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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The History of England, by T.F. Tout
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The History of England
+ From the Accession of Henry III. to the Death of Edward III. (1216-1377)
+
+Author: T.F. Tout
+
+Editor: William Hunt and Reginald L. Poole
+
+Release Date: September 10, 2005 [EBook #16679]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Lee Dawei, Anurag Garg, Turgut Dincer and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND
+
+FROM THE ACCESSION OF HENRY III. TO THE DEATH OF EDWARD III.
+(1216-1377)
+
+BY
+T.F. TOUT, M.A.
+Professor of Mediæval and Modern History
+in the University of Manchester.
+
+
+
+
+THE POLITICAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND IN TWELVE VOLUMES
+
+Seventy-six years have passed since Lingard completed his HISTORY OF
+ENGLAND, which ends with the Revolution of 1688. During that period
+historical study has made a great advance. Year after year the mass of
+materials for a new History of England has increased; new lights have
+been thrown on events and characters, and old errors have been
+corrected. Many notable works have been written on various periods of
+our history; some of them at such length as to appeal almost
+exclusively to professed historical students. It is believed that the
+time has come when the advance which has been made in the knowledge of
+English history as a whole should be laid before the public in a single
+work of fairly adequate size. Such a book should be founded on
+independent thought and research, but should at the same time be
+written with a full knowledge of the works of the best modern
+historians and with a desire to take advantage of their teaching
+wherever it appears sound.
+
+The vast number of authorities, printed and in manuscript, on which a
+History of England should be based, if it is to represent the existing
+state of knowledge, renders co-operation almost necessary and certainly
+advisable. The History, of which this volume is an instalment, is an
+attempt to set forth in a readable form the results at present attained
+by research. It will consist of twelve volumes by twelve different
+writers, each of them chosen as being specialty capable of dealing with
+the period which he undertakes, and the editors, while leaving to each
+author as free a hand as possible, hope to insure a general similarity
+in method of treatment, so that the twelve volumes may in their
+contents, as well as in their outward appearance, form one History.
+
+As its title imports, this History will primarily deal with politics,
+with the History of England and, after the date of the union with
+Scotland, Great Britain, as a state or body politic; but as the life of
+a nation is complex, and its condition at any given time cannot be
+understood without taking into account the various forces acting upon
+it, notices of religious matters and of intellectual, social, and
+economic progress will also find place in these volumes. The footnotes
+will, so far as is possible, be confined to references to authorities,
+and references will not be appended to statements which appear to be
+matters of common knowledge and do not call for support. Each volume
+will have an Appendix giving some account of the chief authorities,
+original and secondary, which the author has used. This account will be
+compiled with a view of helping students rather than of making long
+lists of books without any notes as to their contents or value. That
+the History will have faults both of its own and such as will always in
+some measure attend co-operative work, must be expected, but no pains
+have been spared to make it, so far as may be, not wholly unworthy of
+the greatness of its subject.
+
+Each volume, while forming part of a complete History, will also in
+itself be a separate and complete book, will be sold separately, and
+will have its own index, and two or more maps.
+
+Vol. I. to 1066. By Thomas Hodgkin, D.C.L., Litt.D., Fellow of
+University College, London; Fellow of the British Academy.
+
+Vol. II. 1066 to 1216. By George Burton Adams, M.A., Professor of
+History in Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
+
+Vol. III. 1216 to 1377. By T.F. Tout, M.A., Professor of Medieval and
+Modern History in the Victoria University of Manchester; formerly
+Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford.
+
+Vol. IV. 1377 to 1485. By C. Oman, M.A., Fellow of All Souls' College,
+and Deputy Professor of Modern History in the University of Oxford.
+
+Vol. V. 1485 to 1547. By H.A.L. Fisher, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of New
+College, Oxford.
+
+Vol. VI. 1547 to 1603. By A.F. Pollard, M.A., Professor of
+Constitutional History in University College, London.
+
+Vol. VII. 1603 to 1660. By F.C. Montague, M.A., Professor of History in
+University College, London; formerly Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford.
+
+Vol. VIII. 1660 to 1702. By Richard Lodge, M.A., Professor of History
+in the University of Edinburgh; formerly Fellow of Brasenose College,
+Oxford.
+
+Vol. IX. 1702 to 1760. By I.S. Leadam, M.A., formerly Fellow of
+Brasenose College, Oxford.
+
+Vol. X. 1760 to 1801. By the Rev. William Hunt, M.A., D. Litt, Trinity
+College, Oxford.
+
+Vol. XI. 1801 to 1837. By the Hon. George C. Brodrick, D.C.L., late
+Warden of Merton College, Oxford, and J K. Fotheringham, M.A., Magdalen
+College, Oxford, Lecturer in Classics at King's College, London.
+
+Vol. XII. 1837 to 1901. By Sidney J Low, M.A., Balliol College, Oxford,
+formerly Lecturer on History at King's College, London.
+
+
+
+
+The Political History of England
+IN TWELVE VOLUMES
+
+EDITED BY WILLIAM HUNT, D. LITT., AND
+REGINALD L. POOLE, M.A.
+
+III.
+THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND
+
+FROM THE ACCESSION OF HENRY III. TO THE
+DEATH OF EDWARD III.
+1216-1377
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE REGENCY OF WILLIAM MARSHAL.
+
+ 19 Oct., 1216. Death of King John
+ Position of parties
+ The Church on the king's side
+ 28 Oct. Coronation of Henry III
+ 11 Nov. Great council at Bristol
+ 12 Nov. The first charter of Henry III
+ 1216-17. Progress of the war
+ 1217. Rising of Wilkin of the Weald
+ Louis' visit to France
+ 22 April. Return of Louis from France
+ Sieges of Dover, Farnham, and Mount Sorrel
+ 20 May. The fair of Lincoln
+ 23 Aug. The sea-fight off Sandwich
+ 11 Sept. Treaty of Lambeth
+ 6 Nov. Reissue of the great charter
+ Restoration of order by William Marshal
+ 14 May, 1219. Death of William Marshal
+ His character and career
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE RULE OF HUBERT DE BURGH.
+
+ 1219. Pandulf the real successor of William Marshal
+ July, 1221. Langton procures Pandulf's recall
+ Ascendency of Hubert de Burgh
+Jan.-Feb., 1221. The rebellion of Albemarle
+ July, 1222. The sedition of Constantine FitzAthulf
+ 1221-24. Marriage alliances
+ 1219-23. War in Wales
+ April, 1223. Henry III. declared by the pope competent to govern
+ June, 1224. Revolt of Falkes de Bréauté
+ 20 June-14 Aug. Siege of Bedford
+ Fall of Falkes
+ Papal and royal taxation
+ April, 1227. End of the minority
+ Relations with France during the minority
+ The Lusignans and the Poitevin barons
+ 1224. Louis VIII.'s conquest of Poitou
+ 1225. Expedition of Richard of Cornwall and William
+ Longsword to Gascony
+ Nov., 1226. Accession of Louis IX. in France
+ 1229-30. Henry III.'s campaign in Brittany and Poitou
+21-30 July, 1230. Siege of Mirambeau
+ 1228. The Kerry campaign
+ 2 May, 1230. Death of William of Braose
+ 1231. Henry III.'s second Welsh campaign
+ Aug. Death of Archbishop Richard le Grand
+ Gregory IX. and Henry III.
+ 1232. Riots of Robert Twenge
+ 29 July. Fall of Hubert de Burgh
+ 1231. Death of William Marshal the Younger
+ 1232. Death of Randolph of Blundeville, Earl of Chester
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE ALIEN INVASION.
+
+ 1232-34. Rule of Peter des Roches
+ Aug., 1233. Revolt of Richard Marshal
+ 23 Nov. Fight near Monmouth
+ 1234. Richard Marshal in Ireland
+ 1 April. Defeat and death of the Earl Marshal near Kildare
+ 2 April. Edmund Rich consecrated Archbishop of Canterbury
+ 9 April. Fall of Peter des Roches
+ Beginning of Henry III.'s personal government
+ Character of Henry III.
+ The alien invasions
+ 14 Jan., 1236. Henry's marriage to Eleanor of Provence
+ The Savoyards in England
+ Revival of Poitevin influence
+ 1239. Simon of Montfort Earl of Leicester
+ 1237. The legation of Cardinal Otto
+ 1239. Quarrel of Gregory IX. and Frederick II.
+ 1235. Robert Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln
+ 16 Nov., 1240. Death of Edmund Rich in exile
+ Henry III. and Frederick II.
+ Attempted reconquest of Poitou
+May-Sept., 1242. The campaign of Taillebourg
+ 1243. Truce with France
+ The Lusignans in England
+ The baronial opposition
+ Grosseteste's opposition to Henry III., and Innocent IV.
+ 1243. Relations with Scotland and Wales
+ 1240. Death of Llewelyn ap Iorwerth
+ 1246. Death of David ap Llewelyn
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+POLITICAL RETROGRESSION and NATIONAL PROGRESS.
+
+ 1248-58. Characteristics of the history of these ten years
+ Decay of Henry's power in Gascony
+ 1248-52. Simon de Montfort, seneschal of Gascony
+ Aug., 1253. Henry III. in Gascony
+ 1254. Marriage and establishment of Edward the king's son
+ Edward's position in Gascony
+ Edward's position in Cheshire
+ 1254. Llewelyn ap Griffith sole Prince of North Wales
+ Edward in the four cantreds and in West Wales
+ 1257. Welsh campaign of Henry and Edward
+ Revival of the baronial opposition
+ 1255. Candidature of Edmund, the king's son, for Sicily
+ 1257. Richard of Cornwall elected and crowned King of the Romans
+ Leicester as leader of the opposition
+ Progress in the age of Henry III
+ The cosmopolitan and the national ideals
+ French influence
+ The coming of the friars
+ 1221. Gilbert of Freynet and the first Dominicans in England
+ 1224. Arrival of Agnellus of Pisa and the first Franciscans
+ in England
+ Other mendicant orders in England
+ The influence of the friars
+ The universities
+ Prominent English schoolmen
+ Paris and Oxford
+ The mendicants at Oxford
+ Roger Bacon and Duns Scotus
+ Academic influence in public life
+ Beginnings of colleges
+ Intellectual characteristics of thirteenth century
+ Literature in Latin and French
+ Literature in English
+ Art
+ Gothic architecture
+ The towns and trade
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE BARONS' WAR.
+
+ 2 April, 1258. Parliament at London
+ 11 June. The Mad Parliament
+ The Provisions of Oxford
+ 22 June. Flight of the Lusignans
+ Appointment of the Fifteen
+ Working of the new Constitution
+ 4 Dec., 1259. Treaty of Paris
+ Its unpopularity in England and France
+ 1259. Dissensions among the baronial leaders
+ 1259. Provisions of Westminster
+ 1261. Henry III.'s repudiation of the Provisions
+ 1263. Reconstitution of parties
+ The changed policy of the marchers
+ Outbreak of civil war
+ The appeal to Louis IX
+ 23 Jan., 1264. Mise of Amiens
+ Renewal of the struggle
+ 4 April. Sack of Northampton
+ The campaign in Kent and Sussex
+ 14 May. Battle of Lewes
+ Personal triumph of Montfort
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE RULE OF MONTFORT AND THE ROYALIST RESTORATION.
+
+ 15 May. Mise of Lewes
+ 15 Dec. Provisions of Worcester
+Jan.-Mar., 1265. The Parliament of 1265
+ Split up of the baronial party
+ Quarrel of Leicester and Gloucester
+ 28 May. Edward's escape
+ 22 June. Treaty of Pipton
+ Small results of the alliance of Llewelyn and the barons
+ The campaign in the Severn valley
+ 4 Aug. Battle of Evesham
+ The royalist restoration
+ 1266. The revolt of the Disinherited
+ 15 May. Battle of Chesterfield
+ 31 Oct. The _Dictum de Kenilworth_
+ Michaelmas. The Ely rebellion
+ April, 1267. Gloucester's support of the Disinherited
+ July. End of the rebellion
+ 25 Sept. Treaty of Shrewsbury
+ 1267. Statute of Marlborough
+ 1270-72. Edward's Crusade
+ 16 Nov., 1272. Death of Henry III
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE EARLY FOREIGN POLICY AND LEGISLATION OF EDWARD I.
+
+ Character of Edward I.
+ 1272-74. Rule of the regency
+ Edward's doings in Italy and France
+ Edward's relations with Philip III.
+ 1273-74. Wars of Béarn and Limoges
+ Edward I. and Gregory X.
+ May-July, 1274. Council of Lyons
+ Relations of Edward I. and Rudolf of Hapsburg
+ 23 May, 1279. Treaty of Amiens
+ 1281. League of Macon
+ 1282. Sicilian vespers
+ 1285. Deaths of Philip III., Charles of Anjou, Peter of
+ Aragon, and Martin IV.
+ Bishop Burnell
+ 1275. Statute of Westminster, the first
+ 1278. Statute of Gloucester
+ Hundred Rolls and _placita de quo warranto_
+ Archbishops Kilwardby and Peckham
+ 1279. Statute of Mortmain
+ 1285. _Circumspecte agatis_
+ 1285. Statute of Westminster, the second (De _Donis_)
+ 1285. Statute of Winchester
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE CONQUEST OF NORTH WALES.
+
+ Execution of the Treaty of Shrewsbury
+ Llewelyn's refusal of homage
+ 1277. Edward's first Welsh campaign
+ 1277. Treaty of Aberconway
+ Edward's attempts to introduce English law into the
+ ceded districts
+ 1282. The Welsh revolt
+ 1282. Edward's second Welsh campaign
+ Llewelyn's escape to the Upper Wye
+ 11 Dec. Battle of Orewyn Bridge
+ 1283. Parliaments and financial expedients
+ Subjection of Gwynedd completed
+ 3 Oct. Parliament of Shrewsbury and execution of David
+ The Edwardian castles
+ Mid-Lent, 1284. Statute of Wales
+ Effect of the conquest upon the march
+ Peckham and the ecclesiastical settlement of _Wales_
+ 1287. Revolt of Rhys ap Meredith
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE SICILIAN AND THE SCOTTISH ARBITRATIONS.
+
+ Edward I. at the height of his fame
+April, 1286-Aug 1289, Edward's long visit to France
+ 1289. The Sicilian arbitration
+ 1287. Treaty of Oloron
+ 1288. Treaty of Canfranc
+ 1291. Treaty of Tarascon
+ Maladministration during Edward's absence
+ Judicial and official scandals
+ 1289. Special commission for the trial of offenders
+ 1290. Statute of Westminster, the third (_Quia emptores_)
+ The feud between Gloucester and Hereford
+ 1291. The courts at Ystradvellte and Abergavenny
+ Humiliation of the marcher earls
+ 1290. Expulsion of the Jews
+ The rise of the Italian bankers
+ 1272-86. Early relations of Edward to Scotland
+ 1286. Death of Alexander III. of Scotland
+ 1286-89. Regency in the name of the Maid of Norway
+ 1289. Treaty of Salisbury
+ 1290. Treaty of Brigham
+ Death of the Maid of Norway
+ The claimants to the Scottish throne
+ May, 1291. Parliament of Norham. Edward recognised as overlord
+ of Scotland
+ 1291-92. The great suit for Scotland
+ 17 Nov., 1292. John Balliol declared King of Scots
+ Edward's conduct in relation to Scotland
+ 1290. Death of Eleanor of Castile
+ Transition to the later years of the reign
+ Edward's later ministers
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE FRENCH AND SCOTTISH WARS AND THE CONFIRMATION OF
+THE CHARTERS.
+
+ Commercial rivalry of English and French seamen
+ 15 May, 1293. Battle off Saint-Mahé
+ 1294. Edmund of Lancaster's failure to procure a settlement
+ with Philip IV.
+ The French occupation of Gascony
+ June, 1294. War with France
+ Preparations for a French campaign
+ 1294. Revolts of Madog, Maelgwn, and Morgan
+ Edward's danger at Aberconway
+ 22 Jan., 1293. Battle of Maes Madog
+ July. Welsh revolts suppressed
+ 1295. Failure of the Gascon campaign
+ Failure of attempted coalition against France
+ Organisation of the English navy
+ Treason of Sir Thomas Turberville
+ The naval attack on England
+ Rupture between Edward and the Scots
+ 5 July. Alliance between the French and Scots
+ Nov. The "Model Parliament"
+ 1296. Gascon expedition and death of Edmund of Lancaster
+ Edward's invasion of Scotland
+ 27 April. Battle of Dunbar
+ 10 July. Submission of John Balliol
+ Conquest and administration of Scotland
+ The Ragman Roll
+ Sept., 1294. Consecration of Archbishop Winchelsea
+ 29 Feb., 1296. Boniface VIII. issues _Clericis laicos_.
+ Conflict of Edward and Winchelsea
+ 24 Feb., 1297. Parliament at Salisbury
+ Conflict of Edward with the earls
+ July. Break up of the clerical opposition
+ Increasing moderation of baronial opposition
+ 24 Aug. Edward's departure for Flanders
+ May. Revolt of the Scots under William Wallace.
+ 11 Sept. Battle of Stirling Bridge.
+ 12 Oct. Confirmation of the charters with new clauses.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE SCOTTISH FAILURE.
+
+ 1297. Edward's unsuccessful campaign in Flanders
+ 31 Jan., 1298. Truce of Tournai, and end of the French war
+ July. Edward's invasion of Scotland
+ 22 July. Battle of Falkirk
+ Slowness of Edward's progress towards the conquest
+ of Scotland
+ 19 June, 1299. Treaty of Montreuil
+ 9 Sept. Marriage of Edward and Margaret of France
+ Mar., 1300. _Articuli super cartas_
+ July-Aug. Carlaverock campaign
+20 Jan.-14 Feb., 1301. Parliament of Lincoln
+ The barons' letter to the pope
+ Edward of Carnarvon, Prince of Wales
+ 1302. Philip IV.'s troubles with the Flemings and Boniface VIII
+ 20 May, 1303. Peace of Paris between Edward and Philip
+ Increasing strength of Edward's position
+ The decay of the earldoms
+ Additions to the royal demesne
+ 1303. Conquest of Scotland seriously undertaken
+ 24 July, 1304. Capture of Stirling
+ Aug., 1305. Execution of Wallace and completion of the conquest
+ The settlement of the government of Scotland
+ 1305. Disgrace of Winchelsea and Bek
+ Edward I. and Clement V.
+ 1307. Statute of Carlisle
+ 1305. Ordinance of Trailbaston
+ 10 Jan., 1306. Murder of Comyn
+ Rising of Robert Bruce
+ 25 Mar. Bruce crowned King of Scots
+ Preparations for a fresh conquest of Scotland
+ 7 July, 1307. Death of Edward I.
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+GAVESTON, THE ORDAINERS, AND BANNOCKBURN.
+
+ Character of Edward II.
+ 1307. Peter Gaveston Earl of Cornwall
+ 25 Jan., 1308. Marriage of Edward with Isabella of France
+ 25 Feb. Coronation of Edward II.
+ Power and unpopularity of Gaveston
+ 8 May. Gaveston exiled
+ July 1309. Return of Gaveston condoned by Parliament at Stamford
+ 1310. Renewal of the opposition of the barons to Gaveston
+ 16 Mar. Appointment of the lords ordainers
+ Sept. Abortive campaign against the Scots
+ Character and policy of Thomas, Earl of Lancaster
+ 1311. The ordinances
+Nov., 1311, Jan., 1312. Gaveston's second exile and return
+ The earls at war against Edward and Gaveston
+ Gaveston's surrender at Scarborough
+ 19 June, 1312. Murder of Gaveston
+ Consequent break up of the baronial party
+ Oct., 1313. Edward and Lancaster reconciled
+ May. Death of Archbishop Winchelsea
+ 1312. Fall of the Templars
+ Walter Reynolds Archbishop of Canterbury
+ Complaints of papal abuses
+ Progress of Bruce's power in Scotland
+ 1314. The siege of Stirling
+ An army collected for its relief
+ 24 June, Battle of Bannockburn
+ The results of the battle
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+LANCASTER, PEMBROKE, AND THE DESPENSERS.
+
+ Failure of the rule of Thomas of Lancaster
+ 1315. Revolts of Llewelyn Bren
+ 1315. Rising of Adam Banaster.
+ 1316. The Bristol disturbances.
+ 1315. Edward Bruce's attack on the English in Ireland.
+ 1317. Roger Mortimer in Ireland.
+ 1318. Death of Edward Bruce at Dundalk.
+ Lancaster's failure and the break up of his party.
+ Pembroke and the middle party.
+ 9 Aug. Treaty of Leek and the supremacy of the middle party.
+ 1314-18. Progress of Robert Bruce.
+ 1319. Renewed attack on Scotland.
+ Battle of Myton.
+ Rise of the Despensers.
+ 1317. The partition of the Gloucester inheritance.
+ 1320. War between the husbands of the Gloucester heiresses
+ in South Wales.
+ June, 1321. Conferences at Pontefract and Sherburn.
+ July. The exile of the Despensers.
+ Break up of the opposition after their victory.
+23-31 Oct., 1321. The siege of Leeds Castle.
+Jan.-Feb., 1322. Edward's successful campaign in the march.
+ 11 Feb. Recall of the Despensers.
+ The king's march against the northern barons.
+ 16 Mar. Battle of Boroughbridge.
+ 22 Mar. Execution of Lancaster.
+ 2 May. Parliament at York and repeal of the ordinances.
+ The triumph of the Despensers.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE FALL OF EDWARD II. AND THE RULE OF ISABELLA AND MORTIMER.
+
+ Aug. Renewed attack on the Scots.
+ Oct. Edward II.'s narrow escape at Byland.
+ Mar., 1323. Treason and execution of Andrew Harclay.
+ Incapacity of the Despensers as administrators.
+ Their quarrels with the old nobles.
+ 1324. Their breach with Queen Isabella.
+ Their chief helpers: Walter Stapledon and Ralph Baldock.
+ Reaction against the Despensers.
+ 1303-14. Relations of England and France.
+ 1314-22. Edward's dealings with Louis X. and Philip V.
+ 1322. Accession of Charles IV.
+ 1324. Affair of Saint-Sardos.
+ Renewal of war. Sequestration of Gascony. Charles
+ of Valois' conquest of the Agenais and La Réole.
+ Isabella's mission to Paris.
+ Edward of Aquitaine's homage to Charles IV.
+ 1325. Treachery of Charles IV. and second sequestration of
+ Gascony.
+ 1326. Relations of Mortimer and Isabella
+ The Hainault marriage
+ 23 Sept. Landing of Isabella and Mortimer
+ Riots in London: murder of Stapledon
+ 26 Oct. Execution of the elder Despenser
+ 16 Nov. Capture of Edward and the younger Despenser
+ Triumph of the revolution
+ 7 Jan., 1327. Parliament's recognition of Edward of Aquitaine as king
+ 20 Jan. Edward II.'s resignation of the crown
+ 24 Jan. Proclamation of Edward III.
+ 22 Sept., 1328. Murder of Edward II.
+ 1327-30. Rule of Isabella and Mortimer
+ 1327. Abortive Scottish campaign
+ April, 1328. Treaty of Northampton; "the shameful peace"
+ Character and ambition of Mortimer
+ Oct. Mortimer Earl of the March of Wales
+ Henry of Lancaster's opposition to him
+ Mar., 1330. Execution of the Earl of Kent
+ Oct. Parliament at Nottingham
+ 19 Oct. Arrest of Mortimer
+ 29 Nov. His execution
+ 1330-58. Later life of Isabella
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE PRELIMINARIES OF THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR.
+
+ Character and policy of Edward III.
+ 1330-40. The rule of the Stratfords
+ 1337. The new earldoms
+ Scotland during the minority of David Bruce
+ Edward Balliol and the Disinherited
+ 6 Aug., 1332. The Disinherited in Scotland
+ Battle of Dupplin Moor
+ 6 Aug.-16 Dec. Edward Balliol's brief reign and expulsion
+ Treaty of Roxburgh
+ 1333. Attempt to procure his restoration
+ Siege of Berwick
+ 19 July. Battle of Halidon Hill
+ Edward Balliol restored
+ 12 June, 1334. Treaty of Newcastle, ceding to Edward south-eastern
+ Scotland
+ Failure of Edward Balliol
+ 1334-36. Edward III.'s Scottish campaigns
+ 1341. Return of David Bruce from France
+ 1327-37. Relations of England and France
+ 31 Mar., 1327. Treaty of Paris
+ Edward's lands in Gascony after the treaty of Paris
+ 1328. Accession of Philip of Valois in France
+ Protests of the English regency
+ 1328. The legal and political aspects of the succession
+ question
+ Edward III.'s claim to France
+ 6 June, 1329. Edward's homage to Philip VI.
+ 8 May, 1330. Convention of the Wood of Vincennes
+ 9 Mar., 1331. Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye
+ April. Interview of Pont-Sainte-Maxence
+ Crusading projects of John XXII.
+ 1336. Abandonment of the crusade by Benedict XII
+ Strained relations between England and France
+ 1337. Mission of the Cardinals Peter and Bertrand
+ Edward and Robert of Artois
+ The _Vow_ of the Heron
+ Preparations for war
+ Breach with Flanders and stoppage of export of wool
+ Alliance with William I. and II. of Hainault
+ Edward's other Netherlandish allies
+ 1337. Breach between France and England
+ Nov. Sir Walter Manny at Cadzand
+ Fruitless negotiations and further hostilities
+ July, 1338. Edward III.'s departure for Flanders
+ 5 Sept. Interview of Edward and the Emperor Louis of
+ Bavaria at Coblenz
+ The Anglo-imperial alliance
+ Further fruitless negotiations
+ Renewal of Edward's claim to the French crown
+ The responsibility for the war
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+THE EARLY CAMPAIGNS OF THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR.
+
+ 1339. Edward's invasion of France
+ Oct. Campaign of the Thiérache
+ 23 Oct. The failure at Buironfosse
+ Alliance between Edward and the Flemish cities
+ James van Artevelde
+ Jan., 1340. Edward III. at Ghent
+ His proclamation as King of France
+ 20 Feb. His return to England
+ 22 June. His re-embarkation for Flanders
+ Parallel naval development of England and France
+ The Norman navy and the projected invasion of
+ England
+ 24 June. Battle of Sluys
+ Ineffective campaigns in Artois and the Tournaisis
+ 25 Sept. Truce of Esplechin
+ 30 Nov. Edward's return to London
+ The ministers displaced and a special commission
+ appointed to try them
+ 30 Nov. Controversy between Edward and Archbishop Stratford.
+ 23 April, 1341. Parliament at London supporting Stratford and forcing
+ Edward to choose ministers after consulting it.
+ 1 Oct. Edward's repudiation of his concessions.
+ April, 1343. Repeal of the statutes of 1341.
+ John of Montfort and Charles of Blois claim the
+ duchy of Brittany.
+ War of the Breton succession.
+ June, 1342. The siege of Hennebont raised.
+ 1343. Battle of Morlaix.
+ 19 Jan., 1343. Edward III. in Brittany.
+ Truce of Malestroit.
+ Edward's financial and political troubles.
+ End of the Flemish alliance.
+ June, 1345. Henry of Derby in Gascony.
+ 21 Oct. Battle of Auberoche.
+ 1346. Siege of Aiguillon and raid in Poitou.
+ Preparations for Edward III.'s campaign.
+ July-Aug. The march through Normandy.
+ 26 July. Capture of Caen.
+ Aug. The march up the Seine valley.
+ The retreat northwards.
+ The passage of the Somme at the _Blanche taque_.
+ 26 Aug. Battle of Crecy.
+ 17 Oct. Battle of Neville's Cross.
+ 4 Sept. Siege of Calais.
+ 3 Aug., 1347. Capture of Calais.
+ 20 June. Battle of La Roche Derien.
+ 28 Sept. Truce of Calais.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+FROM THE BLACK DEATH TO THE TREATY OF CALAIS.
+
+ 1347-48. Prosperity of England after the truce.
+ 1348-50. The Black Death and its results.
+ 1351. Statute of labourers.
+ Social and economic unrest.
+ Religious unrest.
+ The Flagellants.
+ The anti-clerical movement.
+ 1351. First statute of provisors.
+ 1353. First statute of _præmunire_.
+ Richard Fitzralph and the attack on the mendicants.
+ 1354. Ordinance Of the Staple.
+ 1352. Statute of treasons.
+ 1349. Foundation of the Order of the Garter.
+ Dagworth's administration of Brittany.
+ Hugh Calveley and Robert Knowles.
+ 27 Mar., 1351. Battle of the Thirty.
+ 1352. Battle of Mauron
+ Fighting round Calais
+ 1352. Capture of Guînes
+ 29 Aug., 1350. Battle of the Spaniards-on-the-sea
+ 6 April, 1354. Preliminaries of peace signed at Guînes
+ 1355. Failure of the negotiations and renewal of the war
+ Failure of John of Gaunt in Normandy
+ Sept.-Nov. Black Prince's raid in Languedoc
+ 1356. Operations of John of Gaunt in Normandy in alliance
+ with Charles of Navarre and Geoffrey of Harcourt
+ 9 Aug.-2 Oct. Black Prince's raid northwards to the Loire
+ 19 Sept. Battle of Poitiers.
+ 23 Mar., 1357. Truce of Bordeaux
+ Oct. Treaty of Berwick
+ 1357-71. The last years of David II.
+ 1371. Accession of Robert II. in Scotland
+ 1358. Preliminaries of peace signed between Edward III.
+ and John
+ State of France after Poitiers
+ 24 Mar., 1359. Treaty of London
+ The rejection of the treaty by the French
+Nov., 1359-April, 1360. Edward III.'s invasion of Northern France
+ Champagne and Burgundy
+ 11 Jan., 1360. Treaty of Guillon
+ 7 April. Siege of Paris
+ 8 May. Treaty of Brétigni
+ 24 Oct. Treaty of Calais
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR FROM THE TREATY OF CALAIS TO THE TRUCE
+OF BRUGES.
+
+ Difficulties in carrying out the treaty of Calais
+ Guerilla warfare: exploits of Calveley, Pipe, and
+ Jowel
+ 16 May, 1364. Battle of Cocherel
+ 29 Sept. Battle of Auray
+ 1365. Treaty of Guérande
+ Exploits of the free companies: John Hawkwood
+ 1361. The charters of renunciation not exchanged
+ 1364. Death of King John: accession of Charles V.
+ 1366. Expulsion of Peter the Cruel from Castile by Du
+ Guesclin and the free companies
+ Feb., 1367. The Black Prince's expedition to Spain
+ 3 April. Battle of Nájera
+ The Black Prince's rule in Aquitaine
+ His difficulties with the great nobles
+ Jan., 1368. The hearth tax imposed
+ Jan., 1369. Renewal of the war.
+ Changed military and political conditions.
+ Relations of England and Flanders.
+ 1371. Battle in Bourgneuf Bay.
+ Successes of the French.
+ Sept., 1370. Sack of the _cité_ of Limoges.
+ 1371. The Black Prince's return to England with shattered
+ health.
+ 1370. Futile expeditions of Lancaster and Knowles.
+ Treason of Sir John Minsterworth.
+ Battle of Pontvallain.
+ 1370-72. Exploits of Sir Owen of Wales.
+ 23 June, 1370. Defeat of Pembroke at La Rochelle.
+ Aug. Defeat of Thomas Percy at Soubise.
+ 1372. Edward III.'s last military expedition.
+ Expulsion of the English from Poitou and Brittany.
+July-Dec., 1373. John of Gaunt's march from Calais to Bordeaux.
+ 1374. Ruin of the English power in France.
+ 27 June, 1375. Truce of Bruges.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+ENGLAND DURING THE LATTER YEARS OF EDWARD III.
+
+ Glories of the years succeeding the treaty of Calais.
+ 1361-69. John Froissart in England.
+ His picture of the life of court and people.
+ The national spirit in English literature.
+ Gower and Minot.
+ Geoffrey Chaucer.
+ The standard English language.
+ Lowland Scottish.
+ The national spirit in art.
+ "Flowing decorated" and "perpendicular" architecture.
+ Contrast between England and Scotland.
+ The national spirit in popular English literature.
+ William Langland.
+ His picture of the condition of the poor.
+ The national spirit and the universities.
+ Early career of John Wycliffe.
+ Spread of cultivation among the laity.
+ The national spirit in English law.
+ The national spirit in commerce.
+ Edward III.'s family settlement.
+ Marriage of the Black Prince and Joan of Kent.
+ Marriages of Lionel of Antwerp with Elizabeth de
+ Burgh and Violante Visconti.
+ Lionel in Ireland.
+ Statute of Kilkenny.
+ 1361-69. Philippa of Clarence's marriage with the Earl of
+ March.
+ John of Gaunt and the Duchy of Lancaster.
+ Continuation of ancient rivalries between houses now
+ represented by branches of the royal family.
+ The great prelates of the end of Edward III.'s reign.
+ Feb., 1371. Parliament: clerical ministers superseded by laymen.
+ Clerical and anti-clerical, constitutional and court
+ parties.
+ Edward III.'s dotage.
+ Alice Perrers.
+ Struggle of parties at court.
+ Increasing bitterness of the opposition to the courtiers.
+April-July, 1376. The "Good Parliament".
+ Fall of the courtiers.
+ 8 June. Death of the Black Prince.
+ John of Gaunt restored to power.
+ Jan., 1377. Packed parliament, and the reaction against the Good
+ Parliament.
+ Persistence of the clerical opposition.
+ The attack on John Wycliffe.
+ 10 Feb. Wycliffe before Bishop Courtenay.
+ John of Gaunt's substantial triumph.
+ 21 June. Death of Edward III.
+ Characteristics of his age.
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+ON AUTHORITIES.
+
+(1216-1377.)
+
+Comparative value of records and chronicles.
+Record sources for the period.
+Chancery Records:--
+ Patent Rolls
+ Close Rolls
+ Rolls of Parliament
+ Charter Rolls
+ Inquests Post-Mortem
+ Fine Rolls
+ Gascon Rolls
+ Hundred Rolls
+Exchequer Records
+Plea Rolls and records of the common law courts
+Records of local courts
+Scotch and Irish records
+Ecclesiastical records
+ Bishops' registers
+ Monastic Cartularies
+ Papal records
+Chroniclers of the period.
+St. Alban's Abbey as a school of history.
+Matthew Paris.
+Later St. Alban's chroniclers.
+Other chroniclers of Henry III.
+Other monastic annals.
+Chroniclers of Edward I.
+Civic chronicles.
+Chroniclers of Edward II.
+Chroniclers of Edward III.
+Scottish and Welsh chronicles.
+French chronicles illustrating English history.
+The three redactions of Froissart.
+Other French chroniclers of the Hundred Years' War.
+Legal literature.
+Literary aids to history.
+Modern works on the period.
+Maps.
+Bibliographies.
+Note on authorities for battle of Poitiers.
+
+INDEX.
+
+MAPS.
+(At the End of the Volume)
+1. Map of Wales and the March at the end of the XIIIth century.
+2. Map of Southern Scotland and Northern England in the XIIIth and
+ XIVth centuries.
+3. Map of France in the XIIIth and XIVth centuries.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE REGENCY OF WILLIAM MARSHAL.
+
+
+When John died, on October 19, 1216, the issue of the war between him
+and the barons was still doubtful. The arrival of Louis of France,
+eldest son of King Philip Augustus, had enabled the barons to win back
+much of the ground lost after John's early triumphs had forced them to
+call in the foreigner. Beyond the Humber the sturdy north-country
+barons, who had wrested the Great Charter from John, remained true to
+their principles, and had also the support of Alexander II., King of
+Scots. The magnates of the eastern counties were as staunch as the
+northerners, and the rich and populous southern shires were for the
+most part in agreement with them. In the west, the barons had the aid
+of Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, the great Prince of North Wales. While ten
+earls fought for Louis, the royal cause was only upheld by six. The
+towns were mainly with the rebels, notably London and the Cinque Ports,
+and cities so distant as Winchester and Lincoln, Worcester and
+Carlisle. Yet the baronial cause excited little general sympathy. The
+mass of the population stood aloof, and was impartially maltreated by
+the rival armies.
+
+John's son Henry had at his back the chief military resources of the
+country; the two strongest of the earls, William Marshal, Earl of
+Pembroke, and Randolph of Blundeville, Earl of Chester; the fierce
+lords of the Welsh March, the Mortimers, the Cantilupes, the Cliffords,
+the Braoses, and the Lacys; and the barons of the West Midlands, headed
+by Henry of Neufbourg, Earl of Warwick, and William of Ferrars, Earl of
+Derby. This powerful phalanx gave to the royalists a stronger hold in
+the west than their opponents had in any one part of the much wider
+territory within their sphere of influence. There was no baronial
+counterpart to the successful raiding of the north and east, which John
+had carried through in the last months of his life. A baronial centre,
+like Worcester, could not hold its own long in the west. Moreover, John
+had not entirely forfeited his hereditary advantages. The
+administrative families, whose chief representative was the justiciar
+Hubert de Burgh, held to their tradition of unswerving loyalty, and
+joined with the followers of the old king, of whom William Marshal was
+the chief survivor. All over England the royal castles were in safe
+hands, and so long as they remained unsubdued, no part of Louis'
+dominions was secure. The crown had used to the full its rights over
+minors and vacant fiefs. The subjection of the south-west was assured
+by the marriage of the mercenary leader, Falkes de Bréauté, to the
+mother of the infant Earl of Devon, and by the grant of Cornwall to the
+bastard of the last of the Dunstanville earls. Though Isabella,
+Countess of Gloucester, John's repudiated wife, was as zealous as her
+new husband, the Earl of Essex, against John's son, Falkes kept a tight
+hand over Glamorgan, on which the military power of the house of
+Gloucester largely depended. Randolph of Chester was custodian of the
+earldoms of Leicester and Richmond, of which the nominal earls, Simon
+de Montfort and Peter Mauclerc, were far away, the one ruling Toulouse,
+and the other Brittany. The band of foreign adventurers, the mainstay
+of John's power, was still unbroken. Ruffians though these hirelings
+were, they had experience, skill, and courage, and were the only
+professional soldiers in the country.
+
+The vital fact of the situation was that the immense moral and
+spiritual forces of the Church remained on the side of the king.
+Innocent III. had died some months before John, but his successor,
+Honorius III., continued to uphold his policy. The papal legate, the
+Cardinal Gualo, was the soul of the royalist cause. Louis and his
+adherents had been excommunicated, and not a single English bishop
+dared to join openly the foes of Holy Church. The most that the
+clerical partisans of the barons could do was to disregard the
+interdict and continue their ministrations to the excommunicated host.
+The strongest English prelate, Stephen Langton, Archbishop of
+Canterbury, was at Rome in disgrace. Walter Grey, Archbishop of York,
+and Hugh of Wells, Bishop of Lincoln, were also abroad, while the
+Bishop of London, William of Sainte-Mère-Eglise, was incapacitated by
+illness. Several important sees, including Durham and Ely, were vacant.
+The ablest resident bishop, Peter des Roches of Winchester, was an
+accomplice in John's misgovernment.
+
+The chief obstacle in the way of the royalists had been the character
+of John, and the little Henry of Winchester could have had no share in
+the crimes of his father. But the dead king had lately shown such rare
+energy that there was a danger lest the accession of a boy of nine
+might not weaken the cause of monarchy. The barons were largely out of
+hand. The war was assuming the character of the civil war of Stephen's
+days, and John's mercenaries were aspiring to play the part of feudal
+potentates. It was significant that so many of John's principal
+supporters were possessors of extensive franchises, like the lords of
+the Welsh March, who might well desire to extend these feudal
+immunities to their English estates. The triumph of the crown through
+such help might easily have resolved the united England of Henry II.
+into a series of lordships under a nominal king.
+
+The situation was saved by the wisdom and moderation of the papal
+legate, and the loyalty of William Marshal, who forgot his interests as
+Earl of Pembroke in his devotion to the house of Anjou. From the moment
+of John's death at Newark, the cardinal and the marshal took the lead.
+They met at Worcester, where the tyrant was buried, and at once made
+preparations for the coronation of Henry of Winchester. The ceremony
+took place at St. Peter's Abbey, Gloucester, on October 28, from which
+day the new reign was reckoned as beginning. The marshal, who had
+forty-three years before dubbed the "young king" Henry a knight, then
+for a second time admitted a young king Henry to the order of chivalry.
+When the king had recited the coronation oath and performed homage to
+the pope, Gualo anointed him and placed on his head the plain gold
+circlet that perforce did duly for a crown.[1] Next day Henry's leading
+supporters performed homage, and before November 1 the marshal was made
+justiciar.
+
+ [1] There is some conflict of evidence on this point, and Dr.
+ Stubbs, following Wendover, iv., 2, makes Peter of Winchester
+ crown Henry. But the official account in _Fædera, i._, 145, is
+ confirmed by _Ann. Tewkesbury_, p. 62; _Histoire de G. le
+ Maréchal_, lines 15329-32; _Hist. des ducs de Normandie, et des
+ rois d'Angleterre_, p. 181, and _Ann. Winchester_, p. 83.
+ Wykes, p. 60, and _Ann. Dunstable_, p. 48, which confirm
+ Wendover, are suspect by reason of other errors.
+
+On November 2 a great council met at Bristol. Only four earls appeared,
+and one of these, William of Fors, Earl of Albemarle, was a recent
+convert. But the presence of eleven bishops showed that the Church had
+espoused the cause of the little king, and a throng of western and
+marcher magnates made a sufficient representation of the lay baronage.
+The chief business was to provide for the government during the
+minority. Gualo withstood the temptation to adopt the method by which
+Innocent III. had ruled Sicily in the name of Frederick II. The king's
+mother was too unpopular and incompetent to anticipate the part played
+by Blanche of Castile during the minority of St. Louis. After the
+precedents set by the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem, the barons took the
+matter into their own hands. Their work of selection was not an easy
+one. Randolph of Chester was by far the most powerful of the royalist
+lords, but his turbulence and purely personal policy, not less than his
+excessive possessions and inordinate palatine jurisdictions, made him
+unsuitable for the regency. Yet had he raised any sort of claim, it
+would have been hardly possible to resist his pretensions.[1] Luckily,
+Randolph stood aside, and his withdrawal gave the aged earl marshal the
+position for which his nomination as justiciar at Gloucester had
+already marked him out. The title of regent was as yet unknown, either
+in England or France, but the style, "ruler of king and kingdom," which
+the barons gave to the marshal, meant something more than the ordinary
+position of a justiciar. William's friends had some difficulty in
+persuading him to accept the office. He was over seventy years of age,
+and felt it would be too great a burden. Induced at last by the legate
+to undertake the charge, from that moment he shrank from none of its
+responsibilities. The personal care of the king was comprised within
+the marshal's duties, but he delegated that branch of his work to Peter
+des Roches.[2] These two, with Gualo, controlled the whole policy of the
+new reign. Next to them came Hubert de Burgh, John's justiciar, whom
+the marshal very soon restored to that office. But Hubert at once went
+back to the defence of Dover, and for some time took little part in
+general politics.
+
+ [1] The fears and hopes of the marshal's friends are well
+ depicted in _Histoire de Guillaume le Maréchal_, lines
+ 15500-15708.
+
+ [2] The panegyrist of the marshal emphasises strongly the fact
+ that Peter's charge was a delegation, _ibid._, lines
+ 17993-18018.
+
+On November 12, the legate and the regent issued at Bristol a
+confirmation of the Great Charter. Some of the most important articles
+accepted by John in 1215 were omitted, including the "constitutional
+clauses" requiring the consent of the council of barons for
+extraordinary taxation. Other provisions, which tied the hands of the
+government, were postponed for further consideration in more settled
+times. But with all its mutilations the Bristol charter of 1216 marked a
+more important moment than even the charter of Runnymede. The
+condemnation of Innocent III. would in all probability have prevented
+the temporary concession of John from becoming permanent. Love of
+country and love of liberty were doubtless growing forces, but they were
+still in their infancy, while the papal authority was something ultimate
+against which few Christians dared appeal. Thus the adoption by the free
+will of the papal legate, and the deliberate choice of the marshal of
+the policy of the Great Charter, converted, as has well been said, "a
+treaty won at the point of the sword into a manifesto of peace and sound
+government".[1] This wise change of policy cut away the ground from under
+the feet of the English supporters of Louis. The friends of the young
+Henry could appeal to his innocence, to his sacred unction, and to his
+recognition by Holy Church. They offered a programme of limited
+monarchy, of the redress of grievances, of vested rights preserved, and
+of adhesion to the good old traditions that all Englishmen respected.
+From that moment the Charter became a new starting-point in our history.
+
+ [1] Stubbs, _Const. Hist._, ii., 21.
+
+In strange contrast to this programme of reform, the aliens, who had
+opposed the charter of Runnymede, were among the lords by whose counsel
+and consent the charter of Bristol was issued. In its weakness the new
+government sought to stimulate the zeal both of the foreign mercenaries
+and of the loyal barons by grants and privileges which seriously
+entrenched upon the royal authority. Falkes de Bréauté was confirmed in
+the custody of a compact group of six midland shires, besides the
+earldom of Devon, and the "county of the Isle of Wight,"[1] which he
+guarded in the interests of his wife and stepson. Savary de Mauléon, who
+in despair of his old master's success had crossed over to Poitou before
+John's death, was made warden of the castle of Bristol. Randolph of
+Chester was consoled for the loss of the regency by the renewal of
+John's recent grant of the Honour of Lancaster which was by this time
+definitely recognised as a shire.[2]
+
+ [1] _Histoire des ducs de Normandie_, etc., p. 181.
+
+ [2] Tait, _Medieval Manchester and the Beginnings of
+ Lancashire_, p. 180.
+
+The war assumed the character of a crusade. The royalist troops wore
+white crosses on their garments, and were assured by the clergy of
+certain salvation. The cruel and purposeless ravaging of the enemy's
+country, which had occupied John's last months of life, became rare,
+though partisans, such as Falkes de Bréauté, still outvied the French
+in plundering monasteries and churches. The real struggle became a war
+of castles. Louis endeavoured to complete his conquest of the
+south-east by the capture of the royal strongholds, which still limited
+his power to the open country. At first the French prince had some
+successes. In November he increased his hold on the Home counties by
+capturing the Tower of London, by forcing Hertford to surrender, and by
+pressing the siege of Berkhampsted. As Christmas approached the
+royalists proposed a truce. Louis agreed on the condition that
+Berkhampsted should be surrendered, and early in 1217 both parties held
+councils, the royalists at Oxford and the barons at Cambridge. There
+was vague talk of peace, but the war was renewed, and Louis captured
+Hedingham and Orford in Essex, and besieged the castles of Colchester
+and Norwich. Then another truce until April 26 was concluded, on the
+condition that the royalists should surrender these two strongholds.
+
+Both sides had need to pause. Louis, at the limit of his resources, was
+anxious to obtain men and money from France. He was not getting on well
+with his new subjects. The eastern counties grumbled at his taxes.
+Dissensions arose between the English and French elements in his host.
+The English lords resented the grants and appointments he gave to his
+countrymen. The French nobles professed to despise the English as
+traitors. When Hertford was taken, Robert FitzWalter demanded that its
+custody should be restored to him. Louis roughly told him that
+Englishmen, who had betrayed their natural lord, were not to be
+entrusted with such charges. It was to little purpose that he promised
+Robert that every man should have his rights when the war was over. The
+prospects of ending the war grew more remote every day. The royalists
+took advantage of the discouragement of their opponents. The regent was
+lavish in promises. There should be no inquiry into bygones, and all
+who submitted to the young king should be guaranteed all their existing
+rights. The result was that a steady stream of converts began to flow
+from the camp of Louis to the camp of the marshal. For the first time
+signs of a national movement against Louis began to be manifest. It
+became clear that his rule meant foreign conquest.
+
+Louis wished to return to France, but despite the truce he could only
+win his way to the coast by fighting. The Cinque Ports were changing
+their allegiance. A popular revolt had broken out in the Weald, where a
+warlike squire, William of Cassingham,[1] soon became a terror to the
+French under his nickname of Wilkin of the Weald. As Louis traversed the
+disaffected districts, Wilkin fell upon him near Lewes, and took
+prisoners two nephews of the Count of Nevers. On his further march to
+Winchelsea, the men of the Weald broke down the bridges behind him,
+while on his approach the men of Winchelsea destroyed their mills, and
+took to their ships as avowed partisans of King Henry. The French prince
+entered the empty town, and had great difficulty in keeping his army
+alive. "Wheat found they there," says a chronicler; "in great plenty,
+but they knew not how to grind it. Long time were they in such a plight
+that they had to crush by hand the corn of which they made their bread.
+They could catch no fish. Great store of nuts found they in the town;
+these were their finest food."[2] Louis was in fact besieged by the
+insurgents, and was only released by a force of knights riding down from
+London to help him. These troops dared not travel by the direct road
+through the Weald, and made their way to Romney through Canterbury. Rye
+was strongly held against them and the ships of the Cinque Ports
+dominated the sea, so that Louis was still cut off from his friends at
+Romney. A relieving fleet was despatched from Boulogne, but stress of
+weather kept it for a fortnight at Dover, while Louis was starving at
+Winchelsea. At last the French ships appeared off Winchelsea. Thereupon
+the English withdrew, and Louis finding the way open to France returned
+home.
+
+ [1] Mr. G.J. Turner has identified Cassingham with the modern
+ Kensham, between Rolvenden and Sandhurst, in Kent.
+
+ [2] _Histoire des ducs de Normandie_, etc., p. 183.
+
+A crowd of waverers changed sides. At their head were William
+Longsword, Earl of Salisbury, the bastard great-uncle of the little
+king, and William, the young marshal, the eldest son of the Earl of
+Pembroke. The regent wandered from town to town in Sussex, receiving
+the submission of the peasantry, and venturing to approach as near
+London as Dorking. The victorious Wilkin was made Warden of the Seven
+Hundreds of the Weald. The greatest of the magnates of Sussex and
+Surrey, William, Earl Warenne, followed the example of his tenantry,
+and made his peace with the king. The royalists fell upon the few
+castles held by the barons. While one corps captured Odiham, Farnham,
+Chichester, and other southern strongholds, Falkes de Bréauté overran
+the Isle of Ely, and Randolph of Chester besieged the Leicestershire
+fortress of Mount Sorrel. Enguerrand de Coucy, whom Louis had left in
+command, remained helpless in London. His boldest act was to send a
+force to Lincoln, which occupied the town, but failed to take the
+castle. This stronghold, under its hereditary warden, the valiant old
+lady, Nichola de Camville,[1] had already twice withstood a siege.
+
+ [1] On Nichola de Camville or de la Hay see M. Petit-Dutaillis
+ in _Mélanges Julien Havet_, pp. 369-80.
+
+Louis found no great encouragement in France, for Philip Augustus, too
+prudent to offend the Church, gave but grudging support to his
+excommunicated son. When, on the eve of the expiration of the truce,
+Louis returned to England, his reinforcements comprised only 120
+knights. Among them, however, were the Count of Brittany, Peter
+Mauclerc, anxious to press in person his rights to the earldom of
+Richmond, the Counts of Perche and Guînes, and many lords of Picardy,
+Artois and Ponthieu. Conscious that everything depended on the speedy
+capture of the royal castles, Louis introduced for the first time into
+England the _trébuchet_, a recently invented machine that cast great
+missiles by means of heavy counterpoises. "Great was the talk about
+this, for at that time few of them had been seen in France."[1] On April
+22, Louis reached Dover, where the castle was still feebly beset by the
+French. On his nearing the shore, Wilkin of the Weald and Oliver, a
+bastard of King John's, burnt the huts of the French engaged in watching
+the castle. Afraid to land in their presence, Louis disembarked at
+Sandwich. Next day he went by land to Dover, but discouraged by tidings
+of his losses, he gladly concluded a short truce with Hubert de Burgh.
+He abandoned the siege of Dover, and hurried off towards Winchester,
+where the two castles were being severely pressed by the royalists. But
+his progress was impeded by his siege train, and Farnham castle blocked
+his way.
+
+ [1] _Histoire des ducs de Normandie, etc._, p. 188; cf.
+ _English Hist. Review_, xviii. (1903), 263-64.
+
+Saer de Quincy, Earl of Winchester, joined Louis outside the walls of
+Farnham. Saer's motive was to persuade Louis to hasten to the relief of
+his castle of Mount Sorrel. The French prince was not in a position to
+resist pressure from a powerful supporter. He divided his army, and
+while the Earl of Winchester, along with the Count of Perche and Robert
+FitzWalter, made their way to Leicestershire, he completed his journey
+to Winchester, threw a fresh force into the castles, and, leaving the
+Count of Nevers in charge, hurried to London. There he learnt that
+Hubert de Burgh at Dover had broken the truce, and he at once set off
+to renew the siege of the stronghold which had so continually baulked
+his plans. But little good came of his efforts, and the much-talked-of
+_trébuchet_ proving powerless to effect a breach, Louis had to resign
+himself to a weary blockade. While he was besieging Dover, Saer de
+Quincy had relieved Mount Sorrel, whence he marched to the help of
+Gilbert of Ghent, the only English baron whom Louis ventured to raise
+to comital rank as Earl of Lincoln. Gilbert was still striving to
+capture Lincoln Castle, but Nichola de Camville had resisted him from
+February to May. With the help of the army from Mount Sorrel, the
+castle and its _châtelaine_ were soon reduced to great straits.
+
+The marshal saw that the time was come to take the offensive, and
+resolved to raise the siege. Having no field army, he stripped his
+castles of their garrisons, and gave rendezvous to his barons at
+Newark. There the royalists rested three days, and received the
+blessing of Gualo and the bishops. They then set out towards Lincoln,
+commanded by the regent in person, the Earl of Chester, and the Bishop
+of Winchester, whom the legate appointed as his representative. The
+strong water defences of the rebel city on the south made it
+unadvisable for them to take the direct route towards it. Their army
+descended the Trent to Torksey, where it rested the night of May 19.
+Early next day, the eve of Trinity Sunday, it marched in four "battles"
+to relieve Lincoln Castle.
+
+There were more than 600 knights besieging the castle and holding the
+town, and the relieving army only numbered 400 knights and 300
+cross-bowmen. But the barons dared not risk a combat that might have
+involved them in the fate of Stephen in 1141. They retreated within the
+city and allowed the marshal to open up communications with the castle.
+The marshal's plan of battle was arranged by Peter des Roches, who was
+more at home in the field than in the church. The cross-bowmen under
+Falkes de Bréauté were thrown into the castle, and joined with the
+garrison in making a sally from its east gate into the streets of the
+town. While the barons were thus distracted, the marshal burst through
+the badly defended north gate. The barons taken in front and flank
+fought desperately, but with no success. Falkes' cross-bowmen shot down
+their horses, and the dismounted knights soon failed to hold their own
+in the open ground about the cathedral. The Count of Perche was slain
+by a sword-thrust through the eyehole of his helmet. The royalists
+chased the barons down the steep lanes which connect the upper with the
+lower town. When they reached level ground the baronial troops rallied,
+and once more strove to reascend the hill. But the town was assailed on
+every side, and its land defences yielded with little difficulty. The
+Earl of Chester poured his vassals through one of the eastern gates,
+and took the barons in flank. Once more they broke, and this time they
+rallied not again, but fled through the Wigford suburb seeking any
+means of escape. Some obstruction in the Bar-gate, the southern exit
+from the city, retarded their flight, and many of the leaders were
+captured. The remnant fled to London, thinking that "every bush was
+full of marshals," and suffering severely from the hostility of the
+peasantry. Only three persons were slain in the battle, but there was a
+cruel massacre of the defenceless citizens after its close. So vast was
+the booty won by the victors that in scorn they called the fight the
+Fair of Lincoln![1]
+
+ [1] For a discussion of the battle, see _English Hist. Review_,
+ xviii. (1903), 240-65.
+
+Louis' prospects were still not desperate. The victorious army
+scattered, each man to his own house, so that the marshal was in no
+position to press matters to extremities. But there was a great rush to
+make terms with the victor, and Louis thought it prudent to abandon the
+hopeless siege of Dover, and take refuge with his partisans, the
+Londoners. Meanwhile the marshal hovered round London, hoping
+eventually to shut up the enemy in the capital. On June 12, the
+Archbishop of Tyre and three Cistercian abbots, who had come to England
+to preach the Crusade, persuaded both parties to accept provisional
+articles of peace. Louis stipulated for a complete amnesty to all his
+partisans; but the legate declined to grant pardon to the rebellious
+clerks who had refused to obey the interdict, conspicuous among whom
+was the firebrand Simon Langton, brother of the archbishop. Finding no
+compromise possible, Louis broke off the negotiations rather than
+abandon his friends. Gualo urged a siege of London, but the marshal saw
+that his resources were not adequate for such a step. Again many of his
+followers went home, and the court abode first at Oxford and afterwards
+at Gloucester. It seemed as if the war might go on for ever.
+
+Blanche of Castile, Louis' wife, redoubled her efforts on his behalf. In
+response to her entreaties a hundred knights and several hundred
+men-at-arms took ship for England. Among the knights was the famous
+William des Barres, one of the heroes of Bouvines, and Theobald, Count
+of Blois. Eustace the Monk, a renegade clerk turned pirate, and a hero
+of later romance, took command of the fleet. On the eve of St.
+Bartholomew, August 23, Eustace sailed from Calais towards the mouth of
+the Thames. Kent had become royalist; the marshal and Hubert de Burgh
+held Sandwich, so that the long voyage up the Thames was the only way of
+taking succour to Louis. Next day the old earl remained on shore, but
+sent out Hubert with the fleet. The English let the French pass by,
+and then, manoeuvring for the weather gage, tacked and assailed them
+from behind.[1] The fight raged round the great ship of Eustace, on
+which the chief French knights were embarked. Laden with stores, horses,
+and a ponderous _trébuchet_, it was too low in the water to manoeuvre or
+escape. Hubert easily laid his own vessel alongside it. The English, who
+were better used to fighting at sea than the French, threw powdered lime
+into the faces of the enemy, swept the decks with their crossbow bolts
+and then boarded the ship, which was taken after a fierce fight. The
+crowd of cargo boats could offer little resistance as they beat up
+against the wind in their retreat to Calais; the ships containing the
+soldiers were more fortunate in escaping. Eustace was beheaded, and his
+head paraded on a pole through the streets of Canterbury.
+
+ [1] This successful attempt of the English fleet to manoeuvre
+ for the weather gage, that is to secure a position to the
+ windward of their opponents, is the first recorded instance of
+ what became the favourite tactics of British admirals. For the
+ legend of Eustace see _Witasse le Moine_, ed. Förster (1891).
+
+The battle of St. Bartholomew's Day, like that of Lincoln a triumph of
+skill over numbers, proved decisive for the fortunes of Louis. The
+English won absolute control of the narrow seas, and cut off from Louis
+all hope of fighting his way back to France. As soon as he heard of the
+defeat of Eustace, he reopened negotiations with the marshal. On the
+29th there was a meeting between Louis and the Earl at the gates of
+London. The regent had to check the ardour of his own partisans, and it
+was only after anxious days of deliberation that the party of
+moderation prevailed. On September 5 a formal conference was held on an
+island of the Thames near Kingston. On the 11th a definitive treaty was
+signed at the archbishop's house at Lambeth.
+
+The Treaty of Lambeth repeated with little alteration the terms
+rejected by Louis three months before. The French prince surrendered
+his castles, released his partisans from their oaths to him, and
+exhorted all his allies, including the King of Scots and the Prince of
+Gwynedd, to lay down their arms. In return Henry promised that no
+layman should lose his inheritance by reason of his adherence to Louis,
+and that the baronial prisoners should be released without further
+payment of ransom. London, despite its pertinacity in rebellion, was to
+retain its ancient franchises. The marshal bound himself personally to
+pay Louis 10,000 marks, nominally as expenses, really as a bribe to
+accept these terms. A few days later Louis and his French barons
+appeared before the legate, barefoot and in the white garb of
+penitents, and were reconciled to the Church. They were then escorted
+to Dover, whence they took ship for France. Only on the rebellious
+clergy did Gualo's wrath fall. The canons of St. Paul's were turned out
+in a body; ringleaders like Simon Langton were driven into exile, and
+agents of the legate traversed the country punishing clerks who had
+disregarded the interdict. But Honorius was more merciful than Gualo,
+and within a year even Simon received his pardon. The laymen of both
+camps forgot their differences, when Randolph of Chester and William of
+Ferrars fought in the crusade of Damietta, side by side with Saer of
+Winchester and Robert FitzWalter. The reconciliation of parties was
+further shown in the marriage of Hubert de Burgh to John's divorced
+wife, Isabella of Gloucester, a widow by the death of the Earl of
+Essex, and still the foremost English heiress. On November 6 the
+pacification was completed by the reissue of the Great Charter in what
+was substantially its final form. The forest clauses of the earlier
+issues were published in a much enlarged shape as a separate Forest
+Charter, which laid down the great principle that no man was to lose
+life or limb for hindering the king's hunting.
+
+It is tempting to regard the defeat of Louis as a triumph of English
+patriotism. But it is an anachronism to read the ideals of later ages
+into the doings of the men of the early thirteenth century. So far as
+there was national feeling in England, it was arrayed against Henry. To
+the last the most fervently English of the barons were steadfast on the
+French prince's side, and the triumph of the little king had largely
+been procured by John's foreigners. To contemporary eyes the rebels
+were factious assertors of class privileges and feudal immunities.
+Their revolt against their natural lord brought them into conflict with
+the sentiment of feudal duty which was still so strong in faithful
+minds. And against them was a stronger force than feudal loyally. From
+this religious standpoint the Canon of Barnwell best sums up the
+situation: "It was a miracle that the heir of France, who had won so
+large a part of the kingdom, was constrained to abandon the realm
+without hope of recovering it. It was because the hand of God was not
+with him. He came to England in spite of the prohibition of the Holy
+Roman Church, and he remained there regardless of its anathema."
+
+The young king never forgot that he owed his throne to the pope and his
+legate. "When we were bereft of our father in tender years," he declared
+long afterwards, "when our subjects were turned against us, it was our
+mother, the Holy Roman Church, that brought back our realm under our
+power, anointed us king, crowned us, and placed us on the throne."[1]
+The papacy, which had secured a new hold over England by its alliance
+with John, made its position permanent by its zeal for the rights of his
+son. By identifying the monarchy with the charters, it skilfully
+retraced the false step which it had taken. Under the ægis of the Roman
+see the national spirit grew, and the next generation was to see the
+temper fostered by Gualo in its turn grow impatient of the papal
+supremacy. It was Gualo, then, who secured the confirmation of the
+charters. Even Louis unconsciously worked in that direction, for, had he
+not gained so strong a hold on the country, there would have been no
+reason to adopt a policy of conciliation. We must not read the history
+of this generation in the light of modern times, or even with the eyes
+of Matthew Paris.
+
+ [1] Grosseteste, _Epistolæ_, p. 339.
+
+The marshal had before him a task essentially similar to that which
+Henry II had undertaken after the anarchy of Stephen's reign. It was
+with the utmost difficulty that the sum promised to Louis could be
+extracted from the war-stricken and famished tillers of the soil. The
+exchequer was so empty that the Christmas court of the young king was
+celebrated at the expense of Falkes de Bréauté. Those who had fought
+for the king clamoured for grants and rewards, and it was necessary to
+humour them. For example, Randolph of Blundeville, with the earldom of
+Lincoln added to his Cheshire palatinate and his Lancashire Honour, had
+acquired a position nearly as strong as that of the Randolph of the
+reign of Stephen. "Adulterine castles" had grown up in such numbers
+that the new issue of the Charter insisted upon their destruction. Even
+the lawful castles were held by unauthorised custodians, who refused to
+yield them up to the king's officers. Though Alexander, King of Scots,
+purchased his reconciliation with Rome by abandoning Carlisle and
+performing homage to Henry, the Welsh remained recalcitrant. One
+chieftain, Morgan of Caerleon, waged war against the marshal in Gwent,
+and was dislodged with difficulty. During the war Llewelyn ap Iorwerth
+conquered Cardigan and Carmarthen from the marchers, and it was only
+after receiving assurances that he might retain these districts so long
+as the king's minority lasted that he condescended to do homage at
+Worcester in March, 1218.
+
+In the following May Stephen Langton came back from exile and threw the
+weight of his judgment on the regent's side. Gradually the worst
+difficulties were surmounted. The administrative machinery once more
+became effective. A new seal was cast for the king, whose documents had
+hitherto been stamped with the seal of the regent. Order was so far
+restored that Gualo returned to Italy. He was a man of high character
+and noble aims, caring little for personal advancement, and curbing his
+hot zeal against "schismatics" in his desire to restore peace to
+England. His memory is still commemorated in his great church of St.
+Andrew, at Vercelli, erected, it may be, with the proceeds of his
+English benefices, and still preserving the manuscript of legends of
+its patron saint, which its founder had sent thither from his exile.
+
+At Candlemas, 1219, the aged regent was smitten with a mortal illness.
+His followers bore him up the Thames from London to his manor of
+Caversham, where his last hours were disturbed by the intrigues of
+Peter of Winchester for his succession, and the importunity of selfish
+clerks, clamouring for grants to their churches. He died on May 14,
+clad in the habit of the Knights of the Temple, in whose new church in
+London his body was buried, and where his effigy may still be seen. The
+landless younger son of a poor baron, he had supported himself in his
+youth by the spoils of the knights he had vanquished in the
+tournaments, where his successes gained him fame as the model of
+chivalry. The favour of Henry, the "young king," gave him political
+importance, and his marriage with Strongbow's daughter made him a
+mighty man in England, Ireland, Wales, and Normandy. Strenuous and
+upright, simple and dignified, the young soldier of fortune bore easily
+the weight of office and honour which accrued to him before the death
+of his first patron. Limited as was his outlook, he gave himself
+entirely to his master-principle of loyally to the feudal lord whom he
+had sworn to obey. This simple conception enabled him to subordinate
+his interests as a marcher potentate to his duty to the English
+monarchy. It guided him in his difficult work of serving with unbending
+constancy a tyrant like John. It shone most clearly when in his old age
+he saved John's son from the consequences of his father's misdeeds. A
+happy accident has led to the discovery in our own days of the long
+poem, drawn up in commemoration of his career[1] at the
+instigation of his son. This important work has enabled us to enter
+into the marshal's character and spirit in much the same way as
+Joinville's _History of St. Louis_ has made us familiar with the
+motives and attributes of the great French king. They are the two men
+of the thirteenth century whom we know most intimately. It is well that
+the two characters thus portrayed at length represent to us so much of
+what is best in the chivalry, loyalty, statecraft, and piety of the
+Middle Ages.
+
+ [1] _Histoire de Guillaume le Maréchal_, published by P. Meyer
+ for the Soc. de l'histoire de France. Petit-Dutaillis, _Étude
+ sur Louis VIII._ (1894), and G.J. Turner, _Minority of Henry
+ III._, part i, in _Transactions of the Royal Hist. Soc._, new
+ ser., viii. (1904), 245-95, are the best modern commentaries on
+ the history of the marshal's regency.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE RULE OF HUBERT DE BURGH.
+
+
+William Marshal had recognized that the regency must end with him.
+"There is no land," he declared, "where the people are so divided as
+they are in England. Were I to hand over the king to one noble, the
+others would be jealous. For this reason I have determined to entrust
+him to God and the pope. No one can blame me for this, for, if the land
+is not defended by the pope, I know no one who can protect it." The
+fortunate absence of Randolph of Chester on crusade made it easy to
+carry out this plan. Accordingly the king of twelve years was supposed
+to be capable of acting for himself. But the ultimate authority resided
+with the new legate Pandulf, who, without any formal designation, was
+the real successor of the marshal. This arrangement naturally left
+great power to Peter des Roches, who continued to have the custody of
+the king's person, and to Hubert the justiciar, who henceforth acted as
+Pandulf's deputy. Next to them came the Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Langton's share in the struggle for the charters was so conspicuous,
+that we do not always remember that it was as a scholar and a
+theologian that he acquired his chief reputation among his
+contemporaries. On his return from exile he found such engrossing
+occupation in the business of his see, that he took little part in
+politics for several years. His self-effacement strengthened the
+position of the legate.
+
+Pandulf was no stranger to England. As subdeacon of the Roman Church he
+received John's submission in 1213, and stood by his side during nearly
+all his later troubles. He had been rewarded by his election to the
+bishopric of Norwich, but was recalled to Rome before his consecration,
+and only came back to England in the higher capacity of legate on
+December 3, 1218, after the recall of Gualo. He had been the cause of
+Langton's suspension, and there was probably no love lost between him
+and the archbishop. It was in order to avoid troublesome questions of
+jurisdiction that Pandulf, at the pope's suggestion, continued to
+postpone his consecration as bishop, since that act would have
+subordinated him to the Archbishop of Canterbury. But neither he nor
+Langton was disposed to push matters to extremities. Just as Peter des
+Roches balanced Hubert de Burgh, so the archbishop acted as a makeweight
+to the legate. When power was thus nicely equipoised, there was a
+natural tendency to avoid conflicting issues. In these circumstances the
+truce between parties, which had marked the regency, continued for the
+first years after Earl William's death. In all doubtful points the will
+of the legate seems to have prevailed. Pandulf's correspondence shows
+him interfering in every matter of state. He associated himself with the
+justiciar in the appointment of royal officials; he invoked the papal
+authority to put down "adulterine castles," and to prevent any baron
+having more than one royal stronghold in his custody; he prolonged the
+truce with France, and strove to pacify the Prince of North Wales; he
+procured the resumption of the royal domain, and rebuked Bishop Peter
+and the justiciar for remissness in dealing with Jewish usurers; he
+filled up bishoprics at his own discretion. Nor did he neglect his own
+interests; his kinsfolk found preferment in his English diocese, and he
+appropriated certain livings for the payment of his debts, "so far as
+could be done without offence". But in higher matters he pursued a wise
+policy. In recognising that the great interest of the Church was peace,
+he truly expressed the policy of the mild Honorius. For more than two
+years he kept Englishmen from flying at each other's throats. If they
+paid for peace by the continuance of foreign rule, it was better to be
+governed by Pandulf than pillaged by Falkes. The principal events of
+these years were due to papal initiative.[1] Honorius looked askance on
+the maimed rites of the Gloucester coronation, and ordered a new
+hallowing to take place at the accustomed place and with the accustomed
+ceremonies. This supplementary rite was celebrated at Westminster on
+Whitsunday, May 17, 1220. Though Pandulf was present, he discreetly
+permitted the Archbishop of Canterbury to crown Henry with the diadem of
+St. Edward. "This coronation," says the Canon of Barnwell, "was
+celebrated with such good order and such splendour that the oldest
+magnates who were present declared that they had seen none of the king's
+predecessors crowned with so much goodwill and tranquillity." Nor was
+this the only great ecclesiastical function of the year. On July 7
+Langton celebrated at Canterbury the translation of the relics of St.
+Thomas to a magnificent shrine at the back of the high altar. Again the
+legate gave precedence to the archbishop, and the presence of the young
+king, of the Archbishop of Reims, and the Primate of Hungary, gave
+distinction to the solemnity. It was a grand time for English saints.
+When Damietta was taken from the Mohammedans, the crusaders dedicated
+two of its churches to St. Thomas of Canterbury and St. Edmund the King.
+A new saint was added to the calendar, who, if not an Englishman, had
+done good work for the country of his adoption. In 1220 Honorius III.
+canonised Hugh of Avalon, the Carthusian Bishop of Lincoln, on the
+report of a commission presided over by Langton himself.
+
+ [1]: H.R. Luard, _On the Relations between England and Rome
+ during the Earlier Portion of the Reign of Henry III._ (1877),
+ illustrates papal influence at this period.
+
+No real unity of principle underlay the external tranquillity. As time
+went on Peter des Roches bitterly resented the growing preponderance of
+Hubert de Burgh. Not all the self-restraint of the legate could commend
+him to Langton, whose obstinate insistence upon his metropolitical
+authority forced Pandulf to procure bulls from Rome specifically
+releasing him from the jurisdiction of the primate. In these
+circumstances it was natural for Bishop Peter and the legate to join
+together against the justiciar and the archbishop. Finding that the
+legate was too strong for him, Langton betook himself to Rome, and
+remained there nearly a year. Before he went home he persuaded Honorius
+to promise not to confer the same benefice twice by papal provision,
+and to send no further legate to England during his lifetime. Pandulf
+was at once recalled, and left England in July, 1221, a month before
+his rival's return. He was compensated for the slight put upon him by
+receiving his long-deferred consecration to Norwich at the hands of the
+pope. There is small reason for believing that he was exceptionally
+greedy or unpopular. But his withdrawal removed an influence which had
+done its work for good, and was becoming a national danger. Langton
+henceforth could act as the real head of the English Church. In 1222,
+he held an important provincial council at Oseney abbey, near Oxford,
+where he issued constitutions, famous as the first provincial canons
+still recognised as binding in our ecclesiastical courts. He began once
+more to concern himself with affairs of state, and Hubert found him a
+sure ally. Bishop Peter, disgusted with his declining influence,
+welcomed his appointment as archbishop of the crusading Church at
+Damietta. He took the cross, and left England with Falkes de Bréauté as
+his companion. Learning that the crescent had driven the cross out of
+his new see, he contented himself with making the pilgrimage to
+Compostella, and soon found his way back to England, where he sought
+for opportunities to regain power.
+
+Relieved of the opposition of Bishop Peter, Hubert insisted on
+depriving barons of doubtful loyalty of the custody of royal castles,
+and found his chief opponent in William Earl of Albemarle. In dignity
+and possessions, Albemarle was not ill-qualified to be a feudal leader.
+The son of William de Fors, of Oléron, a Poitevin adventurer of the
+type of Falkes de Bréauté, he represented, through his mother, the line
+of the counts of Aumâle, who had since the Conquest ruled over
+Holderness from their castle at Skipsea. The family acquired the status
+of English earls under Stephen, retaining their foreign title,
+expressed in English in the form of Albemarle, being the first house of
+comital rank abroad to hold an earldom with a French name unassociated
+with any English shire. During the civil war Albemarle's
+tergiversations, which rivalled those of the Geoffrey de Mandeville of
+Stephen's time, had been rewarded by large grants from the victorious
+party. Since 1219 he suffered slight upon slight, and in 1220 was
+stripped of the custody of Rockingham Castle. Late in that year Hubert
+resolved to enforce an order, promulgated in 1217, which directed
+Albemarle to restore to his former subtenant Bytham Castle, in South
+Kesteven, of which he was overlord, and of which he had resumed
+possession on account of the treason of his vassal. The earl hurried
+away in indignation from the king's Christmas court, and in January,
+1221, threw himself into Bytham, eager to hold it by force against the
+king. For a brief space he ruled over the country-side after the
+fashion of a baron of Stephen's time. He plundered the neighbouring
+towns and churches, and filled the dungeons of Castle Bytham with
+captives. On the pretext of attending a council at Westminster he
+marched southwards, but his real motive was disclosed when he suddenly
+attacked the castle of Fotheringhay. His men crossed the moat on the
+ice, and, burning down the great gate, easily overpowered the scanty
+garrison. "As if he were the only ruler of the kingdom," says the Canon
+of Barnwell, "he sent letters signed with his seal to the mayors of the
+cities of England, granting his peace to all merchants engaged in
+plying their trades, and allowing them free licence of going and coming
+through his castles." Nothing in the annals of the time puts more
+clearly this revival of the old feudal custom that each baron should
+lord it as king over his own estates.
+
+Albemarle's power did not last long. He incurred the wrath of the
+Church, and both in Kesteven and in Northamptonshire set himself
+against the interests of Randolph of Chester. Before January was over
+Pandulf excommunicated him, and a great council granted a special
+scutage, "the scutage of Bytham," to equip an army to crush the rebel.
+Early in February a considerable force marched northwards against him.
+The Earl of Chester took part in the campaign, and both the legate and
+the king accompanied the army. Before the combined efforts of Church
+and State, Albemarle dared not hold his ground, and fled to Fountains,
+where he took sanctuary. His followers abandoned Fotheringhay, but
+stood a siege at Bytham. After six days this castle was captured on
+February 8. Even then secret sympathisers with Albemarle were able to
+exercise influence on his behalf, and Pandulf himself was willing to
+show mercy. The earl came out of sanctuary, and was pardoned on
+condition of taking the crusader's vow. No effort was made to insist on
+his going on crusade, and within a few months he was again in favour.
+"Thus," says Roger of Wendover, "the king set the worst of examples,
+and encouraged future rebellions." Randolph of Chester came out with
+the spoils of victory. He secured as the price of his ostentatious
+fidelity the custody of the Honour of Huntingdon, during the nonage of
+the earl, his nephew, John the Scot.
+
+A tumult in the capital soon taught Hubert that he had other foes to
+fight against besides the feudal party. At a wrestling match, held on
+July 25, 1222, between the city and the suburbs, the citizens won an
+easy victory. The tenants of the Abbot of Westminster challenged the
+conquerors to a fresh contest on August 1 at Westminster. But the
+abbot's men were more anxious for revenge than good sport, and seeing
+that the Londoners were likely to win, they violently broke up the
+match. Suspecting no evil, the citizens had come without arms, and were
+very severely handled by their rivals. Driven back behind their walls,
+the Londoners clamoured for vengeance. Serlo the mercer, their mayor, a
+prudent and peace-loving man, urged them to seek compensation of the
+abbot. But the citizens preferred the advice of Constantine FitzAthulf,
+who insisted upon an immediate attack on the men of Westminster. Next
+day the abbey precincts were invaded, and much mischief was done. The
+alarm was the greater because Constantine was a man of high position,
+who had recently been a sheriff of London, and had once been a
+strenuous supporter of Louis of France. It was rumoured that his
+followers had raised the cry, "Montjoie! Saint Denis!" The quarrels of
+neighbouring cities were as dangerous to sound rule as the feuds of
+rival barons, and Hubert took instant measures to put down the
+sedition. With the aid of Falkes de Bréauté's mercenaries, order was
+restored, and Constantine was led before the justiciar. Early next day
+Falkes assembled his forces, and crossed the river to Southwark. He
+took with him Constantine and two of his supporters, and hanged all
+three, without form of trial, before the city knew anything about it.
+Then Falkes and his soldiers rushed through the streets, capturing,
+mutilating, and frightening away the citizens. Constantine's houses and
+property were seized by the king. The weak Serlo was deposed from the
+mayoralty, and the city taken into the king's hands. It was the last
+time that Hubert and Falkes worked together, and something of the
+violence of the _condottiere_ captain sullied the justiciar's
+reputation. As the murderer of Constantine, Hubert was henceforth
+pursued with the undying hatred of the Londoners.
+
+During the next two years parties became clearly defined. Hubert more
+and more controlled the royal policy, and strove to strengthen both his
+master and himself by marriage alliances. Powerful husbands were sought
+for the king's three sisters. On June 19, 1221, Joan, Henry's second
+sister, was married to the young Alexander of Scotland, at York. At the
+same time Hubert, a widower by Isabella of Gloucester's death, wedded
+Alexander's elder sister, Margaret, a match which compensated the
+justiciar for his loss of Isabella's lands. Four years later, Isabella,
+the King of Scot's younger sister, was united with Roger Bigod, the
+young Earl of Norfolk, a grandson of the great William Marshal, whose
+eldest son and successor, William Marshal the younger, was in 1224
+married to the king's third sister, Eleanor. The policy of
+intermarriage between the royal family and the baronage was defended by
+the example of Philip Augustus in France, and on the ground of the
+danger to the royal interests if so strong a magnate as the earl
+marshal were enticed away from his allegiance by an alliance with a
+house unfriendly to Henry.[1]
+
+ [1] _Royal Letters_, i., 244-46.
+
+The futility of marriage alliances in modifying policy was already made
+clear by the attitude of Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, the husband of Henry's
+bastard sister Joan. This resourceful prince had already raised himself
+to a high position by a statecraft which lacked neither strength nor
+duplicity. Though fully conscious of his position as the champion of a
+proud nation, and, posing as the peer of the King of Scots, Llewelyn
+saw that it was his interest to continue the friendship with the
+baronial opposition which had profited him so greatly in the days of
+the French invasion. The pacification arranged in 1218 sat rightly upon
+him, and he plunged into a war with William Marshal the younger that
+desolated South Wales for several years. In 1219 Llewelyn devastated
+Pembrokeshire so cruelly that the marshal's losses were currently,
+though absurdly, reported to have exceeded the amount of the ransom of
+King Richard. There was much more fighting, but Llewelyn's progress was
+impeded by difficulties with his own son Griffith, and with the princes
+of South Wales, who bore impatiently the growing hold of the lord of
+Gwynedd upon the affections of southern Welshmen. There was war also in
+the middle march, where in 1220 a royal army was assembled against
+Llewelyn; but Pandulf negotiated a truce, and the only permanent result
+of this effort was the fortification of the castle and town at
+Montgomery, which had become royal demesne on the extinction of the
+ancient house of Bollers a few years earlier. But peace never lasted
+long west of the Severn, and in 1222 William Marshal drove Llewelyn out
+of Cardigan and Carmarthen. Again there were threats of war. Llewelyn
+was excommunicated, and his lands put under interdict. The marshal
+complained bitterly of the poor support which Henry gave him against
+the Welsh, but Hubert restored cordiality between him and the king. In
+these circumstances the policy of marrying Eleanor to the indignant
+marcher was a wise one. Llewelyn however could still look to the active
+friendship of Randolph of Chester. While the storm of war raged in
+South Wales, the march between Cheshire and Gwynedd enjoyed unwonted
+peace, and in 1223 a truce was patched up through Randolph's mediation.
+
+Earl Randolph needed the Welsh alliance the more because he definitely
+threw in his lot with the enemies of Hubert de Burgh. In April, 1223, a
+bull of Honorius III. declared Henry competent to govern in his own
+name, a change which resulted in a further strengthening of Hubert's
+power. Towards the end of the year Randolph joined with William of
+Albemarle, the Bishop of Winchester and Falkes de Bréauté, in an
+attempt to overthrow the justiciar. The discontented barons took arms
+and laid their grievances before the king. They wished, they said, no
+ill to king or kingdom, but simply desired to remove the justiciar from
+his counsels. Hot words passed between the indignant Hubert and Peter
+des Roches, and the conference broke up in confusion. The barons still
+remained mutinous, and, while the king held his Christmas court at
+Northampton, they celebrated the feast at Leicester. At last Langton
+persuaded both parties to come to an agreement on the basis of king's
+friends and barons alike surrendering their castles and wardships. This
+was a substantial victory for the party of order, and during the next
+few months much was done to transfer the castles to loyal hands.
+Randolph himself surrendered Shrewsbury and Bridgnorth.
+
+Comparative peace having been restored, and the judicial bench purged
+of feudal partisans, private persons ventured to complain of outrageous
+acts of "novel disseisin", or unlawful appropriation of men's lands. In
+the spring of 1224 the king's justices went throughout the country,
+hearing and deciding pleas of this sort. Sixteen acts of novel
+disseisin were proved against Falkes de Bréauté. Despite all the
+efforts of Langton and Hubert, that able adventurer, though stripped of
+some of his castles, fully maintained the position which he first
+acquired in the service of John. He was not the man to put up tamely
+with the piecemeal destruction of his power by legal process, and,
+backed up secretly by the feudal leaders, resolved to take the law into
+his own hands. One of the most active of the judges in hearing
+complaints against him was Henry of Braybrook. Falkes bade his brother,
+William de Bréauté fall upon the justice, who had been hearing suits at
+Dunstable, and take him prisoner. William faithfully fulfilled his
+brother's orders, and on June 17 the unlucky judge was safely shut up
+in a dungeon of Bedford Castle, of which William had the custody, as
+his brother's agent. So daring an outrage on the royal authority was
+worse than the action of William of Albemarle four years before. Hubert
+and the archbishop immediately took strong measures to enforce the
+sanctity of the law. While Langton excommunicated Falkes and his
+abettors, Hubert hastily turned against the traitor the forces which
+were assembling at Northampton with the object of reconquering Poitou.
+Braybrook was captured on Monday. On Thursday the royal troops besieged
+Bedford.
+
+The siege lasted from June 20 to August 14. The "noble castle of
+Bedford" was new, large, and fortified with an inner and outer baily,
+and two strong towers. Falkes trusted that it would hold out for a year,
+and had amply provided it with provisions and munitions of war. In
+effect, though William de Bréauté and his followers showed a gallant
+spirit, it resisted the justiciar for barely two months. When called
+upon to surrender the garrison answered that they would only yield at
+their lord's orders, and that the more as they were not bound to the
+king by homage or fealty. Nothing was left but a fight to the death. The
+royalists made strenuous efforts. A new scutage, the "scutage of
+Bedford," was imposed on the realm. Meanwhile Falkes fled to his
+accomplice, the Earl of Chester, and afterwards took refuge with
+Llewelyn. But the adventurer found such cold comfort from the great men
+who had lured him to his ruin that he perforce made his way back to
+England, along with a motley band of followers, English and French,
+Scottish and Welsh.[1] A hue and cry was raised after him, and, like
+William of Albemarle, he was forced to throw himself into sanctuary,
+while Randolph of Chester openly joined the besiegers of Bedford. In his
+refuge in a church at Coventry, Falkes was persuaded to surrender to the
+bishop of the diocese, who handed him over to Langton.
+
+ [1] The names of his _familia_ taken with him are in _Patent
+ Rolls of Henry III._, 1216-1227, pp. 461-62.
+
+During Falkes's wanderings his brother had been struggling valiantly
+against overwhelming odds. _Petrariae_ and mangonels threw huge stones
+into the castle, and effected breaches in keep and curtain. Miners
+undermined the walls, while over-against the stronghold two lofty
+structures of wood were raised, from which the crossbowmen, who manned
+them, were able to command the whole of the interior. At last the
+castle was captured in four successive assaults. In the first the
+barbican was taken; in the next the outer baily was stormed; in the
+third the interior baily was won; and in the last the keep was split
+asunder. The garrison then allowed the women and captives, including
+the wife of Falkes and the unlucky Braybrook, to make their way to the
+enemies' lines. Next day the defenders themselves surrendered. The only
+mercy shown to these gallant men was that they were allowed to make
+their peace with the Church before their execution. Of the eighty
+prisoners, three Templars alone were spared.
+
+Falkes threw himself upon the king's mercy, appealing to his former
+services to Henry and his father. He surrendered to the King the large
+sums of money which he had deposited with his bankers, the Templars of
+London, and ordered his castellans in Plympton and the other
+west-country castles of his wife to open their gates to the royal
+officers. In return for these concessions he was released from
+excommunication. His life was spared, but his property was confiscated,
+and he was ordered to abjure the realm. Even his wife deserted him,
+protesting that she had been forced to marry him against her will. On
+October 26 he received letters of safe conduct to go beyond sea. As he
+left England, he protested that he had been instigated by the English
+magnates in all that he had done. On landing at Fécamp he was detained
+by his old enemy Louis, then, by his father's death, King of France.
+But Louis VIII. was the last man to bear old grudges against the Norman
+adventurer, especially as Falkes's rising had enabled him to capture
+the chief towns of Poitou.
+
+Even in his exile Falkes was still able to do mischief. He obtained his
+release from Louis' prison about Easter, 1225, on the pretence of going
+on crusade. He then made his way to Rome where he strove to excite the
+sympathy of Honorius III., by presenting an artful memorial, which
+throws a flood of light upon his character, motives, and hopes.
+Honorius earnestly pleaded for his restitution, but Hubert and Langton
+stood firm against him. They urged that the pope had been misinformed,
+and declined to recall the exile. Honorius sent his chaplain Otto to
+England, but the nuncio found it impossible to modify the policy of the
+advisers of the king. Falkes went back from Italy to Troyes, where he
+waited for a year in the hope that his sentence would be reversed. At
+last Otto gave up his cause in despair, and devoted himself to the more
+profitable work of exacting money from the English clergy. Falkes died
+in 1226. With him disappears from our history the lawless spirit which
+had troubled the land since the war between John and his barons. The
+foreign adventurers, of whom he was the chief, either went back in
+disgust to their native lands, or, like Peter de Mauley, became loyal
+subjects and the progenitors of a harmless stock of English barons. The
+ten years of storm and stress were over. The administration was once
+more in English hands, and Hubert enjoyed a few years of well-earned
+power.
+
+New difficulties at once arose. The defeat of the feudalists and their
+Welsh allies involved heavy special taxation, and the king's honour
+required that an effort should be made both to wrest Poitou from Louis
+VIII., and to strengthen the English hold over Gascony. Besides
+national obligations, clergy and laity alike were still called upon to
+contribute towards the cost of crusading enterprises, and in 1226 the
+papal nuncio, Otto, demanded that a large proportion of the revenues of
+the English clergy should be contributed to the papal coffers. To the
+Englishman of that age all extraordinary taxation was a grievance quite
+irrespective of its necessity. The double incidence of the royal and
+papal demands was met by protests which showed some tendency towards
+the splitting up of the victorious side into parties. It was still easy
+for all to unite against Otto, and the papal agent was forced to go
+home empty handed, for councils both of clergy and barons agreed to
+reject his demands. Whatever other nations might offer to the pope,
+argued the magnates, the realms of England and Ireland at least had a
+right to be freed from such impositions by reason of the tribute which
+John had agreed to pay to Innocent III. The demand of the king's
+ministers for a fifteenth to prosecute the war with France was
+reluctantly conceded, but only on the condition of a fresh confirmation
+of the charters in a form intended to bring home to the king his
+personal obligation to observe them. Hubert de Burgh, however, was no
+enthusiast for the charters. His standpoint was that of the officials
+of the age of Henry II. To him the re-establishment of order meant the
+restoration of the prerogative. There he parted company with the
+archbishop, who was an eager upholder of the charters, for which he was
+so largely responsible. The struggle against the foreigner was to be
+succeeded by a struggle for the charters.
+
+In January, 1227, a council met at Oxford. The king, then nearly twenty
+years old, declared that he would govern the country himself, and
+renounced the tutelage of the Bishop of Winchester. Henry gave himself
+over completely to the justiciar, whom he rewarded for his faithful
+service by making him Earl of Kent. In deep disgust Bishop Peter left
+the court to carry out his long-deferred crusading vows. For four years
+he was absent in Palestine, where his military talents had ample scope
+as one of the leaders of Frederick II.'s army, while his diplomatic
+skill sought, with less result, to preserve some sort of relations
+between the excommunicated emperor and the new pope, Gregory IX., who
+in this same year succeeded Honorius. In April Gregory renewed the bull
+of 1223 in which his predecessor recognised Henry's competence to
+govern.
+
+Thus ended the first minority since the Conquest. The successful
+restoration of law and order when the king was a child, showed that a
+strong king was not absolutely necessary for good government. From the
+exercise of royal authority by ministers without the personal
+intervention of the monarch arose the ideas of limited monarchy, the
+responsibility of the official, and the constitutional rights of the
+baronial council to appoint ministers and control the administration.
+We also discern, almost for the first time, the action of an inner
+ministerial council which was ultimately to develop into the _consilium
+ordinarium_ of a later age.
+
+No sudden changes attended the royal majority. Those who had persuaded
+Henry to dismiss Bishop Peter had no policy beyond getting rid of a
+hated rival. The new Earl of Kent continued to hold office as justiciar
+for five years, and his ascendency is even more marked in the years
+1227 to 1232 than it had been between 1224 and 1227. Hubert still found
+the task of ruling England by no means easy. With the mitigation of
+home troubles foreign affairs assumed greater importance, and England's
+difficulties with France, the efforts to establish cordial relations
+with the empire, the ever-increasing aggressions of Llewelyn of Wales,
+and the chronic troubles of Ireland, involved the country in large
+expenses with little compensating advantage. Not less uneasy were the
+results of the growing encroachments of the papacy and the increasing
+inability of the English clergy to face them. Papal taxation, added to
+the burden of national taxation, induced discontent that found a ready
+scapegoat in the justiciar. The old and the new baronial opposition
+combined to denounce Hubert as the true cause of all evils. The
+increasing personal influence of the young king complicated the
+situation. In his efforts to deal with all these problems Hubert became
+involved in the storm of obloquy which finally brought about his fall.
+
+At the accession of Henry III., the truce for five years concluded
+between his father and Philip Augustus on September 18, 1214, had still
+three years to run. The expedition of Louis to England might well seem
+to have broken it, but the prudent disavowal by Philip II. of his son's
+sacrilegious enterprise made it a point of policy for the French King
+to regard it as still in force, and neither John nor the earl marshal
+had a mind to face the enmity of the father as well as the invasion of
+the son. Accordingly the truce ran out its full time, and in 1220
+Honorius III., ever zealous for peace between Christian sovereigns,
+procured its prolongation for four years. Before this had expired, the
+accession of Louis VIII. in 1223 raised the old enemy of King Henry to
+the throne of France. Louis still coveted the English throne, and
+desired to complete the conquest of Henry's French dominions in France.
+His accession soon involved England in a new struggle, luckily delayed
+until the worst of the disorders at home had been overcome.
+
+Peace was impossible because Louis, like Philip, regarded the
+forfeiture of John as absolute, and as involving the right to deny to
+Henry III. a legitimate title to any of his lands beyond sea. Henry, on
+the other hand, was still styled Duke of Normandy, Count of Anjou,
+Count of Poitou, and Duke of Aquitaine. Claiming all that his father
+had held, he refused homage to Philip or Louis for such French lands as
+he actually possessed. For the first time since the Conquest, an
+English king ruled over extensive French territories without any feudal
+subjection to the King of France. However, Henry's French lands, though
+still considerable, were but a shadow of those once ruled by his
+father. Philip had conquered all Normandy, save the Channel Islands,
+and also the whole of Anjou and Touraine. For a time he also gained
+possession of Poitou, but before his death nearly the whole of that
+region had slipped from his grasp. Poitiers, alone of its great towns,
+remained in French hands. For the rest, both the barons and cities of
+Poitou acknowledged the over-lordship of their English count. Too much
+importance must not be ascribed to this revival of the English power.
+Henry claimed very little domain in Poitou, which practically was
+divided between the feudal nobles and the great communes. So long as
+they maintained a virtual freedom, they were indifferent as to their
+overlord. If they easily transferred their allegiance from Philip to
+Henry, it was because the weakness of absentee counts was less to be
+dreaded than the strength of a monarch near at hand. Meanwhile the
+barons carried on their feuds one against the other, and all alike
+joined in oppressing the townsmen.
+
+During Henry's minority the crown was not strong enough to deal with
+the unruly Foitevins. Seneschals quickly succeeded each other; the
+barons expected the office to be filled by one of their own order, and
+the towns, jealous of hostile neighbours, demanded the appointment of
+an Englishman. At last, in 1221, Savary de Mauléon, one of King John's
+mercenaries, a poet, and a crusader against infidels and Albigenses,
+was made seneschal. His English estates ensured some measure of
+fidelity, and his energy and experience were guarantees of his
+competence, though, as a younger member of the great house of Thouars,
+he belonged by birth to the inner circle of the Poitevin nobility,
+whose treachery, levity, and self-seeking were proverbial. The powerful
+Viscounts of Thouars were constantly kept in check by their traditional
+enemies the Counts of La Marche, whose representative, Hugh of
+Lusignan, was by far the strongest of the local barons. His cousin, and
+sometime betrothed, Isabella, Countess of Angoulême, the widow of King
+John, had left England to resume the administration of her dominions.
+Early in 1220 she married Hugh, justifying herself to her son on the
+ground that it would be dangerous to his interests if the Count of La
+Marche should contract an alliance with the French party. But this was
+mere excuse. The union of La Marche and Angoulême largely increased
+Count Hugh's power, and he showed perfect impartiality in pursuing his
+own interests by holding a balance between his stepson and the King of
+France. Against him neither Savary nor the Poitevin communes could
+contend with success. The anarchy of Poitou was an irresistible
+temptation to Louis VII. "Know you," he wrote to the men of Limoges,
+"that John, king of England, was deprived by the unanimous judgment of
+his peers of all the lands which he held of our father Philip. We have
+now received in inheritance all our father's rights, and require you to
+perform the service that you owe us." While the English government
+weakly negotiated for the prolongation of the truce, and for the pope's
+intervention, Louis concluded treaties with the Poitevin barons, and
+made ready an army to conquer his inheritance. Foremost among his local
+partisans appeared Henry's stepfather.
+
+The French army met at Tours on June 24, 1224, and marched through
+Thouars to La Rochelle, the strongest of the Poitevin towns, and the
+most devoted to England. On the way Louis forced Savary de Mauléon to
+yield up Niort, and to promise to defend no other place than La
+Rochelle, before which city he sat down on July 15. At first Savary
+resisted vigorously. The siege of Bedford, however, prevented the
+despatch of effective help from England, and Savary was perhaps already
+secretly won over by Louis. Be this as it may, the town surrendered on
+August 3, and with it went all Aquitaine north of the Dordogne. Savary
+took service with the conqueror, and was made warden of La Rochelle and
+of the adjacent coasts, while Lusignan received the reward of his
+treachery in a grant of the Isle of Oléron. When Louis returned to the
+north, the Count of La Marche undertook the conquest of Gascony. He
+soon made himself master of St. Emilion, and of the whole of Périgord.
+The surrender of La Réole opened up the passage of the Garonne, and the
+capture of Bazas gave the French a foothold to the south of that river.
+Only the people of Bordeaux showed any spirit in resisting Hugh. But
+their resistance proved sufficient, and he withdrew baffled before
+their walls.
+
+The easiness of Louis' conquests showed their instability. "I am sure,"
+wrote one of Henry's officers, "that you can easily recover all that you
+have lost, if you send speedy succour to these regions." After the
+capture of Bedford, Hubert undertook the recovery of Poitou and the
+defence of Gascony. Henry's younger brother Richard, a youth of sixteen,
+was appointed Earl of Cornwall and Count of Poitou, dubbed knight by his
+brother, and put in nominal command of the expedition despatched to
+Gascony in March, 1225. His experienced uncle, William Longsword, Earl
+of Salisbury, and Philip of Aubigny, were sent with him as his chief
+counsellors. Received with open arms by Bordeaux, he boasted on May 2
+that he had conquered all Gascony, save La Réole, and had received the
+allegiance of every Gascon noble, except Elie Rudel, the lord of
+Bergerac. The siege of La Réole, the only serious military operation of
+the campaign, occupied Richard all the summer and autumn, and it was not
+until November 13 that the burgesses opened their gates. As soon as the
+French had retired, the lord of Bergerac, "after the fashion of the
+Poitevins," renounced Louis and professed himself the liegeman of Earl
+Richard. Then the worst trouble was that Savary de Mauléon's ships
+commanded the Bay of Biscay, and rendered communication between Bordeaux
+and England very difficult.[1] Once more the men of the Cinque Ports
+came to the king's aid, and there was severe fighting at sea, involving
+much plunder of merchant vessels and dislocation of trade.
+
+ [1] The names of his _familia_ taken with him are in _Patent
+ Rolls of Henry III._, 1216-1227, pp. 461-62.
+
+The English sought to supplement their military successes by diplomacy.
+Richard of Cornwall made an alliance with the counts of Auvergne, and
+the home administration negotiated with all possible enemies of the
+French King. A proposal to affiance Henry's sister, Isabella, to Henry,
+King of the Romans, the infant son of Frederick II., led to no results,
+for the Archbishop of Cologne, the chief upholder of the scheme in
+Germany, was murdered, and the young king found a bride in Austria. Yet
+the project counteracted the negotiations set on foot by Louis to
+secure Frederick II. for his own side, and induced the Emperor to take
+up a position of neutrality. An impostor appeared in Flanders who gave
+out that he was the old Count Baldwin, sometime Latin Emperor of the
+East, who had died in prison in Bulgaria twenty years before. Baldwin's
+daughter, Joan, appealed to Louis for support against the false
+Baldwin, whereupon Henry recognised his claims and sought his alliance.
+Nothing but the capture and execution of the impostor prevented Henry
+from effecting a powerful diversion in Flanders. Peter Mauclerc, Count
+of Brittany, was won over by an offer of restitution to his earldom of
+Richmond, and by a promise that Henry would marry his daughter Iolande.
+Intrigues were entered into with the discontented Norman nobles, and
+the pope was importuned to save Henry from French assaults at the same
+moment that the king made a treaty of alliance with his first cousin,
+the heretical Raymond VII. of Toulouse. Honorius gave his ward little
+save sympathy and good advice. His special wish was to induce Louis to
+lead a French expedition into Languedoc against the Albigensian
+heretics. As soon as Louis resolved on this, the pope sought to prevent
+Henry from entering into unholy alliance with Raymond. It was the
+crusade of 1226, not the good-will of the Pope or the fine-drawn
+English negotiations, which gave Gascony a short respite. Louis VIII.
+died on November 8 in the course of his expedition, and the Capetian
+monarchy became less dangerous during the troubles of a minority, in
+which his widow, Blanche, strove as regent to uphold the throne of
+their little son, Louis IX.
+
+The first months of Louis IX.'s reign showed how unstable was any
+edifice built upon the support of the treacherous lords of Poitou.
+Within six weeks of Louis VIII.'s death, Hugh of Lusignan, the viscount
+of Thouars, Savary de Mauléon, and many other Poitevin barons,
+concluded treaties with Richard of Cornwall, by which in return for
+lavish concessions they went back to the English obedience. In the
+spring of 1227, however, the appearance of a French army south of the
+Loire caused these same lords to make fresh treaties with Blanche.
+Peter of Brittany also became friendly with the French regent, and gave
+up his daughter's English marriage. With allies so shifty, further
+dealings seemed hopeless. Before Easter, Richard patched up a truce and
+went home in disgust. The Capetians lost Poitou, but Henry failed to
+take advantage of his rival's weakness, and the real masters of the
+situation were the local barons. Fifteen more years were to elapse
+before the definitive French conquest of Poitou.
+
+During the next three years the good understanding between the Bretons,
+the Poitevins, and the regent Blanche came to an end, and the progress
+of the feudal reaction against the rule of the young King of France
+once more excited hopes of improving Henry's position in south-western
+France. Henry III. was eager to win back his inheritance, though Hubert
+de Burgh had little faith in Poitevin promises, and, conscious of his
+king's weakness, managed to prolong the truce, until July 22, 1229.
+Three months before that, Blanche succeeded in forcing the unfortunate
+Raymond VII. to accept the humiliating treaty of Meaux, which assured
+the succession to his dominions to her second son Alfonse, who was to
+marry his daughter and heiress, Joan. The barons of the north and west
+were not yet defeated, and once more appealed to Henry to come to their
+aid. Accordingly, the English king summoned his vassals to Portsmouth
+on October 15 for a French campaign. When Henry went down to Portsmouth
+he found that there were not enough ships to convey his troops over
+sea. Thereupon he passionately denounced the justiciar as an "old
+traitor," and accused him of being bribed by the French queen. Nothing
+but the intervention of Randolph of Chester, Hubert's persistent enemy,
+put an end to the undignified scene.
+
+Count Peter of Brittany, who arrived at Portsmouth on the 9th, did
+homage to Henry as King of France, and received the earldom of Richmond
+and the title of Duke of Brittany which he had long coveted, but which
+the French government refused to recognise. He persuaded Henry to
+postpone the expedition until the following spring. When that time came
+Henry appointed Ralph Neville, the chancellor, and Stephen Segrave, a
+rising judge, as wardens of England, and on May 1, 1230, set sail from
+Portsmouth. It was the first time since 1213 that an English king had
+crossed the seas at the head of an army, and every effort was made to
+equip a sufficient force. Hubert the justiciar, Randolph of Chester,
+William the marshal, and most of the great barons personally shared in
+the expedition, and the ports of the Channel, the North Sea, and the
+Bay of Biscay were ransacked to provide adequate shipping. Many Norman
+vessels served as transports, apparently of their owners' free-will.
+
+On May 3 Henry landed at St. Malo, and thence proceeded to Dinan, the
+meeting-place assigned for his army, the greater part of which landed at
+Port Blanc, a little north of Tréguier. Peter Mauclerc joined him, and a
+plan of operations was discussed. The moment was favourable, for a great
+number of the French magnates were engaged in war against Theobald, the
+poet-count of Champagne, and the French army, which was assembled at
+Angers, represented but a fraction of the military strength of the land.
+Fulk Paynel, a Norman baron who wished to revive the independence of the
+duchy, urged Henry to invade Normandy. Hubert successfully withstood
+this rash proposal, and also Fulk's fatal suggestion that Henry should
+divide his army and send two hundred knights for the invasion of
+Normandy. Before long the English marched through Brittany to Nantes,
+where they wasted six weeks. At last, on the advice of Hubert, they
+journeyed south into Poitou. The innate Poitevin instability had again
+brought round the Lusignans, the house of Thouars, and their kind to the
+French side, and Henry found that his own mother did her best to
+obstruct his progress. He was too strong to make open resistance safe,
+and his long progress from Nantes to Bordeaux was only once checked by
+the need to fight his way. This opposition came from the little town and
+castle of Mirambeau, situated in Upper Saintonge, rather more than
+half-way between Saintes and Blaye.[1] From July 21 to 30 Mirambeau
+stoutly held out, but Henry's army was reinforced by the chivalry of
+Gascony, and by a siege-train borrowed from Bordeaux and the loyal lords
+of the Garonne. Against such appliances of warfare Mirambeau could not
+long resist. On its capitulation Henry pushed on to Bordeaux.
+
+ [1] E. Berger, _Bibl. Ecole des Chartes_, 1893, _pp. 35-36_,
+ shows that Mirambeau, not Mirebeau, was besieged by Henry; see
+ also his _Blanche de Castille_ (1895).
+
+Useless as the march through Poitou had been, it was then repeated in
+the reverse way. With scarcely a week's rest, Henry left the Gascon
+capital on August 10, and on September 15 ended his inglorious campaign
+at Nantes. Although he was unable to assert himself against the
+faithless Poitevins, the barons of the province were equally impotent
+to make head against him. On reaching Brittany, Hubert once more
+stopped further military efforts. After a few days' rest at Nantes,
+Henry made his way by slow stages through the heart of Brittany. It was
+said that his army had no better occupation than teaching the local
+nobles to drink deep after the English fashion. The King had wasted all
+his treasure, and the poorer knights were compelled to sell or pawn
+their horses and arms to support themselves. The farce ended when the
+King sailed from St. Pol de Leon, and late in October landed at
+Portsmouth. He left a portion of his followers in Brittany, under the
+Earls of Chester and Pembroke. Randolph himself, as a former husband of
+Constance of Brittany, had claims to certain dower lands which
+appertained to Count Peter's mother-in-law. He was put in possession of
+St. James de Beuvron, and thence he raided Normandy and Anjou. By this
+time the coalition against the count of Champagne had broken down, and
+Blanche was again triumphant. It was useless to continue a struggle so
+expensive and disastrous, and on July 4, 1231, a truce for three years
+was concluded between France, Brittany, and England. Peter des Roches,
+then returning through France from his crusade, took an active part in
+negotiating the treaty. Just as the king was disposed to make the
+justiciar the scapegoat of his failure, Hubert's old enemy appeared
+once more upon the scene. The responsibility for blundering must be
+divided among the English magnates, and not ascribed solely to their
+monarch. If Hubert saved Henry from reckless adventures, he certainly
+deserves a large share of the blame for the Poitevin fiasco.
+
+The grave situation at home showed the folly of this untimely revival
+of an active foreign policy. The same years that saw the collapse of
+Henry's hopes in Normandy and Poitou, witnessed troubles both in
+Ireland and in Wales. In both these regions the house of the Marshals
+was a menace to the neighbouring chieftains, and Hugh de Lacy, Earl of
+Ulster, and Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, made common cause against it and
+vigorously attacked their rivals both in Leinster and in South Wales.
+Nor was this the only disturbance. The summons of the Norman chieftains
+of Ireland to Poitou gave the king of Connaught a chance of attacking
+the justiciar of Ireland, Geoffrey Marsh, who ultimately drove the
+Irish back with severe loss. Llewelyn was again as active and hostile
+as ever. Irritated by the growing strength of the new royal castle of
+Montgomery, he laid siege to it in 1228. Hubert de Burgh, then
+castellan of Montgomery, could only save his castle by summoning the
+levies of the kingdom. At their head Hubert went in person to hold the
+field against Llewelyn, taking the king with him. The Welsh withdrew as
+usual before a regular army, and Hubert and the king, late in
+September, marched a few miles westwards of Montgomery to the vale of
+Kerry, where they erected a castle. But Llewelyn soon made the English
+position in Kerry untenable. Many of the English lords were secretly in
+league with him, and the army suffered severely from lack of food. In
+the fighting that ensued the Welsh got the better of the English,
+taking prisoner William de Braose, the heir of Builth, and one of the
+greatest of the marcher lords. At last king and justiciar were glad to
+agree to demolish the new castle on receiving from Llewelyn the
+expenses involved in the task. The dismantled ruin was called "Hubert's
+folly". "And then," boasts the Welsh chronicler, "the king returned to
+England with shame."
+
+In 1230 Llewelyn inflicted another slight upon his overlord. William de
+Braose long remained the Welsh prince's captive, and only purchased his
+liberty by agreeing to wed his daughter to Llewelyn's son, and
+surrendering Builth as her marriage portion. The captive had employed
+his leisure in winning the love of Llewelyn's wife, Joan, Henry's
+half-sister. At Easter, Llewelyn took a drastic revenge on the
+adulterer. He seized William in his own castle at Builth, and on May 2
+hanged him on a tree in open day in the presence of 900 witnesses.
+Finding that neither the king nor the marchers moved a finger to avenge
+the outrage done to sister and comrade, Llewelyn took the aggressive in
+regions which had hitherto been comparatively exempt from his assaults.
+In 1231 he laid his heavy hand on all South Wales, burning down
+churches full of women, as the English believed, and signalling out for
+special attack the marshal's lands in Gwent and Pembroke. Once more the
+king penetrated with his barons into Mid Wales, while the pope and
+archbishop excommunicated Llewelyn and put his lands under interdict.
+Yet neither temporal nor spiritual arms were of avail against the
+Welshman. Henry's only exploit in this, his second Welsh campaign, was
+to rebuild Maud's Castle in stone. He withdrew, and in December agreed
+to conclude a three years' truce, and procure Llewelyn's absolution.
+Hubert once more bore the blame of his master's failure.
+
+On July 9, 1228, Stephen Langton died. Despite their differences as to
+the execution of the charters, his removal lost the justiciar a
+much-needed friend. Affairs were made worse by the unteachable folly of
+the monks of Christ Church. Regardless of the severe warning which they
+had received in the storms that preceded the establishment of Langton's
+authority, the chapter forthwith proceeded to the election of their
+brother monk, Walter of Eynsham. The archbishop-elect was an ignorant
+old monk of weak health and doubtful antecedents, and Gregory IX.
+wisely refused to confirm the election. On the recommendation of the
+king and the bishops, Gregory himself appointed as archbishop Richard,
+chancellor of Lincoln, an eloquent and learned secular priest of
+handsome person, whose nickname of "le Grand" was due to his tall
+stature. The first Archbishop of Canterbury since the Conquest directly
+nominated by the pope--for even in Langton's case there was a form of
+election--Richard le Grand at once began to quarrel with the justiciar,
+demanding that he should surrender the custody of Tunbridge castle on
+the ground of some ancient claim of the see of Canterbury. Failing to
+obtain redress in England, Richard betook himself to Rome in the spring
+of 1231. There he regaled the pope's ears with the offences of Hubert,
+and of the worldly bishops who were his tools. In August, Richard's
+death in Italy left the Church of Canterbury for three years without a
+pastor.
+
+While Gregory IX. did more to help Henry against Louis than Honorius
+III., the inflexible character and lofty hierarchical ideals of this
+nephew of Innocent III. made his hand heavier on the English Church
+than that of his predecessor. Above all, Gregory's expenses in pursuing
+his quarrel with Frederick II. made the wealth of the English Church a
+sore temptation to him. With his imposition of a tax of one-tenth on
+all clerical property to defray the expenses of the crusade against the
+emperor, papal taxation in England takes a newer and severer phase. The
+rigour with which Master Stephen, the pope's collector, extorted the
+tax was bitterly resented. Not less loud was the complaint against the
+increasing numbers of foreign ecclesiastics forced into English
+benefices by papal authority, and without regard for the rights of the
+lawful patrons and electors. A league of aggrieved tax-payers and
+patrons was formed against the Roman agents. At Eastertide, 1232, bands
+of men, headed by a knight named Robert Twenge, who took the nickname
+of William Wither, despoiled the Romans of their gains, and distributed
+the proceeds to the poor. These doings were the more formidable from
+their excellent organisation, and the strong sympathy everywhere
+extended to them. Hubert, who hated foreign interference, did nothing
+to stop Twenge and his followers. His inaction further precipitated his
+ruin. Archbishop Richard had already poisoned the pope's mind against
+him, and his suspected connivance with the anti-Roman movement
+completed his disfavour. Bitter letters of complaint arrived in England
+denouncing the outrages inflicted on the friends of the apostolic see.
+It is hard to dissociate the pope's feeling in this matter from his
+rejection of the nomination of the king's chancellor, Ralph Neville,
+Bishop of Chichester, to the see of Canterbury, as an illiterate
+politician.
+
+The dislike of the taxes made necessary by the Welsh and French wars,
+such as the "scutage of Poitou" and the "scutage of Kerry," swelled the
+outcry against the justiciar. So far back as 1227 advantage had been
+taken of Henry's majority to exact large sums of money for the
+confirmation of all charters sealed during his nonage. The barons made
+it a grievance that his brother Richard was ill-provided for, and a
+rising in 1227 extorted a further provision for him from what was
+regarded as the niggardliness of the justiciar. Nor did Hubert, with
+all his rugged honesty, neglect his own interests. He secured for
+himself lucrative wardships, such as the custody for the second time of
+the great Gloucester earldom, and of several castles, including the not
+very profitable charge of Montgomery, and the important governorship of
+Dover. On the very eve of his downfall he was made justice of Ireland.
+His brother was bishop of Ely, and other kinsmen were promoted to high
+posts. He was satisfied that he spent all that he got in the King's
+service, in promoting the interests of the kingdom, but his enemies
+regarded him as unduly tenacious of wealth and office. All classes
+alike grew disgusted with the justiciar. The restoration of the malign
+influence of Peter of Winchester completed his ruin. The king greedily
+listened to the complaints of his old guardian against the minister who
+overshadowed the royal power. At last, on July 29, 1232, Henry plucked
+up courage to dismiss him.
+
+With Hubert's fall ends the second period of Henry's reign. William
+Marshal expelled the armed foreigner. Hubert restored the
+administration to English hands. Matthew Paris puts into the mouth of a
+poor smith who refused to fasten fetters on the fallen minister words
+which, though probably never spoken, describe with sufficient accuracy
+Hubert's place in history: "Is he not that most faithful Hubert who so
+often saved England from the devastation of the foreigners and restored
+England to England?" Hubert was, as has been well said, perhaps the
+first minister since the Conquest who made patriotism a principle of
+policy, though it is easy in the light of later developments to read
+into his doings more than he really intended. But whatever his motives,
+the results of his action were clear. He drove away the mercenaries,
+humbled the feudal lords, and set limits to the pope's interference. He
+renewed respect for law and obedience to the law courts. Even in the
+worst days of anarchy the administrative system did not break down, and
+the records of royal orders and judicial judgments remain almost as
+full in the midst of the civil war as in the more peaceful days of
+Hubert's rule. But it was easy enough to issue proclamations and writs.
+The difficulty was to get them obeyed, and the work of Hubert was to
+ensure that the orders of king and ministers should really be respected
+by his subjects. He made many mistakes. He must share the blame of the
+failure of the Kerry campaign, and he was largely responsible for the
+sorry collapse of the invasion of Poitou. He neither understood nor
+sympathised with Stephen Langton's zeal for the charters. A
+straightforward, limited, honourable man, he strove to carry out his
+rather old-fashioned conception of duty in the teeth of a thousand
+obstacles. He never had a free hand, and he never enjoyed the hearty
+support of any one section of his countrymen. Hated by the barons whom
+he kept away from power, he alienated the Londoners by his high-handed
+violence, and the tax-payers by his heavy exactions. The pope disliked
+him, the aliens plotted against him, and the king, for whom he
+sacrificed so much, gave him but grudging support. But the reaction
+which followed his retirement made many, who had rejoiced in his
+humiliation, bitterly regret it.
+
+Three notable enemies of Hubert went off the stage of history within a
+few months of his fall. The death of Richard le Grand has already been
+recorded. William Marshal, the brother-in-law of the king, the gallant
+and successful soldier, the worthy successor of his great father, came
+home from Brittany early in 1231. His last act was to marry his sister,
+Isabella, to Richard of Cornwall. Within ten days of the wedding his
+body was laid beside his father in the Temple Church at London. In
+October, 1232, died Randolph of Blundeville, the last representative of
+the male stock of the old line of the Earls of Chester, and long the
+foremost champion of the feudal aristocracy against Hubert. The contest
+between them had been fought with such chivalry that the last public act
+of the old earl was to protect the fallen justiciar from the violence of
+his foes. For more than fifty years Randolph had ruled like a king over
+his palatine earldom; had, like his master, his struggles with his own
+vassals, and had perforce to grant to his own barons and boroughs
+liberties which he strove to wrest from his overlord for himself and his
+fellow nobles. He was not a great statesman, and hardly even a
+successful warrior. Yet his popular personal qualities, his energy, his
+long duration of power, and his enormous possessions, give him a place
+in history. His memory, living on long in the minds of the people,
+inspired a series of ballads which vied in popularity with the cycle of
+Robin Hood,[1] though, unfortunately, they have not come down to us. His
+estates were divided among his four sisters. His nephew, John the Scot,
+Earl of Huntingdon, received a re-grant of the Chester earldom; his
+Lancashire lands had already gone to his brother-in-law, William of
+Ferrars, Earl of Derby; other portions of his territories went to his
+sister, the Countess of Arundel, and the Lincoln earldom, passing
+through another sister, Hawise of Quincy, to her son-in-law, John of
+Lacy, constable of Chester, raised the chief vassal of the palatinate to
+comital rank. None of these heirs of a divided inheritance were true
+successors to Randolph. With him died the last of the great Norman
+houses, tenacious beyond its fellows, and surpassing in its two
+centuries of unbroken male descent the usual duration of the medieval
+baronial family. Its collapse made easier the alien invasion which
+threatened to undo Hubert's work.
+
+ [1] "Ich can rymes of Robyn Hode, and of Randolf erl of
+ Chestre," _Vision of Piers Plowman_, i., 167; ii., 94.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE ALIEN INVASION.
+
+
+With the dismissal of Hubert on July 29, 1232, Peter des Roches resumed
+his authority over Henry III. Mindful of past failures, the bishop's
+aim was to rule through dependants, so that he could pull the wires
+without making himself too prominent. His chief agents in pursuing this
+policy were Peter of Rivaux, Stephen Segrave, and Robert Passelewe. Of
+these, Peter of Rivaux was a Poitevin clerk, officially described as
+the bishop's nephew, but generally supposed to have been his son.
+Stephen Segrave, the son of a small Leicestershire landholder, was a
+lawyer who had held many judicial and administrative posts, including
+the regency during the king's absence abroad in 1230. He abandoned his
+original clerical profession, received knighthood, married nobly, and
+was the founder of a baronial house in the midlands. His only political
+principle was obedience to the powers that were in the ascendant.
+Passelewe, a clerk who had acted as the agent of Randolph of Chester
+and Falkes of Bréauté at the Roman court, was, like Segrave, a mere
+tool.
+
+The Bishop of Winchester began to show his hand. Between June 26 and
+July 11, nineteen of the thirty-five sheriffdoms were bestowed on Peter
+of Rivaux for life. As Segrave was sheriff of five shires, and the
+bishop himself had acquired the shrievalty of Hampshire, this involved
+the transference of the administration of over two-thirds of the
+counties to the bishop's dependants. On the downfall of Hubert, Segrave
+became justiciar. He was not the equal of his predecessors either in
+personal weight or in social position, and did not aspire to act as
+chief minister. The appointment of a mere lawyer to the great Norman
+office of state marks the first stage in the decline, which before long
+degraded the justiciarship into a simple position of headship over the
+judges, the chief justiceship of the next generation. Hubert's offices
+and lands were divided among his supplanters. Peter of Rivaux became
+keeper of wards and escheats, castellan of many castles on the Welsh
+march, and the recipient of even more offices and wardships in Ireland
+than in England. The custody of the Gloucester earldom went to the
+Bishop of Winchester. The last steps of the ministerial revolution were
+completed at the king's Christmas court at Worcester. There Rivaux, who
+had yielded up before Michaelmas most of his shrievalties, was made
+treasurer, with Passelewe as his deputy. Of the old ministers only the
+chancellor, Ralph Neville, Bishop of Chichester, was suffered to remain
+in office. Finally the king's new advisers imported a large company of
+Poitevin and Breton mercenaries, hoping with their help to maintain
+their newly won position. The worst days of John seemed renewed.
+
+The Poitevin gang called upon Hubert to render complete accounts for
+the whole period of his justiciarship. When he pleaded that King John
+had given him a charter of quittance, he was told that its force had
+ended with the death of the grantor. He was further required to answer
+for the wrongs which Twenge's bands had inflicted on the servants of
+the pope. He was accused of poisoning William Earl of Salisbury,
+William Marshal, Falkes de Bréauté, and Archbishop Richard. He had
+prevented the king from contracting a marriage with a daughter of the
+Duke of Austria; he had dissuaded the king from attempting to recover
+Normandy; he had first seduced and then married the daughter of the
+King of Scots; he had stolen from the treasury a talisman which made
+its possessor invincible in war and had traitorously given it to
+Llewelyn of Wales; he had induced Llewelyn to slay William de Braose;
+he had won the royal favour by magic and witchcraft, and finally he had
+murdered Constantine FitzAthulf.
+
+Many of these accusations were so monstrous that they carried with them
+their own refutation. It was too often the custom in the middle ages to
+overwhelm an enemy with incredible charges for it to be fair to accuse
+the enemies of Hubert of any excessive malignity. The substantial
+innocence of Hubert is clear, for the only charges brought against him
+were either errors of judgment and policy, or incredible crimes.
+Nevertheless he was in such imminent danger that he took sanctuary with
+the canons of Merton in Surrey. Thereupon the king called upon the
+Londoners to march to Merton and bring their ancient foe, dead or
+alive, to the city. Randolph of Chester interposed between his fallen
+enemy and the royal vengeance. He persuaded Henry to countermand the
+march to Merton and to suffer the fallen justiciar to leave his refuge
+with some sort of safe conduct. But the king was irritated to hear that
+Hubert had journeyed into Essex. Again he was pursued, and once more he
+was forced to take sanctuary, this time in a chapel near Brentwood.
+From this he was dragged by some of the king's household and brought to
+London, where he was imprisoned in the Tower. The Bishop of London
+complained to the king of this violation of the rights of the Church,
+and Hubert was allowed to return to his chapel. However, the levies of
+Essex surrounded the precincts, and he was soon forced by hunger to
+surrender. He offered to submit himself to the king's will, and was for
+a second time confined in the Tower. On November 10, he was brought
+before a not unfriendly tribunal, in which the malice of the new
+justiciar was tempered by the baronial instincts of the Earls of
+Cornwall, Warenne, Pembroke, and Lincoln. He made no effort to defend
+himself, and submitted absolutely to the judgment of the king. It was
+finally agreed that he should be allowed to retain the lands which he
+had inherited from his father, and that all his chattels and the lands
+that he had acquired himself should be forfeited to the crown. Further,
+he was to be kept in prison in the castle of Devizes under the charge
+of the four earls who had tried him.
+
+Peter des Roches was soon in difficulties. The earls who had saved
+Hubert began to oppose the whole administration. Their leader was
+Richard, Earl of Pembroke, the second son of the great regent, and
+since his brother's death head of the house of Marshal. Richard was
+bitterly prejudiced against the king and his courtiers by an attempt to
+refuse him his brother's earldom. A gallant warrior, handsome and
+eloquent, pious, upright, and well educated, Richard, the best of the
+marshal's sons, stood for the rest of his short life at the head of the
+opposition. He incited his friends to refuse to attend a council
+summoned to meet at Oxford, on June 24, 1233. The king would have
+sought to compel their presence, had not a Dominican friar, Robert
+Bacon, when preaching before the court, warned him that there would be
+no peace in England until Bishop Peter and his son were removed from
+his counsels. The friar's boldness convinced him that disaffection was
+widespread, and he promised the magnates at a later council at London
+that he would, with their advice, correct whatever he found there was
+need to reform. Meanwhile the Poitevins brought into England fresh
+swarms of hirelings from their own land, and Peter des Roches urged
+Henry to crush rebellion in the bud. As a warning to greater offenders,
+Gilbert Basset was deprived of a manor which he had held since the
+reign of King John, and an attempt was made to lay violent hands upon
+his brother-in-law, Richard Siward. The two barons resisted, whereupon
+all their estates were transferred to Peter of Rivaux. Yet Richard
+Marshal still continued to hope for peace, and, after the failure of
+earlier councils, set off to attend another assembly fixed for August
+1, at Westminster. On his way he learnt from his sister Isabella, the
+wife of Richard of Cornwall, that Peter des Roches was laying a trap
+for him. In high indignation he took horse for his Welsh estates, and
+prepared for rebellion.
+
+The king summoned the military tenants to appear with horses and arms
+at Gloucester on the 14th. There Richard Marshal was declared a traitor
+and an invasion of his estates was ordered. But the king had not
+sufficient resources to carry out his threats, and October saw the
+barons once more wrangling with Henry at Westminster, and claiming that
+the marshal should be tried by his peers. Peter of Winchester declared
+that there were no peers in England as there were in France, and that
+in consequence the king had power to condemn any disloyal subject
+through his justices. This daringly unconstitutional doctrine provoked
+a renewed outcry. The bishops joined the secular magnates, and
+threatened their colleague with excommunication. A formidable civil war
+broke out. Siward and Basset harried the lands of the Poitevins, while
+the marshal made a close alliance with Llewelyn of Wales. The king
+still had formidable forces on his side. Richard of Cornwall was
+persuaded by Bishop Peter to take up arms for his brother, and the two
+new earls, John the Scot of Chester, and John de Lacy of Lincoln,
+joined the royal forces. Hubert de Burgh took advantage of the
+increasing confusion to escape from Devizes castle to a church in the
+town. Dragged back with violence to his prison, he was again, as at
+Brentwood, restored to sanctuary through the exertions of the bishop of
+the diocese. There he remained, closely watched by his foes, until
+October 30, when Siward and Basset drove away the guard, and took him
+off with them to the marshal's castle of Chepstow.
+
+The tide of war flowed to the southern march of Wales. Llewelyn and
+Richard Marshal devastated Glamorgan, which, as a part of the
+Gloucester inheritance, was under the custody of the Bishop of
+Winchester. They took nearly all its castles, including that of
+Cardiff. Thence they subdued Usk, Abergavenny, and other neighbouring
+strongholds, while an independent army, including the marshal's
+Pembrokeshire vassals and the men of the princes of South Wales, wasted
+months in a vain attack on Carmarthen. The king's vassals were again
+summoned to Gloucester, whence Henry led them early in November towards
+Chepstow, the centre of the marshal's estates in Gwent. Earl Richard
+devastated his lands so effectively that the king could not support his
+army on them, and was compelled to move up the Wye valley towards the
+castles of Monmouth, Skenfrith, Whitecastle, and Grosmont, the strong
+quadrilateral of Upper Gwent which still remained in the hands of the
+king's friends. Marching to the most remote of these, Grosmont, on the
+upper Monnow, Henry spent several days in the castle, while his army
+lay around under canvas. On the night of November 11, the sleeping
+soldiers were suddenly set upon by the barons and their Welsh allies;
+they fled unarmed to the castle, or scattered in confusion. The
+assailants seized their horses, harness, arms and provisions, but
+refrained from slaying or capturing them. The royal forces never
+rallied. Many gladly went home, giving as their excuse that they were
+unable to fight since they had lost their equipment. Henry and his
+ministers withdrew to Gloucester. More convinced than ever of the
+treachery of Englishmen, the king entrusted the defence of the border
+castles to mercenaries from Poitou.
+
+The fighting centred round Monmouth, which Richard approached on the
+25th with a small company. A sudden sortie almost overwhelmed the
+little band. The marshal held his own heroically against twelve, until
+at last Baldwin of Guînes, the warden of the castle, took him prisoner.
+Thereupon Baldwin fell to the ground, his armour pierced by a lucky
+bolt from a crossbow. His followers, smitten with panic, abandoned the
+marshal, and bore their leader home. By that time, however, the bulk of
+the marshal's forces had come upon the scene. A general engagement
+followed, in which the Anglo-Welsh army drove the enemy back into
+Monmouth and took possession of the castle. This set the marshal free
+to march northwards and join Llewelyn in a vigorous attack upon
+Shrewsbury. In January, 1234, they burnt that town and retired to their
+own lands loaded with booty. Meanwhile Siward devastated the estates of
+the Poitevins and of Richard of Cornwall. Afraid to be cut off from his
+retreat to England the king abandoned Gloucester, where he had kept his
+melancholy Christmas court, and found a surer refuge in Bishop Peter's
+cathedral city. Thereupon Gloucestershire suffered the fate of
+Shropshire. "It was a wretched sight for travellers in that region to
+see on the highways innumerable dead bodies lying naked and unburied,
+to be devoured by birds of prey, and so polluting the air that they
+infected healthy men with mortal sickness."[1]
+
+ [1] Wendover, iv., 291.
+
+The king swore that he would never make peace with the marshal, unless
+he threw himself on the royal mercy as a confessed traitor with a rope
+round his neck. Having, however, exhausted all his military resources,
+he cunningly strove to entice Richard from Wales to Ireland. The two
+Peters wrote to Maurice Fitzgerald, then justiciar of Ireland, and to
+the chief foes of the marshal, urging them to fall upon his Irish
+estates and capture the traitor, dead or alive. Many of the most
+powerful nobles of Ireland lent themselves to the conspiracy. The Lacys
+of Meath, his old enemies, joined with Fitzgerald, Geoffrey Marsh, and
+Richard de Burgh, the greatest of the Norman lords of Connaught, and
+the nephew of Hubert, in carrying out the plot. The confederates fell
+suddenly upon the marshal's estates and devastated them with fire and
+sword. On hearing of this attack Richard immediately left Wales, and,
+accompanied by only fifteen knights, took ship for Ireland. On his
+arrival Geoffrey Marsh, the meanest of the conspirators, received him
+with every profession of cordiality, and urged him to attack his
+enemies without delay. Geoffrey was an old man; he had long held the
+great post of justiciar of Ireland; and he was himself the liegeman of
+the marshal. Richard therefore implicitly trusted him, and forthwith
+took the field.
+
+The first warlike operations of Earl Richard were successful. After a
+short siege he obtained possession of Limerick, and his enemies were
+fain to demand a truce. Richard proposed a conference to be held on
+April 1, 1234, on the Curragh of Kildare. The conference proved
+abortive, for Geoffrey Marsh cunningly persuaded the marshal to refuse
+any offer of terms which the magnates would accept, and Richard found
+that he had been duped into taking up a position that he was not strong
+enough to maintain. Marsh withdrew from his side, on the ground that he
+could not fight against Lacy, whose sister he had married. The marshal
+foresaw the worst. "I know," he declared, "that this day I am delivered
+over to death, but it is better to die honourably for the cause of
+justice than to flee from the field and become a reproach to
+knighthood."
+
+The forsworn Irish knights slunk away to neighbouring places of
+sanctuary or went over to the enemy. When the final struggle came, later
+on the same April 1, Richard had few followers save the faithful fifteen
+knights who had crossed over with him from Wales. The little band,
+outnumbered by more than nine to one, struggled desperately to the end.
+At last the marshal, unhorsed and severely wounded, fell into the hands
+of his enemies. They bore him, more dead than alive, to his own castle
+of Kilkenny, which had just been seized by the justiciar. After a few
+days Richard's tough constitution began to get the better of his wounds.
+Then his enemies, showing him the royal warranty for their acts, induced
+him to admit them into his castles. An ignorant or treacherous surgeon,
+called in by the justiciar, cauterised his wounds so severely that his
+sufferings became intense. He died of fever on the 16th, and was buried,
+as he himself had willed, in the Franciscan church at Kilkenny. No one
+rejoiced at the death of the hero save the traitors who had lured him to
+his doom and the Poitevins who had suborned them. Their victim, the weak
+king, mourned for his friend as David had lamented Saul and Jonathan.[1]
+The treachery of his enemies brought them little profit. While Richard
+Marshal lay on his deathbed, a new Archbishop of Canterbury drove the
+Poitevins from office.
+
+ [1] _Dunstable Ann._, p. 137.
+
+In the heyday of the Poitevins' power the Church sounded a feeble but
+clear note of alarm. The pope expostulated with Henry for his treatment
+of Hubert de Burgh, and Agnellus of Pisa, the first English provincial
+of the newly arrived Franciscan order, strove to reconcile Richard
+Marshal with his sovereign in the course of the South-Welsh campaign.
+More drastic action was necessary if vague remonstrance was to be
+translated into fruitful action. The three years' vacancy of the see of
+Canterbury, after the death of Richard le Grand, paralysed the action
+of the Church. After the pope's rejection of the first choice of the
+convent of Christ Church, the chancellor, Ralph Neville, the monks
+elected their own prior, and him also Gregory refused as too old and
+incompetent. Their third election fell upon John Blunt, a theologian
+high in the favour of Peter des Roches, who sent him to Rome, well
+provided with ready money, to secure his confirmation. Simon Langton,
+again restored to England, and archdeacon of Canterbury, persuaded the
+pope to veto Blunt's appointment on the ground of his having held two
+benefices without a dispensation. His rejection was the first check
+received by the Poitevin faction. It was promptly followed by a more
+crushing blow. Weary of the long delay, Gregory persuaded the Christ
+Church monks then present at Rome to elect Edmund Rich, treasurer of
+Salisbury. Edmund, a scholar who had taught theology and arts with
+great distinction at Paris and Oxford, was still more famous for his
+mystical devotion, for his asceticism and holiness of life. He was
+however an old man, inexperienced in affairs, and, with all his
+gracious gifts, somewhat wanting in the tenacity and vigour which
+leadership involved. Yet in sending so eminent a saint to Canterbury,
+Rome conferred on England a service second only to that which she had
+rendered when she secured the archbishopric for Stephen Langton.
+
+Before his consecration as archbishop on April 2, 1234, Edmund had
+already joined with his suffragans on February 2 in upholding the good
+fame of the marshal and in warning the king of the disastrous results
+of preferring the counsels of the Poitevins to those of his
+natural-born subjects. A week after his consecration Edmund succeeded
+in carrying out a radical change in the administration. On April 9 he
+declared that unless Henry drove away the Poitevins, he would forthwith
+pronounce him excommunicate. Yielding at once, Henry sent the Bishop of
+Winchester back to his diocese, and deprived Peter of Rivaux of all his
+offices. The followers of the two Peters shared their fate, and Henry,
+despatching Edmund to Wales to make peace with Llewelyn and the
+marshal, hurried to Gloucester in order to meet the archbishop on his
+return. His good resolutions were further strengthened by the news of
+Earl Richard's death. On arriving at Gloucester he held a council in
+which the ruin of the Poitevins was completed. A truce, negotiated by
+the archbishop with Llewelyn, was ratified. The partisans of the
+marshal were pardoned, even Richard Siward being forgiven his long
+career of plunder. Gilbert Marshal, the next brother of the childless
+Earl Richard, was invested with his earldom and office, and Henry
+himself dubbed him a knight. Hubert de Burgh was included in the
+comprehensive pardon. Indignant that his name and seal should have been
+used to cover his ex-ministers' treachery to Earl Richard, Henry
+overwhelmed them with reproaches, and strove by his violence against
+them to purge himself from complicity in their acts. The Poitevins
+lurked in sanctuary, fearing for the worst. Segrave forgot his
+knighthood, resumed the tonsure, and took refuge in a church in
+Leicester. The king's worst indignation was reserved for Peter of
+Rivaux. Peter protested that his orders entitled him to immunity from
+arrest, but it was found that he wore a mail shirt under his clerical
+garments, and, without a word of reproach from the archbishop, he was
+immured in a lay prison on the pretext that no true clerk wore armour.
+Of the old ministers Ralph Neville alone remained in office.
+
+With Bishop Peter's fall disappeared the last of the influences that
+had prevailed during the minority. The king, who felt his dignity
+impaired by the Poitevin domination, resolved that henceforward he
+would submit to no master. He soon framed a plan of government that
+thoroughly satisfied his jealous and exacting nature. Henceforth no
+magnates, either of Church or State, should stand between him and his
+subjects. He would be his own chief minister, holding in his own hands
+all the strings of policy, and acting through subordinates whose sole
+duly was to carry out their master's orders. Under such a system the
+justiciarship practically ceased to exist. The treasurership was held
+for short periods by royal clerks of no personal distinction. Even the
+chancellorship became overshadowed. Henry quarrelled with Ralph Neville
+in 1238, and withdrew from him the custody of the great seal, though he
+allowed him to retain the name and emoluments of chancellor. On
+Neville's death the office fell into abeyance for nearly twenty years,
+during which time the great seal was entrusted to seven successive
+keepers. Like his grandfather, Henry wished to rule in person with the
+help of faithful but unobtrusive subordinates. This system, which was
+essentially that of the French monarchy, presupposed for success the
+constant personal supervision of an industrious and strong-willed king.
+Henry III was never a strenuous worker, and his character failed in the
+robustness and self-reliance necessary for personal rule. The magnates,
+who regarded themselves as the king's natural-born counsellors, were
+bitterly incensed, and hated the royal clerks as fiercely as they had
+disliked the ministers of his minority. Opposed by the barons,
+distrusted by the people, liable to be thrown over by their master at
+each fresh change of his caprice, the royal subordinates showed more
+eagerness in prosecuting their own private fortunes than in consulting
+the interests of the State. Thus the nominal government of Henry proved
+extremely ineffective. Huge taxes were raised, but little good came
+from them. The magnates held sullenly aloof; the people grumbled; the
+Church lamented the evil days. Yet for five and twenty years the
+wretched system went on, not so much by reason of its own strength as
+because there was no one vigorous enough to overthrow it.
+
+The author of all this mischief was a man of some noble and many
+attractive qualities. Save when an occasional outburst of temper showed
+him a true son of John, Henry was the kindest, mildest, most amiable of
+men. He was the first king since William the Conqueror in whose private
+life the austerest critics could find nothing blameworthy. His piety
+stands high, even when estimated by the standards of the thirteenth
+century. He was well educated and had a touch of the artist's
+temperament, loving fair churches, beautiful sculpture, delicate
+goldsmith's work, and richly illuminated books. He had a horror of
+violence, and never wept more bitter tears than when he learned how
+treacherously his name had been used to lure Richard Marshal to his
+doom. But he was extraordinarily deficient in stability of purpose. For
+the moment it was easy to influence him either for good or evil, but
+even the ablest of his counsellors found it impossible to retain any
+hold over him for long. One day he lavished all his affection on Hubert
+de Burgh; the next he played into the hands of his enemies. In the same
+way he got rid of Peter des Roches, the preceptor of his infancy, the
+guide of his early manhood. Jealous, self-assertive, restless, and
+timid, he failed in just those qualities that his subjects expected to
+find in a king. Born and brought up in England, and never leaving it
+save for short and infrequent visits to the continent, he was proud of
+his English ancestors and devoted to English saints, more especially to
+royal saints such as Edward the Confessor and Edmund of East Anglia.
+Yet he showed less sympathy with English ways than many of his
+foreign-born predecessors. Educated under alien influences, delighting
+in the art, the refinement, the devotion, and the absolutist principles
+of foreigners, he seldom trusted a man of English birth. Too weak to
+act for himself, too suspicious to trust his natural counsellors, he
+found the friendship and advice for which he yearned in foreign
+favourites and kinsmen. Thus it was that the hopes excited by the fall
+of the Poitevins were disappointed. The alien invasion, checked for a
+few years, was renewed in a more dangerous shape.
+
+During the ten years after the collapse of Peter des Roches, swarms of
+foreigners came to England, and spoiled the land with the king's entire
+good-will. Henry's marriage brought many Provençals and Savoyards to
+England. The renewed troubles between pope and emperor led to a renewal
+of Roman interference in a more exacting form. The continued
+intercourse with foreign states resulted in fresh opportunities of
+alien influence. A new attempt on Poitou brought as its only result the
+importation of the king's Poitevin kinsmen. The continued close
+relationship between the English and the French baronage involved the
+frequent claim of English estates and titles by men of alien birth.
+Even such beneficial movements as the establishment of the mendicant
+orders in England, and the cosmopolitan outlook of the increasingly
+important academic class contributed to the spread of outlandish ideas.
+As wave after wave of foreigners swept over England, Englishmen
+involved them in a common condemnation. And all saw in the weakness of
+the king the very source of their power.
+
+The first great influx of foreigners followed directly from Henry's
+marriage. For several years active negotiations had been going on to
+secure him a suitable bride. There had also at various times been talk
+of his selecting a wife from Brittany, Austria, Bohemia, or Scotland,
+and in the spring of 1235 a serious negotiation for his marriage with
+Joan, daughter and heiress of the Count of Ponthieu, only broke down
+through the opposition of the French court. Henry then sought the hand
+of Eleanor, a girl twelve years old, and the second of the four
+daughters of Raymond Berengar IV., Count of Provence, and his wife
+Beatrice, sister of Amadeus III., Count of Savoy. The marriage contract
+was signed in October. Before that time Eleanor had left Provence under
+the escort of her mother's brother, William, bishop-elect of Valence.
+On her way she spent a long period with her elder sister Margaret, who
+had been married to Louis IX. of France in 1234. On January 14, 1236,
+she was married to Henry at Canterbury by Archbishop Edmund, and
+crowned at Westminster on the following Sunday.
+
+The new queen's kinsfolk quickly acquired an almost unbounded
+ascendency over her weak husband. With the exception of the reigning
+Count Amadeus of Savoy, her eight maternal uncles were somewhat
+scantily provided for. The prudence of the French government prevented
+them from obtaining any advantage for themselves at the court of their
+niece the Queen of France, and they gladly welcomed the opportunity of
+establishing themselves at the expense of their English nephew.
+Self-seeking and not over-scrupulous, able, energetic, and with the
+vigour and resource of high-born soldiers of fortune, several of them
+play honourable parts in the history of their own land, and are by no
+means deserving of the complete condemnation meted out to them by the
+English annalists.[1] The bishop-elect of Valence was an able and
+accomplished warrior. He stayed on in England after accomplishing his
+mission, and with him remained his clerk, the younger son of a house of
+Alpine barons, Peter of Aigueblanche, whose cunning and dexterity were
+as attractive to Henry as the more martial qualities of his master.
+Weary of standing alone, the king eagerly welcomed a trustworthy
+adviser who was outside the entanglements of English parties, and made
+Bishop William his chief counsellor. It was believed that he was
+associated with eleven others in a secret inner circle of royal
+advisers, whose advice Henry pledged himself by oath to follow. Honours
+and estates soon began to fall thickly on William and his friends. He
+made himself the mouthpiece of Henry's foreign policy. When he
+temporarily left England, he led a force sent by the king to help
+Frederick II. in his war against the cities of northern Italy. His
+influence with Henry did much to secure for his brother, Thomas of
+Savoy, the hand of the elderly countess Joan of Flanders. With Thomas
+as the successor of Ferdinand of Portugal, the rich Flemish county,
+bound to England by so many political and economic ties, seemed in safe
+hands, and preserved from French influence. In 1238 Thomas visited
+England, and received a warm welcome and rich presents from the king.
+
+ [1] For Eleanor's countrymen see Mugnier, _Les Savoyards en
+ Angleterre au XIIIe siècle, et Pierre d'Aigueblanche, évêque
+ d'Héreford_ (1890).
+
+Despite the establishment of the Savoyards, the Poitevin influence began
+to revive. Peter des Roches, who had occupied himself after his fall by
+fighting for Gregory IX. against the revolted Romans, returned to
+England in broken health in 1236, and was reconciled to the king. Peter
+of Rivaux was restored to favour, and made keeper of the royal wardrobe.
+Segrave and Passelewe again became justices and ministers. England was
+now the hunting-ground of any well-born Frenchmen anxious for a wider
+career than they could obtain at home.[1] Among the foreigners attracted
+to England to prosecute legal claims or to seek the royal bounty came
+Simon of Montfort, the second son of the famous conqueror of the
+Albigenses. Amice, the mother of the elder Simon, was the sister and
+heiress of Robert of Beaumont, the last of his line to hold the earldom
+of Leicester. After Amice's death her son used the title and claimed the
+estates of that earldom. But these pretensions were but nominal, and
+since 1215 Randolph of Chester had administered the Leicester lands as
+if his complete property. However, Amaury of Montfort, the Count of
+Toulouse's eldest son, ceded to his portionless younger brother his
+claims to the Beaumont inheritance, and in 1230 Simon went to England to
+push his fortunes. Young, brilliant, ambitious and attractive, he not
+only easily won the favour of the king, but commended himself so well to
+Earl Randolph that in 1231 the aged earl was induced to relax his grasp
+on the Leicester estates. In 1239 the last formalities of investiture
+were accomplished. Amaury renounced his claims, and after that Simon
+became Earl of Leicester and steward of England. A year before that he
+had secured the great marriage that he had long been seeking. In
+January, 1238, he was wedded to the king's own sister, Eleanor, the
+childless widow of the younger William Marshal. Simon was for the moment
+high in the affection of his brother-in-law. To the English he was
+simply another of the foreign favourites who turned the king's heart
+against his born subjects.
+
+ [1] This is well illustrated by Philip de Beaumanoir's
+ well-known romance, _Jean de Dammartin et Blonde d'Oxford_ (ed.
+ by Suchier, Soc. des anciens Textes français, and by Le Roux de
+ Lincy, Camden Soc.).
+
+In 1238 Peter des Roches died. With all his faults the Poitevin was an
+excellent administrator at Winchester,[1] and left his estates in
+such a prosperous condition that Henry coveted the succession for the
+bishop-elect of Valence, though William already had the prospect of the
+prince-bishopric of liege. But the monks of St. Swithun's refused to
+obey the royal order, and Henry sought to obtain his object from the
+pope. Gregory gave William both Liege and Winchester, but in 1239 death
+ended his restless plans. William's death left more room for his
+kinsfolk and followers. His clerk, Peter of Aigueblanche, returned to
+the land of promise, and in 1240 secured his consecration as Bishop of
+Hereford. William's brother, Peter of Savoy, lord of Romont and
+Faucigny, was invited to England in the same year. In 1241 he was
+invested with the earldom of Richmond, which a final breach with Peter
+of Brittany had left in the king's hands. Peter, the ablest member of
+his house, thus became its chief representative in England.[2]
+
+ [1] See H. Hall, _Pipe Roll of the Bishop of Winchester_,
+ 1207-8.
+
+ [2] For Peter see Wurstemberger, _Peter II., Graf von Savoyen_
+ (1856).
+
+With the Provençals and Savoyards came a fresh swarm of Romans. In 1237
+the first papal legates _a latere_ since the recall of Pandulf landed
+in England. The deputy of Gregory IX. was the cardinal-deacon Otto, who
+in 1226 had already discharged the humbler office of nuncio in England.
+It was believed that the legate was sent at the special request of
+Henry III., and despite the remonstrances of the Archbishop of
+Canterbury. Those most unfriendly to the legate were won over by his
+irreproachable conduct. He rejected nearly all gifts. He was unwearied
+in preaching peace; travelled to the north to settle outstanding
+differences between Henry and the King of Scots, and thence hurried to
+the west to prolong the truce with Llewelyn. His zeal for the
+reformation of abuses made the canons of the national council, held
+under his presidency at St. Paul's on November 18, 1237, an epoch in
+the history of our ecclesiastical jurisprudence.
+
+Despite his efforts the legate remained unpopular. The pluralists and
+nepotists, who feared his severity, joined with the foes of all
+taxation and the enemies of all foreigners in denouncing the legate. To
+avoid the danger of poison, he thought it prudent to make his own
+brother his master cook. During the council of London it was necessary
+to escort him from his lodgings and back again with a military force.
+In the council itself the claim of high-born clerks to receive
+benefices in plurality found a spokesman in so respectable a prelate as
+Walter of Cantilupe, the son of a marcher baron, whom Otto had just
+enthroned in his cathedral at Worcester, and the legate, "fearing for
+his skin," was suspected of mitigating the severity of his principles
+to win over the less greedy of the friends of vested interests. His
+Roman followers knew and cared little about English susceptibilities,
+and feeling was so strong against them that any mischance might excite
+an explosion. Such an accident occurred on St. George's day, April 23,
+1238, when the legate was staying with the Austin Canons of Oseney,
+near Oxford, while the king was six miles off at Abingdon. Some of the
+masters of the university went to Oseney to pay their respects to the
+cardinal, and were rudely repulsed by the Italian porter. Irritated at
+this discourtesy, they returned with a host of clerks, who forced their
+way into the abbey. Amongst them was a poor Irish chaplain, who made
+his way to the kitchen to beg for food. The chief cook, the legate's
+brother, threw a pot of scalding broth into the Irishman's face. A
+clerk from the march of Wales shot the cook dead with an arrow. A
+fierce struggle followed, in the midst of which Otto, hastily donning
+the garb of his hosts, took refuge in the tower of their church, where
+he was besieged by the infuriated clerks, until the king sent soldiers
+from Abingdon to release him. Otto thereupon laid Oxford under an
+interdict, suspended all lectures, and put thirty masters into prison.
+English opinion, voiced by the diocesan, Grosseteste, held that the
+cardinal's servants had provoked the riot, and found little to blame in
+the violence of the clerks.
+
+In 1239 Gregory IX. began his final conflict with Frederick II., and
+demanded the support of all Europe. As before, from 1227 to 1230, the
+pressure of the papal necessity was at once felt in England. The legate
+had to raise supplies at all costs. Crusaders were allowed to renounce
+their vows for ready money. Every visitation or conference became an
+excuse for procurations and fees. Presents were no longer rejected, but
+rather greedily solicited. On the pretence that it was necessary to
+reform the Scottish Church, "which does not recognise the Roman Church
+as its sole mother and metropolitan," Otto excited the indignation of
+Alexander II. by attempts to extend his jurisdiction to Scotland,
+hitherto unvisited by legates. In England his claims soon grew beyond
+all bearing. At last he demanded a fifth of all clerical goods to
+enable the pope to finance the anti-imperial crusade. Even this was
+more endurable than the order received from Rome that 300 clerks of
+Roman families should be "provided" to benefices in England in order
+that Gregory might obtain the support of their relatives against
+Frederick. Both as feudal suzerain and as spiritual despot, the pope
+lorded it over England as fully as his uncle Innocent III.
+
+Weakness, piety, and self-interest combined to make Henry III.
+acquiesce in the legate's exactions. "I neither wish nor dare," said
+he, "to oppose the lord pope in anything." The union of king and legate
+was irresistible. The lay opposition was slow and feeble. Gilbert
+Marshal, though showing no lack of spirit, was not the man to play the
+part which his brother Richard had filled so effectively. Richard, Earl
+of Cornwall, who constituted himself the spokesman of the magnates,
+made a special grievance of the marriage of Simon of Montfort with his
+sister Eleanor. England, he said, was like a vineyard with a broken
+hedge, so that all that went by could steal the grapes. He took arms,
+and subscribed the first of the long series of plans of constitutional
+reform that the reign was to witness, according to which the king was
+to be guided by a chosen body of counsellors. But at the crisis of the
+movement he held back, having accomplished nothing.
+
+There was more vigour in the ecclesiastical opposition. Robert
+Grosseteste,[1] a Suffolk man of humble birth, had already won for
+himself a position of unique distinction at Oxford and Paris. A teacher
+of rare force, a scholar of unexampled range, a thinker of daring
+originality, and a writer who had touched upon almost every known
+subject, he was at the height of his fame when, in 1235, his appointment
+as Bishop of Lincoln gave the fullest opportunities for the employment
+of his great gifts in the public service. He was convinced that the
+preoccupation of the clergy in worldly employment and the constant
+aggressions of the civil upon the ecclesiastical courts lay at the root
+of the evils of the time. His conviction brought him into conflict with
+the king rather than the legate, though for the moment his absorption in
+the cares of his diocese distracted his attention from general
+questions. The bishops generally had become so hostile that Otto shrank
+from meeting them in another council, and strove to get money by
+negotiating individually with the leading churchmen. The old foe of
+papal usurpations, Robert Twenge, renewed his agitation on behalf of the
+rights of patrons, and the clergy of Berkshire drew up a remonstrance
+against Otto's extortions.
+
+ [1] For Grosseteste, see F.S. Stevenson, _Robert Grosseteste,
+ Bishop of Lincoln_ (1899).
+
+Archbishop Edmund saw the need of opposing both legate and king; but he
+was hampered by his ecclesiastical and political principles, and still
+more, perhaps, by the magnitude of the rude task thrown upon him. He
+had set before himself the ideal of St. Thomas, not only in the
+asceticism of his private life, but in his zeal for his see and the
+Church. But few men were more unlike the strong-willed and bellicose
+martyr of Canterbury than the gentle and yielding saint of Abingdon. A
+plentiful crop of quarrels, however, soon showed that Edmund had, in
+one respect, copied only too faithfully the example of his predecessor.
+He was engaged in a controversy of some acerbity with the Archbishop of
+York, and he was involved in a long wrangle with the monks of his
+cathedral, which took him to Rome soon after the legate's arrival. He
+got little satisfaction there, and found a whole sea of troubles to
+overwhelm him on his return. At last came the demand of the fifth from
+Otto. Edmund joined in the opposition of his brethren to this exaction,
+but his attitude was complicated by his other difficulties. Leaning in
+his weakness on the pope, he found that Gregory was a taskmaster rather
+than a director. At last he paid his fifth, but, broken in health and
+spirits, he was of no mind to withstand the demands of the Roman clerks
+for benefices. If he could not be another St. Thomas defending the
+liberties of the Church, he could at least withdraw like his prototype
+from the strife, and find a refuge in a foreign house of religion.
+Seeking out St. Thomas's old haunt at Pontigny, he threw himself with
+ardour into the austere Cistercian life. On the advice of his
+physicians, he soon sought a healthier abode with the canons of Soisy,
+in Brie, at whose house he died on November 16, 1240. His body was
+buried at Pontigny in the still abiding minster which had witnessed the
+devotions of Becket and Langton, and miracles were soon wrought at his
+tomb. Within eight years of his death he was declared a saint; and
+Henry, who had thwarted him in life, and even opposed his canonisation,
+was among the first of the pilgrims who worshipped at his shrine. It
+needed a tougher spirit and a stronger character than Edmund's to
+grapple with the thorny problems of his age.
+
+The retirement of the archbishop enabled Otto to carry through his
+business, and withdraw from England on January 7, 1241. On August 21
+Gregory IX. died, with his arch-enemy at the gates of Rome and all his
+plans for the time frustrated. High-minded, able and devout, he wagered
+the whole fortunes of the papacy on the result of his secular struggle
+with the emperor. In Italy as in England, the spiritual hegemony of the
+Roman see and the spiritual influence of the western Church were
+compromised by his exaltation of ecclesiastical politics over religion.
+
+The monks of Christ Church won court favour by electing as archbishop,
+Boniface of Savoy, Bishop-elect of Belley, one of the queen's uncles.
+There was no real resistance to the appointment, though a prolonged
+vacancy in the papacy made it impossible for him to receive formal
+confirmation until 1243, and it was not until 1244 that he condescended
+to visit his new province. Meanwhile his kinsmen were carrying
+everything before them. Richard of Cornwall lost his first wife,
+Isabella, daughter of William Marshal, in 1240, an event which broke
+almost the last link that bound him to the baronial opposition. He
+withdrew himself from the troubles of English politics by going on
+crusade, and with him went his former enemy, Simon of Leicester.
+Richard was back in England early in 1242, and on November 23, 1243,
+his marriage with Sanchia of Provence, the younger sister of the queens
+of France and England, completed his conversion to the court party.
+
+Henry III.'s cosmopolitan instincts led him to take as much part in
+foreign politics as his resources allowed. In 1235 he married his
+sister Isabella to Frederick II., and henceforth manifested a strong
+interest in the affairs of his imperial brother-in-law. His relations
+with France were still uneasy, and he hoped to find in Frederick's
+support a counterpoise to the steady pressure of French hostility. All
+England watched with interest the progress of the emperor's arms. Peter
+of Savoy led an English contingent to fight for Frederick against the
+Milanese, and Matthew Paris, the greatest of the English chroniclers,
+narrates the campaign of Corte Nuova with a detail exceeding that which
+he allows to the military enterprises of his own king. Frederick
+constantly corresponded with both the king and Richard of Cornwall, and
+it was nothing but solicitude for the safely of the heir to the throne
+that led the English magnates to reject the emperor's request that
+Richard should receive a high command under him. Even Frederick's
+breach with the pope in 1239 did not destroy his friendship with Henry.
+The situation became extremely complicated, since Innocent IV. derived
+large financial support for his crusade from the unwilling English
+clergy, while Henry still professed to be Frederick's friend. The king
+allowed Otto to proclaim Frederick's excommunication in England, and
+then urged the legate to quit the country because the emperor strongly
+protested against the presence of an avowed enemy at his
+brother-in-law's court. Neither pope nor emperor could rely upon the
+support of so half-hearted a prince. Renewed trouble with France
+explains in some measure the anxiety of Henry to remain in good
+relations with the emperor despite Frederick's quarrel with the pope.
+
+The position of the French monarchy was far stronger than it had been
+when Henry first intervened in continental politics. Blanche of Castile
+had broken the back of the feudal coalition, and even Peter Mauclerc had
+made his peace with the monarchy at the price of his English earldom.
+Louis IX. attained his majority in 1235, and his first care was to
+strengthen his power in his newly won dominions. If Poitou were still in
+the hands of the Count of La Marche and the Viscount of Thouars, the
+royal seneschals of Beaucaire and Carcassonne after 1229 ruled over a
+large part of the old dominions of Raymond of Toulouse. In 1237 the
+treaty of Meaux was further carried out by the marriage of Raymond's
+daughter and heiress, Joan, to Alfonse, the brother of the French king.
+In 1241 Alfonse came of age, and Louis at once invested him with Poitou
+and Auvergne. The lords of Poitou saw that the same process which had
+destroyed the feudal liberties of Normandy now endangered their
+disorderly independence. Hugh of Lusignan and his wife had been present
+at Alfonse's investiture, and the widow of King John had gone away
+highly indignant at the slights put upon her dignity.[1] She bitterly
+reproached her husband with the ignominy involved in his submission.
+Easily moved to new treasons, Hugh became the soul of a league of
+Poitevin barons formed at Parthenay, which received the adhesion of
+Henry's seneschal of Gascony, Rostand de Sollers, and even of Alfonse's
+father-in-law, the depressed Raymond of Toulouse. At Christmas Hugh
+openly showed his hand. He renounced his homage to Alfonse, declared his
+adhesion to his step-son, Richard of Cornwall, the titular count of
+Poitou, and ostentatiously withdrew from the court with his wife. The
+rest of the winter was taken up with preparations for the forthcoming
+struggle.
+
+ [1] See the graphic letter of a citizen of La Rochelle to
+ Blanche, published by M. Delisle in _Bibliothèque de l'Ecole
+ des Chartes_, série ii., iv., 513-55 (1856).
+
+Untaught by experience, Henry III. listened to the appeals of his
+mother and her husband. Richard of Cornwall, who came back from his
+crusade in January, 1242, was persuaded that he had another chance of
+realising his vain title of Count of Poitou. But the king had neither
+men nor money and the parliament of February 2 refused to grant him
+sums adequate for his need, so that, despairing of dealing with his
+barons in a body, Henry followed the legate's example of winning men
+over individually. He made a strong protest against the King of
+France's breach of the existing truce, and his step-father assured him
+that Poitou and Gascony would provide him with sufficient soldiers if
+he brought over enough money to pay them. Thereupon, leaving the
+Archbishop of York as regent, Henry took ship on May 9 at Portsmouth
+and landed on May 13 at Royan at the mouth of the Gironde. He was
+accompanied by Richard of Cornwall, seven earls, and 300 knights.
+
+Meanwhile Louis IX. marshalled a vast host at Chinon, which from April
+to July overran the patrimony of the house of Lusignan, and forced many
+of the confederate barons to submit. Peter of Savoy and John Mansel,
+Henry's favourite clerk, then made seneschal of Gascony, assembled the
+Aquitanian levies, while Peter of Aigueblanche, the Savoyard Bishop of
+Hereford, went to Provence to negotiate the union between Earl Richard
+and Sanchia, and, if possible, to add Raymond Berengar to the coalition
+against the husband of his eldest daughter. Henry hoped to win tactical
+advantages by provoking Louis to break the truce, and mendaciously
+protested his surprise at being forced into an unexpected conflict with
+his brother-in-law. Towards the end of July, Louis, who had conquered
+all Poitou, advanced to the Charente, and occupied Taillebourg. If the
+Charente were once crossed, Saintonge would assuredly follow the
+destinies of Poitou; and the Anglo-Gascon army advanced from Saintes to
+dispute the passage of the river. On July 21 the two armies were in
+presence of each other, separated only by the Charente. Besides the
+stone bridge at Taillebourg, the French had erected a temporary wooden
+structure higher up the stream, and had collected a large number of
+boats to facilitate their passage. Seeing with dismay the oriflamme
+waving over the sea of tents which, "like a great and populous city,"
+covered the right bank, the soldiers of Henry retreated precipitately
+to Saintes. There was imminent danger of their retreat being cut off,
+but Richard of Cornwall went to the French camp, and obtained an
+armistice of a few hours, which gave his brother time to reach the
+town.
+
+Next day Louis advanced at his ease to the capital of Saintonge. The
+Anglo-Gascons went out to meet him, and, despite their inferior numbers,
+fought bravely amidst the vineyards and hollow lanes to the west of the
+city. But the English king was the first to flee, and victory soon
+attended the arms of the French. Immediately after the battle, the lords
+of Poitou abandoned Richard for Alfonse. Henry fled from Saintes to
+Pons, from Pons to Barbezieux, and thence sought a more secure refuge at
+Blaye, leaving his tent, the ornaments of his chapel, and the beer
+provided for his English soldiers as booty for the enemy. The outbreak
+of an epidemic in the French army alone prevented a siege of Bordeaux,
+by necessitating the return of St. Louis to the healthier north. Henry
+lingered at Bordeaux until September, when he returned to England.[1]
+Meanwhile the French dictated peace to the remaining allies of Henry. On
+the death of Raymond of Toulouse, in 1249, Alfonse quietly succeeded to
+his dominions. The next twenty years saw the gradual extension of the
+French administrative system to Poitou, Auvergne, and the Toulousain.
+English Gascony was reduced to little more than the districts round
+Bordeaux and Bayonne. Even a show of hostility was no longer useful, and
+on April 7, 1243, a five years' truce between Henry and Louis was signed
+at Bordeaux. The marriage of Beatrice of Provence, the youngest of the
+daughters of Raymond Berengar, to Charles of Anjou, Louis' younger
+brother, removed Provence from the sphere of English influence. On his
+father-in-law's death in 1245, Charles of Anjou succeeded to his
+dominions to the prejudice of his two English brothers-in-law, and
+became the founder of a Capetian line of counts of Provence, which
+brought the great fief of the empire under the same northern French
+influences which Alfonse of Poitiers was diffusing over the lost
+inheritances of Eleanor of Aquitaine and the house of Saint-Gilles.
+
+ [1] The only good modern account of this expedition is that by
+ M. Charles Bémont, _La campagne de Poitou, 1242-3_, in _Annales
+ du Midi_, v., 389-314 (1893). For the Lusignans see Boissonade,
+ _Quomodo comites Engolismenses erga reges Angliæ et Franciæ
+ se gesserint_, 1152-1328 (1893).
+
+A minor result of Louis' triumph was the well-deserved ruin of Hugh of
+Lusignan and Isabella of Angoulême. The proud spirit of Isabella did
+not long tolerate her humiliation. She retired to Fontevraud and died
+there in 1246. Hugh X. followed her to the tomb in 1248. Their eldest
+son, Hugh XI., succeeded him, but the rest of their numerous family
+turned for support to the inexhaustible charity of the King of England.
+Thus in 1247 a Poitevin invasion of the king's half-brothers and
+sisters recalled to his much-tried subjects the Savoyard invasion of
+ten years earlier. In that single year three of the king's brothers and
+one of his sisters accepted his invitation to make a home in England.
+Of these, Guy, lord of Cognac, became proprietor of many estates.
+William, called from the Cistercian abbey in which he was born William
+of Valence, secured, with the hand of Joan of Munchensi, a claim to the
+great inheritance that was soon to be scattered by the extinction of
+the male line of the house of Marshal. Aymer of Valence, a very
+unclerical churchman, obtained in 1250 his election as bishop of
+Winchester, though his youth and the hostility of his chapter delayed
+his consecration for ten years. Alice their sister found a husband of
+high rank in the young John of Warenne, Earl of Warenne or Surrey,
+while a daughter of Hugh XI. married Robert of Ferrars, Earl of Ferrars
+or Derby. Others of their kindred flocked to the land of promise. Any
+Poitevin was welcome, even if not a member of the house of Lusignan.
+Thus the noble adventurer John du Plessis, came over to England,
+married the heiress of the Neufbourg Earls of Warwick, and in 1247 was
+created Earl of Warwick. The alien invasion took a newer and more
+grievous shape.
+
+The expenses of the war were still to be paid; and in 1244 Henry
+assembled a council, declaring that, as he had gone to Gascony on the
+advice of his barons, they were bound to make him a liberal grant
+towards freeing him from the debts which he had incurred beyond sea.
+Prelates, earls, and barons each deliberated apart, and a joint
+committee, composed of four members of each order, drew up an
+uncompromising reply. The king had not observed the charters; previous
+grants had been misapplied, and the abeyance of the great offices of
+state made justice difficult and good administration impossible. The
+committee insisted that a justiciar, a chancellor, and a treasurer
+should forthwith be appointed. This was the last thing that the jealous
+king desired. Helpless against a united council, he strove to break up
+the solidarity between its lay and clerical elements by laying a papal
+order before the prelates to furnish him an adequate subsidy. The leader
+of the bishops was now Grosseteste, who from this time until his death
+in 1253 was the pillar of the opposition. "We must not," he declared,
+"be divided from the common counsel, for it is written that if we be
+divided we shall all die forthwith." At last a committee of twelve
+magnates was appointed to draw up a plan of reform. The unanimity of all
+orders was shown by the co-operation on this body of prelates such as
+Boniface of Savoy with patriots of the stamp of Grosseteste and Walter
+of Cantilupe, while among the secular lords, Richard of Cornwall and
+'Simon of Leicester worked together with baronial leaders like Norfolk
+and Richard of Montfichet, a survivor of the twenty-five executors of
+Magna Carta. The obstinacy of the king may well have driven the estates
+into drawing up the remarkable paper constitution preserved for us by
+Matthew Paris.[1] By it the execution of the charters and the
+supervision of the administration were to be entrusted to four
+councillors, chosen from among the magnates, and irremovable except with
+their consent. It is unlikely that the scheme was ever carried out; but
+its conception shows an advance in the claims of the opposition, and
+anticipates the policy of restraining an incompetent ruler by a
+committee responsible to the estates, which, for the next two centuries,
+was the popular specific for royal maladministration. For the moment
+neither side gained a decided victory. Though the barons persisted in
+their refusal of an extraordinary grant, they agreed to pay an aid to
+marry the king's eldest daughter to the son of Frederick II.
+
+ [1] _Chron. Maj_., iv., 366-68.
+
+Further demands arose from the quarrel between Innocent IV.' and the
+emperor. A new papal envoy, Master Martin, came to England to extort
+from the clergy money to enable Innocent to carry on his war against
+Frederick. The lords told Martin that if he did not quit the realm
+forthwith he would be torn in pieces. In terror he prayed for a safe
+conduct. "May the devil give you a safe conduct to hell," was the only
+reply that the angry Henry vouchsafed. Even his complaisance was
+exhausted by Master Martin.
+
+On July 26, 1245, a few weeks before Martin's expulsion, Innocent IV.
+opened a general council at Lyons, in which Frederick was deposed from
+the imperial dignity. Grosseteste, the chief English prelate to attend
+the gathering, was drawn in conflicting directions by his zeal for pope
+against emperor and by his dislike of curialist exactions. This
+attitude of the bishop is reflected in the remonstrance, in the name of
+the English people, laid before Innocent, declaring the faithfulness of
+England to the Holy See and the wrongs with which her fidelity had been
+requited. The increasing demands for money, the intrusion of aliens
+into English cures, and Martin's exactions were set forth at length.
+Innocent refused to entertain the petition, forced all the bishops at
+Lyons to join in the deprivation of the emperor, and required every
+English bishop to seal with his own seal the document by which John had
+pledged the nation to a yearly tribute. No one could venture to stand
+up against the successor of St. Peter, and so, despite futile
+remonstrance, Innocent still had it all his own way. In 1250
+Grosseteste again met Innocent face to face at Lyons, and urged him to
+"put to flight the evils and purge the abominations" which the Roman
+see had done so much to foster. But this outspoken declaration was
+equally without result. Bold as were Grosseteste's words, he fully
+accepted the curialist theory which regarded the pope as the universal
+bishop, the divinely appointed source of all ecclesiastical
+jurisdiction. He could therefore do no more than protest. If the pope
+chose to disregard him, there was nothing to be done but wait patiently
+for better times. The plague of foreign ecclesiastics was still to
+torment the English Church for many a year.
+
+The king's difficulties were increased by fresh troubles in Scotland
+and Wales. The friendship between Henry and his brother-in-law,
+Alexander II., was weakened by the death of the Queen of Scots and by
+Alexander's marriage to a French lady in 1239. At last, in 1244,
+relations were so threatening that the English levies were mustered for
+a campaign at Newcastle. However, on the mediation of Richard of
+Cornwall, Alexander bound himself not to make alliances with England's
+enemies, and the trouble passed away. In Wales the difficulties were
+more complicated. Llewelyn ap Iorwerth died in 1240, full of years and
+honour. In the last years of his reign broken health and the revolts of
+his eldest son Griffith made the old chieftain anxious for peace with
+England, as the best way of securing the succession to all his
+dominions of David, his son by Joan of Anjou. Henry III., anxious that
+David as his nephew should inherit the principality, granted a
+temporary cessation of hostilities. After Llewelyn's death David was
+accepted as Prince of Snowdon, and made his way to Gloucester, where he
+performed homage, and was dubbed knight by his uncle. Next year,
+however, hostilities broke out, and Henry, disgusted with his nephew,
+made a treaty with the wife of Griffith, Griffith himself being David's
+prisoner. In 1241 Henry led an expedition from Chester into North
+Wales, and forced David to submit. He surrendered Griffith to his
+uncle's safe keeping and promised to yield his principality to Henry if
+he died without a son. Three years later Griffith broke his neck in an
+attempt to escape from the Tower. The death of his rival emboldened
+David to take up a stronger line against his uncle. A fresh Welsh
+expedition was necessary for the summer of 1245, in which the English
+advanced to the Conway, but were speedily forced to retire. David held
+his own until his death, without issue, in March, 1246, threw open the
+question of the Welsh succession.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+POLITICAL RETROGRESSION AND NATIONAL PROGRESS.
+
+
+The ten years from 1248 to 1258 saw the continuance of the
+misgovernment, discontent, and futile opposition which have already
+been sufficiently illustrated. The history of those years must be
+sought not so much in the relations of the king and his English
+subjects as in Gascony, in Wales, in the crusading revival, and in the
+culmination of the struggle of papacy and empire. In each of these
+fields the course of events reacted sharply upon the domestic affairs
+of England, until at last the failures of Henry's foreign policy gave
+unity and determination to the party of opposition whose first
+organised success, in 1258, ushered in the Barons' War.
+
+The relations between England and France remained anomalous. Formal
+peace was impossible, since France would yield nothing, and the English
+king still claimed Normandy and Aquitaine. Yet neither Henry nor Louis
+had any wish for war. They had married sisters: they were personally
+friendly, and were both lovers of peace. In such circumstances it was
+not hard to arrange truces from time to time, so that from 1243 to the
+end of the reign there were no open hostilities. In 1248 the friendly
+feeling of the two courts was particularly strong. Louis was on the eve
+of departure for the crusade and many English nobles had taken the
+cross. Henry, who was himself contemplating a crusade, was of no mind
+to avail himself of his kinsman's absence to disturb his realm.
+
+The French could afford to pass over Henry's neglect to do homage, for
+Gascony seemed likely to emancipate itself from the yoke of its English
+dukes without any prompting from Paris. After the failure of 1243, a
+limited amount of territory between the Dordogne and the Pyrenees alone
+acknowledged Henry. This narrower Gascony was a thoroughly feudalised
+land: the absentee dukes had little authority, domain, or revenue: and
+the chief lordships were held by magnates, whose relations to their
+overlord were almost formal, and by municipalities almost as free as
+the cities of Flanders or the empire. The disastrous campaign of
+Taiilebourg lessened the prestige of the duke, and Henry quitted
+Gascony without so much as attempting to settle its affairs. In the
+following years weak seneschals, with insufficient powers and quickly
+succeeding each other, were unable to grapple with ever-increasing
+troubles. The feudal lords dominated the countryside, pillaged traders,
+waged internal war and defied the authority of the duke. In the
+autonomous towns factions had arisen as fierce as those of the cities
+of Italy. Bordeaux was torn asunder by the feuds of the Rosteins and
+Colons. Bayonne was the scene of a struggle between a few privileged
+families, which sought to monopolise municipal office, and a popular
+opposition based upon the seafaring class. The neighbouring princes
+cast greedy eyes on a land so rich, divided, and helpless. Theobald
+IV., the poet, Count of Champagne and King of Navarre, coveted the
+valley of the Adour. Gaston, Viscount of Béarn, the cousin of Queen
+Eleanor, plundered and destroyed the town of Dax. Ferdinand the Saint
+of Castile and James I. of Aragon severally claimed all Gascony. Behind
+all these loomed the agents of the King of France. Either Gascony must
+fall away altogether, or stronger measures must be taken to preserve
+it.
+
+In this extremity Henry made Simon of Montfort seneschal or governor of
+Gascony, with exceptionally full powers and an assured duration of
+office for seven years. Simon had taken the crusader's vow, but was
+persuaded by the king to abandon his intention of following Louis to
+Egypt. He at once threw himself into his rude task with an energy that
+showed him to be a true son of the Albigensian crusader. In the first
+three months he traversed the duchy from end to end; rallied the royal
+partisans; defeated rebels; kept external foes in check, and
+administered the law without concern for the privileges of the great.
+In 1249 he crushed the Rostein faction at Bordeaux. The same fate was
+meted out to their partisans in the country districts. Order was
+restored, but the seneschal utterly disregarded impartiality or
+justice. He sought to rule Gascony by terrorism and by backing up one
+faction against the other. It was the same with minor cities, like
+Bazas and Bayonne, and with the tyrants of the countryside. The
+Viscount of Fronsac saw his castle razed and his estates seized. Gaston
+of Béarn, tricked by the seneschal out of the succession of Bigorre,
+was captured, sent to England, and only allowed to return to his home,
+humiliated and powerless to work further evil. The lesser barons had to
+acknowledge Simon their master. On the death of Raymond of Toulouse in
+1249, his son-in-law and successor, Alfonse of Poitiers, had all he
+could do to secure his inheritance, and was too closely bound by the
+pacific policy of his brother to give Simon much trouble. The truce
+with France was easily renewed by reason of St. Louis' absence on a
+crusade. The differences between Gascony and Theobald of Navarre were
+mitigated in 1248 at a personal interview between Leicester and the
+poet-king.
+
+Gascony for the moment was so quiet that the rebellious hordes called
+the _Pastoureaux_, who had desolated the royal domain, withdrew from
+Bordeaux in terror of Simon's threats. But the expense of maintaining
+order pressed heavily on the seneschal's resources, and his master
+showed little disposition to assist him. Moreover Gascony could not
+long keep quiet. There were threats of fresh insurrections, and the
+whole land was burning with indignation against its governor.
+Complaints from the Gascon estates soon flowed with great abundance
+into Westminster. For the moment Henry paid little attention to them.
+His son Edward was ten years of age, and he was thinking of providing
+him with an appanage, sufficient to support a separate household and so
+placed as to train the young prince in the duties of statecraft. Before
+November, 1249, he granted to Edward all Gascony, along with the
+profits of the government of Ireland, which were set aside to put
+Gascony in a good state of defence. Simon's strong hand was now more
+than ever necessary to keep the boy's unruly subjects under control.
+The King therefore continued Simon as seneschal of Gascony, though
+henceforth the earl acted as Edward's minister. "Complete happily,"
+Henry wrote to the seneschal, "all our affairs in Gascony and you shall
+receive from us and our heirs a recompense worthy of your services."
+For the moment Leicester's triumph seemed complete, but the Gascons,
+who had hoped that Edward's establishment meant the removal of their
+masterful governor, were bitterly disappointed at the continuance of
+his rule. Profiting by Simon's momentary absence in England, they once
+more rose in revolt. Henry wavered for the moment. "Bravely," declared
+he to his brother-in-law, "hast thou fought for me, and I will not deny
+thee help. But complaints pour in against thee. They say that thou hast
+thrown into prison, and condemned to death, folk who have been summoned
+to thy court under pledge of thy good faith." In the end Simon was sent
+back to Gascony, and by May, 1251, the rebels were subdued.
+
+Next year Gaston of Béarn stirred up another revolt, and, while Simon
+was in England, deputies from the Aquitanian cities crossed the sea and
+laid new complaints before Henry. A stormy scene ensued between the
+king and his brother-in-law. Threatened with the loss of his office,
+Simon insisted that he had been appointed for seven years, and that he
+could not be removed without his own consent. Henry answered that he
+would keep no compacts with traitors. "That word is a lie," cried
+Simon; "were you not my king it would be an ill hour for you when you
+dared to utter it." The sympathy of the magnates saved Leicester from
+the king's wrath, and before long he returned to Gascony, still
+seneschal, but with authority impaired by the want of his sovereign's
+confidence. Though the king henceforth sided with the rebels, Simon
+remained strong enough to make headway against the lord of Béarn.
+Before long, however, Leicester unwillingly agreed to vacate his office
+on receiving from Henry a sum of money. In September, 1252, he laid
+down the seneschalship and retired into France. While shabbily treated
+by the king, he had certainly shown an utter absence of tact or
+scruple. But the tumults of Gascony raged with more violence than ever
+now that his strong hand was withdrawn. Those who had professed to rise
+against the seneschal remained in arms against the king. Once more the
+neighbouring princes cast greedy eyes on the defenceless duchy. In
+particular, Alfonso the Wise, King of Castile, who succeeded his father
+Ferdinand in 1252, renewed his father's claims to Gascony.
+
+The only way to save the duchy was for Henry to go there in person.
+Long delays ensued before the royal visit took place, and it was not
+until August, 1253, that Bordeaux saw her hereditary duke sail up the
+Gironde to her quays. The Gascon capital remained faithful, but within
+a few miles of her walls the rebels were everywhere triumphant. It
+required a long siege to reduce Bénauge to submission, and months
+elapsed before the towns and castles of the lower Garonne and Dordogne
+opened their gates. Even then La Réole, whither all the worst enemies
+of Montfort had fled, held out obstinately. Despairing of military
+success, Henry fell back upon diplomacy. The strength of the Gascon
+revolt did not lie in the power of the rebels themselves but in the
+support of the neighbouring princes and the French crown. By renewing
+the truce with the representatives of Louis, Henry protected himself
+from the danger of French intervention, and at the same time he cut off
+a more direct source of support to the rebels by negotiating treaties
+with such magnates as the lord of Albret, the Counts of Comminges and
+Armagnac, and the Viscount of Béarn. His master-stroke was the
+conclusion, in April, 1254, of a peace with Alfonso of Castile, whereby
+the Spanish king abandoned his Gascon allies and renounced his claims
+on the duchy. In return it was agreed that the lord Edward should marry
+Alfonso's half-sister, Eleanor, heiress of the county of Ponthieu
+through her mother, Joan, whom Henry had once sought for his queen. As
+Edward's appanage included Aquitaine, Alfonso, in renouncing his
+personal claims, might seem to be but transferring them to his sister.
+
+In May, 1254, Queen Eleanor joined Henry at Bordeaux. With her went her
+two sons, Edward and Edmund, her uncle, Archbishop Boniface, and a great
+crowd of magnates. In August Edward went with his mother to Alfonso's
+court at Burgos, where he was welcomed with all honour and dubbed to
+knighthood by the King of Castile, and in October he and Eleanor were
+married at the Cistercian monastery of Las Huelgas. His appanage
+included all Ireland, the earldom of Chester, the king's lands in Wales,
+the Channel Islands, the whole of Gascony, and whatsoever rights his
+father still had over the lands taken from him and King John by the
+Kings of France. Thus he became the ruler of all the outlying
+dependencies of the English crown, and the representative of all the
+claims on the Aquitanian inheritance of Eleanor and the Norman
+inheritance of William the Conqueror. The caustic St. Alban's chronicler
+declared that Henry left to himself such scanty possessions that he
+became a "mutilated kinglet".[1] But Henry was too jealous of power
+utterly to renounce so large a share of his dominions. His grants to his
+son were for purposes of revenue and support, and the government of
+these regions was still strictly under the royal control. Yet from this
+moment writs ran in Edward's name, and under his father's direction the
+young prince was free to buy his experience as he would. Soon after his
+son's return with his bride, Henry III. quitted Gascony, making his way
+home through France, where he visited his mother's tomb at Fontevraud
+and made atonement at Pontigny before the shrine of Archbishop Edmund.
+Of more importance was his visit to King Louis, recently returned from
+his Egyptian captivity. The cordial relations established by personal
+intercourse between the two kings prepared the way for peace two years
+later.
+
+ [1] Matthew Paris, _Chron. Maj._, v., 450.
+
+Edward remained in Gascony about a year after his father. He checked
+with a stern hand the disorders of his duchy, strove to make peace
+between the Rosteins and Colons, and failing to do so, took in 1261 the
+decisive step of putting an end to the tumultuous municipal
+independence of the Gascon capital by depriving the jurats of the right
+of choosing their mayor.[1] Thenceforth Bordeaux was ruled by a
+mayor nominated by the duke or his lieutenant. Edward's rule in Gascony
+has its importance as the first experiment in government by the boy of
+fifteen who was later to become so great a king. Returning to London in
+November, 1255, he still forwarded the interests of his Gascon
+subjects, and an attempt to protect the Bordeaux wine-merchants from
+the exactions of the royal officers aroused the jealousy of Henry, who
+declared that the days of Henry II. had come again, when the king's
+sons rose in revolt against their father. Despite this characteristic
+wail, Edward gained his point. Yet his efforts to secure the well-being
+of Gascony had not produced much result. The hold of the English duke
+on Aquitaine was as precarious under Edward as it had been in the days
+of Henry's direct rule.
+
+ [1] See Bémont, _Rôles Gascons_, i., supplément, pp.
+ cxvi.-cxviii.
+
+The affairs of Wales and Cheshire involved Edward in responsibilities
+even more pressing than those of Gascony. On the death of John the Scot
+without heirs in 1237, the palatinate of Randolph of Blundeville became
+a royal escheat. Its grant to Edward made him the natural head of the
+marcher barons. The Cheshire earldom became the more important since
+the Welsh power had been driven beyond the Conway. Since the death of
+David ap Llewelyn in 1246, divisions in the reigning house of Gwynedd
+had continued to weaken the Welsh. Llewelyn and Owen the Red, the two
+elder sons of the Griffith ap Llewelyn who had perished in attempting
+to escape from the Tower, took upon themselves the government of
+Gwynedd, dividing the land, by the advice of the "good men," into two
+equal halves. The English seneschal at Carmarthen took advantage of
+their weakness to seize the outlying dependencies of Gwynedd south of
+the Dovey. War ensued, for the brothers resisted this aggression. But
+in April, 1247, they were forced to do homage at Woodstock for Gwynedd
+and Snowdon. Henry retained not only Cardigan and Carmarthen, but the
+debatable lands between the eastern boundary of Cheshire and the river
+Clwyd, the four cantreds of the middle country or Perveddwlad, so long
+the scene of the fiercest warfare between the Celt and the Saxon. Thus
+the work of Llewelyn ap Iorwerth was completely undone, and his
+grandsons were confined to Snowdon and Anglesey, the ancient cradles of
+their house.
+
+It suited English policy that even, the barren lands of Snowdon should
+be divided. As time went on, other sons of Griffith ap Llewelyn began
+to clamour for a share of their grandfather's inheritance. Owen, the
+weaker of the two princes, made common cause with them, and David,
+another brother, succeeded in obtaining his portion of the common
+stock. Llewelyn showed himself so much the most resourceful and
+energetic of the brethren that, when open war broke out between them in
+1254, he easily obtained the victory. Owen was taken prisoner, and
+David was deprived of his lands. Llewelyn, thus sole ruler of Gwynedd,
+at once aspired to follow in the footsteps of his grandfather. He
+overran Merioneth, and frightened the native chieftains beyond the
+Dovey into the English camp. His ambitions were, however, rudely
+checked by the grant of Cheshire and the English lands in Wales to
+Edward.
+
+Besides the border palatinate, Edward's Welsh lands included the four
+cantreds of Perveddwlad, and the districts of Cardigan and Carmarthen.
+Young as he was, he had competent advisers, and, while he was still in
+Aquitaine, designs were formed of setting up the English shire system
+in his Welsh lands, so as to supersede the traditional Celtic methods
+of government by feudal and monarchical centralisation. Efforts were
+made to subject the four cantreds to the shire courts at Chester; and
+Geoffrey of Langley, Edward's agent in the south, set up shire-moots at
+Cardigan and Carmarthen, from which originated the first beginnings of
+those counties. The bitterest indignation animated Edward's Welsh
+tenants, whether on the Clwyd or on the Teivi and Towy. They rose in
+revolt against the alien innovators, and called upon Llewelyn to
+champion their grievances. Llewelyn saw the chance of extending his
+tribal power into a national principality over all Wales by posing as
+the upholder of the Welsh people. He overran the four cantreds in a
+week, finding no resistance save before the two castles of Deganwy and
+Diserth. He conquered Cardigan with equal ease, and prudently granted
+out his acquisition to the local chieftain Meredith ap Owen. Nor were
+Edward's lands alone exposed to his assaults. In central Wales Roger
+Mortimer was stripped of his marches on the upper Wye, and Griffith ap
+Gwenwynwyn, the lord of upper Powys, driven from the regions of the
+upper Severn. In the spring of 1257 the lord of Gwynedd appeared in
+regions untraversed by the men of Snowdon since the days of his
+grandfather. He devastated the lands of the marchers on the Bristol
+Channel and slew Edward's deputy in battle. "In those days," says
+Matthew Paris, "the Welsh saw that their lives were at stake, so that
+those of the north joined together in indissoluble alliance with those
+of the south. Such a union had never before been, since north and south
+had always been opposed." The lord of Snowdon assumed the title of
+Prince of Wales.
+
+Edward was forced to defend his inheritance. Henry III. paid little
+heed to his misfortunes, and answered his appeal for help by saying:
+"What have I to do with the matter? I have given you the land; you must
+defend it with your own resources. I have plenty of other business to
+do." Nevertheless, Henry accompanied his son on a Welsh campaign in
+August, 1257. The English army got no further than Deganwy, and
+therefore did not really invade Llewelyn's dominions at all. After
+waiting idly on the banks of the Conway for some weeks, it retired
+home, leaving the open country to be ruled by Llewelyn as he would, and
+having done nothing but revictual the castles of the four cantreds.
+Next year a truce was made, which left Llewelyn in possession of the
+disputed districts. Troubles at home were calling off both father and
+son from the Welsh war, and thus Llewelyn secured his virtual triumph.
+Though fear of the progress of the lord of Gwynedd filled every marcher
+with alarm, yet the dread of the power of Edward was even more nearly
+present before them. The marcher lords deliberately stood aside, and
+the result was inevitable disaster. Edward found that the territories
+handed over to him by his father had to be conquered before they could
+be administered, and Henry III.'s methods of government made it a
+hopeless business to find either the men or the money for the task.
+
+England still resounded with complaints of misgovernment, and demands
+for the execution of the charters. Before going to Bordeaux in 1253,
+Henry obtained from the reluctant parliament a considerable subsidy,
+and pledged himself as "a man, a Christian, a knight, and a crowned and
+anointed king," to uphold the charters. During his absence a
+parliament, summoned by the regents, Queen Eleanor and Richard of
+Cornwall, for January, 1254, showed such unwillingness to grant a
+supply that a fresh assembly was convened in April, to which knights of
+the shire, for the first time since the reign of John, and
+representatives of the diocesan clergy, for the first occasion on
+record, were summoned, as well as the baronial and clerical grandees.
+Nothing came of the meeting save fresh complaints. The Earl of
+Leicester became the spokesman of the opposition. Hurrying back from
+France he warned the parliament not to fall into the "mouse-traps" laid
+for them by the king. In default of English money, enough to meet the
+king's necessities was extorted from the Jews, recently handed over to
+the custody of Richard of Cornwall. After his return from France at the
+end of 1254, Henry's renewed requests for money gave coherence to the
+opposition. Between 1254 and 1258 the king's exactions, and an
+effective organisation for withstanding them, developed on parallel
+lines. To the old sources of discontent were added grievances
+proceeding from enterprises of so costly a nature that they at last
+brought about a crisis.
+
+The foremost grievance against the king was still his co-operation with
+the papacy in spoiling the Church of England. Though the death of the
+excommunicated Frederick II. in 1250 was a great gain for Innocent IV.,
+the contest of the papacy against the Hohenstaufen raged as fiercely as
+ever. Both in Germany and in Italy Innocent had to carry on his
+struggle against Conrad, Frederick's son. After Conrad's death, in
+1254, there was still Frederick's strenuous bastard, Manfred, to be
+reckoned with in Naples and Sicily. Innocent IV. died in 1254, but his
+successor, Alexander IV., continued his policy. A papalist King of
+Naples was wanted to withstand Manfred, and also a papalist successor
+to the pope's phantom King of the Romans, William of Holland, who died
+in 1256.
+
+Candidates to both crowns were sought for in England. Since 1250
+Innocent IV. had been sounding Richard, Earl of Cornwall, as to his
+willingness to accept Sicily. The honourable scruple against hostility
+to his kinsman, which Richard shared with the king, prevented him from
+setting up his claims against Conrad. But the deaths both of Conrad and
+of Frederick II.'s son by Isabella of England weakened the ties between
+the English royal house and the Hohenstaufen, and Henry was tempted by
+Innocent's offer of the Sicilian throne for his younger son, Edmund, a
+boy of nine, along with a proposal to release him from his vow of
+crusade to Syria, if he would prosecute on his son's behalf a crusading
+campaign against the enemies of the Church in Naples. Innocent died
+before the negotiations were completed, but Alexander IV. renewed the
+offer, and in April, 1255, Peter of Aigueblanche, Bishop of Hereford,
+accepted the preferred kingdom in Edmund's name. Sicily was to be held
+by a tribute of money and service, as a fief of the holy see, and was
+never to be united with the empire. Henry was to do homage to the pope
+on his son's behalf, to go to Italy in person or send thither a
+competent force, and to reimburse the pope for the large sums expended
+by him in the prosecution of the war. In return the English and
+Scottish proceeds of the crusading tenth, imposed on the clergy at
+Lyons, were to be paid to Henry. On October 18, 1255, a cardinal
+invested Edmund with a ring that symbolised his appointment. Henry
+stood before the altar and swore by St. Edward that he would himself go
+to Apulia, as soon as he could safely pass through France.
+
+The treaty remained a dead letter. Henry found it quite impossible to
+raise either the men or the money promised, and abandoned any idea of
+visiting Sicily in person. Meanwhile Naples and Sicily were united in
+support of Manfred, and discomfited the feeble forces of the papal
+legates who acted against him in Edmund's name. At last the Archbishop
+of Messina came from the pope with an urgent request for payment of the
+promised sums. It was in vain that Henry led forth his son, clothed in
+Apulian dress, before the Lenten parliament of 1257, and begged the
+magnates to enable him to redeem his bond. When they heard the king's
+speech "the ears of all men tingled". Nothing could be got save from
+the clergy, so that Henry was quite unable to meet his obligations. He
+besought Alexander to give him time, to make terms with Manfred, to
+release Edmund from his debts on condition of ceding a large part of
+Apulia to the Church,--to do anything in short save insist upon the
+original contract. The pope deferred the payment, but the respite did
+Henry no good. Edmund's Sicilian monarchy vanished into nothing, when,
+early in 1258, Manfred was crowned king at Palermo. Before the end of
+the year, Alexander cancelled the grant of Sicily to Edmund. Yet his
+demands for the discharge of Henry's obligations had contributed not a
+little towards focussing the gathering discontent.[1]
+
+ [1] For Edmund's Sicilian claims, see W.E. Rhodes' article on
+ _Edmund, Earl of Lancaster_, in the _English Historical
+ Review_, x. (1895), 20-27.
+
+While Henry was seeking the Sicilian crown for his son, his brother
+Richard was elected to the German throne. Since William of Holland's
+death in January, 1256, the German magnates, divided between the
+Hohenstaufen and the papalist parties, had hesitated for nearly a year
+as to the choice of his successor. As neither party was able to secure
+the election of its own partisan, a compromise was mooted. At last the
+name of Richard of Cornwall was brought definitely forward. He was of
+high rank and unblemished reputation; a friend of the pope yet a kinsman
+of the Hohenstaufen; he was moderate and conciliatory; he had enough
+money to bribe the electors handsomely, and he was never likely to be so
+deeply rooted in Germany as to stand in the way of the princes of the
+empire. The Archbishop of Cologne became his paid partisan, and the
+Count Palatine of the Rhine accepted his candidature on conditions. The
+French party set up as his rival Alfonso X. of Castile, who, despite his
+newly formed English alliance, was quite willing to stand against
+Richard. At last, in January, 1257, the votes of three electors,
+Cologne, Mainz, and the Palatine, were cast for Richard, who also
+obtained the support of Ottocar, King of Bohemia. However, in April,
+Trier, Saxony, and Brandenburg voted for Alfonso. The double election of
+two foreigners perpetuated the Great Interregnum for some sixteen years.
+Alfonso's title was only an empty show, but Richard took his appointment
+seriously. He made his way to Germany, and was crowned King of the
+Romans on May 17, 1257, at Aachen. He remained in the country nearly
+eighteen months, and succeeded in establishing his authority in the
+Rhineland, though beyond that region he never so much as showed his
+face.[1] The elevation of his brother to the highest dignity in
+Christendom was some consolation to Henry for the Sicilian failure.
+
+ [1] See for Richard's career, Koch's _Richard von Cornwallis_,
+ 1209-1257, and the article on _Richard, King of the Romans_, in
+ the _Dictionary of National Biography_.
+
+The nation was disgusted to see maladministration grow worse and worse;
+the nobles were indignant at the ever-increasing sway of the
+foreigners; and several years of bad harvests, high prices, rain,
+flood, and murrain sharpened the chronic misery of the poor. The
+withdrawal of Earl Richard to his new kingdom deprived the king and
+nation of an honourable if timid counsellor, though a more capable
+leader was at last provided in the disgraced governor of Gascony. Simon
+still deeply resented the king's ingratitude for his services, and had
+become enough of an Englishman to sympathise with the national
+feelings. Since his dismissal in 1253 he had held somewhat aloof from
+politics. He knew so well that his interests centred in England that he
+declined the offer of the French regency on the death of Blanche of
+Castile. He prosecuted his rights over Bigorre with characteristic
+pertinacity, and lawsuits about his wife's jointure from her first
+husband exacerbated his relations with Henry. It cannot, however, be
+said that the two were as yet fiercely hostile. Simon went to Henry's
+help in Gascony in 1254, served on various missions and was nominated
+on others from which he withdrew. His chosen occupations during these
+years of self-effacement were religious rather than political; his
+dearest comrades were clerks rather than barons.
+
+Among Montfort's closer intimates, Bishop Grosseteste was removed by
+death in 1253. But others of like stamp still remained, such as Adam
+Marsh, the Franciscan mystic, whose election to the see of Ely was
+quashed by the malevolence of the court; Eudes Rigaud, the famous
+Archbishop of Rouen, and Walter of Cantilupe, Bishop of Worcester, who
+formed a connecting link between the aristocracy and the Church.
+Despite the ineffectiveness of the clerical opposition to the papacy,
+the spirit of independence expressed in Grosseteste's protests had not
+yet deserted the churchmen. Clerks had felt the pinch of the papal
+exactions, had been bled to the uttermost to support the Sicilian
+candidature, and had seen aliens and non-residents usurping their
+revenues and their functions. More timid and less cohesive than the
+barons, they had quicker brains, more ideas, deeper grievances, and
+better means of reaching the masses. If resentment of the Sicilian
+candidature was the spark that fired the train, the clerical opposition
+showed the barons the method of successful resistance. The rejection of
+Henry's demands for money in the assemblies of 1257 started the
+movement that spread to the baronage in the parliaments of 1258. In the
+two memorable gatherings of that year the discontent, which had
+smouldered for a generation, at last burst into flame. In the next
+chapter we shall see in what fashion the fire kindled.
+
+The futility of the political history of the weary middle period of the
+reign suggests, to those who make the history of the state the
+criterion of every aspect of the national fortunes, a corresponding
+barrenness and lack of interest in other aspects of national life. Yet
+a remedy for Henry's misrule was only found because the age of
+political retrogression was in all other fields of action an epoch of
+unexampled progress. The years during which the strong centralised
+government of the Angevin kings was breaking down under Henry's weak
+rule were years which, to the historian of civilisation, are among the
+most fruitful in our annals. In vivid contrast to the tale of misrule,
+the historian can turn to the revival of religious and intellectual
+life, the growing delight in ideas and knowledge, the consummation of
+the best period of art, and the spread of a nobler civilisation which
+make the middle portion of the thirteenth century the flowering time of
+English medieval life. It is part of this strange contrast that Henry,
+the obstacle to all political progress, was himself a chief supporter
+of the religious and intellectual movements which were so deeply
+influencing the age.
+
+Much has been said of the alien invasion, and of the strong national
+opposition it excited. But insularity is not a good thing in itself,
+and the natural English attitude to the foreigners tended to confound
+good and bad alike in a general condemnation. Even the Savoyards were
+by no means as evil as the English thought them, and Henry in welcoming
+his kinsmen was not merely moved by selfish and unworthy motives; he
+believed that he was showing his openness to ideas and his welcome to
+all good things from whencesoever they came. There were, in fact, two
+tendencies, antagonistic yet closely related, which were operative, not
+only in England but all over western Europe, during this period.
+Nations, becoming conscious and proud of their unity, dwelt, often
+unreasonably, on the points wherein they differed from other peoples,
+and strongly resented alien interference. At the same time the closer
+relations between states, the result of improved government, better
+communications, increased commercial and social intercourse, the
+strengthening of common ideals, and the development of cosmopolitan
+types of the knight, the scholar, and the priest, were deepening the
+union of western Christendom on common lines. Neither the political nor
+the military nor the ecclesiastical ideals of the early middle ages
+were based upon nationality, but rather on that ecumenical community of
+tradition which still made the rule of Rome, whether in Church or
+State, a living reality. In the thirteenth century the papal tradition
+was still at its height. The jurisdiction of the papal _curia_ implied
+a universal Christian commonwealth. World-wide religious orders united
+alien lands together by ties more spiritual than obedience to the papal
+lawyers. The academic ideal was another and a fresh link that connected
+the nations together. To the ancient reasons for union--symbolised by
+the living Latin speech of all clerks, of all scholars, of all engaged
+in serious affairs-were added the newer bonds of connexion involved in
+the common knightly and social ideals, in the general spread of a
+common art and a common vernacular language and literature.
+
+As Latin expressed the one series of ties, so did French represent the
+other. The France of St. Louis meant two things. It meant, of course,
+the French state and the French nationality, but it meant a great deal
+more than that. The influence of the French tongue and French ideals
+was wider than the political influence of the French monarchy. French
+was the common language of knighthood, of policy, of the literature
+that entertained lords and ladies, of the lighter and less technical
+sides of the cosmopolitan culture which had its more serious
+embodiments in Latin. To the Englishman of the thirteenth century the
+French state was the enemy; but the English baron denounced France in
+the French tongue, and leant a ready ear to those aspects of life
+which, cosmopolitan in reality, found their fullest exposition in
+France and among French-speaking peoples. In the age which saw
+hostility to Frenchmen become a passion, a Frenchman like Montfort
+could become the champion of English patriotism, English scholars could
+readily quit their native land to study at Paris, the French vernacular
+literature was the common property of the two peoples, and French words
+began to force their way into the stubborn vocabulary of the English
+language, which for two centuries had almost entirely rejected these
+alien elements. In dwelling, however briefly, on the new features which
+were transforming English civilisation during this memorable period, we
+shall constantly see how England gained by her ever-increasing
+intercourse with the continent, by necessarily sharing in the new
+movements which had extended from the continent to the island, no
+longer, as in the eleventh century, to be described as a world apart.
+Neither the coming of the friars, nor the development of university
+life and academic schools of philosophy, theology, and natural science,
+nor the triumph of gothic art, nor the spread of vernacular literature,
+not even the scholarly study of English law nor the course of English
+political development-not one of these movements could have been what
+it was without the close interconnexion of the various parts of the
+European commonwealth, which was becoming more homogeneous at the same
+time that its units were acquiring for themselves sped characteristics
+of their own.
+
+In the early days of Henry III.'s reign, a modest alien invasion
+anticipated the more noisy coming of the Poitevin or the Provençal. The
+most remarkable development of the "religious" life that the later
+middle age was to witness had just been worked out in Italy. St.
+Francis of Assisi had taught the cult of absolute poverty, and his
+example held up to his followers the ideal of the thorough and literal
+imitation of Christ's life. Thus arose the early beginnings of the
+Minorite or Franciscan rule. St. Dominic yielded to the fascination of
+the Umbrian enthusiast, and inculcated on his Order of Preachers a
+complete renunciation of worldly goods which made a society, originally
+little more than a new type of canons regular, a mendicant order like
+the Franciscans, bound to interpret the monastic vow of poverty with
+such literalness as to include corporate as well as individual
+renunciation of possessions, so that the order might not own lands or
+goods, and no member of it could live otherwise than by labour or by
+alms. In the second chapter of the Dominican order, at Whitsuntide,
+1221, an organisation into provinces was carried out; and among the
+eight provinces, each with its prior, then instituted, was the province
+of England, where no preaching friar had hitherto set foot, and over it
+Gilbert of Freynet was appointed prior. Then Dominic withdrew to
+Bologna, where he died on August 6. Within a few days of the saint's
+death, Friar Gilbert with thirteen companions made his way to England.
+In the company of Peter des Roches the Dominican pioneers went to
+Canterbury, where Archbishop Langton was then residing. At the
+archbishop's request Gilbert preached in a Canterbury church, and
+Langton was so much delighted by his teaching that henceforth he had a
+special affection for the new order. From Canterbury the friars
+journeyed to London and Oxford. Mindful of the work of their leaders at
+Paris and Bologna, they built their first English chapel, house, and
+schools in the university town. Soon these proved too small for them,
+and they had to seek ampler quarters outside the walls. From these
+beginnings the Dominicans spread over England.
+
+The Franciscans quickly followed the Dominicans. On September 10, 1224,
+there landed at Dover a little band of four clerks and five laymen,
+sent by St. Francis himself to extend the new teaching into England. At
+their head was the Italian, Agnellus of Pisa, a deacon, formerly warden
+of the Parisian convent, who was appointed provincial minister in
+England. His three clerical companions were all Englishmen, though the
+five laymen were Italians or Frenchmen. Like the Dominican pioneers,
+the Franciscan missionaries first went to Canterbury, where the favour
+of Simon Langton, the archdeacon, did for them what the goodwill of his
+brother Stephen had done for their precursors. Leaving some of their
+number at Canterbury, four of the Franciscans went on to London, and
+thence a little later two of them set out for Oxford. Alike at London
+and at Oxford, they found a cordial welcome from the Dominicans, eating
+in their refectories, and sleeping in their dormitories, until they
+were able to erect modest quarters in both places. The brethren of the
+new order excited unbounded enthusiasm. Necessity and choice combined
+to compel them to interpret their vow of poverty as St. Francis would
+have wished. They laboured with their own hands at the construction of
+their humble churches. The friars at Oxford knew the pangs of debt and
+hunger, rejected pillows as a vain luxury, and limited the use of boots
+and shoes to the sick and infirm. The faithful saw the brethren singing
+songs as they picked their way over the frozen mud or hard snow, blood
+marking the track of their naked feet, without their being conscious of
+it. The joyous radiance of Francis himself illuminated the lives of his
+followers. "The friars," writes their chronicler, "were so full of fun
+among themselves that a deaf mute could hardly refrain from laughter at
+seeing them." With the same glad spirit they laboured for the salvation
+of souls, the cure of sickness, and the relief of distress. The
+emotional feeling of the age quickly responded to their zeal. Within a
+few years other houses had arisen at Gloucester, at Nottingham, at
+Stamford, at Worcester, at Northampton, at Cambridge, at Lincoln, at
+Shrewsbury. In a generation there was hardly a town of importance in
+England that had not its Franciscan convent, and over against it a
+rival Dominican house.
+
+The esteem felt for the followers of Francis and Dominic led to an
+extraordinary extension of the mendicant type. New orders of friars
+arose, preserving the essential attribute of absolute poverty, though
+differing from each other and from the two prototypes in various
+particulars. Some of these lesser orders found their way to England. In
+the same year as Agnellus, there came to England the Trinitarian
+friars, called also the Maturins, from the situation of their first
+house in Paris, an order whose special function was the redemption of
+captives. In 1240 returning crusaders brought back with them the first
+Carmelite friars, for whom safer quarters had to be found than in their
+original abodes in Syria. This society spread widely, and in 1287, to
+the disgust of the older monks, it laid aside the party-coloured habit,
+forced upon it in derision by the infidels, and adopted the white robe,
+which gave them their popular name of White Friars. Hard upon these, in
+1244, came also the Crutched Friars, so called from the red cross set
+upon their backs or breasts; but these were never deeply rooted in
+England. The multiplication of orders of friars became an abuse, so
+that, at the Council of Lyons of 1245, Innocent IV abolished all save
+four. Besides Dominicans and Franciscans the pope only continued the
+Carmelites, and an order first seen in England a few years later, the
+Austin friars or the hermits of the order of St. Augustine. These made
+up the traditional four orders of friars of later history. Yet even the
+decree of a council could not stay the growth of new mendicant types.
+In 1257 the Friars of the Penance of Jesus Christ, popularly styled
+Friars of the Sack, from their coarse sackcloth garb, settled down in
+London, exempted by papal dispensation from the fate of suppression;
+and even later than this King Richard's son, Edmund of Cornwall,
+established a community of Bonhommes at Ashridge in Buckinghamshire.
+
+The friars were not recluses, like the older orders, but active
+preachers and teachers of the people. The parish clergy seldom held a
+strong position in medieval life. The estimation in which the monastic
+ideal was held limited their influence. They were, as a rule, not much
+raised above the people among whom they laboured. If the parish priest
+were a man of rank or education, he was too often a non-resident and a
+pluralist, bestowing little personal attention on his parishioners. Nor
+were the numerous parishes served by monks in much better plight. The
+monastery took the tithes and somehow provided for the services; but the
+efforts of Grosseteste to secure the establishment of permanent
+stipendiary vicarages in his diocese exemplify the reluctance of the
+religious to give their appropriations the benefit of permanent pastors,
+paid on an adequate scale. It was an exceptional thing for the parish
+clergymen to do more than discharge perfunctorily the routine duties of
+their office, and preaching was almost unknown among them. The friars
+threw themselves into pastoral work with such devotion as to compel the
+reluctant admiration of their natural rivals, the monks. "At first,"
+says Matthew Paris,[1] "the Preachers and the Minorites lived a life of
+poverty and extreme sanctity. They busied themselves in preaching,
+hearing confessions, the recital of divine service, in teaching and
+study. They embraced voluntary poverty for God's sake, abandoning all
+their worldly goods and not even reserving for themselves their food for
+to-morrow." A special field of labour was in the crowded suburbs of the
+larger towns, where so often they chose to erect their first convents.
+The care of the sick and of lepers was their peculiar function. Their
+sympathy and charity carried everything before them, and they remained
+the chief teachers of the poor down to the Reformation. They ingratiated
+themselves with the rich as much as with the poor. Henry III. and Edward
+selected mendicants as their confessors. The strongest and holiest of
+the bishops, Grosseteste, became their most active friend. Simon of
+Montfort sought the advice and friendship of a friar like Adam Marsh.
+The mere fact that Stephen Langton and Peter des Roches were their first
+patrons in England shows how they appealed alike to the best and worst
+clerical types of the time.
+
+ [1] _Chron. Maj._, v., 194.
+
+Men and women of all ranks, while still living in the world and
+fulfilling their ordinary occupations, associated themselves to the
+mendicant brotherhoods. Besides these _tertiaries_, as they were
+called, still wider circles sought the friars' direction in all
+spiritual matters and showed eagerness to be buried within their
+sanctuaries. Nor did the friars limit themselves to pastoral care. They
+won a unique place in the intellectual history of the time. They made
+themselves the spokesmen of all the movements of the age. They were
+eager to make peace, and Agnellus himself mediated between Henry III.
+and the earl marshal. They were the strenuous preachers of the
+crusades, whether against the infidel or against Frederick II. The
+Franciscans taught a new and more methodical devotion to the Virgin
+Mother. The friars upheld the highest papal claims, were constantly
+selected as papal agents and tax-gatherers, and yet even this did not
+deprive them of their influence over Englishmen. Their zeal for truth
+often made them defenders of unpopular causes, and it was much to their
+honour that they did not hesitate to incur the displeasure of the
+Londoners by their anxiety to save innocent Jews accused of the murder
+of Christian children. The parish clergy hated and envied them as
+successful rivals, and bitterly resented the privilege which they
+received from Alexander IV of hearing confessions throughout the world.
+Not less strong was the hostility of the monastic orders which is often
+expressed in Matthew Paris's free-spoken abuse of them. They were
+accused of terrorising dying men out of their possessions, of laxity in
+the confessional, of absolving their friends too easily, of overweening
+ambition and restless meddlesomeness. They were violent against
+heretics and enemies of the Church. They answered hate with hate. They
+despised the seculars as drones and the monks as lazy and corrupt. The
+dissensions between the various orders of friars, and particularly
+between the sober and intellectual Dominicans and the radical and
+mystic Franciscans, were soon as bitter as those between monks and
+friars, or monks and seculars. But when all allowances have been made,
+the good that they wrought far outbalanced the evil, and in England at
+least, the mendicant orders exhibited a nobler conception of religion,
+and of men's duly to their fellowmen than had as yet been set before
+the people. If the main result of their influence was to strengthen
+that cosmopolitan conception of Christendom of which the papacy was the
+head and the friars the agents, their zeal for righteousness often led
+them beyond their own rigid platform, and Englishmen honoured the
+wandering friar as the champion of the nation's cause.
+
+Like the religious orders, the universities were part of the world
+system and only indirectly represented the struggling national life.
+The ferment of the twelfth century revival crystallised groups of
+masters or doctors into guilds called universities, with a strong class
+tradition, rigid codes of rules, and intense corporate spirit. The
+schools at Oxford, whose continuous history can be traced from the days
+of Henry II., had acquired a considerable reputation by the time that
+his grandson had ascended the throne. Oxford university, with an
+autonomous constitution of its own since _1214_, was presided over by a
+chancellor who, though in a sense the representative of the distant
+diocesan at Lincoln, was even in the earliest times the head of the
+scholars, and no mere delegate of the bishop. Five years earlier the
+Oxford schools were sufficiently vigorous to provoke a secession, from
+which the first faint beginnings of a university at Cambridge arose. A
+generation later there were other secessions to Salisbury and
+Northampton, but neither of these schools succeeded in maintaining
+themselves. Cambridge itself had a somewhat languid existence
+throughout the whole of the thirteenth century, and was scarcely
+recognised as a _studium generale_ until the bull of John XXII. in 1318
+made its future position secure. In early days the university owed
+nothing to endowments, buildings, social prestige, or tradition. The
+two essentials was the living voice of the graduate teacher and the
+concourse of students desirous to be taught. Hence migrations were
+common and stability only gradually established. When, late in Henry
+III.'s reign, the chancellor, Walter of Merton, desired to set up a
+permanent institution for the encouragement of poor students, he
+hesitated whether to establish it at Oxford, or Cambridge, or in his
+own Surrey village. Oxford, though patriots coupled it with Paris and
+Bologna, only gradually rose into repute. But before the end of Henry
+III.'s reign it had won an assured place among the great universities
+of western Europe, though lagging far behind that of the supreme
+schools of Paris.
+
+The growing fame of the university of Oxford was a matter of national
+importance. Down to the early years of the thirteenth century a young
+English clerk who was anxious to study found his only career abroad,
+and was too often cut off altogether from his mother country. Among the
+last of this type were the Paris mathematician, John of Holywood or
+Halifax, Robert Curzon, cardinal, legate, theologian, and crusader, and
+Alexander of Hales. Stephen Langton, who did important work in revising
+the text of the Vulgate, might well have been one of those lost to
+England but for the wisdom of Innocent III who restored him, in the
+fulness of his reputation and powers, to the service of the English
+Church. Not many years younger than Langton was his successor Edmund of
+Abingdon, but the difference was enough to make the younger primate a
+student of the Oxford schools in early life. Though he left Oxford for
+Paris, Edmund returned to an active career in England, when experience
+convinced him of the vanity of scholastic success. Bishop Grosseteste,
+another early Oxford teacher of eminence, probably studied at Paris,
+for so late as 1240 he held up to the Oxford masters of theology the
+example of their Paris brethren for their imitation. The double
+allegiance of Edmund and Grosseteste was typical. A long catalogue of
+eminent names adorned the annals of Oxford in the thirteenth century,
+but the most distinguished of her earlier sons were drawn away from her
+by the superior attractions of Paris. England furnished at least her
+share of the great names of thirteenth century scholasticism, but of
+very few of these could it be said that their main obligation was to
+the English university. It was at Paris that the academic organisation
+developed which Oxford adopted. At Paris the great intellectual
+conflicts of the century were fought. There the ferment seethed round
+that introduction of Aristotle's teaching from Moorish sources which
+led to the outspoken pantheism of an Amaury of Bène. There also was the
+reconciliation effected between the new teacher and the old faith which
+made Aristotle the pillar of the new scholasticism that was to justify
+by reason the ways of God to man. In Paris also was fought the contest
+between the aggressive mendicant friars and the secular doctors whom
+they wished to supplant in the divinity schools.
+
+There is little evidence of even a pale reflection of these struggles
+in contemporary Oxford. English scholars bore their full share in the
+fight. It was the Englishman Curzon who condemned the heresies of
+Amaury of Bène. Another Englishman, Alexander of Hales, issued in his
+_Summa Theologiæ_ the first effective reconciliation of Aristotelian
+metaphysic with Christian doctrine which his Paris pupils, Thomas
+Aquinas, the Italian, and Albert the Great, the German, were to work
+out in detail in the next generation. Hales was the first secular
+doctor in Europe who in 1222, in the full pride of his powers,
+abandoned his position in the university to embrace the voluntary
+poverty of the Franciscans and resume his teaching, not in the regular
+schools but in a Minorite convent. And at the same time another English
+doctor at Paris, John of St. Giles, notable as a physician as well as a
+theologian, dramatically marked his conversion to the Dominican order
+by assuming its habit in the midst of a sermon on the virtues of
+poverty. All these famous Englishmen worked and taught at Paris, and it
+was only a generation later that their successors could establish on
+the Thames the traditions so long upheld on the banks of the Seine.
+
+The establishment of the Dominicans and Franciscans at Oxford gave an
+immense impetus to the activity of the university. The Franciscans
+appointed as the first _lector_ of their Oxford convent the famous
+secular teacher Grosseteste, who ever after held the Minorites in the
+closest estimation. Grosseteste was the greatest scholar of his day,
+knowing Greek and Hebrew as well as the accustomed studies of the
+period. A clear and independent thinker, he was not, like so many of
+his contemporaries, overborne by the weight of authority, but appealed
+to observation and experience in terms which make him the precursor of
+Roger Bacon. Grosseteste's successor as _lector_ was himself a
+Minorite, Adam Marsh, whose reputation was so great that Grosseteste
+was afraid to leave him when sick in a French town, lest the Paris
+masters should persuade him to teach in their schools. Adam's loyalty
+to his native university withstood any such temptation, and from that
+time Oxford began to hold up its head against Paris. Even before this,
+Grosseteste persuaded John of St. Giles to transfer his teaching from
+Paris to Oxford, where he remained for the rest of his life.
+
+The intense intellectual activity of the thirteenth century flowed in
+more than one channel, and Englishmen took their full share both in
+building up and in destroying. Two Englishmen of the next generation
+mark in different ways the reaction against the moderate
+Aristotelianism and orthodox rationalism which their countryman Hales
+first brought into vogue. These were the Franciscan friars, Roger Bacon
+and Duns Scotus. Bacon, though he studied at Paris as well as at
+Oxford, is much more closely identified with England than with the
+Continent. His sceptical, practical intellect led him to heap scorn on
+Hales and his followers and to plunge into audacities of speculation
+which cost him long seclusions in his convent and enforced abstinence
+from writing and study. In his war against the Aristotelians, the
+intrepid friar upheld recourse to experiment and observation as
+superior to deference to authority, in language which stands in strange
+contrast to the traditions of the thirteenth century. Grosseteste, who
+also had preferred the teachings of experience to the appeal to the
+sages of the past, was the only academic leader that escaped Bacon's
+scathing censure. When his order kept him silent, Roger was bidden to
+resume his pen by Pope Clement IV. A generation still later, Duns
+Scotus, probably a Lowland Scot, who taught at Paris and died at
+Cologne in 1308, emphasised, sharply enough, but in less drastic
+fashion, the reaction against the teaching of Hales and Aquinas, by
+accepting a dualism between reason and authority that broke away from
+the Thomist tradition of the thirteenth century and prepared the way
+for the scholastic decadence of the fourteenth. After France, England
+took a leading part in all these movements; and even in France English
+scholars had a large share in making that land the special home of the
+_Studium_, as Italy was of the _Sacerdotium_ and Germany of the
+_Imperium_.
+
+This intellectual ferment had its results on practical life. Though the
+university was cosmopolitan, the individual members of it were not the
+less good citizens. A patriot like Grosseteste strove to his uttermost
+to keep Englishmen for Oxford or to win them back from Paris. Oxford
+clerks fought the battle of England against the legate Otto, and we
+shall see them siding with Montfort. The eminently practical temper of
+the academic class could not neglect the world of action for the
+abstract pursuit of science. Eager as men were to know, to prove, and
+to inquire, the age had little of the mystical temperament about it.
+The studies which made for worldly success, such as civil and canon
+law, attracted the thousands for whom philosophy or theology had little
+attraction. Never before was there a career so fully opened to talent.
+The academic teacher's fame took him from the lecture-room to the
+court, from the university to the episcopal throne, and so it was that
+the university influenced action almost as profoundly as it influenced
+thought, and affected all classes of society alike. The struggles of
+poor students like Edmund of Abingdon or Grosseteste must not make us
+think that the universities of this period were exclusively frequented
+by humble scholars. The academic career of a rich baron's son like
+Thomas of Cantilupe, living in his own hired house at Paris with a
+train of chaplains and tutors, receiving the visits of the French king,
+and feeding poor scholars with the remnants from his table, is as
+characteristic as the more common picture of the student begging his
+way from one seat of learning to another, and suffering the severest
+privations rather than desert his studies. Yet the function of the
+_studium_ as promoting a healthy circulation between the various orders
+of medieval society, must not be ignored.
+
+Partly to help on the poor, partly to encourage men to devote
+themselves to the pursuit of knowledge, endowments began to arise which
+soon enhanced the splendour of universities though they lessened their
+mobility and their freedom. The mendicant convents at Paris and Oxford
+prepared the way for secular foundations, at first small and
+insignificant, like that which, in the days of Henry III., John Balliol
+established at Oxford for the maintenance of poor scholars, but soon
+increasing in magnitude and distinction. The great college set up by
+St. Louis' confessor at Paris for the endowment of scholars, desirous
+of studying the unlucrative but vital subject of theology, was soon
+imitated by the chancellor of Henry III. Side by side with Robert of
+Sorbon's college of 1257, arose Walter of Merton's foundation of 1263,
+and twenty years later Bishop Balsham's college of Peterhouse extended
+the "rule of Merton" to Cambridge.
+
+The academic movement was not all clear gain. The humanism, of the
+twelfth century was crushed beneath the weight of the specialised
+science and encyclopædic learning of the thirteenth. We should seek in
+vain among most theologians or the philosophers of our period for any
+spark of literary art; and the tendency dominant in them affected for
+evil all works written in Latin. Even the historians show a falling
+away from the example of William of Malmesbury or of Roger of Hoveden.
+The one English chronicler of the thirteenth century who is a
+considerable man of letters, Matthew Paris, belongs to the early half
+of it, before the academic tradition was fully established, and even
+with him prolixity impairs the art without injuring the colour of his
+work. The age of Edward I., the great time of triumphant scholasticism,
+is recorded in chronicles so dreary that it is hard to make the dry
+bones live. Walter of Hemingburgh, the most attractive historian of the
+time, belongs to the next generation: and his excellencies are only
+great in comparison with his fellows. Something of this decadence may
+be attributed to the falling away of the elder monastic types, whose
+higher life withered up from want of able recruits, for the secular and
+mendicant careers offered opportunities so stimulating that few men of
+purpose, or earnest spiritual character, cared to enter a Benedictine
+or a Cistercian house of religion. Something more may be assigned to
+the growing claims of the vulgar tongue on literary aspirants. But the
+chief cause of the literary defects of thirteenth century writers must
+be set down to the doctrine that the study of "arts"--of grammar,
+rhetoric and the rest--was only worthy of schoolboys and novices, and
+was only a preliminary to the specialised faculties which left little
+room for artistic presentation. Science in short nearly killed
+literature.
+
+It was the same with the vulgar tongues as with Latin. French remained
+the common language of the higher classes of English society, and the
+history of French literature belongs to the history of the western
+world rather than to that of England. The share taken in it by
+English-born writers is less important than in the great age of romance
+when the contact of Celt and Norman on British soil added the Arthurian
+legend to the world's stock of poetic material. The practical motive,
+which destroyed the art of so many Latin writers, impaired the literary
+value of much written in the vernacular. We have technical works in
+French and even in English, such as Walter of Henley's treatise on
+_Husbandry_, composed in French for the guidance of stewards of manors,
+and translated, it is said by Grosseteste, into English for the benefit
+of a wider public. Grosseteste is also said to have drawn up in French
+a handbook of rules for the management of a great estate, and he
+certainly wrote French poetry. The legal literature, written in Latin
+or French, and illustrated by such names as Bracton, Britton, and
+"Fleta," shows that there was growing up a school of earnest students
+of English law who, though anxious, like Bracton, to bring their
+conclusions under the rules of Roman jurisprudence, began to treat
+their science with an independence which secured for English custom the
+opportunity of independent development. Of more literary interest than
+such technicalities were the rhyming chronicles, handed on from the
+previous age, of which one of the best, the recently discovered history
+of the great William Marshal, has already been noticed. The spontaneity
+of this poem proves that its language was still the natural speech of
+the writer, and impels its French editor to claim for it a French
+origin. As the century grew older there was no difficulty in deciding
+whether French works were written by Englishmen or Frenchmen. The
+Yorkshire French of Peter Langtoft's _Chronicle_, and the jargon of the
+_Year Books_, attest how the political separation of the two lands, and
+the preponderance in northern France of the dialect of Paris, placed
+the insular French speech in strong contrast to the language of polite
+society beyond the Channel. Yet barbarous as Anglo-French became, it
+retained the freshness of a living tongue, and gained some ground at
+the expense of Latin, notably in the law courts and in official
+documents.
+
+English was slowly making its way upwards. There was a public ready to
+read vernacular books, and not at home with French. For their sake a
+great literature of translations and adaptations was made, beginning
+with Layamon's English version of Wace's _Brut_, which by the end of
+the century made the cycle of French romance accessible to the English
+reader. Many works of edification and devotion were written in English;
+and Robert of Gloucester's rhyming history appealed to a larger public
+than the Yorkshire French of Langtoft. It is significant of the trend
+of events that the early fourteenth century saw Langtoft himself done
+into English by Robert Mannyng, of Bourne. While as yet no continuous
+works of high merit were written in English, there was no lack of
+experiments, of novelties, and of adaptations. Much evidence of depth
+of feeling, power of expression, and careful art lies hidden away in
+half-forgotten anonymous lyrics, satires, and romances. The language in
+which these works were written was steadily becoming more like our
+modern English. The dialectical differences become less acute; the
+inflections begin to drop away; the vocabulary gradually absorbs a
+larger romance element, and the prosody drops from the forms of the
+West Saxon period into measures and modes that reflect a living
+connexion with the contemporary poetry of France. Thus, even in the
+literature of a not too literary age, we find abundant tokens of that
+strenuous national life which was manifesting itself in so many
+different ways.
+
+Art rather than literature reflected the deeper currents of the
+thirteenth century. Architecture, the great art of the middle age, was
+in its perfection. The inchoate gothic which the Cistercians brought
+from Burgundy to the Yorkshire dales, and William of Sens transplanted
+from his birthplace to Canterbury, was superseded by the more developed
+art of St. Hugh's choir at Lincoln. In the next generation the new
+style, imported from northern France, struck out ways of its own, less
+soaring, less rigidly logical, yet of unequalled grace and
+picturesqueness, such as we see in Salisbury cathedral, which
+altogether dates from the reign of Henry III. Here also, as in
+literature, foreign models stood side by side with native products.
+Henry III.'s favourite foundation at Westminster reproduced on English
+soil the towering loftiness, the vaulted roofs, the short choir, and
+the ring of apsidal chapels, of the great French minsters. This was
+even more emphatically the case with the decorations, the goldsmith's
+and metal work, the sculpture, painting, and glass, which the best
+artists of France set up in honour of the English king's favourite
+saint. In these crafts English work would not as yet bear a comparison
+with foreign, and even the glories of the statuary of the façade of
+Wells cannot approach the sculptured porches of Amiens or Paris. As the
+century advanced some of the fashions of the French builders, notably
+as regards window tracery, were taken up in the early "Decorated" of
+the reign of Edward I.; and here the claims of English to essential
+equality with French building can perhaps be better substantiated than
+in the infancy of the art. But all these comparisons are misleading.
+The impulse to gothic art came to England from France, like the impulse
+to many other things. Its working out was conducted on English local
+lines, ever becoming more divergent from those of the prototype, though
+not seldom stimulated by the constant intercourse of the two lands.
+
+The new gothic art enriched the medieval town with a splendour of
+buildings hitherto unknown, which symbolised the growth of material
+prosperity as well as of a keener artistic appreciation. In the greater
+towns the four orders of friars erected their large and plain churches,
+designed as halls for preaching to great congregations. The development
+of domestic architecture is even more significant than the growth of
+ecclesiastical and military buildings. Stone houses were no longer the
+rare luxuries of Jews or nobles. Never were the towns more prosperous
+and more energetic. They were now winning for themselves both economic
+and administrative independence. Magnates, such as Randolph of Chester,
+followed the king's example by granting charters to the smaller towns.
+Even the lesser boroughs became not merely the abodes of agriculturists
+but the homes of organised trading communities. It was the time when
+the merchant class first began to manifest itself in politics, and the
+power of capital to make itself felt. Capital was almost monopolised by
+Jews, Lombards, or Tuscans, and the fierce English hatred of the
+foreigner found a fresh expression in the persecution of the Hebrew
+money-lenders and in the increasing dislike felt for the alien bankers
+and merchants who throve at Englishmen's expense. The fact that so much
+of English trade with the continent was still in the hands of Germans,
+Frenchmen, and Italians made this feeling the more intense. But there
+were limits even to the ill-will towards aliens. The foreigner could
+make himself at home in England, and the rapid naturalisation of a
+Montfort in the higher walks of life is paralleled by the absorption
+into the civic community of many a Gascon or German merchant, like that
+Arnold Fitz Thedmar,[1] a Bremen trader's son, who became alderman
+of London and probably chronicler of its history. Yet even the greatest
+English towns did not become strong enough to cut themselves off from
+the general life of the people. They were rather a new element in that
+rich and purposeful nation that had so long been enduring the rule of
+Henry of Winchester. The national energy spurned the feebleness of the
+court, and the time was at hand when the nation, through its natural
+leaders, was to overthrow the wretched system of misgovernment under
+which it had suffered. Political retrogression was no longer to bar
+national progress.
+
+ [1] See for Arnold the _Chronica majorum et vicecomitum
+ Londoniarum_ in _Liber de antiquis legibus_, and Riley's
+ introduction to his translation of _Chronicles of the Mayors
+ and Sheriffs of London_ (1863).
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE BARONS' WAR.
+
+
+During the early months of 1258, the aliens ruled the king and realm,
+added estate to estate, and defied all attempts to dislodge them. Papal
+agents traversed the country, extorting money from prelates and
+churches. The Welsh, in secret relations with the lords of the march,
+threatened the borders, and made a confederacy with the Scots. The
+French were hostile, and the barons disunited, without leaders, and
+helpless. A wretched harvest made corn scarce and dear. A wild winter,
+followed by a long late frost, cut off the lambs and destroyed the
+farmers' hopes for the summer. A murrain of cattle followed, and the
+poor were dying of hunger and pestilence. Henry III. was in almost as
+bad a plight as his people. He had utterly failed to subdue Llewelyn. A
+papal agent threatened him with excommunication and the resumption of
+the grant of Sicily. He could not control his foreign kinsfolk, and the
+rivalry of Savoyards and Poitevins added a new element of turmoil to
+the distracted relations of the magnates. His son had been forced to
+pawn his best estates to William of Valence, and the royal exchequer
+was absolutely empty. Money must be had at all risks, and the only way
+to get it was to assemble the magnates.
+
+On April 2 the chief men of Church and State gathered together at
+London. For more than a month the stormy debates went on. The king's
+demands were contemptuously waved aside. His exceptional misdeeds, it
+was declared, were to be met by exceptional measures. Hot words were
+spoken, and William of Valence called Leicester a traitor. "No, no,
+William," the earl replied, "I am not a traitor, nor the son of a
+traitor; your father and mine were men of a different stamp," An
+opposition party formed itself under the Earls of Gloucester,
+Leicester, Hereford, and Norfolk. Even the Savoyards partially fell
+away from the court, and a convocation of clergy at Merton, presided
+over by Archbishop Boniface, drew up canons in the spirit of
+Grosseteste. In parliament all that Henry could get was a promise to
+adjourn the question of supply until a commission had drafted a
+programme of reform. On May 2 Henry and his son Edward announced their
+acceptance of this proposal; parliament was forthwith prorogued, and
+the barons set to work to mature their scheme.
+
+On June 11 the magnates once more assembled, this time at Oxford. A
+summons to fight the Welsh gave them an excuse to appear attended with
+their followers in arms. The royalist partisans nicknamed the gathering
+the Mad Parliament, but its proceedings were singularly business-like.
+A petition of twenty-nine articles was presented, in which the abuses
+of the administration were laid bare in detail. A commission of
+twenty-four was appointed who were to redress the grievances of the
+nation, and to draw up a new scheme of government. According to the
+compact Henry himself selected half this body. It was significant of
+the falling away of the mass of the ruling families from the monarchy,
+that six of Henry's twelve commissioners were churchmen, four were
+aliens, three were his brothers, one his brother-in-law, one his
+nephew, one his wife's uncle. The only earls that accepted his
+nomination were the Poitevin adventurer, John du Plessis, Earl of
+Warwick, and John of Warenne, who was pledged to a royalist policy by
+his marriage to Henry's half-sister, Alice of Lusignan. The only
+bishops were, the queen's uncle, Boniface of Canterbury, and Fulk
+Basset of London, the richest and noblest born of English prelates,
+who, though well meaning, was too weak in character for continued
+opposition. Yet these two were the most independent names on Henry's
+list. The rest included the three Lusignan brothers, Guy, William, and
+Aymer, still eight years after his election only elect of Winchester;
+Henry of Almaine, the young son of the King of the Romans; the
+pluralist official John Mansel; the chancellor, Henry Wingham; the
+Dominican friar John of Darlington, distinguished as a biblical critic,
+the king's confessor and the pope's agent; and the Abbot of
+Westminster, an old man pledged by long years of dependence to do the
+will of the second founder of his house. In strong contrast to these
+creatures of court favour were the twelve nominees of the barons. The
+only ecclesiastic was Walter of Cantilupe, Bishop of Worcester, and the
+only alien was Earl Simon of Leicester. With him were three other
+earls, Richard of Clare, Earl of Gloucester, Roger Bigod, earl marshal
+and Earl of Norfolk, and Humphrey Bohun, Earl of Hereford. Those of
+baronial rank were Roger Mortimer, the strongest of the marchers, Hugh
+Bigod, the brother of the earl marshal, John FitzGeoffrey, Richard
+Grey, William Bardolf, Peter Montfort, and Hugh Despenser.
+
+The twenty-four drew up a plan of reform which left little to be
+desired in thoroughness. The Provisions of Oxford, as the new
+constitution was styled, were speedily laid before the barons and
+adopted. By it a standing council of fifteen was established, with
+whose advice and consent Henry was henceforth to exercise all his
+authority. Even this council was not to be without supervision. Thrice
+in the year another committee of twelve was to treat with the fifteen
+on the common affairs of the realm. This rather narrow body was
+created, we are told, to save the expense involved in too frequent
+meetings of the magnates. A third aristocratic junto of twenty-four was
+appointed to make grants of money to the crown. All aliens were to be
+expelled from office and from the custody of royal castles. New
+ministers, castellans, and escheators were appointed under stringent
+conditions and under the safeguard of new oaths. The original
+twenty-four were not yet discharged from office. They had still to draw
+up schemes for the reform of the household of king and queen, and for
+the amendment of the exchange of London. Moreover, "Be it remembered,"
+ran one of the articles, "that the estate of Holy Church be amended by
+the twenty-four elected to reform the realm, when they shall find time
+and place".
+
+For the first time in our history the king was forced to stand aside
+from the discharge of his undoubted functions, and suffer them to be
+exercised by a committee of magnates. The conception of limited
+monarchy, which had been foreshadowed in the early struggles of Henry's
+long reign, was triumphantly vindicated, and, after weary years of
+waiting, the baronial victors demanded more than had ever been
+suggested by the most free interpretation of the Great Charter. The
+body that controlled the crown was, it is true, a narrow one. But
+whatever was lost by its limitation, was more than gained by the
+absolute freedom of the whole movement from any suspicion of the
+separatist tendencies of the earlier feudalism. The barons tacitly
+accepted the principle that England was a unity, and that it must be
+ruled as a single whole. The triumph of the national movement of the
+thirteenth century was assured when the most feudal class of the
+community thus frankly abandoned the ancient baronial contention that
+each baron should rule in isolation over his own estates, a tradition
+which, when carried out for a brief period under Stephen, had set up
+"as many kings or rather tyrants as lords of castles". The feudal
+period was over: the national idea was triumphant. This victory becomes
+specially significant when we remember how large a share the barons of
+the Welsh march, the only purely feudal region in the country, took in
+the movement against the King.
+
+The unity of the national government being recognised, it was another
+sign of the times that its control should be transferred from the
+monarch to a committee of barons. At this point the rigid conceptions
+of the triumphant oligarchy stood in the way of a wide national policy.
+Since the reign of John the custom had arisen of consulting the
+representatives of the shire-courts on matters of politics and finance.
+In 1258 there is not the least trace of a suggestion that parliament
+could ever include a more popular element than the barons and prelates.
+On the contrary, the Provisions diminished the need even for those
+periodical assemblies of the magnates which had been in existence since
+the earliest dawn of our history. For all practical purposes small
+baronial committees were to perform the work of magnates and people as
+well as of the crown. Yet it must be recognised that the barons showed
+self-control, as well as practical wisdom, in handing over functions
+discharged by the baronage as a whole to the various committees of
+their selection. The danger of general control by the magnates was that
+a large assembly, more skilled in opposition than in constructive work,
+was almost sure to become infected by faction. By strictly limiting and
+defining who the new rulers of England were to be, the barons
+approached a combination of aristocratic control with the stability and
+continuity resulting from limited numbers and defined functions. It is
+likely, however, that in bestowing such extensive powers on their
+nominees, they were influenced by the well-grounded belief that the new
+constitution could only be established by main force, and that, even
+when abandoned by the king, the aliens would make a good fight before
+they gave up all that they had so long held in England. The success of
+the new scheme largely depended upon the immediate execution of the
+ordinance for the expulsion of the foreigners.
+
+The first step taken to carry out the Provisions was the appointment of
+the new ministers. The barons insisted on the revival of the office of
+justiciar, and a strenuous and capable chief minister was found in Hugh
+Bigod. It was advisable to go cautiously, and some of the king's
+ministers were allowed to continue in office. An appeal to force was
+necessary before the new constitution could be set up in detail. The
+Savoyards bought their safety by accepting it; but the Poitevins,
+seeing that flight or resistance were the only alternatives before
+them, were spirited enough to prefer the bolder course. They were
+specially dangerous because Edward and his cousin, Henry of Almaine,
+the son of the King of the Romans, were much under their influence. In
+the Dominican convent at Oxford the baronial leaders formed a sworn
+confederacy not to desist from their purpose until the foreigners had
+been expelled. There were more hot words between Leicester and William,
+the most capable of the Lusignans. The Poitevins soon found that they
+could not maintain themselves in the face of the general hatred. On
+June 22 they fled from Oxford in the company of their ally, Earl
+Warenne. They rode straight for the coast, but failing to reach it,
+occupied Winchester, where they sought to maintain themselves in
+Aymer's castle of Wolvesey. The magnates of the parliament then turned
+against them the arms they professed to have prepared against the
+Welsh. Headed by the new justiciar, Hugh Bigod, they besieged Wolvesey.
+Warenne abandoned the aliens, and they gladly accepted the terms
+offered to them by their foes. They were allowed to retain their lands
+and some of their ready money, on condition of withdrawing from the
+realm and surrendering their castles. By the middle of July they had
+crossed over to France. With them disappeared the whole of the
+organised opposition to the new government. Edward, deprived of their
+support, swore to observe the Provisions.
+
+Immediately on the flight of the Lusignans the council of Fifteen was
+chosen after a fashion which seemed to give the king's friends an equal
+voice with the champions of the aristocracy. Four electors appointed
+it, and of these two were the nominees of the baronial section, and two
+of the royalist section of the original twenty-four. The result of
+their work showed that there was only one party left after the Wolvesey
+fiasco. While only three of the king's twelve had places on the
+permanent council, no less that nine of the fifteen were chosen from
+the baronial twelve. It was useless for Archbishop Boniface, John
+Mansel, and the Earl of Warwick to stand up against the Bishop of
+Worcester, the Earls of Leicester, Norfolk, Hereford, and Gloucester,
+against John FitzGeoffrey, Peter Montfort, Richard Grey, and Roger
+Mortimer. Moreover, of the three, John Mansel alone could still be
+regarded as a royalist partisan. There were three of the fifteen chosen
+from outside the twenty-four. Of these, Peter of Savoy, Earl of
+Richmond, might, like his brother Boniface, be regarded as an alien,
+though hatred of the Poitevins had by this time made Englishmen of the
+Savoyards. The other two, the marcher-lord James of Audley and William
+of Fors, Earl of Albemarle, were of baronial sympathies. It was the
+same with the other councils.
+
+Inquiry was made as to abuses. Gradually the royal officials were
+replaced by men of popular leanings. The sheriffs were changed and were
+strictly controlled, and four knights from each shire assembled in
+October to present to the king the grievances of the people against the
+out-going sheriffs. The custody of the castles was put into trusty and,
+for the most part, into English hands. Finally the king was forced to
+issue a proclamation, in which he commanded all true men "steadfastly
+to hold and to defend the statutes that be made or are to be made by
+our counsellors". This document was issued in English as well as in
+French and Latin. A copy of the English version was sent to every
+sheriff, with instructions to read it several times a year in the
+county court, so that a knowledge of its contents might be attained by
+every man. It is perhaps the first important proclamation issued in
+English since the coming of the Normans. Early in 1259 Richard, King of
+the Romans, set out to revisit England. He was met at Saint Omer by a
+deputation of magnates, who told him that he could only be allowed to
+land after taking an oath to observe the Provisions. Richard blustered,
+but soon gave in his submission. His adhesion to the reforms marks the
+last step in the revolution.
+
+The new constitution worked without interruption until the end of 1259.
+Throughout that period domestic affairs were uneventful, and the
+efforts of the ministry were chiefly concerned in securing peace
+abroad. In 1258 Wales had been in revolt, Scotland unfriendly, and
+France threatening. A truce, ill observed, was made with Llewelyn, who
+found it worth while to be cautious, seeing that his natural enemies,
+but sometime associates, the marchers, had a preponderant share in the
+government. The Scots were easier to satisfy, for there was at the time
+no real hostility between either kings or peoples. The chief event of
+this period is the conclusion of the first peace with France since the
+wars of John and Philip Augustus. The protracted negotiations which
+preceded it took the king and his chief councillors abroad, and that
+made it easier to carry on the new domestic system without friction.
+
+Since the friendly personal intercourse held between Henry and Louis
+IX. in 1254, the relations between England and France had become less
+cordial. The revival of the English power in Gascony, the
+Anglo-Castilian alliance, and the election of Richard of Cornwall to
+the German kingship irritated the French, to whom the persistent
+English claim to Normandy and Anjou, and the repudiation of the
+Aquitanian homage, were perpetual sources of annoyance. The French
+championship of Alfonso against Richard achieved the double end of
+checking English pretensions, and cooling the friendship between
+England and Castile. St. Louis, however, was always ready to treat for
+peace, while the revolution of 1258 made all parties in England anxious
+to put a speedy end to the unsettled relations between the two realms.
+Negotiations were begun as early as 1257, and made some progress; but
+the decisive step was taken immediately after the prorogation of the
+reforming parliament in the spring of 1258. During May a strangely
+constituted embassy treated for peace at Paris, where Montfort and Hugh
+Bigod worked side by side with two of the Lusignans and Peter of Savoy.
+They concluded a provisional treaty in time for the negotiators to take
+their part in the Mad Parliament. The unsettled state of affairs in
+England, however, delayed the ratification of the treaty. Arrangements
+had been made for its publication at Cambrai, but the fifteen dared not
+allow Henry to escape from their tutelage, and Louis refused to treat
+save with the king himself. There were difficulties as to the relation
+of the pope and the King of the Romans to the treaty, while Earl
+Simon's wife Eleanor and her children refused to waive their very
+remote claims to a share in the Norman and Angevin inheritances, which
+her brother was prepared to renounce. As ever, Montfort held to his
+personal rights with the utmost tenacity, and the self-seeking
+obstinacy of the chief negotiator of the treaty caused both bad blood
+and delay. At last he was bought off by the promise of a money payment,
+and the preliminary ratifications were exchanged in the summer of 1259.
+On November 14 Henry left England for Paris for the formal conclusion
+of the treaty. There were great festivities on the occasion of the
+meeting of the two kings, but once more Montfort and his wife blocked
+the way. Not until the very morning of the day fixed for the final
+ceremony were they satisfied by Henry's promise to deposit on their
+behalf a large sum in the hands of the French. Immediately afterwards
+Henry did homage to Louis for Gascony.
+
+The chief condition of the treaty of Paris was Henry's definitive
+renunciation of all his claims on Normandy, Anjou, Maine, Touraine, and
+Poitou, and his agreement to hold Gascony as a fief of the French
+crown. In return for this, Louis not only recognised him as Duke of
+Aquitaine, but added to his actual possessions there by ceding to him
+all that he held, whether in fief or in demesne, in the three dioceses
+of Limoges, Cahors, and Périgueux. Besides these immediate cessions,
+the French king promised to hand over to Henry certain districts then
+held by his brother, Alfonse of Poitiers, and his brother's wife Joan
+of Toulouse, in the event of their dominions escheating to the crown by
+their death without heirs. These regions included Agen and the Agenais,
+Saintonge to the south of the Charente, and in addition the whole of
+Quercy, if it could be proved by inquest that it had been given by
+Richard I. to his sister Joan, grandmother of Joan of Poitiers, as her
+marriage portion. Moreover the French king promised to pay to Henry the
+sums necessary to maintain for two years five hundred knights to be
+employed "for the service of God, or the Church, or the kingdom of
+England."[1]
+
+ [1] For the treaty and its execution see M. Gavrilovitch,
+ _Étude sur le traité de Paris de 1259_ (1899).
+
+The treaty was unpopular both in France and England. The French
+strongly objected to the surrender of territory, and were but little
+convinced of the advantage gained by making the English king once more
+the vassal of France. English opinion was hostile to the abandonment of
+large pretensions in return for so small an equivalent. On the French
+side it is true that Louis sacrificed something to his sense of justice
+and love of peace. But the territory he ceded was less in reality than
+in appearance. The French king's demesnes in Quercy, Périgord, and
+Limousin were not large, and the transference of the homage of the
+chief vassals meant only a nominal change of overlordship, and was
+further limited by a provision that certain "privileged fiefs" were
+still to be retained under the direct suzerainty of the French crown.
+As to the eventual cessions, Alfonse and his wife were still alive and
+likely to live many years. Even the cession of Gascony was hampered by
+a stipulation that the towns should take an "oath of security," by
+which they pledged themselves to aid France against England in the
+event of the English king breaking the provisions of the treaty.
+Perhaps the most solid advantage Henry gained by the treaty was
+financial, for he spent the sums granted to enable him to redeem his
+crusading vow in preparing for war against his own subjects. It was,
+however, an immense advantage for England to be able during the
+critical years which followed to be free from French hostility. If,
+therefore, the French complaints against the treaty were exaggerated,
+the English dissatisfaction was unreasonable. The real difficulty for
+the future lay in the fact that the possession of Gascony by the king
+of a hostile nation was incompatible with the proper development of the
+French monarchy. For fifty years, however, a chronic state of war had
+not given Gascony to the French; and Louis IX. was, perhaps, politic as
+well as scrupulous in abandoning the way of force and beginning a new
+method of gradual absorption, that in the end gained the Gascon fief
+for France more effectively than any conquest. The treaty of Paris was
+not a final settlement. It left a score of questions still open, and
+the problems of its gradual execution involved the two courts in
+constant disputes down to the beginning of the Hundred Years' War. For
+seventy years the whole history of the relations between the two
+nations is but a commentary on the treaty of Paris.
+
+During his visit to Paris Henry arranged a marriage between his
+daughter Beatrice and John of Brittany, the son of the reigning duke.
+In no hurry to get back to the tutelage of the fifteen, he prolonged
+his stay on the continent till the end of April, 1260. Yet, abroad as
+at home, he could not be said to act as a free man. It was not the king
+so much as Simon of Montfort who was the real author of the French
+treaty. Indeed, it is from the conclusion of the Peace of Paris that
+Simon's preponderance becomes evident. He was at all stages the chief
+negotiator of the peace and, save when his personal interests stood in
+the way, he controlled every step of the proceedings. If in 1258 he was
+but one of several leaders of the baronial party in England, he came
+back from France in 1260 assured of supremacy. During his absence
+abroad, events had taken place in England which called for his
+presence.
+
+After their triumph in 1258, the baronial leaders relaxed their efforts.
+Contented with their position as arbiters of the national destinies,
+they made little effort to carry out the reforms contemplated at Oxford.
+The ranks of the victors were broken up by private dissensions. Before
+leaving for France, Earl Simon violently quarrelled with Richard, Earl
+of Gloucester. It was currently believed that Gloucester had grown
+slack, and Simon rose in popular estimation as a thorough-going reformer
+who had no mind to substitute the rule of a baronial oligarchy for the
+tyranny of the king. His position was strengthened by his personal
+qualities which made him the hero of the younger generation; and his
+influence began to modify the policy of Edward the king's son, who,
+since the flight of his Poitevin kinsmen, was gradually arriving at
+broader views of national policy. Even before his father's journey to
+France, Edward took up a line of his own. In the October parliament of
+1259, he listened to a petition presented to the council by the younger
+nobles[1] who complained that, though the king had performed all his
+promises, the barons had not fulfilled any of theirs. Edward thereupon
+stirred up the oligarchy to issue an instalment of the promised reforms
+in the document known as the Provisions of Westminster. During Henry's
+absence in France the situation became strained. The oligarchic party,
+headed by Gloucester, was breaking away from Montfort; and Edward was
+forming a liberal royalist party which was not far removed from
+Montfort's principles. Profiting by these discords, the Lusignans
+prepared to invade England. The papacy was about to declare against the
+reformers. When the monks of Winchester elected an Englishman as their
+bishop in the hope of getting rid of the queen's uncle, Alexander IV.
+summoned Aymer to his court and consecrated him bishop with his own
+hands.
+
+ [1] "Communitas bacheleriae Angliae," _Burton Ann_., p. 471.
+ _See on_ this, _Engl. Hist. Review_, xvii. (1902), 89-94.
+
+Early in 1260, Montfort went back to England and made common cause with
+Edward. Despite the king's order that no parliament should be held
+during his absence abroad, Montfort insisted that the Easter parliament
+should meet as usual at London. The discussions were hot. Montfort
+demanded the expulsion of Peter of Savoy from the council, and Edward
+and Gloucester almost came to blows. The Londoners closed their gates on
+both parties, but the mediation of the King of the Romans prevented a
+collision. Henry hurried home, convinced that Edward was conspiring
+against him. The king threw himself into the city of London, and with
+Gloucester's help collected an army. Meanwhile Montfort and Edward, with
+their armed followers, were lodged at Clerkenwell, ready for war. Again
+the situation became extremely critical, and again King Richard proved
+the best peacemaker. Henry held out against his son for a fortnight, but
+such estrangement was hard for him to endure. "Do not let my son appear
+before me," he cried, "for if I see him, I shall not be able to refrain
+from kissing him." A reconciliation was speedily effected, and nothing
+remained of the short-lived alliance of Edward with Montfort save that
+his feud with Gloucester continued until the earl's death.
+
+The dissensions among the barons encouraged Henry to shake off the
+tutelage of the fifteen. As soon as he was reconciled with his son, he
+charged Leicester with treason.[1] "But, thanks _be_ to God, the earl
+answered to all these points with such force that the king could do
+nothing against him." Unable to break down his enemy by direct attack,
+Henry followed one of the worst precedents of his father's reign by
+beseeching Alexander IV. to relieve him of his oath to observe the
+Provisions. On April 13, 1261, a bull was issued annulling the whole of
+the legislation of 1258 and 1259, and freeing the king from his sworn
+promise.
+
+ [1] Bémont, _Simon de Montfort_, Appendix xxxvii., pp. 343-53.
+
+William of Valence was already back in England, and restored to his old
+dignities. His return was the easier because his brother, Aymer, the
+most hated of the Poitevins, had died soon after his consecration to
+Winchester. On June 14, 1261, the papal bull was read before the
+assembled parliament at Winchester. There Henry removed the baronial
+ministers and replaced them by his own friends. Chief among the
+sufferers was Hugh Despenser, who had succeeded Hugh Bigod as
+justiciar; and Bigod himself was expelled from the custody of Dover
+Castle. In the summer Henry issued a proclamation, declaring that the
+right of choosing his council and garrisoning his castles was among the
+inalienable attributes of the crown. England was little inclined to
+rebel, for the return of prosperity and good harvests made men more
+contented.
+
+The repudiation of the Provisions restored unity to the baronage. The
+defections had been serious, and it was said that only five of the
+twenty-four still adhered to the opposition. But the crisis forced
+Leicester and Gloucester to forget their recent feuds, and co-operate
+once more against the king. They saw that their salvation from Henry's
+growing strength lay in appealing to a wider public than that which
+they had hitherto addressed. Still posing as the heads of the
+government established by the Provisions, they summoned three knights
+from each shire to attend an assembly at St. Alban's. This appeal to
+the landed gentry alarmed the king so much that he issued counter-writs
+to the sheriffs ordering them to send the knights, not to the baronial
+camp at St. Alban's, but to his own court at Windsor. Neither party was
+as yet prepared for battle. The death of Alexander IV, soon after the
+publication of his bull tied the hands of the king. At the same time
+the renewed dissensions of Leicester and Gloucester paralysed the
+baronage. Before long Simon withdrew to the continent, leaving
+everything in Gloucester's hands. At last, on December 7, a treaty of
+pacification was patched up, and the king announced that he was ready
+to pardon those who accepted its conditions. But there was no
+permanence in the settlement, and the king, the chief gainer by it, was
+soon pressing the new pope, Urban IV., to confirm the bull of
+Alexander. On February 25, 1262, Urban renewed Henry's absolution from
+his oath in a bull which was at once promulgated in England. Montfort
+then came back from abroad and rallied the baronial party. In January,
+1263, Henry once more confirmed the Provisions, and peace seemed
+restored. The death of Richard of Gloucester during 1262 increased
+Montfort's power. His son, the young Earl Gilbert, was Simon's devoted
+disciple, but he was still a minor and the custody of his lands was
+handed over to the Earl of Hereford. Montfort's personal charm
+succeeded in like fashion in winning over Henry of Almaine.
+
+The events of 1263 are as bewildering and as indecisive as those of the
+two previous years. Amidst the confusion of details and the violent
+clashing of personal and territorial interests, a few main principles
+can be discerned. First of all the royalist party was becoming
+decidedly stronger, and fresh secessions of the barons constantly
+strengthened its ranks. Conspicuous among these were the lords of the
+march of Wales, who in 1258 had been almost as one man on the side of
+the opposition, but who by the end of 1263 had with almost equal
+unanimity rallied to the crown.[1] The causes of this change of
+front are to be found partly in public and partly in personal reasons.
+In 1258 Henry III., like Charles I. in 1640, had alienated every class
+of his subjects, and was therefore entirely at the mercy of his
+enemies. By 1263 his concessions had procured for him a following, so
+that he now stood in the same position as Charles after his concessions
+to the Long Parliament made it possible for him to begin the Civil War
+in 1642. A new royalist party was growing up with a wider policy and
+greater efficiency than the old coterie of courtiers and aliens. Of
+this new party Edward was the soul. He had dissociated himself from
+Earl Simon, but he carried into his father's camp something of Simon's
+breadth of vision and force of will. He set to work to win over
+individually the remnant that adhered to Leicester. What persuasion and
+policy could not effect was accomplished by bribes and promises. Edward
+won over the Earl of Hereford, whose importance was doubled by his
+custody of the Gloucester lands, the ex-justiciar Roger Bigod, and
+above all Roger Mortimer.
+
+ [1] On this, and the whole marcher and Welsh aspect of the
+ period, 1258-1267, see my essay on Wales and _the March during
+ the Barons' Wars_ in _Owens College Historical Essays_, pp.
+ 76-136 (1902).
+
+The change of policy of the marchers was partly at least brought about
+by their constant difficulties with the Prince of Wales. During the
+period immediately succeeding the Provisions of Oxford, Llewelyn ceased
+to devastate the marches. A series of truces was arranged which, if
+seldom well kept, at least avoided war on a grand scale. Within Wales
+Llewelyn fully availed himself of the respite from English war.
+Triumphant over the minor chiefs, he could reckon upon the support of
+every Welsh tenant of a marcher lord, and at last grew strong enough to
+disregard the truces and wage open war against the marchers. It was in
+vain that Edward, the greatest of the marcher lords, persuaded David,
+the Welsh prince's brother, to rise in revolt against him. Llewelyn
+devastated the four cantreds to the gates of Chester, and at last,
+after long sieges, forced the war-worn defenders of Deganwy and Diserth
+to surrender the two strong castles through which alone Edward had
+retained some hold over his Welsh lands. It was the same in the middle
+march, where Llewelyn turned his arms against the Mortimers, and robbed
+them of their castles. Even in the south the lord of Gwynedd carried
+everything before him. "If the Welsh are not stopped," wrote a southern
+marcher, "they will destroy all the lands of the king as far as the
+Severn and the Wye, and they ask for nothing less than the whole of
+Gwent." Up to this point the war had been a war of Welsh against
+English, but Montfort sought compensation for his losses in England by
+establishing relations with the Welsh. The alliance between Montfort
+and their enemy had a large share in bringing about the secession of
+the marchers. Their alliance with Edward neutralised the action of
+Montfort, and once more enabled Henry to repudiate the Provisions.
+
+In the summer of 1263, Edward and Montfort both raised armies.
+Leicester made himself master of Hereford, Gloucester, and Bristol, and
+when Edward threw himself into Windsor Castle, he occupied Isleworth,
+hoping to cut his enemy off from London, where the king and queen had
+taken refuge in the Tower. But the hostility of the Londoners made the
+Tower an uneasy refuge for them. On one occasion, when the queen
+attempted to make her way up the Thames in the hope of joining her son
+at Windsor, the citizens assailed her barge so fiercely from London
+Bridge that she was forced to return to the Tower. The foul insults
+which the rabble poured upon his mother deeply incensed Edward and he
+became a bitter foe of the city for the rest of his life. For the
+moment the hostility of London was decisive against Henry. Once more
+the king was forced to confirm the Provisions, agree to a fresh
+banishment of the aliens, and restore Hugh Despenser to the
+justiciarship. This was the last baronial triumph. In a few weeks
+Edward again took up arms, and was joined by many of Montfort's
+associates, including his cousin, Henry of Almaine. Even the Earl of
+Gloucester was wavering. The barons feared the appeal to arms, and
+entered into negotiations. Neither side was strong enough to obtain
+mastery over the other, and a recourse to arbitration seemed the best
+way out of an impossible situation. Accordingly, on December, 1263, the
+two parties agreed to submit the question of the validity of the
+Provisions to the judgment of Louis IX.
+
+The king and his son at once crossed the channel to Amiens, where the
+French king was to hear both sides. A fall from his horse prevented
+Leicester attending the arbitration, and the barons were represented by
+Peter Montfort, lord of Beaudesert castle in Warwickshire, and
+representative of an ancient Anglo-Norman house that was not akin to
+the family of Earl Simon. Louis did not waste time, and on January 23,
+1264, issued his decision in a document called the "Mise of Amiens,"
+which pronounced the Provisions invalid, largely on the ground of the
+papal sentence. Henry was declared free to select his own wardens of
+castles and ministers, and Louis expressly annulled "the statute that
+the realm of England should henceforth be governed by native-born
+Englishmen". "We ordain," he added, "that the king shall have full
+power and free jurisdiction over his realm as in the days before the
+Provisions." The only consolation to the barons was that Louis declared
+that he did not intend to derogate from the ancient liberties of the
+realm, as established by charter or custom, and that he urged a general
+amnesty on both parties. In all essential points Louis decided in
+favour of Henry. Though the justest of kings, he was after all a king,
+and the limitation of the royal authority by a baronial committee
+seemed to him to be against the fundamental idea of monarchy. The pious
+son of the Church was biassed by the authority of two successive popes,
+and he was not unmoved by the indignation of his wife, the sister of
+Queen Eleanor. A few weeks later Urban IV. confirmed the award.
+
+The Mise of Amiens was too one-sided to be accepted. The decision to
+refer matters to St. Louis had been made hastily, and many enemies of
+the king had taken no part in it. They, at least, were free to
+repudiate the judgment and they included the Londoners, the Cinque
+Ports, and nearly the whole of the lesser folk of England. The
+Londoners set the example of rebellion. They elected a constable and a
+marshal, and joining forces with Hugh Despenser, the baronial
+justiciar, who still held the Tower, marched out to Isleworth, where
+they burnt the manor of the King of the Romans. "And this," wrote the
+London Chronicler, "was the beginning of trouble and the origin of the
+deadly war by which so many thousand men perished." The Londoners did
+not act alone. Leicester refused to be bound by the award, though
+definitely pledged to obey it. It was, he maintained, as much perjury
+to abandon the Provisions as to be false to the promise to accept the
+Mise of Amiens. After a last attempt at negotiation at a parliament at
+Oxford, he withdrew with his followers and prepared for resistance.
+"Though all men quit me," he cried, "I will remain with my four sons
+and fight for the good cause which I have sworn to defend--the honour
+of Holy Church and the good of the realm." This was no mere boast. The
+more his associates fell away, the more the Montfort family took the
+lead. While Leicester organised resistance in the south, he sent his
+elder sons, Simon and Henry, to head the revolt in the midlands and the
+west.
+
+There was already war in the march of Wales when Henry Montfort crossed
+the Severn and strove to make common cause with Llewelyn. But the Welsh
+prince held aloof from him, and Edward himself soon made his way to the
+march. At first all went well for young Montfort. Edward, unable to
+capture Gloucester and its bridge, was forced to beg for a truce.
+Before long he found himself strong enough to repudiate the armistice
+and take possession of Gloucester. Master of the chief passage over the
+lower Severn, Edward abandoned the western campaign and went with his
+marchers to join his father at Oxford, where he at once stirred up the
+king to activity. The masters of the university, who were strong
+partisans of Montfort, were chased away from the town. Then the royal
+army marched against Northampton, the headquarters of the younger
+Simon, who was resting there, and, on April 4, the king and his son
+burst upon the place. Their first assault was unsuccessful, but next
+day the walls were scaled, the town captured, and many leading barons,
+including young Simon, taken prisoner. The victors thereupon marched
+northwards, devastated Montfort's Leicestershire estates, and thence
+proceeded to Nottingham, which opened its gates in a panic.
+
+Leicester himself had not been idle. While his sons were courting
+disaster in the west and midlands, he threw himself into London, where
+he was rapturously welcomed. The Londoners, however, became very
+unruly, committed all sorts of excesses against the wealthy royalists,
+and cruelly plundered and murdered the Jews. Montfort himself did not
+disdain to share in the spoils of the Jewry, though he soon turned to
+nobler work. He was anxious to open up communications with his allies
+in the Cinque Ports. But Earl Warenne, in Rochester castle, blocked the
+passage of the Dover road over the Medway. Accordingly Montfort marched
+with a large following of Londoners to Rochester, captured the town,
+and assaulted the castle with such energy that it was on the verge of
+surrendering. The news of Warenne's peril reached Henry in the
+midlands. In five days the royalists made their way from Nottingham to
+Rochester, a distance of over 160 miles. On their approach Montfort
+withdrew into London.
+
+Flushed with their successes at Northampton and Rochester, the
+royalists marched through Kent and Sussex, plundering and devastating
+the lands of their enemies. Though masters of the open country, they
+had to encounter the resistance of the Clare castles, and the solid
+opposition of the Cinque Ports. Their presence on the south coast was
+specially necessary, for Queen Eleanor, who had gone abroad, was
+waiting, with an army of foreign mercenaries, on the Flemish coast, for
+an opportunity of sailing to her husband's succour. The royal army was
+hampered by want of provisions, and was only master of the ground on
+which it was camped. As a first fruit of the alliance with Llewelyn,
+Welsh soldiers lurked behind every hedge and hill, cut off stragglers,
+intercepted convoys, and necessitated perpetual watchfulness. At last
+the weary and hungry troops found secure quarters in Lewes, the centre
+of the estates of Earl Warenne.
+
+Montfort then marched southwards from the capital. Besides the baronial
+retinues, a swarm of Londoners, eager for the fray, though unaccustomed
+to military restraints, accompanied him. On May 13 he encamped at
+Fletching, a village hidden among the dense oak woods of the Weald,
+some nine miles north of Lewes. A last effort of diplomacy was
+attempted by Bishop Cantilupe of Worcester who, despite papal censures,
+still accompanied the baronial forces. But the royalists would not
+listen to the mediation of so pronounced a partisan. Nothing therefore
+was left but the appeal to the sword.
+
+The royal army was the more numerous, and included the greater names.
+Of the heroes of the struggle of 1258 the majority was in the king's
+camp, including most of the lords of the Welsh march, and the hardly
+less fierce barons of the north, whose grandfathers had wrested the
+Great Charter from John. The returned Poitevins with their followers
+mustered strongly, and the confidence of the royalists was so great
+that they neglected all military preparations. The poverty of
+Montfort's host in historic families attested the complete
+disintegration of the party since 1263. Its strength lay in the young
+enthusiasts, who were still dominated by the strong personality and
+generous ideals of Leicester, such as the Earl of Gloucester, or
+Humphrey Bohun of Brecon, whose father, the Earl of Hereford, was
+fighting upon the king's side. Early on the morning of May 14 Montfort
+arrayed his troops and marched southward in the direction of Lewes.
+Dawn had hardly broken when the troops were massed on the summit of the
+South Downs, overlooking Lewes from the north-west.
+
+Lewes is situated on the right bank of a great curve of the river Ouse,
+which almost encircles the town. To the south are the low-lying marshes
+through which the river meanders towards the sea, while to the north,
+east, and west are the bare slopes of the South Downs, through which
+the river forces its way past the gap in which the town is situated. To
+the north of the town lies the strong castle of the Warennes, wherein
+Edward had taken up his quarters, while in the southern suburb the
+Cluniac priory of St. Pancras, the chief foundation of the Warennes,
+afforded lodgings for King Henry and the King of the Romans. When Simon
+reached the summit of the downs, his movements were visible from the
+walls. But the royal army was still sleeping and its sentinels kept
+such bad watch that the earl was able to array his troops at his
+leisure.
+
+From the summit of the hills two great spurs, separated by a waterless
+valley, slope down towards the north and west sides of the town. The
+more northerly led straight to the castle, and the more southerly to
+the priory. Montfort's plan was to throw his main strength on the
+attack on the priory, while deluding the enemy into the belief that his
+chief object was to attack the castle. He was not yet fully recovered
+from his fall from his horse, and it was known that he generally
+travelled in a closed car or horse-litter. This vehicle he posted in a
+conspicuous place on the northerly spur, and planted over it his
+standard. In front of it were massed the London militia, mainly
+infantry and the least effective element in his host. Meanwhile the
+knights and men-at-arms were mustered on the southerly spur under the
+personal direction of Montfort, who held himself in the rear with the
+reserve, while the foremost files were commanded by the young Earl of
+Gloucester, whom Simon solemnly dubbed to knighthood before the
+assembled squadrons. Then the two divisions of the army advanced
+towards Lewes, hoping to find their enemies still in their beds.
+
+At the last moment the alarm was given, and before the barons
+approached the town, the royalists, pouring out of castle, town, and
+priory, hastily took up their position face to face to the enemy. All
+turned out as Montfort had foreseen. Edward, emerging from the castle
+with his cousin Henry of Almaine, his Poitevin uncles, and the warriors
+of the march, observed the standard of Montfort on the hill, and
+supposing that the earl was with his banner, dashed impetuously against
+the left wing of Leicester's troops. He soon found himself engaged with
+the Londoners, who broke and fled in confusion before his impetuous
+charge. Eager to revenge on the flying citizens the insults they had
+directed against his parents, he pursued the beaten militia for many a
+mile, inflicting terrible damage upon them. On his way he captured
+Simon's standard and horse-litter, and slew its occupants, though they
+were three royalist members of the city aristocracy detained there for
+sure keeping. When the king's son drew rein he was many miles from
+Lewes, whither he returned, triumphant but exhausted.
+
+The removal of Edward and the marchers from the field enabled Montfort
+to profit by his sacrifice of the Londoners. The followers of the two
+kings on the left of the royalist lines could not withstand the weight
+of the squadrons of Leicester and Gloucester. The King of the Romans
+was driven to take refuge in a mill, where he soon made an ignominious
+surrender. Henry himself lost his horse under him and was forced to
+yield himself prisoner to Gilbert of Gloucester. The mass of the army
+was forced back on to the town and priory, which were occupied by the
+victors. Scarcely was their victory assured when Edward and the
+marchers came back from the pursuit of the Londoners. Thereupon the
+battle was renewed in the streets of the town. It was, however, too
+late for the weary followers of the king's son to reverse the fortunes
+of the day. Some threw themselves into the castle, where the king's
+standard still floated; Edward himself took sanctuary in the church of
+the Franciscans; many strove to escape eastwards over the Ouse bridge
+or by swimming over the river. The majority of the latter perished by
+drowning or by the sword: but two compact bands of mail-clad horsemen
+managed to cut their way through to safety. One of these, a force of
+some two hundred, headed by Earl Warenne himself, and his
+brothers-in-law, Guy of Lusignan and William of Valence, secured their
+retreat to the spacious castle of Pevensey, of which Warenne was
+constable, and from which the possibility of continuing their flight by
+sea remained open. Of greater military consequence was the successful
+escape of the lords of the Welsh march, whose followers were next day
+the only section of the royalist army which was still a fighting force.
+This was the only immediate limitation to the fulness of Montfort's
+victory. After seven weary years, the judgment of battle secured the
+triumph of the "good cause," which had so long been delayed by the
+weakness of his confederates and the treachery of his enemies. Not the
+barons of 1258, but Simon and his personal following _were_ the real
+conquerors at Lewes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE RULE OF MONTFORT AND THE ROYALIST RESTORATION.
+
+
+On the day after the battle, Henry III. accepted the terms imposed upon
+him by Montfort in a treaty called the "Mise of Lewes," by which he
+promised to uphold the Great Charter, the Charter of the Forests, and
+the Provisions of Oxford. A body of arbitrators was constituted, in
+which the Bishop of London was the only Englishman, but which included
+Montfort's friend, Archbishop Eudes Rigaud of Rouen; the new papal
+legate, Guy Foulquois, cardinal-bishop of Sabina; and Peter the
+chamberlain, Louis IX.'s most trusted counsellor, with the Duke of
+Burgundy or Charles of Anjou, to act as umpire. These arbitrators were,
+however, to be sworn to choose none save English councillors, and Henry
+took oath to follow the advice of his native-born council in all
+matters of state. An amnesty was secured to Leicester and Gloucester;
+and Edward and Henry of Almaine surrendered as hostages for the good
+behaviour of the marchers, who still remained under arms. By the
+establishment of baronial partisans as governors of the castles,
+ministers, sheriffs, and conservators of the peace, the administration
+passed at once into the hands of the victorious party. Three weeks
+later writs were issued for a parliament which included four knights
+from every shire. In this assembly the final conditions of peace were
+drawn up, and arrangements made for keeping Henry under control for the
+rest of his life, and Edward after him, for a term of years to be
+determined in due course. Leicester and Gloucester were associated with
+Stephen Berkstead, the Bishop of Chichester, to form a body of three
+electors. By these three a Council of Nine was appointed, three of whom
+were to be in constant attendance at court; and without their advice
+the king was to do nothing. Hugh Despenser was continued as justiciar,
+while the chancery went to the Bishop of Worcester's nephew, Thomas of
+Cantilupe, a Paris doctor of canon law, and chancellor of the
+University of Oxford.
+
+Once more a baronial committee put the royal authority into commission,
+and ruled England through ministers of its own choice. While agreeing
+in this essential feature, the settlement of 1264 did not merely
+reproduce the constitution of 1258. It was simpler than its forerunner,
+since there was no longer any need of the cumbrous temporary machinery
+for the revision of the whole system of government, nor for the
+numerous committees and commissions to which previously so many
+functions had been assigned. The main tasks before the new rulers were
+not constitution-making but administration and defence. Moreover, the
+later constitution shows some recognition of the place due to the
+knights of the shire and their constituents. It is less closely
+oligarchical than the previous scheme. This may partly be due to the
+continued divisions of the greater barons, but it is probably also in
+large measure owing to the preponderance of Simon of Montfort. The
+young Earl of Gloucester and the simple and saintly Bishop of
+Chichester were but puppets in his hands. He was the real elector who
+nominated the council, and thus controlled the government. Every act of
+the new administration reflects the boldness and largeness of his
+spirit.
+
+The pacification after Lewes was more apparent than real, and there
+were many restless spirits that scorned to accept the settlement which
+Henry had so meekly adopted. The marchers were in arms in the west, and
+were specially formidable because they detained in their custody the
+numerous prisoners captured at the sack of Northampton. The fugitives
+from Lewes were holding their own behind the walls of Pevensey, though
+Earl Warenne and other leaders had made their escape to France, where
+they joined the army which Queen Eleanor had collected on the north
+coast for the purpose of invading England and restoring her husband to
+power. The papacy and the whole official forces of the Church were in
+bitter hostility to the new system. The collapse of Henry's rule had
+ruined the papal plans in Sicily, where Manfred easily maintained his
+ground against so strong a successor of the unlucky Edmund as Charles
+of Anjou. The papal legate, Guy Foulquois, was waiting at Boulogne for
+admission into England, and, far from being conciliated by his
+appointment as an arbitrator, was dexterously striving to make the
+arbitration ineffective, by summoning the bishops adhering to Montfort
+to appear before him, and sending them back with orders to
+excommunicate Earl Simon and all his supporters. The only gleam of hope
+was to be found in the unwillingness of the King of France to interfere
+actively in the domestic disputes of England. The death of Urban IV.
+for the moment brought relief, but, after a long vacancy, the new pope
+proved to be none other than the legate Guy, who in February, 1265,
+mounted the papal throne as Clement IV. It was to no purpose that
+Walter of Cantilupe assembled the patriotic bishops and appealed to a
+general council, or that radical friars like the author of the _Song of
+Lewes_ formulated the popular policy in spirited verse. The greatest
+forces of the time were steadily opposed to the revolutionary
+government, and rare strength and boldness were necessary to make head
+against them.
+
+Before the end of 1264 the vigour of Earl Simon triumphed over some of
+his immediate difficulties. In August he summoned the military forces
+of the realm to meet the threatened invasion. Adverse storms, however,
+dispersed Queen Eleanor's fleet, and her mercenaries, weary of the long
+delays that had exhausted her resources, went home in disgust. This
+left Simon free to betake himself to the west, and on December 15 he
+forced the marcher lords to accept a pacification called the Provisions
+of Worcester, by which they agreed to withdraw for a year and a day to
+Ireland, leaving their families and estates in the hands of the ruling
+faction.
+
+On the day after the signature of the treaty, Henry, who accompanied
+Simon to the west, issued from Worcester the writs for a parliament
+that sat in London from January to March in 1265. From the
+circumstances of the case this famous assembly could only be a meeting
+of the supporters of the existing government. So scanty was its
+following among the magnates that writs of summons were only issued to
+five earls and eighteen barons, though the strong muster of bishops,
+abbots, and priors showed that the papal anathema had done little to
+shake the fidelity of the clergy to Montfort's cause. The special
+feature of the gathering, however, was the summoning of two knights
+from every shire, side by side with the barons of the faithful Cinque
+Ports and two representatives from every city and borough, convened by
+writs sent, not to the sheriff, after later custom, but to the cities
+and boroughs directly. It was the presence of this strong popular
+element which long caused this parliament to be regarded as the first
+really representative assembly in our history, and gained for Earl
+Simon the fame of being the creator of the House of Commons. Modern
+research has shown that neither of these views can be substantiated. It
+was no novelty for the crown to strengthen the baronial parliaments by
+the representatives of the shire-moots, and there were earlier
+precedents for the holding meetings of the spokesmen of the cities and
+boroughs. What was new was the combination of these two types of
+representatives in a single assembly, which was convoked, not merely
+for a particular administrative purpose, but for a great political
+object. The real novelty and originality of Earl Simon's action lay in
+his giving a fresh proof of his disposition to fall back upon the
+support of the ordinary citizen against the hostility or indifference
+of the magnates, to whom the men of 1258 wished to limit all political
+deliberation. This is in itself a sufficient indication of policy to
+give Leicester an almost unique position among the statesmen to whom
+the development of our representative institutions are due. But just as
+his parliament was not in any sense our first representative assembly,
+so it did not include in any complete sense a House of Commons at all.
+We must still wait for a generation before the rival and disciple of
+Montfort, Edward, the king's son, established the popular element in
+our parliament on a permanent basis. Yet in the links which connect the
+early baronial councils with the assemblies of the three estates of the
+fourteenth century, not one is more important than Montfort's
+parliament of January, 1265.
+
+The chief business of parliament was to complete the settlement of the
+country. Simon won a new triumph in making terms with the king's son.
+Edward had witnessed the failure of his mother's attempts at invasion,
+the futility of the legatine anathema, and the collapse of the marchers
+at Worcester. He saw it was useless to hold out any longer, and
+unwillingly bought his freedom at the high price that Simon exacted. He
+transferred to his uncle the earldom of Chester, including all the
+lands in Wales that might still be regarded as appertaining to it. This
+measure put Simon in that strong position as regards Wales and the west
+which Edward had enjoyed since the days of his marriage. It involved a
+breach in the alliance between Edward and the marchers, and the
+subjection of the most dangerous district of the kingdom to Simon's
+personal authority. It was safe to set free the king's son, when his
+territorial position and his political alliances were thus weakened.
+
+At the moment of his apparent triumph, Montfort's authority began to
+decline. It was something to have the commons on his side: but the
+magnates were still the greatest power in England, and in pressing his
+own policy to the uttermost, Simon had fatally alienated the few great
+lords who still adhered to him. There was a fierce quarrel in
+parliament between Leicester and the shifty Robert Ferrars, Earl of
+Derby. For the moment Leicester prevailed, and Derby was stripped of
+his lands and was thrown into prison. But his fate was a warning to
+others, and the settlement between Montfort and Edward aroused the
+suspicions of the Earl of Gloucester. Gilbert of Clare was now old
+enough to think for himself, and his close personal devotion to
+Montfort could not blind him to the antagonism of interests between
+himself and his friend. He was gallant, strenuous, and high-minded, but
+quarrelsome, proud, and unruly, and his strong character was balanced
+by very ordinary ability. His outlook was limited, and his ideals were
+those of his class; such a man could neither understand nor sympathise
+with the broader vision and wider designs of Leicester. Moreover, with
+all Simon's greatness, there was in him a fierce masterfulness and an
+inordinate ambition which made co-operation with him excessively
+difficult for all such as were not disposed to stand to him in the
+relation of disciple to master. And behind the earl were his
+self-seeking and turbulent sons, set upon building up a family interest
+that stood directly in the way of the magnates' claim to control the
+state. Thus personal rivalries and political antagonisms combined to
+lead Earl Gilbert on in the same course that his father, Earl Richard,
+had traversed. The closest ally of Leicester became his bitterest
+rival. The victorious party split up in 1265, as it had split up in
+1263. And the dissolution of the dominant faction once more gave Edward
+a better chance of regaining the upper hand than was to be hoped for
+from foreign mercenaries and from papal support.
+
+Gloucester was the natural leader of the lords of the Welsh march. He
+was not only the hereditary lord of Glamorgan, but had received the
+custody of William of Valence's forfeited palatinate of Pembroke. He
+had shown self-control in separating himself so long from the marcher
+policy; and his growing suspicion of the Montforts threw him back into
+his natural alliance with them. Even after the treaty of Worcester, the
+marchers remained under arms. They had obtained from the weakness of
+the government repeated prolongations of the period fixed for their
+withdrawal into Ireland. It was soon rumoured that they were sure of a
+refuge in Gloucester's Welsh estates, and Leicester, never afraid of
+making enemies, bitterly reproached Earl Gilbert with receiving the
+fugitives into his lands. Shortly after the breaking up of parliament,
+Gloucester fled to the march, and a little later William of Valence and
+Earl Warenne landed in Pembrokeshire with a small force of men-at-arms
+and crossbowmen. There was no longer any hope of carrying out the
+Provisions of Worcester, and once more Montfort was forced to proceed
+to the west to put down rebellion.
+
+By the end of April Montfort was at Gloucester, accompanied by the king
+and Edward, who, despite his submission, remained virtually a prisoner.
+Earl Gilbert was master of all South Wales, and closely watched his
+rival's movements from the neighbouring Forest of Dean. It was with
+difficulty that Earl Simon and his royal captives advanced from
+Gloucester to Hereford, but Earl Gilbert preferred to negotiate rather
+than to push matters to extremities. He went in person to Hereford and
+renewed his homage to the king. Arbitrators were appointed to settle
+the disputes between the two earls, and a proclamation was issued
+declaring that the rumour of dissension between them was "vain, lying,
+and fraudulently invented". For the next few days harmony seemed
+restored.
+
+Gloucester's submission lured Leicester into relaxing his precautions.
+His enemies took advantage of his remissness to hatch an audacious plot
+which soon enabled them to renew the struggle under more favourable
+conditions. Since his nominal release, Edward had been allowed the
+diversions of riding and hunting, and on May 28 he was suffered to go
+out for a ride under negligent or corrupt guard. Once well away from
+Hereford, the king's son fled from his lax custodians and joined Roger
+Mortimer, who was waiting for him in a neighbouring wood. On the next
+day he was safe behind the walls of Mortimer's castle of Wigmore, and,
+the day after, met Earl Gilbert at Ludlow, where he promised to uphold
+the charters and expel the foreigners. Valence and Warenne hurried from
+Pembrokeshire and made common cause with Edward and Gilbert. Edward
+then took the lead in the councils of the marchers, who, from that
+moment, obtained a unity of purpose and policy that they had hitherto
+lacked. He and his allies could claim to be the true champions of the
+Charters and the Provisions of Oxford against the grasping foreigner
+who strove to rule over king and barons alike.
+
+Montfort's small force was cut off from its base by the rapidity of the
+marchers' movements. It was in vain that all the supporters of the
+existing government were summoned to the assistance of the hard-pressed
+army at Hereford. Before the end of June, Edward completed the conquest
+of the Severn valley by the capture of the town and castle of
+Gloucester. A broad river and a strong army stood between Montfort and
+succour from England. Leicester then turned to Llewelyn of Wales, who
+took up his quarters at Pipton, near Hay. There, on June 22, a treaty
+was signed between the Welsh prince and the English king by which Henry
+was forced to make huge concessions to Llewelyn in order to secure his
+alliance. Llewelyn was recognised as prince of all Wales. The
+overlordship over all the barons of Wales was granted to him, and the
+numerous conquests, which he had made at the expense of the marchers,
+were ceded to him in full possession.
+
+Thus Llewelyn, like his grandfather in the days of the Great Charter,
+profited by the dissensions of the English to obtain the recognition of
+his claims which had invariably been refused when England was united.
+The Welsh prince gained a unique opportunity of making his weight felt
+in general English politics, but with all his ability he hardly rose to
+the occasion. Montfort had pressing need of his help. A few days after
+the treaty of Pipton, Gloucester Castle opened its gates to Edward, and
+the marchers advanced westwards to seek out Earl Simon at Hereford.
+Leicester fled in alarm before their overwhelming forces. He was driven
+from the Wye to the Usk, and, beaten in a sharp fight on Newport
+bridge, found refuge only by retreating up the Usk valley, whence he
+escaped northwards into the hilly region where Llewelyn ruled over the
+lands once dominated by the Mortimers. Before long Montfort's English
+followers grew weary of the hard conditions of mountain warfare. With
+their heavy armour and barbed horses it was difficult for them to
+emulate the tactics of the Welsh, and they revolted against the simple
+diet of milk and meat that contented their Celtic allies. They could
+not get on without bread, and, as bread was not to be found among the
+hills, they forced their leader to return to the richer regions of the
+east. Llewelyn did little to help them in their need, and did not
+accompany them in their march back to the Severn valley, though a large
+but disorderly force of Welsh infantry still remained with Simon as the
+fruit of the alliance with their prince.
+
+By the end of July, Simon was once more in the Severn valley, seeking
+for a passage over the river. On August 2 he found a ford over the
+stream some miles south of Worcester. There he crossed with all his
+forces and encamped for the night at Kempsey, one of Bishop Cantilupe's
+manors on the left bank. His skill as a general had extricated him from
+a position of the utmost peril. All might yet be regained if he could
+join forces with an army of relief which his son Simon had slowly
+levied in the south and midlands. But his quarrel with Gloucester and
+his alliance with the Welsh had done much to undermine Montfort's
+popularity, and the younger Simon had no appreciation of the necessity
+for decisive action. Summoned from the long siege of Pevensey by his
+father's danger, he wasted time in plundering the lands of the
+royalists, and only left London on July 8, whence he led his men by
+slow stages to Kenilworth. On July 31 young Simon's troops took up
+their quarters for the night in the open country round Kenilworth
+castle. They had no notion that the enemy was at hand and troubled
+neither to defend themselves nor to keep watch. Edward, warned by spies
+of their approach, abandoned his close guard of the Severn fords, and
+in the early morning of August 1 fell suddenly upon the sleeping host
+and scattered it with little difficulty. The younger Simon and a few of
+his followers took refuge in the castle. As a fighting force the army
+of relief ceased to exist.
+
+Leicester, knowing nothing of his son's disaster, made his way, on
+August 3, from Kempsey to Evesham, where he rested for the night. Next
+morning, after mass and breakfast, the army was about to continue its
+march, when scouts descried troops advancing upon the town. At first it
+was hoped that they were the followers of young Simon, but their near
+approach revealed them to be the army of the marchers. With
+extraordinary rapidity Edward led his troops back to Worcester as soon
+as he had won the fight at Kenilworth. Learning there that Simon had
+crossed the river in his absence, he at once turned back to meet him,
+seeking to elude his vigilance by a long night march by circuitous
+routes. The result was that for the second time he caught his enemy in
+a trap.
+
+Evesham, like Lewes, stands on a peninsula. It is situated on the right
+bank of a wide curve of the Avon, and approachable only by crossing
+over the river, or by way of the sort of isthmus between the two bends
+of the Avon a little to the north of the town. Edward occupied this
+isthmus with his best troops, and thus cut off all prospect of escape
+by land. The other means of exit from the town was over the bridge
+which connects it with its south-eastern suburb of Bengeworth, on the
+left bank of the river. Edward, however, took the precaution to detach
+Gloucester with a strong force to hold Bengeworth, and thus prevent
+Simon's escape over the bridge. The weary and war-worn host of
+Montfort, then, was out-generalled in such fashion that effective
+resistance to a superior force, flushed by recent victory, was
+impossible. Simon himself saw that his last hour was come; yet he could
+not but admire the skilful plan which had so easily discomfited him.
+"By the arm of St. James," he declared, "they come on cunningly. Yet
+they have not taught themselves that order of battle; they have learnt
+it from me. God have mercy upon our souls, for our bodies are theirs."
+
+Edward and Gloucester both advanced simultaneously to the attack. A
+storm broke at the moment of the encounter, and the battle was fought
+in a darkness that obscured the brightness of an August day.
+Leicester's Welsh infantry broke at once before the charge of the
+mail-clad horsemen, and took refuge behind hedges and walls, where they
+were hunted out and butchered after the main fight was over. But the
+men-at-arms struggled valiantly against Edward's superior forces,
+though they were soon borne down by sheer numbers. Simon fought like a
+hero and met a soldier's death. With him were slain his son Henry, his
+faithful comrade Peter Montfort, the baronial justiciar Hugh Despenser,
+and many other men of mark. A large number of prisoners fell into the
+victor's hands, and King Henry, who unwillingly followed Simon in all
+his wanderings, was wounded in the shoulder by his son's followers, and
+only escaped a worse fate by revealing his identity with the cry: "Slay
+me not! I am Henry of Winchester, your King." The marchers gratified
+their rage by massacring helpless fugitives, and by mutilating the
+bodies of the slain. Earl Simon's head was sent as a present to the
+wife of Roger Mortimer; and it was with difficulty that the mangled
+corpse found its last rest in the church of Evesham Abbey. His memory
+long lived in the hearts of his adopted countrymen, and especially
+among monks and friars, who despite the ban of the Church, hailed him
+as another St. Thomas, for he too had lain down his life for the cause
+of justice and religion. Miracles were worked at his tomb; liturgies
+composed in his honour, and an informal popular canonisation, which no
+papal censures could prevent, kept his memory green. His faults were
+forgotten in the pathos of his end. His work survived the field of
+Evesham and the reaction which succeeded it. His victorious nephew
+learnt well the lesson of his career, and the true successor of the
+martyred earl was the future Edward I.
+
+No thoughts of policy disturbed the fierce passion of revenge which
+possessed the victorious marchers. On August 7 Henry issued a
+proclamation announcing that he had resumed the personal exercise of
+the royal power. The baronial ministers and sheriffs were replaced by
+royalist partisans. The acts of the revolutionary government were
+denounced as invalid. The faithful city of London was cruelly
+humiliated for its zeal for Earl Simon. The exiles, headed by Queen
+Eleanor and Archbishop Boniface, returned from their long sojourn
+beyond sea. With them came to England a new legate, the Cardinal
+Ottobon, specially sent from the papal court to punish the bishops and
+clergy that had persisted in their adherence to the popular cause. Four
+prelates were excommunicated and suspended from their functions,
+including Berkstead of Chichester and Cantilupe of Worcester. But the
+aged Bishop of Worcester was delivered from persecution by death;
+"snatched away," as a kindly foe says, "lest he should see evil days".
+His nephew, Thomas of Cantilupe, the baronial chancellor, fled to
+Paris, where he forsook politics for the study of theology. The widowed
+Countess of Leicester was not saved by her near kindred to the king
+from lifelong banishment. At last a general sentence of forfeiture was
+pronounced against all who had fought against Edward, either at
+Kenilworth or Evesham. There was a greedy scramble for the spoils of
+victory. The greatest of these, Montfort's forfeited earldom of
+Leicester, went to Edmund, the king's younger son. Edward took back the
+earldom of Chester and all his old possessions. Roger Mortimer was
+rewarded by grants of land and franchises which raised the house of
+Wigmore to a position only surpassed by that of the strongest of the
+earldoms.
+
+At first the Montfort party showed an inclination to accept the defeat
+at Evesham as decisive. Even young Simon of Montfort, who still held
+out at Kenilworth, considered it prudent to restore his prisoner, the
+King of the Romans, to liberty. But the victors' resolve to deprive all
+their beaten foes of their estates, drove the vanquished into fresh
+risings. The first centre of the revolt of the disinherited was at
+Kenilworth, but before long the younger Simon abandoned the castle to
+join a numerous band which had found a more secure retreat in the isle
+of Axholme, amidst the marshes of the lower Trent. There they held
+their own until the winter, when they were persuaded by Edward to
+accept terms. A little later, Simon again revolted and joined the
+mariners of the Cinque Ports, whose towns still held out against the
+king, save Dover, which Edward had captured after a siege. Under
+Simon's leadership the Cinque Ports played the part of pirates on all
+merchants going to and from England. At last in March, 1266, Edward
+forced Winchelsea to open its gates to him. He next turned his arms
+against a valiant freebooter, Adam Gordon, who lurked with his band of
+outlaws in the dense beech woods of the Chilterns. With the capture of
+Adam Gordon, after a hand-to-hand tussle with Edward in which the
+king's son narrowly escaped with his life, the resistance in the south
+was at an end.
+
+As one centre of rebellion was pacified other disturbances arose. In
+the spring of 1266, Robert Ferrars, Earl of Derby, newly released from
+the prison into which Earl Simon had thrown him, raised a revolt in his
+own county. On May 15, 1266, Derby was defeated by Henry of Almaine at
+Chesterfield. His earldom was transferred to Edmund, the king's son,
+already Montfort's successor as Earl of Leicester, and in 1267 also
+Earl of Lancaster, a new earldom, deriving its name from the youngest
+of the shires.[1] Reduced to the Staffordshire estate of
+Chartley, the house of Ferrars fell back into the minor baronage.
+Kenilworth was still unconquered. Its walls were impregnable except to
+famine, and before his flight to Axholme young Simon had procured
+provisions adequate for a long resistance. The garrison harried the
+neighbourhood with such energy that the whole levies of the realm were
+assembled to subdue it. After a fruitless assault, the royalists
+settled down to a blockade which lasted from midsummer to Christmas.
+The legate, Ottobon, appearing in the besiegers' camp to excommunicate
+the defenders, they in derision dressed up their surgeon in the red
+robes of a cardinal, in which disguise he answered Ottobon's curses by
+a travesty of the censures of the Church.
+
+ [1] For Edmund's estates and whole career, see W.E. Rhodes'
+ _Edmund, Earl of Lancaster_, in _Engl. Hist. Review_, x.
+ (1895), 19-40 and 209-37.
+
+The blockade soon tried the patience of the barons. It was hard to keep
+any medieval army long together, and the lords, anxious to go back to
+their homes, complained of the harsh policy that compelled their long
+attendance. The royalist host split up into two parties, led
+respectively by Roger Mortimer and Earl Gilbert of Gloucester. The
+cruel lord of Wigmore was the type of the extreme reaction. Intent only
+on vengeance, booty, and ambition, Mortimer clamoured for violent
+measures, and was eager to reject all compromises. Gloucester, on the
+other hand, posed as the mediator, and urged the need of pacifying the
+disinherited by mitigating the sentence of forfeiture which had driven
+them into prolonged resistance. In the first flush of victory, Edward
+had been altogether on Mortimer's side, but gradually statecraft and
+humanity turned him from the reckless policy of the marcher. Edward's
+adhesion to counsels of moderation changed the situation. While
+Mortimer pressed the siege of Kenilworth, Edward and Gloucester met a
+parliament at Northampton which agreed to uphold the policy of 1258 and
+mitigate the hard lot of the disinherited. A document drawn up in the
+camp at Kenilworth received the approval of parliament and was
+published on October 31. The _Dictum de Kenilworth_, as it was called,
+was largely taken up with assertions of the authority of the crown, and
+denunciations of the memory of Earl Simon. More essential points were
+the re-enactment of the Charters and the redress of some of the
+grievances against which the Provisions of 1258 were directed. The
+vital article, however, laid down that the stern sentence of forfeiture
+against adherents of the fallen cause was to be remitted, and allowed
+rebels to redeem their estates by paying a fine, which in most cases
+was to be assessed at five years' value of their lands. Hard as were
+these terms, they were milder than those which had previously been
+offered to the insurgents. Yet the defenders of Kenilworth could not
+bring themselves to accept them until December, when disease and famine
+caused them to surrender. Despite their long-deferred submission, the
+garrison was admitted to the terms of the _Dictum_.
+
+Even then resistance was not yet over. A forlorn hope of the
+disinherited, headed by John d'Eyville, established themselves about
+Michaelmas in the isle of Ely, where they made themselves the terror of
+all East Anglia, plundering towns so far apart as Norwich and
+Cambridge, maltreating the Jews, and holding the rich citizens to
+ransom. Early in 1267 the north-country baron, John of Vescy, rose in
+Northumberland, and violently resumed possession of his forfeited
+castle of Alnwick. While Henry tarried at Cambridge, Edward went north
+and soon won over Vescy by the clemency which made the lord of Alnwick
+henceforth one of his most devoted servants.
+
+More formidable than the revolt of Eyville or Vescy was the ambiguous
+attitude of Earl Gilbert of Gloucester. Roger Mortimer was once more
+intriguing against him, and striving to upset the Kenilworth
+compromise. After a violent scene between the two enemies in the
+parliament at Bury, Gloucester withdrew to the march of Wales, where he
+waged war against Mortimer. In April, 1267, he made his way with a
+great following to London, professing that he wished to hold a
+conference with the legate. It was a critical moment. Edward was still
+in the north; Henry was wasting his time at Cambridge; the Londoners
+welcomed Earl Gilbert as a champion of the good old cause; the legate
+took refuge in the Tower, and the earl did not hesitate to lay siege to
+the stronghold. Before long Gloucester was joined by Eyville and many
+of the Ely fugitives. It seemed as if Gloucester was in as strong
+position as Montfort had ever won, and that after two years of warfare
+the verdict of Evesham was about to be reversed.
+
+Edward marched south and joined forces with his father, who had moved
+from Cambridge to Stratford, near London. Everything seemed to suggest
+that the eastern suburbs of London would witness a fight as stubborn as
+Lewes or Evesham. But Gloucester was not the man to press things to
+extremities, and Edward though firm was conciliatory. He delivered
+Ottobon from the hands of the rebels,[1] and then arranged a peace upon
+terms which secured Gloucester's chief object of procuring better
+conditions for the disinherited. Not only Earl Gilbert but Eyville and
+his associates were admitted to the royal favour. A few desperadoes
+still held out until July in the isle of Ely, and Edward devoted himself
+to tracking them to their lairs. He built causeways of wattles over the
+fens, which protected the disinherited in their last refuge. When he had
+clearly shown his superiority, he offered the garrison of Ely the terms
+of the _Dictum de Kenilworth_. With their acceptance of these conditions
+the English struggle ended, in July, 1267, nearly two years after the
+battle of Evesham.
+
+ [1] _Engl. Hist. Review_, xvii. (1902), 522.
+
+Llewelyn still remained under arms. He had profited by the two years of
+strife to deal deadly blows against the marchers. He conquered the
+Mid-Welsh lands which had been granted to Mortimer, and devastated
+Edward's Cheshire earldom. When Gloucester grew discontented with the
+course of events, the old friend of Montfort became the close ally of
+the man who had ruined Montfort's cause. A Welsh chronicler treats
+Gloucester's march to London as a movement which naturally followed the
+alliance of Gloucester and Llewelyn. On Gloucester's submission,
+Llewelyn was left to his own resources. Edward had it in his power to
+avenge past injuries by turning all his forces against his old enemy.
+But the country was weary of war, and Edward preferred to end the
+struggle. The legate Ottobon urged both Edward and the Welsh prince to
+make peace, and in September, 1267, Henry and his son went down to
+Shrewsbury, accompanied by Ottobon, who received from the king full
+powers to treat with Llewelyn, and a promise that Henry would accept any
+terms that he thought fit to conclude. Llewelyn thereupon sent
+ambassadors to Shrewsbury, and the negotiations went on so smoothly that
+on September 25 a definite treaty of peace was signed. On Michaelmas day
+Henry met Llewelyn at Montgomery, received his homage, and witnessed the
+formal ratification of the treaty.
+
+By the treaty of Shrewsbury Llewelyn was recognised as Prince of Wales,
+and as overlord of all the Welsh magnates, save the representative of
+the old line of the princes of South Wales. The four cantreds, Edward's
+old patrimony, were ceded to him; and though he promised to surrender
+many of his conquests, he was allowed to remain in possession of great
+tracts of land in Mid and South Wales, in the heart of the marcher
+region.[1] Substantially the Welsh prince was recognised as holding the
+position which he claimed from Montfort in the days of the treaty of
+Pipton. Alone of Montfort's friends, Llewelyn came out of an
+unsuccessful struggle upon terms such as are seldom obtained even by
+victory in the field. The triumph of the Welsh prince is the more
+remarkable because Edward and his ally, Mortimer, were the chief
+sufferers by the treaty. But Edward had learnt wisdom during his
+apprenticeship. He recognised that the exhaustion of the country
+demanded peace at any price, and he dreaded the possibility of the
+alliance of Llewelyn and Earl Gilbert. But whatever Edward's motives
+may have been in concluding the treaty, it left Llewelyn in so strong a
+position that he was encouraged to those fresh aggressions which in the
+next reign proved the ruin of his power. The Welsh wars of Edward I.
+are the best elucidation of the importance of the treaty of Shrewsbury.
+The Welsh principality, which Edward as king was to destroy, was as
+much the creation of the Barons' War as the outcome of the fierce
+Celtic enthusiasm which found its bravest champion in the son of
+Griffith.
+
+ [1] For the growth of Llewelyn's power see the maps of Wales in
+ 1247 and 1267 in Owens College _Historical Essays_, pp. 76 and
+ 135.
+
+It was time to redeem the promises by which the moderate party had been
+won over to the royalist cause. The statute of Marlborough of 1267
+re-enacted in a more formal fashion the chief of the Provisions of
+Westminster of 1259, and thus prevented the undoing of all the progress
+attained during the years of struggle. Ottobon in 1268 held a famous
+council at London, in which important canons were enacted with a view
+to the reformation of the Church. A little later the Londoners received
+back their forfeited charters and the disinherited were restored to
+their estates. After these last measures of reparation, England sank
+into a profound repose that lasted for the rest of the reign of Henry
+III. A happy beginning of the years of peace was the dedication of the
+new abbey of Westminster, and the translation of the body of St. Edward
+to the new shrine, whose completion had long been the dearest object of
+the old king's life.
+
+At this time Louis IX. was meditating his second crusade, and in every
+country in Europe the friars were preaching the duty of fighting the
+infidel. Nowhere save in France did the Holy War win more powerful
+recruits than in England. In 1268 Edward himself took the cross, [1] and
+with him his brother Edmund of Lancaster, his cousin Henry of Almaine,
+and many leading lords of both factions. Financial difficulties delayed
+the departure of the crusaders, and it was not until 1270 that Edward
+and Henry were able to start. On reaching Provence, they learnt that
+Louis had turned his arms against Tunis, whither they followed him with
+all speed. On Edward's arrival off Tunis, he found that Louis was dead
+and that Philip III., the new French king, had concluded a truce with
+the misbelievers. Profoundly mortified by this treason to Christendom,
+Edward set forth with his little squadron to Acre, the chief town of
+Palestine that still remained in Christian hands. Henry of Almaine
+preferred to return home at once, but on his way through Italy was
+murdered at Viterbo by the sons of Earl Simon of Montfort, a deed of
+blood which revived the bitterest memories of the Barons' War. Edward
+remained in Palestine until August, 1272, and threw all his wonted fire
+and courage into the hopeless task of upholding the fast-decaying Latin
+kingdom. At last alarming news of his father's health brought him back
+to Europe.
+
+ [1] For Edward's crusade see Riant's article in _Archives de
+ l'Orient Latin_, i., 617-32 (1881).
+
+On November 16, 1272, Henry III., then in his sixty-sixth year, died at
+Westminster. His remains were laid at rest in the neighbouring abbey
+church, hard by the shrine of St. Edward. With him died the last of his
+generation. St. Louis' death in August, 1270, has already been recorded.
+The death of Clement IV. in 1268 was followed by a three years' vacancy
+in the papacy. This was scarcely over when Richard, King of the Romans,
+prostrated by the tragedy of Viterbo, preceded his brother to the tomb.
+Still earlier, Boniface of Canterbury had ended his tenure of the chair
+of St. Augustine. The new reign begins with fresh actors and fresh
+motives of action.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE EARLY FOREIGN POLICY AND LEGISLATION OF EDWARD I.
+
+
+The Dominican chronicler, Nicholas Trivet, thus describes the
+personality of Edward I.: "He was of elegant build and lofty stature,
+exceeding the height of the ordinary man by a head and shoulders. His
+abundant hair was yellow in childhood, black in manhood, and snowy white
+in age. His brow was broad, and his features regular, save that his left
+eyelid drooped somewhat, like that of his father, and hid part of the
+pupil. He spoke with a stammer, which did not, however, detract from the
+persuasiveness of his eloquence. His sinewy, muscular arms were those of
+the consummate swordsman, and his long legs gave him a firm hold in the
+saddle when riding the most spirited of steeds. His chief delight was in
+war and tournaments, but he derived great pleasure from hawking and
+hunting, and had a special joy in chasing down stags on a fleet horse
+and slaying them with a sword instead of a hunting spear. His
+disposition was magnanimous, but he was intolerant of injuries, and
+reckless of dangers when seeking revenge, though easily won over by a
+humble submission."[1] The defects of his youth are well brought out by
+the radical friar who wrote the _Song of Lewes_. Even to the partisan of
+Earl Simon, Edward was "a valiant lion, quick to attack the strongest,
+and fearing the onslaught of none. But if a lion in pride and
+fierceness, he was a panther in inconstancy and mutability, changing his
+word and promise, cloaking himself by pleasant speech. When he is in a
+strait he promises whatever you wish, but as soon as he has escaped he
+forgets his promise. The treachery or falsehood, whereby he is advanced,
+he calls prudence; the way whereby he arrives whither he will, crooked
+though it be, he regards as straight; whatever he likes he says is
+lawful, and he thinks he is released from the law, as though he were
+greater than a king."[2]
+
+ [1] _Annals_, pp. 181-82.
+
+ [2] _Song_ of _Lewes_, pp. 14-15, ed. Kingsford.
+
+Hot and impulsive in disposition, easily persuaded that his own cause
+was right, and with a full share in the pride of caste, Edward
+committed many deeds of violence in his youth, and never got over his
+deeply rooted habit of keeping the letter of his promise while
+violating its spirit. Yet he learnt to curb his impetuous temper, and
+few medieval kings had a higher idea of justice or a more strict regard
+to his plighted word. "Keep troth" was inscribed upon his tomb, and his
+reign signally falsified the prediction of evil which the Lewes
+song-writer ventured to utter. A true sympathy bound him closely to his
+nobles and people. His unstained family life, his piety and religious
+zeal, his devotion to friends and kinsfolk, his keen interest in the
+best movements of his time, showed him a true son of Henry III. But his
+strength of will and seriousness of purpose stand in strong contrast to
+his father's weakness and levity. A hard-working, clear-headed,
+practical, and sober temperament made him the most capable king of all
+his line. He may have been wanting in originality or deep insight, yet
+it is impossible to dispute the verdict that has declared him to be the
+greatest of all the Plantagenets.
+
+The broad lines of Edward's policy during the thirty-five years of his
+kingship had already been laid down for him during his rude schooling.
+The ineffectiveness of his father's government inspired him with a love
+of strong rule, and this enabled him to grapple with the chronic
+maladministration which made even a well-ordered medieval kingdom a
+hot-bed of disorder. The age of Earl Simon had been fertile in new
+ideals and principles of government. Edward held to the best of the
+traditions of his youth, and his task was not one of creation so much
+as of selection. His age was an age of definition. The series of great
+laws, which he made during the earlier half of his reign, represented a
+long effort to appropriate what was best in the age that had gone
+before, and to combine it in orderly sequence. The same ideals mark the
+constitutional policy of his later years. The materials for the future
+constitution of England were already at his hand. It was a task well
+within Edward's capacity to strengthen the authority of the crown by
+associating the loyal nobles and clergy in the work of ruling the
+state, and to build up a body politic in which every class of the
+nation should have its part. Yet he never willingly surrendered the
+most insignificant of his prerogatives, and if he took the people into
+partnership with him, he did so with the firm belief that he would be a
+more powerful king if his subjects loved and trusted him. Though
+closely associated with his nobles by many ties of kinship and
+affection, he was the uncompromising foe of feudal separatism, and
+hotly resented even the constitutional control which the barons
+regarded as their right. In the same way the unlimited franchises of
+the lords of the Welsh march, the almost regal authority which the
+treaty of Shrewsbury gave to the Prince of Wales, the rejection of his
+claims as feudal overlord of Scotland, were abhorrent to his autocratic
+disposition. True son of the Church though he was, he was the bitter
+foe of ecclesiastical claims which, constantly encroaching beyond their
+own sphere, denied kings the fulness of their authority.
+
+Edward's policy was thoroughly comprehensive. He is not only the
+"English Justinian" and the creator of our later constitution; he has
+rightly been praised for his clear conception of the ideal of a united
+Britain which brought him into collision with Welsh and Scots. His
+foreign policy lay as near to his heart as the conquest of Wales or
+Scotland, or the subjection of priests and nobles. He was eager to make
+Gascony obey him, anxious to keep in check the French king, and to
+establish a sort of European balance of power, of which England, as in
+Wolsey's later dreams, was to be the tongue of the balance. Yet,
+despite his severe schooling in self-control, he undertook more than he
+could accomplish, and his failure was the more signal because he found
+the utmost difficulty in discovering trustworthy subordinates.
+Moreover, the limited resources of a medieval state, and the even more
+limited control which a medieval ruler had over these resources, were
+fatal obstacles in the way of too ambitious a policy. Edward had
+inherited his father's load of debt, and could only accomplish great
+things by further pledging his credit to foreign financiers, against
+whom his subjects raised unending complaints. Yet, if his methods of
+attaining his objects were sometimes mean and often violent, there was
+a rare nobility about his general purpose.
+
+Every precaution was taken to secure Edward's succession and the
+establishment of the provisional administration which was to rule until
+his return. Before leaving England in 1270, Edward had appointed as his
+agents Walter Giffard, Archbishop of York, Roger Mortimer, and Robert
+Burnell, his favourite clerk. The vacancy of the see of Canterbury
+after Boniface's death placed Giffard in a position of peculiar
+eminence. Appointed first lord of the council, he virtually became
+regent; and he associated with himself in the administration of the
+realm his two colleagues in the management of the new king's private
+affairs. Early in 1273 a parliament of magnates and representatives of
+shires and boroughs took oaths of allegiance to the king and continued
+the authority of the three regents. By the double title of Edward's
+personal delegation and the recognition of the estates, Giffard,
+Mortimer, and Burnell ruled the country for the two years which were to
+elapse before the sovereign's return. Their government was just,
+economical, and peaceful. Even Gilbert of Gloucester remained quiet,
+and, save for the refusal of the Prince of Wales to perform his feudal
+obligations, the calm of the last years of the old reign continued. It
+is evidence of constitutional progress that the administration was
+carried on with so little friction in the absence of the monarch. Roger
+Mortimer, the most formidable of the feudal baronage, was himself one
+of the agents of this salutary change. The marcher chieftain put down
+with promptitude an attempted revolt of north-country knights which
+threatened public tranquillity.
+
+Edward first heard of his father's death in Sicily, but the tidings of
+the maintenance of peace rendered it unnecessary for him to hasten his
+return, and he made his way slowly through Italy. In Sicily he was
+entertained by his uncle, Charles of Anjou. Thence he went to Orvieto,
+where the new pope, Gregory X., who, as archdeacon of Liege, had been
+the comrade of his crusade, was then residing. From king and pope alike
+Edward earnestly sought vengeance for the murder of Henry of Almaine.
+Proceeding northwards, he was received with great pomp by the cities of
+Lombardy, and made personal acquaintance with Savoy and its count,
+Philip, his aged great-uncle. Crossing the Mont Cenis, he was welcomed
+by bands of English magnates who had gone forth to meet him. He was
+soon at the head of a little army, and in the true spirit of a hero of
+romance halted to receive the challenge of the boastful Count of
+Chalon. The tournament between the best knights of England and Burgundy
+was fought out with such desperation that it became a serious battle.
+At last Edward unhorsed the count in a personal encounter, which added
+greatly to his fame. This "Little Battle of Chalon" was the last
+victory of his irresponsible youth.
+
+The serious business of kingcraft began when Edward met his cousin,
+Philip III., at Paris. The news from England was still so good that
+Edward resolved to remain in France with the twofold object of settling
+his relations with the French monarchy and of receiving the homage and
+regulating the affairs of Aquitaine. Despite the treaty of Paris of
+1259, there were so many subjects of dispute between the English and
+French kings that, beneath the warm protestations of affection between
+the kinsmen, there was, as a French chronicler said, but a cat-and-dog
+love between them.[1] The treaty had not been properly executed, and the
+English had long complained that the French had not yielded up to
+England their king's rights over the three bishoprics of Limoges,
+Cahors, and Périgueux, which St. Louis had ceded. New complications
+arose after the death of Alfonse of Poitiers in the course of the
+Tunisian crusade. By the treaty of Paris the English king should then
+have entered into possession of Saintonge south of the Charente, the
+Agenais, and lower Quercy. But the ministers of Philip III. laid hands
+upon the whole of Alfonse's inheritance and refused to surrender these
+districts to the English. The welcome which Edward received from his
+cousin at Paris could not blind him to the incompatibility of their
+interests, nor to the impossibility of obtaining at the moment the
+cession of the promised lands. He did not choose to tarry at Paris while
+the diplomatists unravelled the tangled web of statecraft. Nor would he
+tender an unconditional homage to the prince who withheld from him his
+inheritance. Already a stickler for legal rights, even when used to his
+own detriment, Edward was unable to deny his subjection to the overlord
+of Aquitaine. He therefore performed homage, but he phrased his
+submission in terms which left him free to urge his claims at a more
+convenient season. "Lord king," he said to Philip, "I do you homage for
+all the lands which I ought to hold of you." The vagueness of this
+language suggested that, if Edward could not get Saintonge, he might
+revive his claim to Normandy. The king appointed a commission to
+continue the negotiations with the French court, and then betook himself
+to Aquitaine.[2]
+
+ [1] "Hic amor dici potest amor cati et canis," _Chron. Limov._,
+ in _Recueil des Hist. de la France_, xxi., 784.
+
+ [2] C.V. Langlois' _Le Règne de Philippe le Hardi_ (1887), and
+ Gavrilovitch's _Le Traité de Paris_, give the best modern
+ accounts of Edward's early dealings with the French crown.
+
+It was nearly ten years since the presence of the monarch had
+restrained the turbulence of the Gascon duchy. Edward had before him
+the task of watching over its internal administration, and checking the
+subtle policy whereby the agents of the French crown were gradually
+undermining his authority. Two wars, the war of Béarn and the war of
+Limoges, desolated Gascony from the Pyrenees to the Vienne. It was
+Edward's first task to bring these troubles to an end. Age and
+experience had not diminished the ardour which had so long made Gaston
+of Béarn the focus of every trouble in the Pyrenean lands. He defied a
+sentence of the ducal court of Saint Sever, and was already at war with
+the seneschal, Luke of Tany, when Edward's appearance brought matters
+to a crisis. During the autumn and winter of 1273-74, Edward hunted out
+Gaston from his mountain strongholds, and at last the Béarnais,
+despairing of open resistance, appealed to the French king. Philip
+accepted the appeal, and ordered Edward to desist from molesting Gaston
+during its hearing. The English king, anxious not to quarrel openly
+with the French court, granted a truce. The suit of Gaston long
+occupied the parliament of Paris, but the good-will of the French
+lawyers could not palliate the wanton violence of the Viscount of
+Béarn. The French, like the English, were sticklers for formal right,
+and were unwilling to push matters to extremities. Edward had the
+reward of his forbearance, for Philip advised Gaston to go to England
+and make his submission. Gratified by his restoration to Béarn in 1279,
+Gaston remained faithful for the next few years. Edward was less
+successful in dealing with Limoges. There had been for many years a
+struggle between the commune of the castle, or _bourg_, of Limoges and
+Margaret the viscountess. It was to no purpose that the townsfolk had
+invoked the treaty of Paris, whereby, as they maintained, the French
+king transferred to the King of England his ancient jurisdiction over
+them. They were answered by a decree of the parliament of Paris that
+the homage of the commune of Limoges belonged not to the crown but to
+the viscountess, and that therefore the treaty involved no change in
+their allegiance. Edward threw himself with ardour on to the side of
+the burgesses. Guy of Lusignan, still the agent of his brother abroad,
+though prudently excluded from England, was sent to Limoges, where he
+incited the commune to resist the viscountess. In May, 1274, Edward
+himself took up his quarters in Limoges, and for a month ruled there as
+sovereign. But the French court reiterated the decree which made the
+commune the vassal of the viscountess. To persevere in upholding the
+rebels meant an open breach with the French court in circumstances more
+unfavourable than in the case of Gaston of Béarn. Once more Edward
+refused to allow his ambition to prevail over his sense of legal
+obligation. With rare self-restraint he renounced the fealty of
+Limoges, and abandoned his would-be subjects to the wrath of the
+viscountess. This was an act of loyalty to feudal duty worthy of St.
+Louis. If Edward, on later occasions, pressed his own legal claims
+against his vassals, he set in his own case a pattern of strict
+obedience to his overlord.
+
+While Edward was still abroad, his friend Gregory X. held from May to
+July, 1274, the second general council at Lyons, wherein there was much
+talk of a new crusade, and an effort was made, which came very near
+temporary success, towards healing the schism of the Eastern and
+Western Churches. At Gregory's request Edward put off his coronation,
+lest the celebration might call away English prelates from Lyons. When
+the council was over, he at last turned towards his kingdom. At Paris
+he was met by the mayor of London, Henry le Waleis, and other leading
+citizens, who set before him the grievous results of the long disputes
+with Flanders, which had broken off the commercial relations between
+the two countries, and had inflicted serious losses on English trade.
+Edward strove to bring the Flemings to their senses by prohibiting the
+export of wool from England to the weaving towns of Flanders. The looms
+of Ghent and Bruges were stopped by reason of the withholding of the
+raw material, and the distress of his subjects made Count Guy of
+Flanders anxious to end so costly a quarrel. On July 28 Edward met Guy
+at Montreuil and signed a treaty which re-established the old
+friendship between lands which stood in constant economic need of each
+other. There was no longer any occasion for further delay, and on
+August 2 Edward and his queen crossed over to Dover. Received with open
+arms by his subjects, he was crowned at Westminster on August 19 by the
+new Archbishop of Canterbury, Robert Kilwardby, philosopher,
+theologian, and Dominican friar, whom Gregory X. had placed over the
+church of Canterbury, despite the vigorous efforts which Edward made to
+secure the primacy for Robert Burnell. He had been absent from England
+for four years.
+
+Edward's sojourn in France was fruitful of results which he was unable
+to reap for the moment. Conscious of the inveterate hostility of the
+French king, he strove to establish relations with foreign powers to
+counterbalance the preponderance of his rival. When the death of
+Richard of Cornwall reopened the question of the imperial succession,
+Charles of Anjou had been anxious to obtain the prize for his nephew,
+Philip III., on the specious pretext that the headship of Christendom
+would enable the King of France to "collect chivalry from all the
+world" and institute the crusade which both Gregory X. and Edward so
+ardently desired. But the most zealous enthusiast for the holy war
+could hardly be deceived by the false zeal with which the Angevin
+cloaked his overweening ambition. It was a veritable triumph for
+Edward, when Gregory X., though attracted for a moment by the prospect
+of a strong emperor capable of landing a crusade, accepted the choice
+of the German magnates who, in terror of France, elected as King of the
+Romans the strenuous but not overmighty Swabian count, Rudolf of
+Hapsburg. As Alfonso of Castile's pretensions were purely nominal, this
+election ended the Great Interregnum by restoring the empire on a
+narrower but more practical basis. Though Gregory strove to reconcile
+the French to Rudolf's accession, common suspicion of France bound
+Edward and the new King of the Romans in a common friendship.
+
+Family disputes soon destroyed the unity of policy of the Capetian
+house. Philip III., well meaning but weak, was drifting into complete
+dependence on Charles of Anjou, whom Edward distrusted, alike as the
+protector of the murderers of Henry of Almaine and as the supplanter of
+his mother in the Provençal heritage. Margaret of Provence, the widow
+of St. Louis, had a common grievance with Edward and his mother against
+Charles of Anjou. She hated him the more inasmuch as he was depriving
+her of all influence over her son, King Philip. It was easy in such
+circumstances for the two widowed queens of France and England to form
+grandiose schemes for ousting Charles from Provence. Rudolf lent
+himself to their plans by investing Margaret with the county. Edward's
+filial piety and political interests made him a willing partner in
+these designs. In 1278 he betrothed his daughter Joan of Acre to
+Hartmann, the son of the King of the Romans. The plan of Edward and
+Rudolf was to revive in some fashion the kingdom of Arles[1] in favour
+of the young couple. Though Rudolf was unfaithful to this policy, and
+abandoned the proposed English marriage in favour of a match between
+his daughter and the son of the King of Sicily, the two queens
+persisted in their plans, and new combinations against Charles and
+Philip for some years threatened the peace of Europe.
+
+ [1] Fournier's _Le Royaume d'Arles et de Vienne_ (1891) gives
+ the best modern account of Edward's relations to the Middle
+ Kingdom.
+
+It is unlikely that Edward hoped for serious results from schemes so
+incoherent and backed with such slender resources. Besides his alliance
+with the emperor, he strove to injure the French king by establishing
+close relations with his brother-in-law, Alfonso of Castile, who since
+1276 was at war with the French. Earlier than this, he made himself the
+champion of Blanche of Artois, the widow of Henry III. of Navarre and
+Champagne. He wished that Joan, their only child, should bring her
+father's lands to one of his own sons, and, though disappointed in this
+ambition, he managed to marry his younger brother, Edmund of Lancaster,
+to Blanche. Though the French took possession of Navarre, whereby they
+alike threatened Gascony and Castile, they suffered Blanche to rule in
+Champagne in her daughter's name, and Edmund was associated with her in
+the government of that county. The tenure of a great French fief by the
+brother of the English king was a fresh security against the
+aggressions of the kings of France and Sicily. It probably facilitated
+the conclusion of the long negotiations as to the interpretation of the
+treaty of Paris, and the partition of the inheritance of Alfonse of
+Poitiers. Edward's position against France was further strengthened in
+1279 by the death of his wife's mother, Joan of Castile, the widow of
+Ferdinand the Saint and the stepmother of Alfonso the Wise, whereupon
+he took possession of Ponthieu in Eleanor's name. Scarcely had he
+established himself at Abbeville, the capital of the Picard county,
+than the negotiations at Paris were so far ripened that Philip III.
+went to Amiens, where Edward joined him. On May 23 both kings agreed to
+accept the treaty of Amiens by which the more important of the
+outstanding difficulties between the two nations were amicably
+regulated. By it Philip recognised Eleanor as Countess of Ponthieu, and
+handed over a portion of the inheritance of Alfonse of Poitiers to
+Edward. Agen and the Agenais were ceded at once, and a commission was
+appointed to investigate Edward's claims over lower Quercy. In return
+for this Edward yielded up his illusory rights over the three
+bishoprics of Limoges, Périgueux, and Cahors. It was a real triumph for
+English diplomacy.
+
+No lasting peace could arise from acts which emphasised the essential
+incompatibility of French and English interests by enlarging the
+territory of the English kings in France. The undercurrent of hostility
+still continued; and the proposal of Pope Nicholas III. that Edward
+should act as mediator between Philip III. and Alfonso of Castile led
+to difficulties that deeply incensed Edward, and embroiled him once
+more both with France and Spain. Under Angevin influence, both Philip
+and Alfonso rejected Edward's mediation in favour of that of the Prince
+of Salerno, Charles of Anjou's eldest son. Disgust at this
+unfriendliness made Edward again support the plans of Margaret of
+Provence against the Angevins. In 1281 Margaret's intrigues formed a
+combination of feudal magnates called the League of Macon, with the
+object of prosecuting her claims over Provence by force of arms. Edward
+and his mother, Eleanor, his Savoyard kinsfolk, and Edmund of Lancaster
+all entered into the league. But it was hopeless for a disorderly crowd
+of lesser chieftains, with the nominal support of a distant prince like
+Edward, to conquer Provence in the teeth of the hostility of the
+strongest and the ablest princes of the age. The League of Macon came
+to nothing, like so many other ambitious combinations of a time in
+which men's capacity to form plans transcended their capacity to
+execute them. Margaret herself soon despaired of the way of arms and
+was bought off by a money compensation. The league mainly served to
+keep alive the troubles that still separated England and France. In
+1284 Philip gained a new success in winning the hand of Joan of
+Champagne, Count Edmund's step-daughter, for his son, the future Philip
+the Fair. When Joan attained her majority, Edmund lost the custody of
+Champagne, which went to the King of France as the natural protector of
+his son and his son's bride. With his brother's withdrawal from Provins
+to Lancaster, Edward lost one of his means of influencing the course of
+French politics.
+
+A compensation for these failures was found in 1282 when the Sicilian
+vespers rang the knell of the Angevin power in Sicily. When the
+revolted islanders chose Peter, King of Aragon, as their sovereign,
+Charles, seeking to divert him from Sicily by attacking him at home,
+inspired his partisan, Pope Martin IV., to preach a crusade against
+Aragon. It was in vain that Edward strove to mediate between the two
+kings.
+
+The only response made to his efforts was a fantastic proposal that
+they should fight out their differences in a tournament at Bordeaux
+with him as umpire, but Edward refused to have anything to do with the
+pseudo-chivalrous venture. At last, in 1285, Philip III. lent himself
+to his uncle's purpose so far as to lead a papalist crusade over the
+Pyrenees. The movement was a failure. Philip lost his army and his life
+in Aragon, and his son and successor, Philip IV., at once withdrew from
+the undertaking. In the year of the crusade of Aragon, Charles of
+Anjou, Peter of Aragon, and Martin IV. died. With them the struggles,
+which had begun with the attack on Frederick II, reached their
+culminating point. Their successors continued the quarrel with
+diminished forces and less frantic zeal, and so gave Edward his best
+chance to pose as the arbiter of Europe. Though Edward's continental
+policy lay so near his heart that it can hardly be passed over, it was
+fuller of vain schemes than of great results. Yet it was not altogether
+fruitless, since twelve years of resolute and moderate action raised
+England, which under Henry III. was of no account in European affairs,
+to a position only second to that of France, and that under conditions
+more nearly approaching the modern conception of a political balance
+and a European state system than feudalism, imperialism, and papalism
+had hitherto rendered possible.
+
+In domestic policy, seven years of monotonous administration had in a
+way prepared for vigorous reforms. Edward's return to England in 1274
+was quickly followed by the dismissal of Walter of Merton, the
+chancellor of the years of quiescence. He was succeeded by Robert
+Burnell, who, though foiled in his quest of Canterbury, obtained an
+adequate standing by his preferment to the bishopric of Bath and Wells.
+For the eighteen years of life which still remained to him, Bishop
+Burnell held the chancery and possessed the chief place in Edward's
+counsels. The whole of this period was marked by a constant legislative
+activity which ceased so soon after Burnell's death that it is tempting
+to assign at least as large a part of the law-making of the reign to
+the minister as to the sovereign. A consummate lawyer and diplomatist,
+Burnell served Edward faithfully. Nor was his fidelity impaired either
+by the laxity which debarred him from higher ecclesiastical preferment
+or by his ambitious endeavours to raise the house of Shropshire squires
+from which he sprang into a great territorial family. Edward gave him
+his absolute confidence and was blind even to his defects.
+
+The first general parliament of the reign to which the king summoned
+the commons was held at Westminster in the spring of 1275. Its work was
+the statute of Westminster the First, a comprehensive measure of many
+articles which covered almost the whole field of legislation, and is
+especially noteworthy for the care which its compilers took to uphold
+sound administration and put down abuses. Not less important was the
+provision of an adequate revenue for the debt-burdened king. The same
+parliament made Edward a permanent grant of a custom on wool,
+wool-fells, and leather, which remained henceforth a chief source of
+the regular income of the crown. The later imposition of further duties
+soon caused men to describe the customs of 1275 as the "Great and
+Ancient Custom". It was significant of the economic condition of
+England that the great custom was a tax on exports, not imports, and
+that, with the exception of leather, it was a tax on raw materials.
+Granted the more willingly since the main incidence of it was upon the
+foreign merchants, who bought up English wool for the looms of Flanders
+and Brabant, the custom proved a source of revenue which could easily
+be manipulated, increased, and assigned in advance to the Italian
+financiers, willing to lend money to a necessitous king. A new step in
+our financial history was attained when this tax on trade steps into
+the place so long held by the taxes on land, from which the Normans and
+Angevins had derived their enormous revenue.
+
+The statute of Westminster the First had a long series of fellows. Next
+year came the statute of Rageman, which supplemented an earlier inquest
+into abuses by instituting a special inquiry in cases of trespass. In
+1277 the first Welsh war interrupted the current of legislation. The
+break was compensated for in 1278 by the passing of the important
+statute of Gloucester, the consummation of a policy which Edward had
+adopted as soon as he set foot on English soil. The troubles of Edward's
+youth had made clear to him the obstacles thrown in the path of orderly
+government by the great territorial franchises. He had been forced to
+modify his policy to gratify the lord of Glamorgan, and win over the
+house of Mortimer by the erection of a new franchise that was a
+palatinate in all but name. But such great "regalities" were, after all,
+exceptional. Much more irritating to an orderly mind were the
+innumerable petty immunities which made half the hundreds in England the
+appendages of baronial estates, and such common privileges as "return of
+writs," which prevented the sheriff's officers from executing his
+mandates on numerous manors where the lords claimed that the execution
+of writs must be entrusted to their bailiffs.[1] These widespread powers
+in private hands were the more annoying to the king since they were
+commonly exercised with no better warrant than long custom, and without
+direct grant from him.
+
+ [1] See on "return of writs" and a host of similar immunities,
+ Pollock and Maitland's _History of English Law_, i., 558-82.
+
+Bracton had already laid down the doctrine that no prescription can
+avail against the rights of the crown, and it was a commonplace with the
+lawyers of the age that nothing less than a clear grant by royal charter
+could justify such delegation of the sovereign's powers into private
+hands. Within a few months of his landing, Edward sent out commissioners
+to inquire into the baronial immunities. The returns of these inquests,
+which were carried out hundred by hundred, are embodied in the precious
+documents called the Hundred Rolls. The study of these reports inspired
+the procedure of the statute of Gloucester, by which royal officers were
+empowered to traverse the land demanding by what warrant the lords of
+franchises exercised their powers. The demand of the crown for
+documentary proof of royal delegation would have destroyed more than
+half the existing liberties. But aristocratic opinion deserted Edward
+when he strove to carry out so violent a revolution. The irritation of
+the whole baronage is well expressed in the story of how Earl Warenne,
+unsheathing a rusty sword, declared to the commissioners: "Here is my
+warrant. My ancestors won their lands with the sword. With my sword I
+will defend them against all usurpers." Nor was this mere boasting. The
+return of the king's officers tells us that Warenne would not say of
+whom, or by what services, he held his Yorkshire stronghold of
+Conisborough, and that his bailiffs refused them entrance into his
+liberties and would not suffer his tenants to answer or appear before
+them.[1] Edward found it prudent not to press his claims. He disturbed
+few men in their franchises, and was content to have collected the mass
+of evidence embodied in the _placita de quo warranto_, and thus to have
+stopped the possibility of any further growth of the franchises. A few
+years later he accepted the compromise that continuous possession since
+the coronation of Richard I. was a sufficient answer to a writ of _quo
+warranto_. In this lies the whole essence of Edward's policy in relation
+to feudalism, a policy very similar to that of St. Louis. Every man is
+to have his own, and the king is not to inquire too curiously what a
+man's own was. But no extension of any private right was to be
+tolerated. Thus feudalism as a principle of political jurisdiction
+gradually withered away, because it was no longer suffered to take fresh
+root. The later land legislation of Edward's reign pushed the idea still
+further.
+
+ [1] _Kirkby's Quest for Yorkshire_, pp. 3, 227, 231, Surtees
+ Soc.
+
+In 1278 it had been the turn of the barons to suffer. Next came the
+turn of the Church. Though Edward was a true son of the Church, he saw
+as clearly as William the Conqueror and Henry II. the essential
+incompatibility between the royal supremacy and the pretensions of the
+extreme ecclesiastics. The limits of Church and State, the growth of
+clerical wealth and immunities, and the relations of the world-power of
+the pope to the local authority of the king, were problems which no
+strong king could afford to neglect, and perhaps were incapable of
+solution on medieval lines. Edward saw that the most practical way of
+dealing with clerical claims was for him to stand in good personal
+relations to the chief dispensers of ecclesiastical jurisdiction. With
+a pope like Gregory X. it was easy for Edward to be on friendly terms;
+but it was more difficult to feel any cordiality for the dogmatic
+canonists or the furious Guelfic partisans who too often occupied the
+chair of St. Peter. Yet Edward was shrewd enough to see that it was
+worth while making sacrifices to keep on his side the power which,
+alike under Innocent III. and Clement IV., had given valuable
+assistance to his grandfather and father in their struggle against
+domestic enemies. Moreover the enormous growth of the system of papal
+provisions had given the papacy the preponderating authority in the
+selection of the bishops of the English Church. It was only by yielding
+to the popes, whenever it was possible, that Edward could secure the
+nomination of his own candidates to the chief ecclesiastical posts in
+his own realm.
+
+In the earlier years of his reign Edward was luckier in his relations
+to the popes than to his own archbishops. But he found that his power
+at Rome broke down just where he wanted to exercise it most. He was
+disgusted to find how little influence he had in the selection of the
+Archbishops of Canterbury. Gregory X. sent to Canterbury the Dominican
+Robert Kilwardby, the first mendicant to hold high place in the English
+Church. Kilwardby was translated in 1278 to the cardinal bishopric of
+Porto, a post of greater dignity but less emolument and power than the
+English archbishopric. A cardinal bishop was bound to reside at Rome,
+and the real motive for this doubtful promotion was the desire to
+remove Kilwardby from England and to send a more active man in his
+place. Edward's indiscreet devotion to Bishop Burnell led him again to
+press his friend's claims, but, though he persuaded the monks of Christ
+Church to elect him, Nicholas III. quashed the appointment, and
+selected the Franciscan friar, John Peckham, as archbishop. Peckham, a
+famous theologian and physicist, had been a distinguished professor at
+Paris, Oxford, and Rome. He was high-minded, honourable and zealous, a
+saint as well as a scholar, an enthusiast for Church reform and a
+vigorous upholder of the extremest hierarchical pretensions. Fussy,
+energetic, tactless, he was the true type of the academic ecclesiastic,
+and alike in his personal qualities and his wonderful grasp of detail,
+he may be compared to Archbishop Laud. Though received by Edward with a
+rare magnanimity, Friar John allowed no personal considerations of
+gratitude to interpose between him and his duty. Reaching England in
+June, 1279, he presided, within six weeks of his landing, at a
+provincial council at Reading. In this gathering canons were passed
+against pluralities which frightened every benefice hunter among the
+clerks of the royal household. Orders were also issued for the
+periodical denunciation of ecclesiastical penalties against all
+violators of the Great Charter in a fashion that suggested that the
+king was an habitual offender against the fundamental laws of his
+realm.
+
+Edward wrathfully laid the usurpations of the new primate before
+parliament, and forced Peckham to withdraw all the canons dealing with
+secular matters, and particularly those which concerned the Great
+Charter. The king set up the counter-claims of the State against the
+pretensions of the Church, and the estates passed the statute of
+Mortmain of 1279 as the layman's answer to the canons of Reading. Like
+most of Edward's laws the statute of Mortmain was based on earlier
+precedents. The wealth of the Church had long inspired statesmen with
+alarm, and a true follower of St. Francis like Peckham was specially
+convinced of the need of reducing the clergy to apostolic poverty. By
+the new law all grants of land to ecclesiastical corporations were
+expressly prohibited, under the penalty of the land being forfeited to
+its supreme lord. The statute was not a mere political weapon of the
+moment. It had a wider importance as a step in the development of
+Edward's anti-feudal policy, and may be regarded as a counterpart of
+the inquest into franchises, and as a means of protecting the State as
+well as of disciplining the Church. A corporation never died, and never
+paid reliefs or wardships. Its property never escheated for want of
+heirs, and, as scutages were passing out of fashion, ecclesiastics were
+less valuable to the king in times of war than lay lords. The recent
+exigencies of the Welsh war had emphasised the need of strengthening
+the military defences of the crown, and the new statute secured this by
+preventing the further devolution of lands into the dead hand of the
+Church. But all medieval laws were rather enunciations of an ideal than
+measures which practical statesmen aimed at carrying out in detail. The
+statute of Mortmain hardly stayed the creation of fresh monasteries and
+colleges, or the further endowment of old ones. All that was necessary
+for the pious founder was to obtain a royal dispensation from the
+operation of the statute. There was little need to fear that the new
+law would stand in the way of the power of the ecclesiastical estate.
+
+A more distinct challenge to the Church was provoked by a further
+aggression of Peckham in 1281. In that year the primate summoned a
+council at Lambeth, wherein he sought to withdraw from the cognisance of
+the civil courts all suits concerning patronage and the disposition of
+the personal effects of ecclesiastics. To extend the jurisdiction of the
+_forum ecclesiasticum_ was the surest way of exciting the hostility of
+the common lawyers and the king. Once more Edward annulled the
+proceedings of a council, and once more the submission of Peckham saved
+the land from a conflict which might have assumed the proportions of
+Becket's struggle against Henry II. Four years later Edward pressed his
+advantage still further by the royal ordinance of 1285, called
+_Circumspecte agatis_, which, though accepting the supremacy of the
+Church courts within their own sphere, narrowly defined the limits of
+their power in matters involving a temporal element. Again Peckham was
+fain to acquiesce. His policy had not only irritated the king, but
+alienated his fellow bishops. He visited his province with pertinacity
+and minuteness, and he was the less able to stand up against the king as
+he was engaged in violent quarrels with all his own suffragans. The
+leader of the bishops in resisting his claims was Thomas of Cantilupe.
+Restored to England by the liberal policy of Edward, Montfort's
+chancellor after Lewes had been raised to the see of Hereford, where his
+sanctity and devotion won him the universal love of his flock. Involved
+in costly lawsuits with the litigious primate, Thomas was forced to
+leave his diocese to plead his cause before the papal _curia_. He died
+in Italy in 1282, and his relics, carried back by his followers to his
+own cathedral, won the reputation of working miracles. A demand arose
+for his canonisation, and Edward before his death had secured the
+appointment of the papal commission, which, a few years later, added St.
+Thomas of Hereford to the list of saints.[1] Thus the chancellor of
+Montfort obtained the honour of sanctity through the action of the
+victor of Evesham.
+
+ [1] The _processus canonisationis_ of Cantilupe, printed in the
+ Bollandist _Acta Sanctorum_, Oct. 1, 539-705, illustrates many
+ aspects of this period.
+
+The second Welsh war interrupted both the conflict between Edward and
+the archbishop, and the course of domestic legislation. Yet even in the
+midst of his campaigns Edward issued the statute of Acton Burnell of
+1283, which provided a better way of recovering merchants' debts, and
+the statute of Rhuddlan of 1284 for the regulation of the king's
+exchequer. The king's full activity as a lawgiver was renewed after the
+settlement of his conquest by the statute of Wales of 1284, and the
+legislation of his early years culminated in the two great acts of
+1285, the statute of Westminster the Second, and the statute of
+Winchester. That year, which also witnessed the passing of the
+_Circumspecte agatis_, stands out as the most fruitful in lawmaking in
+the whole of Edward's reign.
+
+The second statute of Westminster, passed in the spring parliament,
+partook of the comprehensive character of the first statute of that
+name. There were clauses by which, as the Canon of Oseney puts it,
+"Edward revived the ancient laws which had slumbered through the
+disturbance of the realm: some corrupted by abuse he restored to their
+proper form: some less evident and apparent he declared: some new ones,
+useful and honourable, he added". Among the more conspicuous
+innovations of the second statute of Westminster was the famous clause
+De _donis conditionalibus_, which forms a landmark in the law of real
+property. It facilitated the creation of entailed estates by providing
+that the rights of an heir of an estate, granted upon conditions, were
+not to be barred on account of the alienation of such an estate by its
+previous tenant. Thus arose those estates for life, which in later ages
+became a special feature of the English land system, and which, by
+restricting the control of the actual possessor of a property over his
+land, did much to perpetuate the worst features of medieval
+land-holding. It is a modern error to regard the legitimation of
+estates in tail as a triumph of reactionary feudalism over the will of
+Edward. Apart from the fact that there is not a tittle of contemporary
+evidence to justify such a view, it is manifest that the interest of
+the king was in this case exactly the same as that of each individual
+lord of a manor. The greater prospect of reversion to the donor, and
+the other features of the system of entails, which commended them to
+the petty baron, were still more attractive to the king, the greatest
+proprietor as well as the ultimate landlord of all the realm. Other
+articles of the Westminster statute were only less important than the
+clause _De donis_, notable among them being the institution of justices
+of _nisi prius_, appointed to travel through the shires three times a
+year to hear civil causes. This was part of the simplification and
+concentration of judicial machinery, whereby Edward made tolerable the
+circuit system which under Henry III. had been a prolific source of
+grievances.
+
+While in the statute of Westminster Edward prepared for the future, the
+companion statute of Winchester, the work of the autumn parliament,
+revived the jurisdiction of the local courts; reformed the ancient
+system of watch and ward, and brought the ancient system of popular
+courts into harmony with the jurisdiction emanating from the crown,
+which had gone so far towards superseding it. This measure marks the
+culmination of Edward's activity as a lawgiver. During the five next
+years there were no more important statutes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE CONQUEST OF NORTH WALES.
+
+
+The treaty of Shrewsbury of 1267 had not brought enduring peace to
+Wales and the march. The pacification was in essentials a simple
+recognition of accomplished facts, but, so far as it involved promises
+of restitution and future good behaviour, its provisions were barely
+carried out, even in the scanty measure in which any medieval treaty
+was executed. Moreover, the treaty by no means covered the whole ground
+of variance between the English and the Welsh. like the treaty of Paris
+of 1259, it was as much the starting-point of new difficulties as the
+solution of old ones. Many troublesome questions of detail had been
+postponed for later settlement, and no serious effort was made to
+grapple with them. Even during the life of the old king, there had been
+war in the south between the Earl of Gloucester and Llewelyn. However,
+the Welsh prince paid, with fair regularity, the instalments of the
+indemnity to which he had been bound, and there was no disposition on
+the part of the English authorities to question the basis of the
+settlement. Even the marchers maintained an unwonted tranquillity. They
+had lost so much during the recent war that they had no great desire to
+take up arms again. Llewelyn himself was the chief obstacle to peace.
+The brilliant success of his arms and diplomacy seems somewhat to have
+turned his brain. Visions of a wider authority constantly floated
+before him. His bards prophesied the expulsion of the Saxon, and he had
+done such great deeds in the first twenty years of his reign, that a
+man of more practical temperament might have been forgiven for
+indulging in dreams of future success. Three obstacles stood in the way
+of the development of his power. These were his vassalage to the
+English crown, the hostility of the marcher barons, and the impatience
+with which the minor Welsh chieftains submitted to his authority. For
+five years he impatiently endured these restraints. He then took
+advantage of the absence of the new king to rid himself of them.
+
+Five days after the accession of Edward I., the lieutenants of the king
+received the last payment of the indemnity which Llewelyn condescended
+to make. Their demand that the Welsh prince should take an oath of
+fealty to his new sovereign was answered by evasive delays. Arrears of
+the indemnity accumulated, and the state of the march became more
+disturbed. The regents showed moderation, though one of them, Roger
+Mortimer, had himself been the greatest sufferer from the treaty of
+Shrewsbury. In the south, Humphrey Bohun, grandson of the old Earl of
+Hereford and earl himself in 1275 by his grandfather's death, was
+engaged in private war with Llewelyn. In direct defiance of the terms
+of 1267, Humphrey strove to maintain himself in the march of Brecon,
+which had been definitely ceded to Llewelyn. It was to the credit of
+the regents that they refused to countenance this glaring violation of
+the treaty. Meanwhile Llewelyn busied himself with erecting a new
+stronghold on the upper Severn, which was a menace alike to the royal
+castle of Montgomery and to his own vassal, Griffith ap Gwenwynwyn, the
+tributary lord of Powys. Yet the regents were content to remonstrate,
+and to urge on all parties the need of strict adherence to the terms of
+the treaty. The Earl of Warwick was appointed in the spring of 1274 as
+head of a commission, empowered to do justice on all transgressions of
+the peace, and Llewelyn was ordered to meet him at Montgomery Ford. But
+Llewelyn was busy at home, where his brother David had joined hands
+with Griffith ap Gwenwynwyn in a plot against him. Llewelyn easily
+crushed the conspiracy; David, after a feeble attempt to maintain
+himself in his own patrimony, took flight to England, and Griffith of
+Powys, driven from his dominions, was also obliged to seek the
+protection of Edward. Henceforth Llewelyn ruled directly over Powys as
+well as Gwynedd. His success encouraged him to persevere in defying his
+overlord.
+
+Rash as he was, Llewelyn recognised that he was not strong enough to
+stand up single-handed against England. Former experience, however,
+suggested that it was an easy matter to make a party with the barons
+against the crown. But times had changed since the Great Charter and
+the Barons' War; and a policy, which could obtain concessions from John
+or Henry III., was powerless against a king who commanded the
+allegiance of all his subjects. Yet there was enough friction between
+the new king and his feudatories to make the attempt seem feasible, and
+Llewelyn revived the Montfort tradition, by claiming the hand of
+Eleanor, Earl Simon's daughter, which had been promised to him since
+1265. The alarm created by this shows that Edward perceived the danger
+that it might involve. But his policy of conciliation had now restored
+to their estates the last of the "disinherited," and, since the murder
+of Henry of Almaine, the name of Montfort was no longer one to conjure
+with. The exiled sons of Earl Simon welcomed Llewelyn's advances, and,
+in 1275, Eleanor was despatched from France to Wales under the escort
+of her clerical brother Amaury. On their way, Eleanor and Amaury were
+captured by English sailors. Edward detained the lady at the queen's
+court, and gave some scandal to the stricter clergy by shutting up
+Amaury in Corfe castle. He had foiled the Welsh prince's game, but he
+had given him a new grievance.
+
+During these transactions negotiations had been proceeding between the
+English court and Llewelyn. In November, 1274, Edward went to
+Shrewsbury in the hope of receiving the prince, but he was delayed by
+illness, and Llewelyn made this an excuse for non-appearance. Next year
+the king journeyed to Chester with the same object, but his mission was
+equally fruitless. Summons after summons was despatched to the
+recalcitrant vassal. Llewelyn heeded them no more than requests to pay
+up the arrears which he owed the English crown. After two years of
+hesitation Edward lost all patience. Irritated to the quick by
+Llewelyn's offer to perform homage in a border town on conditions
+altogether impossible of acceptance, the king summoned a council of
+magnates for November 12, 1276, and laid the whole case before them. It
+was agreed that the king should go against Llewelyn as a rebel and
+disturber of the peace; and the feudal levies were summoned to meet at
+Worcester on June 24, 1277. As a preliminary to the great effort,
+Warwick was sent to Chester, Roger Mortimer to Montgomery, and Payne of
+Chaworth to Carmarthen. All the available marcher forces and every
+trooper of the royal household were despatched to enable them to
+operate during the winter and spring. Their movements were brilliantly
+successful. On the reappearance of its ancient lord, the middle march
+threw off the yoke of Llewelyn and went back to its obedience to
+Mortimer. Griffith ap Gwenwynwyn was restored to upper Powys; the sons
+of Griffith of Bromfield cast off their allegiance to Llewelyn and were
+received back as direct vassals of the king. A Tony was once more
+ruling in Elvael, a Gifford in Llandovery, and a Bohun in Brecon. Rhys
+ap Meredith yielded up Dynevor, and was content to be recognised as
+lord of the humbler stronghold of Drysllwyn. Chaworth's bands conquered
+all Cardiganshire. Thus the wider "principality" of Llewelyn was
+shattered at the first assault, and when the decisive moment came,
+Llewelyn was thrown back upon his hereditary clansmen of Gwynedd. Of
+all the acquisitions of the treaty of Shrewsbury, the four cantreds
+alone still held for their prince.[1]
+
+ [1] On the whole subject of this chapter Mr. J.E. Morris's
+ _Welsh Wars of Edward I._ throws a flood of new light,
+ especially on the military history, the organisation of the
+ Edwardian army, and the political condition of the march.
+
+When the baronial levies mustered at Worcester, the work was already
+half accomplished. Of the thousand lances that there assembled, small
+forces were detached to help Mortimer in mid Wales and to reinforce the
+marcher army in west Wales, which was now commanded by Edmund of
+Lancaster, the king's brother. The mass of the troops followed Edward
+to Chester, whence the main attack was to be made. Edward's plan of
+operations was simplicity itself. He knew that the Welsh desired no
+pitched battle, and he was indisposed to lose his soldiers in
+unnecessary conflict. Swarms of workmen cleared a wide road through the
+dense forests of the four cantreds. The route chosen was as near as
+possible to the coast, where a strong fleet, mainly from the Cinque
+Ports, kept up communications with the land forces. The advance was
+cautious and slow, with long halts at Flint and at Rhuddlan, where
+hastily erected forts secured the king's base and safe-guarded a
+possible retreat. By the end of August the king was at Deganwy, and the
+four cantreds were conquered. During all this time fresh forces were
+hurried up. Some 15,000 infantry, largely drawn from southern and
+central Wales, swelled the king's host.
+
+Llewelyn was closely shut up in the Snowdon country. His position was
+safe enough from a direct assault, and his only fear was want of
+provisions. He trusted, however, that supplies would come in from
+Anglesea, whose rich cornfields were yellowing for the harvest. But the
+fleet of the Cinque Ports cut off communications between Anglesea and
+the mainland, and ferried over a strong detachment of Edward's troops,
+which occupied the island. English harvest-men gathered for Edward the
+crops of Welsh corn, and left Llewelyn to face the beginnings of a
+mountain-winter without the means of feeding his followers. By
+September the real fight was over. Edward withdrew to Rhuddlan and
+dismissed the greater part of his followers. Enough were left to block
+the approaches to Snowdon, and Llewelyn, seeing no gain in further
+delay, made his submission on November 9.
+
+The treaty of Aberconway, which Edward dictated, reduced Llewelyn to
+the position of a petty North Welsh chieftain, which he had held thirty
+years before. He gave up the homage of the greater Welsh magnates, and
+resigned all his former conquests. The four cantreds thus passed away
+from his power, and even Anglesea was only allowed to him for life and
+subject to a yearly tribute. He was compelled to do homage, and ordered
+to pay a crushing indemnity, twice as much as the expenses of the war.
+But Edward was in a generous mood. After Llewelyn's personal submission
+at Rhuddlan, the king remitted the indemnity and the rent for Anglesea.
+It was a boon to Llewelyn that the treacherous David received his
+reward not' in Gwynedd itself but in Duffryn Clwyd and Rhuvoniog, two
+of the four cantreds of the Perveddwlad. Llewelyn's humiliation was
+completed by his enforced attendance at Edward's Christmas court at
+Westminster. Next year, however, he received a further sign of royal
+favour. He was allowed to marry Eleanor Montfort, and Edward himself
+was present at their wedding. But on the morning of the ceremony,
+Llewelyn was forced to make a promise not to entertain the king's
+fugitives and outlaws.
+
+The treaty of Aberconway left Edward free to revive in the rest of Wales
+the policy which, when originally begun in 1254,[1] had, like a rising
+flood, floated Llewelyn into his wider principality. The lords marchers
+resumed their ancient limits. Princes like Griffith of Powys and Rhys of
+Drysllwyn sank into a position which is indistinguishable from that of
+their Anglo-Norman neighbours. David, in the vale of Clwyd had no better
+prospects. The heirs of lower Powys were put under the guardianship of
+Roger Mortimer's younger son, another Roger, who, on the death of his
+wards by drowning, received possession of their lands, and henceforth,
+as Roger Mortimer of Chirk, became a new marcher baron. Meanwhile Edward
+busied himself with schemes for establishing settled government in the
+conquered territories. To a man of his training and temperament, this
+meant the establishment of English law and administration. He could see
+no merits in the archaic Welsh customs which regarded all crimes as
+capable of atonement by a money payment, treated a wrecked ship as the
+lawful perquisite of the local proprietor, and hardly distinguished
+legitimate from illegitimate children in determining the descent of
+property. He convinced himself that the land laws of Wales were already
+those of Anglo-Norman feudalism. He subjected the cantreds of Rhos and
+Englefield to the Cheshire county court, and breathed a new life into
+the decayed shire organisation of Cardiganshire and Carmarthenshire.
+Flint and Rhuddlan dominated the two former, Aberystwyth and Carmarthen
+the latter. Round the king's castles grew up petty boroughs of English
+traders, who would, it was believed, teach the Welsh to love commerce
+and peaceful ways.
+
+ [1] See page 76.
+
+For five years all seemed to go well, though underneath the apparent
+calm a storm was gradually gathering. The Welsh of the ceded districts
+bitterly resented the imposition of a strange yoke and complained that
+the king had broken his promise to respect their laws. "Are the Welsh
+worse than Jews?" was their cry, "and yet the king allows the Jews to
+follow their own laws in England." But Edward coldly answered that,
+though it would be a breach of his coronation oath to maintain customs
+of Howel the Good, which were contrary to the Decalogue, he was willing
+to listen to specific complaints. It was, however, a very difficult
+matter to persuade Edward's bailiffs and agents to carry out his
+commands, and many acts of oppression were wrought for which there was
+no redress. Nobles like David and Rhys found their franchises
+threatened by the encroachments of the neighbouring shire-courts.
+Lesser Welshmen were liable to be robbed and insulted by the workmen
+who were building Edward's castles, or by the soldiers who were
+garrisoning them. At last even the Welsh who had helped Edward to put
+down Llewelyn saw that they had been preparing their own ruin, and
+turned to their former enemy for the redress refused them at
+Westminster. David himself made common cause with his brother, and the
+spirit of resistance spread among the half-hearted Cymry of the south.
+Edward's oppression did more than Llewelyn's triumphs to weld together
+the Welsh clans into a single people. A rising was planned in the
+strictest secrecy; and on the eve of Palm Sunday, March 21, 1282, David
+swooped down on Hawarden, a weak castle in private hands, and captured
+it. Llewelyn promptly crossed the Conway and turned his arms against
+the royal strongholds of Flint and Rhuddlan, which withstood him,
+though he devastated the countryside in every direction. Meanwhile
+David hurried south and found the local lords in Cardigan and the vale
+of Towy already in arms. With their help he captured the castles of the
+upper Towy, but lower down the river Rhys remained staunch to the king,
+whereupon David hurried over the hills to Cardiganshire and took
+Aberystwyth. North and south were in full revolt.
+
+Edward, taken unawares, prepared to reassert his authority. Certain
+faithful barons were "affectionately requested" to serve the king for
+pay, and a fairly large army was gathered together, though the
+scattered character of the rebellion necessitated its acting in small
+bands. Meanwhile the military tenants and the Cinque Ports were
+summoned to join in an attack on Llewelyn on the lines of the campaign
+of 1277. Edward's task was more difficult than on the previous
+occasion. Though Rhuddlan, not Chester as in 1277, had become his
+starting-point against Gwynedd, he dared not advance so long as David
+threatened his left flank from Denbigh, and the rising in the south was
+far more formidable than that of five years before. A considerable part
+of the levies had to be despatched to the help of Earl Gilbert of
+Gloucester, who was charged with the reconquest of the vale of Towy. On
+June 17 as the earl's soldiers were returning, laden with plunder, to
+their headquarters at Dynevor, they were suddenly attacked by the Welsh
+at Llandilo, and were driven back on their base. Gloucester hastily
+retreated to Carmarthen. He was superseded by William of Valence, whose
+activity against the Welsh had been quickened by the loss of his son at
+Llandilo. Llewelyn then came south, and pressed the English so hard
+that for several weeks nothing of moment was accomplished.
+
+The advance against Gwynedd was delayed until the late summer. Edward
+still tarried at Rhuddlan, with a host constantly varying in numbers,
+for his soldiers had long overpassed the period of feudal service.
+Every effort was made to bring fresh troops to the field, and Luke de
+Tany, seneschal of Gascony, came upon the scene with a small levy of
+the chivalry of Aquitaine. To Tany was assigned the task of conquering
+Anglesey, but it was not until September that he was able to occupy the
+island. In the same month a strenuous effort was made to dislodge the
+hostile Welsh in the vale of Clwyd; the Earl of Lincoln at last took
+Denbigh from David; Reginald Grey, justice of Chester, captured Ruthin,
+higher up the valley, and Earl Warenne seized Bromfield and Yale. Each
+noble fought for his own hand, and Edward was forced to reward their
+services by immediately granting to them their conquests, and thus
+created a new marcher interest which, later on, stood in the way of an
+effective settlement. But things were getting desperate, and it was
+well for Edward that the security of his left flank at last enabled him
+to advance to the Conway. Thereupon Llewelyn returned to Snowdon, where
+he was joined by the homeless David. Meanwhile Tany, then master of
+Anglesey, opened up communications with the coast of Arvon by a bridge
+of boats over the Menai Straits. Winter was already at hand when
+Llewelyn and his brother were at last shut up amidst the fastnesses of
+Snowdon.
+
+Late in October Archbishop Peckham appeared on the scene. He had
+excommunicated Llewelyn at the beginning of the war, but was still
+anxious to negotiate a peace. Edward did his best to put him off, but
+Peckham's importunity extorted from him a short truce, during which the
+primate visited Snowdon, taking with him an offer of an ample estate in
+England if the prince would surrender his patrimony. Llewelyn furnished
+Peckham with long catalogues of grievances. He was quite willing to
+gain time by discussing his wrongs.
+
+Edward's army shared his irritation at Peckham's interference, and,
+while the archbishop was still in Snowdon, a breach of the truce
+destroyed any hopes of peace. On November 6 Tany led his troops over
+the bridge of boats at low water and marched inland. But his operations
+were ill-planned, and the Welsh came down from the hills and easily put
+him to flight. Meanwhile the tide had risen and the flood cut off
+access to the bridge over the Menai. In their panic the soldiers rushed
+into the water rather than face the enemy. Many leading men were
+drowned, including Tany himself, the author of the treachery. Flushed
+with this success Llewelyn rejected Peckham's terms. In great disgust
+the archbishop went back to England, bitterly denouncing the Welsh. But
+defeat only strengthened the iron resolution of Edward. He issued fresh
+summonses for men and money. Contrary to all precedent, he determined
+to continue the campaign through the winter.
+
+Llewelyn was probably ignorant of the perilous plight into which the
+king had fallen. With the approach of bad weather he became afraid that
+he would be starved out in Snowdon. Any risk was better than being
+caught like a rat in a trap, and, fearing lest a cordon should be drawn
+round the mountains, he made his way southwards, leaving David in
+command. His enemy, Roger Mortimer, was just dead, and Mortimer's
+eldest son Edmund, a youth brought up for the clerical profession, was
+not likely to hold the middle marches with the same strong grasp as his
+father. Thither accordingly Llewelyn made his way, hoping that on his
+approach the tribesmen of the upper Wye, over whom he had ruled so
+long, would abandon their English lord for their Cymric chieftain. A
+force gathered round him, and he occupied a strong position on a hill
+overlooking the river Yrvon, which flows into the right bank of the
+Wye, just above Builth. The right bank of the Yrvon was held by the
+English of Builth. But the only way over the stream was by Orewyn
+bridge, which was held by a detachment of the Welsh. Their position
+seemed so secure that, on December 11, Llewelyn left his troops to
+confer with some of the local chieftains. The English were, however,
+shown a ford over the river; a band crossed in safety, and, taking the
+defenders of Orewyn bridge in the rear, opened up the passage over it
+to their comrades. The English ascended the hill, their mail-clad
+squadrons interlaced with archers, in order that the Welsh infantry
+might be assailed by missiles before they were exposed to the shock of
+a cavalry charge. In the absence of their leader, the Welsh were a
+helpless mass of sheep, and were easily put to flight. Meanwhile
+Llewelyn, hearing the din of battle, hurried back to direct his
+followers. On the way he was slain by Stephen of Frankton, a Shropshire
+veteran of the Barons' War, who fought under the banner of Roger
+l'Estrange. The discovery of important papers on the body first told
+the conquerors the rank of their victim.
+
+Thus perished the able and strenuous chief, who had struggled so long
+to win for himself in Wales a position similar to that occupied by the
+King of Scots in the north. His death did not end, but it much
+simplified, the struggle. The south and midland districts were entirely
+subdued, and the interest of the war again shifted to the mountains of
+Snowdon, where David strove to maintain himself as Prince of Wales. His
+best chance lay in the exhaustion of his enemy, but Edward stuck grimly
+to his task. His coffers were exhausted, and his army for the most part
+went home. Yet Edward tarried at Rhuddlan for over six months, dividing
+his energy between watching the Welsh and replenishing his treasure and
+troops. His treasurer, John Kirkby, wandered from shire to shire
+soliciting voluntary contributions. Then in January, 1283, an anomalous
+parliament was summoned, consisting mainly of ecclesiastics, knights of
+the shire, and burgesses, and meeting in two divisions, at York and at
+Northampton, according as the members came from the northern or
+southern ecclesiastical provinces. The grant of a thirtieth so little
+satisfied the king that he laid violent hands on the crusading-tenth,
+which was deposited in the Temple. Meanwhile the chivalry of Gascony
+and Ponthieu were tempted by high wages to supply the void left by the
+retirement of the English.
+
+Early in 1283 a gallant force from beyond sea, among which figured the
+Counts of Armagnac and Bigorre, reached Rhuddlan. After their arrival
+the king took the offensive, crossed the Conway and transferred his
+headquarters to the Cistercian abbey of Aberconway. Fearful once more
+of being enclosed in the mountains, David sought a new hiding-place
+among the heights of Cader Idris. He shifted his quarters to the castle
+of Bere, hidden away in a remote valley sloping down from the mountain
+to the sea. The unwearied Edward once more issued summonses for a fresh
+campaign. David was at the extremity of his resources. Before the new
+arrivals enabled Edward to move, William of Valence marched up from the
+south, and in April forced Bere to surrender. David fled before the
+siege began; but he was a fugitive without an army, and the campaign
+was reduced to a weary tracking out of the last little bands that still
+scorned to surrender. In June David was betrayed by men of his own
+tongue, and Edward summoned for Michaelmas at Shrewsbury a parliament
+whose chief business was the trial of David. On October 3 the last
+Cymric Prince of Wales suffered the ignominious doom of a traitor, a
+murderer, and a blasphemer. The magnates then adjourned to the
+chancellor's neighbouring seat of Acton Burnell, where the rejoicings
+incident to the king's visit to his friend's new mansion were combined
+with passing the statute of Merchants.
+
+Edward's love of thoroughness made him linger in Wales to settle the
+government of the newly won lands. His first care was to hold Snowdon
+with the ring of fortresses which, in their ruin, still bear abiding
+witness to the solidity of the conqueror's work. Round each castle
+arose a new town, created as artificially as were the _bastides_ of
+Aquitaine, within whose walls English traders and settlers were tempted
+by high privileges to take up their abodes, and whose strictly military
+character was emphasised by the general provision that the constable of
+the castle was to be _ex officio_ the mayor of the municipality. Chief
+among these was Aberconway, whose strategic importance Edward
+understood so fully that he forced the Cistercian monks to take up new
+quarters at Maenan, higher up the valley, in order that there might be
+room for the castle and town which were henceforth to guard the
+entrance to Snowdon. Equally important was the future capital of
+Gwynedd, Carnarvon, where on April 25, 1284, a son was born to Edward
+and Eleanor, who seventeen years later was to become the first English
+Prince of Wales. Elsewhere fortresses of Welsh origin were rebuilt and
+enlarged to complete the stone circuit round the mountains. Such were
+Criccieth, the key of Lleyn; Dolwyddelen, which dominated the upper
+Conway; and Harlech and Bere, the two strongholds that curbed the
+mountaineers of Merioneth. In the south the same policy was carried
+out. Alike in Gwynedd and in the vale of Towy, both in his castle
+building and in his town foundations, Edward was simply carrying on the
+traditions of earlier ages, and applying to his new lands those
+principles of government which, since the Norman Conquest, had become
+the tradition of the marcher lords. Even in his architectural schemes
+there was nothing novel in Edward's policy. Gilbert of Gloucester at
+Caerphilly, and Payne of Chaworth at Kidwelly, had already worked out
+the pattern of "concentric" defences that were to find their fullest
+expression in the new castles of the principality. In each of these
+strongholds an adequate garrison of highly trained and well-paid troops
+kept the Welsh in check.
+
+The civil government of the Edwardian conquests was provided for by the
+statute of Wales, issued on Mid-Lent Sunday, 1284, at Rhuddlan,
+Edward's usual headquarters. It declared that the land of Wales,
+heretofore subject to the crown in feudal right, was entirely
+transferred to the king's dominion. To the whole of the annexed
+districts the English system of shire government was extended, though
+such local customs as appealed to Edward's sense of justice were
+suffered to be continued. Gwynedd and its appurtenances were divided
+into the three shires of Anglesey, Carnarvon, and Merioneth, and were
+collectively put under the justice of Snowdon, whose seat was to be at
+Carnarvon, where courts of chancery and exchequer for north Wales were
+set up. The shires of Cardigan and Carmarthen were re-organised so as
+to include the southern districts which had been subject to Llewelyn,
+or to the Welsh lords who had fallen with him. These were put under the
+justice of west Wales, whose chancery and exchequer were established at
+Carmarthen. It is significant that Edward prepared the way for making
+these districts into shires by persuading his brother Edmund, to whom
+they had been granted, to abandon his claims over them in return for
+ample compensation elsewhere. Without this step the new shires would
+only have been palatinates of the Glamorgan or Pembroke type, and the
+creation of such franchises was directly contrary to Edward's policy.
+It was different in the vale of Clwyd, where it would have been natural
+for Edward to have extended the shire system to the four cantreds.
+Military exigences had, however, already erected most of these lands
+into new marcher lordships, and Edward was perforce content with the
+union of some fragments of Rhos to the shire of Carnarvon, and with
+joining together Englefield and some adjoining districts in the new
+county of Flint. This arrangement secured the strongholds of Flint and
+Rhuddlan for the king. But the district was too small to make it worth
+while to set up a separate organisation for it, and Flintshire was put
+under the justice and courts of Chester, so that it became a dependency
+of the neighbouring palatinate.[1]
+
+ [1] For the shires of Walessee my paper on _The Welsh Shires_
+ in _Y Cymmrodor_, ix. (1888), 201-26.
+
+The lordships of the march were not directly influenced by this
+legislation. They continued to hold their position as franchises until
+the reign of Henry VIII., and under Edward III. were declared by
+statute to be no part of the principality but directly subject to the
+English crown. Yet the removal of the pressure of a native principality
+profoundly affected these districts. The policy of definition made its
+mark even here. The liberties of each marcher were defined and
+circumscribed, and, while scrupulously respected, were incapable of
+further extension. The vague jurisdictions of the sheriffs of the
+border shires were cleared up, and if this process involved some
+limitation of the royal authority in districts like Clun and Oswestry,
+which virtually ceased to be parts of Shropshire, there was a
+compensating advantage in the increased clearness with which the border
+line was drawn and the royal authority consolidated. Gradually the
+marcher lordships passed by lapse into the royal hands, and even from
+the beginning there were regions, such as Montgomery and Builth, which
+knew no lord but the king. All this was, however, an indirect result of
+the Edwardian conquest. Strictly speaking it was no conquest of all
+Wales but merely of the principality, the ancient dominions of
+Llewelyn, to which most of the crown lands in Wales were joined.
+
+Ecclesiastical settlement followed the political reorganisation.
+Peckham was as zealous as Edward in compelling the conquered to follow
+the law-abiding traditions of the king's ancient inheritance. He
+laboured strenuously for the rebuilding of churches, the preservation
+and extension of ecclesiastical property, the education of the clergy,
+and the extirpation of clerical matrimony and simony. Despite his
+unsympathetic attitude, he did good work for the Welsh Church by his
+manful resistance to all attempts of Edward and his subordinates to
+encroach upon her liberties. He quaintly thought it would promote the
+civilisation of Wales if the people were forced to "learn civility" by
+living in towns and sending their children to school in England. His
+assiduous visitation of the Welsh dioceses in 1284 did something to
+kindle zeal, and win the Welsh clergy from the idleness wherein, he
+believed, lay the root of all their shortcomings.
+
+In the autumn of 1284 Edward went on an extended progress in Wales. He
+passed through the four cantreds into Gwynedd, and thence worked his
+way southwards through Cardigan and Carmarthen, ending his tour by
+visits to the marcher lords of the south. He crossed over from
+Glamorgan, where he had been entertained by Gilbert of Clare, to
+Bristol, where he held his Christmas court. Wales was to see no more of
+its new ruler for seven years. During that time the principality gave
+Edward little trouble, though the marchers, as will be seen, were a
+constant anxiety to him. In 1287, while Edward was in Gascony, the
+regent, Edmund of Cornwall, was called upon to deal with a revolt of
+Rhys, son of Meredith, the loyalist lord of the vale of Towy, who
+resented the authority of the justice of Carmarthen over his patrimony.
+His grievances were those of a marcher rather than those of a Welshman.
+Yet his rising in 1287 was formidable enough to require the raising of
+a great army for its suppression. The Welsh chieftain could not long
+hold out against the odds brought against him, and the confiscation of
+his lands swelled the district directly depending on the sheriff of
+Carmarthen. The support of the countryside enabled Rhys to evade his
+pursuers for nearly three years. At last he was captured, and with the
+execution of the last of the lords of Dynevor, the triumph of Edward
+became complete.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE SICILIAN AND THE SCOTTISH ARBITRATIONS.
+
+
+Edward I. had now attained the height of his fame. He had conquered
+Llewelyn; he had reformed the administration; he had put himself as a
+lawmaker in the same rank as St. Louis or Frederick II.; and he had
+restored England to a leading position in the councils of Europe.
+Moreover, he had won a character for justice and fairness which did him
+even greater service, since the several deaths of prominent sovereigns
+during 1285 left him almost alone of his generation among princes of a
+lesser stature. Of the chief rulers of Europe in the early years of
+Edward's reign, Rudolf of Hapsburg alone survived; and the King of the
+Romans had little weight outside Germany many. Edward had outlived his
+brother-in-law Alfonso of Castile, his cousin Philip the Bold, his
+uncle Charles of Anjou, and Peter of Aragon. But the conflicts, in
+which these kings had been engaged, were continued by their successors.
+Above all, the contest for Sicily still raged. The successors of Martin
+IV., though deprived of the active support of France, would not abandon
+the claims of the captive Charles of Salerno; and James of Aragon,
+Peter's second son, maintained himself in Sicily, despite papal
+censures and despite the virtual desertion of his cause by his elder
+brother, Alfonso III., the new king of Aragon. Each side was at a
+standstill, though each side struggled on. The personal hatreds, which
+made it impossible to reconcile the older generation, were dying out,
+and the chief obstacle in the way of a settlement was the stubbornness
+of the papacy. If any one could reconcile the quarrel, it was the King
+of England; and to him Charles' sons and the nobles of his dominions
+appealed to procure his release.
+
+Edward was anxious to proffer his services as a peacemaker, dream of a
+Europe, united for the liberation of the holy places, had not been
+expelled from his mind by his schemes for the advancement of his
+kingdom. If he could inspire his neighbour kings with something of his
+spirit, the crusade might still be possible. Other matters also called
+Edward's attention to the continent. He had to do homage to the new
+French king; he had to press for the execution of the treaty of Amiens,
+and his presence was again necessary in Gascony. His realm was in such
+profound peace that he could safely leave it. Accordingly in May, 1286,
+he took ship for France. With him went his wife Eleanor of Castile, his
+chancellor Bishop Burnell, and a large number of his nobles. He
+entrusted the regency to his cousin, Edmund, Earl of Cornwall, the son
+and successor of Earl Richard; and England saw him no more until
+August, 1289. Edward first made his way to Amiens, where he met the new
+King of France, Philip the Fair. The two kings went together to Paris,
+where Edward spent two months. There he performed homage for Gascony,
+and made a new agreement as to the execution of the treaty of Amiens,
+by which he renounced his claims over Quercy for a money payment, and
+was put in possession of Saintonge, south of the Charente. The
+settlement was the easier as for the moment neither king had his
+supreme interest in Gascony. Edward's real business was to make peace
+between Anjou and Aragon, and Philip IV. showed every desire to help
+him. Before Edward left Paris, he had negotiated a truce between the
+Kings of France and Aragon. Soon afterwards he went to Bordeaux. He
+made Gascony his headquarters for three years, and strove with all his
+might to convert the truce into a peace.
+
+Grave obstacles arose, chief among which was the determination of the
+papacy to make no terms with the King of Aragon so long as his brother
+still reigned over Sicily. Honorius IV., in approving Edward's
+preliminary action, and exhorting him to obtain the liberation of the
+Prince of Salerno, carefully guarded himself against recognising the
+schismatic Aragonese. Edward himself was no partisan of either side. He
+was heartily anxious for peace and desirous to free his kinsman from
+the rigours of his long imprisonment. His wish for a close alliance
+between England and Aragon was unacceptable to the partisanship both of
+Honorius IV. and his successor Nicholas IV. Papal coldness, however,
+did not turn Edward from his course. In the summer of 1287 he met
+Alfonso at Oloron in Béarn, where a treaty was drawn up by which the
+Aragonese king agreed to release Charles of Salerno on condition that
+he would either, within three years, procure from the pope the
+recognition of James in Sicily, or return to captivity and forfeit
+Provence. Besides this, an alliance between England and Aragon was to
+be cemented by the marriage of one of Edward's daughters to Alfonso.
+Delighted with the success of his undertaking, Edward, on his return to
+Bordeaux, again took the cross and prepared to embark on the crusade.
+
+Nicholas IV. interposed between Edward and his vows by denouncing the
+treaty of Oloron.[1] Though well-meaning, he was not strong enough to
+shake himself free from partisan traditions, and though honestly anxious
+to bring about a crusade, he could not see that he made the holy war
+impossible by interposing obstacles in the way of the one prince who
+seriously intended to take the cross. While denouncing Edward's treaty,
+Nicholas encouraged his crusading zeal by granting him a new
+ecclesiastical tenth for six years, a tax made memorable by the fact
+that it occasioned the stringent valuation of benefices, called the
+taxation of Pope Nicholas, which was the standard clerical rate-book
+until the reign of Henry VIII. Despite the pope, Edward still persevered
+in his mediation, and in October, 1288, a new treaty for Charles'
+liberation was signed at Canfranc, in Aragon, which only varied in
+details from the agreement of 1287. Charles was released, but he
+straightway made his way to Rome, where Nicholas absolved him from his
+oath and crowned him King of Sicily. Edward was bitterly disappointed.
+He tarried in the south until July, 1289, usefully employed in promoting
+the prosperity of his duchy, crushing conspiracies, furthering the
+commerce of Bordeaux, and founding new _bastides_. At last tidings of
+disorder at home called him back to his kingdom before the purpose of
+his continental sojourn had been accomplished. But he still pressed on
+his thankless task, and in 1291 peace was made at Tarascon, between
+Aragon and the Roman see, on the hard condition of Alfonso abandoning
+his brother's cause. On Alfonso's death soon afterwards the war was
+renewed, for James then united the Sicilian and Aragonese thrones and
+would not yield up either. It was not until 1295 that Boniface VIII., a
+stronger pope than Nicholas, ended the struggle on terms which left the
+stubborn Aragonese masters of Sicily.
+
+ [1] For his policy, see O. Schiff, _Studien zur Geschichte P.
+ Nikolaus IV._ (1897).
+
+Things had not gone well in England during Edward's absence. Edmund of
+Cornwall had shown vigour in putting down the revolt of Rhys, but he
+was not strong enough to control either the greater barons or the
+officers of the crown. Grave troubles were already brewing in Scotland.
+A fierce quarrel between the Earls of Gloucester and Hereford broke out
+with regard to the boundaries of Glamorgan and Brecon, and the private
+war between the two marchers proved more formidable to the peace of the
+realm than the revolt of the Welsh prince. Even more disastrous to the
+country was the scandalous conduct of the judges and royal officials,
+who profited by the king's absence to pile up fortunes at the expense
+of his subjects. The highest judges of the land forged charters,
+condoned homicides, sold judgments, and practised extortion and
+violence. A great cry arose for the king's return. In the Candlemas
+parliament of 1289 Earl Gilbert of Gloucester met a request for a
+general aid by urging that nothing should be granted until Englishmen
+once more saw the king's face. Alarmed at this threat, Edward returned,
+and landed at Dover on August 12, 1289.
+
+The whole situation was changed by the king's arrival. Edward met the
+innumerable complaints against his subordinates by dismissing nearly all
+the judges from office, and appointing a special commission to
+investigate the charges brought against royal officials of every rank.
+Thomas Weyland, chief justice of the common pleas, anticipated inquiry
+by taking sanctuary with the Franciscan friars of Bury St. Edmunds. A
+knight and a married man, he had taken subdeacon's orders in early life
+and sought to little purpose to be protected by his clergy. His refuge
+was watched by the local sheriffs; finally, he was starved into
+surrender, and suffered to abjure the realm.[1] He fled to France,
+whence he never returned. For some years the commission investigated the
+offences of the ministers of the crown. Though much that was irregular
+was proved against them, many charges broke down under inquiry, and, as
+time went on, the official class saw that their interest lay in
+condoning rather than in punishing scandals. Some of the worst
+offenders, such as the greedy and corrupt Adam of Stratton, were never
+restored to office;[2] but Hengham, the chief justice of the King's
+Bench, was soon reinstated. There were not enough good lawyers in
+England to make it prudent for Edward to dispense with the services of
+such a man. A rigorous maintenance of a high standard of official
+morality meant getting rid of nearly all the king's ministers, and any
+successors would have been inferior in experience and not superior in
+honesty. Edward had to work with such material as he had, and on the
+whole he made the best of it. Scandalous as were the proceedings of his
+agents, their iniquities are but trifles as compared with the offences
+of the counsellors of Philip the Fair.
+
+ [1] For the _abjuratio regni_ see A. Réville in the _Revue
+ Historique_, 1. (1892), 1-42.
+
+ [2] For Adam of Stratton see Hall, _Red Book of the Exchequer_,
+ iii., cccxv.-cccxxxi. Extracts from the Assize rolls recording
+ the proceedings of the special commission will soon be
+ published by the Royal Historical Society.
+
+Fear of Edward drove nobles into obedience as well as ministers into
+honesty. Gloucester desisted unwillingly from his attacks on Brecon,
+and was constrained to divorce his wife and marry the king's daughter,
+Joan of Acre. In becoming the king's son-in-law, he was forced to
+surrender his estates to the crown, receiving them back entailed on the
+heirs of the marriage or, in their default, on the heirs of Joan. Thus
+the system of entails made possible by the statute _De donis_ was used
+by Edward to strengthen his hold over the most powerful of his
+feudatories and increase the prospect of his estates escheating to the
+crown. Considered in this light, Gilbert's marriage with the king's
+daughter seems less a reward of loyalty than a punishment for
+lawlessness. In the same year as this marriage, Edward passed another
+law directed against the baronage. This was the statute of Westminster
+the Third, called from its opening words, _Quia emptores_. It enacted
+that, when part of an estate was alienated by its lord, the grantee
+should not be permitted to become the subtenant of the grantor, but
+should stand to the ultimate lord of the fief in the same feudal
+relation as the grantor himself. This prohibition of further
+subinfeudation stopped the creation of new manors and prevented the
+rivetting of new links in the feudal chain, which were the necessary
+condition of its strength. Though passed at the request of the barons,
+it was a measure much more helpful to the king than to his vassals. It
+stood to the barons as the statute of Mortmain stood to the Church.
+
+Edward was bent on showing that he was master, and his new son-in-law
+and the Earl of Hereford became the victims of his policy. He forced the
+reluctant Gloucester to admit that the pretensions of the lord of
+Glamorgan to be the overlord of the bishop of LLandaff and the guardian
+of the temporalities of the see during a vacancy were usurpations.
+Seeing that his marcher prerogatives were thus rapidly becoming
+undermined, Gloucester put the most cherished marcher right to the test
+by renewing the private war with the Earl of Hereford which had
+disturbed the realm during Edward's absence. The king issued peremptory
+orders for the immediate cessation of hostilities. These mandates
+Hereford obeyed, but Gloucester did not. Resolved that law not force was
+henceforth to settle disputes in the march, Edward summoned a novel
+court at Ystradvellte, in Brecon, wherein a jury from the neighbouring
+shires and liberties was to decide the case between the two earls in the
+presence of the chief marchers. Gloucester refused to appear, and the
+marchers declined to take part in the trial, pleading that it was
+against their liberties. The case was adjourned to give the
+recalcitrants every chance, and after a preliminary report by the
+judges, Edward resolved to hear the suit in person. In October, 1291, he
+presided at Abergavenny over the court before which the earls were
+arraigned. They were condemned to imprisonment and forfeiture. Content
+with humbling their pride and annihilating their privileges, Edward
+suffered them to redeem themselves from captivity by the payment of
+heavy fines, and before long gave them back their lands. The king's
+victory was so complete that neither of the earls could forgive it. In
+1295, Gloucester died, without opportunity of revenge; but Hereford
+lived on, brooding over his wrongs, and in later years signally avenged
+the trial at Abergavenny. Meanwhile the conqueror of the principality
+had shown unmistakably that the liberties of the march were an
+anachronism, since the marchers had no longer the work of defending
+English interests against the Welsh nation.[1]
+
+ [1] Mr. J.E. Morris in chap. vi. of his _Welsh Wars of Edward
+ I._ has admirably summarised this suit. See also G.T. Clark's
+ _Land of Morgan_.
+
+Another measure that followed Edward's home-coming was the expulsion of
+the Jews. Despite constant odium and intermittent persecution, the
+Jewish financiers who had settled in England after the Norman conquest
+steadily improved their position down to the reign of Henry III. The
+personal dependants of the crown, they were well able to afford to share
+their gains from usury with their protectors. They lived in luxury,
+built stone houses, set up an organisation of their own, and even
+purchased lands. Henry III.'s financial embarrassments forced him to
+rely upon them, and the alliance of the Jews and the crown stimulated
+the religious bigotry of the popular party to ill-treat the Jews during
+the Barons' War. Stories of Jews murdering Christian children were
+eagerly believed; and the cult of St. Hugh of Lincoln and St. William of
+Norwich,[1] two pretended victims of Hebrew cruelty, testified to the
+hatred which Englishmen bore to the race.
+
+ [1] See for this saint, Thomas of Monmouth, _Life and Miracles
+ of St. William of Norwich_, ed. Jessopp and James (1896).
+
+Under Edward I. the condition of the Jews became more precarious. The
+king hated them alike on religious and economical grounds. He rigorously
+insisted that they should wear a distinctive dress, and at last
+altogether prohibited usury. Driven from their chief means of earning
+their living, the Jews had recourse to clipping and sweating the coin.
+Indiscriminate severities did little to abate these evils. Meanwhile
+active missionary efforts were made to win over the Jews to the
+Christian faith. They were compelled to listen to long sermons from
+mendicant friars, and their obstinacy in adhering to their own creed was
+denounced as a deliberate offence against the light. Peckham shut up
+their synagogues, and Eleanor of Provence, who had entered a convent,
+joined with the archbishop in urging her son to take severe measures
+against them. There was a similar movement in France, and Edward, during
+his long stay abroad, had expelled the Jews from Aquitaine. In 1290 he
+applied the same policy to England, and their exile was so popular an
+act that parliament made him a special grant as a thankoffering. But
+though Edward thus drove the Jews to seek new homes beyond sea, he
+allowed them to carry their property with them, and punished the
+mariners who took advantage of the helplessness of their passengers to
+rob and murder them. Though individual Jews were found from time to time
+in England during the later middle ages, their official re-establishment
+was only allowed in the seventeenth century.[1]
+
+ [1] For the Jews see J. Jacobs, _Jews in Angevin England_;
+ Tovey, _Anglia Judaica_; J.M. Rigg, _Select Pleas of the Jewish
+ Exchequer_; and for their exile B.L. Abrahams, _Expulsion of
+ the Jews from England in 1290_.
+
+Two generations at least before their expulsion, the Jews had been
+outrivalled in their financial operations by societies of Italian
+bankers, whose admirable organisation and developed system of credit
+enabled them to undertake banking operations of a magnitude quite beyond
+the means of the Hebrews. First brought into England as papal agents for
+remitting to Rome the spoils of the Church, they found means of evading
+the canonical prohibitions of usury, and became the loanmongers of
+prince and subject alike. To the crown the Italians were more useful
+than the Jews had been. The value of the Jews to the monarch had been in
+the special facilities enjoyed by him in taxing them. The utility of the
+Italian societies was in their power of advancing sums of money that
+enabled the king to embark on enterprises hitherto beyond the limited
+resources of the medieval state. The Italians financed all Edward's
+enterprises from the crusade of 1270 to his Welsh and Scottish
+campaigns. From them Edward and his son borrowed at various times sums
+amounting to almost half a million of the money of the time. In return
+the Italians, chief among whom was the Florentine Society of the
+Frescobaldi, obtained privileges which made them as deeply hated as ever
+the Hebrews had been.[1]
+
+ [1] See on this subject E.A. Bond's article in _Archæologia_,
+ vol. xxviii., pp. 207-326; W.E. Rhodes, _Italian Bankers in
+ England under Edward I. and II._ in _Owens Coll. Historical
+ Essays_, pp. 137-68; and R.J. Whitwell, _Italian Bankers and
+ the English Crown_ in _Transactions of Royal Hist. Soc._, N.S.,
+ xvii. (1903), pp. 175-234.
+
+Among the troubles which had called Edward back from Gascony was the
+condition of Scotland, where a long period of prosperity had ended with
+the death of Edward's brother-in-law, Alexander III., in 1286. Alexander
+III. attended his brother-in-law's coronation in 1274, and the
+irritation excited by his limiting his homage to his English lordships
+of Tynedale and Penrith did not cause any great amount of friction. But
+the homage question was only postponed, and at Michaelmas, 1278,
+Alexander was constrained to perform unconditionally this unwelcome act.
+"I, Alexander King of Scotland," were his words, "become the liege man
+of the lord Edward, King of England, against all men." But by carefully
+refraining from specifying for what he became Edward's vassal, Alexander
+still suggested that it was for his English lordships. Edward with equal
+caution declared that he received the homage, "saving his right and
+claim to the homage of Scotland when he may wish to speak concerning
+it". Both parties were content with mutual protestations. Edward was so
+friendly to Alexander that he allowed him to appoint Robert Bruce, Earl
+of Carrick, his proxy in professing fealty, so as to minimise the king's
+feeling of humiliation. The King of Scots went home loaded with
+presents, and for the rest of his life his relations with Edward
+remained cordial.
+
+The closing years of Alexander's reign were overshadowed by domestic
+misfortunes and the prospects of difficulties about the succession. His
+wife, Margaret of England, had died in 1275, and was followed to the
+tomb by their two sons, Alexander and David. A delicate girl, Margaret,
+then alone represented the direct line of the descendants of William the
+Lion. Margaret was married, when still young, to Eric, King of Norway,
+and died in 1283 in giving birth to her only child, a daughter named
+Margaret. No children were born of Alexander's second marriage; and in
+March, 1286, the king broke his neck, when riding by night along the
+cliffs of the coast of Fife. Before his death, however, he persuaded the
+magnates of Scotland to recognise his granddaughter as his successor.
+The Maid of Norway, as Margaret was called, was proclaimed queen, and
+the administration was put into the hands of six guardians, who from
+1286 to 1289 carried on the government with fair success. As time went
+on, the baronage got out of hand and a feud between the rival
+south-western houses of Balliol and Bruce foreshadowed worse troubles.
+
+William Eraser, Bishop of St. Andrews, the chief of the regents, visited
+Edward in Gascony and urged the necessity of action. The best solution
+of all problems was that the young Queen of Scots should be married to
+Edward of Carnarvon, a boy a few months her junior. But both the Scots
+nobles and the King of Norway were jealous and suspicious, and any
+attempt to hurry forward such a proposal would have been fatal to its
+accomplishment. However, negotiations were entered into between England,
+Scotland, and Norway. In 1289 the guardians of Scotland agreed to
+nominate representatives to treat on the matter. Edward took up his
+quarters at Clarendon, while his agents, conspicuous among whom was
+Anthony Bek, Bishop of Durham, negotiated with the envoys of Norway and
+Scotland. On November 6 the three powers concluded the treaty of
+Salisbury, by which they agreed that Margaret should be sent to England
+or Scotland before All Saints' Day, 1290, "free and quit of all contract
+of marriage or espousals". Edward promised that if Margaret came into
+his custody he would, as soon as Scotland was tranquil, hand her over to
+the Scots as "free and quit" as when she came to him; and the "good folk
+of Scotland" engaged that, if they received their queen thus free, they
+would not marry her "save with the ordinance, will, and counsel of
+Edward and with the agreement of the King of Norway". In March, 1290, a
+parliament of Scots magnates met at Brigham, near Kelso, and ratified
+the treaty. Fresh negotiations were begun for the marriage of Edward of
+Carnarvon and the Queen of Scots, resulting in the treaty of Brigham of
+July 18, which Edward confirmed a month later at Northampton. By this
+Edward agreed that, in the event of the marriage taking place, the laws
+and customs of Scotland should be perpetually maintained. Should
+Margaret die without issue, Scotland was to go to its natural heir, and
+in any case was to remain "separate and divided from the realm of
+England".
+
+The treaty of Brigham was as wise a scheme as could have been devised
+for bringing about the unity of Britain. In the care taken to meet the
+natural scruples of the smaller nation we are reminded of the treaty of
+Union of 1707. But a nearer parallel is to be found in the conditions
+under which the union between France and Brittany was gradually
+accomplished after the marriage of Anne of Brittany. In both cases
+alike, in France and in England, the stronger party was content with
+securing the personal union of the two crowns, and strove to reconcile
+the weaker party by providing safeguards against violent or over-rapid
+amalgamation. It was left for the future to decide whether the habit of
+co-operation, continued for generations, might not ultimately involve a
+more organic union. Unluckily for this island, the policy which
+ultimately made the stubborn Celts of Brittany content with union with
+France, never had a chance of being carried out here. Edward made every
+preparation for bringing over the Maid of Norway to her kingdom and her
+husband, and neither the Scots nor the Norwegians grudged his leading
+share in accomplishing their common wishes. But the child's health gave
+way before the hardships of the journey. Before All Saints' day had come
+round, she died in one of the Orkneys, where the ship which conveyed her
+had put in.
+
+The death of the queen threatened Scotland with revolution. The regents'
+commission became of doubtful legality, and a swarm of claimants for the
+vacant throne arose, whose resources, if not their rights, were
+sufficiently evenly balanced to make civil strife inevitable. Since
+southern Scotland had become a wholly feudal, largely Norman, and partly
+English state, there had been no grave difficulties with regard to the
+succession. Now that they arose, there was doubt as to the principles on
+which claims to the throne should be settled. There was no legitimate
+representative left of the stock of William the Lion. The male line of
+his brother David, Earl of Huntingdon, had died out with John the Scot,
+the last independent Earl of Chester. The nearest claimants to the
+succession were therefore to be found in the descendants of David's
+three daughters. But there was no certainty that any rights could be
+transmitted through the female line. Moreover there was a doubt whether,
+allowing that a woman could transmit the right to rule, the succession
+should proceed according to primogeniture or in accordance with the
+nearness of the claimant to the source of his claim. If the former view
+were held then John of Balliol, lord of Barnard castle in Durham and of
+Galloway in Scotland, had the best right as the grandson of Earl David's
+eldest daughter. Yet less than a century before, the passing over of
+Arthur of Brittany in favour of his uncle John, had recalled to men's
+mind the ancient doctrine that a younger son is nearer to the parent
+stock than a grandson sprung from his elder brother; and if the view,
+then expressed in the _History of William the Marshal_,[1] was still to
+hold good, Robert Bruce, lord of Skelton in Yorkshire, and of Annandale
+in the northern kingdom, was the nearest in blood to David of Huntingdon
+as the son of his second daughter. Beyond this there was the further
+question of the divisibility of the kingdom. So fully was southern
+Scotland feudalised that it seemed arguable that the monarchy, or at
+least its demesne lands, might be divided among all the representatives
+of the coheiresses, after the fashion in which the Huntingdon estates
+had been allotted to all the representatives of Earl David. In that case
+John of Hastings, lord of Abergavenny, put in a claim as the grandson of
+Earl David's youngest daughter.
+
+ [1] _Hist. de Guillaume le Maréchal_, ii., _64_, II. 11899-902.
+
+ Oil, sire, quer c'est raison
+ Quer plus près est sanz achaison
+ Le filz de la terre son père
+ Que le niês: dreiz est qu'il i père.
+
+When so much was uncertain, every noble who boasted any connexion with
+the royal house safeguarded his interests, or advertised his pedigree,
+by enrolling himself among the claimants. Five or six of the competitors
+had no better ground of right than descent from bastards of the royal
+house, especially from the numerous illegitimate offspring of William
+the Lion. The others went back to more remote ancestors. A foreign
+prince, Florence, Count of Holland, demanded the succession as a
+descendant of a sister of Earl David, declaring that David had forfeited
+his rights by rebellion. John Comyn, lord of Badenoch, brought forward
+his descent from Donaldbane, brother of Malcolm Canmore. One claim reads
+like a fairy tale, with stories of an unknown king dying, leaving a son
+to be murdered by a wicked uncle, and a daughter to escape to obscurity
+in Ireland, where she married and transmitted her rights to her
+children. There was no authority in Scotland strong enough to decide
+these claims. Once more Robert Bruce raised the standard of disorder,
+and the appeal of Bishop Fraser to Edward to undertake the settlement of
+the question showed that the English king's mediation was the readiest
+way of restoring order.
+
+In 1291 Edward summoned the magnates of both realms, along with certain
+popular representatives, to meet at Norham, Bishop Bek's border castle
+on the Tweed. Trained civilians and canonists also attended, while
+abbeys and churches contributed extracts from chronicles, carefully
+compiled by royal order, with a view of illustrating the king's claims.
+On May 10 Edward met the assembly in Norham parish church. Roger
+Brabazon, the chief justice, declared in the French tongue that Edward
+was prepared to do justice to the claimants as "superior and direct lord
+of Scotland". Before, however, he could act, his master required that
+his overlordship should be recognised by the Scots. It is likely that
+this demand was not unexpected. Even in the treaty of Brigham Edward had
+been careful not to withdraw his claim of superiority, and his action
+with relation to Alexander III.'s homage was well known. But the
+sensitiveness which their late king had shown in the face of Edward's
+earlier claims was shared by the Scots lords, and shrinking from
+recognising facts which they ought to have faced before they solicited
+his intervention, they begged for delay and drew up remonstrances.
+Edward granted them, a respite for three weeks, though he swore by St.
+Edward that he would rather die than diminish the rights due to the
+Confessor's crown. He had already summoned the northern levies, and was
+prepared to enforce his claim by force. His uncompromising attitude put
+the Scots in an awkward position. But they had gone to Norham to get his
+help, and they were not prepared to run the risk of an English invasion
+as well as civil war. Most of the claimants had as many interests in
+England as in Scotland, and a breach with Edward would involve the
+forfeiture of their southern lands as well as the loss of a possible
+kingdom in the north. When the magnates reassembled, the competitors set
+the example of acknowledging Edward as overlord. Fresh demands followed
+their submission, and were at once conceded. Edward was to have seisin
+of Scotland and its royal castles, though he pledged himself to return
+both land and fortresses to him who should be chosen king.
+
+Edward then undertook the examination of the suit. He delegated the
+hearing of the claims to a commission, of whom the great majority,
+eighty, were Scotsmen, nominated in equal numbers by Bruce and Balliol,
+the two senior competitors, while the remaining twenty-four consisted of
+Englishmen, and included many of Edward's wisest counsellors. In
+deference to Scottish feeling, Edward ordered the court to meet on
+Scottish territory, at Berwick, and appointed August 2 for the opening
+day. Meanwhile the full consequences of the Scottish submission were
+carried out. On Edward's taking seisin of Scotland, the regency came to
+an end. The nomination of the provisional government resting with
+Edward, he reappointed the former regents, and allowed the Scots barons
+to elect their chancellor. But with the regents Edward associated a
+northern baron, Brian Fitzalan of Bedale, and the Scottish bishop, who
+was appointed chancellor, had to act jointly with one of Edward's
+clerks. Edward then made a short progress, reaching as far as Stirling
+and St. Andrews. He was back at Berwick for the meeting of the
+commissioners on August 2.
+
+The first session of the court was a brief one. The twelve competitors
+put in their claims, and Bruce and Balliol supported theirs by argument.
+However, on August 12, the trial was adjourned for nearly a year, until
+June 2, 1292. On its resumption in Edward's presence, the more difficult
+issues were carefully worked out. A new and fantastic claim, sent in by
+Eric of Norway, as the nearest of kin to his daughter, did not delay
+matters. The judges were instructed to settle in the first instance the
+relative claims of Bruce and Balliol, and also to decide by what law
+these should be determined. On October 14, they declared their first
+judgment. They rejected Bruce's plea that the decision should follow the
+"natural law by which kings rule," and accepted Balliol's contention
+that they should follow the laws of England and Scotland. They further
+laid down that the law of succession to the throne was that of other
+earldoms and dignities. They pronounced in favour of primogeniture as
+against proximity of blood.
+
+These decisions practically settled the case, but a further adjournment
+was resolved upon, and upon the reassembling of the court on November 6
+the only question still open, that of whether the kingdom could be
+divided, was taken up. John of Hastings came on the scene with the
+contention that the monarchy should be divided among the representatives
+of Earl David's daughters. Bruce had the effrontery to associate himself
+with Hastings' demand. A short adjournment was arranged to settle this
+issue, and on November 17 the final scene took place in the hall of
+Berwick castle. Besides the commissioners, the king was there in full
+parliament, and eleven claimants, who still persevered, were present or
+represented by proxy. Nine of these were severally told that they would
+obtain nothing by their petitions. Bruce was informed that his claim to
+the whole was incompatible with his present claim for a third. It was
+laid down that the kingdom of Scotland was indivisible, and that the
+right of Balliol had been established.
+
+The seal of the regency was broken: Edward handed over the seisin of
+Scotland to John Balliol, who three days later took the oath of fealty
+as King of Scots, promising that he would perform all the service due to
+Edward from his kingdom, Balliol hurried to his kingdom, and was crowned
+at Scone on St. Andrew's day. He then returned to England, and kept
+Christmas with his overlord at Newcastle, where, on December 26, he did
+homage to Edward in the castle hall. But within a few days a difficulty
+arose. John resented Edward's retaining the jurisdiction over a law-suit
+in which a Berwick merchant, a Scotsman, was a party. He was reassured
+by Edward that he only did so, because the case had arisen during the
+vacancy, when Edward was admittedly ruling Scotland. But Edward
+significantly added a reservation of his right of hearing appeals, even
+in England; and when the King of Scots went back to his realm, early in
+January, he must have already foreseen that there was trouble to come.
+
+Edward never lost sight of his own interests, and it is clear that he
+took full advantage of the needs of the Scots to establish a close
+supremacy over the northern kingdom. Making allowance for this sinister
+element, his general policy in dealing with the great suit had been
+singularly prudent and correct. He was anxious to ascertain the right
+heir; he gave the Scots a preponderating voice in the tribunal; he
+rejected the temptation which Bruce and Hastings dangled before him of
+splitting up the realm into three parts, and he restored the land and
+its castles as soon as the suit was settled. There is nothing to show
+that up to this point his action had produced any resentment in
+Scotland, and little evidence that there was any strong national feeling
+involved. Scottish chroniclers, who wrote after the war of independence,
+have given a colour to Edward's policy which contemporary evidence does
+not justify. From the point of his generation, his action was just and
+legal. He had, in fact, performed a signal service to Scotland in
+vindicating its unity; and by maintaining the rigid doctrines of
+Anglo-Norman jurisprudence, he rescued it from the vague philosophy
+which Bruce called natural law, and the recrudescence of Celtic custom
+that gave even bastards a hope of the succession. The real temptation
+came when, after his triumph, Edward sought to extract from the
+submission of the Scots consequences which had no warranty in custom,
+and made Scottish resistance inevitable.
+
+The expulsion of the Jews, the reform of the administration, the statute
+_Quia emptores_, the treaty of Tarascon, the humiliation of Gloucester,
+and the successful issue of the Scottish arbitration, mark the
+culminating point in the reign of Edward I. The king had ruled twenty
+years with almost uniform success, and his only serious disappointment
+had been the failure of the crusade. The last hope of the Latin East
+faded when, in 1291, Acre, so long the bulwark of the crusaders against
+the Turks, opened its gates to the infidel. With the fall of Acre went
+the last chance of the holy war. Before long the peace of Europe, which
+Edward thought that he had established, was once more rudely disturbed.
+Difficulties soon arose with Scotland, with France, with the Church, and
+with the barons. These troubles bore the more severely on the king
+because this period saw also the removal of nearly all of those in whom
+he had placed special trust. The gracious Eleanor of Castile died in
+1290, at Harby, in Nottinghamshire, near Lincoln,[1] and the devotion of
+the king to the partner of his youth found a striking expression in the
+sculptured crosses, which marked the successive resting-places of her
+corpse on its last journey from Harby to Westminster Abbey. A few months
+later Edward's mother, Eleanor of Castile, ended her long life in the
+convent of Amesbury, in Wiltshire. The ministers of Edward's early reign
+were also removed by death. Bishop Kirkby, the treasurer, died in 1290,
+and Burnell, the chancellor, in 1292, soon after he had performed his
+last public act in the declaration of the king's judgment as to the
+Scottish succession. Archbishop Peckham died in the same year. New
+domestic ties were formed, and fresh ministers were found, but the
+ageing king became more and more lonely, as he was compelled to rely
+upon a younger and a less faithful generation. Of his old comrades the
+chief remaining was Henry Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, while the removal of
+Burnell brought forward to the first rank prelates whose position had
+hitherto been somewhat obscured by his predominance. Prominent among
+these were the brothers Thomas Bek, Bishop of St. David's, and Anthony
+Bek, Bishop of Durham, members of a conspicuous Lincolnshire baronial
+family. Both of these for a time strikingly combined devotion to the
+royal service with loyalty to those clerical and aristocratic traditions
+which, strictly interpreted, were almost incompatible with faithful
+service to a secular monarch. Even more important henceforth was the
+king's treasurer, Walter Langton, Bishop of Lichfield, the most trusted
+minister of Edward's later life, a faithful but not too scrupulous
+prelate of the ministerial type, who stood to the second half of the
+reign in almost the same close relation as that in which Burnell stood
+to the years which we have now traversed.
+
+ [1] See for this W.H. Stevenson, _Death of Eleanor of Castile_,
+ in _English Hist. Review_, iii. (1888), pp. 315-318.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE FRENCH AND SCOTTISH WARS AND THE CONFIRMATION OF THE CHARTERS.
+
+
+Troubles arose between France and England soon after Edward had settled
+the Scottish succession. Neither Edward nor Philip the Fair sought a
+conflict. Edward was satisfied with his diplomatic successes, and
+Philip's designs upon Gascony were better pursued by chicane than by
+warfare. But questions arose of a different kind from the disputes as to
+feudal right, which had been hitherto the principal matters in debate
+between the two crowns.
+
+There had long been keen commercial rivalry between the Cinque Ports and
+the traders of Normandy. The sailors of Bayonne and other Gascon
+harbours had associated themselves with the English against the Normans,
+and both sides loudly complained to their respective rulers of the
+piracies and homicides committed by their enemies. Edward and Philip did
+what they could to smooth over matters, but were alike unable to prevent
+their subjects flying at each other's throats. The story spread that a
+Norman ship was to be seen in the Channel with' English sailors and dogs
+hanging suspended from her yard-arms: "And so," says Hemingburgh, "they
+sailed over the sea, making no difference between a dog and an
+Englishman". Indignation at this outrage drove the English to act
+together in large organised squadrons. The French adopted the same
+tactics, and a collision soon ensued. On May 15, 1293, an Anglo-Gascon
+merchant fleet encountered a Norman fleet off Saint Mahe in Brittany. A
+pitched battle, probably prearranged, at once ensued. It ended in a
+complete victory for the less numerous English squadron, which
+immediately returned to Portsmouth, laden with booty.
+
+Even after this, Edward strove to keep the peace, and endeavoured to
+exact compensation from his subjects. They answered with a highly
+coloured narrative of the dispute which threw the whole blame upon the
+Normans. Philip, changing his policy, took up his subjects' cause, and
+summoned Edward to answer in January, 1294, before the Parliament of
+Paris for the piracy exercised by his mariners, the misdeeds of his
+Gascon subjects, and the violent measures taken by his officers against
+any who appealed to the court of Paris. Edward sent his brother, Edmund,
+to reply for him. As Count of Champagne and the step-father of Philip's
+wife, Joan, Edmund seemed a peculiarly acceptable negotiator. After long
+debates, the personal intervention of the French queen, and Philip's
+step-mother, Mary of Brabant, resulted in an agreement being arranged.
+The overlord's grievances could not be denied, and it was urged that the
+formal surrender of part of Gascony might be made by way of recognising
+them. French garrisons were therefore to be admitted into six Gascon
+strongholds; twenty Gascon hostages were to be delivered over to Philip,
+while the seisin of the duchy was also to be transferred to the French
+king, who pledged himself not to change the officials nor to occupy the
+land in force. The whole business was in fact to be as formal as the
+delivery of the seisin of Scotland to Edward during the suit for the
+succession. Meanwhile, Edward and Philip were to arrange a meeting at
+Amiens to settle the conditions of a permanent peace, by which Edward
+was to take Philip's sister, Margaret, as his second wife, and the
+Gascon duchy was to be settled upon the offspring of the union. That
+Edward or Edmund should ever have contemplated such terms is a strong
+proof of their zeal for peace. It soon became clear that Edmund had been
+outrageously duped, and that the whole negotiation was a trick to secure
+for Philip the permanent possession of Gascony. The constable of France
+appeared on the Aquitanian frontier. The English seneschal surrendered
+the six castles and the seisin of the land. Gradually the French king
+began to take actual possession of the government. Moreover, after three
+months, the proceedings against Edward in the parliament of Paris were
+resumed; Edward was declared contumacious on the ground of his
+non-appearance, and sentence of forfeiture was passed.
+
+Philip's treachery was thus manifest? and in great disgust Edmund
+withdrew from France. Edward was deeply indignant. In a parliament, held
+in June, 1294, which was attended by the King of Scots, war was resolved
+upon. The feudal tenants were summoned to assemble at Portsmouth on
+September 1; and Edward appealed for help to his Gascon subjects,
+beseeching their pardon for having negotiated the fatal treaty, and
+promising a speedy effort to restore them to his obedience. He sent them
+his nephew, John of Brittany, as his lieutenant and captain-general,
+under whom John of St. John was to act as seneschal of Gascony.
+Ambassadors were despatched to all neighbouring courts to build up a
+coalition against the French. Strenuous efforts were made to get
+together men and money, and the clergy were forced to make a grant of a
+half of their spiritual income. Edward overbore their opposition amidst
+a scene of excitement in which the Dean of St. Paul's fell dead at the
+king's feet. The shires were mulcted of a tenth and the boroughs of a
+sixth. And besides these constitutional exactions, the king laid violent
+hands on all the coined money deposited in the treasuries of the
+churches, and appropriated the wool of the merchants, which he only
+restored on the payment of a heavy pecuniary redemption. Meanwhile,
+about Michaelmas the lieutenant and the seneschal sailed with a fairly
+strong force. Further levies were summoned to assemble at Portsmouth at
+later dates. Besides the ordinary tenants of the crown, writs were sent
+to the chief magnates of Ireland and Scotland; and Wales and its march
+were called upon to furnish all the men that could be mustered. The
+Earls of Cornwall and Lincoln were appointed to the command, and Edward
+himself proposed to follow them to Gascony as soon as he could.
+
+At the moment of the departure of John of Brittany a sudden insurrection
+in Wales frustrated Edward's plans. All Wales was ripe for revolt. In
+the principality the Cymry resented English rule, and the sulky marchers
+stood aloof in sullen discontent, while their native tenants, seeing in
+the recent humiliation of Gloucester and Hereford the degradation of all
+their lords, lost respect for such powerless masters. Both in the
+principality and in the marches, Edward's demand for compulsory service
+in Gascony was universally regarded as a new aggression. The intensity
+of the resistance to his demand can be measured by the general nature of
+the insurrection, and by the admirable way in which it was organised. As
+by a common signal all Wales rose at Michaelmas, 1294. One Madog,
+probably a bastard son of Llewelyn, son of Griffith, raised all Gwynedd,
+took possession of Carnarvon castle, and closely besieged the other
+royal strongholds. In west Wales a chieftain named Maelgwn was equally
+successful in Carmarthen and Cardigan. The marches were in arms equally
+with the principality. In the north, Lincoln's tenants in Rhos and
+Rhuvoniog besieged Denbigh, and threatened the king's fortresses in
+Flint. Maelgwn's sphere of operations included the earldom of Pembroke,
+while Brecon rose against Hereford, and Glamorgan against Gilbert of
+Gloucester. Morgan, the leader of the Glamorganshire rebels, loudly
+declared that he did not rebel against the king but against the Earl of
+Gloucester. With the beginning of winter the state of Wales was more
+critical than in the worst times of the winter of 1282.
+
+Edward postponed his attack on Philip in order to throw all his energies
+into the reduction of Wales. The levies assembled at Portsmouth for the
+Gascon expedition were hurried beyond the Severn. The king held another
+parliament and exacted a fresh supply. Criminals were offered pardon and
+good wages, if they would serve, first in Wales and then in Gascony.
+Before Christmas about a thousand men-at-arms were mustered at various
+border centres under the royal standards, while every marcher lord was
+busily engaged in putting down his own rebels. Before so great a force
+the Welsh could do but little, and the spring saw the extinction of the
+rebellion. But there was hard fighting both in the south and in the
+north. Edward himself undertook the reconquest of Gwynedd. He was at
+Conway before the end of the year, and in his haste he threw himself
+into the town while the mass of his army remained on the right bank of
+the river. High tides and winter floods made the crossing of the stream
+impossible, and for a short time the king was actually besieged by the
+rebels. Conway was unprepared for resistance and almost destitute of
+supplies. The garrison thought it a terrible hardship that they had to
+live on salt meat and bread, and to drink water mixed with honey. They
+were encouraged by Edward refusing to taste better fare than his
+troopers, and declining to partake of the one small measure of wine
+reserved for his use. William Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, conveyed his
+troops across the estuary and raised the siege. Yet the insurgents were
+still able to fight a pitched battle. About January 22, 1295, Warwick
+found the Welsh established in a strong position in a plain between two
+woods. They had fixed the butts of their lances into the ground, hoping
+thus to resist the shock of a cavalry charge. Improving on the tactics
+of Orewyn bridge, the earl stationed between his squadrons of knights,
+archers and crossbowmen, whose missiles inflicted such loss on the Welsh
+lines that the cavalry soon found it safe to charge. The Welsh were
+utterly broken, and never in a single day did they suffer such enormous
+losses. Even more important than its results in breaking the back of
+Madog's insurrection, this battle of Maes Madog--or Madog's field, as
+the Welsh called the place of their defeat--is of the highest importance
+in the development of infantry tactics. The order of the victorious
+force strikingly anticipates the great battles in Scotland and France of
+a later generation. In obscure fights, like Orewyn bridge and Maes
+Madog, the English learnt the famous battle array which was to overwhelm
+the Scots in the later years of Edward's reign and prepare the way for
+the triumphs of Crecy and Poitiers.
+
+Madog still held out, and with the advent of spring, 1295, Edward began
+to hunt him from his lairs. Gwynedd was cleared of the enemy and
+Anglesey was reconquered. Carnarvon castle arose from its ruins in the
+stately form that we still know, while on the Anglesey side of the Menai
+the new stronghold of Beaumaris arose, to ensure the subjection of the
+granary of Gwynedd. In May Edward felt strong enough to undertake a
+progress in South Wales. After receiving the submissions of the rebels
+of Cardigan and Carmarthen, he won back for the lords of Brecon and
+Glamorgan the lands which, without his help, they had been unable to
+conquer. The Welsh chieftains were leniently treated. While Madog was
+imprisoned in the Tower, Morgan was at once set at liberty. By July
+Edward was able to leave Wales. Yet his triumph had taxed all his
+resources, and left him, overwhelmed with debt, to face the irritation
+of subjects unaccustomed to such demands upon their loyalty and
+patriotism. But nothing broke his dauntless spirit, and once more he
+busied himself in obtaining revenge on the false King of France.
+
+It was inevitable that the Welsh war should have reduced to slender
+proportions the expedition of John of Brittany and John of St. John for
+the recovery of Gascony. After a tedious voyage the English expedition
+sailed up the Gironde late in October, 1294. Their forces, strong enough
+to capture Bourg and Blaye, were not sufficient to attack Bordeaux.
+Leaving the capital in the hands of its conquerors, the English sailed
+past Bordeaux to Rioms, where they disembarked. The small towns of the
+neighbourhood were taken and garrisoned, and the Gascon lords began to
+flock to the camp of their duke. Before long the army was large enough
+to be divided. John of Brittany remained at Rioms, while John of St.
+John marched overland to Bayonne. The French garrison was unable to
+overpower the enthusiasm of the Bayonnais for Edward, and the capture of
+the second town of Gascony was the greatest success attained by the
+invaders. With the spring of 1295, however, Charles of Valois, brother
+of the King of France, was sent to operate against John of Brittany. The
+English and Gascons found themselves unable to make head against him.
+There was ill-feeling between the two nations that made up the army, and
+also between the nobly-born knights and men-at-arms and the foot
+soldiers. The infantry mutinied, and John of Brittany fled by night down
+the river from Rioms, leaving many of his knights and all his horses and
+armour in the town. Next day Rioms opened its gates to Charles of
+Valois, who gained immense spoils and many distinguished prisoners. Save
+for the capture of Bayonne, the expedition had been a disastrous
+failure.
+
+Edward failed even more signally in his efforts to defeat Philip by
+diplomacy. He had left no effort unspared to build up a great coalition
+against the French king. He "sent a great quantity of sterling money
+beyond the sea," and made alliances with all the princes and barons that
+he could find.[1] At first it seemed that he had succeeded. Adolf of
+Nassau, the poor and dull, but strenuous and hard-fighting King of the
+Romans, concluded a treaty with England, and did not think it beneath
+the dignity of the lord of the world to take the pay of the English
+monarch. Many vassals of the empire, especially in the Netherlands, the
+Rhineland, and Burgundy followed Adolf's example. Edward strengthened
+his party further by marrying three of his daughters to the Duke of
+Brabant, the son of the Count of Holland, and the Count of Bar as the
+price of their adherence to the coalition. He made closer his ancient
+friendship with Guy of Dampierre, the old Count of Flanders, by
+betrothing Edward of Carnarvon to his daughter Philippine. At the same
+time he sought the friendship of the lords of the Pyrenees, such as the
+Count of Foix, and of the kings of the Spanish peninsula. But nothing
+came of the hopes thus excited, save fair promises and useless
+expenditure. Before long Philip of France was able to build up a French
+party in appearance as formidable-in reality as useless as Edward's
+attempted confederation. Edward's most important ally, Guy of Flanders,
+was forced to renounce his daughter's marriage to the heir of England
+and hand her over to Philip's custody. The time was not yet come for
+effective European coalitions; the real fighting had to be done by the
+parties directly interested in the quarrel.
+
+ [1] See a contemporary notice printed by F. Funck-Brentano in
+ _Revue Historique_, xxxix. (1889), pp. 329-30.
+
+The command of the sea continued to be a vital question. The Norman
+sailors were eager to avenge their former defeats, and Philip saw that
+the best way to preserve his hold over Gascony was to be master of the
+Channel and the Bay of Biscay. Edward prepared to meet attack by
+establishing an organisation of the English navy which marks an epoch in
+the history of our admiralty. He divided the vessels told off to guard
+the sea into three classes, and set over each a separate admiral. John
+of Botecourt was made admiral of the Yarmouth and eastern fleet; William
+of Leyburn was set over the navy at Portsmouth; and the western and
+Irish squadron was put under a valiant knight of Irish origin. Meanwhile
+the French planned an invasion of England, and promised James of Aragon
+that, when England was conquered, its king should be considered his
+personal prize. Galleys were hired at Marseilles and Genoa for service
+in the Channel, and Sir Thomas Turberville, a Glamorganshire knight
+captured at Rioms, turned traitor and was restored to England in the
+hope that he might obtain the custody of some seaport and betray it to
+the enemy. Turberville strove in vain to induce Morgan to head another
+revolt in Glamorgan, and urged upon Philip the need of an alliance with
+the Scots. At last the invasion was attempted, and the French admiral,
+Matthew of Montmorenci, sacked and burnt the town of Dover. Luckily,
+however, Turberville's treason was discovered, and the Yarmouth fleet
+soon avenged the attack on Dover by burning Cherbourg. In the face of
+such resistance, Philip IV. abandoned his plan of invasion and tried to
+establish a sort of "continental blockade" of English ports in which a
+modern writer has seen an anticipation of the famous dream of
+Napoleon.[1] Though nothing came of these grandiose schemes, yet the
+efforts made to organise invasion had their permanent importance as
+resulting in the beginnings of the French royal navy. As late as 1297 a
+Genoese was appointed admiral of France in the Channel, and strongly
+urged the invasion of England and its devastation by fire and flame. But
+the immediate result of Philip's efforts to cut off England from the
+continent was that his Flemish allies found in his policy a new reason
+for abandoning his service. On January 7, 1297, a fresh treaty of
+alliance between Edward and Guy, Count of Flanders, was concluded.
+
+ [1] See for this Jourdain, _Mémoire sur les Commencements de la
+ Marine française sous Philippe le Bel_ (1880), and C. de la
+ Roncière, _Le Blocus continental de l'Angleterre sous Philippe
+ le Bel_ in _Revue des Questions historiques_, lx. (1896),
+ 401-41.
+
+More effective than Philip's efforts to combine the Continent against
+the English were his endeavours to stir up opposition to Edward in
+Britain. The Welsh rising of 1294 had taken place independently of him,
+but it was not Philip's fault that Morgan did not once more excite
+Glamorgan to rebellion. A better opening for intrigue was found in
+Scotland. Ever since the accession of John Balliol, there had been
+appeals from the Scottish courts to those of Edward. Certain suits begun
+under the regency, which had acted in Edward's name from 1290 to 1292,
+gave the overlord an opportunity of inserting the thin end of the wedge;
+and it looked as if, after a few years, appeals from Edinburgh to London
+would be as common as appeals from Bordeaux to Paris. But whatever were
+the ancient relations of England and Scotland, it is clear that the
+custom of appeals to the English king had never previously been
+established. It was no wonder then that what seemed to Edward an
+inevitable result of King John's submission, appeared to the Scots an
+unwarrantable restriction of their independence.
+
+The weakness and simplicity of King John left matters to take their
+course for a time, but the king, who was not strong enough to stand up
+against Edward, was not the man to resist the pressure of his own
+subjects. On his return from the London parliament of June, 1294, the
+Scots barons virtually deposed him. A committee was set up by parliament
+consisting of four bishops, four earls, and four barons which, though
+established professedly on the model of the twelve peers of France, had
+a nearer prototype in the fifteen appointed under the Provisions of
+Oxford. To this body the whole power of the Scottish monarchy was
+transferred, so that John became a mere puppet, unable to act without
+the consent of his twelve masters. Under this new government the
+relations of England and Scotland soon became critical. The Scots denied
+all right of appeal to the English courts, and expelled from their
+country the nobles whose possessions in England gave them a greater
+interest in the southern than in the northern kingdom. Among the
+dispossessed barons was Robert Bruce, son of the claimant, by marriage
+already Earl of Carrick, and now by his father's recent death lord of
+Annandale. In defiance of Edward's prohibition the Scots received French
+ships, and subjected English traders at Berwick to many outrages. At
+last, on July 5, 1295, an alliance was signed between Scotland and
+France, by which Edward Balliol, the eldest son of King John, was
+betrothed to Joan, the eldest daughter of Charles of Valois, the brother
+of the French king. On this, Edward demanded the surrender of three
+border castles, and on the refusal of the Scots, cited John to appear at
+Berwick on March 1, 1296. Thus, by a process similar to that which had
+embroiled Edward with his French overlord, the King of Scots also was
+forced to face the alternative of certain war or humiliating surrender.
+
+To Edward a breach with Scotland was unwelcome. In 1294 the Welsh had
+prevented him using all his power against France, and in 1295 the Scots
+troubles further postponed his prospects of revenge. But no suggestion
+of compromise or delay came from him. On his return to London early in
+August, 1295, he busied himself with preparing to resist the enemies
+that were gathering around him on every side. It was the moment of the
+raid on Dover, and the French question was still the more pressing. In a
+parliament of magnates at London, Edmund of Lancaster told the story of
+his Paris embassy with such effect that two cardinal-legates, whom the
+new pope, Boniface VIII., had sent in the hope of making peace, were put
+off politely, on the ground that Edward could make no treaty without the
+consent of his ally, the King of the Romans. Edmund was appointed
+commander of a new expedition to Gascony, though his weak health delayed
+his departure. Meanwhile Edward called upon every class of his subjects
+to co-operate with him in his defence of the national honour. He was
+statesman enough to see that he could only cope with the situation, if
+England as a whole rallied round him. His best answer to the Scots and
+the French was the convention of the "model parliament" of November,
+1295.
+
+The deep political purpose with which this parliament was assembled is
+reflected even in the formal language of the writs. "Inasmuch as a most
+righteous law of the emperors," wrote Edward, "ordains that what touches
+all should be approved by all, so it evidently appears that common
+dangers should be met by remedies agreed upon in common. You know well
+how the King of France has cheated me out of Gascony, and how he still
+wickedly retains it. But now he has beset my realm with a great fleet
+and a great multitude of warriors, and proposes, if his power equal his
+unrighteous design, to blot out the English tongue from the face of the
+earth." To avert this peril, Edward summoned not only a full and
+representative gathering of magnates, but also two knights from every
+shire and two burgesses from every borough. Moreover, the lower clergy
+were also required to take part in the assembly, the archdeacons and
+deans in person, the clergy of every cathedral church by one proctor,
+the beneficed clerks of each diocese by two proctors. Thus the assembly
+became so systematic a representation of the three estates' that after
+ages have regarded it as the type upon which subsequent popular
+parliaments were to be modelled. This gathering marks the end of the
+parliamentary experiments of the earlier part of the reign. It met on
+November 27, and each estate, deliberating separately, contributed its
+quota to the national defence. The barons and knights offered an
+eleventh, and the boroughs a seventh. It was a bitter disappointment to
+Edward that the clergy could not be induced to make a larger grant than
+a tenth. Enough, however, was obtained to equip the two armies which, in
+the spring of 1296, were to operate against the French and the Scots.
+
+The Gascon expedition was the first to start. Early in March, 1296,
+Edmund of Lancaster, accompanied by the Earl of Lincoln, landed at Bourg
+and Blaye. John of St. John was still maintaining himself in that
+district as well as at Bayonne. On the appearance of the reinforcements
+the Gascon lords began to flock to the English camp, and a large force
+was at once able to take the field. On March 28 an attempt was made to
+capture Bordeaux by a sudden assault. On its failure Edmund, who did not
+possess the equipment necessary for a formal siege, sailed up the river
+to Saint-Macaire and occupied the town. But the castle held out
+gallantly, and after a three weeks' siege Edmund retired to his original
+position on the lower Gironde. Even there he found difficulty in holding
+his own, and before long shifted his quarters to Bayonne. He had
+exhausted his resources, and found that his army could not be kept
+together without pay. "Thereupon," writes Hemingburgh, "his face fell
+and he sickened about Whitsuntide. So with want of money came want of
+breath too, and after a few days he went the way of all flesh." Lincoln,
+his successor, managed still to stand his ground against Robert of
+Artois. At last Artois made a successful night attack upon the English,
+captured St. John, and destroyed all his war-train and baggage. The
+darkness of the night and the shelter of the neighbouring woods alone
+saved the English army from total destruction. "After this," boasted
+William of Nangis, "no Englishman or Gascon dared to go out to battle
+against the Count of Artois and the French." At Easter, 1297, a truce
+was concluded which left nearly all Gascony in French hands.
+
+Soon after the departure of his brother for Gascony, Edward went to war
+against the Scots, regarding the non-appearance of King John on March 1
+at Berwick as a declaration of hostility. The lord of Wark offered to
+betray his castle to the Scots, and Edward's successful effort to save
+it first brought him to the Tweed. Meanwhile the men of Annandale under
+their new lord, the Earl of Buchan, engaged in a raid on Carlisle, but
+failed to capture the city, and speedily returned home. On March 28, the
+day on which his brother attacked Bordeaux, Edward crossed the Tweed at
+Coldstream, and marched down its left bank towards Berwick. On March 30
+Berwick was captured. The townsmen fought badly, and the heroes of the
+resistance were thirty Flemish merchants, who held their factory, called
+the Red Hall, until the building was fired, and the defenders perished
+in the flames. The garrison of the castle, commanded by Sir William
+Douglas, laid down their arms at once.
+
+Edward spent a month in Berwick, strengthening the fortifications of the
+town, and preparing for an invasion of Scotland. Early in April, King
+John renounced his homage and, immediately afterwards, the Scots lords
+who had attacked Carlisle devastated Tynedale and Redesdale, penetrating
+as far as Hexham. Edward's command of the sea made it impossible for the
+raiders to cut off his communications with his base, and they quickly
+returned to their own land, where they threw themselves into Dunbar.
+Though the lord of Dunbar, Patrick, Earl of March, was serving with the
+English king, his countess, who was at Dunbar, invited them into the
+fortress. Dunbar blocked the road into Scotland, and Edward sent forward
+Earl Warenne with a portion of the army in the hope of recapturing the
+position. Warenne laid siege to Dunbar, but on the third day, April 27,
+the main Scots army came to its relief. Leaving some of the young nobles
+to continue the siege, Warenne drew up his army in battle array. The
+Scots thought that the English were preparing for flight, and rushed
+upon them with loud cries and blowing of horns. Discovering too late
+that the enemy was ready for battle, they fell back in confusion as far
+as Selkirk Forest. Next day Edward came up from Berwick and received the
+surrender of Dunbar. Henceforth his advance was but a military
+promenade.
+
+Edward turned back from Dunbar to receive the submission of the Steward
+of Scotland at Roxburgh, and to welcome a large force of Welsh infantry,
+whose arrival enabled him to dismiss the English foot, fatigued with the
+slight effort of a month's easy campaigning. Thence he made his way to
+Edinburgh, which yielded after an eight days' siege. Stirling castle,
+the next barrier to his progress, was abandoned by its garrison, and
+there Edward was reinforced by some Irish contingents. He then advanced
+to Perth, keeping St. John's feast on June 24 in St. John's own town. On
+July 10 Balliol surrendered to the Bishop of Durham at Brechin,
+acknowledging that he had forfeited his throne by his rebellion. Edward
+continued his triumphal progress, preceded at every stage by Bishop Bek
+at the head of the warriors of the palatinate of St. Cuthbert. He made
+his way through Montrose up the east coast to Aberdeen, and thence up
+the Don and over the hills to Banff and Elgin, the farthest limit of his
+advance. He returned by a different route, bringing back with him from
+Scone the stone on which the Scots kings had been wont to sit at their
+coronation. This he presented as a trophy of victory to the monks of
+Westminster, where it was set up as a chair for the priest celebrating
+mass at the altar over against the shrine of St. Edward, though soon
+used as the coronation seat of English kings.
+
+In less than five months Edward had conquered a kingdom. On August 22 he
+was back at Berwick, whither he had summoned a parliament of the nobles
+and prelates of both kingdoms, in order that the work of organising the
+future government of Scotland might be completed. Meanwhile a crowd of
+Scots of every class flocked to the victor's court and took oaths of
+fealty to him. Their names, along with those of the persons who made
+similar recognitions of his sovereignly during his Scottish progress,
+were recorded with notarial precision in one of those formal documents
+with which Edward delighted to mark the stages in the accomplishment of
+his task. This record, popularly styled the Ragman Roll, containing the
+names of about two thousand freeholders and men of substance in
+Scotland, is of extreme value to the Scottish genealogist and
+antiquary.[1] The last entries are dated August 28, the day on which
+Edward met his parliament at Berwick. The administration of Scotland was
+provided for. John, Earl Warenne, became the king's lieutenant, Hugh
+Cressingham, treasurer, and William Ormesby, justiciar. When the land
+was subdued Edward showed a strong desire to treat the people well. The
+only precaution taken by him against the renewal of disturbances was an
+order that the former King of Scots, John Comyn of Buchan, John Comyn of
+Badenoch, and other magnates of the patriotic party were to dwell in
+England, south of the Trent, until the conclusion of the war with
+France. As soon as his business was accomplished at Berwick, Edward
+turned his steps southwards. At last he seemed free to lead a great army
+against Philip the Fair; and, in order to prepare for the French
+expedition, he summoned another parliament to meet at Bury St. Edmunds
+on the morrow of All Souls' day, November 3. At Bury the barons,
+knights, and burgesses made liberal offerings for the war. But a new
+difficulty arose in the absolute refusal of the clergy to vote any
+supplies. Once more the cup of hope was dashed from Edward's lips, and
+he found himself forced to enter into another weary conflict, this time
+with his English liegemen.
+
+ [1] It is printed by the Bannatyne Club, and summarised in
+ _Cal. Doc. Scot._, ii., 193-214.
+
+So long as Peckham had lived, there had always been a danger of a
+conflict between Church and State. Friar John had ended his restless
+career in 1292, and Edward showed natural anxiety to secure as his
+successor a prelate more amenable to the secular authority and more
+national in his sentiments. The papacy remained vacant after the death
+of Nicholas IV. in 1292, so that there was no danger of Rome taking the
+appointment into its own hands, and the happy accident, which had given
+the monks of Christchurch a statesmanlike prior in Henry of Eastry,
+minimised the chances of a futile conflict between the king and the
+canonical electors. Eastry took care that the archbishop-elect should
+be a person acceptable to the sovereign. Robert Winchelsea, the new
+primate, was an Englishman and a secular clerk, who had taught with
+distinction at Paris and Oxford, but had received no higher
+ecclesiastical promotion than the archdeaconry of Essex and a canonry
+of St. Paul's, and was mainly conspicuous for the sanctity of his life,
+his ability as a preacher, and his zeal for making the cathedral of
+London a centre of theological instruction. The vacancy in, the papacy
+forced upon the archbishop-elect a wearisome delay of eighteen months
+in Italy; but at last in September, 1294, he received consecration and
+the _pallium_ from the newly elected hermit-pope, Celestine V.
+Winchelsea on his return strove to show that a secular archbishop could
+be as austere in life, and as zealous for the rights of Holy Church, as
+his mendicant predecessors. His desire to walk in the steps of Peckham
+soon brought him into conflict with the king, and in this conflict he
+showed an appreciation of the political situation, and a power of
+interpreting English opinion, which made him the most formidable of
+Edward's domestic opponents. He gained his first victory in the
+parliament of 1295 by preventing the clergy from making a larger grant
+than a tenth. But this triumph sank into insignificance as compared
+with the refusal of all aid by the parliament of Bury.
+
+A change in the papacy immensely strengthened Winchelsea's position
+against Edward. In December, 1294, Celestine, overpowered with the
+burden of an office too heavy for his strength, made his great
+renunciation and sought to resume his hermit life. The Cardinal
+Benedict Gaetano was at once elected his successor and took the style
+of Boniface VIII. The son of a noble house of the neighbourhood of
+Anagni, a canonist, a politician, and a zealot, the new pope had made
+personal acquaintance with Edward and England from having attended
+Cardinal Ottobon on his English legation, and was eager to appease
+discord between Christian princes in order to forward the crusade. He
+hated war the more because it was largely waged with the money drawn
+from the clergy, and was indignant that the custom of taxing the
+Church, which was begun under the guise of crusading tenths, had become
+so frequent that both Philip and Edward applied it in order to raise
+revenue from ecclesiastics for frankly secular warfare. Within a few
+weeks of his accession he despatched two cardinals to mediate peace
+between the Kings of France and England, and was disgusted at the long
+delays with which both kings had sought to frustrate his intervention.
+On February 29, 1296, Boniface issued his famous bull _Clericis
+laicos_, in which he declared it unlawful for any lay authority to
+exact supplies from the clergy without the express authority of the
+apostolic see. Princes imposing, and clerics submitting to such
+exactions were declared _ipso_ facto excommunicate.
+
+Boniface's contention had been urged by his predecessors, and it is
+improbable that he sought to do more than assert the ancient law of the
+Church and save the clergy all over the Latin world from exactions
+which were fast becoming intolerable. His object was quite general,
+though a pointed reference to the extortions of Edward in 1294 showed
+that he had the case of England before his mind. He had no wish to
+throw down the gauntlet to the princes of Christendom, or to quarrel
+with Edward and Philip, between whom he was still conducting
+negotiations. It was his misfortune that he was constantly forced to
+face fresh conditions which rendered it almost possible to apply the
+ancient doctrines. Strong national kings, like Edward and Philip, had
+already shown impatience with such traditions of the Church as limited
+their temporal authority. The pope's untimely restatement of the
+theories of the twelfth century at once involved him in his first
+fierce difference with Philip the Fair, and put him into a position in
+which he could only win peace by explaining away the doctrine of
+_Clericis laicos_. While on the continent the conflict of Church and
+State took the form of a dispute between the French king and the
+papacy, in England it assumed the shape of a struggle between Edward
+and the Archbishop of Canterbury.
+
+In November, 1296, at Bury, Winchelsea admitted the justice of the
+French war, but pleaded the pope's decretal as an absolute bar to any
+grant from the clerical estate. No decision was arrived at, and the
+problem was discussed again in the convocation of Canterbury in
+January, 1297. "We have two lords over us," declared the archbishop to
+his clergy, "the king and the pope; and, although we owe obedience to
+both of these, we owe greater obedience to our spiritual than to our
+temporal lord." All that they could do was to entreat the pope's
+permission to allow them to pay Cæsar that which Cæsar by himself had
+no right to demand. Edward burst into a fury on hearing of this new
+pretext for delay. He declared that the clergy must pay a fifth, under
+penalty of his withdrawing his protection from a body which strove to
+stand outside the commonwealth. The clergy remained firm, and separated
+without making any grant. Thereupon, on January 30, the chief justice,
+John of Metingham, sitting in Westminster Hall, pronounced the clergy
+to be outlays. "Henceforth," he declared, "there shall be no justice
+meted out to a clerk in the court of the lord king, however atrocious
+be the injury from which he may have suffered. But sentence against a
+clerk shall be given at the instance of all who have a complaint
+against him." Winchelsea retaliated by publishing the sentence of
+excommunication against violators of the papal bull. Two days later the
+king ordered the sheriffs to take possession of the lay fees held by
+clerks in the province of Canterbury. A few ecclesiastics, who
+privately made an offering of a fifth, were alone exempted from this
+command.
+
+Edward's conflict with the Church was followed within a month by a
+dispute of almost equal gravity with a section of the barons. He
+summoned a baronial parliament to assemble on February 24 at Salisbury,
+and went down in person to explain his plan of campaign. One force was
+to help his new ally, Guy of Flanders, while another was to act in
+Gascony. Edward himself was to accompany the army to Flanders. He
+requested some of the earls, including Norfolk and Hereford, to fight
+for him in Gascony. The deaths of Edmund of Lancaster, Gilbert of
+Gloucester, and William of Pembroke had robbed the baronage of its
+natural leaders. Earl Warenne was fully engaged in the north, and
+Lincoln was devoted to the king's side. The removal of other possible
+spokesmen made Norfolk and Hereford the champions of the party of
+opposition. For years the friends of aristocratic authority had been
+smarting under the growing influence of the crown. The time was ripe
+for a revival of the baronial opposition which a generation earlier had
+won the Provisions of Oxford. Moreover both the earls had personal
+slights to avenge. Hereford bitterly resented the punishment meted out
+to him for waging private war against Earl Gilbert in the march.
+Norfolk was angry because, during the last Welsh campaign, Edward had
+suspended him from the exercise of the marshalship. The form of
+Edward's request at Salisbury gave them a technical advantage which
+they were not slow to seize. Ignoring the broader issues which lay
+between them and the king, they took their stand on their traditional
+rights as constable and marshal to attend the king in person. "Freely,"
+declared the earl marshal, "will I go with thee, O king, and march
+before thee in the first line of thy army, as my hereditary duty
+requires." Edward answered: "Thou shalt go without me along with the
+rest to Gascony". The marshal replied: "I am not bound to go save with
+thee, nor will I go". Edward flew into a passion: "By God, sir earl,
+thou shalt either go or hang". Norfolk replied with equal spirit: "By
+that same oath, sir king, I will neither go nor hang". The parliament
+broke up in disorder. Before long a force of 1,500 men-at-arms gathered
+together under the leadership of the constable and marshal.
+
+During these stormy times Edward had been straining every nerve to
+equip an adequate army for foreign service. Once more he laid violent
+hands upon the wool and hides of the merchants, while a huge
+male--tolt, varying from forty shillings a sack for raw wool to
+sixty-six shillings and eightpence a sack for carded wool, was exacted
+for such wool as the king's officers suffered to remain in the owner's
+possession. Moreover, vast stores of wheat, barley, and oats, salt pork
+and salt beef were requisitioned all over the land. Men said that the
+king's tyranny could no longer be borne, and that the rights decreed to
+all Englishmen by the Great Charter were in imminent danger. The
+movement, which had begun as a defence of feudal right, became a
+popular revolt in favour of national liberty. The commons joined the
+barons and clergy in the general opposition to the headstrong king.
+
+Edward saw that he must divide his enemies if he wished to effect his
+purpose. The clergy were the easiest to deal with. Boniface VIII. was
+already yielding in his struggle against Philip the Fair. In the bull
+_Romana mater_ of February 2, 1297, he had authorised voluntary
+contributions of the French clergy in the case of pressing necessity,
+without previous recourse to the permission of the apostolic see. The
+same attitude had already been taken up by the royalist clergy in
+England, who redeemed their outlawry by offering to the king the fifth
+of their revenues. In March Edward made things easier for the
+recalcitrants by suspending the edict confiscating the lay fees of the
+Church. Even Winchelsea saw the wisdom of abandoning his too heroic
+attitude. In a convocation, held on March 24, he practically applied
+the doctrine of _Romana mater_ to the English situation. "Let each
+man," he declared, "save his own soul and follow his own conscience.
+But my conscience does not allow me to offer money for the king's
+protection or on any other pretext." In the event nearly all the clergy
+bought off the king's wrath by the voluntary payment of a fifth.
+Winchelsea was obdurate. His estates remained for five months in the
+king's hands, and he was forced, like another St. Francis, to depend on
+the charity of the faithful. But even Winchelsea did not hold out
+indefinitely. On July 14 he was publicly reconciled with the king
+outside Westminster Hall, and a few days later his goods were restored.
+On July 31 Boniface entirely receded from the doctrine of _Cleritis
+laicos_ in the bull _Etsi de statu_. Before this could be known in
+England, Winchelsea told his clergy that the king had agreed to confirm
+the Great Charter, if they would but make a grant to carry on the
+French war. A little later Edward of his own authority exacted a third
+from all clerical revenues. This persistence in his highhanded policy
+made any real reconciliation between Edward and Winchelsea impossible.
+The king never forgave the archbishop, whose action demonstrated to all
+England the divided allegiance of his clergy between their two masters.
+Winchelsea still retained his profound distrust of the king, who had
+set at naught the liberties of Church and realm.
+
+The baronial opposition was broken up by devices not dissimilar to
+those which neutralised the antagonism of the clergy. By strenuous
+efforts Edward obtained a fair sum of money for his expenses. He let it
+be understood that, if he took his subjects' wool, the talleys given in
+exchange would be redeemed when better times had arrived, and he
+scrupulously paid for the corn and meat that his officers had
+requisitioned. Meanwhile he summoned all possible fighting men from
+England, Wales, and Ireland to meet at London on July 7. The prospect
+of subjects of the crown being forced, whatsoever their feudal
+obligations might be, to wage war beyond sea, threatened to provoke a
+fresh crisis. But after many long altercations, Edward announced that
+neither the feudal tenants nor the twenty-pound freeholders had any
+legal obligation to go with him to Flanders, and offered pay to all who
+were willing to hearken to his "affectionate request" for their
+services. Under these conditions a considerable force of stipendiaries
+was levied without much difficulty.
+
+Hereford and Norfolk abandoned active in favour of passive hostility.
+They refused to serve as constable and marshal, and Edward appointed
+barons of less dignity and greater loyalty to act in their place. While
+all England was busy with the equipment of troops and the provision of
+supplies, they sullenly held aloof. At last, when all was ready, Edward
+issued an appeal to his subjects, protesting the purity of his motives,
+and emphasising the inexorable necessity under which he was forced to
+play the tyrant in the interests of the whole realm. By the beginning
+of August such barons as were willing to go to Flanders began to
+assemble in arms at London. The young Edward of Carnarvon was appointed
+regent during his father's absence, and among the councillors who were
+to act in his name was the Archbishop of Canterbury. At last the king
+set off to embark at Winchelsea. While there, the earls presented to
+him a belated list of grievances. He refused to deal with their demand
+for the confirmation of the charters. "My full council," he declared to
+the envoys of the earls, "is not with me, and without it I cannot reply
+to your requests. Tell those who have sent you that, if they will come
+with me to Flanders, they will please me greatly. If they will not
+come, I trust they will do no harm to me, or at any rate to my
+kingdom." On August 24 he took ship for Flanders, and a few days later
+he and his troops safely landed at Sluys, whence they made their way to
+Ghent. Nearly a thousand men-at-arms and a great force of infantry,
+largely Welsh and Irish, swelled the expedition to considerable
+proportions. After all his troubles, Edward found that the loyalty of
+his subjects enabled him to carry out the ideal which he had formulated
+two years before. King and nation were to meet common dangers by action
+undertaken in common.
+
+Everything else was ruthlessly sacrificed in order that the king might
+take an army to Flanders. The Gascon expedition was quietly dropped.
+But the gravest difficulty arose not from Gascony but Scotland.
+Edward's choice of agents to carry out his Scottish policy had been
+singularly unhappy. Warenne, the governor, was a dull and lethargic
+nobleman more than sixty-six years of age. He complained of the bad
+climate of Scotland, and passed most of his time on his Yorkshire
+estates. In his absence Cressingham, the treasurer, and Ormesby, the
+justiciar, became the real representatives of the English power.
+Cressingham was a pompous ecclesiastic, who appropriated to his own
+uses the money set aside for the fortification of Berwick, and was
+odious to the Scots for his rapacity and incompetence. Ormesby was a
+pedantic lawyer, rigid in carrying out the king's orders but stiff and
+unsympathetic in dealing with the Scots. Under such rulers Scotland was
+neither subdued nor conciliated. No real effort was made to track to
+their hiding-places in the hills the numerous outlaws, who had
+abandoned their estates rather than take an oath of fealty to Edward.
+When the English governors took action, they were cruel and
+indiscriminating; and often too were lax and careless. Matters soon
+became serious. William Wallace of Elderslie slew an English official
+in Clydesdale, and threw in his lot with the outlaws. He was joined by
+Sir William Douglas, the former defender of Berwick. By May, 1297,
+Scotland was in full revolt. In the north, Andrew of Moray headed a
+rising in Strathspey. In central Scotland the justiciar barely escaped
+capture, while holding his court at Scone. The south-west, the home
+both of Wallace and Douglas, proved the most dangerous district. There
+the barons, imitating Bohun and Bigod, based their opposition to Edward
+on his claim upon their compulsory service in the French wars. Before
+long the son of the lord of Annandale, Robert Bruce, now called Earl of
+Carrick, Robert Wishart, Bishop of Glasgow, and other magnates were in
+arms, and in close association with Douglas and Wallace.
+
+Edward made light of this rebellion. Resolved to go to Flanders at all
+costs, he contented himself with calling upon the levies of the shires
+north of the Trent to protect his interests in Scotland. Early in July,
+Henry Percy, Warenne's grandson, rode through south-western Scotland,
+at the head of the Cumberland musters, and on July 7, the local
+insurgent leaders, with the exception of Wallace, made their submission
+to him at Irvine. Moreover, Edward released the two Comyns from their
+veiled imprisonment, and sent them back to Scotland to help in
+suppressing the insurrection. Henry Percy boasted that the Scots south
+of the Forth had been reduced to subjection. But a few days later
+Wallace was found to be strongly established in Ettrick forest and was
+threatening Roxburgh. At last Edward stirred up Warenne to return to
+his government. The king took the precaution of leaving some of his
+best warriors in England in case their services were needed against the
+recalcitrant barons or the Scots. Then, as has been said, on August 24
+he crossed over to Flanders.
+
+The constable and marshal were still in arms, and Winchelsea, who, in
+spite of his reconciliation with Edward, was in close communication
+with them, declined to take an active part on the council of regency.
+Two days before Edward took ship, Hereford and Norfolk appeared in arms
+at the exchequer at Westminster, and forbade the officials to continue
+the collection of supplies, until the Great Charter and the Charter of
+the Forest had been confirmed. They strove to win the support of the
+Londoners, who had long had a grievance against Edward for depriving
+them of their right to elect their own mayor, and for subjecting the
+city to the arbitrary rule of a warden nominated by the crown. They
+forbade their followers to commit acts of violence, but they made it
+clear that there could be no peace until the charters were confirmed.
+
+In August, Warenne grappled with the Scottish rising, but his own
+incompetence, and the half-heartedness of the Scottish magnates, on
+whom he relied, made his task very difficult. Wallace retreated beyond
+the Forth, and Warenne reached Stirling on September 10 in pursuit of
+him. He learnt that Wallace was holding the wooded heights, immediately
+to the north of Stirling bridge on the left bank of the Forth, not far
+from the abbey of Cambuskenneth. The Steward of Scotland, who, after
+the collapse of the revolt in the south-west, served under Warenne,
+offered his mediation. But no good result came from his action, and the
+English suspected treachery. Wallace took up a bold attitude, scorning
+either compromise or retreat. He had only a small following of cavalry,
+but his infantry was numerous and enthusiastic. The English resolved to
+attack him on September 11. The Forth at Stirling was crossed by a long
+wooden bridge, so narrow that only two horsemen could pass abreast. It
+was madness to send an army over the river by such a means in the face
+of a watchful enemy. But not only was the English plan of battle
+foolish it was also carried out weakly. Warenne overslept himself, and
+his subordinates wasted the early morning in useless discussions and
+altercations. When at last he woke up, he rejected the advice of a
+Scottish knight to send part of his cavalry over the river by a ford
+which thirty horsemen could traverse abreast, and ordered all his
+troops to cross by the bridge.
+
+Wallace, seeing that the enemy had delivered themselves into his hands,
+remained in the woods until a fair proportion of the English
+men-at-arms had made their way over the stream. He then suddenly
+swooped down upon the bridge, cutting off the retreat of those who had
+traversed it, and blocking all possibility of reinforcement. After a
+short fight the English to the north of the Forth were cut down almost
+to a man. The English on the Stirling side, seeing the fate of their
+comrades, fled in terror, and their Scots allies went over to their
+country men. Among the slain was the greedy Cressingham, whose skin the
+Scots tanned into leather. Warenne did not draw rein until he reached
+Berwick, and in one day all Scotland was lost. The castles of Roxburgh
+and Berwick alone upheld the English flag. Wallace and Moray governed
+all Scotland as "generals of the army of King John". Within a few weeks
+of their victory, they raided the three northern counties of England.
+
+Wallace had freed Scotland, but his wonderful success taught the
+contending factions in England the plain duty of union against the
+common enemy. A new parliament of the three estates was summoned for
+September 30. The opposition leaders came armed, and declared that there
+could be no supply of men or money until their demand for the
+confirmation of the charters was granted. No longer content with simple
+confirmation, they drew up, in the form of a statute, a petition
+requiring that no tallage or aid should henceforth be taken without the
+assent of the estates. This was the so-called _statutum de tallagio non
+concedendo_ which seventeenth-century parliaments and judges erroneously
+accepted as a statute. The helpless regency substantially accepted their
+demands, and, on October 12, issued a confirmation of the charters, to
+which fresh clauses were added, providing, with less generality than in
+the baronial request, that no male-tolts, or such manner of aids as had
+recently been extorted, should be imposed in the future without the
+common consent of all the realm, but making no reference to tallage.[1]
+Liberal supplies were then voted by all the three estates, and
+Winchelsea, who all through these proceedings acted as the brain of the
+baronage, exerted himself to explain away the last of the clerical
+difficulties raised by the _Clericis laicos_.
+
+ [1] The Latin, _Articuli inserti in magna carta_, given by
+ Hemingburgh, ii., 152, is quoted as a statute in the Petition
+ of Right of 1628, under the title _De tallagio non concedendo_.
+ The view of its relation to the French _Confirmatio cartavum_
+ is that taken by M. Bémont, _Chartes des libertés anglaises_,
+ especially pp. xliii., xliv. and 87. It is based on Bartholomew
+ Cotton's nearly contemporary statement (_Hist. Angl_., p. 337).
+
+On November 5 the king ratified, at Ghent, the action of his son's
+advisers. Thus the constitutional struggle was ended by the complete
+triumph of the baronial opposition. And the victory was the more
+signal, because it was gained not over a weak king, careless of his
+rights, but over the strongest of the Plantagenets, greedy to retain
+every scrap of authority. It is with good reason that the Confirmation
+of the Charters of 1297 is reckoned as one of the great turning points
+in the history of our constitution. Its provisions sum up the whole
+national advance which had been made since Gualo and William the
+marshal first identified the English monarchy with the principles
+wrested from John at Runnymede. In the years that immediately followed,
+it might well seem that the act of 1297, like the submission of John,
+was only a temporary expedient of a dexterous statecraft which
+consented with the lips but not with the heart. But in later times,
+when the details of the struggle were forgotten and the noise of the
+battle over, the event stood out in its full significance. Edward had
+been willing to take the people into partnership with him when he
+thought that they would be passive partners, anxious to do his
+pleasure. He was taught that the leaders of the people were henceforth
+to have their share with the crown in determining national policy.
+Common dangers were still to be met by measures deliberated in common,
+but the initiative was no longer exclusively reserved to the monarch.
+The sordid pedantry of the baronial leaders and the high-souled
+determination of the king compel our sympathy for Edward rather than
+his enemies. But all that made English history what it is, was involved
+in the issue, and the future of English freedom was assured when the
+obstinacy of the constable and marshal prevailed over the resolution of
+the great king.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE SCOTTISH FAILURE.
+
+
+The expedition of Edward to Flanders lost its best chance of success
+through the events which retarded its despatch. While the English king
+was wrangling with his barons, the French king was active. On the news
+of the alliance of Count Guy with the English, Robert of Artois was
+summoned from Gascony to the north. While Philip besieged Lille, and
+finally took it, Robert of Artois gained a brilliant victory over the
+Flemings at Furnes on August 20. Meanwhile John of Avesnes, Count of
+Hainault, was closely co-operating with the French, and kept Edward's
+son-in-law and ally, John, Duke of Brabant, from sending effective help
+to the Flemings. Moreover, the Flemish townsmen, in their dislike of
+their count, were largely on the side of the French. Edward's little
+army could do nothing to redress a balance that already inclined so
+heavily on the other side. The Flemings were disappointed at the scanty
+numbers of the English men-at-arms, and stared with wonder and contempt
+at the bare-legged Welsh archers and lancemen, with their uncouth garb,
+strange habits of eating and fighting, and propensity to pillage and
+disorder, though they recognised their hardihood and the effectiveness
+of their missiles.[1] The same disorderly spirit that had marred the
+Rioms campaign still prevailed among the English engaged on foreign
+service. No sooner were the troops landed at Sluys on August 28, than
+the mariners of the Cinque Ports renewed their old feud with the men of
+Yarmouth, and many ships were destroyed and lives lost in this untimely
+conflict. Edward advanced to Bruges, where he was joined by the Count of
+Flanders, but the disloyalty of the townsmen and the approach of King
+Philip forced the king and the earl to take shelter behind the stronger
+walls of Ghent. Immediately on their retreat, Philip occupied Bruges and
+Damme, thus cutting off the English from the direct road to the sea. The
+Anglo-Flemish army was afraid to attack the powerful force of the French
+king. But the French had learnt by experience a wholesome fear of the
+English and Welsh archers, and did not venture to approach Ghent too
+closely. The ridiculous result followed that the Kings of France and
+England avoided every opportunity of fighting out their quarrel, and
+lay, wasting time and money, idly watching each other's movements.
+
+ [1] See for Flemish criticisms of the Welsh, L. van Velthem,
+ _Spiegel Historiaal_, pp. 215-16, ed. Le Long, partly
+ translated by Funck Brentano in his edition of _Annales
+ Qandenses_, p. 7, a work giving full details of these
+ struggles.
+
+The only dignified way of putting an end to this impossible situation
+lay in negotiation. Edward's faithful servant, William of Hotham, the
+Dominican friar whom the pope had appointed Archbishop of Dublin, was
+in the English camp. Hotham, who had enjoyed Philip's personal
+friendship while teaching theology in the Paris schools, was an
+acceptable mediator between the two kings. A short truce was signed at
+Vyve-Saint-Bavon on the Lys on October 7. This allowed time for more
+elaborate negotiations to be carried on at Courtrai and Tournai, and on
+January 31, 1298, a truce, in which the allies of both kings were
+included, was signed at Tournai, to last until January 6, 1300. It was
+agreed to refer all questions in dispute to the arbitration of Boniface
+VIII, "not as pope but as a private person, as Benedict Gaetano". Both
+kings despatched their envoys to Rome, where with marvellous celerity
+Boniface issued, on June 30, 1298, a preliminary award. It suggested
+the possibility of a settlement on the basis of each belligerent
+retaining the possessions which he had held at the beginning of the
+struggle, and entering into an alliance strengthened by a double
+marriage. Edward was to marry the French king's sister Margaret, while
+Edward of Carnarvon was to be betrothed to Philip's infant daughter
+Isabella. The latter match involved the repudiation of the betrothal of
+Edward of Carnarvon with the daughter of the Count of Flanders. But all
+through the award there was no mention of the allies of either party.
+Boniface was too eager for peace to be over-scrupulous as to the
+honourable obligations of the two kings who sought his mediation.
+
+The English regency, which grappled so courageously with the baronial
+opposition, showed an equal energy in protecting the northern counties
+from the Scots. About the time of the confirmation of the charters,
+Wallace crossed the border and spread desolation and ruin from Carlisle
+to Hexham. Warenne and Henry Percy, who had attended the October
+parliament at London, were soon back in the north. By December the
+largest army which was ever assembled during Edward I.'s reign[1]
+was collected together on the borders, and preparations were made for a
+winter campaign after the fashion which had proved so effective in
+Wales. But all that Warenne was able to accomplish was the relief of
+Roxburgh. The quality of the troops was not equal to their quantity,
+and all his misfortunes had not taught him wisdom. Early in Lent Edward
+stopped active campaigning by announcing that no great operations were
+to be attempted until his return. Thereupon Warenne sent the bulk of
+the troops home, and remained at Berwick, awaiting the king's arrival.
+
+ [1] Morris, _Welsh Wars of Edward I._, pp. 284-86.
+
+Edward landed at Sandwich on March 14, 1298, and at once set about
+preparing to avenge Stirling Bridge. He met his parliament on
+Whitsunday, May 25, at York. The Scots barons were summoned to this
+assembly, but as they neither attended nor sent proxies, their absence
+was deemed to be proof of contumacy. A month later a large army was
+concentrated at Roxburgh. The earls and barons with their retinues
+mustered to the number of 1,100 horse, while 1,300 men-at-arms served
+under the king's banners for pay. Though Gascony was still in Philip's
+hands, the good relations that prevailed between England and France
+allowed the presence in Edward's host of a magnificent troop of Gascon
+lords, headed by the lord of Albret and the Captal de Buch, and
+conspicuous for the splendour of their armour and the costliness and
+beauty of their chargers. On this occasion Edward set little store on
+infantry, and was content to accept the services of those who came of
+their own free will. Yet even under these conditions some 12,000 foot
+were assembled, more than 10,000 of whom came from Wales and its march.
+
+The leaders of the opposition were present in Edward's host. On the eve
+of the invasion, the impatient king was kept back by the declaration of
+Hereford and Norfolk that they would not cross the frontier, until
+definite assurances were given that the king would carry out the
+confirmation of the charters which he had informally ratified on
+foreign soil. Etiquette or pride prevented Edward himself satisfying
+their demand, but the Bishop of Durham and three loyal earls pledged
+themselves that the king would fulfil all his promises on his return.
+Then the two earls suffered the expedition to proceed; and on July 6
+the army left Roxburgh, proceeding by moderate marches to Kirkliston on
+the Almond, where it encamped on the 15th. Here there was a few days'
+delay, while Bishop Bek captured some of the East Lothian castles which
+were threatening the English rear. Already there was a difficulty in
+obtaining supplies from the devastated country-side, and northerly
+winds prevented the provision ships from sailing from Berwick to the
+Forth. The worst hardships fell upon the Welsh infantry, who began to
+mutiny and talked of joining the Scots. Matters grew worse on the
+arrival of a wine ship, for such ample rations of wine were distributed
+to the Welsh that very many of them became drunk. So threatening was
+the state of affairs that Edward thought of retreating to Edinburgh. On
+July 21, however, the news was brought that Wallace and his followers
+were assembled in great force at Falkirk, some seventeen miles to the
+west. The prospect of battle at once restored the courage and
+discipline of the army, and Edward ordered an advance. That night the
+host bivouacked on the moors east of Linlithgow, "with shields for
+pillows and armour for beds". During the night the king, who was
+sleeping in the open field like the meanest trooper, received a kick
+from his horse which broke two of his ribs. Yet the early morning of
+July 22, the feast of St. Mary Magdalen, saw him riding at the head of
+his troops through the streets of Linlithgow. At last the Scots lances
+were descried on the slopes of a hill near Falkirk, and the English
+rested while the bishop and king heard mass. Then the army, which had
+eaten nothing since the preceding day, advanced to the battle.
+
+Wallace had a large following of infantry, but a mere handful of
+mounted men-at-arms. He ordered the latter to occupy the rear, and
+grouped his pikemen, the flower of his army, into four great circles,
+or "schiltrons," which, with the front ranks kneeling or sitting and
+the rear ranks standing, presented to the enemy four living castles,
+each with a bristling hedge of pikes, dense enough, it was hoped, to
+break the fierce shock of a cavalry charge. The spaces between the four
+schiltrons were occupied by the archers, the best of whom came from
+Ettrick Forest. The front was further protected by a morass, and
+perhaps also by a row of stout posts sunk into the ground and fastened
+together by ropes.
+
+Edward ordered the Welsh archers to prepare the way with their missiles
+for the advance of the men-at-arms. But the Welsh refused to move, so
+that Edward was forced to proceed by a direct cavalry charge. For this
+purpose he divided his men-at-arms into four "battles". The first of
+these was commanded by the Earl of Lincoln, with whom were the
+constable and marshal, who at last had an opportunity of serving the
+king in battle in the offices which belonged to them by hereditary
+right. On approaching the morass this first line was thrown into some
+confusion, and paused in its advance. Behind it the second battle,
+under command of the Bishop of Durham, who, perhaps, knew the ground
+better, wheeled to the east and took the Scots on their left flank. But
+Bek's followers disobeyed his orders to wait until the rest of the army
+came up, and they suffered heavy losses in attacking the left
+schiltron. Before long, however, Lincoln found a way round the morass
+westwards to the enemy's right, while the two rearmost battles, headed
+by the king and Earl Warenne, also advanced to the front. The combat
+thus became general. The Scots cavalry fled without striking a blow,
+and some of the English thought that Wallace himself rode off the field
+with them. The archers between the schiltrons were easily trampled
+down, so that the only effective resistance came from the circles of
+pikemen. The yeomanry of Scotland steadily held their own against the
+fierce charges of the mail-clad knights, and it looked for a time as if
+the day was theirs. But the despised infantry at last made their way to
+the front and poured in showers of arrows that broke down the Scottish
+ranks. Friend and foe were at such close quarters that the English who
+had no bows threw stones against the Scottish circles. When the way was
+thus prepared, the horsemen easily penetrated through the gaps made in
+the circles, and before long the Scottish pikemen were a crowd of
+panic-stricken fugitives. Edward's brilliant victory was won with
+comparatively little loss.
+
+It was years before the Scots again ventured to meet the English in the
+open field. Yet the king's victory was not followed by any real conquest
+even of southern Scotland. Edward advanced to Stirling, where he rested
+until he had recovered from his accident, while detachments of his
+troops penetrated as far as Perth and St. Andrews. Meanwhile the
+south-west rose in revolt, under Robert Bruce, Earl of Carrick, whose
+father had fought at Falkirk. Late in August, Edward made his way to Ayr
+and occupied it, while Bruce fled before him. Provisions were still
+scarce, and the army was weary of fighting. The Durham contingent
+deserted in a body,[1] and the earls were so lukewarm that Edward was
+fain to return by way of Carlisle, capturing Lochmaben, Bruce's
+Annandale stronghold, on the way. On September 8 the king reached
+Carlisle, where the constable and marshal declared that they had lost so
+many men and horses that they could no longer continue the campaign.
+Edward tried to stem the tide of desertion by promises of Scottish lands
+to those who would remain with his banners. But the distribution of
+these rewards proved only a fresh source of discontent. At last Edward
+was forced to dismiss the greater part of his forces. He lingered in the
+north until the end of the year, but there was no more real fighting;
+with the beginning of 1299 he returned to the south, convinced that the
+disloyalty of his barons had neutralised his triumphs in the field. The
+few castles which still upheld the English cause in Scotland were soon
+closely besieged.
+
+ [1] Lapsley, _County Palatine of Durham_, p. 128.
+
+During the whole of 1299 Edward was prevented by other work from
+prosecuting the war against the Scots. Even the borderers were sick of
+fighting, and Bishop Bek, who had hitherto afforded him an unswerving
+support with all the forces of his palatinate, was forced to desist
+from warlike operations by the refusal of his tenants to serve any
+longer beyond the bounds of the lands of St. Cuthbert. While the men of
+Durham abandoned the war, there was little reason to wonder at the
+indifference of the south country as to the progress of the Scots. In
+the Lenten parliament at London, the Earls of Hereford and Norfolk
+pressed Edward once more to fulfil his promise to carry out the
+confirmation of the charters. The king would not yield to their demand
+yet dared not refuse it. In his perplexity he had recourse to evasions
+which further embittered his relations with them. He promised that he
+would give an answer the next day, but when the morrow came, he
+secretly withdrew from the city. The angry barons followed him to his
+retreat and reminded him of his broken promise. Edward coolly replied
+that he left London because his health was suffering from the corrupt
+air of the town, and bade the barons return, as his council had his
+reply ready. The barons obeyed the king's orders, but their indignation
+passed all bounds when they found that the king's promised confirmation
+of the charters was vitiated by a new clause saving all the rights of
+the crown, and that nothing was said as to the promised perambulation
+of the forests. In bitter wrath the parliament broke up, and the
+Londoners, who shared the anger of the barons, threatened a revolt.
+After Easter these stormy scenes were repeated in a new parliament, and
+Edward was at last forced to yield a grudging assent to all the demands
+of the opposition, and even to appoint a commission for the
+perambulation of the forests. By the time the summer was at hand, the
+progress of the negotiations with France occupied Edward so fully that
+he had abundant excuse for not precipitating a new rupture with his
+barons, by insisting upon a fresh campaign against the Scots.
+
+A papal legate presided over a congress of English and French
+ambassadors at Montreuil-sur-mer, which belonged to Edward by right of
+the late queen, Eleanor as Countess of Ponthieu. The outcome of these
+deliberations was the treaty of Montreuil, concluded on June 19, 1299.
+It was not the final pacification which had been hoped for. Edward
+indeed abandoned his Flemish allies, but Philip would not relax his
+hold upon Gascony, and without that a definitive peace was impossible.
+The treaty of Montreuil was simply a marriage treaty. Edward was
+forthwith to marry Margaret, and his son was to be betrothed to
+Isabella of France. Neither the prolongation of the truce nor the
+affairs of the Flemings were mentioned in it, while all that Philip did
+for the Scots was to provide for the liberation of the deposed King
+John from his English prison. As soon as the ratifications were
+exchanged the king, who was then sixty years of age, and his youthful
+bride were married on September 9 at Canterbury by Archbishop
+Winchelsea.
+
+Edward's willingness to marry the sister of the king who still kept him
+out of Gascony can best be explained by his overmastering desire to
+renew operations in Scotland. Shortly after his marriage, he again
+busied himself with preparations for the long-delayed Scots campaign.
+It was high time that he took action. The English garrisons were
+surrendering one by one, and the Scottish magnates were deserting the
+English cause. Their conversion to patriotic principles was made easier
+by the decay of Wallace's power consequent on his defeat at Falkirk.
+After stormy scenes with his aristocratic rivals, Wallace withdrew from
+Scotland and went to the continent, where he implored the help of the
+King of France. Philip proved true to his new brother-in-law, and put
+Wallace in prison, only releasing him that he might go to Rome and
+enlist the sympathy of Boniface VIII. Meanwhile the Scots chose a new
+regency at the head of which was the younger John Comyn of Badenoch.
+Under these changed conditions the Scottish earls rapidly rallied round
+the national cause. Stirling, Edward's chief stronghold in central
+Scotland, was so hardly pressed that the men-at-arms were forced to eat
+their chargers. Yet when the English barons assembled about the
+beginning of winter, in obedience to Edward's summons, they stubbornly
+declared that they would not endure the hardships of a winter campaign
+until the king had fulfilled his pledges as regards the charters. Thus
+left to their own resources, the sorely tried garrison of Stirling
+surrendered to the Scots.
+
+In March, 1300, Edward met his parliament at Westminster. Despite the
+straits to which he was reduced, he was still unwilling to make a
+complete surrender. He avoided a formal re-issue of the charters by
+giving his sanction to a long series of articles, drawn up apparently by
+the barons. These articles provided for the better publication of the
+charters, and the appointment in every shire of a commission to punish
+all offences against them which were not already provided for by the
+common law; together with numerous technical clauses "for the relief of
+the grievances that the people have had by reason of the wars that have
+been, and for the amendment of their estate, and that they may be more
+ready in the king's service and more willing to aid him when he has need
+of them ". This document was known as _Articuli super cartas_.[1] At the
+same time the forest perambulation, which had long been ordered, was
+directed to be proceeded with at once. For this reason a chronicler
+calls this assembly "the parliament of the perambulation".[2] The
+reconciliation between the king and his subjects was attested by a grant
+of a twentieth.
+
+ [1] It is published in Bémont's _Chartes_, pp. 99-108, with
+ valuable comments; another draft analysed in _Hist. MSS.
+ Comm._, 6th Report, i., p. 344.
+
+ [2] Langtoft, ii, 320.
+
+Edward's concessions once more enabled him to face the Scots, and the
+summer saw a gallant army mustered at Carlisle, though some of the
+earls, including Roger Bigod, still held aloof. A two months' campaign
+was fought in south-western Scotland in July and August. But the
+peasants drove their cattle to the hills, and rainy weather impeded the
+king's movements. The chief exploit of the campaign was the capture of
+Carlaverock castle, though even in the glowing verse of the herald, who
+has commemorated the taking of this stronghold,[1] the military
+insignificance of the achievement cannot be concealed. Edward returned
+to the same district in October, but he effected so little that he was
+glad to agree to a truce with the Scots, which Philip the Fair urged him
+to accept. The armistice was to last until Whitsuntide, and Edward
+immediately returned to England. He had not yet satisfied his subjects,
+and was again forced to meet his estates.
+
+ [1] _The Siege of Carlaverock_, ed. Nicolas (1828).
+
+A full parliament assembled on January 20, 1301, at Lincoln. The
+special business was to receive the report of the forest perambulation;
+and the first anticipation of the later custom of continuing the same
+parliament from one session to another can be discerned in the
+direction to the sheriffs that they should return the same
+representatives of the shires and boroughs as had attended the Lenten
+parliament of 1300, and only hold fresh elections in the case of such
+members as had died or become incapacitated. During the ten days that
+the commons were in session stormy scenes occurred. Edward would only
+promise to agree to the disafforestments recommended by the
+perambulators, if the estates would assure him that he could do so,
+without violating his coronation oath or disinheriting his crown. The
+estates refused to undertake this grave responsibility, and a long
+catalogue of their grievances was presented to Edward by Henry of
+Keighley, knight of the shire for Lancashire, and one of the first
+members of the third estate of whose individual action history has
+preserved any trace. The commons demanded a fresh confirmation of the
+charters; the punishment of the royal ministers who had infringed them,
+or the _Articuli super cartas_ of the previous session, and the
+completion of the proposed disafforestments. In addition, the prelates
+declared that they could not assent to any tax being imposed upon the
+clergy contrary to the papal prohibition. Among the ministers specially
+signalled out for attack was the treasurer, Bishop Walter Langton, and
+in this Edward discerned the influence of Winchelsea, for he was
+Langton's personal enemy. The king's disgust at the primate's action
+was the more complete since Bishop Bek now arrayed himself on the side
+of the opposition. Edward showed his ill-will by consigning Henry of
+Keighley to prison. But the coalition was too formidable to be
+withstood. The king agreed to all the secular demands of the estates,
+accepted the hated disafforestments and directed the re-issue of a
+further confirmation of the charters, but refused his assent to the
+demand of the prelates. A grant of a fifteenth was then made, and
+Edward dismissed the popular representatives on January 30, retaining
+the prelates and nobles for further business. On February 14, the last
+confirmation of the charters concluded the long chapter of history,
+which had begun at Runnymede.
+
+Edward strove to separate his baronial and his clerical enemies, and
+found an opportunity, which he was not slow to use, in the
+uncompromising papalism of Winchelsea. Boniface VIII. had no sooner
+settled the relations of England and France than he threw himself with
+ardour into an attempt to establish peace between England and Scotland.
+Scottish emissaries, including perhaps Wallace himself, gave Boniface
+their version of the ancient relations of the two crowns. On June 27,
+1299, the pope issued the letter _Scimus, fili_, in which he claimed
+that Scotland specially belonged to the apostolic see, on the ground
+that it was converted through the relics of St. Andrew. He denied all
+feudal dependence of Scotland on Edward, and explained away the
+submissions of 1291 as arising from such momentary fear as might fall
+upon the most steadfast. If Edward persisted in his claims, he was to
+submit them to the judgment of the Roman _curia_ within the next six
+months. In 1300 Winchelsea, who fully accepted the new papal doctrine,
+sought out Edward in the midst of the Carlaverock campaign and presented
+him with Boniface's letter. Edward's hot temper fired up at the
+archbishop's ill-timed intervention, and subsequent military failures
+had not smoothed over the situation. His wrath reached its climax when
+Winchelsea once more stirred up opposition in the Lincoln parliament,
+and his refusal of a demand, which the primate had astutely added to the
+commons' requests, showed that he was prepared for war to the knife.
+Edward laid the papal letter before the earls and barons that still
+tarried with him at Lincoln. His appeal to their patriotism was not
+unsuccessful. A letter was drawn up, which was sealed, then and
+subsequently, by more than a hundred secular magnates, in which Boniface
+was roundly told that the King of England was in no wise bound to answer
+in the pope's court as to his rights over the realm of Scotland or as to
+any other temporal matter, and that the papal claim was unprecedented,
+and prejudicial to Edward's sovereignly. A longer historical statement
+was composed by the king's order in answer to Boniface. It is not
+certain that the two documents ever reached the pope, but they had great
+effect in influencing English opinion and in breaking down the alliance
+between the baronage and the ecclesiastical party.[1] Winchelsea's
+influence was fatally weakened, and the period of his overthrow was at
+hand.
+
+ [1] See, on the barons' letter, the _Ancestor_, for July and
+ October, 1903, and Jan., 1904.
+
+The triumph over Winchelsea made Edward's position stronger than it had
+been during the first days of the Lincoln parliament. That assembly
+ended amidst the festivities which attended the creation of Edward of
+Carnarvon as Prince of Wales, Earl of Chester, and Count of Ponthieu.
+The new prince, already seventeen years of age, had made his first
+campaign in the previous year. But all the pains that Edward took in
+training his son in warfare and in politics bore little fruit, and
+Edward of Carnarvon's introduction to active life was only to add
+another trouble to the many that beset the king.
+
+When the truce with Scotland expired, in the summer of 1301, Edward
+again led an army over the border, in which the Prince of Wales
+appeared, at the head of a large Welsh contingent. Little of military
+importance happened. Edward remained in Scotland over the cold season,
+and kept his Christmas court at Linlithgow. Men and horses perished
+amidst the rigours of the northern winter, and, before the end of
+January, 1302, the king was glad to accept a truce, suggested by Philip
+of France, to last until the end of November. Immediately afterwards he
+was called to the south by the negotiations for a permanent peace with
+France, which still hung fire despite his marriage to the French king's
+sister. The earlier stages of the negotiation were transacted at Rome,
+but it was soon clear to Edward that no good would come to him from the
+intervention of the _curia_. The fundamental difficulty still lay in the
+refusal of Philip to relax his grasp on Gascony. Not even the
+exaltation, consequent on the success of the famous jubilee of 1300,
+blinded Boniface to the patent fact that he dared not order the
+restitution of Gascony. "We cannot give you an award," declared the pope
+to the English envoys in 1300. "If we pronounced in your favour, the
+French would not abide by it, and could not be compelled, for they would
+make light of any penalty." "What the French once lay hold of," he said
+again, "they never let go, and to have to do with the French is to have
+to do with the devil."[1] A year later Boniface could do no more than
+appeal to the crusading zeal of Edward not to allow his claim on a patch
+of French soil to stand between him and his vow. With such commonplaces
+the papal mediation died away.
+
+ [1] See the remarkable report of the Bishop of Winchester to
+ Edward printed in _Engl. Hist. Review_, xvii. (1902), pp.
+ 518-27.
+
+Two events in 1302 indirectly contributed towards the establishment of
+a permanent peace. These were the successful revolt of Flanders from
+French domination, and the renewed quarrel between Philip and Boniface.
+On May 18, the Flemings, in the "matins of Bruges," cruelly avenged
+themselves for the oppressions which they had endured from Philip's
+officials, and on July 11 the revolted townsfolk won the battle of
+Courtrai, in which their heavy armed infantry defeated the feudal
+cavalry of France, a victory of the same kind as that Wallace had
+vainly hoped to gain at Falkirk. Even before the Flemish rising, the
+reassertion of high sacerdotal doctrine in the bull _Ausculta, fili_
+had renewed the strife between Boniface and the French king. A few
+months later the bull _Unam sanctam_ laid down with emphasis the
+doctrine that those who denied that the temporal sword belongs to St.
+Peter were heretics, unmindful of the teachings of Christ. Thus began
+the famous difference that went on with ever-increasing fury until the
+outrage at Anagni, on September 7, 1303, brought about the fall of
+Boniface and the overthrow of the Hildebrandine papacy. Meanwhile
+Philip was devoting his best energies to constant, and not altogether
+vain, attempts to avenge the defeat of Courtrai, and re-establish his
+hold on Flanders. With these two affairs on his hands, it was useless
+for him to persevere in his attempt to hold Gascony.
+
+In the earlier stages of his quarrel with Philip, Boniface built great
+hopes on Edward's support, and strongly urged him to fight for holy
+Church against the impious French king. But Edward had suffered too
+much from Boniface to fall into so obvious a trap. His hold over his
+own clergy was so firm that Winchelsea himself had no chance of taking
+up the papal call to battle. Thus it was that _Unam sanctam_ produced
+no such clerical revolt in England as _Clericis laicos_ had done. It
+was Edward's policy to make use of Philip's necessities to win back
+Gascony, and cut off all hope of French support from the Scottish
+patriots. Philip himself was the more disposed to agree with his
+brother-in-law's wishes, because about Christmas, 1302, Bordeaux threw
+off the French yoke and called in the English. The best way to save
+French dignity was by timely concession. Accordingly, on May 20, 1303,
+the definitive treaty of Paris was sealed, by which the two kings were
+pledged to "perpetual peace and friendship". Gascony was restored, and
+Edward agreed that he, or his son, should perform liege homage for it.
+With the discharge of this duty by the younger Edward at Amiens, in
+1304, the last stage of the pacification was accomplished. For the rest
+of the reign, England and France remained on cordial terms. Neither
+Edward nor Philip had resources adequate to the accomplishment of great
+schemes of foreign conquest. Though Edward got back Gascony, he owed
+it, not to his own power, but to the embarrassment of his rival.
+
+While completing his pacification with Philip the Fair, Edward was
+busily engaged in establishing his power at home, at the expense of the
+clerical and baronial opposition, which had stood for so many years in
+the way of the conquest of Scotland. Since the parliament of Lincoln,
+Winchelsea was no longer dangerous. He failed even to get Boniface on
+his side in a scandalous attack which he instigated on Bishop Langton.
+His constant efforts to enlarge his jurisdiction raised up enemies all
+over his diocese and province, and the mob of his cathedral city broke
+open his palace, while he was in residence there. His inability to
+introduce into England even a pale reflection of the struggle of Philip
+and the pope showed how clearly he had lost influence since the days of
+_Clericis laicos_. A more recent convert to higher clerical pretensions
+also failed. Bishop Bek of Durham lost all his power, and was deprived
+of his temporalities by the king in 1302. Two years later the
+insignificant Archbishop of York also incurred the royal displeasure,
+and was punished in the same fashion. With Durham, Norhamshire, and
+Hexhamshire all in the royal hands, the road into Scotland was
+completely open.
+
+The heavy hand of Edward fell upon earls as well as upon bishops. Even
+in the early days of his reign when none, save Gilbert of Gloucester,
+dared uplift the standard of opposition, Edward had not spared the
+greatest barons in his efforts to eliminate the idea of tenure from
+English political life. A subtle extension of his earlier policy began
+to emphasise the dependence of the landed dignitaries on his pleasure.
+The extinction of several important baronial houses made this the
+easier, and Edward took care to retain escheats in his own hands, or at
+least to entrust them only to persons of approved confidence. The old
+leaders of opposition were dead or powerless. Ralph of Monthermer, the
+simple north-country knight who had won the hand of Joan of Acre, ruled
+over the Gloutester-Glamorgan inheritance on behalf of his wife and
+Edward's little grandson, Gilbert of Clare. The Earl of Hereford died
+in 1299, and in 1302 his son and successor, another Humphrey Bohun, was
+bribed by a marriage with the king's daughter, Elizabeth, the widowed
+Countess of Holland, to surrender his lands to the crown and receive
+them back, like the Earl of Gloucester in 1290, entailed on the issue
+of himself and his consort. In the same year the childless earl
+marshal, Roger Bigod, conscious of his inability to continue any longer
+his struggle against royal assumptions and at variance with his brother
+and heir, made a similar surrender of his estates, which was the more
+humiliating since the estate in tail, with which he was reinvested, was
+bound to terminate with his life. In 1306, on the marshal's death, the
+Bigod inheritance lapsed to the crown. Much earlier than that, in 1293,
+Edward had extorted on her deathbed from the great heiress, Isabella of
+Fors, Countess of Albemarle and Devon, the bequest of the Isle of Wight
+and the adjacent castle of Christchurch. In 1300, on the death of the
+king's childless cousin, Earl Edmund, the wealthy earldom of Cornwall
+escheated to the crown. To Edward's contemporaries the acquisition of
+the earldoms of Norfolk and Cornwall seemed worthy to be put alongside
+the conquests of Wales and Scotland.[1]
+
+ [1] See John of London, _Commendatio lamentabilis_ in _Chron.
+ of Edw. I. and Edw. II._, ii., 8-9. See for the earldoms my
+ _Earldoms under Edward I._ in _Transactions of the Royal
+ Historical Society, new ser._, viii. (1894), 129-155.
+
+Even more important as adding to Edward's resources than these direct
+additions to the royal domains, was the increasing dependence of the
+remaining earls upon the crown. His sons-in-law of Gloucester and
+Hereford were entirely under his sway. In 1304 the aged Earl Warenne
+had died, and in 1306 his grandson and successor was bound closely to
+the royal policy by his marriage with Joan of Bar, Edward's
+grand-daughter. In the same way Edward's young nephew, Thomas of
+Lancaster, ruled over the three earldoms of Lancaster, Derby, and
+Leicester, and by his marriage to the daughter and heiress of Henry
+Lacy, was destined to add to his immense estates the additional
+earldoms of Lincoln and Salisbury. Edward of Carnarvon was learning the
+art of government in Wales, Cheshire, and Ponthieu. The policy of
+concentrating the higher baronial dignities in the royal family was no
+novelty, but Edward carried it out more systematically and successfully
+than any of his predecessors. He reaped the immediate advantages of his
+dexterity in the extinction of baronial opposition and in the zeal of
+the baronial levies against the Scots during the concluding years of
+his reign. Yet the later history of the Middle Ages bears witness to
+the grievous dangers to the wielder of the royal power which lurked
+beneath a system so attractive in appearance.
+
+The truce with the Scots ended in November, 1302, and Edward despatched
+a strong force to the north under John Segrave. On February 24, 1303,
+Segrave, attacked unexpectedly by the enemy at Roslin, near Edinburgh,
+suffered a severe defeat. The conclusion of the treaty of Paris gave
+Edward the opportunity for avenging the disaster. He summoned his
+levies to assemble at Roxburgh for Whitsuntide and, a fortnight before
+that time, appeared in person in Tweeddale. After seven weary years of
+waiting and failure, he was at last in a position to wear down the
+obstinate Scots by the same systematic and deliberate policy that had
+won for him the principality of Wales. The invasion of Scotland was
+henceforth to continue as long as the Scottish resistance. Adequate
+resources were procured to enable the royal armies to hold the field,
+and a politic negotiation with the foreign merchants resulted in a
+_carta mercatoria_ by which additional customs were imposed upon
+English exports. These imposts, known as the "new and small customs,"
+as opposed to the "old and great customs" established in 1275, were not
+sanctioned by parliamentary grant: but for the moment they provoked no
+opposition. Thus Edward was equipped both with men and money for his
+undertaking. At last the true conquest of Scotland began.
+
+No attempt was made in the Lothians to stop Edward's advance, but the
+Scots, under the regent, John Comyn of Badenoch, made a vigorous effort
+to hold the line of the Forth against him. Their plan seemed to promise
+well, for Stirling castle was still in Scottish hands. Edward crossed
+the river by a ford, and all organised efforts to oppose him at once
+ceased. Prudently leaving Stirling to itself for the present, he
+hurried to Perth. After spending most of June and July at Perth, he led
+his army northwards, nearly following the line of his advance in 1296,
+through Perth, Brechin, and Aberdeen, to Banff and Elgin. The most
+remote point reached was Kinloss, a few miles west of Elgin, in which
+neighbourhood he spent much of September. Then he slowly retraced his
+steps and took up his winter quarters at Dunfermline. In all this long
+progress, the only energetic resistance which Edward encountered was at
+Brechin. Flushed with his triumph, he ordered Stirling to be besieged,
+and from April, 1304, directed the operations himself. The garrison
+held out with the utmost gallantry, but at last a breach was effected
+in the walls, and on July 24 the defenders laid down their arms. Long
+before the Scots people despaired of withstanding the invader, the
+nobles grew cold in the defence of their country. In February, 1304,
+the regent and many of the earls made their submission. It was more
+than suspected that this result was brought about by the threat of
+Edward to divide their lands among his English followers. But on Comyn
+and his friends showing a desire to yield, the king readily promised
+them their lives and estates. Believing that his task was over, Edward
+returned to England in August after an absence of nearly fifteen
+months. He crossed the Humber early in December, kept his Christmas
+court at Lincoln, and reached London late in February. As a sign of the
+completion of the conquest, he ordered that the law courts, which since
+1297 had been established at York, should resume their sessions in
+London.
+
+A few heroes still upheld the independence of Scotland. Foremost among
+them was Sir William Wallace, who, since his mission to France in 1298,
+had disappeared from history. The submission of the barons to Edward
+gave him another chance. He took a strenuous part in the struggle of
+1303-4, and he was specially exempted from the easy pardons with which
+Edward purchased the submission of the greater nobles. It was the
+daring and skill of Wallace that prolonged the Scots' struggle until
+the spring of 1305. But he was then once more an outlaw and a fugitive,
+only formidable by his hold over the people, and by the possibility
+that the smallest spark of resistance might at any time be blown into a
+flame. At last he was captured through the zeal, or treachery, of a
+Scot in Edward's service. In August, Wallace was despatched to London
+to stand a public trial for treason, sedition, sacrilege, and murder.
+He denied that he had ever become Edward's subject, but did not escape
+conviction. With his execution, the last stage of Edward's triumph in
+Scotland was accomplished. Though the full measure of Wallace's fame
+belongs to a later age rather than his own, yet it was a sure instinct
+that made the Scottish people celebrate him as the popular hero of
+their struggle for independence. His courage, persistency, and daring
+stands in marked contrast to the self-seeking opportunism of the great
+nobles, who afterwards appropriated the results of his endeavours. Yet
+we can hardly blame Edward for making an example of him, when he fell
+into his power. Even if Wallace had successfully evaded the oath of
+fealty to Edward, it is scarcely reasonable to expect that the king
+would consider this technical plea as availing against his doctrine
+that all Scots were necessarily his subjects since the submission of
+1296. It was Wallace's glory that he fought his fight and paid the
+penalty of it.
+
+A full parliament of the three estates sat with the king at Westminster
+from February 28 to March 21, 1305. The proceedings of this assembly are
+known with a fulness exceeding that of the record of any of the other
+parliaments of the reign.[1] Among the matters enumerated in the writs
+as specially demanding attention was the "establishment of our realm of
+Scotland". Three Scottish magnates, Robert Wishart, Bishop of Glasgow,
+Robert Bruce, Earl of Carrick, and John Mowbray were particularly called
+upon to give their advice as to how Scotland was to be represented in a
+later parliament, in which the plans for its future government were to
+be drawn up. They informed the king that two bishops, two abbots, two
+barons, and two representatives of the commons, one from the south of
+the Forth and the other from the north thereof, would be sufficient for
+this purpose. This further "parliament" assembled on September 15, three
+weeks after the execution of Wallace. It consisted simply of twenty
+councillors of Edward, and the ten Scottish delegates. From the joint
+deliberations of these thirty sprang the "ordinance made by the lord
+king for the establishment of the land of Scotland".
+
+ [1] See _Memoranda, de parliamento_ (1305), ed. F.W. Maitland
+ (Rolls Series).
+
+Following the general lines of the settlement of the principality of
+Wales, the ordinance combined Edward's direct lordship over Scotland
+with a legal and administrative system separate from that of England.
+John of Brittany, Earl of Richmond, the king's sister's son, was made
+Edward's lieutenant and warden of Scotland, and under him were a
+chancellor, a chamberlain, and a controller. Scotland was to be split
+up for judicial purposes into districts corresponding to its racial and
+political divisions. Four pairs of justices were appointed for each of
+these regions, two for Lothian, two for Galloway and the south-west,
+two for the lands "between Forth and the mountains," that is the
+Lowland districts of the north-east, and two for the lands "beyond the
+mountains," that is for the Highlands and islands. Sheriffs "natives
+either of England or Scotland" were nominated for each of the shires,
+and it was significant that the great majority of them were Scots and
+that the hereditary sheriffdoms of the older system were still
+continued. The "custom of the Scots and the Welsh," that is the Celtic
+laws of the Highlanders and the Strathclyde Welsh, was "henceforth
+prohibited and disused". John of Brittany was to "assemble the good
+people of Scotland in a convenient place" where "the laws of King David
+and the amendments by other kings" were to be rehearsed, and such of
+these laws as are "plainly against God and reason" were to be reformed,
+all doubtful matters being referred to the judgment of Edward. The
+king's lieutenant was bidden to "remove such persons as might disturb
+the peace" to the south of the Trent, but their deportation was to be
+in "courteous fashion" and after taking the advice of the "good people
+of Scotland". Care for the preservation of the peace, and for
+administrative reform, is seen in the oath imposed upon officials and
+in the pains taken to secure the custody of the castles. The Scots
+parliament was to be retained, and recent precedents also suggested the
+probability of Scottish representation in the parliament of England. If
+Scotland were to be ruled by Edward at all, it would have been
+difficult to devise a wiser scheme for its administration. Yet the
+Scottish love of independence was not to be bartered away for better
+government. Within six months the new constitution was overthrown, and
+the chief part in its destruction was taken by the Scots by whose
+advice Edward had drawn it up.
+
+Edward at last felt himself in a position to take his long deferred
+revenge on Winchelsea. The primate still kept aloof from the councils of
+the king, and his spirit was as irreconcilable as ever. He gained his
+last victory in the Lenten parliament of 1305, when he prevented the
+promulgation of a statute, passed on the petition of the laity, but
+agreed to by all the estates, which forbade taxes on ecclesiastical
+property involving the exportation of money out of the country.[1] At
+this moment the long vacancy of the papacy, which followed the
+pontificate of Benedict XI., Boniface VIII.'s short-lived successor, had
+not yet come to an end. Soon, however, Winchelsea's zeal on behalf of
+papal taxation was to be ill requited. On June 5, 1305, Bertrand de
+Goth, a Gascon nobleman who since 1299 had been archbishop of Bordeaux,
+was elected to the papacy as Clement V., through the management of
+Philip the Fair. A dependant of the King of France and a subject of the
+King of England, the new pope showed a complaisance towards kings which
+stood in strong contrast to the ultramontane austerity of his
+predecessors. He refused to visit Italy, received the papal crown at
+Lyons, and spent the first years of his pontificate in Poitou and
+Gascony. Ultimately establishing himself at Avignon, he began that
+seventy years of Babylonish captivity of the apostolic see which greatly
+degraded the papacy. Though Clement's main concern was to fulfil the
+exacting conditions which, as it was believed, Philip had imposed upon
+him, he was almost as subservient to Edward as to the King of France.
+His deference to his natural lord enabled Edward to renounce the most
+irksome of the obligations which he had incurred to his subjects, to
+punish Winchelsea, and to restrain Roman authority by laws which
+anticipate the legislation of the age of Edward III.
+
+ [1] _Memoranda de parliamento_, preface, p. li. The statement
+ in the text is an inference suggested by Professor Maitland's
+ account of the statute _De asportis religiosorum_. For the last
+ struggle of Edward and Winchelsea, see Stubbs's preface to
+ _Chron. of Edw. I. and Edw. II._, i., xcix.-cxiii.
+
+At Clement V.'s coronation at Lyons, in November, England was
+represented by Winchelsea's old enemy, Bishop Walter Langton, and by
+the Earl of Lincoln. The first result of their work was the
+promulgation, on December 29, of the bull _Regalis devotionis_, by
+which the pope annulled the additions made to the charters in 1297 and
+succeeding years, and dispensed Edward from the oath which he had taken
+to observe them, on the ground that it was in conflict with his
+coronation vows. Next year Edward took advantage of this bull to revoke
+the disafforestments made by the parliament of Lincoln in 1301. It may
+be a sign either of the moderation, or of the well-grounded fears of
+the king, that he made no further use of the papal absolution. But,
+like his father and grandfather, he used the papal authority to set
+aside his plighted word, and his conduct in this respect suggests that
+it was well for England that the renewal of the Scottish troubles
+reduced for the rest of the reign the temptation, which the bull held
+out to him, to play fast and loose with the liberties of his subjects.
+The standards of contemporary morality were not, however, infringed by
+Edward's action, dishonourable and undignified as it seems to us of
+later times.
+
+Winchelsea's turn was at last come. On February 12, 1306,
+Clement suspended him from his office, and summoned him to appear
+before the _curia_. On March 25 the archbishop humbled himself before
+Edward and begged for his protection. But the king overwhelmed him with
+reproaches and refused to show him any mercy. Within two months, the
+primate took ship for France and made his way to the papal court, which
+was then established at Bordeaux. He remained in exile, though in the
+English king's dominions, for the rest of Edward's life. A less harsh
+punishment was meted out to the Bishop of Durham, who then came back
+from the court of Clement with the magnificent title of Patriarch of
+Jerusalem. For a second time Edward laid violent hands upon the rich
+temporalities of the see, and Bek, like Winchelsea, remained under a
+cloud for the remainder of the reign.
+
+Clement expected to be paid for yielding so much to the king. A papal
+agent, William de Testa, was sent to England, and to him Edward gave
+the administration of the temporalities of Canterbury. William's energy
+in collecting first-fruits aroused a storm of opposition from the
+clergy. The laity, disgusted to find that the king was negotiating for
+the transference of a crusading tenth to himself, associated themselves
+with their protest. Clement thereupon despatched the Cardinal Peter of
+Spain to England, that he might attempt to arrange a general
+pacification, and complete the marriage of the Prince of Wales to
+Isabella of France, which had been agreed upon in 1303. Before the
+cardinal's arrival, Edward's last parliament met in January, 1307, at
+Carlisle. The renewed disturbances in Scotland necessitated a meeting
+on the border, but the main transactions of the estates bore upon
+matters ecclesiastical. The lords and commons joined in demanding from
+the king a remedy against the oppressions of the apostolic see. A
+spirited and strongly worded protest was addressed to the pope. Nor
+were the estates contented with mere remonstrances. The statute of
+Carlisle renewed the abortive measure of 1305 _De asportis
+religiosorum_, by prohibiting tallages of religious houses being sent
+out of the realm. Had the petition of the estates been drafted into a
+statute, the parliament of Carlisle would have anticipated the statute
+of _Praemunire_ and many other anti-papal enactments. But Peter of
+Spain arrived, and Edward thought it injudicious to provoke a contest
+with the papacy. Even the petition actually approved was left in
+suspense to await further negotiations between the king and the
+cardinal. Before any decision was come to, Edward died, and this
+anti-Roman movement, like so many which had preceded it, resulted in
+little more than brave words. When, two generations later, a more
+resolute temper seized upon king and estates, they fell back upon the
+petitions and proceedings of the parliament of Carlisle for precedents
+for resisting the papal authority. With all its pitiful conclusion,
+Edward's ecclesiastical policy at least marks a step in advance upon
+the dependent attitude of Henry III.
+
+In the period of peace after the conquest of Scotland, Edward busied
+himself with strengthening the administration of his own kingdom and
+with enforcing the laws against violence and outrage. Under the
+strongest of medieval kings, the state of society was very disorderly,
+and even a ruler like Edward had often to be contented with holding up
+in his legislation an ideal of conduct which he was powerless to
+enforce in detail. Complaints had long been made that the greater
+nobles encroached upon poor men's inheritances, that gangs of marauders
+ranged over the country, wreaking every sort of violence and outrage,
+and that the law courts would give no redress to the sufferers from
+such outrageous deeds, since judges and juries were alike terrorised by
+overmighty offenders and dared not administer equal justice.
+Accordingly in the Lenten parliament of 1305 was drawn up the ordinance
+of Trailbaston, by which the king was empowered to issue writs of
+inquiry, addressed to special justices in the various shires, and
+authorising them to take vigorous action against these _trailbastons_,
+or men with clubs, whose outrages had become so grievous. It was not so
+much a new law as an administrative act; but it formed a precedent for
+later times, and the energy of the justices of trailbaston effected a
+real, if temporary, improvement in the condition of the country. So
+important was the measure that a chronicler calls the year in which
+this was enacted the "year of trailbaston".[1]
+
+ [1] _Liber de antiquis legibus_, p. 250.
+
+Never did Edward's prospects seem brighter than in the early days of
+1306. Scotland was obedient; the French alliance was firmly cemented;
+the pope was complacent; the Archbishop of Canterbury was in exile and
+the Bishop of Durham in disgrace; the commons were grateful for the
+better order secured by the commissions of trailbaston, and the king
+had in the papal absolution a weapon in reserve, which he could always
+use against a renewal of baronial opposition, though, for the moment,
+neither nobles nor commons seemed likely to give trouble. Once more
+there was some talk of Edward leading a crusade, and the French lawyer,
+Peter Dubois, at this time dedicated to him the first draft of his
+remarkable treatise on the recovery of the Holy Land.[1] Nor did the
+project seem altogether impracticable. Though Edward was sixty-seven
+years of age, he remained slim, vigorous and straight as a palm tree.
+He could mount his horse and ride to the hunt or the field with the
+activity of youth. His eyes were not dimmed with age and his teeth were
+still firm in his jaws.[2] The worst trouble which immediately beset him,
+was the undutiful conduct of the young Prince of Wales, who foolishly
+quarrelled with Bishop Langton, and preferred to amuse himself with
+unworthy favourites rather than submit himself to the severe training
+in arms and affairs to which Edward had long striven to inure him. When
+all thus seemed favourable, a sudden storm burst in Scotland which
+plunged the old king into renewed troubles.
+
+ [1] _De recuperatione terre sancte_, ed. C.V. Langlois (1891).
+
+ [2] John of London, _Commendatio lamentabilis_, pp. 5-6.
+
+In 1304 Robert Bruce, Earl of Carrick, became by his father's death the
+head of his house. Though he had long adhered to the regency which had
+governed Scotland in Balliol's name, he had now made terms with Edward,
+and had taken a conspicuous part in bringing about the pacification of
+Scotland under its new constitution. But the double policy, which had
+involved him in the shifts and tergiversations of his earlier career,
+still dominated the mind of the ambitious earl. At the moment of his
+submission to Edward, he entered into an intimate alliance with Bishop
+Lamberton of St. Andrews, the old partisan of Wallace. Lamberton was
+then, like Bruce, on Edward's side, and as John of Brittany had not yet
+personally taken up his new charge, the blind confidence of Edward
+entrusted him with the foremost place among the commissioners who acted
+as wardens of Scotland during the king's lieutenant's absence. Bruce,
+still remembering his grandfather's claim on the throne, welcomed the
+definitive setting aside of Balliol. While Edward believed that
+Scotland was quietening down under its new constitution, Bruce was
+secretly conspiring with the Scottish magnates, with a view to making
+himself king. His chief difficulty was with the late regent, John Comyn
+the Red, lord of Badenoch. The Bruces and the Comyns had long been at
+variance, and the Red Comyn, who was the nephew of the deposed King
+John, regarded himself as the representative of the Balliol claim to
+the throne, and was not unmindful how his father had withdrawn his
+pretensions in 1291 rather than divide the Balliol interest. Meanwhile
+the antagonism of the two houses was the best safeguard for the
+continuance of Edward's rule.
+
+Bruce was violent as well as able and ambitious. He invited Comyn to a
+conference for January 10, 1306, in the Franciscan friary at Dumfries.
+On that day the king's justices were holding the assizes in the castle,
+and Brace and Comyn, with a few followers, met in the cloister of the
+convent. Hot words were exchanged, and Bruce drew his sword and wounded
+Comyn. The lord of Badenoch took refuge in the church, and some of
+Bruce's friends followed him and slew him on the steps of the high
+altar. This cruel murder involved a violent breach between Bruce and
+the king. The earl took to the hills, declared himself the champion of
+national independence, and renewed his claim to the crown. He was
+joined by a great multitude of the people and by a certain number of
+the magnates. Conspicuous among the latter was Bishop Wishart of
+Glasgow, who broke his sixth oath of fealty, using the timber given him
+by Edward for building the steeple of his cathedral in constructing
+military engines to besiege the castles which were still held for the
+English king. Before long Bishop Lamberton, the chief of the Edwardian
+government, also went over. The support of the two bishops enabled
+Bruce to be crowned on March 25 at Scone. All Scotland was soon in
+revolt, and only the garrisons and a few magnates remained faithful to
+Edward.
+
+News of the death of Comyn and the revolt of Bruce reached Edward,
+while engaged in hunting in Dorset and Wiltshire. He at once called
+upon Church and State to unite against the sacreligious murderer and
+traitor. Clement V. excommunicated the Earl of Carrick, and deprived
+Lamberton and Wishart of their bishoprics. The warlike zeal of the
+English barons was stimulated by liberal grants of the forfeited
+estates of Bruce and his partisans. Feeling the infirmities of age
+coming upon him, Edward saw that his best chance of success was to
+inspire his son with something of his spirit. The Prince of Wales
+accordingly received a grant of Gascony, and on Whitsunday, May 22, was
+dubbed knight at Westminster along with over two hundred other
+aspirants to arms. A magnificent feast in Westminster Hall succeeded
+the ceremony. Two swans, adorned with golden chains, were brought in,
+and the old king set to all the revellers the example of vowing on the
+swans to revenge the murder of Comyn. Edward swore that when he had
+expiated this wrong to Holy Church, he would never more bear arms
+against Christian man, but would immediately turn his steps towards the
+Holy Land to redeem the Holy Sepulchre. The Prince of Wales' vow was
+never to rest two nights in the same spot until he had reached Scotland
+to assist his father in his purpose. Then all the young knights were
+despatched northwards to overthrow the Scottish pretender.
+
+A liberal grant from the estates facilitated the military preparations.
+But since the beginning of the year, Edward's strength had rapidly
+broken. He was no longer able to ride, and his movements were
+consequently very tedious. His army gathered together with more than
+the usual slowness, and Aymer of Valence, Earl of Pembroke, the king's
+cousin, was sent forward as warden of Scotland to meet Bruce with such
+forces as were ready. On June 26 Aymer fell upon Bruce at Methven, near
+Perth, and inflicted a severe defeat upon him. The power of the
+pretender died away as rapidly as it had arisen. The Bishops of St.
+Andrews and Glasgow were made prisoners, and Bruce's brothers, wife,
+and daughter fell into the enemy's hands. The brothers were promptly
+beheaded, though one of them was an ecclesiastic, and the ladies were
+confined in English nunneries. Bruce himself fled to Kintyre, and
+thence to Rathlin island, off the coast of Antrim.
+
+Edward went north in July, and, after a long stay in Northumberland,
+took up his quarters early in October with the Austin canons of
+Lanercost, near Carlisle. There he remained for above five months. In
+January, 1307, the parliament, whose anti-clerical policy has already
+been recounted, assembled at Carlisle, and remained in session until
+March. With the spring, Brace crossed over from Ireland, and
+re-appeared in his own lands in the south-west. In May he revenged the
+rout of Methven by inflicting a bloody check on Aymer of Valence near
+Ayr, and within three days gained another victory over Edward's
+son-in-law, Earl Ralph of Gloucester. These blows only spurred on
+Edward to increased efforts. The levies were summoned to meet at
+Carlisle and, regardless of his infirmities, the old king resolved to
+lead his troops in person. On July 3 he once more mounted his horse and
+started for the border. But his constitution could not respond to the
+demands made on it by his unbroken spirit. After a journey of two miles
+he was forced to rest for the night. Next day he could only traverse a
+similar distance, and his exertions so fatigued him that he was
+compelled to remain at his lodgings all the following day. This repose
+enabled him to make his way, on July 6, to Burgh-on-Sands, less than
+seven miles from Carlisle, where he spent the night. On July 7, as he
+was being raised in his bed by his attendants to take his morning meal,
+he fell back in their arms and expired.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+GAVESTON, THE ORDAINERS, AND BANNOCKBURN.
+
+
+Edward of Carnarvon was over twenty-three years of age when he became
+king. Tall, graceful, and handsome, with magnificent health and
+exceptional bodily strength, the young king was, so far as externals
+went, almost as fine a man as his father. Yet no one could have been
+more absolutely destitute of all those qualities which constitute
+Edward I.'s claims to greatness. An utter want of serious purpose
+blasted his whole career. It was in vain that his father subjected him
+to a careful training in statecraft and in military science. Though not
+lacking in intelligence, the young prince from the first to the last
+concerned himself with nothing but his own amusements. A confirmed
+gambler and a deep drinker, Edward showed a special bent for unkingly
+and frivolous diversions. Save in his devotion for the chase, his
+tastes had nothing in common with the high-born youths with whom he was
+educated. He showed himself a coward on the battlefield, and shirked
+even the mimic warfare of the tournament. He repaid the contempt and
+dislike of his own class by withdrawing himself from the society of the
+nobles, and associating himself with buffoons, singers, play-actors,
+coachmen, ditchers, watermen, sailors, and smiths. Of the befitting
+comrades of his youth, the only one of the higher aristocracy with whom
+he had any true intimacy was his nephew, Gilbert of Clare, while the
+only member of his household for whom he showed real affection was the
+Gascon knight, Peter of Gaveston.[1] Attributing his son's levity to
+Gaveston's corrupting influence, the old king had banished the foreign
+favourite early in 1307. But no change in his surroundings could stir
+up the prince's frivolous nature to fulfil the duties of his station.
+Edward's most kingly qualities were love of fine clothes and of
+ceremonies. Passionately fond of rowing, driving, horse-breeding, and
+the rearing of dogs, his ordinary occupations were those of the athlete
+or the artisan. He was skilful with his hands, and an excellent
+mechanic, proficient at the anvil and the forge, and proud of his skill
+in digging ditches and thatching roofs. Interested in music, and
+devoted to play-acting, he was badly educated, taking the coronation
+oath in the French form provided for a king ignorant of Latin. Vain,
+irritable, and easily moved to outbursts of childish wrath, he was
+half-conscious of the weakness of his will, and was never without a
+favourite, whose affection compensated him for his subjects' contempt.
+The household of so careless a master was disorderly beyond the
+ordinary measure of the time. While Edward irritated the nobles by his
+neglect of their counsel, he vexed the commons by the exactions of his
+purveyors.
+
+ [1] That is Gabaston, dep. Basses Pyrénées, cant. Morlaas.
+
+The task which lay before Edward might well have daunted a stronger
+man. The old king had failed in the great purpose of his life. Scotland
+was in full revolt and had found a man able to guide her destinies. The
+crown was deeply in debt; the exchequer was bare of supplies, and the
+revenues both of England and Gascony were farmed by greedy and
+unpopular companies of Italian bankers, such as the Frescobaldi of
+Florence, the king's chief creditors. The nobles, though restrained by
+the will of the old king, still cherished the ideals of the age of the
+Barons' War, and were convinced that the best way to rule England was
+to entrust the machinery of the central government, which Edward I. had
+elaborated with so much care, to the control of a narrow council of
+earls and prelates. Winchelsea, though broken in health, looked forward
+in his banishment to the renewal of the alliance of baronage and
+clergy, and to the reassertion of hierarchical ideals. The papal
+_curia_, already triumphant in the last days of the reign of the dead
+king, was anticipating a return to the times of Henry III, when every
+dignity of the English Church was at its mercy. The strenuous endeavour
+which had marked the last reign gave place to the extreme of
+negligence.
+
+Edward at once broke with the policy of his father. After receiving, at
+Carlisle, the homage of the English magnates, he crossed the Solway to
+Dumfries, where such Scottish barons as had not joined Robert Bruce
+took oaths of fealty to him. He soon relinquished the personal conduct
+of the war, and travelled slowly to Westminster on the pretext of
+following his father's body to its last resting-place. He replaced his
+father's ministers by dependants of his own. Bishop Walter Langton, the
+chief minister of the last years of Edward I., was singled out for
+special vengeance. He was stripped of his offices, robbed of his
+treasure, and thrown into close confinement, without any regard to the
+immunities of a churchman from secular jurisdiction. Langton's place as
+treasurer was given to Walter Reynolds, an illiterate clerk, who had
+won the chief place in Edward's household through his skill in
+theatricals. Ralph Baldock, Bishop of London, was replaced in the
+chancery by John Langton, Bishop of Chichester. The barons of the
+exchequer, the justices of the high courts, and the other ministers of
+the old king were removed in favour of more complacent successors.
+Signal favour was shown to all who had fallen under Edward I.'s
+displeasure. Bishop Bek, of Durham, was restored to his palatinate, and
+the road to return opened to Winchelsea, though ill-health detained him
+on the Continent for some time longer. Conspicuous among the returned
+exiles was Peter of Gaveston, whom the king welcomed with the warmest
+affection. He at once invested his "brother Peter" with the rich
+earldom of Cornwall, which the old king, with the object of conferring
+it on one of his sons by his second marriage, had kept in his hands
+since Earl Edmund's death. A little later Edward married the favourite
+to his niece, Margaret of Clare, the eldest sister of Earl Gilbert of
+Gloucester. Of the tried comrades of Edward I. the only one who
+remained in authority was Henry Lacy, Earl of Lincoln. The abandonment
+of the Scottish campaign soon followed. It was no wonder that the Scots
+lords, who had performed homage to Edward at Dumfries, began to turn to
+Bruce. Already king of the Scottish commons, Robert was in a fair way
+to become accepted by the whole people.
+
+The readiness with which the barons acquiesced in Edward's reversal of
+his father's policy shows that they had regarded the late king's action
+with little favour. Lincoln, the wisest and most influential of the
+earls, even found reasons for the grant of Cornwall to Gaveston, and
+kept in check his son-in-law, Earl Thomas of Lancaster, who was the
+most disposed to grumble at the elevation of the Gascon favourite.
+Gilbert of Gloucester was but newly come to his earldom. He was
+personally attached to the king, his old playmate and uncle, and was
+not unfriendly to his Gascon brother-in-law. The recent concentration
+of the great estates in the hands of a few individuals gave these three
+earls a position of overwhelming importance both in the court and in
+the country, and with their good-will Edward was safe. But the weakness
+of the king and the rashness of the favourite soon caused murmurs to
+arise.
+
+Early in 1308 Edward crossed over to France, leaving Gaveston as
+regent, and was married on January 25, at Boulogne, to Philip the
+Fair's daughter Isabella, a child of twelve, to whom he had been
+plighted since 1298. The marriage was attended by the French king and a
+great gathering of the magnates of both countries. Opportunity was
+taken of the meeting for Edward to perform homage for Aquitaine. After
+the arrival of the royal couple in England, their coronation took place
+on February 25. Time had been when the reign began with the king's
+crowning; but Edward had taken up every royal function immediately on
+his father's death, and set a precedent to later sovereigns by dating
+his own accession from the day succeeding the decease of his
+predecessor. The coronation ceremony, minutely recorded, provided
+precedents for later ages. It was some recognition of the work of the
+last generation that the coronation oath was somewhat more rigid and
+involved a more definite recognition of the rights of the community
+than on earlier occasions. Winchelsea was still abroad, and the
+hallowing was performed by Henry Woodlock, Bishop of Winchester.
+
+Discontent was already simmering. Not even Lincoln's weighty influence
+could overcome the irritation of the earls at the elevation of the
+Gascon knight into their circle. The very virtues of the vigorous
+favourite turned to his discredit. At a tournament given by him, at his
+own castle of Wallingford, to celebrate his marriage with the king's
+niece, the new-made earl, with a party of valiant knights, challenged a
+troop, which included the Earls of Hereford, Warenne, and Arundel, and
+utterly discomfited his rivals.[1] The victory of the upstart over
+magnates of such dignity was accounted for by treachery, and the
+prohibition of a coronation tournament, probably a simple measure of
+police, was ascribed to the unwillingness of Peter to give his opponents
+a legitimate opportunity of vindicating their skill. There had been much
+resentment at Gaveston's appointment as regent during the king's absence
+in France. A further outburst of indignation followed when the Gascon,
+magnificently arrayed and bedecked with jewels, bore the crown of St.
+Edward in the coronation procession. The queen's uncles, who had
+escorted her to her new home, left England disgusted that Edward's love
+for Gaveston led him to neglect his bride, and the want of reserve shown
+in the personal dealings of the king and his "idol" suggested the worst
+interpretation of their relations, though this is against the weight of
+evidence. Rumours spread that the favourite had laid hands on the vast
+treasures which Bishop Walter Langton had deposited at the New Temple,
+and had extorted from the king even larger sums, which he had sent to
+his kinsfolk in Gascony by the agency of the Italian farmers of the
+revenue.
+
+ [1] _Ann. Paulini_, p. 258, and Monk of Malmesbury, p. 156, are
+ to be preferred to Trokelowe, p. 65.
+
+Gaveston was a typical Gascon, vain, loquacious, and ostentatious,
+proud of his own ready wit and possessed of a fatal talent for sharp
+and bitter sayings. He seems to have been a brave and generous soldier.
+There is little proof that he was specially vicious or incompetent,
+and, had he been allowed time to establish himself, he might well have
+been the parent of a noble house, as patriotic and as narrowly English
+as the Valence lords of Pembroke had become in the second generation.
+But his sudden elevation rather turned his head, and the dull but
+dignified English earls were soon mortally offended by his airs of
+superiority, and by his intervention between them and the sovereign.
+"If," wrote the annalist of St. Paul's, London, "one of the earls or
+magnates sought any special favour of the king, the king forthwith sent
+him to Peter, and whatever Peter said or ordered at once took place,
+and the king ratified it. Hence the whole people grew indignant that
+there should be two kings in one kingdom, one the king in name, the
+other the king in reality." Gaveston's vanity was touched by the sullen
+hostility of the earls. He returned their suspicion by an openly
+expressed contempt. He amused himself and the king by devising
+nicknames for them. Thomas of Lancaster was the old pig or the
+play-actor, Aymer of Pembroke was Joseph the Jew, Gilbert of Gloucester
+was the cuckoo, and Guy of Warwick was the black dog of Arden. Such
+jests were bitterly resented. "If he call me dog," said Warwick on
+hearing of the insult, "I will take care to bite him." The barons
+formed an association, bound by oath to drive Gaveston into exile and
+deprive him of his earldom. All over the country there were secret
+meetings and eager preparations for war. The outlook became still more
+alarming when the Earl of Lincoln at last changed his policy. Convinced
+of the unworthiness of Gaveston, he turned against him, and the whole
+baronage followed his lead. Only Hugh Despenser and a few lawyers
+adhered to the favourite. Gloucester did not like to take an active
+part against his brother-in-law, but his stepfather, Monthermer, was
+conspicuous among the enemies of the Gascon. Winchelsea, too, came to
+England and threw his powerful influence on the side of the opposition.
+
+In April, 1308, a parliament of nobles met and insisted upon the exile
+of the favourite. The magnates took up a high line. "Homage and the
+oath of allegiance," they declared, "are due to the crown rather than
+to the person of the king. If the king behave unreasonably, his lieges
+are bound to bring him back to the ways of righteousness." On May 18
+letters patent were issued promising that Gaveston should be banished
+before June 25. Gaveston, bending before the storm, surrendered his
+earldom and prepared for departure, while Winchelsea and the bishops
+declared him excommunicate if he tarried in England beyond the
+appointed day. The king did his best to lighten his friend's
+misfortune. Fresh grants of land and castles compensated for the loss
+of Cornwall and gave him means for armed resistance. The grant of
+Gascon counties, jurisdictions, cities and castles to the value of
+3,000 marks a year provided him with a dignified refuge. The pope and
+cardinals were besought to relieve him from the sentence hung over his
+head by the archbishop. It is significant of Edward's early intention
+to violate his promise, that in his letters to the curia he still
+describes Gaveston as Earl of Cornwall. Peter was soon appointed the
+king's lieutenant in Ireland. This time he was called Earl of Cornwall
+in a document meant for English use. As midsummer approached, Edward
+accompanied him to Bristol and bade him a sorrowful farewell. Attended
+by a numerous and splendid household, Gaveston crossed over to Ireland
+and took up the government of that country, where his energy and
+liberality won him considerable popularity.
+
+Edward was inconsolable at the loss of his friend. For the first time
+in his reign he threw himself into politics with interest, and
+intrigued with rare perseverance to bring about his recall. Meanwhile
+the business of the state fell into deplorable confusion. No supplies
+were raised; no laws were passed; no effort was made to stay the
+progress of Robert Bruce. The magnates refused to help the king, and in
+April, 1309, Edward was forced to meet a parliament of the three
+estates at Westminster. There he received a much-needed supply, but the
+barons and commons drew up a long schedule of grievances, in which they
+complained of the abuses of purveyance, the weakness of the government,
+the tyranny of the royal officials, and the delays in obtaining
+justice. The estates refused point blank the king's request for the
+recall of Gaveston and demanded an answer to their petitions in the
+next parliament.
+
+Edward saw in submission to the estates the only way of bringing back
+his brother Peter from his gilded exile. He persuaded the pope to annul
+the ecclesiastical censures with which Winchelsea had sought to prevent
+Gaveston's return, and then recalled his friend on his own authority.
+Gaveston at once quitted Ireland and was met at Chester by Edward.
+Together they attended a parliament of magnates held in July at
+Stamford. There Edward announced that he accepted the petitions of the
+estates and issued a statute limiting purveyance. But the real work of
+this assembly was the ratification of the recall of the favourite,
+which was assured since Edward had won over some of the chief earls to
+agree to it. Gloucester was easily moved to champion his
+brother-in-law's cause. Lincoln reverted to his former friendship for
+the Gascon, and managed both to overbear the hostility of Lancaster and
+to induce Earl Warenne, "who had never shown a cheerful face to Peter
+since the Wallingford tournament," to become his friend. Warwick, alone
+of the earls, was irreconcilable. But Edward had gained his point. It
+was even agreed that the returned exile should regain his earldom of
+Cornwall.
+
+The annalists moralise on the instability of the magnates; and the
+sudden revolution may perhaps be set down as much to their incapacity
+as to the dexterity of the king. But Peter's second period of power was
+even shorter than his first. He had learnt nothing from his
+misfortunes, save perhaps increased contempt for his enemies. He was
+more insolent, greedy, and bitter in speech than ever. Early in 1310
+the barons were again preparing to renew their attacks. The second
+storm burst in a parliament of magnates held at London in March, 1310.
+The barons came to this parliament in military array, and Edward once
+more found himself at their mercy. The conditions of 1258 exactly
+repeated themselves. Once more an armed baronial parliament made itself
+the mouthpiece of the national discontent against a weak king, an
+incompetent administration, and foreign favourites. The magnates were
+no longer contented with simply demanding the banishment of Gaveston.
+They were ready with a constructive programme of reform, and they went
+back to the policy of the Mad Parliament. As the king could not be
+trusted, the royal power must once more be put into commission in the
+hands of a committee of magnates. So stiff were the barons in their
+adhesion to the precedents of 1258, that they made no pretence of
+taking the commons into partnership with them. To them the work of
+Edward I. had been done to no purpose. Baronial assemblies and full
+parliaments of the estates were still equally competent to transact all
+the business of the nation. It is vain to see in this ignoring of the
+commons any aristocratic jealousy of the more popular element in the
+constitution. There can be no doubt but that any full parliament would
+have co-operated with the barons as heartily in 1310 as it had done in
+1309. It was simply that popular co-operation was regarded as
+unnecessary. As in 1258, the magnates claimed to speak for the whole
+nation.
+
+The barons drew up a statement of the "great perils and dangers" to
+which England was exposed through the king's dependence on bad
+counsellors. The franchises of Holy Church were threatened; the king
+was reduced to live by extortion; Scotland was lost; and the crown was
+"grievously dismembered" in England and Ireland. "Wherefore, sire," the
+petition concludes, "your good folk pray you humbly that, for the
+salvation of yourself and them and of the crown, you will assent that
+these perils shall be avoided and redressed by ordinance of your
+baronage." Edward at once surrendered at discretion, perhaps in the
+vain hope of saving Gaveston. On March 16 he issued a charter, which
+empowered the barons to elect certain persons to draw up ordinances to
+reform the realm and the royal household. The powers of the committee
+were to last until Michaelmas, 1311. A barren promise that the king's
+concession should not be counted a precedent made Edward's submission
+seem a little less abject. Four days later the ordainers were
+appointed, the method of their election being based upon the precedents
+of 1258.
+
+Twenty-one lords ordainers represented in somewhat unequal proportions
+the three great ranks of the magnates. At the head of the seven bishops
+was Winchelsea, while both Bishop Baldock of London, the dismissed
+chancellor, and his successor, John Langton of Chichester, were
+included among the rest. All the eight earls attending the parliament
+became ordainers. Side by side with moderate men, such as Gloucester,
+Lincoln, and John of Brittany, Earl of Richmond, were the extreme men
+of the opposition, Lancaster, Pembroke, Warwick, Hereford, the king's
+brother-in-law, and Edmund Fitzalan, Earl of Arundel. Warenne and the
+insignificant Earl of Oxford do not seem to have been present in
+parliament, and are therefore omitted. With these exceptions, and of
+course that of the Earl of Cornwall, the whole of the earls were
+arrayed against the king. The six barons, who completed the list of
+nominees, were either colourless in their policy or dependent on the
+earls and their episcopal allies. The ordainers set to work at once.
+Two days after their appointment, they issued six preliminary
+ordinances by which they resolved that the place of their sitting
+should be London, that none of the ordainers should receive gifts from
+the crown, that no royal grants should be valid without the consent of
+the majority, that the customs should be paid directly into the
+exchequer, that the foreign merchants who had lately farmed them should
+be arrested, and that the Great Charter should be firmly kept. During
+the next eighteen months they remained hard at work.
+
+Gaveston, conscious of his impending doom, betook himself to the north
+as early as February. As soon as he could escape, Edward hurried
+northwards to join him. An expedition against the Scots was then
+summoned for September. It was high time that something should be done.
+During the three years that Edward had reigned, Robert Bruce had made
+alarming progress. One after the other the Scottish magnates had joined
+his cause, and a few despairing partisans and some scattered
+ill-garrisoned, ill-equipped strongholds alone upheld the English cause
+north of the Tweed. But even then Edward did not wage war in earnest.
+His real motive for affecting zeal for martial enterprise was his
+desire to escape from his taskmasters, and to keep Gaveston out of
+harm's way. The earls gave him no encouragement. On the pretext that
+their services were required in London at the meetings of the
+ordainers, the great majority of the higher baronage took no personal
+part in the expedition. Gloucester was the only ordainer who was
+present, and the only other earls in the host were Warenne and Gaveston
+himself. The chief strength of Edwards army was a swarm of
+ill-disciplined Welsh and English infantry, more intent on plunder than
+on victory. In September Edward advanced to Roxburgh and made his way
+as far as Linlithgow. No enemy was to be found, for Bruce was not
+strong enough to risk a pitched battle, even against Edward's army. He
+hid himself in the mountains and moors, and contented himself with
+cutting off foraging parties, destroying stragglers, and breaking down
+the enemy's communications. Within two months Edward discreetly retired
+to Berwick, and there passed many months at the border town.
+Technically he was in Scotland; practically he might as well have been
+in London for all the harm he was doing to Bruce. However, Gaveston
+showed more martial zeal than his master. He led an expedition which
+penetrated as far as Perth, and reduced the country between the Forth
+and the Grampians to Edward's obedience. Gloucester also pacified the
+forest of Ettrick. To these two all the little honour of the campaign
+belonged.
+
+The Earl of Lincoln governed England as regent during the king's
+absence. In February, 1311, he died, and Gloucester abandoned the
+campaign to take up the regency. The death of the last of Edward I.'s
+lay ministers was followed in March by that of another survivor of the
+old generation, Bishop Bek of Durham. The old landmarks were quickly
+passing away, and the forces that still made for moderation were
+sensibly diminished. Gilbert of Gloucester, alone of the younger
+generation, still aspired to the position of a mediator. The most
+important result of Lincoln's death was the unmuzzling of his
+son-in-law, Thomas of Lancaster. In his own right the lord of the three
+earldoms of Lancaster, Leicester, and Derby, Thomas then received in
+addition his father-in-law's two earldoms of Lincoln and Salisbury. The
+enormous estates and innumerable jurisdictions attached to these five
+offices gave him a territorial position greater by far than that of any
+other English lord. "I do not believe," writes the monk of Malmesbury,
+"that any duke or count of the Roman empire could do as much with the
+revenues of his estates as the Earl of Lancaster." Nor were Earl
+Thomas' personal connexions less magnificent than his feudal dignities.
+As a grandson of Henry III., he was the first cousin of the king.
+Through his mother, Blanche of Artois, Queen of Navarre and Countess of
+Champagne, he was the grandson of the valiant Robert of Artois, who had
+fallen at Mansura, and the great-grandson of Louis VIII. of France. His
+half-sister, Joan of Champagne, was the wife of Philip the Fair, so
+that the French king was his brother-in-law as well as his cousin, and
+Isabella, Edward's consort, was his niece. Unluckily, the personality
+of the great earl was not equal to his pedigree or his estates. Proud,
+hard to work with, jealous, and irascible, he was essentially the
+leader of opposition, the grumbler, and the _frondeur_. When the time
+came for a constructive policy, Thomas broke down almost as signally as
+Edward himself. His ability was limited, his power of application
+small, and his passions violent and ungovernable. Greedy, selfish,
+domineering, and narrow, he had few scruples and no foresight, little
+patriotism, and no breadth of view. At this moment he had to play a
+part which was within his powers. The simple continuance of the
+traditions of policy, which he inherited with his pedigree and his
+estates; was all that was necessary. As the greatest of the English
+earls, the head of a younger branch of the royal house, and the
+inheritor of the estates and titles of Montfort and Ferrars, he was
+trebly bound to act as leader of the baronial opposition, the champion
+of the charters, the enemy of kings, courtiers, favourites, and
+foreigners. He was steadfast in his prejudices and hatreds, and the
+ordainers found in him a leader who could at least save them from the
+reproach of inconstancy and the lack of fixed purpose shown at the
+parliament of Stamford.
+
+It was the first duty of Earl Thomas to perform homage and fealty for
+his new earldoms of Lincoln and Salisbury. Attended by a hundred armed
+knights, he rode towards the border. Edward was at Berwick, and Thomas
+declined to proffer his homage outside the kingdom. On Edward refusing
+to cross the Tweed, Thomas declared that he would take forcible
+possession of his lands. Civil war was only avoided by Edward giving
+way. The king met Thomas on English soil at Haggerston, four miles from
+Berwick. There the earl performed homage, and exchanged the kiss of
+peace with his king, but he would not even salute the upstart Earl of
+Cornwall, who injudiciously accompanied Edward, and the king departed
+deeply indignant at this want of courtesy. Returning to Berwick, Edward
+lingered there until the completion of the work of the ordainers made
+it necessary for him to face parliament. Leaving Gaveston protected by
+the strong walls of Bamburgh, the king quitted the border at the end of
+July, and met his parliament a month later in London. Though the
+ordainers had been appointed by a baronial parliament, the three
+estates were summoned to hear and ratify the results of their labours.
+Thirty-five more ordinances, covering a very wide field, were then laid
+before them. Disorderly and disproportioned, like most medieval
+legislation, they ranged from trivial personal questions and the
+details of administration to the broadest schemes for the future. Many
+of them were simply efforts to get the recognised law enforced. There
+were clauses forbidding alienation of domain, the abuses of purveyance,
+the usurpations of the courts of the royal household, the enlargement
+of the forests, and the employment of unlawful sources of revenue.
+Under the last head, the new custom, which Edward I. had persuaded the
+foreign merchants to pay, was specifically abolished. Provisions of
+such a character show that the king had made no effort to observe
+either the Great Charter or the laws of Edward I. Even the recent
+statute of Stamford, and the six ordinances of the previous year, had
+to be re-enacted. Similar restatements of sound principles were too
+common in the fourteenth century to make the ordinances an epoch. The
+vital clauses were those providing for the control of the king and for
+penalties against his favourites.
+
+Under the first of these heads, the ordainers worked out to the
+uttermost consequences their favourite distinction between the crown
+and the king. The crown was to be strengthened, but the king was to be
+deprived of every shred of power. The great offices of state in
+England, Ireland, and Gascony were to be filled up with the counsel and
+consent of the barons, a provision which, if literally interpreted,
+meant that the barons intended to govern Gascony as well as England.
+The king was not to go to war, raise an army, or leave the kingdom
+without the permission of parliament. He was to "live of his own,"
+however scanty a living that might be. Special judges were to hear
+complaints against royal ministers and bailiffs. Parliaments were to
+meet once or twice a year. It was a complete programme of limited
+monarchy. But there was no reference to the commons and clergy. We are
+still in the atmosphere of the Provisions of Oxford, and there is no
+Earl Simon to emphasise the fuller conception of national control.
+
+To Edward and to the barons, the penal clauses were the very essence of
+the ordinances. The twentieth ordinance declared that Peter of
+Gaveston, "as a public enemy of the king and kingdom, be forthwith
+exiled, for all time and without hope of return," from all dominions
+subject to the English king. He was to leave England before All Saints'
+day, and the port of Dover was to be his place of embarkation. Other
+ordinances dealt with lesser offenders. Exile was once more to be the
+doom of the Frescobaldi, and the other alien merchants who had acted as
+Edward's financial agents; Gaveston's kinsfolk, followers and abettors
+incurred their master's fate. All Gascons were to be sent to their own
+country, their allegiance to the crown in no wise saving them from the
+hatred meted out to all aliens. Neither high nor low were spared: Henry
+de Beaumont, the grandson of an Eastern emperor, and his sister, the
+lady Vesey, were to leave the realm; John Charlton, the pushing
+Shropshire squire who was worming his way by court favour into the
+estates of the degenerate descendants of the house of Gwenwynwyn, was,
+with the other English partisans of the favourite, to be driven from
+the royal service.
+
+Edward made a last desperate attempt to save Gaveston. He would agree
+to all the other ordinances, if he were still allowed to keep his
+brother Peter in England and in possession of the earldom of Cornwall.
+But the estates refused to yield the root of the whole matter.
+Threatened with the prospect of a new battle of Lewes, if he remained
+obdurate, Edward bowed to his destiny. The ordinances were published in
+every shire, and new ministers, chosen with the approval of the
+estates, deprived the king of the government of the country.
+
+Early in November, Gaveston sailed to Flanders, but within a few weeks
+Edward insisted upon his return. Rumours spread that Gaveston was in
+England, hiding himself away in his former castles of Wallingford and
+Tintagel, or in the king's castle of Windsor. The thin veil of mystery
+was soon withdrawn. Early in 1312, Peter openly accompanied the king to
+York, where, on January 18, Edward issued a proclamation to the effect
+that Gaveston had been unlawfully exiled, that he was back in England
+by the king's command, and prepared to answer to all charges against
+him. A few weeks later, Edward restored him to his earldom and estates.
+King and favourite still tarried in the north, preparing for the
+inevitable struggle. It was believed that they intrigued with Robert
+Bruce for a refuge in Scotland. Bruce, according to the story, declined
+to have anything to do with them. "If the King of England will not keep
+faith with his own subjects," he is reported to have said, "how then
+will he keep faith with me?"
+
+The ordainers looked upon Gaveston's return as a declaration of war.
+Winchelsea pronounced him excommunicate, and five of the eight earls
+who sat among the ordainers, bound themselves by oaths to maintain the
+ordinances and pursue the favourite to the death. These were Thomas of
+Lancaster, Aymer of Pembroke, Humphrey of Hereford, Edmund of Arundel,
+and Guy of Warwick. Gilbert of Gloucester declined to take part in the
+confederacy, but promised to accept whatever the five earls might
+determine. Moreover, John, Earl Warenne, who had hitherto kept aloof
+from the ordainers, at last threw in his lot with them, won over, it
+was believed, by the eloquence of Archbishop Winchelsea. The ordainers
+then divided England into large districts, appointing one of the
+baronial leaders to the charge of each. Gloucester himself undertook
+the government of the south-east, while Robert Clifford and Henry Percy
+agreed to guard the march, to prevent Gaveston escaping to the Scots.
+Pembroke and Warenne marched to the north to lay hands on the
+favourite, and Lancaster himself followed them.
+
+While the ordainers were acting, Edward and Gaveston were aimlessly
+wandering about in the north. They failed to raise an army or to win
+the people to their side, and on the approach of Lancaster, they fled
+before him from York to Newcastle. The earl followed quickly. On the
+afternoon of Ascension day, May 4, Lancaster, Clifford, and Percy
+suddenly swooped down on Newcastle. The king and his friend escaped
+with the utmost difficulty to Tynemouth, leaving their luggage, jewels,
+horses, and other possessions to the victor. Next day they fled by sea
+to Scarborough. The queen, left behind at Tynemouth, fell into her
+uncle Lancaster's power.
+
+The royal castle of Scarborough, whose Norman keep and spacious wards
+occupy a rocky peninsula surrounded, except on the town side, by the
+North Sea, had lately been transferred from the custody of Henry Percy,
+one of the confederate barons, to that of Gaveston. There was no fitter
+place wherein the favourite could stand at bay against his pursuers.
+Accordingly Edward left Gaveston, after a tender parting, and betook
+himself to York. Lancaster thereupon occupied a position midway between
+Scarborough and Knaresborough, while Pembroke, Warenne, and Henry Percy
+laid siege to Scarborough. Gaveston soon found that he was unable to
+resist them. His troops, scarcely adequate to man the extensive walls,
+were too many for the scanty store of provisions which the castle
+contained. After less than a fortnight's siege, he persuaded the two
+earls and Percy to allow him easy terms of surrender. The three
+baronial leaders pledged themselves on the Gospels to protect Gaveston
+from all manner of evil until August 1. During the interval parliament
+was to decide as to what was to be his future fate. If the terms agreed
+upon by parliament were unsatisfactory to him, he was to return to
+Scarborough, which was still to be garrisoned by his followers, with
+leave to purchase supplies.
+
+Pembroke undertook the personal custody of the prisoner, and escorted
+him by slow stages from Scarborough to the south, where he was to be
+retained in honourable custody at his own castle of Wallingford. Three
+weeks after the surrender, the convoy reached Deddington, a small town
+in Oxfordshire, a few miles south of Banbury. There Gaveston was lodged
+in the house of the vicar of the parish, and told to take a few days'
+rest after the fatigues of the journey. Pembroke himself did not remain
+at Deddington, but went on to Bampton in the Bush, where his countess
+then was. Thereupon on June 10, at sunrise, the Earl of Warwick, the
+most rancorous of Peter's enemies, occupied Deddington with a strong
+force. Bursting into the bedchamber of his victim, Earl Guy exclaimed
+in a loud voice: "Arise, traitor, thou art taken". Peter was at once
+led with every mark of indignity to Warwick castle. Thus the black dog
+of Arden showed that he could bite.
+
+Warwick was not personally pledged to Gaveston's safety, though, as one
+of the confederates, he was clearly bound by their acts. His seizure of
+Peter was only warrantable by the, fear that Pembroke, with his
+royalist leanings, was likely to play the extreme party false; but in
+any case Warwick was as much obliged as Pembroke to observe the terms
+of the capitulation. Neither Warwick nor his allies took this view of
+the matter. They rejoiced at the good fortune which had remedied the
+disastrous capitulation of Scarborough, and resolved to put an end to
+the favourite without delay. Lancaster was then at Kenilworth;
+Hereford, Arundel, and other magnates were also present, and all agreed
+in praising Warwick's energy. On Monday morning, June 19, the three
+earls rode the few miles from Kenilworth to Warwick, and Earl Guy
+handed over Peter to them. They then escorted their captive to a place
+called Blacklow hill, about two miles out of Warwick on the Kenilworth
+road, but situated in Lancaster's lands. The crowd following the
+cavalcade was moved to tears when Peter, kneeling to Lancaster, cried
+in vain for mercy from the "gentle earl". On reaching Blacklow hill,
+the three earls withdrew, though remaining near enough to see what was
+going on. Then two Welshmen in Lancaster's service laid hands upon the
+victim. One drove his sword through his body, the other cut off his
+head. The corpse remained where it had fallen, but the head was brought
+to the earls as a sign that the deed was done. After this the earls
+rode back to Kenilworth. Guy of Warwick remained all the time in his
+castle. He had already taken his share in the cruel act of treachery.
+It was, however, important that Lancaster should take the
+responsibility for the deed. Four cobblers of Warwick piously bore the
+headless corpse within their town. But the grim earl sent it back,
+because it was not found on his fee. At last some Oxford Dominicans
+took charge of the body and deposited it temporarily in their convent,
+not daring to inter it in holy ground, as Gaveston had died
+excommunicate.
+
+The ostentatious violence of the confederate earls broke up their
+party. Aymer of Pembroke, indignant at their breach of faith, regarded
+the whole transaction as a stain on his honour. He besought
+Gloucester's intervention, but was only told that he should be more
+cautious in his future negotiations. He harangued the clerks and
+burgesses of Oxford, but university and town agreed that the matter was
+no business of theirs. Then in disgust he betook himself to the king,
+whom he found still surrounded with the Beaumonts, Mauleys, and other
+friends of Gaveston, against whom the ordinances had decreed
+banishment. Warenne, whose honour was only less impeached than
+Pembroke's, also deserted the ordainers for the court. Edward bitterly
+deplored the death of his friend. He gladly welcomed the deserters, and
+prepared to wreak vengeance on the ordainers.
+
+Edward plucked up courage to return to London, where in July he
+addressed the citizens, and persuaded them to maintain the peace of the
+city against the barons. He next visited Dover, and there he
+strengthened the fortifications of the castle, took oaths of fealty
+from the Cinque Ports, and negotiated with the King of France. Thence
+he returned to London, hoping that the precautions he had taken would
+secure his position in the parliament which he had summoned to meet at
+Westminster. But the four earls still held the field, and answered the
+summons to parliament by occupying Ware with a strong military force. A
+thousand men-at-arms were drawn by Lancaster from his five earldoms,
+while the Welsh from Brecon, who followed the Earl of Hereford, and the
+vigorous foresters of Arden, who mustered under the banner of Warwick,
+made a formidable show. Yet at the last moment neither side was eager
+to begin hostilities. The four earls' violence damaged their cause, and
+many who had no love of Gaveston, or desire to avenge him, inclined to
+the king's party. Gilbert of Gloucester busied himself with mediating
+between the two sides. At this juncture two papal envoys, sent to end
+the interminable outstanding disputes with France, arrived in England,
+along with Louis, Count of Évreux, the queen's uncle. Edward availed
+himself of the presence of French jurists in the count's train to
+obtain legal opinion that the ordinances were invalid, as against
+natural equity and civil law. These technicalities did little service
+to the king's cause, and better work was done when Louis and the papal
+envoys joined with Gloucester in mediating between the opposing forces.
+At length moderate counsels prevailed. Edward could only resist the
+four earls through the support of his new allies, and Pembroke and
+Warenne were as little anxious to fight as Gloucester himself. They
+were quite willing to make terms which seemed to the king treason to
+his friend's memory.
+
+The negotiations were still proceeding when, on November 13, 1312, the
+birth of a son to Edward and Isabella revived the almost dormant
+feeling of loyalty to the sovereign. The king ceased to brood over the
+loss of his brother Peter, and became more willing to accept the
+inevitable. He gave some pleasure to his subjects by refusing the
+suggestion of the queen's uncle that the child should be called Louis,
+and christened him Edward after his own father. At last, on December
+22, terms of peace were agreed upon. The earls and barons concerned in
+Gaveston's death were to appear before the king in Westminster Hall,
+and humbly beg his pardon and good-will. In return for this the king
+agreed to remit all rancour caused by the death of the favourite.
+Lancaster and Warwick, who took no personal part in the negotiations,
+sent in a long list of objections to the details of the treaty. Nearly
+a year elapsed before the earls personally acknowledged their fault.
+During that interval there was no improvement in the position of
+affairs. Parliament granted no money; and Edward only met his daily
+expenses by loans, contracted from every quarter, and by keeping tight
+hands on the confiscated estates of the Templars. Both the king and the
+leading earls made every excuse to escape attending the ineffective
+parliaments of that miserable time. Two short visits to France gave
+Edward a pretext for avoiding his subjects. There were some hasty
+musterings of armed men on pretence of tournaments. But the king was
+still formidable enough to make it desirable for the barons to carry
+out the treaty. Finally, in October, 1313, Lancaster, Hereford, and
+Warwick made their public submission in Westminster Hall. Pardons were
+at once issued to them and to over four hundred minor offenders. Feasts
+of reconciliation were held, and it seemed as if the old feuds were at
+last ended. Gaveston's corpse was removed from Oxford to Langley, in
+Hertfordshire, and buried in the church of a new convent of Dominicans
+set up by Edward to pray for the favourite's soul.
+
+Just before the end of the disputes Archbishop Winchelsea died in May,
+1313. He left behind him the reputation of a saint and a hero, and a
+movement was undertaken for his canonisation. With all his faults, he
+was the greatest churchman of his time, and the most steadfast and
+unselfish of ecclesiastical statesmen. Despite his palsy, he had shown
+wonderful activity since his return. The brain and soul of the
+ordainers, he equally made it his business to uphold extreme
+hierarchical privilege. Bitterly as he hated Walter Langton, he was
+indignant that a bishop should be imprisoned and despoiled by the lay
+power, and took up his cause with such energy that he effected his
+liberation, only to find that Langton made peace with the king and
+turned his back on the ordainers. The after-swell of the storms,
+excited by the petition of Lincoln and the statute of Carlisle, still
+continued troublous during Winchelsea's later years. The pope
+complained of the violated privileges of the Church and of the
+accumulated arrears of King John's tribute; and Winchelsea was anxious
+to promote the papal cause. But the barons in Edward's early
+parliaments still used the bold language of the magnates of 1301, and
+the letter of 1309, drawn up by the parliament of Stamford, is no
+unworthy pendant of the Lincoln letter. As time went on, the disorders
+of the government and the weakness of the king surrendered everything
+to the pope. It was soon as it had been in the days of Henry III., when
+pope and king combined to despoil the English Church.
+
+The suppression of the order of the Temple shows how absolutely England
+was forced to follow in the wake of the papacy and the King of France.
+There was no spontaneous movement against the society as in France;
+there was not even the fierce malice and insatiable greed which could
+find their only satisfaction in the ruin of the brethren; and there is
+not much evidence that the Templars were unpopular. The whole attack
+was the result of commands given from without. It was at the repeated
+request of Philip of France and Clement V. that Edward reluctantly
+ordered the apprehension of all the Templars within England, Scotland,
+and Ireland on January 8, 1308. Their property was taken into the
+king's hands, and their persons were confined in the royal prisons
+under the custody of the sheriffs. For their trial, Clement appointed a
+mixed commission including Winchelsea, Archbishop Greenfield of York,
+several English bishops, one French bishop, and certain papal
+inquisitors specially assigned for the purpose, the chief of whom were
+the Abbot of Lagny and Sicard de Lavaur, Canon of Narbonne, who came to
+England in 1309. At last the victims were collected at London and York,
+where the trials were to be conducted for the southern and northern
+provinces. There was much hesitation among the English bishops. The
+foes of the Templars lamented the prelates' lack of zeal and their
+scruples in collecting evidence, and suggested that the torture, which
+had so freely been used in France, would soon extract confessions. But
+the northern bishops declared that torture was unknown in England, and
+asked, if it were to be adopted, whether it was to be applied by clerks
+or laymen, and whether torturers should be imported from beyond sea. In
+the end, torture was used, but not to any great extent.
+
+A great mass of depositions, mostly vague and worthless, or derived
+from the suspicious confessions of apostates and weaklings, was
+gathered together, and in 1311 laid before provincial councils, but
+neither province came to any fixed decision. "Inasmuch," says
+Hemingburgh, "as the Templars were not found altogether guilty or
+altogether innocent, they referred the dubious matter to the pope."
+They sent the evidence they had collected to swell the mass of
+testimony from all Christendom, which was laid before the council of
+Vienne. When the pope suppressed the order in April, 1312, and
+transferred its lands to the Knights of St. John, the papal decrees
+were quietly carried out in England. One or two Templars died in
+prison, but none were executed; and the majority were dismissed with
+pensions or secluded in monasteries. Edward and his nobles took good
+care to make a large profit out of the transaction. The resources of
+the Temple alone kept the king from destitution during the period
+between the death of Gaveston and his reconciliation with the earls.
+Many barons laid violent hands on estates belonging to the order, and
+long held on to them despite papal expostulation. The Hospitallers
+found that the lands of their rivals came to them so slowly, and
+encumbered with so many charges, that their new property became
+burdensome rather than helpful to their society. Thus it was that they
+never made any use of the New Temple in London, and, before long, let
+it out to the common-lawyers. In the fall of the Templars, the pope and
+the Church set the first great example of the suppression of a
+religious order to kings, who before long bettered the precedent given
+them. The sordid story is mainly important to our history as an example
+of the completeness of the influence of the papal autocracy, and of the
+submissiveness of clergy and laity to its behests. It was a lurid
+commentary on the practical working of the ecclesiastical system that
+the business of condemning an innocent order first brought into England
+the papal inquisitor and the use of torture. Yet the whole process was
+but so pale a reflection of the horrors wrought in France that the
+conclusion arises that England owed more to the weakness of Edward II
+than France to the strength of Philip IV.
+
+Winchelsea's death removed a real check on Edward, especially as the
+king was on such good terms with the papacy that he had little
+difficulty in obtaining a successor amenable to his will. Undeterred by
+Clement's bull reserving to himself the appointment, the monks of
+Christ Church at once proceeded to elect Thomas of Cobham, a theologian
+and a canonist of distinction, a man of high birth, great sanctity, and
+unblemished character, and in every way worthy of the primacy. But his
+merits did not weigh for a moment with Clement against the wishes of
+the king. He rejected Cobham and conferred the primacy on Edwards
+favourite, Walter Reynolds, who had already obtained the bishopric of
+Worcester through the king's influence. A good deal of money, it was
+believed, found its way to the coffers of the _curia_; and the
+indignation of the English Church found voice in the impassioned
+protests of the chroniclers. "Lady Money rules everything in the pope's
+court," lamented the monk of Malmesbury. "For eight years Pope Clement
+has ruled the Universal Church: but what good he has done escapes
+memory. England, alone of all countries, feels the burden of papal
+domination. Out of the fulness of his power, the pope presumes to do
+many things, and neither prince nor people dare contradict him. He
+reserves all the fat benefices for himself, and excommunicates all who
+resist him: his legates come and spoil the land: those armed with his
+bulls come and demand prebends. He has given all the deaneries to
+foreigners, and cut down the number of resident canons. Why does the
+pope exercise greater power over the clergy than the emperor over the
+laity? Lord Jesus! either take away the pope from our midst or lessen
+the power which he presumes to have over the people." Such lamentations
+bore no fruit, and the simoniacal nomination of Reynolds was but the
+first of a series of appointments which robbed the episcopate of
+dignity and moral worth.
+
+While Church and State in England were thus distressed, the cause of
+Robert Bruce was making steady progress in Scotland. It is some measure
+of the difficulties against which Bruce had to contend that, after six
+years, he was still by no means master of all that land. But least of
+all among the causes which retarded his advance can be placed the armed
+forces of England. During six years Edward II.'s one personal
+expedition had been a complete failure. A more formidable obstacle in
+Bruce's way was the stubborn resistance offered to him by the valour
+and skill of the small but highly trained garrisons which the wisdom of
+Edward I. had established in the fortresses of southern and central
+Scotland. Each castle took a long time to subdue, and demanded
+engineering resources and a persistency of effort, which were difficult
+to obtain from a popular army. The garrisons co-operated with the
+Scottish nobles who still adhered to Edward through jealousy of the
+upstart Bruces and love of feudal independence, rather than by reason
+of any sympathy with the English cause. Additional obstacles to
+Robert's progress were the hostility of the Church, to which he was
+still the excommunicated murderer of Comyn; the captivity of so many
+Scottish prelates and barons in England; the efforts of the pope and
+the King of France to bring about suspensions of hostilities, and the
+grievous famines which desolated Scotland no less than southern
+Britain. But during these years the King of Scots gradually overcame
+these difficulties. His hardest fighting in the field was with rival
+Scots rather than with the English intruders. In 1308 he defeated the
+Comyns of Buchan, and established himself on the ruins of that house in
+the north-east. In the same year his brother, Edward Bruce, conquered
+Galloway, where the Balliol tradition long prevented the domination of
+the rival family.
+
+Secure from retaliation so long as domestic troubles lasted, the Scots
+devastated the northern counties of England, whose inhabitants were
+forced to purchase relief from further attacks by paying large sums of
+money to the invaders. Formal truces were more than once made, but they
+were ill observed, and each violation of an armistice involved some
+loss to Edward and some gain to Robert. Meanwhile the garrisons were
+carefully isolated, and one by one signalled out for attack. In 1312
+Berwick itself was only saved from surprise by the opportune barking of
+a dog. In January, 1313, Perth was captured by assault. Next day Robert
+slew the leading native burgesses who had adhered to the English, while
+he permitted the English inhabitants to return freely to their own
+country. The whole town was destroyed, since walled towns, like
+castles, had given the English their chief hold upon the country.
+
+Such was the state of Scotland when the reconciliation between Edward
+and the earls restored England to the appearance of unity. As if
+conscious that no time was to be lost in strengthening his position,
+Bruce redoubled his efforts to make himself master of the fortresses
+which still remained in the enemy's hands. Regardless of the rigour of
+the season, he set actively to work in the early weeks of 1314, and
+remarkable success attended his efforts. In February, the border
+stronghold of Roxburgh was taken by a night attack. "And all that fair
+castle, like the other castles which he had acquired, they pulled down
+to the ground, lest the English should afterwards by holding the castle
+bear rule over the land."[1] In March, Edinburgh castle was secured by
+some Scots who climbed up the precipitous northern face of the castle
+rock, overpowered the garrison, and opened the gates to their comrades
+outside. Flushed with this great success, Bruce began the siege of
+Stirling, the only important English garrison then held by the English
+in the heart of Scotland. He pressed the besieged so hard that they
+agreed to surrender to the enemy, if they were not relieved before
+Midsummer day, the feast of St. John the Baptist. While Robert was
+watching Stirling, his brother Edward devastated the country round
+Carlisle, lording it for three days at the bishop's castle of Rose, and
+levying heavy blackmail on the men of Cumberland.
+
+ [1] _Lanercost Chronicle_, p. 223.
+
+If Stirling were lost, all Scotland would be at Bruce's mercy. Even
+Edward was stirred by the disgrace involved in the utter abandonment of
+his father's conquest; and from March onwards he began to make spasmodic
+efforts to collect men and ships to enable him to advance to the relief
+of the beleaguered garrison. At first it seemed sufficient to raise the
+feudal levies and a small infantry force from the northern shires, but
+as time went on the necessity of meeting the Scottish pikemen by
+corresponding levies of foot soldiers became evident, and over 20,000
+infantry were summoned from the northern counties and Wales.[1] But the
+notice given was far too short, and June was well advanced before
+anything was ready.
+
+ [1] For the numbers at Bannockburn, see _Foedera_, ii., 248,
+ and Round, _Commune_ of London, pp. 289-301.
+
+Even the Scottish peril could not quicken the sluggish patriotism of
+the ordainers. Four earls, Lancaster, Warenne, Warwick, and Arundel,
+answered Edward's summons by reminding him that the ordinances
+prescribed that war should only be undertaken with the approval of
+parliament, and by declining to follow him to a campaign undertaken on
+his own responsibility. They would send quotas, but begged to be
+excused from personal attendance. Yet even without them, a gallant
+array slowly gathered together at Berwick, and one at least of the
+opposition earls, Humphrey of Hereford, was there, with Gilbert of
+Gloucester and Aymer of Pembroke and 2,000 men-at-arms. An enormous
+baggage train enabled the knights and barons to appear in the field in
+great magnificence, though it destroyed the mobility of the force. "The
+multitude of waggons," wrote the monk of Malmesbury, "if they had been
+extended in a single line would have occupied the space of twenty
+leagues." The splendour and number of the army inspired the king and
+his friends with the utmost confidence. Though the host started from
+Berwick less than a week before the appointed day, the king moved, says
+the Malmesbury monk, not as if he were about to lead an army to battle,
+but rather as if he were going on a pilgrimage to Compostella. "There
+was but short delay for sleep, and a shorter delay for taking food.
+Hence horses, horsemen, and infantry were worn out with fatigue and
+hunger." There was no order or method in the proceedings of the host.
+The presence of the king meant that there was no effective general, and
+Hereford and Gloucester quarrelled for the second place.
+
+It was not until Sunday, June 23, that Edward at last took up his
+quarters a few miles south of Stirling, with a worn-out and dispirited
+army. Yet, if Stirling were to be saved, immediate action was
+necessary. Gloucester and Hereford made a vigorous but unsuccessful
+effort to penetrate at once into the castle, and Bruce came down just
+in time to throw himself between them and the walls. Henry Bohun, who
+had forced his way forward at the head of a force of Welsh infantry,
+was slain, and his troops dispersed. Gloucester was unhorsed, and
+thereupon the English retreated to their camp. Fearing an attack under
+cover of darkness, they had little sleep that night, and many of the
+watchers consoled themselves with revelry and drunkenness. When St.
+John's day dawned, they were too weary to fight effectively. Bruce
+advanced from the woods and stationed his troops on the low ridge
+bounding the northern slope of the little brook, called the
+Bannockburn, which runs about two miles south of Stirling on its course
+towards the Forth. Of the three divisions, or battles, into which the
+Scots were divided, two stood on the same front, side by side, while
+King Robert commanded the rear battle, which was to serve as a reserve.
+He marshalled his forces much in the same way that Wallace had adopted
+at Falkirk. There was the same close array of infantry, protected by a
+wall of shields and a thick hedge of pikes. Each man wore light but
+adequate armour, and, besides the pike, bore an axe at his side for
+work at close quarters. Pits were dug before the Scots lines, and
+covered over with hurdles so light that they would not bear the weight
+of a mail-clad warrior and his horse. Save for a small cavalry force
+kept in reserve in the rear, the men-at-arms were ordered to dismount
+and take their place in the dense array, lest, like their comrades at
+Falkirk, they should ride off in alarm when they saw the preponderance
+of the enemy's horse. The Scots were less numerous than the English,
+but they were an army and not a mob; their commander was a man of rare
+military insight, and their tactics were those which, twelve years
+before, had defeated the chivalry of France at Courtrai.
+
+The English had feared that the Scots would not fight a pitched battle,
+and were astonished to see them at daybreak prepared to receive an
+attack. Their contempt for their enemy made them eager to accept the
+challenge, but Gloucester, who, though only twenty-three, had more of
+the soldier's eye than most of the magnates, urged Edward to postpone
+the encounter for a day, that the army might recover from its fatigue,
+and the clergy advised delay out of respect to St. John the Baptist.
+Unmoved by prudence or piety, Edward denounced his nephew as a coward,
+and ordered an immediate advance.
+
+The English, forgetting the lessons of the Welsh wars, sent on the
+archers in front of the cavalry. Bruce, seeing that their missiles were
+playing havoc on his dense ranks, directed his small cavalry force to
+charge the archers on their left flank. The unsupported bowmen at once
+fell back in confusion, leaving the cavalry to do its work. Meanwhile
+the English men-at-arms were advancing in three "battles," the first of
+which then came into action. Many of the English fell into the pits
+prepared for them, and the Scottish shields and pikes broke the attack
+of those who evaded these obstacles. Gloucester fought with rare
+gallantry, but was badly seconded by his followers. At last his horse
+was slain under him, and he was knocked down and killed. The troop
+which he led fled panic-stricken from the field. The Scots then
+advanced with such vigour that the English never recovered from the
+disorder into which their first disaster had thrown them. While these
+things were going on, the second and third English "battles" had been
+making feeble efforts to take their part in the fight. But the first
+line cut them off from direct access to the foe, and the archers of the
+second battle did more harm to their friends than to their enemies by
+shooting wildly, straight in front of them. There was no single
+directing force, nor, after Gloucester's fall, even one conspicuous
+leader who would set an example of blind valour. Hundreds of English
+knights, who had not drawn their swords, were soon fleeing in terror
+before the enemy. Edward, who had taken up his station in the rear
+battle, rode off the field and never dismounted until he reached
+Dunbar, whence he fled by sea to Berwick.
+
+Abandoned by their leaders, the English retreated as best they could.
+Many of their best knights lay dead on the field, and more were drowned
+in the Forth or Bannock, or swallowed up in the bogs, than were slain
+in the fight. The Scots, whose losses were slight, showed a prudent
+tendency to capture rather than slay the knights and barons, in order
+that they might hold them up to ransom, and though many desisted from
+the pursuit to plunder the baggage train, those who followed the
+English fugitives reaped an abundant harvest of captives. Hereford was
+chased into Bothwell castle, which was still held for the English. But
+next day the Scottish official who commanded there for Edward opened
+the gates to Bruce, and the earl became a prisoner. Pembroke escaped
+with difficulty on foot, along with a contingent of Welsh infantry. The
+mighty English army had ceased to exist; and with the surrender of
+Stirling, next day, Bruce's career attained its culminating point. His
+long years of trial were at last over, and the clever adventurer could
+henceforth enjoy in security the crown which he had so gallantly won.
+
+The military results of Bannockburn were of extreme importance. The
+ablest of contemporary annalists aptly compared Bruce's victory to the
+battle of Courtrai. An even nearer analogy was the fight at Morgarten
+where, within two years, the pikemen of the Forest Cantons were to
+scatter the chivalry of the Hapsburgers as effectively as the Flemings
+won the day at Courtrai or the Scots at Bannockburn. The English had
+forgotten the military lessons of Edward I., as completely as they had
+forgotten his political lessons, and their reliance on the obsolete and
+unsupported cavalry charge was their undoing. Bruce, on the other hand,
+had improved upon the teaching of Wallace and Edward I. His use of his
+men-at-arms on foot anticipates the English tactics of the Hundred
+Years' War. The presence of these heavily armed troopers in his ranks
+gave him a strength in defence, and an impetuosity in attack, which
+made it a simple matter to break up the undisciplined squadrons opposed
+to him. Bannockburn rang the death-knell of the tactics which since
+Hastings had been regarded as the perfection of military art. The
+political lessons of the victory were of not less importance. It is
+almost too much to say that Bannockburn won for Scotland its
+independence, for Scottish independence had already been vindicated.
+But the easy victory brought home to men's minds the full measure of
+the Scottish triumph. It was already clear that so long as Edward
+lived, England would never make the continued effort which, as Edward
+I.'s wars both in Wales and Scotland had shown, could alone
+systematically conquer a nation. Bruce's difficulties were not so much
+with the English as with the Scots. It was no small task to unite the
+English of the Lothians, the Welsh of the south-west, the Norsemen of
+the extreme north, and the Celts of the hills into a single Scottish
+nation. He had against him the separatist local feeling which Scottish
+history and ethnology made inevitable, and it took time for him to
+obtain that prestige, which should hedge a king, and raise him above
+the crowd of feudal earls and clan chieftains, who thought themselves
+as good as the sometime Earl of Carrick. Such dignity and distinction
+Bannockburn supplied, and such measure of national unity and strong
+monarchical authority as Scotland ever enjoyed, came from the triumph
+of him who became, even more than Wallace, the hero of the new nation.
+For the next few years the Scots took the aggressive. They induced the
+French kings to renew the alliance which Philip IV. had made with them
+in the early years of the contest. They obtained papal recognition for
+their king and the withdrawal of the ban of the Church on Comyn's
+murderer; they plundered northern England from end to end, and broke
+down Anglo-Norman rule in Ireland; they plotted for the resurrection of
+the Welsh principality; and, worse than all, they made common cause
+with the baronial opposition. Hence it followed that the political
+results of the victory were as important to England as they were to
+Scotland itself. The troubled history of the next eight years reveals
+in detail the effects of Bannockburn on England. Edward's defeat threw
+him into the power of the ordainers. The ordainers, when called upon to
+govern, showed themselves as incapable as ever Edward or his favourites
+had been. The results were misrule, aristocratic faction, popular
+distress, and mob violence. Ineffective as are the first seven years of
+the reign of Edward of Carnarvon, the eight years which followed
+Bruce's victory plunged England deeper into the pit of degradation,
+from which neither the king nor the king's foes were strong, wise, or
+honest enough to release her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+LANCASTER, PEMBROKE, AND THE DESPENSERS.
+
+
+Bannockburn was almost welcomed by the ordainers, for it afforded new
+opportunities of humiliating the defeated king. While Edward tarried at
+Berwick, Lancaster was in his castle of Pontefract with a force far
+larger than his cousin's. Loudly declaring that the true cause of the
+disaster was Edward's neglect to carry out the ordinances, he announced
+his intention of immediately enforcing their observance. At a
+parliament at York, in September, Edward delivered himself altogether
+into Thomas's hands, ordering the immediate execution of the
+ordinances, and replacing his ministers and sheriffs by nominees of the
+ordainers. The only boon that he obtained was that the earls postponed
+the removal from court of Hugh Despenser and Henry Beaumont, the two
+faithful friends who had guarded him in his flight from Bannockburn.
+Despenser, however, thought it prudent to avoid his enemies by going
+into hiding. Edward's submission did not help him against the Scots.
+The earls resolved that the question of an expedition was to be
+postponed until the next parliament, on the ground that it was
+imprudent to take action until Hereford and the other captives had been
+released. It was a sorry excuse, for King Robert and his brother were
+devastating the northern counties with fire and sword, and it gave new
+ground to the suspicion of an understanding between the Scottish king
+and the ordainers. But the victor of Bannockburn showed surprising
+moderation. He suffered the bodies of Gloucester and the slain barons
+to be buried among their ancestors, and released Gloucester's
+father-in-law, Monthermer, without ransom, declaring that the thing in
+the world which he most desired was to live in peace with the English.
+He welcomed an exchange of prisoners, by which his wife, Elizabeth de
+Burgh, his sister, his daughter, and the Bishop of Glasgow were
+restored to Scotland. The release of Hereford soon added to the king's
+troubles.
+
+In January, 1315, Edward's humiliation was completed at a London
+parliament. Hugh Despenser and Walter Langton were removed from the
+council. The "superfluous members" of the royal household, denounced as
+"excessively burdensome to the king and the land," were dismissed, and
+drastic ordinances were drawn up for the regulation of the diminished
+following still allowed to the king. Edward was put on an allowance of
+£10 a day, and the administration of his revenues taken out of his
+hands. The grant made was accompanied by the condition that its
+spending should be entirely in the hands of the barons, and the estates
+arranged after their own fashion for the new Scottish campaign. When
+summer came, Lancaster insisted on taking the command himself, and thus
+gave a new grievance to Pembroke, who had already been appointed
+general. Lancaster was henceforth the indispensable man. When
+parliament met at Lincoln, in January, 1316, the few magnates who
+attended would transact no business until his arrival. On his tardy
+appearance in the last days of the session, it was resolved "that the
+lord king should do nothing grave or arduous without the advice of the
+council, and that the Earl of Lancaster should hold the chief place in
+the council". It was only after some hesitation that the earl accepted
+this position. Once more the king was forced to confirm the ordinances.
+Liberal grants were made by the estates, and every rural township was
+called upon to furnish and pay a foot soldier to fight the Scots.
+
+The commander of the army and the chief counsellor of the king,
+Lancaster, was in a stronger position than any subject since the days of
+Simon of Montfort. He could afford to despise aristocratic jealousy and
+royal malignity. To the commons he was the good earl, who was standing
+up for the rights of the people. He was the darling of the clergy, who
+looked upon him as the pillar of orthodoxy, the disciple of Winchelsea,
+and the upholder of the rights of Holy Church. The warlike and energetic
+barons of the north were his sworn followers, and, apart from his hold
+upon public opinion, he could always fall back on the resources of his
+five earldoms. But events were soon to show that the successful leader
+of opposition was absolutely incapable of carrying out a constructive
+policy. He had no ideals, no principles, no feeling of the importance of
+administrative efficiency, no sense of responsibility, no power of
+controlling his followers. He never understood that his business was no
+longer to oppose but to act. The clear-headed monk of Malmesbury paints
+the disastrous results of his inaction: "Whatsoever pleased the king,
+the earl's servants strove to overthrow; and whatever pleased the earl,
+was declared by the king's servants to be treasonable; and so, at the
+suggestion of the evil one, the households of earl and king put
+themselves in the way and would not allow their masters, by whom the
+land should have been defended, to be of one accord". Even the implied
+understanding with the King of Scots was not abandoned by the man on
+whom the responsibility rested of defeating him. When Bruce devastated
+the north of England he still spared the lands of the king's "chief
+counsellor," as of old he had spared the lands of the opposition leader.
+When, in 1316, Lancaster mustered his forces at Newcastle against the
+Scots, Edward repaid him for his inaction in 1314 by declining to
+accompany him over the border. "Thereupon," wrote the border
+annalist,[1] "the earl at once went back; for neither trusted the
+other." Edward, who forgot and forgave nothing, secretly negotiated with
+the pope for absolution from his oath to the ordinances. He gradually
+built up a court party, and soon restored Hugh Despenser to his position
+in the household. As might be expected in such circumstances no
+effective resistance was made to the Scots.
+
+ [1] _Lanercost Chronicle_, p. 233.
+
+It was a time of severe distress in England. In 1315 a rainy summer
+ruined the harvest. Great floods swept away the hay from the fields,
+and drowned the sheep and cattle. In 1316 famine raged, especially in
+the north. For a hundred years, we are told, such scarcity of corn had
+not been known. A bushel of wheat was sold at London for forty pence,
+and the Northumbrians were driven to feed on dogs, horses, and other
+unwonted food. Pestilence followed in the train of famine. It was in
+vain that parliament passed laws, limiting the repasts of the barons'
+households to two courses of meat, and fixing the price of the chief
+sorts of victuals. The only result was that dealers refused to bring
+their produce to market. Then the legislation, passed in a panic, was
+repealed in a panic. "It is better," said a chronicler, "to buy things
+at a high rate than not to be able to buy them at all."
+
+Private wars raged from end to end of south Britain. On the upper
+Severn, Griffith of Welshpool, the younger son of Griffith ap
+Gwenwynwyn, laid regular siege to Powys castle, the stronghold of John
+Charlton, his niece's husband and his rival for the lordship of upper
+Powys. As Charlton was a courtier, Griffith attached himself to the
+ordainers. After Bannockburn, the captivity of Hereford, the lord of
+Brecon, and the death without heirs of Gloucester, the lord of
+Glamorgan, removed the strongest restraints on the men of south Wales.
+The royal warden of Glamorgan, Payne of Turberville, displaced
+Gloucester's old officers. One of the sufferers was Llewelyn Bren, "a
+great and powerful Welshman in those parts," who had held high office
+under Earl Gilbert. In 1315 Llewelyn, after seeking justice in vain at
+the king's court, rose in revolt against Turberville. He gathered the
+Welshmen on the hills, burst upon Caerphilly, while the constable was
+holding a court outside the castle, took the outer ward by surprise and
+burnt it to ashes. There was fear lest this revolt should be the
+starting-point of a general Welsh rising. Llewelyn's hill strongholds
+threatened Brecon on the north and the vale of Glamorgan on the south;
+and Hereford, then released from his Scottish captivity, was entrusted
+with the suppression of the revolt. Before long all the lords of the
+march joined Hereford in stamping out the movement. Among them were the
+two Roger Mortimers, the Montagues and the Giffords, and Henry of
+Lancaster, Earl Thomas's brother, and lord in his own right of Monmouth
+and Kidwelly. Overwhelmed by such mighty opponents, Llewelyn
+surrendered to Hereford, hoping thus to save his followers.
+
+Lancaster himself suffered from the spirit of anarchy that was abroad.
+His own Lancashire vassals rose against his authority, under Adam
+Banaster, a former member of his household. Adam belonged to an
+important Lancashire family, which had long stood in close relations to
+Wales, and had committed a homicide for which he despaired of pardon.
+He now posed as the champion of the king against the earl, believing
+that anything that caused trouble to Thomas would give no small delight
+at court. Lancaster showed more energy in upholding his own rights than
+in maintaining the honour of England. He raised such an overwhelming
+force that Banaster, unable to hold the field against him, shut himself
+up in his house. His refuge was stormed and his head brought to Earl
+Thomas as a trophy of victory. While Banaster was raiding Lancashire
+and Llewelyn south Wales, the Scots were devastating the country as far
+south as Furness, and Edward Bruce, King Robert's brother, was
+conquering Ireland. There was little wonder that Edward Bruce hoped to
+cross over to Wales when he had done his work in Ireland, or that the
+Welsh, buoyed up, as in the last generation, by the prophesies of
+Merlin, believed that the time was come when they would expel the
+Saxons, and win back the empire of Britain.
+
+Of much longer duration than the wars of Llewelyn Bren and Adam
+Banaster, were the formidable disturbances which raged for many years
+at Bristol. Fourteen Bristol magnates had long a preponderating
+influence in the government of the town. The commons bitterly resented
+their superiority and declared that every burgess should enjoy equal
+rights. A royal inquiry was ordered, but the judges, bribed, as was
+believed, by the fourteen, gave a decision which was unacceptable to
+the commons. Lord Badlesmere, warden of the castle, sided with the
+oligarchs, and thus the whole authority of the state was brought to
+bear against the popular party. But it was an easy matter to resist the
+government of Edward II. The commons took arms and a riot broke out in
+court. Twenty men were killed in the disturbances, and the judges fled
+for their lives. Eighty burgesses were proved by inquest at Gloucester
+to have been the ringleaders. As they refused to appear to answer the
+charges, they were outlawed. Indignation at Bristol then rose to such a
+height that the fourteen fled in their turn, and for more than two
+years Bristol succeeded in holding out against the royal mandate. At
+last, in 1316, the town was regularly besieged by the Earl of Pembroke.
+The castle was not within the burgesses' power, and its _petrariae_,
+breaking down the walls and houses of the borough, compelled the
+townsmen to surrender. A few of the chief rebels were punished, but a
+pardon was issued to the mass of the burgesses.
+
+More dangerous than any of these troubles was the attack made by Edward
+Bruce on the English power in Ireland. That power had been on the wane
+during the last two generations. Edward I. had formed schemes for the
+better administration of the country, but little had come of them. The
+English government in Dublin gradually lost such control as it had
+possessed over the remoter parts of the island. The shire organisation,
+set up in an earlier generation, became little more than nominal. The
+constitutional movement of the thirteenth century extended to the
+island, and the Irish parliament, then growing up out of the old
+council, reflected in a blurred fashion the organisation of the English
+parliament of the three estates. But royal lieutenants and councils,
+shires and sheriffs, parliaments and justices had only the most
+superficial influence on Irish life. Real authority was divided between
+the Norman lords of the plain and the Celtic chieftains of the hills.
+Each feudal lord hated his fellows, and bitter as were the feuds of
+Fitzgeralds and Burghs, they were mild as compared with the rancorous
+hereditary factions which divided the native septs from each other.
+These divisions alone made it possible for the king's officers to keep
+up some semblance of royal rule. If they were seldom obeyed, the
+divisions in the enemies' camps prevented any chance of their being
+overthrown. Thus the Irish went on living a rude, turbulent life of
+perpetual purposeless war and bloodshed. Ireland was a wilder, larger,
+more remote Welsh march, and the resemblance was heightened by the fact
+that many of the Anglo-Norman principalities were in the hands of great
+English or marcher families, and that the Irish foot-soldier played
+only a less important part than the Welsh archer and pikeman among the
+light-armed soldiers of the English crown.
+
+The easiest way to keep up a show of English government was to form an
+alliance between the crown and some of the baronial houses. Richard de
+Burgh, Earl of Ulster, the most powerful of the feudal lords of
+Ireland, was the only one who at that period bore the title of earl. He
+had long been interested in general English affairs, and his kinswomen
+had intermarried into great British houses. One of his daughters
+married Robert Bruce when he was Earl of Carrick, and another was more
+recently wedded to Earl Gilbert of Gloucester. Despite the Bruce
+connexion, the Earl of Ulster was still trusted by the English party,
+and the king gave him the command of an Irish army which he had
+intended to send against Scotland in 1314. Richard was too busy
+fighting the Ulster clans of O'Donnell and O'Neil, and too jealous of
+the Fitzgeralds, his feudal rivals, to throw his heart into the
+hopeless task of gathering together the two nations and many clans of
+Ireland into a single host. The death of Earl Gilbert at Bannockburn
+broke his nearest tie with England, and the release of Elizabeth Bruce
+in exchange for Hereford gave his daughter the actual enjoyment of the
+throne of Scotland. His natural instincts as an Irishman and as a baron
+were to restrain the power of his overlord. When the news of Bruce's
+victory produced a great stir among the Irish clans, he stood aside and
+let events take their course.
+
+Though the Gael of the Scottish Highlands played little part at
+Bannockburn, the Irish rejoiced at the Scots' success as that of their
+kinsmen. "The Kings of the Scots," said the Irish Celts, "derive their
+origin from our land. They speak our tongue and have our laws and
+customs." However little true this was in fact, it was a good excuse
+for some of the Irish clans to offer the throne of Ireland to the King
+of Scots. Robert rejected the proposal for himself, but was willing to
+give his able and adventurous brother Edward the chance of winning
+another crown for his house. Edward, "who thought that Scotland was too
+little for his brother and himself," cheerfully fell in with the
+scheme. On May 25, 1315, he landed near Carrickfergus and received a
+rapturous welcome from the O'Neils, the greatest of the septs of the
+north-east. Before long all Celtic Ulster flocked to his banners, and
+Edmund Butler, then justice of Ireland, strove with little success to
+make head against the Scottish invasion. The completeness of Bruce's
+union with the native Irish gave him his best chance of attaining his
+object. Up to this point the attitude of the Earl of Ulster had been
+most undecided. He at last threw in his lot with the justiciar. When
+parties began to shape themselves it was clear that "all the Irish of
+Ireland" were in league with Bruce. The danger was that "a great part
+of the great lords and lesser English folk" also joined the invader.
+Conspicuous among these were the Lacys of Meath.
+
+Edward Bruce showed energy and vigour. He made his way southwards, and
+in September won a victory over the forces of the Earl of Ulster and
+the justiciar at Dundalk, then in the south of Ulster. After this he
+pushed into Meath and Leinster and was joined by the O'Tooles and the
+other clans of the Wicklow mountains, while the adhesion of Phelim
+O'Connor, King of Connaught, brought the whole of the Celtic west into
+his alliance. The barons, however, took the alarm. During the winter
+Butler contracted friendship with many of the Norman colonists. From
+that time the struggle assumed the character of a war between Celtic
+Ireland and feudal Ireland, the native clansmen and the Anglo-Norman
+settlers. Thus, though Bruce and his wild allies found it easy to make
+themselves masters of the open country, all the castles and towns were
+closed to them and could only be won by long-continued efforts. Before
+long, Butler drove them to the hills. Ere the winter was over, Edward
+found it prudent to retire to Ulster.
+
+During 1316 the struggle raged unceasingly. Bruce was crowned King of
+Ireland, the O'Neil, it was said, having abdicated his rights in his
+favour. But the summer saw the utter defeat of the O'Connors by the
+justiciar at the bloody battle of Athenry, where King Phelim and the
+noblest of his sept perished. A little later the King of Scots came to
+the help of his brother. With his aid, Edward was able to reduce
+Carrickfergus, which had hitherto defied his efforts. Then the brothers
+led their forces from one end of Ireland to the other. Dublin prepared
+for a siege by burning its suburbs and devastating the country around.
+But though the two Bruces penetrated as far as Limerick, they did not
+capture a single castle or a walled town. They lost so many men during
+their winter campaign, that they were forced in the spring to retire to
+Ulster. The hopeless disunion of both parties in Ireland seemed likely
+to prolong the struggle indefinitely. The men of Dublin and the Earl of
+Ulster were at feud with each other, and the citizens captured the earl
+and shut him up in Dublin castle. However little the earl could be
+trusted, this was a step likely to throw all Ulster into the arms of
+the Bruces. But a stronger justice of Ireland then superseded Edmund
+Butler. Roger Mortimer of Wigmore, the mightiest baron of the Welsh
+march, and a man of real ability, rare energy, extreme ruthlessness,
+and savage cruelty, crossed over from Haverfordwest early in 1317 at
+the head of a large force of marcher knights and men-at-arms, versed
+from their youth up in the traditions of Celtic warfare. Mortimer set
+himself to work to break up the ill-assorted coalition that supported
+Bruce. He released the Earl of Ulster from his Dublin prison; he
+procured the banishment of the heads of the house of Lacy; he won over
+some of the Irish septs to his side; he stimulated the civil war which
+had devastated Connaught since the fall of the O'Connors. Edward Bruce
+was once more confined to Ulster, where he still struggled on bravely.
+In the autumn of 1318 he led a foray southwards, and met his fate in a
+skirmish near Dundalk on October 14, when his force was scattered in
+confusion by John of Bermingham, one of the neighbouring lords. The
+four quarters of the luckless King of Ireland were exposed in the four
+chief towns of the island as a trophy of victory, and Bermingham was
+rewarded by the new earldom of Louth.
+
+Edward Bruce's enterprise ended with his death, and Ireland rapidly
+settled down into its normal condition of impotent turbulence. Though
+at first sight the invader utterly failed, yet he pricked the bubble of
+the English power in Ireland. His gallant attempt at winning the throne
+is the critical event in a long period of Irish history. From the days
+of Henry III to the days of Edward Bruce, the lordship of the English
+kings in Ireland was to some extent a reality. From 1315 to the reign
+of Henry VIII, the English dominion was little more than a name as
+regards the greater part of Ireland.
+
+No one attained success, in the years after Bannockburn,--neither
+Banaster, nor Llewelyn Bren, nor the Bristol commons nor Edward Bruce
+and his Irish allies. Before long, the incompetence of Lancaster became
+as manifest as the incompetence of Edward II. Lancaster's failure led
+to the dissolution of the baronial opposition into fiercely opposing
+factions. Personal and territorial jealousies slowly undermined a unity
+which had always been more apparent than real. The Earl of Pembroke had
+never forgiven the treachery of Deddington. Though Warwick was dead,
+Pembroke still pursued Lancaster with unrelenting hatred. No partisan
+of prerogative, and an enemy of Edward's personal following, Earl Aymer
+separated himself from his old associates and strove to form a middle
+party between the faction of the king and the faction of Lancaster.
+Warerine, coarse, turbulent, and vicious, at once violent and crafty,
+still acted with him. The lord of Conisborough had long grudged the
+master of Pontefract and Sandal his great position in Yorkshire. The
+natural rivalries of neighbouring potentates were further emphasised by
+personal animosity of the deadliest kind. Lancaster had long been at
+variance with his wife, Alice Lacy. On May 9, 1317, the Countess of
+Lancaster ran away from him, with the active help of Warenne and by the
+secret contrivance of the king. Private war at once broke out between
+the two earls. Lancaster was too strong for his enemy. Before winter
+had begun, Conisborough and Warenne's other Yorkshire castles fell into
+his hands. Lancaster's partisans even laid hold of the king's castle of
+Knaresborough, while other Lancastrian bands occupied Alton castle in
+Staffordshire. Intermittent hostilities continued until the summer of
+1318. Twice Edward himself went to the north, and on one occasion
+appeared in force outside Pontefract. But the more moderate of the
+baronage managed to prevent open hostilities between the king and the
+earl. Lancaster was, as ever, fighting for his own hand. His
+self-seeking narrowness gave Pembroke the chance of winning for his
+middle party a preponderating authority.
+
+Pembroke found more trustworthy allies than Warenne in Bartholomew,
+Lord Badlesmere, the sometime instigator of the Bristol troubles, and a
+bitter opponent of Lancaster, and in Roger of Amory, the husband of one
+of the three co-heiresses who now divided the Gloucester inheritance.
+Edward, who had profited by the divisions of his enemies to revive the
+court party, formed a coalition between his friends and the followers
+of Pembroke. All lovers of order, of moderation, and of the supremacy
+of the law necessarily made common cause with them. Thus it followed
+that the same machinery, which Lancaster a few years earlier had turned
+against the king, was now turned against him. An additional motive to
+bring peaceable Englishmen into line was found in the capture of
+Berwick by Bruce in April, 1318. After this negotiations for peace
+began. The king and Lancaster treated as two independent princes.
+Lancaster was no longer supported by any prominent earl, and even his
+clerical friends were falling from him. Ordainers as jealous as
+Arundel, royalists as fierce as Mortimer, served along with trimmers
+like Pembroke and Badlesmere, in acting as mediators. Lancaster could
+no more resist than Edward could in 1312. On August 9 he accepted at
+Leek, in Staffordshire, the conditions drawn up for him.
+
+The treaty of Leek marks the triumph of the middle party and the
+removal of Lancaster from the first place in the royal council. A
+pardon was granted to him and his followers, but Thomas gained little
+else by the compact. Pembroke and his friends showed themselves as
+jealous of Edward as ever the ordainers had been. The ordinances were
+once more confirmed, and a new council of seventeen was nominated,
+including eight bishops, four earls, four barons, and one banneret. The
+earls were Pembroke, Arundel, Richmond, and Hereford. Of these the
+Breton Earl of Richmond was the most friendly to the king, but it was
+significant to find so truculent a politician as Hereford making common
+cause with Pembroke. The most important of the four barons was Roger
+Mortimer of Wigmore. Lancaster though not paramount was still powerful,
+but his habit of absenting himself from parliaments made it useless to
+offer him a place in the council, and he was represented by a single
+banneret, nominated by him. Of these councillors two bishops, one earl,
+one baron, and Lancaster's nominee were to be in constant attendance.
+They were virtually to control Edward's policy, and to see that he
+consulted parliament in all matters that required its assent. A few
+days after the treaty Edward and Lancaster met at Hathern, near
+Loughborough, and exchanged the kiss of peace. Roger of Amory and other
+magnates of the middle party reconciled themselves to Lancaster, and he
+condescendingly restored them to his favour. But he would not deign to
+admit Hugh Despenser to his presence, and declared that he was still
+free to carry on his quarrel against Warenne. In October, a parliament
+at York confirmed the treaty of Leek, adding new members to the council
+and appointing another commission to reform the king's household. From
+that time until 1321, Pembroke and his friends controlled the English
+state, though often checked both by the king and even more by
+Lancaster, who still stood ostentatiously aloof from parliaments and
+campaigns. These years, though neither glorious nor prosperous, were
+the most peaceable and uneventful of the whole of Edward II.'s reign.
+They are noteworthy for the only serious attempt made to check the
+progress of the Scots after Bannockburn. From 1318 to 1320 king and
+court were almost continually in the north. York became the regular
+meeting-place of parliaments for even a longer period.
+
+Since 1314, the Scots had mercilessly devastated the whole north of
+England. The population made little attempt at resistance, and sought
+to buy them off by large payments of money. The Scots took the cash and
+soon came again for more. They wandered at will over the open country,
+and only the castles and walled towns afforded protection against them.
+Their forays extended as far south as Lancashire and Yorkshire, and, so
+early as 1315, Carlisle and Berwick were regularly besieged by them. It
+was to no purpose that in 1317 the pope issued a bull insisting upon a
+truce. The English welcomed an armistice on any terms, but the Scots'
+interest was in the continuance of the war, and they paid no attention
+to the papal proposal. The result was a renewal of Bruce's
+excommunication, and the placing of all Scotland under interdict. Yet
+no papal censures checked Robert's career or lessened his hold over
+Scotland. Next year he showed greater activity than ever. In April,
+1318, he captured the town of Berwick by treachery. Peter of Spalding,
+one of the English burgesses who formed the town guard, was bribed to
+allow a band of Scots to seize that section of the town wall of which
+he was guardian. Then the intruders captured the gates and admitted
+their comrades. Thus the last Scottish town to be held by the English
+went back to its natural rulers. The English burgesses were expelled,
+though Bruce showed wonderful moderation, and few of his enemies were
+slain. Berwick castle held out for a time, until lack of victuals
+caused its surrender. In May the Scots marched through Northumberland
+and Durham into Yorkshire, burnt Northallerton and Boroughbridge, and
+exacted a thousand marks from Ripon, as the price of respecting the
+church of St. Wilfred. They then spent three days at Knaresborough, and
+made their way home through Craven.
+
+Such successes show clearly enough that the treaty of Leek was not
+signed a moment too soon. It was, however, too late for any great
+effort against the Scots in 1318. A strenuous endeavour was made to
+levy a formidable expedition for 1319. In strict accordance with the
+ordinances, the parliament, which met at York in May of that year,
+agreed that there should be a muster at Berwick for July 22, and
+granted a liberal subsidy. An insolent offer of peace, coupled with a
+promise of freedom of life and limb to Bruce, should he resign his
+crown, provoked from the Scots king the reply that Scotland was his
+kingdom both by hereditary right and the law of arms, and that he was
+indifferent whether he had peace with the English king or not. On July
+22, the feast of St. Mary Magdalen and the anniversary of Falkirk
+fight, the barons assembled at Newcastle. Thomas of Lancaster was there
+with his brother Henry. Warenne, newly reconciled with Lancaster by a
+large surrender of lands, also attended, as did Pembroke, Arundel,
+Hereford, and the husbands of the three Gloucester co-heiresses. There
+was a braver show of earls than even in 1314. An offer of lands, when
+Scotland was conquered, attracted a large number of volunteer infantry,
+while the cupidity of the seamen was appealed to by a promise of ample
+plunder. In August the host and fleet moved northwards, and closely
+beset Berwick.
+
+The Scots were too astute to offer battle. While the English were
+employed at Berwick, Sir James Douglas led their main force into the
+heart of Yorkshire. Douglas hoped to capture Queen Isabella, who was
+staying near York. A spy betrayed this design to the English, and
+Isabella was hurried off by water to Nottingham, while Douglas pressed
+on into the heart of Yorkshire. The Yorkshiremen had to defend their
+own shire while their best soldiers were with the king at Berwick. A
+hastily gathered assembly of improvised warriors flocked into York.
+Archbishop Melton put himself at their head, and the clergy, both
+secular and religious, formed a considerable element in the host. Then
+they marched out against the Scots, and found them at Myton in
+Swaledale. The Scots despised the disorderly mob of squires and
+farmers, priests and canons, monks and friars. "These are not
+warriors," they cried, "but huntsmen. They will do nought against us."
+Concealing their movements by kindling great fires of hay, they bore
+down upon the Yorkshiremen and put them to flight with much loss. The
+fight was called "the white battle of Myton" on account of the large
+number of white-robed monks who took part in it The archbishop escaped
+with the utmost difficulty. Many fugitives were drowned in the Swale,
+and not one would have escaped had not night stopped the Scots'
+pursuit. The victors then pushed as far south as Pontefract. On the
+news of the battle, the besiegers of Berwick were dismayed. There was
+talk of dividing the army, and sending one part to drive Douglas out of
+Yorkshire while the other continued the siege. But the magnates, in no
+mood to run risks, insisted on an immediate return to England. Before
+Edward had reached Yorkshire, Douglas had made his way home over
+Stainmoor and Gilsland. Thereupon the king sent back his troops, each
+man to his own house. The magnificent army had accomplished nothing at
+all. So inglorious a termination of the campaign naturally gave rise to
+suspicions of treason. A story was spread abroad that Lancaster had
+received £4,000 from the King of Scots and had consequently done his
+best to help his ally. The rumour was so seriously believed that the
+earl offered to purge himself by ordeal of hot iron. In despair Edward
+made a two years' truce with the Scots. It was the best way of avoiding
+another Bannockburn.
+
+Troublous times soon began again. Since Edward surrendered himself to
+the guidance of Pembroke and Badlesmere, he had enjoyed comparative
+repose and dignity. It was only when a great enterprise, like the Scots
+campaign, was attempted that the evil results of anarchy and the
+still-abiding influence of Lancaster made themselves felt. But Edward
+bore no love to Pembroke and his associates, and was quietly feeling
+his way towards the re-establishment of the court party. His chief
+helpers in this work were the two Despensers, father and son, both
+named Hugh. The elder Despenser, then nearly sixty years of age, had
+grown grey in the service of Edward I. A baron of competent estate, he
+inherited from his father, the justiciar who fell at Evesham, an
+hereditary bias towards the constitutional tradition, but he looked to
+the monarch or to the popular estates, rather than to the baronage, as
+the best embodiment of his ideals. Ambitious and not over-scrupulous,
+he saw more advantage to himself in playing the game of the king than
+in joining a swarm of quarrelsome opposition lords. From the beginning
+of the reign he had identified himself with Gaveston and the courtiers,
+and had incurred the special wrath of Lancaster and the ordainers.
+Excluded from court, forced into hiding, excepted from several
+pacifications as he had been, Despenser never long absented himself
+from the court. His ambition was kindled by the circumstance that his
+eldest son had become the most intimate personal friend of the king.
+Brought up as a boy in the household of Edward when Prince of Wales,
+the ties of old comradeship gradually drew the younger Hugh into
+Gaveston's old position as the chief favourite. Neither a foreigner nor
+an adventurer, Despenser had the good sense to avoid the worst errors
+of his predecessor. As chamberlain, he was in constant attendance on
+the king; and having married Edward's niece Eleanor, the eldest of the
+Gloucester co-heiresses, he sought to establish himself among the
+higher aristocracy. Royal grants and offices rained upon father and
+son. The household officers were changed at their caprice. The only
+safe way to the king's favour was by purchasing their good-will. Their
+good fortune stirred up fierce animosities, and the barons showed that
+they could hate a renegade as bitterly as a foreign adventurer.
+
+The Despensers' ambition to attain high rank was the more natural from
+the havoc which death had played among the earls. "Time was," said the
+monk of Malmesbury, "when fifteen earls and more followed the king to
+war; but now only five or six gave him their assistance." The five
+earldoms of Thomas of Lancaster meant the extinction of as many ancient
+houses. The earldoms of Chester, Cornwall, and Norfolk had long been in
+the king's hands. If the comital rank was not to be extinguished
+altogether, it had to be recruited with fresh blood. And who were so
+fit to fill up the vacant places as these well-born favourites?
+
+A little had been done under Edward II to remedy the desolation of the
+earldoms. The revival of the earldom of Cornwall in favour of Gaveston
+had not been a happy experiment. But the king's elder half-brother,
+Thomas of Brotherton, invested with the estates and dignities of the
+Bigods, was made earl marshal and Earl of Norfolk. In 1321 the earldom
+of Kent, extinct since the fall of Hubert de Burgh, was revived in
+favour of Edmund of Woodstock, the younger half-brother of the king.
+The titular Scottish earldoms of some English barons, such as the
+Umfraville earls of Angus, kept up the name, if not the state of earls,
+and we have seen the reward of the victor of Dundalk in the creation of
+a new earldom of Louth in Ireland. But there were certain hereditary
+dignities whose suspension seemed unnatural. Conspicuous among these
+was the Gloucester earldom which, from the days of the valiant son of
+Henry I. to the death of the last male Clare at Bannockburn, had played
+a unique part in English history.
+
+Both the Despensers desired to be earls, and the younger Hugh wished
+that the Gloucester earldom should be revived in his favour. Assured of
+the good-will of the king, both had to contend against the jealousy of
+the baronage and the exclusiveness of the existing earls. The younger
+Hugh had also to reckon with his two brothers-in-law, with whom he had
+divided the Clare estates. These were Hugh of Audley, who had married
+Margaret the widow of Gaveston, and Roger of Amory, the husband of
+Elizabeth, the youngest of the Clare sisters. There had been difficulty
+enough in effecting the partition of the Gloucester inheritance among
+the three co-heiresses. In 1317 the division was made, and Despenser had
+become lord of Glamorgan, which politically and strategically was most
+important of all the Gloucester lands.[1] Yet even then, Despenser was
+not satisfied with his position. His rival Audley had been allotted
+Newport and Netherwent, while Amory had been assigned the castle of Usk
+and estates higher up the Usk valley. Annoyed that he should be a lesser
+personage in south Wales than Earl Gilbert had been, Despenser began to
+intrigue against his wife's brothers-in-law. Each of the co-heirs had
+already become deadly rivals. Their hostility was the more keen since
+the three had already taken different sides in English politics.
+Despenser was the soul of the court faction; Amory was the ally of
+Pembroke and Badlesmere, the men of the middle party; and Audley was an
+uncompromising adherent of Thomas of Lancaster. There was every chance
+that each one of the three would have competent backing. To each the
+triumph of his friends meant the prospect of his becoming Earl of
+Gloucester.
+
+ [1] See for this, W.H. Stevenson, _A Letter of the Younger
+ Despenser in 1321_ in _Engl. Hist. Rev._, xii. (1897), 755-61.
+
+Despenser, abler and more restless than the others, and confident in
+the royal favour, was the first to take the aggressive. He wished to
+base his future greatness upon a compact marcher principality in south
+Wales, and to that end not only laid his hands upon the outlying
+possessions of the Clares but coveted the lands of all his weaker
+neighbours. He took advantage of a family arrangement for the
+succession to Gower, to strike the first blow. The English-speaking
+peninsula of Gower, with the castle of Swansea, was still held by a
+junior branch of the decaying house of Braose, whose main marcher
+lordships had been divided a century earlier between the Bohuns and the
+Mortimers. Its spendthrift ruler, William of Braose, was the last male
+of his race. He strove to make what profit he could for himself out of
+his succession, and had for some time been treating with Humphrey of
+Hereford. Gower was immediately to the south-west of Hereford's
+lordship of Brecon. Its acquisition would extend the Bohun lands to the
+sea, and make Earl Humphrey the greatest lord in south Wales. At the
+last moment, however, Braose broke off with him and sought to sell
+Gower to John of Mowbray, the husband of his daughter and heiress. When
+Braose died in 1320, Mowbray took possession of Gower in accordance
+with the "custom of the march". The royal assent had not been asked,
+either for licence to alienate, or for permission to enter upon the
+estate. Despenser coveted Gower for himself. He had already got
+Newport, had he Swansea also he would rule the south coast from the
+Lloughor to the Usk. Accordingly, he declared that the custom of the
+march trenched upon the royal prerogative, and managed that Gower
+should be seized by the king's officers, as a first step towards
+getting it for himself.
+
+Despenser's action provoked extreme indignation among all the marcher
+lords. They denounced the apostate from the cause of his class for
+upsetting the balance of power in the march, and declared that in
+treating a lordship beyond the Wye like a landed estate in England,
+Hugh had, like Edward I., "despised the laws and customs of the march".
+It was easy to form a coalition of all the marcher lords against him.
+The leaders of it were Humphrey of Hereford, Roger Mortimer of Chirk,
+justice of Wales, and his nephew, Roger Mortimer of Wigmore, the head
+of the house, who had overthrown Edward Bruce's monarchy of Ireland. As
+Braose co-heirs their position was unassailable. But every other baron
+had his grievance. John of Mowbray resented the loss of Gower; Henry of
+Lancaster feared for Monmouth and Kidwelly; Audley wished to win back
+Newport, and Amory, Usk. Behind the confederates was Thomas of
+Lancaster himself, eager to regain his lost position of leadership. The
+league at once began to wage war against Despenser in south Wales, and
+approached the court with a demand that he should be banished as a
+traitor.
+
+Edward made his way to Gloucester in March, 1321, and strove to protect
+Despenser and to calm the wild spirits of the marchers. But private war
+had already broken out after the marcher fashion, and the king retired
+without effecting his purpose. Left to themselves the marcher allies
+easily overran the Despenser lands, inherited or usurped. Neither
+Cardiff nor Caerphilly held out long against them: the Welsh
+husbandmen, like the English knights and barons of Glamorgan, were
+hostile to the Despensers. The king could do nothing to help his
+friends. In May, Lancaster formed a league of northern barons in the
+chapter-house of the priory at Pontefract. In June, another northern
+gathering was held in the Norman nave of the parish church of
+Sherburn-in-Elmet, a few miles to the north of Pontefract. This was
+attended by the Archbishop of York and two of his suffragans, and a
+great number of clergy, secular and regular, as well as by many barons
+and knights. It was in fact an informal parliament of the Lancastrian
+party. A long list of complaints were drawn up which, under fair words,
+demanded the removal of bad ministers, and among them the chamberlain.
+The clerical members of the conference met separately at the rectory,
+where they showed more circumspection, but an equally partisan bias.[1]
+
+ [1] Bp. Stubbs works all this out, _Chron. Ed. I. and II_.,
+ ii., pref., lxxxvi.-xc.
+
+The conferences at Pontefract and Sherburn showed that Lancaster and
+the northerners were in full sympathy with the men of the west. The
+middle party again made common cause with the followers of Lancaster.
+Amory's interests were sufficiently involved to make him an eager enemy
+of Despenser, and Badlesmere was almost as keen. Though Pembroke still
+professed to mediate, it was generally believed that he was delighted
+to get rid of the Despensers. Even Warenne took sides against them,
+though the discredited earl was fast becoming of no account. Such being
+the drift of opinion, the fate of the favourites was settled when the
+estates assembled in London in July. Edward had delayed a meeting of
+parliament as long as he could, and was helpless in its hands. Great
+pains were taken this time to prevent the repetition of the
+informalities which had attended the attack on Gaveston. There was an
+unprecedented gathering of magnates, who came to the parliament with a
+large armed following, encamped like an army in all the villages to the
+north of the city. The commons were fully represented, and the clerical
+estate was expressly summoned. Articles were at once drawn up against
+the Despensers. They had aspired to royal power; had turned the heart
+of the king from his subjects; had excited civil war, and had taught
+that obedience was due to the crown rather than to the king. This last
+charge came strangely from those who had urged that doctrine as a
+pretext for withdrawing support from Gaveston. It is a good
+illustration of the tendency of the Despensers to cloak their personal
+ambitions with loud-sounding constitutional phrases.
+
+The peers pronounced sentence of banishment and forfeiture against both
+the elder and the younger Hugh. They were not to be recalled save by
+consent of the peers in parliament assembled. The easy revolution was
+completed by the issuing of pardons to nearly five hundred members of
+the triumphant coalition. The elder Despenser at once withdrew to the
+continent. The younger Hugh found friends among the mariners of the
+Cinque Ports. These at first protected him in England, and then put at
+his disposal a little fleet of vessels with which, when driven from the
+land, he took to piracy in the narrow seas.
+
+The fall of the Despensers was brought about very much after the same
+fashion as the first exile of Gaveston. Like Gaveston, they speedily
+returned, and in circumstances which suggest an even closer parallel
+with the events that led to the recall of the Gascon. The triumphant
+coalition in each case fell to pieces as soon as it had done its
+immediate work. Once more the loss of his friend and comrade stirred up
+Edward to an energy and perseverance such as he never displayed on
+other occasions. But the second triumph of the king assumed a more
+complete character than his earlier snatched victory. Accident favoured
+Edward's design of bringing back his favourites, and throwing off once
+more the baronial thraldom. On October 13, 1321, Queen Isabella, on her
+way to Canterbury, claimed hospitality at Leeds castle, situated
+between Maidstone and the archiepiscopal city. The castle belonged to
+Badlesmere, whose wife was then residing there, with his kinsman,
+Bartholomew Burghersh, and a competent garrison. Lady Badlesmere
+refused to admit the queen, declaring that, without her lord's orders,
+she could not venture to entertain any one. Bitterly indignant at the
+insult, the queen took up her quarters in the neighbouring priory and
+attempted to force an entrance. The castle, however, was not to be
+taken by the hasty attack of a small company. Six of Isabella's
+followers were slain, and the attempt was abandoned. Isabella called
+upon her husband to avenge her; and the king at once resolved to
+capture Leeds castle at any cost, and prepared to undertake the
+enterprise in person. He offered high wages to all crossbowmen,
+archers, knights, and squires who would follow him to Leeds, and
+summoned the levies of horse and foot from the towns and shires of the
+south-east. His trust in the loyalty of his subjects met with an
+unexpectedly favourable response. In a few days a large army gathered
+round the king under the walls of Leeds. Among the many magnates who
+appeared among the royal following were six earls: Pembroke,
+Badlesmere's own associate; the king's two brothers, Norfolk and Kent;
+Warenne, Richmond, and Arundel, who as Despenser's kinsman felt himself
+bound to fight on his side. On October 23 the castle was closely
+besieged by this overwhelming force, and on October 31 was forced to
+surrender. Burghersh was shut up in the Tower and Lady Badlesmere in
+Dover castle. Thirteen of the garrison, "stout men and valiant," were
+hanged by the angry king.
+
+During the siege of Leeds, the magnates of the march, headed by
+Hereford and Roger Mortimer, collected a force at Kingston-on-Thames,
+where they were joined by Badlesmere. But they dared not advance
+towards the relief of the Kentish castle, and, after a fortnight they
+dispersed to their own homes. Lancaster hated Badlesmere so bitterly
+that he made no move against the king, and sullenly bided his time in
+the north. His inaction paralysed the barons as effectively as in
+earlier days it had hindered the plans of the king. Flushed with his
+victory, Edward gradually unfolded his designs. His tool, Archbishop
+Reynolds, summoned a convocation of the southern province for December
+1 at St. Paul's, and obtained from the assembled clergy the opinion
+that the proceedings against the Despensers were invalid. On January 1,
+1322, Reynolds solemnly declared this sentence in St. Paul's. Edward
+did not wait for the archbishop. Attended by many of the warriors who
+had fought at Leeds, he marched to the west, occupying on his journey
+the lands and castles of his enemies. He kept his Christmas court at
+Cirencester, and thence advanced towards the Severn. As the inaction of
+Lancaster kept the northern barons quiet, Edward's sole task was to
+wreak his revenge on the marcher lords. They were unprepared for
+resistance, and waited in vain for Lancaster to come to their help.
+Without a leader, they made feeble and ill-devised efforts to oppose
+the king's advance. Their command of the few bridges over the Severn
+prevented the king from crossing the river, and leading his troops
+directly into the march. Foiled at Gloucester, Worcester, and
+Bridgnorth, Edward made his way up the stream to Shrewsbury. The two
+Mortimers, who held the town and the passage of the river, could have
+stopped him if they had chosen. But they feared to undertake strong
+measures while Lancaster's action remained uncertain. They suffered
+Edward to cross the stream and surrendered to him. The collapse of the
+fiercest of the marcher lords frightened the rest into surrender.
+Edward wandered back through the middle and southern marches, occupying
+without resistance the main strongholds of his enemies. At Hereford, he
+sharply rebuked the bishop for upholding the barons against their
+natural lord. At Berkeley, he received from Maurice of Berkeley the
+keys of the stately fortress which was so soon to be the place of his
+last humiliation. Early in February, he was back at Gloucester, where,
+on February 11, he recalled the Despensers.
+
+Humphrey of Hereford, Roger of Amory, and a few other marchers managed
+to escape the king's pursuit, and rode northwards to join Thomas of
+Lancaster. Thomas had long been ready at Pontefract with his followers
+in arms. But he let the time for effective action slip, and was only
+goaded into doing anything when the fugitives from the march impressed
+him with the critical state of affairs. The quarrel of king and barons
+was not the only trouble besetting England. The two years' truce with
+Scotland had expired, and Robert Bruce was once more devastating the
+northern counties. But neither Edward nor Lancaster cared anything for
+this. Andrew Harclay, the governor of Carlisle, strongly urged the king
+to defend his subjects from the Scots rather than make war against
+them. Edward answered that rebels must be put down before foreign
+enemies could be encountered, and pressed northwards with his
+victorious troops.
+
+Lancaster was then besieging Tickhill, a royal castle in southern
+Yorkshire. After wasting three weeks before its walls, he led his force
+south to Burton-on-Trent, which he occupied on March 10. Edward soon
+approached the Trent on his northward march. The barons thereupon lost
+courage, and, abandoning the defence of the passage over the river, fled
+northwards to Pontefract, the centre of Lancaster's power in Yorkshire.
+Edward advanced against them, taking on his road Lancaster's castle of
+Tutbury, where Roger of Amory was captured, mortally wounded. The
+Lancastrians were panic-stricken. They fled from Pontefract as they had
+fled from Burton, retreating northwards, probably simply to avoid the
+king, possibly to join hands with Robert Bruce. On March 16 the
+fugitives reached Boroughbridge, on the south bank of the Ure, where a
+long narrow bridge, hardly wide enough for horsemen in martial array,
+crossed the stream. The north bank of the river, and the approaches to
+the bridge, were held in force by the levies of Cumberland and
+Westmoreland which Barclay had summoned at the king's request, in order
+to prevent a junction between the Lancastrians and the Scots. Barclay
+was a brave and capable commander and had well learnt the lessons of
+Scottish warfare.[1] He dismounted all his knights and men-at-arms, and
+arranged them on the northern side of the river, along with some of his
+pikemen. The rest of the pikemen he ordered to form a "schiltron" after
+the Scottish fashion, so that their close formation might resist the
+cavalry of which the Lancastrian force consisted. He bade his archers
+shoot swiftly and continually at the enemy.
+
+ [1] For the tactics of Boroughbridge see _Engl. Hist. Review_,
+ xix. (1904), 711-13.
+
+Seeing this disposition of the hostile force, the Lancastrian army
+divided. One band, under Hereford and Roger Clifford, dismounted and
+made for the bridge, which was defended by the schiltron of pikemen.
+The rest of the men-at-arms remained on horseback and followed
+Lancaster, to a ford near the bridge, whence, by crossing the water,
+they could take the schiltron in flank. Neither movement succeeded.
+Hereford and Clifford advanced, each with one attendant, to the bridge.
+No sooner had the earl entered upon the wooden structure than he was
+slain by a Welsh spearman, who had hidden himself under it, and aimed a
+blow at Humphrey through the planking. Clifford was severely wounded,
+and escaped with difficulty. Discouraged by the loss of their leaders,
+the rest of the troops made only a feeble effort to force the passage.
+The same evil fortune attended the division that followed Lancaster.
+The archers of Harclay obeyed his orders so well that the Lancastrian
+cavalry scarcely dared enter the water. Lancaster lost his nerve, and
+besought Harclay for a truce until the next morning. His request was
+granted, but during the night all the followers of Hereford dispersed,
+thinking that there was no need for them to remain after the death of
+their lord. Lancaster's own troops were likewise thinned by desertions.
+The sheriff of York came up early in the morning with an armed force
+from the south, joined Harclay, and cut off the last hope of retreat.
+Further resistance being useless, Lancaster, Audley, Clifford, Mowbray,
+and the other leaders surrendered in a body.
+
+Edward was then at Pontefract in the chief castle of his deadliest
+enemy. Thither the prisoners of Boroughbridge were sent for their
+trial, and there they were hastily condemned by a body of seven earls
+and numerous barons, presided over by the king himself. Lancaster, not
+allowed to say a word in his defence, was at once sentenced to death as
+a rebel and a traitor. In consideration of his exalted rank, the
+grosser penalties of treason were commuted, as in the case of Gaveston,
+to simple decapitation. On the morning of March 22 Thomas was led out
+of his castle, clad in the garb of a penitent and mounted on a sorry
+steed. He was conducted to a little hill outside the walls. The crowd
+mocked at his sufferings and in scorn called him "King Arthur". In two
+or three blows of the axe, his head was struck off from his body. Nor
+was he the only victim. Audley, spared his life by reason of his
+marriage to the king's niece, was, like the two Mortimers, consigned to
+prison. Clifford and Mowbray were hanged at York, and Badlesmere at
+Canterbury. In all, more than twenty knights and barons paid the
+penalty of death.
+
+It is hard to waste much pity on Lancaster. He was the victim of his
+own fierce passions and, still more, of his own utter incompetence. His
+attitude all through the crisis had been inept in the extreme, and the
+poor fight that he made for his life at Boroughbridge was a fitting
+conclusion to a feeble career. But with all his faults he remained
+popular to the end, especially with the clergy and commons. He was
+hailed as a martyr to freedom and sound government. Pilgrimages were
+made to the scene of his death, and miracles were wrought with his
+relics. A chapel arose on the little hill dedicated to his worship, and
+a loud cry arose for his canonisation. The abuse made by his enemies of
+their victory only strengthened his reputation among the people. The
+tragedy of his fall appealed to the rude sympathies of the
+north-countrymen, and the merit of the cause atoned in their minds for
+the weakness of the man.
+
+A parliament met at York on May 2, where the triumph of the king
+received its consummation. The Despensers had more advanced
+constitutional ideas than Lancaster, and pains were taken that this
+parliament should completely represent the three estates. It was a
+novel feature that twelve representatives of the commons of north Wales
+and twelve of the commons of south Wales attended, on this occasion, to
+speak on behalf of the region where the troubles had first begun. With
+the full approval of the estates, the ordinances were solemnly revoked,
+as infringing the rights of the crown. The important principle was laid
+down that "matters which are to be established for the estate of the
+king and for the estate of the realm shall be treated, accorded, and
+established in parliament by the king and by the council of the
+prelates, earls, and barons, and the commonalty of the realm". Thus,
+while the repeal of the ordinances seemed based upon their infringement
+of the royal prerogative, it was at least implied that they were also
+invalid because they were the work of a council of barons only, and not
+of a full parliament of the estates. This declaration of the necessity
+of popular co-operation in valid legislation is the most important
+constitutional advance of the reign of Edward II. It is a significant
+comment on the limitations of the baronial opposition that the
+ordinances should be the last great English law in the passing of which
+the commons were not consulted, and that a royalist triumph should be
+the occasion of the declaration of a vital principle.
+
+The king's friends then received their rewards. Harclay was made Earl
+of Carlisle and the elder Despenser became Earl of Winchester. Fear of
+the marcher lords, even in their prison, withheld from the younger Hugh
+the title, though hardly the authority, of Earl of Gloucester. In other
+ways also the Despensers were anxious to prevent their victory
+suggesting too much of a reaction. Before parliament separated, it
+adopted a new series of ordinances confirming the Great Charter and
+re-enacting in more constitutional fashion some portions of the laws of
+1312, which aimed at protecting the subject and strengthening the
+administration. Grants of men and money were made to fight the Scots,
+and once more the new customs were allowed to swell the royal revenue.
+Thus the revolution was completed. Edward, Gaveston, Lancaster, and
+Pembroke had each in their turn been tried and found wanting. Thanks to
+the jealousies of the barons, his own spasmodic energy, and the
+acuteness of the Despensers, Edward was still to have another chance,
+under the guidance of his new friends. We shall see how the restored
+rule of the Despensers was blighted by the same incompetence and
+selfishness which had ruined their predecessors in power. The triumph
+of the Despensers proved but the first act in the tragic fall of Edward
+II.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE FALL OF EDWARD II. AND THE RULE OF ISABELLA AND MORTIMER.
+
+
+During the deliberations of the parliament of York, the truce with
+Bruce expired, and forthwith came the news that the Scots had once more
+crossed the border. On this occasion Bruce raided the country from
+Carlisle to Preston, burning every open town on his way, though sparing
+most of the religious houses. At Cartmel, Lancaster, and Preston,
+favoured monastic buildings alone stood entire amidst the desolation
+wrought by the Scots. No effective opposition was offered to them, and
+after a three weeks' foray, they recrossed the Solway.
+
+As in 1314 and 1318, the restoration of order was followed by an
+attempt to put down Bruce. In August, 1322, Edward assembled his forces
+at Newcastle and invaded Scotland. Berwick was unsuccessfully besieged
+and the Lothians laid waste. The Scots still had the prudence to
+withdraw beyond the Forth, and avoid battle in the open field. By the
+beginning of September, pestilence and famine had done their work on
+the invaders. Unable to find support in the desolate fields of Lothian,
+the, English returned to their own land, having accomplished nothing.
+The Scots followed on their tracks, but with such secrecy that they
+penetrated into the heart of Yorkshire before Edward was aware of their
+presence. In October they suddenly swooped down on the king, when he
+was staying at Byland abbey. Some troops which accompanied him were
+encamped on a hill between Byland and Rievaux. They were attacked by
+the Scots and defeated; their leader, John of Brittany, was taken
+prisoner, and Edward only avoided capture by a precipitate flight from
+Byland to Bridlington. All Yorkshire was reduced to abject terror, and
+Edward's hosts, the canons of Bridlington, removed with all their
+valuables to Lincolnshire, and sent one of their number to Bruce at
+Malton to purchase immunity for their estates. After a month the Scots
+went home, leaving famine, pestilence, and misery in their train. The
+Despensers thus proved themselves not less incompetent to defend
+England than Thomas of Lancaster.
+
+As the state afforded no protection, each private person had to make
+the best terms he could for himself. Even the king's favourite, Louis
+of Beaumont, the illiterate Bishop of Durham, entered into negotiations
+with the Scots, while the Archbishop of York issued formal permission
+to religious houses of his diocese to treat with the excommunicated
+followers of Bruce. Not only timid ecclesiastics, but well-tried
+soldiers found in private dealings with the Scots the only remedy for
+their troubles. After the Byland surprise, Harclay, the new Earl of
+Carlisle, the victor of Boroughbridge, and the warden of the marches,
+dismissed his troops, sought out Bruce at Lochmaben, and made an
+arrangement with him, by which it was resolved that a committee of six
+English and six Scottish magnates should be empowered to conclude peace
+between the two countries on the basis of recognising him as King of
+Scots. There was great alarm at court when Harclay's treason was known.
+A Cumberland baron, Anthony Lucy, was instructed to apprehend the
+culprit, and forcing his way into Carlisle castle by a stratagem,
+captured the earl with little difficulty. In March, 1323, Harclay
+suffered the terrible doom of treason. He justified his action to the
+last, declaring that his only motive was a desire to procure peace, and
+convincing many of the north-countrymen of the innocence of his
+motives. To such a pass had England been reduced that those who
+honestly desired that the farmers of 'Cumberland should once more till
+their fields in peace, saw no other means of gaining their end than by
+communication with the enemies of their country.
+
+The disgrace of Byland and the tragedy of Carlisle showed that it was
+idle to pretend to fight the Scots any longer. Negotiations for peace
+were entered upon; Pembroke and the younger Despenser being the chief
+English commissioners. Peace was found impossible, as English pride
+still refused to recognise the royal title of King Robert, but a
+thirteen years' truce was arranged without any difficulty. This treaty
+of 1323 practically concluded the Scottish war of independence. Bruce
+then easily obtained papal recognition of his title, though English
+ill-will long stood in the way of the remission of his sentence of
+excommunication. His martial career, however, was past, and he could
+devote his declining years to the consolidation of his kingdom and the
+restoration of its material prosperity. He reorganised the national
+army, built up a new nobility by distributing among his faithful
+followers the estates of the obstinate friends of England, and first
+called upon the royal burghs of Scotland to send representatives to the
+Scottish parliament. He had made Scotland a nation, and nobly redeemed
+the tergiversation and violence of his earlier career.
+
+Among Harclay's motives for treating with the Scots had been his
+distrust of the Despensers. As generals against the Scots and as
+administrators of England, they manifested an equal incapacity. Their
+greed and insolence revived the old enmities, and they proved strangely
+lacking in resolution to grapple with emergencies. Nevertheless they
+ruled over England for nearly five years in comparative peace. This
+period, unmarked by striking events, is, however, evidence of the
+exhaustion of the country rather than of the capacity of the Earl of
+Winchester and the lord of Glamorgan. The details of the history bear
+witness to the relaxation of the reins of government, the prevalence of
+riot and petty rebellion, the sordid personal struggles for place and
+power, the weakness which could neither collect the taxes, enforce
+obedience to the law, nor even save from humiliation the most trusted
+agents of the government.
+
+The Despensers' continuance in power rested more on the absence of
+rivals than on their own capacity. The strongest of the royalist earls,
+Aymer of Pembroke, died in 1324. As he left no issue, his earldom
+swelled the alarmingly long roll of lapsed dignities. None of the few
+remaining earls could step into his place, nor give Edward the wise
+counsel which the creator of the middle party had always provided.
+Warenne was brutal, profligate, unstable, and distrusted; Arundel had
+no great influence; Richmond was a foreigner, and of little personal
+weight, and the successors of Humphrey of Hereford and Guy of Warwick
+were minors, suspected by reason of their fathers' treasons. The only
+new earl was Henry of Lancaster, who in 1324 obtained a partial
+restitution of his brother's estates and the title of Earl of
+Leicester. Prudent, moderate, and high-minded, Henry stood in strong
+contrast to his more famous brother. But the tragedy of Pontefract and
+his unsatisfied claim on the Lancaster earldom stood between Henry and
+the government, and the imprudence of the Despensers soon utterly
+estranged him from the king, though he was the last man to indulge in
+indiscriminate opposition, and Edward dared not push his powerful
+cousin to extremities. In these circumstances, the king had no wise or
+strong advisers whose influence might counteract the Despensers. His
+loneliness and isolation made him increasingly dependent upon the
+favourites.
+
+The older nobles were already alienated, when the Despensers provoked a
+quarrel with the queen. Isabella was a woman of strong character and
+violent passions, with the lack of morals and scruples which might have
+been expected from a girlhood passed amidst the domestic scandals of
+her father's household. She resented her want of influence over her
+husband, and hated the Despensers because of their superior power with
+him. The favourites met her hostility by an open declaration of
+warfare. In 1324 the king deprived her of her separate estate, drove
+her favourite servants from court, and put her on an allowance of a
+pound a day. The wife of the younger Hugh, her husband's niece, was
+deputed to watch her, and she could not even write a letter without the
+Lady Despenser's knowledge. Isabella bitterly chafed under her
+humiliation. She was, she declared, treated like a maidservant and made
+the hireling of the Despensers. Finding, however, that nothing was to
+be gained by complaints, she prudently dissembled her wrath and waited
+patiently for revenge.
+
+The Despensers' chief helpers were among the clergy. Conspicuous among
+them were Walter Stapledon, Bishop of Exeter, the treasurer, and Robert
+Baldock, the chancellor. The records of Stapledon's magnificence
+survive in the nave of his cathedral church, and in Exeter College,
+Oxford; but the great builder and pious founder was a worldly, greedy,
+and corrupt public minister. So unpopular was he that, in 1325, it was
+thought wise to remove him from office. Thereupon another building
+prelate, William Melton, Archbishop of York, whose piety and charity
+long intercourse with courtiers had not extinguished, abandoned his
+northern flock for London and the treasury. But the best of officials
+could do little to help the unthrifty king. Edward was so poorly
+respected that he could not even obtain a bishopric for his chancellor.
+On two occasions the envoys sent to Avignon, to urge Baldock's claims
+on vacant sees, secured for themselves the mitre destined for the
+minister. In this way John Stratford became Bishop of Winchester and
+William Ayermine, Bishop of Norwich. Edward had not even the spirit to
+show manifest disfavour to these self-seeking prelates, but his
+inaction was so clearly the result of weakness that it involved no
+gratitude, and the two bishops secretly hated the ruling clique, as
+likely to do them an evil turn if it dared. Nor were the older prelates
+better contented or more loyal. The primate Reynolds was deeply
+irritated by Melton's appointment as treasurer. Burghersh, the Bishop
+of Lincoln, was a nephew of Badlesmere, and anxious to avenge his
+uncle. Adam Orleton, Bishop of Hereford, was a dependant of the
+Mortimers, who took his surname from one of their Herefordshire manors.
+Forgiven for his share in the revolt of 1322, he cleverly contrived in
+1324 the escape of his patron, Roger Mortimer of Wigmore, from the
+Tower. The marcher made his way to France, but his ally felt the full
+force of the king's wrath. He was deprived of his temporalities, and,
+when the Church spread her ægis over him, the court procured the
+verdict of a Herefordshire jury against him. Thus the impolicy of the
+crown combined the selfish worldling with the zealot for the Church in
+a common opposition. Like Isabella, Orleton bided his time, and Edward
+feared to complete his disgrace.
+
+In such ways the king and the Despensers proclaimed their incapacity to
+the world. The Scottish truce, the wrongs of Henry of Lancaster, the
+humiliation of the queen, the alienation of the old nobles, the fears
+of greedy prelates,--each of these was remembered against them.
+Gradually every order of the community became disgusted. The feeble
+efforts of Edward to conciliate the Londoners met with little response.
+Weak rule and the insecurity of life and property turned away the heart
+of the commons from the king. It was no wonder that men went on
+pilgrimage to the little hill outside Pontefract, where Earl Thomas had
+met his doom, or that rumours spread that the king was a changeling and
+no true son of the great Edward. But though the power of the king and
+the Despensers was thoroughly undermined, the absence of leaders and
+the general want of public spirit still delayed the day of reckoning.
+At last, the threatening outlook beyond the Channel indirectly
+precipitated the crisis.
+
+The relations of France and England remained uneasy, despite the
+marriage of two English kings in succession to ladies of the Capetian
+house. The union of Edward I. and Margaret of France had not done much
+to help the settlement of the disputed points in the interpretation of
+the treaty of Paris of 1303, and the match between Edward II and his
+stepmother's niece had been equally ineffective. The restoration of
+Gascony in 1303 had never been completed, and in the very year of the
+treaty a decree of the parliament of Paris had withdrawn the homage of
+the county of Bigorre from the English duke. Within the ceded
+districts, the conflict of the jurisdictions of king and duke became
+increasingly accentuated. Having failed to hold Gascony by force of
+arms, Philip the Fair aspired to conquer it by the old process of
+stealthily undermining the traditional authority of the duke. Appeals
+to Paris became more and more numerous. The agents of the king wandered
+at will through Edward's Gascon possessions, and punished all loyalty
+to the lawful duke by dragging the culprits before their master's
+courts. The ineptitude which characterised all Edward's subordinates
+was particularly conspicuous among his Gascon seneschals and their
+subordinates. While the English king's servants drifted on from day to
+day, timid, without policy, and without direction, the agents of
+France, well trained, energetic, and determined, knew their own minds
+and gradually brought about the end which they had clearly set before
+themselves. In vain did bitter complaints arise of the aggressions of
+the officers of Philip. It was to no purpose that conferences were
+held, protocols drawn up, and much time and ink wasted in discussing
+trivialities. Neither Edward nor Philip wished to push matters to
+extremities. To the former the policy of drift was always congenial.
+The latter was content to wait until the pear was ripe. It seemed that
+in a few more years Gascony would become as thoroughly subject to the
+French crown as Champagne or Normandy.
+
+Philip the Fair died in 1314, and was followed in rapid succession by
+his three sons. The first of these, Louis X., had, like Edward II., to
+contend against an aristocratic reaction, and died in 1316, before he
+could even receive the homage of his brother-in-law. A king of more
+energy than Edward might have profited by the difficult situation which
+followed Louis' death. For a time there was neither pope, nor emperor,
+nor King of France. But Philip V. mounted the French throne when his
+brother's widow had given birth to a daughter, and continued the policy
+of his predecessors with regard to Gascony. Again the disputes between
+Norman and Gascon sailors threatened, as in 1293, to bring about a
+rupture. The ever-increasing aggressions of the suzerain culminated in
+summoning Edward's own seneschal of Saintonge to appear before the
+French king's court. Edward neglected to do homage, alleging his
+preoccupation in the Scottish war and similar excuses. But the
+threatened danger soon passed away, for again the interests and fears
+of both parties postponed the conflict. In avoiding any alliance with
+the Scots, the French king showed a self-restraint for which Edward
+could not but be grateful. In 1320 Edward performed in person his
+long-delayed homage at Amiens, though his grievances against his
+brother-in-law still remained unredressed. In 1322 the death of Philip
+V. renewed the troublesome homage question in a more acute form.[1]
+
+ [1] For the relations of Edward II. and Philip V. see Lehugeur,
+ _Hist. de Philippe le Long_, pp. 240-66 (1897).
+
+The obligation of performing homage to a rival prince weighed with
+increasing severity on the English kings at each rapid change of
+occupants of the throne of France. The same pretexts were again brought
+forward, as sufficient reasons for postponing or evading the unpleasant
+duly. But before the question was settled a new source of trouble arose
+in the affair of Saint-Sardos, which soon plunged the two countries into
+open war. The lord of Montpezat, a vassal of the Duke of Gascony, built
+a _bastide_ at Saint-Sardos upon a site which he declared was held by
+himself of the duke, but which the French officials claimed as belonging
+to Charles IV. The dispute was taken before the parliament of Paris,
+which decided that the new town belonged to the King of France.
+Thereupon a royal force promptly took possession of it. Irritated at
+this high-handed action, the lord of Montpezat invoked the aid of
+Edward's seneschal of Gascony, who attacked and destroyed the _bastide_
+and massacred the French garrison.[1] The answer of Charles the Fair to
+this aggression was decisive. Gascony was pronounced sequestrated and
+Charles of Valois, the veteran uncle of the king, was ordered to enforce
+the sentence at the head of an imposing army.
+
+ [1] See for this affair Bréquigny, _Mémoire sur les différends
+ entre la France et l'Angleterre sous Charles le Bel, in Mém. de
+ l'Acad. des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres_, xli. (1780), pp.
+ 641-92. M. Déprez is about to publish a Chancery Roll of Edward
+ II. which includes all the official acts relating to it.
+
+Thus, in the summer of 1324 England and France were once more at war.
+But while England remonstrated and negotiated, France acted. Norman
+corsairs swept the Channel and pillaged the English coasts. Ponthieu
+yielded without resistance. Early in August, Charles of Valois entered
+the Agenais, and on the 15th Agen opened its gates. The victorious
+French soon appeared before La Réole, where alone they encountered real
+resistance. Edmund, Earl of Kent, who had made vain attempts to procure
+peace at Paris, had been sent in July to act as lieutenant of
+Aquitaine. He had not sufficient force at his command to venture to
+meet the Count of Valois in the open field, and threw himself into La
+Réole. The rocky height, crowned with a triple wall, and looking down
+on the vineyards and cornfields of the Garonne, defied for weeks the
+skill of the eminent Lorrainer engineers who directed Charles of
+Valois' siege train. But when Charles announced to Edmund that he would
+carry the town by assault, if not surrendered within four days, the
+timid earl signed a truce from September to Easter, and was allowed to
+withdraw to Bordeaux. A mere fringe of coast-land still remained
+faithful to the English duke, when Charles of Valois went back to
+Paris, having victoriously terminated his long and chequered career.
+Before the end of 1325 he died.[1]
+
+ [1] Petit, _Charles de Valois_, pp. 207-15 (1900), gives the
+ fullest modern account of these transactions.
+
+The truce involved a renewal of the negotiations. Bishop Stratford and
+William Ayermine, the astute chancery clerk, were commissioned in
+November, 1324, to treat with the French, but made little progress in
+their delicate task. At this stage Isabella, inspired probably by Adam
+Orleton, came forward with a proposal. She besought her husband to
+allow her to visit her brother, the French king, and use her influence
+with him to procure peace and the restitution of Gascony. With the
+strange infatuation which marked all the acts of Edward and his
+favourites, Isabella's proposal was adopted, and in March, 1325, the
+queen crossed the Channel and made her way to her brother's court. The
+summer was consumed in negotiating a treaty, by which Edward's French
+fiefs were to be restored to him in their integrity, as soon as he had
+performed homage to the new king. Meanwhile the English garrison of
+Gascony was to withdraw to Bayonne, leaving the rest of the duchy in
+the hands of a French seneschal. Edward agreed to these terms, and put
+Gascony into Charles's hands. He was still unwilling to compromise his
+dignity by performing homage, while the Despensers were mortally afraid
+of his going to France, lest it should remove him from their influence.
+Isabella then made a second suggestion. She persuaded her brother to
+excuse the personal homage of her husband, if Edward would invest his
+young son, Edward, with Gascony and Ponthieu, and send him in his stead
+to tender his feudal duly. This also was agreed to by the English king,
+and in September the young prince, then about thirteen years old, was
+appointed Duke of Aquitaine and Count of Ponthieu, and despatched to
+join his mother at Paris, where he performed homage to his uncle.
+
+It was expected that Gascony and Ponthieu would then be restored, and
+that the queen and her son would return to England. But Charles IV.
+perpetrated a clever piece of trickery which showed how far off a real
+settlement still was. He "restored" to Edward those parts of Gascony
+which had been peacefully surrendered to him in the summer, and
+announced that he should keep the Agenais and La Réole, as belonging to
+France by right of Charles of Valois' recent conquest. Bitterly
+mortified at this treachery, Edward took upon himself the title of
+"governor and administrator of his firstborn, Edward, Duke of
+Aquitaine, and of his estates". By this technical subtlety, he thought
+himself entitled to resume the control of the ceded districts and
+resist the attack which was bound to follow hard upon the new breach.
+Once more Charles IV. pronounced the sequestration of the duchy, and
+despite Edward's efforts, his power crumbled away before the peaceful
+advent of the French troops, charged with the execution of their
+master's edict.
+
+Long before the last Gascon castles had opened their gates to Charles's
+officers, new developments at Paris made the question of Aquitaine a
+subordinate matter. Despite the breach of the negotiations, Isabella
+and her son still tarried at the French court. In answer to Edward's
+requests for their return, she sent back excuse after excuse, till his
+patience was fairly exhausted. At last, on December 1, 1325, Edward
+peremptorily ordered his wife to return home, and warned her not to
+consort with certain English traitors in the French court. The Duke of
+Aquitaine was similarly exhorted to return, with his mother if he
+could, but if not, without her. The reference to English traitors shows
+that Edward was aware that Isabella had already formed that close
+relation with the exiled lord of Wigmore which soon ripened into an
+adulterous connexion. Inspired by Roger Mortimer, Isabella declared
+that she was in peril of her life from the malice of the Despensers,
+and would never go back to her husband as long as the favourites
+retained power. A band of the exiles of 1322 gathered round her and her
+paramour, and sought to bring about their restoration as champions of
+the loudly expressed grievances of the queen, and the rights of her
+young son. The king's ambassadors at Paris, Stratford and Ayermine,
+recently made Bishop of Norwich by a papal provision which ignored the
+election of Robert Baldock the chancellor, united themselves with the
+queen and the fugitive marcher. With them, too, was associated Edmund
+of Kent, who was allowed by the treaty to return from Gascony through
+France. Bishop Stapledon, who had accompanied the queen to France, was
+so alarmed at the turn events were taking, that he fled in disguise to
+reveal his suspicions to the king. Thus England, already exposed to a
+danger of a French war, was threatened with the forcible overthrow of
+the Despensers and the reinstatement of Isabella by armed invaders.
+
+By the spring of 1326 the scandalous relations of Isabella and Mortimer
+were notorious all over England and France. Charles IV. grew disgusted
+at his sister's doings, and gave no countenance to her schemes.
+Isabella accordingly withdrew from Paris with her son and her paramour,
+and made her way to the Netherlands. There she found refuge in the
+county of Hainault, whose lord, William II, of Avesnes, was won over to
+support her by a contract to marry the Duke of Aquitaine to his
+daughter Philippa. A large advance from Philippa's marriage portion was
+employed in hiring a troop of knights and squires of Hainault and
+Holland. John of Hainault, brother of the count, took joint command of
+this band with Roger Mortimer. The ports of Holland and Zealand, both
+of which counties were united with Hainault under William II.'s rule,
+offered ample facilities for their embarkation.
+
+On September 23, 1326, the queen and her followers took ship at
+Dordrecht in Holland. Next day the fleet cast anchor in the port of
+Orwell, and that same day the expedition was landed and marched to
+Walton, where it spent the first night on English soil. The gentry of
+Suffolk and Essex flocked to the standard of the queen, who declared
+that she had come to avenge the wrongs of Earl Thomas of Lancaster and
+to drive the Despensers from power. Thomas of Brotherton, the earl
+marshal, made common cause with the invaders, and Henry, Earl of
+Leicester, hastened to associate himself with the champions of his
+martyred brother. A great force of native Englishmen swelled the
+queen's host, and reduced to insignificance the little band of
+Hainaulters and Hollanders. There was no resistance. Isabella marched
+to Bury St. Edmunds, "as if on a pilgrimage," and thence to Cambridge,
+where she tarried several days with the canons of Barnwell. From
+Cambridge she moved on to Baldock, where she despoiled the chancellor's
+manors and took his brother captive. At Dunstable, her next halt, she
+was on a great highway, within thirty-three miles of London.
+
+On hearing of his wife's landing, Edward threw himself on the
+compassion of the Londoners, but met with so cold a reception that
+early in October he withdrew to Gloucester. Besides the chancellor and
+the two Despensers, the only magnates of mark who remained faithful to
+him were the brothers-in-law, Edmund, Earl of Arundel, and Earl
+Warenne. On Edward's retreat from London, Bishop Stratford made his way
+to the capital, where he joined with Archbishop Reynolds in a hollow
+pretence of mediation. The Londoners gladly welcomed the queen's
+messengers and soon rose in revolt in her favour. They plundered and
+burnt the house of the Bishop of Exeter, who fled in alarm to St.
+Paul's. Seized at the very door of the church, Stapledon was brutally
+murdered by the mob in Cheapside, where his naked body lay exposed all
+day. Immediately after this, Reynolds fled in terror to his Kentish
+estates, where he waited to see which was the stronger side. The king's
+younger son, John of Eltham, a boy of nine, who had been left behind by
+his father in the Tower, was proclaimed warden of the capital.
+
+On hearing of Edward's flight to the west, Isabella went after him in
+pursuit. On the day of Stapledon's murder, she had advanced as far as
+Wallingford, where, posing as the continuer of the policy of the lords
+ordainers, she issued a proclamation denouncing the Despensers. Thence
+she made her way to Oxford, where Bishop Orleton, who had already
+joined her, preached a seditious sermon before the university and the
+leaders of the revolt. Taking as his text, "My head, my head," he
+demonstrated that the sick head of the state could not be restored by
+all the remedies of Hippocrates, and would therefore have to be cut
+off. This was the first intimation that the insurgents would not be
+content with the fall of the Despensers. From Oxford, Isabella and
+Mortimer hurried to Gloucester, whence Edward had already fled to the
+younger Despenser's palatinate of Glamorgan. From Gloucester, they
+passed on through Berkeley to Bristol, where the elder Despenser, the
+Earl of Winchester, was in command. The feeling of the burgesses of the
+second town in England was so strongly adverse that the earl was unable
+to defend either the borough or the castle. In despair he opened the
+gates on October 26 to the queen, and was immediately consigned,
+without trial or inquiry, to the death of a traitor. After proclaiming
+the Duke of Aquitaine as warden of the realm during his father's
+absence, the queen's army marched on Hereford, where Isabella remained,
+while the Earl of Leicester, accompanied by a Welsh clerk, named Rhys
+ap Howel, was sent, with part of the army to hunt out the king.
+
+After his flight from Gloucester, Edward had wandered through the Welsh
+march to Chepstow, whence he took ship, hoping to make sail to Lundy,
+which Despenser had latterly acquired, and perhaps ultimately to
+Ireland. But contrary winds kept him in the narrows of the Bristol
+Channel, and on October 27 he landed again at Cardiff. A few days later
+he was at Caerphilly, but afraid to entrust himself to the protection
+of the mightiest of marcher castles, he moved restlessly from place to
+place in Glamorgan and Gower, imploring the help of the tenants of the
+Despensers, and issuing vain summonses and commissions that no one
+obeyed. Discovered by the local knowledge of Rhys ap Howel, or betrayed
+by those whom the Welshman's gold had corrupted, Edward was captured on
+November 16 in Neath abbey. With him Baldock and the younger Despenser
+were also taken. On November 20 the favourite was put to death at
+Hereford, while Baldock, saved from immediate execution by his clerkly
+privilege, was consigned to the cruel custody of Orleton, only to
+perish a few months later of ill-treatment. To Hereford also was
+brought Edmund of Arundel, captured in Shropshire, and condemned to
+suffer the fate of the Despensers. The king was entrusted to the
+custody of Henry of Leicester, who conveyed him to his castle of
+Kenilworth, where the unfortunate monarch passed the winter, "treated
+not otherwise than a captive king ought to be treated".
+
+It only remained to complete the revolution by making provision for the
+future government of England. With this object a parliament was
+summoned, at first by the Duke of Aquitaine in his father's name, and
+afterwards more regularly by writs issued under the great seal. It met
+on January 7, 1327, at Westminster, and, after the York precedent of
+1322, contained representatives of Wales as well as of the three
+estates of England. Orleton, the spokesman of Mortimer, asked the
+estates whether they would have Edward II. or his son as their ruler.
+The London mob loudly declared for the Duke of Aquitaine, and none of
+the members of parliament ventured to raise a voice in favour of the
+unhappy king, save four prelates of whom the most important was the
+steadfast Archbishop Melton. The southern primate, deserting his old
+master, declared that the voice of the people was the voice of God.
+Stratford drew up six articles, in which he set forth that Edward of
+Carnarvon was incompetent to govern, led by evil counsellors, a
+despiser of the wholesome advice of the "great and wise men of the
+realm," neglectful of business, and addicted to unprofitable pleasures;
+that by his lack of good government he had lost Scotland, Ireland, and
+Gascony; that he had injured Holy Church, and had done to death or
+driven into exile many great men; that he had broken his coronation
+oath, and that it was hopeless to expect amendment from him.
+
+Even the agents of Mortimer shrunk from the odium of decreeing Edward's
+deposition, and the more prudent course was preferred of inducing the
+king to resign his power into his son's hands. An effort to persuade
+the captive monarch to abdicate before his estates, was defeated by his
+resolute refusal. Thereupon a committee of bishops, barons, and judges
+was sent to Kenilworth to receive his renunciation in the name of
+parliament. On January 20, Edward, clothed in black, admitted the
+delegates to his presence. Utterly unmanned by misfortune, the king
+fell in a deep swoon at the feet of his enemies. Leicester and
+Stratford raised him from the ground, and, on his recovery, Orleton
+exhorted him to resign his throne to his son, lest the estates,
+irritated by his contumacy, should choose as their king some one who
+was not of the royal line. Edward replied that he was sorry that his
+people were tired of his rule, but that being so, he was prepared to
+yield to their wishes, and make way for the Duke of Aquitaine. On this,
+Sir William Trussell, as proctor of the three estates, formally
+renounced their homage and fealty, and Sir Thomas Blount, steward of
+the household, broke his staff of office, and announced that the royal
+establishment was disbanded. Thus the calamitous reign of Edward of
+Carnarvon came to a wretched end. His utter inefficiency as a king
+makes it impossible to lament his fate. Yet few revolutions have ever
+been conducted with more manifest self-seeking than that which hurled
+Edward from power. The angry spite of the adulterous queen, the fierce
+vengeance and greed of Roger Mortimer, the craft and cruelty of
+Orleton, the time-serving cowardice of Reynolds, the stupidity of Kent
+and Norfolk, the party spirit of Stratford and Ayermine, can inspire
+nothing but disgust. Among the foes of Edward, Henry of Leicester alone
+behaved as an honourable gentleman, anxious to vindicate a policy, but
+careful to subordinate his private wrongs to public objects. Though his
+name and wrongs were ostentatiously put forward by the dominant
+faction, it is clear from the beginning that he was only a tool in its
+hands, and that the reversal of the sentence of Earl Thomas was but the
+pretext by which the schemers and traitors sought to capture the
+government for their own selfish ends.
+
+The resignation of the king was promptly reported to parliament. On
+January 24 the Duke of Aquitaine was proclaimed Edward III., and from
+the next day his regnal years were reckoned as beginning. Henry of
+Leicester dubbed him knight, and on January 20 he was crowned in
+Westminster Abbey. A few days later the young king met his parliament.
+A standing council was appointed to carry on the administration during
+his nonage. Of this body the Earl of Leicester acted as chief, though
+most of his colleagues were partisans of Mortimer and the queen.
+Orleton, who was made treasurer, continued to pull the wires as the
+confidential agent of Isabella and Mortimer. A show of devotion to the
+good old cause was thought politic, and therefore the sentences of 1322
+were revoked, so that Earl Henry, restored to all his brother's
+estates, was henceforth styled Earl of Lancaster. The commons went
+beyond this in petitioning for the canonisation of Earl Thomas and
+Archbishop Winchelsea. The revolution was consummated by a new
+confirmation of the charters.
+
+Even in the first flush of victory, Isabella and Mortimer were too
+insecure and too bitter to allow Edward of Carnarvon to remain quietly
+in prison under the custody of the Earl of Lancaster. As long as he was
+alive, he might always become the possible instrument of their
+degradation. At Orleton's instigation the deposed king was transferred
+in April from his cousin's care to that of two knights, Thomas Gurney
+and John Maltravers. He was promptly removed from Kenilworth and
+hurried by night from castle to castle until, after some sojourn at
+Corfe, he was at last immured at Berkeley. Every indignity was put upon
+him, and the systematic course of ill-treatment, to which he was
+subjected, was clearly intended to bring about his speedy death. But
+the robust constitution of the athlete rose superior to the
+persecutions of his torturers, and to save further trouble he was
+barbarously murdered in his bed on the night of September 21. Piercing
+shrieks from the interior of the castle told the peasantry that some
+dire deed was being perpetrated within its gloomy walls. Next day it
+was announced that the lord Edward had died a natural death, and his
+corpse was exposed to the public view that suspicion might be averted.
+He was buried with the state that became a crowned king in the
+Benedictine Abbey Church of St. Peter, Gloucester. A few years later
+the piety or remorse of Edward III. erected over his father's remains
+the magnificent tomb which still challenges our admiration by the
+delicacy of its tabernacle work and the artistic beauty of the
+sculptured effigy of the murdered monarch.
+
+The tragedy of Edward's end soon caused his misdeeds to be forgotten,
+and ere long the countryside flocked on pilgrimage to his tomb, as to
+the shrine of a saint. By a curious irony the burial place of Edward of
+Carnarvon rivalled in popularity the chapel on the hill at Pontefract
+where Thomas of Lancaster had perished by Edward's orders. Like his
+cousin, Edward became a popular, though not a canonised, saint. From
+the offerings made at his tomb the monks of Gloucester were in time
+supplied with the funds that enabled them to recast their romanesque
+choir in the newer "perpendicular" fashion of architecture, and
+embellish their church with all the rich additions which contrast so
+strangely with the grim impressiveness of the stately Norman nave.
+There was only one impediment to the people's worship of the dead king.
+The secrecy which enveloped his end led to rumours that he was still
+alive, and the prevalence of these reports soon proved almost as great
+a source of embarrassment to his supplanters, as his living presence
+had been in the first months of their unhallowed power.
+
+It was not easy for Isabella and Mortimer to restore the waning
+fortunes of England at home and abroad. We shall see that it was only
+by an almost complete surrender that they procured peace with France
+and a partial restoration of Gascony. In Scotland they were even less
+fortunate. Robert Bruce, though broken in health and spirits, took up
+an aggressive attitude, and it was found necessary to summon the feudal
+levies to meet on the border in the summer of 1327 in order to repel
+his attack. While the troops were mustering at York, a fierce fight
+broke out in the streets, between the Hainault mercenaries, under John
+of Hainault, and the citizens. So threatening was the outlook that it
+was thought wise to send the Hainaulters back home. From this accident
+it happened that the young king went forth to his first campaign,
+attended only by his native-born subjects. The Scots began operations
+by breaking the truce and overrunning the borders. The campaign
+directed against them was as futile as any of the last reign, and the
+English, though three times more numerous than the enemy, dared not
+provoke battle. This inglorious failure may well have convinced
+Mortimer that the best chance of maintaining his power was to make
+peace at any price. Early in 1328, the negotiations for a treaty were
+concluded at York. During their progress, Edward, who was at York to
+meet his parliament, was married to Philippa of Hainault.
+
+The Scots treaty was confirmed in April by a parliament that met at
+Northampton. All claim to feudal superiority over Scotland was
+withdrawn; Robert Bruce was recognised as King of Scots, and his young
+son David was married to Joan of the Tower, Edward III.'s infant
+sister. This surrender provoked the liveliest indignation, and men
+called the treaty of Northampton the "shameful peace," and ascribed it
+to the treachery or timorousness of the queen and her paramour. But it
+is hard to see what other solution of the Scottish problem was
+practicable. For many years Bruce had been _de facto_ King of Scots,
+and any longer hesitation to withhold the recognition which he coveted
+would have been sure to involve the north of England in the same
+desolation as that which he had inflicted before the truce of 1322. But
+the founder of Scottish independence was drawing near to the end of his
+career. His health had long been undermined by a terrible disease which
+the chroniclers thought to be leprosy. He died in 1329, and on his
+death-bed he bethought him of how he, who had shed so much Christian
+blood, had never been able to fulfil his vow of crusade. Accordingly he
+entreated James Douglas, his faithful companion-in-arms, to go on
+crusade against the Moors of Granada, taking with him the heart of his
+dead master. Douglas fulfilled the request, and perished in Spain,
+whither he had carried the heart of the Scottish liberator. With the
+accession of the little David Bruce, new troubles began for Scotland,
+though danger from England was for the moment averted by the English
+marriage and the treaty of Northampton.
+
+The ill-will produced by the "shameful peace" spread far and wide the
+profound dislike for Mortimer which pity for the fate of Edward had
+first aroused in the breasts of Englishmen. The greedy marcher was at
+no pains to make himself popular. Holding no great office of state, he
+strove to rule through his creatures Orleton, the treasurer, and the
+hardly less subservient chancellor, Bishop Hotham of Ely, or through
+lay partisans such as Sir Oliver Ingham and Sir Simon Bereford. But his
+best chance of remaining in power was through the besotted infatuation
+of the queen-mother, whose relations with him were not concealed from
+the public eye by any elaborate parade of secrecy. He still posed as
+the inheritor of the tradition of the lords ordainers, and never failed
+to put as much of the responsibility of his rule as he could on Henry
+of Lancaster and the old baronial leaders. But with all his force and
+energy, he was too narrowly selfish and grasping to take much trouble
+to frame an elaborate policy. As an administrator he was as incompetent
+as either Thomas of Lancaster or the Despensers.
+
+Mortimer's chief care was to add office to office, and estate to
+estate, in order that he might establish his house as supreme over all
+Wales and its march. Besides his own enormous inheritance, he ruled
+over Ludlow and Meath in the right of his wife, Joan of Joinville, the
+heiress of the Lacys. He had inherited Chirk and the other lands of his
+uncle, the sometime justice of Wales, who had died in Edward II.'s
+prison; and he procured for himself a grant of his uncle's old office
+for life, so that, while as justice of Wales he lorded it over the
+principality, as head of the Mortimers he could dominate the whole
+march. To complete his ascendency in the march became his great
+ambition. He obtained the custody of Glamorgan, the stronghold of his
+sometime rival, Hugh Despenser the younger. To this were added Oswestry
+and Clun, the Fitzalan march in western Shropshire, forfeited to the
+crown by the faithfulness with which Edmund Fitzalan, the late Earl of
+Arundel, had laid down his life for Edward II. Minor grants of lands,
+offices, wardships, and pensions were constantly lavished upon him by
+the complacency of his mistress. In Ireland he received complete
+palatine franchises over Trim, Meath, and Louth, along with the custody
+of the estates of the infant Earl of Kildare, the chief of the Leinster
+Geraldines. He extended his connexions by marrying his seven daughters
+to the heads of great families, and where possible to men of marcher
+houses. He soon numbered among his sons-in-law the representatives of
+the Charltons of Powys, the Hastingses of Abergavenny, now the chief
+heirs of Aymer of Pembroke, the Audleys of the Shropshire march, the
+Beauchamps of Warwick, the Berkeleys, the Grandisons, and the Braoses.
+Anxious to extend his dignity as well as his power, he procured his
+nomination as Earl of the March of Wales, "a title," says a chronicler,
+"hitherto unheard of in England". As earl of the march and justice of
+the principality, he ruled the lands west of the Severn with little
+less than regal sway. His banquets, his tournaments, his pious
+foundations even, dazzled all men by their splendour.
+
+Mortimer was created Earl of March in the parliament held in October,
+1328, at Salisbury, where John of Eltham was made Earl of Cornwall and
+James, Butler of Ireland, Earl of Ormonde. His assumption of this new
+title at last roused the sluggish indignation of Earl Henry of
+Lancaster, who felt that his own marcher interests were compromised,
+and bitterly resented the vain use made of his name, while he was
+carefully kept without any control of policy. He refused to attend the
+Salisbury parliament, though he and his partisans mustered in arms in
+the neighbourhood of that city. Civil war seemed imminent, and
+Mortimer's Welshmen devastated Lancaster's earldom of Leicester, but
+Archbishop Meopham (who had lately succeeded Reynolds in the primacy)
+managed to patch up peace. Not long afterwards Lancaster was smitten
+with blindness, and was thenceforth unable to take an active part in
+public affairs. Mortimer again triumphed for the moment, and, with
+cruel malice, excepted Lancaster's confidential agents from the pardon
+which he was forced to extend to the earl. His success over Lancaster
+was materially facilitated by the weakness of Edmund, Earl of Kent,
+who, after joining with Earl Henry in his refusal to attend the
+Salisbury parliament, deserted him at the moment of the capture of
+Leicester by the Earl of March. But his treachery did not save him from
+Mortimer's revenge. In conjunction with the queen, Mortimer plotted to
+lure on Earl Edmund to ruin. Their agents persuaded him that Edward II.
+was still alive and imprisoned in Corfe castle, and urged him to
+restore his brother to liberty. The earl rose to the bait, and agreed
+to be party to an insurrection which was to restore Edward of Carnarvon
+to freedom, if not to his throne. When Kent was involved in the meshes,
+he was suddenly arrested in the Winchester parliament of March, 1330,
+and accused of treason. Convicted by his own speeches and letters, he
+was adjudged to death by the lords, and on March 19 beheaded outside
+the walls of the city.
+
+The fall of Kent convinced Lancaster that his fate would not be long
+delayed, and that his best chance of saving himself and his cause lay
+in stirring up the king to energetic action against the Earl of March.
+The death of his uncle irritated Edward, who at seventeen was old
+enough to feel the degrading nature of his thraldom, and was eager to
+govern the kingdom of which he was the nominal head. In June, 1330, the
+birth of a son, the future Black Prince, to Edward and Philippa seems
+to have impressed on the young monarch that he had come to man's
+estate. Lancaster accordingly found him eager to shake off the yoke of
+his mother's paramour. The opportunity came in October, 1330, when the
+magnates assembled at Nottingham to hold a parliament there. Isabella
+and Mortimer took up their abode in the castle, where Edward also
+resided. Suspicions were abroad, and the castle was closely guarded by
+Mortimer's Welsh followers. Sir William Montague, a close friend of
+Edward's, was chosen to strike the blow, and lay outside with a band of
+troops. Some rumour of the plot seems to have leaked out, and on
+October 19 Mortimer angrily denounced Montague as a traitor, and
+accused the king of complicity with his designs. But Montague was safe
+outside the castle, and, when evening fell, all that Mortimer could do
+was to lock the gates and watch the walls. William Eland, constable of
+the castle, had been induced to join the conspiracy, and had revealed
+to Montague a secret entrance into the stronghold. On that very night,
+Montague and his men-at-arms effected an entrance through an
+underground passage into the castle-yard, where Edward joined them.
+They then made their way up to Mortimer's chamber, which as usual was
+next to that of the queen. Two knights, who guarded the door, were
+struck down, and the armed band burst into the room. After a desperate
+scuffle, the Earl of March was secured. Hearing the noise, the queen
+rushed into the room, and though Edward still waited without, cried,
+with seeming consciousness of his share in the matter, "Fair son, have
+pity on the gentle Mortimer". Her entreaties were unavailing, and the
+fallen favourite was hurried, under strict custody, to London.
+
+Edward then issued a proclamation announcing that he had taken the
+government of England into his own hands. Parliament, prorogued to
+Westminster, met on November 26, and its chief business was the trial
+of Mortimer before the lords. He was charged with accroaching to
+himself the royal power, stirring up dissension between Edward II and
+the queen, teaching Edward III. to regard the Earl of Lancaster as his
+enemy, deluding Edmund of Kent into believing that his brother was
+alive and with procuring his execution, accepting bribes from the Scots
+for concluding the disgraceful peace, and with perpetrating grievous
+cruelties in Ireland. The lords, imitating the evil precedents set
+during Mortimer's time of power, condemned him without trial or chance
+of answer to the accusations made against him. On November 29 the
+fallen earl was paraded through London from his prison in the Tower to
+Tyburn Elms, and was there hanged on the common gallows. His vast
+estates were forfeited to the crown. His accomplice, Sir Simon
+Bereford, suffered the same fate; but Sir Oliver Ingham, another of his
+associates, was pardoned. Edward discreetly drew a veil over his
+mother's shame. Mortimer's notorious relations with her were not
+enumerated in the accusations brought against him, and Isabella, though
+removed from power and stripped of some of her recent acquisitions, was
+allowed to live in honourable retirement on her dower manors.
+Scrupulously visited by her dutiful son, she wandered freely from house
+to house, as she felt disposed. She died in 1358 at her castle of
+Hertford, in the habit of the Poor Clares--a sister order of the
+Franciscans. The later tradition that she was kept in confinement at
+Castle Rising has only this slender foundation in fact that Castle
+Rising was one of her favourite places of abode. With her withdrawal
+from public life Edward III.'s real reign begins.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE PRELIMINARIES OF THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR.
+
+
+Edward III. had just entered upon his nineteenth year when he became
+king in fact as well as in name. In person he was not unworthy of his
+father and grandfather. Less strikingly tall than they, he was nobly
+built and finely proportioned. In full manhood, long hair, a thick
+moustache and a flowing beard adorned his regular and handsome
+countenance. His graciousness and affability were universally praised.
+His face shone, we are told, like the face of a god, so that to see him
+or to dream of him was certain to conjure up joyous images.[1] He
+delighted in the pomp of his office, wore magnificent garments, and
+played his kingly part with the same majesty and dignity as his
+grandfather. Despite the troubles of his youth, he was well educated.
+Richard of Bury is said to have been his tutor, and the early lessons of
+the author or instigator of the _Philobiblon_ were never entirely lost
+by the prince who took Chaucer and Froissart into his service. More
+conspicuous was his love of art, his taste for sumptuous buildings and
+their magnificent embellishment, which left memorials in the stately
+castle of Windsor and its rich chapel of St. George, in St. Stephen's
+chapel at Westminster, and the Eastminster for Cistercian nuns hard by
+Tower hill. A fluent and eloquent speaker in French and English, Edward
+was also conversant with Latin, and perhaps Low-Dutch. Yet no king was
+less given to study or seclusion. Possessed, perhaps, of no exceptional
+measure of intellectual capacity, and not even endowed to any large
+extent with firmness of character, he won a great place in history by
+the extraordinary activity of his temperament and the vigour and energy
+with which he threw himself into whatever work he set his hand to do. He
+was a consummate master of knightly exercises, delighting in
+tournaments, and especially in those which were marked by some touch of
+quaintness or fancy. He had the hereditary passion of his house for the
+chase. In his youthful campaigns in Scotland and in his maturer
+expeditions in France, he was accompanied by a little army of falconers
+and huntsmen, by packs of hounds, and many hawks trained with the utmost
+care. He honoured with his special friendship an Abbot of Leicester,
+famed throughout England as the most dexterous of hare-coursers.[2]
+
+ [1] _Continuation of Murimuth_ (Engl. Hist. Soc.), pp. 225-27,
+ which gives the best contemporary description of Edward's
+ character.
+
+ [2] Knighton, ii., 127.
+
+Edward's abounding energy was even more gladly devoted to war than to
+the chase. He was an admirable exponent of those chivalric ideals which
+are glorified in the courtly pages of Froissart. Not content with the
+easy victories which fall in the tiltyard to the crowned king, Edward
+was anxious to show that his triumphs belonged to the knight and not to
+the monarch, and more than once jousted victoriously in disguise. The
+same spirit led him to challenge Philip of France to decide their
+quarrel by single combat, and to win a personal triumph when masking as
+a knight attached to the service of Sir Walter Manny. He was liberal to
+the verge of prodigality, good-tempered, easy of access, and, save when
+moved by deep gusts of fierce anger, kindly and compassionate. His easy
+good nature endeared him both to foreigners and to every class of his
+own subjects. Not only did he enter fully into the free-masonry which
+regarded the knights of all Christian nations as equal members of a
+sworn brotherhood of arms, but he extended his favours to the London
+vintner's son who earned his bread in his service, and entertained the
+wives of the leading London citizens, side by side with the noble
+ladies in whose honour he gave the most quaint and magnificent of his
+banquets. Pious after a somewhat formal fashion, he was unwearied in
+going on pilgrimage and lavish in his religious foundations. Though no
+prince was more careful to protect the state from the encroachments of
+churchmen, his orthodoxy and devoutness kept him in good repute with
+the austerest champions of the Church. He could choose fit agents to
+carry out his policy, and his campaigns were a marvellous training
+ground for gallant and capable warriors.
+
+Edward seldom lost sight of the material and economic interests of his
+subjects. He was the friend of merchants, the father of English
+commerce, the patron of the infant woollen manufactures, and a zealous
+champion of the maritime greatness of his island realm, which boasted
+that he was "king of the sea". Though his financial exigencies often
+led him to sell excessive privileges to alien traders, this policy did
+little harm to his subjects, for few of them were ready as yet to
+embark in foreign commerce. A true patriot, who declared that his land
+of England was "nearer to his heart, more delightful, noble, and
+profitable than all other lands," he succeeded in making Englishmen
+conscious of their national life as they had never been before; and he
+won for his fatherland a foremost place among the kingdoms of the
+world. His network of diplomatic alliances was dexterously fashioned,
+and enabled him to supplement the resources of his own subjects.
+
+The breadth of Edward's ambitions hindered their complete
+accomplishment. Like Edward I., he undertook more than he could carry
+through, and, though his panegyrists praise his patience in adversity no
+less than his moderation in prosperity, his merely animal courage and
+vigour broke down under the weight of misfortune. Thus the glorious
+king, who in his youth vied with his grandfather, seemed in his old age
+to have nearly approached the fate of his wretched father. In early life
+he won the love of his subjects. It was only in the first years of his
+reign that the violence and greed of his disorderly household, which
+inherited the evil traditions of the previous generation, bore so
+heavily upon the people that Englishmen fled at his approach in dread of
+the purveyors, who confiscated every man's goods for the royal use.[1]
+The somewhat shallow opportunism which abandoned, with little attempt at
+resistance, every royal right that stood in the way of his receiving the
+full support of his parliament, at least had the merit of keeping Edward
+in general touch with his estates. The wanton breaches of good faith, by
+which he sometimes strove to win back what he had lightly conceded, were
+regarded as efforts to save the sovereign's dignity, rather than as
+insidious attempts to restore the prerogative. Unjust as was the very
+basis of his French pretensions, they were backed up by a show of legal
+claim that satisfied the conscience of king and subject, and to
+contemporaries Edward seemed a king regardful of his honour and mindful
+of his plighted word. If his generosity verged on extravagance, and his
+affectation of popular manners and graciousness on unreality, Englishmen
+of the fourteenth century were no severe critics of a crowned king. It
+was only when in his later years Edward laid aside the soldier's life,
+and abandoned himself to the frivolous distractions and degrading
+amours[2] which provoked the censure even of his admirers, that the
+self-indulgent traits inherited from his unhappy father stood revealed.
+
+ [1] The _Speculum regis Edwardi_ (ed. Moisant) was written
+ before 1333, and the attribution of its composition to
+ Archbishop Islip and the inferences drawn in Stubbs' _Const.
+ Hist._, ii., 394, are therefore unwarranted; see Professor
+ Tait's note in _Engl. Hist. Review_, xvi. (1901), 110-15.
+
+ [2] _Chron. Anglia_, 1328-1388, p. 401.
+
+Edward was before all things a soldier. He was not only the consummate
+knight, the mirror of chivalry, but a capable tactician with a
+general's eye that took in the essential points of the situation at a
+glance. His restless energy ensured the rapidity of movement and
+alertness of action which won him many a triumph over less mobile and
+less highly trained antagonists; while they inspired his followers with
+faith in their cause and with the courage which succeeds against
+desperate odds. Yet the victor of Crecy cannot be numbered among the
+consummate generals of history. His campaigns were ill-planned; and he
+lacked the self-restraint and sense of proportion which would have
+prevented him from aiming at objects beyond his reach. The same want of
+relation between ends and means, the same want of definite policy and
+clear ideals, marred his statecraft. Yet contemporaries, conscious of
+his faults, magnified Edward as the brilliant and successful king who
+had won for himself an assured place among the greatest monarchs of
+history, "Never," says Froissart, "had there been such a king since the
+days of Arthur King of Great Britain."[1] Even to his own age his
+senile degradation pointed the moral of the triumphs of his manhood.
+The modern historian, who sees, beneath the superficial splendour of
+the days of Edward III., the misery and degradation that underlay the
+wreck of the dying Middle Ages, is in no danger of appraising too
+highly the merits of this showy and ambitious monarch. Perhaps in our
+own days the reaction has gone too far, and we have been taught to
+undervalue the splendid energy and robustness of temperament which
+commanded the admiration of all Europe, and personified the strenuous
+ideals of the young English nation.
+
+ [1] Froissart (ed. Luce), viii., 231; _cf_. Canon of
+ Bridlington, p. 95.
+
+The internal history of the first few years of Edward's reign was
+uneventful. John Stratford became chancellor after Mortimer's fall, and
+remained for ten years the guiding spirit of the administration.
+Translated on Meopham's death in 1333 to Canterbury, he continued, as
+primate, to take a leading part in politics. His chief helper was his
+brother Robert, rewarded in 1337 by the see of Chichester. The brothers
+were capable but not brilliant politicians. The worst disorders of the
+times of anarchy were put down, and parliaments readily granted
+sufficient money to meet the king's necessities. After a few years, the
+strife of parties was so far hushed that Burghersh was suffered to
+return to office, and it looks as if the balance between the
+Lancastrian party, upheld by the Stratfords, and the old middle party
+of Pembroke and Badlesmere, with which Burghersh had hereditary
+connexions, was maintained, as it had been during the least unhappy
+period of the preceding reign. The country was growing rich and
+prosperous. The annalists tell us of little save tournaments and
+mummings, and the setting up of seven new earldoms to remedy the gaps
+which death and forfeiture had made in the higher circle of the
+baronage. The earldom of Devon was revived for the house of Courtenay;
+that of Salisbury in favour of the trusty William Montague, and an
+Audley, son of Despenser's rival, was raised to the earldom of
+Gloucester. William Bohun, a younger son of the Humphrey slain at
+Boroughbridge, became Earl of Northampton, an Ufford, Earl of Suffolk,
+a Clinton Earl of Huntingdon, a Hastings Earl of Pembroke, and Henry of
+Grosmont, the Earl of Lancaster's first born, Earl of Derby. A new rank
+was added to the English peerage when the king's little son, Earl of
+Chester in 1333, was made Duke of Cornwall in 1337. The old feuds
+seemed dead and with them the old disorder. But Edward was ambitious of
+military glory, and it was natural that he should seek to reverse the
+degrading part which he had been forced to play in relation to Scotland
+and France. His hands being tied by treaties, it was not easy for him
+to make the first move. Before long, however, circumstances arose which
+gave him a chance of taking up a line of his own with regard to
+Scotland. From that time Scottish affairs mainly absorbed his attention
+until the outbreak of troubles with France.
+
+The establishment of Robert Bruce on the Scottish throne had been
+attended by a considerable disturbance of the territorial balance in
+the northern kingdom. Many Scottish magnates, deprived of their lands
+and driven into exile, had abodes in England, and all might well look
+for the favour of the king in whose service they had been ruined. The
+treaty of Northampton made no provision for their restoration, and
+Edward showed himself disposed to uphold it. Their estates were in the
+hands of their supplanters, the nobles who had gathered round the
+throne of the Bruces. Thus it was that the exiles were cut off from all
+hope of return, and saw their only possibility of restitution in the
+break-up of the friendship of Edward and David. In like case were the
+English magnates who still entertained hopes of making effective the
+grants of Scottish estates which they had received from Edward I. and
+Edward II. For both classes alike every fresh year of peace between the
+realms decreased their chances of obtaining their desires. They failed
+to persuade Edward to go to war with his brother-in-law and repudiate
+formally the obligations imposed upon him by his mother and her
+paramour. But the minority of King David had unloosed the spirits of
+disorder in Scotland. Though the vigorous and capable regent, Sir
+Thomas Randolph, Earl of Moray, showed himself competent to stem the
+tide of aristocratic reaction which swelled round the throne of his
+infant cousin, he was one of the old generation of heroes that had
+aided King Robert to gain his throne. Were he to die, or become
+incapable of acting, there was no one who could supply his place. The
+Disinherited--thus they styled themselves--were encouraged both by the
+apathy of Edward III. and the weakness of Scotland to make a bold
+stroke on their own behalf.
+
+At the head of the disinherited was Edward Balliol, the son of the
+deposed King John. Brought up in England, first under the care of his
+cousin, Earl Warenne, and afterwards in the household of the
+half-brothers of Edward II., Edward Balliol, who succeeded in 1315 to
+the French estates on which his father spent his latter years, divided
+his time between England and France. The forfeiture of his father still
+kept him out of Barnard Castle and the other Balliol lands in England.
+Young and warlike, poor and ambitious, with few lands and great
+pretensions, he never formally abandoned either the lordship of
+Galloway or the throne of Scotland. In 1330 he received permission to
+take up his quarters in England during pleasure. He soon associated
+himself with his fellow-exiles in a bold attempt to win back their
+patrimony. Chief among his followers were three titular Scottish earls,
+closely related by intermarriage, each of whom was also a baron of high
+rank in England. Of these the French-born Henry of Beaumont, kinsman of
+Eleanor of Castile, and brother of Bishop Louis of Durham, was the
+oldest and most experienced. As the husband of a sister of the last of
+the Comyn Earls of Buchan, he posed as the heir of the greatest of the
+Scottish houses which had paid the penalty of its opposition to King
+Robert, and was summoned to the English parliament as Earl of Buchan.
+Beaumont's great-nephew, the young Gilbert of Umfraville, lord of
+Redesdale, was a grandson of another Comyn heiress, and his ancestors
+had inherited in the middle of the thirteenth century the ancient
+Scottish earldom of Angus, though they also had incurred forfeiture for
+their adhesion to the English policy. David of Strathbolgie, Earl of
+Athol, had a better right to be called a Scot than Umfraville or
+Beaumont. But his father abandoned Bruce, and was driven into England,
+where he held the Kentish barony of Chilham, and sat in the English
+parliament under his Scottish title. The younger Athol was son-in-law
+to the titular Earl of Moray, and all three kinsmen were bound by
+common interests to embrace the policy of Edward Balliol. Many lesser
+men associated themselves with the three earls and the claimant to a
+throne. Nearly every nobleman of the Scottish border made himself a
+party to a scheme of adventure which had its best parallels in the
+Norman invasions of Wales and Ireland.
+
+The object of the disinherited was to raise an army and prosecute their
+Scottish claims by force. Edward III. gave them no open countenance,
+and took up an ostentatiously correct attitude. He solemnly forbade all
+breach of the peace, and prevented the adventurers from adopting the
+easy course of marching from England to an open attack on Scotland. No
+obstacles, however, were imposed to hinder their raising a small but
+efficient army of 500 men-at-arms and 1,000 archers. Mercenaries, both
+English and foreign, were hired to supplement their scanty numbers, and
+among those who took service with them was a young gentleman of
+Hainault, Walter Manny, whose father had a few years before perished in
+the service of Edward II. in Gascony, and who had first come to England
+in the service of his countrywoman, Queen Philippa. Ships were
+collected in the Humber, and on the last day of July, 1332, the
+disinherited and their followers sailed from Ravenspur on a destination
+which was officially supposed to be unknown. A week later, on August 6,
+they landed at Kinghorn in Fife.
+
+Scotland was singularly unready to meet invasion. The regent Moray had
+died a few weeks earlier, and his successor, Donald, Earl of Mar,
+incompetent to carry on his vigorous policy, had perhaps already been
+intriguing with the adventurers. The only resistance to Balliol's
+landing, made by the Earl of Fife, was altogether unsuccessful. The
+little army established itself easily in the enemies' territory, and,
+after two days' rest at Dunfermline, advanced over the Ochils towards
+Perth. The regent had by that time gathered together an imposing army.
+As the invaders approached Strathearn on their way northwards, they
+found Mar encamped on Dupplin Moor, on the left bank of the Earn, and
+holding in force the only bridge available for crossing the river.
+There was some parleying between the two hosts. "We are sons of
+magnates of this land," declared the disinherited to Mar. "We are come
+hither with the lord Edward of Balliol, the right heir of the realm, to
+demand the lands which belong to us by hereditary right." Mar returned
+a warlike answer to their words, and both armies made preparation for
+battle.
+
+The disinherited, though few in number, were well trained in warfare,
+and from the beginning showed capacity to out-general the unwieldy host
+and feeble leader opposed to them. At sunset, some of their forces
+crossed the Earn by a ford which the Scots had neglected to guard, and
+falling upon an outlying portion of the enemies' camp, where the
+infantry were quartered, slaughtered the surprised Scots at their
+leisure. Luckily for Mar, the whole of his knights and men-at-arms were
+far away, uselessly watching the bridge, over which they had expected
+the disinherited to force a passage. Thus saved from the night
+ambuscade, the kernel of the Scottish army prepared next morning,
+August 12, to attack the disinherited. Puffed up by the memory of
+Bannockburn and the consciousness of superior numbers, they marched to
+battle as if certain of victory. All fought on foot, and the
+men-at-arms were drawn up in a dense central mass, supported at each
+side by wings. The disinherited were sufficiently schooled in northern
+warfare to adopt the same tactics. Save for a few score of horsemen in
+reserve, their heavily armed troops, leaving their horses in the rear,
+formed a compact column after the Scottish fashion. But archers were
+distributed in open order on the right and left flanks, with both
+extremities pushed forward, so that they formed the horns of a
+half-moon. Then the Scots advanced to the charge, and both sides joined
+in battle. The irresistible weight of the Scottish main phalanx forced
+back the little column of the disinherited, and for a moment it looked
+as if the battle were won. Meanwhile the archers on the flanks poured a
+galling shower on the collateral Scottish columns. The unvisored
+helmets of the Scots made them an easy prey to the storm of missiles,
+and they were driven back on to the main body. By this time the
+disinherited had rallied from the first shock; and still the deadly
+hail of arrows descended from right and left, until the whole of the
+Scottish army was thrown into panic-stricken disorder. Escape was
+impossible for the foremost ranks by reason of the closeness of their
+formation. At last, the rear files sought safely in flight, and were
+closely pursued by the victors, mounted on their fresh horses. A huge
+mass of slain, piled up upon each other, marked the place of combat. As
+at Bannockburn, the small disciplined host prevailed, but discipline
+was now with the English and numbers only with the Scots.[1]
+
+ [1] The significance of the battle of Dupplin was first pointed
+ out by Mr. J.E. Morris in _Engl. Hist. Review_, xii. (1897),
+ 430-31.
+
+The victory of Dupplin Moor was for the moment decisive. Balliol
+occupied Perth, and received the submission of many of the Scottish
+magnates, among them being that Earl of Fife who first opposed his
+landing. A few weeks later, on September 24, Balliol was crowned King
+of Scots at Scone by the Bishop of Dunkeld. It was a soldier's
+coronation, and the magnates sat at the coronation feast in full
+armour, save their helmets. The disinherited then received the lands
+for which they had striven; and thereupon quitted the new king, either
+to secure their estates or to revisit their property in England. But
+the Scots, of no mind to receive a king from the foreigner, chose a new
+regent in Sir Andrew Moray, son of the companion of Wallace; and
+prepared to maintain King David. On December 16, Balliol was surprised
+at Annan by a hostile force under the young Earl of Moray, son of the
+late regent, and by Sir Archibald Douglas. His followers were cut off,
+his brother was slain, and he himself had the utmost difficulty in
+effecting his escape to England. He had only reigned four months.
+
+During Balliol's brief triumph, Edward III. had declared himself in his
+favour. Debarred by the treaty of Northampton from questioning the
+independence of King David, he was able to make what terms he liked
+with David's supplanter. In November a treaty was drawn up at Roxburgh,
+by which Balliol recognised the overlordship of Edward, and promised
+him the town, castle, and shire of Berwick. In return for these
+concessions, Edward III. acknowledged his namesake as lawful King of
+Scots. When, a few weeks later, his new vassal appeared as a fugitive
+on English soil, Edward had no longer any scruples in openly supporting
+him in an attempt to win back his throne. In the spring of 1333,
+Balliol and the disinherited once more crossed the frontier in
+sufficient force to undertake the siege of Berwick. The border
+stronghold held out manfully, but the Scots failed in an attempt to
+divert the attention of the English by an invasion of Cumberland. After
+Easter, Edward III. went in person to Berwick, and devoted the whole
+resources of England to ensuring its reduction. The siege lasted on
+until July, when the garrison, at the last gasp, offered to surrender,
+unless the town were relieved within fifteen days. The Scots made a
+great effort to save Berwick from capture, and the English king was
+forced to fight a pitched battle, before he could secure its
+possession.
+
+On July 19 Edward, leaving a sufficient portion of his army to maintain
+the blockade of Berwick, took up a position with the remainder on
+Halidon Hill, a short distance to the west of the town. The lessons of
+Bannockburn, Boroughbridge, and Dupplin were not forgotten, and the
+English host was arranged much after the fashion which had procured the
+first victory of the disinherited. Knights and men-at-arms sent their
+horses to the rear and, from the king downwards, all, save a small
+reserve of horse, prepared to fight on foot. Edward divided his forces
+into three lines or "battles," each of which consisted of a central
+column of dismounted heavily armed troops, flanked by a right and a
+left wing of archers in open order, John of Eltham and the titular Earl
+of Buchan commanded the right battle, the king the centre, and Edward
+Balliol the left. The Scots still employed the traditional tactics
+which had failed so signally at Dupplin. Sir Archibald Douglas led his
+followers up the slopes of the hill in three dense columns. But a
+pitiless rain of arrows spread havoc among their ranks, and there were
+no answering volleys to disturb their foes. The battle was won for the
+English almost before the two lines had joined in close combat. It was
+only on Edward's right that the Scots were strong enough to push home
+their attack. On the centre and left, the English easily drove the
+enemy in panic flight down the slopes which they had ascended so
+confidently. The pursuit was long and bloody; few were taken prisoners,
+but many were slain or driven into the sea. Seven Scottish earls were
+believed by the English to have fallen, while the victors lost one
+knight, one squire, and a few infantry soldiers. Thus, for a second
+time the tactics, which had served the Scots so well in the defensive
+fight of Bannockburn, failed in offence to secure victory for them. The
+experience of this day completed the evolution of the new English
+battle array of men-at-arms fighting on foot and supported by wings of
+archers, which was soon to excite the wonder of Europe, when its
+possibilities were demonstrated on continental fields.
+
+Next day Berwick opened its gates, and was handed over to the English,
+according to the treaty of Roxburgh, to be for the rest of its history
+an English frontier town. Edward Balliol again conquered Scotland as
+easily as he had done on the former occasion, and far more effectually.
+It was no longer possible for the few remaining champions of the house
+of Bruce to safeguard the person of the little king and queen. David
+and Joan were accordingly sent off to France, where they were to grow
+up as good friends of King Philip. But Balliol had so clearly regained
+his throne through English help that he was no longer an independent
+agent. No sooner was his conquest assured than he was forced not only
+to confirm the surrender of Berwick, but to yield up the whole of
+south-eastern Scotland as the price of the English assistance. The
+depth of his humiliation was sounded when, in the treaty of Newcastle,
+June 12, 1334, Edward, King of Scots, granted Edward, King of England,
+lands worth two thousand pounds a year in the marches of Scotland, and
+in part payment thereof yielded up to him, besides Berwick and its
+shire, the castle, town, and county of Roxburgh, the forests of
+Jedburgh Selkirk, and Ettrick, the town and county of Selkirk, and the
+towns, castles, and counties of Peebles, Dumfries, and Edinburgh. Of
+these Dumfries then included the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright, while the
+shire of Edinburgh took in the constabularies, the modern shires, of
+Haddington and Linlithgow. Thus the whole of Lothian, the whole of the
+central upland region, and Balliol's own inheritance of Galloway east
+of the Cree were directly transferred to the English crown, and were
+divided into sheriffdoms, and officered after the English fashion. On
+June 18 Balliol personally performed homage for so much of Scotland as
+Edward chose to leave him. The wrongs of the disinherited had been the
+means of re-opening the whole Scottish question, and Edward III. seemed
+assured of a position as supreme as that which had once been held by
+Edward I.
+
+It was always easier in the Middle Ages to conquer a country than to
+keep it. And the experience of forty years might well have convinced
+Englishmen that no land was more difficult to hold than the stubborn
+and impenetrable northern kingdom, with its strenuous population, ever
+willing to cry a truce between local feuds when there was an
+opportunity of uniting against the southerners. Edward overshot his
+mark in grasping too eagerly the fairest portions of Balliol's realm.
+He needed for his policy a Scottish king, strong enough to maintain
+himself against his subjects, and loyal enough to remain true to the
+English connexion. Any faint chance of Balliol occupying such a
+position was completely destroyed by his studied humiliation.
+Henceforward the King of Scots, who had fought so well at Dupplin and
+Halidon, was but a pawn in Edward's game. Hated by the Scots as the
+betrayer of his country, distrusted by the English who henceforth spied
+his actions and commanded his armies in his name, the gallant victor of
+Dupplin lost faith in himself and in his cause. After all, he was his
+father's son, and in no wise capable of bearing adversity and indignity
+with equanimity. His helplessness soon proved the worst obstacle in the
+way of the success of Edward's plans. Even with the aid of a large
+Scottish party, Edward I. had failed to bring about the subjection of
+Scotland. It was clearly impossible for his grandson to succeed in the
+same task when all Scotland was united against him, and braced to
+action by a series of glorious memories.
+
+Difficulties arose almost from the first. Not only had Balliol to
+contend against the implacable hostility of the Scottish patriots; the
+disinherited split up into rival factions after their triumph, and
+their divisions played the game of the partisans of the Bruces. The
+Earls of Athol and Buchan quarrelled with Balliol. Buchan, besieged by
+the partisans of David Bruce in a remote castle, was forced to
+surrender and quit Scotland for good. Athol was distinguished by the
+violence and suddenness of his tergiversations. After deserting Balliol
+for the patriots, he once more declared for the two Edwards, and
+persuaded many of the Scottish magnates to submit themselves to them.
+So long as the English king remained in Scotland, Athol was safe. On
+Edward's retirement to his kingdom in November, 1335, the nationalist
+leaders took the earl prisoner and put him to death. The war dragged on
+from year to year, with startling vicissitudes of fortune, but at no
+time was Balliol really established on the Scottish throne, and at no
+time did Edward III. really govern all the ceded districts.
+
+Scottish business detained the English king and court mainly in the
+north. Edward was in Scotland for most of the winter of 1334-5, keeping
+his Christmas court at Roxburgh. In the summer of 1335 he led an army
+into Scotland and penetrated as far as Perth. Again in 1336, he marched
+from Perth along the east coast, as far as Elgin and Inverness. The
+Scots refused to give him battle, and their tactics of evasion and
+guerilla warfare soon exhausted his resources and demoralised his
+armies. This was Edward's last personal intervention in the business.
+He had long been irritated by the persistent interference of the French
+king in Scottish affairs, and his anger was not lessened by his hard
+plight forcing him, on more than one occasion, to grant short truces to
+the Scottish insurgents at Philip's intervention. His relations with
+France were becoming so strained that he preferred to spend 1337 in the
+south and entrust Thomas Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, with the conduct
+of the fruitless campaign of that year. Early in 1338, Edward made his
+way once more to Berwick, but his intention of invading Scotland was
+suddenly abandoned on the news of a threatened French expedition to
+England recalling him to the south. This was the decisive moment of the
+long struggle. Henceforth the English king could only devote a small
+share of his resources to an undertaking which he had not been able to
+compass when his whole energies were absorbed in it. The patriots, who
+had always dominated the open country, now attacked the castles and
+fortified towns, which were the bulwarks of the Edwardian power. Within
+three years all the more important of these fell into their hands. In
+1339 Edward Balliol's capital of Perth was beset by Robert, the Steward
+of Scotland, who had recently undertaken the regency for his uncle
+David. On the approach of danger, Balliol was ordered to England, and
+Sir Thomas Ughtred, an English knight and one of the disinherited of
+1332, was entrusted with the command. By August he had been forced to
+surrender, and Stirling soon afterwards opened its gates to the gallant
+and energetic steward. In 1341 Edinburgh castle was captured by a
+clever stratagem, and a few weeks later David and Joan returned from
+France. The king, then seventeen years old, henceforth undertook the
+personal administration of his kingdom. Once more there was a King of
+Scots whom the Scottish people themselves desired. The first military
+enterprise of Edward's reign ended in complete failure.
+
+During the years of Edward Balliol's attempt on Scotland, it was the
+obvious interest of the English king to maintain such relations with
+France as to prevent the tightening of the traditional bond between the
+French and the Scottish courts. There were plenty of outstanding points
+of difference between England and France, but neither country was
+anxious for war, and the result of this mutual forbearance enabled
+Edward III. to deal with the Scots at his leisure. A survey of the
+relations of the two realms during the first ten years of Edward III.'s
+reign will show how, despite the reluctance of either party to force
+matters to a crisis, the Kings of France and England gradually drifted
+into the hostility which, from 1337 onwards, paralysed the progress of
+the English cause in Scotland.
+
+At the moment of the fall of Edward II., England and France were still
+nominally engaged in the war which had followed the second seizure of
+Guienne by Charles IV. The difficulties experienced by Isabella and
+Mortimer in establishing their power made them as willing to give way
+to the French as to the Scots. Accordingly, on March 31, 1327, a treaty
+of peace was signed at Paris. By this treaty Edward only gained the
+restoration of certain of his Gascon vassals to the estates of which
+they had been deprived through their loyalty to the English connexion.
+He pledged himself to pay a large war indemnity, and accepted a partial
+restitution of his Gascon lands. Like so many of the treaties since
+1259, it was a truce rather than a peace. Many details still remained
+for settlement, and it was pretty clear that the French, having the
+whip hand, would drive Gascony towards the goal of gradual absorption
+which had been so clearly marked out by Philip the Fair.
+
+Charles IV. restored to Edward such parts of Gascony as he chose to
+surrender. He retained in his hands Agen and the Agenais, and Bazas and
+the Bazadais, on the ground that Charles of Valois had won them by
+right of conquest in 1324. This policy reduced Edward's duchy to two
+portions of territory, very unequal in size and separated from each
+other by the lands conquered by the French king's uncle. The larger
+section of the English king's lands extended along the coast from the
+mouth of the Charente to the mouth of the Bidassoa. It included Saintes
+with Saintonge south of the Charente, Bordeaux and the Bordelais, Dax
+and the diocese of Dax, and Bayonne and its territory. But in no place
+did the boundaries go very far inland. Along the Dordogne, Libourne and
+Saint-Émilion were the easternmost English towns. Up the Garonne, the
+French were in possession of Langon, while, in the valley of the Adour,
+Saint-Sever, perched on its upland rock, was the landward outpost of
+the diminished Gascon duchy. In the east of the Agenais the two
+_châtellenies_ of Penne and Puymirol formed a little _enclave_ of ducal
+territory which extended from the Lot to the Garonne. But this second
+fragment of the ancient duchy was of no military and little commercial
+value, being commanded on all sides by the possessions of the French
+king. Moreover, the fiefs dependent on the Gascon duchy had fallen away
+with the attenuation of the duke's domain. In particular the viscounty
+of Béarn, now held by the Count of Foix, repudiated all allegiance to
+its English overlord. Even a thoroughly Gascon seigneur, such as the
+lord of Albret, was wavering in his fidelity to his duke. It was no
+longer safe for Gascons to risk the hostility of the king of the
+French.
+
+Within a year of the treaty of Paris, the death of Charles IV. further
+complicated Anglo-French relations. Like his brothers, Louis X. and
+Philip V., Charles the Fair left no male issue; but the pregnancy of
+his queen prevented the settlement of the succession being completed
+immediately after his decease. The barons of France, however, had no
+serious doubts as to their policy. The inadmissibility of a female
+ruler had already been determined at the accession of both Philip V.
+and Charles IV., and it was clear that the nearest male heir was
+Philip, Count of Valois, who had recently succeeded to the great
+appanage left vacant by the death in 1325 of his father, Charles of
+Valois, the inveterate enemy of the English. As the next representative
+of the male line, the French at once recognised Philip of Valois as
+regent. When his cousin's widow gave birth to a daughter, the regent
+was proclaimed as King Philip VI. without either delay or hesitation.
+Thus the house of Valois occupied the throne of France in the place of
+the direct Capetian line in which son had succeeded father since the
+days of Hugh Capet.
+
+Even Isabella and Mortimer protested against the succession of Philip
+of Valois. Admitted that the exclusion of women from the monarchy was
+already established by two precedents, could it not be plausibly argued
+that a woman, incapable herself of reigning, might form "the bridge and
+plank"[1] (as a contemporary put it) by which her sons might step into
+the rights of their ancestors? Strange as such a conception seems to
+our ideas, it was not unfamiliar to the jurists of that day. It was in
+this fashion that the Capetian house claimed its boasted descent and
+continuity from the race of Charlemagne. Such a principle was actually
+the law in some parts of France, and it was a matter of every-day
+occurrence in the Parisis to transmit male fiefs to the sons of
+heiresses, themselves incapable of succession. Edward, as the son of
+Charles IV.'s sister, was nearer of kin to his uncle than Philip, the
+son of Charles's uncle. Surely a man's nephew had a better right to his
+succession than his first cousin could ever claim? From the purely
+juridical point of view, the claim put forward by Isabella on her son's
+behalf was not only plausible but strong.
+
+ [1] Viollet, _Hist. des Institutions politiques et
+ administratives de la France_, ii., 74, from a MS. source. See
+ also Viollet, _Comment les Femmes ont été exclues en France de
+ la Succession à la Couronne_, in _Mém. de l'Acad. des
+ Inscriptions_, xxxiv., pt. ii. (1893).
+
+Happily for France, the magnates of the realm dealt with the succession
+question as statesmen and not as lawyers. A later age imagined that the
+French barons brought forward a text of the law of the Salian Pranks, as
+a complete answer to Edward's claim from the juridical point of view.
+But the famous Salic law was a figment, forged by the next generation of
+lawyers who were eager to give a complete refutation of the elaborate
+legal pleadings of the partisans of the English claim. No authentic
+Salic law dealt with the question of the succession to the throne,[1]
+and the bold step of transferring a doctrine of private inheritance to
+the domain of public law was one of the characteristic feats of the
+medieval jurist, anxious to heap up at any risk a mass of arguments that
+might overwhelm his antagonists' case. The barons of 1328 rose superior
+to legal subtleties. To them the question at issue was the preservation
+of the national identity of their country. The vital thing for them was
+to secure the throne of France, both at the moment and at future times,
+for a Frenchman. Any admission, however guarded, of the right of women
+to transmit claims to their sons opened out a vista of the foreign
+offspring of French princesses, married abroad, ruling France as
+strangers, and it might be as enemies. They chose Philip of Valois
+because he was a Frenchman born and bred, and because he had no
+interests or possessions outside the French realm. They could not endure
+the idea of being ruled by the English king. He was not only a stranger,
+but the hereditary enemy. The Capetian monarchy must at all costs be
+kept French.
+
+ [1] Viollet, _op. cit._, pp. 55-57; _cf_. Désprez, _Les
+ Préliminaires de la Giurre de Cent Am_, p. 32.
+
+Isabella did what she could on her son's behalf. She excited the
+_noblesse_ of Aquitaine to support Edward's claim; but the lords of the
+south paid no heed to her exhortations. She was more successful with the
+Flemings, then in revolt against their Count, Louis of Nevers. Twelve
+notables of Bruges, headed by the burgomaster, William de Deken, visited
+England and offered to recognise Edward as King of France if he would
+support the Flemish democracy against their feudal lord.[1] But Philip
+VI.'s first act was to unite with the Count of Flanders, and the fatal
+day of Cassel laid low the fortunes of Bruges and restored the fugitive
+Louis to power. Isabella was forced to resign herself to simple
+protests.
+
+ [1] See Pirenne, _La première Tentative pour reconnaitre
+ Édouard I. comme Roi de France in Ann. de la Soc. d'Hist. de
+ Gand_, 1902.
+
+The inevitable demand from Philip VI. for Edward's homage for Guienne
+and Ponthieu soon brought the English government face to face with
+realities. The request for his vassal's submission, conveyed to England
+by Peter Roger, Abbot of Fecamp, the future Clement VI., was even more
+unwelcome than such demands commonly were. At first Isabella used brave
+words: "My son, who is the son of a king, will never do homage to the
+son of a count".[1] But a threat of a third seizure of Gascony soon
+brought the queen to her senses. Further insistence on the part of
+Philip was met with polite apologies for delay. At last, in May, 1329,
+the young king crossed the Channel, and on June 6 performed homage to
+Philip in the choir of the cathedral of Amiens. But even at the last
+moment there were explanations and reservations on both sides. Philip
+made it clear that he acknowledged no claim of his vassal to any
+territories, beyond those which he actually possessed. Edward's
+advisers protested that they abandoned no pretension to the whole by
+performing homage for a part. Moreover, the act of homage was couched
+in such ambiguous phrases that it remained doubtful whether Edward had
+performed "liege homage," as the King of France demanded, or only
+"simple homage," such as seemed to him less offensive to the dignity of
+a crowned king. Thus, though the cousins parted amicably and discussed
+proposals of a marriage treaty between the English and French houses,
+the homage at Amiens settled nothing.
+
+ [1] _Grandes Chroniques de France_, v., 323 (ed. P. Paris).
+
+The diplomatists still had plenty of work before them. The French
+statesmen insisted on the necessity of the ceremony at Amiens being
+interpreted as liege homage, involving the obligation of defending the
+overlord "against all those who can live or die". The English
+politicians complained of the "injustice and unreason of the King of
+France, who seeks the disinheritance of their master in Aquitaine". It
+was only by limiting the demands of both parties to points of detail,
+that a compromise was arrived at in the convention of the Wood of
+Vincennes on May 8, 1330. Further negotiations were still necessary;
+and at the moment when everything was trembling in the balance, the
+sudden occupation of Saintes by the Count of Alencon, brother of Philip
+VI., brought matters within a measurable distance of war. But Edward,
+then at the beginning of his real reign, had no mind for fighting. A
+more satisfactory convention, drawn up on March 9, 1331, at
+Saint-Germain-en-Laye, was ratified by Edward at Eltham on March 30,
+when he recognised that he owed liege homage, and not merely simple
+homage, to the King of France. Next month, he crossed over to France so
+secretly that his subjects believed that he went disguised as a
+merchant or a pilgrim. At Pont-Sainte-Maxence, a little town on the
+Oise, a few miles below Compiègne, Edward held an interview with Philip
+VI., who came thither with equal privacy. The French king does not seem
+to have insisted upon a renewal of homage, being content with the
+assurance already given as to the character of the previous ceremony.
+The informal interview, which the modern historian can only ascertain
+by painful scrutiny of the royal itineraries, proved more fertile in
+friendship than all the pomp of Amiens. Before Edward went home, Philip
+gave him complete satisfaction for the outrage at Saintes, and arrived
+at a financial settlement. Thus Edward and Philip at last became
+friends "so far as outside appearances went," as a chronicler of the
+time phrased it. The fundamental difference of interests and standpoint
+could be glossed over by no facile compromise, and the calm of the next
+six years was only the prelude to a storm destined to end the policy
+that had regulated the relations of the two courts from the days of the
+peace of 1259 to those of the meeting at Pont-Sainte-Maxence.
+
+At first there was talk of further cementing the newly established
+friendship. There were suggestions of a marriage of Edward's infant son
+with Philip's daughter, a fresh interview between the monarchs, a
+treaty of perpetual alliance and a common crusade against the Turks.
+The last, and the most fantastic, of these projects was the one which
+was most seriously discussed. The chivalrous spirit of Philip of Valois
+rose eagerly to the idea of a great European expedition against the
+infidel, of which he was to be the chief commander. Inspired by John
+XXII., he took the cross, made preparations for an early start, and
+invoked Edward's co-operation. Edward cleverly utilised his kinsman's
+zeal as another lever for enforcing the settlement of outstanding
+differences. "Tell your master," he said to the French ambassador,
+Peter Roger, now Archbishop of Rouen, "that when he has fulfilled his
+promises, I will be more eager to go on the holy voyage than he is
+himself." But the chronic troubles, arising from the unceasing
+extension of the suzerain's claims in Aquitaine, and from the shelter
+given by Philip to David Bruce, had continued all through the years of
+professed friendship, and in 1334 an embassy to Paris, presided over by
+Archbishop Stratford, failed to establish a _modus vivendi_. In the
+same year John XXII. died without having either procured the crusade or
+crushed Louis of Bavaria. His successor, James Founder of Foix, who
+took the name of Benedict XII., pursued his general policy, though in a
+more diplomatic and self-seeking spirit. Benedict's great wish was to,
+unite France and England against his enemy, the Emperor Louis of
+Bavaria, and he dexterously played upon Philip's eagerness for the
+crusade to persuade him to abandon to the papacy the position, which he
+had assumed, of arbiter of the differences between Edward and the
+Scots. It was a signal, though transitory, triumph of this policy that
+a truce between England and Scotland was brought about by the mediation
+of the pope and not of the French king. But Benedict found that a
+crusade was impossible so long as the chief powers of the west were
+hopelessly estranged from each other. In 1336, he vetoed the crusading
+scheme until happier times had dawned. Philip, bitterly disappointed,
+sought out Benedict at Avignon, but utterly failed to change his
+purpose. He was in his own despite released from the crusader's vow,
+though exhorted still to continue his preparations. The galleys,
+purchased from the crusading tenths of the Church, were transferred
+from the Mediterranean to the Channel. The French king might well find
+consolation for the abandonment of the holy war in a sudden descent on
+England.
+
+From that moment the horizon darkened. Philip VI., once more took up
+the cause of the Scots, and once more the Aquitanian troubles became
+acute. His irritation at Benedict led him to open up negotiations with
+Louis of Bavaria, whereat Benedict was greatly offended. Edward III.
+then sought to find friends who would help him against Philip. He was
+as much disgusted with the pope as was his French rival. The crusading
+fleet, equipped with the money of the Roman Church, threatened the
+English coast, and the _curia_ was even more French in its sympathies
+than the temporising pontiff. It is no wonder then that both kings
+looked coldly on Benedict's offer of mediation between them. Yet,
+notwithstanding the indifference manifested by both courts, two
+cardinals, Peter Gomez, a Spaniard, and Bertrand of Montfavence, a
+Frenchman, were sent in the summer of 1337 as papal legates to France
+and England to settle the points in dispute. For the next three years
+these prelates pursued their mission with energy and persistence,
+though with little result.
+
+A fresh dispute further embittered the personal relations of Philip and
+Edward. In 1336, Edward offered a refuge in England to Robert of Artois,
+Philip's brother-in-law and mortal enemy. The grandson of the Count
+Robert of Artois who was slain in 1302 at Courtrai, Robert of Artois was
+indignant that the rich county of Artois should, according to local
+custom, have devolved upon his aunt Maud, the wife of Otto, Count of
+Burgundy, or Franche Comté, and the mother-in-law of the last two kings
+of the direct Capetian line. Though he had failed in several suits to
+obtain it, Robert renewed his claim after his brother-in-law became King
+of France. It was soon proved that the charters upon which he relied to
+prove his title had been forged. The sudden death of the Countess of
+Artois, followed quickly by that of her daughter and heiress, added the
+suspicion of poisoning to the certainly of forgery. Robert was deprived
+of all his possessions and was exiled from France. Driven from his first
+refuge in Brabant by Philip's indignant hostility, he found shelter in
+England, where he was received with a favour which Philip bitterly
+resented. Condemned in his absence as a traitor, and devoured by a
+ferocious hatred of Philip and his Burgundian wife, Robert did all that
+he could to inflame the mind of Edward against the French king. French
+romance of the next generation, in the poem of the _Vow of the
+Heron_,[1] tells how Robert, returning to Edward's court from the chase,
+brought as his only victim a heron, which he offered to the king as the
+most timid of birds to the most cowardly of kings; "for, sire," he
+declared, "you have not dared to claim the realm of France which belongs
+to you by hereditary right". Stirred up by this challenge, Edward swore
+to God and the heron that within a year he would place the crown of
+France on Queen Philippa's brow. This famous legend is, however, a
+fiction. It was not until later that Edward seriously renewed the claim
+which he had advanced in 1328. But when once war became certain, the
+challenge of the French throne was bound to be made, and the dissolution
+of the friendly personal relations of the two kings, which had so long
+prevented either from proceeding to extremities, was certainly in large
+part the work of Robert of Artois. For the moment, Edward probably
+thought that his welcome of Robert was only a fair return for Philip's
+reception of David Bruce.
+
+ [1] _Les voeus du héron_ in Wright, _Political Poems and
+ Songs_, i., 1-25 (Rolls Ser.)
+
+War being imminent, Edward looked beyond sea for foreign allies.
+Commercial and traditional ties closely bound England to the county of
+Flanders, but our friendship had latterly been with its people rather
+than with its princes. Louis of Nevers, the Count of Flanders, had been
+expelled in 1328 by a rising of the maritime districts of the county,
+and had been restored by force of arms through the agency of Philip of
+Valois. Gratitude and interest accordingly combined to make Count Louis
+a strong partisan of Philip of Valois. Though far from absolute, he was
+still possessed of sufficient authority over his unruly townsmen to
+make it impossible for Edward to negotiate successfully with them. In
+1336 the count answered Edward's advances by prohibiting all commercial
+relations between his subjects and England. Bitterly disgusted at the
+hostility of Flanders, Edward in 1337 passed a law through parliament
+which prohibited the export of wool to the Flemish weaving centres.
+This measure provoked an economic crisis at Ghent and Ypres; but for
+the moment such a catastrophe could only accentuate the differences
+between England and the count. It was otherwise, however, with the
+neighbouring princes of the imperial obedience. Count William I. of
+Hainault, Holland, and Zealand was Edward III.'s father-in-law, and,
+during the last months of his strenuous career, he welcomed Bishop
+Burghersh, Edward's chief diplomatist, to his favourite residence of
+Valenciennes, where from April, 1337, the English ambassadors kept
+great state, "sparing as little as if the king were present there in
+his own person," and striving with all their might to build up an
+alliance with the princes of the Low Countries. When the count died,
+his son and successor, William II., persisted, though with less energy,
+in his father's policy, and the Hainault connexion became the nucleus
+of a general Low German alliance. Burghersh was lavish in promises, and
+soon a large number of imperial vassals took Edward's pay and promised
+to fight his battles. Among these were Count Reginald of Gelderland,
+who since 1332 had been the husband of Edward III.'s sister Eleanor,
+and with him came the Counts of Berg, Jülich, Cleves, and Mark, the
+Count Palatine of the Rhine, and a swarm of minor potentates.
+
+Hardest to win over of the Netherlandish princes was Duke John III. of
+Brabant, a crafty statesman and a successful warrior, who had recently
+conquered limburg, and won a signal victory over a formidable coalition
+of his neighbours. Among his former foes had been the house of Avesnes,
+but he had reconciled himself with Hainault, by reason of his greater
+hatred for Louis of Flanders. The Flemish cities were the rivals in
+trade of his own land, and their count's friendship for his French
+suzerain ensured the establishment of Philip of Valois as temporary
+lord of Mechlin, the possession of which had long been indirectly
+disputed between Brabant and Flanders. The hesitating duke was at last
+won over by a favourable commercial treaty, which made Antwerp the
+staple of English wools, and ensured for the looms of Louvain and
+Brussels the advantages denied by Edward's hostility to the
+clothworkers of Ghent and Ypres. Convinced that war with Philip was the
+surest way of adding Mechlin to his dominions, he then joined the
+circle of Edward's stipendiaries. The excommunicated and schismatic
+emperor, Louis of Bavaria, welcomed the advances of Burghersh. More
+than one tie already bound the Bavarian to England. The English
+Franciscan, William of Ockham, proved himself the most active and
+daring of the literary champions of the imperial claims against John
+XXII. Moreover, the emperor and Edward had married sisters, and their
+brother-in-law, the new Count of Hainault, Holland, and Zealand, was
+childless, so that they had common interests in keeping on good terms
+with him. Louis' bitter enemy, Benedict XII., forbade all hope of
+French support, and blocked the way to all prospect of reconciliation
+with the Church. It was natural that Louis should take his revenge by
+an alliance with the prince who ignored the advice of the pontiff, and
+hated the Valois king. As the result of all this, an offensive and
+defensive alliance between Edward on the one hand and Louis and his Low
+German vassals on the other was signed at Valenciennes in the summer of
+1337.
+
+The die seemed cast. Philip VI. pronounced the forfeiture of Gascony
+and Ponthieu. The French at once invaded Edward's duchy and county,
+while the French sailors in the Channel plundered the Anglo-Norman
+islands and the towns on the Sussex and Hampshire coasts. Edward
+redoubled his preparations for war, and issued a long manifesto to his
+subjects in which he set forth in violent language his grievances
+against Philip. It was at this unlucky moment that the two cardinal
+legates came upon the scene, reaching Paris in August, intent on
+arranging a pacification. The irritation, which Benedict showed against
+Edward for concluding an alliance with the schismatic emperor, did not
+make him more disposed to the work of conciliation. But the pope saw in
+the outbreak of a great war the destruction of his last hopes of
+humiliating the Bavarian, and once more played upon the weakness and
+impolicy of Philip. Though France was more ready than England, and
+Philip had everything to lose by delay, the French king allowed himself
+to be persuaded by the two legates to enter once more upon the paths of
+conciliation. As a preliminary measure, he revoked the order for the
+confiscation of Gascony, and accepted a temporary armistice. As before
+in the Scottish business, Philip again played the game of the papacy.
+Unlike his adversary, Edward continued steadily in the line which he
+had determined upon, while welcoming any delay that gave him
+opportunity to get ready. He employed the interval in making peace more
+impossible than ever. On October 7, he renewed his claim to the French
+crown, repudiated the homage into which he had been tricked during his
+infancy, and sent Bishop Burghersh straight from Valenciennes to Paris
+as bearer of his defiance. Thus the autumn of 1337 saw a virtual
+declaration of war. In November the first serious hostilities took
+place. Sir Walter Manny devastated the Flemish island of Cadzand,
+taking away with him as prisoner the bastard brother of the Count of
+Flanders.
+
+Papal diplomacy had not yet exhausted its resources. Benedict XII. was
+deeply concerned at the conclusion of the Anglo-imperial alliance. He
+was convinced that the only possible way of avoiding its perils was to
+persuade Edward and Philip to bury their differences and unite with him
+against the emperor. He succeeded in obtaining short prolongations of
+the existing armistice and, in December, 1337, the two cardinal legates
+landed in England, and were gladly received by Edward, who was
+delighted to gain time by negotiations. For the next six months they
+tarried in England, hoping against hope that something definite would
+result from their efforts. Meanwhile the English hurried on their
+preparations for war, and Edward made ready to cross over to the
+continent. As months slipped away, the tension became more severe, and
+in May Edward denounced the truces, though he still kept up the
+pretence of negotiations, and so late as June appointed ambassadors to
+treat with Philip of Valois. The real interest centred in the hard
+fighting which at once broke out at sea between the rival seamen of
+England and Normandy. At first the advantage was with the Normans. Not
+only were many English ships captured, but repeated destructive forays
+were made on the coasts of the south-eastern counties. Portsmouth was
+burnt; the Channel Islands were ravaged; and so alarming were the
+French corsairs that, in July, 1338, the dwellers on the south coast
+were ordered to take refuge in fortresses, or withdraw their goods to a
+distance of four leagues from the sea.
+
+At last the army and fleet were ready. On July 12, 1338, Edward
+appointed his son, the eight-year-old Duke of Cornwall, warden of
+England, and a few days later sailed from Orwell on a great ship named
+the _Christopher_. A favourable wind quickly bore the royal fleet to
+the mouth of the Scheldt. Thence the king and his army sailed up the
+river to Antwerp, the chief port of Brabant, where they landed on July
+16. There, on July 22, Edward revoked all commissions addressed to the
+King of France, and withheld from his agents all power to prejudice his
+own pretensions to the throne of the Valois. He passed more than a
+month at Antwerp, holding frequent conferences with his imperial
+allies, and thence proceeded through Brabant and Jülich to Cologne.
+From that city he went up the Rhine to Coblenz, where on September 5 he
+held an interview with his queen's imperial brother-in-law. Their
+meeting was celebrated with all the pomp and stateliness of the heyday
+of chivalry. Edward was accompanied by the highest nobles of his land,
+the emperor by all the electors, save King John of Bohemia, who, as a
+Luxemburger, was a convinced partisan of the French. Louis received his
+ally clothed in a purple dalmatic, with crown on head and with sceptre
+and orb in hand, surrounded by the electors and the higher dignitaries
+of the empire, and seated on a lofty throne erected in the Castorplatz,
+hard by the Romanesque basilica that watches over the junction of the
+Moselle with the Rhine. Another throne, somewhat lower in height, was
+occupied by the King of England, clothed in a robe of scarlet
+embroidered with gold, and surrounded by three hundred knights. Then,
+before the assembled crowd, Louis declared that Philip of France had
+forfeited the fiefs which he held of the empire. He put into Edward's
+hands a rod of gold and a charter of investiture, by which symbols he
+appointed him as "Vicar-general of the Empire in all the Germanies and
+in all the Almaines". Next day the allies heard a mass celebrated by
+the Archbishop of Cologne in the church of St. Castor. After the
+service the emperor swore to aid Edward against the King of France for
+seven years, while the barons of the empire took oaths to obey the
+imperial vicar and to march against his enemies. Thereupon the English
+king took farewell of the emperor, and returned to Brabant.
+
+All was ready for war. The interview at Coblenz was the deathblow to
+the papal diplomacy, and the sluggish Philip awaited in the Vermandois
+the expected attack of the Anglo-imperial armies. Yet the best part of
+a year was still to elapse before lances were crossed in earnest. The
+lords of the empire had no real care for the cause of Edward. They were
+delighted to take his presents, to pledge themselves to support him,
+and to insist upon the regular payment of the subsidies he had
+promised. But John of Brabant was more intent on winning Mechlin than
+on invading France, and even William of Avesnes was embarrassed by the
+ties which bound him to Philip, his uncle, even more than to Edward,
+his brother-in-law. They contented themselves with taking Edward's
+money and giving him little save promises in return. It became evident
+that an imperial vicar would be obeyed even less than an emperor. Every
+week of delay was dangerous to Edward, who had exhausted his resources
+in the pompous pageantry of his Rhenish journey, and in magnificent
+housekeeping in Brabant. It was then Edward's interest, as it had
+previously been Philip's, to bring matters to a crisis. That he failed
+to do this must be ascribed to the lukewarmness of his allies, the
+poverty of his exchequer, and, above all, to the still active diplomacy
+of Benedict XII.
+
+The cardinal legates appeared in Brabant, but their tone was different
+from that which they had taken in the previous spring in England.
+Profoundly irritated by the alliance of Edward and Louis, Benedict
+lectured the English king on the iniquity of his courses. The empire
+was vacant; the Coblenz grant was therefore of no effect; if Edward
+persisted in acting as vicar of the schismatic, he would be
+excommunicated. Benedict stood revealed as the partisan of France. It
+was in vain that Edward offered peace if France gave up the Scots and
+made full restitution of Gascony. Benedict ordered his legates to
+refuse to discuss the latter proposal, and, as the Gascon question lay
+at the root of the whole matter, an amicable settlement became more
+impossible than ever. Edward hotly defended his right to make what
+alliances he chose with his wife's kinsmen, and bitterly denounced the
+employment of the wealth of the Church in equipping the armies of his
+enemies. Though the cardinals, Peter and Bertrand, remained in Edward's
+camp, they might, for all practical purposes, as well have been at
+Avignon. The papal diplomacy had failed.
+
+Edward employed the leisure forced upon him by these events in
+elaborating his claim to the French throne. His lawyers ransacked both
+Roman jurisprudence and feudal custom that they might lay before the
+pope and Christendom plausible reasons for their master's pretensions.
+They advanced pleas of an even bolder character. Was not the right of
+Edward to the French throne the same as that of Jesus Christ to the
+succession of David? The Virgin Mary, incapable of the succession on her
+own behalf, was yet able to transmit her rights to her Son. These
+contentions, sacred and profane, did not touch the vital issue. It was
+not the dynastic question that brought about the war, though, war being
+inevitable, Edward might well, as he himself said, use his claim as a
+buckler to protect himself from his enemies. The fundamental difference
+between the two nations lay in the impossible position of Edward in
+Gascony. He could not abandon his ancient patrimony, and Philip could
+not give up that policy of gradually absorbing the great fiefs which the
+French kings had carried on since the days of St. Louis. The support
+given to the Scots, the Anglo-imperial alliance, the growing national
+animosity of the two peoples, the rivalry of English and French
+merchants and sailors, all these and many similar causes were but
+secondary.[1] At this stage the claim to the French throne, though
+immensely complicating the situation, and interposing formidable
+technical obstacles to the conduct of negotiations, loomed larger in
+talk than in acts. It was only in 1340, when Edward saw in his
+pretensions the best way of commanding the allegiance of Philip's sworn
+vassals, that the question of the French title became a serious matter.
+
+ [1] Déprez, _Les Préliminaires de la Guerre de Cent Am_, pp.
+ 400-406, admirably elucidates the situation.
+
+On which side did the responsibility for the war rest? National
+prejudices have complicated the question. English historians have seen
+in the aggression of Philip in Gascony, his intervention in Scottish
+affairs, and the buccaneering exploits of the Norman mariners, reasons
+adequate to provoke the patience even of a peace-loving monarch. French
+writers, unable to deny these facts, have insisted upon the slowness of
+Philip to requite provocation, his servile deference to papal
+authority, his willingness to negotiate, and his dislike to take
+offence even at the denial of his right to the crown which he wore.
+Either king seems hesitating and reluctant when looked at from one
+point of view, and pertinaciously aggressive when regarded from the
+opposite standpoint. It is safer to conclude that the war was
+inevitable than to endeavour to apportion the blame which is so equally
+to be divided between the two monarchs. The modern eye singles out
+Edward's baseless claim and makes him the aggressor, but there was
+little, as the best French historians admit, in Edward's pretension
+that shocked the idea of justice in those days. Moreover this view,
+held too absolutely, is confuted by the secondary position taken by the
+claim during the negotiations which preceded hostilities. If in the
+conduct of the preliminaries we may assign to Edward the credit of
+superior insight, more resolute policy, and a more clearly perceived
+goal, the intellectual superiority, which he possessed over his rival,
+was hardly balanced by any special moral obliquity on his part; though
+to Philip, with all his weakness, must always be given the sympathy
+provoked by the defence of his land against the foreign invader. It is
+useless to refine the issue further. The situation had become
+impossible, and fighting was the only way out of the difficulty. When
+in the late summer of 1339 the curtain was rung down on the
+long-drawn-out diplomatic comedy, Edward had not yet finally assumed
+that title of King of France, which made an inevitable strife
+irreconcilable, and so prolonged hostilities that the struggle became
+the Hundred Years' War.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+THE EARLY CAMPAIGNS OF THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR.
+
+
+In the late summer of 1339 Edward III. was at last able to take the
+offensive against France. During the negotiations England strained
+every effort to provide her absent sovereign with men and money, but
+neither the troops nor the supplies were adequate. The army which
+assembled in September in the neighbourhood of Brussels consisted
+largely of imperial vassals, hired by the English King, and clamorous
+for the regular payment of their wages. Already Edward told his
+ministers that, had not "a good friend in Flanders" advanced him a
+large sum, he would have been obliged to return with shame to England.
+As it was, enough was raised to set the unwieldy host in motion, and on
+September 20 he marched from Valenciennes, and thence advanced into the
+bishopric of Cambrai, whose lord, though an imperial vassal, had
+declared for France and the papacy.
+
+The rolling uplands of the Cambrésis were devastated with fire and
+sword. One night an English baron took the Cardinal Bertrand, who with
+his comrade Peter still accompanied Edward's host, to the summit of a
+high tower, whence they could witness the flaming homesteads and
+villages of the fertile and populous district. In that woeful spectacle
+the churchman saw the futility of his last two years of constant
+labour, and fell in a swoon to the ground. But the confederates could
+do little more than devastate the open country. Cambrai itself was
+besieged to no purpose, and Edward pressed on to the invasion of
+France. On October g he spent his first night on French soil at the
+abbey of Mont Saint-Martin. He learnt how slender was the tie which
+bound his foreign allies to him, for his brother-in-law, William of
+Hainault, refused to serve, except on imperial soil, against his uncle
+Philip VI. Consoled for this defection by the arrival of the sluggish
+Duke of Brabant and of the Elector of Brandenburg, the eldest son of
+the emperor, Edward marched through the Vermandois, the Soissonais, and
+the Laonnais, burning and devastating, without meeting any serious
+resistance. Philip of Valois timidly held aloof in the neighbourhood of
+Péronne.
+
+By the middle of October, when Edward was near St. Quentin on the Oise,
+the Duke of Brabant suggested the expediency of seeking out winter
+quarters. The slow-moving host was almost in mutiny, when the master
+crossbowman of the King of France brought a challenge from his lord.
+"Let the King of England," ran the message, "seek out a field
+favourable for a pitched battle, where there is neither wood, nor
+marsh, nor river." Edward cheerfully accepted a day for the combat, and
+chose his ground higher up the Oise valley, among the green meadowlands
+and hedgerows of the Thiérache. The appointed day passed by, and the
+French came not. At last, when Edward almost despaired of a meeting, he
+was told that the French were arrayed at Buironfosse, on the plateau
+between the Oise and the upper Sambre, and that Philip was ready to
+fight the next day, Saturday, October 23. Edward once more chose a
+suitable field of action in a plain between La Flamangrie and
+Buironfosse, a league and a half from the French. "On the Saturday,"
+wrote Edward to his son in England, "we were in the field, a full
+quarter of an hour before dawn, and took up our position in a fitting
+place to fight. In the early morning some of the enemy's scouts were
+taken, and they told us that his advanced guard was in battle array and
+coming out towards us. The news having come to our host, our allies,
+though they had hitherto borne themselves somewhat sluggishly, were in
+truth of such loyal intent that never were folk of such goodwill to
+fight. In the meantime one of our scouts, a knight of Germany, was
+taken, and he showed all our array to the enemy. Thereupon the foe
+withdrew his van, gave orders to encamp, made trenches around him, and
+cut down large trees in order to prevent us from approaching him. We
+tarried all day on foot in order of battle, until towards evening it
+seemed to our allies that we had waited long enough. And at vespers we
+mounted our horses and went near to Avesnes, and made him to know that
+we would await him there all the Sunday. On the Monday morning we had
+news that the lord Philip had withdrawn. And so would our allies no
+longer afterwards abide."
+
+Thus ended the inglorious campaign of the Thiérache. Edward returned to
+Brussels "like a fox to his hole," and each side denounced the other
+for failing to keep the appointed tryst. The chivalry of the fourteenth
+century saw something ignoble in the sluggishness of Philip; but no
+modern soldier would blame him for his inactivity. Without striking a
+blow, he obtained the object of his campaign, for the enemy abandoned
+French territory. Had Edward been fully confident of victory, he could
+easily have forced a battle by advancing on Buironfosse; but he
+preferred to run the risk of a fiasco rather than abandon the defensive
+tactics on which he relied. Thus, even from the chivalrous point of
+view, he was by no means blameless. From the material standpoint, his
+first French campaign was a failure. It left its only mark on the
+devastated countryside, the beggared peasantry, the desolated churches
+and monasteries, the farmsteads and villages burnt to ashes.
+
+Edward seemed ruined both in reputation and purse. He had exhausted his
+resources in meeting the extravagant demands of his allies, and their
+help had profited him nothing at all. Yet his inexhaustible energy
+opened up a surer means of foreign assistance than had been supplied by
+the unruly vassals of Louis of Bavaria. At the moment when the imperial
+alliance was tried and found wanting, the way was opened up for close
+friendship between Edward and the Flemish cities. In earlier years the
+chivalrous devotion of Louis of Nevers to his overlord had secured the
+political dependence of Flanders upon the King of France. If the action
+of their count made the Flemings the tools of French policy, their
+commercial necessities bound them to England by chains forged by nature
+itself. Alone of the lands of northern and western Europe, Flanders was
+not a self-sufficing economic community.[1] Its great ports and weaving
+towns depended for their customers on foreign markets, and the raw
+material of their staple manufacture was mainly derived from England.
+When in 1337 Edward prohibited the export of wool to Flanders, his
+action at once brought about the same result that the cessation of the
+supplies of American cotton would cause in the manufacturing districts
+of Lancashire. A wool famine, like the Lancashire cotton famine of
+1862-65, plunged Ghent, Ypres, and Bruges into grievous distress. The
+starving weavers wandered through the farms begging their bread, and,
+when charity at home proved inadequate, they exposed their rags and
+their misery in the chief cities of northern France. Even wealthy
+merchants felt the pinch of the crisis which ruined the small craftsmen.
+
+ [1] See for this Pirenne, _Histoire de Belgique_, vols. i. and
+ ii., and Lamprecht, _Deutsche Geschichte_, iii., 304-324, and
+ iv., 134-142.
+
+A common desire to avoid calamity bound together the warring classes
+and rival districts of Flanders, as they had never been united before.
+Bruges and Ypres had borne the brunt of earlier struggles, and had not
+even yet recovered from the exhaustion of the wars of the early years
+of the century. Their exhaustion left the way open to Ghent, where the
+old patricians and the rich merchants, the weavers and the fullers,
+forgot their ancient rivalries and worked together to remedy the
+crisis. A wealthy landholder and merchant-prince of Ghent, James van
+Artevelde, made himself the spokesman of all classes of that great
+manufacturing city. He was no demagogue nor artisan, though his
+eloquence and force had wonderful power over the impressionable
+craftsmen of the trading guilds. He was no Netherlandish patriot, as
+some moderns have imagined, though he was anxious to unite Flanders
+with her neighbour states, on the broad basis of their identity of
+economic and political interests. A man of Ghent, above all things, his
+policy was to save the imperilled industries of his native town, and to
+make it the centre of a new movement for the vindication of commercial
+liberty against feudal domination. By the winter of 1337 this rich
+capitalist allied himself with the turbulent democracy of the weavers'
+guilds, and put himself at the head of affairs. Early in 1338 he began
+to negotiate with Edward III., and his loans to the distressed monarch
+had the result of removing the embargo on English wool. The famished
+craftsmen hailed the enemy of their class as a god who had come down
+from heaven for their salvation.
+
+Louis of Nevers and Philip of Valois took the alarm. Seeing in the
+ascendency of Artevelde the certainty that Flanders would join the
+English alliance, they left no stone unturned to avoid so dire a
+calamity. Artevelde, conscious of the narrow basis of his own
+authority, was prudent enough to be moderate. Instead of pressing the
+English alliance to a conclusion, he accepted the suggestion of Philip
+VI., that Flanders should remain neutral. Louis of Nevers hated the
+notion; but in June, 1338, Edward and Philip agreed to recognise
+Flemish neutrality, and he was forced to acquiesce in it. Both monarchs
+promised to avoid Flemish territory, and offered free commercial
+relations between Flanders and their respective dominions.
+
+Artevelde and the men of Ghent were the real masters of Flanders. They
+kept their count in scarcely veiled captivity, forcing him to wear the
+Flemish colours and to profess acceptance of the policy that he
+disliked. In such circumstances the neutrality of Flanders could not
+last long. Both Edward and Artevelde regarded it simply as a step
+towards a declared alliance. Before long Philip became uneasy, and
+lavished concession on concession to keep the dominant party true to
+its promises. He gave up the degrading conditions which since the
+treaty of Athis had secured the subjection of Flanders. But Edward
+could offer more than his rival. He proposed to the count and the "good
+towns" of Ghent, Bruges, and Ypres that, in return for their alliance,
+he would aid them to win back the towns of Lille, Douai, Béthune, and
+Tournai, which the French king had usurped from the Flemings, as well
+as the county of Artois, which had been separated from Flanders since
+the days of Philip Augustus. He also offered ample commercial
+privileges, the establishment of the staple of wool at Bruges as well
+as at Antwerp, free trade for Flemish cloth with the English markets,
+and a good and fixed money which was to be legal tender in Flanders,
+Brabant, France, and England. The Flemings demanded in return that
+Edward, by formally assuming the title of King of France, should stand
+to them as their liege lord, and thus free themselves and their count
+from the ecclesiastical penalties and dishonour involved in their
+waging war against a king of France. Late in 1339, these terms were
+mutually accepted, and Count Louis avoided further humiliations by
+flight into France.
+
+In January, 1340, Edward entered Flemish territory and was
+magnificently entertained in the abbey of Saint Bavon at Ghent. "The
+three towns of Flanders," declared Artevelde to his guest, "are ready
+to recognise you as their sovereign lord, provided that you engage
+yourself to defend them." The deputies of the three towns took oaths to
+Edward as their suzerain, and thereupon Edward was proclaimed King of
+France with much ceremony in the Friday market of Ghent. A new great
+seal was fashioned and new royal arms assumed, in which the lilies of
+France were quartered with the leopards of England. The new regnal year
+of Edward, which began on January 25, was styled the fourteenth of his
+reign in England, and the first of his reign in France. Urgent affairs
+called Edward back to his kingdom, but his debts to the Flemings were
+already so heavy that they only consented to his departure on his
+pledging himself to return before Michaelmas day, and on his leaving as
+hostages his queen, his two sons, and two earls. At last, on February
+20, he crossed over from Sluys to Orwell. He had been absent from home
+for nearly a year and a half.
+
+From February 21 to June 22, 1340, Edward remained in England. During
+that period, formal treaties with the Flemings confirmed the hasty
+negotiations of Ghent. Benedict XII, still pursued Edward with
+remonstrances. He warned the English king to have no trust in allies
+like the Flemings, who had shamefully driven away their natural lords
+and whose faithlessness and inconstancy were by-words. He told him that
+his strength was not enough to conquer France, and reproached him with
+calling himself king of a land of which he possessed nothing. Somewhat
+inconsistently, he offered his mediation between Edward and Philip. But
+Philip was only less weary than Edward of the self-seeking pontiff.
+Benedict was forced to drink the cup of humiliation, for after the
+rejection of his mediation, he was confronted with a proposal that the
+schismatic Bavarian should arbitrate between the two crowns. Meanwhile,
+after many delays, Edward embarked a gallant army on a fleet of 200
+ships, and on June 22 a favourable west wind bore them from the Orwell
+towards Flanders. On arriving next day off Blankenberghe, he learned
+that a formidable French squadron was anchored in the mouth of the
+Zwyn, and that he could only land in Flanders as the reward of victory.
+
+From the outbreak of hostilities in 1337, there had been a good deal of
+fighting by sea, and in the first stages of warfare the advantage lay
+with the French. Since the days of Edward I., and Philip the Fair, the
+maritime energies of the two countries had developed at an almost equal
+rate, and the parallel growth had been marked by bitter rivalry between
+the seamen of the two nations. The Normans had taken the leading share
+in this expansion of the French navy.[1] They welcomed the outbreak of
+war with enthusiasm, as giving them a chance of measuring their forces
+with their hated foes. Alone among the provinces of France, Normandy
+seems already to have experienced that intense national bitterness
+against the English which was soon to spread to all the rest of the
+country. Not content with the vigorous war of corsairs which had
+inflicted so much mischief on our southern coast and on English
+shipping, the Normans formed bold designs of a new Norman Conquest of
+England, and in return for the permanent establishment of the local
+estates of Normandy, agreed with Philip and his son John, who bore the
+title of Duke of Normandy, to equip a large fleet and army, with which
+England was to be invaded in the summer of 1339. Normandy, which
+monopolised the glory, was to monopolise the spoil. If England were
+conquered, Duke John, like Duke William before him, was to be King of
+England as well as Duke of Normandy. Thus the aggressions of Edward in
+France were to be answered by Norman aggressions in England.[2]
+
+ [1] _C_. de la Roncière, _Hist, de_ la _Marine Française_; of.
+ Nicolas, _Hist, of the Royal Navy_.
+
+ [2] See on this subject A. Coville, _Les États_ de _Normandie_,
+ pp. 41-52 (1894).
+
+Nothing came of this grandiose project, though the burning ruins of
+Southampton, the capture of the great _Christopher_, which had borne
+Edward in 1338 to Antwerp, and the occupation of the Channel
+Islands--the last remnants of the old duchy still under English
+rule--showed that the Normans were in earnest. The chief result of their
+energy was the equipment of the strongest French fleet that had ever
+been seen in the Channel. Though a few Genoese galleys under Barbavera
+and a few great Spanish ships swelled the number of the armada, 160 of
+the 200 ships that formed the fleet were Norman.[1] Of the two Frenchmen
+in command, one, Hugh Quièret, was a Picard knight, but the other, the
+more popular, was Nicholas Béhuchet, a Norman of humble birth, then a
+knight and the chief confidant of Philip VI. Quièret and Béhuchet had
+long challenged the command of the narrow seas. But for their error of
+dividing their forces and preferring a piratical war of reprisals, they
+might have cut off communications between England and the Netherlands.
+They had learnt wisdom by experience, and their ships were massed in
+Zwyn harbour to prevent the passage of Edward to his new allies.
+
+ [1] _S_. Luce, _La Marine normande à l'Écluse_, in _La France
+ pendant la Guerre de Cent Ans_, 3-31.
+
+The coast-line between Blankenberghe and the mouth of the Scheldt was
+strangely different in the fourteenth century from what it is at
+present.[1] The sandy flats, through which the Zwyn now trickles to the
+sea, formed a large open harbour, accessible to the biggest ships then
+known. It was protected on the north by the island of Cadzand, the scene
+of Manny's exploit in 1337, while at its head stood the town of Sluys,
+so called from the locks, or sluices, that regulated the waters of the
+ship canal, which bore to the great mart of Bruges the merchantmen of
+every land. It was in this harbour that Edward, on arriving off
+Blankenberghe, first spied the fleet of Quièret and Béhuchet. He
+anchored at sea for the night, and on the afternoon of June 24, the
+anniversary of Bannockburn, he bore down on the French, having the sun,
+the tide, and the wind in his favour. On his approach Barbavera urged
+that the French should take to the open sea; but Quièret and Béhuchet
+preferred to fight in the harbour. As an unsatisfactory compromise,
+however, the French moved a mile or so towards the enemy. Then they
+lashed their ships together and awaited attack.
+
+ [1] For this see Professor Tait's inset map of the district in
+ _Oxford Historical Atlas_, plate lvi.
+
+The English, unable to break the serried mass of their enemies, feigned
+a retreat, whereupon the Normans unlashed their ships and hurried in
+pursuit into the open water. At once the English turned and met them.
+The battle began when the English admiral, Robert Morley, lay alongside
+the _Christopher_, which, after its capture, had been taken into the
+enemy's service. Soon the ships of both fleets were closely grappled
+together in a fierce hand-to-hand fight which lasted until after
+nightfall. The desperate eagerness of the combatants strangely
+contrasted with the slackness of the campaign in the Thiérache. "This
+battle," says Froissart, "was right fierce and horrible, for battles by
+sea are more dangerous and fiercer than battles by land, for at sea
+there is no retreat nor fleeing; there is no remedy but to fight and
+abide fortune, and every man to show his prowess." In the end the
+English won an overwhelming victory, which was completed next morning
+after more hard fighting. During the night Barbavera and his Genoese put
+to sea and escaped, but the magnificent Norman fleet was in the hands of
+the victor. The English loss was small, though it included Thomas of
+Monthermer, a son of Joan of Acre, and Edward himself was wounded in the
+thigh. The Norman force was almost annihilated. Quièret fell mortally
+wounded into Edward's hands; Béhuchet was captured unhurt. A later
+Norman legend tells how Béhuchet, when brought before the English king,
+answered some taunt by boxing the king's ears, whereupon the angry
+monarch hanged him forthwith from the mast of his ship.[1] But the
+tradition is unsupported by English authorities, and, with all his
+faults, Edward was not the man to deal thus with a captive knight who
+had fought his best. Master at last of the sea, Edward landed at Sluys
+amidst the rejoicings of the Flemings, and made his way to Ghent, where
+he greeted his wife, and first saw his infant son John, born during his
+absence, to whom Artevelde stood as godfather.
+
+ [1] Luce, _Le Soufflet de l'Écluse_, in _La Frame pendant la
+ Guerre de Cent Ans_, 2nd série, pp. 3-15.
+
+Edward's military fame was established over all Europe, and, says the
+Flemish writer, John van Klerk, "all who spoke the German tongue
+rejoiced at the defeat of the French". Yet the victory at Sluys was the
+prelude to a land campaign as ineffective as the raid into the
+Thiérache. Eager to restore their lost lands to the Flemings, Edward
+made the mistake of dividing his army. He sent Robert of Artois to
+effect the reconquest of Artois, while he himself besieged Tournai,
+which was then in French hands. Robert's attempt to win back the lands
+of his ancestors was a sorry failure. Defeated outside Saint Omer, he
+was unable even to invest that town. Almost equally unsuccessful was
+Edward's siege of Tournai, which resisted with such energy that he was
+soon at the end of his resources. At last, in despair, Edward
+challenged Philip VI. to decide their claim to France by single combat.
+The Valois answered that he would gladly do so if, in the event of his
+winning, he might obtain Edward's kingdom. In the same spirit of
+caution, Philip tarried half-way between Saint Omer and Tournai,
+watching both armies and afraid to strike at either. The armies wore
+themselves out in this game of waiting until the widowed Countess of
+Hainault, then abbess of the Cistercian nuns of Fontenelles, was moved
+by the desolation of the country to intervene between the two kings.
+The mother of the Queen of England and the sister of the King of
+France, she succeeded not only by reason of her prayers, but through
+the refusal of the Duke of Brabant, the Count of Hainault, and the
+other imperial vassals to remain longer at the war. On September 25,
+1340, a truce was signed at the solitary chapel of Esplechin, situated
+in the open country a little south of Tournai. By it hostilities
+between both kings and their respective allies were suspended, until
+midsummer day, 1341. Each king was to enjoy the lands actually in his
+possession, and commerce was to be carried on as if peace had been
+made. The most significant clause of the truce was that by which both
+kings pledged themselves that they "procure not that any innovation be
+done by the Church of Rome, or by others of Holy Church on either of
+the said kings. And if our most holy father the pope will do that, the
+two kings shall prevent it, so far as in them lies."
+
+The truce of Esplechin, renewed until 1345, put an end to the first, or
+Netherlandish, period of the Hundred Years' War. The imperial alliance,
+which had failed Edward, was soon to be solemnly dissolved. Early in
+1341, Louis of Bavaria revoked Edward's vicariate, and announced his
+intention of becoming henceforth the friend of his uncle, the King of
+France. This alliance between Philip and Louis completed the
+discomfiture of Benedict XII. In 1342 he died, and his successor was
+Peter Roger, the sometime Archbishop of Rouen, who assumed the title of
+Clement VI. By persuading Brabant and Hainault to be neutral between
+France and England, the new pontiff broke up the last remnant of the
+Anglo-imperial alliance. Even Flanders and England became estranged.
+Artevelde, who found it a hard matter to govern Flanders after the
+truce, would willingly have supported Edward. But Edward had henceforth
+less need of Artevelde than Artevelde had of him. In 1345 Edward again
+appeared at Sluys and had an interview with him, and then returned to
+his own country without setting foot on Flemish soil. Artevelde soon
+afterwards met his death in a popular tumult. His family fled to
+England, _where_ they lived on a pension from Edward. This was the end
+of the Anglo-Flemish alliance.
+
+After the treaty of Esplechin, Edward returned to Ghent. The conclusion
+of military operations was a signal to all his creditors to clamour for
+immediate settlement of their debts. Neither subsidies nor wool came
+from England, though the king wrote in piteous terms to his council.
+Edward was convinced that the real cause of his failure was the
+remissness of the home government, and resolved to wreak his vengeance
+on his ministers. He was encouraged to this effect by Bishop Burghersh,
+who still remembered his old feuds with Archbishop Stratford, and may
+well have believed that the archbishop, who had a financier's dread of
+war, had wilfully ruined his rival's diplomacy. But Edward dared not
+openly return to England, for his Flemish creditors regarded his
+personal presence as the best security for his debts. He was therefore
+reduced to the pitiful expedient of running away from them. One day he
+rode out of Ghent on the pretext of taking exercise, and hurried
+secretly and without escort to Sluys. Thence he took ship for England,
+and, after a tempestuous voyage of three days and nights, sailed up the
+Thames, and landed at the Tower on November 30, 1340, after nightfall.
+At cockcrow next morning, he summoned his ministers before him,
+denounced them as false traitors and drove them all from office. The
+judges were thrown into prison, and with them some of the leading
+merchants, including William de la Pole of Hull. A special commission,
+like that of 1289, scrutinised the acts of the royal officials
+throughout the kingdom, and exacted heavy fines from the many who were
+found wanting. Nothing but fear of provoking the wrath of the Church
+prevented Edward from consigning to prison the dismissed chancellor,
+Robert Stratford, Bishop of Chichester, and the late treasurer, Roger
+Northburgh, Bishop of Coventry. Their successors were lay knights, the
+new chancellor, Sir Robert Bourchier, being the first keeper of the
+great seal who was not a clerk.
+
+Earlier in the year the king had quarrelled with Archbishop Stratford,
+who resigned the chancellorship. But before Edward sailed from Orwell
+in June there had been a partial reconciliation, and the king left
+Stratford president of the council during his absence. When his brother
+and colleagues were dismissed, the archbishop was at Charing. Conscious
+that he was the chief object of Edward's vengeance, he at once took
+sanctuary with the monks of his cathedral. Every effort was made to
+drag him from his refuge. Some Louvain merchants, to whom he had bound
+himself for the king's debts, demanded that he should be surrendered to
+their custody until the money was paid. He was summoned to court and
+afterwards to parliament. But he prudently remained safe within the
+walls of Christ Church, and preached a course of sermons to the monks,
+in which he compared himself to St. Thomas of Canterbury, and hinted at
+the danger of his incurring his prototype's fate. Edward replied to
+this challenge by a lengthy pamphlet, called the _libellus famosus_.
+The violence and unmeasured terms of the tractate suggest the hand of
+Bishop Orleton, Stratford's lifelong foe, who had by Burghersh's recent
+death become the most prominent of the courtly prelates. The archbishop
+was declared to be the sole cause of the king's failures. He had left
+Edward without funds, and in trusting to him the king had leant on a
+broken reed. Stratford justified himself in another sermon in which he
+invited inquiry and demanded trial by his peers.
+
+Edward so far relented as to issue letters of safe-conduct enabling the
+archbishop to attend the parliament summoned for April 23, 1341. But
+when Stratford took his place, the king refused to meet him, and
+ordered him to answer in the exchequer the complaints brought against
+him. The lords upheld the primate's cause, and declared that in no
+circumstances could a peer of parliament be brought to trial elsewhere
+than in full parliament. Edward's fury abated when he saw that he would
+get no grant unless he gave way. He restored Stratford to his favour,
+and acceded to his request that he should answer in parliament and not
+in the exchequer. The childish controversy ended with the personal
+victory of the primate and the formal re-assertion of the important
+principle of trial by peers. But not even then was Edward able to get a
+subsidy. He was further forced to embody in the statute of the year the
+doctrines that auditors of the accounts of the royal officers should be
+elected in parliament, and that all ministers should be chosen by the
+king, after consultation with his estates, and should resign their
+offices at each meeting of parliament and be prepared to answer all
+complaints before it.
+
+Thus the fallen minister brought the estates the greatest triumph over
+the prerogative won during Edward's reign. Before long Edward was
+magnanimous enough to resume friendly relations with him, but he was
+never suffered to take a prominent part in politics. He died in 1348,
+after spending his later years in the business of his see. It was a
+strange irony of fate that this worldly and politic ecclesiastic should
+have perforce become the champion of the rights of the Church and the
+liberties of the nation. His victory established a remarkable
+solidarity between the high ecclesiastical party and the popular
+opposition, which was to last nearly as long as the century. Disgust at
+this alliance moved Edward to take up the anti-clerical attitude which
+henceforth marks the policy of the crown until the accession of the
+house of Lancaster.
+
+The victory of the estates of 1341 was too complete to last. For a
+medieval king to hand over the business of government to a nominated
+ministry was in substance a return to the state of things in 1258 or
+1312. Edward was not the sort of man to endure the thraldom that his
+father and great-grandfather had both found intolerable. Even at the
+moment of sealing the statute, he and his ministers protested that they
+were not bound to observe laws contrary to the constitution of the
+realm. Five months later, on October 1, 1341, the king issued letters,
+revoking the laws of the previous session. "We have never," he
+impudently declared, "really given our consent to the aforesaid
+pretended statute. But inasmuch as our rejecting it would have
+dissolved parliament in confusion, without any business having been
+transacted, and so all our affairs would have been ruined, we
+dissembled, as was our duty, and allowed the pretended statute to be
+sealed." For more than two years he did not venture to face a
+parliament, but the next gathering of the estates in April, 1343,
+repealed the offensive acts of 1341. Parliament was so reluctant to
+ratify the king's high-handed action, that he did not venture to ask it
+for any extraordinary grant of money. The only other important act of
+this parliament was a petition from lords and commons, urging the king
+to check the claims of a French pope, friendly to the "tyrant of
+France," to exercise ever-increasing rights of patronage over English
+benefices. The anti-clerical tide was still flowing.
+
+Before parliament met in 1343, the French war had been renewed on
+another pretext. A new source of trouble arose in a disputed succession
+to the duchy of Brittany. The duke John III., the grandson of John II.
+and Edward I.'s sister Beatrice, died in April, 1341. He left no
+legitimate children, and his succession was claimed by his half-brother,
+John of Montfort, and his niece Joan of Penthièvre. Montfort, the son of
+Duke Arthur II. by his second wife, had inherited from his mother the
+Norman county of Montfort l'Amaury, which became her possession as the
+representative on the spindle side of the line of Simon de Montfort the
+Albigensian crusader. Joan was the daughter of Guy, John III.'s brother
+of the full blood, in whose favour the great county of
+Penthièvre-Tréguier, including the whole of the north coast of the duchy
+from the river of Morlaix to within a few miles of the Rance, had been
+dissociated from the demesne and reconstituted as an appanage.[1] The
+heiress of Penthièvre thus ruled directly over nearly a sixth of
+Brittany, and her power was further strengthened by her marriage with
+Charles of Blois, who, though a younger son, enjoyed great influence as
+the sister's son of Philip VI., and also by reason of his simple,
+saintly, honourable, and martial character. The house of Penthièvre not
+only stood to Brittany as the house of Lancaster stood to England, as
+the natural head of the higher nobility; it also enjoyed the favour and
+protection of the French king, who was ever anxious to find friends
+among the chief sub-tenants of his great vassals. Against so formidable
+an opponent John of Montfort could only secure his rights by
+promptitude. Accordingly he made his way to Nantes and, receiving a warm
+welcome from his burgesses, proclaimed himself duke. Very few of the
+great feudatories threw in their lot with him. His strength was in the
+petty _noblesse_, the townsmen, and the enthusiasm of the Celtic
+population of _La Brétagne bretonnante_, which made Léon, Cornouailles,
+and Vannes the strongholds of his cause. Yet the Penthièvre influence
+took with it the Breton-speaking inhabitants of the diocese of Tréguier,
+and the piety of Charles made the clergy, and especially the friars,
+devoted to him.
+
+ [1] On the importance of Penthièvre, see A. de la Borderie, _La
+ Géographie feodale de la Brétagne_ (1889), pp. 60-65.
+
+The fight was not waged in Brittany only. Montfort had to contend
+against the general sentiment of the French nobility and the strong
+interest and affection which bound Philip VI. to uphold the claims of
+Charles of Blois. After a few months the parliament of Paris decided in
+favour of the king's nephew against Montfort. Charles's wife was the
+nearest heir of the deceased duke, and had therefore a prior claim over
+her uncle. Montfort urged in vain that the superior rights of the male,
+which had made the Count of Valois King of France, equally gave the
+Count of Montfort the duchy of Brittany. He had to fight for his duchy.
+John, Duke of Normandy, the heir of France, marched to Brittany with a
+strong force, to secure the establishment of his cousin in accordance
+with the decree of parliament. The union of the royal troops, with the
+levies of Penthièvre and the great feudatories of Brittany, was too
+powerful a combination to withstand. Montfort was shut up in Nantes,
+was forced to capitulate, and sent prisoner to Paris. His place was
+taken by his wife, Joan of Flanders, a daughter of Louis of Nevers.
+This lady shewed "the heart of a man and of a lion," as Froissart says.
+Her efforts, however, did not prevail against her formidable enemies.
+Bit by bit she was driven from one stronghold to another, until at last
+she was closely besieged in Hennebont by Charles of Blois. Before that,
+she had recognised Edward as King of France, and offered him the homage
+of her husband and son. Edward III. readily took up the cause of
+Montfort. He recked little of the inconsistency involved in the prince,
+who claimed France through his mother, supporting in Brittany a duke,
+whose pretensions were based upon grounds similar to the claim advanced
+by Philip of Valois on the French throne. As in Flanders, he found two
+rival nations contending in the bosom of a single French fief. He at
+once supported the Celtic party in Brittany as he had supported the
+Flemish party in Flanders. Both his allies had the same enemies in
+feudalism, the French monarchy, and the pretensions of high
+clericalism. Afraid to renew the attack in France without allies,
+Edward welcomed the support of the Montfort party, as giving him a
+chance of renewing his assaults on his adversary of Valois. He invested
+Montfort with the earldom of Richmond, of which John III had died
+possessed. He sent Sir Walter Manny with a force sufficient to raise
+the siege of Hennebont. The heroic Joan of Flanders was almost at the
+end of her resources, when on an early June morning, in 1342, she
+espied the white sails of Manny's fleet working its way from the sea up
+the estuary of the Blavet, which bathes the walls of Hennebont. After
+the arrival of the English, Charles of Blois abandoned the siege in
+despair. For the rest of the year the war was waged on a more equal
+footing. In August Edward sent to Brest an additional force under
+William Bohun, Earl of Northampton, who attempted, though with little
+success, to invade the domains of the house of Penthièvre. A hard-won
+victory against great odds near Morlaix was made memorable by
+Northampton's first applying the tactics of Halidon Hill to a pitched
+battle on the continent.[1] But the earl's troops were so few that
+they were forced to withdraw after their success into more friendly
+regions. Leon and Cornouailles then resumed allegiance to the house of
+Montfort. In the midst of the struggle Robert of Artois received a
+wound which soon ended his tempestuous career.
+
+ [1] Baker, p.76, gives the place, Knighton, ii., 25, the
+ details. See also my note in _Engl. Hist. Review, xix._ (1904),
+ 713-15.
+
+Edward was eager to enter the field in person. Since his return to
+England in 1340, his only military experience had been a luckless
+winter campaign in the Lothians against King David. In October, 1342,
+he left the Duke of Cornwall as warden of England during his absence,
+and took ship at Sandwich for Brittany. He remained in the country
+until the early months of 1343, raiding the land from end to end,
+receiving many of the greater barons into his obedience, and striving
+in particular to conquer the regions included in the modern department
+of the Morbihan. There he besieged Vannes, the strongest and largest
+city of Brittany, says Froissart, after Nantes. The triumphs of his
+rival at last brought Philip VI. into Brittany. While Edward
+laboriously pursued the siege of Vannes, amidst the hardships of a wet
+and stormy winter, Philip watched his enemy from Ploermel, a few miles
+to the north. For a third time the situation of Buironfosse and Tournai
+was renewed. The rivals were within striking distance, but once more
+both Edward and Philip were afraid to strike. History still further
+repeated itself; for the cardinal-bishops of Palestrina and Frascati,
+sent by Clement VI. to end the struggle, travelled from camp to camp
+with talk of peace. The sufferings of both armies gave the kings a
+powerful reason for listening to their advances. At last, on January
+19, 1343, a truce for nearly four years was signed at Malestroit,
+midway between Ploermel and Vannes, "in reverence of mother church, for
+the honour of the cardinals, and that the parties shall be able to
+declare their reasons before the pope, not for the purpose of rendering
+a judicial decision, but in order to make a better peace and treaty".
+Scotland and the Netherlands were included in the truce, and it was
+agreed that each belligerent should continue in the enjoyment of the
+territories which he held at the moment. Vannes, the immediate apple of
+discord, was put into the hands of the pope.
+
+The spring of 1343 saw Edward back in England. The scene of interest
+shifted to the papal court at Avignon, where ambassadors from Edward
+and Philip appeared to declare their masters' rights. The protracted
+negotiations were lacking in reality. The English, distrusting Clement
+as a French partisan, did their best to complicate the situation by
+complaints against papal provisions in favour of aliens "not having
+knowledge of the tongue nor condition of those whose governance and
+care should belong to them". English indignation rose higher when,
+despite the terms of the truce and the promise of the cardinals,
+Montfort remained immured in his French prison, while Breton nobles of
+his faction were kidnapped and put to death by Philip. Clement declared
+himself against Edward's claims to the French throne, and, long before
+the negotiations had reached a formal conclusion, it was clear that
+nothing would come of them. At last in 1345 the English King denounced
+the truce and prepared to renew the war. His first concern was,
+necessarily finance, and he had already exhausted all his resources as
+a borrower. The financial difficulties, which had stayed his career in
+the Netherlands five years before, had reached their culmination.
+Stratford was avenged for the outrages of 1340, for Edward was in worse
+embarrassments than on that winter night when the glare of torches
+illuminated the sovereign's sudden return to the Tower. The king's
+Netherlandish, Rhenish, and Italian creditors would trust him no longer
+and vainly clamoured for the repayment of their advances. "We grieve,"
+he was forced to reply to the Cologne magistrates, "nay, we blush, that
+we are unable to meet our obligations at the due time." Edward's
+anxiety to prepare for fresh campaigns made him careless as to his
+former obligations. His wholesale neglect to repay his debts drove the
+great banking houses of the Bardi and the Peruzzi into bankruptcy, and
+the failure of the English king's creditors plunged all Florence into
+deep distress. One good result came from the king's dishonour. The
+foreign sources of supply having dried up, Edward was forced to lean
+more exclusively upon his English subjects. A wealthy family of Hull
+merchants, recently transferred to London, became very flourishing. Its
+head, William de la Pole, who had financed every government scheme
+since the days of Mortimer, became a knight, a judge, a territorial
+magnate, and the first English merchant to found a baronial house. And
+as the credit of the English merchants was limited, Edward was forced
+more and more to rely upon parliamentary grants. The memory of the
+king's want of faith to the estates of 1341 had died away, and a
+parliament, which met in 1344, once more made Edward liberal
+contributions. Secure of his subjects' support, the frivolous king
+largely employed his resources in the chivalrous pageantry which
+stirred up the martial ardour of his barons and made the war popular.
+It was then that he resolved to set up a "round table" at Windsor after
+the fabled fashion of King Arthur. From this came the foundation of the
+Round Tower which Edward was to erect in his favourite abode, and the
+organised chivalry that was soon to culminate in the Order of the
+Garter. In the summer of 1345 Edward made that journey to Sluys, which
+has already been noted, and he held on ship-board his last interview
+with James van Artevelde. His immediate return to England showed that
+he had no mind to renew his Flemish alliances. In the same year the
+death of the queen's brother, William of Avesnes, established the rule
+of Louis of Bavaria in the three counties of Holland, Zealand, and
+Hainault in the right of his wife, Philippa's elder sister. Edward put
+in a claim on behalf of his queen, which further embittered his already
+uneasy relations with Louis, and led him to seek his field of combat
+anywhere rather than in the Netherlands. In Brittany the murder of the
+nobles of Montfort's faction had given an excuse for the renewal of
+partisan warfare as early as 1343, but Montfort was still under
+surveillance in France, even after his release from Philip's prison,
+and Joan of Flanders, the heroic defender of Hennebont, was hopelessly
+insane in England. At last in 1345 Montfort ventured to flee from
+France to England, where he did homage to Edward as King of France for
+the duchy which he claimed. He then went to Brittany, and there shortly
+afterwards died. The new Duke of Brittany, also named John, was a mere
+boy when he was thus robbed of both his parents' care, and his cause
+languished for want of a head. Edward took upon himself the whole
+direction of Brittany as tutor of the little duke. Northampton was once
+more sent thither, but for a time the war degenerated into sieges of
+castles and petty conflicts.
+
+While action was thus impracticable in the Netherlands, and ineffective
+in Brittany, Gascony became, for the first time during the struggle, the
+scene of military operations of the first rank. The storm of warfare had
+hitherto almost spared the patrimony of the English king in southern
+France. No great effort was made either by the French to capture the
+last bulwarks of the Aquitanian inheritance, or by Edward to extend his
+duchy to its ancient limits. Cut off from other fields of expansion,
+Edward threw his chief energies into the enlargement of his power in
+southern France. He won over many of those Gascon nobles, including the
+powerful lord of Albret, who had been alienated by his former
+indifference. All was ready for action, and in June, 1345, Henry of
+Grosmont, Earl of Derby, the eldest son of Henry of Lancaster, landed at
+Bayonne with a sufficient English force to encourage the lords of
+Gascony to rally round the ducal banner. Soon after his landing, the
+death of his blind father made Derby Earl of Lancaster. During the next
+eighteen months, the earl successfully led three raids into the heart of
+the enemies' territory.[1] The first, begun very soon after his landing,
+occupied the summer of 1345. Advancing from Libourne, the limit of the
+Anglo-Gascon power, Henry made his way up the Dordogne, a fleet of boats
+co-operating with his land forces. He took the important town of
+Bergerac, and thence, mounting the stream as far as Lalinde, he crossed
+the hills separating the Dordogne from the Isle, and unsuccessfully
+assaulted Périgueux. Thence he advanced still further, and captured the
+stronghold of Auberoche, dominating the rocky valley of the Auvézère.
+Leaving a garrison at Auberoche, Henry returned to his base, but upon
+his withdrawal the French closely besieged his conquest, and the earl
+made a sudden move to its relief. On October 21 he won a brisk battle
+outside the walls of Auberoche before the more sluggish part of his army
+had time to reach the scene of action. This famous exploit again
+established the Gascon duke in Périgord.
+
+ [1] For these campaigns, see Ribadieu, _Les Campagnes du Comté
+ de Derby en Guyenne, Saintonge et Poitou_ (1865).
+
+Early in 1346 the victor of Auberoche led his forces up the Garonne
+valley. La Réole, lost since 1325, was taken in January, and thence
+Earl Henry marched to the capture of many a town and fortress on the
+Garonne and the lower Lot. His most important acquisition was
+Aiguillon, commanding the junction of the Lot and the Garonne, for its
+possession opened up the way for the reconquest of the Agenais, the
+rich fruit of the last campaign of Charles of Valois. Duke John of
+Normandy then appeared upon the scene, and Henry of Lancaster withdrew
+before him to the line of the Dordogne. Aiguillon stood a siege from
+April to August, when the Duke of Normandy, then at the end of his
+resources, solicited a truce. News having come to Lancaster at Bergerac
+that Edward had begun his memorable invasion of Normandy, he
+contemptuously rejected the proposal. Before long, Duke John raised the
+siege and hurried to his father's assistance. Thereupon Lancaster
+returned to the Garonne and revictualled Aiguillon. Immediately after
+he started on his third raid. This time he bent his steps northwards,
+and late in September was at Châteauneuf on the Charente, whence he
+threatened Angoulême, and finally obtained its surrender. Crossing the
+Charente, he entered French Saintonge, where the important town of
+Saint-Jean-d'Angely opened its gates and took oaths to Edward _as_ duke
+and king. Then he boldly dashed into the heart of Poitou, marching by
+Lusignan to Poitiers. "We rode before the city," wrote Lancaster, "and
+summoned it, but they would do nothing. Thereupon on the Wednesday
+after Michaelmas we stormed the city, and all those within were taken
+or slain. And the lords that were within fled away on the other side,
+and we tarried full eight days. Thus we have made a fair raid, God be
+thanked, and are come again to Saint-Jean, whence we propose to return
+to Bordeaux." This exploit ended Lancaster's Gascon career. In January,
+1347, he was back in England, having restored the reputation of his
+king in Gascony, and set an example of heroism soon to be emulated by
+his cousin, the Black Prince.
+
+Edward resolved to take the field in person in the summer of 1346.
+Special efforts were made to equip the army, and lovers of ancient
+precedent were dismayed when the king called upon all men of property to
+equip archers, hobblers, or men-at-arms, according to their substance,
+that they might serve abroad at the king's wages. But the nation
+responded to the king's call, and a host of some 2,400 cavalry and
+10,000 archers and other infantry collected at Portsmouth between Easter
+and the early summer.[1] There were the usual delays of a medieval
+muster, and it was not until July was well begun that Edward, having
+constituted his second son Lionel of Antwerp, a boy of six, as regent,
+took ship at Portsmouth with his eldest son, then sixteen years of age,
+and, since 1343, Prince of Wales as well as Duke of Cornwall. The
+destination of the army was a secret, but Edward's original idea seems
+to have been to join Henry of Lancaster in Gascony, though we may well
+believe that the resources of medieval transport were hardly adequate to
+convey so large a force for so great a distance. Moreover, a persistent
+series of south-westerly winds prohibited all attempts to round the
+Breton peninsula, while Godfrey of Harcourt, a Norman lord who had
+incurred the wrath of Philip VI. and had been driven into exile,
+persistently urged on Edward the superior attractions of his native
+coast. When the fleet set sail from Portsmouth, it was directed to
+follow in the admiral's track; and as soon as the open sea was gained,
+the ships were instructed to make their way to the Côtentin. On July 12
+the English army reached Saint-Vaast de la Hougue, and spent five days
+in disembarking and ravaging the neighbourhood.[2] Immediately on
+landing, Edward dubbed the Prince of Wales a knight, along with other
+young nobles, one of whom was Roger Mortimer, the grandson and heir of
+the traitor Earl of March. At last, on July 18, the English army began
+to move by slow stages to the south. It met with little resistance, and
+plundered and burnt the rich countryside at its discretion. The English
+marvelled at the fertility of the country and the size and wealth of its
+towns. Barfleur was as big as Sandwich, Carentan reminded them of
+Leicester, Saint-Lo was the size of Lincoln, and Caen was more populous
+than any English city save London.
+
+ [1] On the details of this force, see Wrottesley, _Crecy and
+ Calais,_ in _Collections for a History of Staffordshire,_ vol.
+ xviii. (1897); _cf._ J.E. Morris in _Engl. Hist. Review, xiv.,_
+ 766-69.
+
+ [2] Besides the sources for this campaign mentioned in Sir E.M.
+ Thompson, _Chronicle of Geoffrey le Baker,_ pp. 252-57, the
+ disregarded _Acta bellicosa Edwardi, etc.,_ published in
+ Moisant, _Le Prince Noir en Aquitaine, pp._ 157-74, from a
+ Corpus Christi Coll. Cambridge MS., should be mentioned. It has
+ first been utilised in H. Pientout's valuable paper, _La prise
+ de Caen par Édouard III. en 1346, in Mémoires de l'Académie de
+ Caen_ (1904).
+
+It was only at Caen that any real resistance was encountered. On July
+26 Edward's soldiers entered the northern quarter of the town without
+opposition, to find the fortified enclosures of the two great abbeys of
+William the Conqueror and his queen undefended and desolate, the _grand
+bourg_, the populous quarter round the church of St. Peter open to
+them, and only the castle in the extreme north garrisoned. Caen was not
+a walled town, and the defenders preferred to limit themselves to
+holding the southern quarter, the _Ile Saint-Jean_, which lay between
+the district of St. Peter's and the river Orne, but was cut off from
+the rest by a branch of the Orne that ran just south of St. Peter's
+church. There was sharp fighting at the bridge which commanded access
+to the island; but the English archers prepared the way, and then the
+men-at-arms completed the work. After a determined conflict, the Island
+of St. John was captured, and its chief defenders, the Count of Eu,
+Constable of France, and the lord of Tancarville, the chamberlain, were
+taken prisoners. Meanwhile the English fleet, which had devastated the
+whole coast from Cherbourg to Ouistreham, arrived off the mouth of the
+Orne, laden with plunder and eager to get back home with its spoils.
+Edward thought it prudent to avoid a threatened mutiny by ordering the
+ships to recross the Channel, and take with them the captives and the
+loot which he had amassed at Caen. During a halt of five days at Caen,
+Edward discovered a copy of the agreement made between the Normans and
+King Philip for the invasion of England eight years before. This also
+he despatched to England, where it was read before the Londoners by the
+Archbishop of Canterbury in order to show that the aggression was not
+all on one side.
+
+On July 31, Edward resumed his eastward march. At Lisieux, the next
+important stage, came the inevitable two cardinals with their
+inevitable proposals of mediation, which Edward put aside with scant
+civility. The army was soon once more on the move, and on August 7
+struck the Seine at Elbeuf, a few miles higher up the river than Rouen.
+Here Edward was at last in touch with his enemy. During the English
+march through lower Normandy, Philip VI. had assembled a considerable
+army, with which he occupied the Norman capital. Nothing but the Seine
+and a few miles of country separated the two forces. But as at
+Buironfosse, at Tournai, and at Vannes, the French declined to attack,
+and Edward would not depart from his tradition of acting on the
+defensive. The English slowly made their way up the left bank of the
+Seine, avoiding the stronger castles and walled towns, and devastating
+the open country. The French followed them on the right bank, carefully
+watching their movements, and breaking all the bridges. So things went
+until, on August 13, Edward reached Poissy, a town within fifteen miles
+of the capital.
+
+The English advanced troops plundered up to the walls of Paris, whose
+citizens, watching in terror the flames that made lurid the western
+sky, implored their king to come to their help. From Saint-Denis Philip
+issued a challenge to Edward to meet him in the open field on a fixed
+day, Edward, however, was not to be tempted by such appeals to his
+chivalry. The day after Philip's message was sent, he repaired the
+bridge at Poissy, crossed the Seine, sent a stinging reply to Philip's
+letter, and moved rapidly northwards. Avoiding Pontoise, Beauvais, and
+other towns, he was soon within a few miles of the Somme. Long marching
+had fatigued his army, and he resolved to retreat to the Flemish
+frontier. The French soon followed him by a route some miles further
+towards the east. They reached the Somme earlier than the English, and
+were pouring into Amiens and Abbeville, while Edward's scouts were
+vainly seeking for an unguarded passage over the river. If the Somme
+could not be crossed, there was every chance of Edward's war-worn army
+being driven into a corner at Saint-Valery, between the broad and sandy
+estuary of the Somme and the open sea. When affairs had become thus
+critical, local guides revealed to the English a way across the
+estuary, where a white band of chalk, called the _Blanche taque_,
+cropping out of the sandy river bed, forms a hard, practicable ford
+from one bank of the river to the other. "Then," writes an official
+reporter, "the King of England and his host took that water of the
+Somme, where never man passed before without loss, and fought their
+enemies, and chased them right up to the gate of Abbeville." That night
+Edward and his troops slept on the outskirts of the forest of Crecy.
+After traversing this, they took up a strong position on the northern
+side of the wood on Saturday, August 26. There, in the heart of his
+grandmother's inheritance of Ponthieu, Edward elected to make a stand,
+and, for the first time in all their campaigning, Philip felt
+sufficient confidence to engage in an offensive battle against his
+rival.
+
+Ponthieu is a land of low chalk downs, open fields, and dense woods,
+broken by valleys, through which the small streams that water it
+trickle down to the sea, and by the waterless depressions
+characteristic of a chalk country. The village of Crécy-en-Ponthieu is
+situated on the north bank of the little river Maye. Immediately to the
+east of the village, a lateral depression, running north and south,
+called the _Vallée aux Clercs,_ falls down into the Maye valley, and is
+flanked with rolling downs, perhaps 150 to 200 feet in height. On the
+summit of the western slopes of this valley, Edward stationed his army.
+Its right was held by the first of the three traditional "battles,"
+under the personal command of the young Prince of Wales. Its front and
+right flank were protected by the hill, while still further to the
+right lay Crecy village embowered in its trees, beyond which the dense
+forest formed an excellent protection from attack. The second of the
+English battles, under the Earls' of Northampton and Arundel, held the
+less formidable slopes of the upper portion of the _Vallée aux Clercs,_
+their left resting on the enclosures and woods of the village of
+Wadicourt. The third battle, commanded by the king himself, and
+stationed in the rear as a reserve, held the rolling upland plain, on
+the highest point of which was a windmill, commanding the whole field,
+in which Edward took up his quarters. The English men-at-arms left
+their horses in the rear. The archers of each of the two forward
+battles were thrown out at an angle on the flanks, so that the enemy,
+on approaching the serried mass of men-at-arms, had to encounter a
+severe discharge of arrows both from the right and the left. It was the
+tactics of Halidon hill, perfected by experience and for the first time
+applied on a large scale against a continental enemy. The credit of it
+may well be assigned to Northampton, fresh from the fight at Morlaix,
+where similar tactics had already won the day.
+
+The English were in position early in the morning of Saturday, August
+26, and employed their leisure in further strengthening their lines by
+digging shallow holes, like the pits at Bannockburn, in the hope of
+ensnaring the French cavalry, if they came to close quarters with the
+dismounted men-at-arms. The summer day had almost ended its course
+before the French army appeared. Philip and his men had passed the
+previous night at Abbeville, and had not only performed the long march
+from the capital of Ponthieu, but many of them, misled by bad
+information as to Edward's position, had made a weary detour to the
+north-west. It was not until the hour of vespers that the mass of the
+French host was marshalled in front of the village of Estrées on the
+eastward plateau beyond the _Vallée aux Clercs_. John of Hainault, who
+had become a thorough-going French partisan, advised Philip to delay
+battle until the following day. The French were tired; all the army had
+not yet come up; night would soon put an end to the combat; the evening
+sun, shining brightly after a violent summer storm, was blazing
+directly in the faces of the assailants. But the French nobles demanded
+an immediate advance. Confident in their numbers and prowess, they had
+already assured themselves of victory, and were quarrelling about the
+division of the captives they would make. Philip, too sympathetic with
+the feudal point of view to oppose his friends, ordered the advance.
+
+The battle began by the French sending forward a strong force of
+Genoese crossbowmen, to prepare the way for the cavalry charge. But the
+long bows of the English outshot the obsolete and cumbrous weapons of
+the Genoese, whose strings had been wetted by the recent storm. The
+Italians descended into the valley, but were soon demoralised by seeing
+their comrades fall all round them, while their own bolts failed to
+reach the enemy. They were already in full retreat back up the slope,
+when the impatience of the French horsemen burst all bounds. The
+reckless cavalry charge swept right through the disordered ranks of the
+crossbowmen, whose groans and cries as they were trampled underfoot by
+the mail-clad steeds, inspired the rear ranks of the French with the
+vain belief that the English were hard pressed, and made them eager to
+join the fray. The charge, as disorderly and as badly directed as the
+fatal attack of Bannockburn, never reached the English ranks. Shot down
+right and left by archers, terrified by the fearful booming of three
+small cannon that the English had dragged about during their
+wanderings, the French line soon became a confused mob of furious
+horsemen on panic-stricken horses. With gallantry even more conspicuous
+than their want of discipline, the French made no less than fifteen
+attempts to penetrate the enemies' lines. At one point only did they
+get near their goal, and that was on the right battle where the Prince
+of Wales himself was in command. A timely reinforcement sent by King
+Edward relieved the pressure, and the French were soon in full retreat,
+protected, as the English boasted, from further attack by the rampart
+of dead that they left behind them. The darkness, which ended the
+struggle, forbade all pursuit. Next day the fight was renewed by fresh
+French forces, but a fog hampered their movements, and they fell easy
+victims to the English. Then the defeated force retreated to Abbeville.
+The English loss was insignificant, but the field was covered with the
+bravest and noblest of the French. Among those who perished on the side
+of Philip were Louis of Nevers, the chivalrous Count of Flanders, who
+had sacrificed everything save his honour on the altar of feudal duty,
+and the blind King John of Bohemia, whose end was as romantic and
+futile as his life. Both these princes left as their successors sons of
+very different stamp in Louis de Male, and Charles of Moravia. Charles,
+who had recently been set up as King of the Romans by the clerical
+party against Louis of Bavaria, was present at Crecy, but a prudent
+retreat saved him from his father's fate.
+
+In the midst of the Norman campaign, Philip urgently besought David,
+King of Scots, to make a diversion in his favour. Since 1341 David,
+then a youth of seventeen, had been back in Scotland. Prolonged truces
+gave him little opportunity of trying his skill as a soldier, and his
+domestic rule was not particularly successful. The full effects of the
+Franco-Scottish alliance were revealed when, early in October, the
+Scottish king invaded the north of England, confident that, as all the
+fighting-men were in France, he would meet no more formidable opponents
+than monks, peasants, and shepherds. The five days' resistance of Lord
+Wake's border peel of Castleton in Liddesdale showed the baselessness
+of this imagination. At its capture on October 10, David put to death
+its gallant captain, a knight named Walter Selby. Then the Scots
+streamed over the hills into Upper Tynedale, and soon devastated
+Durham. Such of the border lords as were not with the king in France
+had now prepared for resistance. Beside the Nevilles, Percys, and other
+great houses of the north, the Archbishop of York, William de la Zouch,
+took a vigorous part in organising the local levies, and in a very
+short space of time a sufficient army assembled to make head against
+the invaders. From their muster at Richmond, the northern barons
+marched into the land of St. Cuthbert, many priests following their
+archbishop as of old their predecessors had followed Melton or
+Thurstan. On October 17 the forces joined battle at Neville's Cross, a
+wayside landmark on the Red hills, a rough and broken region sloping
+down to the Wear, immediately to the west of the city of Durham.
+Neither host was large in size, and each stood facing the other, with
+the archers at either wing, after the fashion that had become Scottish
+as well as English. For a time neither army was willing to begin. At
+last the English archers, irritated at the delay, advanced upon the
+Scots with showers of missiles. Then the struggle grew general and
+after a fierce hand-to-hand fight the English prevailed. David was
+taken prisoner and was lodged in the Tower, and many of the noblest of
+the Scots lay dead on the field. The diversion was a failure; the local
+levies had proved amply sufficient to cope with the enemy. In thus
+playing the game of the French king, David began a policy which, from
+Neville's Cross to Flodden, brought embarrassment to England and
+desolation to Scotland. It was the inevitable penalty of two
+independent and hostile states existing in one little island.
+
+So war-worn were the victors of Crecy that all the profit they could
+win from the battle was the power to continue their march undisturbed
+to the sea coast. On September 4, Edward reached the walls of Calais,
+the last French town on the frontiers of Flanders, and the port whose
+corsairs had inflicted exceptional damage on English shipping during
+the whole of the war. With a keen eye to the military importance of the
+place, the King abandoned the easy course of returning with his troops
+to England, and at once sat down before Calais. It was an arduous and
+prolonged siege. Calais was girt by double walls and ditches of
+exceptional strength and was bravely defended by John de Vienne and a
+numerous garrison. Moreover the yielding soil of the sands and marshes
+around the town made it impossible for Edward to erect against the
+fortifications the cumbrous machines by which engineers then sought to
+batter down the walls of towns. The only method of taking the place was
+by starvation. At first Edward was not able to block every avenue of
+access to the beleaguered fortress. Winter came on; the troops demanded
+permission to go home; the sailors threatened mutiny, and the French
+were actively on the watch.
+
+Amidst these troubles, Edward III showed a persistence worthy of his
+grandfather. He remained at the seat of war, transacting much of the
+business of government in the town of wooden huts which, growing up
+round the besiegers' lines, made the winter siege endurable. In the
+worst period of the year sufficient forces to man the trenches could
+only be secured by wholesale charters of pardon to felonious and
+offending soldiers, on condition that they did not withdraw from service
+without the king's licence, so long as Edward himself remained beyond
+the seas.[1] A parliament of magnates met in March, 1347, and granted an
+aid. Instead of summoning the commons, Edward preferred to raise his
+chief supplies by another loan of 20,000 sacks of wool from the
+merchants, by additional customs dues voted by a merchant assembly, and
+by considerable loans from ecclesiastics and religious houses. In April
+and May all England was alive with martial preparation, and gradually a
+force far transcending the Crecy army was gathered round the walls of
+Calais, while a great fleet held the sea and prohibited the access of
+French ships to the doomed garrison. Northampton, ever fertile in
+expedients, discovered that, even after the high seas were blocked,
+boats still crept into Calais port by hugging the shallow shore. He ran
+long jetties of piles from the coast line into deep water, and thus cut
+off the last means of communication and of supplies. By June the town
+was suffering severely from famine.
+
+ [1] See for this, _Rotulus Normannice_ in _Cal. Patent Rolls,_
+ 1345-48, especially PP. 473-526. For the vast force gathered
+ later, see Wrottesley and Morris, U.S.
+
+The French made a great effort, both by sea and land, to relieve
+Calais. On June 25 Northampton went out with his ships as far as the
+mouth of the Somme, where off Le Crotoy he won a naval victory which
+made the English command of the sea absolutely secure. A month later
+Philip, at the head of the land army, looked down upon the lines of
+Calais from the heights of Guînes. The two cardinals made their usual
+efforts for a truce, but the English would not allow their prey to be
+snatched from them at the eleventh hour. Then Philip challenged the
+enemy to a pitched battle, and four knights on each side were appointed
+to select the place of combat. The French, however, were of no mind to
+risk another Crecy, and on the morning of July 31 the smoke of their
+burning camp told the English that once more Philip had shrunk from a
+meeting. Then at last the garrison opened its gates on August 3, 1347.
+The defenders were treated chivalrously by the victor, who admired
+their courage and endurance. But the mass of the population were
+removed from their homes, and numerous grants of houses and property
+made to Englishmen. Edward resolved to make his conquest an English
+town, and, from that time onwards, it became the fortress through which
+an English army might at any time be poured into France, and the
+warehouse from which the spinners and weavers of Flanders were to draw
+their supplies of raw wool. For more than two hundred years, English
+Calais retained all its military and most of its commercial importance.
+Later conquests enabled a ring of forts to be erected round it which
+strengthened its natural advantages.
+
+Crecy, Neville's Cross, Aiguillon, and Calais did not exhaust the
+glories of this strenuous time. The war of the Breton succession, which
+Northampton had waged since 1345, was continued in 1346 by Thomas
+Dagworth, a knight appointed as his lieutenant on his withdrawal to
+join the army of Crecy and Calais. The Montfort star was still in the
+ascendant, and even the hereditary dominions of Joan of Penthièvre were
+assailed. An English garrison was established at La Roche Derien,
+situated some four miles higher up the river Jaudy than the little open
+episcopal city of Tréguier, and communicating by the river with the sea
+and with England. So troublesome did Montfort's garrison at La Roche
+become to the vassals of Penthièvre, that in the summer of 1347 Charles
+of Blois collected an army, wherein nearly all the greatest feudal
+houses of Brittany were strongly represented, and sat down before La
+Roche. Dagworth, one of the ablest of English soldiers, was at Carhaix,
+in the heart of the central uplands, when he heard of the danger of the
+single English post within the lands of Penthièvre. He at once hurried
+northwards, and on the night of June 19 rested at the abbey of Bégard,
+about ten miles to the south of La Roche. From Bégard two roads led to
+La Roche, one on each bank of the Jaudy. Thinking that Dagworth would
+pursue the shorter road on the left bank, Charles of Blois stationed a
+portion of his army at some distance from La Roche on that side of the
+Jaudy, while the rest remained with himself on the right bank before
+the walls of the town. Dagworth, however, chose the longer route, and
+before daybreak, on the morning of June 20, fell suddenly upon Charles.
+A fierce fight in the dark was ended after dawn in favour of Montfort
+by a timely sally of the beleaguered garrison. In the confusion Charles
+forgot to recall the division uselessly stationed beyond the Jaudy, and
+this error completed his ruin. Charles fought like a hero, and, after
+receiving seventeen wounds, yielded up his sword to a Breton lord
+rather than to the English commander. When his wounds were healed,
+Charles was sent to London, where he joined David of Scotland, the
+Count of Eu, and the Lord of Tancarville. It looked as if Montfort's
+triumph was secured.
+
+In the midst of his successes Edward made a truce, yielding to the
+earnest request of the cardinals, "through his reverence to the
+apostolic see". The truce of Calais was signed on September 28, and
+included Scotland and Brittany as well as France within its scope. On
+October 12 Edward returned to his kingdom. Financial exhaustion, the
+need of repose, the unwillingness of his subjects to continue the
+combat, and the failure of the Flemish and Netherlandish alliances
+sufficiently explain this halt in the midst of victory. Yet from the
+military standpoint Edward's action, harmful everywhere to his
+partisans, was particularly fatal in Brittany, where most of Penthièvre
+and nearly all upper Brittany were still obedient to Charles of
+Blois.[1] But Edward had embarked upon a course infinitely beyond his
+material resources. When a special effort could only give him the one
+town of Calais, how could he ever conquer all France?
+
+ [1] See on this A. de la Borderie, _Hist. de Brétagne_, iii.,
+ 507, _et seq_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+FROM THE BLACK DEATH TO THE TREATY OF CALAIS.
+
+
+At the conclusion of the truce of Calais in 1347, Edward III and
+England were at the height of their military reputation. Perhaps the
+nation was in even a stronger position than the monarch. Edward had
+dissipated his resources in winning his successes, but the danger which
+faced the ruler had but slightly impaired the fortunes of his subjects.
+The country was in a sufficiently prosperous condition to bear its
+burdens without much real suffering. The widespread dislike of
+extraordinary taxation, which so often assumed the form of the familiar
+cry that the king must live of his own, had taken the shape of
+unwillingness to accept responsibility for the king's policy and a
+growing indisposition to meet his demands. But since the rule of Edward
+began, England enjoyed a prosperity so unbroken that far heavier
+burdens would hardly have brought about a diminution of the well-being
+which stood in glaring contrast to the desolation long inflicted by
+Edward's wars on France. A war waged exclusively on foreign soil did
+little harm to England, and offered careers whereby many an English
+adventurer was gaining a place among the landed classes. The simple
+archers and men-at-arms, who received high wages and good hopes of
+plunder in the king's foreign service, found in it a congenial and
+lucrative, if demoralising profession. In England, though wages were
+low, provisions were cheap and employment constant. The growth of the
+wool trade, then further stimulated by refugees from the "three towns
+of Flanders," against which Louis de Male was waging relentless war,
+was bringing comfort to many, and riches to a few. The maritime
+greatness of England that found its first results in the battle of
+Sluys was the fruit of a commercial activity on the sea which enabled
+English shipmen to deprive the Italians, Netherlanders, and Germans of
+the overwhelming share they had hitherto enjoyed of our foreign trade.
+The dark shadows of medieval life were indeed never absent from the
+picture; but medieval England seldom enjoyed greater wellbeing and
+tranquillity than during the first eighteen years of the personal rule
+of Edward III. One sign of the increasing attention paid to suppressing
+disorder was an act of 1344, which empowered the local conservators of
+the peace, already an element in the administrative machinery, to hear
+and determine felonies. A later act made this a part of their regular
+functions, and gave them the title of justices of the peace, thus
+setting up a means of maintaining local order so effective that the old
+machinery of the local courts gradually gave way to it.
+
+A rude ending to this period of prosperity was brought about by the
+devastations of the pestilence known to modern readers as the Black
+Death, which since 1347 had decimated the Levant. This was the bubonic
+plague, almost as familiar in the east of to-day as in the
+mid-fourteenth century. It was brought along the chief commercial
+highways which bound the western world to the markets of the east. First
+introduced into the west at the great ports of the Mediterranean,
+Venice, Genoa, Marseilles, it spread over France and Italy by the early
+months of 1348. Avignon was a chief centre of the infection, and, amidst
+the desolation around him, Clement VI. strove with rare energy to give
+peace to a distracted world. The regions of western and northern France,
+which had felt the full force of the war, were among the worst
+sufferers. Aquitaine, too, was cruelly desolated, and among the victims
+was Edward III.'s daughter, Joan, who perished at Bordeaux on her way to
+Castile, as the bride of the prince afterwards infamous as Peter the
+Cruel. Early in August, 1348, the scourge crossed the channel, making
+its first appearance in England at Weymouth. Thence it spread northwards
+and westwards. Bristol was the first great English town to feel its
+ravages. Though the Gloucestershire men prohibited all intercourse
+between the infected port and their own villages, the plague was in no
+wise stayed by their precautions. The disease extended, by way of
+Gloucester and Oxford, to London, reaching the capital early in
+November, and continuing its ravages until the following Whitsuntide.
+When it had almost died out in London, it began, in the spring of 1349,
+to rage severely in East Anglia,[1] while in Lancashire the worst time
+seems to have been from the autumn of 1349 to the beginning of 1350.[2]
+Scotland was so long exempt that the Scots, proud of their immunity,
+were wont to swear "by the foul death of England". In 1350 they gathered
+together an army in Ettrick forest with the object of invading the
+plague-stricken border shires. But the pestilence fell upon the host
+assembled for the foray, and all war was stopped while Scotland was
+devastated from end to end. Ireland began to suffer in August, 1349, the
+disease being at first confined to the Englishry of the towns, though,
+after a time, it made its way also to the pure Irish.[3]
+
+ [1] A. Jessopp, _The Black Death in East Anglia_, in _The
+ Coming of the Friars and Other Essays_(1889). For general
+ details see F. Seebohm, _The Black Death_, in _Fortnightly
+ Review (1865 and 1866)_; J.E.T. Rogers, _England before and
+ after the Black Death_, in _Fortnightly Review (1866)_; F.A.
+ Gasquet's _Great Pestilence_ (1893); and C. Creighton, _History
+ of Epidemics in Britain_, i., 114-207(1891).
+
+ [2] A.G. Little, _The Black Death in Lancashire_, in _Engl.
+ Hist. Review_, v. (1890), 524-30
+
+ [3] See for Ireland, however, the vivid details in J. Clyn of
+ Kilkenny, _Annales Hibevnia: ad annum 1349_, ed. R. Butler,
+ _Irish Archaological Soc._ (1849).
+
+The wild exaggerations of the chroniclers reflect the horror and
+desolation wrought by the epidemic. There died so many, we are told,
+that the survivors scarcely sufficed to bury the victims, and not one
+man in ten remained alive. The more moderate estimate of Froissart sets
+down the proportion dead of the plague as one in three throughout all
+Christendom, and some modern inquirers have rashly reckoned the
+mortality in England as amounting to a half or a third of the
+population. In truth, complete statistics are necessarily wanting, and
+if the records of the admissions of the clergy attest that, in certain
+dioceses, half the livings changed hands during the years of
+pestilence, it is not permissible to infer from that circumstance that
+there was a similar rate of mortality from the plague over the whole of
+the population. The sudden and overwhelming character of the disorder
+increased the universal terror. One day a man was healthy: within a few
+hours of the appearance of the fatal swelling, or of the dark livid
+marks which gave the plague its popular name, he was a corpse. The
+pestilence seemed to single out the young and robust as its prey, and
+to spare the aged and sick. The churchyards were soon overflowing, and
+special plague pits had to be dug where the dead were heaped up by the
+hundred. Comparatively few magnates died, but the poor, the religious,
+and the clergy were chief sufferers. The law courts ceased to hold
+regular sessions. When the people had partially recovered from the
+first visitations of the plague, others befel them which were scarcely
+less severe. The years 1362 and 1369 almost rivalled the horrors of
+1348 and 1349.
+
+The immediate effects of the calamity were overwhelming. At first the
+horror of the foul death effaced all other considerations from men's
+minds. There were not enough priests to absolve the dying, and special
+indulgences, with full liberty to choose confessors at discretion, were
+promulgated from Avignon and from many diocesan chanceries. The price
+of commodities fell for the moment, since there were few, we are told,
+who cared for riches amidst the general fear of death. The pestilence
+played such havoc with the labouring population that the beasts
+wandered untended in the pastures, and rich crops of corn stood rotting
+in the fields from lack of harvesters to gather them. There was the
+same lack of clergy as of labourers, and the priest, like the peasant,
+demanded a higher wage for his services by reason of the scarcity of
+labour. A mower was not to be had for less than a shilling a day with
+his food, and a chaplain, formerly glad to receive two marks and his
+board, demanded ten pounds, or ten marks at the least. Non-residence,
+neglect of cures, and other evils followed. As Langland wrote:--
+
+ Persones and parisch prestes - playneth to heore bisschops,
+ That heore parisch hath ben pore - seththe the pestilence tyme,
+ And asketh leue and lycence - at Londun to dwelle,
+ To singe ther for simonye - for seluer is swete.[1]
+
+The lack of clergy was in some measure compensated by the rush of
+candidates for orders. Some of these new clerks were men who had lost
+their wives by the plague; many of them were illiterate, or if they
+knew how to read their mass-book, could not understand it. The close
+social life of the monasteries proved particularly favourable to the
+spread of the disease; the number of monks and nuns declined
+considerably, and, since there was no great desire to embrace the
+religious profession, many houses remained half empty for generations.
+
+ [1] _Vision of Piers Plowman_, i., p. g, ed. Skeat.
+
+No one in the Middle Ages believed in letting economic laws work out
+their natural results. If anything were amiss, it was the duty of kings
+and princes to set things right. Accordingly Edward and his council at
+once strove to remedy the lack of labourers by ordinances that
+harvesters and other workmen should not demand more wages than they had
+been in the habit of receiving, while the bishops, following the royal
+example, ordered chaplains and vicars to be content with their
+accustomed salaries. As soon as parliament ventured to assemble, the
+royal orders were embodied in the famous statute of labourers of 1351.
+This measure has been condemned as an attempt of a capitalist
+parliament to force poor men to work for their masters at wages far
+below the market rates. But it was no new thing to fix wages by
+authority, and the medieval conception was that a just and living wage
+should be settled by law, rather than left to accident. The statute
+provided that prices, like wages, should remain as they had been before
+the pestilence, so that, far from only regarding the interests of the
+employer, it attempted to maintain the old ratio between the rate of
+wages and the price of commodities. Moreover it sought to provide for
+the cultivation of the soil by enacting that the sturdy beggar, who,
+though able, refused to work, should be forced to put his hand to the
+plough. Futile as the statute of labourers was, it was not much more
+ineffective than most laws of the time. Though real efforts were made
+to carry it out, the chronic weakness of a medieval executive soon
+recoiled before the hopeless task of enforcing impossible laws on an
+unwilling population. Class prejudices only showed themselves in the
+stipulation that, while the employer was forbidden to pay the new rate
+of wages under pain of heavy fines, the labourers who refused, to work
+on the old terms were imprisoned and only released upon taking oath to
+accept their ancient wages. In effect, however, the king's arm was not
+long enough to reach either class. The labourers, says a chronicler,
+were so puffed up and quarrelsome that they would not observe the new
+enactment, and the master's alternative was either to see his crops
+perish unharvested, or to gratify the greedy desires of the workmen by
+violating the statute. While labourers could escape punishment through
+their numbers, the employer was more accessible to the royal officers.
+
+Thus the labourers enjoyed the benefits of the scarcity of labour,
+while the employers suffered the full inconveniences of the change.
+Producers were to some extent recompensed by a great rise in prices,
+more especially in the case of those commodities into whose cost of
+production labour largely entered. For example the rise in the price of
+corn and meat was inconsiderable, while clothing, manufactured goods,
+and luxuries became extraordinarily dear. Of eatables fish rose most in
+value, because the fishermen had been swept away by the plague. Rents
+fell heavily. Landlords found that they could only retain their tenants
+by wholesale remissions. When farmers perished of the plague, it was
+often impossible to find others to take up their farms. It was even
+harder for lords, who farmed their own demesne, to provide themselves
+with the necessary labour. Hired labour could not be obtained except at
+ruinous rates. It was injudicious to press for the strict performance
+of villein services, lest the villein should turn recalcitrant and
+leave his holding. The lord preferred to commute his villein's service
+into a small payment. On the whole the best solution of the difficulty
+was for him to abandon the ancient custom of farming his demesne
+through his bailiffs, and to let out his lands on such rents as he
+could get to tenant farmers. Thus the feudal method of land tenure,
+which, since the previous century, had ceased to have much political
+significance, became economically ineffective, and began to give way to
+a system more like that which still obtains among us.
+
+Struck by these undoubted results of the pestilence, some modern
+writers have persuaded themselves that the Black Death is the one great
+turning-point in the social and economic history of England, and that
+nearly all which makes modern England what it is, is due to the effects
+of this pestilence. A wider survey suggests the extreme improbability
+of a single visitation having such far-reaching consequences. Moreover
+the Black Death was not an English but a European calamity, and it is
+strange to imagine that the effects of the plague in England should
+have been so much deeper than in France or Germany, and so different.
+In the fourteenth century there was little that was distinctly insular
+in the conditions of England, as compared with those of the continent.
+A trouble common to both regions alike could hardly have been the
+starting-point of such differentiation between them as later ages
+undoubtedly witnessed. There was a French counterpart to the statute of
+labourers.
+
+In truth the Black Death was no isolated phenomenon. There were already
+in the air the seeds of the decay of the ancient order, and those seeds
+fructified more rapidly in England by reason of the plague.[1] It is
+only because of the impetus which it gave to changes already in progress
+that the pestilence had in a fashion more lasting results in England
+than elsewhere. The last thirty years of the reign of Edward were an
+epoch of social upheaval and unrest contrasting strongly with the
+uneventful times that had preceded the Black Death. It is not right to
+regard the period as one of misery or severe distress. The war of
+classes, which was beginning, sprang not so much from material
+discomfort of the poor, as from what unsympathetic annalists called
+their greediness, their pride, and their wantonness. The wage-earner was
+master of the situation and did not hesitate to make his power felt.
+While the spread of manufactures, the rise of prices, and the opening
+out of wider markets still secured the prosperity of the shopkeeper, the
+merchant, or the artisan of the towns, the whole brunt of the social
+change fell upon the landed classes, and most heavily upon the
+ecclesiastics and especially upon the monks. Broken down by the heavy
+demands of the state, unable to share with the layman in the new avenues
+to wealth opened up by the expanding resources of the country, the monks
+saw the chief sources of their prosperity drying up. Their rents were
+shrinking and it became increasingly difficult to cultivate their lands.
+They never recovered their ancient welfare, and were already getting out
+of touch with the national life.
+
+ [1] See for this W. Cunningham, _Growth of English Industry and
+ Commerce,_ vol. i., p. 330 ff. (ed. 4); T.W. Page, _The End of
+ Villainage in England_ (American Economic Association, 1900);
+ and, above all, P. Vinogradoff in _Engl. Hist. Review, xv._
+ (1900), 774-781.
+
+One immediate result of the plague was a renewed activity in founding
+religious houses. Upon the two plague pits west and east of the city of
+London, Sir Walter Manny set up his Charterhouse in Smithfield, and
+Edward III. his foundation for Cistercian nuns between Tower Hill and
+Aldgate. More characteristic of the times was the foundation of secular
+colleges, which were established either with mainly ecclesiastical
+objects or to encourage study at the universities. Both at Oxford and
+Cambridge there were more colleges set up in the first than in the
+second half of the fourteenth century; and it is noteworthy that
+several Cambridge colleges incorporated after the plague were founded
+with the avowed motive of filling up the gaps in the secular clergy
+occasioned by it. The riots between the Oxford townsmen and the clerks
+of the university on St. Scholastica's day, 1354, resulted in the
+victory of the former because of the recent diminution in the number of
+the scholars. Yet even as regards the monasteries, it is easy to
+exaggerate the effects of the plague. Five years after the Black Death,
+the Cistercians of the Lancashire abbey of Whalley boasted that they
+had added twenty monks to their convent, and were busy in enlarging
+their church.[1]
+
+ [1] Cal. _Papal Registers, Petitions_, i., 264. Professor Tait,
+ however, informs me that the monks took a sanguine view of
+ their numbers. After the plague of 1362, we know that they were
+ not much more numerous than in the previous century.
+
+Change was in the air in religion as well as in society. Along with
+democratic ideas filtering in with the exiles from the great Flemish
+cities, came a breath of that restless and unquiet spirit which soon
+awakened the concern of the inquisition in the Netherlands. There
+brotherhoods, some mystical and quietistic, others enthusiastic and
+fanatical, were growing in numbers and importance. Some of these bodies,
+Beguines, Beghards, and what not, were harmless enough, but the whole
+history of the Middle Ages bears testimony to the readiness with which
+religious excitement unchastened by discipline or direction, grew into
+dangerous heresy. The strangest of the new communities, the Flagellants,
+made its appearance in England immediately after the pestilence. In the
+autumn of 1349, some six score men crossed over from Holland and marched
+in procession through the open spaces of London, chanting doleful
+litanies in their own tongue. They wore nothing save a linen cloth that
+covered the lower part of their body, and on their heads hats marked
+with a red cross behind and before. Each of them bore in his right hand
+a scourge, with which he belaboured the naked back and shoulders of his
+comrade in the fore rank. Twice a day they repeated this mournful
+exercise, and even at other times were never seen in public but with cap
+on head and discipline in hand. Few Englishmen joined the Flagellants,
+but their appearance is not unworthy of notice as the first concrete
+evidence of the religious unrest which soon became more widespread.
+Before long the Yorkshireman, John Wycliffe, was studying arts at the
+little north-country foundation of the Balliols at Oxford, and John
+Ball, the Essex priest, was preaching his revolutionary socialism to the
+villeins. "We are all come," said he, "from one father and one mother,
+Adam and Eve. How can the gentry show that they are greater lords than
+we?"[1] In 1355 there were heretics in the diocese of York who
+maintained that it is impossible to merit eternal life by good works,
+and that original sin does not deserve damnation.[2]
+
+ [1] The sentiment, or its equivalent in Ball's famous distich,
+ was not new; it was employed for mystical purposes in Richard
+ Rolle's
+
+ "When Adam delf and Eue span, spir, if thou wil spede,
+ Whare was then the pride of man, that now merres his mede?"
+
+ _Library of Early English Writers. Richard Rolle of Hampole and
+ his followers_, ed. Horstman, i., 73 (1895).
+
+ [2] Cal. _Papal Registers, Letters_, iii., 565.
+
+The Flagellants were denounced as heretics by Clement VI.; the
+Archbishop of York proceeded against the northern heretics, and in 1366
+the Archbishop of Canterbury forbade John Ball's preaching. But there
+were more insidious, because more measured, enemies of the Church than
+a handful of fanatics. The English were long convinced that the Avignon
+popes were playing the game of the French adversary, and Clement VI.'s
+efforts for peace never had a fair hearing. Since the beginning of the
+war, the king laid his hand on the alien priories, and, though in his
+scrupulous regard for clerical rights he had allowed the monks to
+remain in possession, he diverted the stream of tribute from the French
+mother houses to his own treasury. Bolder measures against papal
+provisions were taken in the years which immediately followed the
+pestilence. Finding remonstrances futile, the parliament of 1351, which
+passed the statute of labourers, enacted also the first statute of
+provisors. It recited that the anti-papal statute of Carlisle of 1307
+was still law, and that the king had sworn to observe it. It claimed
+for all electing bodies and patrons the right to elect or to present
+freely to the benefices in their gift. It declared invalid all
+appointments brought about by way of papal provision. Provisors who had
+accepted appointments from Avignon were to be arrested. If convicted,
+they were to be detained in prison, until they had made their peace
+with the king, and found surely not to accept provisions in the future,
+and also not to seek their reinstatement by any process in the Roman
+_curia_. Two years later this measure was supplemented by the first
+statute of _præmunire_, which enacted that those who brought matters
+cognisable in the king's courts before foreign courts should be liable
+to forfeiture and outlawry. Though the papal court is not specially
+mentioned, it is clear that this measure _was_ aimed against it.
+
+General measures proving insufficient, more specific legislation soon
+followed. In 1365 a fresh statute of _præmunire_ was drawn up on the
+initiative of the crown, enacting that all who obtained citations,
+offices, or benefices from the Roman court should incur the penalties
+prescribed by the act of 1353. The prelates dissociated themselves from
+so stringent a law, but did not actively oppose it. When in 1366,
+Edward requested the guidance of the estates as to how he was to deal
+with the demand of Urban V. for the arrears of King John's tribute,
+withheld altogether for more than thirty years, the prelates joined the
+lay estates in answering that neither John nor any one else could put
+the realm into subjection without their consent. Even the ancient
+offering of Peter's pence ceased to be paid for the rest of Edward's
+reign. If these laws had been strictly carried out, the papal authority
+in England would have been gravely circumscribed. But medieval laws
+were too often the mere enunciations of an ideal. The statutes of
+provisors and _præmunire_ were as little executed as were the statutes
+of labourers, or as some elaborate sumptuary legislation passed by the
+parliament of 1363. The catalogue of acts of papal interference in
+English ecclesiastical and temporal affairs is as long after the
+passing of these laws as before. Litigants still carried their suits to
+Avignon: provisions were still issued nominating to English benefices,
+and Edward himself set the example of disregarding his own laws by
+asking for the appointment of his ministers to bishoprics by way of
+papal provision. Papal ascendency was too firmly rooted in the
+fourteenth century to be eradicated by any enactment. To the average
+clergyman or theologian of the day the pope was still the "universal
+ordinary," the one divinely appointed source of ecclesiastical
+authority, the shepherd to whom the Lord had given the commission to
+feed His sheep. This theory could only be overcome by revolution; and
+the parliaments and ministers of Edward III. were in no wise of a
+revolutionary temper.
+
+The anti-papal laws of the fourteenth century were the acts of the
+secular not of the ecclesiastical power. They were not simply
+anti-papal, they were also anti-clerical in their tendency, since to the
+men of the age an attack on the pope was an attack on the Church. No
+doubt the English bishop at Edward's court sympathised with his master's
+dislike of foreign ecclesiastical interference, and the English priest
+was glad to be relieved from payments to the curia. But the clergyman,
+whose soul grew indignant against the curialists, still believed that
+the pope was the divinely appointed autocrat of the Church universal.
+Being a man, a pope might be a bad pope; but the faithful Christian,
+though he might lament and protest, could not but obey in the last
+resort. The papacy was so essentially interwoven with the whole Church
+of the Middle Ages, that few figments have less historical basis than
+the notion that there was an anti-papal Anglican Church in the days of
+the Edwards. However, before another generation had passed away,
+ecclesiastical protests began.
+
+Monasticism no less than the papacy was of the very essence of the
+Church of the Middle Ages. Yet the monastic ideal had no longer the
+force that it had in previous generations, and even the latest
+embodiments of the religious life had declined from their original
+popularity. Pope John XXII. himself, in his warfare against William of
+Ockham and the Spiritual Franciscans who had supported Louis of Bavaria,
+denied in good round terms the Franciscan doctrine of "evangelical
+poverty". Ockham was now dead, and with him perished the last of the
+great cosmopolitan schoolmen, of whose birth indeed England might boast,
+but who early forsook Oxford for Paris. Conspicuous among the younger
+academical generation was Richard Fitzralph, Archbishop of Armagh, whose
+bitter attacks on the fundamental principles underlying the mendicant
+theory of the regular life are indicative of the changing temper of the
+age. A distinguished Oxford scholar, a learned and pungent writer, a
+popular preacher, a reputed saint, and a good friend of the pope,
+Fitzralph made himself, about 1357, the champion of the secular clergy
+against the friars by writing a treatise to prove that absolute poverty
+was neither practised nor commended by the apostles.[1] The indignant
+mendicants procured the archbishop's citation to Avignon, and it was a
+striking proof of the ineffectiveness of recent legislation that Edward
+III. allowed him to plead his cause before the _curia_. By 1358 the
+friars gained the day, but their efforts to get Fitzralph's opinions
+condemned were frustrated by his death in 1360. Fitzralph had the
+sympathy not only of the seculars, but of the "possessioners," or
+property-holding monks.
+
+ [1] See his _De Pauperie Salvatoris_, lib. i.-iv., printed by
+ R.L. Poole, as appendix to Wycliffe, _De Dominio Divino_.
+
+The period of experiments in economic and anti-clerical legislation was
+also marked by other important new laws, such as the ordinance of the
+staple of 1354, providing that wool, leather, and other commodities
+were only to be sold at certain _staple_ towns, a measure soon to be
+modified by the law of 1362, which settled the staple at Calais; the
+ordinance of 1357 for the government of Ireland, to which later
+reference will be made; the statute making English the language of the
+law courts in 1362, and a drastic act against purveyance in 1365. The
+statute of treasons of 1352, which laid down seven several offences as
+alone henceforth to be regarded as treason, also demands attention. Its
+classification is rude and unsystematic. While the slaying of the
+king's ministers or judges, and the counterfeiting of the great seal or
+the king's coin, are joined with the compassing the death of the king
+or his wife or heir, adherence to the king's enemies, the violation of
+the queen or the king's eldest daughter, as definite acts of treason,
+its omission to brand other notable indications of disloyally as
+traitorous, inspired the judges of later generations to elaborate the
+doctrine of constructive treason in order to extend in practice the
+scope of the act. It was, however, an advance for nobles and commons to
+have set any limitations whatever to the wide power claimed by the
+courts of defining treason.
+
+Partial respite from war did not diminish the martial ardour of the
+king and his nobles. The period of the Black Death was precisely the
+time when Edward completed a plan which he had begun by the erection of
+his Round Table at Windsor in 1344. By 1348 he instituted a chapel at
+Windsor, dedicated to St. George, served by a secular chapter, and
+closely connected with a foundation for the support of poor knights.
+Within a year this foundation also included the famous Order of the
+Garter, the type and model of all later orders of chivalry. On St.
+George's day the king celebrated the new institution by special
+solemnities. The most famous of his companions-at-arms were associated
+with him as founders and first knights. Clad in russet coats sprinkled
+with blue garters, a blue garter on the right leg, and a mantle of blue
+ornamented with little shields bearing the arms of St. George, the
+Knights of the Garter heard mass sung by the Archbishop of Canterbury
+in St. George's chapel, and then feasted solemnly in their common hall.
+Ten years later the glorification of the king's birthplace was
+completed by the erection of new quarters for the king, more sumptuous
+and splendid than were elsewhere to be seen. The fame of the Knights of
+the Garter excited the emulation of King John of France, who set up a
+Round Table which grew in 1351 into the knightly Order of the Star.
+
+The rival brethren of the Garter and the Star found plenty of
+opportunities of demonstrating their prowess. Though between 1347 and
+1355 there was, so far as forms went, an almost continuous armistice
+for the space of eight years, its effect was not so much to stop
+fighting as to limit its scale. In reality the years of nominal truce
+were a period of harassing warfare in Brittany, the Calais march,
+Gascony, and the narrow seas, which even the ravages of the Black Death
+did not stop.
+
+In Brittany affairs were in a wretched condition. The nominal duke,
+John, was a child brought up in England under the guardianship of
+Edward III. Edward was not in a position to spend either men or money
+upon Brittany. As an easy way of discharging his obligations to his
+ward, he handed over the duchy to Sir Thomas Dagworth, the governor,
+who maintained the war from local resources and had a free hand as
+regards his choice of agents and measures. In return for power to
+appropriate to his own purposes the revenues of the duchy, Dagworth
+undertook the custody of the fortresses, the payment of the troops, the
+expenses of the administration, and the conduct of the war. In short,
+Brittany was leased out to him as a speculation, like a farm left
+derelict of husbandmen after the Black Death. Dagworth sublet to the
+highest bidders the lordships, fortresses, and towns of Brittany. He
+established at various centres of his influence a military adventurer,
+whose chief business was to make war support war and, moreover, bring
+in a good profit. The consequences were disastrous. Dagworth's captains
+were for the most part Englishmen, men of character, energy, and
+resources, but utterly without scruples and with no other ambition than
+to raise a good revenue and maintain themselves in authority. The most
+famous of them were members of gentle but obscure houses, whose poverty
+debarred them from the ordinary avenues to fame and fortune, and whose
+vigour and ability made good use of their exceptional positions. Two
+Cheshire kinsmen, Hugh Calveley and Robert Knowles, thus won, each for
+himself, a place in history. Some of the adventurers were of obscurer
+origin, some were foreigners, German, French, or Netherlandish, and
+some few Breton gentlemen of Montfort's faction. Of these Crockart, the
+German, and Raoul de Caours, the Breton, were the most famous.
+
+The results of the system bore heavily on the Breton peasantry. Each
+lord of a castle levied systematic blackmail on the neighbouring
+parishes. These payments, called ransoms, were exacted as a condition
+of protection. The governor, though severely maltreating those who
+neglected to pay their ransom, did little to save his dependants from
+the ravages of the partisans of Charles of Blois. Despite such
+misdeeds, the war of partisans was brightened by many feats of heroism.
+The friends of Charles of Blois disregarded the truce and waged war as
+well as they could. Among them was already conspicuous the son of a
+nobleman of the neighbourhood of Dinan, the ugly, able, restless
+Bertrand du Guesclin, whose enterprise and valour won for him a great
+local reputation. In 1350 Dagworth was slain. The history of the
+following years is not to be found in the acts of his successor, Sir
+Walter Bentley, but in the private deeds of daring of the heroes of
+both sides. Conspicuous among these is the famous Battle of the Thirty,
+well known from the detailed narrative of Froissart, and the stirring
+verses of a contemporary French poem. This fight was fought on March
+27, 1351, between thirty Breton gentlemen of the Blois faction, drawn
+from the garrison of Josselin, and a less noble but even more strenuous
+band of thirty English and other adventurers of the Montfort party,
+from the garrison of Ploermel, seven miles to the east. Beaumanoir, the
+commandant at Josselin, had been moved to indignation at the cruel
+treatment of peasants who had refused to pay ransom by Robert Bembro,
+the commander of Ploermel. He challenged the tyrant to combat, and
+thirty heroes of each party fought out their quarrel at a spot marked
+by the half-way oak, equidistant from the two garrisons. After a long
+struggle, in which Bembro was slain, victory fell to the men from
+Josselin. Among the vanquished were Knowles, Calveley, and Crockart.
+This fight had absolutely no influence on the fortune of the war.
+
+In 1352 the French strove to carry on the Breton war on a grander scale,
+and a large army, commanded by Guy of Nesle, marshal of France, was sent
+to reinforce the partisans of Charles of Blois. They met Bentley at
+Mauron, a few miles north of Ploermel, where one of the most interesting
+battles of the war was fought Taught by the lesson of Crecy, Nesle had
+already, in obscure fights in Poitou, ordered the French knights and
+men-at-arms to fight on foot.[1] He here adopted the same plan for the
+first time in a battle of importance, but, after a severe struggle,
+Bentley won the day. In 1353 Edward III. made a treaty with his captive,
+Charles of Blois. In return for a huge ransom Charles was to obtain his
+liberty, be recognised as Duke of Brittany, marry one of Edward's
+daughters, and promise to remain neutral in the Anglo-French struggle.
+The treaty involved too great a dislocation of policy to be carried out.
+Charles, after visiting Brittany, renounced the compact and returned to
+his London prison. Thus the weary war of partisans still went on, and
+thenceforth the fortunes of Charles depended less upon negotiations than
+on the growing successes of Bertrand du Guesclin.
+
+ [1] See my paper on _Some Neglected Fights between Crecy and
+ Poitiers_ in _Engl. Hist. Review_, vol. xxi., Oct., 1905.
+
+During these years Calais was the centre of much fighting. Eager to win
+back the town, the French bribed an Italian mercenary, then in Edward's
+service, to admit them into the castle. The plot was discovered, and
+Edward and the Prince of Wales crossed over in disguise to help in
+frustrating the French assault. The French were enticed into Calais and
+taken as in a trap. Edward then sallied out of the town, and rashly
+engaged in personal encounter with a more numerous enemy. He was
+unexpectedly successful, and made wonderful display of his prowess as a
+knight. In revenge, the English devastated the neighbouring country by
+raids like that led by the Duke of Lancaster in 1351, which spread
+desolation from Thérouanne to Etaples. Of more enduring importance were
+the gradual extensions of the English pale by the piecemeal conquest of
+the fortresses of the neighbourhood. The chief step in this direction
+was the capture of Guînes in 1352. An archer named John Dancaster, who
+escaped from French custody in Guînes, led his comrades to the assault
+of the town by a way which he learnt during his imprisonment. The
+attack succeeded, and Dancaster, to avoid involving his master in a
+formal breach of the truce, professed to hold the town on his own
+account and to be willing to sell it to the highest bidder. Of course
+the highest bidder was Edward III. himself, and thus Guînes became the
+southern outpost of the Calais march.
+
+In Aquitaine and Languedoc there was no thought of repose. In 1349
+Lancaster led a foray to the gates of Toulouse, which wrought immense
+damage but led to no permanent results. There was incessant border
+warfare. The Anglo-Gascon forces spread beyond the limits of Edward's
+duchy and captured outposts in Poitou, Périgord, Quercy, and the
+Agenais. In retaliation, the Count of Armagnac, a strong upholder of
+the French cause, did what mischief he could in those parts of Gascony
+adjacent to his own territories. On the whole the result of these
+struggles was a considerable extension of the English power.
+
+The most famous episode of these years was a naval battle fought off
+Winchelsea on August 29, 1350, against a strong fleet of Spanish
+privateers commanded by Charles of La Cerda. The Spaniards having
+plundered English wine ships, Edward summoned a fleet to meet them, and
+himself went on board, along with the Prince of Wales, Lancaster, and
+many of his chief nobles. The fight that ensued was remarkable not more
+for the reckless valour of the king and his nobles than for the
+dexterity of the English tactics. The great busses of Spain towered
+above the little English vessels, like castles over cottages. Yet the
+English did not hesitate to grapple their adversaries' craft and swarm
+up their sides on to the decks. Edward captured one of the chief of the
+Spanish ships, though his own vessel, the Cog _Thomas_, was so severely
+damaged that it had to be hastily abandoned for its prize. The glory of
+the victory of the "Spaniards on the sea" kept up the fame first won at
+Sluys.
+
+In these years of truce first appeared the worst scourge of the war,
+bands of mercenary soldiers, fighting on their own account and
+recklessly devastating the regions which they chose to visit. The cry
+for peace rose higher than ever. Innocent VI., who succeeded Clement VI.
+in 1352, took up with great energy the papal policy of mediation. Thanks
+to his legates' good offices, preliminary articles of peace were
+actually agreed upon on April 6, 1354, at Guînes. By them Edward agreed
+to renounce his claim to the French throne if he were granted full
+sovereignly over Guienne, Ponthieu, Artois, and Guînes. When the
+chamberlain, Burghersh, laid before parliament, which was then sitting,
+the prospect of peace, "the commons with one accord replied that,
+whatever course the king and the magnates should take as regards the
+said treaty, was agreeable to them. On this reply the chamberlain said
+to the commons: 'Then you wish to agree to a perpetual treaty of peace,
+if one can be had?' And the said commons answered unanimously, 'Yea,
+yea'."[1] Vexatious delays, however, supervened, and at last the
+negotiations broke down hopelessly. The French refused to surrender
+their over-lordship over the ceded provinces, and the Easter parliament
+of 1355 agreed with the king that war must be renewed. Two years of war
+were to follow more fierce than even the struggles which had culminated
+in Crecy, La Roche, and Calais.
+
+ [1] _Rot. Pad.,_ ii., 262.
+
+Two expeditions were organised to invade France in the summer of 1355,
+one for Aquitaine under the Prince of Wales,[1] and the other for
+Normandy under Lancaster. Westerly winds long prevented their despatch.
+It was not until September that the Prince of Wales reached Bordeaux.
+The change of wind, which bore the prince to Gascony, enabled the host,
+collected by the King and Lancaster on the Thames, to make its way to
+Normandy. But the special reason which brought the English thither was
+already gone. The expedition was planned to co-operate with the King of
+Navarre. Charles, surnamed the Bad, traced on his father's side his
+descent to that son of Philip the Bold who obtained the county of Evreux
+in upper Normandy for his appanage. From his mother, the daughter of
+Louis X., he derived his kingdom of Navarre and a claim on the French
+monarchy of the same type as that of Edward III. Cunning, plausible,
+unscrupulous, and violent, Charles had quarrelled fiercely with King
+John, whose daughter he had married. His vast estates in Normandy made
+him a valuable ally to Edward, and he had suggested joint action in that
+duchy against the French. Unluckily, while the west winds kept the
+English fleet beyond the Straits of Dover, John made terms with his
+son-in-law. Lancaster was compensated for his disappointment by the
+governorship of Brittany. The army equipped for the Norman expedition
+was diverted to Calais, whence in November, Edward and Lancaster led a
+purposeless foray in the direction of Hesdin, which hastily ended on the
+arrival of the news that the Scots had surprised the town of Berwick,
+and were threatening its castle. Thereupon Edward hastened back home. He
+had to keep the Scots quiet, before he could attack the French.
+
+ [1] For the Black Prince's career in Aquitaine, see Moisant,
+ _Le Prince Noir en Aquitaine_ (1894)
+
+When the Black Prince reached Bordeaux, he received a warm welcome from
+the Gascons, and at once set out at the head of an army, partly English
+and partly Gascon, on a foray into the enemy's territory. He made his
+way from Bazas to the upper Adour through the county of Armagnac, whose
+lord had incurred his wrath by his devotion to the house of Valois and
+his invasions of the Gascon duchy. Thence he worked eastwards, avoiding
+the greater towns, and plundering and devastating wherever he could.
+The Count of Armagnac, the French commander in the south, watched his
+progress from Toulouse, and prudently avoided any open encounter. The
+prince approached within a few miles of the capital of Languedoc, but
+found an easier prey in the rich towns and fertile plains in the valley
+of the Aude. He captured the "town" of Carcassonne, though he failed to
+reduce the fortress-crowned height of the "city". At Narbonne also he
+took the "town" and left the "city". His progress spread terror
+throughout the south, and the clerks of the university of Montpellier
+and the papal _curia_ at Avignon trembled lest he should continue his
+raid in their direction. But November came, and Edward found it prudent
+to retire, choosing on his westward journey a route parallel to that
+which he had previously adopted. He had achieved his real purpose in
+desolating the region from which the French had derived the chief
+resources for their attacks on Gascony. The raiders boasted that
+Carcassonne was larger than York, Limoux not less great than
+Carcassonne, and Narbonne nearly as populous as London. Over this fair
+region, where wine and oil were more abundant than water, the black
+band of desolation, which had already marked so many of the fairest
+provinces of France, was cruelly extended.
+
+The prince kept his Christmas at Bordeaux. Even during the winter his
+troops remained active. Most of the Agenais was conquered by January,
+1356, while in February the capture of Périgueux opened up the way of
+invasion northwards. Meanwhile the prince mustered his forces for a
+vigorous summer campaign. While the towns on the Isle and the Lot were
+yielding to his son, Edward III. was avenging the capture of Berwick by
+a winter campaign in the Lothians. Before the end of January, 1356,
+Berwick was once more in his hands. Thence he passed to Roxburgh, where
+Edward Balliol surrendered to him all his rights over the Scottish
+throne. Thenceforth styling himself no longer overlord but King of
+Scotland, Edward mercilessly harried his new subjects. But storms
+dispersed the English victualling ships, and Edward's men could not
+live in winter on the country that they had made a wilderness. In a few
+weeks they were back over the border, though their raid was long
+remembered in Scottish tradition as the Burnt Candlemas.
+
+Another breach between Charles of Navarre and his father-in-law again
+opened to the English the way to Normandy. John lost patience at
+Charles's renewed intrigues, and in April arrested him and his friends
+at Rouen. Thereupon his brother, Philip of Navarre, rose in revolt.
+With him were many of the Norman lords, including Geoffrey of Harcourt,
+lord of Saint-Sauveur. The English were once more invited to Normandy,
+and on June 18 Lancaster landed at La Hougue with the double mission of
+aiding the Norman rebels and establishing John of Montfort, then
+arrived at man's estate, in his Breton duchy. It was the first English
+invasion of northern France during the war, in which they had, as in
+Brittany, the co-operation of a strong party in the land. The Navarre
+and Harcourt influence at once secured them the Côtentin. Meanwhile,
+however, the French were besieging the fortresses of the county of
+Evreux. With the object of relieving this pressure, Lancaster,
+immediately after his landing, marched into the heart of Normandy, and
+soon reached Verneuil. It looked for the moment as if he were destined
+to emulate the exploits of Edward II. in 1346. But he abruptly turned
+back, leaving the county of Evreux to fall into French hands. The
+permanent result of his intervention was to reduce Normandy to a state
+of anarchy nearly as complete as that of Brittany. In the autumn
+Lancaster at last made his way to the land of which he had had nominal
+charge since the previous year. He left Philip of Navarre as commander
+in Normandy, and the war was supported from local resources. The
+Côtentin being in friendly hands, Lancaster attacked the strongholds of
+the Blois party, which had hitherto been exempt from the war. In
+October he laid siege to Rennes and was detained before its walls until
+July, 1357, when he agreed to desist from the attack in return for a
+huge ransom. Lancaster then established young Montfort as duke. At the
+same time Charles of Blois, released from his long imprisonment, once
+more reappeared in his wife's inheritance, though, as his ransom was
+still but partly paid, his scrupulous honour compelled him to abstain
+from personal intervention in the war. Thus Brittany got back both her
+dukes.
+
+The northern operations in 1356 sink into insignificance when compared
+with the exploits of the Black Prince in the south. After the capture
+of Périgueux, there had been some idea of the prince making a northward
+movement and joining hands with Lancaster on the Loire. When Lancaster
+retired from Verneuil, however, the Black Prince was still in the
+valley of the Dordogne. Even when all was ready, attacks on the Gascon
+duchy compelled him to divert a large portion of his army for the
+defence of his own frontiers. Not until August 9 was he able to advance
+from Périgueux to Brantôme into hostile territory. It was a month too
+late to co-operate with Lancaster, and the 7,000 men, who followed his
+banners, were in equipment rather prepared for a raid than for a
+systematic conquest.
+
+Edward's outward march was in a generally northerly direction. Leaving
+Limoges on his right, he crossed the Vienne lower down the stream, and
+thence he led his troops over the Creuse at Argenton and over the Indre
+at Châteauroux. When he traversed the Cher at Vierzon, his followers
+rejoiced that they had at last got out of the limits of the ancient
+duchy of Guienne and were invading the actual kingdom of France. On
+penetrating beyond the Cher into the melancholy flats of the Sologne,
+the prince encountered the first serious resistance. He then turned
+abruptly to the west, and chased the enemy into the strong castle of
+Romorantin, which he captured on September 3. There he heard that John
+of France, who had gathered together a huge force, was holding the
+passages over the Loire. Edward marched to meet the enemy, and on
+September 7 reached the neighbourhood of Tours, where he tarried in his
+camp for three days. But the few bridges were destroyed or strongly
+guarded, and the men-at-arms found it quite impossible to make their
+way over the broad and swift Loire. Moreover the news came that John
+had crossed the river near Blois, and was hurrying southwards.
+Thereupon the Black Prince turned in the same direction, seeing in this
+southward march his best chance of getting to close quarters. The
+French host was enormously the superior in numbers, but after Morlaix,
+Mauron, and Crecy, mere numerical disparity weighed but lightly on an
+English commander.
+
+For some days the armies marched in the same direction in parallel
+lines, neither knowing very clearly the exact position of the other. On
+September 14 Edward reached Châtelherault on the Vienne. His troops
+were weary and war-worn, and his transport inordinately swollen by
+spoils. He rested two days at Châtelherault, but was again on the move
+on hearing that the enemy was at Chauvigny, situated some twenty miles
+higher up the Vienne. Edward at once started in pursuit, only to find
+that the French had retired before him to Poitiers, eighteen miles due
+west of Chauvigny. Careless of his convoy, he hurried across country in
+the hope of catching the elusive enemy, but was only in time to fight a
+rear-guard skirmish at a manor named La Chaboterie, on the road from
+Chauvigny to Poitiers, on September, 17. That night the English lay in
+a wood hard by the scene of action, suffering terribly from want of
+water. Next day, Sunday, September 18, Edward pursued the French as
+near as he could to Poitiers, halting in battle array within a league
+of the town. A further check on his impatience now ensued. Innocent
+VI.'s legate, the Cardinal Talleyrand, brother of the Count of
+Périgord, who was with the French army, crossed to the rival host with
+an offer of mediation. Edward received the cardinal courteously and
+spent most of the day in negotiations. But the French showed no
+eagerness to bring matters to a conclusion, and as every hour
+reinforcements poured into the enemy's camp the scanty patience of the
+English was exhausted. They declared that the legate's talk about
+saving the effusion of Christian blood was only a blind to gain time,
+so that the French might overwhelm them. Edward broke off the
+negotiations, and, retiring to a position more remote from the enemy,
+passed the night quietly. Early next morning the cardinal again sought
+to treat, but this time his offers were rejected. On his withdrawal,
+the French attack began.
+
+The topographical details of the battle of Poitiers of September 19,
+1356, cannot be determined with certainty. We only know that the place
+of the encounter was called Maupertuis, which is generally identified
+with a farm now called La Cardinerie, some six miles south-east of
+Poitiers, and a little distance to the north of the Benedictine abbey
+of Nouaille. The abbey formed the southern limit of the field. On the
+west the place of combat was skirted by the little river Miausson,
+which winds its way through marshes in a deep-cut valley, girt by
+wooded hills. The French left their horses at Poitiers, having
+resolved, perhaps on the advice of a Scottish knight, Sir William
+Douglas, to fight on foot, after the English and Scottish fashion, and
+as they had already fought at Mauron and elsewhere. As at Mauron, a
+small band of cavalry was retained, both for the preliminary
+skirmishing which then usually heralded a battle, and in the hope of
+riding down some of the archers. But the French did not fully
+understand the English tactics, and took no care to combine men-at-arms
+with archers or crossbowmen, though these were less important against
+an army weak in archers and largely consisting of Gascons. Of the four
+"battles" the first, under the Marshals Audrehem and Clermont, included
+the little cavalry contingent; the second was under Charles, Duke of
+Normandy, a youth of nineteen; the third under the Duke of Orleans, the
+king's brother; and the rear was commanded by the king.
+
+The English army spent the night before the battle beyond the Miausson,
+but in the morning the prince, fearing an ambuscade behind the hill of
+Nouaillé on the east bank, abandoned his original position and crossed
+the stream in order to occupy it. He divided his forces into three
+"battles," led respectively by himself, Warwick, and William Montague,
+since 1343 by his father's death Earl of Salisbury. Though he found no
+enemy there, he remained with his "battle" on the hill, because it
+commanded the slopes to the north over on which the French were now
+advancing. His remote position threw the brunt of the fighting upon the
+divisions of Warwick and Salisbury. They were stationed side by side in
+advance of him on ground lower than that held by him, but higher than
+that of the enemy, and beset with bushes and vineyards which sloped
+down on the left towards the marshes of the Miausson. Some distance in
+front of their position, a long hedge and ditch divided the upland, on
+which the "battles" of Warwick and Salisbury were stationed, from the
+fields in which the French were arrayed. At its upper end, remote from
+the Miausson, where Salisbury's command lay, the hedge was broken by a
+gap through which a farmer's track connected the fields on each side of
+it. The first fighting began when the English sent a small force of
+horsemen through the gap to engage with the French cavalry beyond.
+While Audrehem, on the French right, suspended his attack to watch the
+result, Clermont made his way straight for the gap, hoping to take
+Salisbury's division, on the upper or right-hand station, in flank.
+Before he reached the gap, however, he found the hedge and the
+approaches to the cart-road held in force by the English archers.
+Meanwhile the mail-clad men and horses of Audrehem's cavalry had
+approached dangerously near the left of the English line, where Warwick
+was stationed. Their complete armour made riders and steeds alike
+impervious to the English arrows, until the prince, seeing from his
+hill how things were proceeding, ordered some archers to station
+themselves on the marshy ground near the Miausson, in advance of the
+left flank of the English army. From this position they shot at the
+unprotected parts of the French horses, and drove the little band of
+cavalry from the field. By that time Clermon's attack on the gap had
+been defeated, and so both sections of the first French division
+retired.
+
+Then came the stronger "battle" of the eldest son of the French king.
+The fight grew more fierce, and for a long time the issue remained
+doubtful. The English archers exhausted their arrows to little purpose,
+and the dismounted French men-at-arms, offering a less sure mark than
+the horsemen, forced their way to the English ranks and fought a
+desperate hand-to-hand conflict with them. At last the Duke of
+Normandy's followers were driven back. Thereupon a panic seized the
+division commanded by the Duke of Orleans, which fled from the field
+without measuring swords with the enemy. The victors themselves were in
+a desperate plight. Many were wounded, and all were weary, especially
+the men-at-arms encased in heavy plate mail. The flight of Orleans gave
+them a short respite: but they soon had to face the assault of the rear
+battle of the enemy, gallantly led by the king. "No battle," we are
+told, "ever lasted so long. In former fights men knew, by the time that
+the fourth or the sixth arrow had been discharged, on which side victory
+was to be. But here a single archer shot with coolness a hundred arrows,
+and still neither side gave way."[1] At last the bowmen had only the
+arrows they snatched from the bodies of the dead and dying, and when
+these were exhausted, they were reduced to throwing stones at their
+foes, or to struggle in the _mêlée_, with sword and buckler, side by
+side with the men-at-arms. But the Black Prince from his hill had
+watched the course of the encounter, and at the right moment, when his
+friends were almost worn out, marched down, and made the fight more
+even. Before joining himself in the engagement, Edward had ordered the
+Captal de Buch, the best of his Gascons, to lead a little band, under
+cover of the hill, round the French position and attack the enemy in the
+rear. At first the Anglo-Gascon army was discouraged, thinking that the
+captal had fled, but they still fought on. Suddenly the captal and his
+men assaulted the French rear. This settled the hard fought day.
+Surrounded on every side, the French perished in their ranks or
+surrendered in despair. King John was taken prisoner, fighting
+desperately to the last, and with him was captured his youngest son
+Philip, the future Duke of Burgundy, a boy of twelve, whose epithet of
+"the Bold" was earned by his precocious valour in the struggle. Before
+nightfall the English host had sole possession of the field, and the
+best fought, best directed, and most important of the battles of the war
+ended in the complete triumph of the invaders.
+
+ [1] _Eulogium Hist._, iii., 225.
+
+As after Crecy, the victors were too weak to continue the campaign.
+Next day they began their slow march back to their base. On October 2
+Edward reached Libourne, and a few days later conducted the captive
+king into the Gascon capital. They were soon followed by the Cardinal
+Talleyrand on whose insistence the prince agreed to resume
+negotiations. On March 23, 1357, a truce to last until 1359 was
+arranged at Bordeaux. On May 24 the prince led the vanquished king
+through the streets of London.
+
+The English, weary of the burden of war, strove to use their advantages
+to procure a stable peace. Though Charles of Blois was released, he was
+muzzled for the future, and when John joined his ally David Bruce in
+the Tower, it was the obvious game of Edward to exact terms from his
+prisoners. David's spirit was broken, and he was glad to accept a
+treaty sealed in October, 1357, at Berwick, by which he was released
+for a ransom of 100,000 marks, to be paid by ten yearly instalments.
+The task was harder for a poor country like Scotland than the
+redemption of Richard I. had been for England. On hostages being given,
+David was released, and Edward, without relinquishing his own
+pretensions to be King of Scots, took no steps to enforce his claim.
+The event showed that Edward knew his man. The instalments of ransom
+could not be regularly paid, and David never became free from his
+obligations. Nothing save the tenacity of the Scottish nobles prevented
+him from accepting Edward's proposals to write off the arrears of his
+ransom in return for his accepting either the English king himself or
+his son, Lionel of Antwerp, as heir of Scotland. This attitude brought
+David into conflict with his natural heir, Robert, the Steward of
+Scotland, the son of his sister Margaret. The tension between uncle and
+nephew forced the Scots king to remain on friendly terms with Edward.
+For the rest of the reign, Scottish history was occupied by
+aristocratic feuds, by financial expedients for raising the king's
+ransom, by the gradual development of the practice of entrusting the
+powers of parliament to those committees of the estates subsequently
+famous as the lords of the articles, by David's matrimonial troubles
+after Joan's death, and by his unpopular visits to the court of his
+neighbour. Warfare between the realms there was none, save for the
+chronic border feuds. When David died in 1371, the Steward of Scotland
+land mounted the throne as Robert II. This first of the Stewart kings
+went back to the policy of the French alliance, but was too weak to
+inflict serious mischief on England.
+
+In January, 1358, preliminaries of peace were also arranged with the
+captive King of France, and sent to Paris and Avignon for ratification.
+Innocent VI. was overjoyed at his success, and Frenchmen were willing
+to make any sacrifices to bring back their monarch, for immediately
+after Poitiers a storm of disorder burst over France. The states
+general met a few weeks after the battle, and the regent, Charles of
+Normandy, was helpless in their hands. This was the time of the power
+of Stephen Marcel, provost of the merchants of Paris, and of Robert
+Lecoq, Bishop of Laon. But the movement in Paris was neither in the
+direction of parliamentary government nor of democracy, and few men
+have less right to be regarded as popular heroes than Marcel and Lecoq.
+The estates were manipulated in the interests of aristocratic intrigue,
+and, behind the ostensible leaders, was the sinister influence of
+Charles of Navarre, who availed himself of the desolation of France to
+play his own game. For a time he was the darling of the Paris mob.
+Innocent VI. was deceived by his protestations of zeal for peace. As
+grandson of Louis X. he aspired to the French throne, and was anxious
+to prevent John's return. Edward had no good-will for a possible rival,
+but it was his interest to keep up the anarchy, and he had no scruple
+in backing up Charles. There was talk of Edward becoming King of France
+and holding the maritime provinces, while Charles as his vassal should
+be lord of Paris and the interior districts. English mercenaries, who
+had lost their occupation with the truce, enlisted themselves in the
+service of Navarre. Robert Knowles, James Pipe, and other ancient
+captains of Edward fought for their own hand in Normandy, and built up
+colossal fortunes out of the spoils of the country. Some of these
+hirelings appeared in Paris, where the citizens welcomed allies of the
+Navarrese, even when they were foreign adventurers. However, Charles
+went so far that a strong reaction deprived him of all power. He was
+able to prevent the ratification of the preliminaries of 1358. But in
+that year the death of Marcel was followed by the return of the regent
+to Paris, the expulsion of the foreign mercenaries, the collapse of the
+estates, and the restoration of the capital to the national cause. The
+short-lived horrors wreaked by the revolted peasantry were followed by
+the more enduring atrocities of the nobles who suppressed them.
+Military adventurers pillaged France from end to end, but the worst
+troubles ended when Charles of Navarre lost his pre-eminence.[1]
+
+ [1] An admirable account of the state of France between 1356
+ and 1358 is in Denifie, _La Desolation des Églises en_ France
+ _pendant _la _Guerre de Cent Ans, ii.,_ 134-316 (1899).
+
+When the truce of Bordeaux was on the verge of expiration, the French
+king negotiated a second treaty by which he bought off the threatened
+renewal of war. This was the treaty of London, March 24, 1359, by which
+John yielded up to Edward in full sovereignty the ancient empire of
+Henry II. Normandy, the suzerainty of Brittany, Anjou, and Maine,
+Aquitaine within its ancient limits, Calais and Ponthieu with the
+surrounding districts, were the territorial concessions in return for
+which Edward renounced his claim to the French throne. The vast ransom
+of 4,000,000 golden crowns was to be paid for John's redemption; the
+chief princes of the blood were to be hostages for him, and in case of
+failure to observe the terms of the treaty he was to return to his
+captivity. The only provision in any sense favourable to France was
+that by which Edward promised to aid John against the King of Navarre.
+
+The treaty of London excited the liveliest anger in France. "We had
+rather," declared the assembled estates, "endure the great mischief that
+has afflicted us so long, than suffer the noble realm of France thus to
+be diminished and defrauded."[1] Spurred up by these patriotic
+manifestations, the regent rejected the treaty, and prepared as best he
+could for the storm of Edward's wrath which soon burst upon his country.
+Anxious to unite forces against the national enemy, he made peace with
+Charles of Navarre, who, abandoned by Edward, was delighted to be
+restored to his estates.
+
+ [1] Froissart, v., 180, ed. Luce.
+
+Edward concentrated all his efforts on a new invasion of France. In
+November, 1359, he marched out of Calais with all his forces. His four
+sons attended him, and there was a great muster of earls and
+experienced warriors. Among the less known members of the host was the
+young Londoner, Geoffrey Chaucer, a page in Lionel of Antwerp's
+household. In three columns, each following a separate route, the
+English made their way from Calais towards the south-east. The French
+avoided a pitched battle, but hung on the skirts of the army and slew,
+or captured, stragglers and foragers. Chaucer was among those thus
+taken prisoner. Edward's ambition was to take Reims, and have himself
+crowned there as King of France. On December 4 he arrived at the gates
+of the city, and besieged it for six weeks. Then on January 11, 1360,
+the King despaired of success, abandoned the siege, and marched
+southwards through Champagne towards Burgundy. Despite the check at
+Reims, he was still so formidable that in March Duke Philip of Burgundy
+concluded with him the shameful treaty of Guillon, by which he
+purchased exemption from invasion by an enormous ransom and a promise
+of neutrality.
+
+Edward next turned towards Paris. The news that the French had effected
+a successful descent on Winchelsea and behaved with extreme brutality to
+the inhabitants, infuriated the English troopers, who perpetrated a
+hundredfold worse deeds in the suburbs of the French capital. It seemed
+as if the war was about to end with the siege and capture of Paris. The
+regent, unable to meet the English in the field, fell back in despair on
+negotiation. Innocent VI. again offered his good services. John sent
+from his English prison full powers to his son to make what terms he
+would, and on April 3, which was Good Friday, ambassadors from each
+power met under papal intervention at Longjumeau; but Edward still
+insisted on the terms of the treaty of London, for which the French were
+not yet prepared. On April 7 Edward began the siege of Paris by an
+attack on the southern suburbs, but was so little successful that he
+withdrew five days later. A terrible tempest destroyed his provision
+train and devastated his army. These disasters made Edward anxious for
+peace, and the negotiations, after two interruptions, were successfully
+renewed at Chartres, and facilitated by the signature of a truce for a
+year. The work of a definitive treaty was pushed forward, and on May 8,
+preliminaries of peace were signed between the prince of Wales and
+Charles of France at the neighbouring hamlet of Brétigni, whither the
+peacemakers had transferred their sittings. There were still formalities
+to accomplish which took up many months. King John was escorted in July
+by the Prince of Wales to Calais, and in October he was joined by Edward
+III., who had returned to England about the time that the negotiations
+at Brétigni were over. The peace took its final form at Calais in
+October 24, 1360. Next day John was released, and ratified the
+convention as a free man on French soil. This permanent treaty is more
+properly styled the treaty of Calais than the treaty of Brétigni; but
+the alterations between the two were only significant in one particular
+respect. At Calais the English agreed to omit a clause inserted at
+Brétigni by which Edward renounced his claims to the French throne, and
+John his claims over the allegiance of the inhabitants of the ceded
+districts. As the Calais treaty of October alone had the force of law,
+it was a real triumph of French diplomacy to have suppressed so vital a
+feature in the definitive document.[1] Even with this alleviation the
+terms were sufficiently humiliating to France. Edward and his heirs were
+to receive in perpetuity, "and in the manner in which the kings of
+France had held them," an ample territory both in southern and northern
+France. All Aquitaine was henceforth to be English, including Poitou,
+Saintonge, Périgord, Angoumois, Limousin, Quercy, Rouergue, Agenais, and
+Bigorre. The greatest feudatories of these districts, the friendly Count
+of Foix as well as the hostile Count of Armagnac, and the Breton
+pretender to the viscounty of Limoges, were to do homage to Edward for
+all their lands within these bounds. Nor was this all. The county of
+Ponthieu, including Montreuil-sur-mer, was restored to its English
+lords, and added to the pale of Calais, which was to include the whole
+county of Guînes, made up two considerable northern dominions for
+Edward. With these cessions were included all adjacent islands, and all
+islands held by the English king at that time, so that the Channel
+islands were by implication recognised as English.
+
+ [1] On the importance of this, see the paper of MM.
+ Petit-Dutaillis and P. Collier, _La Diplomatie française et le
+ Traité de Brétigny_ in _Le Moyen Age_, 2e serie, tome i.
+ (1897), pp. 1-35.
+
+The ransom of John was fixed at 3,000,000 gold crowns, that is ~500,000
+sterling. The vastness of this sum can be realised by remembering that
+the ordinary revenue of the English crown in time of peace did not much
+exceed £60,000, while the addition to that of a sum of £150,000
+involved an effort which only a popular war could dispose Englishmen to
+make. Of this ransom 600,000 crowns were to be paid at once, and the
+rest in annual instalments of 400,000 crowns until the whole payment
+was effected. During this period the prisoners from Poitiers, several
+of the king's near relatives, a long list of the noblest names in
+France, and citizens of some of its wealthiest cities, were to remain
+as hostages in Edward's hands. As to the Breton succession, Edward and
+John engaged to do their best to effect a peaceful settlement. If they
+failed in attaining this, the rival claimants were to fight it out
+among themselves, England and France remaining neutral. Whichever of
+the two became duke was to do homage to the King of France, and John of
+Montfort was, in any case, to be restored to his county of Montfort. A
+similar care for Edward's friends was shown in the article which
+preserved for Philip of Navarre his hereditary domains in Normandy.
+Forfeitures and outlawries were to be pardoned, and the rights of
+private persons to be respected. Nevertheless Calais was to remain at
+Edward's entire disposal, and the burgesses, dispossessed by him, were
+not to be reinstated. The French renounced their alliance with the
+Scots, and the English theirs with the Flemings. Time was allowed to
+carry out these complicated stipulations, and, by way of compensating
+Edward for the significant omission which has been mentioned, elaborate
+provisions were made for the mutual execution at a later date of
+charters of renunciation, by which Edward abandoned his claim to the
+French throne and John the over-lordship of the districts yielded to
+Edward. These were to be exchanged at Bruges about a year later.
+
+England rejoiced at the conclusion of so brilliant a peace, and laid no
+stress on the subtle change in the conditions which made the treaty far
+less definitive in reality than in appearance. In France the faithful
+flocked to the churches to give thanks for deliverance from the long
+anarchy. The perfect courtesy and good feeling which the two kings had
+shown to each other gilded the concluding ceremonies with a ray of
+chivalry. John was released almost at once, and allowed to retain with
+him in France some of the hostages, including his valiant son Philip,
+the companion of his captivity. John made Edward's peace with Louis of
+Flanders, and Edward persuaded John to pardon Charles and Philip of
+Navarre. At last the two weary nations looked forward to a long period
+of repose.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR FROM THE TREATY OF CALAIS TO THE TRUCE OF
+BRUGES.
+
+
+It was an easier matter to conclude the treaty of Calais than to carry
+it out. Troubles followed the release of the French king and the
+expiration of the year during which the two parties were to yield up
+the ceded territory and effect the renunciations of their respective
+claims. John did his best to keep faith in both these matters. He
+ordered his vassals to submit themselves to their new lord, and
+appointed commissioners to hand over the lost provinces to the agents
+of the English king. In July, 1361, Sir John Chandos, Edward's
+lieutenant in France, received the special mission of taking possession
+of the new acquisitions in the name of his master. Chandos' reputation
+as a soldier made him acceptable to the French, and being recognised by
+the treaty as lord of Saint-Sauveur in the Côtentin, he was interested
+in maintaining good relations between the two realms. He began his work
+by taking possession of Poitiers and Poitou, but found that many of the
+descendants of the greedy lords, who, more than a hundred years before,
+had played off Henry III against St. Louis, abandoned the rule of John
+with undisguised reluctance. It was worse with the towns, where
+national sentiment was stronger. La Rochelle held out for months, and,
+when its notables at last submitted, they declared: "We will accept the
+English with our lips but never with our hearts". Much patriotic
+feeling was manifested in Quercy. The consuls of Cahors made their
+submission, weeping and groaning. "Alas!" they declared, "how odious it
+is to lose our natural lord, and to pass over to a master we know not.
+But it is not we who abandon the King of France. It is he who, against
+our wishes, hands us over, like orphans, to the hands of the stranger."
+It was not until two years after the signing of the treaty that Edward
+entered into possession of the bulk of the lands granted to him. Even
+then there were districts in Poitou, notably Belleville, which never
+became English at all. One of the last districts to yield was Rouergue,
+whose count, John of Armagnac, only made his submission under the
+compulsion of irresistible necessity.
+
+It was even more difficult to get the English out of the lands which
+the treaty had assigned to the French. These districts were largely
+held by companies of mercenaries, little under Edward's control and
+indisposed to yield up the conquests won by their own hands because
+their nominal lord had thought fit to make a treaty with the French
+king. Despite the orders of Edward, the English garrisons in the north
+and centre of France flatly refused to surrender their strongholds. In
+Maine, Hugh Calveley took Bertrand du Guesclin prisoner when he sought
+to receive the submission of his castles, and only released him on
+payment of a heavy ransom. In Normandy, Du Guesclin had to buy off
+James Pipe, who dominated all the central district from the fortified
+abbey of Cormeilles, and to crush John Jowel in a pitched battle near
+Lisieux. Even when the castles were surrendered, the garrisons joined
+with each other to establish societies of warriors that now inflicted
+terrible woes on France. The exploits of these free companies hardly
+belong to English history, though many of their leaders and a large
+proportion of the rank and file were Englishmen. Cruel, fierce, and
+uncouth, they still preserved in all military dealings the strict
+discipline which had taught the English armies the way to victory. The
+combination of the order of a settled host with the rapacity of a gang
+of freebooters made them as irresistible as they were destructive.
+Though Edward formally repudiated them, it was more than suspected that
+they were secretly playing his game.
+
+Before long, this guerilla warfare became consolidated into military
+operations on a large scale. Charles of Navarre once more profited by
+the disorder of France to bring himself to the front. In 1361 John had
+availed himself of the death of Philip of Rouvres to treat the duchy of
+Burgundy as a lapsed fief, and conferred it on his youngest son, Philip
+the Bold. Charles then claimed to be the heir of Burgundy, and while he
+personally directed the forces of disorder in the south, his agents
+united with the English _condottieri_ in Normandy. John Jowel still
+held tight to his Norman conquests, and was, by Edward's direction,
+fighting openly for Charles of Navarre. The Captal de Buch, the hero of
+Poitiers, hurried from Gascony to protect the Navarrese lands from the
+invasion of Bertrand du Guesclin. On May 16, 1364, the little armies of
+the Captal and the Breton partisan met at Cocherel on the Eure, where
+Du Guesclin cleverly won the first important victory gained by the
+French in the open field during the whole course of the war. The Captal
+was taken prisoner, and the establishment of Du Guesclin in some of
+Charles of Navarre's Norman fiefs deprived the intriguer of his
+opportunities to do mischief in the north. Charles of Navarre's career
+was not yet over; but henceforth his chief field was his southern
+kingdom.
+
+The victorious Du Guesclin turned his attention to his native Brittany,
+where the war of Blois and Montfort still went on, for Joan of
+Penthièvre insisted so strongly upon her rights that the efforts of
+Edward and John to end the contest had been without result. In 1362
+John de Montfort was at last entrusted with the government of Brittany,
+and Du Guesclin quitted the service of France for that of Charles of
+Blois, that the treaty of 1360 might remain unbroken. But as in the
+early wars, the army of Blois was mainly French, and the host of
+Montfort was commanded by the Englishman, John Chandos, and largely
+consisted of English men-at-arms and archers. Calveley, Knowles, and
+the Breton Oliver de Clisson were among the captains of Duke John's
+forces.
+
+The decisive engagement took place on September 29, 1364, on the
+plateau, north of Auray, which is still marked by the church of St.
+Michael, erected as a thank-offering by the victor. It was another
+Poitiers on a small scale. The Anglo-Breton army held a good defensive
+position, facing northwards, with its back on the town of Auray. The
+troops of Charles of Blois and Du Guesclin advanced to attack them with
+more ardour than discipline or skill. Both sides fought on foot. The
+French knights had at last learnt to meet the storm of English arrows
+by strengthening their armour and by protecting themselves by large
+shields. Thus, as at Poitiers, they had little difficulty in making
+their way up to the enemy's ranks. But their order was confused, and
+they thought of nothing but the fierce delights of the _mêlée_. The
+Montfort party showed more intelligence, and Chandos, like the captal
+at Poitiers, fell suddenly upon the flank of one of the enemy's
+divisions. This settled the fight; Charles of Blois was slain, Du
+Guesclin taken prisoner, and their army utterly scattered. Auray ended
+the war of the Breton succession. Even Joan of Penthièvre was at last
+willing to treat. In 1365 the treaty of Guérande was signed, by which.
+Montfort was recognised as John IV. of Brittany, and did homage to the
+French crown. Joan was consoled by remaining in possession of the
+county of Penthièvre and the viscounty of Limoges. Practically her
+defeat was an English victory, and Montfort remained in his duchy so
+long only as English influence prevailed. A second step towards the
+pacification of the north was made when the troubles in Brittany were
+ended within a few months of the destruction of the power of Charles
+the Bad in Normandy.
+
+The free companies lost their chief hunting-grounds; and a further
+relief came when some of them, like the White Company, found a better
+market for their swords in Italy. With all their faults, the companies
+opened out a career to talent such as had seldom been found before. John
+Hawkwood, the leader of the White Company, was an Essex man of the
+smaller landed class. He had played but a subordinate figure beside
+Knowles, Calveley, Pipe, and Jowel; but in Italy he won for himself the
+name of the greatest strategist of his age. Thus, though at the cost of
+murder and pillage, the English made themselves talked about all over
+the western world. "In my youth," wrote Petrarch, "the Britons, whom we
+call Angles or English, had the reputation of being the most timid of
+the barbarians. Now they are the most warlike of peoples. They have
+overturned the ancient military glory of the French by a series of
+victories so numerous and unexpected that those, who were not long since
+inferior to the wretched Scots, have so crushed by fire and sword the
+whole realm that, on a recent journey, I could hardly persuade myself
+that it was the France that I had seen in former years."[1]
+
+ [1] _Epistolæ Familiares_, iii., Ep. 14, p. 162, ed.
+ Fracassetti.
+
+It was to little purpose that King John laboured to redeem his plighted
+word and make France what it had been before the war. Though in
+November, 1361, neither he nor Edward sent commissioners to Bruges,
+where, according to the treaty of Calais, the charters of renunciation
+were to be exchanged, John offered in 1362 to carry out his promise.
+Edward, however, for reasons of his own, made no response to his
+advances. The result was that the renunciations were never made, and so
+the essential condition of the original settlement remained
+unfulfilled. The matter passed almost unnoticed at the time as a mere
+formality, but in later years Edward's lack of faith brought its own
+punishment in giving the French king a plausible excuse for still
+claiming suzerainty over the ceded provinces. Perhaps Edward still
+cherished the ambition of resuscitating his pretensions to the French
+crown. He found it as hard to give up a claim as ever his grandfather
+had done.
+
+John's good faith was conspicuously evinced by the efforts he made to
+raise the instalments of his ransom. His payments were in arrears: some
+of the hostages left in free custody by Edward's generosity broke their
+parole and escaped; and among them was his own son, Louis, Duke of
+Anjou. The father felt it his duty to step into the place thus left
+vacant. In 1363 he returned to his English prison, where he died in
+1364, surrounded with every courtesy and attention that Edward could
+lavish upon him. During the last months of his life, England received
+visits from two other kings, David of Scotland and the Lusignan lord of
+Cyprus, who still called himself King of Jerusalem, and was wandering
+through the courts of Europe to stir up interest in the projected
+crusade.
+
+Charles of Normandy then became Charles V. He was no knight-errant like
+his father, and his diplomatic gifts, tact, and patience made him much
+better fitted than John for outwitting his English enemies and for
+restoring order to France. Slowly but surely he grappled with the
+companies, and at last an opening was found for their skill in the
+civil war which broke out in Castile. Peter the Cruel, since 1350 King
+of Castile, had made himself odious to many of his subjects. At last
+his bastard brother, Henry of Trastamara, rose in revolt against him.
+Peter, however, was capable and energetic, and not without support from
+certain sections of the Castilians. Moreover, he was friendly with
+Charles of Navarre, and allied with Edward III. On the other hand Henry
+found powerful backing from the King of Aragon, and made an appeal to
+the King of France. This gave Charles V. the chance he wanted. He hated
+Peter, who was reputed to have murdered his own wife, Blanche of
+Bourbon sister of the Queen of France, and in 1365 he agreed to give
+Henry assistance. Du Guesclin welded the scattered companies into an
+army and led them against the Spanish king. The pope fell in with the
+scheme as an indirect way of realising his crusading ambition. When
+Henry had become King of Castile, the companies would go on to attack
+the Moors of Granada. English and French mercenaries flocked gladly
+together under Du Guesclin's banner. Edward in vain ordered his
+subjects not to take part in an invasion of the lands of his friend and
+cousin, Peter of Castile. Though Chandos declined at the last moment to
+follow Du Guesclin into the peninsula, Sir Hugh Calveley would not
+desist from the quest of fresh adventure, even at the orders of his
+lord. Professional and knightly feeling bound Calveley to Du Guesclin
+more closely than their difference of nationality separated them, so
+that Calveley took his part in the Castilian campaign with perfect
+loyally to his ancient enemy. In December, 1365, Du Guesclin and his
+followers made their way through Roussillon and Aragon into Castile.
+The spring of 1366 saw Peter a fugitive in Aquitaine, and Henry of
+Trastamara crowned Henry II. of Castile. Most of the companies then
+went home, though Du Guesclin and Calveley remained to support the new
+king's throne.
+
+The deposed tyrant went to Bordeaux, where since 1363 the Black Prince
+had been resident as Prince of Aquitaine; for in 1362 Edward had erected
+his new possessions into a principality and conferred it on his eldest
+son, in the hope of conciliating the Gascons by some pretence of
+restoring their independence. At Bordeaux Peter persuaded the prince to
+restore him to his throne by force. Edward also agreed to support Peter,
+and sent his third son, John of Gaunt, to march through Brittany and
+Poitou with a powerful English reinforcement to his brother's resources,
+while the lord of Aquitaine assembled the whole, strength of his new
+principality for the expedition. At the bidding of his lord, Calveley
+cheerfully abandoned Du Guesclin, and thenceforth fought as courageously
+on the one side as he had previously done on the other. Charles of
+Navarre professed great desire to help forward the invaders, and his
+offers of friendship opened up to the prince the easiest way into Spain
+by way of the pass of Roncesvalles from Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port to
+Pamplona, the capital of Navarre. In February, 1367, the prince's army
+made its way in frost and snow through the valleys famous in romance.
+From Pamplona two roads diverged to Burgos, the ancient Castilian
+capital. The easier way ran south-westwards through Navarrese territory
+to the Ebro at Logroño, where beyond the river lay the Castilian
+frontier. The more difficult route went westwards through rugged
+mountains and high valleys by way of Salvatierra and Vitoria to a
+passage over the upper Ebro at Miranda. The Black Prince chose the
+latter route, and reached Vitoria in safely. Beyond the town King
+Henry's army held a position so strong that Edward found it impossible
+to dislodge him.
+
+The winter weather still held the upland valleys in its grip when March
+was far advanced. Men and horses suffered terribly from cold and
+hunger, and the prince, seeing that he could not long maintain his
+position, boldly resolved to transfer himself to the southern route. A
+flank march over snow-clad sierras brought him to the vale of the Ebro,
+and, crossing the stream at Logroño, he took up his position a few
+miles south-west of that town, near the Castilian village of Navarrete.
+On the prince's change of front King Henry also moved southward,
+crossing the Ebro a few miles above Logroño, and then advanced to
+Nájera, a village about six miles west of Navarrete, where he once more
+blocked the English path. The prince, however, had the advantage of
+position and could afford to wait until the Castilians attacked. On
+April 3 Henry advanced over the little river Najarilla against the
+enemy. The Spanish host fought after a different fashion from that
+practised by both sides in the French wars. Only Du Guesclin and the
+small remnant of the companies which still abode in Spain dismounted.
+The mass of the Castilians remained on their horses. Their cavalry was
+of two sorts: besides a large number of men-at-arms bestriding armoured
+steeds, there were swarms of light horsemen, unencumbered by heavy
+armour and called _genitours_, from being mounted on the fleet Spanish
+steeds called jennets. The desperate valour of Du Guesclin and his
+followers could not prevent utter disaster. Henry fled in panic from
+the scene; Du Guesclin was again a prisoner, and the Najarilla was
+reddened by the blood of the thousands of fugitive Spaniards, for,
+caught as in a trap at the narrow bridge which offered the _sole_ means
+of retreat, they were massacred without difficulty by the prince's
+troops. The victors marched on to Burgos, and, Don Henry having fled to
+France, Peter was restored with little further trouble to the Castilian
+throne.
+
+The Black Prince remained in Castile all through the summer, waiting
+for the rewards which Don Peter had promised him. His army melted away
+through fever and dysentery, and the prince himself contracted the
+beginnings of a mortal disorder. Thus the crowning victory of his
+career was the last of his triumphs. Like many other leaders of
+chivalry, he had not understood the limitations of his resources, and
+had dissipated on this bootless Spanish campaign means scarcely
+sufficient to grapple with the spirit of disaffection already
+undermining his power in Aquitaine. With shattered health and the mere
+skeleton of his gallant army, he made his way back over the Pyrenees.
+Henceforth misfortune dogged every step of his career.
+
+Since 1363 the constant residence of the Black Prince and his wife, Joan
+of Kent, in Gascony, had been broken only by his Castilian expedition.
+It was a wise policy to send the prince to hold a permanent court in
+Aquitaine, such as the land had never seen since Richard Coeur de Lion.
+All that affability, magnificence, and chivalry could do to make his
+domination attractive might be confidently anticipated from so brilliant
+and high-minded a knight as the prince of Aquitaine. The court of
+Bordeaux was as brilliant as the court of Windsor. "Never," boasted the
+Chandos Herald,[1] "was such good entertainment as his; for every day at
+his table he had more than four-score knights and four times as many
+squires. There was found all nobleness, merriment, freedom, and honour.
+His subjects loved him, for he did them much good." The sulky magnates
+of the south-west, such as John of Armagnac and Gaston Phoebus of Foix,
+found their bitterness tempered by the prince's courtesy, while the
+boastful knights of Gascony looked forward to a career of honourable
+service under the descendant of their ancient dukes. Feastings and
+tournaments were not enough to win all his subjects' hearts; and the
+Black Prince strove with some energy to show that he was a ruler of men
+as well as the centre of a court. It is to his credit that he cleared
+his inheritance from the free companies, so that Poitou and Limousin
+enjoyed far more prosperity and tranquillity than in the days of French
+ascendency. Such new taxation as Gascon custom allowed was only levied
+after grants from the three estates. Great pains were taken to improve
+the administration, the judicial system, and the coinage. Edward saw
+that his best policy was to rely upon the people of Gascony, and to look
+with suspicion on the great lords. But he did not understand how limited
+was the authority which tradition gave to the dukes of Aquitaine, and he
+was too stiff, too pedantic, too insular, to get on really cordial terms
+with his subjects. He never, like Gaston Phoebus or Richard Coeur de
+Lion, threw himself into the local life, language, and traditions of the
+country.
+
+ [1] _Le Prince Noir, poème du héraut d'Armes Chandos_, pp.
+ 107-108, ed. F. Michel.
+
+The Black Prince's greatest successes were with the towns, and
+especially with those which had been continuously subject to English
+rule. The citizens of Bordeaux, who had feared lest Edward's claim to
+the French crown should involve them in more complete subjection, were
+appeased by promises that they should in any case remain subject to the
+English monarchy. Their liberties were increased and their wine trade
+was fostered, even to the loss of English merchants. The other towns
+were equally contented. Edward relied upon them as a counterpoise to
+the feudal lords, and their liberties exempted them from the
+extraordinary taxes by which he strove to restore the equilibrium of
+his finances. The half-independent magnates were soon convinced that
+their chivalrous lord was no friend of aristocratic privilege. Edward,
+even when using their services in war, carefully excluded them from the
+administration. They saw with disgust the chief offices monopolised by
+Englishmen. An English bishop, John Harewell of Bath, was Edward's
+chancellor and confidential adviser. An English knight, Thomas Felton,
+was seneschal of Aquitaine and head of the administration. The
+constableship was assigned to Chandos. The seneschalships of the
+several provinces were mainly in English hands. With English notions of
+the rights of the supreme power, the prince paid little attention to
+the franchises of either lord or prelate. He mortally offended John of
+Armagnac by requiring a direct oath of fealty from the Bishop of Rodez,
+who held all his lands of Armagnac as Count of Rouergue. Clerks of
+lesser degree were outraged by the prince's attempts to hinder students
+from attending the university of Toulouse.
+
+The Spanish expedition immensely increased the Black Prince's
+difficulties. He exhausted his finances to equip his army, and both on
+their coming and going his soldiers cruelly pillaged the country.
+Edward now dismissed most of his troops and urged them to betake
+themselves to France. In January, 1368, he obtained from the estates of
+Aquitaine a new hearth tax of ten _sous_ a hearth for five years. The
+tax was freely voted and collected from the great majority of the
+payers without trouble. The towns were mainly exempt from it by reason
+of their liberties; and the lesser lords were as yet not averse from
+English rule. But the greater feudatories saw in the new hearth-tax a
+pretext for revolt. They had no special zeal for the French monarchy,
+but the house of Valois was weak and far removed from their
+territories. Their great concern was the preservation of their
+independence, which seemed more threatened by a resident prince than by
+a distant overlord at Paris. Even before the imposition of the
+hearth-tax, the Count of Armagnac entered into a secret treaty with
+Charles V., who promised to increase his territories and respect his
+franchises, if he would return to the French allegiance. The lord of
+Albret married a sister of the French queen and followed Armagnac's
+lead. A little later the Counts of Périgord and Comminges and other
+lords associated themselves with this policy. Thus the rule of the
+Black Prince in Aquitaine, acquiesced in by the mass of the people, was
+threatened by a feudal revolt. Armagnac appealed to the parliament of
+Paris against the hearth-tax. Charles V. accepted the appeal on the
+ground of the non-exchange of the renunciations which should have
+followed the treaty of Calais. Cited before the parliament in January,
+1369, the Black Prince replied that he would go to Paris with helmet on
+head and with sixty thousand men at his back. His father once more
+assumed the title of King of France, and war broke out again.
+
+The relative positions of France and England were different from what
+they had been nine years before. Edward III. was sinking into an
+unhonoured old age, and the Prince of Aquitaine suffered from dropsy,
+and was incapable of taking the field. Of their former comrades some,
+like Walter Manny, were dead, and others too old for much more
+fighting. On the other side was Charles V., who had tamed Navarre and
+the feudal lords, had cleared the realm of the companies, had put down
+faction and disorder, and had made himself the head of a strong
+national party, resolved to effect the expulsion of the foreigner. His
+chief military counsellors were Du Guesclin, and Du Guesclin's old
+adversary in the Breton wars, Oliver de Clisson, now the zealous
+servant of the king. A wonderful outburst of French patriotism
+facilitated the reconquest of the lands that had passed to English rule
+nine years before. Even the tradition of military superiority availed
+little against commanders who were learning by their defeats how to
+meet their once invincible enemies.
+
+There was a like modification in the foreign alliances of the two
+kingdoms. Dynastic changes in the Netherlands had robbed Edward of
+supporters who, though costly and ineffective, had been imposing in
+outward appearance. Even after the dissolution of the alliances of the
+early years of the war, the temporising policy of Louis de Male at
+least neutralised the influence of Flanders. During the peace both
+Edward and Charles did their best to win the goodwill of the Flemish
+count. Louis' relation to the two rivals was the more important since
+his only child was a daughter named Margaret. In 1356, this lady, to
+Edward's great disgust, was promised in marriage to Philip de Rouvre,
+Duke and Count of Burgundy, and Count of Artois. The death of Philip in
+1361 saved Edward from the danger of a great state with one arm in the
+Burgundies and the other in Flanders and Artois; and the irritation of
+Louis de Male at Charles V.'s grant of the Burgundian duchy to his
+youngest son, Philip the Bold, gave the English king a new chance of
+winning his favour. At last, in 1364, Edward concluded a treaty with
+Flanders according to his dearest wishes. Edmund of Langley, Earl of
+Cambridge, his youngest son, was betrothed to the widowed Margaret,
+with Ponthieu, Guînes, and Calais as their appanage. Great as were
+Edward's sacrifices, they were worth making if a permanent union could
+be established between England and Flanders, equally threatening to
+France and to the lords of the Netherlands. Charles persuaded Urban V.
+to refuse the necessary dispensations for the marriage. Edward and
+Louis, irritated at the success of this countermove, waited patiently
+and renewed their alliance.
+
+No sooner was his understanding with Armagnac completed than Charles
+strove to secure the support of northern as well as of southern
+feudalism against Edward. He offered his brother, Philip of Burgundy,
+to Margaret, along with the restoration of the districts of French
+Flanders, which he still held. In June, 1369, the marriage took place.
+Edmund of Cambridge lost his last chance of the great heiress, and
+Charles V. bought off the enmity of the Count of Flanders at the price
+of that union of Burgundy and Flanders which, in the next century, was
+to make the descendants of Philip and Margaret the most formidable
+opponents of the French monarchy. For the moment, however, Charles
+gained little. Flemish ships, indeed, fought against the English at
+sea, notably in Bourgneuf Bay in 1371, but next year Louis made peace
+with them. Despite his daughter's marriage, the Count of Flanders still
+showed that his sympathies were with England. The other princes of the
+Netherlands were much more decidedly on the French side than the Count
+of Flanders. Margaret of Hainault, Queen Philippa's sister, had, after
+the death of her husband the Emperor Louis of Bavaria, in 1347 fought
+with her son William for the possession of her three counties of
+Hainault, Holland, and Zealand, to which Philippa also had pretensions,
+naturally upheld by her husband. William obtained such advantages over
+his mother that Margaret was obliged to invoke the assistance of her
+brother-in-law. Eager to regain his influence in the Netherlands,
+Edward willingly agreed to be arbiter between Margaret and her son, and
+at his suggestion the disputed lands were divided between them. William
+was married to Maud of Lancaster, Duke Henry's elder daughter, and thus
+secured to the English alliance. On Margaret's death William inherited
+all the three counties: but Maud died, and William became insane,
+whereupon his brother and heir invoked the support of the Emperor
+Charles IV., and was duly established in his fiefs. The claims of
+Philippa were ignored, and the Lancaster marriage with the lord of
+Holland, like the projected union of Edmund with the heiress of
+Flanders, failed to fulfil Edward's hopes.
+
+Meanwhile Edward had to face the constant hostility of the emperor.
+Wenceslaus of Luxemburg, brother of Charles IV., had married the
+daughter and heiress of John III of Brabant, with the result of solidly
+establishing the house of Luxemburg in the strongest of the duchies of
+the Low Countries. With the Luxemburger as with the Bavarian, Edward's
+relations were unfriendly. Two only of the Low German lords, the dukes
+of Gelderland and Jülich, were willing to take his pay. Early in the
+war they were assailed by the Luxemburgers, and the contest occupied
+all their energies. Thus Edward re-entered the struggle against France
+with no help save that of his own subjects. Urban V. died at Avignon in
+1370, and his successor, Gregory XI., was as little friendly to English
+claims in France as his predecessors had been. Pope, emperor, and the
+Netherlandish princes, were all either French or neutral. And in 1369
+Peter of Castile lost his throne, and soon afterwards perished at his
+brother's hands. Henry of Trastamara, henceforth King of Castile,
+became the firm ally of the French, who had already the support of
+Aragon. Even Charles the Bad thought it prudent to declare for France.
+
+At each stage of the war the French took the initiative. The appeal of
+the southern nobles was the beginning of a national movement which,
+before March, 1369, was supported by more than 900 towns, castles, and
+fortified places in Edward's allegiance. In April the French invaded
+Ponthieu and were welcomed as deliverers at Abbeville and the other
+towns of the county. John of Gaunt led an army during the summer from
+Calais southwards. He marched through Ponthieu, crossed the Somme at
+Blanchetaque, and ravaged the country up to the Seine. Then he retired
+exhausted, having gained no real advantage by this mere foray. Charles
+announced that, as Edward had supported the free companies, he fell
+under the excommunication threatened by the pope against the abettors
+of these pests of society, and that the vassals of the English crown
+were therefore relieved from allegiance to him. Soon afterwards he
+declared that Edward had forfeited all his possessions in France.
+
+Quercy and Rouergue, which had submitted last, were the first districts
+of Aquitaine to revolt. Cahors declared for France as soon as the Black
+Prince was cited to Paris. By the end of 1369 all Quercy had
+acknowledged Charles V., and John of Armagnac ruled Rouergue as his
+vassal. It was the same in the Garonne valley, where towns which had no
+quarrel with English rule, were swept away by the strong tide of
+national feeling that surged round their walls. A systematic attack was
+made upon the English power in Aquitaine. Charles V. fitted out new
+armies in which the townsmen and the country-folk fought side by side
+with the nobility. Two of his brothers, John, Duke of Berri, and Louis,
+Duke of Anjou, prepared to assail the intruders, Berri in the central
+uplands, Anjou in the Garonne valley. It was not enough to recover what
+was lost. Aggression must be met by aggression, and the Duke of
+Burgundy, Charles' third brother, equipped a fleet in Norman ports,
+either to invade England or at least to cut off the Black Prince from
+his base. Portsmouth was burnt, before England had made any effort to
+defend her shores.
+
+The English were strangely inactive. The Black Prince lay sick at
+Cognac, and of his subordinates Chandos, now seneschal of Poitou, alone
+showed vigour. Chandos, finding the lords of Poitou much more loyal to
+the English connexion than those of the south, was able to take the
+aggressive by invading Anjou. He was, however, soon recalled to protect
+Poitou, and on January 1, 1370, was mortally wounded at the bridge of
+Lussac. James Audley had already died of disease in another Poitevin
+town. While England was losing her best soldiers, Du Guesclin began a
+fresh series of raids in the Garonne valley. Soon the banner of the
+lilies waved within a few leagues of Bordeaux, and ancient towns of the
+English obedience, like Bazas and Bergerac, fell into the enemy's
+hands. With the capture of Périgueux, the Limousin was isolated from
+Gascon succour. In August the Duke of Berri appeared before the walls
+of the _cité,_ or episcopal quarter, of Limoges, and the bishop
+promptly handed it over to him.
+
+Disasters at last stirred up the English to action. In 1370 John of
+Gaunt was sent with one army to Gascony and Sir Robert Knowles with
+another to Calais. The Black Prince, though unable to ride, was eager
+to command. It was arranged that while Lancaster led one force from
+Bordeaux to Limoges, Edward should accompany another that marched from
+Cognac towards the same destination. To resist this combination Du
+Guesclin strove to combine the separate armies of the Dukes of Anjou
+and Berri. However, he failed to prevent the junction of Lancaster and
+Edward, and their advance to Limoges. On September 19, the anniversary
+of Poitiers, the city of Limoges opened its gates after a five days'
+siege. The English took a terrible revenge. Not a house in the _cité_
+was spared, and the cathedral rose over a mass of ruins. The whole
+population was put to the sword, the Black Prince in his litter
+watching grimly the execution of his orders. A few gentlemen alone were
+saved for the sake of their ransoms. Among them was the brother of Pope
+Gregory XI., who not unnaturally became a warm friend of the patriotic
+party. The sack of Limoges was the last exploit of the Black Prince.
+Early in 1371, he returned to England, partly because of his state of
+health, and partly because he had no money to pay his soldiers. It is
+not unlikely that he was already on bad terms with John of Gaunt, who
+had necessarily taken the chief share in the campaign and was nominated
+his successor. Too late, efforts were made to conciliate the Gascons;
+in 1370 a supreme court was set up at Saintes to save the necessity of
+appeals to London which had become as onerous as the ancient frequency
+of resort to the parliament of Paris; and the hearth-tax, the
+ostensible cause of the rising, was formally renounced.
+
+Sir Robert Knowles's expedition of 1370 was as futile as that of
+Lancaster. He advanced from Calais into the heart of northern France.
+Taught by long experience the danger of joining battle, the French
+allowed him to wander where he would, plundering and ravaging the
+country. Roughly following the line of march of Edward III. in 1360,
+the English advanced through Artois and Vermandois to Laon and Reims,
+and thence southwards through Champagne. Then striking northwards from
+the Burgundian border, they appeared, at the end of September, before
+the southern suburbs of Paris. To dissipate the alarm felt at the
+presence of the English, Du Guesclin was summoned from the south and
+made constable of France. Before his arrival Knowles had moved on
+westwards 'towards the Beauce, intending to reach his own estates in
+Brittany for winter quarters. But his young captains got out of
+control. Led by a Gloucestershire knight, Sir John Minsterworth, "ready
+in hand but deceitful and perverse in mind," a considerable section of
+the troops refused to follow the old "tomb-robber" to Brittany, and
+determined to spend the winter where they were, under Minsterworth's
+leadership. Knowles would not give place to his subordinate, and made
+his way to Brittany with the part of his army which was still faithful
+to him. No sooner was he well started than Du Guesclin, after a march
+of ninety miles in three days, fell upon his rearguard at Pontvallain
+in southern Maine and overwhelmed it on December 4, 1370. Knowles
+managed to reach Brittany with the bulk of his forces, and
+Minsterworth, the real cause of the disaster, ventured to go to England
+and denounce his leader as a traitor. He was forced to flee to France,
+where he openly joined the enemy. Seven years later he was captured and
+executed.
+
+Minsterworth was not the only traitor. In the earlier part of the war,
+there had fought on the English side a grand-nephew of the last
+independent Prince of Wales, Sir Owen ap Thomas ap Rhodri,[1] whose
+grandfather, Rhodri or Roderick, the youngest brother of the princes
+Llewelyn and David, had after the ruin of his house lived obscurely as
+a small Cheshire and Gloucestershire landlord. In 1365 Owen was in
+France, engaged, no doubt, in one of the free companies, and on his
+father's death he returned to defend his inheritance from the claims of
+the Charltons of Powys. Having succeeded in this, he returned to
+France, and nothing more is heard of him until after the renewal of the
+war. In 1370 he appeared as a strenuous partisan of the French. Mindful
+of his ancestry he posed as the lawful Prince of Wales, and established
+communications with his countrymen, both in France and in Wales.
+Anxious to stir up discord in Edward's realm, the French king gladly
+upheld his claims. A gallant knight and an impulsive, energetic
+partisan, Sir Owen of Wales soon won a place of his own in the history
+of his time. In Gwynedd he was celebrated as Owain _Lawgoch,_ Owen of
+the Red Hand. Conspiracies in his favour were ruthlessly stamped out,
+and a halo of legend and poetry soon encircled his name. In France
+Charles entrusted him and another Welshman, named John Wynn, with the
+equipment of a fleet at Rouen with which the champion was to descend on
+the principality and excite arising. Bad weather caused the complete
+destruction of the expedition of the Welsh pretender. Two years later,
+however, another fleet was fitted out on his behalf, and in June, 1372,
+Owen took possession of Guernsey.
+
+ [1] The place of Owen of Wales in history was for the first
+ time clearly shown by Mr. Edward Owen in _Y Cymmrodor,_
+ 1899-1900, pp. 1-105.
+
+At that time the fortune of war was strongly in favour of France,
+though the initial successes of Charles V. were damped by the doubtful
+results of the petty struggles which filled the year 1371. During that
+year Du Guesclin, the soul of the French attack, ejected the English
+from many places in Normandy and Poitou. On the other hand, the English
+won the hard fought battle over a Flemish fleet in Bourgneuf Bay, which
+has already been mentioned. They also showed some power of recovery in
+Aquitaine, where their recapture of Figeac in upper Quercy gave them a
+base for renewing their attacks on Rouergue. On the whole then, the
+year left matters much as they had been.
+
+The occupation of Guernsey by Owen of Wales was the beginning of a new
+series of French victories. Up to that time the northern coastlands of
+Aquitaine, lower Poitou, Saintonge, and Angoumois had remained almost
+entirely under their English lords. In the hope of resisting attack,
+the English projected the invasion of France both from Calais and from
+Guienne. To carry out the latter plan John Hastings, Earl of Pembroke,
+was despatched with a fleet and army from England, with a commission to
+succeed John of Gaunt as the king's lieutenant in Aquitaine. The
+Franco-Spanish alliance then began to bear its fruits. Henry of
+Trastamara equipped a strong Spanish fleet to meet the invaders in the
+Bay of Biscay. On June 23, 1372, the two fleets fought an action off La
+Rochelle. The light Spanish galleys out-manoeuvred the heavy English
+ships, laden deep in the water with stores and filled with troops and
+horses. The Spaniards set on fire some of the English transports, which
+became unmanageable owing to the fright of the horses embarked upon
+them. The English fought valiantly, and night fell before the battle
+was decided. Next day, the Spaniards attacked again, and won a complete
+victory. The English fleet was destroyed, and Pembroke was taken a
+prisoner to Santander.
+
+The news of Pembroke's defeat encouraged the French to attempt the
+conquest of Poitou. Du Guesclin invaded the county from the north in
+co-operation with the Spaniards at sea, Owen of Wales abandoned the
+siege of Cornet castle, in Guernsey, which still held out against him,
+and hurried to join the Spaniards. At Santander he met the captive
+Pembroke, and bitterly reproached the marcher earl with the part his
+house had taken in driving the Welsh from their lands. In August Owen
+and the Spaniards were lying off La Rochelle. Sir Thomas Percy,
+seneschal of Poitou, and the Captal de Buch were with a considerable
+force at Soubise, near the mouth of the Charente. Owen ascended the
+river and fell unexpectedly on the English at night. The English were
+utterly defeated and both leaders were taken prisoners, Thomas Percy,
+the future ally of Owen Glendower, being captured by one of Sir Owen's
+Welsh followers. Meanwhile, Du Guesclin, after receiving the surrender
+of Poitiers on August 7, pressed forward to the coast and was soon in
+touch with Owen and the Spaniards. On the same September day Angoulême
+and La Rochelle opened their gates to the French. In the course of the
+same month all the other towns of the district declared for the winning
+side. The nobles of Poitou were still to some extent English in
+sympathy, and a considerable band of them and their followers took
+refuge in Thouars. On December 1 this last stronghold of Poitevin
+feudalism surrendered. The tidings of disaster roused the old English
+king to his final martial effort. A fleet was raised and sailed from
+Sandwich, having on board the king, the Prince of Wales, the Duke of
+Lancaster, and many other magnates. Contrary winds kept the vessels
+near the English coast, and the vast sums lavished on the equipment of
+the expedition were wasted. In despair the Black Prince surrendered to
+his father his principality of Aquitaine. When the king begged the
+commons for a further war subsidy, he was told that the navy had been
+ruined by his harsh impressment of seamen, and his refusal to give them
+pay when detained in port waiting for orders. When the command of the
+sea passed to the French and their Spanish allies, all hope of
+retaining Aquitaine was lost.
+
+The final stages in the ruin of the English power in France need not
+detain us long. Despite his successes, Du Guesclin persevered in his
+policy of wearing down the English by delays and by avoiding pitched
+battles. He turned his attention to Brittany, where Duke John, in
+difficulties with his subjects, had invoked the aid of an English army.
+Thereupon the Breton barons called the French king to take possession
+of the duchy, whose lord was betraying it to the foreigner. The old
+party struggle was at an end: Celtic Brittany joined hands with French
+Brittany. Before the end of 1373, Duke John was a fugitive, and only a
+few castles with English garrisons upheld his cause. Of these Brest was
+the most important, and despite the Spaniards and Owen of Wales, the
+English were still strong enough at sea to retain possession of the
+place.
+
+In July, 1373, John of Gaunt marched out of Calais with one of the
+strongest armies with which an English invader had ever entered France.
+Pursuing a general south-easterly direction, the English pitilessly
+devastated Artois, Picardy, and Champagne. Du Guesclin hastened back
+from Brittany to command the army engaged in watching Lancaster. He
+still continued his defensive tactics, but gave the enemy little rest.
+Lancaster was no match for so able a general as the Breton constable.
+At the end of September he moved from Troyes to Sens, and thence pushed
+into Burgundy. Then he turned westwards through the Nivernais and the
+Bourbonnais, and led his army through the uplands of Auvergne. By the
+end of the year he had traversed the Limousin, and made his way to
+Bordeaux. Half his army had perished of hunger, cold, and in petty
+warfare. The horses had suffered worse than the men, and the baggage
+train was almost destroyed. Without fighting a battle Du Guesclin had
+put the enemy out of action. Experience now showed how useless were the
+prolonged plundering raids which ten years before had filled all France
+with terror.
+
+Even in Gascony Lancaster could not hold his own. After declining
+battle with the Duke of Anjou, he returned to England, leaving Sir
+Thomas Felton as seneschal. The enemy had penetrated to the very heart
+of the old English district. La Réole opened its gates to them;
+Saint-Sever, the seat of the Gascon high court, followed its example,
+By 1374 the English duchy was reduced to the coast lands around Bayonne
+and Bordeaux. That year the French laid siege to Chandos's castle of
+Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte. The siege was as long and as elaborately
+organised as the great siege of Calais. A ring of _bastilles_ was
+erected round the doomed town, and cannon discharged huge balls of
+stone against its ramparts. After nearly a year's siege the garrison
+agreed to surrender on condition of a heavy payment. With the fall of
+the old home of the Harcourts the English power in Normandy perished.
+There was still, it is true, the influence of Charles of Navarre; but
+that desperate intriguer had compromised himself so much with both
+parties that no confidence could be placed in him.
+
+The misfortunes of the English inclined them to listen to proposals of
+peace. Though the papacy was more frankly on the French side than ever,
+it had not lost its ancient solicitude to put an end to the war. With
+that object Gregory XI, though eager to return to Rome, tarried in the
+Rhone valley. Two of his legates appeared in Champagne at the time of
+John of Gaunt's abortive expedition. From that moment offers of peace
+were constantly pressed on both sides. Lancaster was at Calais, and
+Anjou was not far off at Saint-Omer, when definite proposals were
+exchanged. Before long it was found more convenient that the envoys
+should meet face to face, and for this reason the two dukes accepted
+the hospitality of Louis de Male, and held personal interviews at
+Bruges. More than once the negotiations broke down altogether. At no
+time was there much hope of a permanent peace. The English insisted on
+the terms of 1360, and the French demanded the cession of Calais and
+the release of the unpaid ransom of King John. However, on June 27,
+1375, a truce for a year was signed at Bruges, which was further
+extended until June, 1377, just long enough to allow the old king to
+end his days in peace. France had once more to wrestle with the
+companies set free by the truce, so that England could still enjoy
+possession of Calais, Bordeaux, Bayonne, Brest, and the other scanty
+remnants of the cessions of the treaty of Calais. Satisfied at putting
+an end to the war, Gregory XI betook himself to Rome. Thus the truce
+outlasted the Babylonish captivity of the papacy as well as the life of
+Edward III.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+ENGLAND DURING THE LATTER YEARS OF EDWARD III.
+
+
+Never was Edward's glory so high as in the years immediately succeeding
+the treaty of Calais. The unspeakable misery of France heightened his
+magnificence by the strength of the contrast. At eight-and-forty he
+retained the vigour and energy of his younger days, though surrounded
+by a band of grown-up sons. In 1362 the king celebrated his jubilee, or
+his fiftieth birthday, amidst feasts of unexampled splendour. Not less
+magnificent were the festivities that attended the visits of the three
+kings, of France, Cyprus, and Scotland, in 1364.
+
+Of the glories of these years we have detailed accounts from an
+eye-witness a writer competent, above all other men of his time, to set
+down in courtly and happy phrase the wonders that delighted his eyes.
+In 1361, John Froissart, an adventurous young clerk from Valenciennes,
+sought out a career for himself in the household of his countrywoman,
+Queen Philippa, bearing with him as his credentials a draft of a verse
+chronicle which was his first attempt at historical composition. He
+came to England at the right moment. The older generation of historians
+had laid down their pens towards the conclusion of the great war, and
+had left no worthy successors. The new-comer was soon to surpass them,
+not in precision and sobriety, but in wealth of detail, in literary
+charm, and in genial appreciation of the externals of his age. He
+recorded with an eye-witness's precision of colour, though with utter
+indifference to exactness, the tournaments and fetes, the banquets and
+the _largesses_ of the noble lords and ladies of the most brilliant
+court in Christendom. He celebrated the courtesy of the knightly class,
+their devotion to their word of honour, the liberality with which
+captive foreigners was allowed to share in their sports and pleasures,
+and the implicit loyalty with which nearly all the many captive knights
+repaid the trust placed on their word. To him Edward was the most
+glorious of kings, and Philippa, his patroness, the most beautiful,
+liberal, pious, and charitable of queens. For nine years he enjoyed the
+queen's bounty, and described with loyal partiality the exploits of
+English knights. With the death of his patroness and the beginning of
+England's misfortunes, the light-minded adventurer sought another
+master in the French-loving Wenceslaus of Brabant. The first edition of
+his chronicle, compiled when under the spell of the English court,
+contrasts strongly with the second version written at Brussels at the
+instigation of the Luxemburg duke of Brabant.
+
+Even Froissart saw that all was not well in England. The common people
+seemed to him proud, cruel, disloyal, and suspicious. Their delight was
+in battle and slaughter, and they hated the foreigner with a fierce
+hatred which had no counterpart in the cosmopolitan knightly class.
+They were the terror of their lords and delighted in keeping their
+kings under restraint. The Londoners were the most mighty of the
+English and could do more than all the rest of England. Other writers
+tell the same tale. The same fierce patriotism that Froissart notes
+glows through the rude battle songs in which Lawrence Minot sang the
+early victories of Edward from Halidon Hill to the taking of Guînes,
+and inspired Geoffrey le Baker to repeat with absolute confidence every
+malicious story which gossip told to the discredit of the French king
+and his people. It was under the influence of this spirit that the
+steps were taken, which we have already recorded, to extend the use of
+English, notably in the law courts. Yet the old bilingual habit clave
+long to the English. Despite the statute of 1362, the lawyers continued
+to employ the French tongue, until it crystallised into the jargon of
+the later _Year Books_ or of Littleton's _Tenures_. Under Edward III,
+however, French remained the living speech of many Englishmen. John
+Gower wrote in French the earliest of his long poems. But he is a
+thorough Englishman for all that. He writes in French, but, as he says,
+he writes for England.[1]
+
+ [1] "O gentile Engleterre, a toi j'escrits," _Mirour de
+ l'Omme,_ in John Gower's _Works,_ i., 378, ed. G.C. MaCaulay,
+ to whom belongs the credit of recovering this long lost work.
+
+It was characteristic of the patriotic movement of the reign of Edward
+III, that a new courtly literature in the English language rivalled the
+French vernacular literature which as yet had by no means ceased to
+produce fruit. The new type begins with the anonymous poems, "Sir
+Gawain and the Green Knight," and the "Pearl". While Froissart was the
+chief literary figure at the English court during the ten years after
+the treaty of Calais, his place was occupied in the concluding decade
+of the reign by Geoffrey Chaucer, the first great poet of the English
+literary revival. The son of a substantial London vintner, Chaucer
+spent his youth as a page in the household of Lionel of Antwerp, from
+which he was transferred to the service of Edward himself. He took part
+in more than one of Edward's French campaigns, and served in diplomatic
+missions to Italy, Flanders, and elsewhere. His early poems reflect the
+modes and metres of the current French tradition in an English dress,
+and only reach sustained importance in his lament on the death of the
+Duchess Blanche of Lancaster, written about 1370. It is significant
+that the favourite poet of the king's declining years was no clerk but
+a layman, and that the Tuscan mission of 1373, which perhaps first
+introduced him to the treasures of Italian poetry, was undertaken in
+the king's service. Thorough Englishman as Chaucer was, he had his eyes
+open to every movement of European culture. His higher and later style
+begins with his study of Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio. Though he
+wrote for Englishmen in their own tongue, his fame was celebrated by
+the French poet, Eustace Deschamps, as the "great translator" who had
+sown the flowers of French poesy in the realm of Aeneas and Brut the
+Trojan. His broad geniality stood in strong contrast to the savage
+patriotism of Minot. In becoming national, English vernacular art did
+not become insular. Chaucer wrote in the tongue of the southern
+midlands, the region wherein were situated his native London, the two
+universities, the habitual residences of the court, the chief seats of
+parliaments and councils, and the most frequented marts of commerce.
+For the first time a standard English language came into being, largely
+displacing for literary purposes the local dialects which had hitherto
+been the natural vehicles of writing in their respective districts. The
+Yorkshireman, Wycliffe, the westcountryman, Langland, adopted before
+the end of the reign the tongue of the capital for their literary
+language in preference to the speech of their native shires. The
+language of the extreme south, the descendant of the tongue of the West
+Saxon court, became the dialect of peasants and artisans. That a
+continuous life was reserved for the idiom of the north country, was
+due to its becoming the speech of a free Scotland, the language in
+which Barbour, Archdeacon of Aberdeen, commemorated for the court of
+the first Stewart king the exploits of Robert Bruce and the Scottish
+war of independence. The unity of England thus found another notable
+expression in the oneness of the popular speech. And the evolution of
+the northern dialect into the "Scottish" of a separate kingdom showed
+that, if England were united, English-speaking Britain remained
+divided.
+
+Other arts indicate the same tendency. Even in the thirteenth century
+English Gothic architecture differentiated itself pretty completely from
+its models in the Isle de France. The early fourteenth century, the age
+of the so-called "decorated style," suggests in some ways a falling back
+to the French types, though the prosperity of England and the desolation
+of France make the English examples of fourteenth century building the
+more numerous and splendid. The occasional tendency of the later
+"flowing" decorated towards "flamboyant" forms, to be seen in some of
+the churches of Northamptonshire, marks the culminating point of this
+fresh approximation of French and English architecture. But the division
+between the two countries brought about by war was illustrated before
+the end of the reign in the growth of the most local of our medieval
+architectural types, that "perpendicular" style which is so strikingly
+different from the "flamboyant" art of the neighbouring kingdom. This
+specially English style begins early in the reign of Edward III, when
+the cult of the murdered Edward of Carnarvon gave to the monks of St.
+Peter's, Gloucester, the means to recast the massive columns and gloomy
+arcades of the eastern portions of their romanesque abbey church after
+the lighter and brighter patterns in which Gloucester set the fashion to
+all southern Britain. In the buildings of the later years of Edward's
+reign the old "flowing decorated" and the newer and stiffer
+"perpendicular" grew up side by side. If the two seem almost combined in
+the church of Edington, in Wiltshire, the foundation dedicated in 1361
+for his native village by Edward's chancellor, Bishop Edington of
+Winchester, the triumph of the perpendicular is assured in the new choir
+which Archbishop Thoresby began for York Minster, and in the
+reconstruction of the Norman cathedral of Winchester begun by Bishop
+Edington, and completed when his greater successor, William of Wykeham,
+carried out in a more drastic way the device already adopted at
+Gloucester of recasing the ancient structure so as to suit modern
+tastes. The full triumph of the new style is apparent in Wykeham's twin
+foundations at Winchester and Oxford. The separation of feeling between
+England and Scotland is now seen in architecture as well as in language.
+When the perpendicular fashion was carrying all before it in the
+southern realm, the Scottish builders erected their churches after the
+flamboyant type of their French allies. Thus while the twelfth and
+thirteenth century structures of the northern and southern kingdoms are
+practically indistinguishable, the differences between the two nations,
+which had arisen from the Edwardian policy of conquest, expressed
+themselves ultimately in the striking contrast between the flamboyant of
+Melrose or St. Giles' and the perpendicular of Winchester or Windsor.
+
+English patriotism, which had asserted itself in the literature and art
+of the people long before it dominated courtly circles, continued to
+express itself in more popular forms than even those of the poems of
+Chaucer. The older fashions of instructing the people were still in
+vogue in the early part of Edward's reign. Richard Rolle, the hermit of
+Hampole, whose _Prick_ of _Conscience_ and vernacular paraphrases of
+the Bible illustrate the older didactic literature, was carried off in
+his Yorkshire cell in the year of the Black Death. The cycles of
+miracle plays, which edified and amused the townsfolk of Chester and
+York, crystallised into a permanent shape early in this reign, and were
+set forth with ever-increasing elaborateness by an age bent on
+pageantry and amusement. The vernacular sermons and popular manuals of
+devotion increased in numbers and copiousness. In this the time of the
+Black Death is, as in other aspects of our story, a deep dividing line.
+
+The note of increasing strain and stress is fully expressed in the
+earlier forms of _The Vision of Piers Plowman,_ which were composed
+before the death of Edward III. Its author, William Langland, a clerk in
+minor orders, debarred by marriage from a clerical career, came from the
+Mortimer estates in the march of Wales: but his life was mainly spent in
+London, and he wrote in the tongue of the city of his adoption. The
+first form of the poem is dated 1362, the year of the second visitation
+of the Black Death, while the troubles of the end of the reign perhaps
+inspired the fuller edition which saw the light in 1377. It is a
+commonplace to contrast the gloomy pictures drawn by Langland with the
+highly coloured pictures of contemporary society for which Chaucer was
+gathering his materials. Yet this contrast may be pressed too far.
+Though Langland had a keen eye to those miseries of the poor which are
+always with us, the impression of the time gathered from his writings is
+not so much one of material suffering, as of social unrest and
+discontent. The poor ploughman, who cannot get meat, still has his
+cheese, curds, and cream, his loaf of beans and bran, his leeks and
+cabbage, his cow, calf, and cart mare.[1] The very beggar demanded
+"bread of clean wheat" and "beer of the best and brownest," while the
+landless labourer despised "night-old cabbage," "penny-ale," and bacon,
+and asked for fresh meat and fish freshly fried.[2] There is plenty of
+rough comfort and coarse enjoyment in the England through which "Long
+Will" stalked moodily, idle, hopeless, and in himself exemplifying many
+of the evils which he condemned. The England of Langland is bitter,
+discontented, and sullen. It is the popular answer to the class
+prejudice and reckless greed of the lords and gentry. Langland's own
+attitude towards the more comfortable classes is much that of the
+self-assertive and mutinous Londoner whom Froissart looked upon with
+such bitter prejudice. He boasts that he was loath to do reverence to
+lords and ladies, or to those clad in furs with pendants of silver, and
+refuses to greet "sergeants" with a "God save you". Every class of
+society is flagellated in his scathing criticisms. He is no
+revolutionist with a new gospel of reform, but, though content to accept
+the old traditions, he is the ruthless denouncer of abuses, and is
+thoroughly filled with the spirit which, four years after the second
+recension of his book, found expression in the Peasants Revolt of 1381.
+With all the archaism of his diction and metre, Langland, even more than
+Chaucer, reflects the modernity of his age.
+
+ [1] _Vision of Piers Plowman,_ i.,220, ed. Skeat.
+
+ [2] _Ibid.,_ i., 222.
+
+Even the universities were growing more national, for the war prevented
+Oxford students from seeking, after their English graduation, a wider
+career at Paris. William of Ockham, the last of the great English
+schoolmen that won fame in the European rather than in the English
+world, died about 1349 in the service of the Bavarian emperor. In the
+same year the plague swept away Thomas Bradwardine, the "profound
+doctor," at the moment of his elevation to the throne of Canterbury.
+Bradwardine, though a scholar of universal reputation, won his fame at
+Oxford without the supplementary course at Paris, and lived all his
+career in his native land. As an English university career became more
+self-sufficient, Oxford became the school of the politician and the man
+of affairs as much as of the pure student. The new tendency is
+illustrated by the careers of the brothers Stratford, both Oxford
+scholars, yet famous not for their writings but for lives devoted to the
+service of the State, though rewarded by the highest offices of the
+Church. His conspicuous position as a teacher of scholastic philosophy
+first brought John Wycliffe into academic prominence. But he soon won a
+wider fame as a preacher in London, an adviser of the court, an opponent
+of the "possessioner" monks, and of the forsworn friars, who, deserting
+apostolic poverty, vied with the monks in covetousness. His attacks on
+practical abuses in the Church marked him out as a politician as well as
+a philosopher. His earlier career ended in 1374, the year in which he
+first became the king's ambassador, not long after proceeding to the
+degree of doctor of divinity.[1] His later struggles must be considered
+in the light of the political history of the concluding episodes of
+Edward's reign. In a few years we shall find the Oxford champion
+abandoning the Latin language of universal culture, and appealing to the
+people in homely English. With Wycliffe's entry upon his wider career,
+it is hardly too much to say that Oxford ceased to be merely a part of
+the cosmopolitan training ground of the schoolmen, and became in some
+fashion a national institution. Cambridge, too young and obscure in
+earlier ages to have rivalled Oxford, first began to enjoy an increasing
+reputation.
+
+ [1] This was before Dec. 26, 1373. See Twemlow in _Engl. Hist.
+ Review_, xv, (1900), 529-530.
+
+Hitherto culture had been not only cosmopolitan but clerical. Every
+university student and nearly every professional man was a clerk. But
+education was becoming possible for laymen, and there were already lay
+professions outside the clerical caste. The wide cultivation and the
+vigorous literary output of laymen of letters like Chaucer and Cower
+are sufficient evidence of this. But the best proof is the complete
+differentiation of the common lawyers from the clergy. The inns of
+court of London became virtually a legal university, where highly
+trained men studied a juristic system, which was not the less purely
+English in spirit because its practitioners used the French tongue as
+their technical instrument. There were no longer lawyers in England
+who, like Bracton, strove to base the law of the land on the forms and
+methods of Roman jurisprudence. There were no longer kings, like Edward
+I., with Italian trained civilians at their court ready to translate
+the law of England into imperialist forms. The canonist still studied
+at Oxford or Cambridge, but his career was increasingly clerical, and
+the Church, unlike the State, was unable to nationalise itself, though
+the whole career of Wycliffe and the strenuous efforts of the kings and
+statesmen who passed the statutes of Provisors and Praemunire, showed
+that some of the English clergy, and many of the English laity, were
+willing to make the effort. English law, in divorcing itself from the
+universities and the clergy, became national as well as lay. There were
+no longer any Weylands who concealed their clerical beginnings, and hid
+away the subdeacon under the married knight and justice, the founder of
+a landowning family. The lawyers of Edward's reign were frankly laymen,
+marrying and giving in marriage, establishing new families that became
+as noble as any of the decaying baronial houses, and yet cherishing a
+corporate ideal and common spirit as lively and real as those of any
+monastery or clerical association.
+
+In enumerating the many convergent tendencies which worked together in
+strengthening the national life, we must not forget the growing
+importance of commerce. Merchant princes like the Poles could rival the
+financial operations of Lombard or Tuscan, and climb into the baronial
+class. The proud and mutinous temper of the Londoners was largely due
+to their ever-increasing wealth. We are on the threshold of the careers
+of commercial magnates, like the Philpots and the Whittingtons. Even
+when Edward III. was still on the throne, a London mayor of no special
+note, John Pyel, could set up in his native Northamptonshire village of
+Irthlingborough a college and church of remarkable stateliness and
+dignity. The growth of the wool trade, and its gradual transfer to
+English hands, the development of the staple system, the rise of an
+English seaman class that knew all the havens of Europe, the beginnings
+of the English cloth manufacture, all indicate that English commerce
+was not only becoming more extensive, but was gradually emancipating
+itself from dependence on the foreigner. Thus before the end of
+Edward's reign England was an intensely national state, proudly
+conscious of itself, and haughtily contemptuous of the foreigner, with
+its own language, literature, style in art, law, universities, and even
+the beginnings of a movement towards the nationalisation of the Church.
+The cosmopolitanism of the earlier Middle Ages was everywhere on the
+wane. A modern nation had arisen out of the old world-state and
+world-spirit. In the England of Edward III., Chaucer, and Wycliffe, we
+have reached the consummation of the movement whose first beginnings we
+have traced in the early storms of the reign of Henry III. It is in the
+development of this tendency that the period from 1216 to 1377
+possesses such unity as it has.
+
+During the years of peace after the treaty of Calais, Edward III.
+completed the scheme for the establishment of his family begun with the
+grant of Aquitaine to the Black Prince. The state of the king's
+finances made it impossible for him to provide for numerous sons and
+daughters from the royal exchequer, and the system of appanages had
+seldom been popular or successful in England. Edward found an easier
+way of endowing his offspring by politic marriages that transferred to
+his sons the endowments and dignities of the great houses, which, in
+spite of lavish creations of new earldoms, were steadily dying out in
+the male line. Some of his daughters in the same way were married into
+baronial families whose attachment to the throne would, it was
+believed, be strengthened by intermarriage with the king's kin; while
+others, wedded to foreign princes, helped to widen the circle of
+continental alliances on which he never ceased to build large hopes.
+Collateral branches of the royal family were pressed into the same
+system, which was so systematically ordered that it has passed for a
+new departure in English history. This is, however, hardly the case.
+Many previous kings, notably Edward I., carried out a policy based upon
+similar lines, and only less conspicuous by reason of the smaller
+number of children that they had to provide for. The descendants of
+Henry III. and Edward I. in no wise kept true to the monarchical
+tradition, but rather gave distinction to the baronial opposition by
+ennobling it with royal alliances. But the martial and vigorous policy
+of Edward III. had at least the effect of reducing to inactivity the
+tradition of constitutional opposition which had been the common
+characteristic of successive generations of the royal house of
+Lancaster, the chief collateral branch of the royal family. Subsequent
+history will show that the Edwardian family settlement was as
+unsuccessful as that of his grandfather. The alliances which Edward
+built up brought neither solidarity to the royal house, nor strength to
+the crown, nor union to the baronage. But the working out of this, as
+of so many of the new developments of the later part of Edward's reign,
+can only be seen after his death.
+
+Edward's eldest son became, as we have seen, Duke of Cornwall, Prince
+of Wales, and Earl of Chester even before he received Aquitaine. He was
+the first of the continuous line of English princes of Wales, for
+Edward III. never bore that title. The Black Prince's marriage with his
+cousin, Joan of Kent, was a love-match, and the estates of his bride
+were scarcely an important consideration to the lord of Wales and
+Cheshire. Yet the only child of the unlucky Edmund of Woodstock was no
+mean heiress, bringing with her the estates of her father's earldom of
+Kent, besides the inheritance of her mother's family, the Wakes of
+Liddell and Lincolnshire. The estates and earldom afterwards passed to
+Joan's son by a former husband, and the Holland earls of Kent formed a
+minor family connexion which closely supported the throne of Richard of
+Bordeaux. Though their paternal inheritance was that of Lancashire
+squires, the Hollands won a leading place in the history of the next
+generation.
+
+Edward III.'s second son, William of Hatfield, died in infancy. For his
+third son, Lionel of Antwerp, when still in his childhood, Edward found
+the greatest heiress of her time, Elizabeth, the only daughter of
+William de Burgh, the sixth lord of Connaught and third Earl of Ulster,
+the representative of one of the chief Anglo-Norman houses in Ireland.
+Even before his marriage, Lionel was made Earl of Ulster, a title sunk
+after 1362 in the novel dignity of the duchy of Clarence. This title was
+chosen because Elizabeth de Burgh was a grand-daughter of Elizabeth of
+Clare, the sister of the last Clare Earl of Gloucester, and a share of
+the Gloucester inheritance passed through her to the young duke. His
+marriage gave Lionel a special relation to Ireland, where, however, his
+two lordships of Ulster and Connaught were largely in the hands of the
+native septs, and where the royal authority had never won back the
+ground lost during the vigorous onslaught of Edward Bruce on the English
+power. In 1342 the estates of Ireland forwarded to Edward a long
+statement of the shortcomings of the English administration of the
+island.[1] No effective steps were taken to remedy those evils until, in
+1361, Edward III. sent Lionel as governor to Ireland, declaring "that
+our Irish dominions have been reduced to such utter devastation and ruin
+that they may be totally lost, if our subjects there are not immediately
+succoured". Lionel's most famous achievement was the statute of
+Kilkenny. This law prohibited the intermixture of the Anglo-Normans in
+Ireland with the native Irish, which was rapidly undermining the basis
+of English rule and confounding Celts and Normans in a nation, ever
+divided indeed against itself, but united against the English. Lionel
+wearied of a task beyond his strength. His wife's early death lessened
+the ties which bound him to her land, and he went back to England
+declaring that he would never return to Ireland if he could help it. His
+succession as governor by a Fitzgerald showed that the plan of ruling
+Ireland through England was abandoned by Edward III. in favour of the
+cheaper but fatal policy of concealing the weakness of the English power
+by combining it with the strength of the strongest of the Anglo-Norman
+houses. Under this faulty system, the statute of Kilkenny became
+inoperative almost from its enactment.
+
+ [1] Cal. of Close, Rolls, 1341-43, pp. 508-16.
+
+The widowed Duke of Clarence made a second great marriage. The
+Visconti, tyrants of Milan, were willing to pay heavily for the
+privilege of intermarriage with the great reigning families of Europe,
+and neither Edward III. nor the French king could resist the temptation
+of alliance with a family that was able to endow its daughters so
+richly. Accordingly, the Duke of Clarence became in 1368 the husband of
+Violante Visconti, the daughter of Galeazzo, lord of Pavia, and the
+niece of Bernabò, signor of Milan, the bitter foe of the Avignon
+papacy. Five months later, Lionel was carried away by a sudden
+sickness, and thus the Visconti marriage brought little fruit to
+England. Lionel's only child, Philippa, the offspring of his first
+marriage, was married, just before her father's death, to Edmund
+Mortimer, Earl of March, great-grandson of the traitor earl beheaded in
+1330. Lionel's death added to the vast inheritance of the Mortimers and
+Joinvilles the lands and claims of Ulster and Clarence, and so Edward
+III.'s magnanimity in reviving the earldom of March after the disgrace
+of 1330 was rewarded by the devolution of its estates to his
+grand-daughter's child. The Earl of March was invested with a new
+political importance, for his wife was the nearest representative of
+Edward III, save for the dying Black Prince and his sickly son. The
+fierce blood and broad estates of the great marcher family continued to
+give importance to Philippa's descendants; and finally the house of
+Mortimer mounted the throne in the person of Edward IV.
+
+The estates of Lancaster were annexed to the reigning branch of the
+royal house by the marriage in 1359 of John of Gaunt, Edward's third
+surviving son, with Blanche of Lancaster, the heiress of Duke Henry,
+who became, after her sister Maud's death, the sole inheritor of the
+duchy of Lancaster. In 1362 John, who had hitherto been Earl of
+Richmond, yielded up this dignity to the younger John of Montfort, its
+rightful heir, and was created Duke of Lancaster at the same time that
+Lionel was made Duke of Clarence. Ten years after her marriage Blanche
+died, leaving John a son, Henry of Derby, the future Henry IV., whose
+wedding, after his grandfather's death, to one of the Bohun
+co-heiresses brought part of the estates of another great house within
+the grasp of Edward III.'s descendants. Moreover, the other Bohun
+co-heiress became in 1376 the wife of Thomas of Woodstock, the youngest
+of Edward's sons, the Gloucester of the next reign. The three Bohun
+earldoms of Hereford, Essex, and Northampton were thus absorbed by the
+old king's children and grandchildren. John of Gaunt, like Lionel, lost
+his wife early and sought a second bride abroad. In 1372 he married
+Constance of Castile, a natural daughter of the deceased Peter the
+Cruel. Henceforth he was summoned to parliament as King of Castile and
+Leon as well as Duke of Lancaster, though it was not until the next
+reign that he took any actual steps to assert his claim.
+
+John's next younger brother, Edmund of Langley, Earl of Cambridge in
+136% [1368?] married Isabella, Constance of Castile's younger sister.
+He was the future Duke of York, and as the only one of Edward III.'s
+sons who did not marry an English heiress, was the most scantily
+endowed of them all. The union of his descendants with those of Lionel
+of Clarence gave the house of York a territorial importance which was,
+as we have seen, mainly derived from the Mortimer inheritance. Thus the
+two lines of descendants of Edward III. which had most future
+significance were those which represented through heiresses the rival
+houses of Lancaster and March. The history of the next century shows
+that the rivalry was only made more formidable by the connexion of both
+these lines with the royal family. In this, the most striking triumph
+of the Edwardian policy, is also the most signal indication of its
+failure. From it arose the factions of York and Lancaster.
+
+The legislation of the years of peace, from 1360 to 1369, is largely
+anti-papal and economic, and is so intimately connected with the laws
+of the preceding period that it has been dealt with in an earlier
+chapter. But however anti-papal, and therefore anti-clerical, some of
+Edward's laws were, his government was still mainly controlled by great
+ecclesiastical statesmen. Simon Langham, though a Benedictine monk, had
+as chancellor demanded in 1366 the opinion of the estates as to the
+unlawfulness of the Roman tribute, and the clerical estate, if it did
+not help forward the anti-Roman legislation, was content to stand
+aside, and let it take effect without protest. Shortly after taking
+part in the movement against papal tribute, Langham was removed from
+the see of Ely to that of Canterbury in succession to Islip. His
+conversion into a purely monastic college of his predecessor's mixed
+foundation for seculars and regulars in Canterbury Hall, Oxford, showed
+a bias which might have been expected in a former abbot of Westminster,
+while his willingness to follow in the footsteps of Kilwardby, and
+exchange his archbishopric for the dignity of a cardinal and residence
+at Avignon showed that he was a papalist as well as an English patriot.
+His successor as primate, appointed in 1369 by papal provision, was
+William Whittlesea, a nephew of Archbishop Islip, whose weak health and
+colourless character made of little account his five years' tenure of
+the metropolitical dignity. With Canterbury in such feeble hands, the
+leadership in the Church and primacy in the councils of the crown
+passed to stronger men: such as John Thoresby, Archbishop of York till
+1373; Thomas Brantingham, treasurer from 1369 to 1371, and Bishop of
+Exeter from 1370 to 1394; and above all to Edward's old servant,
+William of Wykeham, chancellor from 1367 to 1371, and Bishop of
+Winchester, in succession to Edington, from 1367 until 1404. Wykeham
+was a strenuous and hard-working servant of the crown, a vigorous and
+careful ruler of his diocese, a mighty pluralist, a magnificent
+builder, and the most bountiful and original of all the pious founders
+of his age. "Everything," says Froissart, "was done through him and
+without him nothing was done."[1]
+
+ [1] Froissart, _Chroniques_, ed. Luce, viii., 101.
+
+The year of the breach of the treaty of Calais was also marked by the
+third great visitation of the Black Death, and the death of Queen
+Philippa. Parliament cordially welcomed the resumption by Edward of the
+title of King of France, and made liberal subsidies for the prosecution
+of the campaign. Disappointment was all the more bitter when each
+campaign ended in disaster, and in the parliament of February, 1371, the
+storm burst. The circumstances of the ministerial crisis of 1341 were
+almost exactly renewed. As on the previous occasion, the state was in
+the hands of great ecclesiastics, whose conservative methods were
+thought inadequate for circumstances so perilous. John Hastings, second
+Earl of Pembroke of his house, a gallant young warrior and the intended
+son-in-law of the king, made himself the spokesman of the anti-clerical
+courtiers, probably with the good-will of the king. At Pembroke's
+instigation the earls, barons, and commons drew up a petition that,
+"inasmuch as the government of the realm has long been in the hands of
+the men of Holy Church, who in no case can be brought to account for
+their acts, whereby great mischief has happened in times past and may
+happen in times to come, may it therefore please the king that laymen of
+his own realm be elected to replace them, and that none but laymen
+henceforth be chancellor, treasurer, barons of the exchequer, clerk of
+privy seal, or other great officers of the realm ".[1] Edward fell in
+with this request. Wykeham quitted the chancery, and Brantingham the
+treasury. Of their lay successors the new chancellor, Sir Robert Thorpe,
+chief-justice of the court of common pleas, was a close friend of the
+Earl of Pembroke, while the new treasurer, Sir Richard le Scrope of
+Bolton, a Yorkshire warrior, represented the interests of John of Gaunt,
+whose long absences abroad did not prevent his ultimately becoming a
+strong supporter of the lay policy. A subsidy of £50,000 and a statute
+that no new tax should be laid on wool without parliamentary assent
+concluded the work of this parliament.
+
+ [1] _Rot. Pad._, ii., 304.
+
+The lay ministers did not prove as efficient as their clerical
+predecessors. Want of acquaintance with administrative routine led them
+to assess the parliamentary grant so badly that an irregular
+reassembling of part of the estates was necessary, when it was found
+that the ministers had ludicrously over-estimated the number of
+parishes in England among which the grant of £50,000 had been equally
+divided. Meanwhile the French war was proceeding worse than before.
+Thorpe died in 1372, and another lay chief-justice, Sir John Knyvett,
+succeeded him in the chancery. Pembroke, as we have seen, was taken
+prisoner to Santander within a few weeks of Thorpe's death. Fresh
+taxation was made necessary by every fresh defeat, and the clergy, who
+looked upon the misfortunes of the anti-clerical earl as God's
+punishment for his enmity to Holy Church, had their revenge against
+their lawyer supplanters, for the parliament of 1372 petitioned that
+lawyers, who used their position in parliament to advance their
+clients' affairs, should not be eligible for election as knights of the
+shire. Next year, the discontent of the estates came to a head after
+the failure of John of Gaunt's march from Calais to Bordeaux. The
+commons, by that time definitely organised as an independent house,
+answered the demand for fresh supplies by requesting the lords to
+appoint a committee of their number to confer with them on the state of
+the realm. The composition of the committee was not one that favoured
+the existing administration, and, guided by men like William of
+Wykeham, it made only a limited and conditional grant, which was
+strictly appropriated to the payment of the expenses of the war. The
+anti-clerical party was still strong enough to send up denunciations of
+papal assumptions, and the anxiety to adjust the relations between the
+papacy and the crown led to some abortive negotiations with the legates
+of Gregory XI at Bruges in 1374, which were mainly memorable for the
+appearance of John Wycliffe as one of the royal commissioners. Disgust
+at the attitude of the commons may well have postponed the next
+parliament for nearly three years. But the truce of Bruges made
+frequent parliaments less necessary.
+
+The truce brought John of Gaunt back to England, and the rivalry
+between him and his elder brother, which had begun during their last
+joint campaigns in France, crystallised into definite parties the
+discordant tendencies that had been well marked since the crisis of
+1371. The old king was a mere pawn in the game. His health had been
+broken by the debauchery and frivolity to which he had abandoned
+himself after the death of Queen Philippa. He was now entirely under
+the influence of Alice Perrers, a Hertfordshire squire's daughter,
+whose venality, greed, and shamelessness made her the fit tool for the
+self-seeking ring of courtiers. John of Gaunt sought her support as the
+best means of withdrawing the old king from the influence of the Prince
+of Wales, and the lay ministers were glad to maintain themselves in
+their tottering power by means of such powerful allies. Prominent among
+their party were courtier nobles--such as the chamberlain, Lord
+Latimer, and the steward of the household, Lord Neville of Raby,--and
+rich London financiers, chief among whom was Richard Lyons, men who
+made exorbitant profits out of the necessities of the administration.
+Faction sought to appear more respectable by professions of zeal for
+reform. The cry against papal encroachments was extended to a
+denunciation of the wealth and power of the clergy. John Wycliffe was
+called from his Oxford classrooms to expound the close connexion
+between dominion and grace, and to teach from London pulpits that the
+ungodly bishop or priest has no right to the temporal possessions given
+him on trust for the discharge of his high mission.[1]
+
+ [1] Until recently all historians have dated the beginning of
+ Wycliffe's political career from 1366, but J. Loserth has
+ proved that 1374, the date of the last demand for the Roman
+ tribute, to be the right year. See his _Studien zur
+ Kirchen-politik Englands im 14ten Jahrhundert_, in
+ _Sitzungsberichte der Académie der Wissenschaften in Wien_,
+ philos. histor. classe, cxxxvi., 1897, and, more briefly, in
+ _Engl. Hist. Review, xi._ (1896), 319-328.
+
+A vigorous opposition to the dominant faction was formed. At its head
+was the Black Prince. Hardly less important and much more active than
+the dying hero of Poitiers was Edmund Mortimer, Earl of March, the
+husband of Philippa of Clarence, and the father of the little Roger
+Mortimer whom nothing but the uncertain lives of the Prince of Wales
+and the sickly Richard of Bordeaux separated from the English throne.
+Hereditary antagonism accentuated incompatibility of personal
+interests. The ancient feuds of the houses of Mortimer and Lancaster
+still lived on in the hostility of their representatives. The
+understanding between the Prince of Wales and the Earl of March seems
+to have been complete. They had as their most powerful supporters the
+outraged dignitaries of the Church, who saw themselves kept out of
+office and threatened in their temporalities by the dominant faction.
+William of Wykeham, who had been the guardian of the Earl of March
+during his long minority, was the most experienced and wary of the
+clerical opposition to the lawyers and courtiers of the Lancaster
+faction. He had an eager and enthusiastic backer in the young and
+high-born Bishop of London, William Courtenay, the son of the Earl of
+Devon, and through his mother, Margaret Bohun, a great-grandson of
+Edward I. Office and descent combined to make Bishop Courtenay the
+custodian of the constitutional tradition, which was equally strong
+among the great baronial houses of ancient descent and such highly
+placed ecclesiastics as were zealous for the nation as well as for
+their order. His support was the more necessary since Simon of Sudbury,
+who in 1375 succeeded Whittlesea on the throne of St. Augustine, was a
+weak and time-serving politician.
+
+The storm, which had long been brewing, burst at last in the parliament
+of April, 1376. Of the acts of this memorable assembly, famous as the
+Good Parliament, and of the other concluding troubles of the reign we
+are fortunate in possessing not only copious official records, but a
+minute and highly dramatic account from the pen of a St. Alban's monk,
+who, alone of the monastic chroniclers of his age, represented the
+spirit which, in the days of Matthew Paris, made the great
+Hertfordshire abbey so famous a school of historiography.[1]
+
+ [1] _Chron. Angliæ_, 1328-88, ed. E.M. Thompson (Rolls Ser.).
+ Compare Mr. S. Armitage-Smith's _John of Gaunt_ for an
+ unfavourable estimate of its value.
+
+The Good Parliament showed from the beginning a strong animosity
+against the courtiers. The time was not yet come when the commons could
+take the initiative, or supply leaders from its own ranks, and even
+among the commons capacity was unequally divided. Authority and
+influence were exclusively with the knights of the shire, and the
+citizens and burgesses were content to allow the country gentry to
+speak and act in their name. The knights of the shire demanded that, in
+accordance with the precedent of 1373, a committee of magnates should
+be associated with them in determining the policy to be adopted. The
+lords spiritual and temporal were as eager as the knights to attack the
+government, and a committee, of which the leading spirits included the
+Earl of March and the Bishop of London, supplied the element of
+direction and initiation in which the commons were lacking. The
+resolution which prevailed was shown by the estates agreeing to make no
+grant until grievances had been redressed, and by the choice of Sir
+Peter de la Mare as spokesman of the commons before the king. Sir Peter
+was elected, we are told, because he possessed abundant wisdom and
+eloquence, and enough boldness to say what was in his mind, regardless
+of the good-will of the great. Perhaps a further and more weighty
+reason was that he was steward of the Earl of March. He was the first
+person to hold an office indistinguishable in all essentials from that
+of the later Speaker. Under his guidance the commons worked out an
+elaborate policy of revenge and reform. The contempt with which John of
+Gaunt and the courtiers had at first regarded their action, gave place
+to fear. The duke found it prudent to stand aside, while a clean sweep
+of the administration was made.
+
+Charges were brought against the leading ministers of state, after a
+fashion in which the constitutional historian sees the beginnings of
+the process of the removal of great offenders by impeachment. Lord
+Latimer was the first victim. He had appropriated the king's money to
+his own uses; he had shown remissness and treachery during the last
+campaign in Brittany; he had taken bribes; he was, in a word, "useless
+to king and kingdom". His fate was promptly shared by Lyons, the London
+merchant, the accomplice of his frauds, who had availed himself of his
+court influence to make a "corner" in nearly all imported articles, to
+the impoverishment of the common people and the disorganisation of
+trade. Lord Neville, whose eager partisanship of Latimer had led him to
+insult Sir Peter de la Mare, was threatened with similar proceedings.
+Even Alice Perrers was attacked, though, says the chronicler, the
+natural affection of Englishmen for their king was so great that they
+were slow to molest the lady whom the king loved. However, Alice's
+unblushing interference with the course of justice, her appearance in
+the courts at Westminster, sitting on the judges' bench, clamouring for
+the condemnation of her enemies and the acquittal of her friends,
+roused the knights of the shire to action. An ordinance against women
+being allowed to practise in the law courts was made the pretext for
+her removal from court, and Alice, fearful that worse might happen,
+took oath that she would have no further dealings with the king.
+Meantime Latimer and Lyons were condemned to forfeiture and
+imprisonment.
+
+In the midst of these proceedings the knights lost their strongest
+support by the death of the Black Prince on June 8. John of Gaunt at
+once went down to the house of commons, and boldly suggested that the
+English should follow the example of the French and allow no woman to
+become heiress of the kingdom. This was a direct assertion of his own
+claims to stand next to the throne after Richard of Bordeaux, and
+before Roger Mortimer. Alarmed at the blow thus levelled against their
+chief remaining champion, the knights courageously held to their
+position. "The king," said they, "though old is still healthy, and may
+outlive us all. Moreover he has an heir in the ten-year-old prince
+Richard. While these are alive there is no need to discuss the question
+of the succession." They completed the drawing up of the long list of
+petitions, whose grudging and partial acceptance by the crown made the
+roll of the parliament of 1376 memorable as asserting principles, if
+not as vindicating practical ends. They forced Lancaster to agree to a
+council of twelve peers nominated in parliament to act as a standing
+committee of advisers, without which the king might do nothing of any
+importance. After this revival of the methods of the Mad Parliament and
+the lords ordainers, the Good Parliament separated on July 6. It had
+sat longer than any previous parliament of which there is record. It
+had persevered to the end in the teeth of discouragements of all kinds,
+and, even after his brother's death, Duke John dared not lift up his
+hand against it so long as the session continued.
+
+When the estates separated Lancaster threw off the mask. The king, sunk
+in extreme dotage, was entirely in the hands of his unscrupulous son.
+The old man was kept quiet by the return of Alice Perrers to court. She
+had sworn on the rood never to see the king again, but the prelates
+were "like dumb dogs unable to bark" against her; and no effort was
+made to prosecute her for perjury. Latimer and Lyons returned from
+their luxurious imprisonment in the Tower to their places at court. The
+duke roundly declared that the late parliament was no parliament at
+all. No statute was based upon its petitions, the council of twelve was
+rudely dissolved, and Sir Peter de la Mare was imprisoned in Nottingham
+castle. William of Wykeham was deprived of his temporalities, and the
+rumour spread that his disgrace was due to his possession of a state
+secret, revealed to him by the dying queen Philippa, that John of Gaunt
+was no true son of the royal pair but a changeling. So timid was the
+disgraced bishop that he vied with the weak primate in his subserviency
+to Alice. The Earl of March, who was marshal of England, was ordered to
+inspect the fortresses beyond sea, whereupon, fearing a plot to
+assassinate him, he resigned his office, "preferring," says a friend,
+"to lose his marshal's staff rather than his life". The powerful
+north-country lord, Henry Percy, who had hitherto acted with the
+opposition, was bribed by the office of marshal to join the Lancastrian
+party.
+
+Grave difficulties still beset the government, and in January, 1377,
+John of Gaunt had to face another parliament. Every precaution was taken
+to pack the commons with his partisans. Of the knights of the shire of
+the Good Parliament only eight were members of its successor,[1] while
+in the place of the imprisoned De la Mare, Sir Thomas Hungerford,
+steward of the Duke of Lancaster, was chosen Speaker, on this occasion
+by that very name. A packed committee of lords was assigned to advise
+the commons. In these circumstances it was not difficult to procure the
+reversal of the acts against Alice Perrers and Latimer, and the grant of
+a poll tax of a groat a head. The only measure of conciliation was a
+general pardon, a pretext for which was found in the jubilee of the
+king's accession. From this William of Wykeham was expressly excepted.
+
+ [1] _Return of Members of Parliament_, pt. i., 193-97; _Chron.
+ Angliæ_, p. 112, understates the case.
+
+The convocation of Canterbury proved less accommodating than the
+parliament. Under the able leadership of Bishop Courtenay, it took up
+the cause of the Bishop of Winchester, refused to join in a grant of
+money until he had taken his place in convocation, and, triumphing at
+last over the time-serving of Sudbury and the hesitation of Wykeham
+himself, persuaded the bishop to join their deliberations. Lancaster met
+the opposition of convocation by calling to his aid the Oxford doctor
+whom the clergy had already begun to look upon as the enemy of the
+privileges of their order. Wycliffe was not as yet under suspicion of
+direct dogmatic heresy. He had not yet clothed himself in the armour of
+his Balliol predecessor, Fitzralph, to wage war against the mendicant
+orders. But he had already formulated his theory that dominion was
+founded on grace, had declared that the pope had no right to
+excommunicate any one, or if he had that any simple priest could absolve
+the culprit from his sentence, and he had shown a hatred so bitter of
+clerical worldliness and clerical property that he was looked upon as
+the special enemy of the great land-holding prelates and of the
+"possessioner" monks, whose lands, he maintained, could be resumed by
+the representatives of the donors at their will. The strenuous advocate
+for reducing the clergy to apostolic poverty was not likely to find
+favour among the prelates. Wycliffe's only clerical supporters at this
+stage were the mendicant friars, from whose characteristic opinions as
+regards "evangelical poverty" he never at any time swerved.[1] He was,
+however, eloquent and zealous, and he had a following. Fear either of
+Wycliffe or of his mendicant allies forced the bishops to take decisive
+action. Even Sudbury awoke, "as from deep sleep".[2] The duke's
+dangerous supporter was summoned to answer before the bishops at St.
+Paul's.
+
+ [1] Shirley (preface to _Fasciculi Zizaniorum,_ Rolls Ser., p.
+ xxvi.) thought that Wycliffe was "the sworn foe of the
+ mendicants" in 1377, and E.M. Thompson's emphatic words
+ repudiating the contrary statement of the St. Alban's writer,
+ _Chron. Anglice,_ p. liii., illustrate the view prevalent in
+ England in 1874. Lechler's _Wiclif und die Vorgeschichte der
+ Reformation,_ published in 1873 proves that it was not until
+ Wycliffe denied the doctrine of transubstantiation in 1379 or
+ 1380 that the friars deserted him.
+
+ [2] _Chron. Anglice_, p. 117.
+
+On February 19, Wycliffe appeared in Courtenay's cathedral. Four
+mendicant doctors of divinity, chosen by Lancaster, came with him to
+defend him against the "possessioners," while the Duke of Lancaster
+himself, and Henry Percy, the new marshal, also accompanied him to
+overawe the bishops by their authority. The court was to be held in the
+lady chapel at the east end of the cathedral, and Wycliffe and his
+friends found some difficulty in making their way through the dense
+crowd that filled the spacious nave and aisles. Percy, irritated at the
+pressure of the throng, began to force it back in virtue of his office.
+Courtenay ordered that the marshal should exercise no authority in his
+cathedral. Thereupon Percy in a rage declared that he would act as
+marshal in the church, whether the bishop liked it or not. When the
+lady chapel was reached, there was further disputing as to whether
+Wycliffe should sit or stand, and Lancaster taunted Courtenay for
+trusting overmuch to the greatness of his family. When the bishop
+replied with equal spirit, John muttered: "I would liefer drag him out
+of his church by the hair of his head than put up with such insolence".
+The words were overheard, and the Londoners, who hated the duke, broke
+into open riot at this insult to their bishop. It was rumoured that the
+duke had come to St. Paul's, hot from an attack on the liberties of the
+city that very morning in parliament. The court broke up in wild
+confusion, and the riot spread from church to city. Next day Percy's
+house was pillaged, and John's palace of the Savoy attacked. The duke
+and the marshal were forced to seek the protection of their opponent,
+the Princess of Wales, at Kennington. The followers of Lancaster could
+only escape rough treatment by hiding away their lord's badges. The
+citizens cried that the Bishop of Winchester and Peter de la Mare
+should have a fair trial. At last the personal authority of Bishop
+Courtenay restored his unruly flock to order. The old king performed
+his last public act by soothing the spokesmen of the citizens with the
+pleasant words and easy grace of which he still was master. The
+Princess of Wales used her influence for peace, and matters were
+smoothed over.
+
+At some risk of personal humiliation, Lancaster secured a substantial
+triumph. Convocation followed the lead of parliament and gave an ample
+subsidy. William of Wykeham purchased the restoration of his
+temporalities by an unworthy deference to Alice Perrers. Wycliffe
+remained powerful, flattered, and consulted, though his enemies had
+already drawn up secret articles against him, which they had forwarded
+to the papal _curia_. Perhaps in the rapidly declining health of the
+king all parties saw that their real interest lay in the postponement
+of a crisis.
+
+In June Edward lay on his deathbed at Sheen. To the last his talk was
+all of hawking and hunting, and his mistress carefully kept from him
+all knowledge of his desperate condition. When he sank into his last
+lethargy, his courtiers deserted him, and Alice Perrers took to flight
+after robbing him of the very rings on his fingers. A simple priest,
+brought to the bedside by pity, performed for the half-conscious king
+the last offices of religion. Edward was just able to kiss the cross
+and murmur "Jesus have mercy". On June 21, 1377, he breathed his last.
+
+With Edward's death we break off a narrative whose course is but half
+run. John of Gaunt's rule was not over; Wycliffe was advancing from
+discontent to revolt; Chaucer was yet to rise for a higher flight;
+Langland had not yet put his complaint into its permanent form; the
+French war was renewed almost on the day of Edward's death; popular
+irritation against bad government, and social and economic repression
+were still preparing for the revolt of 1381. With all its defects the
+age of Edward is preeminently a strong age. Greedy, self-seeking,
+rough, and violent it may be; its passions and rivalries combined to
+make futile the exercise of its strength; it sounded the revolutionary
+note of all abrupt ages of transition, and it ends in disaster and
+demoralisation at home and abroad. But government is not everything,
+and least of all in the Middle Ages when what was then thought vigorous
+government appears miserably weak to modern notions. The strong rule
+decayed with the failure of the king's personal vigour. The ministers
+of Edward's dotage could not hold France nor even keep England quiet.
+England had grown impatient of the rule of a despot, though she was not
+yet able to govern herself after a constitutional fashion. It is in the
+incompatibility of the political ideals of royal authority and
+constitutional control, not less than in the want of purpose of her
+ruler and in the factions of her nobles that the explanation of the
+period must be sought. The age of Edward III. has been alternatively
+decried and exalted. Both verdicts are true, but neither contains the
+whole truth. The explanation of both is to be found in the annals of a
+later age.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+ON AUTHORITIES.
+
+(1216-1377.)
+
+Our two main sources of knowledge for medieval history are records and
+chronicles. Chronicles are more accessible, easier to study, more
+continuous, readable, and coloured than records can generally be. Yet
+the record far excels the chronicle in scope, authority, and
+objectivity, and a prime characteristic of modern research is the
+increasing reliance on the record rather than the chronicle as the
+sounder basis of historical investigation. The medieval archives of
+England, now mainly collected in the Public Record Office, are
+unrivalled by those of any other country. From the accession of Henry
+III. several of the more important classes of records have become
+copious and continuous, while in the course of the reign nearly all the
+chief groups of documents have made a beginning. The whole of the
+period 1216 to 1377 can therefore be well studied in them.
+
+A large proportion of our archives is taken up with common forms,
+technicalities, and petty detail. It will never be either possible or
+desirable to print the mass of them _in extenso_, and most of the
+efforts made to render them accessible have taken the form of
+calendars, catalogues, and inventories. Such attempts began with the
+costly and unsatisfactory labours of the Record Commission (dissolved
+in 1836); and in recent years the work has again been taken up and
+pursued on better lines. The folio volumes of the Record Commission
+only remain so far of value as they have not been superseded by the
+more scholarly octavo calendars which are now being issued under the
+direction of the deputy-keeper of the records. These latter are all
+accompanied by copious indices which, though not always to be trusted
+implicitly, immensely facilitate the use of them. The records were
+preserved by the various royal courts. Of special importance for the
+political historian are the records of the Chancery and Exchequer.
+
+Prominent among the Chancery records are the PATENT ROLLS, strips of
+parchment sewn together continuously for each regnal year, whereon are
+inscribed copies of the letters patent of the sovereign, so called
+because they were sent out open, with the great seal pendent. Beginning
+in 1200, they present a continuous series throughout all our period,
+except for 23 and 24 Henry III. The publication of the complete Latin
+text of the _Patent Rolls of Henry III._ is now in progress, and two
+volumes have been issued, including respectively the years 1216-1225
+and 1225-1232. From the accession of Edward I. onwards the bulk of the
+rolls renders the method of a calendar in English more desirable. The
+_Calendars of the Patent Rolls_ are now complete from 1272 to 1324 and
+from 1327 to 1348 (Edward I., 4 vols.; Edward II., 4 vols.; Edward
+III., 7 vols.). For the years not thus yet dealt with the
+unsatisfactory _Calendarium Rotulorum Patentium_ (1802, fol.) may still
+sometimes be of service.
+
+The letters close, or sealed letters addressed to individuals, usually
+of inferior public interest to the letters patent are preserved in the
+CLOSE ROLLS, compiled in the same fashion as the Patent Rolls. The
+whole extant rolls from 1204 to 1227 are printed in _Rotuli Literarum
+Clausarum_ (2 vols. fol., 1833 and 1844, Rec. corn.), and it is
+proposed to continue the integral publication of the text for the rest
+of Henry III.'s reign on the same plan as that of the Patent Rolls. One
+volume of this continuation, 1227-1231 (8vo, 1902), has been issued.
+For the subsequent periods a calendar in English is being prepared
+similar in type to the _Calendar of Patent Rolls_. The periods at
+present covered by the _Calendar of Close Rolls_ (1892-1905) are,
+Edward I., 1272-1296 (3 vols.): Edward II., the whole of the reign (4
+vols.), and Edward III., 1327-1349 (8 vols.).
+
+A third series of records preserved by the Chancery officials is the
+ROLLS OF PARLIAMENT, including the petitions, pleas, and other
+parliamentary proceedings. None of these are extant before 1278, and
+the series for the succeeding century is often interrupted. Many of
+them are printed in the first two folios (vol. i., Edward I. and II.;
+vol. ii., Edward III.) of _Rotuli Parliamentorum_ (1767-1777). A
+copious index volume was issued in 1832. A specimen of what may still
+be looked for is to be found in Professor Maitland's edition of one of
+the earliest rolls of parliament in _Memoranda de Parliamento_ (1305)
+(Rolls series, 1893) with an admirable introduction. For the reigns of
+Edward I. and II. the deficiencies of the published rolls are
+supplemented by SIR F. PALGRAVE'S _Parliamentary Writs and Writs of
+Military Service_ (vol. i., 1827, Edward I.; vol. ii., 1834, Edward
+II., fol., Rec. Corn.) with alphabetical digests and indices.
+
+Formal grants under the great seal called _Charters_, characterised by
+a "salutation" clause, the names of attesting witnesses, and, under
+Henry III. after 1227, by the final formula _data per manum nostram
+apud_, etc., and implying normally the presence of the king, are
+contained in the CHARTER ROLLS, extant from the reign of John onwards.
+They are roughly analysed in the _Calendarium Rotulorum Chartarum_
+(1803, Rec. Com.); and the _Rotuli Chartarum_ (fol., 1837, Rec. Corn.)
+contains the rolls _in extenso_ up to 1216, Vol. i., 1226-1257, of an
+English _Calendar of Charter Rolls_, printing some of the documents in
+full, was published in 1903.
+
+The documents formerly known as ESCHEAT ROLLS, or INQUISITIONES POST
+MORTEM, are concerned with the inquiries made by the Crown on the death
+of every landholder as to the extent and character of his holding. Some
+of the information contained in these inquests was made accessible in
+the _Calendarium Inquisitionum sive Eschætarum_ (vol. i., Henry III.,
+Edward I. and II., 1806; vol. ii., Edward III., 1808, fol., Rec.
+Corn.). The errors and omissions of these volumes were partially
+remedied for the reigns of Henry III. and Edward I. by C. ROBERTS'S
+_Calendarium Genealogicum_ (2 vols. 8vo, 1865). A scholarly guide to
+all this class of documents has been begun in the new _Calendar of
+Inquisitions Post Mortem and other Analogous Documents_, of which vol.
+i. (Henry III.) was issued in 1904. The first volume of a separate list
+of the analogous inquisitions _Ad pod damnum_ is also announced.
+
+Of the FINE ROLLS containing the records of fines[1] made with the Crown
+for licence to alienate, exemption from service, wardships, pardons,
+etc., those of Henry III. have been made accessible in C. ROBERTS'S
+_Excerpta e Rotulis Finium_, 1216-1272 (1835-36, 8vo). Other rolls such
+as the LIBERATE ROLLS have not yet been published for the reigns here
+treated.
+
+ [1] A _fine_ in this technical sense is an agreement arrived at
+ by a money transaction.
+
+Of special or local rolls, preserved in the Chancery, the most
+important for our period are the GASCON ROLLS. The earlier documents
+called by this name are not exclusively concerned with the affairs of
+Gascony; they are miscellaneous documents enrolled for convenience in
+common parchments by reason of the presence of the king in his
+Aquitanian dominions. Of these are F. MICHEL'S _Roles Gascons_, vol.
+i., published in the French government series of _Documents Inédits sur
+l'Histoire de France_ (1885), including a "fragmentum rotuli
+Vasconiæ," 1242-1243, and "patentes littere facte in Wasconia,"
+1253-1254, years in which Henry III. was actually in Gascony. This
+publication was resumed in 1896 by M. CHARLES BÉMONT'S _Supplément_ to
+Michel's imperfect volume, containing innumerable corrections, an
+index, introduction, and some additional rolls of 1254 and 1259-1260.
+The later of these, the roll of Edward's delegated administration, is
+the first exclusively devoted to the concerns of Gascony. "Gascon
+Rolls" in this later sense begin with Edward I.'s accession, and M.
+Bémont has undertaken their publication for the whole of Edward's reign
+from photographs of the records supplied by the English to the French
+government. In 1900 vol. ii. of the _Roles Gascons,_ containing the
+years 1273-1290, was issued. Other classes of Chancery Rolls accessible
+in print are _Rotuli Scotiæ,_ 1291-1516 (2 vols., 1814-1819, Rec.
+Corn.), and _Rotuli Walliæ_, 5-9 Edward I., privately printed by Sir
+Thomas Phillipps (1865). Among isolated Chancery records the _Rotuli
+Hundredorum_ (Rec. Corn., 2 vols. fol., 1812-1818), containing the very
+important inquests made by Edward I.'s commissioners into the
+franchises of the barons, may specially be noticed here.
+
+Of not less importance than the Chancery records are those handed down
+from the Court of Exchequer. The most famous of these, the PIPE ROLLS,
+which, unlike the Chancery Enrolments, were "filed" or sewn skin by
+skin, are decreasingly important from the thirteenth century onwards as
+compared with their value for the twelfth. For this reason the Pipe
+Roll Society, founded in 1883, only undertook their publication up to
+1200. Fragments of Pipe Rolls for our period can be seen in print in
+various local histories and transactions, as e.g., "Pipe Rolls of
+Northumberland" up to 1272 in HODGSON-HINDE'S History of
+Northumberland, pt. iii., vol. iii., and 1273-1284, ed. Dickson
+(Newcastle, 1854-60), and of Notts and Derby (translated extracts) in
+YEATMAN's _History of Derby_ (1886). The only gap in our series is for
+Henry III. Of other Exchequer records we may mention: (i) the
+ORIGINALIA ROLLS, containing the estreats or documents from the
+Chancery informing the Exchequer of moneys due to it, beginning in 20
+Henry III., a summary of which is published in _Rotulorum Originalium_
+in Curia _Scaccarii Abbreviatio,_ 20 Henry III,-51 Edward III (2 vols.
+fol., Rec. Corn., 1805-1810); (2) the MEMORANDA ROLLS, containing
+records of charges upon the Exchequer, etc., are complete for this
+period. They were kept by the king's and the treasurer's remembrancer,
+and are illustrated in print by extracts from the Memoranda Rolls,
+1297, in _Transactions of the Royal Hist. Soc.,_ new series, iii.,
+281-291(1886), and by the roll of 3 Henry III. in COOPER'S _Proceedings
+of the Record Commissioners_ (1833); (3) MINISTERS ACCOUNTS, i.e.,
+accounts of royal bailiffs, etc., for royal manors, etc., not included
+in the sheriffs' accounts, beginning with Edward I., of which a list is
+given in the _P.R.O. Lists and Indexes_, Nos. v. and viii.; (4) of the
+PELL RECORDS, recording issues and payments, samples given in DEVON'S
+_Issues of the Exchequer_ (Rec. Corn., 8vo, 1837), DEVON'S _Issue Roll
+of Thomas of Brantingham in_ 1370 (Rec. Corn., 8vo, 1835). The pells of
+receipt were entered on the (5) RECEIPT ROLLS, specimens of which,
+along with the corresponding issues, are to be found in SIR JAMES
+RAMSAY'S abstracts of issue and receipt rolls for certain years of
+Edward III. in the _Antiquary_(1880-1888); (6) SUBSIDY ROLLS of various
+types, illustrated by _Nonarum Inquisitiones tempore Edwardi ZZZ._
+(Rec. Corn., 1807), the record of a subsidy of a ninth collected by
+Edward III. in 1340-1341; (7) WARDROBE and HOUSEHOLD ACCOUNTS
+containing for the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries information on
+national as well as private royal finance; specimens in print include
+the important _Liber Quotidianus Contra-rotulatoris Garderobæ_, 28
+_Ed. I._(1299-1300), (1787, Soc. Antiq.).
+
+From the Exchequer records come also the following: (1) _Testa de
+Neville sive Liber Feodorum temp. Hen. ZZZ. et Edw. I._ (Rec. Corn.,
+fol., 1807), a miscellaneous and ill-digested but valuable collection of
+thirteenth century inquisitions; (2) _Nomina Villarum, g_ Ed. II.,
+published in PALGRAVE'S _Parl. Writs_, ii., iii., 301-416; (3)
+_Kirkby's Quest, a_ survey made by Bishop Kirkby, the treasurer, in
+1284-85, of which the Yorkshire portion has been printed by the Surtees
+Soc., ea. Skaife (1867), and other portions elsewhere; (4) _Taxatio
+Ecclesiastica Angliæ et Walliæ_, 1291 (Rec. Corn., 1802), the
+taxation of benefices by Nicholas IV. by which assessments of papal and
+ecclesiastical taxes were long made. A very useful compilation,
+recently undertaken under the direction of the deputy-keeper, is
+_Inquisitions and Assessments relating to Feudal Aids_, 1284-1431, of
+which three volumes, dealing in alphabetical order with the shires from
+Bedford to Norfolk, are published Cheshire and Durham are entirely
+omitted and Lancashire very scantily dealt with as exceptional
+jurisdictions. The work is based upon the various lay records
+enumerated above and other analogous inquests. Ancient compilations of
+miscellaneous documents by officials of the Exchequer are exemplified
+in _Liber Niger Scaccarii_ (ed. Hearne, 2 vols., 1774), and in the _Red
+Book of the Exchequer_ (ed. H. Hall, 3 vols., Rolls ser., 1896).
+
+The records of the common law courts, the King's Bench and the Court of
+Common Pleas, are of less direct historical value than those of the
+Chancery and the Exchequer. Extraordinarily bulky, they require a good
+deal of sifting to sort the wheat from the chaff. As yet a very small
+proportion of them has been printed, and few have even been calendared.
+A brief index of them has been compiled in the useful _List of Plea
+Rolls_ (1894, _P.R.O. Lists and Indexes_, No. iv.). Of the various
+types of these records the FEET OF FINES have been largely used by the
+topographer and genealogist, and the feet of fines for many counties
+during this period have been calendared, summarised, excerpted, and
+printed, wholly or in part, by local archaeological societies, as for
+example, W. FARRER'S _Lancashire Final Concords till 1307_ (Rec. Soc.
+for Lancashire and Cheshire, 1899), and many others. The PLEA ROLLS are
+of wider importance. For the days of Henry III. _Placita Coram Rege_
+(_i.e._, of the King's Bench) and the _Placita de Banco_ (_i.e._, of
+the Common Pleas in later phrase) are classified as _Rotuli Curiæ
+Regis_, while the rolls of the local eyres for the same period are
+called _Assize Rolls_. Separate series for each court begin with Edward
+I. Specimens of most of these types have been printed. _Placitorum
+Abbreviatio Ric. I.--Edw. II._ (Rec. Com., fol., 1811) is a careless
+seventeenth century abstract. _Placita de Quo Warranto_, Edward I. to
+Edward III. (Rec. Com., fol., 1818), is a record of local eyres of
+particular importance for the reign of Edward I. as the corollary of
+the Hundred Rolls and the attack on the local franchises. HUNTER'S
+_Rotuli Selecti_ (Rec. Com., 1834) contains pleas of the reign of Henry
+III. A typical year's pleadings of the King's Bench for 1297 is given
+in full in PHILLIMORE's _Placita coram rege_, 25 Edward I. (1898,
+British Rec. Soc.). Selections from the proceedings of the commission
+appointed by Edward I. in 1289 to hear complaints against judges and
+officials will shortly be published by Miss Hilda Johnstone and myself
+for the Royal Historical Society. Of special importance are the plea
+rolls issued by the Selden Society, which include for our period F.W.
+MAITLAND'S _Select Pleas of the Crown_, 1200-1225; BAILDON'S _Select
+Chancery Pleas_, 1364-1471; J.M. RIGG'S _Select Pleas of the Jewish
+Exchequer_; and G.J. TURNER'S _Select Pleas of the Forest_; all have
+translations and introductions, of which those of Professor Maitland
+are of exceptional value.
+
+To these types must be added the records of the local courts, now
+largely also in the Public Record Office, though vast numbers of court
+rolls and manorial documents are still in private hands, and among the
+archives of ecclesiastical and secular corporations. The Selden Society
+has done excellent work in publishing such muniments; as in particular,
+MAITLAND'S _Select Pleas in Manorial Courts_, vol. i., Henry III. and
+Edward I., illustrating the social and legal life of a medieval
+village; MAITLAND and BAILDON'S _Court Baron_; HUNTER' s _Leet
+Jurisdiction of Norwich_; C. GROSS's _Select Cases from the Coroners'
+Rolls_, 1265-1413. The records of the Bishopric of Durham, the County
+Palatine of Chester, the Principality of Wales, and the Duchy of
+Lancaster are deposited in the Public Record Office, and calendars and
+lists scattered over the _Deputy-Keeper of the Records' Reports_ throw
+some light on their contents. Unluckily these records of franchise are
+incompletely preserved and often in bad condition. The best preserved
+for our period are the Durham records, described in LAPSLEY'S County
+_Palatine of Durham_, pp. 327-337 (Harvard Historical Studies); some of
+the most important are printed in _Registrum Palatinum Dunelmense_, ed.
+Hardy (Rolls Series, 4 vols.), which is also an Episcopal register.
+Welsh records may be illustrated by the _Record of Carnarvon_ (Rec.
+Corn., fol., 1838). Academic records are illustrated by the Oxford
+_Munimenta Academica_ (ed. Anstey), Rolls Series. Municipal records are
+very numerous and important; full particulars as to them can be found
+in C. Gross's _Bibliography of British Municipal History_ (Harvard
+Hist. Studies). Admirably edited examples of our wealth of municipal
+records for this period are to be found in _Records of the Borough of
+Nottingham_ (ed. W.H. Stevenson), vol. i. (1882); _Records of the
+Borough of Leicester_ (ed. Mary Bateson), vols. i. and ii. (1899 and
+1901); and _Munimenta Gildhallæ Londoniensis_ (ed. H.T. Riley), Rolls
+Series. The _Reports of the Historical Manuscripts Commission_ afford
+much information as to every type of document in private or local
+custody. Ireland and Scotland have archives of their own; but there are
+no systematic records in the Register House at Edinburgh before the War
+of Independence. Among the enterprises now abandoned of the Public
+Record Office were _Calendars of Documents relating to Scotland and
+Ireland_. The Scottish series covers all this period (vols. i.-iv.),
+the Irish was stopped at 1307. They are derived, by a rather arbitrary
+selection, from various classes of English records, but contain much
+valuable material. JOSEPH STEVENSON'S _Documents illustrating the
+History of Scotland_ (1286-1306) (Scot. Rec. Publications, 1870), and
+PALGRAVE'S Documents _and Records illustrating the History of Scotland_
+(Rec. Corn., 1837), are useful for the reign of Edward I. as are for
+limited periods of it the _Wallace Papers_ (Maitland Club, 1841) and
+_Scotland in 1298_ (ed. Gough, 1888).
+
+A new class of records begins in the thirteenth century with BISHOPS'
+REGISTERS. These, so far as they survive, are preserved in the diocesan
+registries. Of printed registers for this period the most important is
+MARTIN'S _Registrum Epistolarum J. Peckham_ (3 vols., Rolls Series,
+1882-1886), the earliest surviving Canterbury register. Other registers
+printed or calendared are HINGESTON-RANDOLPH'S _Exeter Registers_,
+1257-1291, 1307-1326, and 1327-1369 (5 vols., 1889, etc.); excerpts,
+particularly from the York registers, in RAINE'S _Letters from the
+Northern Registers,_ Rolls Series; the two oldest York _Registers_ of
+ARCHBISHOPS WALTER GREY (1215-1255) and WALTER GIFFARD (1266-1279),
+both in Surtees Society; the Wells _Registers_ of BPS. DROKENSFORD,
+1309-1329, and RALPH OF SHREWSBURY, 1329-1363 (Somerset Record
+Society); the Worcester _Register_ of BP. GIFFARD, 1268-1302 (Worcester
+Historical Society); the Winchester _Registers_ of BISHOPS SANDALE and
+RIGAUD, 1316-1323, and WYKEHAM, 1366-1404 (Hampshire Record Society). A
+society called the Canterbury and York Society has recently been
+started to set forth episcopal registers systematically in print. It
+has begun to publish the earliest Lincoln _Register_ extant, that of
+Hugh of Wells, bishop of Lincoln, 1209-1235, whose _Liber Antiquus de
+Ordinatione Vicariorum_ was printed in 1888. Analogous documents are
+LUARD'S _Rob. Grosseteste Epistola_ (Roll Series, 1861), and the like.
+
+Monastic CARTULARIES are less important for general history in this
+than in previous periods; large masses of monastic records of this age
+have survived, not a tithe of which is to be found in DUGDALE'S
+_Monasticon_. Some monastic records illustrate the domestic economy or
+religious life of the house as KIRK'S _Accounts of the Obedientiaries
+of Abingdon,_ 1322-1479 (Camden Soc.); J.W. CLARK's _Observances in use
+at Barnwell Priory,_ 1295-1296(1897), and the like.
+
+For this period by far the most important series of foreign records is
+the magnificent collections of the papacy. A summary of many of these
+is to be found in BLISS, JOHNSON, and TWEMLOW's _Calendars of Papal
+Registers illustrating the History of Great Britain and Ireland; Papal
+Letters_ (vols. i.-iv., 1198-1404), and _Petitions to the Pope_ (vol.
+i., 1342-1419), of special importance for the fourteenth century. These
+useful calendars, however, do not always dispense us from consulting
+the grand series of papal records published or analysed under the care
+of the French School of Rome, which has not yet sufficiently been
+studied in this country. This enterprise is divided into two sections.
+In the first the _Registers from Gregory IX. to Benedict XI._ are in
+course of publication; in the second the letters of the Avignon popes
+relating to France are printed or analysed. Portions of the letters of
+John XXII, Benedict XII, and Clement VI, are already issued. PRESSUTI
+has published one volume of the _Registers of Honorius III_ (1888).
+From the Vatican archives also comes THEINER'S _Vetera Monumenta Hib.
+et Scot. Historiam illustrantia_ (1864), beginning in 1216.
+
+Extracts from various archives are found in such collections as RYMER's
+_Foedera_ of which the Record Commission's edition in folio reaches
+just beyond the end of this period; WILKINS'S _Concilia_ (1737),
+containing many extracts from episcopal registers and canons of
+councils; HADDAN and STUBBS'S _Councils_, vol. i. (for the thirteenth
+century Welsh Church); CHAMPOLLION-FIGEAC'S _Lettres des Rois et des
+Reines d'Angleterre_ (2 vols., 1847, _Doc. Inédits_); STUBBS'S _Select
+Charters_ (Henry III. and Edward I.), and BÉMONT'S excellent _Chartes
+des Libertés anglaises_ in the _Collection de Textes pour l'Étude et
+l'Enseignement de l'Histoire_. Equally useful is COSNEAU'S _Grands
+Traités de la Guerre de Cent Ans_ also in the same _Collection de
+Textes_. The _Statutes of the Realm_ (vol. i., fol., 1810) contains the
+text of the laws and of the great charters of this period.
+
+Chronicles, with all their deficiencies, must ever be largely used as
+sources of continuous historical narrative. For the thirteenth century
+our chief reliance must still be placed upon the annals drawn up in
+various monasteries, some based upon little more than gossip or
+hearsay, others showing real efforts to acquire authentic information.
+The greatest centre of historical composition in thirteenth-century
+England was the Abbey of St. Alban's, whose chronicles form so
+important a series that they may appropriately be considered as a
+whole, before the other chroniclers are dealt with in approximately
+chronological order. The fame of St. Alban's as a school of history had
+its origin in the order of Abbot Simon (d. 1183) that the house should
+always appoint a special historiographer. The first of these whose work
+is now extant is ROGER OF WENDOVER (d. 1236), whose _Flores
+Historiarum_ (ed. H.O. Coxe, Engl. Hist. Soc., 1842, or ed. Hewlett,
+Rolls Series, 1886-89--this latter edition is unscholarly) becomes
+original in 1216 and remains a chief source, copious and interesting,
+if not always precise, until 1235. On Wendover's death, MATTHEW PARIS,
+who took the monastic habit in 1217, became the official St. Alban's
+chronicler. His great work, the _Chronica Majora_, is, up to 1235,
+little more than an expansion and embellishment of Wendover. He
+re-edited Wendover's work with a patriotic and anti-curialist bias
+quite alien to the spirit of the earlier writer, whose version should
+preferably be followed. Paris's book is a first-hand source from 1235
+to 1259. The narrative of the years 1254-1259 is considerably later in
+composition to the history of the period 1235-1253, since on reaching
+1253 Paris devoted himself to an abridgment of what he had already
+written, called the _Historia Minor_. On completing this he resumed his
+earlier book, and carried it on to the eve of his death in 1259, though
+he did not live to complete its final revision; that was the work of
+another monk who added a picture of his death-bed. The _Chronica
+Majora_ has been excellently edited by Dr. H.R. Luard in seven volumes
+for the Rolls Series, with elaborate introductions tracing the literary
+history of the work and a magnificent index. The _Historia Minor_ has
+been published in three volumes by Sir F. Madden in the Rolls Series.
+Paris also wrote the lives of the abbots of his house up to 1255, a
+work not now extant, and the basis of the later _Gesta Abbatum S.
+Albani_, compiled by Thomas Walsingham (d. 1422?) and likewise issued
+in the Rolls Series. The thirteenth century biographies have some
+original value. Paris's _Life_ of _Stephen Langton_ is printed in
+LIEBERMANN'S _Ungedruckte Anglo-Normannische Geschichtsquellen_ (1870).
+
+Paris, perhaps the greatest historian of the Middle Ages, has literary
+skill, a vivid though prolix style, a keen eye for the picturesque,
+bold and independent judgment, wonderful breadth and range, and an
+insatiable curiosity. He was a man of the world, a courtier and a
+scholar; he took immense pains to collect his facts from documents and
+eye-witnesses, and had great advantages in this respect through the
+intimate relations between his house and the court. Henry III himself
+contributed many items of information to him. His details are
+extraordinarily full, and he tells us almost as much about continental
+affairs as about those of his own country. He wrote with too flowing a
+pen to be careful about precision, and had too much love of the
+picturesque to resist the temptation of embellishing a good story. His
+narrative of continental transactions is in particular extremely
+inexact. But the chief cause of his offending also gives special value
+to his work; he was a man of strong views and his sympathies and
+prejudices colour every line he wrote. His standpoint is that of a
+patriotic Englishman, indignant at the alien invasions, at the
+misgovernment of the king, the greed of the curialists and the
+Poitevins, and with a professional bias against the mendicants. His
+writings make his age live.
+
+The falling off in the St. Alban's work of the next generation is
+characteristic of the decay of colour and detail which makes the
+chroniclers of the age of Edward I. inferior to those of his father's
+reign. The years after 1259 were briefly chronicled by uninspired
+continuators of Matthew Paris, and the reputation of St. Alban's as a
+school of history led to the frequent transference of their annals to
+other religious houses, where they were written up by local pens. This
+led to the dissemination of the series of jejune compilations which in
+the ages of Edward I. and II. were widely spread under the name of
+_Flores Historiarum_. Dr. Luard has published a critical edition of
+these _Flores_ in three volumes of the Rolls Series, which range from
+the creation to 1326, with an introduction determining their
+complicated relations to each other. They are of no real value before
+1259, and for the next sixty-seven years are only important by reason
+of the defects of our other sources. No unity or colour can be expected
+in books handed from house to house and kept up to date by jottings by
+different hands. The ascription of these _Flores_ to a conjectural
+Matthew of Westminster by earlier editors is groundless. Dr. C.
+Horstmann, _Nova Legenda Anglie_, i., pp. xlix. _seq._(1901), maintains
+that John of Tynemouth's _Historia Aurea_, still in manuscript, is the
+official St. Alban's history from 1327 to 1377.
+
+In the reign of Edward I. the credit of the school of St. Alban's was
+revived to some extent by WILLIAM RISHANGER, who made his profession in
+1271 and died early in the reign of Edward II. To him is assigned a
+chronicle ranging from 1259 to 1306 published by H.T. Riley in the
+volume _Willelmi Rishanger et Anonymorum Chronica et Annales_ (Rolls
+Series). Rishanger's authorship of the portion 1259-1272 is more
+probable than that of the section 1272-1306, which, not compiled before
+1327, is almost certainly by another hand, and the attribution of even
+the earlier section to Rishanger is doubted by so competent an
+authority as M. Bémont. The compilation is frigid and unequal. Of the
+miscellaneous contents of Mr. Riley's volume, the short _Gesta Edwardi
+I._ (pp. 411-423), of no great value, is clearly Rishanger's work. We
+may also ascribe to Rishanger the _Narratio de Bellis apud Lewes et
+Evesham_ (ed. Halliwell, Camden Soc., 1840), which tells the story of
+the Barons' Wars with vigour, detail, and insight. Written by a true
+inheritor of the prejudices of Matthew Paris, this chronicle is a
+eulogy of Montfort. It was put together not before 1312.
+
+Another volume of _Chroniclers of St. Alban's_ was edited by Mr. Riley
+for the Rolls Series in 1860. Three of its chronicles concern our
+period. These are: (1) _Opus Chronicorum_, 1259-1296, a source of
+"Rishanger's" chronicle; (2) J. DE TROKELOWE'S _Annales_, 1307-1322;
+(3) H. DE BLANEFORDE'S _Chronica_ (1323). These last two are important
+for Edward II.'s reign. After these works, historical writing further
+declined at St. Alban's. At the end of our period, however, another
+true disciple of Matthew Paris was found in the St. Alban's monk who
+added to a jejune compilation for the years 1328 to 1370 a vivid and
+personal narrative of the years 1376-1388, our chief source for the
+history of the last year of Edward III.'s reign. In his bitter
+prejudice against John of Gaunt and his clerical allies, such as
+Wychffe and the mendicants, the monk is so outspoken that his book was
+suppressed, and most manuscripts leave out the more offensive passages.
+It has been edited by Sir E. Maunde Thompson as _Chronicon Angliæ_,
+1328-1388 (Rolls Series). Before that its contents, like that of other
+St. Alban's annals, were partially known through the fifteenth century
+compilation under the name of a St. Alban's monk, THOMAS OF WALSINGHAM,
+whose _Historia Anglicana_ (2 vols., Rolls Series, ed. Riley) is not an
+authority for our period.
+
+For the early years of Henry III. we have besides Wendover's _Flores_:
+(i) The CANON OF BARNWELL'S continuation of Howden published in
+STUBBS'S _Memoriale Fratris Walteri de Coventria_ (Rolls Series),
+written in 1227 and copious for the years 1216-1225. (2) RALPH OF
+COGGESHALL's _Chronicon Anglicanum_ (ed. Stevenson, Rolls Series),
+ending at 1227 and important for its last twelve years. (3) The
+_Histoire des Ducs de Normandie et des Rois d'Angleterre_, which,
+published by F. Michel in 1840 (Soc. de l'histoire de France), was
+first appreciated at its full value by M. Petit-Dutaillis in the _Revue
+Historique_. tome 2 (1892). (4) The _Chronique de l'Anonyme de Béthune_
+printed in 1904 in vol. xxiv. of the _Recueil des Historiens de la
+France_. (5) A French rhyming chronicle, the _Histoire de Guillaume le
+Maréchal_, discovered and edited by P. Meyer for the Soc. de l'histoire
+de France. Written by a minstrel of the younger Marshal from materials
+supplied by the regent's favourite squire, it is, though poetry and
+panegyric, an important source for Marshal's regency.
+
+St. Alban's was not the only religious house that concerned itself with
+the production of chronicles. Other _Annales Monastici_ have been
+edited in five volumes (Rolls Series, vol. v. is the index) by Dr.
+Luard. They are of special importance for the reign of Henry III. In
+vol. i. the meagre annals of the Glamorganshire abbey of Margam only
+extend to 1232. The _Annals of Tewkesbury_ are useful from 1200 to
+1263, and specially for the history of the Clares, the patrons of that
+house. The Annals of Burton-upon-Trent illustrate the years 1211 to
+1261 with somewhat intermittent light, and are of unique value for the
+period of the Provisions of Oxford, containing many official documents.
+Vol. ii. includes the _Annals_ of _Winchester_ and _Waverley_. The
+former, extending to 1277, though mainly concerned with local affairs
+are useful for certain parts of the reign of Henry III., and
+particularly for the years 1267-1277. The annals of the Cistercian
+house of Waverley, near Farnham, go down to 1291. From 1259 to 1266 the
+narrative is contemporary and valuable; from 1266 to 1275, and partly
+from 1275 to 1277 it is borrowed from the Winchester Annals; from 1277
+to its abrupt end it is again of importance. The _Annals of Bermondsey_
+in vol. iii. are a fifteenth century compilation. The _Annals_ of the
+Austin canons of _Dunstable_ are of great value, especially from the
+year 1201, when they become original, down to 1242. This section is
+written by RICHARD DE MORINS, prior of Dunstable from 1202 to 1242.
+After his death the annals become more local, though they give a clear
+narrative of the puzzling period 1258-1267. They stop in 1297. The
+chief contents of vol. iv, are the parallel _Annals of Oseney_ and the
+_Chronicle_ of THOMAS WYKES, a canon of that house, who took the
+religious habit in 1282. To 1258 the two histories are very similar,
+that of Wykes being slightly fuller. They then remain distinct until
+1278, and again from 1280 to 1284 and 1285-1289. In the latter year
+Wykes stops, while Oseney goes on with independent value until 1293,
+and as a useless compilation till 1346. Wykes is of unique interest for
+the Barons' Wars, as he is the only competent chronicler who takes the
+royalist side. The Oseney writer, much less full and interesting,
+represents the ordinary baronial standpoint. Wykes is occasionally
+useful for the first years of Edward I.; after 1288 his importance
+becomes small. The _Annals of Worcester_ are largely a compilation from
+the Winchester Annals and the _Flores_; the local insertions have some
+value for the period 1216-1258, and more for the latter part of the
+reign of Edward I., at whose death they end.
+
+Other monastic chronicles of the thirteenth century, of small
+importance, enumerated by Dr. Luard (_Ann. Mon._, iv., liii.) are not
+yet printed in full. Extracts from many are given in PERTZ'S _Monumenta
+Germaniæ Hist. Scriptores_, vols. xxvii. and xxviii. The _Annales
+Cestrienses_ (to 1297) have been edited by R.C. Christie (Record Soc.
+of Lancashire and Cheshire); EDMUND OF HADENHAM'S _Chronicle_ (down to
+1307) is given in part in WHARTON'S _Anglia Sacra_, and M. Bémont
+publishes in an appendix to his _Simon de Montfort_ (pp. 373-380) a
+valuable fragment of a _Chronicle_ of _Battle Abbey_ on the Barons'
+Wars, 1258-1265. For the latter part of that period we have some useful
+notices in HENRY OF SILEGRAVE's brief _Chronicle_ (ed. Hook, Caxton
+Soc., 1849), whose close relationship to the _Battle Chronicle_ M.
+Bémont has first indicated. To these may be added the _Annals of
+Stanley Abbey_ (1202-1271) in vol. ii. of _Chronicles of Stephen, Henry
+II. and Richard I._ (ed. Hewlett, Rolls Series, 1885), and the
+_Chronicle_ of the Bury monk, JOHN OF TAXSTER or TAYSTER, which becomes
+copious from the middle of the thirteenth century and ends in 1265; it
+was partly printed in 1849 by Benjamin Thorpe as a continuation of
+Florence of Worcester (English Historical Society), and the years
+1258-1262 are best read in Luard's edition of Bartholomew Cotton (Rolls
+Series). Taxster's work became the basis of several later compilations
+of the eastern counties, including: (i) JOHN OF EVERSDEN, another Bury
+monk, independent from 1265 to 1301, also printed without his name by
+Thorpe, up to 1295, as a further continuation of Florence. (2) JOHN OF
+OXNEAD, a monk of St. Benet's, Hulme, a reputed continuator of Taxster
+and Eversden up to 1280, who adds a good deal of his own for the years
+1280-1293, edited somewhat carelessly by Sir Henry Ellis as _Chronica
+J. de Oxenedes_ (Rolls Series). (3) BARTHOLOMEW COTTON, a monk of
+Norwich, whose _Historia Anglicana_, original from 1291 to 1298, and
+specially important from 1285 to 1291, is edited by Luard (Rolls
+Series). Some thirteenth and early fourteenth century Bury chronicles
+are also in _Memorials_ of _St. Edmund's Abbey_, ed. T. Arnold (vols.
+ii. and iii., Rolls Series). The _Chronicon de Mailros_ (Bannatyne
+Club), from the Cistercian abbey of Melrose, goes to 1270; though
+utterly untrustworthy, it may be noticed as almost the only Scottish
+chronicle before the war of independence, and as containing a curious
+record of the miracles of Simon de Montfort.
+
+Among the historians of Edward I.'s reign is WALTER OF HEMINGBURGH,
+Canon of Guisborough in Cleveland (ed. H.C. Hamilton, 2 vols., Engl.
+Hist. Soc.). His account of Henry III.'s reign is worthless, but from
+1272 to 1312 his work is of great value, though never precise and full
+of gaps. It contains many documents and is remarkable for its stirring
+battle pictures. Hemingburgh probably laid down his pen when the
+narrative ceases early in the reign of Edward II. Another writer,
+identified by Horstmann with John of Tynemouth, carries the story from
+1326 to 1346.
+
+In striking contrast to the flowing periods of Hemingburgh is the
+well-written and chronologically digested _Annals_ of the Dominican
+friar NICHOLAS TREVET or TRIVET, the son of a judge of Henry III.'s
+reign (ed. Hog, Engl. Hist. Soc.). Beginning in 1138, his work assumes
+independent value for the latter years of Henry III. and is of
+first-rate importance for the reign of Edward I., at whose death it
+concludes, though Trevet was certainly alive in 1324. It was largely
+used by the later St. Alban's chroniclers.
+
+Franciscan historiography begins earlier than Dominican with the
+remarkable tract of THOMAS OF ECCLESTON, written about 1260, _De
+Adventu Fratrum Minorum in Anglia_, published with other Minorite
+documents (including Adam Marsh's letters) in BREWER'S _Monumenta
+Franciscana_ (Rolls Series, continued in a second volume by R.
+Hewlett). The first important Franciscan chronicle, called the
+_Chronicon de Lanercost_ (ed. J. Stevenson, Bannatyne Club, 2 vols.),
+really comes from the Minorite convent of Carlisle. It covers the years
+1201 to 1346. The early part is derived from the valueless chronicle of
+Melrose, and its incoherent cult of the memory of Montfort does not
+save it from the grossest errors in dealing with his history. It
+becomes important for northern affairs from Edward I. onwards, giving
+full details with a strong anti-Scottish bias. Another north-country
+chronicle is Sir T. GREY'S _Scalacronica_ (ed. Stevenson, Maitland
+Club, 1836), useful for the Scottish wars and for Edward III.'s reign
+up to 1362.
+
+A sign of the times is the beginning of civic chronicles. The London
+series alone is important for English history. It begins with the
+_Liber de Antiquis Legibus_, or _Chronica Majorum et Vicecomitum
+Londoniarum_ (1188-1274, ed. T. Stapleton, Camden Soc.). The work of
+ARNOLD FITZTHEDMAR, alderman of the German merchants in London, it is
+copious for the years 1236 to 1274, and is, with Wykes, the only
+chronicle of the Barons' Wars written with a royalist bias. Fourteenth
+century civic chronicles, based upon _Flores Historiarum_, and
+continued independently, form the main contents of the two volumes of
+_Chronicles of the Reigns of Edward I. and II._ (ed. by Dr. Stubbs for
+the Rolls Series). These are: (1) _Annales Londonienses_, perhaps
+written by ANDREW HORN, chamberlain of London, and compiler of the
+_Liber Horn_; they have much general value for the period 1301 to 1316,
+and deal more narrowly with London history from 1316 to 1330, when they
+conclude. (2) _Annales Paulini_, 1307-1341, compiled by one of the
+clergy of St. Paul's, but not by Adam Murimuth. These take up Dr.
+Stubbs's first volume. The second contains: (1) JOHN OF LONDON'S
+_Commendatio Lamentabilis in Transitu magni Regis Edwardi quarti_, a
+funeral eulogy containing the most elaborate contemporary analysis of
+Edward's character. (2) The CANON OF BRIDLINGTON'S _Gesta Edwardi de
+Carnarvon_, with a continuation down to the death of Edward III., of
+little value after 1339. It has frequent reference to the vaticinations
+of the local prophet, John of Bridlington, and was not put in its
+present shape before 1377. Its first part is based on earlier sources,
+and it is, for lack of better, a prime authority for north-country
+history and Anglo-Scottish relations; the continuation contains the
+best account of Edward Balliol's attempts on the Scottish throne. (3)
+_Vita Edwardi II._, from 1307 to 1325, attributed by Hearne on slight
+grounds to a MONK OF MALMESBURY, with many notices of the history of
+Gloucestershire and Bristol, of which the famous rising is described at
+length. The writer is the most human of the annalists of the reign,
+prolix, self-conscious, moralising, and somewhat incoherent. He is the
+most outspoken of all the fourteenth century critics of the Roman
+curia, and has more insight than most of his contemporaries.
+
+The following are of primary importance for the early years of Edward
+III.; it is significant that they are nearly all secular, not monastic,
+in origin. (1) _Continuatio Chronicorum_, 1303-1347, by ADAM MURIMUTH,
+a canon of St. Paul's much employed by Edward III. (ed. E.M. Thompson
+in Rolls Series), a mere continuation of the _Flores_ until 1325,
+thence enlarged from personal sources, but still meagre until 1337,
+when it becomes a first-rate authority to 1346. Murimuth's adoption of
+Michaelmas day as the beginning of the year has often confused those
+who have imitated him. Chief among these is (2) GEOFFREY LE BAKER of
+Swinbrooke, an Oxfordshire man, and like Murimuth, a secular clerk,
+whose _Chronicon_ (ed. E.M. Thompson), beginning in 1303 on the basis
+of Murimuth, has independent value after 1324, and is noteworthy for
+its touching details of Edward II.'s fall and death. It ends in 1356
+with an excellent account of the battle of Poitiers. The early part of
+Baker's chronicle, widely circulated as _Vita et Mors Edwardi II._, was
+previously assigned to Sir Thomas de la Moor, and was so edited by
+Stubbs, but Sir E.M. Thompson showed clearly that this Oxfordshire
+knight was Baker's patron and not the writer of a chronicle. With many
+defects, Baker can tell a story picturesquely. (3) ROBERT OF AVESBURY,
+a canon lawyer, wrote _De mirabilibus Gestis Edwardi III._, of special
+importance for the war from 1339 to 1356, and containing many state
+documents. It is edited by E.M. Thompson in the same volume as
+Murimuth. (4) HENRY KNIGHTON, Canon of Leicester, wrote a _Chronicle_
+about 1366 which is valuable for the period 1336-1366 and includes the
+best contemporary account of the Black Death. The latest edition by
+Lumby in the Rolls Series is not a scholarly work. (5) _Eulogium
+Historiarum_ (ed. Haydon, Rolls Series) is contemporary and valuable
+for 1356-1366 only. There is a great dearth of English chronicles for
+the latter years of Edward III. The signal exception is the important
+St. Alban's _Chronicon Angliæ_ already mentioned.
+
+In the age of Edward III. the _Flores Historiarum_ were superseded by
+the _Polychronicon_ (often called the "Brute" after WACE'S _Brut
+d'Angleterre_), the voluminous compilation (to 1352) of RANDOLPH
+HIGDEN, a monk of Chester (edited by Babington and Lumby, Rolls
+Series). ROBERT OF GLOUCESTER, PETER LANGTOFT, and ROBERT MANNYNG have
+been referred to elsewhere. The first is of some original value for the
+Barons' Wars and Edward I., while Langtoft, a Yorkshire canon specially
+interested in the Scottish wars, is a contemporary for all Edward I.'s
+reign. Among rhyming chronicles, French in tongue but English in
+origin, may be mentioned _Le Siège de Carlaverock_, 1300 (ed. Nicolas,
+1828), of value for heraldry, and CHANDOS HERALD'S _Prince Noir_ (ed.
+H.O. Coxe, whose edition was pillaged by F. Michel for his more
+accessible version of 1883). _L'Histoire de Foulques Fitz Warin_ (d.
+1260?), a picturesque marcher hero, a prose romance of the end of the
+thirteenth century, can be read in Stevenson's edition of COGGESHALL
+(Rolls Series), or Englished by A. Kemp-Welch (1904).
+
+No contemporary Scottish chronicles of importance deal with the War of
+Independence, though fairly full Scottish versions of it exist in later
+books. The earliest of these is the _Bruce_ of JOHN BARBOUR, Archdeacon
+of Aberdeen. Written in 1375 at the instigation of Robert II.,
+Barbour's spirited verses are inspired by patriotic rather than
+historic motives. His details are minute, but impossible to control by
+other sources, and he is more valuable as the epic poet of Scottish
+liberty than as an historical authority. He is edited by Skeat (Early
+English Text Soc.), Jamieson, and Innes. The earliest prose Scottish
+chronicle, that of JOHN FORDUN, who died about 1384 (ed. Skene, in
+_Historians of Scotland_), is of value for the fourteenth century.
+ANDREW WYNTONN'S _Originale_, a metrical history written in the
+fifteenth century, has next to no authority until the end of this
+period (ed. Laing, in _Historians of Scotland_), BLIND HARRY'S
+_Wallace_, written in 1488, is romance not history.
+
+Wales is more fortunate than Scotland in preserving contemporary
+thirteenth century annals, of which a Latin chronicle, _Annales
+Cambriæ_, extending to 1288, and a Welsh one, _Brut y Tywysogion_
+(i.e., _Chronicle of the Princes_), down to 1278, are edited by J.
+Williams in the Rolls Series, the latter with an English translation. A
+more critical version of the Welsh text of the _Brut_ is that of J.
+RHYS and J.G. EVANS' _Red Book of Hergest_, vol. ii. (1890).
+
+The close relations between England and France for the whole of this
+period render the French chronicles by far the most important of
+foreign sources for English history. They are enumerated in detail by
+Auguste Molinier in vols. iii. (up to 1328) and iv. (after 1328) of the
+first part of _Les Sources de l'Histoire de France (Manuels de
+Bibliographie historique_). The chief French chronicles of the period
+1226-1328 are collected in vols. xx.-xxiv. of the _Recueil des
+Historiens de la France_ begun by Dom Bouquet. Some of them are of
+special importance for English history. For Anglo-Netherlandish
+relations under Edward I. see _Annales Gandenses_ (1296-1310), "la
+chronique la plus remarquable de la fin du xiiie siècle," the French
+_Chronique Artésienne_ (1295-1304), and the _Chronique Tournaisienne_
+(1296-1314), all edited by F. Funck-Brentano in the already mentioned
+_Collection de Textes_. For the Hundred Years' War the French
+chroniclers are indispensable, especially for military history. The
+most famous of these writers, JEAN FROISSART, has been characterised in
+my text (p. 419). He can best be studied in Luce and Raynouart's
+excellent edition for the Soc. de l'Histoire de France (tomes i.-viii.,
+1869-1888) which completes the story up to Edward III.'s death. Luce's
+careful "sommaire et commentaire critique" often affords means of
+checking Froissart by other sources. The magnificent volumes of indexes
+of Kervyn de Lettenhove's complete edition (vols. XX.-XXV.) are still
+of immense use, though his text and comments are inferior to those of
+Luce, Froissart's spirit may well be caught in Lord Berners's racy
+English translation (Tudor Translations), or in G.C. Macaulay's useful
+abridgment. The three redactions of Froissart's first book (from 1327
+to 1373-1377), which is all that concerns our period, have been clearly
+distinguished by Luce. (1) The first edition, written about 1373, at
+the request of Count Robert of Namur, is inspired by an English bias.
+Up to 1360 it is largely derived from the chronicle of JEAN LE BEL,
+Canon of St. Lambert of Liège; after that date it is original. (2) The
+second edition, only represented by two MSS., of which one is
+incomplete, is a modification of the first with a French bias. The
+earlier part is more independent of Jean le Bel. (3) The third edition,
+preserved in a single MS., ends with the death of Philip VI in 1350,
+and, written after 1400, is even more hostile to England than the
+second. The best edition of Jean le Bel is by Polain for the Académie
+royale de Belgique.
+
+A few of the more important French chronicles after 1328 may be
+mentioned shortly. (1) _Grands Chroniques de France_ (ed. Paulin
+Paris). Original from 1350 to 1377, a work of first-rate importance,
+where, if truth is altered, it is altered deliberately from political
+motives. (2) JEAN DE VENETTE, 1340-1368, written with a popular bias,
+and partly favourable to Charles of Navarre (edited as a supplement to
+Géraud's edition of Guillaume de Nangis, ii., 178-378, Soc. de l'Hist.
+de France). (3) _Chronique Normande du xiv'e siècle_, 1337-1372 (ed.
+Molinier, Soc. de l'Hist. de France, 1882), exact and very important
+for the wars 1337 to 1372. (4) _Chronique des quatre premiers Valois_
+(Soc. de l'Hist. de France). (5) CUVELIER'S poetical _Vie de Bertrand
+du Guesclin_ (2 vols., _Doc. inédits_). Further details can be found in
+Molinier's bibliography. Netherlandish sources for the Hundred Years'
+War are summarised in PIRENNE'S _Bibliographie de l'Histoire de
+Belgique_ (1895). Of special importance is JAN VAN KLERK'S _Van den
+Derden Edewaert Rym Kronyk_. (1840), useful for 1337-1341, and written
+with an English bias.
+
+The unofficial legal literature of the thirteenth and fourteenth
+centuries is of exceptional variety and value. Many lawyers' treatises
+throw light on matters far beyond legal technicalities. HENRY OF
+BRACTON or BRATTON'S _De Legibus et Consuetudinibus Angliæ_
+illustrates the union of English and Roman juridical ideas
+characteristic of the age of Henry III. It has been edited badly by Sir
+T. Twiss in six volumes (Rolls Series), and some portions well by
+Professor Maitland in his _Select passages from Bracton and Azo_
+(Selden Soc.). Maitland's _Bracton's Note Book_ includes extracts from
+plea rolls seemingly made by Bracton. Bracton's book on the laws was
+translated, condensed, and rearranged by a writer of the next
+generation called Britton. It may be studied in a modern edition in
+NICHOLLS'S _Britton on the laws of England_, while _Fleta_, an almost
+contemporary Latin law book, must be read in Selden's seventeenth
+century edition. Another thirteenth century law-book, _Le Mirroir des
+Justices_, has been edited by Maitland and W.J. Whittaker for the
+Selden Society. From Edward I.'s time onwards unofficial reports of
+trials called YEAR BOOKS, written in French, become valuable for their
+vividness and detail, and for the light which they throw on the more
+technical records of the plea rolls. Many of them are printed in
+unsatisfactory seventeenth century editions, but the Year Books of five
+of Edward I.'s regnal years, between 1292 to 1307, together with the
+Year Book of 11-12 Edward III., are accessible in A.J. Horwood's
+editions in the Rolls Series. L.O. Pike has also edited in the Rolls
+Series the _Year books of Edward III._ from 1338 to 1345, and
+Maitland's _Year books of Edward II._ for the Selden Society are the
+first two instalments of a scheme for publishing the Year Books of the
+reign. Besides their legal value, the Year Books are an almost unworked
+mine for social and economic, and often even political and
+ecclesiastical, history.
+
+Of literary aids to history T. WRIGHT'S _Political Songs_ (Camden Soc.)
+illustrate this period to the reign of Edward II. One of Wright's
+pieces has been more elaborately edited in C.L. KINGSFORD'S Song of
+_Lewes_ (1890), and C. Hardwick published a _Poem on the Times OF
+Edward II._ for the Percy Soc. (1849). With Edward III. such literature
+becomes copious. Of special importance are T. Wright's _Political POEMS
+and SONGS FROM the accession of Edward III._, vol. i. (Rolls Series,
+1859), J. Hall's _Poems of_ LAURENCE MINOT, Skeat's editions of CHAUCER
+and LANGLAND, and G.C. Macaulay's edition of GOWER. The Latin works of
+Wycliffe, published by the Wycliffe Society, mainly belong to the
+succeeding period, but _De Dominio Divino_ and _De Civili Dominio_, as
+well as some tracts printed in the appendix to LEWIS'S _Life of Wiclif_
+and in Shirley's edition of _Fasciculi Zizanioram_ (Rolls Series), were
+written before 1377.
+
+Of modern works treating of this period, many monographs, dealing with
+particular points, have been mentioned in notes in the course of the
+narrative. Of general guides to the period the best by far are Stubbs
+and Pauli. STUBBS'S _Constitutional History_ (vol. ii.) is as valuable
+for the chapters summarising the political history as for the more
+strictly constitutional matter. R. PAULI'S _Geschichte von England_,
+iii., 489-896, and iv., 1-505, 716-741, remains, after half a century,
+the fullest and most satisfactory working up in detail of these reigns,
+though the great additions to our material make parts of it a somewhat
+unsafe guide. It can be supplemented for particular aspects of history
+by the following: For legal history, POLLOCK and MAITLAND'S _History of
+English Law before the time of Edward I._, especially vol. i., book i.
+(chapters iv.-vi.), and book ii.; and most of vol. ii.; to which should
+be added the prefaces by Prof. Maitland and others to the volumes of
+the Selden Society. MAITLAND'S _Roman Canon Law in the Church of
+England_ (1898) is also of great importance. For economic history, W.J.
+ASHLEY'S _Economic History_, parts i. and ii.; W. CUNNINGHAM's _Growth
+of English Industry and Commerce, Early and Middle Ages_; VINOGRADOFF'S
+_Villainage in England_, S. DOWELL'S _History of Taxation_ (2nd
+edition), H. HALL'S _Customs Revenue of England_, and, as a collection
+of materials, J.E. THOROLD ROGERS' _History of Agriculture and Prices_,
+vols. i. and ii. For ecclesiastical history, W.R.W. STEPHENS'S _History
+of the English Church, 1066-1272_; W.W. CAPES'S _History of the English
+Church in the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries_, and F. MAKOWER'S
+_The Constitutional History and Constitution of the Church of England_
+(translated from the German). For academic history, DENIFLE'S
+_Entstehung der Universitäten des Mittelalters bis 1400_, especially
+pp. 1-40, 237-251 (Oxford) and pp. 367-376 (Cambridge), HAURÉAU'S
+_Histoire de la Philosophie scholastique_ and RASHDALL'S _Universities
+of the Middle Ages_, i., 1-74, and ii., part ii. (Oxford and
+Cambridge). For military history, KÖHLER'S _Entwickelung des
+Kriegswesens in der Ritterzeit_, OMAN'S _History of the Art of War in
+the Middle Ages_, CLARK'S _Mediæval Military Architecture_, and (above
+all) J.E. MORRIS'S _Welsh Wars of Edward I_. For naval history,
+NICOLAS'S _History of the Royal Navy_, and C. DE LA RONCIÈRE'S
+_Histoire de la Marine Française_. For particular reigns the following
+may be found useful: For Henry III., PETIT-DUTAILLIS'S _Étude sur Louis
+VIII._, GASQUET'S _Henry III. and the Church_ (1905), BÉMONT'S _Simon
+de Montfort_, PROTHERO'S _Simon de Montfort_, and BLAAUW'S _Barons'
+Wars_ (2nd ed., 1871). For the reign of Edward I., SEELEY's _Life and
+Reign of Edward I._ (1872), my _Edward I._; GOUGH'S _Itinerary of
+Edward I._, MAXWELL'S _Robert the Bruce_ (Heroes of the Nations), and
+MORRIS'S above-mentioned _Welsh Wars of Edward I._ For some aspects of
+Edward II.'s reign, STUBBS'S prefaces to _Chronicles of Edward I. and
+Edward II._ are of special value. For Edward III.'s reign, BARNES's
+_History of Edward III._ (1688) is not quite superseded by LONGMAN'S
+_Life and Times of Edward III._ (2 vols., 1869), and MACKINNON'S
+_History of Edward III._ (1900). For the Hundred Years' War, E.
+DÉPREZ'S _Préliminaires de la Guerre de Cent Ans_ (1328-1342) (Bibl. de
+l'Ecole française de Rome, 1902) for diplomatic history, and DENIFLE's
+_Désolation des Églises et Monastères de la France pendant la Guerre de
+Cent Ans_ (ii., part i., 1899) for the best general survey of the war
+to 1380. See also LUCE'S _La Jeunesse de Bertrand de Guesclin and La
+France pendant la Guerre de Cent Ans_, and (for Brittany) A. DE LA
+BORDERIE'S _Histoire de Brétagne_ (1899). The end of Edward III.'s
+reign is illustrated by S. ARMITAGE SMITH'S _John of Gaunt_ (1904), J.
+LECHLER'S _Wiclif und die Vorgeschichte der Reformation_ (2 vols.,
+1873), also translated, not very adequately, _Wycliffe and His English
+Precursors_ (1878 and 1881), F.D. MATTHEW'S introduction to _Wyclif's
+English Works_ (Early English Text Society), and R.L. POOLE'S
+_Illustrations of the History of Mediæval Thought_ (1884), and
+_Wycliffe_ (1889). G.M. TREVELYAN's _England in the Age of Wycliffe_
+(1899) is interesting but not always very scholarly.
+
+Some account of the general foreign history of the period can be found
+in LAVISSE and RAMBAUD'S _Histoire générale_ (tomes ii. and iii.),
+LOSERTH'S _Geschichte des späteren Mittelalters_ (good bibliographies),
+and, briefly, in my _Papacy and Empire_ (up to 1273), and LODGE'S
+_Close of the Middle Ages_ (after 1273). For French history of the
+period LAVISSE'S _Histoire de France_ (iii., pt. i., 1137-1226, by A.
+LUCHAIRE; iii., pt. ii., 1226-1328, by C.V. LANGLOIS, and iv., pt. i.,
+1328-1422, by A. COVILLE) cover the whole of the period. More detailed
+works are, PETIT-DUTAILLIS'S _Louis VIII._, E. BERGER'S _Blanche de
+Castile_, WALLON'S _Louis IX._, BOUTARIC'S _Saint Louis et Alfonse de
+Poitiers_, C.V. LANGLOIS'S _Philippe le Hardi_, BOUTARIC'S _France sous
+Philippe le Bel_, LEHUGEUR'S _Philippe le Long_, PETIT'S _Charles de
+Valois_, FOURNIER'S _Royaume d'Arles et de Vienne_, L. DELISLE'S _Hist.
+de Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte_, and (for the south) the new edition of DE
+VIC and VAISSÈTE's _Hist. générale de Languedoc_. Much recent work has
+been done by French scholars towards the reconstruction of the external
+history of England during the whole of our period. For the Low
+Countries, PIRENNE'S _Hist. de Belgique_, ii., ASHLEY'S _James and
+Philip van Artevelde_, and VANDER KINDERE'S _Le Siècle des Arteveldt_.
+PAULI is good for the relations of England and Germany.
+
+Maps illustrating the period are to be found in POOLE'S _Oxford
+Historical Atlas_, LONGNON'S _Atlas historique de la France_, and
+SPRUNER-MENKE'S _Historischer Hand-Atlas_; special maps of Edward I.'s
+Scottish expeditions in GOUGH'S _Itinerary of Edward I._, of Edward
+III.'s and the Black Prince's campaigns in THOMPSON'S _Chronicon
+Galfridi le Baker_, and KERVYN'S _Froissart_, of John of Gaunt's in
+ARMITAGE-SMITH's _John of Gaunt_, and of Wales in the thirteenth
+century in _Owens College Historical Essays_. VIDAL DE LA BLACHE'S
+_Tableau de la Géographie de la France_ (LAVISSE, _Hist. de France_,
+i., pt. i.) is instructive for the physical features of the campaigns
+of the Hundred Years' War.
+
+Further details as to English authorities, ancient and modern, can be
+found in GROSS'S excellent Sources _and Literature of English History_
+(1900). The _Monumenta Germaniæ Historica_, _Scriptores_, vols.
+xxvii., xxviii., consist of excerpts from English writers of the
+twelfth and thirteenth centuries; the introductions (in Latin) by Pauli
+and Liebermann contain noteworthy estimates of the works from which the
+extracts are taken.
+
+NOTE TO PAGES 390-92.
+
+My reasons for my account of the battle of Poitiers demand longer
+explanation than can be given in a footnote. Like most modern writers,
+I have based my narrative on the _Chronicle_ of Geoffrey le Baker as
+expounded by Sir E.M. Thompson, though I agree with Professor Oman in
+holding that Baker's "ampla profundaque vallis et mariscus, torrente
+quodam irriguus," must be the valley of the Miausson. I also, however,
+agree with Father Denifle in not setting great store on Chandos Herald,
+though I would not reject him altogether, as all prudent writers must
+reject Froissart. My conjectural account of the movements of the armies
+is an attempt to combine Baker with what may be true in the Herald. I
+hope elsewhere to be able to justify my narrative at length.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+Aachen.
+Abbeville.
+Aberconway Abbey.
+Aberdeen.
+Aberdeen, John Barbout, Archdeacon of. See Barbour, John.
+Abergavenny, town, castle and lordship.
+Abergavenny, Lords of. See Hastings.
+Aberystwyth.
+Abingdon.
+Abingdon, Edmund of. See Rich, Edmund.
+Acre.
+Acre, Joan of. See Joan.
+Acton Burnell.
+Adolf of Nassau, King of the Romans.
+Adour, the river.
+Agen.
+Agenais, the.
+Agnelius of Pisa.
+Aigueblanche, Peter of, Bishop of Hereford.
+Aiguillon.
+Albemarle, William of Fors, Earl of.
+Albemarle and Devon, Isabella of Fors, Countess of.
+Albigenses, the.
+Albert the Great.
+Albret, Lord of.
+Aldgate.
+Alencon, Count of.
+Alexander II., King-of Scots.
+Alexander III., King of Scots.
+Alexander, son of Alexander III of Scotland.
+Alexander IV., Pope.
+Alexander of Hales. See Hales.
+Alfonso X., King of Castile.
+Alfonse of France, Count of Poitiers.
+Alice, Countess of Lancaster.
+Alice of Lusignan.
+Aliens.
+Almaine, Henry of. See Henry of Almaine.
+"Almaines, The."
+Almond, the river.
+Alnwick Castle.
+Alton Castle.
+Amadeus III., Count of Savoy.
+Amesbury.
+Amice, mother of the elder Simon de Montfort.
+Amiens,
+ cathedral;
+ mise of;
+ treaty of.
+Amory, Roger of.
+Anagni.
+Andrew, St.
+Anne of Brittany.
+Angers.
+Anglesey.
+Anglia, East.
+Angoulême.
+Angoulême, Isabella, Countess of. See Isabella, Queen of England.
+Angoumois.
+Anjou.
+Anjou, Charles of. See Charles.
+Anjou, Louis, Duke of. See Louis.
+Annandale.
+Antrim.
+Antwerp.
+Apulia.
+Aquinas, St. Thomas.
+Aquitaine, See also Gascony.
+Aquitaine, Dukes of. See under the Kings of England.
+Aquitaine, Edward, Prince of. See Edward the Black Prince.
+Aquitaine, Eleanor of.
+Aragon.
+Aragon, James, King of. See James.
+Aragon, Peter, King of. See Peter.
+Archers,
+ English;
+ Welsh;
+ Scottish.
+Architecture,
+ gothic;
+ ecclesiastical;
+ domestic;
+ military;
+ "decorated" style, "flamboyant";
+ "perpendicular";
+ Norman;
+ French.
+Arden, forest of.
+Argenton.
+Aristotle.
+Armagh, Archbishop of. See Fitzralph, Richard.
+Armagnac, Counts of.
+Armagnac, John, Count of.
+Arnold, T., his edition of _Memorials of St. Edmund's Abbey_.
+Art. _See_ also Architecture.
+Artevelde, James van.
+Arthur I., Count of Brittany.
+Arthur II., Duke of Brittany.
+Arthur, King.
+Arthurian Legend, the _Articuli super cartas_.
+Artois.
+Artois, Blanche of. See Blanche.
+Artois, Maud, Countess of. See Maud.
+Artois, Robert of. See Robert.
+Arundel, the Countess of.
+Arundel, Edmund Fitzalan, Earl of.
+Arundel, Richard Fitzalan, Earl of.
+Arvon.
+Ashley, W.J.,
+ his _Economic History_;
+ his _James and Philip van Artevelde_.
+Assisi.
+Athenry, battle of.
+Athis, treaty of.
+Athol, David of Strathbolgie, Earl of.
+Auberoche, battle of.
+Aubigny, Philip of.
+Aude, the river.
+Audley, Hugh of.
+Audley, Earl of Gloucester. See Gloucester.
+Audley, James (1258).
+Audley, James (d. 1369).
+Audleys of Shropshire.
+Audrehem, Marshal.
+Aumâle, Counts of, See also Albemarle.
+Auray;
+ battle of;
+ Church of St. Michael.
+_Ausculta, Fili_, bull.
+Austin Canons of Lanercost.
+Austin Friars.
+Austria.
+Austria, Duke of.
+Auvergne.
+Auvergne, Counts of.
+Auvézère, the river.
+Avalon, Hugh of. See Hugh, St.
+Avesbury, Robert of, chronicler.
+Avesnes;
+ house of.
+Avesnes, William of. See William,
+Count of Hainault.
+Avignon,
+ the papal court at;
+ records of Popes of.
+Avon, the river.
+Axholme.
+Ayermine, William, Bishop of Norwich.
+Aymer of Valence, Bishop of Winchester.
+Aymer of Valence, Earl of Pembroke. See Pembroke.
+Ayr.
+
+"Babylonish Captivity, the."
+Bacon, Roger.
+Bacon, Robert.
+Badenoch, John Comyn, lord of, See Comyn.
+Badlesmere, Bartholomew, Lord.
+Badlesmere, Lady.
+Baker, Geoffrey le, _Chronicle_ of.
+"Balance of Power," the.
+Baldock (town).
+Baldock, Ralph, chancellor and bishop of London.
+Baldock, Robert, chancellor.
+Baldwin, Count of Flanders, Latin Emperor of the East.
+Ball, John,
+Balliol, Edward, eldest son of King John of Scotland.
+Balliol, John (d. 1269).
+Balliol, John, lord of Barnard Castle, and of Galloway, son of the above,
+ See also John, King of Scots.
+Balsham, Hugh, Bishop of Ely.
+Barnburgh Castle.
+Bampton in the Bush.
+Banaster, Adam.
+Banbury.
+Banff.
+Bankers,
+ foreign;
+ Jewish;
+ Italian.
+Bannatyne club, publications of the.
+Bannock, the river.
+Bannockburn, battle of.
+Bar, Joan of. See Joan.
+Bar, Count of.
+Barbavera.
+Barbezieux.
+Barbour, John, _Bruce_.
+Bardi, the.
+Bardolf, William.
+Barfleur.
+Bar-gate, the, Lincoln.
+Barnard Castle.
+Barnes's _History of Edward III_.
+Barnwell.
+Barnwell, Canon of.
+Barons' war, the.
+Barres, William des.
+Basset, Gilbert.
+_Bastides_.
+_Bastilles_.
+Bath.
+Bath and Wells, Bishop of. See Burnell, Robert; Drokensford;
+ Shrewsbury, Ralph of, and Harewell, John.
+Battle Abbey, chronicle of.
+Battles of ----
+ Athenry.
+ Auberoche.
+ Auray.
+ Ayr.
+ Bannockburn.
+ Boroughbridge.
+ Bourgneuf Bay.
+ Cassel.
+ Chalon.
+ Chesterfield.
+ Cocherel.
+ Corte Nuova.
+ Courtrai.
+ Crecy.
+ Dupplin Moor.
+ Dunbar.
+ Dundalk.
+ Evesham.
+ Falkirk.
+ Halidon Hill.
+ La Rochelle.
+ Lewes.
+ Lincoln.
+ Lisieux.
+ Madog's Field.
+ Maes Madog.
+ Mauron.
+ Methven.
+ Morgarten.
+ Morlaix.
+ Myton.
+ Nájera.
+ Neville's Cross.
+ Orewyn Bridge.
+ Poitiers.
+ Pontvallain.
+ Sandwich.
+ Sluys.
+ Stirling Bridge.
+ The Thirty.
+ Winchelsea.
+Bayonne.
+Bazas.
+Béarn.
+Béarn, Gaston, Viscount of. See Gaston.
+Beatrice, daughter of Henry III. and wife of John II. of Brittany.
+Beatrice, sister of Amadeus III., Count of Savoy, wife of Raymond
+ Berengar IV., Count of Provence.
+Beaucaire.
+Beauce, the.
+Beauchamp, Thomas. See Warwick, Earl of.
+Beauchamp, William. See Warwick, Earl of.
+Beauchamps of Warwick, the.
+Beaumanoir, commandant at Josselin.
+Beaumaris Castle.
+Beaumont, Henry de.
+Beaumont, Louis de, Bishop of Durham.
+Beaumont, Robert of, Earl of Leicester. See Leicester.
+Beaumonts, the.
+Beauvais.
+Becket, Archbishop, St. Thomas.
+Bedale, 182.
+Bedford, Castle of;
+ scutage of.
+Bedfordshire.
+Bégard, Abbey of.
+Beghards, the.
+Beguines, the.
+Béhuchet, Nicholas.
+Bek, Anthony, Bishop of Durham.
+Bek, Thomas, Bishop of St. David's.
+Belleville.
+Bembro, Robert.
+Bémont, Charles;
+ his _Rôles Gascons_;
+ his _Chartes des libertés anglaises_;
+ his Simon _de Montfort_.
+Bénauge.
+Béne, Amaury of.
+Benedict XI.
+Benedict XII.
+Bengeworth, near Evesham.
+Bentley, Sir Walter.
+Bere Castle.
+Bereford, Sir Simon.
+Berg, Count of.
+Berger's _Blanche de Castile_.
+Bergerac.
+Berkeley Castle.
+Berkeleys, the.
+Berkhampstead, siege of.
+Berkshire.
+Berkstead, Stephen, Bishop of Chichester.
+Bermingham, John of. See Louth, Earl of.
+Bernabò, Visconti, Lord of Milan.
+Berners, Lord, translator of Froissart.
+Berri, John, Duke of.
+Bertrand, Cardinal. See Montfavence.
+Berwick.
+Béthune,
+ _Chronique de l'Anonyme de_.
+Bibliographies, historical
+Bidassoa, the.
+Bigod, the house of.
+Bigod, Hugh, justiciar.
+Bigod, Roger, earl marshal and Earl of Norfolk. See Norfolk, Earl of.
+Bigorre, county of.
+Biscay, Bay of.
+Blaauw's _Barons' Wars_.
+Black Prince, the. See Edward, Prince of Wales and Aquitaine.
+Black death, the.
+Blacklow Hill.
+Blanche of Artois, Queen of Navarre.
+Blanche of Bourbon, wife of Peter the Great of Castile.
+Blanche of Castile, Queen of Louis VIII. and regent of France.
+Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster.
+Blanche taque, the, in estuary of Somme.
+Blaneforde's _Chronicle_
+Blankenberghe.
+Blavet, the river.
+Blaye.
+Bliss' _Calendars of Papal Registers_.
+Blois.
+Blois, Charles of. See Charles.
+Blois, Theobald, Count of.
+Blount, Sir Thos.,
+Blundeville, Randolph of, Earl of Chester. See Chester, Randolph, Earl of.
+Boccaccio.
+Bohemia.
+Bohemia, Ottocar, King of.
+Bohun, Humphrey, Earl of Hereford. See Hereford.
+Bohun, Humphrey of Brecon, son of the Earl of Hereford.
+Bohun, Margaret.
+Bohun, William, Earl of Northampton. See Northampton.
+Bohuns, the.
+Bollers, house of.
+Bologna.
+Bolton.
+Bonhommes, order of.
+Boniface VIII., Pope.
+Boniface of Savoy, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Bordeaux;
+ truce of.
+Bordeaux, Bertrand de Goth, Archbishop of. See Clement V.
+Bordelais, the.
+Borderie's _Histoire de Brétagne_.
+Boroughbridge; battle of.
+Boroughs; growth of; representation of.
+Bothwell Castle.
+Boulogne.
+Bouquet, Dom, his _Recueil des Historiens de la France_.
+Bourbon, Blanche of. See Blanche.
+Bourbonnais.
+Bourchier, Sir Robert.
+_Bourg_, of Limoges, the.
+Bourg.
+Bourgneuf, Bay of.
+Bourne.
+Boutaric's _St. Louis et Alfonse de Poitiers_;
+ his _France sous Philippe le Bel_
+Bouvines, battle of.
+Brabant.
+Brabant, Dukes of. See John II., John III., and Wenceslaus.
+Brabant, Mary of. See Mary, Queen of France.
+Brabazon, Roger de, chief justice after 1295.
+Bracton, Henry of,
+ his book _De Legibus_;
+ his Note Book.
+Bradwardine, Thomas, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Brandenburg.
+Brandenburg, Elector of.
+Brantingham, Thomas, treasurer, Bishop of Exeter.
+Brantôme.
+Braose, house of.
+Braose, William de,
+ his daughter.
+Bratton, Henry. See Bracton.
+Braybrook, Henry de.
+Bréauté, Falkes de.
+Brechin.
+Brecon.
+Bren, Llewelyn. See Llewelyn.
+Brentwood.
+Bremen.
+Brest.
+_Brétagne bretonnante, La_.
+Brétigni, treaty of, See also Calais, treaty of.
+Bretons. See Brittany.
+Brewer's _Monumenta Franciscana_.
+Bridgnorth.
+Bridlington.
+Bridlington, Canon of, his _Gesta Edwardi de Carnarvon_.
+Bridlington, John of.
+Brie.
+Brigham, treaty of.
+Bristol,
+ council meets at;
+ confirmation of the Great Charter at;
+ castle of;
+ channel;
+ disturbances at.
+Brittany,
+ Celtic;
+ French.
+Brittany, Counts, afterwards Dukes, of. See Arthur I., Arthur II.,
+ John II., John III., John IV., John V., Peter Mauclerc.
+Brittany, Constance of, wife of Randolph of Chester.
+ See Constance of Brittany.
+Brittany, John of, Earl of Richmond. See John of Brittany, Earl of
+ Richmond.
+Britton, lawyer,
+ his treatise _On the Laws of England_.
+Bromfield.
+Brotherton, Thomas of, Earl of Norfolk. See Thomas of Brotherton.
+Bruce, David. See David II., King of Scots.
+Bruce, Edward, "King of Ireland."
+Bruce, Elizabeth, Queen of Scots. See Elizabeth.
+Bruce, Joan, Queen of Scots. See Joan.
+Bruce, Robert, Lord of Annandale,
+ claimant to the Scots throne (d.1295).
+Bruce, Robert, Earl of Carrick, son of the above (d. 1304).
+Bruce, Robert, Earl of Carrick, son of the above.
+ See also Robert, King of Scots.
+_Bruce_, John Barbour's.
+Bruges,
+ the Matins of.
+ truce of (1375).
+Brussels.
+Brut, the Trojan.
+_Brut d'Angleterre_, Wace's.
+_Brut y Tywysogion_.
+Buch, Captal de.
+Buchan, Comyn, John, Earl of.
+Buchan, Henry de Beaumont, Earl of,
+ See also Beaumont, Henry de.
+Builth, town and castle.
+Buironfosse.
+Bulgaria.
+Burgh, the family of.
+Burgh, Elizabeth de, wife of Robert, King of Scots.
+ See Elizabeth, Queen of Scots.
+Burgh, Elizabeth de, wife of Lionel of Clarence.
+Burgh, Hubert de, Earl of Kent.
+Burgh, Richard de, Earl of Ulster. See Ulster.
+Burgh, Richard de, Lord of Connaught.
+Burgh, William de, Lord of Connaught and Earl of Ulster,
+ See Ulster.
+Burgh-on-Sands.
+Burghersh, Bartholomew, Bishop of Lincoln.
+Burgos.
+Burgundy.
+Burgundy, Duke of. See Philip the Bold and Philip de Rouvres.
+Burnell, Robert, Chancellor, and Bishop of Bath and Wells.
+Burton-on-Trent.
+Bury, Richard of, Bishop of Durham.
+Bury St. Edmunds.
+Busses, Spanish.
+Butler, Edmund.
+Butler of Ireland, James, the.
+Byland Abbey.
+Bytham Castle.
+
+Cader Idris.
+Cadzand, island of.
+Caen;
+ abbeys of;
+ church of St. Peter at.
+Caerlaverock. See Carlaverock.
+Caerleon, Morgan of.
+Caerphilly Castle.
+Cahors;
+ bishopric of,
+ See Quercy.
+Calais;
+ treaty of,
+ See also Brétigni.
+_Calendar of Close Rolls_.
+_Calendar of Charter Rolls_.
+Calendars of _Documents relating to Scotland and Ireland_.
+_Calendar of Inquisitions Post-mortem and other analogous
+documents_.
+_Calendars of Papal Registers_.
+_Calendar of the Patent Rolls_.
+_Calendarium Genealogicum_, C. Roberts'.
+_Calendarium Inquisitionum sive Eschætarum_.
+_Calendarium Rotulorum Cartarum_.
+Calveley, Sir Hugh.
+Cambrai.
+Cambrésis, the.
+Cambridge;
+ university of.
+Cambridge, Edmund of Langley, Earl of. See Edmund.
+Camville, Nichola de.
+"Candlemas, The Burnt,".
+Canfranc, treaty of.
+Canons, Austin, annals by.
+Canterbury;
+ cathedral;
+ hall, Oxford;
+ register.
+Canterbury, Archbishops of.
+ See Langton, Stephen;
+ Grand, Richard le;
+ Neville, Ralph, and Blunt, John (archbishops elect);
+ Rich, Edmund;
+ Boniface of Savoy;
+ Kilwardby, Robert;
+ Peckham, John;
+ Winchelsea, Robert;
+ Cobham, Thomas (archbishop elect);
+ Reynolds, Walter;
+ Meopham, Simon;
+ Stratford, John;
+ Bradwardine, Thomas;
+ Islip, Simon;
+ Langham, Simon;
+ Whittlesea, William, and Sudbury, Simon.
+Cantilupe, St. Thomas of, chancellor and Bishop of Hereford.
+Cantilupe, Walter of, Bishop of Worcester.
+Cantilupes, the.
+Cantreds, the four. See also Perveddwlad.
+Caours, Raoul de.
+Capes's, W.W., _History of the English Church_.
+Capetians, the.
+Captal de Buch, the. See Buch.
+Captivity, the Babylonish, of the Papacy.
+Carcassonne.
+Cardiff Castle.
+Cardigan and Cardiganshire.
+Cardinerie, La.
+Carlaverock, castle;
+ chronicle of the siege of.
+Carentan.
+Carhaix.
+Carlisle, town and castle;
+ parliament of 1307 at;
+ Statute of.
+Carlisle, Andrew Harclay, Earl of.
+Carmarthen, town and castle, and Carmarthenshire;
+ justice of.
+Carmelites, the.
+Carnarvon, town and castle.
+Carnarvon, Edward of. See Edward.
+Carnarvonshire.
+Carrick, Earl of. See Bruce, Robert.
+Carrickfergus.
+_Carta menatoria_.
+Cartmel.
+Cartularies.
+Cassel, battle of.
+Cassingham (Kensham), William of.
+Castile.
+Castile, Alfonso, King of. See Alfonso.
+Castile, Blanche of. See Blanche.
+Castile, Constance of. See Constance.
+Castile, Eleanor of. See Eleanor.
+Castile, Ferdinand the Saint, King of. See Ferdinand.
+Castile, Henry of Trastamara, King of. See Henry.
+Castile, Isabella of. See Isabella.
+Castile, Peter the Cruel, King Of. See Peter.
+Castile, John, King of Leon and Duke Lancaster. See John of Gaunt.
+Castle of
+ Aberconway or Conway.
+ Abergavenny.
+ Aberyswyth.
+ Alnwick.
+ Alton.
+ Bamburgh.
+ Barnard.
+ Beaumaris.
+ Bedford.
+ Bere.
+ Berkeley.
+ Berwick.
+ Bothwell.
+ Bristol.
+ Builth.
+ Bytham.
+ Caen.
+ Caerphilly.
+ Cardiff.
+ Carlaverocc.
+ Carmarthen.
+ Carnarvon.
+ Castleton, Liddesdale.
+ Chepstow.
+ Christchurch.
+ Clare.
+ Colchester.
+ Conway. See Aberconway.
+ Conisborough.
+ Corfe.
+ Cornet.
+ Criccieth.
+ Deganwy.
+ Devises.
+ Diserth.
+ Dolwyddelen.
+ Dover.
+ Drysllwyn.
+ Dublin.
+ Dumfries.
+ Dunbar.
+ Dynevor.
+ Edinburgh.
+ Flint.
+ Fotheringhay.
+ Gloucester.
+ Grosmont.
+ Harlech.
+ Hawarden.
+ Hedingham.
+ Josselin.
+ Kenilworth.
+ Kilkenny.
+ Kidwelly.
+ Knaresborough.
+ Leeds (Kent).
+ Limoges.
+ Lincoln.
+ London. See Tower of London, the.
+ Maud's.
+ Monmouth.
+ Montgomery.
+ Mount Sorrel.
+ Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
+ Norham.
+ Norwich.
+ Nottingham.
+ Orford.
+ Peebles.
+ Pevensey.
+ Pontefract.
+ Powys.
+ Rhuddlan.
+ Rising.
+ Rochester.
+ Rockingham.
+ Romorantin.
+ Rose.
+ Roxburgh.
+ Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte.
+ Scarborough.
+ Skelton.
+ Skenfrith.
+ Stirling.
+ Swansea.
+ Tickhill.
+ Tintagel.
+ Tunbridge.
+ Tutbury.
+ Usk.
+ Wallingford.
+ Wark,
+ Warwick.
+ Whitecastle.
+ Wigmore.
+ Windsor.
+ Wolvesey (Winchester).
+Castles;
+ royal;
+ adulterine;
+ Welsh;
+ of South Wales;
+ Edward I.'s;
+ concentric;
+ Scottish.
+Castleton Castle, Liddesdale.
+Castor, Church of St., Coblenz.
+Castorplatz, the, Coblenz.
+Caversham.
+Celestine V., Pope.
+Celts, Irish.
+Celts of Scotland, the.
+Chaboterie, la.
+Chalon, little battle of.
+Champagne, Blanche of Artois, Queen of Navarre and Countess of. See
+Blanche.
+Champagne, Edmund, Count of. See also Edmund of Lancaster.
+Champagne, Henry, Count of. See Henry.
+Champagne, Joan of. See Joan.
+Champagne, Theobald IV., Count of. See Theobald.
+Champagne.
+Champollion-Figeac's _Lettres des rots d'Angleterre_.
+Chancellor, office of.
+Chancery courts, for Wales;
+ records.
+Chandos, Sir John.
+Chandos Herald.
+Channel, the Bristol;
+ the English.
+Channel Islands, the.
+Charente, the river.
+Charing.
+Charles IV., the Emperor.
+Charles IV., the Fair, King of France.
+Charles V., King of France.
+Charles of Anjou, younger brother of Louis IX., Count of Provence and
+Charles I., King of Sicily.
+Charles the Bad, Count of Evreux and King of Navarre.
+Charles of Blois, claimant to Duchy of Brittany.
+Charles of La Cerda.
+Charles of Moravia, King of the Romans.
+ See Charles IV., the Emperor.
+Charles, Duke of Normandy.
+ See also Charles V., King of France.
+Charles of Salerno, afterwards Charles II. of Sicily.
+Charles, Count of Valois.
+Charlemagne.
+Charlton, Tohn, lord of Powys.
+Charltons of Powys, the.
+Charter, the Great;
+ the forest;
+ Rolls, the, See Rolls.
+Charterhouse, the London.
+Charters, confirmations of the;
+ of London;
+ _Carta Mercatoria_;
+ as sources for history.
+Chartley.
+Chartres.
+Châteauneuf.
+Châteauroux.
+Châtelherault.
+Chaucer, Geoffrey.
+Chauvigny.
+Chaworth, Payne of.
+Cheapside.
+Chepstow.
+Cher, the river.
+Cherbourg.
+Cheshire;
+ palatine earldom of;
+ palatine courts of;
+ records of county palatine of.
+Chester.
+Chester, Edward, Earl of. See Edward I., Edward II. and Edward III.
+Chester, John de Lacy, Constable of. See Lacy.
+Chester, John the Scot, Earl of. See also Huntingdon.
+Chester, Simon de Montfort, Earl of. See Leicester.
+Chester, Randolph Blundeville, Earl of.
+Chesterfield, battle of.
+Chichester.
+Chichester, Bishops of. See Berkstead, Stephen; Neville, Ralth, and
+Stratford, Robert.
+Chilham, barony of, Kent.
+Chilterns, the.
+Chinon.
+Chirk.
+Chirk, Roger Mortimer of. See Mortimer, Roger, of Chirk.
+Christchurch Castle.
+_Christopher, The_.
+Chroniclers, the.
+Chronicles as sources of history.
+Cinque Ports, the.
+Cirencester.
+Cistercian, nuns of Eastminster;
+ monks of Whalley.
+Cistercians, the.
+Clare Castle;
+ the house of.
+Clare, Eleanor de. See Despenser, Eleanor de.
+Clare, Elizabeth of.
+Clare, Gilbert of, Earl of Gloucester. See Gloucester.
+Clare, Margaret of.
+Clare, Richard of, Earl of Gloucester. See Gloucester.
+Clarence, Duchy of. See Lionel of Antwerp.
+Clarendon.
+Clares, the poor.
+Clark's, G.T., _Mediæval Military Architecture_.
+Clark's, J.W., _Observances in use at Barnwell Priory_.
+Clement IV., Pope.
+Clement V., Pope.
+Clement VI., Pope.
+Clergy, taxation of the.
+_Clericis laicos_, the bull.
+Clerkenwell.
+Clermont, Marshal.
+Cleves, Count of.
+Clifford, Robert.
+Clifford, Roger.
+Cliffords, the.
+Clinton, Earl of Huntingdon. See Huntingdon.
+Clisson, Oliver de.
+Cloth, manufacture of English.
+Clydesdale.
+Clwyd, the river.
+Clun.
+Cobham, Thomas of, Archbishop elect of Canterbury.
+Coblenz.
+Cocherel, battle of.
+Cog Thomas, the.
+Coggeshall's _Chronicle_.
+Cognac.
+Coinage.
+Colchester, Castle of.
+Coldstream.
+Colleges, growth of.
+Cologne.
+Cologne, Archbishop of.
+Colons, faction of the.
+Commerce under Edward III.
+Comminges, Counts of.
+Commons, house of.
+Companies, the free.
+Company, the White.
+Compiègne.
+Compostella.
+Comyn, John, the elder, lord of Badenoch.
+Comyn, John, of Badenoch, the younger, or the Red, regent of Scotland.
+Comyn, John, of Buchan. See Buchan, Earl of.
+Confirmation of the charters. See Charters.
+Conisborough Castle.
+Connaught.
+Connaught, Phelim O'Connor, King of,
+Connaught, King of.
+Conrad, son of Frederick II.
+Conservators of the Peace.
+_Consilium ordinarium_, the.
+Constable, office of.
+Constance of Brittany.
+Constance of Castile, daughter of Peter the Cruel, wife of John, Duke
+of Lancaster.
+Convocation.
+Conway, the river.
+Corfe Castle.
+Cormeilles, Abbey of.
+Cornet Castle,
+Cornouailles.
+Cornwall;
+ earldom of.
+Cornwall, Dunstanville, Earls of. See Dunstanville.
+Cornwall, Edmund, Earl of. See Edmund.
+Cornwall, Edward, Duke of. See Edward, the Black Prince.
+Cornwall, John of Eltham, Earl of. See John.
+Cornwall, Peter Gaveston, Earl of. See Gaveston.
+Cornwall, Richard, Earl of. See Richard.
+Corte Nuova, battle of.
+Cosneau's _Grands Traités de la Guerre de Cent Ans_.
+Côtentin, the.
+Cotton, Bartholomew's _Historia Anglicana_.
+Coucy, Enguerrand de.
+Councils, General, at Lyons.
+Court of King's Bench, records of.
+Court of Common Pleas, records of.
+Court of the County.
+Courts of Chancery and Exchequer in Wales.
+Courtenay, House of, Earls of Devon.
+Courtenay, William, Bishop of London.
+Courtrai;
+ battle of.
+Coventry, Roger Northburgh, Bishops of. See Northburgh, Roger.
+Coville's _Histoire de France_.
+Craven.
+Crécy, battle of.
+Crécy-en-Ponthieu.
+Cree, the river.
+Cressingham, Hugh.
+Creuse, the river.
+Criccieth Castle.
+Crockart.
+Crossbowmen, Genoese.
+Crotoy, Le.
+Crusades, the.
+Crutched friars, the.
+Cumberland.
+Cunningham's, W., _Growth of English Industry_.
+Curzon, Robert.
+Customs.
+"Custom, the Great and Ancient,"; "the New and Small,".
+Cuvelier's _Vie de Bertrand de Guesclin_.
+Cymry, the. See also Wales.
+Cyprus.
+Cyprus, Lusignan kings of.
+
+Dagworth, Sir Thomas.
+Damietta, Crusade of.
+Damietta, Archbishop of. See Roches, Peter des.
+Damme.
+Dampierre, Guy, Count of Flanders. See Guy.
+Dancaster, John.
+Dante.
+Darlington, John of, Archbishop of Dublin.
+David I., King of Scots.
+David II., son of Robert Bruce, King of Scots.
+David I., an Llewelyn, Prince of Wales.
+David II., ap Griffith, Prince of Wales.
+David, Earl of Huntingdon. See Huntingdon.
+David of Strathbolgie, Earl of Athol. See Athol.
+Dax.
+Dean, Forest of.
+"Decorated" style of architecture.
+Deddington.
+Deganwy, Castle of.
+Delisle's _Histoire de Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte_.
+Denbigh, town, lordship and castle of.
+Denifle's _Désolation des Églises de France_, etc.;
+ his _Entstehung der Universitäten_.
+Déprez's _Préliminaires de la Guerre de Cent Ans_.
+Derby, Henry of Grosmont, Earl of. See also Lancaster.
+Derby, Robert Ferrars, Earl of.
+Derby, Thomas, Earl of Lancaster and. See Lancaster.
+Derby, William of Ferrars, Earl of.
+Deschamps, Eustace.
+Despenser, Eleanor de, wife of Hugh le Despenser, the younger.
+Despenser, Hugh, justiciar.
+Despenser, Hugh, the elder, Earl of Winchester, son of the justiciar.
+Despenser, Hugh, the younger, Lord of Glamorgan, son of the foregoing.
+Devizes, Castle of.
+Devon, earldom of, Falkes de Bréauté as warden of.
+Devon, Courtenays, earls of.
+_Dictum de Kenilworth_, the.
+Dinan.
+Disafforestments.
+Diserth, Castle of.
+Disinherited, the (after Evesham);
+ the, Scotch.
+_Disseisin_, novel.
+Dolwyddelen Castle.
+Dominic, St.
+Dominicans.
+Don, the river.
+Donaldbane, brother of Malcolm Canmore.
+Dordogne, the river.
+Dordrecht.
+Dorking.
+Dorsetshire.
+Douai.
+Douglas, Sir Archibald.
+Douglas, Sir James.
+Douglas, Sir William.
+Douglas, Sir William (at Poitiers).
+Dover, town and castle;
+ straits of.
+Dovey the river.
+Dowell's, S., _History of Taxation_.
+Downs, the north;
+ the south.
+Drokensford, Bishop of Bath and Wells.
+Dublin, Castle of.
+Dublin, Archbishop of. See Hotham, William of, Archbishop of.
+Dubois, Peter.
+Dugdale's _Monasticon_.
+Dumfries.
+Dunbar, battle of.
+Dunfermline.
+Dunkeld, Bishop of.
+Duns Scotus.
+Dunstable.
+Dunstanville, house of.
+Dupplin Moor, battle of.
+Durham;
+ bishopric of;
+ records of.
+Durham, Bishops of.
+ See Bek, Anthony;
+ Beaumont, Louis de;
+ and Bury, Richard of.
+Dynevor Castle.
+
+Earn, the river.
+Eastminster, the, London.
+Eastry, Henry of, prior of Christ Church, Canterbury.
+Ebro, the river.
+Eccleston, William of, his _De adventu fratrum minorun_.
+Edinburgh, town and castle.
+Edington, church of.
+Edington, William of, Bishop of Winchester.
+Edmund of Almaine, Earl of Cornwall, son of Richard of Cornwall.
+Edmund, Earl of Lancaster, Leicester and Derby, some time titular King
+of Sicily, son of Henry III.
+Edmund of Langley, son of Edward III., Earl of Cambridge, afterward
+Duke of York.
+Edmund of Woodstock, son of Edward I., Earl of Kent.
+Edmund (Rich). St. See Rich, Edmund.
+Edmund, St., of East Anglia.
+Edward the Confessor, saint and king; translation of.
+Edward I.;
+ authorities for reign of.
+Edward II.;
+ sources for the reign of.
+Edward III.;
+ sources for the reign of.
+Edward, son of Henry III. See also Edward I.
+Edward of Carnarvon, Prince of Wales. See also Edward II.
+Edward of Windsor, Duke of Aquitaine.
+Edward, Prince of Wales and of Aquitaine, called the Black Prince.
+Education;
+ of clergy.
+Elbeuf.
+Egypt.
+Elderslie.
+Eleanor of Aquitaine, Queen of Henry II.
+Eleanor of Castile, Queen of Edward I.
+Eleanor, second daughter of Raymond Berenger IV., Count of Provence,
+Queen of Henry III.
+Eleanor, younger sister of Henry III., married (1) William Marshal,
+(2) Simon de Montfort.
+Elgin.
+Elizabeth, daughter of Edward I., Countess of Holland, afterwards of
+Hereford.
+Elizabeth de Burgh, queen of Robert (Bruce), King of Scots.
+Ellis, Sir Henry, ed. of _Chronica I. De Oxenedes_.
+Eland, William.
+Ely, bishopric of, isle of.
+Ely, Bishops of.
+ See Marsh, Adam;
+ Balsham, Hugh;
+ Langham, Simon;
+ Hotham, John.
+Eltham.
+Eltham, John of. See John.
+Englefield.
+English language;
+ in law courts.
+Eric, King of Norway.
+Escheats.
+Esplechin, treaty of.
+Essex; earldom of.
+Essex, Countess of. See Isabella of Gloucester.
+Estates, the three.
+_Etsi de statu_, bull.
+Etaples.
+Ettrick forest.
+Eu, Count of, constable of France.
+Eure, the river.
+_Eulogium Historiarum_.
+Eustace the Monk.
+Evans, J.G., his edition of the _Red Book of Hergest_.
+Eversden, John of.
+Evesham, battle of;
+ Abbey.
+Evreux.
+Evreux, Counts of.
+ See Charles the Bad, King of Navarre;
+ Philip the Bold.
+Evreux, Louis, Count of. See Louis.
+Exchequer courts for Wales.
+Exchequer records.
+Exeter, Bishops of.
+ See Brantingham, Thomas;
+ Stapledon, Walter.
+Exeter College, Oxford.
+Exports.
+Eynsham, Walter of.
+Eyville, John d'.
+
+Fair of Lincoln, the. See Lincoln, battle of.
+Falkirk;
+ battle of.
+Famine, of 1316, the;
+ of wool, in Flanders.
+Farnham.
+Farrer's, W., _Lancashire Final Concords_.
+Faucigny.
+Fecamp.
+Fecamp, Peter Roger, Abbot of. See Clement VI.
+_Feet of Fines_.
+Felton, Sir Thomas, Seneschal of Aquitaine.
+Ferdinand of Portugal, Count of Flanders.
+Ferdinand III. the Saint, King of Cast& [Castile].
+Ferrars, house of.
+Ferrars, Robert of, Earl of Derby. See Derby.
+Ferrars, William of, Earl of Derby. See Derby.
+Fife.
+Fife, Earl of.
+Fifteen, the Council of.
+Figeac.
+Firstfruits.
+Fitzalan, Edmund, and Richard, Earls of Arundel. See Arundel.
+Fitzalan of Bedale, Brian.
+Fitzalans, the.
+FitzAthulf, Constantine, sheriff of London.
+FitzGeoffrey, John.
+Fitzgerald, governor of Ireland.
+Fitzgerald, Maurice, justiciar of Ireland.
+Fitzgeralds, the.
+Fitzralph, Richard, Archbishop of Armagh.
+Fitzthedmar, Arnold.
+FitzWalter, Robert.
+Flemings, the. See Flanders.
+_Fleta_, law-book.
+Fletching.
+Flint, county of;
+ town and castle of.
+Flodden, battle of.
+Florence.
+Florence, count of Holland.
+Florence of Worcester, Continuators of the _Chronicle_ of.
+_Flores Historiarum_, Roger of Wendover's.
+_Flores Historiarum_ (fourteenth century).
+Flagellants, the.
+Flamangrie, La.
+Flanders, county of.
+Flanders, counts of.
+ See Ferdinand of Portugal,
+ Guy of Dampierre,
+ Louis of Male,
+ Louis of Nevers,
+ Robert of Béthune
+ and Thomas of Savoy.
+Flanders, Joan, Countess of. See Joan.
+Flanders, Margaret of. See Margaret.
+_Foedera_, Rymer's.
+Foix.
+Foix, Count of.
+Foix, Gaston Phoebus, Count of.
+Fontenelles, Cistercian Abbey of.
+Fontevraud.
+Fordun, John, his _Chronicle_.
+Forests, charter of the;
+ perambulation of the;
+ enlargement of the.
+Fors, William of, Earl of Albemarle. See Albemarle.
+Fors, Isabella of. See Albemarle, Countess of.
+Forth, the.
+Fotheringhay, Castle of.
+Foulquois, Guy, Cardinal-bishop of Sabina. See Clement IV.
+Fountains Abbey.
+Fournier, James. See Benedict XII.
+Fournier's _Royaume d'Arles_.
+France;
+ records of;
+ chronicles of.
+France, King of, Edward III. takes title of.
+France, Kings of.
+ See Philip Augustus,
+ Louis VIII.,
+ Louis IX.,
+ Philip III.,
+ Philip IV.,
+ Louis X.,
+ Philip V.,
+ Charles IV.,
+ Philip VI.,
+ John and
+ Charles V.
+Francis, St., of Assisi.
+Franciscans, the;
+ the spiritual.
+Franks, the Salian.
+Frankton, Stephen of.
+Frascati.
+Fraser, William, Bishop of St. Andrews.
+Frederick II., the emperor.
+French language, the.
+Frescobaldi, the.
+Freynet, Gilbert of. See Gilbert.
+Friars, the;
+ the four orders of;
+ See Austin or hermits of order of St. Augustine;
+ Bonhommes;
+ Carmelite or White;
+ Crutched;
+ Dominicans;
+ Francisans;
+ ---- of the Penance of Jesus Christ or
+ ---- of the Sack;
+ Trinitarians or Maturins.
+Froissart, John.
+Froissart, _Chroniques_, ed. Luce;
+ ed. Kervyn.
+Fronsac, Viscount of.
+Funck-Brentano's, F., editions of the _Chronique Artésienne_ and
+_Annales Gandenses_.
+Furness.
+
+Gabaston.
+Gaetano, Benedict. See Boniface VIII.
+Galeazzo Visconti, Lord of Pavia.
+Galloway.
+Garonne, the river.
+Garter, Order of the.
+Gascony, See also Aquitaine.
+Gaston, Viscount of Béarn.
+Gaveston, Peter, Earl of Cornwall.
+Gelderland, Duke of.
+_Genitours_.
+Genoa.
+Genoese, the;
+ crossbowmen.
+Geraldines of Leinster, the.
+Germany.
+Ghent.
+Ghent, Gilbert of. See Lincoln, Earls of.
+Giffard, Walter, Archbishop of York;
+ his register.
+Giffords, the.
+Gilbert of Freynet.
+Gilsland.
+Gironde, the river.
+Glamorgan, lordship of.
+Glamorgan, Lords of. See Gloucester, Earls of.
+Glasgow, Robert Wishart, Bishop of. See Wishart.
+Glendower, Owen.
+Gloucester;
+ St. Peter's Church;
+ statute of;
+ earldom of.
+Gloucester, Richard of Clare, Earl of.
+Gloucester, Earl of, Gilbert of Clare, son of the above.
+Gloucester, Earl of, Gilbert of Clare, son of the above.
+Gloucester, Ralph of Monthermer, Earl of.
+Gloucester, Audley, Earl of.
+Gloucester, Thomas of Woodstock, Earl of. See Thomas.
+Gloucester, Isabella, Countess of. See Isabella, Queen of King John.
+Gloucester, Robert of.
+Gloucestershire.
+Gomez, Peter, Cardinal.
+Gordon, Adam.
+Gothic architecture. See Architecture.
+Gough's _Itinerary of Edward I_.
+Gower,
+Gower, John;
+ his works.
+Grampians, the.
+Granada.
+Grand, Richard le, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Grandisons, the.
+Greek, study of.
+Greenfield, William, Archbishop of York.
+Gregory IX., Pope.
+Gregory X., Pope.
+Gregory XI, Pope.
+Grey, Reginald.
+Grey, Richard of.
+Grey's Sir T., _Scalachronica_.
+Grey, Walter, Archbishop of York;
+ his register.
+Griffith ap Gwenwynwyn.
+Griffith ap Llewelyn.
+Griffith of Welshpool.
+Grosmont, castle of.
+Grosmont, Henry of, Earl of Derby. See Derby and Lancaster.
+Gross's, C., _Select Cases from the Coroners' Rolls_;
+ his _Bibliography of British Municipal History_;
+ his _Sources of English History_.
+Grosseteste, Robert, Bishop of Lincoln.
+ his _Epistoae_.
+Gualo the legate.
+Guérande, treaty of.
+Guernsey. See also Channel Islands.
+Guesclin, Bertrand du.
+Guienne. See also Aquitaine and Gascony.
+Guillon, treaty of.
+Guînes.
+Guînes, Baldwin of.
+Guînes, Count of.
+Gurney, Thomas.
+Guy of Brittany, Count of Penthièvre.
+Guy of Dampierre, Count of Flanders.
+Guy of Lusignan, Lord of Cognac.
+Gwent.
+Gwenwynwyn, house of.
+Gwynedd. See also Wales, North.
+Gwynedd, house of.
+
+Haddan and Stubbs' _Councils_.
+Haddington.
+Hadenham's, Edmund of, _Chronicle_.
+Haggerston.
+Hainault.
+Hainault, Counts of. See John and William.
+Hainault, Countess of, Abbess of Fontenelles.
+Hainault, Philippa of. See Philippa Queen.
+Hales, Alexander of.
+Halidon Hill, battle of.
+Halifax, John of.
+Hall's, H., _Customs Revenue_.
+Hall's, J, ed. of Minot's _Poems_.
+Hamilton, H.C., ed. of Walter of Hemingburgh.
+Hampole.
+Hampshire.
+Hapsburg, house of.
+Hapsburg, Rudolf of. See Rudolf.
+Harby.
+Harclay, Andrew, governor of Carlisle. See Carlisle, Earl of.
+Harcourt, Geoffrey of.
+Harcourts, the.
+Hardy, _Registrum Palatinum Dunelmense_.
+Harewell, John, Bishop of Bath.
+Harlech Castle.
+Harry's, Blind, _Wallace_.
+Hastings, battle of.
+Hastings, John, first Earl of Pembroke. See Pembroke.
+Hastings, John, second Earl of Pembroke. See Pembroke.
+Hastingses of Abergavenny, the.
+Hathern.
+Hauréau's _Histoire de la philosophie scholastique_.
+Haverfordwest.
+Hawarden.
+Hawkwood, John.
+Hay.
+Haydon's ed. of _Eulogium Historiarum_.
+Hearne.
+Hebrew, study of.
+Hebrews. See also Jews.
+Hedingham Castle.
+Hengham, Justice.
+Henley, Walter of.
+Hemingburgh, Walter of.
+Hennebont.
+Henry I., King of England.
+Henry II..
+Henry III.;
+ chroniclers for the reign of.
+Henry VIII.
+Henry, King of the Romans, son of Frederick II.
+Henry II. of Navarre.
+Henry II. of Trastarnara, King of Castile.
+Henry, Earl of Derby, afterwards King Henry IV.
+Henry of Lancaster, younger son of Earl Edmund;
+ Earl of Leicester;
+ Earl of Lancaster.
+Henry of Grosmont, Earl of Derby, then Earl afterwards Duke of
+Lancaster.
+Hereford;
+ earldom of.
+Hereford, Bishops of.
+ See Aigueblanche, Peter of;
+ Cantilupe, St. Thomas of;
+ Orleton, Adam.
+Hereford, Humphrey Bohun, Earl of.
+Hereford, Humphrey Bohun, grandson of above, Earl of.
+Hereford, Humphrey Bohun, son of above, Earl of.
+Herefordshire.
+Heretics, Albigensian.
+Hertford.
+Hesdin.
+Hewlett's editions of _Chronicles_.
+Hexham.
+Hexhamshire.
+Higden's, Randolph, _Polychronicon_.
+Highlands, the.
+Hingeston-Randelph's _Exeter Registers_.
+History, study of.
+Hohenstaufen, the.
+Holderness, ruled by Counts of Aumâle.
+Holland.
+Holland, Florence, Count of.
+Hollands, Earls of Kent.
+Holy Land, the. See Palestine and Crusades.
+Holywood, John of. See also Halifax.
+Honorius III, Pope.
+Honorius IV., Pope.
+Hood, Robin.
+Horn, Andrew.
+Horstmann, Dr., his _Legenda Anglie_.
+Horwood's, A.L., editions of _Year Books_.
+Hospitallers, the.
+Hotham, John, Bishop of Ely.
+Hotham, William of, Archbishop of Dublin.
+Hougue, La.
+Hoveden, or Howden, Roger of;
+ his continuator.
+Howlett's ed. of _Monumenta Franciscana_.
+Howel the Good.
+Huelgas, las, monastery of.
+Hugh, Choir of St., at Lincoln.
+Hugh of Avalon, Bishop of Lincoln, St., Little St. Hugh of Lincoln.
+Hugh X., of Lusignan. See also Lusignan.
+Hugh XI. of Lusignan. See also Lusignan.
+Hull.
+Hulme, St. Benet's.
+Humanism.
+Humber, the.
+_Hundred Rolls_, the.
+Hungary, Primate of, visits Canterbury.
+Hungerford, Sir Thomas.
+Hunter's _Leet Jurisdiction of Norwich_;
+ _Rotuli Selecti_.
+Huntingdon, David, Earl of.
+Huntingdon, Honour of.
+Huntingdon, Earl of, John the Scot.
+Huntingdon, Clinton, Earl of.
+Husbandry, Walter of Henley's treatise on.
+
+_Imperium_, the.
+Immunities, baronial.
+Indre, the river.
+Ingham, Sir Oliver.
+Infantry, English;
+ French;
+ Irish;
+ Scotch;
+ Welsh.
+Innocent III., Pope.
+Innocent IV., Pope.
+Innocent VI., Pope.
+Inquisition, the, in England;
+ in the Netherlands.
+Interregnum, the Great.
+Inverness.
+Iolande, daughter of Peter Mauclerc, Count of Brittany.
+Ireland.
+Ireland, the Butler of, made Earl of Ormonde. See Ormonde.
+Irthlingborough, Northamptonshire.
+Irvine.
+Isabella of Castile, daughter of Peter the Cruel, wife of Edmund, Earl
+of Cambridge.
+Isabella Marshal, wife of Richard of Cornwall. See Marshal.
+Isabella of Angoulême, Queen of John, and wife of Hugh of Lusignan.
+Isabella of France, Queen of Edward II..
+Isabella of Gloucester, divorced wife of John, wife of Hubert de
+Burgh.
+Isabella, sister of Henry III., queen of Frederick II.
+Isabella, younger sister of Alexander II., wife of Roger Bigod, Earl
+of Norfolk.
+Islands, the Channel. See Channel Islands, the.
+Isleworth.
+Isle, the river.
+Isle de France, the.
+Isle Saint-Jean, Caen.
+Islip, Simon, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Italy.
+
+James, King of Sicily, son of Peter of Aragon; afterwards James II. of
+Aragon.
+Jaudy, the river.
+Jedburgh.
+Jerusalem, Latin kingdom of.
+Jerusalem, Patriarch of. See Bek, Antony.
+Jews, in England, the;
+ expulsion of the.
+Joan of Champagne, Queen of Philip the Fair.
+Joan of Ponthieu, Queen of Ferdinand the Saint.
+Joan of the Tower, sister of Edward III., Queen of David Bruce.
+Joan, sister of Henry III., Queen of Alexander II. of Scotland.
+Joan, Countess of Flanders, wife of Thomas of Savoy.
+Joan, Countess of Kent, Princess of Wales, wife of Edward the Black
+Prince.
+Joan, daughter of Edward III.
+Joan, eldest daughter of Charles of Valois.
+Joan of Acre, daughter of Edward I. and Countess of Gloucester.
+Joan of Bar, grand-daughter of Edward I.
+Joan of Flanders, Countess of Penthièvre, wife of Charles of Blois.
+Joan of Toulouse, daughter of Raymond of Toulouse, wife of Alfonso of
+Poitiers.
+Joan, Princess of North Wales, wife of Llewelyn ap Iorwerth.
+Joan, sister of Richard I., grandmother of Joan of Poitiers.
+John, King.
+John, King of Bohemia.
+John, King of France.
+John (Balliol), King of Scots.
+John XXII., Pope.
+John, Duke of Berri.
+John II., Duke of Brabant.
+John III., Duke of Brabant.
+John II., Duke of Brittany.
+John III., Duke of Brittany.
+John IV., Duke of Brittany (Montfort).
+John V., Duke of Brittany (Montfort).
+John, Duke of Normandy.
+ See also John, King of France.
+John of Avesnes, Count of Hainault.
+John of Brittany, Earl of Richmond, son of John II., Duke of Brittany,
+and nephew of Edward I.
+John of Eltham, son of Edward II., Earl of Cornwall.
+John of Gaunt, son of Edward III., Duke of Lancaster.
+John of Hainault, brother of William II. of Hainault.
+John of Montfort, Earl of Richmond.
+ See John V., Duke of Brittany.
+John of Montfort, half-brother of John III. of Brittany.
+ See John IV., Duke of Brittany.
+John the Scot, Earl of Chester. See Chester.
+Joinville, Joan of.
+Joinvilles, the.
+Joinville's _History of St. Louis_.
+Josselin Castle.
+Jowel, John.
+Judges, the.
+Jülich, Dukes of.
+Jurisprudence, Anglo-Norman;
+ Roman.
+Justiciar, office of.
+Justiciars.
+ See Burgh, Hubert de;
+ Marshal, William;
+ Roches, Peter des;
+ Segrave, Stephen.
+Justiciars of Ireland.
+ See Marsh, Geoffrey,
+ and Fitzgerald, Maurice.
+Justiciars of Scotland.
+ See Ormesby, William.
+
+Keighley, Henry of, knight of the shire for Lancashire.
+Kelso.
+_Kenilworth, Dictum de_.
+Kenilworth Castle.
+Kennington.
+Kensham.
+Kent;
+ earldom of.
+Kent, Earl of, Hubert de Burgh. See Burgh.
+Kent, Edmund of Woodstock, Earl of. See Edmund.
+Kerry (Wales);
+ Vale of;
+ scutage of.
+Kervyn de Lettenhove's edition of _Froissart_.
+Kesteven, South.
+Kidwelly, castle and lordship.
+Kildare, Curragh of.
+Kildare, Earl of.
+Kilkenny, Castle;
+ statute of.
+Kilwardby, Robert, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Kinghorn.
+Kingsford's, C.L., Song of _Lewes_.
+Kingston-on-Thames.
+Kinloss.
+Kintyre.
+Kirk's _Accounts of the Obedientiaries of Abingdon_.
+Kirkby, John, treasurer of Edward I and Bishop of Ely.
+Kirkby's _Quest_.
+Kirkcudbright, stewartry of.
+Kirkliston, 213.
+Klerk, Jan van, his _Chronicle_.
+Knaresborough, castle and town.
+Knighton's, Henry, _Chronicle_.
+Knights, of the Shire;
+ Templars;
+ of St. John;
+ of the Garter;
+ of the Star.
+Knowles, Sir Robert.
+Knyvett, Sir John.
+Köhler's _Entwickelung des Kriegswesens in der Ritterzeit_.
+
+Labourers, Statute of.
+Lacy, Alice, Countess of Lancaster.
+Lacy, Henry, Earl of Lincoln. See Lincoln.
+Lacy, Hugh de, Earl of Ulster. See Ulster.
+Lacy, John de, Constable of Chester.
+ See also Lincoln, Earls of.
+Lacy, the house of;
+ the house of, in Meath.
+Lagny, Abbot of.
+Lalinde.
+Lamberton, Bishop of St. Andrews.
+Lambeth, treaty of.
+Lancashire.
+Lancaster, Alice, Countess of. See Alice.
+Lancaster, Blanche, Duchess of. See Blanche.
+Lancaster, Edmund, Earl of. See Edmund.
+Lancaster, Henry, Earl of. See Henry.
+Lancaster, Henry of Grosmont, Earl and Duke of. See Henry.
+Lancaster, honour of;
+ town;
+ house of;
+ records of Duchy of.
+Lancaster, John of Gaunt, Duke of. See John.
+Lanercost;
+ chronicle of.
+Langham, Simon, Chancellor and Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Langland, William.
+Langley.
+Langley, Geoffrey of.
+Langlois, Charles V., his _Philippe le Hardi_;
+ his _Histoire de France_.
+Langon.
+Langtoft's, Peter, _Chronicle_.
+Langton, John, Bishop of Chichester.
+Langton, Simon, Archdeacon of Canterbury.
+Langton, Stephen, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Langton, Walter, Bishop of Lichfield.
+Language, English;
+ French;
+ German;
+ Latin;
+ Scottish.
+Languedoc.
+Laon.
+Laon, Robert Lecoq, Bishop of.
+Laonnais, the.
+Lapsley's County _Palatine of Durham_.
+Latimer, Lord, Chamberlain.
+Latin-language.
+Lavisse and Rambaud's _Histoire Générale_.
+Lavisse's _Histoire de France_.
+Law, study of English;
+ literature of;
+ the Salic;
+ English.
+Laws, Celtic, of Highlanders and Strathclyde Welsh.
+Lawyers, Italian;
+ English.
+Layamon's English version of Wace's _Brut_.
+Lechler's _Wycliffe_.
+Lecoq, Robert, Bishop of Laon.
+Leeds Castle (Kent).
+Leek, treaty of.
+Lehugeur's _Philippe le Long_.
+Leicester;
+ earldom of.
+Leicester, Abbot of.
+Leicester, Countess of. See Eleanor.
+Leicester, Henry, Earl of. See Henry, Earl of Lancaster.
+Leicester, Robert Beaumont, Earl of.
+Leicester, Simon de Montfort, Earl of.
+Leicester, Simon de Montfort, the elder, Count of Toulouse and titular
+Earl of.
+Leicester, Thomas, Earl of. See Thomas, Earl of Lancaster.
+Leicestershire.
+Leinster.
+Leon.
+Leon.
+L'Estrange, Roger.
+Levant, the.
+Lewes;
+ battle of;
+ mise of.
+Lewis' _Life of Wiclif_.
+_Libellus Famosus_, Edward III.'s.
+Libourne.
+Lichfield, Bishops of.
+ See Langton, Walter;
+ Northburgh, Roger.
+Liddesdale. See also Liddell.
+Liddell.
+Liebermann, Dr., works by.
+Liege, William, Bishop of. See William.
+Liege.
+Lille.
+Limburg.
+Limerick.
+Limoges;
+ sack of.
+Limousin.
+Lincoln;
+ Castle;
+ battle of;
+ Cathedral;
+ parliament of (1301);
+ parliament at (1316).
+Lincoln, Bishops of.
+ See Wells, Hugh of;
+ Hugh, St., of Avalon;
+ Grosse-teste, Robert;
+ Burghersh, Henry.
+Lincoln, Richard le Grand, Chancellor of. See Canterbury.
+Lincoln, Gilbert of Ghent, Earl of.
+Lincoln, Henry Lacy, Earl of.
+Lincoln, John de Lacy, Earl of, 45, 47.
+Lincoln, Randolph de Blundeville, Earl of. See also Chester.
+Lincoln, Thomas of Lancaster, Earl of. See Thomas, Earl of Lancaster.
+Lincolnshire.
+Linlithgow.
+Lionel of Antwerp, son of Edward III., Duke of Clarence and Earl of
+Ulster.
+Lisieux;
+ battle near.
+Literature in the thirteenth century;
+ French;
+ English.
+Literature in the fourteenth century;
+ English;
+ French.
+Littleton's _Tenures_.
+Llandaff, Bishop of.
+Llandilo.
+Llewelyn ap Griffith, Prince of Wales.
+Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, Prince of North Wales.
+Llewelyn Bren.
+Lleyn.
+Lloughor.
+Lochmaben Castle.
+Lodge's _Close of the Middle Ages_.
+Logroño.
+Loire, the river.
+Lombards.
+Lombardy,
+ cities of.
+London.
+London, Bishops of.
+ See Sainte-Mère-Eglise, William of;
+ Basset, Fulk;
+ Baldock, Ralph;
+ Courtenay, William.
+London, Mayors of.
+ See Serlo;
+ Waleys, Henry le,
+ and Pyel, John.
+London, Sheriffs of.
+ See FitzAthulf, Constantine.
+London, treaty of.
+Longjumeau.
+Longman's _Life and Times of Edward III._.
+Longnon's _Atlas historique de la France_.
+Longsword, William, Earl of Salisbury. See Salisbury.
+Lorraine.
+Loserth's _Geschichte des späteren Mittelalters_.
+Lot, the river.
+Lothians, the.
+Loughborough.
+Louis, Count of Evreux.
+Louis, Duke of Anjou, brother of Charles V. of France.
+Louis of Bavaria, the Emperor.
+Louis of France, afterwards Louis VIII.
+Louis IX. (St. Louis), King of France.
+Louis X., King of France.
+Louis of Male, Count of Flanders.
+Louis of Nevers, Count of Flanders.
+Louth;
+ Earldom of.
+Louth, John of Bermingham, Earl of.
+Louvain.
+Luard, Dr. H.R., his _Roberti Grosse-teste Epistolæ_;
+ his editions of _Annales Monastici_;
+ B. Cotton, and _Flores Historiarum_,
+ and Matthew Paris' _Chronica Majora_.
+Luce's _Jeunesse de Betrand du Guesclin_;
+ _La France pendant la Guerre de Cent An_.
+Luce and Raynouart's edition of Froissart's _Chronicle_.
+_Lucy_, Anthony.
+Ludlow.
+Lundy Island.
+Lusignan, Alice of.
+Lusignan, Aymer of. See Valence, Aymer de.
+Lusignan, Guy of.
+Lusignan, House of.
+Lusignan, Hugh X. of.
+Lusignan, Hugh XI. of.
+Lusignan (town).
+Lusignan, William of. See Valence, William of.
+Lussac, bridge of.
+Luxemburg, house of.
+Lyons, Richard.
+Lyons.
+Lyons, Council at (1245).
+Lyons, Council at (1274).
+Lyrics, English.
+Lys, the river.
+
+Macaulay's, G.C., edition of Gower's _Works_.
+Mackinnon's _History of Edward III._
+Macon, league of.
+Madden's, Sir F., edition of Matthew Paris' _Historia Minor_.
+Madog ap Llewelyn.
+Maelgwn.
+Maenan.
+Maes Madog, battle of.
+Maidstone.
+Maine.
+Mains. Elector of.
+Maitland's, F.W., _Memoranda de Parliamento_;
+ _Select Pleas of the Crown_;
+ _Bracton's Note Book_;
+ _Le Mirroir des Justices_;
+ _Select Passages from Bracton,_ etc.;
+ _Year Books of Edward II._
+ and _Canon Law_.
+Maitland, F.W., and Pollock, Sir F., _History of English Law_.
+
+Makower's, F., _Constitutional History of the Church of England_.
+Malestroit, truce of.
+Malmesbury, the Monk of.
+Malmesbury, William of.
+Malton.
+Maltravers, John.
+Mandeville, Geoffrey de.
+Manfred, King of Sicily.
+Mangonels.
+Manny, Sir Walter.
+Mannyng, Robert.
+Mansel, John.
+Mansura.
+Maps for period.
+Mar, Donald, Earl of.
+Marcel, Stephen.
+March of Calais.
+March (of Scotland), Patrick, Earl of.
+March of Wales, the.
+March of Wales, Earl of the.
+ See also Mortimer, Edmund, and Mortimer, Roger.
+March, Edmund Mortimer, Earl of (d. 1381).
+March, Roger Mortimer, first Earl of (d. 1330).
+ See also Mortimer, Roger, of Wigmore (d. 1330).
+Marche, Counts of La.
+Marche, La.
+Mare, Sir Peter de la.
+Margam, annals of abbey of.
+Margaret of England, Queen of Alexander III. of Scotland.
+Margaret of Flanders.
+Margaret of France, sister of Philip the Fair, and second Queen of
+Edward I.
+Margaret of Hainault, sister of Queen Philippa, Empress of Louis of
+Bavaria.
+Margaret of Provence, Queen of Louis IX. of France.
+Margaret, Queen of Eric, King of Norway, and mother of Margaret, Queen
+of Scots.
+Margaret, Queen of Scots, the Maid of Norway, daughter of Margaret and
+Eric of Norway.
+Margaret, sister of Alexander II. of Scotland, wife of Hubert de Burgh.
+Margaret, sister of David of Scotland.
+Margaret, Viscountess of Limoges.
+Margaret, wife of Philip of Burgundy.
+Mark, Count of.
+Marlborough, statute of.
+Marseilles.
+Marsh, Adam;
+ _Letters of_.
+Marsh, Geoffrey, justiciar of Ireland.
+Marshal, office of.
+Marshal, house of.
+Marshal, the Earls.
+ See Pembroke, Earl of;
+ Thomas of Brotherton, Earl;
+ March, Mortimer, Edmund, Earl of March;
+ and Percy, Henry.
+Marshal, Gilbert. See Pembroke, Gilbert Marshal, Earl of.
+Marshal, Isabella, wife of Richard of Cornwall.
+Marshal, Richard. See Pembroke, Richard Marshal, Earl of.
+Marshal, William. See Pembroke, William Marshal, the elder, Earl of,
+regent of England.
+Marshal, William, the younger. See Pembroke, William Marshal, the
+younger, Earl of.
+Martin IV., Pope.
+Martin, papal envoy.
+Martin's, C. Trice, _Registrum Epistolarum J. Peckham_.
+Mary of Brabant, Queen of France.
+Maturins, the.
+Mauclerc, Peter, Count of Brittany. See Peter.
+Maud, daughter of Henry, Duke of Lancaster.
+Maud of Artois, wife of Otto, Count of Burgundy.
+Maud's Castle.
+Mauléon, Savary de.
+Mauley, Peter de.
+Mauleys, the family of.
+Maupertuis.
+Mauron, battle of.
+Maxwell's _Robert the Bruce_.
+Maye, the river.
+Meath.
+Meaux, treaty of.
+Mechlin.
+Mediterranean, the.
+Melton, William, Archbishop of York.
+Melrose Abbey.
+Melrose, chronicle of.
+Menai Straits, the.
+Mendicants, the See also Friars.
+Meopham, Simon, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Mercenaries.
+Merchants,
+ statute of;
+ foreign;
+ English.
+Meredith ap Owen.
+Merioneth.
+Merionethshire.
+Merlin.
+Merton.
+"Merton, Rule of,".
+Merton, Walter of.
+Messina, Archbishop of.
+Methven, battle of.
+Metingham, John of.
+Meyer, Paul, his edition of the _Histoire de Guillaume le
+Maréchal_.
+Miausson, the river.
+Michel, Francisque.
+Milan.
+_Ministers' Accounts_.
+Minorites, the,
+ See also Franciscans.
+Minot, Lawrence.
+Minsterworth, Sir John.
+Miracle plays.
+Mirambeau.
+Miranda.
+_Mirroir des Justices, Le_.
+Mise of Amiens, the.
+Mise of Lewes, the.
+Model Parliament, the.
+ See Parliament.
+Mohammedans, the.
+Molinier, Auguste, Sources _de l'histoire de France_.
+Monasteries.
+_Monasticon_, Dugdale's.
+Monmouth, castle and town of.
+Monnow, the river.
+Mont Cenis, the.
+Montague, Sir William.
+ See also Salisbury, Earls of.
+Montague;
+ the house of.
+Montfavence, Bertrand of, Cardinal.
+Montfichet, Richard of.
+Montfort l'Amaury.
+Montfort, county of.
+Montfort, Amaury of.
+Montfort, the house of (Dukes of Brittany).
+ See also John IV. and John V., Dukes of Brittany.
+Montfort, the house of (Earls of Leicester).
+Montfort, Henry of.
+Montfort, John of, the elder. See Brittany, John, Duke of.
+Montfort, John of, the younger. See Brittany, John, Duke of.
+Montfort, Peter of.
+Montfort, Simon of, Count of Toulouse.
+ See also Leicester.
+Montfort Simon of, Earl of Leicester. See Lester.
+Montfort, Simon of, the younger, son of Simon, Earl of Leicester.
+Montgomery, castle and town of.
+Monthermer, Ralph of.
+Monthermer, Thomas of, _Montjoie_.
+Montmorenci, Matthew of.
+Montpellier, University of.
+Montpezat, lord of.
+Montreuil-sur-mer.
+ treaty of.
+Montrose.
+Mont-Saint-Martin, Monastery of.
+_Monumenta Franciscana_, Brewer's.
+_Monumenta Hist. Germanicae, Scriptores_, Pertz'.
+Moors of Granada.
+Moor, Sir Thomas de la.
+Moray.
+Moray, Randolph, Earl of.
+Moray, Sir Andrew.
+Morbihan.
+Morgan of Caerleon.
+Morgan, leader of Glamorganshire rebels.
+Morgarten, battle of.
+Morlaix.
+ battle of.
+Morley, Robert.
+Mortimer, Edmund (d. 1303).
+Mortimer, Edmund (d. 1381). See March, Edmund Mortimer, Earl of.
+Mortimer, Roger, of Chirk.
+Mortimer, Roger, of Wigmore (d. 1282).
+Mortimer, Roger, of Wigmore (d. 1330).
+ See also March, Roger Mortimer, first Earl of.
+Mortimer, Roger, grandson of Roger Mortimer, first Earl of March.
+Mortimer, Roger, son of Edmund, Earl of March.
+Mortimer, the house of.
+_Mortmain_, Statute of.
+Moselle, the river.
+Mountchensi, Joan of.
+Mount Sorrel.
+Mowbray, John of (of Scotland).
+Mowbray, John of.
+Murimuth, Adam.
+Myton, battle of.
+
+Najarilla, the river.
+Nájera, battle of.
+Nantes.
+Naples.
+Narbonne.
+Nassau, Adolf of. King of the Romans. See Adolf, King of the Romans.
+Navarre, Blanche of Artois, Queen of. See Blanche.
+Navarre, Henry III., King of. See Henry.
+Navarre, King of, Charles the Bad. See Charles.
+Navarre, Philip of. See Philip.
+Navarre, Theobald IV., King of. See Theobald.
+Navarre.
+Navarete,
+Navy, the English;
+ the French;
+ the Norman.
+Neath Abbey.
+Netherlands, the.
+Neufbourg, house of.
+Neufbourg, Henry of, Earl of Warwick. See Warwick.
+Nevers, Louis of. See Louis of Nevers, Count of Flanders.
+Nevers, the Count of.
+Neville of Raby, Lord.
+Neville, Ralph, Bishop of Chichester and Chancellor.
+Nevilles, the.
+Neville's Cross, battle of.
+Newark.
+Newcastle-on-Tyne.
+Newport-on-Usk.
+Nicholas IV., Pope.
+Nicolas's _History of the Royal Navy_.
+Nine, Council of.
+Niort.
+Nivernais, the.
+Norfolk;
+ earldom of.
+Norfolk, Roger Bigod, Earl of.
+Norfolk, Roger Bigod, Earl of, nephew of above.
+Norfolk, Thomas of Brotherton, Earl of See Thomas.
+Norham Castle.
+Norman architecture.
+Normandy.
+Normandy, Charles, Duke of. See Charles.
+Normandy, John, Duke of. See John, King of France.
+Normans, the;
+ in Ireland, the.
+Norsemen in Scotland, the.
+Northallerton.
+Northampton;
+ parliaments at;
+ treaty of Brigham confirmed at;
+ treaty of;
+ earldom of.
+Northampton, William Bohun, Earl of.
+Northamptonshire.
+Northburgh, Roger, Bishop of Lichfield or Coventry and treasurer.
+Northumberland.
+Norway, Eric, King of. See Eric.
+Norway, Margaret, the Maid of, Queen of Scotland. See Margaret.
+Norwich.
+Norwich, Bishops of. See Ayermine, William, and Pandulf.
+Nottingham.
+Nouaillé.
+
+Ochils, the.
+Ockham, William of.
+O'Connor, Phelim, King of Connaught. See Connaught.
+Odiham.
+O'Donnells, the.
+Oléron, Isle of.
+Oliver, illegitimate son of King John.
+Oloron, treaty of.
+Oman's _History of the Art of War in the Middle Ages_.
+O'Neils, the.
+Oise, the river.
+Ordainers, the Lords.
+Order of the Garter, the.
+Order of the Star, the.
+Orders, the Religious.
+Orders of Friars.
+Orewyn Bridge, battle of.
+_Originalia_ Rolls, the.
+Orkneys, the.
+Orleans, Duke of.
+Orleton, Adam, Bishop of Hereford.
+Ormonde, the Butler of Ireland, made Earl of.
+Ormesby, William, justiciar.
+Orne, the river.
+Orvieto.
+Orwell, port and river.
+Oseney Abbey;
+ _Annals_ of.
+Oswestry.
+O'Tooles, the.
+Otto, nuncio to England;
+ legate.
+Otto, Count of Burgundy.
+Ottobon, Cardinal, legate.
+Ottocar, King of Bohemia.
+Ouistreham.
+Ouse, the river.
+Owain _Lawgoch. See_ Owen of Wales.
+Owen of Wales, Sir Owen ap Thomas ap Rhodri.
+Owen the Red, son of Griffith ap Llewelyn.
+Owens College _Historical Essays_.
+Oxford,
+ University of,
+ Balliol College,
+ Merton College,
+ the Provisions of,
+ parliament at,
+ Exeter College.
+Oxfordshire.
+Oxnead, John of.
+
+Painting in Westminster Abbey.
+Palatine, the Elector.
+Palermo.
+Palestine.
+Palestrina, Cardinal-bishop of.
+Palgrave's, Sir F.T., _Parliamentary Writs and Writs of Military
+Service_.
+ his _Documents illustrating the History of Scotland_.
+Pamplona.
+Pandulf, Papal Legate and Bishop of Norwich.
+Pantheism.
+Papacy, the,
+ See also under Popes.
+Paris,
+ University of,
+ College of the Sorbonne in,
+ Cathedral of,
+ parliament of,
+ treaty of (1259),
+ treaty of (1303),
+ treaty of (1327).
+Paris, Matthew.
+Parliament, of,
+ the mad (1258),
+ of Oxford,
+ growth Of,
+ at Oxford (1264),
+ at Northampton (1267),
+ at Bury (1267),
+ of 1273,
+ at Westminster (1275),
+ of 1283,
+ at Shrewsbury (1284),
+ at Acton Burnell (1284),
+ of 1289,
+ at London (1294),
+ the model(1295),
+ of the perambulation (1300),
+ at Lincoln (1301),
+ at Westminster (1305),
+ of Carlisle (1307),
+ of 1308,
+ at Westminster (1309),
+ at Stamford (1309),
+ of London (1310),
+ at London (1315),
+ at Lincoln (1316),
+ the Irish,
+ at York (1318),
+ at York (1319),
+ in London (July, 1320),
+ at York (May, 1322),
+ at Westminster (January, 1327),
+ at Salisbury (October, 1328),
+ at Northampton (1329),
+ at Winchester (March, 1330),
+ prorogued to Westminster (November, 1330),
+ of April 23, 1341,
+ of April, 1343,
+ of 1347,
+ of 1371,
+ of 1372,
+ the Good (April, 1376),
+ of 1377,
+ of Paris, see Paris, parliament of.
+Parthenai.
+Passelewe, Robert.
+_Pastaureaux_, the.
+Patrick, Earl of March,
+ See also March (Scotland), Earl of.
+Pauli's, R., _Geschichte von England_.
+Pavia, Galeazzo Visconti, Lord of.
+Paynel, Fulk.
+_Pearl_, the, poem of.
+Peasants' revolt, the.
+Peasants, revolts of French.
+Peckham, John, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Peebles.
+_Pell Records_, the.
+Pembroke, earldom of.
+Pembroke, Gilbert Marshal, Earl of.
+Pembroke, Richard Marshal. Earl of.
+Pembroke, William Marshal, the elder, Regent and Earl of,
+ _History of_.
+Pembroke, William Marshal, the younger, Earl of.
+Pembroke, Aymer of Valence, Earl of.
+Pembroke. John Hastings, second Earl of that house.
+Pembroke. William of. See William of Valence.
+Pembrokeshire, palatine county of.
+Penance of Jesus Christ, Friars of the.
+Penne.
+Penrith.
+Penthièvre, county of.
+Penthièvre-Tréguier, county of.
+Perche, Count of.
+Percy, Henry, grandson of Earl Warenne.
+Percy, Henry, marshal of England.
+Percy, Sir Thomas, seneschal of Poitou.
+Percy, the family of.
+Périgord.
+Périgord, Count of.
+Périgueux,
+ bishopric of.
+Péronne.
+Perpendicular style in architecture.
+Perrers, Alice.
+Perth.
+Pertz's _Monumenta_.
+Peruzzi, the.
+Perveddwlad.
+Peter, Cardinal. See Gomez, Peter.
+Peter III., King of Aragon.
+Peter Mauclerc, Count of Brittany.
+Peter of Aigueblanche, Bishop of Hereford,
+ See Aigueblanche.
+Peter of Gaveston. See Gaveston.
+Peter of Savoy, Earl of Richmond.
+Peter of Spain, Cardinal.
+Peter Roger, Archbishop of Rouen. See Roger, Peter, and Clement VI.
+Peter the Chamberlain.
+Peter the Cruel, King of Castile.
+Peterhouse, Cambridge.
+Peter's Pence.
+Petit's _Charles de Valois_.
+Petit-Dutaillis, M.,
+ his _Étude sur Louis VIII._
+Petrarch, Francis.
+_Petrariae_.
+Pevensey Castle.
+Philip II., Augustus, King of France.
+Philip III., the Bold, King of France.
+Philip IV., the Fair, King of France.
+Philip V., the Long, King of France.
+Philip VI. of Valois, King of France.
+Philip, Count of Savoy.
+Philip, Count of Valois, See also Philip VI., King of France.
+Philip of Navarre.
+Philip of Rouvres, Duke of Burgundy.
+Philip the Bold, Count of Évreux.
+Philip the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, son of John, King of France.
+Philippa, daughter of Lionel, Duke of Clarence, Countess of March.
+Philippa of Hainault, Queen of Edward III.
+Philippine, daughter of Guy of Dampierre, Count of Flanders.
+Philpots, the.
+_Philobiblon,_ the, of Richard of Bury.
+Philosophy.
+Picardy.
+Pike, L.O., his editions of the _Year Books_.
+Pipe, James.
+Pipe Rolls.
+Pipton, treaty o.
+Pirenne's _Bibliographie de l'histoire de Belgique_.
+ _Histoire de Belgique_.
+Pisa, Agnellus of. See Agnellus.
+Plague, the. See Black Death.
+Plays, miracle.
+Plessis, John du, Earl of Warwick.
+ See Warwick.
+Ploermel.
+Plympton.
+Poissy.
+Poitevins.
+Poitiers,
+ battle of,
+ sources for.
+Poitiers, Alfonse of. See Alfonse.
+Poitou,
+ scutage of.
+Poitou, Count of, Richard, son of King John, Count of. See Richard.
+Polain's edition of _Jean le Bel,_
+Pole, the house of
+Pole, William de la.
+Pollock, Sir P., and Maitland's _History of English Law,_
+_Polychronicon,_ Higden's.
+Pons.
+Pont-Sainte-Maxence.
+Pontefract,
+ Castle.
+Ponthieu.
+Pontigny.
+Pontoise.
+Pontvallain, battle of.
+Poole's, R.L., _Mediæval Thought,_
+ his _Wycliffe_,
+ his _Oxford Historical Atlas_.
+Popes.
+ See under Innocent III.,
+ Honorius III.,
+ Gregory IX.,
+ Innocent IV.,
+ Alexander IV.,
+ Urban IV.,
+ Clement IV.,
+ Gregory X.,
+ Nicholas III.,
+ Martin IV.,
+ Honorius IV.,
+ Nicholas IV.,
+ Celestine V.,
+ Boniface VIII.,
+ Benedict XL,
+ Clement V.,
+ John XXII.,
+ Benedict XII.,
+ Clement VI.,
+ Urban V.,
+ Gregory XL.
+Port Blanc.
+Ports, the Cinque.
+Portsmouth.
+Portugal, Ferdinand of.
+Powys;
+ Castle.
+Powys, Charltons of. See Charltons.
+_Praemunire_ statute of.
+Preachers, Order of. See Dominicans.
+Pressuti's Registers of _Honorius III._
+Preston.
+Prices, rise in, after the Black Death.
+Principality of Wales, the.
+Priories, the alien.
+Proclamation in English, French and Latin.
+Prothero's _Simon de Montfort_.
+Provençals.
+Provence.
+Provence, Raymond Berengar IV., Count of,
+ See Raymond Berengar.
+Proving.
+Provisions, papal;
+ of Oxford, the;
+ of Westminster, the;
+ of Worcester.
+Provisors, statute of.
+Public Record Office, the.
+Purveyance.
+Puymirol.
+Pyel, John, mayor of London.
+Pyrenees, the.
+
+Quercy
+_Quia Emptores_ statute.
+Quièret, Hugh.
+Quincy, Saer de, Earl of Winchester. See Winchester.
+
+Rageman, statute of.
+Ragman. Roll, the.
+Ranee, the river.
+Randolph, Sir Thomas, Earl of Moray.
+Rashdall's _Universities of the Middle Ages_.
+Rathlin Island.
+Rationalism.
+Ravenspur.
+Raymond Berengar IV., Count of Provence.
+Raymond VII., Count of Toulouse.
+Record of Carnarvon, the.
+Record Commission, the.
+Records, as sources for history;
+ of Court of Chancery;
+ of Court of Exchequer;
+ of Common Law Courts;
+ of King's Bench and Court of Common Pleas;
+ of Scotland;
+ Welsh;
+ Papal.
+_Recueil des historiens de la France_, begun by Dom Bouquet.
+Red Hills, the.
+Redesdale.
+Redesdale, Gilbert of Umfraville, Lord of. See Umfraville.
+Regalis Devotionis, Bull.
+Reginald, Count of Gelderland.
+Registers, Bishops;
+ Papal Calendars of.
+Reims.
+Reims, Archbishop of.
+Renaissance of the twelfth century, the.
+Rennes.
+Réole, La.
+_Reports of Deputy-keeper of the Records_;
+ _of Historical Manuscripts Commission_.
+Revolt, the peasants'.
+Reynolds, Walter, Treasurer of England and Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Rhine, the.
+Rhine, Count Palatine of the.
+Rhineland, the.
+Rhos, Cantred of.
+Rhone Valley, the.
+Rhuddlan Castle.
+Rhunoviog, Cantred of.
+Rhys ap Howel.
+Rhys ap Meredith.
+Rhys, J., and J.G. Evans' _Red Book of Hergest_.
+Rich, St. Edmund, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Richard I.
+Richard of Bordeaux, son of the Black Prince.
+Richard, son of King John, titular Count of Poitou, Earl of Cornwall
+and King of the Romans.
+Richmond, John, Earl of. See John of Gaunt.
+Richmond, John of Brittany, Earl of. See John of Brittany.
+Richmond, Peter Mauclerc, Earl of.
+ See Peter, Count or Duke of Brittany.
+Richmond, Peter of Savoy, Earl of. See Peter of Savoy.
+Richmond (place).
+Richmond, Simon de Montfort, made Earl of. See Leicester, Earl of
+Rievaux.
+Rigaud, Bishop of Winchester
+Rigaud, Eudes, Archbishop of Rouen.
+Rigg's, J.M., _Select Pleas of the Jewish Exchequer_.
+Riley's, H.T., his edition of _Rishanger_, etc.
+Rioms.
+Ripon.
+Rishanger, William.
+Rivaux, Peter of, treasurer.
+Robert I, Bruce, King of Scots. See also Bruce, Robert.
+Robert II, Steward of Scotland, afterwards King Robert II.
+Robert, Steward of Scotland.
+Robert, Count of Artois.
+Robert of Artois, enemy of Philip VI.
+Robert, Count of Namur.
+Roberts' _Calendarium Genealogicum_.
+Roche Derien, La, battle of.
+Rochelle, La.
+Rochelle, battle of La.
+Roches, Peter des, Bishop of Winchester.
+Rochester, Castle and city.
+Rockingham Castle.
+Rodez, Bishop of.
+Roger, Peter. See also Clement VI Pope.
+Rogers, J.E. Thorold, _History of Agriculture and Prices_.
+Roles Gascons. See Rolls
+Roll, the Ragman.
+Rolle, Richard
+Rolls;
+ the hundred;
+ patent;
+ the close;
+ of parliament;
+ series, the;
+ of Court of Chancery;
+ Charter;
+ _Escheat_ or _Inquisitiones post mortem_;
+ fine;
+ _Excerpt a e Rotulis Finium_ (C. Roberts');
+ exchequer;
+ Assize;
+ Coroners;
+_Romana Mater_, bull.
+Romances.
+Romanesque architecture.
+Romans, Adolf of Nassau, King of the, see Adolf of Nassau;
+ Charles of Moravia, King of the, see Charles IV;
+ Henry, King of the, see Henry;
+ Rudolf of Hapsburg, King of the, see Rudolf;
+ William of Holland, King of the, see William of Holland.
+Rome.
+Romney.
+Romont.
+Romorantin Castle.
+Roncesvalles, Pass of.
+Roncière, de la, _Histoire de la Marine Française_.
+Rose Castle.
+Roslin.
+Rostein, the family of.
+Rotuli. See Rolls.
+Round Table at Windsor.
+Rouen,
+ Archbishops of. See Rigaud, Eudes, Roger, Peter.
+Rouergue,
+ Counts of. See Armagnac, Count of.
+Roussillon.
+Roxburgh, town and castle;
+ treaty of.
+Royan.
+Rudel, Elie, lord of Bergerac.
+Rudolf of Hapsburg, King of the Romans.
+Runnymede.
+Ruthin.
+Rye.
+Rymer's _Foedera_.
+
+Sabina, Guy Foulquois, Cardinal-bishop of, papal legate.
+ See Clement IV.
+Sacerdotium, the.
+Sack, Friars of the.
+Sailors, English.
+Saints, English, honour paid to.
+St. Albans;
+ abbey;
+ chroniclers of abbey of;
+St Albans, Abbot Simon of.
+St Andrews;
+ Bishops of. See Fraser and Lamberton.
+Saint-Bavon, abbey of.
+St. Davids, Bishop of. See Bek, Thomas.
+Saint-Denis.
+Saint-Émilion.
+Saint-Germain-en-Laye.
+St. Giles, John of.
+Saint-James-de-Beuvron.
+Saint-Jean-d'Angely.
+Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port.
+St. John, John of.
+Saint-Lo.
+Saint-Macaire.
+Saint-Mahé.
+Saint-Malo.
+Saint-Omer.
+Saint-Pol-de-Leon.
+St. Paul's, London;
+ canons of;
+ dean of;
+ annalist of;
+ See also London.
+Saint-Quentin.
+Saint-Sardos.
+Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte.
+Saint-Sever.
+Saint-Vaast-de-la-Hougue.
+Saint-Valery.
+Sainte-Mère-Eglise, William of, Bishop of London.
+Saints, English.
+Saintes.
+Saintonge.
+Salerno, Charles, Prince of.
+Salic Law, the.
+Salisbury;
+ cathedral;
+ treaty of;
+ parliaments at.
+Salisbury, Henry, of Lacy, Earl of. See Lincoln.
+Salisbury, Thomas of Lancaster, Earl of. See Thomas.
+Salisbury, William Longsword, Earl of.
+Salisbury, William Montague, Earl of.
+ See also Montague, William.
+Salisbury, William Montague, Earl of (son of the above).
+Salvatierra.
+Sambre, the river.
+Sanchia of Provence, second wife of Richard of Cornwall.
+Sandal Castle.
+Sandale, Bishop of Winchester.
+Sandwich.
+Santander.
+Satires, English.
+Savoy;
+ palace of the.
+Savoy, Amadeus III., Count of Savoy. See Amadeus.
+Savoy, Boniface of. See Boniface.
+Savoy, Peter of. See Peter.
+Savoy, Philip of. See Philip.
+Savoy, Thomas of. See Thomas.
+Savoyards, the.
+Saxony.
+_Scalachronica_, Sir T. Grey's.
+Scarborough Castle.
+Scheldt, the river.
+Schiltron of pikemen.
+Schism between eastern and western Churches.
+Scholasticism.
+Science.
+_Scimus Fili_, papal letter.
+Scone.
+Scotland.
+Scrope, Sir Richard le, treasurer.
+Sculpture.
+Scutage of Bedford, the;
+ of Kerry;
+ of Poitou.
+Seeley's _Life and Reign of Edward I._
+Segrave, John.
+Segrave, Stephen.
+Seine, the river.
+Selby, William.
+Selden Society, the.
+Selkirk;
+ forest of;
+ See Ettrick.
+Sens.
+Sens, William of.
+Septs, the Irish.
+Serlo, Mayor of London.
+Severn, the river.
+Sheen.
+Sherburn-in-Elmet.
+Sheriffs;
+ for Scotland.
+Shire, system in Wales;
+ courts;
+ knights of the.
+Shrewsbury;
+ Castle of;
+ treaty of;
+ parliament at.
+Shrewsbury, Ralph of, Bishop of Bath and Wells.
+Shropshire.
+Sicilian Vespers, the.
+Sicily.
+Silegrave's Henry of, _Chronicle_.
+Simony.
+Siward, Richard.
+Skeat's editions of Chaucer and Langland.
+Skelton Castle.
+Skenfrith, Castle of.
+Skicsea Castle.
+Sluys.
+Smith's, S. Armitage, _John of Gaunt_.
+Smithfield.
+Snowdon.
+Soissonais, the.
+Soisy.
+Sellers, Rostand de, seneschal of Gascony.
+Sologne, the.
+Solway, the.
+Somme, the river.
+Sorbon, Robert of.
+Soubise.
+Southampton.
+Southwark.
+Spalding, Peter of.
+Spain. See also Aragon and Castile.
+Spain, Peter of, Cardinal. See Peter.
+Speaker, office of.
+Spruner-Menke's _Historischer Hand-Atlas_.
+Staffordshire.
+Stammoor.
+Stamford;
+ parliaments at;
+ statute of.
+Stanley Abbey, Chronicle of.
+Staple, ordinance of the;
+ system the.
+Stapledon, Walter, Bishop of Exeter.
+Statute of ----
+ Acton Burnell.
+ Carlisle (1307).
+ _De Donis_.
+ Gloucester.
+ Kilkenny.
+ Marlborough.
+ Merchants.
+ Mortmain.
+ _Praemunire_.
+ Provisors.
+ _Quia Emptores_.
+ Rageman.
+ Stamford.
+ Treasons (1352).
+ Wales.
+ Westminster, the first;
+ the second;
+ the third.
+ 1341 as to election of auditors of royal officers.
+_Statutum de Tallagio won concedendo_
+Stephen, papal collector.
+Stephen, King.
+Stephens, W. R W., his _History of the English Church_.
+Stevenson's, J., _Documents of Scotland_;
+ _Chronicon de Lanenost_;
+ edition of _Coggeshall's Chronicon Anglicanum_.
+Stevenson's, W.H., _Records of Nottingham_.
+Steward, of England, Simon de Montfort;
+ of Scotland, the.
+Stewart Kings of Scotland.
+Stirling Bridge, battle of.
+Stirling, castle and town.
+Stone, use of, in building houses.
+Stratford.
+Stratford, John, chancellor, Bishop of Winchester and Archbishop of
+Canterbury.
+Stratford, Robert, Bishop of Chichester, chancellor.
+Strathearn.
+Strathspey.
+Stratton, Adam of.
+Strongbow.
+Stubbs' _Select Charters_;
+ Councils;
+ edition of Walter of Coventry;
+ _Chronicles of Edward I and Edward II._;
+ _Constitutional History_.
+_Studium_, the.
+_Studium Generale_. See University.
+Subinfeudation.
+_Subsidy Rolls_.
+Sudbury, Simon of, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Suffolk.
+Suffolk, Ufford, Earl of.
+Surrey.
+Sussex.
+Swale, the river.
+Swaledale.
+Swansea, castle and town.
+Swinbrooke.
+Syria.
+
+Taillebourg, battle of.
+_Tallagio non concedendo, Statutum de_.
+Talleyrand, the Cardinal.
+Tancarville, Lord of, Chamberlain of France.
+Tany, Luke de, seneschal of Gascony.
+Tarascon, Treaty of.
+_Taxatio Ecclesiastica Angliæ et Walliae_.
+Taxation;
+ papal;
+ of clergy.
+Taxes, on exports;
+ on land.
+Taxster, John de, Chronicle of.
+Tayster. See Taxster.
+Teivi, the river.
+Templars, Order of the;
+ suppression of the.
+Temple, Church of the;
+ the New.
+Temple, Knights of the. See Templars.
+Tertiaries.
+_Testa de Neville_, the.
+Thames, the.
+Theiner's _Vetera Monumenta Hib. et Scot. Historiam Illustrantia_.
+Theobald IV, Count of Champagne and King of Navarre.
+Theology.
+Thérouanne.
+Thiérache, the.
+Thirty, battle of the.
+Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, Leicester and Derby.
+Thomas of Brotherton, Earl of Norfolk, son of Edward I.
+Thomas of Savoy, uncle of Eleanor of Provence.
+Thomas of Woodstock, Earl of Gloucester.
+Thomas, St. Aquinas See Aquinas, St. Thomas.
+Thomas, St., of Canterbury;
+ translation of relics of. See also Becket.
+Thomas, St., of Cantilupe. See Cantilupe.
+Thomist teaching. See Aquinas, St. Thomas.
+Thompson's, Sir E. Maunde, _Chronicon Angliæ_;
+ _Chronicon Galfridi le Baker_.
+Thoresby, John, Archbishop of York.
+Thorpe, Benjamin, his _Florence of Worcester_.
+Thorpe, Sir Robert, Chancellor and Chief Justice.
+Thouars,
+ house of.
+Thouars, the Viscount of.
+Tintagel Castle.
+Tickhill Castle.
+Torksey.
+Torture.
+Toulouse.
+Toulouse, Joan, Countess of. See Joan.
+Toulouse, Raymond VII., Count of. See Raymond VII.
+Touraine.
+Tournai.
+Tournaments.
+Tours.
+Tout's _Edward I._;
+ _Papacy and Empire_.
+Tower, of London, the;
+ the Round, Windsor.
+Tower Hill.
+Towns, growth of;
+ Gascon;
+ Welsh;
+ "Staple".
+Towy, the river.
+Trade.
+Trailbaston, Ordinance of.
+Translations into English.
+Treasons, Statute of.
+Treasurer, office of.
+Treaty of ----
+ Aberconway.
+ Amiens.
+ Athis.
+ Berwick.
+ Bordeaux.
+ Brétigni.
+ Brigham.
+ Bruges.
+ Calais (1347);
+ (1360).
+ Canfranc.
+ Coblenz.
+ Esplechin.
+ Guérande.
+ Guillond.
+ Lambeth.
+ Leek.
+ London.
+ Malestroit.
+ Meaux.
+ Montreuil.
+ Newcastle.
+ Northampton.
+ Oloron.
+ Paris (1259);
+ (1303);
+ (1327).
+ Pipton.
+ Roxburgh.
+ Saint-Germain.
+ Salisbury.
+ Shrewsbury.
+ Tarascon.
+ Valenciennes.
+ Vincennes.
+_Trébuchet_, the.
+Tréguier;
+ County of Penthièvre-Tréguier.
+Trent, the river.
+Trevelyan's, G.M., _England in the Age of Wycliffe_.
+Trevet. See Trivet.
+Trier.
+Trim.
+Trinitarian Friars, the.
+Trivet, Nicholas, Dominican chronicler.
+Trokelowe, J. de, _Annales_.
+Troyes.
+Trussell, Sir William.
+Tunbridge.
+Tunis.
+Turner's, G.J., _Pleas of the Forest_;
+ _Select Pleas of the Forest_;
+ _Minority of Henry III., 1_.
+Turberville, Payne of.
+Turberville, Sir Thomas.
+Turks, the.
+Tuscans.
+Tuscany.
+Tutbury Castle.
+Tweed, the river.
+Tweeddale.
+Twemlow's _Calendars of Papal Registers_.
+Twenge, Sir Robert.
+"Twenty-Four," the.
+Twiss, Sir T.'s edition of Bracton.
+Tyburn Elms.
+Tynedale.
+Tynemouth.
+Tyre, Archbishop of.
+
+Ufford, Earl of Suffolk. See Suffolk.
+Ughtred, Sir Thomas.
+Ulster.
+Ulster, Hugh de Lacy, Earl of.
+Ulster, Lionel of Clarence, Earl of. See also Lionel.
+Ulster, Richard de Burgh, Earl of.
+Umfravilles, the.
+Umfraville, Gilbert of, Lord of Redesdale.
+_Unam Sanctam_ Bull.
+Union, treaty of, between England and Scotland.
+Universities, the. See also Cambridge, Montpellier, Oxford, Paris.
+Urban IV, Pope.
+Urban V, Pope.
+Ure, the river.
+Usk Castle and town.
+Usk, River;
+ Valley, the.
+Usury.
+
+Vaissète's _Histoire de Languedoc_.
+Vallée aux Clercs, near Crecy.
+Valois, house of.
+Valois, Charles of. See Charles.
+Valence, Aymer of. See Pembroke, Aymer, Earl of, and Aymer, Bishop of
+Winchester.
+Valence, William of, Lord of Pembroke.
+Valence, William of Savoy, Bishop-elect of.
+Valenciennes.
+Vander Kindere's _Siècle des Artevelde_.
+Vannes.
+Venice.
+Vercelli, Church of St. Andrew at.
+Vermandois, the.
+Verneuil.
+Vescy, John de, 131
+Vescy, Lady, 248
+Vespers, the Sicilian, 146
+Vic, De, his _Histoire de Languedoc_, 462.
+Vidal de la Blache's _Tableau de la Géographie de la France_.
+Vienne, the river;
+ Council of.
+Vierzon.
+Villeins, the.
+Vincennes, Convention of the Wood of.
+Vinogradoff's _Villainage in England_.
+Visconti, Bernabò.
+Visconti, Galeazzo.
+Visconti of Milan, the.
+Visconti, Violante, daughter of Galeazzo, of Pavia.
+_Vision of Piers Plowman_, Langland's.
+Viterbo.
+Vitoria,
+Vyve-Saint-Bavon, truce of.
+
+Wadicourt.
+Wace's _Brut_.
+Wages affected by Black Death.
+Wake, Lord.
+Wakes, the, of Liddell and Lincolnshire.
+Waleis, Henry le, Mayor of London.
+Wales;
+ statute of;
+ records of;
+ annals of.
+Wallace, Sir William, of Eldershe.
+Wallon's _Louis IX._
+Wallingford Castle and town.
+Walsingham, Thomas, _Gesta. Abbatum S. Albani_;
+ _Historia Anglicana of_.
+Walton.
+Wardrobe accounts.
+Ware.
+Warenne, William, Earl (d 1240).
+Warenne, John, Earl (d 1304), son of above.
+Warenne, John, Earl (d 1347), grandson of above.
+Wark, the Lord of.
+Warwick Castle.
+Warwick, Beauchamps of. See Beauchamps;
+ Neufbourg, Earls of.
+Warwick, Guy of Beauchamp, Earl of.
+Warwick, Henry of Neufbourg, Earl of.
+Warwick, John du Plessis, Earl of.
+Warwick, Thomas of Beauchamp, Earl of.
+Warwick, William Beauchamp, Earl of.
+Waverley, Annals of Abbey of.
+Weald, the.
+Wear, the river.
+Wells, Hugh of, Bishop of Lincoln.
+Wells, Bishops of Bath and,
+ See Burnell;
+ Robert;
+ Drokensford;
+ Sandale.
+Wenceslaus of Luxemburg, Duke of Brabant, brother of the Emperor,
+Charles IV.
+Wendover, Roger of;
+ his _Flores Historiarum_.
+Westminster;
+ Abbey;
+ the Provisions of;
+ the first statute of;
+ second statute of;
+ third statute of;
+ Hall;
+ St. Stephen's Chapel.
+Westminster, Abbot of. See also Lansham, Simon.
+Westminster, Matthew of, imaginary chronicler.
+Westmoreland.
+Weyland, Sir Thomas, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas.
+Weymouth.
+Whalley Abbey.
+Wharton's _Anglia Sacra_.
+Whitecastle.
+White Friars, the.
+Whittaker, W.J., his edition of _Le Mirroir des Justices_.
+Whittingtons, the.
+Whittlesea, William, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Wicklow.
+Wigford.
+Wight, Isle of.
+Wigmore, Castle;
+ house of.
+Wigmore, Roger Mortimer of. See Mortimer, Roger.
+Wilkin of the Weald.
+Wilkins' _Concilia_.
+William I. of Avesnes, Count of Hainault, Holland and Zealand.
+William II. of Avesnes, Count of Hainault, Holland and Zealand. Son of
+the above.
+William of Bavaria, Count of Hainault, Holland and Zealand.
+William of Hatfield, son of Edward III.
+William of Holland, King of the Romans.
+William of Norwich, St.
+William of Savoy, Bishop-elect of Valence and Winchester.
+William of Valence, Lord of Pembroke.
+William I. the Conqueror.
+William the Lion, King of Scots.
+Wiltshire.
+Winchelsea;
+ naval battle off.
+Winchelsea, Robert, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Winchester;
+ bishopric of;
+ Cathedral of;
+ parliament of March 1330, at;
+ Annals of.
+Winchester, Bishops of.
+ See Edington, William;
+ Roches, Peter des;
+ Stratford, John;
+ Aymer of Valence;
+ Woodlock, Henry;
+ William of Savoy;
+ Wykeham, William of.
+Winchester, Hugh Despenser, the elder, Earl of. See Despenser.
+Winchester, Saer de Quincy, Earl of.
+Windsor, town and castle;
+ Round Table at;
+ Chapel, St. George's at.
+Wingham, Henry.
+Wishart, Robert, Bishop of Glasgow.
+Wither, William.
+Wolvesey Castle, Winchester.
+Women in the law courts;
+ French law of succession of.
+Woodlock, Henry, Bishop of Winchester.
+Woodstock.
+Wool trade.
+Worcester;
+ Bishops of, see Cantilupe, Walter; Reynolds, Walter.
+Worcester, Provisions of;
+ _Annals of_.
+Wright's, T., _Political Songs_;
+ _Political Songs and Poems_.
+_Writs, Parliamentary_, edited by Sir F. Palgrave.
+Wycliffe, John;
+ his writings.
+Wye, the river.
+Wykeham, William of, Bishop of Winchester;
+ his _Register_.
+Wykes, Thomas, _Chronicle of_.
+Wynn, John.
+Wyntoun, Andrew, _Originale_ by.
+
+Yale.
+Yarmouth.
+_Year Books_, the.
+York;
+ parliaments at;
+ house of.
+York, Archbishops of.
+ See Giffard, Walter;
+ Greenfield, William;
+ Grey, Walter;
+ Melton, William;
+ Thoresby, John;
+ Zouch, William de la.
+York, Edmund of Langley, Earl of Cambridge, Duke of. See Edmund.
+Yorkshire.
+Ypres.
+Yrvon, the river.
+Ystradvellte.
+
+Zealand, county of.
+Zouch, William de la, Archbishop of York.
+Zwyn, the river;
+ harbour.
+
+
+CORRIGENDA
+
+Chapter II, Paragraph 5, for Roger Bigod read Hugh Bigod.
+
+Chapter X, Paragraph 4, for Earl of Cornwall read Earl of Lancaster.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The History of England, by T.F. Tout
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND ***
+
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The History of England, by T.F. Tout
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The History of England
+ From the Accession of Henry III. to the Death of Edward III. (1216-1377)
+
+Author: T.F. Tout
+
+Editor: William Hunt and Reginald L. Poole
+
+Release Date: September 10, 2005 [EBook #16679]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Lee Dawei, Anurag Garg, Turgut Dincer and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<h1><a name="TOP" id="TOP" />THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND</h1>
+
+<h4>FROM THE ACCESSION OF HENRY III.</h4>
+
+<h4>TO THE DEATH OF EDWARD III.</h4>
+
+<h5>(1216-1377)</h5>
+
+<h4>BY</h4>
+
+<h2>T.F. TOUT, M.A.</h2>
+
+<h4>PROFESSOR OF MEDIÆVAL AND MODERN HISTORY IN THE</h4>
+
+<h4>UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER</h4>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>THE POLITICAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND</h2>
+
+<h4>IN TWELVE VOLUMES</h4>
+
+<p>Seventy-six years have passed since Lingard completed his
+HISTORY OF ENGLAND, which ends with the Revolution of 1688. During
+that period historical study has made a great advance. Year after
+year the mass of materials for a new History of England has
+increased; new lights have been thrown on events and characters,
+and old errors have been corrected. Many notable works have been
+written on various periods of our history; some of them at such
+length as to appeal almost exclusively to professed historical
+students. It is believed that the time has come when the advance
+which has been made in the knowledge of English history as a whole
+should be laid before the public in a single work of fairly
+adequate size. Such a book should be founded on independent thought
+and research, but should at the same time be written with a full
+knowledge of the works of the best modern historians and with a
+desire to take advantage of their teaching wherever it appears
+sound.</p>
+
+<p>The vast number of authorities, printed and in manuscript, on
+which a History of England should be based, if it is to represent
+the existing state of knowledge, renders co-operation almost
+necessary and certainly advisable. The History, of which this
+volume is an instalment, is an attempt to set forth in a readable
+form the results at present attained by research. It will consist
+of twelve volumes by twelve different writers, each of them chosen
+as being specialty capable of dealing with the period which he
+undertakes, and the editors, while leaving to each author as free a
+hand as possible, hope to insure a general similarity in method of
+treatment, so that the twelve volumes may in their contents, as
+well as in their outward appearance, form one History.</p>
+
+<p>As its title imports, this History will primarily deal with
+politics, with the History of England and, after the date of the
+union with Scotland, Great Britain, as a state or body politic; but
+as the life of a nation is complex, and its condition at any given
+time cannot be understood without taking into account the various
+forces acting upon it, notices of religious matters and of
+intellectual, social, and economic progress will also find place in
+these volumes. The footnotes will, so far as is possible, be
+confined to references to authorities, and references will not be
+appended to statements which appear to be matters of common
+knowledge and do not call for support. Each volume will have an
+Appendix giving some account of the chief authorities, original and
+secondary, which the author has used. This account will be compiled
+with a view of helping students rather than of making long lists of
+books without any notes as to their contents or value. That the
+History will have faults both of its own and such as will always in
+some measure attend co-operative work, must be expected, but no
+pains have been spared to make it, so far as may be, not wholly
+unworthy of the greatness of its subject.</p>
+
+<p>Each volume, while forming part of a complete History, will also
+in itself be a separate and complete book, will be sold separately,
+and will have its own index, and two or more maps.</p>
+
+<p class="one">Vol. I. to 1066. By Thomas Hodgkin, D.C.L., Litt.D.,
+Fellow of University College, London; Fellow of the British
+Academy.</p>
+
+<p class="one">Vol. II. 1066 to 1216. By George Burton Adams, M.A.,
+Professor of History in Yale University, New Haven,
+Connecticut.</p>
+
+<p class="one">Vol. III. 1216 to 1377. By T.F. Tout, M.A.,
+Professor of Medieval and Modern History in the Victoria University
+of Manchester; formerly Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford.</p>
+
+<p class="one">Vol. IV. 1377 to 1485. By C. Oman, M.A., Fellow of
+All Souls' College, and Deputy Professor of Modern History in the
+University of Oxford.</p>
+
+<p class="one">Vol. V. 1485 to 1547. By H.A.L. Fisher, M.A., Fellow
+and Tutor of New College, Oxford.</p>
+
+<p class="one">Vol. VI. 1547 to 1603. By A.F. Pollard, M.A.,
+Professor of Constitutional History in University College,
+London.</p>
+
+<p class="one">Vol. VII. 1603 to 1660. By F.C. Montague, M.A.,
+Professor of History in University College, London; formerly Fellow
+of Oriel College, Oxford.</p>
+
+<p class="one">Vol. VIII. 1660 to 1702. By Richard Lodge, M.A.,
+Professor of History in the University of Edinburgh; formerly
+Fellow of Brasenose College, Oxford.</p>
+
+<p class="one">Vol. IX. 1702 to 1760. By I.S. Leadam, M.A.,
+formerly Fellow of Brasenose College, Oxford.</p>
+
+<p class="one">Vol. X. 1760 to 1801. By the Rev. William Hunt,
+M.A., D. Litt, Trinity College, Oxford.</p>
+
+<p class="one">Vol. XI. 1801 to 1837. By the Hon. George C.
+Brodrick, D.C.L., late Warden of Merton College, Oxford, and J K.
+Fotheringham, M.A., Magdalen College, Oxford, Lecturer in Classics
+at King's College, London.</p>
+
+<p class="one">Vol. XII. 1837 to 1901. By Sidney J Low, M.A.,
+Balliol College, Oxford, formerly Lecturer on History at King's
+College, London.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>The Political History of England</h2>
+
+<h4>IN TWELVE VOLUMES</h4>
+
+<h4>EDITED BY WILLIAM HUNT, D. LITT., AND</h4>
+
+<h4>REGINALD L. POOLE, M.A.</h4>
+
+<h3>III.</h3>
+
+<h3>THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND</h3>
+
+<h4>FROM THE ACCESSION OF HENRY III. TO THE</h4>
+
+<h4>DEATH OF EDWARD III.</h4>
+
+<h4>1216-1377</h4>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER I.</h3>
+
+<h5>THE REGENCY OF WILLIAM MARSHAL.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">19 Oct., 1216.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of King John</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg001">1</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Position of parties</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg001">1</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Church on the king's side</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg002">2</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">28 Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Coronation of Henry III.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg003">3</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">11 Nov.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Great council at Bristol.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg004">4</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">12 Nov.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The first charter of Henry III.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg005">5</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1216-17.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Progress of the war.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg006">6</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1217.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Rising of Wilkin of the Weald.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg007">7</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Louis' visit to France</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg008">8</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">22 April.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Return of Louis from France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg009">9</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Sieges of Dover, Farnham, and Mount
+Sorrel.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg009">9</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">20 May.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The fair of Lincoln.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg010">10</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">23 Aug.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The sea-fight off Sandwich.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg011">11</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">11 Sept.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Lambeth.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg012">12</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">6 Nov.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Reissue of the great charter.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg013">13</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Restoration of order by William Marshal.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg014">14</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">14 May, 1219.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of William Marshal.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg015">15</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">His character and career.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg015">15</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+
+<h5>THE RULE OF HUBERT DE BURGH.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1219.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Pandulf the real successor of William
+Marshal</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg017">17</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">July, 1221.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Langton procures Pandulf's recall.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg019">19</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Ascendency of Hubert de Burgh.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg020">20</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Jan.-Feb., 1221.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The rebellion of Albemarle.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg020">20</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">July, 1222.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The sedition of Constantine FitzAthulf.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg022">22</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1221-24.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Marriage alliances.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg023">23</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1219-23.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">War in Wales.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg023">23</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">April, 1223.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Henry III. declared by the pope competent to
+govern.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg024">24</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">June, 1224.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Revolt of Falkes de
+Br&eacute;aut&egrave;.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg025">25</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">20 June-14 Aug.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Siege of Bedford.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg025">25</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Fall of Falkes.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg026">26</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Papal and royal taxation.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg027">27</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">April, 1227.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">End of the minority.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg029">29</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Relations with France during the
+minority.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg029">29</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Lusignans and the Poitevin barons.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg030">30</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1224.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Louis VIII.'s conquest of Poitou.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg031">31</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1225.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Expedition of Richard of Cornwall and William
+Longsword to Gascony.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg032">32</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Nov., 1226.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Accession of Louis IX. in France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg034">34</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1229-30.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Henry III.'s campaign in Brittany and
+Poitou.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg034">34</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">21-30 July, 1230.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Siege of Mirambeau.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg036">36</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1228.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Kerry campaign.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg037">37</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">2 May, 1230.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of William of Braose.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg038">38</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1231.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Henry III.'s second Welsh campaign.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg038">38</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Aug.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of Archbishop Richard le Grand.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg039">39</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Gregory IX. and Henry III.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg039">39</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1232.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Riots of Robert Twenge</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg039">39</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">29 July.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Fall of Hubert de Burgh.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg040">40</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1231.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of William Marshal the Younger.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg041">41</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1232.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of Randolph of Blundeville, Earl of
+Chester.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg041">41</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER III.</h3>
+
+<h5>THE ALIEN INVASION.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1232-34.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Rule of Peter des Roches.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg043">43</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Aug., 1233.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Revolt of Richard Marshal</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg045">45</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">23 Nov.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Fight near Monmouth.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg047">47</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1234.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Richard Marshal in Ireland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg048">48</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1 April.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Defeat and death of the Earl Marshal near
+Kildare.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg049">49</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">2 April.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edmund Rich consecrated Archbishop of
+Canterbury.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg050">50</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">9 April.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Fall of Peter des Roches.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg051">51</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Beginning of Henry III.'s personal
+government</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg051">51</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Character of Henry III.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg052">52</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The alien invasions</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg053">53</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">14 Jan., 1236.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Henry's marriage to Eleanor of Provence.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg054">54</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Savoyards in England.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg054">54</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Revival of Poitevin influence.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg055">55</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1239.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Simon of Montfort Earl of Leicester.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg056">56</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1237.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The legation of Cardinal Otto.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg057">57</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1239.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Quarrel of Gregory IX. and Frederick II.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg058">58</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1235.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Robert Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg059">59</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">16 Nov., 1240.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of Edmund Rich in exile.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg060">60</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Henry III. and Frederick II.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg061">61</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Attempted reconquest of Poitou.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg062">62</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">May-Sept., 1242.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The campaign of Taillebourg.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg063">63</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1243.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Truce with France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg064">64</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Lusignans in England.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg065">65</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The baronial opposition.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg066">66</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Grosseteste's opposition to Henry III., and
+Innocent IV..</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg066">66</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1243.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Relations with Scotland and Wales.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg067">67</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1240.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of Llewelyn ap Iorwerth.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg067">67</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1246.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of David ap Llewelyn.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg068">68</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+
+<h5>POLITICAL RETROGRESSION and NATIONAL PROGRESS.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1248-58.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Characteristics of the history of these ten
+years.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg069">69</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Decay of Henry's power in Gascony.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg069">69</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1248-52.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Simon de Montfort, seneschal of Gascony.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg070">70</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Aug., 1253.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Henry III. in Gascony.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg072">72</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1254.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Marriage and establishment of Edward the
+king's son.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg073">73</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's position in Gascony.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg073">73</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's position in Cheshire.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg074">74</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1254.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Llewelyn ap Griffith sole Prince of North
+Wales.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg075">75</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward in the four cantreds and in West
+Wales.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg076">76</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1257.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Welsh campaign of Henry and Edward.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg076">76</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Revival of the baronial opposition.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg077">77</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1255.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Candidature of Edmund, the king's son, for
+Sicily.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg078">78</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1257.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Richard of Cornwall elected and crowned King
+of the Romans.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg080">80</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Leicester as leader of the opposition.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg081">81</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Progress in the age of Henry III.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg081">81</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The cosmopolitan and the national ideals.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg082">82</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">French influence.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg083">83</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The coming of the friars.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg084">84</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1221.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Gilbert of Freynet and the first Dominicans in
+England.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg084">84</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1224.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Arrival of Agnellus of Pisa and the first
+Franciscans in England.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg084">84</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Other mendicant orders in England.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg085">85</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The influence of the friars.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg086">86</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The universities.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg088">88</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Prominent English schoolmen.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg089">89</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Paris and Oxford.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg090">90</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The mendicants at Oxford.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg091">91</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Roger Bacon and Duns Scotus.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg092">92</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Academic influence in public life.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg092">92</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Beginnings of colleges.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg093">93</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Intellectual characteristics of thirteenth
+century.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg093">93</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Literature in Latin and French.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg094">94</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Literature in English.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg095">95</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Art.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg090">90</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Gothic architecture.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg090">90</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The towns and trade.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg090">90</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER V.</h3>
+
+<h5>THE BARONS' WAR.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">2 April, 1258.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Parliament at London.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg098">98</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">11 June.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Mad Parliament</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg099">99</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Provisions of Oxford.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg100">100</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">22 June.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Flight of the Lusignans.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg102">102</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Appointment of the Fifteen</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg103">103</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Working of the new Constitution</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg104">104</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">4 Dec., 1259.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Paris.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg104">104</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Its unpopularity in England and France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg106">106</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1259.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Dissensions among the baronial leaders.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg107">107</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1259.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Provisions of Westminster.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg108">108</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1261.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Henry III.'s repudiation of the
+Provisions.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg109">109</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1263.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Reconstitution of parties.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg110">110</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The changed policy of the marchers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg111">111</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Outbreak of civil war.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg112">112</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The appeal to Louis IX.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg112">112</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">23 Jan., 1264.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Mise of Amiens.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg113">113</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Renewal of the struggle.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg113">113</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">4 April.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Sack of Northampton.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg114">114</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The campaign in Kent and Sussex.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg115">115</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">14 May.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Lewes.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg116">116</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Personal triumph of Montfort.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg118">118</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
+
+<h5>THE RULE OF MONTFORT AND THE ROYALIST RESTORATION.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">15 May.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Mise of Lewes.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg119">119</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">15 Dec.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Provisions of Worcester.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg121">121</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Jan.-Mar., 1265.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Parliament of 1265.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg121">121</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Split up of the baronial party.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg123">123</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Quarrel of Leicester and Gloucester.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg123">123</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">28 May.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's escape.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg124">124</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">22 June.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Pipton.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg125">125</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Small results of the alliance of Llewelyn and
+the barons.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg125">125</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The campaign in the Severn valley.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg126">126</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">4 Aug.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Evesham.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg127">127</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The royalist restoration.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg128">128</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1266.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The revolt of the Disinherited.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg129">129</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">15 May.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Chesterfield.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg130">130</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">31 Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The <i>Dictum de Kenilworth</i>.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg131">131</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Michaelmas.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Ely rebellion.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg131">131</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">April, 1267.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Gloucester's support of the Disinherited.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg132">132</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">July.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">End of the rebellion.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg132">132</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">25 Sept.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Shrewsbury.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg133">133</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1267.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Statute of Marlborough.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg134">134</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1270-72.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's Crusade.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg134">134</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">16 Nov., 1272.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of Henry III.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg135">135</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER VII.</h3>
+
+<h5>THE EARLY FOREIGN POLICY AND LEGISLATION OF EDWARD I.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Character of Edward I.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg136">136</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1272-74.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Rule of the regency.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg139">139</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's doings in Italy and France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg139">139</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's relations with Philip III.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg140">140</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1273-74.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Wars of B&eacute;arn and Limoges.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg141">141</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward I. and Gregory X.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg142">142</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">May-July, 1274.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Council of Lyons.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg142">142</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Relations of Edward I. and Rudolf of
+Hapsburg.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg143">143</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">23 May, 1279.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Amiens.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg145">145</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1281.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">League of Macon.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg146">146</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1282.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Sicilian vespers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg146">146</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1285.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Deaths of Philip III., Charles of Anjou, Peter
+of Aragon, and Martin IV.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg146">146</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Bishop Burnell.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg147">147</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1275.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Statute of Westminster, the first.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg147">147</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1278.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Statute of Gloucester.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg148">148</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Hundred Rolls and <i>placita de quo
+warranto</i>.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg149">149</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Archbishops Kilwardby and Peckham.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg150">150</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1279.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Statute of Mortmain.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg151">151</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1285.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid"><i>Circumspecte agatis</i>.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg152">152</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1285.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Statute of Westminster, the second (De
+<i>Donis</i>).</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg153">153</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1285.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Statute of Winchester.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg154">154</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
+
+<h5>THE CONQUEST OF NORTH WALES.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Execution of the Treaty of Shrewsbury.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg155">155</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Llewelyn's refusal of homage.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg156">156</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1277.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's first Welsh campaign.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg157">157</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1277.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Aberconway.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg159">159</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's attempts to introduce English law
+into the ceded districts.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg160">160</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1282.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Welsh revolt.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg161">161</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1282.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's second Welsh campaign.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg162">162</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Llewelyn's escape to the Upper Wye.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg163">163</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">11 Dec.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Orewyn Bridge.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg164">164</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1283.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Parliaments and financial expedients.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg164">164</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Subjection of Gwynedd completed.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg165">165</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">3 Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Parliament of Shrewsbury and execution of
+David.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg165">165</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Edwardian castles.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg165">165</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Mid-Lent, 1284.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Statute of Wales.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg166">166</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Effect of the conquest upon the march.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg167">167</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Peckham and the ecclesiastical settlement of
+<i>Wales</i>.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg167">167</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1287.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Revolt of Rhys ap Meredith.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg168">168</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER IX.</h3>
+
+<h5>THE SICILIAN AND THE SCOTTISH ARBITRATIONS.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward I. at the height of his fame.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg169">169</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">April, 1286-Aug, 1289.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's long visit to France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg170">170</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1289.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Sicilian arbitration.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg170">170</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1287.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Oloron.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg171">171</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1288.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Canfranc.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg171">171</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1291.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Tarascon.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg171">171</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Maladministration during Edward's
+absence.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg172">172</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Judicial and official scandals.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg172">172</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1289.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Special commission for the trial of
+offenders.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg172">172</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1290.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Statute of Westminster, the third (<i>Quia
+emptores</i>).</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg173">173</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The feud between Gloucester and Hereford.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg174">174</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1291.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The courts at Ystradvellte and
+Abergavenny.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg174">174</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Humiliation of the marcher earls.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg174">174</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1290.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Expulsion of the Jews.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg175">175</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The rise of the Italian bankers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg176">176</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1272-86.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Early relations of Edward to Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg177">177</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1286.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of Alexander III. of Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg177">177</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1286-89.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Regency in the name of the Maid of
+Norway.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg177">177</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1289.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Salisbury.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg178">178</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1290.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Brigham.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg178">178</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of the Maid of Norway.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg179">179</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The claimants to the Scottish throne.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg179">179</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">May, 1291.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Parliament of Norham. Edward recognised as
+overlord of Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg181">181</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1291-92.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The great suit for Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg181">181</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">17 Nov., 1292.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">John Balliol declared King of Scots.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg183">183</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's conduct in relation to Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg183">183</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1290.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of Eleanor of Castile.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg184">184</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Transition to the later years of the
+reign.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg184">184</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's later ministers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg185">185</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER X.</h3>
+
+<h5>THE FRENCH AND SCOTTISH WARS AND THE CONFIRMATION OF THE
+CHARTERS.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Commercial rivalry of English and French
+seamen.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg186">186</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">15 May, 1293.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle off Saint-Mah&eacute;.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg186">186</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1294.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edmund of Lancaster's failure to procure a
+settlement with Philip IV.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg187">187</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The French occupation of Gascony.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg187">187</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">June, 1294.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">War with France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg188">188</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Preparations for a French campaign.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg188">188</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1294.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Revolts of Madog, Maelgwn, and Morgan.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg189">189</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's danger at Aberconway.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg189">189</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">22 Jan., 1293.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Maes Madog.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg190">190</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">July.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Welsh revolts suppressed.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg190">190</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1295.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Failure of the Gascon campaign.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg191">191</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Failure of attempted coalition against
+France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg191">191</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Organisation of the English navy.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg192">192</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treason of Sir Thomas Turberville.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg192">192</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The naval attack on England.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg192">192</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Rupture between Edward and the Scots.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg193">193</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">5 July.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Alliance between the French and Scots.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg194">194</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Nov.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The "Model Parliament".</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg195">195</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1296.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Gascon expedition and death of Edmund of
+Lancaster.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg196">196</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's invasion of Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg196">196</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">27 April.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Dunbar.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg197">197</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">10 July.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Submission of John Balliol.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg197">197</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Conquest and administration of Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg198">198</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Ragman Roll.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg198">198</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Sept., 1294.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Consecration of Archbishop Winchelsea.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg199">199</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">29 Feb., 1296.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Boniface VIII. issues <i>Clericis
+laicos</i>.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg200">200</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Conflict of Edward and Winchelsea.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg200">200</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">24 Feb., 1297.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Parliament at Salisbury.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg202">202</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Conflict of Edward with the earls.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg202">202</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">July.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Break up of the clerical opposition.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg203">203</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Increasing moderation of baronial
+opposition.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg204">204</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">24 Aug.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's departure for Flanders.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg205">205</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">May.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Revolt of the Scots under William
+Wallace.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg205">205</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">11 Sept.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Stirling Bridge..</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg207">207</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">12 Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Confirmation of the charters with new
+clauses.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg208">208</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XI.</h3>
+
+<h5>THE SCOTTISH FAILURE.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1297.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's unsuccessful campaign in
+Flanders.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg210">210</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">31 Jan., 1298.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Truce of Tournai, and end of the French
+war.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg211">211</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">July.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's invasion of Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg212">212</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">22 July.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Falkirk.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg213">213</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Slowness of Edward's progress towards the
+conquest of Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg215">215</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">&gt;19 June, 1299.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Montreuil.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg216">216</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">9 Sept.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Marriage of Edward and Margaret of
+France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg217">217</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Mar., 1300.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid"><i>Articuli super cartas</i>.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg217">217</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">July-Aug.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Carlaverock campaign.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg218">218</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">20 Jan.-14 Feb., 1301.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Parliament of Lincoln.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg218">218</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The barons' letter to the pope.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg219">219</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward of Carnarvon, Prince of Wales.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg220">220</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1302.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Philip IV.'s troubles with the Flemings and
+Boniface VIII.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg221">221</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">20 May, 1303.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Peace of Paris between Edward and Philip.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg222">222</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Increasing strength of Edward's position.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg222">222</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The decay of the earldoms.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg223">223</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Additions to the royal demesne.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg224">224</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1303.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Conquest of Scotland seriously
+undertaken.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg225">225</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">24 July, 1304.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Capture of Stirling.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg225">225</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Aug., 1305.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Execution of Wallace and completion of the
+conquest.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg226">226</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The settlement of the government of
+Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg227">227</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1305.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Disgrace of Winchelsea and Bek.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg228">228</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward I. and Clement V..</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg230">230</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1307.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Statute of Carlisle.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg230">230</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1305.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Ordinance of Trailbaston.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg231">231</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">10 Jan., 1306.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Murder of Comyn.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg232">232</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Rising of Robert Bruce.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg233">233</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">25 Mar.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Bruce crowned King of Scots.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg233">233</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Preparations for a fresh conquest of
+Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg234">234</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">7 July, 1307.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of Edward I.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg235">235</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XII.</h3>
+
+<h5>GAVESTON, THE ORDAINERS, AND BANNOCKBURN.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Character of Edward II..</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg236">236</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1307.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Peter Gaveston Earl of Cornwall.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg238">238</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">25 Jan., 1308.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Marriage of Edward with Isabella of
+France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg239">239</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">25 Feb.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Coronation of Edward II.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg239">239</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Power and unpopularity of Gaveston.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg240">240</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">8 May.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Gaveston exiled.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg241">241</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">July 1309.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Return of Gaveston condoned by Parliament at
+Stamford.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg242">242</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1310.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Renewal of the opposition of the barons to
+Gaveston.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg243">243</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">16 Mar.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Appointment of the lords ordainers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg244">244</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Sept.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Abortive campaign against the Scots.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg245">245</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Character and policy of Thomas, Earl of
+Lancaster.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg245">245</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1311.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The ordinances.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg247">247</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Nov., 1311, Jan., 1312.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Gaveston's second exile and return.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg249">249</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The earls at war against Edward and
+Gaveston.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg250">250</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Gaveston's surrender at Scarborough.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg250">250</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">19 June, 1312.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Murder of Gaveston.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg251">251</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Consequent break up of the baronial
+party.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg252">252</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Oct., 1313.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward and Lancaster reconciled.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg253">253</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">May.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of Archbishop Winchelsea.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg254">254</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1312.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Fall of the Templars.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg254">254</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Walter Reynolds Archbishop of Canterbury.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg256">256</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Complaints of papal abuses.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg256">256</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Progress of Bruce's power in Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg257">257</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1314.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The siege of Stirling.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg258">258</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">An army collected for its relief.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg259">259</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">24 June,</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Bannockburn.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg260">260</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The results of the battle.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg262">262</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XIII.</h3>
+
+<h5>LANCASTER, PEMBROKE, AND THE DESPENSERS.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Failure of the rule of Thomas of
+Lancaster.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg264">264</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1315.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Revolts of Llewelyn Bren.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg267">267</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1315.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Rising of Adam Banaster.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg267">267</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1316.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Bristol disturbances..</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg268">268</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1315.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward Bruce's attack on the English in
+Ireland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg268">268</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1317.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Roger Mortimer in Ireland..</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg271">271</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1318.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of Edward Bruce at Dundalk.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg272">272</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Lancaster's failure and the break up of his
+party.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg272">272</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Pembroke and the middle party.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg273">273</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">9 Aug.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Leek and the supremacy of the middle
+party.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg274">274</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1314-18.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Progress of Robert Bruce..</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg275">275</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1319.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Renewed attack on Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg275">275</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Myton.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg276">276</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Rise of the Despensers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg277">277</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1317.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The partition of the Gloucester
+inheritance.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg279">279</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1320.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">War between the husbands of the Gloucester
+heiresses in South Wales.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg280">280</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">June, 1321.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Conferences at Pontefract and Sherburn.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg281">281</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">July.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The exile of the Despensers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg281">281</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Break up of the opposition after their
+victory.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg282">282</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">23-31 Oct., 1321.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The siege of Leeds Castle.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg282">282</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Jan.-Feb., 1322.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's successful campaign in the
+march.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg284">284</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">11 Feb.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Recall of the Despensers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg284">284</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The king's march against the northern
+barons.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg284">284</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">16 Mar.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Boroughbridge.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg285">285</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">22 Mar.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Execution of Lancaster.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg286">286</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">2 May.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Parliament at York and repeal of the
+ordinances.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg287">287</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The triumph of the Despensers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg288">288</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XIV.</h3>
+
+<h5>THE FALL OF EDWARD II. AND THE RULE OF ISABELLA AND
+MORTIMER.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Aug.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Renewed attack on the Scots.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg289">289</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward II.'s narrow escape at Byland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg289">289</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Mar., 1323.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treason and execution of Andrew Harclay.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg290">290</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Incapacity of the Despensers as
+administrators.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg290">290</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Their quarrels with the old nobles.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg290">290</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1324.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Their breach with Queen Isabella.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg291">291</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Their chief helpers: Walter Stapledon and
+Ralph Baldock.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg292">292</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Reaction against the Despensers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg293">293</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1303-14.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Relations of England and France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg294">294</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1314-22.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's dealings with Louis X. and Philip
+V.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg294">294</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1322.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Accession of Charles IV.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg295">295</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1324.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Affair of Saint-Sardos.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg295">295</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Renewal of war. Sequestration of Gascony.
+Charles of Valois' conquest of the Agenais and La
+R&eacute;ole.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg296">296</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Isabella's mission to Paris.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg297">297</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward of Aquitaine's homage to Charles
+IV.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg297">297</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1325.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treachery of Charles IV. and second
+sequestration of Gascony.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg297">297</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1326.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Relations of Mortimer and Isabella.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg298">298</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Hainault marriage.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg298">298</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">23 Sept.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Landing of Isabella and Mortimer.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg299">299</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Riots in London: murder of Stapledon.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg299">299</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">26 Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Execution of the elder Despenser.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg300">300</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">16 Nov.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Capture of Edward and the younger
+Despenser.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg300">300</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Triumph of the revolution.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg301">301</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">7 Jan., 1327.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Parliament's recognition of Edward of
+Aquitaine as king.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg301">301</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">20 Jan.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward II.'s resignation of the crown.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg302">302</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">24 Jan.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Proclamation of Edward III.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg302">302</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">22 Sept., 1328.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Murder of Edward II.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg303">303</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1327-30.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Rule of Isabella and Mortimer.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg304">304</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1327.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Abortive Scottish campaign.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg304">304</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">April, 1328.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Northampton; "the shameful
+peace".</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg305">305</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Character and ambition of Mortimer.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg306">306</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Mortimer Earl of the March of Wales.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg306">306</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Henry of Lancaster's opposition to him.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg307">307</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Mar., 1330.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Execution of the Earl of Kent.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg307">307</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Parliament at Nottingham.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg308">308</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">19 Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Arrest of Mortimer.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg308">308</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">29 Nov.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">His execution.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg309">309</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1330-58.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Later life of Isabella.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg309">309</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XV.</h3>
+
+<h5>THE PRELIMINARIES OF THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Character and policy of Edward III.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg310">310</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1330-40.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The rule of the Stratfords.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg314">314</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1337.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The new earldoms.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg314">314</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Scotland during the minority of David
+Bruce.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg315">315</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward Balliol and the Disinherited.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg315">315</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">6 Aug., 1332.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Disinherited in Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg317">317</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Dupplin Moor.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg318">318</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">6 Aug.-16 Dec.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward Balliol's brief reign and
+expulsion.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg319">319</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Roxburgh.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg319">319</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1333.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Attempt to procure his restoration.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg319">319</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Siege of Berwick.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg319">319</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">19 July.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Halidon Hill.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg320">320</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward Balliol restored.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg320">320</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">12 June, 1334.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Newcastle, ceding to Edward
+south-eastern Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg321">321</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Failure of Edward Balliol.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg300">300</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1334-36.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward III.'s Scottish campaigns.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg322">322</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1341.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Return of David Bruce from France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg323">323</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1327-37.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Relations of England and France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg323">323</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">31 Mar., 1327.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Paris.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg324">324</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's lands in Gascony after the treaty of
+Paris.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg324">324</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1328.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Accession of Philip of Valois in France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg325">325</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Protests of the English regency.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg325">325</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1328.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The legal and political aspects of the
+succession question.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg326">326</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward III.'s claim to France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg327">327</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">6 June, 1329.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's homage to Philip VI.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg327">327</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">8 May, 1330.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Convention of the Wood of Vincennes.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg328">328</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">9 Mar., 1331.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg328">300</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">April.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Interview of Pont-Sainte-Maxence.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg300">328</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Crusading projects of John XXII..</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg329">329</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1336.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Abandonment of the crusade by Benedict
+XII.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg329">329</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Strained relations between England and
+France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg330">330</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1337.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Mission of the Cardinals Peter and
+Bertrand.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg330">330</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward and Robert of Artois.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg330">330</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The <i>Vow of the Heron</i>.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg331">331</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Preparations for war.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg331">331</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Breach with Flanders and stoppage of export of
+wool.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg332">332</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Alliance with William I. and II. of
+Hainault.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg332">332</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's other Netherlandish allies.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg332">332</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1337.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Breach between France and England.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg333">333</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Nov.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Sir Walter Manny at Cadzand.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg334">334</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Fruitless negotiations and further
+hostilities.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg334">334</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">July, 1338.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward III.'s departure for Flanders.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg335">335</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">5 Sept.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Interview of Edward and the Emperor Louis of
+Bavaria at Coblenz.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg335">335</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Anglo-imperial alliance.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg335">335</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Further fruitless negotiations.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg336">336</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Renewal of Edward's claim to the French
+crown.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg337">337</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The responsibility for the war.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg337">337</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XVI.</h3>
+
+<h5>THE EARLY CAMPAIGNS OF THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1339.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's invasion of France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg339">339</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Campaign of the Thi&eacute;rache.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg340">340</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">23 Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The failure at Buironfosse.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg340">340</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Alliance between Edward and the Flemish
+cities.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg341">341</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">James van Artevelde.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg342">342</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Jan., 1340.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward III. at Ghent.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg343">343</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">His proclamation as King of France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg344">344</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">20 Feb.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">His return to England.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg344">344</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">22 June.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">His re-embarkation for Flanders.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg344">344</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Parallel naval development of England and
+France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg344">344</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Norman navy and the projected invasion of
+England.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg345">345</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">24 June.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Sluys.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg346">346</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Ineffective campaigns in Artois and the
+Tournaisis.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg347">347</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">25 Sept.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Truce of Esplechin.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg348">348</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">30 Nov.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's return to London.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg349">349</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The ministers displaced and a special
+commission appointed to try them.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg349">349</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">30 Nov.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Controversy between Edward and Archbishop
+Stratford.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg350">350</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">23 April, 1341.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Parliament at London supporting Stratford and
+forcing Edward to choose ministers after consulting it.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg350">350</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1 Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's repudiation of his concessions.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg351">351</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">April, 1343.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Repeal of the statutes of 1341.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg351">351</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">John of Montfort and Charles of Blois claim
+the duchy of Brittany.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg352">352</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">War of the Breton succession.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg353">353</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">June, 1342.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The siege of Hennebont raised.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg354">354</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1343.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Morlaix.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg354">354</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">19 Jan., 1343.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward III. in Brittany.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg354">354</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Truce of Malestroit.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg355">355</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward's financial and political
+troubles.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg355">355</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">End of the Flemish alliance.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg356">356</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">June, 1345.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Henry of Derby in Gascony.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg357">357</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">21 Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Auberoche.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg358">358</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1346.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Siege of Aiguillon and raid in Poitou.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg358">358</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Preparations for Edward III.'s campaign.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg359">359</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">&gt;July-Aug.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The march through Normandy.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg359">359</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">26 July.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Capture of Caen.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg360">360</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Aug.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The march up the Seine valley.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg360">360</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The retreat northwards.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg361">361</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The passage of the Somme at the <i>Blanche
+taque</i>.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg361">361</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">26 Aug.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Crecy.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg362">362</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">17 Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Neville's Cross.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg364">364</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">4 Sept.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Siege of Calais.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg366">366</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">3 Aug., 1347.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Capture of Calais.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg367">367</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">20 June.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of La Roche Derien.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg368">368</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">28 Sept.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Truce of Calais.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg368">368</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XVII.</h3>
+
+<h5>FROM THE BLACK DEATH TO THE TREATY OF CALAIS.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1347-48.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Prosperity of England after the truce.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg369">369</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1348-50.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Black Death and its results.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg370">370</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1351.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Statute of labourers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg372">372</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Social and economic unrest.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg374">374</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Religious unrest.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg376">376</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Flagellants.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg376">376</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The anti-clerical movement.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg377">377</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1351.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">First statute of provisors.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg377">377</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1353.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">First statute of <i>præmunire</i>.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg378">378</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Richard Fitzralph and the attack on the
+mendicants.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg379">379</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1354.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Ordinance Of the Staple.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg380">380</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1352.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Statute of treasons.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg380">380</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1349.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Foundation of the Order of the Garter.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg380">380</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Dagworth's administration of Brittany.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg381">381</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Hugh Calveley and Robert Knowles.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg382">382</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">27 Mar., 1351.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of the Thirty.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg382">382</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1352.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Mauron.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg383">383</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Fighting round Calais.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg383">383</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1352.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Capture of Gu&icirc;nes.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg384">384</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">29 Aug., 1350.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of the Spaniards-on-the-sea.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg384">384</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">6 April, 1354.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Preliminaries of peace signed at
+Gu&icirc;nes.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg385">385</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1355.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Failure of the negotiations and renewal of the
+war.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg385">385</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Failure of John of Gaunt in Normandy.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg386">386</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Sept.-Nov.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Black Prince's raid in Languedoc.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg386">386</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1356.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Operations of John of Gaunt in Normandy in
+alliance with Charles of Navarre and Geoffrey of Harcourt.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg387">387</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">9 Aug.-2 Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Black Prince's raid northwards to the
+Loire.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg388">388</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">19 Sept.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Poitiers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg390">390</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">23 Mar., 1357.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Truce of Bordeaux.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg392">392</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Berwick.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg393">393</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1357-71.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The last years of David II.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg393">393</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1371.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Accession of Robert II. in Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg393">393</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1358.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Preliminaries of peace signed between Edward
+III. and John.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg393">393</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">State of France after Poitiers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg394">394</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">24 Mar., 1359.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of London.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg395">395</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The rejection of the treaty by the
+French.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg395">395</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Nov., 1359-April, 1360.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward III.'s invasion of Northern France
+Champagne and Burgundy.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg396">396</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">11 Jan., 1360.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Guillon.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg396">396</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">7 April.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Siege of Paris.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg396">396</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">8 May.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Br&eacute;tigni.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg396">396</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">24 Oct.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Calais.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg396">396</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XVIII.</h3>
+
+<h5>THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR FROM THE TREATY OF CALAIS TO THE TRUCE
+OF BRUGES.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Difficulties in carrying out the treaty of
+Calais.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg399">399</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Guerilla warfare: exploits of Calveley, Pipe,
+and Jowel.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg400">400</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">16 May, 1364.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Cocherel.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg401">401</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">29 Sept.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Auray.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg401">401</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1365.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treaty of Gu&eacute;rande.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg402">402</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Exploits of the free companies: John
+Hawkwood.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg402">402</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1361.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The charters of renunciation not
+exchanged.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg402">402</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1364.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of King John: accession of Charles
+V..</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg403">403</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1366.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Expulsion of Peter the Cruel from Castile by
+Du Guesclin and the free companies.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg404">404</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Feb., 1367.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Black Prince's expedition to Spain.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg404">404</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">3 April.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of N&aacute;jera.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg405">405</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Black Prince's rule in Aquitaine.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg406">406</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">His difficulties with the great nobles.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg407">407</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Jan., 1368.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The hearth tax imposed.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg408">408</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Jan., 1369.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Renewal of the war.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg400">408</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Changed military and political
+conditions.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg409">409</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Relations of England and Flanders.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg409">409</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1371.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle in Bourgneuf Bay.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg410">410</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Successes of the French.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg411">411</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Sept., 1370.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Sack of the <i>cit&eacute;</i> of
+Limoges.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg412">412</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1371.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The Black Prince's return to England with
+shattered health.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg413">413</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1370.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Futile expeditions of Lancaster and
+Knowles.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg413">413</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Treason of Sir John Minsterworth.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg413">413</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Battle of Pontvallain.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg414">414</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1370-72.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Exploits of Sir Owen of Wales.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg414">414</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">23 June, 1370.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Defeat of Pembroke at La Rochelle.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg415">415</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Aug.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Defeat of Thomas Percy at Soubise.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg415">415</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1372.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward III.'s last military expedition.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg416">416</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Expulsion of the English from Poitou and
+Brittany.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg416">416</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">July-Dec., 1373.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">John of Gaunt's march from Calais to
+Bordeaux.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg417">417</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1374.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Ruin of the English power in France.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg417">417</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">27 June, 1375.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Truce of Bruges.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg418">418</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XIX.</h3>
+
+<h5>ENGLAND DURING THE LATTER YEARS OF EDWARD III.</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Glories of the years succeeding the treaty of
+Calais.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg419">419</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1361-69.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">John Froissart in England.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg419">419</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">His picture of the life of court and
+people.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg420">420</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The national spirit in English
+literature.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg420">420</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Gower and Minot.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg420">420</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Geoffrey Chaucer.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg421">421</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The standard English language.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg421">421</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Lowland Scottish.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg422">422</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The national spirit in art.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg422">422</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">"Flowing decorated" and "perpendicular"
+architecture.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg422">422</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Contrast between England and Scotland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg423">423</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The national spirit in popular English
+literature.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg423">423</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">William Langland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg423">423</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">His picture of the condition of the poor.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg424">424</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The national spirit and the universities.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg424">424</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Early career of John Wycliffe.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg425">425</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Spread of cultivation among the laity.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg426">426</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The national spirit in English law.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg426">426</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The national spirit in commerce.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg426">426</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward III.'s family settlement.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg427">427</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Marriage of the Black Prince and Joan of
+Kent.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg428">428</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Marriages of Lionel of Antwerp with Elizabeth
+de Burgh and Violante Visconti.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg429">429</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Lionel in Ireland.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg429">429</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Statute of Kilkenny.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg429">429</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">1361-69.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Philippa of Clarence's marriage with the Earl
+of March.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg430">430</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">John of Gaunt and the Duchy of Lancaster.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg430">430</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Continuation of ancient rivalries between
+houses now represented by branches of the royal family.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg431">431</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The great prelates of the end of Edward III.'s
+reign.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg431">431</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Feb., 1371.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Parliament: clerical ministers superseded by
+laymen.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg432">432</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Clerical and anti-clerical, constitutional and
+court parties.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg433">433</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Edward III.'s dotage.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg434">434</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Alice Perrers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg434">434</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Struggle of parties at court.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg434">434</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Increasing bitterness of the opposition to the
+courtiers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg434">434</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">April-July, 1376.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The "Good Parliament".</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg435">435</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Fall of the courtiers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg436">436</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">8 June.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of the Black Prince.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg437">437</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">John of Gaunt restored to power.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg438">438</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">Jan., 1377.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Packed parliament, and the reaction against
+the Good Parliament.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg438">438</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Persistence of the clerical opposition.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg439">439</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">The attack on John Wycliffe.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg439">439</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">10 Feb.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Wycliffe before Bishop Courtenay.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg439">439</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">John of Gaunt's substantial triumph.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg440">440</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt">21 June.</td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Death of Edward III.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg441">441</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid">Characteristics of his age.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt"><a href="#pg441">441</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h3>APPENDIX.</h3>
+
+<h5>ON AUTHORITIES.</h5>
+
+<h5>(1216-1377.)</h5>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Comparative value of records and
+chronicles.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg443">443</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Record sources for the period.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg443">443</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Chancery Records:&mdash;</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg400">400</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt0"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid0">Patent Rolls.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt0"><a href="#pg444">444</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt0"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid0">Close Rolls.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt0"><a href="#pg444">444</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt0"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid0">Rolls of Parliament.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt0"><a href="#pg444">444</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt0"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid0">Charter Rolls.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt0"><a href="#pg445">445</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt0"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid0">Inquests Post-Mortem.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt0"><a href="#pg445">445</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt0"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid0">Fine Rolls.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt0"><a href="#pg445">445</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt0"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid0">Gascon Rolls.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt0"><a href="#pg445">445</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt0"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid0">Hundred Rolls.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt0"><a href="#pg446">446</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Exchequer Records.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg446">446</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Plea Rolls and records of the common law
+courts.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg447">447</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Records of local courts.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg448">448</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Scotch and Irish records.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg449">449</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Ecclesiastical records.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg449">448</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt0"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid0">Bishops' registers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt0"><a href="#pg449">449</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt0"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid0">Monastic Cartularies.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt0"><a href="#pg450">450</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt0"></td>
+<td class="cell_mid0">Papal records.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt0"><a href="#pg450">450</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Chroniclers of the period.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg451">451</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">St. Alban's Abbey as a school of history.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg451">451</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Matthew Paris.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg451">451</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Later St. Alban's chroniclers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg452">452</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Other chroniclers of Henry III.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg454">454</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Other monastic annals.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg455">455</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Chroniclers of Edward I.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg455">455</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Civic chronicles.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg457">457</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Chroniclers of Edward II.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg457">457</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Chroniclers of Edward III.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg458">458</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Scottish and Welsh chronicles.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg459">459</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">French chronicles illustrating English
+history.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg459">459</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">The three redactions of Froissart.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg460">460</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Other French chroniclers of the Hundred Years'
+War.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg460">460</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Legal literature.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg461">461</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Literary aids to history.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg461">461</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Modern works on the period.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg462">462</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Maps.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg464">464</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Bibliographies.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg464">464</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">Note on authorities for battle of
+Poitiers.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg464">464</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="0" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_lt1">INDEX.</td>
+<td class="cell_rt1"><a href="#pg465">465</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<h4>MAPS.</h4>
+
+<div class="center"><a id="walesthumb"></a> <a href=
+"images/wales1000.jpg"><img src="images/walesthumb.jpg" alt=
+"Map of Wales and the March at the end of the XIIIth century."
+title=
+"Map of Wales and the March at the end of the XIIIth century." /></a>
+
+<p class="caption">1. Map of Wales and the March at the end of the
+XIIIth century.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="center"><a id="scottlandthumb"></a> <a href=
+"images/scottland1000.jpg"><img src="images/scottlandthumb.jpg"
+alt=
+"Map of Southern Scotland and Northern England in the XIIIth and XIVth centuries."
+ title=
+"Map of Southern Scotland and Northern England in the XIIIth and XIVth centuries." /></a>
+
+
+<p class="caption">2. Map of Southern Scotland and Northern England
+in the XIIIth and XIVth centuries.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="center"><a id="francethumb"></a> <a href=
+"images/france1000.jpg"><img src="images/francethumb.jpg" alt=
+"Map of France in the XIIIth and XIVth centuries." title=
+"Map of France in the XIIIth and XIVth centuries." /></a>
+
+<p class="caption">3. Map of France in the XIIIth and XIVth
+centuries.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<h4>THE REGENCY OF WILLIAM MARSHAL.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg001" id=
+"pg001">001</a></span>When John died, on October 19, 1216, the
+issue of the war between him and the barons was still doubtful. The
+arrival of Louis of France, eldest son of King Philip Augustus, had
+enabled the barons to win back much of the ground lost after John's
+early triumphs had forced them to call in the foreigner. Beyond the
+Humber the sturdy north-country barons, who had wrested the Great
+Charter from John, remained true to their principles, and had also
+the support of Alexander II., King of Scots. The magnates of the
+eastern counties were as staunch as the northerners, and the rich
+and populous southern shires were for the most part in agreement
+with them. In the west, the barons had the aid of Llewelyn ap
+Iorwerth, the great Prince of North Wales. While ten earls fought
+for Louis, the royal cause was only upheld by six. The towns were
+mainly with the rebels, notably London and the Cinque Ports, and
+cities so distant as Winchester and Lincoln, Worcester and
+Carlisle. Yet the baronial cause excited little general sympathy.
+The mass of the population stood aloof, and was impartially
+maltreated by the rival armies.</p>
+
+<p>John's son Henry had at his back the chief military resources of
+the country; the two strongest of the earls, William Marshal, Earl
+of Pembroke, and Randolph of Blundeville, Earl of Chester; the
+fierce lords of the Welsh March, the Mortimers, the Cantilupes, the
+Cliffords, the Braoses, and the Lacys; and the barons of the West
+Midlands, headed by Henry of Neufbourg, Earl of Warwick, and
+William of Ferrars, Earl of Derby. This powerful phalanx gave to
+the royalists a stronger hold in the west than their opponents had
+in any one part of the much wider territory within their sphere of
+influence. There was <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg002" id=
+"pg002">002</a></span> no baronial counterpart to the successful
+raiding of the north and east, which John had carried through in
+the last months of his life. A baronial centre, like Worcester,
+could not hold its own long in the west. Moreover, John had not
+entirely forfeited his hereditary advantages. The administrative
+families, whose chief representative was the justiciar Hubert de
+Burgh, held to their tradition of unswerving loyalty, and joined
+with the followers of the old king, of whom William Marshal was the
+chief survivor. All over England the royal castles were in safe
+hands, and so long as they remained unsubdued, no part of Louis'
+dominions was secure. The crown had used to the full its rights
+over minors and vacant fiefs. The subjection of the south-west was
+assured by the marriage of the mercenary leader, Falkes de
+Br&eacute;aut&eacute;, to the mother of the infant Earl of Devon,
+and by the grant of Cornwall to the bastard of the last of the
+Dunstanville earls. Though Isabella, Countess of Gloucester, John's
+repudiated wife, was as zealous as her new husband, the Earl of
+Essex, against John's son, Falkes kept a tight hand over Glamorgan,
+on which the military power of the house of Gloucester largely
+depended. Randolph of Chester was custodian of the earldoms of
+Leicester and Richmond, of which the nominal earls, Simon de
+Montfort and Peter Mauclerc, were far away, the one ruling
+Toulouse, and the other Brittany. The band of foreign adventurers,
+the mainstay of John's power, was still unbroken. Ruffians though
+these hirelings were, they had experience, skill, and courage, and
+were the only professional soldiers in the country.</p>
+
+<p>The vital fact of the situation was that the immense moral and
+spiritual forces of the Church remained on the side of the king.
+Innocent III. had died some months before John, but his successor,
+Honorius III., continued to uphold his policy. The papal legate,
+the Cardinal Gualo, was the soul of the royalist cause. Louis and
+his adherents had been excommunicated, and not a single English
+bishop dared to join openly the foes of Holy Church. The most that
+the clerical partisans of the barons could do was to disregard the
+interdict and continue their ministrations to the excommunicated
+host. The strongest English prelate, Stephen Langton, Archbishop of
+Canterbury, was at Rome in disgrace. Walter Grey, Archbishop of
+York, and Hugh of Wells, Bishop<span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg003" id="pg003">003</a></span> of Lincoln, were also abroad,
+while the Bishop of London, William of Sainte-M&egrave;re-Eglise,
+was incapacitated by illness. Several important sees, including
+Durham and Ely, were vacant. The ablest resident bishop, Peter des
+Roches of Winchester, was an accomplice in John's
+misgovernment.</p>
+
+<p>The chief obstacle in the way of the royalists had been the
+character of John, and the little Henry of Winchester could have
+had no share in the crimes of his father. But the dead king had
+lately shown such rare energy that there was a danger lest the
+accession of a boy of nine might not weaken the cause of monarchy.
+The barons were largely out of hand. The war was assuming the
+character of the civil war of Stephen's days, and John's
+mercenaries were aspiring to play the part of feudal potentates. It
+was significant that so many of John's principal supporters were
+possessors of extensive franchises, like the lords of the Welsh
+March, who might well desire to extend these feudal immunities to
+their English estates. The triumph of the crown through such help
+might easily have resolved the united England of Henry II. into a
+series of lordships under a nominal king.</p>
+
+<p>The situation was saved by the wisdom and moderation of the
+papal legate, and the loyalty of William Marshal, who forgot his
+interests as Earl of Pembroke in his devotion to the house of
+Anjou. From the moment of John's death at Newark, the cardinal and
+the marshal took the lead. They met at Worcester, where the tyrant
+was buried, and at once made preparations for the coronation of
+Henry of Winchester. The ceremony took place at St. Peter's Abbey,
+Gloucester, on October 28, from which day the new reign was
+reckoned as beginning. The marshal, who had forty-three years
+before dubbed the "young king" Henry a knight, then for a second
+time admitted a young king Henry to the order of chivalry. When the
+king had recited the coronation oath and performed homage to the
+pope, Gualo anointed him and placed on his head the plain gold
+circlet that perforce did duly for a crown.[1]<span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg004" id="pg004">004</a></span> Next day
+Henry's supporters performed homage, and before November 1 the
+marshal was made justiciar.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] There is some conflict of evidence on this
+point, and Dr. Stubbs, following Wendover, iv., 2, makes Peter of
+Winchester crown Henry. But the official account in <i>Fædera,
+i.</i>, 145, is confirmed by <i>Ann. Tewkesbury</i>, p. 62;
+<i>Histoire de G. le Mar&eacute;chal</i>, lines 15329-32; <i>Hist.
+des ducs de Normandie, et des rois d'Angleterre</i>, p. 181, and
+<i>Ann. Winchester</i>, p. 83. Wykes, p. 60, and <i>Ann.
+Dunstable</i>, p. 48, which confirm Wendover, are suspect by reason
+of other errors.</p>
+
+<p>On November 2 a great council met at Bristol. Only four earls
+appeared, and one of these, William of Fors, Earl of Albemarle, was
+a recent convert. But the presence of eleven bishops showed that
+the Church had espoused the cause of the little king, and a throng
+of western and marcher magnates made a sufficient representation of
+the lay baronage. The chief business was to provide for the
+government during the minority. Gualo withstood the temptation to
+adopt the method by which Innocent III. had ruled Sicily in the
+name of Frederick II. The king's mother was too unpopular and
+incompetent to anticipate the part played by Blanche of Castile
+during the minority of St. Louis. After the precedents set by the
+Latin kingdom of Jerusalem, the barons took the matter into their
+own hands. Their work of selection was not an easy one. Randolph of
+Chester was by far the most powerful of the royalist lords, but his
+turbulence and purely personal policy, not less than his excessive
+possessions and inordinate palatine jurisdictions, made him
+unsuitable for the regency. Yet had he raised any sort of claim, it
+would have been hardly possible to resist his pretensions.[1]
+Luckily, Randolph stood aside, and his withdrawal gave the aged
+earl marshal the position for which his nomination as justiciar at
+Gloucester had already marked him out. The title of regent was as
+yet unknown, either in England or France, but the style, "ruler of
+king and kingdom," which the barons gave to the marshal, meant
+something more than the ordinary position of a justiciar. William's
+friends had some difficulty in persuading him to accept the office.
+He was over seventy years of age, and felt it would be too great a
+burden. Induced at last by the legate to undertake the charge, from
+that moment he shrank from none of its responsibilities. The
+personal care of the king was comprised within the marshal's
+duties, but he delegated that branch of his work to Peter des
+Roches.[2] These two, with Gualo, controlled the whole policy of
+the new reign.<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg005" id=
+"pg005">005</a></span> Next to them came Hubert de Burgh, John's
+justiciar, whomthe marshal very soon restored to that office. But
+Hubert at once went back to the defence of Dover, and for some time
+took little part in general politics.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] The fears and hopes of the marshal's friends
+are well depicted in <i>Histoire de Guillaume le
+Mar&eacute;chal</i>, lines 15500-15708.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] The panegyrist of the marshal emphasises
+strongly the fact that Peter's charge was a delegation,
+<i>ibid.</i>, lines 17993-18018.</p>
+
+<p>On November 12, the legate and the regent issued at Bristol a
+confirmation of the Great Charter. Some of the most important
+articles accepted by John in 1215 were omitted, including the
+"constitutional clauses" requiring the consent of the council of
+barons for extraordinary taxation. Other provisions, which tied the
+hands of the government, were postponed for further consideration
+in more settled times. But with all its mutilations the Bristol
+charter of 1216 marked a more important moment than even the
+charter of Runnymede. The condemnation of Innocent III. would in
+all probability have prevented the temporary concession of John
+from becoming permanent. Love of country and love of liberty were
+doubtless growing forces, but they were still in their infancy,
+while the papal authority was something ultimate against which few
+Christians dared appeal. Thus the adoption by the free will of the
+papal legate, and the deliberate choice of the marshal of the
+policy of the Great Charter, converted, as has well been said, "a
+treaty won at the point of the sword into a manifesto of peace and
+sound government".[1] This wise change of policy cut away the ground
+from under the feet of the English supporters of Louis. The friends
+of the young Henry could appeal to his innocence, to his sacred
+unction, and to his recognition by Holy Church. They offered a
+programme of limited monarchy, of the redress of grievances, of
+vested rights preserved, and of adhesion to the good old traditions
+that all Englishmen respected. From that moment the Charter became
+a new starting-point in our history.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Stubbs, <i>Const. Hist.</i>, ii., 21.</p>
+
+<p>In strange contrast to this programme of reform, the aliens, who
+had opposed the charter of Runnymede, were among the lords by whose
+counsel and consent the charter of Bristol was issued. In its
+weakness the new government sought to stimulate the zeal both of
+the foreign mercenaries and of the loyal barons by grants and
+privileges which seriously entrenched upon the royal authority.
+Falkes de Br&eacute;aut&eacute; was confirmed in the custody of a
+compact group of six midland shires,<span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg006" id="pg006">006</a></span> besides the earldom of Devon, and
+the "county of the Isle of Wight,"[1] which he guarded in the
+interests of his wife and stepson. Savary de Maul&eacute;on, who in
+despair of his old master's success had crossed over to Poitou
+before John's death, was made warden of the castle of Bristol.
+Randolph of Chester was consoled for the loss of the regency by the
+renewal of John's recent grant of the Honour of Lancaster which was
+by this time definitely recognised as a shire.[2]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Histoire des ducs de Normandie</i>, etc.,
+p. 181.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] Tait, <i>Medieval Manchester and the
+Beginnings of Lancashire</i>, p. 180.</p>
+
+<p>The war assumed the character of a crusade. The royalist troops
+wore white crosses on their garments, and were assured by the
+clergy of certain salvation. The cruel and purposeless ravaging of
+the enemy's country, which had occupied John's last months of life,
+became rare, though partisans, such as Falkes de
+Br&eacute;aut&eacute;, still outvied the French in plundering
+monasteries and churches. The real struggle became a war of
+castles. Louis endeavoured to complete his conquest of the
+south-east by the capture of the royal strongholds, which still
+limited his power to the open country. At first the French prince
+had some successes. In November he increased his hold on the Home
+counties by capturing the Tower of London, by forcing Hertford to
+surrender, and by pressing the siege of Berkhampsted. As Christmas
+approached the royalists proposed a truce. Louis agreed on the
+condition that Berkhampsted should be surrendered, and early in
+1217 both parties held councils, the royalists at Oxford and the
+barons at Cambridge. There was vague talk of peace, but the war was
+renewed, and Louis captured Hedingham and Orford in Essex, and
+besieged the castles of Colchester and Norwich. Then another truce
+until April 26 was concluded, on the condition that the royalists
+should surrender these two strongholds.</p>
+
+<p>Both sides had need to pause. Louis, at the limit of his
+resources, was anxious to obtain men and money from France. He was
+not getting on well with his new subjects. The eastern counties
+grumbled at his taxes. Dissensions arose between the English and
+French elements in his host. The English lords resented the grants
+and appointments he gave to his countrymen. The French nobles
+professed to despise the English as traitors. When Hertford was
+taken, Robert<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg007" id=
+"pg007">007</a></span> FitzWalter demanded that its custody should
+be restored to him. Louis roughly told him that Englishmen, who had
+betrayed their natural lord, were not to be entrusted with such
+charges. It was to little purpose that he promised Robert that
+every man should have his rights when the war was over. The
+prospects of ending the war grew more remote every day. The
+royalists took advantage of the discouragement of their opponents.
+The regent was lavish in promises. There should be no inquiry into
+bygones, and all who submitted to the young king should be
+guaranteed all their existing rights. The result was that a steady
+stream of converts began to flow from the camp of Louis to the camp
+of the marshal. For the first time signs of a national movement
+against Louis began to be manifest. It became clear that his rule
+meant foreign conquest.</p>
+
+<p>Louis wished to return to France, but despite the truce he could
+only win his way to the coast by fighting. The Cinque Ports were
+changing their allegiance. A popular revolt had broken out in the
+Weald, where a warlike squire, William of Cassingham,[1] soon
+became a terror to the French under his nickname of Wilkin of the
+Weald. As Louis traversed the disaffected districts, Wilkin fell
+upon him near Lewes, and took prisoners two nephews of the Count of
+Nevers. On his further march to Winchelsea, the men of the Weald
+broke down the bridges behind him, while on his approach the men of
+Winchelsea destroyed their mills, and took to their ships as avowed
+partisans of King Henry. The French prince entered the empty town,
+and had great difficulty in keeping his army alive. "Wheat found
+they there," says a chronicler; "in great plenty, but they knew not
+how to grind it. Long time were they in such a plight that they had
+to crush by hand the corn of which they made their bread. They
+could catch no fish. Great store of nuts found they in the town;
+these were their finest food."[2] Louis was in fact besieged by the
+insurgents, and was only released by a force of knights riding down
+from London to help him. These troops dared not travel by the
+direct road through the Weald, and made their way to Romney through
+Canterbury. Rye was strongly<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg008"
+id="pg008">008</a></span> held against them and the ships of the
+Cinque Ports dominated the sea, so that Louis was still cut off
+from his friends at Romney. A relieving fleet was despatched from
+Boulogne, but stress of weather kept it for a fortnight at Dover,
+while Louis was starving at Winchelsea. At last the French ships
+appeared off Winchelsea. Thereupon the English withdrew, and Louis
+finding the way open to France returned home.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Mr. G.J. Turner has identified Cassingham with
+the modern Kensham, between Rolvenden and Sandhurst, in Kent.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] <i>Histoire des ducs de Normandie</i>, etc.,
+p. 183.</p>
+
+<p>A crowd of waverers changed sides. At their head were William
+Longsword, Earl of Salisbury, the bastard great-uncle of the little
+king, and William, the young marshal, the eldest son of the Earl of
+Pembroke. The regent wandered from town to town in Sussex,
+receiving the submission of the peasantry, and venturing to
+approach as near London as Dorking. The victorious Wilkin was made
+Warden of the Seven Hundreds of the Weald. The greatest of the
+magnates of Sussex and Surrey, William, Earl Warenne, followed the
+example of his tenantry, and made his peace with the king. The
+royalists fell upon the few castles held by the barons. While one
+corps captured Odiham, Farnham, Chichester, and other southern
+strongholds, Falkes de Br&eacute;aut&eacute; overran the Isle of
+Ely, and Randolph of Chester besieged the Leicestershire fortress
+of Mount Sorrel. Enguerrand de Coucy, whom Louis had left in
+command, remained helpless in London. His boldest act was to send a
+force to Lincoln, which occupied the town, but failed to take the
+castle. This stronghold, under its hereditary warden, the valiant
+old lady, Nichola de Camville,[1] had already twice withstood a
+siege.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] On Nichola de Camville or de la Hay see M.
+Petit-Dutaillis in <i>M&eacute;langes Julien Havet</i>, pp.
+369-80.</p>
+
+<p>Louis found no great encouragement in France, for Philip
+Augustus, too prudent to offend the Church, gave but grudging
+support to his excommunicated son. When, on the eve of the
+expiration of the truce, Louis returned to England, his
+reinforcements comprised only 120 knights. Among them, however,
+were the Count of Brittany, Peter Mauclerc, anxious to press in
+person his rights to the earldom of Richmond, the Counts of Perche
+and Gu&icirc;nes, and many lords of Picardy, Artois and Ponthieu.
+Conscious that everything depended on the speedy capture of the
+royal castles, Louis introduced for the first time into England the
+<i>tr&eacute;buchet</i>, a recently invented<span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg009" id="pg009">009</a></span> machine that
+cast great missiles by means of heavy counterpoises. "Great was the
+talk about this, for at that time few of them had been seen in
+France."[1] On April 22, Louis reached Dover, where the castle was
+still feebly beset by the French. On his nearing the shore, Wilkin
+of the Weald and Oliver, a bastard of King John's, burnt the huts
+of the French engaged in watching the castle. Afraid to land in
+their presence, Louis disembarked at Sandwich. Next day he went by
+land to Dover, but discouraged by tidings of his losses, he gladly
+concluded a short truce with Hubert de Burgh. He abandoned the
+siege of Dover, and hurried off towards Winchester, where the two
+castles were being severely pressed by the royalists. But his
+progress was impeded by his siege train, and Farnham castle blocked
+his way.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Histoire des ducs de Normandie, etc.</i>,
+p. 188; cf. <i>English Hist. Review</i>, xviii. (1903), 263-64.</p>
+
+<p>Saer de Quincy, Earl of Winchester, joined Louis outside the
+walls of Farnham. Saer's motive was to persuade Louis to hasten to
+the relief of his castle of Mount Sorrel. The French prince was not
+in a position to resist pressure from a powerful supporter. He
+divided his army, and while the Earl of Winchester, along with the
+Count of Perche and Robert FitzWalter, made their way to
+Leicestershire, he completed his journey to Winchester, threw a
+fresh force into the castles, and, leaving the Count of Nevers in
+charge, hurried to London. There he learnt that Hubert de Burgh at
+Dover had broken the truce, and he at once set off to renew the
+siege of the stronghold which had so continually baulked his plans.
+But little good came of his efforts, and the much-talked-of
+<i>tr&eacute;buchet</i> proving powerless to effect a breach, Louis
+had to resign himself to a weary blockade. While he was besieging
+Dover, Saer de Quincy had relieved Mount Sorrel, whence he marched
+to the help of Gilbert of Ghent, the only English baron whom Louis
+ventured to raise to comital rank as Earl of Lincoln. Gilbert was
+still striving to capture Lincoln Castle, but Nichola de Camville
+had resisted him from February to May. With the help of the army
+from Mount Sorrel, the castle and its <i>ch&acirc;telaine</i> were
+soon reduced to great straits.</p>
+
+<p>The marshal saw that the time was come to take the offensive,
+and resolved to raise the siege. Having no field<span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg010" id="pg010">010</a></span> army, he
+stripped his castles of their garrisons, and gave rendezvous to his
+barons at Newark. There the royalists rested three days, and
+received the blessing of Gualo and the bishops. They then set out
+towards Lincoln, commanded by the regent in person, the Earl of
+Chester, and the Bishop of Winchester, whom the legate appointed as
+his representative. The strong water defences of the rebel city on
+the south made it unadvisable for them to take the direct route
+towards it. Their army descended the Trent to Torksey, where it
+rested the night of May 19. Early next day, the eve of Trinity
+Sunday, it marched in four "battles" to relieve Lincoln Castle.</p>
+
+<p>There were more than 600 knights besieging the castle and
+holding the town, and the relieving army only numbered 400 knights
+and 300 cross-bowmen. But the barons dared not risk a combat that
+might have involved them in the fate of Stephen in 1141. They
+retreated within the city and allowed the marshal to open up
+communications with the castle. The marshal's plan of battle was
+arranged by Peter des Roches, who was more at home in the field
+than in the church. The cross-bowmen under Falkes de
+Br&eacute;aut&eacute; were thrown into the castle, and joined with
+the garrison in making a sally from its east gate into the streets
+of the town. While the barons were thus distracted, the marshal
+burst through the badly defended north gate. The barons taken in
+front and flank fought desperately, but with no success. Falkes'
+cross-bowmen shot down their horses, and the dismounted knights
+soon failed to hold their own in the open ground about the
+cathedral. The Count of Perche was slain by a sword-thrust through
+the eyehole of his helmet. The royalists chased the barons down the
+steep lanes which connect the upper with the lower town. When they
+reached level ground the baronial troops rallied, and once more
+strove to reascend the hill. But the town was assailed on every
+side, and its land defences yielded with little difficulty. The
+Earl of Chester poured his vassals through one of the eastern
+gates, and took the barons in flank. Once more they broke, and this
+time they rallied not again, but fled through the Wigford suburb
+seeking any means of escape. Some obstruction in the Bar-gate, the
+southern exit from the city, retarded their flight, and many of the
+leaders were captured. The remnant fled to London,<span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg011" id="pg011">011</a></span> thinking that
+"every bush was full of marshals," and suffering severely from the
+hostility of the peasantry. Only three persons were slain in the
+battle, but there was a cruel massacre of the defenceless citizens
+after its close. So vast was the booty won by the victors that in
+scorn they called the fight the Fair of Lincoln![1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For a discussion of the battle, see <i>English
+Hist. Review</i>, xviii. (1903), 240-65.</p>
+
+<p>Louis' prospects were still not desperate. The victorious army
+scattered, each man to his own house, so that the marshal was in no
+position to press matters to extremities. But there was a great
+rush to make terms with the victor, and Louis thought it prudent to
+abandon the hopeless siege of Dover, and take refuge with his
+partisans, the Londoners. Meanwhile the marshal hovered round
+London, hoping eventually to shut up the enemy in the capital. On
+June 12, the Archbishop of Tyre and three Cistercian abbots, who
+had come to England to preach the Crusade, persuaded both parties
+to accept provisional articles of peace. Louis stipulated for a
+complete amnesty to all his partisans; but the legate declined to
+grant pardon to the rebellious clerks who had refused to obey the
+interdict, conspicuous among whom was the firebrand Simon Langton,
+brother of the archbishop. Finding no compromise possible, Louis
+broke off the negotiations rather than abandon his friends. Gualo
+urged a siege of London, but the marshal saw that his resources
+were not adequate for such a step. Again many of his followers went
+home, and the court abode first at Oxford and afterwards at
+Gloucester. It seemed as if the war might go on for ever.</p>
+
+<p>Blanche of Castile, Louis' wife, redoubled her efforts on his
+behalf. In response to her entreaties a hundred knights and several
+hundred men-at-arms took ship for England. Among the knights was
+the famous William des Barres, one of the heroes of Bouvines, and
+Theobald, Count of Blois. Eustace the Monk, a renegade clerk turned
+pirate, and a hero of later romance, took command of the fleet. On
+the eve of St. Bartholomew, August 23, Eustace sailed from Calais
+towards the mouth of the Thames. Kent had become royalist; the
+marshal and Hubert de Burgh held Sandwich, so that the long voyage
+up the Thames was the only way of taking succour to Louis. Next day
+the old earl remained on shore, but sent out Hubert<span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg012" id="pg012">012</a></span> with the fleet.
+The English let the French pass by, and then, manoeuvring for the
+weather gage, tacked and assailed them from behind.[1] The fight
+raged round the great ship of Eustace, on which the chief French
+knights were embarked. Laden with stores, horses, and a ponderous
+<i>tr&eacute;buchet</i>, it was too low in the water to manoeuvre
+or escape. Hubert easily laid his own vessel alongside it. The
+English, who were better used to fighting at sea than the French,
+threw powdered lime into the faces of the enemy, swept the decks
+with their crossbow bolts and then boarded the ship, which was
+taken after a fierce fight. The crowd of cargo boats could offer
+little resistance as they beat up against the wind in their retreat
+to Calais; the ships containing the soldiers were more fortunate in
+escaping. Eustace was beheaded, and his head paraded on a pole
+through the streets of Canterbury.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] This successful attempt of the English fleet
+to manoeuvre for the weather gage, that is to secure a position to
+the windward of their opponents, is the first recorded instance of
+what became the favourite tactics of British admirals. For the
+legend of Eustace see <i>Witasse le Moine</i>, ed. F&ouml;rster
+(1891).</p>
+
+<p>The battle of St. Bartholomew's Day, like that of Lincoln a
+triumph of skill over numbers, proved decisive for the fortunes of
+Louis. The English won absolute control of the narrow seas, and cut
+off from Louis all hope of fighting his way back to France. As soon
+as he heard of the defeat of Eustace, he reopened negotiations with
+the marshal. On the 29th there was a meeting between Louis and the
+Earl at the gates of London. The regent had to check the ardour of
+his own partisans, and it was only after anxious days of
+deliberation that the party of moderation prevailed. On September 5
+a formal conference was held on an island of the Thames near
+Kingston. On the 11th a definitive treaty was signed at the
+archbishop's house at Lambeth.</p>
+
+<p>The Treaty of Lambeth repeated with little alteration the terms
+rejected by Louis three months before. The French prince
+surrendered his castles, released his partisans from their oaths to
+him, and exhorted all his allies, including the King of Scots and
+the Prince of Gwynedd, to lay down their arms. In return Henry
+promised that no layman should lose his inheritance by reason of
+his adherence to Louis, and that the baronial prisoners should be
+released without further payment<span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg013" id="pg013">013</a></span> of ransom. London, despite its
+pertinacity in rebellion, was to retain its ancient franchises. The
+marshal bound himself personally to pay Louis 10,000 marks,
+nominally as expenses, really as a bribe to accept these terms. A
+few days later Louis and his French barons appeared before the
+legate, barefoot and in the white garb of penitents, and were
+reconciled to the Church. They were then escorted to Dover, whence
+they took ship for France. Only on the rebellious clergy did
+Gualo's wrath fall. The canons of St. Paul's were turned out in a
+body; ringleaders like Simon Langton were driven into exile, and
+agents of the legate traversed the country punishing clerks who had
+disregarded the interdict. But Honorius was more merciful than
+Gualo, and within a year even Simon received his pardon. The laymen
+of both camps forgot their differences, when Randolph of Chester
+and William of Ferrars fought in the crusade of Damietta, side by
+side with Saer of Winchester and Robert FitzWalter. The
+reconciliation of parties was further shown in the marriage of
+Hubert de Burgh to John's divorced wife, Isabella of Gloucester, a
+widow by the death of the Earl of Essex, and still the foremost
+English heiress. On November 6 the pacification was completed by
+the reissue of the Great Charter in what was substantially its
+final form. The forest clauses of the earlier issues were published
+in a much enlarged shape as a separate Forest Charter, which laid
+down the great principle that no man was to lose life or limb for
+hindering the king's hunting.</p>
+
+<p>It is tempting to regard the defeat of Louis as a triumph of
+English patriotism. But it is an anachronism to read the ideals of
+later ages into the doings of the men of the early thirteenth
+century. So far as there was national feeling in England, it was
+arrayed against Henry. To the last the most fervently English of
+the barons were steadfast on the French prince's side, and the
+triumph of the little king had largely been procured by John's
+foreigners. To contemporary eyes the rebels were factious assertors
+of class privileges and feudal immunities. Their revolt against
+their natural lord brought them into conflict with the sentiment of
+feudal duty which was still so strong in faithful minds. And
+against them was a stronger force than feudal loyally. From this
+religious standpoint the Canon of Barnwell best sums up the<span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg014" id="pg014">014</a></span>
+situation: "It was a miracle that the heir of France, who had won
+so large a part of the kingdom, was constrained to abandon the
+realm without hope of recovering it. It was because the hand of God
+was not with him. He came to England in spite of the prohibition of
+the Holy Roman Church, and he remained there regardless of its
+anathema."</p>
+
+<p>The young king never forgot that he owed his throne to the pope
+and his legate. "When we were bereft of our father in tender
+years," he declared long afterwards, "when our subjects were turned
+against us, it was our mother, the Holy Roman Church, that brought
+back our realm under our power, anointed us king, crowned us, and
+placed us on the throne."[1] The papacy, which had secured a new
+hold over England by its alliance with John, made its position
+permanent by its zeal for the rights of his son. By identifying the
+monarchy with the charters, it skilfully retraced the false step
+which it had taken. Under the ægis of the Roman see the national
+spirit grew, and the next generation was to see the temper fostered
+by Gualo in its turn grow impatient of the papal supremacy. It was
+Gualo, then, who secured the confirmation of the charters. Even
+Louis unconsciously worked in that direction, for, had he not
+gained so strong a hold on the country, there would have been no
+reason to adopt a policy of conciliation. We must not read the
+history of this generation in the light of modern times, or even
+with the eyes of Matthew Paris.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Grosseteste, <i>Epistolæ</i>, p. 339.</p>
+
+<p>The marshal had before him a task essentially similar to that
+which Henry II had undertaken after the anarchy of Stephen's reign.
+It was with the utmost difficulty that the sum promised to Louis
+could be extracted from the war-stricken and famished tillers of
+the soil. The exchequer was so empty that the Christmas court of
+the young king was celebrated at the expense of Falkes de
+Br&eacute;aut&eacute;. Those who had fought for the king clamoured
+for grants and rewards, and it was necessary to humour them. For
+example, Randolph of Blundeville, with the earldom of Lincoln added
+to his Cheshire palatinate and his Lancashire Honour, had acquired
+a position nearly as strong as that of the Randolph of the reign of
+Stephen. "Adulterine castles" had grown up in such numbers that the
+new issue of the Charter insisted upon their destruction.<span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg015" id="pg015">015</a></span> Even the
+lawful castles were held by unauthorised custodians, who refused to
+yield them up to the king's officers. Though Alexander, King of
+Scots, purchased his reconciliation with Rome by abandoning
+Carlisle and performing homage to Henry, the Welsh remained
+recalcitrant. One chieftain, Morgan of Caerleon, waged war against
+the marshal in Gwent, and was dislodged with difficulty. During the
+war Llewelyn ap Iorwerth conquered Cardigan and Carmarthen from the
+marchers, and it was only after receiving assurances that he might
+retain these districts so long as the king's minority lasted that
+he condescended to do homage at Worcester in March, 1218.</p>
+
+<p>In the following May Stephen Langton came back from exile and
+threw the weight of his judgment on the regent's side. Gradually
+the worst difficulties were surmounted. The administrative
+machinery once more became effective. A new seal was cast for the
+king, whose documents had hitherto been stamped with the seal of
+the regent. Order was so far restored that Gualo returned to Italy.
+He was a man of high character and noble aims, caring little for
+personal advancement, and curbing his hot zeal against
+"schismatics" in his desire to restore peace to England. His memory
+is still commemorated in his great church of St. Andrew, at
+Vercelli, erected, it may be, with the proceeds of his English
+benefices, and still preserving the manuscript of legends of its
+patron saint, which its founder had sent thither from his
+exile.</p>
+
+<p>At Candlemas, 1219, the aged regent was smitten with a mortal
+illness. His followers bore him up the Thames from London to his
+manor of Caversham, where his last hours were disturbed by the
+intrigues of Peter of Winchester for his succession, and the
+importunity of selfish clerks, clamouring for grants to their
+churches. He died on May 14, clad in the habit of the Knights of
+the Temple, in whose new church in London his body was buried, and
+where his effigy may still be seen. The landless younger son of a
+poor baron, he had supported himself in his youth by the spoils of
+the knights he had vanquished in the tournaments, where his
+successes gained him fame as the model of chivalry. The favour of
+Henry, the "young king," gave him political importance, and his
+marriage with Strongbow's daughter made him a mighty <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg016" id="pg016">016</a></span>man in England,
+Ireland, Wales, and Normandy. Strenuous and upright, simple and
+dignified, the young soldier of fortune bore easily the weight of
+office and honour which accrued to him before the death of his
+first patron. Limited as was his outlook, he gave himself entirely
+to his master-principle of loyally to the feudal lord whom he had
+sworn to obey. This simple conception enabled him to subordinate
+his interests as a marcher potentate to his duty to the English
+monarchy. It guided him in his difficult work of serving with
+unbending constancy a tyrant like John. It shone most clearly when
+in his old age he saved John's son from the consequences of his
+father's misdeeds. A happy accident has led to the discovery in our
+own days of the long poem, drawn up in commemoration of his
+career[1] at the instigation of his son. This important work has
+enabled us to enter into the marshal's character and spirit in much
+the same way as Joinville's <i>History of St. Louis</i> has made us
+familiar with the motives and attributes of the great French king.
+They are the two men of the thirteenth century whom we know most
+intimately. It is well that the two characters thus portrayed at
+length represent to us so much of what is best in the chivalry,
+loyalty, statecraft, and piety of the Middle Ages.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Histoire de Guillaume le
+Mar&eacute;chal</i>, published by P. Meyer for the Soc. de
+l'histoire de France. Petit-Dutaillis, <i>&Eacute;tude sur Louis
+VIII.</i> (1894), and G.J. Turner, <i>Minority of Henry III.</i>,
+part i, in <i>Transactions of the Royal Hist. Soc.</i>, new ser.,
+viii. (1904), 245-95, are the best modern commentaries on the
+history of the marshal's regency.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<h4>THE RULE OF HUBERT DE BURGH.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg017" id=
+"pg017">017</a></span>William Marshal had recognized that the
+regency must end with him. "There is no land," he declared, "where
+the people are so divided as they are in England. Were I to hand
+over the king to one noble, the others would be jealous. For this
+reason I have determined to entrust him to God and the pope. No one
+can blame me for this, for, if the land is not defended by the
+pope, I know no one who can protect it." The fortunate absence of
+Randolph of Chester on crusade made it easy to carry out this plan.
+Accordingly the king of twelve years was supposed to be capable of
+acting for himself. But the ultimate authority resided with the new
+legate Pandulf, who, without any formal designation, was the real
+successor of the marshal. This arrangement naturally left great
+power to Peter des Roches, who continued to have the custody of the
+king's person, and to Hubert the justiciar, who henceforth acted as
+Pandulf's deputy. Next to them came the Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Langton's share in the struggle for the charters was so
+conspicuous, that we do not always remember that it was as a
+scholar and a theologian that he acquired his chief reputation
+among his contemporaries. On his return from exile he found such
+engrossing occupation in the business of his see, that he took
+little part in politics for several years. His self-effacement
+strengthened the position of the legate.</p>
+
+<p>Pandulf was no stranger to England. As subdeacon of the Roman
+Church he received John's submission in 1213, and stood by his side
+during nearly all his later troubles. He had been rewarded by his
+election to the bishopric of Norwich, but was recalled to Rome
+before his consecration, and only came <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg018" id="pg018">018</a></span> back to England in the
+higher capacity of legate on December 3, 1218, after the recall of
+Gualo. He had been the cause of Langton's suspension, and there was
+probably no love lost between him and the archbishop. It was in
+order to avoid troublesome questions of jurisdiction that Pandulf,
+at the pope's suggestion, continued to postpone his consecration as
+bishop, since that act would have subordinated him to the
+Archbishop of Canterbury. But neither he nor Langton was disposed
+to push matters to extremities. Just as Peter des Roches balanced
+Hubert de Burgh, so the archbishop acted as a makeweight to the
+legate. When power was thus nicely equipoised, there was a natural
+tendency to avoid conflicting issues. In these circumstances the
+truce between parties, which had marked the regency, continued for
+the first years after Earl William's death. In all doubtful points
+the will of the legate seems to have prevailed. Pandulf's
+correspondence shows him interfering in every matter of state. He
+associated himself with the justiciar in the appointment of royal
+officials; he invoked the papal authority to put down "adulterine
+castles," and to prevent any baron having more than one royal
+stronghold in his custody; he prolonged the truce with France, and
+strove to pacify the Prince of North Wales; he procured the
+resumption of the royal domain, and rebuked Bishop Peter and the
+justiciar for remissness in dealing with Jewish usurers; he filled
+up bishoprics at his own discretion. Nor did he neglect his own
+interests; his kinsfolk found preferment in his English diocese,
+and he appropriated certain livings for the payment of his debts,
+"so far as could be done without offence". But in higher matters he
+pursued a wise policy. In recognising that the great interest of
+the Church was peace, he truly expressed the policy of the mild
+Honorius. For more than two years he kept Englishmen from flying at
+each other's throats. If they paid for peace by the continuance of
+foreign rule, it was better to be governed by Pandulf than pillaged
+by Falkes. The principal events of these years were due to papal
+initiative.[1] Honorius looked askance on the maimed rites of<span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg019" id="pg019">019</a></span> the
+Gloucester coronation, and ordered a new hallowing to take place at
+the accustomed place and with the accustomed ceremonies. This
+supplementary rite was celebrated at Westminster on Whitsunday, May
+17, 1220. Though Pandulf was present, he discreetly permitted the
+Archbishop of Canterbury to crown Henry with the diadem of St.
+Edward. "This coronation," says the Canon of Barnwell, "was
+celebrated with such good order and such splendour that the oldest
+magnates who were present declared that they had seen none of the
+king's predecessors crowned with so much goodwill and
+tranquillity." Nor was this the only great ecclesiastical function
+of the year. On July 7 Langton celebrated at Canterbury the
+translation of the relics of St. Thomas to a magnificent shrine at
+the back of the high altar. Again the legate gave precedence to the
+archbishop, and the presence of the young king, of the Archbishop
+of Reims, and the Primate of Hungary, gave distinction to the
+solemnity. It was a grand time for English saints. When Damietta
+was taken from the Mohammedans, the crusaders dedicated two of its
+churches to St. Thomas of Canterbury and St. Edmund the King. A new
+saint was added to the calendar, who, if not an Englishman, had
+done good work for the country of his adoption. In 1220 Honorius
+III. canonised Hugh of Avalon, the Carthusian Bishop of Lincoln, on
+the report of a commission presided over by Langton himself.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] H.R. Luard, <i>On the Relations between
+England and Rome during the Earlier Portion of the Reign of Henry
+III.</i> (1877), illustrates papal influence at this period.</p>
+
+<p>No real unity of principle underlay the external tranquillity.
+As time went on Peter des Roches bitterly resented the growing
+preponderance of Hubert de Burgh. Not all the self-restraint of the
+legate could commend him to Langton, whose obstinate insistence
+upon his metropolitical authority forced Pandulf to procure bulls
+from Rome specifically releasing him from the jurisdiction of the
+primate. In these circumstances it was natural for Bishop Peter and
+the legate to join together against the justiciar and the
+archbishop. Finding that the legate was too strong for him, Langton
+betook himself to Rome, and remained there nearly a year. Before he
+went home he persuaded Honorius to promise not to confer the same
+benefice twice by papal provision, and to send no further legate to
+England during his lifetime. Pandulf was at once recalled, and left
+England in July, 1221, a month before his<span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg020" id="pg020">020</a></span> rival's return. He was
+compensated for the slight put upon him by receiving his
+long-deferred consecration to Norwich at the hands of the pope.
+There is small reason for believing that he was exceptionally
+greedy or unpopular. But his withdrawal removed an influence which
+had done its work for good, and was becoming a national danger.
+Langton henceforth could act as the real head of the English
+Church. In 1222, he held an important provincial council at Oseney
+abbey, near Oxford, where he issued constitutions, famous as the
+first provincial canons still recognised as binding in our
+ecclesiastical courts. He began once more to concern himself with
+affairs of state, and Hubert found him a sure ally. Bishop Peter,
+disgusted with his declining influence, welcomed his appointment as
+archbishop of the crusading Church at Damietta. He took the cross,
+and left England with Falkes de Br&eacute;aut&eacute; as his
+companion. Learning that the crescent had driven the cross out of
+his new see, he contented himself with making the pilgrimage to
+Compostella, and soon found his way back to England, where he
+sought for opportunities to regain power.</p>
+
+<p>Relieved of the opposition of Bishop Peter, Hubert insisted on
+depriving barons of doubtful loyalty of the custody of royal
+castles, and found his chief opponent in William Earl of Albemarle.
+In dignity and possessions, Albemarle was not ill-qualified to be a
+feudal leader. The son of William de Fors, of Ol&eacute;ron, a
+Poitevin adventurer of the type of Falkes de Br&eacute;aut&eacute;,
+he represented, through his mother, the line of the counts of
+Aum&acirc;le, who had since the Conquest ruled over Holderness from
+their castle at Skipsea. The family acquired the status of English
+earls under Stephen, retaining their foreign title, expressed in
+English in the form of Albemarle, being the first house of comital
+rank abroad to hold an earldom with a French name unassociated with
+any English shire. During the civil war Albemarle's
+tergiversations, which rivalled those of the Geoffrey de Mandeville
+of Stephen's time, had been rewarded by large grants from the
+victorious party. Since 1219 he suffered slight upon slight, and in
+1220 was stripped of the custody of Rockingham Castle. Late in that
+year Hubert resolved to enforce an order, promulgated in 1217,
+which directed Albemarle to restore to his former subtenant Bytham
+Castle, in South Kesteven, of which he was<span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg021" id="pg021">021</a></span> overlord, and of which he
+had resumed possession on account of the treason of his vassal. The
+earl hurried away in indignation from the king's Christmas court,
+and in January, 1221, threw himself into Bytham, eager to hold it
+by force against the king. For a brief space he ruled over the
+country-side after the fashion of a baron of Stephen's time. He
+plundered the neighbouring towns and churches, and filled the
+dungeons of Castle Bytham with captives. On the pretext of
+attending a council at Westminster he marched southwards, but his
+real motive was disclosed when he suddenly attacked the castle of
+Fotheringhay. His men crossed the moat on the ice, and, burning
+down the great gate, easily overpowered the scanty garrison. "As if
+he were the only ruler of the kingdom," says the Canon of Barnwell,
+"he sent letters signed with his seal to the mayors of the cities
+of England, granting his peace to all merchants engaged in plying
+their trades, and allowing them free licence of going and coming
+through his castles." Nothing in the annals of the time puts more
+clearly this revival of the old feudal custom that each baron
+should lord it as king over his own estates.</p>
+
+<p>Albemarle's power did not last long. He incurred the wrath of
+the Church, and both in Kesteven and in Northamptonshire set
+himself against the interests of Randolph of Chester. Before
+January was over Pandulf excommunicated him, and a great council
+granted a special scutage, "the scutage of Bytham," to equip an
+army to crush the rebel. Early in February a considerable force
+marched northwards against him. The Earl of Chester took part in
+the campaign, and both the legate and the king accompanied the
+army. Before the combined efforts of Church and State, Albemarle
+dared not hold his ground, and fled to Fountains, where he took
+sanctuary. His followers abandoned Fotheringhay, but stood a siege
+at Bytham. After six days this castle was captured on February 8.
+Even then secret sympathisers with Albemarle were able to exercise
+influence on his behalf, and Pandulf himself was willing to show
+mercy. The earl came out of sanctuary, and was pardoned on
+condition of taking the crusader's vow. No effort was made to
+insist on his going on crusade, and within a few months he was
+again in favour. "Thus," says Roger of Wendover, "the king set the
+worst of<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg022" id=
+"pg022">022</a></span> examples, and encouraged future rebellions."
+Randolph of Chester came out with the spoils of victory. He secured
+as the price of his ostentatious fidelity the custody of the Honour
+of Huntingdon, during the nonage of the earl, his nephew, John the
+Scot.</p>
+
+<p>A tumult in the capital soon taught Hubert that he had other
+foes to fight against besides the feudal party. At a wrestling
+match, held on July 25, 1222, between the city and the suburbs, the
+citizens won an easy victory. The tenants of the Abbot of
+Westminster challenged the conquerors to a fresh contest on August
+1 at Westminster. But the abbot's men were more anxious for revenge
+than good sport, and seeing that the Londoners were likely to win,
+they violently broke up the match. Suspecting no evil, the citizens
+had come without arms, and were very severely handled by their
+rivals. Driven back behind their walls, the Londoners clamoured for
+vengeance. Serlo the mercer, their mayor, a prudent and
+peace-loving man, urged them to seek compensation of the abbot. But
+the citizens preferred the advice of Constantine FitzAthulf, who
+insisted upon an immediate attack on the men of Westminster. Next
+day the abbey precincts were invaded, and much mischief was done.
+The alarm was the greater because Constantine was a man of high
+position, who had recently been a sheriff of London, and had once
+been a strenuous supporter of Louis of France. It was rumoured that
+his followers had raised the cry, "Montjoie! Saint Denis!" The
+quarrels of neighbouring cities were as dangerous to sound rule as
+the feuds of rival barons, and Hubert took instant measures to put
+down the sedition. With the aid of Falkes de
+Br&eacute;aut&eacute;'s mercenaries, order was restored, and
+Constantine was led before the justiciar. Early next day Falkes
+assembled his forces, and crossed the river to Southwark. He took
+with him Constantine and two of his supporters, and hanged all
+three, without form of trial, before the city knew anything about
+it. Then Falkes and his soldiers rushed through the streets,
+capturing, mutilating, and frightening away the citizens.
+Constantine's houses and property were seized by the king. The weak
+Serlo was deposed from the mayoralty, and the city taken into the
+king's hands. It was the last time that Hubert and Falkes worked
+together, and something of the violence of<span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg023" id="pg023">023</a></span> the <i>condottiere</i>
+captain sullied the justiciar's reputation. As the murderer of
+Constantine, Hubert was henceforth pursued with the undying hatred
+of the Londoners.</p>
+
+<p>During the next two years parties became clearly defined. Hubert
+more and more controlled the royal policy, and strove to strengthen
+both his master and himself by marriage alliances. Powerful
+husbands were sought for the king's three sisters. On June 19,
+1221, Joan, Henry's second sister, was married to the young
+Alexander of Scotland, at York. At the same time Hubert, a widower
+by Isabella of Gloucester's death, wedded Alexander's elder sister,
+Margaret, a match which compensated the justiciar for his loss of
+Isabella's lands. Four years later, Isabella, the King of Scot's
+younger sister, was united with Roger Bigod, the young Earl of
+Norfolk, a grandson of the great William Marshal, whose eldest son
+and successor, William Marshal the younger, was in 1224 married to
+the king's third sister, Eleanor. The policy of intermarriage
+between the royal family and the baronage was defended by the
+example of Philip Augustus in France, and on the ground of the
+danger to the royal interests if so strong a magnate as the earl
+marshal were enticed away from his allegiance by an alliance with a
+house unfriendly to Henry.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Royal Letters</i>, i., 244-46.</p>
+
+<p>The futility of marriage alliances in modifying policy was
+already made clear by the attitude of Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, the
+husband of Henry's bastard sister Joan. This resourceful prince had
+already raised himself to a high position by a statecraft which
+lacked neither strength nor duplicity. Though fully conscious of
+his position as the champion of a proud nation, and, posing as the
+peer of the King of Scots, Llewelyn saw that it was his interest to
+continue the friendship with the baronial opposition which had
+profited him so greatly in the days of the French invasion. The
+pacification arranged in 1218 sat rightly upon him, and he plunged
+into a war with William Marshal the younger that desolated South
+Wales for several years. In 1219 Llewelyn devastated Pembrokeshire
+so cruelly that the marshal's losses were currently, though
+absurdly, reported to have exceeded the amount of the ransom of
+King Richard. There was much more fighting, but Llewelyn's progress
+was impeded by difficulties with his own son Griffith, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg024" id="pg024">024</a></span>and with the
+princes of South Wales, who bore impatiently the growing hold of
+the lord of Gwynedd upon the affections of southern Welshmen. There
+was war also in the middle march, where in 1220 a royal army was
+assembled against Llewelyn; but Pandulf negotiated a truce, and the
+only permanent result of this effort was the fortification of the
+castle and town at Montgomery, which had become royal demesne on
+the extinction of the ancient house of Bollers a few years earlier.
+But peace never lasted long west of the Severn, and in 1222 William
+Marshal drove Llewelyn out of Cardigan and Carmarthen. Again there
+were threats of war. Llewelyn was excommunicated, and his lands put
+under interdict. The marshal complained bitterly of the poor
+support which Henry gave him against the Welsh, but Hubert restored
+cordiality between him and the king. In these circumstances the
+policy of marrying Eleanor to the indignant marcher was a wise one.
+Llewelyn however could still look to the active friendship of
+Randolph of Chester. While the storm of war raged in South Wales,
+the march between Cheshire and Gwynedd enjoyed unwonted peace, and
+in 1223 a truce was patched up through Randolph's mediation.</p>
+
+<p>Earl Randolph needed the Welsh alliance the more because he
+definitely threw in his lot with the enemies of Hubert de Burgh. In
+April, 1223, a bull of Honorius III. declared Henry competent to
+govern in his own name, a change which resulted in a further
+strengthening of Hubert's power. Towards the end of the year
+Randolph joined with William of Albemarle, the Bishop of Winchester
+and Falkes de Br&eacute;aut&eacute;, in an attempt to overthrow the
+justiciar. The discontented barons took arms and laid their
+grievances before the king. They wished, they said, no ill to king
+or kingdom, but simply desired to remove the justiciar from his
+counsels. Hot words passed between the indignant Hubert and Peter
+des Roches, and the conference broke up in confusion. The barons
+still remained mutinous, and, while the king held his Christmas
+court at Northampton, they celebrated the feast at Leicester. At
+last Langton persuaded both parties to come to an agreement on the
+basis of king's friends and barons alike surrendering their castles
+and wardships. This was a substantial victory for the party of
+order, and during the next few months much was <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg025" id="pg025">025</a></span>done to transfer
+the castles to loyal hands. Randolph himself surrendered Shrewsbury
+and Bridgnorth.</p>
+
+<p>Comparative peace having been restored, and the judicial bench
+purged of feudal partisans, private persons ventured to complain of
+outrageous acts of "novel disseisin", or unlawful appropriation of
+men's lands. In the spring of 1224 the king's justices went
+throughout the country, hearing and deciding pleas of this sort.
+Sixteen acts of novel disseisin were proved against Falkes de
+Br&eacute;aut&eacute;. Despite all the efforts of Langton and
+Hubert, that able adventurer, though stripped of some of his
+castles, fully maintained the position which he first acquired in
+the service of John. He was not the man to put up tamely with the
+piecemeal destruction of his power by legal process, and, backed up
+secretly by the feudal leaders, resolved to take the law into his
+own hands. One of the most active of the judges in hearing
+complaints against him was Henry of Braybrook. Falkes bade his
+brother, William de Br&eacute;aut&eacute; fall upon the justice,
+who had been hearing suits at Dunstable, and take him prisoner.
+William faithfully fulfilled his brother's orders, and on June 17
+the unlucky judge was safely shut up in a dungeon of Bedford
+Castle, of which William had the custody, as his brother's agent.
+So daring an outrage on the royal authority was worse than the
+action of William of Albemarle four years before. Hubert and the
+archbishop immediately took strong measures to enforce the sanctity
+of the law. While Langton excommunicated Falkes and his abettors,
+Hubert hastily turned against the traitor the forces which were
+assembling at Northampton with the object of reconquering Poitou.
+Braybrook was captured on Monday. On Thursday the royal troops
+besieged Bedford.</p>
+
+<p>The siege lasted from June 20 to August 14. The "noble castle of
+Bedford" was new, large, and fortified with an inner and outer
+baily, and two strong towers. Falkes trusted that it would hold out
+for a year, and had amply provided it with provisions and munitions
+of war. In effect, though William de Br&eacute;aut&eacute; and his
+followers showed a gallant spirit, it resisted the justiciar for
+barely two months. When called upon to surrender the garrison
+answered that they would only yield at their lord's orders, and
+that the more as they were not bound to the king by homage or
+fealty. Nothing was left <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg026" id=
+"pg026">026</a></span>but a fight to the death. The royalists made
+strenuous efforts. A new scutage, the "scutage of Bedford," was
+imposed on the realm. Meanwhile Falkes fled to his accomplice, the
+Earl of Chester, and afterwards took refuge with Llewelyn. But the
+adventurer found such cold comfort from the great men who had lured
+him to his ruin that he perforce made his way back to England,
+along with a motley band of followers, English and French, Scottish
+and Welsh.[1] A hue and cry was raised after him, and, like William
+of Albemarle, he was forced to throw himself into sanctuary, while
+Randolph of Chester openly joined the besiegers of Bedford. In his
+refuge in a church at Coventry, Falkes was persuaded to surrender
+to the bishop of the diocese, who handed him over to Langton.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] The names of his <i>familia</i> taken with him
+are in <i>Patent Rolls of Henry III.</i>, 1216-1227, pp.
+461-62.</p>
+
+<p>During Falkes's wanderings his brother had been struggling
+valiantly against overwhelming odds. <i>Petrariae</i> and mangonels
+threw huge stones into the castle, and effected breaches in keep
+and curtain. Miners undermined the walls, while over-against the
+stronghold two lofty structures of wood were raised, from which the
+crossbowmen, who manned them, were able to command the whole of the
+interior. At last the castle was captured in four successive
+assaults. In the first the barbican was taken; in the next the
+outer baily was stormed; in the third the interior baily was won;
+and in the last the keep was split asunder. The garrison then
+allowed the women and captives, including the wife of Falkes and
+the unlucky Braybrook, to make their way to the enemies' lines.
+Next day the defenders themselves surrendered. The only mercy shown
+to these gallant men was that they were allowed to make their peace
+with the Church before their execution. Of the eighty prisoners,
+three Templars alone were spared.</p>
+
+<p>Falkes threw himself upon the king's mercy, appealing to his
+former services to Henry and his father. He surrendered to the King
+the large sums of money which he had deposited with his bankers,
+the Templars of London, and ordered his castellans in Plympton and
+the other west-country castles of his wife to open their gates to
+the royal officers. In return for these concessions he was released
+from excommunication. His life was spared, but his property was
+confiscated, and he<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg027" id=
+"pg027">027</a></span> was ordered to abjure the realm. Even his
+wife deserted him, protesting that she had been forced to marry him
+against her will. On October 26 he received letters of safe conduct
+to go beyond sea. As he left England, he protested that he had been
+instigated by the English magnates in all that he had done. On
+landing at F&eacute;camp he was detained by his old enemy Louis,
+then, by his father's death, King of France. But Louis VIII. was
+the last man to bear old grudges against the Norman adventurer,
+especially as Falkes's rising had enabled him to capture the chief
+towns of Poitou.</p>
+
+<p>Even in his exile Falkes was still able to do mischief. He
+obtained his release from Louis' prison about Easter, 1225, on the
+pretence of going on crusade. He then made his way to Rome where he
+strove to excite the sympathy of Honorius III., by presenting an
+artful memorial, which throws a flood of light upon his character,
+motives, and hopes. Honorius earnestly pleaded for his restitution,
+but Hubert and Langton stood firm against him. They urged that the
+pope had been misinformed, and declined to recall the exile.
+Honorius sent his chaplain Otto to England, but the nuncio found it
+impossible to modify the policy of the advisers of the king. Falkes
+went back from Italy to Troyes, where he waited for a year in the
+hope that his sentence would be reversed. At last Otto gave up his
+cause in despair, and devoted himself to the more profitable work
+of exacting money from the English clergy. Falkes died in 1226.
+With him disappears from our history the lawless spirit which had
+troubled the land since the war between John and his barons. The
+foreign adventurers, of whom he was the chief, either went back in
+disgust to their native lands, or, like Peter de Mauley, became
+loyal subjects and the progenitors of a harmless stock of English
+barons. The ten years of storm and stress were over. The
+administration was once more in English hands, and Hubert enjoyed a
+few years of well-earned power.</p>
+
+<p>New difficulties at once arose. The defeat of the feudalists and
+their Welsh allies involved heavy special taxation, and the king's
+honour required that an effort should be made both to wrest Poitou
+from Louis VIII., and to strengthen the English hold over Gascony.
+Besides national obligations, clergy and laity alike were still
+called upon to contribute towards the<span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg028" id="pg028">028</a></span> cost of crusading enterprises,
+and in 1226 the papal nuncio, Otto, demanded that a large
+proportion of the revenues of the English clergy should be
+contributed to the papal coffers. To the Englishman of that age all
+extraordinary taxation was a grievance quite irrespective of its
+necessity. The double incidence of the royal and papal demands was
+met by protests which showed some tendency towards the splitting up
+of the victorious side into parties. It was still easy for all to
+unite against Otto, and the papal agent was forced to go home empty
+handed, for councils both of clergy and barons agreed to reject his
+demands. Whatever other nations might offer to the pope, argued the
+magnates, the realms of England and Ireland at least had a right to
+be freed from such impositions by reason of the tribute which John
+had agreed to pay to Innocent III. The demand of the king's
+ministers for a fifteenth to prosecute the war with France was
+reluctantly conceded, but only on the condition of a fresh
+confirmation of the charters in a form intended to bring home to
+the king his personal obligation to observe them. Hubert de Burgh,
+however, was no enthusiast for the charters. His standpoint was
+that of the officials of the age of Henry II. To him the
+re-establishment of order meant the restoration of the prerogative.
+There he parted company with the archbishop, who was an eager
+upholder of the charters, for which he was so largely responsible.
+The struggle against the foreigner was to be succeeded by a
+struggle for the charters.</p>
+
+<p>In January, 1227, a council met at Oxford. The king, then nearly
+twenty years old, declared that he would govern the country
+himself, and renounced the tutelage of the Bishop of Winchester.
+Henry gave himself over completely to the justiciar, whom he
+rewarded for his faithful service by making him Earl of Kent. In
+deep disgust Bishop Peter left the court to carry out his
+long-deferred crusading vows. For four years he was absent in
+Palestine, where his military talents had ample scope as one of the
+leaders of Frederick II.'s army, while his diplomatic skill sought,
+with less result, to preserve some sort of relations between the
+excommunicated emperor and the new pope, Gregory IX., who in this
+same year succeeded Honorius. In April Gregory renewed the bull of
+1223 in which his predecessor recognised Henry's competence to
+govern.</p>
+
+<p>Thus ended the first minority since the Conquest. The<span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg029" id="pg029">029</a></span>
+successful restoration of law and order when the king was a child,
+showed that a strong king was not absolutely necessary for good
+government. From the exercise of royal authority by ministers
+without the personal intervention of the monarch arose the ideas of
+limited monarchy, the responsibility of the official, and the
+constitutional rights of the baronial council to appoint ministers
+and control the administration. We also discern, almost for the
+first time, the action of an inner ministerial council which was
+ultimately to develop into the <i>consilium ordinarium</i> of a
+later age.</p>
+
+<p>No sudden changes attended the royal majority. Those who had
+persuaded Henry to dismiss Bishop Peter had no policy beyond
+getting rid of a hated rival. The new Earl of Kent continued to
+hold office as justiciar for five years, and his ascendency is even
+more marked in the years 1227 to 1232 than it had been between 1224
+and 1227. Hubert still found the task of ruling England by no means
+easy. With the mitigation of home troubles foreign affairs assumed
+greater importance, and England's difficulties with France, the
+efforts to establish cordial relations with the empire, the
+ever-increasing aggressions of Llewelyn of Wales, and the chronic
+troubles of Ireland, involved the country in large expenses with
+little compensating advantage. Not less uneasy were the results of
+the growing encroachments of the papacy and the increasing
+inability of the English clergy to face them. Papal taxation, added
+to the burden of national taxation, induced discontent that found a
+ready scapegoat in the justiciar. The old and the new baronial
+opposition combined to denounce Hubert as the true cause of all
+evils. The increasing personal influence of the young king
+complicated the situation. In his efforts to deal with all these
+problems Hubert became involved in the storm of obloquy which
+finally brought about his fall.</p>
+
+<p>At the accession of Henry III., the truce for five years
+concluded between his father and Philip Augustus on September 18,
+1214, had still three years to run. The expedition of Louis to
+England might well seem to have broken it, but the prudent
+disavowal by Philip II. of his son's sacrilegious enterprise made
+it a point of policy for the French King to regard it as still in
+force, and neither John nor the earl marshal <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg030" id="pg030">030</a></span>had a mind to
+face the enmity of the father as well as the invasion of the son.
+Accordingly the truce ran out its full time, and in 1220 Honorius
+III., ever zealous for peace between Christian sovereigns, procured
+its prolongation for four years. Before this had expired, the
+accession of Louis VIII. in 1223 raised the old enemy of King Henry
+to the throne of France. Louis still coveted the English throne,
+and desired to complete the conquest of Henry's French dominions in
+France. His accession soon involved England in a new struggle,
+luckily delayed until the worst of the disorders at home had been
+overcome.</p>
+
+<p>Peace was impossible because Louis, like Philip, regarded the
+forfeiture of John as absolute, and as involving the right to deny
+to Henry III. a legitimate title to any of his lands beyond sea.
+Henry, on the other hand, was still styled Duke of Normandy, Count
+of Anjou, Count of Poitou, and Duke of Aquitaine. Claiming all that
+his father had held, he refused homage to Philip or Louis for such
+French lands as he actually possessed. For the first time since the
+Conquest, an English king ruled over extensive French territories
+without any feudal subjection to the King of France. However,
+Henry's French lands, though still considerable, were but a shadow
+of those once ruled by his father. Philip had conquered all
+Normandy, save the Channel Islands, and also the whole of Anjou and
+Touraine. For a time he also gained possession of Poitou, but
+before his death nearly the whole of that region had slipped from
+his grasp. Poitiers, alone of its great towns, remained in French
+hands. For the rest, both the barons and cities of Poitou
+acknowledged the over-lordship of their English count. Too much
+importance must not be ascribed to this revival of the English
+power. Henry claimed very little domain in Poitou, which
+practically was divided between the feudal nobles and the great
+communes. So long as they maintained a virtual freedom, they were
+indifferent as to their overlord. If they easily transferred their
+allegiance from Philip to Henry, it was because the weakness of
+absentee counts was less to be dreaded than the strength of a
+monarch near at hand. Meanwhile the barons carried on their feuds
+one against the other, and all alike joined in oppressing the
+townsmen.</p>
+
+<p>During Henry's minority the crown was not strong enough <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg031" id="pg031">031</a></span>to deal
+with the unruly Foitevins. Seneschals quickly succeeded each other;
+the barons expected the office to be filled by one of their own
+order, and the towns, jealous of hostile neighbours, demanded the
+appointment of an Englishman. At last, in 1221, Savary de
+Maul&eacute;on, one of King John's mercenaries, a poet, and a
+crusader against infidels and Albigenses, was made seneschal. His
+English estates ensured some measure of fidelity, and his energy
+and experience were guarantees of his competence, though, as a
+younger member of the great house of Thouars, he belonged by birth
+to the inner circle of the Poitevin nobility, whose treachery,
+levity, and self-seeking were proverbial. The powerful Viscounts of
+Thouars were constantly kept in check by their traditional enemies
+the Counts of La Marche, whose representative, Hugh of Lusignan,
+was by far the strongest of the local barons. His cousin, and
+sometime betrothed, Isabella, Countess of Angoul&ecirc;me, the
+widow of King John, had left England to resume the administration
+of her dominions. Early in 1220 she married Hugh, justifying
+herself to her son on the ground that it would be dangerous to his
+interests if the Count of La Marche should contract an alliance
+with the French party. But this was mere excuse. The union of La
+Marche and Angoul&ecirc;me largely increased Count Hugh's power,
+and he showed perfect impartiality in pursuing his own interests by
+holding a balance between his stepson and the King of France.
+Against him neither Savary nor the Poitevin communes could contend
+with success. The anarchy of Poitou was an irresistible temptation
+to Louis VII. "Know you," he wrote to the men of Limoges, "that
+John, king of England, was deprived by the unanimous judgment of
+his peers of all the lands which he held of our father Philip. We
+have now received in inheritance all our father's rights, and
+require you to perform the service that you owe us." While the
+English government weakly negotiated for the prolongation of the
+truce, and for the pope's intervention, Louis concluded treaties
+with the Poitevin barons, and made ready an army to conquer his
+inheritance. Foremost among his local partisans appeared Henry's
+stepfather.</p>
+
+<p>The French army met at Tours on June 24, 1224, and marched
+through Thouars to La Rochelle, the strongest of the Poitevin
+towns, and the most devoted to England. On <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg032" id="pg032">032</a></span>the way Louis forced Savary
+de Maul&eacute;on to yield up Niort, and to promise to defend no
+other place than La Rochelle, before which city he sat down on July
+15. At first Savary resisted vigorously. The siege of Bedford,
+however, prevented the despatch of effective help from England, and
+Savary was perhaps already secretly won over by Louis. Be this as
+it may, the town surrendered on August 3, and with it went all
+Aquitaine north of the Dordogne. Savary took service with the
+conqueror, and was made warden of La Rochelle and of the adjacent
+coasts, while Lusignan received the reward of his treachery in a
+grant of the Isle of Ol&eacute;ron. When Louis returned to the
+north, the Count of La Marche undertook the conquest of Gascony. He
+soon made himself master of St. Emilion, and of the whole of
+P&eacute;rigord. The surrender of La R&eacute;ole opened up the
+passage of the Garonne, and the capture of Bazas gave the French a
+foothold to the south of that river. Only the people of Bordeaux
+showed any spirit in resisting Hugh. But their resistance proved
+sufficient, and he withdrew baffled before their walls.</p>
+
+<p>The easiness of Louis' conquests showed their instability. "I am
+sure," wrote one of Henry's officers, "that you can easily recover
+all that you have lost, if you send speedy succour to these
+regions." After the capture of Bedford, Hubert undertook the
+recovery of Poitou and the defence of Gascony. Henry's younger
+brother Richard, a youth of sixteen, was appointed Earl of Cornwall
+and Count of Poitou, dubbed knight by his brother, and put in
+nominal command of the expedition despatched to Gascony in March,
+1225. His experienced uncle, William Longsword, Earl of Salisbury,
+and Philip of Aubigny, were sent with him as his chief counsellors.
+Received with open arms by Bordeaux, he boasted on May 2 that he
+had conquered all Gascony, save La R&eacute;ole, and had received
+the allegiance of every Gascon noble, except Elie Rudel, the lord
+of Bergerac. The siege of La R&eacute;ole, the only serious
+military operation of the campaign, occupied Richard all the summer
+and autumn, and it was not until November 13 that the burgesses
+opened their gates. As soon as the French had retired, the lord of
+Bergerac, "after the fashion of the Poitevins," renounced Louis and
+professed himself the liegeman of Earl Richard. Then the worst
+trouble was that Savary de <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg033"
+id="pg033">033</a></span>Maul&eacute;on's ships commanded the Bay
+of Biscay, and rendered communication between Bordeaux and England
+very difficult.[1] Once more the men of the Cinque Ports came to
+the king's aid, and there was severe fighting at sea, involving
+much plunder of merchant vessels and dislocation of trade.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] The names of his <i>familia</i> taken with him
+are in <i>Patent Rolls of Henry III.</i>, 1216-1227, pp.
+461-62.</p>
+
+<p>The English sought to supplement their military successes by
+diplomacy. Richard of Cornwall made an alliance with the counts of
+Auvergne, and the home administration negotiated with all possible
+enemies of the French King. A proposal to affiance Henry's sister,
+Isabella, to Henry, King of the Romans, the infant son of Frederick
+II., led to no results, for the Archbishop of Cologne, the chief
+upholder of the scheme in Germany, was murdered, and the young king
+found a bride in Austria. Yet the project counteracted the
+negotiations set on foot by Louis to secure Frederick II. for his
+own side, and induced the Emperor to take up a position of
+neutrality. An impostor appeared in Flanders who gave out that he
+was the old Count Baldwin, sometime Latin Emperor of the East, who
+had died in prison in Bulgaria twenty years before. Baldwin's
+daughter, Joan, appealed to Louis for support against the false
+Baldwin, whereupon Henry recognised his claims and sought his
+alliance. Nothing but the capture and execution of the impostor
+prevented Henry from effecting a powerful diversion in Flanders.
+Peter Mauclerc, Count of Brittany, was won over by an offer of
+restitution to his earldom of Richmond, and by a promise that Henry
+would marry his daughter Iolande. Intrigues were entered into with
+the discontented Norman nobles, and the pope was importuned to save
+Henry from French assaults at the same moment that the king made a
+treaty of alliance with his first cousin, the heretical Raymond
+VII. of Toulouse. Honorius gave his ward little save sympathy and
+good advice. His special wish was to induce Louis to lead a French
+expedition into Languedoc against the Albigensian heretics. As soon
+as Louis resolved on this, the pope sought to prevent Henry from
+entering into unholy alliance with Raymond. It was the crusade of
+1226, not the good-will of the Pope or the fine-drawn English
+negotiations, which gave Gascony a short respite. Louis VIII. died
+on November 8 in the course of his expedition, and the Capetian
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg034" id=
+"pg034">034</a></span>monarchy became less dangerous during the
+troubles of a minority, in which his widow, Blanche, strove as
+regent to uphold the throne of their little son, Louis IX.</p>
+
+<p>The first months of Louis IX.'s reign showed how unstable was
+any edifice built upon the support of the treacherous lords of
+Poitou. Within six weeks of Louis VIII.'s death, Hugh of Lusignan,
+the viscount of Thouars, Savary de Maul&eacute;on, and many other
+Poitevin barons, concluded treaties with Richard of Cornwall, by
+which in return for lavish concessions they went back to the
+English obedience. In the spring of 1227, however, the appearance
+of a French army south of the Loire caused these same lords to make
+fresh treaties with Blanche. Peter of Brittany also became friendly
+with the French regent, and gave up his daughter's English
+marriage. With allies so shifty, further dealings seemed hopeless.
+Before Easter, Richard patched up a truce and went home in disgust.
+The Capetians lost Poitou, but Henry failed to take advantage of
+his rival's weakness, and the real masters of the situation were
+the local barons. Fifteen more years were to elapse before the
+definitive French conquest of Poitou.</p>
+
+<p>During the next three years the good understanding between the
+Bretons, the Poitevins, and the regent Blanche came to an end, and
+the progress of the feudal reaction against the rule of the young
+King of France once more excited hopes of improving Henry's
+position in south-western France. Henry III. was eager to win back
+his inheritance, though Hubert de Burgh had little faith in
+Poitevin promises, and, conscious of his king's weakness, managed
+to prolong the truce, until July 22, 1229. Three months before
+that, Blanche succeeded in forcing the unfortunate Raymond VII. to
+accept the humiliating treaty of Meaux, which assured the
+succession to his dominions to her second son Alfonse, who was to
+marry his daughter and heiress, Joan. The barons of the north and
+west were not yet defeated, and once more appealed to Henry to come
+to their aid. Accordingly, the English king summoned his vassals to
+Portsmouth on October 15 for a French campaign. When Henry went
+down to Portsmouth he found that there were not enough ships to
+convey his troops over sea. Thereupon he passionately denounced the
+justiciar as an "old traitor," and accused him of being bribed by
+the French queen. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg035" id=
+"pg035">035</a></span>Nothing but the intervention of Randolph of
+Chester, Hubert's persistent enemy, put an end to the undignified
+scene.</p>
+
+<p>Count Peter of Brittany, who arrived at Portsmouth on the 9th,
+did homage to Henry as King of France, and received the earldom of
+Richmond and the title of Duke of Brittany which he had long
+coveted, but which the French government refused to recognise. He
+persuaded Henry to postpone the expedition until the following
+spring. When that time came Henry appointed Ralph Neville, the
+chancellor, and Stephen Segrave, a rising judge, as wardens of
+England, and on May 1, 1230, set sail from Portsmouth. It was the
+first time since 1213 that an English king had crossed the seas at
+the head of an army, and every effort was made to equip a
+sufficient force. Hubert the justiciar, Randolph of Chester,
+William the marshal, and most of the great barons personally shared
+in the expedition, and the ports of the Channel, the North Sea, and
+the Bay of Biscay were ransacked to provide adequate shipping. Many
+Norman vessels served as transports, apparently of their owners'
+free-will.</p>
+
+<p>On May 3 Henry landed at St. Malo, and thence proceeded to
+Dinan, the meeting-place assigned for his army, the greater part of
+which landed at Port Blanc, a little north of Tr&eacute;guier.
+Peter Mauclerc joined him, and a plan of operations was discussed.
+The moment was favourable, for a great number of the French
+magnates were engaged in war against Theobald, the poet-count of
+Champagne, and the French army, which was assembled at Angers,
+represented but a fraction of the military strength of the land.
+Fulk Paynel, a Norman baron who wished to revive the independence
+of the duchy, urged Henry to invade Normandy. Hubert successfully
+withstood this rash proposal, and also Fulk's fatal suggestion that
+Henry should divide his army and send two hundred knights for the
+invasion of Normandy. Before long the English marched through
+Brittany to Nantes, where they wasted six weeks. At last, on the
+advice of Hubert, they journeyed south into Poitou. The innate
+Poitevin instability had again brought round the Lusignans, the
+house of Thouars, and their kind to the French side, and Henry
+found that his own mother did her best to obstruct his progress. He
+was too strong to make open resistance safe, and his long progress
+from Nantes <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg036" id=
+"pg036">036</a></span>to Bordeaux was only once checked by the need
+to fight his way. This opposition came from the little town and
+castle of Mirambeau, situated in Upper Saintonge, rather more than
+half-way between Saintes and Blaye.[1] From July 21 to 30 Mirambeau
+stoutly held out, but Henry's army was reinforced by the chivalry
+of Gascony, and by a siege-train borrowed from Bordeaux and the
+loyal lords of the Garonne. Against such appliances of warfare
+Mirambeau could not long resist. On its capitulation Henry pushed
+on to Bordeaux.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] E. Berger, <i>Bibl. Ecole des Chartes</i>,
+1893, <i>pp. 35-36</i>, shows that Mirambeau, not Mirebeau, was
+besieged by Henry; see also his <i>Blanche de Castille</i>
+(1895).</p>
+
+<p>Useless as the march through Poitou had been, it was then
+repeated in the reverse way. With scarcely a week's rest, Henry
+left the Gascon capital on August 10, and on September 15 ended his
+inglorious campaign at Nantes. Although he was unable to assert
+himself against the faithless Poitevins, the barons of the province
+were equally impotent to make head against him. On reaching
+Brittany, Hubert once more stopped further military efforts. After
+a few days' rest at Nantes, Henry made his way by slow stages
+through the heart of Brittany. It was said that his army had no
+better occupation than teaching the local nobles to drink deep
+after the English fashion. The King had wasted all his treasure,
+and the poorer knights were compelled to sell or pawn their horses
+and arms to support themselves. The farce ended when the King
+sailed from St. Pol de Leon, and late in October landed at
+Portsmouth. He left a portion of his followers in Brittany, under
+the Earls of Chester and Pembroke. Randolph himself, as a former
+husband of Constance of Brittany, had claims to certain dower lands
+which appertained to Count Peter's mother-in-law. He was put in
+possession of St. James de Beuvron, and thence he raided Normandy
+and Anjou. By this time the coalition against the count of
+Champagne had broken down, and Blanche was again triumphant. It was
+useless to continue a struggle so expensive and disastrous, and on
+July 4, 1231, a truce for three years was concluded between France,
+Brittany, and England. Peter des Roches, then returning through
+France from his crusade, took an active part in negotiating the
+treaty. Just as the king was disposed to make the justiciar the
+scapegoat of his failure, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg037" id=
+"pg037">037</a></span>Hubert's old enemy appeared once more upon
+the scene. The responsibility for blundering must be divided among
+the English magnates, and not ascribed solely to their monarch. If
+Hubert saved Henry from reckless adventures, he certainly deserves
+a large share of the blame for the Poitevin fiasco.</p>
+
+<p>The grave situation at home showed the folly of this untimely
+revival of an active foreign policy. The same years that saw the
+collapse of Henry's hopes in Normandy and Poitou, witnessed
+troubles both in Ireland and in Wales. In both these regions the
+house of the Marshals was a menace to the neighbouring chieftains,
+and Hugh de Lacy, Earl of Ulster, and Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, made
+common cause against it and vigorously attacked their rivals both
+in Leinster and in South Wales. Nor was this the only disturbance.
+The summons of the Norman chieftains of Ireland to Poitou gave the
+king of Connaught a chance of attacking the justiciar of Ireland,
+Geoffrey Marsh, who ultimately drove the Irish back with severe
+loss. Llewelyn was again as active and hostile as ever. Irritated
+by the growing strength of the new royal castle of Montgomery, he
+laid siege to it in 1228. Hubert de Burgh, then castellan of
+Montgomery, could only save his castle by summoning the levies of
+the kingdom. At their head Hubert went in person to hold the field
+against Llewelyn, taking the king with him. The Welsh withdrew as
+usual before a regular army, and Hubert and the king, late in
+September, marched a few miles westwards of Montgomery to the vale
+of Kerry, where they erected a castle. But Llewelyn soon made the
+English position in Kerry untenable. Many of the English lords were
+secretly in league with him, and the army suffered severely from
+lack of food. In the fighting that ensued the Welsh got the better
+of the English, taking prisoner William de Braose, the heir of
+Builth, and one of the greatest of the marcher lords. At last king
+and justiciar were glad to agree to demolish the new castle on
+receiving from Llewelyn the expenses involved in the task. The
+dismantled ruin was called "Hubert's folly". "And then," boasts the
+Welsh chronicler, "the king returned to England with shame."</p>
+
+<p>In 1230 Llewelyn inflicted another slight upon his overlord.
+William de Braose long remained the Welsh prince's captive, and
+only purchased his liberty by agreeing to wed his <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg038" id="pg038">038</a></span>daughter to
+Llewelyn's son, and surrendering Builth as her marriage portion.
+The captive had employed his leisure in winning the love of
+Llewelyn's wife, Joan, Henry's half-sister. At Easter, Llewelyn
+took a drastic revenge on the adulterer. He seized William in his
+own castle at Builth, and on May 2 hanged him on a tree in open day
+in the presence of 900 witnesses. Finding that neither the king nor
+the marchers moved a finger to avenge the outrage done to sister
+and comrade, Llewelyn took the aggressive in regions which had
+hitherto been comparatively exempt from his assaults. In 1231 he
+laid his heavy hand on all South Wales, burning down churches full
+of women, as the English believed, and signalling out for special
+attack the marshal's lands in Gwent and Pembroke. Once more the
+king penetrated with his barons into Mid Wales, while the pope and
+archbishop excommunicated Llewelyn and put his lands under
+interdict. Yet neither temporal nor spiritual arms were of avail
+against the Welshman. Henry's only exploit in this, his second
+Welsh campaign, was to rebuild Maud's Castle in stone. He withdrew,
+and in December agreed to conclude a three years' truce, and
+procure Llewelyn's absolution. Hubert once more bore the blame of
+his master's failure.</p>
+
+<p>On July 9, 1228, Stephen Langton died. Despite their differences
+as to the execution of the charters, his removal lost the justiciar
+a much-needed friend. Affairs were made worse by the unteachable
+folly of the monks of Christ Church. Regardless of the severe
+warning which they had received in the storms that preceded the
+establishment of Langton's authority, the chapter forthwith
+proceeded to the election of their brother monk, Walter of Eynsham.
+The archbishop-elect was an ignorant old monk of weak health and
+doubtful antecedents, and Gregory IX. wisely refused to confirm the
+election. On the recommendation of the king and the bishops,
+Gregory himself appointed as archbishop Richard, chancellor of
+Lincoln, an eloquent and learned secular priest of handsome person,
+whose nickname of "le Grand" was due to his tall stature. The first
+Archbishop of Canterbury since the Conquest directly nominated by
+the pope&mdash;for even in Langton's case there was a form of
+election&mdash;Richard le Grand at once began to quarrel with the
+justiciar, demanding that he <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg039"
+id="pg039">039</a></span>should surrender the custody of Tunbridge
+castle on the ground of some ancient claim of the see of
+Canterbury. Failing to obtain redress in England, Richard betook
+himself to Rome in the spring of 1231. There he regaled the pope's
+ears with the offences of Hubert, and of the worldly bishops who
+were his tools. In August, Richard's death in Italy left the Church
+of Canterbury for three years without a pastor.</p>
+
+<p>While Gregory IX. did more to help Henry against Louis than
+Honorius III., the inflexible character and lofty hierarchical
+ideals of this nephew of Innocent III. made his hand heavier on the
+English Church than that of his predecessor. Above all, Gregory's
+expenses in pursuing his quarrel with Frederick II. made the wealth
+of the English Church a sore temptation to him. With his imposition
+of a tax of one-tenth on all clerical property to defray the
+expenses of the crusade against the emperor, papal taxation in
+England takes a newer and severer phase. The rigour with which
+Master Stephen, the pope's collector, extorted the tax was bitterly
+resented. Not less loud was the complaint against the increasing
+numbers of foreign ecclesiastics forced into English benefices by
+papal authority, and without regard for the rights of the lawful
+patrons and electors. A league of aggrieved tax-payers and patrons
+was formed against the Roman agents. At Eastertide, 1232, bands of
+men, headed by a knight named Robert Twenge, who took the nickname
+of William Wither, despoiled the Romans of their gains, and
+distributed the proceeds to the poor. These doings were the more
+formidable from their excellent organisation, and the strong
+sympathy everywhere extended to them. Hubert, who hated foreign
+interference, did nothing to stop Twenge and his followers. His
+inaction further precipitated his ruin. Archbishop Richard had
+already poisoned the pope's mind against him, and his suspected
+connivance with the anti-Roman movement completed his disfavour.
+Bitter letters of complaint arrived in England denouncing the
+outrages inflicted on the friends of the apostolic see. It is hard
+to dissociate the pope's feeling in this matter from his rejection
+of the nomination of the king's chancellor, Ralph Neville, Bishop
+of Chichester, to the see of Canterbury, as an illiterate
+politician.</p>
+
+<p>The dislike of the taxes made necessary by the Welsh <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg040" id="pg040">040</a></span>and French
+wars, such as the "scutage of Poitou" and the "scutage of Kerry,"
+swelled the outcry against the justiciar. So far back as 1227
+advantage had been taken of Henry's majority to exact large sums of
+money for the confirmation of all charters sealed during his
+nonage. The barons made it a grievance that his brother Richard was
+ill-provided for, and a rising in 1227 extorted a further provision
+for him from what was regarded as the niggardliness of the
+justiciar. Nor did Hubert, with all his rugged honesty, neglect his
+own interests. He secured for himself lucrative wardships, such as
+the custody for the second time of the great Gloucester earldom,
+and of several castles, including the not very profitable charge of
+Montgomery, and the important governorship of Dover. On the very
+eve of his downfall he was made justice of Ireland. His brother was
+bishop of Ely, and other kinsmen were promoted to high posts. He
+was satisfied that he spent all that he got in the King's service,
+in promoting the interests of the kingdom, but his enemies regarded
+him as unduly tenacious of wealth and office. All classes alike
+grew disgusted with the justiciar. The restoration of the malign
+influence of Peter of Winchester completed his ruin. The king
+greedily listened to the complaints of his old guardian against the
+minister who overshadowed the royal power. At last, on July 29,
+1232, Henry plucked up courage to dismiss him.</p>
+
+<p>With Hubert's fall ends the second period of Henry's reign.
+William Marshal expelled the armed foreigner. Hubert restored the
+administration to English hands. Matthew Paris puts into the mouth
+of a poor smith who refused to fasten fetters on the fallen
+minister words which, though probably never spoken, describe with
+sufficient accuracy Hubert's place in history: "Is he not that most
+faithful Hubert who so often saved England from the devastation of
+the foreigners and restored England to England?" Hubert was, as has
+been well said, perhaps the first minister since the Conquest who
+made patriotism a principle of policy, though it is easy in the
+light of later developments to read into his doings more than he
+really intended. But whatever his motives, the results of his
+action were clear. He drove away the mercenaries, humbled the
+feudal lords, and set limits to the pope's interference. He renewed
+respect for law and obedience to the law courts. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg041" id="pg041">041</a></span>Even in the
+worst days of anarchy the administrative system did not break down,
+and the records of royal orders and judicial judgments remain
+almost as full in the midst of the civil war as in the more
+peaceful days of Hubert's rule. But it was easy enough to issue
+proclamations and writs. The difficulty was to get them obeyed, and
+the work of Hubert was to ensure that the orders of king and
+ministers should really be respected by his subjects. He made many
+mistakes. He must share the blame of the failure of the Kerry
+campaign, and he was largely responsible for the sorry collapse of
+the invasion of Poitou. He neither understood nor sympathised with
+Stephen Langton's zeal for the charters. A straightforward,
+limited, honourable man, he strove to carry out his rather
+old-fashioned conception of duty in the teeth of a thousand
+obstacles. He never had a free hand, and he never enjoyed the
+hearty support of any one section of his countrymen. Hated by the
+barons whom he kept away from power, he alienated the Londoners by
+his high-handed violence, and the tax-payers by his heavy
+exactions. The pope disliked him, the aliens plotted against him,
+and the king, for whom he sacrificed so much, gave him but grudging
+support. But the reaction which followed his retirement made many,
+who had rejoiced in his humiliation, bitterly regret it.</p>
+
+<p>Three notable enemies of Hubert went off the stage of history
+within a few months of his fall. The death of Richard le Grand has
+already been recorded. William Marshal, the brother-in-law of the
+king, the gallant and successful soldier, the worthy successor of
+his great father, came home from Brittany early in 1231. His last
+act was to marry his sister, Isabella, to Richard of Cornwall.
+Within ten days of the wedding his body was laid beside his father
+in the Temple Church at London. In October, 1232, died Randolph of
+Blundeville, the last representative of the male stock of the old
+line of the Earls of Chester, and long the foremost champion of the
+feudal aristocracy against Hubert. The contest between them had
+been fought with such chivalry that the last public act of the old
+earl was to protect the fallen justiciar from the violence of his
+foes. For more than fifty years Randolph had ruled like a king over
+his palatine earldom; had, like his master, his struggles with his
+own vassals, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg042" id=
+"pg042">042</a></span>and had perforce to grant to his own barons
+and boroughs liberties which he strove to wrest from his overlord
+for himself and his fellow nobles. He was not a great statesman,
+and hardly even a successful warrior. Yet his popular personal
+qualities, his energy, his long duration of power, and his enormous
+possessions, give him a place in history. His memory, living on
+long in the minds of the people, inspired a series of ballads which
+vied in popularity with the cycle of Robin Hood,[1] though,
+unfortunately, they have not come down to us. His estates were
+divided among his four sisters. His nephew, John the Scot, Earl of
+Huntingdon, received a re-grant of the Chester earldom; his
+Lancashire lands had already gone to his brother-in-law, William of
+Ferrars, Earl of Derby; other portions of his territories went to
+his sister, the Countess of Arundel, and the Lincoln earldom,
+passing through another sister, Hawise of Quincy, to her
+son-in-law, John of Lacy, constable of Chester, raised the chief
+vassal of the palatinate to comital rank. None of these heirs of a
+divided inheritance were true successors to Randolph. With him died
+the last of the great Norman houses, tenacious beyond its fellows,
+and surpassing in its two centuries of unbroken male descent the
+usual duration of the medieval baronial family. Its collapse made
+easier the alien invasion which threatened to undo Hubert's
+work.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] "Ich can rymes of Robyn Hode, and of Randolf
+erl of Chestre," <i>Vision of Piers Plowman</i>, i., 167; ii.,
+94.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<h4>THE ALIEN INVASION.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg043" id=
+"pg043">043</a></span>With the dismissal of Hubert on July 29,
+1232, Peter des Roches resumed his authority over Henry III.
+Mindful of past failures, the bishop's aim was to rule through
+dependants, so that he could pull the wires without making himself
+too prominent. His chief agents in pursuing this policy were Peter
+of Rivaux, Stephen Segrave, and Robert Passelewe. Of these, Peter
+of Rivaux was a Poitevin clerk, officially described as the
+bishop's nephew, but generally supposed to have been his son.
+Stephen Segrave, the son of a small Leicestershire landholder, was
+a lawyer who had held many judicial and administrative posts,
+including the regency during the king's absence abroad in 1230. He
+abandoned his original clerical profession, received knighthood,
+married nobly, and was the founder of a baronial house in the
+midlands. His only political principle was obedience to the powers
+that were in the ascendant. Passelewe, a clerk who had acted as the
+agent of Randolph of Chester and Falkes of Br&eacute;aut&eacute; at
+the Roman court, was, like Segrave, a mere tool.</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop of Winchester began to show his hand. Between June 26
+and July 11, nineteen of the thirty-five sheriffdoms were bestowed
+on Peter of Rivaux for life. As Segrave was sheriff of five shires,
+and the bishop himself had acquired the shrievalty of Hampshire,
+this involved the transference of the administration of over
+two-thirds of the counties to the bishop's dependants. On the
+downfall of Hubert, Segrave became justiciar. He was not the equal
+of his predecessors either in personal weight or in social
+position, and did not aspire to act as chief minister. The
+appointment of a mere lawyer to the great Norman office of state
+marks <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg044" id=
+"pg044">044</a></span>the first stage in the decline, which before
+long degraded the justiciarship into a simple position of headship
+over the judges, the chief justiceship of the next generation.
+Hubert's offices and lands were divided among his supplanters.
+Peter of Rivaux became keeper of wards and escheats, castellan of
+many castles on the Welsh march, and the recipient of even more
+offices and wardships in Ireland than in England. The custody of
+the Gloucester earldom went to the Bishop of Winchester. The last
+steps of the ministerial revolution were completed at the king's
+Christmas court at Worcester. There Rivaux, who had yielded up
+before Michaelmas most of his shrievalties, was made treasurer,
+with Passelewe as his deputy. Of the old ministers only the
+chancellor, Ralph Neville, Bishop of Chichester, was suffered to
+remain in office. Finally the king's new advisers imported a large
+company of Poitevin and Breton mercenaries, hoping with their help
+to maintain their newly won position. The worst days of John seemed
+renewed.</p>
+
+<p>The Poitevin gang called upon Hubert to render complete accounts
+for the whole period of his justiciarship. When he pleaded that
+King John had given him a charter of quittance, he was told that
+its force had ended with the death of the grantor. He was further
+required to answer for the wrongs which Twenge's bands had
+inflicted on the servants of the pope. He was accused of poisoning
+William Earl of Salisbury, William Marshal, Falkes de
+Br&eacute;aut&eacute;, and Archbishop Richard. He had prevented the
+king from contracting a marriage with a daughter of the Duke of
+Austria; he had dissuaded the king from attempting to recover
+Normandy; he had first seduced and then married the daughter of the
+King of Scots; he had stolen from the treasury a talisman which
+made its possessor invincible in war and had traitorously given it
+to Llewelyn of Wales; he had induced Llewelyn to slay William de
+Braose; he had won the royal favour by magic and witchcraft, and
+finally he had murdered Constantine FitzAthulf.</p>
+
+<p>Many of these accusations were so monstrous that they carried
+with them their own refutation. It was too often the custom in the
+middle ages to overwhelm an enemy with incredible charges for it to
+be fair to accuse the enemies of Hubert of any excessive malignity.
+The substantial innocence of Hubert is clear, for the only charges
+brought against him <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg045" id=
+"pg045">045</a></span>were either errors of judgment and policy, or
+incredible crimes. Nevertheless he was in such imminent danger that
+he took sanctuary with the canons of Merton in Surrey. Thereupon
+the king called upon the Londoners to march to Merton and bring
+their ancient foe, dead or alive, to the city. Randolph of Chester
+interposed between his fallen enemy and the royal vengeance. He
+persuaded Henry to countermand the march to Merton and to suffer
+the fallen justiciar to leave his refuge with some sort of safe
+conduct. But the king was irritated to hear that Hubert had
+journeyed into Essex. Again he was pursued, and once more he was
+forced to take sanctuary, this time in a chapel near Brentwood.
+From this he was dragged by some of the king's household and
+brought to London, where he was imprisoned in the Tower. The Bishop
+of London complained to the king of this violation of the rights of
+the Church, and Hubert was allowed to return to his chapel.
+However, the levies of Essex surrounded the precincts, and he was
+soon forced by hunger to surrender. He offered to submit himself to
+the king's will, and was for a second time confined in the Tower.
+On November 10, he was brought before a not unfriendly tribunal, in
+which the malice of the new justiciar was tempered by the baronial
+instincts of the Earls of Cornwall, Warenne, Pembroke, and Lincoln.
+He made no effort to defend himself, and submitted absolutely to
+the judgment of the king. It was finally agreed that he should be
+allowed to retain the lands which he had inherited from his father,
+and that all his chattels and the lands that he had acquired
+himself should be forfeited to the crown. Further, he was to be
+kept in prison in the castle of Devizes under the charge of the
+four earls who had tried him.</p>
+
+<p>Peter des Roches was soon in difficulties. The earls who had
+saved Hubert began to oppose the whole administration. Their leader
+was Richard, Earl of Pembroke, the second son of the great regent,
+and since his brother's death head of the house of Marshal. Richard
+was bitterly prejudiced against the king and his courtiers by an
+attempt to refuse him his brother's earldom. A gallant warrior,
+handsome and eloquent, pious, upright, and well educated, Richard,
+the best of the marshal's sons, stood for the rest of his short
+life at the head of the opposition. He incited his friends to
+refuse to attend a <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg046" id=
+"pg046">046</a></span>council summoned to meet at Oxford, on June
+24, 1233. The king would have sought to compel their presence, had
+not a Dominican friar, Robert Bacon, when preaching before the
+court, warned him that there would be no peace in England until
+Bishop Peter and his son were removed from his counsels. The
+friar's boldness convinced him that disaffection was widespread,
+and he promised the magnates at a later council at London that he
+would, with their advice, correct whatever he found there was need
+to reform. Meanwhile the Poitevins brought into England fresh
+swarms of hirelings from their own land, and Peter des Roches urged
+Henry to crush rebellion in the bud. As a warning to greater
+offenders, Gilbert Basset was deprived of a manor which he had held
+since the reign of King John, and an attempt was made to lay
+violent hands upon his brother-in-law, Richard Siward. The two
+barons resisted, whereupon all their estates were transferred to
+Peter of Rivaux. Yet Richard Marshal still continued to hope for
+peace, and, after the failure of earlier councils, set off to
+attend another assembly fixed for August 1, at Westminster. On his
+way he learnt from his sister Isabella, the wife of Richard of
+Cornwall, that Peter des Roches was laying a trap for him. In high
+indignation he took horse for his Welsh estates, and prepared for
+rebellion.</p>
+
+<p>The king summoned the military tenants to appear with horses and
+arms at Gloucester on the 14th. There Richard Marshal was declared
+a traitor and an invasion of his estates was ordered. But the king
+had not sufficient resources to carry out his threats, and October
+saw the barons once more wrangling with Henry at Westminster, and
+claiming that the marshal should be tried by his peers. Peter of
+Winchester declared that there were no peers in England as there
+were in France, and that in consequence the king had power to
+condemn any disloyal subject through his justices. This daringly
+unconstitutional doctrine provoked a renewed outcry. The bishops
+joined the secular magnates, and threatened their colleague with
+excommunication. A formidable civil war broke out. Siward and
+Basset harried the lands of the Poitevins, while the marshal made a
+close alliance with Llewelyn of Wales. The king still had
+formidable forces on his side. Richard of Cornwall was persuaded by
+Bishop Peter to take up arms for his brother, and <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg047" id="pg047">047</a></span>the two new
+earls, John the Scot of Chester, and John de Lacy of Lincoln,
+joined the royal forces. Hubert de Burgh took advantage of the
+increasing confusion to escape from Devizes castle to a church in
+the town. Dragged back with violence to his prison, he was again,
+as at Brentwood, restored to sanctuary through the exertions of the
+bishop of the diocese. There he remained, closely watched by his
+foes, until October 30, when Siward and Basset drove away the
+guard, and took him off with them to the marshal's castle of
+Chepstow.</p>
+
+<p>The tide of war flowed to the southern march of Wales. Llewelyn
+and Richard Marshal devastated Glamorgan, which, as a part of the
+Gloucester inheritance, was under the custody of the Bishop of
+Winchester. They took nearly all its castles, including that of
+Cardiff. Thence they subdued Usk, Abergavenny, and other
+neighbouring strongholds, while an independent army, including the
+marshal's Pembrokeshire vassals and the men of the princes of South
+Wales, wasted months in a vain attack on Carmarthen. The king's
+vassals were again summoned to Gloucester, whence Henry led them
+early in November towards Chepstow, the centre of the marshal's
+estates in Gwent. Earl Richard devastated his lands so effectively
+that the king could not support his army on them, and was compelled
+to move up the Wye valley towards the castles of Monmouth,
+Skenfrith, Whitecastle, and Grosmont, the strong quadrilateral of
+Upper Gwent which still remained in the hands of the king's
+friends. Marching to the most remote of these, Grosmont, on the
+upper Monnow, Henry spent several days in the castle, while his
+army lay around under canvas. On the night of November 11, the
+sleeping soldiers were suddenly set upon by the barons and their
+Welsh allies; they fled unarmed to the castle, or scattered in
+confusion. The assailants seized their horses, harness, arms and
+provisions, but refrained from slaying or capturing them. The royal
+forces never rallied. Many gladly went home, giving as their excuse
+that they were unable to fight since they had lost their equipment.
+Henry and his ministers withdrew to Gloucester. More convinced than
+ever of the treachery of Englishmen, the king entrusted the defence
+of the border castles to mercenaries from Poitou.</p>
+
+<p>The fighting centred round Monmouth, which Richard approached on
+the 25th with a small company. A sudden <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg048" id="pg048">048</a></span>sortie almost overwhelmed the
+little band. The marshal held his own heroically against twelve,
+until at last Baldwin of Gu&icirc;nes, the warden of the castle,
+took him prisoner. Thereupon Baldwin fell to the ground, his armour
+pierced by a lucky bolt from a crossbow. His followers, smitten
+with panic, abandoned the marshal, and bore their leader home. By
+that time, however, the bulk of the marshal's forces had come upon
+the scene. A general engagement followed, in which the Anglo-Welsh
+army drove the enemy back into Monmouth and took possession of the
+castle. This set the marshal free to march northwards and join
+Llewelyn in a vigorous attack upon Shrewsbury. In January, 1234,
+they burnt that town and retired to their own lands loaded with
+booty. Meanwhile Siward devastated the estates of the Poitevins and
+of Richard of Cornwall. Afraid to be cut off from his retreat to
+England the king abandoned Gloucester, where he had kept his
+melancholy Christmas court, and found a surer refuge in Bishop
+Peter's cathedral city. Thereupon Gloucestershire suffered the fate
+of Shropshire. "It was a wretched sight for travellers in that
+region to see on the highways innumerable dead bodies lying naked
+and unburied, to be devoured by birds of prey, and so polluting the
+air that they infected healthy men with mortal sickness."[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Wendover, iv., 291.</p>
+
+<p>The king swore that he would never make peace with the marshal,
+unless he threw himself on the royal mercy as a confessed traitor
+with a rope round his neck. Having, however, exhausted all his
+military resources, he cunningly strove to entice Richard from
+Wales to Ireland. The two Peters wrote to Maurice Fitzgerald, then
+justiciar of Ireland, and to the chief foes of the marshal, urging
+them to fall upon his Irish estates and capture the traitor, dead
+or alive. Many of the most powerful nobles of Ireland lent
+themselves to the conspiracy. The Lacys of Meath, his old enemies,
+joined with Fitzgerald, Geoffrey Marsh, and Richard de Burgh, the
+greatest of the Norman lords of Connaught, and the nephew of
+Hubert, in carrying out the plot. The confederates fell suddenly
+upon the marshal's estates and devastated them with fire and sword.
+On hearing of this attack Richard immediately left Wales, and,
+accompanied by only fifteen knights, took ship for Ireland. On his
+arrival Geoffrey Marsh, the meanest of the conspirators, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg049" id="pg049">049</a></span>received
+him with every profession of cordiality, and urged him to attack
+his enemies without delay. Geoffrey was an old man; he had long
+held the great post of justiciar of Ireland; and he was himself the
+liegeman of the marshal. Richard therefore implicitly trusted him,
+and forthwith took the field.</p>
+
+<p>The first warlike operations of Earl Richard were successful.
+After a short siege he obtained possession of Limerick, and his
+enemies were fain to demand a truce. Richard proposed a conference
+to be held on April 1, 1234, on the Curragh of Kildare. The
+conference proved abortive, for Geoffrey Marsh cunningly persuaded
+the marshal to refuse any offer of terms which the magnates would
+accept, and Richard found that he had been duped into taking up a
+position that he was not strong enough to maintain. Marsh withdrew
+from his side, on the ground that he could not fight against Lacy,
+whose sister he had married. The marshal foresaw the worst. "I
+know," he declared, "that this day I am delivered over to death,
+but it is better to die honourably for the cause of justice than to
+flee from the field and become a reproach to knighthood."</p>
+
+<p>The forsworn Irish knights slunk away to neighbouring places of
+sanctuary or went over to the enemy. When the final struggle came,
+later on the same April 1, Richard had few followers save the
+faithful fifteen knights who had crossed over with him from Wales.
+The little band, outnumbered by more than nine to one, struggled
+desperately to the end. At last the marshal, unhorsed and severely
+wounded, fell into the hands of his enemies. They bore him, more
+dead than alive, to his own castle of Kilkenny, which had just been
+seized by the justiciar. After a few days Richard's tough
+constitution began to get the better of his wounds. Then his
+enemies, showing him the royal warranty for their acts, induced him
+to admit them into his castles. An ignorant or treacherous surgeon,
+called in by the justiciar, cauterised his wounds so severely that
+his sufferings became intense. He died of fever on the 16th, and
+was buried, as he himself had willed, in the Franciscan church at
+Kilkenny. No one rejoiced at the death of the hero save the
+traitors who had lured him to his doom and the Poitevins who had
+suborned them. Their victim, the weak king, mourned for his friend
+as David had lamented Saul and <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg050" id="pg050">050</a></span>Jonathan.[1] The treachery of his
+enemies brought them little profit. While Richard Marshal lay on
+his deathbed, a new Archbishop of Canterbury drove the Poitevins
+from office.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Dunstable Ann.</i>, p. 137.</p>
+
+<p>In the heyday of the Poitevins' power the Church sounded a
+feeble but clear note of alarm. The pope expostulated with Henry
+for his treatment of Hubert de Burgh, and Agnellus of Pisa, the
+first English provincial of the newly arrived Franciscan order,
+strove to reconcile Richard Marshal with his sovereign in the
+course of the South-Welsh campaign. More drastic action was
+necessary if vague remonstrance was to be translated into fruitful
+action. The three years' vacancy of the see of Canterbury, after
+the death of Richard le Grand, paralysed the action of the Church.
+After the pope's rejection of the first choice of the convent of
+Christ Church, the chancellor, Ralph Neville, the monks elected
+their own prior, and him also Gregory refused as too old and
+incompetent. Their third election fell upon John Blunt, a
+theologian high in the favour of Peter des Roches, who sent him to
+Rome, well provided with ready money, to secure his confirmation.
+Simon Langton, again restored to England, and archdeacon of
+Canterbury, persuaded the pope to veto Blunt's appointment on the
+ground of his having held two benefices without a dispensation. His
+rejection was the first check received by the Poitevin faction. It
+was promptly followed by a more crushing blow. Weary of the long
+delay, Gregory persuaded the Christ Church monks then present at
+Rome to elect Edmund Rich, treasurer of Salisbury. Edmund, a
+scholar who had taught theology and arts with great distinction at
+Paris and Oxford, was still more famous for his mystical devotion,
+for his asceticism and holiness of life. He was however an old man,
+inexperienced in affairs, and, with all his gracious gifts,
+somewhat wanting in the tenacity and vigour which leadership
+involved. Yet in sending so eminent a saint to Canterbury, Rome
+conferred on England a service second only to that which she had
+rendered when she secured the archbishopric for Stephen
+Langton.</p>
+
+<p>Before his consecration as archbishop on April 2, 1234, Edmund
+had already joined with his suffragans on February 2 in upholding
+the good fame of the marshal and in warning the king <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg051" id="pg051">051</a></span>of the
+disastrous results of preferring the counsels of the Poitevins to
+those of his natural-born subjects. A week after his consecration
+Edmund succeeded in carrying out a radical change in the
+administration. On April 9 he declared that unless Henry drove away
+the Poitevins, he would forthwith pronounce him excommunicate.
+Yielding at once, Henry sent the Bishop of Winchester back to his
+diocese, and deprived Peter of Rivaux of all his offices. The
+followers of the two Peters shared their fate, and Henry,
+despatching Edmund to Wales to make peace with Llewelyn and the
+marshal, hurried to Gloucester in order to meet the archbishop on
+his return. His good resolutions were further strengthened by the
+news of Earl Richard's death. On arriving at Gloucester he held a
+council in which the ruin of the Poitevins was completed. A truce,
+negotiated by the archbishop with Llewelyn, was ratified. The
+partisans of the marshal were pardoned, even Richard Siward being
+forgiven his long career of plunder. Gilbert Marshal, the next
+brother of the childless Earl Richard, was invested with his
+earldom and office, and Henry himself dubbed him a knight. Hubert
+de Burgh was included in the comprehensive pardon. Indignant that
+his name and seal should have been used to cover his ex-ministers'
+treachery to Earl Richard, Henry overwhelmed them with reproaches,
+and strove by his violence against them to purge himself from
+complicity in their acts. The Poitevins lurked in sanctuary,
+fearing for the worst. Segrave forgot his knighthood, resumed the
+tonsure, and took refuge in a church in Leicester. The king's worst
+indignation was reserved for Peter of Rivaux. Peter protested that
+his orders entitled him to immunity from arrest, but it was found
+that he wore a mail shirt under his clerical garments, and, without
+a word of reproach from the archbishop, he was immured in a lay
+prison on the pretext that no true clerk wore armour. Of the old
+ministers Ralph Neville alone remained in office.</p>
+
+<p>With Bishop Peter's fall disappeared the last of the influences
+that had prevailed during the minority. The king, who felt his
+dignity impaired by the Poitevin domination, resolved that
+henceforward he would submit to no master. He soon framed a plan of
+government that thoroughly satisfied his jealous and exacting
+nature. Henceforth no magnates, either of Church or State, should
+stand between him and his subjects. <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg052" id="pg052">052</a></span>He would be his own chief
+minister, holding in his own hands all the strings of policy, and
+acting through subordinates whose sole duly was to carry out their
+master's orders. Under such a system the justiciarship practically
+ceased to exist. The treasurership was held for short periods by
+royal clerks of no personal distinction. Even the chancellorship
+became overshadowed. Henry quarrelled with Ralph Neville in 1238,
+and withdrew from him the custody of the great seal, though he
+allowed him to retain the name and emoluments of chancellor. On
+Neville's death the office fell into abeyance for nearly twenty
+years, during which time the great seal was entrusted to seven
+successive keepers. Like his grandfather, Henry wished to rule in
+person with the help of faithful but unobtrusive subordinates. This
+system, which was essentially that of the French monarchy,
+presupposed for success the constant personal supervision of an
+industrious and strong-willed king. Henry III was never a strenuous
+worker, and his character failed in the robustness and
+self-reliance necessary for personal rule. The magnates, who
+regarded themselves as the king's natural-born counsellors, were
+bitterly incensed, and hated the royal clerks as fiercely as they
+had disliked the ministers of his minority. Opposed by the barons,
+distrusted by the people, liable to be thrown over by their master
+at each fresh change of his caprice, the royal subordinates showed
+more eagerness in prosecuting their own private fortunes than in
+consulting the interests of the State. Thus the nominal government
+of Henry proved extremely ineffective. Huge taxes were raised, but
+little good came from them. The magnates held sullenly aloof; the
+people grumbled; the Church lamented the evil days. Yet for five
+and twenty years the wretched system went on, not so much by reason
+of its own strength as because there was no one vigorous enough to
+overthrow it.</p>
+
+<p>The author of all this mischief was a man of some noble and many
+attractive qualities. Save when an occasional outburst of temper
+showed him a true son of John, Henry was the kindest, mildest, most
+amiable of men. He was the first king since William the Conqueror
+in whose private life the austerest critics could find nothing
+blameworthy. His piety stands high, even when estimated by the
+standards of the thirteenth century. He was well educated and had a
+touch of the artist's temperament, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg053" id="pg053">053</a></span>loving fair churches, beautiful
+sculpture, delicate goldsmith's work, and richly illuminated books.
+He had a horror of violence, and never wept more bitter tears than
+when he learned how treacherously his name had been used to lure
+Richard Marshal to his doom. But he was extraordinarily deficient
+in stability of purpose. For the moment it was easy to influence
+him either for good or evil, but even the ablest of his counsellors
+found it impossible to retain any hold over him for long. One day
+he lavished all his affection on Hubert de Burgh; the next he
+played into the hands of his enemies. In the same way he got rid of
+Peter des Roches, the preceptor of his infancy, the guide of his
+early manhood. Jealous, self-assertive, restless, and timid, he
+failed in just those qualities that his subjects expected to find
+in a king. Born and brought up in England, and never leaving it
+save for short and infrequent visits to the continent, he was proud
+of his English ancestors and devoted to English saints, more
+especially to royal saints such as Edward the Confessor and Edmund
+of East Anglia. Yet he showed less sympathy with English ways than
+many of his foreign-born predecessors. Educated under alien
+influences, delighting in the art, the refinement, the devotion,
+and the absolutist principles of foreigners, he seldom trusted a
+man of English birth. Too weak to act for himself, too suspicious
+to trust his natural counsellors, he found the friendship and
+advice for which he yearned in foreign favourites and kinsmen. Thus
+it was that the hopes excited by the fall of the Poitevins were
+disappointed. The alien invasion, checked for a few years, was
+renewed in a more dangerous shape.</p>
+
+<p>During the ten years after the collapse of Peter des Roches,
+swarms of foreigners came to England, and spoiled the land with the
+king's entire good-will. Henry's marriage brought many
+Proven&ccedil;als and Savoyards to England. The renewed troubles
+between pope and emperor led to a renewal of Roman interference in
+a more exacting form. The continued intercourse with foreign states
+resulted in fresh opportunities of alien influence. A new attempt
+on Poitou brought as its only result the importation of the king's
+Poitevin kinsmen. The continued close relationship between the
+English and the French baronage involved the frequent claim of
+English estates and titles by men of alien birth. Even such
+beneficial movements as the establishment of the mendicant orders
+in England, and the cosmopolitan outlook <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg054" id="pg054">054</a></span>of the increasingly important
+academic class contributed to the spread of outlandish ideas. As
+wave after wave of foreigners swept over England, Englishmen
+involved them in a common condemnation. And all saw in the weakness
+of the king the very source of their power.</p>
+
+<p>The first great influx of foreigners followed directly from
+Henry's marriage. For several years active negotiations had been
+going on to secure him a suitable bride. There had also at various
+times been talk of his selecting a wife from Brittany, Austria,
+Bohemia, or Scotland, and in the spring of 1235 a serious
+negotiation for his marriage with Joan, daughter and heiress of the
+Count of Ponthieu, only broke down through the opposition of the
+French court. Henry then sought the hand of Eleanor, a girl twelve
+years old, and the second of the four daughters of Raymond Berengar
+IV., Count of Provence, and his wife Beatrice, sister of Amadeus
+III., Count of Savoy. The marriage contract was signed in October.
+Before that time Eleanor had left Provence under the escort of her
+mother's brother, William, bishop-elect of Valence. On her way she
+spent a long period with her elder sister Margaret, who had been
+married to Louis IX. of France in 1234. On January 14, 1236, she
+was married to Henry at Canterbury by Archbishop Edmund, and
+crowned at Westminster on the following Sunday.</p>
+
+<p>The new queen's kinsfolk quickly acquired an almost unbounded
+ascendency over her weak husband. With the exception of the
+reigning Count Amadeus of Savoy, her eight maternal uncles were
+somewhat scantily provided for. The prudence of the French
+government prevented them from obtaining any advantage for
+themselves at the court of their niece the Queen of France, and
+they gladly welcomed the opportunity of establishing themselves at
+the expense of their English nephew. Self-seeking and not
+over-scrupulous, able, energetic, and with the vigour and resource
+of high-born soldiers of fortune, several of them play honourable
+parts in the history of their own land, and are by no means
+deserving of the complete condemnation meted out to them by the
+English annalists.[1] The <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg055" id=
+"pg055">055</a></span>bishop-elect of Valence was an able and
+accomplished warrior. He stayed on in England after accomplishing
+his mission, and with him remained his clerk, the younger son of a
+house of Alpine barons, Peter of Aigueblanche, whose cunning and
+dexterity were as attractive to Henry as the more martial qualities
+of his master. Weary of standing alone, the king eagerly welcomed a
+trustworthy adviser who was outside the entanglements of English
+parties, and made Bishop William his chief counsellor. It was
+believed that he was associated with eleven others in a secret
+inner circle of royal advisers, whose advice Henry pledged himself
+by oath to follow. Honours and estates soon began to fall thickly
+on William and his friends. He made himself the mouthpiece of
+Henry's foreign policy. When he temporarily left England, he led a
+force sent by the king to help Frederick II. in his war against the
+cities of northern Italy. His influence with Henry did much to
+secure for his brother, Thomas of Savoy, the hand of the elderly
+countess Joan of Flanders. With Thomas as the successor of
+Ferdinand of Portugal, the rich Flemish county, bound to England by
+so many political and economic ties, seemed in safe hands, and
+preserved from French influence. In 1238 Thomas visited England,
+and received a warm welcome and rich presents from the king.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For Eleanor's countrymen see Mugnier, <i>Les
+Savoyards en Angleterre au XIIIe si&egrave;cle, et Pierre
+d'Aigueblanche, &eacute;v&ecirc;que d'H&eacute;reford</i>
+(1890).</p>
+
+<p>Despite the establishment of the Savoyards, the Poitevin
+influence began to revive. Peter des Roches, who had occupied
+himself after his fall by fighting for Gregory IX. against the
+revolted Romans, returned to England in broken health in 1236, and
+was reconciled to the king. Peter of Rivaux was restored to favour,
+and made keeper of the royal wardrobe. Segrave and Passelewe again
+became justices and ministers. England was now the hunting-ground
+of any well-born Frenchmen anxious for a wider career than they
+could obtain at home.[1] Among the foreigners attracted to England
+to prosecute legal claims or to seek the royal bounty came Simon of
+Montfort, the second son of the famous conqueror of the Albigenses.
+Amice, the mother of the elder Simon, was the sister and heiress of
+Robert of Beaumont, the last of his line to hold the earldom of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg056" id=
+"pg056">056</a></span>Leicester. After Amice's death her son used
+the title and claimed the estates of that earldom. But these
+pretensions were but nominal, and since 1215 Randolph of Chester
+had administered the Leicester lands as if his complete property.
+However, Amaury of Montfort, the Count of Toulouse's eldest son,
+ceded to his portionless younger brother his claims to the Beaumont
+inheritance, and in 1230 Simon went to England to push his
+fortunes. Young, brilliant, ambitious and attractive, he not only
+easily won the favour of the king, but commended himself so well to
+Earl Randolph that in 1231 the aged earl was induced to relax his
+grasp on the Leicester estates. In 1239 the last formalities of
+investiture were accomplished. Amaury renounced his claims, and
+after that Simon became Earl of Leicester and steward of England. A
+year before that he had secured the great marriage that he had long
+been seeking. In January, 1238, he was wedded to the king's own
+sister, Eleanor, the childless widow of the younger William
+Marshal. Simon was for the moment high in the affection of his
+brother-in-law. To the English he was simply another of the foreign
+favourites who turned the king's heart against his born
+subjects.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] This is well illustrated by Philip de
+Beaumanoir's well-known romance, <i>Jean de Dammartin et Blonde
+d'Oxford</i> (ed. by Suchier, Soc. des anciens Textes
+fran&ccedil;ais, and by Le Roux de Lincy, Camden Soc.).</p>
+
+<p>In 1238 Peter des Roches died. With all his faults the Poitevin
+was an excellent administrator at Winchester,[1] and left his
+estates in such a prosperous condition that Henry coveted the
+succession for the bishop-elect of Valence, though William already
+had the prospect of the prince-bishopric of liege. But the monks of
+St. Swithun's refused to obey the royal order, and Henry sought to
+obtain his object from the pope. Gregory gave William both Liege
+and Winchester, but in 1239 death ended his restless plans.
+William's death left more room for his kinsfolk and followers. His
+clerk, Peter of Aigueblanche, returned to the land of promise, and
+in 1240 secured his consecration as Bishop of Hereford. William's
+brother, Peter of Savoy, lord of Romont and Faucigny, was invited
+to England in the same year. In 1241 he was invested with the
+earldom of Richmond, which a final breach with Peter of Brittany
+had left in the king's hands. Peter, the ablest member of his
+house, thus became its chief representative in England.[2]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See H. Hall, <i>Pipe Roll of the Bishop of
+Winchester</i>, 1207-8.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] For Peter see Wurstemberger, <i>Peter II.,
+Graf von Savoyen</i> (1856).</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg057" id=
+"pg057">057</a></span>With the Proven&ccedil;als and Savoyards came
+a fresh swarm of Romans. In 1237 the first papal legates <i>a
+latere</i> since the recall of Pandulf landed in England. The
+deputy of Gregory IX. was the cardinal-deacon Otto, who in 1226 had
+already discharged the humbler office of nuncio in England. It was
+believed that the legate was sent at the special request of Henry
+III., and despite the remonstrances of the Archbishop of
+Canterbury. Those most unfriendly to the legate were won over by
+his irreproachable conduct. He rejected nearly all gifts. He was
+unwearied in preaching peace; travelled to the north to settle
+outstanding differences between Henry and the King of Scots, and
+thence hurried to the west to prolong the truce with Llewelyn. His
+zeal for the reformation of abuses made the canons of the national
+council, held under his presidency at St. Paul's on November 18,
+1237, an epoch in the history of our ecclesiastical
+jurisprudence.</p>
+
+<p>Despite his efforts the legate remained unpopular. The
+pluralists and nepotists, who feared his severity, joined with the
+foes of all taxation and the enemies of all foreigners in
+denouncing the legate. To avoid the danger of poison, he thought it
+prudent to make his own brother his master cook. During the council
+of London it was necessary to escort him from his lodgings and back
+again with a military force. In the council itself the claim of
+high-born clerks to receive benefices in plurality found a
+spokesman in so respectable a prelate as Walter of Cantilupe, the
+son of a marcher baron, whom Otto had just enthroned in his
+cathedral at Worcester, and the legate, "fearing for his skin," was
+suspected of mitigating the severity of his principles to win over
+the less greedy of the friends of vested interests. His Roman
+followers knew and cared little about English susceptibilities, and
+feeling was so strong against them that any mischance might excite
+an explosion. Such an accident occurred on St. George's day, April
+23, 1238, when the legate was staying with the Austin Canons of
+Oseney, near Oxford, while the king was six miles off at Abingdon.
+Some of the masters of the university went to Oseney to pay their
+respects to the cardinal, and were rudely repulsed by the Italian
+porter. Irritated at this discourtesy, they returned with a host of
+clerks, who forced their way into the abbey. Amongst them was a
+poor Irish chaplain, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg058" id=
+"pg058">058</a></span>who made his way to the kitchen to beg for
+food. The chief cook, the legate's brother, threw a pot of scalding
+broth into the Irishman's face. A clerk from the march of Wales
+shot the cook dead with an arrow. A fierce struggle followed, in
+the midst of which Otto, hastily donning the garb of his hosts,
+took refuge in the tower of their church, where he was besieged by
+the infuriated clerks, until the king sent soldiers from Abingdon
+to release him. Otto thereupon laid Oxford under an interdict,
+suspended all lectures, and put thirty masters into prison. English
+opinion, voiced by the diocesan, Grosseteste, held that the
+cardinal's servants had provoked the riot, and found little to
+blame in the violence of the clerks.</p>
+
+<p>In 1239 Gregory IX. began his final conflict with Frederick II.,
+and demanded the support of all Europe. As before, from 1227 to
+1230, the pressure of the papal necessity was at once felt in
+England. The legate had to raise supplies at all costs. Crusaders
+were allowed to renounce their vows for ready money. Every
+visitation or conference became an excuse for procurations and
+fees. Presents were no longer rejected, but rather greedily
+solicited. On the pretence that it was necessary to reform the
+Scottish Church, "which does not recognise the Roman Church as its
+sole mother and metropolitan," Otto excited the indignation of
+Alexander II. by attempts to extend his jurisdiction to Scotland,
+hitherto unvisited by legates. In England his claims soon grew
+beyond all bearing. At last he demanded a fifth of all clerical
+goods to enable the pope to finance the anti-imperial crusade. Even
+this was more endurable than the order received from Rome that 300
+clerks of Roman families should be "provided" to benefices in
+England in order that Gregory might obtain the support of their
+relatives against Frederick. Both as feudal suzerain and as
+spiritual despot, the pope lorded it over England as fully as his
+uncle Innocent III.</p>
+
+<p>Weakness, piety, and self-interest combined to make Henry III.
+acquiesce in the legate's exactions. "I neither wish nor dare,"
+said he, "to oppose the lord pope in anything." The union of king
+and legate was irresistible. The lay opposition was slow and
+feeble. Gilbert Marshal, though showing no lack of spirit, was not
+the man to play the part which his brother Richard had filled so
+effectively. Richard, Earl of Cornwall, who constituted himself the
+spokesman of the magnates, made <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg059" id="pg059">059</a></span>a special grievance of the
+marriage of Simon of Montfort with his sister Eleanor. England, he
+said, was like a vineyard with a broken hedge, so that all that
+went by could steal the grapes. He took arms, and subscribed the
+first of the long series of plans of constitutional reform that the
+reign was to witness, according to which the king was to be guided
+by a chosen body of counsellors. But at the crisis of the movement
+he held back, having accomplished nothing.</p>
+
+<p>There was more vigour in the ecclesiastical opposition. Robert
+Grosseteste,[1] a Suffolk man of humble birth, had already won for
+himself a position of unique distinction at Oxford and Paris. A
+teacher of rare force, a scholar of unexampled range, a thinker of
+daring originality, and a writer who had touched upon almost every
+known subject, he was at the height of his fame when, in 1235, his
+appointment as Bishop of Lincoln gave the fullest opportunities for
+the employment of his great gifts in the public service. He was
+convinced that the preoccupation of the clergy in worldly
+employment and the constant aggressions of the civil upon the
+ecclesiastical courts lay at the root of the evils of the time. His
+conviction brought him into conflict with the king rather than the
+legate, though for the moment his absorption in the cares of his
+diocese distracted his attention from general questions. The
+bishops generally had become so hostile that Otto shrank from
+meeting them in another council, and strove to get money by
+negotiating individually with the leading churchmen. The old foe of
+papal usurpations, Robert Twenge, renewed his agitation on behalf
+of the rights of patrons, and the clergy of Berkshire drew up a
+remonstrance against Otto's extortions.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For Grosseteste, see F.S. Stevenson, <i>Robert
+Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln</i> (1899).</p>
+
+<p>Archbishop Edmund saw the need of opposing both legate and king;
+but he was hampered by his ecclesiastical and political principles,
+and still more, perhaps, by the magnitude of the rude task thrown
+upon him. He had set before himself the ideal of St. Thomas, not
+only in the asceticism of his private life, but in his zeal for his
+see and the Church. But few men were more unlike the strong-willed
+and bellicose martyr of Canterbury than the gentle and yielding
+saint of Abingdon. A plentiful crop <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg060" id="pg060">060</a></span>of quarrels, however, soon showed
+that Edmund had, in one respect, copied only too faithfully the
+example of his predecessor. He was engaged in a controversy of some
+acerbity with the Archbishop of York, and he was involved in a long
+wrangle with the monks of his cathedral, which took him to Rome
+soon after the legate's arrival. He got little satisfaction there,
+and found a whole sea of troubles to overwhelm him on his return.
+At last came the demand of the fifth from Otto. Edmund joined in
+the opposition of his brethren to this exaction, but his attitude
+was complicated by his other difficulties. Leaning in his weakness
+on the pope, he found that Gregory was a taskmaster rather than a
+director. At last he paid his fifth, but, broken in health and
+spirits, he was of no mind to withstand the demands of the Roman
+clerks for benefices. If he could not be another St. Thomas
+defending the liberties of the Church, he could at least withdraw
+like his prototype from the strife, and find a refuge in a foreign
+house of religion. Seeking out St. Thomas's old haunt at Pontigny,
+he threw himself with ardour into the austere Cistercian life. On
+the advice of his physicians, he soon sought a healthier abode with
+the canons of Soisy, in Brie, at whose house he died on November
+16, 1240. His body was buried at Pontigny in the still abiding
+minster which had witnessed the devotions of Becket and Langton,
+and miracles were soon wrought at his tomb. Within eight years of
+his death he was declared a saint; and Henry, who had thwarted him
+in life, and even opposed his canonisation, was among the first of
+the pilgrims who worshipped at his shrine. It needed a tougher
+spirit and a stronger character than Edmund's to grapple with the
+thorny problems of his age.</p>
+
+<p>The retirement of the archbishop enabled Otto to carry through
+his business, and withdraw from England on January 7, 1241. On
+August 21 Gregory IX. died, with his arch-enemy at the gates of
+Rome and all his plans for the time frustrated. High-minded, able
+and devout, he wagered the whole fortunes of the papacy on the
+result of his secular struggle with the emperor. In Italy as in
+England, the spiritual hegemony of the Roman see and the spiritual
+influence of the western Church were compromised by his exaltation
+of ecclesiastical politics over religion.</p>
+
+<p>The monks of Christ Church won court favour by electing as
+archbishop, Boniface of Savoy, Bishop-elect of Belley, one <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg061" id="pg061">061</a></span>of the
+queen's uncles. There was no real resistance to the appointment,
+though a prolonged vacancy in the papacy made it impossible for him
+to receive formal confirmation until 1243, and it was not until
+1244 that he condescended to visit his new province. Meanwhile his
+kinsmen were carrying everything before them. Richard of Cornwall
+lost his first wife, Isabella, daughter of William Marshal, in
+1240, an event which broke almost the last link that bound him to
+the baronial opposition. He withdrew himself from the troubles of
+English politics by going on crusade, and with him went his former
+enemy, Simon of Leicester. Richard was back in England early in
+1242, and on November 23, 1243, his marriage with Sanchia of
+Provence, the younger sister of the queens of France and England,
+completed his conversion to the court party.</p>
+
+<p>Henry III.'s cosmopolitan instincts led him to take as much part
+in foreign politics as his resources allowed. In 1235 he married
+his sister Isabella to Frederick II., and henceforth manifested a
+strong interest in the affairs of his imperial brother-in-law. His
+relations with France were still uneasy, and he hoped to find in
+Frederick's support a counterpoise to the steady pressure of French
+hostility. All England watched with interest the progress of the
+emperor's arms. Peter of Savoy led an English contingent to fight
+for Frederick against the Milanese, and Matthew Paris, the greatest
+of the English chroniclers, narrates the campaign of Corte Nuova
+with a detail exceeding that which he allows to the military
+enterprises of his own king. Frederick constantly corresponded with
+both the king and Richard of Cornwall, and it was nothing but
+solicitude for the safely of the heir to the throne that led the
+English magnates to reject the emperor's request that Richard
+should receive a high command under him. Even Frederick's breach
+with the pope in 1239 did not destroy his friendship with Henry.
+The situation became extremely complicated, since Innocent IV.
+derived large financial support for his crusade from the unwilling
+English clergy, while Henry still professed to be Frederick's
+friend. The king allowed Otto to proclaim Frederick's
+excommunication in England, and then urged the legate to quit the
+country because the emperor strongly protested against the presence
+of an avowed enemy at his brother-in-law's court. Neither pope nor
+emperor could <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg062" id=
+"pg062">062</a></span>rely upon the support of so half-hearted a
+prince. Renewed trouble with France explains in some measure the
+anxiety of Henry to remain in good relations with the emperor
+despite Frederick's quarrel with the pope.</p>
+
+<p>The position of the French monarchy was far stronger than it had
+been when Henry first intervened in continental politics. Blanche
+of Castile had broken the back of the feudal coalition, and even
+Peter Mauclerc had made his peace with the monarchy at the price of
+his English earldom. Louis IX. attained his majority in 1235, and
+his first care was to strengthen his power in his newly won
+dominions. If Poitou were still in the hands of the Count of La
+Marche and the Viscount of Thouars, the royal seneschals of
+Beaucaire and Carcassonne after 1229 ruled over a large part of the
+old dominions of Raymond of Toulouse. In 1237 the treaty of Meaux
+was further carried out by the marriage of Raymond's daughter and
+heiress, Joan, to Alfonse, the brother of the French king. In 1241
+Alfonse came of age, and Louis at once invested him with Poitou and
+Auvergne. The lords of Poitou saw that the same process which had
+destroyed the feudal liberties of Normandy now endangered their
+disorderly independence. Hugh of Lusignan and his wife had been
+present at Alfonse's investiture, and the widow of King John had
+gone away highly indignant at the slights put upon her dignity.[1]
+She bitterly reproached her husband with the ignominy involved in
+his submission. Easily moved to new treasons, Hugh became the soul
+of a league of Poitevin barons formed at Parthenay, which received
+the adhesion of Henry's seneschal of Gascony, Rostand de Sollers,
+and even of Alfonse's father-in-law, the depressed Raymond of
+Toulouse. At Christmas Hugh openly showed his hand. He renounced
+his homage to Alfonse, declared his adhesion to his step-son,
+Richard of Cornwall, the titular count of Poitou, and
+ostentatiously withdrew from the court with his wife. The rest of
+the winter was taken up with preparations for the forthcoming
+struggle.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See the graphic letter of a citizen of La
+Rochelle to Blanche, published by M. Delisle in
+<i>Biblioth&egrave;que de l'Ecole des Chartes</i>, s&eacute;rie
+ii., iv., 513-55 (1856).</p>
+
+<p>Untaught by experience, Henry III. listened to the appeals of
+his mother and her husband. Richard of Cornwall, who came back from
+his crusade in January, 1242, was persuaded that he had another
+chance of realising his vain title of Count <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg063" id="pg063">063</a></span>of Poitou. But
+the king had neither men nor money and the parliament of February 2
+refused to grant him sums adequate for his need, so that,
+despairing of dealing with his barons in a body, Henry followed the
+legate's example of winning men over individually. He made a strong
+protest against the King of France's breach of the existing truce,
+and his step-father assured him that Poitou and Gascony would
+provide him with sufficient soldiers if he brought over enough
+money to pay them. Thereupon, leaving the Archbishop of York as
+regent, Henry took ship on May 9 at Portsmouth and landed on May 13
+at Royan at the mouth of the Gironde. He was accompanied by Richard
+of Cornwall, seven earls, and 300 knights.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Louis IX. marshalled a vast host at Chinon, which from
+April to July overran the patrimony of the house of Lusignan, and
+forced many of the confederate barons to submit. Peter of Savoy and
+John Mansel, Henry's favourite clerk, then made seneschal of
+Gascony, assembled the Aquitanian levies, while Peter of
+Aigueblanche, the Savoyard Bishop of Hereford, went to Provence to
+negotiate the union between Earl Richard and Sanchia, and, if
+possible, to add Raymond Berengar to the coalition against the
+husband of his eldest daughter. Henry hoped to win tactical
+advantages by provoking Louis to break the truce, and mendaciously
+protested his surprise at being forced into an unexpected conflict
+with his brother-in-law. Towards the end of July, Louis, who had
+conquered all Poitou, advanced to the Charente, and occupied
+Taillebourg. If the Charente were once crossed, Saintonge would
+assuredly follow the destinies of Poitou; and the Anglo-Gascon army
+advanced from Saintes to dispute the passage of the river. On July
+21 the two armies were in presence of each other, separated only by
+the Charente. Besides the stone bridge at Taillebourg, the French
+had erected a temporary wooden structure higher up the stream, and
+had collected a large number of boats to facilitate their passage.
+Seeing with dismay the oriflamme waving over the sea of tents
+which, "like a great and populous city," covered the right bank,
+the soldiers of Henry retreated precipitately to Saintes. There was
+imminent danger of their retreat being cut off, but Richard of
+Cornwall went to the French camp, and obtained an armistice of a
+few hours, which gave his brother time to reach the town.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg064" id=
+"pg064">064</a></span>Next day Louis advanced at his ease to the
+capital of Saintonge. The Anglo-Gascons went out to meet him, and,
+despite their inferior numbers, fought bravely amidst the vineyards
+and hollow lanes to the west of the city. But the English king was
+the first to flee, and victory soon attended the arms of the
+French. Immediately after the battle, the lords of Poitou abandoned
+Richard for Alfonse. Henry fled from Saintes to Pons, from Pons to
+Barbezieux, and thence sought a more secure refuge at Blaye,
+leaving his tent, the ornaments of his chapel, and the beer
+provided for his English soldiers as booty for the enemy. The
+outbreak of an epidemic in the French army alone prevented a siege
+of Bordeaux, by necessitating the return of St. Louis to the
+healthier north. Henry lingered at Bordeaux until September, when
+he returned to England.[1] Meanwhile the French dictated peace to
+the remaining allies of Henry. On the death of Raymond of Toulouse,
+in 1249, Alfonse quietly succeeded to his dominions. The next
+twenty years saw the gradual extension of the French administrative
+system to Poitou, Auvergne, and the Toulousain. English Gascony was
+reduced to little more than the districts round Bordeaux and
+Bayonne. Even a show of hostility was no longer useful, and on
+April 7, 1243, a five years' truce between Henry and Louis was
+signed at Bordeaux. The marriage of Beatrice of Provence, the
+youngest of the daughters of Raymond Berengar, to Charles of Anjou,
+Louis' younger brother, removed Provence from the sphere of English
+influence. On his father-in-law's death in 1245, Charles of Anjou
+succeeded to his dominions to the prejudice of his two English
+brothers-in-law, and became the founder of a Capetian line of
+counts of Provence, which brought the great fief of the empire
+under the same northern French influences which Alfonse of Poitiers
+was diffusing over the lost inheritances of Eleanor of Aquitaine
+and the house of Saint-Gilles.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] The only good modern account of this
+expedition is that by M. Charles B&eacute;mont, <i>La campagne de
+Poitou, 1242-3</i>, in <i>Annales du Midi</i>, v., 389-314 (1893).
+For the Lusignans see Boissonade, <i>Quomodo comites Engolismenses
+erga reges Angliæ et Franciæ se gesserint</i>, 1152-1328
+(1893).</p>
+
+<p>A minor result of Louis' triumph was the well-deserved ruin of
+Hugh of Lusignan and Isabella of Angoul&ecirc;me. The proud spirit
+of Isabella did not long tolerate her humiliation. She <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg065" id="pg065">065</a></span>retired to
+Fontevraud and died there in 1246. Hugh X. followed her to the tomb
+in 1248. Their eldest son, Hugh XI., succeeded him, but the rest of
+their numerous family turned for support to the inexhaustible
+charity of the King of England. Thus in 1247 a Poitevin invasion of
+the king's half-brothers and sisters recalled to his much-tried
+subjects the Savoyard invasion of ten years earlier. In that single
+year three of the king's brothers and one of his sisters accepted
+his invitation to make a home in England. Of these, Guy, lord of
+Cognac, became proprietor of many estates. William, called from the
+Cistercian abbey in which he was born William of Valence, secured,
+with the hand of Joan of Munchensi, a claim to the great
+inheritance that was soon to be scattered by the extinction of the
+male line of the house of Marshal. Aymer of Valence, a very
+unclerical churchman, obtained in 1250 his election as bishop of
+Winchester, though his youth and the hostility of his chapter
+delayed his consecration for ten years. Alice their sister found a
+husband of high rank in the young John of Warenne, Earl of Warenne
+or Surrey, while a daughter of Hugh XI. married Robert of Ferrars,
+Earl of Ferrars or Derby. Others of their kindred flocked to the
+land of promise. Any Poitevin was welcome, even if not a member of
+the house of Lusignan. Thus the noble adventurer John du Plessis,
+came over to England, married the heiress of the Neufbourg Earls of
+Warwick, and in 1247 was created Earl of Warwick. The alien
+invasion took a newer and more grievous shape.</p>
+
+<p>The expenses of the war were still to be paid; and in 1244 Henry
+assembled a council, declaring that, as he had gone to Gascony on
+the advice of his barons, they were bound to make him a liberal
+grant towards freeing him from the debts which he had incurred
+beyond sea. Prelates, earls, and barons each deliberated apart, and
+a joint committee, composed of four members of each order, drew up
+an uncompromising reply. The king had not observed the charters;
+previous grants had been misapplied, and the abeyance of the great
+offices of state made justice difficult and good administration
+impossible. The committee insisted that a justiciar, a chancellor,
+and a treasurer should forthwith be appointed. This was the last
+thing that the jealous king desired. Helpless against a united
+council, he strove to break up the solidarity between its lay and
+clerical <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg066" id=
+"pg066">066</a></span>elements by laying a papal order before the
+prelates to furnish him an adequate subsidy. The leader of the
+bishops was now Grosseteste, who from this time until his death in
+1253 was the pillar of the opposition. "We must not," he declared,
+"be divided from the common counsel, for it is written that if we
+be divided we shall all die forthwith." At last a committee of
+twelve magnates was appointed to draw up a plan of reform. The
+unanimity of all orders was shown by the co-operation on this body
+of prelates such as Boniface of Savoy with patriots of the stamp of
+Grosseteste and Walter of Cantilupe, while among the secular lords,
+Richard of Cornwall and 'Simon of Leicester worked together with
+baronial leaders like Norfolk and Richard of Montfichet, a survivor
+of the twenty-five executors of Magna Carta. The obstinacy of the
+king may well have driven the estates into drawing up the
+remarkable paper constitution preserved for us by Matthew Paris.[1]
+By it the execution of the charters and the supervision of the
+administration were to be entrusted to four councillors, chosen
+from among the magnates, and irremovable except with their consent.
+It is unlikely that the scheme was ever carried out; but its
+conception shows an advance in the claims of the opposition, and
+anticipates the policy of restraining an incompetent ruler by a
+committee responsible to the estates, which, for the next two
+centuries, was the popular specific for royal maladministration.
+For the moment neither side gained a decided victory. Though the
+barons persisted in their refusal of an extraordinary grant, they
+agreed to pay an aid to marry the king's eldest daughter to the son
+of Frederick II.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Chron. Maj</i>., iv., 366-68.</p>
+
+<p>Further demands arose from the quarrel between Innocent IV.' and
+the emperor. A new papal envoy, Master Martin, came to England to
+extort from the clergy money to enable Innocent to carry on his war
+against Frederick. The lords told Martin that if he did not quit
+the realm forthwith he would be torn in pieces. In terror he prayed
+for a safe conduct. "May the devil give you a safe conduct to
+hell," was the only reply that the angry Henry vouchsafed. Even his
+complaisance was exhausted by Master Martin.</p>
+
+<p>On July 26, 1245, a few weeks before Martin's expulsion, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg067" id="pg067">067</a></span>Innocent
+IV. opened a general council at Lyons, in which Frederick was
+deposed from the imperial dignity. Grosseteste, the chief English
+prelate to attend the gathering, was drawn in conflicting
+directions by his zeal for pope against emperor and by his dislike
+of curialist exactions. This attitude of the bishop is reflected in
+the remonstrance, in the name of the English people, laid before
+Innocent, declaring the faithfulness of England to the Holy See and
+the wrongs with which her fidelity had been requited. The
+increasing demands for money, the intrusion of aliens into English
+cures, and Martin's exactions were set forth at length. Innocent
+refused to entertain the petition, forced all the bishops at Lyons
+to join in the deprivation of the emperor, and required every
+English bishop to seal with his own seal the document by which John
+had pledged the nation to a yearly tribute. No one could venture to
+stand up against the successor of St. Peter, and so, despite futile
+remonstrance, Innocent still had it all his own way. In 1250
+Grosseteste again met Innocent face to face at Lyons, and urged him
+to "put to flight the evils and purge the abominations" which the
+Roman see had done so much to foster. But this outspoken
+declaration was equally without result. Bold as were Grosseteste's
+words, he fully accepted the curialist theory which regarded the
+pope as the universal bishop, the divinely appointed source of all
+ecclesiastical jurisdiction. He could therefore do no more than
+protest. If the pope chose to disregard him, there was nothing to
+be done but wait patiently for better times. The plague of foreign
+ecclesiastics was still to torment the English Church for many a
+year.</p>
+
+<p>The king's difficulties were increased by fresh troubles in
+Scotland and Wales. The friendship between Henry and his
+brother-in-law, Alexander II., was weakened by the death of the
+Queen of Scots and by Alexander's marriage to a French lady in
+1239. At last, in 1244, relations were so threatening that the
+English levies were mustered for a campaign at Newcastle. However,
+on the mediation of Richard of Cornwall, Alexander bound himself
+not to make alliances with England's enemies, and the trouble
+passed away. In Wales the difficulties were more complicated.
+Llewelyn ap Iorwerth died in 1240, full of years and honour. In the
+last years of his reign broken health and the revolts of his eldest
+son Griffith made the <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg068" id=
+"pg068">068</a></span>old chieftain anxious for peace with England,
+as the best way of securing the succession to all his dominions of
+David, his son by Joan of Anjou. Henry III., anxious that David as
+his nephew should inherit the principality, granted a temporary
+cessation of hostilities. After Llewelyn's death David was accepted
+as Prince of Snowdon, and made his way to Gloucester, where he
+performed homage, and was dubbed knight by his uncle. Next year,
+however, hostilities broke out, and Henry, disgusted with his
+nephew, made a treaty with the wife of Griffith, Griffith himself
+being David's prisoner. In 1241 Henry led an expedition from
+Chester into North Wales, and forced David to submit. He
+surrendered Griffith to his uncle's safe keeping and promised to
+yield his principality to Henry if he died without a son. Three
+years later Griffith broke his neck in an attempt to escape from
+the Tower. The death of his rival emboldened David to take up a
+stronger line against his uncle. A fresh Welsh expedition was
+necessary for the summer of 1245, in which the English advanced to
+the Conway, but were speedily forced to retire. David held his own
+until his death, without issue, in March, 1246, threw open the
+question of the Welsh succession.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<h4>POLITICAL RETROGRESSION AND NATIONAL PROGRESS.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg069" id=
+"pg069">069</a></span>The ten years from 1248 to 1258 saw the
+continuance of the misgovernment, discontent, and futile opposition
+which have already been sufficiently illustrated. The history of
+those years must be sought not so much in the relations of the king
+and his English subjects as in Gascony, in Wales, in the crusading
+revival, and in the culmination of the struggle of papacy and
+empire. In each of these fields the course of events reacted
+sharply upon the domestic affairs of England, until at last the
+failures of Henry's foreign policy gave unity and determination to
+the party of opposition whose first organised success, in 1258,
+ushered in the Barons' War.</p>
+
+<p>The relations between England and France remained anomalous.
+Formal peace was impossible, since France would yield nothing, and
+the English king still claimed Normandy and Aquitaine. Yet neither
+Henry nor Louis had any wish for war. They had married sisters:
+they were personally friendly, and were both lovers of peace. In
+such circumstances it was not hard to arrange truces from time to
+time, so that from 1243 to the end of the reign there were no open
+hostilities. In 1248 the friendly feeling of the two courts was
+particularly strong. Louis was on the eve of departure for the
+crusade and many English nobles had taken the cross. Henry, who was
+himself contemplating a crusade, was of no mind to avail himself of
+his kinsman's absence to disturb his realm.</p>
+
+<p>The French could afford to pass over Henry's neglect to do
+homage, for Gascony seemed likely to emancipate itself from the
+yoke of its English dukes without any prompting from Paris. After
+the failure of 1243, a limited amount of territory between the
+Dordogne and the Pyrenees alone acknowledged Henry. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg070" id="pg070">070</a></span>This narrower
+Gascony was a thoroughly feudalised land: the absentee dukes had
+little authority, domain, or revenue: and the chief lordships were
+held by magnates, whose relations to their overlord were almost
+formal, and by municipalities almost as free as the cities of
+Flanders or the empire. The disastrous campaign of Taiilebourg
+lessened the prestige of the duke, and Henry quitted Gascony
+without so much as attempting to settle its affairs. In the
+following years weak seneschals, with insufficient powers and
+quickly succeeding each other, were unable to grapple with
+ever-increasing troubles. The feudal lords dominated the
+countryside, pillaged traders, waged internal war and defied the
+authority of the duke. In the autonomous towns factions had arisen
+as fierce as those of the cities of Italy. Bordeaux was torn
+asunder by the feuds of the Rosteins and Colons. Bayonne was the
+scene of a struggle between a few privileged families, which sought
+to monopolise municipal office, and a popular opposition based upon
+the seafaring class. The neighbouring princes cast greedy eyes on a
+land so rich, divided, and helpless. Theobald IV., the poet, Count
+of Champagne and King of Navarre, coveted the valley of the Adour.
+Gaston, Viscount of B&eacute;arn, the cousin of Queen Eleanor,
+plundered and destroyed the town of Dax. Ferdinand the Saint of
+Castile and James I. of Aragon severally claimed all Gascony.
+Behind all these loomed the agents of the King of France. Either
+Gascony must fall away altogether, or stronger measures must be
+taken to preserve it.</p>
+
+<p>In this extremity Henry made Simon of Montfort seneschal or
+governor of Gascony, with exceptionally full powers and an assured
+duration of office for seven years. Simon had taken the crusader's
+vow, but was persuaded by the king to abandon his intention of
+following Louis to Egypt. He at once threw himself into his rude
+task with an energy that showed him to be a true son of the
+Albigensian crusader. In the first three months he traversed the
+duchy from end to end; rallied the royal partisans; defeated
+rebels; kept external foes in check, and administered the law
+without concern for the privileges of the great. In 1249 he crushed
+the Rostein faction at Bordeaux. The same fate was meted out to
+their partisans in the country districts. Order was restored, but
+the seneschal utterly disregarded impartiality or justice. He
+sought to rule Gascony by terrorism <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg071" id="pg071">071</a></span>and by backing up one faction
+against the other. It was the same with minor cities, like Bazas
+and Bayonne, and with the tyrants of the countryside. The Viscount
+of Fronsac saw his castle razed and his estates seized. Gaston of
+B&eacute;arn, tricked by the seneschal out of the succession of
+Bigorre, was captured, sent to England, and only allowed to return
+to his home, humiliated and powerless to work further evil. The
+lesser barons had to acknowledge Simon their master. On the death
+of Raymond of Toulouse in 1249, his son-in-law and successor,
+Alfonse of Poitiers, had all he could do to secure his inheritance,
+and was too closely bound by the pacific policy of his brother to
+give Simon much trouble. The truce with France was easily renewed
+by reason of St. Louis' absence on a crusade. The differences
+between Gascony and Theobald of Navarre were mitigated in 1248 at a
+personal interview between Leicester and the poet-king.</p>
+
+<p>Gascony for the moment was so quiet that the rebellious hordes
+called the <i>Pastoureaux</i>, who had desolated the royal domain,
+withdrew from Bordeaux in terror of Simon's threats. But the
+expense of maintaining order pressed heavily on the seneschal's
+resources, and his master showed little disposition to assist him.
+Moreover Gascony could not long keep quiet. There were threats of
+fresh insurrections, and the whole land was burning with
+indignation against its governor. Complaints from the Gascon
+estates soon flowed with great abundance into Westminster. For the
+moment Henry paid little attention to them. His son Edward was ten
+years of age, and he was thinking of providing him with an
+appanage, sufficient to support a separate household and so placed
+as to train the young prince in the duties of statecraft. Before
+November, 1249, he granted to Edward all Gascony, along with the
+profits of the government of Ireland, which were set aside to put
+Gascony in a good state of defence. Simon's strong hand was now
+more than ever necessary to keep the boy's unruly subjects under
+control. The King therefore continued Simon as seneschal of
+Gascony, though henceforth the earl acted as Edward's minister.
+"Complete happily," Henry wrote to the seneschal, "all our affairs
+in Gascony and you shall receive from us and our heirs a recompense
+worthy of your services." For the moment Leicester's triumph seemed
+complete, but the Gascons, who had hoped that Edward's <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg072" id="pg072">072</a></span>establishment
+meant the removal of their masterful governor, were bitterly
+disappointed at the continuance of his rule. Profiting by Simon's
+momentary absence in England, they once more rose in revolt. Henry
+wavered for the moment. "Bravely," declared he to his
+brother-in-law, "hast thou fought for me, and I will not deny thee
+help. But complaints pour in against thee. They say that thou hast
+thrown into prison, and condemned to death, folk who have been
+summoned to thy court under pledge of thy good faith." In the end
+Simon was sent back to Gascony, and by May, 1251, the rebels were
+subdued.</p>
+
+<p>Next year Gaston of B&eacute;arn stirred up another revolt, and,
+while Simon was in England, deputies from the Aquitanian cities
+crossed the sea and laid new complaints before Henry. A stormy
+scene ensued between the king and his brother-in-law. Threatened
+with the loss of his office, Simon insisted that he had been
+appointed for seven years, and that he could not be removed without
+his own consent. Henry answered that he would keep no compacts with
+traitors. "That word is a lie," cried Simon; "were you not my king
+it would be an ill hour for you when you dared to utter it." The
+sympathy of the magnates saved Leicester from the king's wrath, and
+before long he returned to Gascony, still seneschal, but with
+authority impaired by the want of his sovereign's confidence.
+Though the king henceforth sided with the rebels, Simon remained
+strong enough to make headway against the lord of B&eacute;arn.
+Before long, however, Leicester unwillingly agreed to vacate his
+office on receiving from Henry a sum of money. In September, 1252,
+he laid down the seneschalship and retired into France. While
+shabbily treated by the king, he had certainly shown an utter
+absence of tact or scruple. But the tumults of Gascony raged with
+more violence than ever now that his strong hand was withdrawn.
+Those who had professed to rise against the seneschal remained in
+arms against the king. Once more the neighbouring princes cast
+greedy eyes on the defenceless duchy. In particular, Alfonso the
+Wise, King of Castile, who succeeded his father Ferdinand in 1252,
+renewed his father's claims to Gascony.</p>
+
+<p>The only way to save the duchy was for Henry to go there in
+person. Long delays ensued before the royal visit took place, and
+it was not until August, 1253, that Bordeaux saw <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg073" id="pg073">073</a></span>her hereditary
+duke sail up the Gironde to her quays. The Gascon capital remained
+faithful, but within a few miles of her walls the rebels were
+everywhere triumphant. It required a long siege to reduce
+B&eacute;nauge to submission, and months elapsed before the towns
+and castles of the lower Garonne and Dordogne opened their gates.
+Even then La R&eacute;ole, whither all the worst enemies of
+Montfort had fled, held out obstinately. Despairing of military
+success, Henry fell back upon diplomacy. The strength of the Gascon
+revolt did not lie in the power of the rebels themselves but in the
+support of the neighbouring princes and the French crown. By
+renewing the truce with the representatives of Louis, Henry
+protected himself from the danger of French intervention, and at
+the same time he cut off a more direct source of support to the
+rebels by negotiating treaties with such magnates as the lord of
+Albret, the Counts of Comminges and Armagnac, and the Viscount of
+B&eacute;arn. His master-stroke was the conclusion, in April, 1254,
+of a peace with Alfonso of Castile, whereby the Spanish king
+abandoned his Gascon allies and renounced his claims on the duchy.
+In return it was agreed that the lord Edward should marry Alfonso's
+half-sister, Eleanor, heiress of the county of Ponthieu through her
+mother, Joan, whom Henry had once sought for his queen. As Edward's
+appanage included Aquitaine, Alfonso, in renouncing his personal
+claims, might seem to be but transferring them to his sister.</p>
+
+<p>In May, 1254, Queen Eleanor joined Henry at Bordeaux. With her
+went her two sons, Edward and Edmund, her uncle, Archbishop
+Boniface, and a great crowd of magnates. In August Edward went with
+his mother to Alfonso's court at Burgos, where he was welcomed with
+all honour and dubbed to knighthood by the King of Castile, and in
+October he and Eleanor were married at the Cistercian monastery of
+Las Huelgas. His appanage included all Ireland, the earldom of
+Chester, the king's lands in Wales, the Channel Islands, the whole
+of Gascony, and whatsoever rights his father still had over the
+lands taken from him and King John by the Kings of France. Thus he
+became the ruler of all the outlying dependencies of the English
+crown, and the representative of all the claims on the Aquitanian
+inheritance of Eleanor and the Norman inheritance of William the
+Conqueror. The caustic <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg074" id=
+"pg074">074</a></span>St. Alban's chronicler declared that Henry
+left to himself such scanty possessions that he became a "mutilated
+kinglet".[1] But Henry was too jealous of power utterly to renounce
+so large a share of his dominions. His grants to his son were for
+purposes of revenue and support, and the government of these
+regions was still strictly under the royal control. Yet from this
+moment writs ran in Edward's name, and under his father's direction
+the young prince was free to buy his experience as he would. Soon
+after his son's return with his bride, Henry III. quitted Gascony,
+making his way home through France, where he visited his mother's
+tomb at Fontevraud and made atonement at Pontigny before the shrine
+of Archbishop Edmund. Of more importance was his visit to King
+Louis, recently returned from his Egyptian captivity. The cordial
+relations established by personal intercourse between the two kings
+prepared the way for peace two years later.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Matthew Paris, <i>Chron. Maj.</i>, v.,
+450.</p>
+
+<p>Edward remained in Gascony about a year after his father. He
+checked with a stern hand the disorders of his duchy, strove to
+make peace between the Rosteins and Colons, and failing to do so,
+took in 1261 the decisive step of putting an end to the tumultuous
+municipal independence of the Gascon capital by depriving the
+jurats of the right of choosing their mayor.[1] Thenceforth
+Bordeaux was ruled by a mayor nominated by the duke or his
+lieutenant. Edward's rule in Gascony has its importance as the
+first experiment in government by the boy of fifteen who was later
+to become so great a king. Returning to London in November, 1255,
+he still forwarded the interests of his Gascon subjects, and an
+attempt to protect the Bordeaux wine-merchants from the exactions
+of the royal officers aroused the jealousy of Henry, who declared
+that the days of Henry II. had come again, when the king's sons
+rose in revolt against their father. Despite this characteristic
+wail, Edward gained his point. Yet his efforts to secure the
+well-being of Gascony had not produced much result. The hold of the
+English duke on Aquitaine was as precarious under Edward as it had
+been in the days of Henry's direct rule.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See B&eacute;mont, <i>R&ocirc;les Gascons</i>,
+i., suppl&eacute;ment, pp. cxvi.-cxviii.</p>
+
+<p>The affairs of Wales and Cheshire involved Edward in
+responsibilities even more pressing than those of Gascony. <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg075" id="pg075">075</a></span>On the
+death of John the Scot without heirs in 1237, the palatinate of
+Randolph of Blundeville became a royal escheat. Its grant to Edward
+made him the natural head of the marcher barons. The Cheshire
+earldom became the more important since the Welsh power had been
+driven beyond the Conway. Since the death of David ap Llewelyn in
+1246, divisions in the reigning house of Gwynedd had continued to
+weaken the Welsh. Llewelyn and Owen the Red, the two elder sons of
+the Griffith ap Llewelyn who had perished in attempting to escape
+from the Tower, took upon themselves the government of Gwynedd,
+dividing the land, by the advice of the "good men," into two equal
+halves. The English seneschal at Carmarthen took advantage of their
+weakness to seize the outlying dependencies of Gwynedd south of the
+Dovey. War ensued, for the brothers resisted this aggression. But
+in April, 1247, they were forced to do homage at Woodstock for
+Gwynedd and Snowdon. Henry retained not only Cardigan and
+Carmarthen, but the debatable lands between the eastern boundary of
+Cheshire and the river Clwyd, the four cantreds of the middle
+country or Perveddwlad, so long the scene of the fiercest warfare
+between the Celt and the Saxon. Thus the work of Llewelyn ap
+Iorwerth was completely undone, and his grandsons were confined to
+Snowdon and Anglesey, the ancient cradles of their house.</p>
+
+<p>It suited English policy that even, the barren lands of Snowdon
+should be divided. As time went on, other sons of Griffith ap
+Llewelyn began to clamour for a share of their grandfather's
+inheritance. Owen, the weaker of the two princes, made common cause
+with them, and David, another brother, succeeded in obtaining his
+portion of the common stock. Llewelyn showed himself so much the
+most resourceful and energetic of the brethren that, when open war
+broke out between them in 1254, he easily obtained the victory.
+Owen was taken prisoner, and David was deprived of his lands.
+Llewelyn, thus sole ruler of Gwynedd, at once aspired to follow in
+the footsteps of his grandfather. He overran Merioneth, and
+frightened the native chieftains beyond the Dovey into the English
+camp. His ambitions were, however, rudely checked by the grant of
+Cheshire and the English lands in Wales to Edward.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg076" id=
+"pg076">076</a></span>Besides the border palatinate, Edward's Welsh
+lands included the four cantreds of Perveddwlad, and the districts
+of Cardigan and Carmarthen. Young as he was, he had competent
+advisers, and, while he was still in Aquitaine, designs were formed
+of setting up the English shire system in his Welsh lands, so as to
+supersede the traditional Celtic methods of government by feudal
+and monarchical centralisation. Efforts were made to subject the
+four cantreds to the shire courts at Chester; and Geoffrey of
+Langley, Edward's agent in the south, set up shire-moots at
+Cardigan and Carmarthen, from which originated the first beginnings
+of those counties. The bitterest indignation animated Edward's
+Welsh tenants, whether on the Clwyd or on the Teivi and Towy. They
+rose in revolt against the alien innovators, and called upon
+Llewelyn to champion their grievances. Llewelyn saw the chance of
+extending his tribal power into a national principality over all
+Wales by posing as the upholder of the Welsh people. He overran the
+four cantreds in a week, finding no resistance save before the two
+castles of Deganwy and Diserth. He conquered Cardigan with equal
+ease, and prudently granted out his acquisition to the local
+chieftain Meredith ap Owen. Nor were Edward's lands alone exposed
+to his assaults. In central Wales Roger Mortimer was stripped of
+his marches on the upper Wye, and Griffith ap Gwenwynwyn, the lord
+of upper Powys, driven from the regions of the upper Severn. In the
+spring of 1257 the lord of Gwynedd appeared in regions untraversed
+by the men of Snowdon since the days of his grandfather. He
+devastated the lands of the marchers on the Bristol Channel and
+slew Edward's deputy in battle. "In those days," says Matthew
+Paris, "the Welsh saw that their lives were at stake, so that those
+of the north joined together in indissoluble alliance with those of
+the south. Such a union had never before been, since north and
+south had always been opposed." The lord of Snowdon assumed the
+title of Prince of Wales.</p>
+
+<p>Edward was forced to defend his inheritance. Henry III. paid
+little heed to his misfortunes, and answered his appeal for help by
+saying: "What have I to do with the matter? I have given you the
+land; you must defend it with your own resources. I have plenty of
+other business to do." Nevertheless, Henry accompanied his son on a
+Welsh campaign in August, 1257. <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg077" id="pg077">077</a></span>The English army got no further
+than Deganwy, and therefore did not really invade Llewelyn's
+dominions at all. After waiting idly on the banks of the Conway for
+some weeks, it retired home, leaving the open country to be ruled
+by Llewelyn as he would, and having done nothing but revictual the
+castles of the four cantreds. Next year a truce was made, which
+left Llewelyn in possession of the disputed districts. Troubles at
+home were calling off both father and son from the Welsh war, and
+thus Llewelyn secured his virtual triumph. Though fear of the
+progress of the lord of Gwynedd filled every marcher with alarm,
+yet the dread of the power of Edward was even more nearly present
+before them. The marcher lords deliberately stood aside, and the
+result was inevitable disaster. Edward found that the territories
+handed over to him by his father had to be conquered before they
+could be administered, and Henry III.'s methods of government made
+it a hopeless business to find either the men or the money for the
+task.</p>
+
+<p>England still resounded with complaints of misgovernment, and
+demands for the execution of the charters. Before going to Bordeaux
+in 1253, Henry obtained from the reluctant parliament a
+considerable subsidy, and pledged himself as "a man, a Christian, a
+knight, and a crowned and anointed king," to uphold the charters.
+During his absence a parliament, summoned by the regents, Queen
+Eleanor and Richard of Cornwall, for January, 1254, showed such
+unwillingness to grant a supply that a fresh assembly was convened
+in April, to which knights of the shire, for the first time since
+the reign of John, and representatives of the diocesan clergy, for
+the first occasion on record, were summoned, as well as the
+baronial and clerical grandees. Nothing came of the meeting save
+fresh complaints. The Earl of Leicester became the spokesman of the
+opposition. Hurrying back from France he warned the parliament not
+to fall into the "mouse-traps" laid for them by the king. In
+default of English money, enough to meet the king's necessities was
+extorted from the Jews, recently handed over to the custody of
+Richard of Cornwall. After his return from France at the end of
+1254, Henry's renewed requests for money gave coherence to the
+opposition. Between 1254 and 1258 the king's exactions, and an
+effective organisation for withstanding them, developed on parallel
+lines. To the old sources of discontent were <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg078" id="pg078">078</a></span>added grievances
+proceeding from enterprises of so costly a nature that they at last
+brought about a crisis.</p>
+
+<p>The foremost grievance against the king was still his
+co-operation with the papacy in spoiling the Church of England.
+Though the death of the excommunicated Frederick II. in 1250 was a
+great gain for Innocent IV., the contest of the papacy against the
+Hohenstaufen raged as fiercely as ever. Both in Germany and in
+Italy Innocent had to carry on his struggle against Conrad,
+Frederick's son. After Conrad's death, in 1254, there was still
+Frederick's strenuous bastard, Manfred, to be reckoned with in
+Naples and Sicily. Innocent IV. died in 1254, but his successor,
+Alexander IV., continued his policy. A papalist King of Naples was
+wanted to withstand Manfred, and also a papalist successor to the
+pope's phantom King of the Romans, William of Holland, who died in
+1256.</p>
+
+<p>Candidates to both crowns were sought for in England. Since 1250
+Innocent IV. had been sounding Richard, Earl of Cornwall, as to his
+willingness to accept Sicily. The honourable scruple against
+hostility to his kinsman, which Richard shared with the king,
+prevented him from setting up his claims against Conrad. But the
+deaths both of Conrad and of Frederick II.'s son by Isabella of
+England weakened the ties between the English royal house and the
+Hohenstaufen, and Henry was tempted by Innocent's offer of the
+Sicilian throne for his younger son, Edmund, a boy of nine, along
+with a proposal to release him from his vow of crusade to Syria, if
+he would prosecute on his son's behalf a crusading campaign against
+the enemies of the Church in Naples. Innocent died before the
+negotiations were completed, but Alexander IV. renewed the offer,
+and in April, 1255, Peter of Aigueblanche, Bishop of Hereford,
+accepted the preferred kingdom in Edmund's name. Sicily was to be
+held by a tribute of money and service, as a fief of the holy see,
+and was never to be united with the empire. Henry was to do homage
+to the pope on his son's behalf, to go to Italy in person or send
+thither a competent force, and to reimburse the pope for the large
+sums expended by him in the prosecution of the war. In return the
+English and Scottish proceeds of the crusading tenth, imposed on
+the clergy at Lyons, were to be paid to Henry. On October 18, 1255,
+a cardinal invested Edmund with a ring that symbolised his
+appointment. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg079" id=
+"pg079">079</a></span>Henry stood before the altar and swore by St.
+Edward that he would himself go to Apulia, as soon as he could
+safely pass through France.</p>
+
+<p>The treaty remained a dead letter. Henry found it quite
+impossible to raise either the men or the money promised, and
+abandoned any idea of visiting Sicily in person. Meanwhile Naples
+and Sicily were united in support of Manfred, and discomfited the
+feeble forces of the papal legates who acted against him in
+Edmund's name. At last the Archbishop of Messina came from the pope
+with an urgent request for payment of the promised sums. It was in
+vain that Henry led forth his son, clothed in Apulian dress, before
+the Lenten parliament of 1257, and begged the magnates to enable
+him to redeem his bond. When they heard the king's speech "the ears
+of all men tingled". Nothing could be got save from the clergy, so
+that Henry was quite unable to meet his obligations. He besought
+Alexander to give him time, to make terms with Manfred, to release
+Edmund from his debts on condition of ceding a large part of Apulia
+to the Church,&mdash;to do anything in short save insist upon the
+original contract. The pope deferred the payment, but the respite
+did Henry no good. Edmund's Sicilian monarchy vanished into
+nothing, when, early in 1258, Manfred was crowned king at Palermo.
+Before the end of the year, Alexander cancelled the grant of Sicily
+to Edmund. Yet his demands for the discharge of Henry's obligations
+had contributed not a little towards focussing the gathering
+discontent.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For Edmund's Sicilian claims, see W.E. Rhodes'
+article on <i>Edmund, Earl of Lancaster</i>, in the <i>English
+Historical Review</i>, x. (1895), 20-27.</p>
+
+<p>While Henry was seeking the Sicilian crown for his son, his
+brother Richard was elected to the German throne. Since William of
+Holland's death in January, 1256, the German magnates, divided
+between the Hohenstaufen and the papalist parties, had hesitated
+for nearly a year as to the choice of his successor. As neither
+party was able to secure the election of its own partisan, a
+compromise was mooted. At last the name of Richard of Cornwall was
+brought definitely forward. He was of high rank and unblemished
+reputation; a friend of the pope yet a kinsman of the Hohenstaufen;
+he was moderate and conciliatory; he had enough money to bribe the
+electors <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg080" id=
+"pg080">080</a></span>handsomely, and he was never likely to be so
+deeply rooted in Germany as to stand in the way of the princes of
+the empire. The Archbishop of Cologne became his paid partisan, and
+the Count Palatine of the Rhine accepted his candidature on
+conditions. The French party set up as his rival Alfonso X. of
+Castile, who, despite his newly formed English alliance, was quite
+willing to stand against Richard. At last, in January, 1257, the
+votes of three electors, Cologne, Mainz, and the Palatine, were
+cast for Richard, who also obtained the support of Ottocar, King of
+Bohemia. However, in April, Trier, Saxony, and Brandenburg voted
+for Alfonso. The double election of two foreigners perpetuated the
+Great Interregnum for some sixteen years. Alfonso's title was only
+an empty show, but Richard took his appointment seriously. He made
+his way to Germany, and was crowned King of the Romans on May 17,
+1257, at Aachen. He remained in the country nearly eighteen months,
+and succeeded in establishing his authority in the Rhineland,
+though beyond that region he never so much as showed his face.[1]
+The elevation of his brother to the highest dignity in Christendom
+was some consolation to Henry for the Sicilian failure.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See for Richard's career, Koch's <i>Richard
+von Cornwallis</i>, 1209-1257, and the article on <i>Richard, King
+of the Romans</i>, in the <i>Dictionary of National
+Biography</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The nation was disgusted to see maladministration grow worse and
+worse; the nobles were indignant at the ever-increasing sway of the
+foreigners; and several years of bad harvests, high prices, rain,
+flood, and murrain sharpened the chronic misery of the poor. The
+withdrawal of Earl Richard to his new kingdom deprived the king and
+nation of an honourable if timid counsellor, though a more capable
+leader was at last provided in the disgraced governor of Gascony.
+Simon still deeply resented the king's ingratitude for his
+services, and had become enough of an Englishman to sympathise with
+the national feelings. Since his dismissal in 1253 he had held
+somewhat aloof from politics. He knew so well that his interests
+centred in England that he declined the offer of the French regency
+on the death of Blanche of Castile. He prosecuted his rights over
+Bigorre with characteristic pertinacity, and lawsuits about his
+wife's jointure from her first husband exacerbated his relations
+with Henry. It cannot, however, be said that the two were as <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg081" id="pg081">081</a></span>yet
+fiercely hostile. Simon went to Henry's help in Gascony in 1254,
+served on various missions and was nominated on others from which
+he withdrew. His chosen occupations during these years of
+self-effacement were religious rather than political; his dearest
+comrades were clerks rather than barons.</p>
+
+<p>Among Montfort's closer intimates, Bishop Grosseteste was
+removed by death in 1253. But others of like stamp still remained,
+such as Adam Marsh, the Franciscan mystic, whose election to the
+see of Ely was quashed by the malevolence of the court; Eudes
+Rigaud, the famous Archbishop of Rouen, and Walter of Cantilupe,
+Bishop of Worcester, who formed a connecting link between the
+aristocracy and the Church. Despite the ineffectiveness of the
+clerical opposition to the papacy, the spirit of independence
+expressed in Grosseteste's protests had not yet deserted the
+churchmen. Clerks had felt the pinch of the papal exactions, had
+been bled to the uttermost to support the Sicilian candidature, and
+had seen aliens and non-residents usurping their revenues and their
+functions. More timid and less cohesive than the barons, they had
+quicker brains, more ideas, deeper grievances, and better means of
+reaching the masses. If resentment of the Sicilian candidature was
+the spark that fired the train, the clerical opposition showed the
+barons the method of successful resistance. The rejection of
+Henry's demands for money in the assemblies of 1257 started the
+movement that spread to the baronage in the parliaments of 1258. In
+the two memorable gatherings of that year the discontent, which had
+smouldered for a generation, at last burst into flame. In the next
+chapter we shall see in what fashion the fire kindled.</p>
+
+<p>The futility of the political history of the weary middle period
+of the reign suggests, to those who make the history of the state
+the criterion of every aspect of the national fortunes, a
+corresponding barrenness and lack of interest in other aspects of
+national life. Yet a remedy for Henry's misrule was only found
+because the age of political retrogression was in all other fields
+of action an epoch of unexampled progress. The years during which
+the strong centralised government of the Angevin kings was breaking
+down under Henry's weak rule were years which, to the historian of
+civilisation, are among the most fruitful in our annals. In vivid
+contrast to the tale of misrule, the <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg082" id="pg082">082</a></span>historian can turn to the revival
+of religious and intellectual life, the growing delight in ideas
+and knowledge, the consummation of the best period of art, and the
+spread of a nobler civilisation which make the middle portion of
+the thirteenth century the flowering time of English medieval life.
+It is part of this strange contrast that Henry, the obstacle to all
+political progress, was himself a chief supporter of the religious
+and intellectual movements which were so deeply influencing the
+age.</p>
+
+<p>Much has been said of the alien invasion, and of the strong
+national opposition it excited. But insularity is not a good thing
+in itself, and the natural English attitude to the foreigners
+tended to confound good and bad alike in a general condemnation.
+Even the Savoyards were by no means as evil as the English thought
+them, and Henry in welcoming his kinsmen was not merely moved by
+selfish and unworthy motives; he believed that he was showing his
+openness to ideas and his welcome to all good things from
+whencesoever they came. There were, in fact, two tendencies,
+antagonistic yet closely related, which were operative, not only in
+England but all over western Europe, during this period. Nations,
+becoming conscious and proud of their unity, dwelt, often
+unreasonably, on the points wherein they differed from other
+peoples, and strongly resented alien interference. At the same time
+the closer relations between states, the result of improved
+government, better communications, increased commercial and social
+intercourse, the strengthening of common ideals, and the
+development of cosmopolitan types of the knight, the scholar, and
+the priest, were deepening the union of western Christendom on
+common lines. Neither the political nor the military nor the
+ecclesiastical ideals of the early middle ages were based upon
+nationality, but rather on that ecumenical community of tradition
+which still made the rule of Rome, whether in Church or State, a
+living reality. In the thirteenth century the papal tradition was
+still at its height. The jurisdiction of the papal <i>curia</i>
+implied a universal Christian commonwealth. World-wide religious
+orders united alien lands together by ties more spiritual than
+obedience to the papal lawyers. The academic ideal was another and
+a fresh link that connected the nations together. To the ancient
+reasons for union&mdash;symbolised by the living Latin speech of
+all clerks, of all scholars, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg083"
+id="pg083">083</a></span>of all engaged in serious affairs-were
+added the newer bonds of connexion involved in the common knightly
+and social ideals, in the general spread of a common art and a
+common vernacular language and literature.</p>
+
+<p>As Latin expressed the one series of ties, so did French
+represent the other. The France of St. Louis meant two things. It
+meant, of course, the French state and the French nationality, but
+it meant a great deal more than that. The influence of the French
+tongue and French ideals was wider than the political influence of
+the French monarchy. French was the common language of knighthood,
+of policy, of the literature that entertained lords and ladies, of
+the lighter and less technical sides of the cosmopolitan culture
+which had its more serious embodiments in Latin. To the Englishman
+of the thirteenth century the French state was the enemy; but the
+English baron denounced France in the French tongue, and leant a
+ready ear to those aspects of life which, cosmopolitan in reality,
+found their fullest exposition in France and among French-speaking
+peoples. In the age which saw hostility to Frenchmen become a
+passion, a Frenchman like Montfort could become the champion of
+English patriotism, English scholars could readily quit their
+native land to study at Paris, the French vernacular literature was
+the common property of the two peoples, and French words began to
+force their way into the stubborn vocabulary of the English
+language, which for two centuries had almost entirely rejected
+these alien elements. In dwelling, however briefly, on the new
+features which were transforming English civilisation during this
+memorable period, we shall constantly see how England gained by her
+ever-increasing intercourse with the continent, by necessarily
+sharing in the new movements which had extended from the continent
+to the island, no longer, as in the eleventh century, to be
+described as a world apart. Neither the coming of the friars, nor
+the development of university life and academic schools of
+philosophy, theology, and natural science, nor the triumph of
+gothic art, nor the spread of vernacular literature, not even the
+scholarly study of English law nor the course of English political
+development-not one of these movements could have been what it was
+without the close interconnexion of the various parts of the
+European commonwealth, which was <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg084" id="pg084">084</a></span>becoming more homogeneous at the
+same time that its units were acquiring for themselves sped
+characteristics of their own.</p>
+
+<p>In the early days of Henry III.'s reign, a modest alien invasion
+anticipated the more noisy coming of the Poitevin or the
+Proven&ccedil;al. The most remarkable development of the
+"religious" life that the later middle age was to witness had just
+been worked out in Italy. St. Francis of Assisi had taught the cult
+of absolute poverty, and his example held up to his followers the
+ideal of the thorough and literal imitation of Christ's life. Thus
+arose the early beginnings of the Minorite or Franciscan rule. St.
+Dominic yielded to the fascination of the Umbrian enthusiast, and
+inculcated on his Order of Preachers a complete renunciation of
+worldly goods which made a society, originally little more than a
+new type of canons regular, a mendicant order like the Franciscans,
+bound to interpret the monastic vow of poverty with such
+literalness as to include corporate as well as individual
+renunciation of possessions, so that the order might not own lands
+or goods, and no member of it could live otherwise than by labour
+or by alms. In the second chapter of the Dominican order, at
+Whitsuntide, 1221, an organisation into provinces was carried out;
+and among the eight provinces, each with its prior, then
+instituted, was the province of England, where no preaching friar
+had hitherto set foot, and over it Gilbert of Freynet was appointed
+prior. Then Dominic withdrew to Bologna, where he died on August 6.
+Within a few days of the saint's death, Friar Gilbert with thirteen
+companions made his way to England. In the company of Peter des
+Roches the Dominican pioneers went to Canterbury, where Archbishop
+Langton was then residing. At the archbishop's request Gilbert
+preached in a Canterbury church, and Langton was so much delighted
+by his teaching that henceforth he had a special affection for the
+new order. From Canterbury the friars journeyed to London and
+Oxford. Mindful of the work of their leaders at Paris and Bologna,
+they built their first English chapel, house, and schools in the
+university town. Soon these proved too small for them, and they had
+to seek ampler quarters outside the walls. From these beginnings
+the Dominicans spread over England.</p>
+
+<p>The Franciscans quickly followed the Dominicans. On September
+10, 1224, there landed at Dover a little band of four <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg085" id="pg085">085</a></span>clerks and five
+laymen, sent by St. Francis himself to extend the new teaching into
+England. At their head was the Italian, Agnellus of Pisa, a deacon,
+formerly warden of the Parisian convent, who was appointed
+provincial minister in England. His three clerical companions were
+all Englishmen, though the five laymen were Italians or Frenchmen.
+Like the Dominican pioneers, the Franciscan missionaries first went
+to Canterbury, where the favour of Simon Langton, the archdeacon,
+did for them what the goodwill of his brother Stephen had done for
+their precursors. Leaving some of their number at Canterbury, four
+of the Franciscans went on to London, and thence a little later two
+of them set out for Oxford. Alike at London and at Oxford, they
+found a cordial welcome from the Dominicans, eating in their
+refectories, and sleeping in their dormitories, until they were
+able to erect modest quarters in both places. The brethren of the
+new order excited unbounded enthusiasm. Necessity and choice
+combined to compel them to interpret their vow of poverty as St.
+Francis would have wished. They laboured with their own hands at
+the construction of their humble churches. The friars at Oxford
+knew the pangs of debt and hunger, rejected pillows as a vain
+luxury, and limited the use of boots and shoes to the sick and
+infirm. The faithful saw the brethren singing songs as they picked
+their way over the frozen mud or hard snow, blood marking the track
+of their naked feet, without their being conscious of it. The
+joyous radiance of Francis himself illuminated the lives of his
+followers. "The friars," writes their chronicler, "were so full of
+fun among themselves that a deaf mute could hardly refrain from
+laughter at seeing them." With the same glad spirit they laboured
+for the salvation of souls, the cure of sickness, and the relief of
+distress. The emotional feeling of the age quickly responded to
+their zeal. Within a few years other houses had arisen at
+Gloucester, at Nottingham, at Stamford, at Worcester, at
+Northampton, at Cambridge, at Lincoln, at Shrewsbury. In a
+generation there was hardly a town of importance in England that
+had not its Franciscan convent, and over against it a rival
+Dominican house.</p>
+
+<p>The esteem felt for the followers of Francis and Dominic led to
+an extraordinary extension of the mendicant type. New orders of
+friars arose, preserving the essential attribute of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg086" id="pg086">086</a></span>absolute
+poverty, though differing from each other and from the two
+prototypes in various particulars. Some of these lesser orders
+found their way to England. In the same year as Agnellus, there
+came to England the Trinitarian friars, called also the Maturins,
+from the situation of their first house in Paris, an order whose
+special function was the redemption of captives. In 1240 returning
+crusaders brought back with them the first Carmelite friars, for
+whom safer quarters had to be found than in their original abodes
+in Syria. This society spread widely, and in 1287, to the disgust
+of the older monks, it laid aside the party-coloured habit, forced
+upon it in derision by the infidels, and adopted the white robe,
+which gave them their popular name of White Friars. Hard upon
+these, in 1244, came also the Crutched Friars, so called from the
+red cross set upon their backs or breasts; but these were never
+deeply rooted in England. The multiplication of orders of friars
+became an abuse, so that, at the Council of Lyons of 1245, Innocent
+IV abolished all save four. Besides Dominicans and Franciscans the
+pope only continued the Carmelites, and an order first seen in
+England a few years later, the Austin friars or the hermits of the
+order of St. Augustine. These made up the traditional four orders
+of friars of later history. Yet even the decree of a council could
+not stay the growth of new mendicant types. In 1257 the Friars of
+the Penance of Jesus Christ, popularly styled Friars of the Sack,
+from their coarse sackcloth garb, settled down in London, exempted
+by papal dispensation from the fate of suppression; and even later
+than this King Richard's son, Edmund of Cornwall, established a
+community of Bonhommes at Ashridge in Buckinghamshire.</p>
+
+<p>The friars were not recluses, like the older orders, but active
+preachers and teachers of the people. The parish clergy seldom held
+a strong position in medieval life. The estimation in which the
+monastic ideal was held limited their influence. They were, as a
+rule, not much raised above the people among whom they laboured. If
+the parish priest were a man of rank or education, he was too often
+a non-resident and a pluralist, bestowing little personal attention
+on his parishioners. Nor were the numerous parishes served by monks
+in much better plight. The monastery took the tithes and somehow
+provided for the services; but the efforts of Grosseteste <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg087" id="pg087">087</a></span>to secure
+the establishment of permanent stipendiary vicarages in his diocese
+exemplify the reluctance of the religious to give their
+appropriations the benefit of permanent pastors, paid on an
+adequate scale. It was an exceptional thing for the parish
+clergymen to do more than discharge perfunctorily the routine
+duties of their office, and preaching was almost unknown among
+them. The friars threw themselves into pastoral work with such
+devotion as to compel the reluctant admiration of their natural
+rivals, the monks. "At first," says Matthew Paris,[1] "the
+Preachers and the Minorites lived a life of poverty and extreme
+sanctity. They busied themselves in preaching, hearing confessions,
+the recital of divine service, in teaching and study. They embraced
+voluntary poverty for God's sake, abandoning all their worldly
+goods and not even reserving for themselves their food for
+to-morrow." A special field of labour was in the crowded suburbs of
+the larger towns, where so often they chose to erect their first
+convents. The care of the sick and of lepers was their peculiar
+function. Their sympathy and charity carried everything before
+them, and they remained the chief teachers of the poor down to the
+Reformation. They ingratiated themselves with the rich as much as
+with the poor. Henry III. and Edward selected mendicants as their
+confessors. The strongest and holiest of the bishops, Grosseteste,
+became their most active friend. Simon of Montfort sought the
+advice and friendship of a friar like Adam Marsh. The mere fact
+that Stephen Langton and Peter des Roches were their first patrons
+in England shows how they appealed alike to the best and worst
+clerical types of the time.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Chron. Maj.</i>, v., 194.</p>
+
+<p>Men and women of all ranks, while still living in the world and
+fulfilling their ordinary occupations, associated themselves to the
+mendicant brotherhoods. Besides these <i>tertiaries</i>, as they
+were called, still wider circles sought the friars' direction in
+all spiritual matters and showed eagerness to be buried within
+their sanctuaries. Nor did the friars limit themselves to pastoral
+care. They won a unique place in the intellectual history of the
+time. They made themselves the spokesmen of all the movements of
+the age. They were eager to make peace, and Agnellus himself
+mediated between Henry III. and the earl marshal. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg088" id="pg088">088</a></span>They were the
+strenuous preachers of the crusades, whether against the infidel or
+against Frederick II. The Franciscans taught a new and more
+methodical devotion to the Virgin Mother. The friars upheld the
+highest papal claims, were constantly selected as papal agents and
+tax-gatherers, and yet even this did not deprive them of their
+influence over Englishmen. Their zeal for truth often made them
+defenders of unpopular causes, and it was much to their honour that
+they did not hesitate to incur the displeasure of the Londoners by
+their anxiety to save innocent Jews accused of the murder of
+Christian children. The parish clergy hated and envied them as
+successful rivals, and bitterly resented the privilege which they
+received from Alexander IV of hearing confessions throughout the
+world. Not less strong was the hostility of the monastic orders
+which is often expressed in Matthew Paris's free-spoken abuse of
+them. They were accused of terrorising dying men out of their
+possessions, of laxity in the confessional, of absolving their
+friends too easily, of overweening ambition and restless
+meddlesomeness. They were violent against heretics and enemies of
+the Church. They answered hate with hate. They despised the
+seculars as drones and the monks as lazy and corrupt. The
+dissensions between the various orders of friars, and particularly
+between the sober and intellectual Dominicans and the radical and
+mystic Franciscans, were soon as bitter as those between monks and
+friars, or monks and seculars. But when all allowances have been
+made, the good that they wrought far outbalanced the evil, and in
+England at least, the mendicant orders exhibited a nobler
+conception of religion, and of men's duly to their fellowmen than
+had as yet been set before the people. If the main result of their
+influence was to strengthen that cosmopolitan conception of
+Christendom of which the papacy was the head and the friars the
+agents, their zeal for righteousness often led them beyond their
+own rigid platform, and Englishmen honoured the wandering friar as
+the champion of the nation's cause.</p>
+
+<p>Like the religious orders, the universities were part of the
+world system and only indirectly represented the struggling
+national life. The ferment of the twelfth century revival
+crystallised groups of masters or doctors into guilds called
+universities, with a strong class tradition, rigid codes of rules,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg089" id="pg089">089</a></span>and
+intense corporate spirit. The schools at Oxford, whose continuous
+history can be traced from the days of Henry II., had acquired a
+considerable reputation by the time that his grandson had ascended
+the throne. Oxford university, with an autonomous constitution of
+its own since <i>1214</i>, was presided over by a chancellor who,
+though in a sense the representative of the distant diocesan at
+Lincoln, was even in the earliest times the head of the scholars,
+and no mere delegate of the bishop. Five years earlier the Oxford
+schools were sufficiently vigorous to provoke a secession, from
+which the first faint beginnings of a university at Cambridge
+arose. A generation later there were other secessions to Salisbury
+and Northampton, but neither of these schools succeeded in
+maintaining themselves. Cambridge itself had a somewhat languid
+existence throughout the whole of the thirteenth century, and was
+scarcely recognised as a <i>studium generale</i> until the bull of
+John XXII. in 1318 made its future position secure. In early days
+the university owed nothing to endowments, buildings, social
+prestige, or tradition. The two essentials was the living voice of
+the graduate teacher and the concourse of students desirous to be
+taught. Hence migrations were common and stability only gradually
+established. When, late in Henry III.'s reign, the chancellor,
+Walter of Merton, desired to set up a permanent institution for the
+encouragement of poor students, he hesitated whether to establish
+it at Oxford, or Cambridge, or in his own Surrey village. Oxford,
+though patriots coupled it with Paris and Bologna, only gradually
+rose into repute. But before the end of Henry III.'s reign it had
+won an assured place among the great universities of western
+Europe, though lagging far behind that of the supreme schools of
+Paris.</p>
+
+<p>The growing fame of the university of Oxford was a matter of
+national importance. Down to the early years of the thirteenth
+century a young English clerk who was anxious to study found his
+only career abroad, and was too often cut off altogether from his
+mother country. Among the last of this type were the Paris
+mathematician, John of Holywood or Halifax, Robert Curzon,
+cardinal, legate, theologian, and crusader, and Alexander of Hales.
+Stephen Langton, who did important work in revising the text of the
+Vulgate, might well have been one of those lost to England but for
+the <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg090" id=
+"pg090">090</a></span>wisdom of Innocent III who restored him, in
+the fulness of his reputation and powers, to the service of the
+English Church. Not many years younger than Langton was his
+successor Edmund of Abingdon, but the difference was enough to make
+the younger primate a student of the Oxford schools in early life.
+Though he left Oxford for Paris, Edmund returned to an active
+career in England, when experience convinced him of the vanity of
+scholastic success. Bishop Grosseteste, another early Oxford
+teacher of eminence, probably studied at Paris, for so late as 1240
+he held up to the Oxford masters of theology the example of their
+Paris brethren for their imitation. The double allegiance of Edmund
+and Grosseteste was typical. A long catalogue of eminent names
+adorned the annals of Oxford in the thirteenth century, but the
+most distinguished of her earlier sons were drawn away from her by
+the superior attractions of Paris. England furnished at least her
+share of the great names of thirteenth century scholasticism, but
+of very few of these could it be said that their main obligation
+was to the English university. It was at Paris that the academic
+organisation developed which Oxford adopted. At Paris the great
+intellectual conflicts of the century were fought. There the
+ferment seethed round that introduction of Aristotle's teaching
+from Moorish sources which led to the outspoken pantheism of an
+Amaury of B&egrave;ne. There also was the reconciliation effected
+between the new teacher and the old faith which made Aristotle the
+pillar of the new scholasticism that was to justify by reason the
+ways of God to man. In Paris also was fought the contest between
+the aggressive mendicant friars and the secular doctors whom they
+wished to supplant in the divinity schools.</p>
+
+<p>There is little evidence of even a pale reflection of these
+struggles in contemporary Oxford. English scholars bore their full
+share in the fight. It was the Englishman Curzon who condemned the
+heresies of Amaury of B&egrave;ne. Another Englishman, Alexander of
+Hales, issued in his <i>Summa Theologiæ</i> the first effective
+reconciliation of Aristotelian metaphysic with Christian doctrine
+which his Paris pupils, Thomas Aquinas, the Italian, and Albert the
+Great, the German, were to work out in detail in the next
+generation. Hales was the first secular doctor in Europe who in
+1222, in the full pride of his powers, abandoned his position in
+the university to embrace the voluntary <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg091" id="pg091">091</a></span>poverty of the Franciscans
+and resume his teaching, not in the regular schools but in a
+Minorite convent. And at the same time another English doctor at
+Paris, John of St. Giles, notable as a physician as well as a
+theologian, dramatically marked his conversion to the Dominican
+order by assuming its habit in the midst of a sermon on the virtues
+of poverty. All these famous Englishmen worked and taught at Paris,
+and it was only a generation later that their successors could
+establish on the Thames the traditions so long upheld on the banks
+of the Seine.</p>
+
+<p>The establishment of the Dominicans and Franciscans at Oxford
+gave an immense impetus to the activity of the university. The
+Franciscans appointed as the first <i>lector</i> of their Oxford
+convent the famous secular teacher Grosseteste, who ever after held
+the Minorites in the closest estimation. Grosseteste was the
+greatest scholar of his day, knowing Greek and Hebrew as well as
+the accustomed studies of the period. A clear and independent
+thinker, he was not, like so many of his contemporaries, overborne
+by the weight of authority, but appealed to observation and
+experience in terms which make him the precursor of Roger Bacon.
+Grosseteste's successor as <i>lector</i> was himself a Minorite,
+Adam Marsh, whose reputation was so great that Grosseteste was
+afraid to leave him when sick in a French town, lest the Paris
+masters should persuade him to teach in their schools. Adam's
+loyalty to his native university withstood any such temptation, and
+from that time Oxford began to hold up its head against Paris. Even
+before this, Grosseteste persuaded John of St. Giles to transfer
+his teaching from Paris to Oxford, where he remained for the rest
+of his life.</p>
+
+<p>The intense intellectual activity of the thirteenth century
+flowed in more than one channel, and Englishmen took their full
+share both in building up and in destroying. Two Englishmen of the
+next generation mark in different ways the reaction against the
+moderate Aristotelianism and orthodox rationalism which their
+countryman Hales first brought into vogue. These were the
+Franciscan friars, Roger Bacon and Duns Scotus. Bacon, though he
+studied at Paris as well as at Oxford, is much more closely
+identified with England than with the Continent. His sceptical,
+practical intellect led him to heap scorn on Hales and his
+followers and to plunge into audacities of <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg092" id="pg092">092</a></span>speculation which cost him
+long seclusions in his convent and enforced abstinence from writing
+and study. In his war against the Aristotelians, the intrepid friar
+upheld recourse to experiment and observation as superior to
+deference to authority, in language which stands in strange
+contrast to the traditions of the thirteenth century. Grosseteste,
+who also had preferred the teachings of experience to the appeal to
+the sages of the past, was the only academic leader that escaped
+Bacon's scathing censure. When his order kept him silent, Roger was
+bidden to resume his pen by Pope Clement IV. A generation still
+later, Duns Scotus, probably a Lowland Scot, who taught at Paris
+and died at Cologne in 1308, emphasised, sharply enough, but in
+less drastic fashion, the reaction against the teaching of Hales
+and Aquinas, by accepting a dualism between reason and authority
+that broke away from the Thomist tradition of the thirteenth
+century and prepared the way for the scholastic decadence of the
+fourteenth. After France, England took a leading part in all these
+movements; and even in France English scholars had a large share in
+making that land the special home of the <i>Studium</i>, as Italy
+was of the <i>Sacerdotium</i> and Germany of the
+<i>Imperium</i>.</p>
+
+<p>This intellectual ferment had its results on practical life.
+Though the university was cosmopolitan, the individual members of
+it were not the less good citizens. A patriot like Grosseteste
+strove to his uttermost to keep Englishmen for Oxford or to win
+them back from Paris. Oxford clerks fought the battle of England
+against the legate Otto, and we shall see them siding with
+Montfort. The eminently practical temper of the academic class
+could not neglect the world of action for the abstract pursuit of
+science. Eager as men were to know, to prove, and to inquire, the
+age had little of the mystical temperament about it. The studies
+which made for worldly success, such as civil and canon law,
+attracted the thousands for whom philosophy or theology had little
+attraction. Never before was there a career so fully opened to
+talent. The academic teacher's fame took him from the lecture-room
+to the court, from the university to the episcopal throne, and so
+it was that the university influenced action almost as profoundly
+as it influenced thought, and affected all classes of society
+alike. The struggles of poor students like Edmund of Abingdon or
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg093" id=
+"pg093">093</a></span>Grosseteste must not make us think that the
+universities of this period were exclusively frequented by humble
+scholars. The academic career of a rich baron's son like Thomas of
+Cantilupe, living in his own hired house at Paris with a train of
+chaplains and tutors, receiving the visits of the French king, and
+feeding poor scholars with the remnants from his table, is as
+characteristic as the more common picture of the student begging
+his way from one seat of learning to another, and suffering the
+severest privations rather than desert his studies. Yet the
+function of the <i>studium</i> as promoting a healthy circulation
+between the various orders of medieval society, must not be
+ignored.</p>
+
+<p>Partly to help on the poor, partly to encourage men to devote
+themselves to the pursuit of knowledge, endowments began to arise
+which soon enhanced the splendour of universities though they
+lessened their mobility and their freedom. The mendicant convents
+at Paris and Oxford prepared the way for secular foundations, at
+first small and insignificant, like that which, in the days of
+Henry III., John Balliol established at Oxford for the maintenance
+of poor scholars, but soon increasing in magnitude and distinction.
+The great college set up by St. Louis' confessor at Paris for the
+endowment of scholars, desirous of studying the unlucrative but
+vital subject of theology, was soon imitated by the chancellor of
+Henry III. Side by side with Robert of Sorbon's college of 1257,
+arose Walter of Merton's foundation of 1263, and twenty years later
+Bishop Balsham's college of Peterhouse extended the "rule of
+Merton" to Cambridge.</p>
+
+<p>The academic movement was not all clear gain. The humanism, of
+the twelfth century was crushed beneath the weight of the
+specialised science and encyclopædic learning of the thirteenth.
+We should seek in vain among most theologians or the philosophers
+of our period for any spark of literary art; and the tendency
+dominant in them affected for evil all works written in Latin. Even
+the historians show a falling away from the example of William of
+Malmesbury or of Roger of Hoveden. The one English chronicler of
+the thirteenth century who is a considerable man of letters,
+Matthew Paris, belongs to the early half of it, before the academic
+tradition was fully established, and even with him prolixity
+impairs the art without injuring the colour of his work. The <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg094" id="pg094">094</a></span>age of
+Edward I., the great time of triumphant scholasticism, is recorded
+in chronicles so dreary that it is hard to make the dry bones live.
+Walter of Hemingburgh, the most attractive historian of the time,
+belongs to the next generation: and his excellencies are only great
+in comparison with his fellows. Something of this decadence may be
+attributed to the falling away of the elder monastic types, whose
+higher life withered up from want of able recruits, for the secular
+and mendicant careers offered opportunities so stimulating that few
+men of purpose, or earnest spiritual character, cared to enter a
+Benedictine or a Cistercian house of religion. Something more may
+be assigned to the growing claims of the vulgar tongue on literary
+aspirants. But the chief cause of the literary defects of
+thirteenth century writers must be set down to the doctrine that
+the study of "arts"&mdash;of grammar, rhetoric and the
+rest&mdash;was only worthy of schoolboys and novices, and was only
+a preliminary to the specialised faculties which left little room
+for artistic presentation. Science in short nearly killed
+literature.</p>
+
+<p>It was the same with the vulgar tongues as with Latin. French
+remained the common language of the higher classes of English
+society, and the history of French literature belongs to the
+history of the western world rather than to that of England. The
+share taken in it by English-born writers is less important than in
+the great age of romance when the contact of Celt and Norman on
+British soil added the Arthurian legend to the world's stock of
+poetic material. The practical motive, which destroyed the art of
+so many Latin writers, impaired the literary value of much written
+in the vernacular. We have technical works in French and even in
+English, such as Walter of Henley's treatise on <i>Husbandry</i>,
+composed in French for the guidance of stewards of manors, and
+translated, it is said by Grosseteste, into English for the benefit
+of a wider public. Grosseteste is also said to have drawn up in
+French a handbook of rules for the management of a great estate,
+and he certainly wrote French poetry. The legal literature, written
+in Latin or French, and illustrated by such names as Bracton,
+Britton, and "Fleta," shows that there was growing up a school of
+earnest students of English law who, though anxious, like Bracton,
+to bring their conclusions under the rules of Roman jurisprudence,
+began to treat their science with an independence <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg095" id="pg095">095</a></span>which secured
+for English custom the opportunity of independent development. Of
+more literary interest than such technicalities were the rhyming
+chronicles, handed on from the previous age, of which one of the
+best, the recently discovered history of the great William Marshal,
+has already been noticed. The spontaneity of this poem proves that
+its language was still the natural speech of the writer, and impels
+its French editor to claim for it a French origin. As the century
+grew older there was no difficulty in deciding whether French works
+were written by Englishmen or Frenchmen. The Yorkshire French of
+Peter Langtoft's <i>Chronicle</i>, and the jargon of the <i>Year
+Books</i>, attest how the political separation of the two lands,
+and the preponderance in northern France of the dialect of Paris,
+placed the insular French speech in strong contrast to the language
+of polite society beyond the Channel. Yet barbarous as Anglo-French
+became, it retained the freshness of a living tongue, and gained
+some ground at the expense of Latin, notably in the law courts and
+in official documents.</p>
+
+<p>English was slowly making its way upwards. There was a public
+ready to read vernacular books, and not at home with French. For
+their sake a great literature of translations and adaptations was
+made, beginning with Layamon's English version of Wace's
+<i>Brut</i>, which by the end of the century made the cycle of
+French romance accessible to the English reader. Many works of
+edification and devotion were written in English; and Robert of
+Gloucester's rhyming history appealed to a larger public than the
+Yorkshire French of Langtoft. It is significant of the trend of
+events that the early fourteenth century saw Langtoft himself done
+into English by Robert Mannyng, of Bourne. While as yet no
+continuous works of high merit were written in English, there was
+no lack of experiments, of novelties, and of adaptations. Much
+evidence of depth of feeling, power of expression, and careful art
+lies hidden away in half-forgotten anonymous lyrics, satires, and
+romances. The language in which these works were written was
+steadily becoming more like our modern English. The dialectical
+differences become less acute; the inflections begin to drop away;
+the vocabulary gradually absorbs a larger romance element, and the
+prosody drops from the forms of the West Saxon period into measures
+and modes that reflect a living connexion with <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg096" id="pg096">096</a></span>the contemporary
+poetry of France. Thus, even in the literature of a not too
+literary age, we find abundant tokens of that strenuous national
+life which was manifesting itself in so many different ways.</p>
+
+<p>Art rather than literature reflected the deeper currents of the
+thirteenth century. Architecture, the great art of the middle age,
+was in its perfection. The inchoate gothic which the Cistercians
+brought from Burgundy to the Yorkshire dales, and William of Sens
+transplanted from his birthplace to Canterbury, was superseded by
+the more developed art of St. Hugh's choir at Lincoln. In the next
+generation the new style, imported from northern France, struck out
+ways of its own, less soaring, less rigidly logical, yet of
+unequalled grace and picturesqueness, such as we see in Salisbury
+cathedral, which altogether dates from the reign of Henry III. Here
+also, as in literature, foreign models stood side by side with
+native products. Henry III.'s favourite foundation at Westminster
+reproduced on English soil the towering loftiness, the vaulted
+roofs, the short choir, and the ring of apsidal chapels, of the
+great French minsters. This was even more emphatically the case
+with the decorations, the goldsmith's and metal work, the
+sculpture, painting, and glass, which the best artists of France
+set up in honour of the English king's favourite saint. In these
+crafts English work would not as yet bear a comparison with
+foreign, and even the glories of the statuary of the fa&ccedil;ade
+of Wells cannot approach the sculptured porches of Amiens or Paris.
+As the century advanced some of the fashions of the French
+builders, notably as regards window tracery, were taken up in the
+early "Decorated" of the reign of Edward I.; and here the claims of
+English to essential equality with French building can perhaps be
+better substantiated than in the infancy of the art. But all these
+comparisons are misleading. The impulse to gothic art came to
+England from France, like the impulse to many other things. Its
+working out was conducted on English local lines, ever becoming
+more divergent from those of the prototype, though not seldom
+stimulated by the constant intercourse of the two lands.</p>
+
+<p>The new gothic art enriched the medieval town with a splendour
+of buildings hitherto unknown, which symbolised the growth of
+material prosperity as well as of a keener artistic <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg097" id="pg097">097</a></span>appreciation. In
+the greater towns the four orders of friars erected their large and
+plain churches, designed as halls for preaching to great
+congregations. The development of domestic architecture is even
+more significant than the growth of ecclesiastical and military
+buildings. Stone houses were no longer the rare luxuries of Jews or
+nobles. Never were the towns more prosperous and more energetic.
+They were now winning for themselves both economic and
+administrative independence. Magnates, such as Randolph of Chester,
+followed the king's example by granting charters to the smaller
+towns. Even the lesser boroughs became not merely the abodes of
+agriculturists but the homes of organised trading communities. It
+was the time when the merchant class first began to manifest itself
+in politics, and the power of capital to make itself felt. Capital
+was almost monopolised by Jews, Lombards, or Tuscans, and the
+fierce English hatred of the foreigner found a fresh expression in
+the persecution of the Hebrew money-lenders and in the increasing
+dislike felt for the alien bankers and merchants who throve at
+Englishmen's expense. The fact that so much of English trade with
+the continent was still in the hands of Germans, Frenchmen, and
+Italians made this feeling the more intense. But there were limits
+even to the ill-will towards aliens. The foreigner could make
+himself at home in England, and the rapid naturalisation of a
+Montfort in the higher walks of life is paralleled by the
+absorption into the civic community of many a Gascon or German
+merchant, like that Arnold Fitz Thedmar,[1] a Bremen trader's son,
+who became alderman of London and probably chronicler of its
+history. Yet even the greatest English towns did not become strong
+enough to cut themselves off from the general life of the people.
+They were rather a new element in that rich and purposeful nation
+that had so long been enduring the rule of Henry of Winchester. The
+national energy spurned the feebleness of the court, and the time
+was at hand when the nation, through its natural leaders, was to
+overthrow the wretched system of misgovernment under which it had
+suffered. Political retrogression was no longer to bar national
+progress.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See for Arnold the <i>Chronica majorum et
+vicecomitum Londoniarum</i> in <i>Liber de antiquis legibus</i>,
+and Riley's introduction to his translation of <i>Chronicles of the
+Mayors and Sheriffs of London</i> (1863).</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<h4>THE BARONS' WAR.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg098" id=
+"pg098">098</a></span>During the early months of 1258, the aliens
+ruled the king and realm, added estate to estate, and defied all
+attempts to dislodge them. Papal agents traversed the country,
+extorting money from prelates and churches. The Welsh, in secret
+relations with the lords of the march, threatened the borders, and
+made a confederacy with the Scots. The French were hostile, and the
+barons disunited, without leaders, and helpless. A wretched harvest
+made corn scarce and dear. A wild winter, followed by a long late
+frost, cut off the lambs and destroyed the farmers' hopes for the
+summer. A murrain of cattle followed, and the poor were dying of
+hunger and pestilence. Henry III. was in almost as bad a plight as
+his people. He had utterly failed to subdue Llewelyn. A papal agent
+threatened him with excommunication and the resumption of the grant
+of Sicily. He could not control his foreign kinsfolk, and the
+rivalry of Savoyards and Poitevins added a new element of turmoil
+to the distracted relations of the magnates. His son had been
+forced to pawn his best estates to William of Valence, and the
+royal exchequer was absolutely empty. Money must be had at all
+risks, and the only way to get it was to assemble the magnates.</p>
+
+<p>On April 2 the chief men of Church and State gathered together
+at London. For more than a month the stormy debates went on. The
+king's demands were contemptuously waved aside. His exceptional
+misdeeds, it was declared, were to be met by exceptional measures.
+Hot words were spoken, and William of Valence called Leicester a
+traitor. "No, no, William," the earl replied, "I am not a traitor,
+nor the son of a traitor; your father and mine were men of a
+different stamp," <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg099" id=
+"pg099">099</a></span>An opposition party formed itself under the
+Earls of Gloucester, Leicester, Hereford, and Norfolk. Even the
+Savoyards partially fell away from the court, and a convocation of
+clergy at Merton, presided over by Archbishop Boniface, drew up
+canons in the spirit of Grosseteste. In parliament all that Henry
+could get was a promise to adjourn the question of supply until a
+commission had drafted a programme of reform. On May 2 Henry and
+his son Edward announced their acceptance of this proposal;
+parliament was forthwith prorogued, and the barons set to work to
+mature their scheme.</p>
+
+<p>On June 11 the magnates once more assembled, this time at
+Oxford. A summons to fight the Welsh gave them an excuse to appear
+attended with their followers in arms. The royalist partisans
+nicknamed the gathering the Mad Parliament, but its proceedings
+were singularly business-like. A petition of twenty-nine articles
+was presented, in which the abuses of the administration were laid
+bare in detail. A commission of twenty-four was appointed who were
+to redress the grievances of the nation, and to draw up a new
+scheme of government. According to the compact Henry himself
+selected half this body. It was significant of the falling away of
+the mass of the ruling families from the monarchy, that six of
+Henry's twelve commissioners were churchmen, four were aliens,
+three were his brothers, one his brother-in-law, one his nephew,
+one his wife's uncle. The only earls that accepted his nomination
+were the Poitevin adventurer, John du Plessis, Earl of Warwick, and
+John of Warenne, who was pledged to a royalist policy by his
+marriage to Henry's half-sister, Alice of Lusignan. The only
+bishops were, the queen's uncle, Boniface of Canterbury, and Fulk
+Basset of London, the richest and noblest born of English prelates,
+who, though well meaning, was too weak in character for continued
+opposition. Yet these two were the most independent names on
+Henry's list. The rest included the three Lusignan brothers, Guy,
+William, and Aymer, still eight years after his election only elect
+of Winchester; Henry of Almaine, the young son of the King of the
+Romans; the pluralist official John Mansel; the chancellor, Henry
+Wingham; the Dominican friar John of Darlington, distinguished as a
+biblical critic, the king's confessor and the pope's agent; and the
+Abbot of Westminster, an old man pledged by long years of
+dependence to do <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg100" id=
+"pg100">100</a></span>the will of the second founder of his house.
+In strong contrast to these creatures of court favour were the
+twelve nominees of the barons. The only ecclesiastic was Walter of
+Cantilupe, Bishop of Worcester, and the only alien was Earl Simon
+of Leicester. With him were three other earls, Richard of Clare,
+Earl of Gloucester, Roger Bigod, earl marshal and Earl of Norfolk,
+and Humphrey Bohun, Earl of Hereford. Those of baronial rank were
+Roger Mortimer, the strongest of the marchers, Hugh Bigod, the
+brother of the earl marshal, John FitzGeoffrey, Richard Grey,
+William Bardolf, Peter Montfort, and Hugh Despenser.</p>
+
+<p>The twenty-four drew up a plan of reform which left little to be
+desired in thoroughness. The Provisions of Oxford, as the new
+constitution was styled, were speedily laid before the barons and
+adopted. By it a standing council of fifteen was established, with
+whose advice and consent Henry was henceforth to exercise all his
+authority. Even this council was not to be without supervision.
+Thrice in the year another committee of twelve was to treat with
+the fifteen on the common affairs of the realm. This rather narrow
+body was created, we are told, to save the expense involved in too
+frequent meetings of the magnates. A third aristocratic junto of
+twenty-four was appointed to make grants of money to the crown. All
+aliens were to be expelled from office and from the custody of
+royal castles. New ministers, castellans, and escheators were
+appointed under stringent conditions and under the safeguard of new
+oaths. The original twenty-four were not yet discharged from
+office. They had still to draw up schemes for the reform of the
+household of king and queen, and for the amendment of the exchange
+of London. Moreover, "Be it remembered," ran one of the articles,
+"that the estate of Holy Church be amended by the twenty-four
+elected to reform the realm, when they shall find time and
+place".</p>
+
+<p>For the first time in our history the king was forced to stand
+aside from the discharge of his undoubted functions, and suffer
+them to be exercised by a committee of magnates. The conception of
+limited monarchy, which had been foreshadowed in the early
+struggles of Henry's long reign, was triumphantly vindicated, and,
+after weary years of waiting, the baronial victors demanded more
+than had ever been suggested by the most free <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg101" id="pg101">101</a></span>interpretation
+of the Great Charter. The body that controlled the crown was, it is
+true, a narrow one. But whatever was lost by its limitation, was
+more than gained by the absolute freedom of the whole movement from
+any suspicion of the separatist tendencies of the earlier
+feudalism. The barons tacitly accepted the principle that England
+was a unity, and that it must be ruled as a single whole. The
+triumph of the national movement of the thirteenth century was
+assured when the most feudal class of the community thus frankly
+abandoned the ancient baronial contention that each baron should
+rule in isolation over his own estates, a tradition which, when
+carried out for a brief period under Stephen, had set up "as many
+kings or rather tyrants as lords of castles". The feudal period was
+over: the national idea was triumphant. This victory becomes
+specially significant when we remember how large a share the barons
+of the Welsh march, the only purely feudal region in the country,
+took in the movement against the King.</p>
+
+<p>The unity of the national government being recognised, it was
+another sign of the times that its control should be transferred
+from the monarch to a committee of barons. At this point the rigid
+conceptions of the triumphant oligarchy stood in the way of a wide
+national policy. Since the reign of John the custom had arisen of
+consulting the representatives of the shire-courts on matters of
+politics and finance. In 1258 there is not the least trace of a
+suggestion that parliament could ever include a more popular
+element than the barons and prelates. On the contrary, the
+Provisions diminished the need even for those periodical assemblies
+of the magnates which had been in existence since the earliest dawn
+of our history. For all practical purposes small baronial
+committees were to perform the work of magnates and people as well
+as of the crown. Yet it must be recognised that the barons showed
+self-control, as well as practical wisdom, in handing over
+functions discharged by the baronage as a whole to the various
+committees of their selection. The danger of general control by the
+magnates was that a large assembly, more skilled in opposition than
+in constructive work, was almost sure to become infected by
+faction. By strictly limiting and defining who the new rulers of
+England were to be, the barons approached a combination of
+aristocratic control with the stability and continuity resulting
+from limited numbers <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg102" id=
+"pg102">102</a></span>and defined functions. It is likely, however,
+that in bestowing such extensive powers on their nominees, they
+were influenced by the well-grounded belief that the new
+constitution could only be established by main force, and that,
+even when abandoned by the king, the aliens would make a good fight
+before they gave up all that they had so long held in England. The
+success of the new scheme largely depended upon the immediate
+execution of the ordinance for the expulsion of the foreigners.</p>
+
+<p>The first step taken to carry out the Provisions was the
+appointment of the new ministers. The barons insisted on the
+revival of the office of justiciar, and a strenuous and capable
+chief minister was found in Hugh Bigod. It was advisable to go
+cautiously, and some of the king's ministers were allowed to
+continue in office. An appeal to force was necessary before the new
+constitution could be set up in detail. The Savoyards bought their
+safety by accepting it; but the Poitevins, seeing that flight or
+resistance were the only alternatives before them, were spirited
+enough to prefer the bolder course. They were specially dangerous
+because Edward and his cousin, Henry of Almaine, the son of the
+King of the Romans, were much under their influence. In the
+Dominican convent at Oxford the baronial leaders formed a sworn
+confederacy not to desist from their purpose until the foreigners
+had been expelled. There were more hot words between Leicester and
+William, the most capable of the Lusignans. The Poitevins soon
+found that they could not maintain themselves in the face of the
+general hatred. On June 22 they fled from Oxford in the company of
+their ally, Earl Warenne. They rode straight for the coast, but
+failing to reach it, occupied Winchester, where they sought to
+maintain themselves in Aymer's castle of Wolvesey. The magnates of
+the parliament then turned against them the arms they professed to
+have prepared against the Welsh. Headed by the new justiciar, Hugh
+Bigod, they besieged Wolvesey. Warenne abandoned the aliens, and
+they gladly accepted the terms offered to them by their foes. They
+were allowed to retain their lands and some of their ready money,
+on condition of withdrawing from the realm and surrendering their
+castles. By the middle of July they had crossed over to France.
+With them disappeared the whole of <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg103" id="pg103">103</a></span>the organised opposition to the
+new government. Edward, deprived of their support, swore to observe
+the Provisions.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately on the flight of the Lusignans the council of
+Fifteen was chosen after a fashion which seemed to give the king's
+friends an equal voice with the champions of the aristocracy. Four
+electors appointed it, and of these two were the nominees of the
+baronial section, and two of the royalist section of the original
+twenty-four. The result of their work showed that there was only
+one party left after the Wolvesey fiasco. While only three of the
+king's twelve had places on the permanent council, no less that
+nine of the fifteen were chosen from the baronial twelve. It was
+useless for Archbishop Boniface, John Mansel, and the Earl of
+Warwick to stand up against the Bishop of Worcester, the Earls of
+Leicester, Norfolk, Hereford, and Gloucester, against John
+FitzGeoffrey, Peter Montfort, Richard Grey, and Roger Mortimer.
+Moreover, of the three, John Mansel alone could still be regarded
+as a royalist partisan. There were three of the fifteen chosen from
+outside the twenty-four. Of these, Peter of Savoy, Earl of
+Richmond, might, like his brother Boniface, be regarded as an
+alien, though hatred of the Poitevins had by this time made
+Englishmen of the Savoyards. The other two, the marcher-lord James
+of Audley and William of Fors, Earl of Albemarle, were of baronial
+sympathies. It was the same with the other councils.</p>
+
+<p>Inquiry was made as to abuses. Gradually the royal officials
+were replaced by men of popular leanings. The sheriffs were changed
+and were strictly controlled, and four knights from each shire
+assembled in October to present to the king the grievances of the
+people against the out-going sheriffs. The custody of the castles
+was put into trusty and, for the most part, into English hands.
+Finally the king was forced to issue a proclamation, in which he
+commanded all true men "steadfastly to hold and to defend the
+statutes that be made or are to be made by our counsellors". This
+document was issued in English as well as in French and Latin. A
+copy of the English version was sent to every sheriff, with
+instructions to read it several times a year in the county court,
+so that a knowledge of its contents might be attained by every man.
+It is perhaps the first important proclamation issued in English
+since the coming of the Normans. Early in 1259 <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg104" id="pg104">104</a></span>Richard, King of
+the Romans, set out to revisit England. He was met at Saint Omer by
+a deputation of magnates, who told him that he could only be
+allowed to land after taking an oath to observe the Provisions.
+Richard blustered, but soon gave in his submission. His adhesion to
+the reforms marks the last step in the revolution.</p>
+
+<p>The new constitution worked without interruption until the end
+of 1259. Throughout that period domestic affairs were uneventful,
+and the efforts of the ministry were chiefly concerned in securing
+peace abroad. In 1258 Wales had been in revolt, Scotland
+unfriendly, and France threatening. A truce, ill observed, was made
+with Llewelyn, who found it worth while to be cautious, seeing that
+his natural enemies, but sometime associates, the marchers, had a
+preponderant share in the government. The Scots were easier to
+satisfy, for there was at the time no real hostility between either
+kings or peoples. The chief event of this period is the conclusion
+of the first peace with France since the wars of John and Philip
+Augustus. The protracted negotiations which preceded it took the
+king and his chief councillors abroad, and that made it easier to
+carry on the new domestic system without friction.</p>
+
+<p>Since the friendly personal intercourse held between Henry and
+Louis IX. in 1254, the relations between England and France had
+become less cordial. The revival of the English power in Gascony,
+the Anglo-Castilian alliance, and the election of Richard of
+Cornwall to the German kingship irritated the French, to whom the
+persistent English claim to Normandy and Anjou, and the repudiation
+of the Aquitanian homage, were perpetual sources of annoyance. The
+French championship of Alfonso against Richard achieved the double
+end of checking English pretensions, and cooling the friendship
+between England and Castile. St. Louis, however, was always ready
+to treat for peace, while the revolution of 1258 made all parties
+in England anxious to put a speedy end to the unsettled relations
+between the two realms. Negotiations were begun as early as 1257,
+and made some progress; but the decisive step was taken immediately
+after the prorogation of the reforming parliament in the spring of
+1258. During May a strangely constituted embassy treated for peace
+at Paris, where Montfort and Hugh Bigod worked side by side with
+two of the Lusignans and Peter of <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg105" id="pg105">105</a></span>Savoy. They concluded a
+provisional treaty in time for the negotiators to take their part
+in the Mad Parliament. The unsettled state of affairs in England,
+however, delayed the ratification of the treaty. Arrangements had
+been made for its publication at Cambrai, but the fifteen dared not
+allow Henry to escape from their tutelage, and Louis refused to
+treat save with the king himself. There were difficulties as to the
+relation of the pope and the King of the Romans to the treaty,
+while Earl Simon's wife Eleanor and her children refused to waive
+their very remote claims to a share in the Norman and Angevin
+inheritances, which her brother was prepared to renounce. As ever,
+Montfort held to his personal rights with the utmost tenacity, and
+the self-seeking obstinacy of the chief negotiator of the treaty
+caused both bad blood and delay. At last he was bought off by the
+promise of a money payment, and the preliminary ratifications were
+exchanged in the summer of 1259. On November 14 Henry left England
+for Paris for the formal conclusion of the treaty. There were great
+festivities on the occasion of the meeting of the two kings, but
+once more Montfort and his wife blocked the way. Not until the very
+morning of the day fixed for the final ceremony were they satisfied
+by Henry's promise to deposit on their behalf a large sum in the
+hands of the French. Immediately afterwards Henry did homage to
+Louis for Gascony.</p>
+
+<p>The chief condition of the treaty of Paris was Henry's
+definitive renunciation of all his claims on Normandy, Anjou,
+Maine, Touraine, and Poitou, and his agreement to hold Gascony as a
+fief of the French crown. In return for this, Louis not only
+recognised him as Duke of Aquitaine, but added to his actual
+possessions there by ceding to him all that he held, whether in
+fief or in demesne, in the three dioceses of Limoges, Cahors, and
+P&eacute;rigueux. Besides these immediate cessions, the French king
+promised to hand over to Henry certain districts then held by his
+brother, Alfonse of Poitiers, and his brother's wife Joan of
+Toulouse, in the event of their dominions escheating to the crown
+by their death without heirs. These regions included Agen and the
+Agenais, Saintonge to the south of the Charente, and in addition
+the whole of Quercy, if it could be proved by inquest that it had
+been given by Richard I. to his sister Joan, grandmother of Joan of
+Poitiers, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg106" id=
+"pg106">106</a></span>as her marriage portion. Moreover the French
+king promised to pay to Henry the sums necessary to maintain for
+two years five hundred knights to be employed "for the service of
+God, or the Church, or the kingdom of England."[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For the treaty and its execution see M.
+Gavrilovitch, <i>&Eacute;tude sur le trait&eacute; de Paris de
+1259</i> (1899).</p>
+
+<p>The treaty was unpopular both in France and England. The French
+strongly objected to the surrender of territory, and were but
+little convinced of the advantage gained by making the English king
+once more the vassal of France. English opinion was hostile to the
+abandonment of large pretensions in return for so small an
+equivalent. On the French side it is true that Louis sacrificed
+something to his sense of justice and love of peace. But the
+territory he ceded was less in reality than in appearance. The
+French king's demesnes in Quercy, P&eacute;rigord, and Limousin
+were not large, and the transference of the homage of the chief
+vassals meant only a nominal change of overlordship, and was
+further limited by a provision that certain "privileged fiefs" were
+still to be retained under the direct suzerainty of the French
+crown. As to the eventual cessions, Alfonse and his wife were still
+alive and likely to live many years. Even the cession of Gascony
+was hampered by a stipulation that the towns should take an "oath
+of security," by which they pledged themselves to aid France
+against England in the event of the English king breaking the
+provisions of the treaty. Perhaps the most solid advantage Henry
+gained by the treaty was financial, for he spent the sums granted
+to enable him to redeem his crusading vow in preparing for war
+against his own subjects. It was, however, an immense advantage for
+England to be able during the critical years which followed to be
+free from French hostility. If, therefore, the French complaints
+against the treaty were exaggerated, the English dissatisfaction
+was unreasonable. The real difficulty for the future lay in the
+fact that the possession of Gascony by the king of a hostile nation
+was incompatible with the proper development of the French
+monarchy. For fifty years, however, a chronic state of war had not
+given Gascony to the French; and Louis IX. was, perhaps, politic as
+well as scrupulous in abandoning the way of force and beginning a
+new <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg107" id=
+"pg107">107</a></span>method of gradual absorption, that in the end
+gained the Gascon fief for France more effectively than any
+conquest. The treaty of Paris was not a final settlement. It left a
+score of questions still open, and the problems of its gradual
+execution involved the two courts in constant disputes down to the
+beginning of the Hundred Years' War. For seventy years the whole
+history of the relations between the two nations is but a
+commentary on the treaty of Paris.</p>
+
+<p>During his visit to Paris Henry arranged a marriage between his
+daughter Beatrice and John of Brittany, the son of the reigning
+duke. In no hurry to get back to the tutelage of the fifteen, he
+prolonged his stay on the continent till the end of April, 1260.
+Yet, abroad as at home, he could not be said to act as a free man.
+It was not the king so much as Simon of Montfort who was the real
+author of the French treaty. Indeed, it is from the conclusion of
+the Peace of Paris that Simon's preponderance becomes evident. He
+was at all stages the chief negotiator of the peace and, save when
+his personal interests stood in the way, he controlled every step
+of the proceedings. If in 1258 he was but one of several leaders of
+the baronial party in England, he came back from France in 1260
+assured of supremacy. During his absence abroad, events had taken
+place in England which called for his presence.</p>
+
+<p>After their triumph in 1258, the baronial leaders relaxed their
+efforts. Contented with their position as arbiters of the national
+destinies, they made little effort to carry out the reforms
+contemplated at Oxford. The ranks of the victors were broken up by
+private dissensions. Before leaving for France, Earl Simon
+violently quarrelled with Richard, Earl of Gloucester. It was
+currently believed that Gloucester had grown slack, and Simon rose
+in popular estimation as a thorough-going reformer who had no mind
+to substitute the rule of a baronial oligarchy for the tyranny of
+the king. His position was strengthened by his personal qualities
+which made him the hero of the younger generation; and his
+influence began to modify the policy of Edward the king's son, who,
+since the flight of his Poitevin kinsmen, was gradually arriving at
+broader views of national policy. Even before his father's journey
+to France, Edward took up a line of his own. In the October
+parliament of 1259, he listened to a petition presented to the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg108" id=
+"pg108">108</a></span>council by the younger nobles[1] who
+complained that, though the king had performed all his promises,
+the barons had not fulfilled any of theirs. Edward thereupon
+stirred up the oligarchy to issue an instalment of the promised
+reforms in the document known as the Provisions of Westminster.
+During Henry's absence in France the situation became strained. The
+oligarchic party, headed by Gloucester, was breaking away from
+Montfort; and Edward was forming a liberal royalist party which was
+not far removed from Montfort's principles. Profiting by these
+discords, the Lusignans prepared to invade England. The papacy was
+about to declare against the reformers. When the monks of
+Winchester elected an Englishman as their bishop in the hope of
+getting rid of the queen's uncle, Alexander IV. summoned Aymer to
+his court and consecrated him bishop with his own hands.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] "Communitas bacheleriae Angliæ," <i>Burton
+Ann</i>., p. 471. <i>See on</i> this, <i>Engl. Hist. Review</i>,
+xvii. (1902), 89-94.</p>
+
+<p>Early in 1260, Montfort went back to England and made common
+cause with Edward. Despite the king's order that no parliament
+should be held during his absence abroad, Montfort insisted that
+the Easter parliament should meet as usual at London. The
+discussions were hot. Montfort demanded the expulsion of Peter of
+Savoy from the council, and Edward and Gloucester almost came to
+blows. The Londoners closed their gates on both parties, but the
+mediation of the King of the Romans prevented a collision. Henry
+hurried home, convinced that Edward was conspiring against him. The
+king threw himself into the city of London, and with Gloucester's
+help collected an army. Meanwhile Montfort and Edward, with their
+armed followers, were lodged at Clerkenwell, ready for war. Again
+the situation became extremely critical, and again King Richard
+proved the best peacemaker. Henry held out against his son for a
+fortnight, but such estrangement was hard for him to endure. "Do
+not let my son appear before me," he cried, "for if I see him, I
+shall not be able to refrain from kissing him." A reconciliation
+was speedily effected, and nothing remained of the short-lived
+alliance of Edward with Montfort save that his feud with Gloucester
+continued until the earl's death.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg109" id=
+"pg109">109</a></span>The dissensions among the barons encouraged
+Henry to shake off the tutelage of the fifteen. As soon as he was
+reconciled with his son, he charged Leicester with treason.[1]
+"But, thanks <i>be</i> to God, the earl answered to all these
+points with such force that the king could do nothing against him."
+Unable to break down his enemy by direct attack, Henry followed one
+of the worst precedents of his father's reign by beseeching
+Alexander IV. to relieve him of his oath to observe the Provisions.
+On April 13, 1261, a bull was issued annulling the whole of the
+legislation of 1258 and 1259, and freeing the king from his sworn
+promise.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] B&eacute;mont, <i>Simon de Montfort</i>,
+Appendix xxxvii., pp. 343-53.</p>
+
+<p>William of Valence was already back in England, and restored to
+his old dignities. His return was the easier because his brother,
+Aymer, the most hated of the Poitevins, had died soon after his
+consecration to Winchester. On June 14, 1261, the papal bull was
+read before the assembled parliament at Winchester. There Henry
+removed the baronial ministers and replaced them by his own
+friends. Chief among the sufferers was Hugh Despenser, who had
+succeeded Hugh Bigod as justiciar; and Bigod himself was expelled
+from the custody of Dover Castle. In the summer Henry issued a
+proclamation, declaring that the right of choosing his council and
+garrisoning his castles was among the inalienable attributes of the
+crown. England was little inclined to rebel, for the return of
+prosperity and good harvests made men more contented.</p>
+
+<p>The repudiation of the Provisions restored unity to the
+baronage. The defections had been serious, and it was said that
+only five of the twenty-four still adhered to the opposition. But
+the crisis forced Leicester and Gloucester to forget their recent
+feuds, and co-operate once more against the king. They saw that
+their salvation from Henry's growing strength lay in appealing to a
+wider public than that which they had hitherto addressed. Still
+posing as the heads of the government established by the
+Provisions, they summoned three knights from each shire to attend
+an assembly at St. Alban's. This appeal to the landed gentry
+alarmed the king so much that he issued counter-writs to the
+sheriffs ordering them to send the knights, not to the baronial
+camp at St. Alban's, but to his own court <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg110" id="pg110">110</a></span>at Windsor. Neither party was
+as yet prepared for battle. The death of Alexander IV, soon after
+the publication of his bull tied the hands of the king. At the same
+time the renewed dissensions of Leicester and Gloucester paralysed
+the baronage. Before long Simon withdrew to the continent, leaving
+everything in Gloucester's hands. At last, on December 7, a treaty
+of pacification was patched up, and the king announced that he was
+ready to pardon those who accepted its conditions. But there was no
+permanence in the settlement, and the king, the chief gainer by it,
+was soon pressing the new pope, Urban IV., to confirm the bull of
+Alexander. On February 25, 1262, Urban renewed Henry's absolution
+from his oath in a bull which was at once promulgated in England.
+Montfort then came back from abroad and rallied the baronial party.
+In January, 1263, Henry once more confirmed the Provisions, and
+peace seemed restored. The death of Richard of Gloucester during
+1262 increased Montfort's power. His son, the young Earl Gilbert,
+was Simon's devoted disciple, but he was still a minor and the
+custody of his lands was handed over to the Earl of Hereford.
+Montfort's personal charm succeeded in like fashion in winning over
+Henry of Almaine.</p>
+
+<p>The events of 1263 are as bewildering and as indecisive as those
+of the two previous years. Amidst the confusion of details and the
+violent clashing of personal and territorial interests, a few main
+principles can be discerned. First of all the royalist party was
+becoming decidedly stronger, and fresh secessions of the barons
+constantly strengthened its ranks. Conspicuous among these were the
+lords of the march of Wales, who in 1258 had been almost as one man
+on the side of the opposition, but who by the end of 1263 had with
+almost equal unanimity rallied to the crown.[1] The causes of this
+change of front are to be found partly in public and partly in
+personal reasons. In 1258 Henry III., like Charles I. in 1640, had
+alienated every class of his subjects, and was therefore entirely
+at the mercy of his enemies. By 1263 his concessions had procured
+for him a following, so that he now stood in the same position as
+Charles after his concessions to the Long <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg111" id="pg111">111</a></span>Parliament made it possible
+for him to begin the Civil War in 1642. A new royalist party was
+growing up with a wider policy and greater efficiency than the old
+coterie of courtiers and aliens. Of this new party Edward was the
+soul. He had dissociated himself from Earl Simon, but he carried
+into his father's camp something of Simon's breadth of vision and
+force of will. He set to work to win over individually the remnant
+that adhered to Leicester. What persuasion and policy could not
+effect was accomplished by bribes and promises. Edward won over the
+Earl of Hereford, whose importance was doubled by his custody of
+the Gloucester lands, the ex-justiciar Roger Bigod, and above all
+Roger Mortimer.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] On this, and the whole marcher and Welsh
+aspect of the period, 1258-1267, see my essay on Wales and <i>the
+March during the Barons' Wars</i> in <i>Owens College Historical
+Essays</i>, pp. 76-136 (1902).</p>
+
+<p>The change of policy of the marchers was partly at least brought
+about by their constant difficulties with the Prince of Wales.
+During the period immediately succeeding the Provisions of Oxford,
+Llewelyn ceased to devastate the marches. A series of truces was
+arranged which, if seldom well kept, at least avoided war on a
+grand scale. Within Wales Llewelyn fully availed himself of the
+respite from English war. Triumphant over the minor chiefs, he
+could reckon upon the support of every Welsh tenant of a marcher
+lord, and at last grew strong enough to disregard the truces and
+wage open war against the marchers. It was in vain that Edward, the
+greatest of the marcher lords, persuaded David, the Welsh prince's
+brother, to rise in revolt against him. Llewelyn devastated the
+four cantreds to the gates of Chester, and at last, after long
+sieges, forced the war-worn defenders of Deganwy and Diserth to
+surrender the two strong castles through which alone Edward had
+retained some hold over his Welsh lands. It was the same in the
+middle march, where Llewelyn turned his arms against the Mortimers,
+and robbed them of their castles. Even in the south the lord of
+Gwynedd carried everything before him. "If the Welsh are not
+stopped," wrote a southern marcher, "they will destroy all the
+lands of the king as far as the Severn and the Wye, and they ask
+for nothing less than the whole of Gwent." Up to this point the war
+had been a war of Welsh against English, but Montfort sought
+compensation for his losses in England by establishing relations
+with the Welsh. The alliance between Montfort and their enemy had a
+large share in bringing about the secession of the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg112" id="pg112">112</a></span>marchers. Their
+alliance with Edward neutralised the action of Montfort, and once
+more enabled Henry to repudiate the Provisions.</p>
+
+<p>In the summer of 1263, Edward and Montfort both raised armies.
+Leicester made himself master of Hereford, Gloucester, and Bristol,
+and when Edward threw himself into Windsor Castle, he occupied
+Isleworth, hoping to cut his enemy off from London, where the king
+and queen had taken refuge in the Tower. But the hostility of the
+Londoners made the Tower an uneasy refuge for them. On one
+occasion, when the queen attempted to make her way up the Thames in
+the hope of joining her son at Windsor, the citizens assailed her
+barge so fiercely from London Bridge that she was forced to return
+to the Tower. The foul insults which the rabble poured upon his
+mother deeply incensed Edward and he became a bitter foe of the
+city for the rest of his life. For the moment the hostility of
+London was decisive against Henry. Once more the king was forced to
+confirm the Provisions, agree to a fresh banishment of the aliens,
+and restore Hugh Despenser to the justiciarship. This was the last
+baronial triumph. In a few weeks Edward again took up arms, and was
+joined by many of Montfort's associates, including his cousin,
+Henry of Almaine. Even the Earl of Gloucester was wavering. The
+barons feared the appeal to arms, and entered into negotiations.
+Neither side was strong enough to obtain mastery over the other,
+and a recourse to arbitration seemed the best way out of an
+impossible situation. Accordingly, on December, 1263, the two
+parties agreed to submit the question of the validity of the
+Provisions to the judgment of Louis IX.</p>
+
+<p>The king and his son at once crossed the channel to Amiens,
+where the French king was to hear both sides. A fall from his horse
+prevented Leicester attending the arbitration, and the barons were
+represented by Peter Montfort, lord of Beaudesert castle in
+Warwickshire, and representative of an ancient Anglo-Norman house
+that was not akin to the family of Earl Simon. Louis did not waste
+time, and on January 23, 1264, issued his decision in a document
+called the "Mise of Amiens," which pronounced the Provisions
+invalid, largely on the ground of the papal sentence. Henry was
+declared free to select his own wardens of castles and ministers,
+and Louis expressly annulled <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg113"
+id="pg113">113</a></span>"the statute that the realm of England
+should henceforth be governed by native-born Englishmen". "We
+ordain," he added, "that the king shall have full power and free
+jurisdiction over his realm as in the days before the Provisions."
+The only consolation to the barons was that Louis declared that he
+did not intend to derogate from the ancient liberties of the realm,
+as established by charter or custom, and that he urged a general
+amnesty on both parties. In all essential points Louis decided in
+favour of Henry. Though the justest of kings, he was after all a
+king, and the limitation of the royal authority by a baronial
+committee seemed to him to be against the fundamental idea of
+monarchy. The pious son of the Church was biassed by the authority
+of two successive popes, and he was not unmoved by the indignation
+of his wife, the sister of Queen Eleanor. A few weeks later Urban
+IV. confirmed the award.</p>
+
+<p>The Mise of Amiens was too one-sided to be accepted. The
+decision to refer matters to St. Louis had been made hastily, and
+many enemies of the king had taken no part in it. They, at least,
+were free to repudiate the judgment and they included the
+Londoners, the Cinque Ports, and nearly the whole of the lesser
+folk of England. The Londoners set the example of rebellion. They
+elected a constable and a marshal, and joining forces with Hugh
+Despenser, the baronial justiciar, who still held the Tower,
+marched out to Isleworth, where they burnt the manor of the King of
+the Romans. "And this," wrote the London Chronicler, "was the
+beginning of trouble and the origin of the deadly war by which so
+many thousand men perished." The Londoners did not act alone.
+Leicester refused to be bound by the award, though definitely
+pledged to obey it. It was, he maintained, as much perjury to
+abandon the Provisions as to be false to the promise to accept the
+Mise of Amiens. After a last attempt at negotiation at a parliament
+at Oxford, he withdrew with his followers and prepared for
+resistance. "Though all men quit me," he cried, "I will remain with
+my four sons and fight for the good cause which I have sworn to
+defend&mdash;the honour of Holy Church and the good of the realm."
+This was no mere boast. The more his associates fell away, the more
+the Montfort family took the lead. While Leicester organised
+resistance in the south, he sent his elder sons, Simon and Henry,
+to head the revolt in the midlands and the west.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg114" id=
+"pg114">114</a></span>There was already war in the march of Wales
+when Henry Montfort crossed the Severn and strove to make common
+cause with Llewelyn. But the Welsh prince held aloof from him, and
+Edward himself soon made his way to the march. At first all went
+well for young Montfort. Edward, unable to capture Gloucester and
+its bridge, was forced to beg for a truce. Before long he found
+himself strong enough to repudiate the armistice and take
+possession of Gloucester. Master of the chief passage over the
+lower Severn, Edward abandoned the western campaign and went with
+his marchers to join his father at Oxford, where he at once stirred
+up the king to activity. The masters of the university, who were
+strong partisans of Montfort, were chased away from the town. Then
+the royal army marched against Northampton, the headquarters of the
+younger Simon, who was resting there, and, on April 4, the king and
+his son burst upon the place. Their first assault was unsuccessful,
+but next day the walls were scaled, the town captured, and many
+leading barons, including young Simon, taken prisoner. The victors
+thereupon marched northwards, devastated Montfort's Leicestershire
+estates, and thence proceeded to Nottingham, which opened its gates
+in a panic.</p>
+
+<p>Leicester himself had not been idle. While his sons were
+courting disaster in the west and midlands, he threw himself into
+London, where he was rapturously welcomed. The Londoners, however,
+became very unruly, committed all sorts of excesses against the
+wealthy royalists, and cruelly plundered and murdered the Jews.
+Montfort himself did not disdain to share in the spoils of the
+Jewry, though he soon turned to nobler work. He was anxious to open
+up communications with his allies in the Cinque Ports. But Earl
+Warenne, in Rochester castle, blocked the passage of the Dover road
+over the Medway. Accordingly Montfort marched with a large
+following of Londoners to Rochester, captured the town, and
+assaulted the castle with such energy that it was on the verge of
+surrendering. The news of Warenne's peril reached Henry in the
+midlands. In five days the royalists made their way from Nottingham
+to Rochester, a distance of over 160 miles. On their approach
+Montfort withdrew into London.</p>
+
+<p>Flushed with their successes at Northampton and Rochester, the
+royalists marched through Kent and Sussex, plundering <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg115" id="pg115">115</a></span>and devastating
+the lands of their enemies. Though masters of the open country,
+they had to encounter the resistance of the Clare castles, and the
+solid opposition of the Cinque Ports. Their presence on the south
+coast was specially necessary, for Queen Eleanor, who had gone
+abroad, was waiting, with an army of foreign mercenaries, on the
+Flemish coast, for an opportunity of sailing to her husband's
+succour. The royal army was hampered by want of provisions, and was
+only master of the ground on which it was camped. As a first fruit
+of the alliance with Llewelyn, Welsh soldiers lurked behind every
+hedge and hill, cut off stragglers, intercepted convoys, and
+necessitated perpetual watchfulness. At last the weary and hungry
+troops found secure quarters in Lewes, the centre of the estates of
+Earl Warenne.</p>
+
+<p>Montfort then marched southwards from the capital. Besides the
+baronial retinues, a swarm of Londoners, eager for the fray, though
+unaccustomed to military restraints, accompanied him. On May 13 he
+encamped at Fletching, a village hidden among the dense oak woods
+of the Weald, some nine miles north of Lewes. A last effort of
+diplomacy was attempted by Bishop Cantilupe of Worcester who,
+despite papal censures, still accompanied the baronial forces. But
+the royalists would not listen to the mediation of so pronounced a
+partisan. Nothing therefore was left but the appeal to the
+sword.</p>
+
+<p>The royal army was the more numerous, and included the greater
+names. Of the heroes of the struggle of 1258 the majority was in
+the king's camp, including most of the lords of the Welsh march,
+and the hardly less fierce barons of the north, whose grandfathers
+had wrested the Great Charter from John. The returned Poitevins
+with their followers mustered strongly, and the confidence of the
+royalists was so great that they neglected all military
+preparations. The poverty of Montfort's host in historic families
+attested the complete disintegration of the party since 1263. Its
+strength lay in the young enthusiasts, who were still dominated by
+the strong personality and generous ideals of Leicester, such as
+the Earl of Gloucester, or Humphrey Bohun of Brecon, whose father,
+the Earl of Hereford, was fighting upon the king's side. Early on
+the morning of May 14 Montfort arrayed his troops and marched
+southward in the direction of Lewes. Dawn had <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg116" id="pg116">116</a></span>hardly broken
+when the troops were massed on the summit of the South Downs,
+overlooking Lewes from the north-west.</p>
+
+<p>Lewes is situated on the right bank of a great curve of the
+river Ouse, which almost encircles the town. To the south are the
+low-lying marshes through which the river meanders towards the sea,
+while to the north, east, and west are the bare slopes of the South
+Downs, through which the river forces its way past the gap in which
+the town is situated. To the north of the town lies the strong
+castle of the Warennes, wherein Edward had taken up his quarters,
+while in the southern suburb the Cluniac priory of St. Pancras, the
+chief foundation of the Warennes, afforded lodgings for King Henry
+and the King of the Romans. When Simon reached the summit of the
+downs, his movements were visible from the walls. But the royal
+army was still sleeping and its sentinels kept such bad watch that
+the earl was able to array his troops at his leisure.</p>
+
+<p>From the summit of the hills two great spurs, separated by a
+waterless valley, slope down towards the north and west sides of
+the town. The more northerly led straight to the castle, and the
+more southerly to the priory. Montfort's plan was to throw his main
+strength on the attack on the priory, while deluding the enemy into
+the belief that his chief object was to attack the castle. He was
+not yet fully recovered from his fall from his horse, and it was
+known that he generally travelled in a closed car or horse-litter.
+This vehicle he posted in a conspicuous place on the northerly
+spur, and planted over it his standard. In front of it were massed
+the London militia, mainly infantry and the least effective element
+in his host. Meanwhile the knights and men-at-arms were mustered on
+the southerly spur under the personal direction of Montfort, who
+held himself in the rear with the reserve, while the foremost files
+were commanded by the young Earl of Gloucester, whom Simon solemnly
+dubbed to knighthood before the assembled squadrons. Then the two
+divisions of the army advanced towards Lewes, hoping to find their
+enemies still in their beds.</p>
+
+<p>At the last moment the alarm was given, and before the barons
+approached the town, the royalists, pouring out of castle, town,
+and priory, hastily took up their position face to face to the
+enemy. All turned out as Montfort had foreseen. Edward, emerging
+from the castle with his cousin Henry of Almaine, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg117" id="pg117">117</a></span>his Poitevin
+uncles, and the warriors of the march, observed the standard of
+Montfort on the hill, and supposing that the earl was with his
+banner, dashed impetuously against the left wing of Leicester's
+troops. He soon found himself engaged with the Londoners, who broke
+and fled in confusion before his impetuous charge. Eager to revenge
+on the flying citizens the insults they had directed against his
+parents, he pursued the beaten militia for many a mile, inflicting
+terrible damage upon them. On his way he captured Simon's standard
+and horse-litter, and slew its occupants, though they were three
+royalist members of the city aristocracy detained there for sure
+keeping. When the king's son drew rein he was many miles from
+Lewes, whither he returned, triumphant but exhausted.</p>
+
+<p>The removal of Edward and the marchers from the field enabled
+Montfort to profit by his sacrifice of the Londoners. The followers
+of the two kings on the left of the royalist lines could not
+withstand the weight of the squadrons of Leicester and Gloucester.
+The King of the Romans was driven to take refuge in a mill, where
+he soon made an ignominious surrender. Henry himself lost his horse
+under him and was forced to yield himself prisoner to Gilbert of
+Gloucester. The mass of the army was forced back on to the town and
+priory, which were occupied by the victors. Scarcely was their
+victory assured when Edward and the marchers came back from the
+pursuit of the Londoners. Thereupon the battle was renewed in the
+streets of the town. It was, however, too late for the weary
+followers of the king's son to reverse the fortunes of the day.
+Some threw themselves into the castle, where the king's standard
+still floated; Edward himself took sanctuary in the church of the
+Franciscans; many strove to escape eastwards over the Ouse bridge
+or by swimming over the river. The majority of the latter perished
+by drowning or by the sword: but two compact bands of mail-clad
+horsemen managed to cut their way through to safety. One of these,
+a force of some two hundred, headed by Earl Warenne himself, and
+his brothers-in-law, Guy of Lusignan and William of Valence,
+secured their retreat to the spacious castle of Pevensey, of which
+Warenne was constable, and from which the possibility of continuing
+their flight by sea remained open. Of greater military consequence
+was the successful escape of the lords of the Welsh <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg118" id="pg118">118</a></span>march, whose
+followers were next day the only section of the royalist army which
+was still a fighting force. This was the only immediate limitation
+to the fulness of Montfort's victory. After seven weary years, the
+judgment of battle secured the triumph of the "good cause," which
+had so long been delayed by the weakness of his confederates and
+the treachery of his enemies. Not the barons of 1258, but Simon and
+his personal following <i>were</i> the real conquerors at
+Lewes.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<h4>THE RULE OF MONTFORT AND THE ROYALIST RESTORATION.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg119" id=
+"pg119">119</a></span>On the day after the battle, Henry III.
+accepted the terms imposed upon him by Montfort in a treaty called
+the "Mise of Lewes," by which he promised to uphold the Great
+Charter, the Charter of the Forests, and the Provisions of Oxford.
+A body of arbitrators was constituted, in which the Bishop of
+London was the only Englishman, but which included Montfort's
+friend, Archbishop Eudes Rigaud of Rouen; the new papal legate, Guy
+Foulquois, cardinal-bishop of Sabina; and Peter the chamberlain,
+Louis IX.'s most trusted counsellor, with the Duke of Burgundy or
+Charles of Anjou, to act as umpire. These arbitrators were,
+however, to be sworn to choose none save English councillors, and
+Henry took oath to follow the advice of his native-born council in
+all matters of state. An amnesty was secured to Leicester and
+Gloucester; and Edward and Henry of Almaine surrendered as hostages
+for the good behaviour of the marchers, who still remained under
+arms. By the establishment of baronial partisans as governors of
+the castles, ministers, sheriffs, and conservators of the peace,
+the administration passed at once into the hands of the victorious
+party. Three weeks later writs were issued for a parliament which
+included four knights from every shire. In this assembly the final
+conditions of peace were drawn up, and arrangements made for
+keeping Henry under control for the rest of his life, and Edward
+after him, for a term of years to be determined in due course.
+Leicester and Gloucester were associated with Stephen Berkstead,
+the Bishop of Chichester, to form a body of three electors. By
+these three a Council of Nine was appointed, three of whom were to
+be in constant attendance at court; and without their advice the
+king was to do nothing. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg120" id=
+"pg120">120</a></span>Hugh Despenser was continued as justiciar,
+while the chancery went to the Bishop of Worcester's nephew, Thomas
+of Cantilupe, a Paris doctor of canon law, and chancellor of the
+University of Oxford.</p>
+
+<p>Once more a baronial committee put the royal authority into
+commission, and ruled England through ministers of its own choice.
+While agreeing in this essential feature, the settlement of 1264
+did not merely reproduce the constitution of 1258. It was simpler
+than its forerunner, since there was no longer any need of the
+cumbrous temporary machinery for the revision of the whole system
+of government, nor for the numerous committees and commissions to
+which previously so many functions had been assigned. The main
+tasks before the new rulers were not constitution-making but
+administration and defence. Moreover, the later constitution shows
+some recognition of the place due to the knights of the shire and
+their constituents. It is less closely oligarchical than the
+previous scheme. This may partly be due to the continued divisions
+of the greater barons, but it is probably also in large measure
+owing to the preponderance of Simon of Montfort. The young Earl of
+Gloucester and the simple and saintly Bishop of Chichester were but
+puppets in his hands. He was the real elector who nominated the
+council, and thus controlled the government. Every act of the new
+administration reflects the boldness and largeness of his
+spirit.</p>
+
+<p>The pacification after Lewes was more apparent than real, and
+there were many restless spirits that scorned to accept the
+settlement which Henry had so meekly adopted. The marchers were in
+arms in the west, and were specially formidable because they
+detained in their custody the numerous prisoners captured at the
+sack of Northampton. The fugitives from Lewes were holding their
+own behind the walls of Pevensey, though Earl Warenne and other
+leaders had made their escape to France, where they joined the army
+which Queen Eleanor had collected on the north coast for the
+purpose of invading England and restoring her husband to power. The
+papacy and the whole official forces of the Church were in bitter
+hostility to the new system. The collapse of Henry's rule had
+ruined the papal plans in Sicily, where Manfred easily maintained
+his ground against so strong a successor of the unlucky Edmund as
+Charles of Anjou. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg121" id=
+"pg121">121</a></span>The papal legate, Guy Foulquois, was waiting
+at Boulogne for admission into England, and, far from being
+conciliated by his appointment as an arbitrator, was dexterously
+striving to make the arbitration ineffective, by summoning the
+bishops adhering to Montfort to appear before him, and sending them
+back with orders to excommunicate Earl Simon and all his
+supporters. The only gleam of hope was to be found in the
+unwillingness of the King of France to interfere actively in the
+domestic disputes of England. The death of Urban IV. for the moment
+brought relief, but, after a long vacancy, the new pope proved to
+be none other than the legate Guy, who in February, 1265, mounted
+the papal throne as Clement IV. It was to no purpose that Walter of
+Cantilupe assembled the patriotic bishops and appealed to a general
+council, or that radical friars like the author of the <i>Song of
+Lewes</i> formulated the popular policy in spirited verse. The
+greatest forces of the time were steadily opposed to the
+revolutionary government, and rare strength and boldness were
+necessary to make head against them.</p>
+
+<p>Before the end of 1264 the vigour of Earl Simon triumphed over
+some of his immediate difficulties. In August he summoned the
+military forces of the realm to meet the threatened invasion.
+Adverse storms, however, dispersed Queen Eleanor's fleet, and her
+mercenaries, weary of the long delays that had exhausted her
+resources, went home in disgust. This left Simon free to betake
+himself to the west, and on December 15 he forced the marcher lords
+to accept a pacification called the Provisions of Worcester, by
+which they agreed to withdraw for a year and a day to Ireland,
+leaving their families and estates in the hands of the ruling
+faction.</p>
+
+<p>On the day after the signature of the treaty, Henry, who
+accompanied Simon to the west, issued from Worcester the writs for
+a parliament that sat in London from January to March in 1265. From
+the circumstances of the case this famous assembly could only be a
+meeting of the supporters of the existing government. So scanty was
+its following among the magnates that writs of summons were only
+issued to five earls and eighteen barons, though the strong muster
+of bishops, abbots, and priors showed that the papal anathema had
+done little to shake the fidelity of the clergy to Montfort's
+cause. The special feature of the gathering, however, was the
+summoning <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg122" id=
+"pg122">122</a></span>of two knights from every shire, side by side
+with the barons of the faithful Cinque Ports and two
+representatives from every city and borough, convened by writs
+sent, not to the sheriff, after later custom, but to the cities and
+boroughs directly. It was the presence of this strong popular
+element which long caused this parliament to be regarded as the
+first really representative assembly in our history, and gained for
+Earl Simon the fame of being the creator of the House of Commons.
+Modern research has shown that neither of these views can be
+substantiated. It was no novelty for the crown to strengthen the
+baronial parliaments by the representatives of the shire-moots, and
+there were earlier precedents for the holding meetings of the
+spokesmen of the cities and boroughs. What was new was the
+combination of these two types of representatives in a single
+assembly, which was convoked, not merely for a particular
+administrative purpose, but for a great political object. The real
+novelty and originality of Earl Simon's action lay in his giving a
+fresh proof of his disposition to fall back upon the support of the
+ordinary citizen against the hostility or indifference of the
+magnates, to whom the men of 1258 wished to limit all political
+deliberation. This is in itself a sufficient indication of policy
+to give Leicester an almost unique position among the statesmen to
+whom the development of our representative institutions are due.
+But just as his parliament was not in any sense our first
+representative assembly, so it did not include in any complete
+sense a House of Commons at all. We must still wait for a
+generation before the rival and disciple of Montfort, Edward, the
+king's son, established the popular element in our parliament on a
+permanent basis. Yet in the links which connect the early baronial
+councils with the assemblies of the three estates of the fourteenth
+century, not one is more important than Montfort's parliament of
+January, 1265.</p>
+
+<p>The chief business of parliament was to complete the settlement
+of the country. Simon won a new triumph in making terms with the
+king's son. Edward had witnessed the failure of his mother's
+attempts at invasion, the futility of the legatine anathema, and
+the collapse of the marchers at Worcester. He saw it was useless to
+hold out any longer, and unwillingly bought his freedom at the high
+price that Simon exacted. He transferred to his uncle the earldom
+of Chester, including all the <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg123"
+id="pg123">123</a></span>lands in Wales that might still be
+regarded as appertaining to it. This measure put Simon in that
+strong position as regards Wales and the west which Edward had
+enjoyed since the days of his marriage. It involved a breach in the
+alliance between Edward and the marchers, and the subjection of the
+most dangerous district of the kingdom to Simon's personal
+authority. It was safe to set free the king's son, when his
+territorial position and his political alliances were thus
+weakened.</p>
+
+<p>At the moment of his apparent triumph, Montfort's authority
+began to decline. It was something to have the commons on his side:
+but the magnates were still the greatest power in England, and in
+pressing his own policy to the uttermost, Simon had fatally
+alienated the few great lords who still adhered to him. There was a
+fierce quarrel in parliament between Leicester and the shifty
+Robert Ferrars, Earl of Derby. For the moment Leicester prevailed,
+and Derby was stripped of his lands and was thrown into prison. But
+his fate was a warning to others, and the settlement between
+Montfort and Edward aroused the suspicions of the Earl of
+Gloucester. Gilbert of Clare was now old enough to think for
+himself, and his close personal devotion to Montfort could not
+blind him to the antagonism of interests between himself and his
+friend. He was gallant, strenuous, and high-minded, but
+quarrelsome, proud, and unruly, and his strong character was
+balanced by very ordinary ability. His outlook was limited, and his
+ideals were those of his class; such a man could neither understand
+nor sympathise with the broader vision and wider designs of
+Leicester. Moreover, with all Simon's greatness, there was in him a
+fierce masterfulness and an inordinate ambition which made
+co-operation with him excessively difficult for all such as were
+not disposed to stand to him in the relation of disciple to master.
+And behind the earl were his self-seeking and turbulent sons, set
+upon building up a family interest that stood directly in the way
+of the magnates' claim to control the state. Thus personal
+rivalries and political antagonisms combined to lead Earl Gilbert
+on in the same course that his father, Earl Richard, had traversed.
+The closest ally of Leicester became his bitterest rival. The
+victorious party split up in 1265, as it had split up in 1263. And
+the dissolution of the dominant faction once more gave Edward a
+better chance of regaining the upper hand than <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg124" id="pg124">124</a></span>was to be hoped
+for from foreign mercenaries and from papal support.</p>
+
+<p>Gloucester was the natural leader of the lords of the Welsh
+march. He was not only the hereditary lord of Glamorgan, but had
+received the custody of William of Valence's forfeited palatinate
+of Pembroke. He had shown self-control in separating himself so
+long from the marcher policy; and his growing suspicion of the
+Montforts threw him back into his natural alliance with them. Even
+after the treaty of Worcester, the marchers remained under arms.
+They had obtained from the weakness of the government repeated
+prolongations of the period fixed for their withdrawal into
+Ireland. It was soon rumoured that they were sure of a refuge in
+Gloucester's Welsh estates, and Leicester, never afraid of making
+enemies, bitterly reproached Earl Gilbert with receiving the
+fugitives into his lands. Shortly after the breaking up of
+parliament, Gloucester fled to the march, and a little later
+William of Valence and Earl Warenne landed in Pembrokeshire with a
+small force of men-at-arms and crossbowmen. There was no longer any
+hope of carrying out the Provisions of Worcester, and once more
+Montfort was forced to proceed to the west to put down
+rebellion.</p>
+
+<p>By the end of April Montfort was at Gloucester, accompanied by
+the king and Edward, who, despite his submission, remained
+virtually a prisoner. Earl Gilbert was master of all South Wales,
+and closely watched his rival's movements from the neighbouring
+Forest of Dean. It was with difficulty that Earl Simon and his
+royal captives advanced from Gloucester to Hereford, but Earl
+Gilbert preferred to negotiate rather than to push matters to
+extremities. He went in person to Hereford and renewed his homage
+to the king. Arbitrators were appointed to settle the disputes
+between the two earls, and a proclamation was issued declaring that
+the rumour of dissension between them was "vain, lying, and
+fraudulently invented". For the next few days harmony seemed
+restored.</p>
+
+<p>Gloucester's submission lured Leicester into relaxing his
+precautions. His enemies took advantage of his remissness to hatch
+an audacious plot which soon enabled them to renew the struggle
+under more favourable conditions. Since his nominal release, Edward
+had been allowed the diversions of riding and hunting, and on May
+28 he was suffered to go out for a ride <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg125" id="pg125">125</a></span>under negligent or corrupt
+guard. Once well away from Hereford, the king's son fled from his
+lax custodians and joined Roger Mortimer, who was waiting for him
+in a neighbouring wood. On the next day he was safe behind the
+walls of Mortimer's castle of Wigmore, and, the day after, met Earl
+Gilbert at Ludlow, where he promised to uphold the charters and
+expel the foreigners. Valence and Warenne hurried from
+Pembrokeshire and made common cause with Edward and Gilbert. Edward
+then took the lead in the councils of the marchers, who, from that
+moment, obtained a unity of purpose and policy that they had
+hitherto lacked. He and his allies could claim to be the true
+champions of the Charters and the Provisions of Oxford against the
+grasping foreigner who strove to rule over king and barons
+alike.</p>
+
+<p>Montfort's small force was cut off from its base by the rapidity
+of the marchers' movements. It was in vain that all the supporters
+of the existing government were summoned to the assistance of the
+hard-pressed army at Hereford. Before the end of June, Edward
+completed the conquest of the Severn valley by the capture of the
+town and castle of Gloucester. A broad river and a strong army
+stood between Montfort and succour from England. Leicester then
+turned to Llewelyn of Wales, who took up his quarters at Pipton,
+near Hay. There, on June 22, a treaty was signed between the Welsh
+prince and the English king by which Henry was forced to make huge
+concessions to Llewelyn in order to secure his alliance. Llewelyn
+was recognised as prince of all Wales. The overlordship over all
+the barons of Wales was granted to him, and the numerous conquests,
+which he had made at the expense of the marchers, were ceded to him
+in full possession.</p>
+
+<p>Thus Llewelyn, like his grandfather in the days of the Great
+Charter, profited by the dissensions of the English to obtain the
+recognition of his claims which had invariably been refused when
+England was united. The Welsh prince gained a unique opportunity of
+making his weight felt in general English politics, but with all
+his ability he hardly rose to the occasion. Montfort had pressing
+need of his help. A few days after the treaty of Pipton, Gloucester
+Castle opened its gates to Edward, and the marchers advanced
+westwards to seek out Earl Simon at Hereford. Leicester fled in
+alarm before their overwhelming <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg126" id="pg126">126</a></span>forces. He was driven from the Wye
+to the Usk, and, beaten in a sharp fight on Newport bridge, found
+refuge only by retreating up the Usk valley, whence he escaped
+northwards into the hilly region where Llewelyn ruled over the
+lands once dominated by the Mortimers. Before long Montfort's
+English followers grew weary of the hard conditions of mountain
+warfare. With their heavy armour and barbed horses it was difficult
+for them to emulate the tactics of the Welsh, and they revolted
+against the simple diet of milk and meat that contented their
+Celtic allies. They could not get on without bread, and, as bread
+was not to be found among the hills, they forced their leader to
+return to the richer regions of the east. Llewelyn did little to
+help them in their need, and did not accompany them in their march
+back to the Severn valley, though a large but disorderly force of
+Welsh infantry still remained with Simon as the fruit of the
+alliance with their prince.</p>
+
+<p>By the end of July, Simon was once more in the Severn valley,
+seeking for a passage over the river. On August 2 he found a ford
+over the stream some miles south of Worcester. There he crossed
+with all his forces and encamped for the night at Kempsey, one of
+Bishop Cantilupe's manors on the left bank. His skill as a general
+had extricated him from a position of the utmost peril. All might
+yet be regained if he could join forces with an army of relief
+which his son Simon had slowly levied in the south and midlands.
+But his quarrel with Gloucester and his alliance with the Welsh had
+done much to undermine Montfort's popularity, and the younger Simon
+had no appreciation of the necessity for decisive action. Summoned
+from the long siege of Pevensey by his father's danger, he wasted
+time in plundering the lands of the royalists, and only left London
+on July 8, whence he led his men by slow stages to Kenilworth. On
+July 31 young Simon's troops took up their quarters for the night
+in the open country round Kenilworth castle. They had no notion
+that the enemy was at hand and troubled neither to defend
+themselves nor to keep watch. Edward, warned by spies of their
+approach, abandoned his close guard of the Severn fords, and in the
+early morning of August 1 fell suddenly upon the sleeping host and
+scattered it with little difficulty. The younger Simon and a few of
+his followers took <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg127" id=
+"pg127">127</a></span>refuge in the castle. As a fighting force the
+army of relief ceased to exist.</p>
+
+<p>Leicester, knowing nothing of his son's disaster, made his way,
+on August 3, from Kempsey to Evesham, where he rested for the
+night. Next morning, after mass and breakfast, the army was about
+to continue its march, when scouts descried troops advancing upon
+the town. At first it was hoped that they were the followers of
+young Simon, but their near approach revealed them to be the army
+of the marchers. With extraordinary rapidity Edward led his troops
+back to Worcester as soon as he had won the fight at Kenilworth.
+Learning there that Simon had crossed the river in his absence, he
+at once turned back to meet him, seeking to elude his vigilance by
+a long night march by circuitous routes. The result was that for
+the second time he caught his enemy in a trap.</p>
+
+<p>Evesham, like Lewes, stands on a peninsula. It is situated on
+the right bank of a wide curve of the Avon, and approachable only
+by crossing over the river, or by way of the sort of isthmus
+between the two bends of the Avon a little to the north of the
+town. Edward occupied this isthmus with his best troops, and thus
+cut off all prospect of escape by land. The other means of exit
+from the town was over the bridge which connects it with its
+south-eastern suburb of Bengeworth, on the left bank of the river.
+Edward, however, took the precaution to detach Gloucester with a
+strong force to hold Bengeworth, and thus prevent Simon's escape
+over the bridge. The weary and war-worn host of Montfort, then, was
+out-generalled in such fashion that effective resistance to a
+superior force, flushed by recent victory, was impossible. Simon
+himself saw that his last hour was come; yet he could not but
+admire the skilful plan which had so easily discomfited him. "By
+the arm of St. James," he declared, "they come on cunningly. Yet
+they have not taught themselves that order of battle; they have
+learnt it from me. God have mercy upon our souls, for our bodies
+are theirs."</p>
+
+<p>Edward and Gloucester both advanced simultaneously to the
+attack. A storm broke at the moment of the encounter, and the
+battle was fought in a darkness that obscured the brightness of an
+August day. Leicester's Welsh infantry broke at once before the
+charge of the mail-clad horsemen, and took <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg128" id="pg128">128</a></span>refuge behind hedges and
+walls, where they were hunted out and butchered after the main
+fight was over. But the men-at-arms struggled valiantly against
+Edward's superior forces, though they were soon borne down by sheer
+numbers. Simon fought like a hero and met a soldier's death. With
+him were slain his son Henry, his faithful comrade Peter Montfort,
+the baronial justiciar Hugh Despenser, and many other men of mark.
+A large number of prisoners fell into the victor's hands, and King
+Henry, who unwillingly followed Simon in all his wanderings, was
+wounded in the shoulder by his son's followers, and only escaped a
+worse fate by revealing his identity with the cry: "Slay me not! I
+am Henry of Winchester, your King." The marchers gratified their
+rage by massacring helpless fugitives, and by mutilating the bodies
+of the slain. Earl Simon's head was sent as a present to the wife
+of Roger Mortimer; and it was with difficulty that the mangled
+corpse found its last rest in the church of Evesham Abbey. His
+memory long lived in the hearts of his adopted countrymen, and
+especially among monks and friars, who despite the ban of the
+Church, hailed him as another St. Thomas, for he too had lain down
+his life for the cause of justice and religion. Miracles were
+worked at his tomb; liturgies composed in his honour, and an
+informal popular canonisation, which no papal censures could
+prevent, kept his memory green. His faults were forgotten in the
+pathos of his end. His work survived the field of Evesham and the
+reaction which succeeded it. His victorious nephew learnt well the
+lesson of his career, and the true successor of the martyred earl
+was the future Edward I.</p>
+
+<p>No thoughts of policy disturbed the fierce passion of revenge
+which possessed the victorious marchers. On August 7 Henry issued a
+proclamation announcing that he had resumed the personal exercise
+of the royal power. The baronial ministers and sheriffs were
+replaced by royalist partisans. The acts of the revolutionary
+government were denounced as invalid. The faithful city of London
+was cruelly humiliated for its zeal for Earl Simon. The exiles,
+headed by Queen Eleanor and Archbishop Boniface, returned from
+their long sojourn beyond sea. With them came to England a new
+legate, the Cardinal Ottobon, specially sent from the papal court
+to punish the bishops and clergy that had persisted in their
+adherence to the <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg129" id=
+"pg129">129</a></span>popular cause. Four prelates were
+excommunicated and suspended from their functions, including
+Berkstead of Chichester and Cantilupe of Worcester. But the aged
+Bishop of Worcester was delivered from persecution by death;
+"snatched away," as a kindly foe says, "lest he should see evil
+days". His nephew, Thomas of Cantilupe, the baronial chancellor,
+fled to Paris, where he forsook politics for the study of theology.
+The widowed Countess of Leicester was not saved by her near kindred
+to the king from lifelong banishment. At last a general sentence of
+forfeiture was pronounced against all who had fought against
+Edward, either at Kenilworth or Evesham. There was a greedy
+scramble for the spoils of victory. The greatest of these,
+Montfort's forfeited earldom of Leicester, went to Edmund, the
+king's younger son. Edward took back the earldom of Chester and all
+his old possessions. Roger Mortimer was rewarded by grants of land
+and franchises which raised the house of Wigmore to a position only
+surpassed by that of the strongest of the earldoms.</p>
+
+<p>At first the Montfort party showed an inclination to accept the
+defeat at Evesham as decisive. Even young Simon of Montfort, who
+still held out at Kenilworth, considered it prudent to restore his
+prisoner, the King of the Romans, to liberty. But the victors'
+resolve to deprive all their beaten foes of their estates, drove
+the vanquished into fresh risings. The first centre of the revolt
+of the disinherited was at Kenilworth, but before long the younger
+Simon abandoned the castle to join a numerous band which had found
+a more secure retreat in the isle of Axholme, amidst the marshes of
+the lower Trent. There they held their own until the winter, when
+they were persuaded by Edward to accept terms. A little later,
+Simon again revolted and joined the mariners of the Cinque Ports,
+whose towns still held out against the king, save Dover, which
+Edward had captured after a siege. Under Simon's leadership the
+Cinque Ports played the part of pirates on all merchants going to
+and from England. At last in March, 1266, Edward forced Winchelsea
+to open its gates to him. He next turned his arms against a valiant
+freebooter, Adam Gordon, who lurked with his band of outlaws in the
+dense beech woods of the Chilterns. With the capture of Adam
+Gordon, after a hand-to-hand tussle with Edward in <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg130" id="pg130">130</a></span>which the king's
+son narrowly escaped with his life, the resistance in the south was
+at an end.</p>
+
+<p>As one centre of rebellion was pacified other disturbances
+arose. In the spring of 1266, Robert Ferrars, Earl of Derby, newly
+released from the prison into which Earl Simon had thrown him,
+raised a revolt in his own county. On May 15, 1266, Derby was
+defeated by Henry of Almaine at Chesterfield. His earldom was
+transferred to Edmund, the king's son, already Montfort's successor
+as Earl of Leicester, and in 1267 also Earl of Lancaster, a new
+earldom, deriving its name from the youngest of the shires.[1]
+Reduced to the Staffordshire estate of Chartley, the house of
+Ferrars fell back into the minor baronage. Kenilworth was still
+unconquered. Its walls were impregnable except to famine, and
+before his flight to Axholme young Simon had procured provisions
+adequate for a long resistance. The garrison harried the
+neighbourhood with such energy that the whole levies of the realm
+were assembled to subdue it. After a fruitless assault, the
+royalists settled down to a blockade which lasted from midsummer to
+Christmas. The legate, Ottobon, appearing in the besiegers' camp to
+excommunicate the defenders, they in derision dressed up their
+surgeon in the red robes of a cardinal, in which disguise he
+answered Ottobon's curses by a travesty of the censures of the
+Church.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For Edmund's estates and whole career, see
+W.E. Rhodes' <i>Edmund, Earl of Lancaster</i>, in <i>Engl. Hist.
+Review</i>, x. (1895), 19-40 and 209-37.</p>
+
+<p>The blockade soon tried the patience of the barons. It was hard
+to keep any medieval army long together, and the lords, anxious to
+go back to their homes, complained of the harsh policy that
+compelled their long attendance. The royalist host split up into
+two parties, led respectively by Roger Mortimer and Earl Gilbert of
+Gloucester. The cruel lord of Wigmore was the type of the extreme
+reaction. Intent only on vengeance, booty, and ambition, Mortimer
+clamoured for violent measures, and was eager to reject all
+compromises. Gloucester, on the other hand, posed as the mediator,
+and urged the need of pacifying the disinherited by mitigating the
+sentence of forfeiture which had driven them into prolonged
+resistance. In the first flush of victory, Edward had been
+altogether on Mortimer's side, but gradually statecraft and
+humanity turned <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg131" id=
+"pg131">131</a></span>him from the reckless policy of the marcher.
+Edward's adhesion to counsels of moderation changed the situation.
+While Mortimer pressed the siege of Kenilworth, Edward and
+Gloucester met a parliament at Northampton which agreed to uphold
+the policy of 1258 and mitigate the hard lot of the disinherited. A
+document drawn up in the camp at Kenilworth received the approval
+of parliament and was published on October 31. The <i>Dictum de
+Kenilworth</i>, as it was called, was largely taken up with
+assertions of the authority of the crown, and denunciations of the
+memory of Earl Simon. More essential points were the re-enactment
+of the Charters and the redress of some of the grievances against
+which the Provisions of 1258 were directed. The vital article,
+however, laid down that the stern sentence of forfeiture against
+adherents of the fallen cause was to be remitted, and allowed
+rebels to redeem their estates by paying a fine, which in most
+cases was to be assessed at five years' value of their lands. Hard
+as were these terms, they were milder than those which had
+previously been offered to the insurgents. Yet the defenders of
+Kenilworth could not bring themselves to accept them until
+December, when disease and famine caused them to surrender. Despite
+their long-deferred submission, the garrison was admitted to the
+terms of the <i>Dictum</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Even then resistance was not yet over. A forlorn hope of the
+disinherited, headed by John d'Eyville, established themselves
+about Michaelmas in the isle of Ely, where they made themselves the
+terror of all East Anglia, plundering towns so far apart as Norwich
+and Cambridge, maltreating the Jews, and holding the rich citizens
+to ransom. Early in 1267 the north-country baron, John of Vescy,
+rose in Northumberland, and violently resumed possession of his
+forfeited castle of Alnwick. While Henry tarried at Cambridge,
+Edward went north and soon won over Vescy by the clemency which
+made the lord of Alnwick henceforth one of his most devoted
+servants.</p>
+
+<p>More formidable than the revolt of Eyville or Vescy was the
+ambiguous attitude of Earl Gilbert of Gloucester. Roger Mortimer
+was once more intriguing against him, and striving to upset the
+Kenilworth compromise. After a violent scene between the two
+enemies in the parliament at Bury, Gloucester withdrew to the march
+of Wales, where he waged war against Mortimer. In April, 1267, he
+made his way with a great <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg132" id=
+"pg132">132</a></span>following to London, professing that he
+wished to hold a conference with the legate. It was a critical
+moment. Edward was still in the north; Henry was wasting his time
+at Cambridge; the Londoners welcomed Earl Gilbert as a champion of
+the good old cause; the legate took refuge in the Tower, and the
+earl did not hesitate to lay siege to the stronghold. Before long
+Gloucester was joined by Eyville and many of the Ely fugitives. It
+seemed as if Gloucester was in as strong position as Montfort had
+ever won, and that after two years of warfare the verdict of
+Evesham was about to be reversed.</p>
+
+<p>Edward marched south and joined forces with his father, who had
+moved from Cambridge to Stratford, near London. Everything seemed
+to suggest that the eastern suburbs of London would witness a fight
+as stubborn as Lewes or Evesham. But Gloucester was not the man to
+press things to extremities, and Edward though firm was
+conciliatory. He delivered Ottobon from the hands of the rebels,[1]
+and then arranged a peace upon terms which secured Gloucester's
+chief object of procuring better conditions for the disinherited.
+Not only Earl Gilbert but Eyville and his associates were admitted
+to the royal favour. A few desperadoes still held out until July in
+the isle of Ely, and Edward devoted himself to tracking them to
+their lairs. He built causeways of wattles over the fens, which
+protected the disinherited in their last refuge. When he had
+clearly shown his superiority, he offered the garrison of Ely the
+terms of the <i>Dictum de Kenilworth</i>. With their acceptance of
+these conditions the English struggle ended, in July, 1267, nearly
+two years after the battle of Evesham.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Engl. Hist. Review</i>, xvii. (1902),
+522.</p>
+
+<p>Llewelyn still remained under arms. He had profited by the two
+years of strife to deal deadly blows against the marchers. He
+conquered the Mid-Welsh lands which had been granted to Mortimer,
+and devastated Edward's Cheshire earldom. When Gloucester grew
+discontented with the course of events, the old friend of Montfort
+became the close ally of the man who had ruined Montfort's cause. A
+Welsh chronicler treats Gloucester's march to London as a movement
+which naturally followed the alliance of Gloucester and Llewelyn.
+On Gloucester's submission, Llewelyn was left to his own resources.
+Edward had it in his power to avenge past injuries <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg133" id="pg133">133</a></span>by turning all
+his forces against his old enemy. But the country was weary of war,
+and Edward preferred to end the struggle. The legate Ottobon urged
+both Edward and the Welsh prince to make peace, and in September,
+1267, Henry and his son went down to Shrewsbury, accompanied by
+Ottobon, who received from the king full powers to treat with
+Llewelyn, and a promise that Henry would accept any terms that he
+thought fit to conclude. Llewelyn thereupon sent ambassadors to
+Shrewsbury, and the negotiations went on so smoothly that on
+September 25 a definite treaty of peace was signed. On Michaelmas
+day Henry met Llewelyn at Montgomery, received his homage, and
+witnessed the formal ratification of the treaty.</p>
+
+<p>By the treaty of Shrewsbury Llewelyn was recognised as Prince of
+Wales, and as overlord of all the Welsh magnates, save the
+representative of the old line of the princes of South Wales. The
+four cantreds, Edward's old patrimony, were ceded to him; and
+though he promised to surrender many of his conquests, he was
+allowed to remain in possession of great tracts of land in Mid and
+South Wales, in the heart of the marcher region.[1] Substantially
+the Welsh prince was recognised as holding the position which he
+claimed from Montfort in the days of the treaty of Pipton. Alone of
+Montfort's friends, Llewelyn came out of an unsuccessful struggle
+upon terms such as are seldom obtained even by victory in the
+field. The triumph of the Welsh prince is the more remarkable
+because Edward and his ally, Mortimer, were the chief sufferers by
+the treaty. But Edward had learnt wisdom during his apprenticeship.
+He recognised that the exhaustion of the country demanded peace at
+any price, and he dreaded the possibility of the alliance of
+Llewelyn and Earl Gilbert. But whatever Edward's motives may have
+been in concluding the treaty, it left Llewelyn in so strong a
+position that he was encouraged to those fresh aggressions which in
+the next reign proved the ruin of his power. The Welsh wars of
+Edward I. are the best elucidation of the importance of the treaty
+of Shrewsbury. The Welsh principality, which Edward as king was to
+destroy, was as much the creation of the Barons' War <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg134" id="pg134">134</a></span>as the outcome
+of the fierce Celtic enthusiasm which found its bravest champion in
+the son of Griffith.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For the growth of Llewelyn's power see the
+maps of Wales in 1247 and 1267 in Owens College <i>Historical
+Essays</i>, pp. 76 and 135.</p>
+
+<p>It was time to redeem the promises by which the moderate party
+had been won over to the royalist cause. The statute of Marlborough
+of 1267 re-enacted in a more formal fashion the chief of the
+Provisions of Westminster of 1259, and thus prevented the undoing
+of all the progress attained during the years of struggle. Ottobon
+in 1268 held a famous council at London, in which important canons
+were enacted with a view to the reformation of the Church. A little
+later the Londoners received back their forfeited charters and the
+disinherited were restored to their estates. After these last
+measures of reparation, England sank into a profound repose that
+lasted for the rest of the reign of Henry III. A happy beginning of
+the years of peace was the dedication of the new abbey of
+Westminster, and the translation of the body of St. Edward to the
+new shrine, whose completion had long been the dearest object of
+the old king's life.</p>
+
+<p>At this time Louis IX. was meditating his second crusade, and in
+every country in Europe the friars were preaching the duty of
+fighting the infidel. Nowhere save in France did the Holy War win
+more powerful recruits than in England. In 1268 Edward himself took
+the cross,[1] and with him his brother Edmund of Lancaster, his
+cousin Henry of Almaine, and many leading lords of both factions.
+Financial difficulties delayed the departure of the crusaders, and
+it was not until 1270 that Edward and Henry were able to start. On
+reaching Provence, they learnt that Louis had turned his arms
+against Tunis, whither they followed him with all speed. On
+Edward's arrival off Tunis, he found that Louis was dead and that
+Philip III., the new French king, had concluded a truce with the
+misbelievers. Profoundly mortified by this treason to Christendom,
+Edward set forth with his little squadron to Acre, the chief town
+of Palestine that still remained in Christian hands. Henry of
+Almaine preferred to return home at once, but on his way through
+Italy was murdered at Viterbo by the sons of Earl Simon of
+Montfort, a deed of blood which <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg135" id="pg135">135</a></span>revived the bitterest memories of
+the Barons' War. Edward remained in Palestine until August, 1272,
+and threw all his wonted fire and courage into the hopeless task of
+upholding the fast-decaying Latin kingdom. At last alarming news of
+his father's health brought him back to Europe.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For Edward's crusade see Riant's article in
+<i>Archives de l'Orient Latin</i>, i., 617-32 (1881).</p>
+
+<p>On November 16, 1272, Henry III., then in his sixty-sixth year,
+died at Westminster. His remains were laid at rest in the
+neighbouring abbey church, hard by the shrine of St. Edward. With
+him died the last of his generation. St. Louis' death in August,
+1270, has already been recorded. The death of Clement IV. in 1268
+was followed by a three years' vacancy in the papacy. This was
+scarcely over when Richard, King of the Romans, prostrated by the
+tragedy of Viterbo, preceded his brother to the tomb. Still
+earlier, Boniface of Canterbury had ended his tenure of the chair
+of St. Augustine. The new reign begins with fresh actors and fresh
+motives of action.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<h4>THE EARLY FOREIGN POLICY AND LEGISLATION OF EDWARD I.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg136" id=
+"pg136">136</a></span>The Dominican chronicler, Nicholas Trivet,
+thus describes the personality of Edward I.: "He was of elegant
+build and lofty stature, exceeding the height of the ordinary man
+by a head and shoulders. His abundant hair was yellow in childhood,
+black in manhood, and snowy white in age. His brow was broad, and
+his features regular, save that his left eyelid drooped somewhat,
+like that of his father, and hid part of the pupil. He spoke with a
+stammer, which did not, however, detract from the persuasiveness of
+his eloquence. His sinewy, muscular arms were those of the
+consummate swordsman, and his long legs gave him a firm hold in the
+saddle when riding the most spirited of steeds. His chief delight
+was in war and tournaments, but he derived great pleasure from
+hawking and hunting, and had a special joy in chasing down stags on
+a fleet horse and slaying them with a sword instead of a hunting
+spear. His disposition was magnanimous, but he was intolerant of
+injuries, and reckless of dangers when seeking revenge, though
+easily won over by a humble submission."[1] The defects of his
+youth are well brought out by the radical friar who wrote the
+<i>Song of Lewes</i>. Even to the partisan of Earl Simon, Edward
+was "a valiant lion, quick to attack the strongest, and fearing the
+onslaught of none. But if a lion in pride and fierceness, he was a
+panther in inconstancy and mutability, changing his word and
+promise, cloaking himself by pleasant speech. When he is in a
+strait he promises whatever you wish, but as soon as he has escaped
+he forgets his promise. The treachery or falsehood, whereby he is
+advanced, he calls prudence; the way whereby he arrives whither he
+will, crooked <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg137" id=
+"pg137">137</a></span>though it be, he regards as straight;
+whatever he likes he says is lawful, and he thinks he is released
+from the law, as though he were greater than a king."[2]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Annals</i>, pp. 181-82.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] <i>Song</i> of <i>Lewes</i>, pp. 14-15, ed.
+Kingsford.</p>
+
+<p>Hot and impulsive in disposition, easily persuaded that his own
+cause was right, and with a full share in the pride of caste,
+Edward committed many deeds of violence in his youth, and never got
+over his deeply rooted habit of keeping the letter of his promise
+while violating its spirit. Yet he learnt to curb his impetuous
+temper, and few medieval kings had a higher idea of justice or a
+more strict regard to his plighted word. "Keep troth" was inscribed
+upon his tomb, and his reign signally falsified the prediction of
+evil which the Lewes song-writer ventured to utter. A true sympathy
+bound him closely to his nobles and people. His unstained family
+life, his piety and religious zeal, his devotion to friends and
+kinsfolk, his keen interest in the best movements of his time,
+showed him a true son of Henry III. But his strength of will and
+seriousness of purpose stand in strong contrast to his father's
+weakness and levity. A hard-working, clear-headed, practical, and
+sober temperament made him the most capable king of all his line.
+He may have been wanting in originality or deep insight, yet it is
+impossible to dispute the verdict that has declared him to be the
+greatest of all the Plantagenets.</p>
+
+<p>The broad lines of Edward's policy during the thirty-five years
+of his kingship had already been laid down for him during his rude
+schooling. The ineffectiveness of his father's government inspired
+him with a love of strong rule, and this enabled him to grapple
+with the chronic maladministration which made even a well-ordered
+medieval kingdom a hot-bed of disorder. The age of Earl Simon had
+been fertile in new ideals and principles of government. Edward
+held to the best of the traditions of his youth, and his task was
+not one of creation so much as of selection. His age was an age of
+definition. The series of great laws, which he made during the
+earlier half of his reign, represented a long effort to appropriate
+what was best in the age that had gone before, and to combine it in
+orderly sequence. The same ideals mark the constitutional policy of
+his later years. The materials for the future constitution of <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg138" id="pg138">138</a></span>England
+were already at his hand. It was a task well within Edward's
+capacity to strengthen the authority of the crown by associating
+the loyal nobles and clergy in the work of ruling the state, and to
+build up a body politic in which every class of the nation should
+have its part. Yet he never willingly surrendered the most
+insignificant of his prerogatives, and if he took the people into
+partnership with him, he did so with the firm belief that he would
+be a more powerful king if his subjects loved and trusted him.
+Though closely associated with his nobles by many ties of kinship
+and affection, he was the uncompromising foe of feudal separatism,
+and hotly resented even the constitutional control which the barons
+regarded as their right. In the same way the unlimited franchises
+of the lords of the Welsh march, the almost regal authority which
+the treaty of Shrewsbury gave to the Prince of Wales, the rejection
+of his claims as feudal overlord of Scotland, were abhorrent to his
+autocratic disposition. True son of the Church though he was, he
+was the bitter foe of ecclesiastical claims which, constantly
+encroaching beyond their own sphere, denied kings the fulness of
+their authority.</p>
+
+<p>Edward's policy was thoroughly comprehensive. He is not only the
+"English Justinian" and the creator of our later constitution; he
+has rightly been praised for his clear conception of the ideal of a
+united Britain which brought him into collision with Welsh and
+Scots. His foreign policy lay as near to his heart as the conquest
+of Wales or Scotland, or the subjection of priests and nobles. He
+was eager to make Gascony obey him, anxious to keep in check the
+French king, and to establish a sort of European balance of power,
+of which England, as in Wolsey's later dreams, was to be the tongue
+of the balance. Yet, despite his severe schooling in self-control,
+he undertook more than he could accomplish, and his failure was the
+more signal because he found the utmost difficulty in discovering
+trustworthy subordinates. Moreover, the limited resources of a
+medieval state, and the even more limited control which a medieval
+ruler had over these resources, were fatal obstacles in the way of
+too ambitious a policy. Edward had inherited his father's load of
+debt, and could only accomplish great things by further pledging
+his credit to foreign financiers, against whom his subjects raised
+unending complaints. Yet, if his methods <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg139" id="pg139">139</a></span>of attaining his objects were
+sometimes mean and often violent, there was a rare nobility about
+his general purpose.</p>
+
+<p>Every precaution was taken to secure Edward's succession and the
+establishment of the provisional administration which was to rule
+until his return. Before leaving England in 1270, Edward had
+appointed as his agents Walter Giffard, Archbishop of York, Roger
+Mortimer, and Robert Burnell, his favourite clerk. The vacancy of
+the see of Canterbury after Boniface's death placed Giffard in a
+position of peculiar eminence. Appointed first lord of the council,
+he virtually became regent; and he associated with himself in the
+administration of the realm his two colleagues in the management of
+the new king's private affairs. Early in 1273 a parliament of
+magnates and representatives of shires and boroughs took oaths of
+allegiance to the king and continued the authority of the three
+regents. By the double title of Edward's personal delegation and
+the recognition of the estates, Giffard, Mortimer, and Burnell
+ruled the country for the two years which were to elapse before the
+sovereign's return. Their government was just, economical, and
+peaceful. Even Gilbert of Gloucester remained quiet, and, save for
+the refusal of the Prince of Wales to perform his feudal
+obligations, the calm of the last years of the old reign continued.
+It is evidence of constitutional progress that the administration
+was carried on with so little friction in the absence of the
+monarch. Roger Mortimer, the most formidable of the feudal
+baronage, was himself one of the agents of this salutary change.
+The marcher chieftain put down with promptitude an attempted revolt
+of north-country knights which threatened public tranquillity.</p>
+
+<p>Edward first heard of his father's death in Sicily, but the
+tidings of the maintenance of peace rendered it unnecessary for him
+to hasten his return, and he made his way slowly through Italy. In
+Sicily he was entertained by his uncle, Charles of Anjou. Thence he
+went to Orvieto, where the new pope, Gregory X., who, as archdeacon
+of Liege, had been the comrade of his crusade, was then residing.
+From king and pope alike Edward earnestly sought vengeance for the
+murder of Henry of Almaine. Proceeding northwards, he was received
+with great pomp by the cities of Lombardy, and made personal
+acquaintance with Savoy and its count, Philip, his aged
+great-uncle. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg140" id=
+"pg140">140</a></span>Crossing the Mont Cenis, he was welcomed by
+bands of English magnates who had gone forth to meet him. He was
+soon at the head of a little army, and in the true spirit of a hero
+of romance halted to receive the challenge of the boastful Count of
+Chalon. The tournament between the best knights of England and
+Burgundy was fought out with such desperation that it became a
+serious battle. At last Edward unhorsed the count in a personal
+encounter, which added greatly to his fame. This "Little Battle of
+Chalon" was the last victory of his irresponsible youth.</p>
+
+<p>The serious business of kingcraft began when Edward met his
+cousin, Philip III., at Paris. The news from England was still so
+good that Edward resolved to remain in France with the twofold
+object of settling his relations with the French monarchy and of
+receiving the homage and regulating the affairs of Aquitaine.
+Despite the treaty of Paris of 1259, there were so many subjects of
+dispute between the English and French kings that, beneath the warm
+protestations of affection between the kinsmen, there was, as a
+French chronicler said, but a cat-and-dog love between them.[1] The
+treaty had not been properly executed, and the English had long
+complained that the French had not yielded up to England their
+king's rights over the three bishoprics of Limoges, Cahors, and
+P&eacute;rigueux, which St. Louis had ceded. New complications
+arose after the death of Alfonse of Poitiers in the course of the
+Tunisian crusade. By the treaty of Paris the English king should
+then have entered into possession of Saintonge south of the
+Charente, the Agenais, and lower Quercy. But the ministers of
+Philip III. laid hands upon the whole of Alfonse's inheritance and
+refused to surrender these districts to the English. The welcome
+which Edward received from his cousin at Paris could not blind him
+to the incompatibility of their interests, nor to the impossibility
+of obtaining at the moment the cession of the promised lands. He
+did not choose to tarry at Paris while the diplomatists unravelled
+the tangled web of statecraft. Nor would he tender an unconditional
+homage to the prince who withheld from him his inheritance. Already
+a stickler for legal rights, even when used to his own detriment,
+Edward was <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg141" id=
+"pg141">141</a></span>unable to deny his subjection to the overlord
+of Aquitaine. He therefore performed homage, but he phrased his
+submission in terms which left him free to urge his claims at a
+more convenient season. "Lord king," he said to Philip, "I do you
+homage for all the lands which I ought to hold of you." The
+vagueness of this language suggested that, if Edward could not get
+Saintonge, he might revive his claim to Normandy. The king
+appointed a commission to continue the negotiations with the French
+court, and then betook himself to Aquitaine.[2]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] "Hic amor dici potest amor cati et canis,"
+<i>Chron. Limov.</i>, in <i>Recueil des Hist. de la France</i>,
+xxi., 784.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] C.V. Langlois' <i>Le R&egrave;gne de Philippe
+le Hardi</i> (1887), and Gavrilovitch's <i>Le Trait&eacute; de
+Paris</i>, give the best modern accounts of Edward's early dealings
+with the French crown.</p>
+
+<p>It was nearly ten years since the presence of the monarch had
+restrained the turbulence of the Gascon duchy. Edward had before
+him the task of watching over its internal administration, and
+checking the subtle policy whereby the agents of the French crown
+were gradually undermining his authority. Two wars, the war of
+B&eacute;arn and the war of Limoges, desolated Gascony from the
+Pyrenees to the Vienne. It was Edward's first task to bring these
+troubles to an end. Age and experience had not diminished the
+ardour which had so long made Gaston of B&eacute;arn the focus of
+every trouble in the Pyrenean lands. He defied a sentence of the
+ducal court of Saint Sever, and was already at war with the
+seneschal, Luke of Tany, when Edward's appearance brought matters
+to a crisis. During the autumn and winter of 1273-74, Edward hunted
+out Gaston from his mountain strongholds, and at last the
+B&eacute;arnais, despairing of open resistance, appealed to the
+French king. Philip accepted the appeal, and ordered Edward to
+desist from molesting Gaston during its hearing. The English king,
+anxious not to quarrel openly with the French court, granted a
+truce. The suit of Gaston long occupied the parliament of Paris,
+but the good-will of the French lawyers could not palliate the
+wanton violence of the Viscount of B&eacute;arn. The French, like
+the English, were sticklers for formal right, and were unwilling to
+push matters to extremities. Edward had the reward of his
+forbearance, for Philip advised Gaston to go to England and make
+his submission. Gratified by his restoration to B&eacute;arn in
+1279, Gaston remained faithful for the next few years. Edward was
+less successful in dealing with Limoges. There <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg142" id="pg142">142</a></span>had been for
+many years a struggle between the commune of the castle, or
+<i>bourg</i>, of Limoges and Margaret the viscountess. It was to no
+purpose that the townsfolk had invoked the treaty of Paris,
+whereby, as they maintained, the French king transferred to the
+King of England his ancient jurisdiction over them. They were
+answered by a decree of the parliament of Paris that the homage of
+the commune of Limoges belonged not to the crown but to the
+viscountess, and that therefore the treaty involved no change in
+their allegiance. Edward threw himself with ardour on to the side
+of the burgesses. Guy of Lusignan, still the agent of his brother
+abroad, though prudently excluded from England, was sent to
+Limoges, where he incited the commune to resist the viscountess. In
+May, 1274, Edward himself took up his quarters in Limoges, and for
+a month ruled there as sovereign. But the French court reiterated
+the decree which made the commune the vassal of the viscountess. To
+persevere in upholding the rebels meant an open breach with the
+French court in circumstances more unfavourable than in the case of
+Gaston of B&eacute;arn. Once more Edward refused to allow his
+ambition to prevail over his sense of legal obligation. With rare
+self-restraint he renounced the fealty of Limoges, and abandoned
+his would-be subjects to the wrath of the viscountess. This was an
+act of loyalty to feudal duty worthy of St. Louis. If Edward, on
+later occasions, pressed his own legal claims against his vassals,
+he set in his own case a pattern of strict obedience to his
+overlord.</p>
+
+<p>While Edward was still abroad, his friend Gregory X. held from
+May to July, 1274, the second general council at Lyons, wherein
+there was much talk of a new crusade, and an effort was made, which
+came very near temporary success, towards healing the schism of the
+Eastern and Western Churches. At Gregory's request Edward put off
+his coronation, lest the celebration might call away English
+prelates from Lyons. When the council was over, he at last turned
+towards his kingdom. At Paris he was met by the mayor of London,
+Henry le Waleis, and other leading citizens, who set before him the
+grievous results of the long disputes with Flanders, which had
+broken off the commercial relations between the two countries, and
+had inflicted serious losses on English trade. Edward strove to
+bring the Flemings to their senses by prohibiting the export <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg143" id="pg143">143</a></span>of wool
+from England to the weaving towns of Flanders. The looms of Ghent
+and Bruges were stopped by reason of the withholding of the raw
+material, and the distress of his subjects made Count Guy of
+Flanders anxious to end so costly a quarrel. On July 28 Edward met
+Guy at Montreuil and signed a treaty which re-established the old
+friendship between lands which stood in constant economic need of
+each other. There was no longer any occasion for further delay, and
+on August 2 Edward and his queen crossed over to Dover. Received
+with open arms by his subjects, he was crowned at Westminster on
+August 19 by the new Archbishop of Canterbury, Robert Kilwardby,
+philosopher, theologian, and Dominican friar, whom Gregory X. had
+placed over the church of Canterbury, despite the vigorous efforts
+which Edward made to secure the primacy for Robert Burnell. He had
+been absent from England for four years.</p>
+
+<p>Edward's sojourn in France was fruitful of results which he was
+unable to reap for the moment. Conscious of the inveterate
+hostility of the French king, he strove to establish relations with
+foreign powers to counterbalance the preponderance of his rival.
+When the death of Richard of Cornwall reopened the question of the
+imperial succession, Charles of Anjou had been anxious to obtain
+the prize for his nephew, Philip III., on the specious pretext that
+the headship of Christendom would enable the King of France to
+"collect chivalry from all the world" and institute the crusade
+which both Gregory X. and Edward so ardently desired. But the most
+zealous enthusiast for the holy war could hardly be deceived by the
+false zeal with which the Angevin cloaked his overweening ambition.
+It was a veritable triumph for Edward, when Gregory X., though
+attracted for a moment by the prospect of a strong emperor capable
+of landing a crusade, accepted the choice of the German magnates
+who, in terror of France, elected as King of the Romans the
+strenuous but not overmighty Swabian count, Rudolf of Hapsburg. As
+Alfonso of Castile's pretensions were purely nominal, this election
+ended the Great Interregnum by restoring the empire on a narrower
+but more practical basis. Though Gregory strove to reconcile the
+French to Rudolf's accession, common suspicion of France bound
+Edward and the new King of the Romans in a common friendship.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg144" id=
+"pg144">144</a></span>Family disputes soon destroyed the unity of
+policy of the Capetian house. Philip III., well meaning but weak,
+was drifting into complete dependence on Charles of Anjou, whom
+Edward distrusted, alike as the protector of the murderers of Henry
+of Almaine and as the supplanter of his mother in the
+Proven&ccedil;al heritage. Margaret of Provence, the widow of St.
+Louis, had a common grievance with Edward and his mother against
+Charles of Anjou. She hated him the more inasmuch as he was
+depriving her of all influence over her son, King Philip. It was
+easy in such circumstances for the two widowed queens of France and
+England to form grandiose schemes for ousting Charles from
+Provence. Rudolf lent himself to their plans by investing Margaret
+with the county. Edward's filial piety and political interests made
+him a willing partner in these designs. In 1278 he betrothed his
+daughter Joan of Acre to Hartmann, the son of the King of the
+Romans. The plan of Edward and Rudolf was to revive in some fashion
+the kingdom of Arles[1] in favour of the young couple. Though
+Rudolf was unfaithful to this policy, and abandoned the proposed
+English marriage in favour of a match between his daughter and the
+son of the King of Sicily, the two queens persisted in their plans,
+and new combinations against Charles and Philip for some years
+threatened the peace of Europe.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Fournier's <i>Le Royaume d'Arles et de
+Vienne</i> (1891) gives the best modern account of Edward's
+relations to the Middle Kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>It is unlikely that Edward hoped for serious results from
+schemes so incoherent and backed with such slender resources.
+Besides his alliance with the emperor, he strove to injure the
+French king by establishing close relations with his
+brother-in-law, Alfonso of Castile, who since 1276 was at war with
+the French. Earlier than this, he made himself the champion of
+Blanche of Artois, the widow of Henry III. of Navarre and
+Champagne. He wished that Joan, their only child, should bring her
+father's lands to one of his own sons, and, though disappointed in
+this ambition, he managed to marry his younger brother, Edmund of
+Lancaster, to Blanche. Though the French took possession of
+Navarre, whereby they alike threatened Gascony and Castile, they
+suffered Blanche to rule in Champagne in her daughter's name, and
+Edmund was associated with her in the government of that county.
+The tenure of a <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg145" id=
+"pg145">145</a></span>great French fief by the brother of the
+English king was a fresh security against the aggressions of the
+kings of France and Sicily. It probably facilitated the conclusion
+of the long negotiations as to the interpretation of the treaty of
+Paris, and the partition of the inheritance of Alfonse of Poitiers.
+Edward's position against France was further strengthened in 1279
+by the death of his wife's mother, Joan of Castile, the widow of
+Ferdinand the Saint and the stepmother of Alfonso the Wise,
+whereupon he took possession of Ponthieu in Eleanor's name.
+Scarcely had he established himself at Abbeville, the capital of
+the Picard county, than the negotiations at Paris were so far
+ripened that Philip III. went to Amiens, where Edward joined him.
+On May 23 both kings agreed to accept the treaty of Amiens by which
+the more important of the outstanding difficulties between the two
+nations were amicably regulated. By it Philip recognised Eleanor as
+Countess of Ponthieu, and handed over a portion of the inheritance
+of Alfonse of Poitiers to Edward. Agen and the Agenais were ceded
+at once, and a commission was appointed to investigate Edward's
+claims over lower Quercy. In return for this Edward yielded up his
+illusory rights over the three bishoprics of Limoges,
+P&eacute;rigueux, and Cahors. It was a real triumph for English
+diplomacy.</p>
+
+<p>No lasting peace could arise from acts which emphasised the
+essential incompatibility of French and English interests by
+enlarging the territory of the English kings in France. The
+undercurrent of hostility still continued; and the proposal of Pope
+Nicholas III. that Edward should act as mediator between Philip
+III. and Alfonso of Castile led to difficulties that deeply
+incensed Edward, and embroiled him once more both with France and
+Spain. Under Angevin influence, both Philip and Alfonso rejected
+Edward's mediation in favour of that of the Prince of Salerno,
+Charles of Anjou's eldest son. Disgust at this unfriendliness made
+Edward again support the plans of Margaret of Provence against the
+Angevins. In 1281 Margaret's intrigues formed a combination of
+feudal magnates called the League of Macon, with the object of
+prosecuting her claims over Provence by force of arms. Edward and
+his mother, Eleanor, his Savoyard kinsfolk, and Edmund of Lancaster
+all entered into the league. But it was hopeless for a disorderly
+crowd of lesser chieftains, with the nominal support <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg146" id="pg146">146</a></span>of a distant
+prince like Edward, to conquer Provence in the teeth of the
+hostility of the strongest and the ablest princes of the age. The
+League of Macon came to nothing, like so many other ambitious
+combinations of a time in which men's capacity to form plans
+transcended their capacity to execute them. Margaret herself soon
+despaired of the way of arms and was bought off by a money
+compensation. The league mainly served to keep alive the troubles
+that still separated England and France. In 1284 Philip gained a
+new success in winning the hand of Joan of Champagne, Count
+Edmund's step-daughter, for his son, the future Philip the Fair.
+When Joan attained her majority, Edmund lost the custody of
+Champagne, which went to the King of France as the natural
+protector of his son and his son's bride. With his brother's
+withdrawal from Provins to Lancaster, Edward lost one of his means
+of influencing the course of French politics.</p>
+
+<p>A compensation for these failures was found in 1282 when the
+Sicilian vespers rang the knell of the Angevin power in Sicily.
+When the revolted islanders chose Peter, King of Aragon, as their
+sovereign, Charles, seeking to divert him from Sicily by attacking
+him at home, inspired his partisan, Pope Martin IV., to preach a
+crusade against Aragon. It was in vain that Edward strove to
+mediate between the two kings.</p>
+
+<p>The only response made to his efforts was a fantastic proposal
+that they should fight out their differences in a tournament at
+Bordeaux with him as umpire, but Edward refused to have anything to
+do with the pseudo-chivalrous venture. At last, in 1285, Philip
+III. lent himself to his uncle's purpose so far as to lead a
+papalist crusade over the Pyrenees. The movement was a failure.
+Philip lost his army and his life in Aragon, and his son and
+successor, Philip IV., at once withdrew from the undertaking. In
+the year of the crusade of Aragon, Charles of Anjou, Peter of
+Aragon, and Martin IV. died. With them the struggles, which had
+begun with the attack on Frederick II, reached their culminating
+point. Their successors continued the quarrel with diminished
+forces and less frantic zeal, and so gave Edward his best chance to
+pose as the arbiter of Europe. Though Edward's continental policy
+lay so near his heart that it can hardly be passed over, it was
+fuller of vain schemes than of great results. Yet it was not
+altogether fruitless, since twelve <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg147" id="pg147">147</a></span>years of resolute and moderate
+action raised England, which under Henry III. was of no account in
+European affairs, to a position only second to that of France, and
+that under conditions more nearly approaching the modern conception
+of a political balance and a European state system than feudalism,
+imperialism, and papalism had hitherto rendered possible.</p>
+
+<p>In domestic policy, seven years of monotonous administration had
+in a way prepared for vigorous reforms. Edward's return to England
+in 1274 was quickly followed by the dismissal of Walter of Merton,
+the chancellor of the years of quiescence. He was succeeded by
+Robert Burnell, who, though foiled in his quest of Canterbury,
+obtained an adequate standing by his preferment to the bishopric of
+Bath and Wells. For the eighteen years of life which still remained
+to him, Bishop Burnell held the chancery and possessed the chief
+place in Edward's counsels. The whole of this period was marked by
+a constant legislative activity which ceased so soon after
+Burnell's death that it is tempting to assign at least as large a
+part of the law-making of the reign to the minister as to the
+sovereign. A consummate lawyer and diplomatist, Burnell served
+Edward faithfully. Nor was his fidelity impaired either by the
+laxity which debarred him from higher ecclesiastical preferment or
+by his ambitious endeavours to raise the house of Shropshire
+squires from which he sprang into a great territorial family.
+Edward gave him his absolute confidence and was blind even to his
+defects.</p>
+
+<p>The first general parliament of the reign to which the king
+summoned the commons was held at Westminster in the spring of 1275.
+Its work was the statute of Westminster the First, a comprehensive
+measure of many articles which covered almost the whole field of
+legislation, and is especially noteworthy for the care which its
+compilers took to uphold sound administration and put down abuses.
+Not less important was the provision of an adequate revenue for the
+debt-burdened king. The same parliament made Edward a permanent
+grant of a custom on wool, wool-fells, and leather, which remained
+henceforth a chief source of the regular income of the crown. The
+later imposition of further duties soon caused men to describe the
+customs of 1275 as the "Great and Ancient Custom". It was
+significant of the economic condition of England that <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg148" id="pg148">148</a></span>the great custom
+was a tax on exports, not imports, and that, with the exception of
+leather, it was a tax on raw materials. Granted the more willingly
+since the main incidence of it was upon the foreign merchants, who
+bought up English wool for the looms of Flanders and Brabant, the
+custom proved a source of revenue which could easily be
+manipulated, increased, and assigned in advance to the Italian
+financiers, willing to lend money to a necessitous king. A new step
+in our financial history was attained when this tax on trade steps
+into the place so long held by the taxes on land, from which the
+Normans and Angevins had derived their enormous revenue.</p>
+
+<p>The statute of Westminster the First had a long series of
+fellows. Next year came the statute of Rageman, which supplemented
+an earlier inquest into abuses by instituting a special inquiry in
+cases of trespass. In 1277 the first Welsh war interrupted the
+current of legislation. The break was compensated for in 1278 by
+the passing of the important statute of Gloucester, the
+consummation of a policy which Edward had adopted as soon as he set
+foot on English soil. The troubles of Edward's youth had made clear
+to him the obstacles thrown in the path of orderly government by
+the great territorial franchises. He had been forced to modify his
+policy to gratify the lord of Glamorgan, and win over the house of
+Mortimer by the erection of a new franchise that was a palatinate
+in all but name. But such great "regalities" were, after all,
+exceptional. Much more irritating to an orderly mind were the
+innumerable petty immunities which made half the hundreds in
+England the appendages of baronial estates, and such common
+privileges as "return of writs," which prevented the sheriff's
+officers from executing his mandates on numerous manors where the
+lords claimed that the execution of writs must be entrusted to
+their bailiffs.[1] These widespread powers in private hands were
+the more annoying to the king since they were commonly exercised
+with no better warrant than long custom, and without direct grant
+from him.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See on "return of writs" and a host of similar
+immunities, Pollock and Maitland's <i>History of English Law</i>,
+i., 558-82.</p>
+
+<p>Bracton had already laid down the doctrine that no prescription
+can avail against the rights of the crown, and it was a commonplace
+with the lawyers of the age that nothing less than a clear grant by
+royal charter could justify such delegation <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg149" id="pg149">149</a></span>of the
+sovereign's powers into private hands. Within a few months of his
+landing, Edward sent out commissioners to inquire into the baronial
+immunities. The returns of these inquests, which were carried out
+hundred by hundred, are embodied in the precious documents called
+the Hundred Rolls. The study of these reports inspired the
+procedure of the statute of Gloucester, by which royal officers
+were empowered to traverse the land demanding by what warrant the
+lords of franchises exercised their powers. The demand of the crown
+for documentary proof of royal delegation would have destroyed more
+than half the existing liberties. But aristocratic opinion deserted
+Edward when he strove to carry out so violent a revolution. The
+irritation of the whole baronage is well expressed in the story of
+how Earl Warenne, unsheathing a rusty sword, declared to the
+commissioners: "Here is my warrant. My ancestors won their lands
+with the sword. With my sword I will defend them against all
+usurpers." Nor was this mere boasting. The return of the king's
+officers tells us that Warenne would not say of whom, or by what
+services, he held his Yorkshire stronghold of Conisborough, and
+that his bailiffs refused them entrance into his liberties and
+would not suffer his tenants to answer or appear before them.[1]
+Edward found it prudent not to press his claims. He disturbed few
+men in their franchises, and was content to have collected the mass
+of evidence embodied in the <i>placita de quo warranto</i>, and
+thus to have stopped the possibility of any further growth of the
+franchises. A few years later he accepted the compromise that
+continuous possession since the coronation of Richard I. was a
+sufficient answer to a writ of <i>quo warranto</i>. In this lies
+the whole essence of Edward's policy in relation to feudalism, a
+policy very similar to that of St. Louis. Every man is to have his
+own, and the king is not to inquire too curiously what a man's own
+was. But no extension of any private right was to be tolerated.
+Thus feudalism as a principle of political jurisdiction gradually
+withered away, because it was no longer suffered to take fresh
+root. The later land legislation of Edward's reign pushed the idea
+still further.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Kirkby's Quest for Yorkshire</i>, pp. 3,
+227, 231, Surtees Soc.</p>
+
+<p>In 1278 it had been the turn of the barons to suffer. Next came
+the turn of the Church. Though Edward was a true son <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg150" id="pg150">150</a></span>of the Church,
+he saw as clearly as William the Conqueror and Henry II. the
+essential incompatibility between the royal supremacy and the
+pretensions of the extreme ecclesiastics. The limits of Church and
+State, the growth of clerical wealth and immunities, and the
+relations of the world-power of the pope to the local authority of
+the king, were problems which no strong king could afford to
+neglect, and perhaps were incapable of solution on medieval lines.
+Edward saw that the most practical way of dealing with clerical
+claims was for him to stand in good personal relations to the chief
+dispensers of ecclesiastical jurisdiction. With a pope like Gregory
+X. it was easy for Edward to be on friendly terms; but it was more
+difficult to feel any cordiality for the dogmatic canonists or the
+furious Guelfic partisans who too often occupied the chair of St.
+Peter. Yet Edward was shrewd enough to see that it was worth while
+making sacrifices to keep on his side the power which, alike under
+Innocent III. and Clement IV., had given valuable assistance to his
+grandfather and father in their struggle against domestic enemies.
+Moreover the enormous growth of the system of papal provisions had
+given the papacy the preponderating authority in the selection of
+the bishops of the English Church. It was only by yielding to the
+popes, whenever it was possible, that Edward could secure the
+nomination of his own candidates to the chief ecclesiastical posts
+in his own realm.</p>
+
+<p>In the earlier years of his reign Edward was luckier in his
+relations to the popes than to his own archbishops. But he found
+that his power at Rome broke down just where he wanted to exercise
+it most. He was disgusted to find how little influence he had in
+the selection of the Archbishops of Canterbury. Gregory X. sent to
+Canterbury the Dominican Robert Kilwardby, the first mendicant to
+hold high place in the English Church. Kilwardby was translated in
+1278 to the cardinal bishopric of Porto, a post of greater dignity
+but less emolument and power than the English archbishopric. A
+cardinal bishop was bound to reside at Rome, and the real motive
+for this doubtful promotion was the desire to remove Kilwardby from
+England and to send a more active man in his place. Edward's
+indiscreet devotion to Bishop Burnell led him again to press his
+friend's claims, but, though he persuaded the monks of Christ
+Church to elect him, Nicholas III. quashed the appointment, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg151" id="pg151">151</a></span>and
+selected the Franciscan friar, John Peckham, as archbishop.
+Peckham, a famous theologian and physicist, had been a
+distinguished professor at Paris, Oxford, and Rome. He was
+high-minded, honourable and zealous, a saint as well as a scholar,
+an enthusiast for Church reform and a vigorous upholder of the
+extremest hierarchical pretensions. Fussy, energetic, tactless, he
+was the true type of the academic ecclesiastic, and alike in his
+personal qualities and his wonderful grasp of detail, he may be
+compared to Archbishop Laud. Though received by Edward with a rare
+magnanimity, Friar John allowed no personal considerations of
+gratitude to interpose between him and his duty. Reaching England
+in June, 1279, he presided, within six weeks of his landing, at a
+provincial council at Reading. In this gathering canons were passed
+against pluralities which frightened every benefice hunter among
+the clerks of the royal household. Orders were also issued for the
+periodical denunciation of ecclesiastical penalties against all
+violators of the Great Charter in a fashion that suggested that the
+king was an habitual offender against the fundamental laws of his
+realm.</p>
+
+<p>Edward wrathfully laid the usurpations of the new primate before
+parliament, and forced Peckham to withdraw all the canons dealing
+with secular matters, and particularly those which concerned the
+Great Charter. The king set up the counter-claims of the State
+against the pretensions of the Church, and the estates passed the
+statute of Mortmain of 1279 as the layman's answer to the canons of
+Reading. Like most of Edward's laws the statute of Mortmain was
+based on earlier precedents. The wealth of the Church had long
+inspired statesmen with alarm, and a true follower of St. Francis
+like Peckham was specially convinced of the need of reducing the
+clergy to apostolic poverty. By the new law all grants of land to
+ecclesiastical corporations were expressly prohibited, under the
+penalty of the land being forfeited to its supreme lord. The
+statute was not a mere political weapon of the moment. It had a
+wider importance as a step in the development of Edward's
+anti-feudal policy, and may be regarded as a counterpart of the
+inquest into franchises, and as a means of protecting the State as
+well as of disciplining the Church. A corporation never died, and
+never paid reliefs or wardships. Its property never escheated for
+want of heirs, and, as scutages <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg152" id="pg152">152</a></span>were passing out of fashion,
+ecclesiastics were less valuable to the king in times of war than
+lay lords. The recent exigencies of the Welsh war had emphasised
+the need of strengthening the military defences of the crown, and
+the new statute secured this by preventing the further devolution
+of lands into the dead hand of the Church. But all medieval laws
+were rather enunciations of an ideal than measures which practical
+statesmen aimed at carrying out in detail. The statute of Mortmain
+hardly stayed the creation of fresh monasteries and colleges, or
+the further endowment of old ones. All that was necessary for the
+pious founder was to obtain a royal dispensation from the operation
+of the statute. There was little need to fear that the new law
+would stand in the way of the power of the ecclesiastical
+estate.</p>
+
+<p>A more distinct challenge to the Church was provoked by a
+further aggression of Peckham in 1281. In that year the primate
+summoned a council at Lambeth, wherein he sought to withdraw from
+the cognisance of the civil courts all suits concerning patronage
+and the disposition of the personal effects of ecclesiastics. To
+extend the jurisdiction of the <i>forum ecclesiasticum</i> was the
+surest way of exciting the hostility of the common lawyers and the
+king. Once more Edward annulled the proceedings of a council, and
+once more the submission of Peckham saved the land from a conflict
+which might have assumed the proportions of Becket's struggle
+against Henry II. Four years later Edward pressed his advantage
+still further by the royal ordinance of 1285, called
+<i>Circumspecte agatis</i>, which, though accepting the supremacy
+of the Church courts within their own sphere, narrowly defined the
+limits of their power in matters involving a temporal element.
+Again Peckham was fain to acquiesce. His policy had not only
+irritated the king, but alienated his fellow bishops. He visited
+his province with pertinacity and minuteness, and he was the less
+able to stand up against the king as he was engaged in violent
+quarrels with all his own suffragans. The leader of the bishops in
+resisting his claims was Thomas of Cantilupe. Restored to England
+by the liberal policy of Edward, Montfort's chancellor after Lewes
+had been raised to the see of Hereford, where his sanctity and
+devotion won him the universal love of his flock. Involved in
+costly lawsuits with the litigious primate, Thomas was forced <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg153" id="pg153">153</a></span>to leave
+his diocese to plead his cause before the papal <i>curia</i>. He
+died in Italy in 1282, and his relics, carried back by his
+followers to his own cathedral, won the reputation of working
+miracles. A demand arose for his canonisation, and Edward before
+his death had secured the appointment of the papal commission,
+which, a few years later, added St. Thomas of Hereford to the list
+of saints.[1] Thus the chancellor of Montfort obtained the honour
+of sanctity through the action of the victor of Evesham.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] The <i>processus canonisationis</i> of
+Cantilupe, printed in the Bollandist <i>Acta Sanctorum</i>, Oct. 1,
+539-705, illustrates many aspects of this period.</p>
+
+<p>The second Welsh war interrupted both the conflict between
+Edward and the archbishop, and the course of domestic legislation.
+Yet even in the midst of his campaigns Edward issued the statute of
+Acton Burnell of 1283, which provided a better way of recovering
+merchants' debts, and the statute of Rhuddlan of 1284 for the
+regulation of the king's exchequer. The king's full activity as a
+lawgiver was renewed after the settlement of his conquest by the
+statute of Wales of 1284, and the legislation of his early years
+culminated in the two great acts of 1285, the statute of
+Westminster the Second, and the statute of Winchester. That year,
+which also witnessed the passing of the <i>Circumspecte agatis</i>,
+stands out as the most fruitful in lawmaking in the whole of
+Edward's reign.</p>
+
+<p>The second statute of Westminster, passed in the spring
+parliament, partook of the comprehensive character of the first
+statute of that name. There were clauses by which, as the Canon of
+Oseney puts it, "Edward revived the ancient laws which had
+slumbered through the disturbance of the realm: some corrupted by
+abuse he restored to their proper form: some less evident and
+apparent he declared: some new ones, useful and honourable, he
+added". Among the more conspicuous innovations of the second
+statute of Westminster was the famous clause De <i>donis
+conditionalibus</i>, which forms a landmark in the law of real
+property. It facilitated the creation of entailed estates by
+providing that the rights of an heir of an estate, granted upon
+conditions, were not to be barred on account of the alienation of
+such an estate by its previous tenant. Thus arose those estates for
+life, which in later ages became a special feature of the English
+land system, and which, by restricting <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg154" id="pg154">154</a></span>the control of the actual
+possessor of a property over his land, did much to perpetuate the
+worst features of medieval land-holding. It is a modern error to
+regard the legitimation of estates in tail as a triumph of
+reactionary feudalism over the will of Edward. Apart from the fact
+that there is not a tittle of contemporary evidence to justify such
+a view, it is manifest that the interest of the king was in this
+case exactly the same as that of each individual lord of a manor.
+The greater prospect of reversion to the donor, and the other
+features of the system of entails, which commended them to the
+petty baron, were still more attractive to the king, the greatest
+proprietor as well as the ultimate landlord of all the realm. Other
+articles of the Westminster statute were only less important than
+the clause <i>De donis</i>, notable among them being the
+institution of justices of <i>nisi prius</i>, appointed to travel
+through the shires three times a year to hear civil causes. This
+was part of the simplification and concentration of judicial
+machinery, whereby Edward made tolerable the circuit system which
+under Henry III. had been a prolific source of grievances.</p>
+
+<p>While in the statute of Westminster Edward prepared for the
+future, the companion statute of Winchester, the work of the autumn
+parliament, revived the jurisdiction of the local courts; reformed
+the ancient system of watch and ward, and brought the ancient
+system of popular courts into harmony with the jurisdiction
+emanating from the crown, which had gone so far towards superseding
+it. This measure marks the culmination of Edward's activity as a
+lawgiver. During the five next years there were no more important
+statutes.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<h4>THE CONQUEST OF NORTH WALES.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg155" id=
+"pg155">155</a></span>The treaty of Shrewsbury of 1267 had not
+brought enduring peace to Wales and the march. The pacification was
+in essentials a simple recognition of accomplished facts, but, so
+far as it involved promises of restitution and future good
+behaviour, its provisions were barely carried out, even in the
+scanty measure in which any medieval treaty was executed. Moreover,
+the treaty by no means covered the whole ground of variance between
+the English and the Welsh. like the treaty of Paris of 1259, it was
+as much the starting-point of new difficulties as the solution of
+old ones. Many troublesome questions of detail had been postponed
+for later settlement, and no serious effort was made to grapple
+with them. Even during the life of the old king, there had been war
+in the south between the Earl of Gloucester and Llewelyn. However,
+the Welsh prince paid, with fair regularity, the instalments of the
+indemnity to which he had been bound, and there was no disposition
+on the part of the English authorities to question the basis of the
+settlement. Even the marchers maintained an unwonted tranquillity.
+They had lost so much during the recent war that they had no great
+desire to take up arms again. Llewelyn himself was the chief
+obstacle to peace. The brilliant success of his arms and diplomacy
+seems somewhat to have turned his brain. Visions of a wider
+authority constantly floated before him. His bards prophesied the
+expulsion of the Saxon, and he had done such great deeds in the
+first twenty years of his reign, that a man of more practical
+temperament might have been forgiven for indulging in dreams of
+future success. Three obstacles stood in the way of the development
+of his power. These were his vassalage to the English crown, the
+hostility of the marcher <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg156" id=
+"pg156">156</a></span>barons, and the impatience with which the
+minor Welsh chieftains submitted to his authority. For five years
+he impatiently endured these restraints. He then took advantage of
+the absence of the new king to rid himself of them.</p>
+
+<p>Five days after the accession of Edward I., the lieutenants of
+the king received the last payment of the indemnity which Llewelyn
+condescended to make. Their demand that the Welsh prince should
+take an oath of fealty to his new sovereign was answered by evasive
+delays. Arrears of the indemnity accumulated, and the state of the
+march became more disturbed. The regents showed moderation, though
+one of them, Roger Mortimer, had himself been the greatest sufferer
+from the treaty of Shrewsbury. In the south, Humphrey Bohun,
+grandson of the old Earl of Hereford and earl himself in 1275 by
+his grandfather's death, was engaged in private war with Llewelyn.
+In direct defiance of the terms of 1267, Humphrey strove to
+maintain himself in the march of Brecon, which had been definitely
+ceded to Llewelyn. It was to the credit of the regents that they
+refused to countenance this glaring violation of the treaty.
+Meanwhile Llewelyn busied himself with erecting a new stronghold on
+the upper Severn, which was a menace alike to the royal castle of
+Montgomery and to his own vassal, Griffith ap Gwenwynwyn, the
+tributary lord of Powys. Yet the regents were content to
+remonstrate, and to urge on all parties the need of strict
+adherence to the terms of the treaty. The Earl of Warwick was
+appointed in the spring of 1274 as head of a commission, empowered
+to do justice on all transgressions of the peace, and Llewelyn was
+ordered to meet him at Montgomery Ford. But Llewelyn was busy at
+home, where his brother David had joined hands with Griffith ap
+Gwenwynwyn in a plot against him. Llewelyn easily crushed the
+conspiracy; David, after a feeble attempt to maintain himself in
+his own patrimony, took flight to England, and Griffith of Powys,
+driven from his dominions, was also obliged to seek the protection
+of Edward. Henceforth Llewelyn ruled directly over Powys as well as
+Gwynedd. His success encouraged him to persevere in defying his
+overlord.</p>
+
+<p>Rash as he was, Llewelyn recognised that he was not strong
+enough to stand up single-handed against England. Former
+experience, however, suggested that it was an easy matter to <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg157" id="pg157">157</a></span>make a
+party with the barons against the crown. But times had changed
+since the Great Charter and the Barons' War; and a policy, which
+could obtain concessions from John or Henry III., was powerless
+against a king who commanded the allegiance of all his subjects.
+Yet there was enough friction between the new king and his
+feudatories to make the attempt seem feasible, and Llewelyn revived
+the Montfort tradition, by claiming the hand of Eleanor, Earl
+Simon's daughter, which had been promised to him since 1265. The
+alarm created by this shows that Edward perceived the danger that
+it might involve. But his policy of conciliation had now restored
+to their estates the last of the "disinherited," and, since the
+murder of Henry of Almaine, the name of Montfort was no longer one
+to conjure with. The exiled sons of Earl Simon welcomed Llewelyn's
+advances, and, in 1275, Eleanor was despatched from France to Wales
+under the escort of her clerical brother Amaury. On their way,
+Eleanor and Amaury were captured by English sailors. Edward
+detained the lady at the queen's court, and gave some scandal to
+the stricter clergy by shutting up Amaury in Corfe castle. He had
+foiled the Welsh prince's game, but he had given him a new
+grievance.</p>
+
+<p>During these transactions negotiations had been proceeding
+between the English court and Llewelyn. In November, 1274, Edward
+went to Shrewsbury in the hope of receiving the prince, but he was
+delayed by illness, and Llewelyn made this an excuse for
+non-appearance. Next year the king journeyed to Chester with the
+same object, but his mission was equally fruitless. Summons after
+summons was despatched to the recalcitrant vassal. Llewelyn heeded
+them no more than requests to pay up the arrears which he owed the
+English crown. After two years of hesitation Edward lost all
+patience. Irritated to the quick by Llewelyn's offer to perform
+homage in a border town on conditions altogether impossible of
+acceptance, the king summoned a council of magnates for November
+12, 1276, and laid the whole case before them. It was agreed that
+the king should go against Llewelyn as a rebel and disturber of the
+peace; and the feudal levies were summoned to meet at Worcester on
+June 24, 1277. As a preliminary to the great effort, Warwick was
+sent to Chester, Roger Mortimer to Montgomery, and Payne of <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg158" id="pg158">158</a></span>Chaworth
+to Carmarthen. All the available marcher forces and every trooper
+of the royal household were despatched to enable them to operate
+during the winter and spring. Their movements were brilliantly
+successful. On the reappearance of its ancient lord, the middle
+march threw off the yoke of Llewelyn and went back to its obedience
+to Mortimer. Griffith ap Gwenwynwyn was restored to upper Powys;
+the sons of Griffith of Bromfield cast off their allegiance to
+Llewelyn and were received back as direct vassals of the king. A
+Tony was once more ruling in Elvael, a Gifford in Llandovery, and a
+Bohun in Brecon. Rhys ap Meredith yielded up Dynevor, and was
+content to be recognised as lord of the humbler stronghold of
+Drysllwyn. Chaworth's bands conquered all Cardiganshire. Thus the
+wider "principality" of Llewelyn was shattered at the first
+assault, and when the decisive moment came, Llewelyn was thrown
+back upon his hereditary clansmen of Gwynedd. Of all the
+acquisitions of the treaty of Shrewsbury, the four cantreds alone
+still held for their prince.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] On the whole subject of this chapter Mr. J.E.
+Morris's <i>Welsh Wars of Edward I.</i> throws a flood of new
+light, especially on the military history, the organisation of the
+Edwardian army, and the political condition of the march.</p>
+
+<p>When the baronial levies mustered at Worcester, the work was
+already half accomplished. Of the thousand lances that there
+assembled, small forces were detached to help Mortimer in mid Wales
+and to reinforce the marcher army in west Wales, which was now
+commanded by Edmund of Lancaster, the king's brother. The mass of
+the troops followed Edward to Chester, whence the main attack was
+to be made. Edward's plan of operations was simplicity itself. He
+knew that the Welsh desired no pitched battle, and he was
+indisposed to lose his soldiers in unnecessary conflict. Swarms of
+workmen cleared a wide road through the dense forests of the four
+cantreds. The route chosen was as near as possible to the coast,
+where a strong fleet, mainly from the Cinque Ports, kept up
+communications with the land forces. The advance was cautious and
+slow, with long halts at Flint and at Rhuddlan, where hastily
+erected forts secured the king's base and safe-guarded a possible
+retreat. By the end of August the king was at Deganwy, and the four
+cantreds were conquered. During all this time fresh forces were
+hurried up. Some 15,000 infantry, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg159" id="pg159">159</a></span>largely drawn from southern and
+central Wales, swelled the king's host.</p>
+
+<p>Llewelyn was closely shut up in the Snowdon country. His
+position was safe enough from a direct assault, and his only fear
+was want of provisions. He trusted, however, that supplies would
+come in from Anglesea, whose rich cornfields were yellowing for the
+harvest. But the fleet of the Cinque Ports cut off communications
+between Anglesea and the mainland, and ferried over a strong
+detachment of Edward's troops, which occupied the island. English
+harvest-men gathered for Edward the crops of Welsh corn, and left
+Llewelyn to face the beginnings of a mountain-winter without the
+means of feeding his followers. By September the real fight was
+over. Edward withdrew to Rhuddlan and dismissed the greater part of
+his followers. Enough were left to block the approaches to Snowdon,
+and Llewelyn, seeing no gain in further delay, made his submission
+on November 9.</p>
+
+<p>The treaty of Aberconway, which Edward dictated, reduced
+Llewelyn to the position of a petty North Welsh chieftain, which he
+had held thirty years before. He gave up the homage of the greater
+Welsh magnates, and resigned all his former conquests. The four
+cantreds thus passed away from his power, and even Anglesea was
+only allowed to him for life and subject to a yearly tribute. He
+was compelled to do homage, and ordered to pay a crushing
+indemnity, twice as much as the expenses of the war. But Edward was
+in a generous mood. After Llewelyn's personal submission at
+Rhuddlan, the king remitted the indemnity and the rent for
+Anglesea. It was a boon to Llewelyn that the treacherous David
+received his reward not' in Gwynedd itself but in Duffryn Clwyd and
+Rhuvoniog, two of the four cantreds of the Perveddwlad. Llewelyn's
+humiliation was completed by his enforced attendance at Edward's
+Christmas court at Westminster. Next year, however, he received a
+further sign of royal favour. He was allowed to marry Eleanor
+Montfort, and Edward himself was present at their wedding. But on
+the morning of the ceremony, Llewelyn was forced to make a promise
+not to entertain the king's fugitives and outlaws.</p>
+
+<p>The treaty of Aberconway left Edward free to revive in the rest
+of Wales the policy which, when originally begun <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg160" id="pg160">160</a></span>in 1254,[1] had,
+like a rising flood, floated Llewelyn into his wider principality.
+The lords marchers resumed their ancient limits. Princes like
+Griffith of Powys and Rhys of Drysllwyn sank into a position which
+is indistinguishable from that of their Anglo-Norman neighbours.
+David, in the vale of Clwyd had no better prospects. The heirs of
+lower Powys were put under the guardianship of Roger Mortimer's
+younger son, another Roger, who, on the death of his wards by
+drowning, received possession of their lands, and henceforth, as
+Roger Mortimer of Chirk, became a new marcher baron. Meanwhile
+Edward busied himself with schemes for establishing settled
+government in the conquered territories. To a man of his training
+and temperament, this meant the establishment of English law and
+administration. He could see no merits in the archaic Welsh customs
+which regarded all crimes as capable of atonement by a money
+payment, treated a wrecked ship as the lawful perquisite of the
+local proprietor, and hardly distinguished legitimate from
+illegitimate children in determining the descent of property. He
+convinced himself that the land laws of Wales were already those of
+Anglo-Norman feudalism. He subjected the cantreds of Rhos and
+Englefield to the Cheshire county court, and breathed a new life
+into the decayed shire organisation of Cardiganshire and
+Carmarthenshire. Flint and Rhuddlan dominated the two former,
+Aberystwyth and Carmarthen the latter. Round the king's castles
+grew up petty boroughs of English traders, who would, it was
+believed, teach the Welsh to love commerce and peaceful ways.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See page 76.</p>
+
+<p>For five years all seemed to go well, though underneath the
+apparent calm a storm was gradually gathering. The Welsh of the
+ceded districts bitterly resented the imposition of a strange yoke
+and complained that the king had broken his promise to respect
+their laws. "Are the Welsh worse than Jews?" was their cry, "and
+yet the king allows the Jews to follow their own laws in England."
+But Edward coldly answered that, though it would be a breach of his
+coronation oath to maintain customs of Howel the Good, which were
+contrary to the Decalogue, he was willing to listen to specific
+complaints. It was, however, a very difficult matter to persuade
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg161" id=
+"pg161">161</a></span>Edward's bailiffs and agents to carry out his
+commands, and many acts of oppression were wrought for which there
+was no redress. Nobles like David and Rhys found their franchises
+threatened by the encroachments of the neighbouring shire-courts.
+Lesser Welshmen were liable to be robbed and insulted by the
+workmen who were building Edward's castles, or by the soldiers who
+were garrisoning them. At last even the Welsh who had helped Edward
+to put down Llewelyn saw that they had been preparing their own
+ruin, and turned to their former enemy for the redress refused them
+at Westminster. David himself made common cause with his brother,
+and the spirit of resistance spread among the half-hearted Cymry of
+the south. Edward's oppression did more than Llewelyn's triumphs to
+weld together the Welsh clans into a single people. A rising was
+planned in the strictest secrecy; and on the eve of Palm Sunday,
+March 21, 1282, David swooped down on Hawarden, a weak castle in
+private hands, and captured it. Llewelyn promptly crossed the
+Conway and turned his arms against the royal strongholds of Flint
+and Rhuddlan, which withstood him, though he devastated the
+countryside in every direction. Meanwhile David hurried south and
+found the local lords in Cardigan and the vale of Towy already in
+arms. With their help he captured the castles of the upper Towy,
+but lower down the river Rhys remained staunch to the king,
+whereupon David hurried over the hills to Cardiganshire and took
+Aberystwyth. North and south were in full revolt.</p>
+
+<p>Edward, taken unawares, prepared to reassert his authority.
+Certain faithful barons were "affectionately requested" to serve
+the king for pay, and a fairly large army was gathered together,
+though the scattered character of the rebellion necessitated its
+acting in small bands. Meanwhile the military tenants and the
+Cinque Ports were summoned to join in an attack on Llewelyn on the
+lines of the campaign of 1277. Edward's task was more difficult
+than on the previous occasion. Though Rhuddlan, not Chester as in
+1277, had become his starting-point against Gwynedd, he dared not
+advance so long as David threatened his left flank from Denbigh,
+and the rising in the south was far more formidable than that of
+five years before. A considerable part of the levies had to be
+despatched to the help of Earl Gilbert of Gloucester, who was
+charged with the reconquest <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg162"
+id="pg162">162</a></span>of the vale of Towy. On June 17 as the
+earl's soldiers were returning, laden with plunder, to their
+headquarters at Dynevor, they were suddenly attacked by the Welsh
+at Llandilo, and were driven back on their base. Gloucester hastily
+retreated to Carmarthen. He was superseded by William of Valence,
+whose activity against the Welsh had been quickened by the loss of
+his son at Llandilo. Llewelyn then came south, and pressed the
+English so hard that for several weeks nothing of moment was
+accomplished.</p>
+
+<p>The advance against Gwynedd was delayed until the late summer.
+Edward still tarried at Rhuddlan, with a host constantly varying in
+numbers, for his soldiers had long overpassed the period of feudal
+service. Every effort was made to bring fresh troops to the field,
+and Luke de Tany, seneschal of Gascony, came upon the scene with a
+small levy of the chivalry of Aquitaine. To Tany was assigned the
+task of conquering Anglesey, but it was not until September that he
+was able to occupy the island. In the same month a strenuous effort
+was made to dislodge the hostile Welsh in the vale of Clwyd; the
+Earl of Lincoln at last took Denbigh from David; Reginald Grey,
+justice of Chester, captured Ruthin, higher up the valley, and Earl
+Warenne seized Bromfield and Yale. Each noble fought for his own
+hand, and Edward was forced to reward their services by immediately
+granting to them their conquests, and thus created a new marcher
+interest which, later on, stood in the way of an effective
+settlement. But things were getting desperate, and it was well for
+Edward that the security of his left flank at last enabled him to
+advance to the Conway. Thereupon Llewelyn returned to Snowdon,
+where he was joined by the homeless David. Meanwhile Tany, then
+master of Anglesey, opened up communications with the coast of
+Arvon by a bridge of boats over the Menai Straits. Winter was
+already at hand when Llewelyn and his brother were at last shut up
+amidst the fastnesses of Snowdon.</p>
+
+<p>Late in October Archbishop Peckham appeared on the scene. He had
+excommunicated Llewelyn at the beginning of the war, but was still
+anxious to negotiate a peace. Edward did his best to put him off,
+but Peckham's importunity extorted from him a short truce, during
+which the primate visited Snowdon, taking with him an offer of an
+ample estate in England if <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg163"
+id="pg163">163</a></span>the prince would surrender his patrimony.
+Llewelyn furnished Peckham with long catalogues of grievances. He
+was quite willing to gain time by discussing his wrongs.</p>
+
+<p>Edward's army shared his irritation at Peckham's interference,
+and, while the archbishop was still in Snowdon, a breach of the
+truce destroyed any hopes of peace. On November 6 Tany led his
+troops over the bridge of boats at low water and marched inland.
+But his operations were ill-planned, and the Welsh came down from
+the hills and easily put him to flight. Meanwhile the tide had
+risen and the flood cut off access to the bridge over the Menai. In
+their panic the soldiers rushed into the water rather than face the
+enemy. Many leading men were drowned, including Tany himself, the
+author of the treachery. Flushed with this success Llewelyn
+rejected Peckham's terms. In great disgust the archbishop went back
+to England, bitterly denouncing the Welsh. But defeat only
+strengthened the iron resolution of Edward. He issued fresh
+summonses for men and money. Contrary to all precedent, he
+determined to continue the campaign through the winter.</p>
+
+<p>Llewelyn was probably ignorant of the perilous plight into which
+the king had fallen. With the approach of bad weather he became
+afraid that he would be starved out in Snowdon. Any risk was better
+than being caught like a rat in a trap, and, fearing lest a cordon
+should be drawn round the mountains, he made his way southwards,
+leaving David in command. His enemy, Roger Mortimer, was just dead,
+and Mortimer's eldest son Edmund, a youth brought up for the
+clerical profession, was not likely to hold the middle marches with
+the same strong grasp as his father. Thither accordingly Llewelyn
+made his way, hoping that on his approach the tribesmen of the
+upper Wye, over whom he had ruled so long, would abandon their
+English lord for their Cymric chieftain. A force gathered round
+him, and he occupied a strong position on a hill overlooking the
+river Yrvon, which flows into the right bank of the Wye, just above
+Builth. The right bank of the Yrvon was held by the English of
+Builth. But the only way over the stream was by Orewyn bridge,
+which was held by a detachment of the Welsh. Their position seemed
+so secure that, on December 11, Llewelyn left his troops to confer
+with some of the local chieftains. The English were, however, shown
+a ford over the river; a band <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg164"
+id="pg164">164</a></span>crossed in safety, and, taking the
+defenders of Orewyn bridge in the rear, opened up the passage over
+it to their comrades. The English ascended the hill, their
+mail-clad squadrons interlaced with archers, in order that the
+Welsh infantry might be assailed by missiles before they were
+exposed to the shock of a cavalry charge. In the absence of their
+leader, the Welsh were a helpless mass of sheep, and were easily
+put to flight. Meanwhile Llewelyn, hearing the din of battle,
+hurried back to direct his followers. On the way he was slain by
+Stephen of Frankton, a Shropshire veteran of the Barons' War, who
+fought under the banner of Roger l'Estrange. The discovery of
+important papers on the body first told the conquerors the rank of
+their victim.</p>
+
+<p>Thus perished the able and strenuous chief, who had struggled so
+long to win for himself in Wales a position similar to that
+occupied by the King of Scots in the north. His death did not end,
+but it much simplified, the struggle. The south and midland
+districts were entirely subdued, and the interest of the war again
+shifted to the mountains of Snowdon, where David strove to maintain
+himself as Prince of Wales. His best chance lay in the exhaustion
+of his enemy, but Edward stuck grimly to his task. His coffers were
+exhausted, and his army for the most part went home. Yet Edward
+tarried at Rhuddlan for over six months, dividing his energy
+between watching the Welsh and replenishing his treasure and
+troops. His treasurer, John Kirkby, wandered from shire to shire
+soliciting voluntary contributions. Then in January, 1283, an
+anomalous parliament was summoned, consisting mainly of
+ecclesiastics, knights of the shire, and burgesses, and meeting in
+two divisions, at York and at Northampton, according as the members
+came from the northern or southern ecclesiastical provinces. The
+grant of a thirtieth so little satisfied the king that he laid
+violent hands on the crusading-tenth, which was deposited in the
+Temple. Meanwhile the chivalry of Gascony and Ponthieu were tempted
+by high wages to supply the void left by the retirement of the
+English.</p>
+
+<p>Early in 1283 a gallant force from beyond sea, among which
+figured the Counts of Armagnac and Bigorre, reached Rhuddlan. After
+their arrival the king took the offensive, crossed the Conway and
+transferred his headquarters to the <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg165" id="pg165">165</a></span>Cistercian abbey of Aberconway.
+Fearful once more of being enclosed in the mountains, David sought
+a new hiding-place among the heights of Cader Idris. He shifted his
+quarters to the castle of Bere, hidden away in a remote valley
+sloping down from the mountain to the sea. The unwearied Edward
+once more issued summonses for a fresh campaign. David was at the
+extremity of his resources. Before the new arrivals enabled Edward
+to move, William of Valence marched up from the south, and in April
+forced Bere to surrender. David fled before the siege began; but he
+was a fugitive without an army, and the campaign was reduced to a
+weary tracking out of the last little bands that still scorned to
+surrender. In June David was betrayed by men of his own tongue, and
+Edward summoned for Michaelmas at Shrewsbury a parliament whose
+chief business was the trial of David. On October 3 the last Cymric
+Prince of Wales suffered the ignominious doom of a traitor, a
+murderer, and a blasphemer. The magnates then adjourned to the
+chancellor's neighbouring seat of Acton Burnell, where the
+rejoicings incident to the king's visit to his friend's new mansion
+were combined with passing the statute of Merchants.</p>
+
+<p>Edward's love of thoroughness made him linger in Wales to settle
+the government of the newly won lands. His first care was to hold
+Snowdon with the ring of fortresses which, in their ruin, still
+bear abiding witness to the solidity of the conqueror's work. Round
+each castle arose a new town, created as artificially as were the
+<i>bastides</i> of Aquitaine, within whose walls English traders
+and settlers were tempted by high privileges to take up their
+abodes, and whose strictly military character was emphasised by the
+general provision that the constable of the castle was to be <i>ex
+officio</i> the mayor of the municipality. Chief among these was
+Aberconway, whose strategic importance Edward understood so fully
+that he forced the Cistercian monks to take up new quarters at
+Maenan, higher up the valley, in order that there might be room for
+the castle and town which were henceforth to guard the entrance to
+Snowdon. Equally important was the future capital of Gwynedd,
+Carnarvon, where on April 25, 1284, a son was born to Edward and
+Eleanor, who seventeen years later was to become the first English
+Prince of Wales. Elsewhere fortresses of Welsh origin were rebuilt
+and enlarged to complete the stone circuit round the mountains.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg166" id="pg166">166</a></span>Such
+were Criccieth, the key of Lleyn; Dolwyddelen, which dominated the
+upper Conway; and Harlech and Bere, the two strongholds that curbed
+the mountaineers of Merioneth. In the south the same policy was
+carried out. Alike in Gwynedd and in the vale of Towy, both in his
+castle building and in his town foundations, Edward was simply
+carrying on the traditions of earlier ages, and applying to his new
+lands those principles of government which, since the Norman
+Conquest, had become the tradition of the marcher lords. Even in
+his architectural schemes there was nothing novel in Edward's
+policy. Gilbert of Gloucester at Caerphilly, and Payne of Chaworth
+at Kidwelly, had already worked out the pattern of "concentric"
+defences that were to find their fullest expression in the new
+castles of the principality. In each of these strongholds an
+adequate garrison of highly trained and well-paid troops kept the
+Welsh in check.</p>
+
+<p>The civil government of the Edwardian conquests was provided for
+by the statute of Wales, issued on Mid-Lent Sunday, 1284, at
+Rhuddlan, Edward's usual headquarters. It declared that the land of
+Wales, heretofore subject to the crown in feudal right, was
+entirely transferred to the king's dominion. To the whole of the
+annexed districts the English system of shire government was
+extended, though such local customs as appealed to Edward's sense
+of justice were suffered to be continued. Gwynedd and its
+appurtenances were divided into the three shires of Anglesey,
+Carnarvon, and Merioneth, and were collectively put under the
+justice of Snowdon, whose seat was to be at Carnarvon, where courts
+of chancery and exchequer for north Wales were set up. The shires
+of Cardigan and Carmarthen were re-organised so as to include the
+southern districts which had been subject to Llewelyn, or to the
+Welsh lords who had fallen with him. These were put under the
+justice of west Wales, whose chancery and exchequer were
+established at Carmarthen. It is significant that Edward prepared
+the way for making these districts into shires by persuading his
+brother Edmund, to whom they had been granted, to abandon his
+claims over them in return for ample compensation elsewhere.
+Without this step the new shires would only have been palatinates
+of the Glamorgan or Pembroke type, and the creation of such
+franchises was directly contrary to Edward's policy. It was
+different <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg167" id=
+"pg167">167</a></span>in the vale of Clwyd, where it would have
+been natural for Edward to have extended the shire system to the
+four cantreds. Military exigences had, however, already erected
+most of these lands into new marcher lordships, and Edward was
+perforce content with the union of some fragments of Rhos to the
+shire of Carnarvon, and with joining together Englefield and some
+adjoining districts in the new county of Flint. This arrangement
+secured the strongholds of Flint and Rhuddlan for the king. But the
+district was too small to make it worth while to set up a separate
+organisation for it, and Flintshire was put under the justice and
+courts of Chester, so that it became a dependency of the
+neighbouring palatinate.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For the shires of Walessee my paper on <i>The
+Welsh Shires</i> in <i>Y Cymmrodor</i>, ix. (1888), 201-26.</p>
+
+<p>The lordships of the march were not directly influenced by this
+legislation. They continued to hold their position as franchises
+until the reign of Henry VIII., and under Edward III. were declared
+by statute to be no part of the principality but directly subject
+to the English crown. Yet the removal of the pressure of a native
+principality profoundly affected these districts. The policy of
+definition made its mark even here. The liberties of each marcher
+were defined and circumscribed, and, while scrupulously respected,
+were incapable of further extension. The vague jurisdictions of the
+sheriffs of the border shires were cleared up, and if this process
+involved some limitation of the royal authority in districts like
+Clun and Oswestry, which virtually ceased to be parts of
+Shropshire, there was a compensating advantage in the increased
+clearness with which the border line was drawn and the royal
+authority consolidated. Gradually the marcher lordships passed by
+lapse into the royal hands, and even from the beginning there were
+regions, such as Montgomery and Builth, which knew no lord but the
+king. All this was, however, an indirect result of the Edwardian
+conquest. Strictly speaking it was no conquest of all Wales but
+merely of the principality, the ancient dominions of Llewelyn, to
+which most of the crown lands in Wales were joined.</p>
+
+<p>Ecclesiastical settlement followed the political reorganisation.
+Peckham was as zealous as Edward in compelling the conquered to
+follow the law-abiding traditions of the king's ancient
+inheritance. He laboured strenuously for the rebuilding <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg168" id="pg168">168</a></span>of
+churches, the preservation and extension of ecclesiastical
+property, the education of the clergy, and the extirpation of
+clerical matrimony and simony. Despite his unsympathetic attitude,
+he did good work for the Welsh Church by his manful resistance to
+all attempts of Edward and his subordinates to encroach upon her
+liberties. He quaintly thought it would promote the civilisation of
+Wales if the people were forced to "learn civility" by living in
+towns and sending their children to school in England. His
+assiduous visitation of the Welsh dioceses in 1284 did something to
+kindle zeal, and win the Welsh clergy from the idleness wherein, he
+believed, lay the root of all their shortcomings.</p>
+
+<p>In the autumn of 1284 Edward went on an extended progress in
+Wales. He passed through the four cantreds into Gwynedd, and thence
+worked his way southwards through Cardigan and Carmarthen, ending
+his tour by visits to the marcher lords of the south. He crossed
+over from Glamorgan, where he had been entertained by Gilbert of
+Clare, to Bristol, where he held his Christmas court. Wales was to
+see no more of its new ruler for seven years. During that time the
+principality gave Edward little trouble, though the marchers, as
+will be seen, were a constant anxiety to him. In 1287, while Edward
+was in Gascony, the regent, Edmund of Cornwall, was called upon to
+deal with a revolt of Rhys, son of Meredith, the loyalist lord of
+the vale of Towy, who resented the authority of the justice of
+Carmarthen over his patrimony. His grievances were those of a
+marcher rather than those of a Welshman. Yet his rising in 1287 was
+formidable enough to require the raising of a great army for its
+suppression. The Welsh chieftain could not long hold out against
+the odds brought against him, and the confiscation of his lands
+swelled the district directly depending on the sheriff of
+Carmarthen. The support of the countryside enabled Rhys to evade
+his pursuers for nearly three years. At last he was captured, and
+with the execution of the last of the lords of Dynevor, the triumph
+of Edward became complete.</p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<h4>THE SICILIAN AND THE SCOTTISH ARBITRATIONS.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg169" id=
+"pg169">169</a></span>Edward I. had now attained the height of his
+fame. He had conquered Llewelyn; he had reformed the
+administration; he had put himself as a lawmaker in the same rank
+as St. Louis or Frederick II.; and he had restored England to a
+leading position in the councils of Europe. Moreover, he had won a
+character for justice and fairness which did him even greater
+service, since the several deaths of prominent sovereigns during
+1285 left him almost alone of his generation among princes of a
+lesser stature. Of the chief rulers of Europe in the early years of
+Edward's reign, Rudolf of Hapsburg alone survived; and the King of
+the Romans had little weight outside Germany many. Edward had
+outlived his brother-in-law Alfonso of Castile, his cousin Philip
+the Bold, his uncle Charles of Anjou, and Peter of Aragon. But the
+conflicts, in which these kings had been engaged, were continued by
+their successors. Above all, the contest for Sicily still raged.
+The successors of Martin IV., though deprived of the active support
+of France, would not abandon the claims of the captive Charles of
+Salerno; and James of Aragon, Peter's second son, maintained
+himself in Sicily, despite papal censures and despite the virtual
+desertion of his cause by his elder brother, Alfonso III., the new
+king of Aragon. Each side was at a standstill, though each side
+struggled on. The personal hatreds, which made it impossible to
+reconcile the older generation, were dying out, and the chief
+obstacle in the way of a settlement was the stubbornness of the
+papacy. If any one could reconcile the quarrel, it was the King of
+England; and to him Charles' sons and the nobles of his dominions
+appealed to procure his release.</p>
+
+<p>Edward was anxious to proffer his services as a peacemaker.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg170" id="pg170">170</a></span>The
+dream of a Europe, united for the liberation of the holy places,
+had not been expelled from his mind by his schemes for the
+advancement of his kingdom. If he could inspire his neighbour kings
+with something of his spirit, the crusade might still be possible.
+Other matters also called Edward's attention to the continent. He
+had to do homage to the new French king; he had to press for the
+execution of the treaty of Amiens, and his presence was again
+necessary in Gascony. His realm was in such profound peace that he
+could safely leave it. Accordingly in May, 1286, he took ship for
+France. With him went his wife Eleanor of Castile, his chancellor
+Bishop Burnell, and a large number of his nobles. He entrusted the
+regency to his cousin, Edmund, Earl of Cornwall, the son and
+successor of Earl Richard; and England saw him no more until
+August, 1289. Edward first made his way to Amiens, where he met the
+new King of France, Philip the Fair. The two kings went together to
+Paris, where Edward spent two months. There he performed homage for
+Gascony, and made a new agreement as to the execution of the treaty
+of Amiens, by which he renounced his claims over Quercy for a money
+payment, and was put in possession of Saintonge, south of the
+Charente. The settlement was the easier as for the moment neither
+king had his supreme interest in Gascony. Edward's real business
+was to make peace between Anjou and Aragon, and Philip IV. showed
+every desire to help him. Before Edward left Paris, he had
+negotiated a truce between the Kings of France and Aragon. Soon
+afterwards he went to Bordeaux. He made Gascony his headquarters
+for three years, and strove with all his might to convert the truce
+into a peace.</p>
+
+<p>Grave obstacles arose, chief among which was the determination
+of the papacy to make no terms with the King of Aragon so long as
+his brother still reigned over Sicily. Honorius IV., in approving
+Edward's preliminary action, and exhorting him to obtain the
+liberation of the Prince of Salerno, carefully guarded himself
+against recognising the schismatic Aragonese. Edward himself was no
+partisan of either side. He was heartily anxious for peace and
+desirous to free his kinsman from the rigours of his long
+imprisonment. His wish for a close alliance between England and
+Aragon was unacceptable to the partisanship both of Honorius IV.
+and his <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg171" id=
+"pg171">171</a></span>successor Nicholas IV. Papal coldness,
+however, did not turn Edward from his course. In the summer of 1287
+he met Alfonso at Oloron in B&eacute;arn, where a treaty was drawn
+up by which the Aragonese king agreed to release Charles of Salerno
+on condition that he would either, within three years, procure from
+the pope the recognition of James in Sicily, or return to captivity
+and forfeit Provence. Besides this, an alliance between England and
+Aragon was to be cemented by the marriage of one of Edward's
+daughters to Alfonso. Delighted with the success of his
+undertaking, Edward, on his return to Bordeaux, again took the
+cross and prepared to embark on the crusade.</p>
+
+<p>Nicholas IV. interposed between Edward and his vows by
+denouncing the treaty of Oloron.[1] Though well-meaning, he was not
+strong enough to shake himself free from partisan traditions, and
+though honestly anxious to bring about a crusade, he could not see
+that he made the holy war impossible by interposing obstacles in
+the way of the one prince who seriously intended to take the cross.
+While denouncing Edward's treaty, Nicholas encouraged his crusading
+zeal by granting him a new ecclesiastical tenth for six years, a
+tax made memorable by the fact that it occasioned the stringent
+valuation of benefices, called the taxation of Pope Nicholas, which
+was the standard clerical rate-book until the reign of Henry VIII.
+Despite the pope, Edward still persevered in his mediation, and in
+October, 1288, a new treaty for Charles' liberation was signed at
+Canfranc, in Aragon, which only varied in details from the
+agreement of 1287. Charles was released, but he straightway made
+his way to Rome, where Nicholas absolved him from his oath and
+crowned him King of Sicily. Edward was bitterly disappointed. He
+tarried in the south until July, 1289, usefully employed in
+promoting the prosperity of his duchy, crushing conspiracies,
+furthering the commerce of Bordeaux, and founding new
+<i>bastides</i>. At last tidings of disorder at home called him
+back to his kingdom before the purpose of his continental sojourn
+had been accomplished. But he still pressed on his thankless task,
+and in 1291 peace was made at Tarascon, between Aragon and the
+Roman see, on the hard condition of <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg172" id="pg172">172</a></span>Alfonso abandoning his brother's
+cause. On Alfonso's death soon afterwards the war was renewed, for
+James then united the Sicilian and Aragonese thrones and would not
+yield up either. It was not until 1295 that Boniface VIII., a
+stronger pope than Nicholas, ended the struggle on terms which left
+the stubborn Aragonese masters of Sicily.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For his policy, see O. Schiff, <i>Studien zur
+Geschichte P. Nikolaus IV.</i> (1897).</p>
+
+<p>Things had not gone well in England during Edward's absence.
+Edmund of Cornwall had shown vigour in putting down the revolt of
+Rhys, but he was not strong enough to control either the greater
+barons or the officers of the crown. Grave troubles were already
+brewing in Scotland. A fierce quarrel between the Earls of
+Gloucester and Hereford broke out with regard to the boundaries of
+Glamorgan and Brecon, and the private war between the two marchers
+proved more formidable to the peace of the realm than the revolt of
+the Welsh prince. Even more disastrous to the country was the
+scandalous conduct of the judges and royal officials, who profited
+by the king's absence to pile up fortunes at the expense of his
+subjects. The highest judges of the land forged charters, condoned
+homicides, sold judgments, and practised extortion and violence. A
+great cry arose for the king's return. In the Candlemas parliament
+of 1289 Earl Gilbert of Gloucester met a request for a general aid
+by urging that nothing should be granted until Englishmen once more
+saw the king's face. Alarmed at this threat, Edward returned, and
+landed at Dover on August 12, 1289.</p>
+
+<p>The whole situation was changed by the king's arrival. Edward
+met the innumerable complaints against his subordinates by
+dismissing nearly all the judges from office, and appointing a
+special commission to investigate the charges brought against royal
+officials of every rank. Thomas Weyland, chief justice of the
+common pleas, anticipated inquiry by taking sanctuary with the
+Franciscan friars of Bury St. Edmunds. A knight and a married man,
+he had taken subdeacon's orders in early life and sought to little
+purpose to be protected by his clergy. His refuge was watched by
+the local sheriffs; finally, he was starved into surrender, and
+suffered to abjure the realm.[1] He fled to France, whence he never
+returned. For some years the <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg173"
+id="pg173">173</a></span>commission investigated the offences of
+the ministers of the crown. Though much that was irregular was
+proved against them, many charges broke down under inquiry, and, as
+time went on, the official class saw that their interest lay in
+condoning rather than in punishing scandals. Some of the worst
+offenders, such as the greedy and corrupt Adam of Stratton, were
+never restored to office;[2] but Hengham, the chief justice of the
+King's Bench, was soon reinstated. There were not enough good
+lawyers in England to make it prudent for Edward to dispense with
+the services of such a man. A rigorous maintenance of a high
+standard of official morality meant getting rid of nearly all the
+king's ministers, and any successors would have been inferior in
+experience and not superior in honesty. Edward had to work with
+such material as he had, and on the whole he made the best of it.
+Scandalous as were the proceedings of his agents, their iniquities
+are but trifles as compared with the offences of the counsellors of
+Philip the Fair.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For the <i>abjuratio regni</i> see A.
+R&eacute;ville in the&nbsp; <i>Revue Historique</i>, 1. (1892),
+1-42.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] For Adam of Stratton see Hall, <i>Red Book of
+the Excheque</i>, iii., cccxv.-cccxxxi. Extracts from the Assize
+rolls recording the proceedings of the special commission will soon
+be published by the Royal Historical Society.</p>
+
+<p>Fear of Edward drove nobles into obedience as well as ministers
+into honesty. Gloucester desisted unwillingly from his attacks on
+Brecon, and was constrained to divorce his wife and marry the
+king's daughter, Joan of Acre. In becoming the king's son-in-law,
+he was forced to surrender his estates to the crown, receiving them
+back entailed on the heirs of the marriage or, in their default, on
+the heirs of Joan. Thus the system of entails made possible by the
+statute <i>De donis</i> was used by Edward to strengthen his hold
+over the most powerful of his feudatories and increase the prospect
+of his estates escheating to the crown. Considered in this light,
+Gilbert's marriage with the king's daughter seems less a reward of
+loyalty than a punishment for lawlessness. In the same year as this
+marriage, Edward passed another law directed against the baronage.
+This was the statute of Westminster the Third, called from its
+opening words, <i>Quia emptore</i>. It enacted that, when part of
+an estate was alienated by its lord, the grantee should not be
+permitted to become the subtenant of the grantor, but should stand
+to the ultimate lord of the fief in the same feudal relation <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg174" id="pg174">174</a></span>as the
+grantor himself. This prohibition of further subinfeudation stopped
+the creation of new manors and prevented the rivetting of new links
+in the feudal chain, which were the necessary condition of its
+strength. Though passed at the request of the barons, it was a
+measure much more helpful to the king than to his vassals. It stood
+to the barons as the statute of Mortmain stood to the Church.</p>
+
+<p>Edward was bent on showing that he was master, and his new
+son-in-law and the Earl of Hereford became the victims of his
+policy. He forced the reluctant Gloucester to admit that the
+pretensions of the lord of Glamorgan to be the overlord of the
+bishop of LLandaff and the guardian of the temporalities of the see
+during a vacancy were usurpations. Seeing that his marcher
+prerogatives were thus rapidly becoming undermined, Gloucester put
+the most cherished marcher right to the test by renewing the
+private war with the Earl of Hereford which had disturbed the realm
+during Edward's absence. The king issued peremptory orders for the
+immediate cessation of hostilities. These mandates Hereford obeyed,
+but Gloucester did not. Resolved that law not force was henceforth
+to settle disputes in the march, Edward summoned a novel court at
+Ystradvellte, in Brecon, wherein a jury from the neighbouring
+shires and liberties was to decide the case between the two earls
+in the presence of the chief marchers. Gloucester refused to
+appear, and the marchers declined to take part in the trial,
+pleading that it was against their liberties. The case was
+adjourned to give the recalcitrants every chance, and after a
+preliminary report by the judges, Edward resolved to hear the suit
+in person. In October, 1291, he presided at Abergavenny over the
+court before which the earls were arraigned. They were condemned to
+imprisonment and forfeiture. Content with humbling their pride and
+annihilating their privileges, Edward suffered them to redeem
+themselves from captivity by the payment of heavy fines, and before
+long gave them back their lands. The king's victory was so complete
+that neither of the earls could forgive it. In 1295, Gloucester
+died, without opportunity of revenge; but Hereford lived on,
+brooding over his wrongs, and in later years signally avenged the
+trial at Abergavenny. Meanwhile the conqueror of the principality
+had shown unmistakably that the liberties of the march were <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg175" id="pg175">175</a></span>an
+anachronism, since the marchers had no longer the work of defending
+English interests against the Welsh nation.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Mr. J.E. Morris in chap. vi. of his <i>Welsh
+Wars of Edward I.</i> has admirably summarised this suit. See also
+G.T. Clark's <i>Land of Morgan</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Another measure that followed Edward's home-coming was the
+expulsion of the Jews. Despite constant odium and intermittent
+persecution, the Jewish financiers who had settled in England after
+the Norman conquest steadily improved their position down to the
+reign of Henry III. The personal dependants of the crown, they were
+well able to afford to share their gains from usury with their
+protectors. They lived in luxury, built stone houses, set up an
+organisation of their own, and even purchased lands. Henry III.'s
+financial embarrassments forced him to rely upon them, and the
+alliance of the Jews and the crown stimulated the religious bigotry
+of the popular party to ill-treat the Jews during the Barons' War.
+Stories of Jews murdering Christian children were eagerly believed;
+and the cult of St. Hugh of Lincoln and St. William of Norwich,[1]
+two pretended victims of Hebrew cruelty, testified to the hatred
+which Englishmen bore to the race.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See for this saint, Thomas of Monmouth,
+<i>Life and Miracles of St. William of Norwich</i>, ed. Jessopp and
+James (1896).</p>
+
+<p>Under Edward I. the condition of the Jews became more
+precarious. The king hated them alike on religious and economical
+grounds. He rigorously insisted that they should wear a distinctive
+dress, and at last altogether prohibited usury. Driven from their
+chief means of earning their living, the Jews had recourse to
+clipping and sweating the coin. Indiscriminate severities did
+little to abate these evils. Meanwhile active missionary efforts
+were made to win over the Jews to the Christian faith. They were
+compelled to listen to long sermons from mendicant friars, and
+their obstinacy in adhering to their own creed was denounced as a
+deliberate offence against the light. Peckham shut up their
+synagogues, and Eleanor of Provence, who had entered a convent,
+joined with the archbishop in urging her son to take severe
+measures against them. There was a similar movement in France, and
+Edward, during his long stay abroad, had expelled the Jews from
+Aquitaine. In 1290 he applied the same policy to England, and their
+exile was so popular an act that parliament made him a special
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg176" id=
+"pg176">176</a></span>grant as a thankoffering. But though Edward
+thus drove the Jews to seek new homes beyond sea, he allowed them
+to carry their property with them, and punished the mariners who
+took advantage of the helplessness of their passengers to rob and
+murder them. Though individual Jews were found from time to time in
+England during the later middle ages, their official
+re-establishment was only allowed in the seventeenth
+century.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For the Jews see J. Jacobs, <i>Jews in Angevin
+England</i>; Tovey, <i>Anglia Judaica</i>; J.M. Rigg, <i>Select
+Pleas of the Jewish Exchequer</i>; and for their exile B.L.
+Abrahams, <i>Expulsion of the Jews from England in 1290</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Two generations at least before their expulsion, the Jews had
+been outrivalled in their financial operations by societies of
+Italian bankers, whose admirable organisation and developed system
+of credit enabled them to undertake banking operations of a
+magnitude quite beyond the means of the Hebrews. First brought into
+England as papal agents for remitting to Rome the spoils of the
+Church, they found means of evading the canonical prohibitions of
+usury, and became the loanmongers of prince and subject alike. To
+the crown the Italians were more useful than the Jews had been. The
+value of the Jews to the monarch had been in the special facilities
+enjoyed by him in taxing them. The utility of the Italian societies
+was in their power of advancing sums of money that enabled the king
+to embark on enterprises hitherto beyond the limited resources of
+the medieval state. The Italians financed all Edward's enterprises
+from the crusade of 1270 to his Welsh and Scottish campaigns. From
+them Edward and his son borrowed at various times sums amounting to
+almost half a million of the money of the time. In return the
+Italians, chief among whom was the Florentine Society of the
+Frescobaldi, obtained privileges which made them as deeply hated as
+ever the Hebrews had been.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See on this subject E.A. Bond's article in
+<i>Archæologia</i>, vol. xxviii., pp. 207-326; W.E. Rhodes,
+<i>Italian Bankers in England under Edward I. and II.</i> in
+<i>Owens Coll. Historical Essays</i>, pp. 137-68; and R.J.
+Whitwell, <i>Italian Bankers and the English Crown</i> in
+<i>Transactions of Royal Hist. Soc.</i>, N.S., xvii. (1903), pp.
+175-234.</p>
+
+<p>Among the troubles which had called Edward back from Gascony was
+the condition of Scotland, where a long period of prosperity had
+ended with the death of Edward's brother-in-law, Alexander III., in
+1286. Alexander III. attended his <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg177" id="pg177">177</a></span>brother-in-law's coronation in
+1274, and the irritation excited by his limiting his homage to his
+English lordships of Tynedale and Penrith did not cause any great
+amount of friction. But the homage question was only postponed, and
+at Michaelmas, 1278, Alexander was constrained to perform
+unconditionally this unwelcome act. "I, Alexander King of
+Scotland," were his words, "become the liege man of the lord
+Edward, King of England, against all men." But by carefully
+refraining from specifying for what he became Edward's vassal,
+Alexander still suggested that it was for his English lordships.
+Edward with equal caution declared that he received the homage,
+"saving his right and claim to the homage of Scotland when he may
+wish to speak concerning it". Both parties were content with mutual
+protestations. Edward was so friendly to Alexander that he allowed
+him to appoint Robert Bruce, Earl of Carrick, his proxy in
+professing fealty, so as to minimise the king's feeling of
+humiliation. The King of Scots went home loaded with presents, and
+for the rest of his life his relations with Edward remained
+cordial.</p>
+
+<p>The closing years of Alexander's reign were overshadowed by
+domestic misfortunes and the prospects of difficulties about the
+succession. His wife, Margaret of England, had died in 1275, and
+was followed to the tomb by their two sons, Alexander and David. A
+delicate girl, Margaret, then alone represented the direct line of
+the descendants of William the Lion. Margaret was married, when
+still young, to Eric, King of Norway, and died in 1283 in giving
+birth to her only child, a daughter named Margaret. No children
+were born of Alexander's second marriage; and in March, 1286, the
+king broke his neck, when riding by night along the cliffs of the
+coast of Fife. Before his death, however, he persuaded the magnates
+of Scotland to recognise his granddaughter as his successor. The
+Maid of Norway, as Margaret was called, was proclaimed queen, and
+the administration was put into the hands of six guardians, who
+from 1286 to 1289 carried on the government with fair success. As
+time went on, the baronage got out of hand and a feud between the
+rival south-western houses of Balliol and Bruce foreshadowed worse
+troubles.</p>
+
+<p>William Eraser, Bishop of St. Andrews, the chief of the regents,
+visited Edward in Gascony and urged the necessity of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg178" id="pg178">178</a></span>action. The best
+solution of all problems was that the young Queen of Scots should
+be married to Edward of Carnarvon, a boy a few months her junior.
+But both the Scots nobles and the King of Norway were jealous and
+suspicious, and any attempt to hurry forward such a proposal would
+have been fatal to its accomplishment. However, negotiations were
+entered into between England, Scotland, and Norway. In 1289 the
+guardians of Scotland agreed to nominate representatives to treat
+on the matter. Edward took up his quarters at Clarendon, while his
+agents, conspicuous among whom was Anthony Bek, Bishop of Durham,
+negotiated with the envoys of Norway and Scotland. On November 6
+the three powers concluded the treaty of Salisbury, by which they
+agreed that Margaret should be sent to England or Scotland before
+All Saints' Day, 1290, "free and quit of all contract of marriage
+or espousals". Edward promised that if Margaret came into his
+custody he would, as soon as Scotland was tranquil, hand her over
+to the Scots as "free and quit" as when she came to him; and the
+"good folk of Scotland" engaged that, if they received their queen
+thus free, they would not marry her "save with the ordinance, will,
+and counsel of Edward and with the agreement of the King of
+Norway". In March, 1290, a parliament of Scots magnates met at
+Brigham, near Kelso, and ratified the treaty. Fresh negotiations
+were begun for the marriage of Edward of Carnarvon and the Queen of
+Scots, resulting in the treaty of Brigham of July 18, which Edward
+confirmed a month later at Northampton. By this Edward agreed that,
+in the event of the marriage taking place, the laws and customs of
+Scotland should be perpetually maintained. Should Margaret die
+without issue, Scotland was to go to its natural heir, and in any
+case was to remain "separate and divided from the realm of
+England".</p>
+
+<p>The treaty of Brigham was as wise a scheme as could have been
+devised for bringing about the unity of Britain. In the care taken
+to meet the natural scruples of the smaller nation we are reminded
+of the treaty of Union of 1707. But a nearer parallel is to be
+found in the conditions under which the union between France and
+Brittany was gradually accomplished after the marriage of Anne of
+Brittany. In both cases alike, in France and in England, the
+stronger party was content with securing the personal union of the
+two crowns, and strove to <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg179" id=
+"pg179">179</a></span>reconcile the weaker party by providing
+safeguards against violent or over-rapid amalgamation. It was left
+for the future to decide whether the habit of co-operation,
+continued for generations, might not ultimately involve a more
+organic union. Unluckily for this island, the policy which
+ultimately made the stubborn Celts of Brittany content with union
+with France, never had a chance of being carried out here. Edward
+made every preparation for bringing over the Maid of Norway to her
+kingdom and her husband, and neither the Scots nor the Norwegians
+grudged his leading share in accomplishing their common wishes. But
+the child's health gave way before the hardships of the journey.
+Before All Saints' day had come round, she died in one of the
+Orkneys, where the ship which conveyed her had put in.</p>
+
+<p>The death of the queen threatened Scotland with revolution. The
+regents' commission became of doubtful legality, and a swarm of
+claimants for the vacant throne arose, whose resources, if not
+their rights, were sufficiently evenly balanced to make civil
+strife inevitable. Since southern Scotland had become a wholly
+feudal, largely Norman, and partly English state, there had been no
+grave difficulties with regard to the succession. Now that they
+arose, there was doubt as to the principles on which claims to the
+throne should be settled. There was no legitimate representative
+left of the stock of William the Lion. The male line of his brother
+David, Earl of Huntingdon, had died out with John the Scot, the
+last independent Earl of Chester. The nearest claimants to the
+succession were therefore to be found in the descendants of David's
+three daughters. But there was no certainty that any rights could
+be transmitted through the female line. Moreover there was a doubt
+whether, allowing that a woman could transmit the right to rule,
+the succession should proceed according to primogeniture or in
+accordance with the nearness of the claimant to the source of his
+claim. If the former view were held then John of Balliol, lord of
+Barnard castle in Durham and of Galloway in Scotland, had the best
+right as the grandson of Earl David's eldest daughter. Yet less
+than a century before, the passing over of Arthur of Brittany in
+favour of his uncle John, had recalled to men's mind the ancient
+doctrine that a younger son is nearer to the parent stock than a
+grandson sprung from his elder brother; and if the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg180" id="pg180">180</a></span>view, then
+expressed in the <i>History of William the Marshal</i>,[1] was
+still to hold good, Robert Bruce, lord of Skelton in Yorkshire, and
+of Annandale in the northern kingdom, was the nearest in blood to
+David of Huntingdon as the son of his second daughter. Beyond this
+there was the further question of the divisibility of the kingdom.
+So fully was southern Scotland feudalised that it seemed arguable
+that the monarchy, or at least its demesne lands, might be divided
+among all the representatives of the coheiresses, after the fashion
+in which the Huntingdon estates had been allotted to all the
+representatives of Earl David. In that case John of Hastings, lord
+of Abergavenny, put in a claim as the grandson of Earl David's
+youngest daughter.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Hist. de Guillaume le Mar&eacute;chal</i>,
+ii., <i>64</i>, II. 11899-902.</p>
+
+<p class="two">Oil, sire, quer c'est raison<br />
+Quer plus pr&egrave;s est sanz achaison<br />
+Le filz de la terre son p&egrave;re<br />
+Que le ni&ecirc;s: dreiz est qu'il i p&egrave;re.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>When so much was uncertain, every noble who boasted any
+connexion with the royal house safeguarded his interests, or
+advertised his pedigree, by enrolling himself among the claimants.
+Five or six of the competitors had no better ground of right than
+descent from bastards of the royal house, especially from the
+numerous illegitimate offspring of William the Lion. The others
+went back to more remote ancestors. A foreign prince, Florence,
+Count of Holland, demanded the succession as a descendant of a
+sister of Earl David, declaring that David had forfeited his rights
+by rebellion. John Comyn, lord of Badenoch, brought forward his
+descent from Donaldbane, brother of Malcolm Canmore. One claim
+reads like a fairy tale, with stories of an unknown king dying,
+leaving a son to be murdered by a wicked uncle, and a daughter to
+escape to obscurity in Ireland, where she married and transmitted
+her rights to her children. There was no authority in Scotland
+strong enough to decide these claims. Once more Robert Bruce raised
+the standard of disorder, and the appeal of Bishop Fraser to Edward
+to undertake the settlement of the question showed that the English
+king's mediation was the readiest way of restoring order.</p>
+
+<p>In 1291 Edward summoned the magnates of both realms, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg181" id="pg181">181</a></span>along with
+certain popular representatives, to meet at Norham, Bishop Bek's
+border castle on the Tweed. Trained civilians and canonists also
+attended, while abbeys and churches contributed extracts from
+chronicles, carefully compiled by royal order, with a view of
+illustrating the king's claims. On May 10 Edward met the assembly
+in Norham parish church. Roger Brabazon, the chief justice,
+declared in the French tongue that Edward was prepared to do
+justice to the claimants as "superior and direct lord of Scotland".
+Before, however, he could act, his master required that his
+overlordship should be recognised by the Scots. It is likely that
+this demand was not unexpected. Even in the treaty of Brigham
+Edward had been careful not to withdraw his claim of superiority,
+and his action with relation to Alexander III.'s homage was well
+known. But the sensitiveness which their late king had shown in the
+face of Edward's earlier claims was shared by the Scots lords, and
+shrinking from recognising facts which they ought to have faced
+before they solicited his intervention, they begged for delay and
+drew up remonstrances. Edward granted them, a respite for three
+weeks, though he swore by St. Edward that he would rather die than
+diminish the rights due to the Confessor's crown. He had already
+summoned the northern levies, and was prepared to enforce his claim
+by force. His uncompromising attitude put the Scots in an awkward
+position. But they had gone to Norham to get his help, and they
+were not prepared to run the risk of an English invasion as well as
+civil war. Most of the claimants had as many interests in England
+as in Scotland, and a breach with Edward would involve the
+forfeiture of their southern lands as well as the loss of a
+possible kingdom in the north. When the magnates reassembled, the
+competitors set the example of acknowledging Edward as overlord.
+Fresh demands followed their submission, and were at once conceded.
+Edward was to have seisin of Scotland and its royal castles, though
+he pledged himself to return both land and fortresses to him who
+should be chosen king.</p>
+
+<p>Edward then undertook the examination of the suit. He delegated
+the hearing of the claims to a commission, of whom the great
+majority, eighty, were Scotsmen, nominated in equal numbers by
+Bruce and Balliol, the two senior competitors, while the remaining
+twenty-four consisted of Englishmen, and <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg182" id="pg182">182</a></span>included many of Edward's
+wisest counsellors. In deference to Scottish feeling, Edward
+ordered the court to meet on Scottish territory, at Berwick, and
+appointed August 2 for the opening day. Meanwhile the full
+consequences of the Scottish submission were carried out. On
+Edward's taking seisin of Scotland, the regency came to an end. The
+nomination of the provisional government resting with Edward, he
+reappointed the former regents, and allowed the Scots barons to
+elect their chancellor. But with the regents Edward associated a
+northern baron, Brian Fitzalan of Bedale, and the Scottish bishop,
+who was appointed chancellor, had to act jointly with one of
+Edward's clerks. Edward then made a short progress, reaching as far
+as Stirling and St. Andrews. He was back at Berwick for the meeting
+of the commissioners on August 2.</p>
+
+<p>The first session of the court was a brief one. The twelve
+competitors put in their claims, and Bruce and Balliol supported
+theirs by argument. However, on August 12, the trial was adjourned
+for nearly a year, until June 2, 1292. On its resumption in
+Edward's presence, the more difficult issues were carefully worked
+out. A new and fantastic claim, sent in by Eric of Norway, as the
+nearest of kin to his daughter, did not delay matters. The judges
+were instructed to settle in the first instance the relative claims
+of Bruce and Balliol, and also to decide by what law these should
+be determined. On October 14, they declared their first judgment.
+They rejected Bruce's plea that the decision should follow the
+"natural law by which kings rule," and accepted Balliol's
+contention that they should follow the laws of England and
+Scotland. They further laid down that the law of succession to the
+throne was that of other earldoms and dignities. They pronounced in
+favour of primogeniture as against proximity of blood.</p>
+
+<p>These decisions practically settled the case, but a further
+adjournment was resolved upon, and upon the reassembling of the
+court on November 6 the only question still open, that of whether
+the kingdom could be divided, was taken up. John of Hastings came
+on the scene with the contention that the monarchy should be
+divided among the representatives of Earl David's daughters. Bruce
+had the effrontery to associate himself with Hastings' demand. A
+short adjournment was arranged to settle this issue, and on
+November 17 the final scene <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg183"
+id="pg183">183</a></span>took place in the hall of Berwick castle.
+Besides the commissioners, the king was there in full parliament,
+and eleven claimants, who still persevered, were present or
+represented by proxy. Nine of these were severally told that they
+would obtain nothing by their petitions. Bruce was informed that
+his claim to the whole was incompatible with his present claim for
+a third. It was laid down that the kingdom of Scotland was
+indivisible, and that the right of Balliol had been
+established.</p>
+
+<p>The seal of the regency was broken: Edward handed over the
+seisin of Scotland to John Balliol, who three days later took the
+oath of fealty as King of Scots, promising that he would perform
+all the service due to Edward from his kingdom, Balliol hurried to
+his kingdom, and was crowned at Scone on St. Andrew's day. He then
+returned to England, and kept Christmas with his overlord at
+Newcastle, where, on December 26, he did homage to Edward in the
+castle hall. But within a few days a difficulty arose. John
+resented Edward's retaining the jurisdiction over a law-suit in
+which a Berwick merchant, a Scotsman, was a party. He was reassured
+by Edward that he only did so, because the case had arisen during
+the vacancy, when Edward was admittedly ruling Scotland. But Edward
+significantly added a reservation of his right of hearing appeals,
+even in England; and when the King of Scots went back to his realm,
+early in January, he must have already foreseen that there was
+trouble to come.</p>
+
+<p>Edward never lost sight of his own interests, and it is clear
+that he took full advantage of the needs of the Scots to establish
+a close supremacy over the northern kingdom. Making allowance for
+this sinister element, his general policy in dealing with the great
+suit had been singularly prudent and correct. He was anxious to
+ascertain the right heir; he gave the Scots a preponderating voice
+in the tribunal; he rejected the temptation which Bruce and
+Hastings dangled before him of splitting up the realm into three
+parts, and he restored the land and its castles as soon as the suit
+was settled. There is nothing to show that up to this point his
+action had produced any resentment in Scotland, and little evidence
+that there was any strong national feeling involved. Scottish
+chroniclers, who wrote after the war of independence, have given a
+colour to Edward's policy which contemporary evidence does not
+justify. From the <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg184" id=
+"pg184">184</a></span>point of his generation, his action was just
+and legal. He had, in fact, performed a signal service to Scotland
+in vindicating its unity; and by maintaining the rigid doctrines of
+Anglo-Norman jurisprudence, he rescued it from the vague philosophy
+which Bruce called natural law, and the recrudescence of Celtic
+custom that gave even bastards a hope of the succession. The real
+temptation came when, after his triumph, Edward sought to extract
+from the submission of the Scots consequences which had no warranty
+in custom, and made Scottish resistance inevitable.</p>
+
+<p>The expulsion of the Jews, the reform of the administration, the
+statute <i>Quia emptores</i>, the treaty of Tarascon, the
+humiliation of Gloucester, and the successful issue of the Scottish
+arbitration, mark the culminating point in the reign of Edward I.
+The king had ruled twenty years with almost uniform success, and
+his only serious disappointment had been the failure of the
+crusade. The last hope of the Latin East faded when, in 1291, Acre,
+so long the bulwark of the crusaders against the Turks, opened its
+gates to the infidel. With the fall of Acre went the last chance of
+the holy war. Before long the peace of Europe, which Edward thought
+that he had established, was once more rudely disturbed.
+Difficulties soon arose with Scotland, with France, with the
+Church, and with the barons. These troubles bore the more severely
+on the king because this period saw also the removal of nearly all
+of those in whom he had placed special trust. The gracious Eleanor
+of Castile died in 1290, at Harby, in Nottinghamshire, near
+Lincoln,[1] and the devotion of the king to the partner of his
+youth found a striking expression in the sculptured crosses, which
+marked the successive resting-places of her corpse on its last
+journey from Harby to Westminster Abbey. A few months later
+Edward's mother, Eleanor of Castile, ended her long life in the
+convent of Amesbury, in Wiltshire. The ministers of Edward's early
+reign were also removed by death. Bishop Kirkby, the treasurer,
+died in 1290, and Burnell, the chancellor, in 1292, soon after he
+had performed his last public act in the declaration of the king's
+judgment as to the Scottish succession. Archbishop Peckham died in
+the same year. New domestic ties were formed, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg185" id="pg185">185</a></span>and fresh
+ministers were found, but the ageing king became more and more
+lonely, as he was compelled to rely upon a younger and a less
+faithful generation. Of his old comrades the chief remaining was
+Henry Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, while the removal of Burnell brought
+forward to the first rank prelates whose position had hitherto been
+somewhat obscured by his predominance. Prominent among these were
+the brothers Thomas Bek, Bishop of St. David's, and Anthony Bek,
+Bishop of Durham, members of a conspicuous Lincolnshire baronial
+family. Both of these for a time strikingly combined devotion to
+the royal service with loyalty to those clerical and aristocratic
+traditions which, strictly interpreted, were almost incompatible
+with faithful service to a secular monarch. Even more important
+henceforth was the king's treasurer, Walter Langton, Bishop of
+Lichfield, the most trusted minister of Edward's later life, a
+faithful but not too scrupulous prelate of the ministerial type,
+who stood to the second half of the reign in almost the same close
+relation as that in which Burnell stood to the years which we have
+now traversed.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See for this W.H. Stevenson, <i>Death of
+Eleanor of Castile</i>, in <i>English Hist. Review</i>, iii.
+(1888), pp. 315-318.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+<h4>THE FRENCH AND SCOTTISH WARS AND THE CONFIRMATION OF THE
+CHARTERS.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg186" id=
+"pg186">186</a></span>Troubles arose between France and England
+soon after Edward had settled the Scottish succession. Neither
+Edward nor Philip the Fair sought a conflict. Edward was satisfied
+with his diplomatic successes, and Philip's designs upon Gascony
+were better pursued by chicane than by warfare. But questions arose
+of a different kind from the disputes as to feudal right, which had
+been hitherto the principal matters in debate between the two
+crowns.</p>
+
+<p>There had long been keen commercial rivalry between the Cinque
+Ports and the traders of Normandy. The sailors of Bayonne and other
+Gascon harbours had associated themselves with the English against
+the Normans, and both sides loudly complained to their respective
+rulers of the piracies and homicides committed by their enemies.
+Edward and Philip did what they could to smooth over matters, but
+were alike unable to prevent their subjects flying at each other's
+throats. The story spread that a Norman ship was to be seen in the
+Channel with' English sailors and dogs hanging suspended from her
+yard-arms: "And so," says Hemingburgh, "they sailed over the sea,
+making no difference between a dog and an Englishman". Indignation
+at this outrage drove the English to act together in large
+organised squadrons. The French adopted the same tactics, and a
+collision soon ensued. On May 15, 1293, an Anglo-Gascon merchant
+fleet encountered a Norman fleet off Saint Mahe in Brittany. A
+pitched battle, probably prearranged, at once ensued. It ended in a
+complete victory for the less numerous English squadron, which
+immediately returned to Portsmouth, laden with booty.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg187" id=
+"pg187">187</a></span>Even after this, Edward strove to keep the
+peace, and endeavoured to exact compensation from his subjects.
+They answered with a highly coloured narrative of the dispute which
+threw the whole blame upon the Normans. Philip, changing his
+policy, took up his subjects' cause, and summoned Edward to answer
+in January, 1294, before the Parliament of Paris for the piracy
+exercised by his mariners, the misdeeds of his Gascon subjects, and
+the violent measures taken by his officers against any who appealed
+to the court of Paris. Edward sent his brother, Edmund, to reply
+for him. As Count of Champagne and the step-father of Philip's
+wife, Joan, Edmund seemed a peculiarly acceptable negotiator. After
+long debates, the personal intervention of the French queen, and
+Philip's step-mother, Mary of Brabant, resulted in an agreement
+being arranged. The overlord's grievances could not be denied, and
+it was urged that the formal surrender of part of Gascony might be
+made by way of recognising them. French garrisons were therefore to
+be admitted into six Gascon strongholds; twenty Gascon hostages
+were to be delivered over to Philip, while the seisin of the duchy
+was also to be transferred to the French king, who pledged himself
+not to change the officials nor to occupy the land in force. The
+whole business was in fact to be as formal as the delivery of the
+seisin of Scotland to Edward during the suit for the succession.
+Meanwhile, Edward and Philip were to arrange a meeting at Amiens to
+settle the conditions of a permanent peace, by which Edward was to
+take Philip's sister, Margaret, as his second wife, and the Gascon
+duchy was to be settled upon the offspring of the union. That
+Edward or Edmund should ever have contemplated such terms is a
+strong proof of their zeal for peace. It soon became clear that
+Edmund had been outrageously duped, and that the whole negotiation
+was a trick to secure for Philip the permanent possession of
+Gascony. The constable of France appeared on the Aquitanian
+frontier. The English seneschal surrendered the six castles and the
+seisin of the land. Gradually the French king began to take actual
+possession of the government. Moreover, after three months, the
+proceedings against Edward in the parliament of Paris were resumed;
+Edward was declared contumacious on the ground of his
+non-appearance, and sentence of forfeiture was passed.</p>
+
+<p>Philip's treachery was thus manifest? and in great disgust <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg188" id="pg188">188</a></span>Edmund
+withdrew from France. Edward was deeply indignant. In a parliament,
+held in June, 1294, which was attended by the King of Scots, war
+was resolved upon. The feudal tenants were summoned to assemble at
+Portsmouth on September 1; and Edward appealed for help to his
+Gascon subjects, beseeching their pardon for having negotiated the
+fatal treaty, and promising a speedy effort to restore them to his
+obedience. He sent them his nephew, John of Brittany, as his
+lieutenant and captain-general, under whom John of St. John was to
+act as seneschal of Gascony. Ambassadors were despatched to all
+neighbouring courts to build up a coalition against the French.
+Strenuous efforts were made to get together men and money, and the
+clergy were forced to make a grant of a half of their spiritual
+income. Edward overbore their opposition amidst a scene of
+excitement in which the Dean of St. Paul's fell dead at the king's
+feet. The shires were mulcted of a tenth and the boroughs of a
+sixth. And besides these constitutional exactions, the king laid
+violent hands on all the coined money deposited in the treasuries
+of the churches, and appropriated the wool of the merchants, which
+he only restored on the payment of a heavy pecuniary redemption.
+Meanwhile, about Michaelmas the lieutenant and the seneschal sailed
+with a fairly strong force. Further levies were summoned to
+assemble at Portsmouth at later dates. Besides the ordinary tenants
+of the crown, writs were sent to the chief magnates of Ireland and
+Scotland; and Wales and its march were called upon to furnish all
+the men that could be mustered. The Earls of Cornwall and Lincoln
+were appointed to the command, and Edward himself proposed to
+follow them to Gascony as soon as he could.</p>
+
+<p>At the moment of the departure of John of Brittany a sudden
+insurrection in Wales frustrated Edward's plans. All Wales was ripe
+for revolt. In the principality the Cymry resented English rule,
+and the sulky marchers stood aloof in sullen discontent, while
+their native tenants, seeing in the recent humiliation of
+Gloucester and Hereford the degradation of all their lords, lost
+respect for such powerless masters. Both in the principality and in
+the marches, Edward's demand for compulsory service in Gascony was
+universally regarded as a new aggression. The intensity of the
+resistance to his demand can be measured by the general nature of
+the insurrection, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg189" id=
+"pg189">189</a></span>by the admirable way in which it was
+organised. As by a common signal all Wales rose at Michaelmas,
+1294. One Madog, probably a bastard son of Llewelyn, son of
+Griffith, raised all Gwynedd, took possession of Carnarvon castle,
+and closely besieged the other royal strongholds. In west Wales a
+chieftain named Maelgwn was equally successful in Carmarthen and
+Cardigan. The marches were in arms equally with the principality.
+In the north, Lincoln's tenants in Rhos and Rhuvoniog besieged
+Denbigh, and threatened the king's fortresses in Flint. Maelgwn's
+sphere of operations included the earldom of Pembroke, while Brecon
+rose against Hereford, and Glamorgan against Gilbert of Gloucester.
+Morgan, the leader of the Glamorganshire rebels, loudly declared
+that he did not rebel against the king but against the Earl of
+Gloucester. With the beginning of winter the state of Wales was
+more critical than in the worst times of the winter of 1282.</p>
+
+<p>Edward postponed his attack on Philip in order to throw all his
+energies into the reduction of Wales. The levies assembled at
+Portsmouth for the Gascon expedition were hurried beyond the
+Severn. The king held another parliament and exacted a fresh
+supply. Criminals were offered pardon and good wages, if they would
+serve, first in Wales and then in Gascony. Before Christmas about a
+thousand men-at-arms were mustered at various border centres under
+the royal standards, while every marcher lord was busily engaged in
+putting down his own rebels. Before so great a force the Welsh
+could do but little, and the spring saw the extinction of the
+rebellion. But there was hard fighting both in the south and in the
+north. Edward himself undertook the reconquest of Gwynedd. He was
+at Conway before the end of the year, and in his haste he threw
+himself into the town while the mass of his army remained on the
+right bank of the river. High tides and winter floods made the
+crossing of the stream impossible, and for a short time the king
+was actually besieged by the rebels. Conway was unprepared for
+resistance and almost destitute of supplies. The garrison thought
+it a terrible hardship that they had to live on salt meat and
+bread, and to drink water mixed with honey. They were encouraged by
+Edward refusing to taste better fare than his troopers, and
+declining to partake of the one small measure of wine reserved for
+his use. William Beauchamp, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg190"
+id="pg190">190</a></span>Earl of Warwick, conveyed his troops
+across the estuary and raised the siege. Yet the insurgents were
+still able to fight a pitched battle. About January 22, 1295,
+Warwick found the Welsh established in a strong position in a plain
+between two woods. They had fixed the butts of their lances into
+the ground, hoping thus to resist the shock of a cavalry charge.
+Improving on the tactics of Orewyn bridge, the earl stationed
+between his squadrons of knights, archers and crossbowmen, whose
+missiles inflicted such loss on the Welsh lines that the cavalry
+soon found it safe to charge. The Welsh were utterly broken, and
+never in a single day did they suffer such enormous losses. Even
+more important than its results in breaking the back of Madog's
+insurrection, this battle of Maes Madog&mdash;or Madog's field, as
+the Welsh called the place of their defeat&mdash;is of the highest
+importance in the development of infantry tactics. The order of the
+victorious force strikingly anticipates the great battles in
+Scotland and France of a later generation. In obscure fights, like
+Orewyn bridge and Maes Madog, the English learnt the famous battle
+array which was to overwhelm the Scots in the later years of
+Edward's reign and prepare the way for the triumphs of Crecy and
+Poitiers.</p>
+
+<p>Madog still held out, and with the advent of spring, 1295,
+Edward began to hunt him from his lairs. Gwynedd was cleared of the
+enemy and Anglesey was reconquered. Carnarvon castle arose from its
+ruins in the stately form that we still know, while on the Anglesey
+side of the Menai the new stronghold of Beaumaris arose, to ensure
+the subjection of the granary of Gwynedd. In May Edward felt strong
+enough to undertake a progress in South Wales. After receiving the
+submissions of the rebels of Cardigan and Carmarthen, he won back
+for the lords of Brecon and Glamorgan the lands which, without his
+help, they had been unable to conquer. The Welsh chieftains were
+leniently treated. While Madog was imprisoned in the Tower, Morgan
+was at once set at liberty. By July Edward was able to leave Wales.
+Yet his triumph had taxed all his resources, and left him,
+overwhelmed with debt, to face the irritation of subjects
+unaccustomed to such demands upon their loyalty and patriotism. But
+nothing broke his dauntless spirit, and once more he busied himself
+in obtaining revenge on the false King of France.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg191" id=
+"pg191">191</a></span>It was inevitable that the Welsh war should
+have reduced to slender proportions the expedition of John of
+Brittany and John of St. John for the recovery of Gascony. After a
+tedious voyage the English expedition sailed up the Gironde late in
+October, 1294. Their forces, strong enough to capture Bourg and
+Blaye, were not sufficient to attack Bordeaux. Leaving the capital
+in the hands of its conquerors, the English sailed past Bordeaux to
+Rioms, where they disembarked. The small towns of the neighbourhood
+were taken and garrisoned, and the Gascon lords began to flock to
+the camp of their duke. Before long the army was large enough to be
+divided. John of Brittany remained at Rioms, while John of St. John
+marched overland to Bayonne. The French garrison was unable to
+overpower the enthusiasm of the Bayonnais for Edward, and the
+capture of the second town of Gascony was the greatest success
+attained by the invaders. With the spring of 1295, however, Charles
+of Valois, brother of the King of France, was sent to operate
+against John of Brittany. The English and Gascons found themselves
+unable to make head against him. There was ill-feeling between the
+two nations that made up the army, and also between the nobly-born
+knights and men-at-arms and the foot soldiers. The infantry
+mutinied, and John of Brittany fled by night down the river from
+Rioms, leaving many of his knights and all his horses and armour in
+the town. Next day Rioms opened its gates to Charles of Valois, who
+gained immense spoils and many distinguished prisoners. Save for
+the capture of Bayonne, the expedition had been a disastrous
+failure.</p>
+
+<p>Edward failed even more signally in his efforts to defeat Philip
+by diplomacy. He had left no effort unspared to build up a great
+coalition against the French king. He "sent a great quantity of
+sterling money beyond the sea," and made alliances with all the
+princes and barons that he could find.[1] At first it seemed that
+he had succeeded. Adolf of Nassau, the poor and dull, but strenuous
+and hard-fighting King of the Romans, concluded a treaty with
+England, and did not think it beneath the dignity of the lord of
+the world to take the pay of the English monarch. Many vassals of
+the empire, especially in the Netherlands, the Rhineland, and
+Burgundy followed Adolf's <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg192" id=
+"pg192">192</a></span>example. Edward strengthened his party
+further by marrying three of his daughters to the Duke of Brabant,
+the son of the Count of Holland, and the Count of Bar as the price
+of their adherence to the coalition. He made closer his ancient
+friendship with Guy of Dampierre, the old Count of Flanders, by
+betrothing Edward of Carnarvon to his daughter Philippine. At the
+same time he sought the friendship of the lords of the Pyrenees,
+such as the Count of Foix, and of the kings of the Spanish
+peninsula. But nothing came of the hopes thus excited, save fair
+promises and useless expenditure. Before long Philip of France was
+able to build up a French party in appearance as formidable-in
+reality as useless as Edward's attempted confederation. Edward's
+most important ally, Guy of Flanders, was forced to renounce his
+daughter's marriage to the heir of England and hand her over to
+Philip's custody. The time was not yet come for effective European
+coalitions; the real fighting had to be done by the parties
+directly interested in the quarrel.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See a contemporary notice printed by F.
+Funck-Brentano in <i>Revue Historique</i>, xxxix. (1889), pp.
+329-30.</p>
+
+<p>The command of the sea continued to be a vital question. The
+Norman sailors were eager to avenge their former defeats, and
+Philip saw that the best way to preserve his hold over Gascony was
+to be master of the Channel and the Bay of Biscay. Edward prepared
+to meet attack by establishing an organisation of the English navy
+which marks an epoch in the history of our admiralty. He divided
+the vessels told off to guard the sea into three classes, and set
+over each a separate admiral. John of Botecourt was made admiral of
+the Yarmouth and eastern fleet; William of Leyburn was set over the
+navy at Portsmouth; and the western and Irish squadron was put
+under a valiant knight of Irish origin. Meanwhile the French
+planned an invasion of England, and promised James of Aragon that,
+when England was conquered, its king should be considered his
+personal prize. Galleys were hired at Marseilles and Genoa for
+service in the Channel, and Sir Thomas Turberville, a
+Glamorganshire knight captured at Rioms, turned traitor and was
+restored to England in the hope that he might obtain the custody of
+some seaport and betray it to the enemy. Turberville strove in vain
+to induce Morgan to head another revolt in Glamorgan, and urged
+upon Philip the need of an alliance with the Scots. At last the
+invasion was attempted, and the French admiral, Matthew of
+Montmorenci, sacked and burnt the town of Dover. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg193" id="pg193">193</a></span>Luckily,
+however, Turberville's treason was discovered, and the Yarmouth
+fleet soon avenged the attack on Dover by burning Cherbourg. In the
+face of such resistance, Philip IV. abandoned his plan of invasion
+and tried to establish a sort of "continental blockade" of English
+ports in which a modern writer has seen an anticipation of the
+famous dream of Napoleon.[1] Though nothing came of these grandiose
+schemes, yet the efforts made to organise invasion had their
+permanent importance as resulting in the beginnings of the French
+royal navy. As late as 1297 a Genoese was appointed admiral of
+France in the Channel, and strongly urged the invasion of England
+and its devastation by fire and flame. But the immediate result of
+Philip's efforts to cut off England from the continent was that his
+Flemish allies found in his policy a new reason for abandoning his
+service. On January 7, 1297, a fresh treaty of alliance between
+Edward and Guy, Count of Flanders, was concluded.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See for this Jourdain, <i>M&eacute;moire sur
+les Commencements de la Marine fran&ccedil;aise sous Philippe le
+Bel</i> (1880), and C. de la Ronci&egrave;re, <i>Le Blocus
+continental de l'Angleterre sous Philippe le Bel</i> in <i>Revue
+des Questions historiques</i>, lx. (1896), 401-41.</p>
+
+<p>More effective than Philip's efforts to combine the Continent
+against the English were his endeavours to stir up opposition to
+Edward in Britain. The Welsh rising of 1294 had taken place
+independently of him, but it was not Philip's fault that Morgan did
+not once more excite Glamorgan to rebellion. A better opening for
+intrigue was found in Scotland. Ever since the accession of John
+Balliol, there had been appeals from the Scottish courts to those
+of Edward. Certain suits begun under the regency, which had acted
+in Edward's name from 1290 to 1292, gave the overlord an
+opportunity of inserting the thin end of the wedge; and it looked
+as if, after a few years, appeals from Edinburgh to London would be
+as common as appeals from Bordeaux to Paris. But whatever were the
+ancient relations of England and Scotland, it is clear that the
+custom of appeals to the English king had never previously been
+established. It was no wonder then that what seemed to Edward an
+inevitable result of King John's submission, appeared to the Scots
+an unwarrantable restriction of their independence.</p>
+
+<p>The weakness and simplicity of King John left matters to take
+their course for a time, but the king, who was not strong <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg194" id="pg194">194</a></span>enough to
+stand up against Edward, was not the man to resist the pressure of
+his own subjects. On his return from the London parliament of June,
+1294, the Scots barons virtually deposed him. A committee was set
+up by parliament consisting of four bishops, four earls, and four
+barons which, though established professedly on the model of the
+twelve peers of France, had a nearer prototype in the fifteen
+appointed under the Provisions of Oxford. To this body the whole
+power of the Scottish monarchy was transferred, so that John became
+a mere puppet, unable to act without the consent of his twelve
+masters. Under this new government the relations of England and
+Scotland soon became critical. The Scots denied all right of appeal
+to the English courts, and expelled from their country the nobles
+whose possessions in England gave them a greater interest in the
+southern than in the northern kingdom. Among the dispossessed
+barons was Robert Bruce, son of the claimant, by marriage already
+Earl of Carrick, and now by his father's recent death lord of
+Annandale. In defiance of Edward's prohibition the Scots received
+French ships, and subjected English traders at Berwick to many
+outrages. At last, on July 5, 1295, an alliance was signed between
+Scotland and France, by which Edward Balliol, the eldest son of
+King John, was betrothed to Joan, the eldest daughter of Charles of
+Valois, the brother of the French king. On this, Edward demanded
+the surrender of three border castles, and on the refusal of the
+Scots, cited John to appear at Berwick on March 1, 1296. Thus, by a
+process similar to that which had embroiled Edward with his French
+overlord, the King of Scots also was forced to face the alternative
+of certain war or humiliating surrender.</p>
+
+<p>To Edward a breach with Scotland was unwelcome. In 1294 the
+Welsh had prevented him using all his power against France, and in
+1295 the Scots troubles further postponed his prospects of revenge.
+But no suggestion of compromise or delay came from him. On his
+return to London early in August, 1295, he busied himself with
+preparing to resist the enemies that were gathering around him on
+every side. It was the moment of the raid on Dover, and the French
+question was still the more pressing. In a parliament of magnates
+at London, Edmund of Lancaster told the story of his Paris embassy
+with such effect that two cardinal-legates, whom the new pope,
+Boniface VIII., <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg195" id=
+"pg195">195</a></span>had sent in the hope of making peace, were
+put off politely, on the ground that Edward could make no treaty
+without the consent of his ally, the King of the Romans. Edmund was
+appointed commander of a new expedition to Gascony, though his weak
+health delayed his departure. Meanwhile Edward called upon every
+class of his subjects to co-operate with him in his defence of the
+national honour. He was statesman enough to see that he could only
+cope with the situation, if England as a whole rallied round him.
+His best answer to the Scots and the French was the convention of
+the "model parliament" of November, 1295.</p>
+
+<p>The deep political purpose with which this parliament was
+assembled is reflected even in the formal language of the writs.
+"Inasmuch as a most righteous law of the emperors," wrote Edward,
+"ordains that what touches all should be approved by all, so it
+evidently appears that common dangers should be met by remedies
+agreed upon in common. You know well how the King of France has
+cheated me out of Gascony, and how he still wickedly retains it.
+But now he has beset my realm with a great fleet and a great
+multitude of warriors, and proposes, if his power equal his
+unrighteous design, to blot out the English tongue from the face of
+the earth." To avert this peril, Edward summoned not only a full
+and representative gathering of magnates, but also two knights from
+every shire and two burgesses from every borough. Moreover, the
+lower clergy were also required to take part in the assembly, the
+archdeacons and deans in person, the clergy of every cathedral
+church by one proctor, the beneficed clerks of each diocese by two
+proctors. Thus the assembly became so systematic a representation
+of the three estates' that after ages have regarded it as the type
+upon which subsequent popular parliaments were to be modelled. This
+gathering marks the end of the parliamentary experiments of the
+earlier part of the reign. It met on November 27, and each estate,
+deliberating separately, contributed its quota to the national
+defence. The barons and knights offered an eleventh, and the
+boroughs a seventh. It was a bitter disappointment to Edward that
+the clergy could not be induced to make a larger grant than a
+tenth. Enough, however, was obtained to equip the two armies which,
+in the spring of 1296, were to operate against the French and the
+Scots.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg196" id=
+"pg196">196</a></span>The Gascon expedition was the first to start.
+Early in March, 1296, Edmund of Lancaster, accompanied by the Earl
+of Lincoln, landed at Bourg and Blaye. John of St. John was still
+maintaining himself in that district as well as at Bayonne. On the
+appearance of the reinforcements the Gascon lords began to flock to
+the English camp, and a large force was at once able to take the
+field. On March 28 an attempt was made to capture Bordeaux by a
+sudden assault. On its failure Edmund, who did not possess the
+equipment necessary for a formal siege, sailed up the river to
+Saint-Macaire and occupied the town. But the castle held out
+gallantly, and after a three weeks' siege Edmund retired to his
+original position on the lower Gironde. Even there he found
+difficulty in holding his own, and before long shifted his quarters
+to Bayonne. He had exhausted his resources, and found that his army
+could not be kept together without pay. "Thereupon," writes
+Hemingburgh, "his face fell and he sickened about Whitsuntide. So
+with want of money came want of breath too, and after a few days he
+went the way of all flesh." Lincoln, his successor, managed still
+to stand his ground against Robert of Artois. At last Artois made a
+successful night attack upon the English, captured St. John, and
+destroyed all his war-train and baggage. The darkness of the night
+and the shelter of the neighbouring woods alone saved the English
+army from total destruction. "After this," boasted William of
+Nangis, "no Englishman or Gascon dared to go out to battle against
+the Count of Artois and the French." At Easter, 1297, a truce was
+concluded which left nearly all Gascony in French hands.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after the departure of his brother for Gascony, Edward went
+to war against the Scots, regarding the non-appearance of King John
+on March 1 at Berwick as a declaration of hostility. The lord of
+Wark offered to betray his castle to the Scots, and Edward's
+successful effort to save it first brought him to the Tweed.
+Meanwhile the men of Annandale under their new lord, the Earl of
+Buchan, engaged in a raid on Carlisle, but failed to capture the
+city, and speedily returned home. On March 28, the day on which his
+brother attacked Bordeaux, Edward crossed the Tweed at Coldstream,
+and marched down its left bank towards Berwick. On March 30 Berwick
+was captured. The townsmen fought badly, and the heroes of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg197" id=
+"pg197">197</a></span>resistance were thirty Flemish merchants, who
+held their factory, called the Red Hall, until the building was
+fired, and the defenders perished in the flames. The garrison of
+the castle, commanded by Sir William Douglas, laid down their arms
+at once.</p>
+
+<p>Edward spent a month in Berwick, strengthening the
+fortifications of the town, and preparing for an invasion of
+Scotland. Early in April, King John renounced his homage and,
+immediately afterwards, the Scots lords who had attacked Carlisle
+devastated Tynedale and Redesdale, penetrating as far as Hexham.
+Edward's command of the sea made it impossible for the raiders to
+cut off his communications with his base, and they quickly returned
+to their own land, where they threw themselves into Dunbar. Though
+the lord of Dunbar, Patrick, Earl of March, was serving with the
+English king, his countess, who was at Dunbar, invited them into
+the fortress. Dunbar blocked the road into Scotland, and Edward
+sent forward Earl Warenne with a portion of the army in the hope of
+recapturing the position. Warenne laid siege to Dunbar, but on the
+third day, April 27, the main Scots army came to its relief.
+Leaving some of the young nobles to continue the siege, Warenne
+drew up his army in battle array. The Scots thought that the
+English were preparing for flight, and rushed upon them with loud
+cries and blowing of horns. Discovering too late that the enemy was
+ready for battle, they fell back in confusion as far as Selkirk
+Forest. Next day Edward came up from Berwick and received the
+surrender of Dunbar. Henceforth his advance was but a military
+promenade.</p>
+
+<p>Edward turned back from Dunbar to receive the submission of the
+Steward of Scotland at Roxburgh, and to welcome a large force of
+Welsh infantry, whose arrival enabled him to dismiss the English
+foot, fatigued with the slight effort of a month's easy
+campaigning. Thence he made his way to Edinburgh, which yielded
+after an eight days' siege. Stirling castle, the next barrier to
+his progress, was abandoned by its garrison, and there Edward was
+reinforced by some Irish contingents. He then advanced to Perth,
+keeping St. John's feast on June 24 in St. John's own town. On July
+10 Balliol surrendered to the Bishop of Durham at Brechin,
+acknowledging that he had forfeited his throne by his rebellion.
+Edward continued his triumphal progress, preceded at every stage by
+Bishop Bek at <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg198" id=
+"pg198">198</a></span>the head of the warriors of the palatinate of
+St. Cuthbert. He made his way through Montrose up the east coast to
+Aberdeen, and thence up the Don and over the hills to Banff and
+Elgin, the farthest limit of his advance. He returned by a
+different route, bringing back with him from Scone the stone on
+which the Scots kings had been wont to sit at their coronation.
+This he presented as a trophy of victory to the monks of
+Westminster, where it was set up as a chair for the priest
+celebrating mass at the altar over against the shrine of St.
+Edward, though soon used as the coronation seat of English
+kings.</p>
+
+<p>In less than five months Edward had conquered a kingdom. On
+August 22 he was back at Berwick, whither he had summoned a
+parliament of the nobles and prelates of both kingdoms, in order
+that the work of organising the future government of Scotland might
+be completed. Meanwhile a crowd of Scots of every class flocked to
+the victor's court and took oaths of fealty to him. Their names,
+along with those of the persons who made similar recognitions of
+his sovereignly during his Scottish progress, were recorded with
+notarial precision in one of those formal documents with which
+Edward delighted to mark the stages in the accomplishment of his
+task. This record, popularly styled the Ragman Roll, containing the
+names of about two thousand freeholders and men of substance in
+Scotland, is of extreme value to the Scottish genealogist and
+antiquary.[1] The last entries are dated August 28, the day on
+which Edward met his parliament at Berwick. The administration of
+Scotland was provided for. John, Earl Warenne, became the king's
+lieutenant, Hugh Cressingham, treasurer, and William Ormesby,
+justiciar. When the land was subdued Edward showed a strong desire
+to treat the people well. The only precaution taken by him against
+the renewal of disturbances was an order that the former King of
+Scots, John Comyn of Buchan, John Comyn of Badenoch, and other
+magnates of the patriotic party were to dwell in England, south of
+the Trent, until the conclusion of the war with France. As soon as
+his business was accomplished at Berwick, Edward turned his steps
+southwards. At last he seemed free to lead a great <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg199" id="pg199">199</a></span>army against
+Philip the Fair; and, in order to prepare for the French
+expedition, he summoned another parliament to meet at Bury St.
+Edmunds on the morrow of All Souls' day, November 3. At Bury the
+barons, knights, and burgesses made liberal offerings for the war.
+But a new difficulty arose in the absolute refusal of the clergy to
+vote any supplies. Once more the cup of hope was dashed from
+Edward's lips, and he found himself forced to enter into another
+weary conflict, this time with his English liegemen.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] It is printed by the Bannatyne Club, and
+summarised in <i>Cal. Doc. Scot.</i>, ii., 193-214.</p>
+
+<p>So long as Peckham had lived, there had always been a danger of
+a conflict between Church and State. Friar John had ended his
+restless career in 1292, and Edward showed natural anxiety to
+secure as his successor a prelate more amenable to the secular
+authority and more national in his sentiments. The papacy remained
+vacant after the death of Nicholas IV. in 1292, so that there was
+no danger of Rome taking the appointment into its own hands, and
+the happy accident, which had given the monks of Christchurch a
+statesmanlike prior in Henry of Eastry, minimised the chances of a
+futile conflict between the king and the canonical electors. Eastry
+took care that the archbishop-elect should be a person acceptable
+to the sovereign. Robert Winchelsea, the new primate, was an
+Englishman and a secular clerk, who had taught with distinction at
+Paris and Oxford, but had received no higher ecclesiastical
+promotion than the archdeaconry of Essex and a canonry of St.
+Paul's, and was mainly conspicuous for the sanctity of his life,
+his ability as a preacher, and his zeal for making the cathedral of
+London a centre of theological instruction. The vacancy in, the
+papacy forced upon the archbishop-elect a wearisome delay of
+eighteen months in Italy; but at last in September, 1294, he
+received consecration and the <i>pallium</i> from the newly elected
+hermit-pope, Celestine V. Winchelsea on his return strove to show
+that a secular archbishop could be as austere in life, and as
+zealous for the rights of Holy Church, as his mendicant
+predecessors. His desire to walk in the steps of Peckham soon
+brought him into conflict with the king, and in this conflict he
+showed an appreciation of the political situation, and a power of
+interpreting English opinion, which made him the most formidable of
+Edward's domestic opponents. He gained his first victory in the
+parliament of 1295 by preventing the <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg200" id="pg200">200</a></span>clergy from making a larger grant
+than a tenth. But this triumph sank into insignificance as compared
+with the refusal of all aid by the parliament of Bury.</p>
+
+<p>A change in the papacy immensely strengthened Winchelsea's
+position against Edward. In December, 1294, Celestine, overpowered
+with the burden of an office too heavy for his strength, made his
+great renunciation and sought to resume his hermit life. The
+Cardinal Benedict Gaetano was at once elected his successor and
+took the style of Boniface VIII. The son of a noble house of the
+neighbourhood of Anagni, a canonist, a politician, and a zealot,
+the new pope had made personal acquaintance with Edward and England
+from having attended Cardinal Ottobon on his English legation, and
+was eager to appease discord between Christian princes in order to
+forward the crusade. He hated war the more because it was largely
+waged with the money drawn from the clergy, and was indignant that
+the custom of taxing the Church, which was begun under the guise of
+crusading tenths, had become so frequent that both Philip and
+Edward applied it in order to raise revenue from ecclesiastics for
+frankly secular warfare. Within a few weeks of his accession he
+despatched two cardinals to mediate peace between the Kings of
+France and England, and was disgusted at the long delays with which
+both kings had sought to frustrate his intervention. On February
+29, 1296, Boniface issued his famous bull <i>Clericis laicos</i>,
+in which he declared it unlawful for any lay authority to exact
+supplies from the clergy without the express authority of the
+apostolic see. Princes imposing, and clerics submitting to such
+exactions were declared <i>ipso</i> facto excommunicate.</p>
+
+<p>Boniface's contention had been urged by his predecessors, and it
+is improbable that he sought to do more than assert the ancient law
+of the Church and save the clergy all over the Latin world from
+exactions which were fast becoming intolerable. His object was
+quite general, though a pointed reference to the extortions of
+Edward in 1294 showed that he had the case of England before his
+mind. He had no wish to throw down the gauntlet to the princes of
+Christendom, or to quarrel with Edward and Philip, between whom he
+was still conducting negotiations. It was his misfortune that he
+was constantly forced to face fresh conditions which rendered it
+almost <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg201" id=
+"pg201">201</a></span>possible to apply the ancient doctrines.
+Strong national kings, like Edward and Philip, had already shown
+impatience with such traditions of the Church as limited their
+temporal authority. The pope's untimely restatement of the theories
+of the twelfth century at once involved him in his first fierce
+difference with Philip the Fair, and put him into a position in
+which he could only win peace by explaining away the doctrine of
+<i>Clericis laicos</i>. While on the continent the conflict of
+Church and State took the form of a dispute between the French king
+and the papacy, in England it assumed the shape of a struggle
+between Edward and the Archbishop of Canterbury.</p>
+
+<p>In November, 1296, at Bury, Winchelsea admitted the justice of
+the French war, but pleaded the pope's decretal as an absolute bar
+to any grant from the clerical estate. No decision was arrived at,
+and the problem was discussed again in the convocation of
+Canterbury in January, 1297. "We have two lords over us," declared
+the archbishop to his clergy, "the king and the pope; and, although
+we owe obedience to both of these, we owe greater obedience to our
+spiritual than to our temporal lord." All that they could do was to
+entreat the pope's permission to allow them to pay Cæsar that
+which Cæsar by himself had no right to demand. Edward burst into a
+fury on hearing of this new pretext for delay. He declared that the
+clergy must pay a fifth, under penalty of his withdrawing his
+protection from a body which strove to stand outside the
+commonwealth. The clergy remained firm, and separated without
+making any grant. Thereupon, on January 30, the chief justice, John
+of Metingham, sitting in Westminster Hall, pronounced the clergy to
+be outlays. "Henceforth," he declared, "there shall be no justice
+meted out to a clerk in the court of the lord king, however
+atrocious be the injury from which he may have suffered. But
+sentence against a clerk shall be given at the instance of all who
+have a complaint against him." Winchelsea retaliated by publishing
+the sentence of excommunication against violators of the papal
+bull. Two days later the king ordered the sheriffs to take
+possession of the lay fees held by clerks in the province of
+Canterbury. A few ecclesiastics, who privately made an offering of
+a fifth, were alone exempted from this command.</p>
+
+<p>Edward's conflict with the Church was followed within a month by
+a dispute of almost equal gravity with a section of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg202" id="pg202">202</a></span>the barons. He
+summoned a baronial parliament to assemble on February 24 at
+Salisbury, and went down in person to explain his plan of campaign.
+One force was to help his new ally, Guy of Flanders, while another
+was to act in Gascony. Edward himself was to accompany the army to
+Flanders. He requested some of the earls, including Norfolk and
+Hereford, to fight for him in Gascony. The deaths of Edmund of
+Lancaster, Gilbert of Gloucester, and William of Pembroke had
+robbed the baronage of its natural leaders. Earl Warenne was fully
+engaged in the north, and Lincoln was devoted to the king's side.
+The removal of other possible spokesmen made Norfolk and Hereford
+the champions of the party of opposition. For years the friends of
+aristocratic authority had been smarting under the growing
+influence of the crown. The time was ripe for a revival of the
+baronial opposition which a generation earlier had won the
+Provisions of Oxford. Moreover both the earls had personal slights
+to avenge. Hereford bitterly resented the punishment meted out to
+him for waging private war against Earl Gilbert in the march.
+Norfolk was angry because, during the last Welsh campaign, Edward
+had suspended him from the exercise of the marshalship. The form of
+Edward's request at Salisbury gave them a technical advantage which
+they were not slow to seize. Ignoring the broader issues which lay
+between them and the king, they took their stand on their
+traditional rights as constable and marshal to attend the king in
+person. "Freely," declared the earl marshal, "will I go with thee,
+O king, and march before thee in the first line of thy army, as my
+hereditary duty requires." Edward answered: "Thou shalt go without
+me along with the rest to Gascony". The marshal replied: "I am not
+bound to go save with thee, nor will I go". Edward flew into a
+passion: "By God, sir earl, thou shalt either go or hang". Norfolk
+replied with equal spirit: "By that same oath, sir king, I will
+neither go nor hang". The parliament broke up in disorder. Before
+long a force of 1,500 men-at-arms gathered together under the
+leadership of the constable and marshal.</p>
+
+<p>During these stormy times Edward had been straining every nerve
+to equip an adequate army for foreign service. Once more he laid
+violent hands upon the wool and hides of the merchants, while a
+huge male&mdash;tolt, varying from forty shillings <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg203" id="pg203">203</a></span>a sack for raw
+wool to sixty-six shillings and eightpence a sack for carded wool,
+was exacted for such wool as the king's officers suffered to remain
+in the owner's possession. Moreover, vast stores of wheat, barley,
+and oats, salt pork and salt beef were requisitioned all over the
+land. Men said that the king's tyranny could no longer be borne,
+and that the rights decreed to all Englishmen by the Great Charter
+were in imminent danger. The movement, which had begun as a defence
+of feudal right, became a popular revolt in favour of national
+liberty. The commons joined the barons and clergy in the general
+opposition to the headstrong king.</p>
+
+<p>Edward saw that he must divide his enemies if he wished to
+effect his purpose. The clergy were the easiest to deal with.
+Boniface VIII. was already yielding in his struggle against Philip
+the Fair. In the bull, <i>Romana mater</i> of February 2, 1297, he
+had authorised voluntary contributions of the French clergy in the
+case of pressing necessity, without previous recourse to the
+permission of the apostolic see. The same attitude had already been
+taken up by the royalist clergy in England, who redeemed their
+outlawry by offering to the king the fifth of their revenues. In
+March Edward made things easier for the recalcitrants by suspending
+the edict confiscating the lay fees of the Church. Even Winchelsea
+saw the wisdom of abandoning his too heroic attitude. In a
+convocation, held on March 24, he practically applied the doctrine
+of <i>Romana mater</i> to the English situation. "Let each man," he
+declared, "save his own soul and follow his own conscience. But my
+conscience does not allow me to offer money for the king's
+protection or on any other pretext." In the event nearly all the
+clergy bought off the king's wrath by the voluntary payment of a
+fifth. Winchelsea was obdurate. His estates remained for five
+months in the king's hands, and he was forced, like another St.
+Francis, to depend on the charity of the faithful. But even
+Winchelsea did not hold out indefinitely. On July 14 he was
+publicly reconciled with the king outside Westminster Hall, and a
+few days later his goods were restored. On July 31 Boniface
+entirely receded from the doctrine of <i>Cleritis laicos</i> in the
+bull <i>Etsi de statu</i>. Before this could be known in England,
+Winchelsea told his clergy that the king had agreed to confirm the
+Great Charter, if they would but make a grant to carry on the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg204" id="pg204">204</a></span>French
+war. A little later Edward of his own authority exacted a third
+from all clerical revenues. This persistence in his highhanded
+policy made any real reconciliation between Edward and Winchelsea
+impossible. The king never forgave the archbishop, whose action
+demonstrated to all England the divided allegiance of his clergy
+between their two masters. Winchelsea still retained his profound
+distrust of the king, who had set at naught the liberties of Church
+and realm.</p>
+
+<p>The baronial opposition was broken up by devices not dissimilar
+to those which neutralised the antagonism of the clergy. By
+strenuous efforts Edward obtained a fair sum of money for his
+expenses. He let it be understood that, if he took his subjects'
+wool, the talleys given in exchange would be redeemed when better
+times had arrived, and he scrupulously paid for the corn and meat
+that his officers had requisitioned. Meanwhile he summoned all
+possible fighting men from England, Wales, and Ireland to meet at
+London on July 7. The prospect of subjects of the crown being
+forced, whatsoever their feudal obligations might be, to wage war
+beyond sea, threatened to provoke a fresh crisis. But after many
+long altercations, Edward announced that neither the feudal tenants
+nor the twenty-pound freeholders had any legal obligation to go
+with him to Flanders, and offered pay to all who were willing to
+hearken to his "affectionate request" for their services. Under
+these conditions a considerable force of stipendiaries was levied
+without much difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>Hereford and Norfolk abandoned active in favour of passive
+hostility. They refused to serve as constable and marshal, and
+Edward appointed barons of less dignity and greater loyalty to act
+in their place. While all England was busy with the equipment of
+troops and the provision of supplies, they sullenly held aloof. At
+last, when all was ready, Edward issued an appeal to his subjects,
+protesting the purity of his motives, and emphasising the
+inexorable necessity under which he was forced to play the tyrant
+in the interests of the whole realm. By the beginning of August
+such barons as were willing to go to Flanders began to assemble in
+arms at London. The young Edward of Carnarvon was appointed regent
+during his father's absence, and among the councillors who were to
+act in his name was the Archbishop of Canterbury. At last the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg205" id="pg205">205</a></span>king set
+off to embark at Winchelsea. While there, the earls presented to
+him a belated list of grievances. He refused to deal with their
+demand for the confirmation of the charters. "My full council," he
+declared to the envoys of the earls, "is not with me, and without
+it I cannot reply to your requests. Tell those who have sent you
+that, if they will come with me to Flanders, they will please me
+greatly. If they will not come, I trust they will do no harm to me,
+or at any rate to my kingdom." On August 24 he took ship for
+Flanders, and a few days later he and his troops safely landed at
+Sluys, whence they made their way to Ghent. Nearly a thousand
+men-at-arms and a great force of infantry, largely Welsh and Irish,
+swelled the expedition to considerable proportions. After all his
+troubles, Edward found that the loyalty of his subjects enabled him
+to carry out the ideal which he had formulated two years before.
+King and nation were to meet common dangers by action undertaken in
+common.</p>
+
+<p>Everything else was ruthlessly sacrificed in order that the king
+might take an army to Flanders. The Gascon expedition was quietly
+dropped. But the gravest difficulty arose not from Gascony but
+Scotland. Edward's choice of agents to carry out his Scottish
+policy had been singularly unhappy. Warenne, the governor, was a
+dull and lethargic nobleman more than sixty-six years of age. He
+complained of the bad climate of Scotland, and passed most of his
+time on his Yorkshire estates. In his absence Cressingham, the
+treasurer, and Ormesby, the justiciar, became the real
+representatives of the English power. Cressingham was a pompous
+ecclesiastic, who appropriated to his own uses the money set aside
+for the fortification of Berwick, and was odious to the Scots for
+his rapacity and incompetence. Ormesby was a pedantic lawyer, rigid
+in carrying out the king's orders but stiff and unsympathetic in
+dealing with the Scots. Under such rulers Scotland was neither
+subdued nor conciliated. No real effort was made to track to their
+hiding-places in the hills the numerous outlaws, who had abandoned
+their estates rather than take an oath of fealty to Edward. When
+the English governors took action, they were cruel and
+indiscriminating; and often too were lax and careless. Matters soon
+became serious. William Wallace of Elderslie slew an English
+official in Clydesdale, and threw in <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg206" id="pg206">206</a></span>his lot with the outlaws. He was
+joined by Sir William Douglas, the former defender of Berwick. By
+May, 1297, Scotland was in full revolt. In the north, Andrew of
+Moray headed a rising in Strathspey. In central Scotland the
+justiciar barely escaped capture, while holding his court at Scone.
+The south-west, the home both of Wallace and Douglas, proved the
+most dangerous district. There the barons, imitating Bohun and
+Bigod, based their opposition to Edward on his claim upon their
+compulsory service in the French wars. Before long the son of the
+lord of Annandale, Robert Bruce, now called Earl of Carrick, Robert
+Wishart, Bishop of Glasgow, and other magnates were in arms, and in
+close association with Douglas and Wallace.</p>
+
+<p>Edward made light of this rebellion. Resolved to go to Flanders
+at all costs, he contented himself with calling upon the levies of
+the shires north of the Trent to protect his interests in Scotland.
+Early in July, Henry Percy, Warenne's grandson, rode through
+south-western Scotland, at the head of the Cumberland musters, and
+on July 7, the local insurgent leaders, with the exception of
+Wallace, made their submission to him at Irvine. Moreover, Edward
+released the two Comyns from their veiled imprisonment, and sent
+them back to Scotland to help in suppressing the insurrection.
+Henry Percy boasted that the Scots south of the Forth had been
+reduced to subjection. But a few days later Wallace was found to be
+strongly established in Ettrick forest and was threatening
+Roxburgh. At last Edward stirred up Warenne to return to his
+government. The king took the precaution of leaving some of his
+best warriors in England in case their services were needed against
+the recalcitrant barons or the Scots. Then, as has been said, on
+August 24 he crossed over to Flanders.</p>
+
+<p>The constable and marshal were still in arms, and Winchelsea,
+who, in spite of his reconciliation with Edward, was in close
+communication with them, declined to take an active part on the
+council of regency. Two days before Edward took ship, Hereford and
+Norfolk appeared in arms at the exchequer at Westminster, and
+forbade the officials to continue the collection of supplies, until
+the Great Charter and the Charter of the Forest had been confirmed.
+They strove to win the support of the Londoners, who had long had a
+grievance against Edward for depriving them of their right to elect
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg207" id=
+"pg207">207</a></span>their own mayor, and for subjecting the city
+to the arbitrary rule of a warden nominated by the crown. They
+forbade their followers to commit acts of violence, but they made
+it clear that there could be no peace until the charters were
+confirmed.</p>
+
+<p>In August, Warenne grappled with the Scottish rising, but his
+own incompetence, and the half-heartedness of the Scottish
+magnates, on whom he relied, made his task very difficult. Wallace
+retreated beyond the Forth, and Warenne reached Stirling on
+September 10 in pursuit of him. He learnt that Wallace was holding
+the wooded heights, immediately to the north of Stirling bridge on
+the left bank of the Forth, not far from the abbey of
+Cambuskenneth. The Steward of Scotland, who, after the collapse of
+the revolt in the south-west, served under Warenne, offered his
+mediation. But no good result came from his action, and the English
+suspected treachery. Wallace took up a bold attitude, scorning
+either compromise or retreat. He had only a small following of
+cavalry, but his infantry was numerous and enthusiastic. The
+English resolved to attack him on September 11. The Forth at
+Stirling was crossed by a long wooden bridge, so narrow that only
+two horsemen could pass abreast. It was madness to send an army
+over the river by such a means in the face of a watchful enemy. But
+not only was the English plan of battle foolish it was also carried
+out weakly. Warenne overslept himself, and his subordinates wasted
+the early morning in useless discussions and altercations. When at
+last he woke up, he rejected the advice of a Scottish knight to
+send part of his cavalry over the river by a ford which thirty
+horsemen could traverse abreast, and ordered all his troops to
+cross by the bridge.</p>
+
+<p>Wallace, seeing that the enemy had delivered themselves into his
+hands, remained in the woods until a fair proportion of the English
+men-at-arms had made their way over the stream. He then suddenly
+swooped down upon the bridge, cutting off the retreat of those who
+had traversed it, and blocking all possibility of reinforcement.
+After a short fight the English to the north of the Forth were cut
+down almost to a man. The English on the Stirling side, seeing the
+fate of their comrades, fled in terror, and their Scots allies went
+over to their country men. Among the slain was the greedy
+Cressingham, whose skin the Scots tanned into leather. Warenne did
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg208" id="pg208">208</a></span>not
+draw rein until he reached Berwick, and in one day all Scotland was
+lost. The castles of Roxburgh and Berwick alone upheld the English
+flag. Wallace and Moray governed all Scotland as "generals of the
+army of King John". Within a few weeks of their victory, they
+raided the three northern counties of England.</p>
+
+<p>Wallace had freed Scotland, but his wonderful success taught the
+contending factions in England the plain duty of union against the
+common enemy. A new parliament of the three estates was summoned
+for September 30. The opposition leaders came armed, and declared
+that there could be no supply of men or money until their demand
+for the confirmation of the charters was granted. No longer content
+with simple confirmation, they drew up, in the form of a statute, a
+petition requiring that no tallage or aid should henceforth be
+taken without the assent of the estates. This was the so-called
+<i>statutum de tallagio non concedendo</i> which
+seventeenth-century parliaments and judges erroneously accepted as
+a statute. The helpless regency substantially accepted their
+demands, and, on October 12, issued a confirmation of the charters,
+to which fresh clauses were added, providing, with less generality
+than in the baronial request, that no male-tolts, or such manner of
+aids as had recently been extorted, should be imposed in the future
+without the common consent of all the realm, but making no
+reference to tallage.[1] Liberal supplies were then voted by all
+the three estates, and Winchelsea, who all through these
+proceedings acted as the brain of the baronage, exerted himself to
+explain away the last of the clerical difficulties raised by the
+<i>Clericis laicos</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] The Latin, <i>Articuli inserti in magna
+carta</i>, given by Hemingburgh, ii., 152, is quoted as a statute
+in the Petition of Right of 1628, under the title <i>De tallagio
+non concedendo</i>. The view of its relation to the French
+<i>Confirmatio cartavum</i> is that taken by M. B&eacute;mont,
+<i>Chartes des libert&eacute;s anglaises</i>, especially pp.
+xliii., xliv. and 87. It is based on Bartholomew Cotton's nearly
+contemporary statement (<i>Hist. Angl</i>., p. 337).</p>
+
+<p>On November 5 the king ratified, at Ghent, the action of his
+son's advisers. Thus the constitutional struggle was ended by the
+complete triumph of the baronial opposition. And the victory was
+the more signal, because it was gained not over a weak king,
+careless of his rights, but over the strongest of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg209" id="pg209">209</a></span>the
+Plantagenets, greedy to retain every scrap of authority. It is with
+good reason that the Confirmation of the Charters of 1297 is
+reckoned as one of the great turning points in the history of our
+constitution. Its provisions sum up the whole national advance
+which had been made since Gualo and William the marshal first
+identified the English monarchy with the principles wrested from
+John at Runnymede. In the years that immediately followed, it might
+well seem that the act of 1297, like the submission of John, was
+only a temporary expedient of a dexterous statecraft which
+consented with the lips but not with the heart. But in later times,
+when the details of the struggle were forgotten and the noise of
+the battle over, the event stood out in its full significance.
+Edward had been willing to take the people into partnership with
+him when he thought that they would be passive partners, anxious to
+do his pleasure. He was taught that the leaders of the people were
+henceforth to have their share with the crown in determining
+national policy. Common dangers were still to be met by measures
+deliberated in common, but the initiative was no longer exclusively
+reserved to the monarch. The sordid pedantry of the baronial
+leaders and the high-souled determination of the king compel our
+sympathy for Edward rather than his enemies. But all that made
+English history what it is, was involved in the issue, and the
+future of English freedom was assured when the obstinacy of the
+constable and marshal prevailed over the resolution of the great
+king.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<h4>THE SCOTTISH FAILURE.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg210" id=
+"pg210">210</a></span>The expedition of Edward to Flanders lost its
+best chance of success through the events which retarded its
+despatch. While the English king was wrangling with his barons, the
+French king was active. On the news of the alliance of Count Guy
+with the English, Robert of Artois was summoned from Gascony to the
+north. While Philip besieged Lille, and finally took it, Robert of
+Artois gained a brilliant victory over the Flemings at Furnes on
+August 20. Meanwhile John of Avesnes, Count of Hainault, was
+closely co-operating with the French, and kept Edward's son-in-law
+and ally, John, Duke of Brabant, from sending effective help to the
+Flemings. Moreover, the Flemish townsmen, in their dislike of their
+count, were largely on the side of the French. Edward's little army
+could do nothing to redress a balance that already inclined so
+heavily on the other side. The Flemings were disappointed at the
+scanty numbers of the English men-at-arms, and stared with wonder
+and contempt at the bare-legged Welsh archers and lancemen, with
+their uncouth garb, strange habits of eating and fighting, and
+propensity to pillage and disorder, though they recognised their
+hardihood and the effectiveness of their missiles.[1] The same
+disorderly spirit that had marred the Rioms campaign still
+prevailed among the English engaged on foreign service. No sooner
+were the troops landed at Sluys on August 28, than the mariners of
+the Cinque Ports renewed their old feud with the men of Yarmouth,
+and many ships were destroyed and lives lost in this untimely
+conflict. Edward advanced to Bruges, where he was joined by the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg211" id=
+"pg211">211</a></span>Count of Flanders, but the disloyalty of the
+townsmen and the approach of King Philip forced the king and the
+earl to take shelter behind the stronger walls of Ghent.
+Immediately on their retreat, Philip occupied Bruges and Damme,
+thus cutting off the English from the direct road to the sea. The
+Anglo-Flemish army was afraid to attack the powerful force of the
+French king. But the French had learnt by experience a wholesome
+fear of the English and Welsh archers, and did not venture to
+approach Ghent too closely. The ridiculous result followed that the
+Kings of France and England avoided every opportunity of fighting
+out their quarrel, and lay, wasting time and money, idly watching
+each other's movements.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See for Flemish criticisms of the Welsh, L.
+van Velthem, <i>Spiegel Historiaal</i>, pp. 215-16, ed. Le Long,
+partly translated by Funck Brentano in his edition of <i>Annales
+Qandenses</i>, p. 7, a work giving full details of these
+struggles.</p>
+
+<p>The only dignified way of putting an end to this impossible
+situation lay in negotiation. Edward's faithful servant, William of
+Hotham, the Dominican friar whom the pope had appointed Archbishop
+of Dublin, was in the English camp. Hotham, who had enjoyed
+Philip's personal friendship while teaching theology in the Paris
+schools, was an acceptable mediator between the two kings. A short
+truce was signed at Vyve-Saint-Bavon on the Lys on October 7. This
+allowed time for more elaborate negotiations to be carried on at
+Courtrai and Tournai, and on January 31, 1298, a truce, in which
+the allies of both kings were included, was signed at Tournai, to
+last until January 6, 1300. It was agreed to refer all questions in
+dispute to the arbitration of Boniface VIII, "not as pope but as a
+private person, as Benedict Gaetano". Both kings despatched their
+envoys to Rome, where with marvellous celerity Boniface issued, on
+June 30, 1298, a preliminary award. It suggested the possibility of
+a settlement on the basis of each belligerent retaining the
+possessions which he had held at the beginning of the struggle, and
+entering into an alliance strengthened by a double marriage. Edward
+was to marry the French king's sister Margaret, while Edward of
+Carnarvon was to be betrothed to Philip's infant daughter Isabella.
+The latter match involved the repudiation of the betrothal of
+Edward of Carnarvon with the daughter of the Count of Flanders. But
+all through the award there was no mention of the allies of either
+party. Boniface was too eager for peace to be over-scrupulous as to
+the honourable obligations of the two kings who sought his
+mediation.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg212" id=
+"pg212">212</a></span>The English regency, which grappled so
+courageously with the baronial opposition, showed an equal energy
+in protecting the northern counties from the Scots. About the time
+of the confirmation of the charters, Wallace crossed the border and
+spread desolation and ruin from Carlisle to Hexham. Warenne and
+Henry Percy, who had attended the October parliament at London,
+were soon back in the north. By December the largest army which was
+ever assembled during Edward I.'s reign[1] was collected together
+on the borders, and preparations were made for a winter campaign
+after the fashion which had proved so effective in Wales. But all
+that Warenne was able to accomplish was the relief of Roxburgh. The
+quality of the troops was not equal to their quantity, and all his
+misfortunes had not taught him wisdom. Early in Lent Edward stopped
+active campaigning by announcing that no great operations were to
+be attempted until his return. Thereupon Warenne sent the bulk of
+the troops home, and remained at Berwick, awaiting the king's
+arrival.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Morris, <i>Welsh Wars of Edward I.</i>, pp.
+284-86.</p>
+
+<p>Edward landed at Sandwich on March 14, 1298, and at once set
+about preparing to avenge Stirling Bridge. He met his parliament on
+Whitsunday, May 25, at York. The Scots barons were summoned to this
+assembly, but as they neither attended nor sent proxies, their
+absence was deemed to be proof of contumacy. A month later a large
+army was concentrated at Roxburgh. The earls and barons with their
+retinues mustered to the number of 1,100 horse, while 1,300
+men-at-arms served under the king's banners for pay. Though Gascony
+was still in Philip's hands, the good relations that prevailed
+between England and France allowed the presence in Edward's host of
+a magnificent troop of Gascon lords, headed by the lord of Albret
+and the Captal de Buch, and conspicuous for the splendour of their
+armour and the costliness and beauty of their chargers. On this
+occasion Edward set little store on infantry, and was content to
+accept the services of those who came of their own free will. Yet
+even under these conditions some 12,000 foot were assembled, more
+than 10,000 of whom came from Wales and its march.</p>
+
+<p>The leaders of the opposition were present in Edward's <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg213" id="pg213">213</a></span>host. On
+the eve of the invasion, the impatient king was kept back by the
+declaration of Hereford and Norfolk that they would not cross the
+frontier, until definite assurances were given that the king would
+carry out the confirmation of the charters which he had informally
+ratified on foreign soil. Etiquette or pride prevented Edward
+himself satisfying their demand, but the Bishop of Durham and three
+loyal earls pledged themselves that the king would fulfil all his
+promises on his return. Then the two earls suffered the expedition
+to proceed; and on July 6 the army left Roxburgh, proceeding by
+moderate marches to Kirkliston on the Almond, where it encamped on
+the 15th. Here there was a few days' delay, while Bishop Bek
+captured some of the East Lothian castles which were threatening
+the English rear. Already there was a difficulty in obtaining
+supplies from the devastated country-side, and northerly winds
+prevented the provision ships from sailing from Berwick to the
+Forth. The worst hardships fell upon the Welsh infantry, who began
+to mutiny and talked of joining the Scots. Matters grew worse on
+the arrival of a wine ship, for such ample rations of wine were
+distributed to the Welsh that very many of them became drunk. So
+threatening was the state of affairs that Edward thought of
+retreating to Edinburgh. On July 21, however, the news was brought
+that Wallace and his followers were assembled in great force at
+Falkirk, some seventeen miles to the west. The prospect of battle
+at once restored the courage and discipline of the army, and Edward
+ordered an advance. That night the host bivouacked on the moors
+east of Linlithgow, "with shields for pillows and armour for beds".
+During the night the king, who was sleeping in the open field like
+the meanest trooper, received a kick from his horse which broke two
+of his ribs. Yet the early morning of July 22, the feast of St.
+Mary Magdalen, saw him riding at the head of his troops through the
+streets of Linlithgow. At last the Scots lances were descried on
+the slopes of a hill near Falkirk, and the English rested while the
+bishop and king heard mass. Then the army, which had eaten nothing
+since the preceding day, advanced to the battle.</p>
+
+<p>Wallace had a large following of infantry, but a mere handful of
+mounted men-at-arms. He ordered the latter to occupy the rear, and
+grouped his pikemen, the flower of his army, into four great
+circles, or "schiltrons," which, with the front ranks <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg214" id="pg214">214</a></span>kneeling or
+sitting and the rear ranks standing, presented to the enemy four
+living castles, each with a bristling hedge of pikes, dense enough,
+it was hoped, to break the fierce shock of a cavalry charge. The
+spaces between the four schiltrons were occupied by the archers,
+the best of whom came from Ettrick Forest. The front was further
+protected by a morass, and perhaps also by a row of stout posts
+sunk into the ground and fastened together by ropes.</p>
+
+<p>Edward ordered the Welsh archers to prepare the way with their
+missiles for the advance of the men-at-arms. But the Welsh refused
+to move, so that Edward was forced to proceed by a direct cavalry
+charge. For this purpose he divided his men-at-arms into four
+"battles". The first of these was commanded by the Earl of Lincoln,
+with whom were the constable and marshal, who at last had an
+opportunity of serving the king in battle in the offices which
+belonged to them by hereditary right. On approaching the morass
+this first line was thrown into some confusion, and paused in its
+advance. Behind it the second battle, under command of the Bishop
+of Durham, who, perhaps, knew the ground better, wheeled to the
+east and took the Scots on their left flank. But Bek's followers
+disobeyed his orders to wait until the rest of the army came up,
+and they suffered heavy losses in attacking the left schiltron.
+Before long, however, Lincoln found a way round the morass
+westwards to the enemy's right, while the two rearmost battles,
+headed by the king and Earl Warenne, also advanced to the front.
+The combat thus became general. The Scots cavalry fled without
+striking a blow, and some of the English thought that Wallace
+himself rode off the field with them. The archers between the
+schiltrons were easily trampled down, so that the only effective
+resistance came from the circles of pikemen. The yeomanry of
+Scotland steadily held their own against the fierce charges of the
+mail-clad knights, and it looked for a time as if the day was
+theirs. But the despised infantry at last made their way to the
+front and poured in showers of arrows that broke down the Scottish
+ranks. Friend and foe were at such close quarters that the English
+who had no bows threw stones against the Scottish circles. When the
+way was thus prepared, the horsemen easily penetrated through the
+gaps made in the circles, and before long the Scottish pikemen were
+a crowd of <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg215" id=
+"pg215">215</a></span>panic-stricken fugitives. Edward's brilliant
+victory was won with comparatively little loss.</p>
+
+<p>It was years before the Scots again ventured to meet the English
+in the open field. Yet the king's victory was not followed by any
+real conquest even of southern Scotland. Edward advanced to
+Stirling, where he rested until he had recovered from his accident,
+while detachments of his troops penetrated as far as Perth and St.
+Andrews. Meanwhile the south-west rose in revolt, under Robert
+Bruce, Earl of Carrick, whose father had fought at Falkirk. Late in
+August, Edward made his way to Ayr and occupied it, while Bruce
+fled before him. Provisions were still scarce, and the army was
+weary of fighting. The Durham contingent deserted in a body,[1] and
+the earls were so lukewarm that Edward was fain to return by way of
+Carlisle, capturing Lochmaben, Bruce's Annandale stronghold, on the
+way. On September 8 the king reached Carlisle, where the constable
+and marshal declared that they had lost so many men and horses that
+they could no longer continue the campaign. Edward tried to stem
+the tide of desertion by promises of Scottish lands to those who
+would remain with his banners. But the distribution of these
+rewards proved only a fresh source of discontent. At last Edward
+was forced to dismiss the greater part of his forces. He lingered
+in the north until the end of the year, but there was no more real
+fighting; with the beginning of 1299 he returned to the south,
+convinced that the disloyalty of his barons had neutralised his
+triumphs in the field. The few castles which still upheld the
+English cause in Scotland were soon closely besieged.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Lapsley, <i>County Palatine of Durham</i>, p.
+128.</p>
+
+<p>During the whole of 1299 Edward was prevented by other work from
+prosecuting the war against the Scots. Even the borderers were sick
+of fighting, and Bishop Bek, who had hitherto afforded him an
+unswerving support with all the forces of his palatinate, was
+forced to desist from warlike operations by the refusal of his
+tenants to serve any longer beyond the bounds of the lands of St.
+Cuthbert. While the men of Durham abandoned the war, there was
+little reason to wonder at the indifference of the south country as
+to the progress of the Scots. In the Lenten parliament at London,
+the Earls of Hereford and Norfolk <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg216" id="pg216">216</a></span>pressed Edward once more to fulfil
+his promise to carry out the confirmation of the charters. The king
+would not yield to their demand yet dared not refuse it. In his
+perplexity he had recourse to evasions which further embittered his
+relations with them. He promised that he would give an answer the
+next day, but when the morrow came, he secretly withdrew from the
+city. The angry barons followed him to his retreat and reminded him
+of his broken promise. Edward coolly replied that he left London
+because his health was suffering from the corrupt air of the town,
+and bade the barons return, as his council had his reply ready. The
+barons obeyed the king's orders, but their indignation passed all
+bounds when they found that the king's promised confirmation of the
+charters was vitiated by a new clause saving all the rights of the
+crown, and that nothing was said as to the promised perambulation
+of the forests. In bitter wrath the parliament broke up, and the
+Londoners, who shared the anger of the barons, threatened a revolt.
+After Easter these stormy scenes were repeated in a new parliament,
+and Edward was at last forced to yield a grudging assent to all the
+demands of the opposition, and even to appoint a commission for the
+perambulation of the forests. By the time the summer was at hand,
+the progress of the negotiations with France occupied Edward so
+fully that he had abundant excuse for not precipitating a new
+rupture with his barons, by insisting upon a fresh campaign against
+the Scots.</p>
+
+<p>A papal legate presided over a congress of English and French
+ambassadors at Montreuil-sur-mer, which belonged to Edward by right
+of the late queen, Eleanor as Countess of Ponthieu. The outcome of
+these deliberations was the treaty of Montreuil, concluded on June
+19, 1299. It was not the final pacification which had been hoped
+for. Edward indeed abandoned his Flemish allies, but Philip would
+not relax his hold upon Gascony, and without that a definitive
+peace was impossible. The treaty of Montreuil was simply a marriage
+treaty. Edward was forthwith to marry Margaret, and his son was to
+be betrothed to Isabella of France. Neither the prolongation of the
+truce nor the affairs of the Flemings were mentioned in it, while
+all that Philip did for the Scots was to provide for the liberation
+of the deposed King John from his English prison. As soon as the
+ratifications were exchanged the king, who was <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg217" id="pg217">217</a></span>then sixty years
+of age, and his youthful bride were married on September 9 at
+Canterbury by Archbishop Winchelsea.</p>
+
+<p>Edward's willingness to marry the sister of the king who still
+kept him out of Gascony can best be explained by his overmastering
+desire to renew operations in Scotland. Shortly after his marriage,
+he again busied himself with preparations for the long-delayed
+Scots campaign. It was high time that he took action. The English
+garrisons were surrendering one by one, and the Scottish magnates
+were deserting the English cause. Their conversion to patriotic
+principles was made easier by the decay of Wallace's power
+consequent on his defeat at Falkirk. After stormy scenes with his
+aristocratic rivals, Wallace withdrew from Scotland and went to the
+continent, where he implored the help of the King of France. Philip
+proved true to his new brother-in-law, and put Wallace in prison,
+only releasing him that he might go to Rome and enlist the sympathy
+of Boniface VIII. Meanwhile the Scots chose a new regency at the
+head of which was the younger John Comyn of Badenoch. Under these
+changed conditions the Scottish earls rapidly rallied round the
+national cause. Stirling, Edward's chief stronghold in central
+Scotland, was so hardly pressed that the men-at-arms were forced to
+eat their chargers. Yet when the English barons assembled about the
+beginning of winter, in obedience to Edward's summons, they
+stubbornly declared that they would not endure the hardships of a
+winter campaign until the king had fulfilled his pledges as regards
+the charters. Thus left to their own resources, the sorely tried
+garrison of Stirling surrendered to the Scots.</p>
+
+<p>In March, 1300, Edward met his parliament at Westminster.
+Despite the straits to which he was reduced, he was still unwilling
+to make a complete surrender. He avoided a formal re-issue of the
+charters by giving his sanction to a long series of articles, drawn
+up apparently by the barons. These articles provided for the better
+publication of the charters, and the appointment in every shire of
+a commission to punish all offences against them which were not
+already provided for by the common law; together with numerous
+technical clauses "for the relief of the grievances that the people
+have had by reason of the wars that have been, and for the
+amendment of their estate, and that they may be more ready in the
+king's service and more <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg218" id=
+"pg218">218</a></span>willing to aid him when he has need of them
+". This document was known as <i>Articuli super cartas</i>.[1] At
+the same time the forest perambulation, which had long been
+ordered, was directed to be proceeded with at once. For this reason
+a chronicler calls this assembly "the parliament of the
+perambulation".[2] The reconciliation between the king and his
+subjects was attested by a grant of a twentieth.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] It is published in B&eacute;mont's
+<i>Chartes</i>, pp. 99-108, with valuable comments; another draft
+analysed in <i>Hist. MSS. Comm.</i>, 6th Report, i., p. 344.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] Langtoft, ii, 320.</p>
+
+<p>Edward's concessions once more enabled him to face the Scots,
+and the summer saw a gallant army mustered at Carlisle, though some
+of the earls, including Roger Bigod, still held aloof. A two
+months' campaign was fought in south-western Scotland in July and
+August. But the peasants drove their cattle to the hills, and rainy
+weather impeded the king's movements. The chief exploit of the
+campaign was the capture of Carlaverock castle, though even in the
+glowing verse of the herald, who has commemorated the taking of
+this stronghold,[1] the military insignificance of the achievement
+cannot be concealed. Edward returned to the same district in
+October, but he effected so little that he was glad to agree to a
+truce with the Scots, which Philip the Fair urged him to accept.
+The armistice was to last until Whitsuntide, and Edward immediately
+returned to England. He had not yet satisfied his subjects, and was
+again forced to meet his estates.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>The Siege of Carlaverock</i>, ed. Nicolas
+(1828).</p>
+
+<p>A full parliament assembled on January 20, 1301, at Lincoln. The
+special business was to receive the report of the forest
+perambulation; and the first anticipation of the later custom of
+continuing the same parliament from one session to another can be
+discerned in the direction to the sheriffs that they should return
+the same representatives of the shires and boroughs as had attended
+the Lenten parliament of 1300, and only hold fresh elections in the
+case of such members as had died or become incapacitated. During
+the ten days that the commons were in session stormy scenes
+occurred. Edward would only promise to agree to the
+disafforestments recommended by the perambulators, if the estates
+would assure him that he could do so, without violating his
+coronation oath or disinheriting his crown. The estates refused to
+undertake this <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg219" id=
+"pg219">219</a></span>grave responsibility, and a long catalogue of
+their grievances was presented to Edward by Henry of Keighley,
+knight of the shire for Lancashire, and one of the first members of
+the third estate of whose individual action history has preserved
+any trace. The commons demanded a fresh confirmation of the
+charters; the punishment of the royal ministers who had infringed
+them, or the <i>Articuli super cartas</i> of the previous session,
+and the completion of the proposed disafforestments. In addition,
+the prelates declared that they could not assent to any tax being
+imposed upon the clergy contrary to the papal prohibition. Among
+the ministers specially signalled out for attack was the treasurer,
+Bishop Walter Langton, and in this Edward discerned the influence
+of Winchelsea, for he was Langton's personal enemy. The king's
+disgust at the primate's action was the more complete since Bishop
+Bek now arrayed himself on the side of the opposition. Edward
+showed his ill-will by consigning Henry of Keighley to prison. But
+the coalition was too formidable to be withstood. The king agreed
+to all the secular demands of the estates, accepted the hated
+disafforestments and directed the re-issue of a further
+confirmation of the charters, but refused his assent to the demand
+of the prelates. A grant of a fifteenth was then made, and Edward
+dismissed the popular representatives on January 30, retaining the
+prelates and nobles for further business. On February 14, the last
+confirmation of the charters concluded the long chapter of history,
+which had begun at Runnymede.</p>
+
+<p>Edward strove to separate his baronial and his clerical enemies,
+and found an opportunity, which he was not slow to use, in the
+uncompromising papalism of Winchelsea. Boniface VIII. had no sooner
+settled the relations of England and France than he threw himself
+with ardour into an attempt to establish peace between England and
+Scotland. Scottish emissaries, including perhaps Wallace himself,
+gave Boniface their version of the ancient relations of the two
+crowns. On June 27, 1299, the pope issued the letter <i>Scimus,
+fili</i>, in which he claimed that Scotland specially belonged to
+the apostolic see, on the ground that it was converted through the
+relics of St. Andrew. He denied all feudal dependence of Scotland
+on Edward, and explained away the submissions of 1291 as arising
+from such momentary fear as might fall upon the most steadfast. If
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg220" id=
+"pg220">220</a></span>Edward persisted in his claims, he was to
+submit them to the judgment of the Roman <i>curia</i> within the
+next six months. In 1300 Winchelsea, who fully accepted the new
+papal doctrine, sought out Edward in the midst of the Carlaverock
+campaign and presented him with Boniface's letter. Edward's hot
+temper fired up at the archbishop's ill-timed intervention, and
+subsequent military failures had not smoothed over the situation.
+His wrath reached its climax when Winchelsea once more stirred up
+opposition in the Lincoln parliament, and his refusal of a demand,
+which the primate had astutely added to the commons' requests,
+showed that he was prepared for war to the knife. Edward laid the
+papal letter before the earls and barons that still tarried with
+him at Lincoln. His appeal to their patriotism was not
+unsuccessful. A letter was drawn up, which was sealed, then and
+subsequently, by more than a hundred secular magnates, in which
+Boniface was roundly told that the King of England was in no wise
+bound to answer in the pope's court as to his rights over the realm
+of Scotland or as to any other temporal matter, and that the papal
+claim was unprecedented, and prejudicial to Edward's sovereignly. A
+longer historical statement was composed by the king's order in
+answer to Boniface. It is not certain that the two documents ever
+reached the pope, but they had great effect in influencing English
+opinion and in breaking down the alliance between the baronage and
+the ecclesiastical party.[1] Winchelsea's influence was fatally
+weakened, and the period of his overthrow was at hand.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See, on the barons' letter, the
+<i>Ancestor</i>, for July and October, 1903, and Jan., 1904.</p>
+
+<p>The triumph over Winchelsea made Edward's position stronger than
+it had been during the first days of the Lincoln parliament. That
+assembly ended amidst the festivities which attended the creation
+of Edward of Carnarvon as Prince of Wales, Earl of Chester, and
+Count of Ponthieu. The new prince, already seventeen years of age,
+had made his first campaign in the previous year. But all the pains
+that Edward took in training his son in warfare and in politics
+bore little fruit, and Edward of Carnarvon's introduction to active
+life was only to add another trouble to the many that beset the
+king.</p>
+
+<p>When the truce with Scotland expired, in the summer of 1301,
+Edward again led an army over the border, in which the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg221" id="pg221">221</a></span>Prince of Wales
+appeared, at the head of a large Welsh contingent. Little of
+military importance happened. Edward remained in Scotland over the
+cold season, and kept his Christmas court at Linlithgow. Men and
+horses perished amidst the rigours of the northern winter, and,
+before the end of January, 1302, the king was glad to accept a
+truce, suggested by Philip of France, to last until the end of
+November. Immediately afterwards he was called to the south by the
+negotiations for a permanent peace with France, which still hung
+fire despite his marriage to the French king's sister. The earlier
+stages of the negotiation were transacted at Rome, but it was soon
+clear to Edward that no good would come to him from the
+intervention of the <i>curia</i>. The fundamental difficulty still
+lay in the refusal of Philip to relax his grasp on Gascony. Not
+even the exaltation, consequent on the success of the famous
+jubilee of 1300, blinded Boniface to the patent fact that he dared
+not order the restitution of Gascony. "We cannot give you an
+award," declared the pope to the English envoys in 1300. "If we
+pronounced in your favour, the French would not abide by it, and
+could not be compelled, for they would make light of any penalty."
+"What the French once lay hold of," he said again, "they never let
+go, and to have to do with the French is to have to do with the
+devil."[1] A year later Boniface could do no more than appeal to
+the crusading zeal of Edward not to allow his claim on a patch of
+French soil to stand between him and his vow. With such
+commonplaces the papal mediation died away.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See the remarkable report of the Bishop of
+Winchester to Edward printed in <i>Engl. Hist. Review</i>, xvii.
+(1902), pp. 518-27.</p>
+
+<p>Two events in 1302 indirectly contributed towards the
+establishment of a permanent peace. These were the successful
+revolt of Flanders from French domination, and the renewed quarrel
+between Philip and Boniface. On May 18, the Flemings, in the
+"matins of Bruges," cruelly avenged themselves for the oppressions
+which they had endured from Philip's officials, and on July 11 the
+revolted townsfolk won the battle of Courtrai, in which their heavy
+armed infantry defeated the feudal cavalry of France, a victory of
+the same kind as that Wallace had vainly hoped to gain at Falkirk.
+Even before the Flemish rising, the reassertion of high sacerdotal
+doctrine in the bull <i>Ausculta, fili</i> had renewed the strife
+between Boniface <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg222" id=
+"pg222">222</a></span>and the French king. A few months later the
+bull <i>Unam sanctam</i> laid down with emphasis the doctrine that
+those who denied that the temporal sword belongs to St. Peter were
+heretics, unmindful of the teachings of Christ. Thus began the
+famous difference that went on with ever-increasing fury until the
+outrage at Anagni, on September 7, 1303, brought about the fall of
+Boniface and the overthrow of the Hildebrandine papacy. Meanwhile
+Philip was devoting his best energies to constant, and not
+altogether vain, attempts to avenge the defeat of Courtrai, and
+re-establish his hold on Flanders. With these two affairs on his
+hands, it was useless for him to persevere in his attempt to hold
+Gascony.</p>
+
+<p>In the earlier stages of his quarrel with Philip, Boniface built
+great hopes on Edward's support, and strongly urged him to fight
+for holy Church against the impious French king. But Edward had
+suffered too much from Boniface to fall into so obvious a trap. His
+hold over his own clergy was so firm that Winchelsea himself had no
+chance of taking up the papal call to battle. Thus it was that
+<i>Unam sanctam</i> produced no such clerical revolt in England as
+<i>Clericis laicos</i> had done. It was Edward's policy to make use
+of Philip's necessities to win back Gascony, and cut off all hope
+of French support from the Scottish patriots. Philip himself was
+the more disposed to agree with his brother-in-law's wishes,
+because about Christmas, 1302, Bordeaux threw off the French yoke
+and called in the English. The best way to save French dignity was
+by timely concession. Accordingly, on May 20, 1303, the definitive
+treaty of Paris was sealed, by which the two kings were pledged to
+"perpetual peace and friendship". Gascony was restored, and Edward
+agreed that he, or his son, should perform liege homage for it.
+With the discharge of this duty by the younger Edward at Amiens, in
+1304, the last stage of the pacification was accomplished. For the
+rest of the reign, England and France remained on cordial terms.
+Neither Edward nor Philip had resources adequate to the
+accomplishment of great schemes of foreign conquest. Though Edward
+got back Gascony, he owed it, not to his own power, but to the
+embarrassment of his rival.</p>
+
+<p>While completing his pacification with Philip the Fair, Edward
+was busily engaged in establishing his power at home, at the
+expense of the clerical and baronial opposition, which <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg223" id="pg223">223</a></span>had stood for so
+many years in the way of the conquest of Scotland. Since the
+parliament of Lincoln, Winchelsea was no longer dangerous. He
+failed even to get Boniface on his side in a scandalous attack
+which he instigated on Bishop Langton. His constant efforts to
+enlarge his jurisdiction raised up enemies all over his diocese and
+province, and the mob of his cathedral city broke open his palace,
+while he was in residence there. His inability to introduce into
+England even a pale reflection of the struggle of Philip and the
+pope showed how clearly he had lost influence since the days of
+<i>,Clericis laicos</i>. A more recent convert to higher clerical
+pretensions also failed. Bishop Bek of Durham lost all his power,
+and was deprived of his temporalities by the king in 1302. Two
+years later the insignificant Archbishop of York also incurred the
+royal displeasure, and was punished in the same fashion. With
+Durham, Norhamshire, and Hexhamshire all in the royal hands, the
+road into Scotland was completely open.</p>
+
+<p>The heavy hand of Edward fell upon earls as well as upon
+bishops. Even in the early days of his reign when none, save
+Gilbert of Gloucester, dared uplift the standard of opposition,
+Edward had not spared the greatest barons in his efforts to
+eliminate the idea of tenure from English political life. A subtle
+extension of his earlier policy began to emphasise the dependence
+of the landed dignitaries on his pleasure. The extinction of
+several important baronial houses made this the easier, and Edward
+took care to retain escheats in his own hands, or at least to
+entrust them only to persons of approved confidence. The old
+leaders of opposition were dead or powerless. Ralph of Monthermer,
+the simple north-country knight who had won the hand of Joan of
+Acre, ruled over the Gloutester-Glamorgan inheritance on behalf of
+his wife and Edward's little grandson, Gilbert of Clare. The Earl
+of Hereford died in 1299, and in 1302 his son and successor,
+another Humphrey Bohun, was bribed by a marriage with the king's
+daughter, Elizabeth, the widowed Countess of Holland, to surrender
+his lands to the crown and receive them back, like the Earl of
+Gloucester in 1290, entailed on the issue of himself and his
+consort. In the same year the childless earl marshal, Roger Bigod,
+conscious of his inability to continue any longer his struggle
+against royal assumptions and at variance with his <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg224" id="pg224">224</a></span>brother and
+heir, made a similar surrender of his estates, which was the more
+humiliating since the estate in tail, with which he was reinvested,
+was bound to terminate with his life. In 1306, on the marshal's
+death, the Bigod inheritance lapsed to the crown. Much earlier than
+that, in 1293, Edward had extorted on her deathbed from the great
+heiress, Isabella of Fors, Countess of Albemarle and Devon, the
+bequest of the Isle of Wight and the adjacent castle of
+Christchurch. In 1300, on the death of the king's childless cousin,
+Earl Edmund, the wealthy earldom of Cornwall escheated to the
+crown. To Edward's contemporaries the acquisition of the earldoms
+of Norfolk and Cornwall seemed worthy to be put alongside the
+conquests of Wales and Scotland.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See John of London, <i>Commendatio
+lamentabilis</i> in <i>Chron. of Edw. I. and Edw. II.</i>, ii.,
+8-9. See for the earldoms my <i>Earldoms under Edward I.</i> in
+<i>,Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, new ser.</i>,
+viii. (1894), 129-155.</p>
+
+<p>Even more important as adding to Edward's resources than these
+direct additions to the royal domains, was the increasing
+dependence of the remaining earls upon the crown. His sons-in-law
+of Gloucester and Hereford were entirely under his sway. In 1304
+the aged Earl Warenne had died, and in 1306 his grandson and
+successor was bound closely to the royal policy by his marriage
+with Joan of Bar, Edward's grand-daughter. In the same way Edward's
+young nephew, Thomas of Lancaster, ruled over the three earldoms of
+Lancaster, Derby, and Leicester, and by his marriage to the
+daughter and heiress of Henry Lacy, was destined to add to his
+immense estates the additional earldoms of Lincoln and Salisbury.
+Edward of Carnarvon was learning the art of government in Wales,
+Cheshire, and Ponthieu. The policy of concentrating the higher
+baronial dignities in the royal family was no novelty, but Edward
+carried it out more systematically and successfully than any of his
+predecessors. He reaped the immediate advantages of his dexterity
+in the extinction of baronial opposition and in the zeal of the
+baronial levies against the Scots during the concluding years of
+his reign. Yet the later history of the Middle Ages bears witness
+to the grievous dangers to the wielder of the royal power which
+lurked beneath a system so attractive in appearance.</p>
+
+<p>The truce with the Scots ended in November, 1302, and Edward
+despatched a strong force to the north under John Segrave. On
+February 24, 1303, Segrave, attacked unexpectedly <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg225" id="pg225">225</a></span>by the enemy at
+Roslin, near Edinburgh, suffered a severe defeat. The conclusion of
+the treaty of Paris gave Edward the opportunity for avenging the
+disaster. He summoned his levies to assemble at Roxburgh for
+Whitsuntide and, a fortnight before that time, appeared in person
+in Tweeddale. After seven weary years of waiting and failure, he
+was at last in a position to wear down the obstinate Scots by the
+same systematic and deliberate policy that had won for him the
+principality of Wales. The invasion of Scotland was henceforth to
+continue as long as the Scottish resistance. Adequate resources
+were procured to enable the royal armies to hold the field, and a
+politic negotiation with the foreign merchants resulted in a
+<i>,carta mercatoria</i> by which additional customs were imposed
+upon English exports. These imposts, known as the "new and small
+customs," as opposed to the "old and great customs" established in
+1275, were not sanctioned by parliamentary grant: but for the
+moment they provoked no opposition. Thus Edward was equipped both
+with men and money for his undertaking. At last the true conquest
+of Scotland began.</p>
+
+<p>No attempt was made in the Lothians to stop Edward's advance,
+but the Scots, under the regent, John Comyn of Badenoch, made a
+vigorous effort to hold the line of the Forth against him. Their
+plan seemed to promise well, for Stirling castle was still in
+Scottish hands. Edward crossed the river by a ford, and all
+organised efforts to oppose him at once ceased. Prudently leaving
+Stirling to itself for the present, he hurried to Perth. After
+spending most of June and July at Perth, he led his army
+northwards, nearly following the line of his advance in 1296,
+through Perth, Brechin, and Aberdeen, to Banff and Elgin. The most
+remote point reached was Kinloss, a few miles west of Elgin, in
+which neighbourhood he spent much of September. Then he slowly
+retraced his steps and took up his winter quarters at Dunfermline.
+In all this long progress, the only energetic resistance which
+Edward encountered was at Brechin. Flushed with his triumph, he
+ordered Stirling to be besieged, and from April, 1304, directed the
+operations himself. The garrison held out with the utmost
+gallantry, but at last a breach was effected in the walls, and on
+July 24 the defenders laid down their arms. Long before the Scots
+people despaired of <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg226" id=
+"pg226">226</a></span>withstanding the invader, the nobles grew
+cold in the defence of their country. In February, 1304, the regent
+and many of the earls made their submission. It was more than
+suspected that this result was brought about by the threat of
+Edward to divide their lands among his English followers. But on
+Comyn and his friends showing a desire to yield, the king readily
+promised them their lives and estates. Believing that his task was
+over, Edward returned to England in August after an absence of
+nearly fifteen months. He crossed the Humber early in December,
+kept his Christmas court at Lincoln, and reached London late in
+February. As a sign of the completion of the conquest, he ordered
+that the law courts, which since 1297 had been established at York,
+should resume their sessions in London.</p>
+
+<p>A few heroes still upheld the independence of Scotland. Foremost
+among them was Sir William Wallace, who, since his mission to
+France in 1298, had disappeared from history. The submission of the
+barons to Edward gave him another chance. He took a strenuous part
+in the struggle of 1303-4, and he was specially exempted from the
+easy pardons with which Edward purchased the submission of the
+greater nobles. It was the daring and skill of Wallace that
+prolonged the Scots' struggle until the spring of 1305. But he was
+then once more an outlaw and a fugitive, only formidable by his
+hold over the people, and by the possibility that the smallest
+spark of resistance might at any time be blown into a flame. At
+last he was captured through the zeal, or treachery, of a Scot in
+Edward's service. In August, Wallace was despatched to London to
+stand a public trial for treason, sedition, sacrilege, and murder.
+He denied that he had ever become Edward's subject, but did not
+escape conviction. With his execution, the last stage of Edward's
+triumph in Scotland was accomplished. Though the full measure of
+Wallace's fame belongs to a later age rather than his own, yet it
+was a sure instinct that made the Scottish people celebrate him as
+the popular hero of their struggle for independence. His courage,
+persistency, and daring stands in marked contrast to the
+self-seeking opportunism of the great nobles, who afterwards
+appropriated the results of his endeavours. Yet we can hardly blame
+Edward for making an example of him, when he fell into his power.
+Even if Wallace had successfully evaded the oath of fealty to
+Edward, it is scarcely <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg227" id=
+"pg227">227</a></span>reasonable to expect that the king would
+consider this technical plea as availing against his doctrine that
+all Scots were necessarily his subjects since the submission of
+1296. It was Wallace's glory that he fought his fight and paid the
+penalty of it.</p>
+
+<p>A full parliament of the three estates sat with the king at
+Westminster from February 28 to March 21, 1305. The proceedings of
+this assembly are known with a fulness exceeding that of the record
+of any of the other parliaments of the reign.[1] Among the matters
+enumerated in the writs as specially demanding attention was the
+"establishment of our realm of Scotland". Three Scottish magnates,
+Robert Wishart, Bishop of Glasgow, Robert Bruce, Earl of Carrick,
+and John Mowbray were particularly called upon to give their advice
+as to how Scotland was to be represented in a later parliament, in
+which the plans for its future government were to be drawn up. They
+informed the king that two bishops, two abbots, two barons, and two
+representatives of the commons, one from the south of the Forth and
+the other from the north thereof, would be sufficient for this
+purpose. This further "parliament" assembled on September 15, three
+weeks after the execution of Wallace. It consisted simply of twenty
+councillors of Edward, and the ten Scottish delegates. From the
+joint deliberations of these thirty sprang the "ordinance made by
+the lord king for the establishment of the land of Scotland".</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See <i>Memoranda, de parliamento</i> (1305),
+ed. F.W. Maitland (Rolls Series).</p>
+
+<p>Following the general lines of the settlement of the
+principality of Wales, the ordinance combined Edward's direct
+lordship over Scotland with a legal and administrative system
+separate from that of England. John of Brittany, Earl of Richmond,
+the king's sister's son, was made Edward's lieutenant and warden of
+Scotland, and under him were a chancellor, a chamberlain, and a
+controller. Scotland was to be split up for judicial purposes into
+districts corresponding to its racial and political divisions. Four
+pairs of justices were appointed for each of these regions, two for
+Lothian, two for Galloway and the south-west, two for the lands
+"between Forth and the mountains," that is the Lowland districts of
+the north-east, and two for the lands "beyond the mountains," that
+is for the Highlands and islands. Sheriffs "natives either of
+England or Scotland" were <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg228" id=
+"pg228">228</a></span>nominated for each of the shires, and it was
+significant that the great majority of them were Scots and that the
+hereditary sheriffdoms of the older system were still continued.
+The "custom of the Scots and the Welsh," that is the Celtic laws of
+the Highlanders and the Strathclyde Welsh, was "henceforth
+prohibited and disused". John of Brittany was to "assemble the good
+people of Scotland in a convenient place" where "the laws of King
+David and the amendments by other kings" were to be rehearsed, and
+such of these laws as are "plainly against God and reason" were to
+be reformed, all doubtful matters being referred to the judgment of
+Edward. The king's lieutenant was bidden to "remove such persons as
+might disturb the peace" to the south of the Trent, but their
+deportation was to be in "courteous fashion" and after taking the
+advice of the "good people of Scotland". Care for the preservation
+of the peace, and for administrative reform, is seen in the oath
+imposed upon officials and in the pains taken to secure the custody
+of the castles. The Scots parliament was to be retained, and recent
+precedents also suggested the probability of Scottish
+representation in the parliament of England. If Scotland were to be
+ruled by Edward at all, it would have been difficult to devise a
+wiser scheme for its administration. Yet the Scottish love of
+independence was not to be bartered away for better government.
+Within six months the new constitution was overthrown, and the
+chief part in its destruction was taken by the Scots by whose
+advice Edward had drawn it up.</p>
+
+<p>Edward at last felt himself in a position to take his long
+deferred revenge on Winchelsea. The primate still kept aloof from
+the councils of the king, and his spirit was as irreconcilable as
+ever. He gained his last victory in the Lenten parliament of 1305,
+when he prevented the promulgation of a statute, passed on the
+petition of the laity, but agreed to by all the estates, which
+forbade taxes on ecclesiastical property involving the exportation
+of money out of the country.[1] At this moment the long vacancy of
+the papacy, which followed the pontificate of Benedict XI.,
+Boniface VIII.'s short-lived successor, had not yet come to an end.
+Soon, however, Winchelsea's zeal on <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg229" id="pg229">229</a></span>behalf of papal taxation was to be
+ill requited. On June 5, 1305, Bertrand de Goth, a Gascon nobleman
+who since 1299 had been archbishop of Bordeaux, was elected to the
+papacy as Clement V., through the management of Philip the Fair. A
+dependant of the King of France and a subject of the King of
+England, the new pope showed a complaisance towards kings which
+stood in strong contrast to the ultramontane austerity of his
+predecessors. He refused to visit Italy, received the papal crown
+at Lyons, and spent the first years of his pontificate in Poitou
+and Gascony. Ultimately establishing himself at Avignon, he began
+that seventy years of Babylonish captivity of the apostolic see
+which greatly degraded the papacy. Though Clement's main concern
+was to fulfil the exacting conditions which, as it was believed,
+Philip had imposed upon him, he was almost as subservient to Edward
+as to the King of France. His deference to his natural lord enabled
+Edward to renounce the most irksome of the obligations which he had
+incurred to his subjects, to punish Winchelsea, and to restrain
+Roman authority by laws which anticipate the legislation of the age
+of Edward III.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Memoranda de parliamento</i>, preface, p.
+li. The statement in the text is an inference suggested by
+Professor Maitland's account of the statute <i>De asportis
+religiosorum</i>. For the last struggle of Edward and Winchelsea,
+see Stubbs's preface to <i>Chron. of Edw. I. and Edw. II.</i>, i.,
+xcix.-cxiii.</p>
+
+<p>At Clement V.'s coronation at Lyons, in November, England was
+represented by Winchelsea's old enemy, Bishop Walter Langton, and
+by the Earl of Lincoln. The first result of their work was the
+promulgation, on December 29, of the bull <i>Regalis
+devotionis</i>, by which the pope annulled the additions made to
+the charters in 1297 and succeeding years, and dispensed Edward
+from the oath which he had taken to observe them, on the ground
+that it was in conflict with his coronation vows. Next year Edward
+took advantage of this bull to revoke the disafforestments made by
+the parliament of Lincoln in 1301. It may be a sign either of the
+moderation, or of the well-grounded fears of the king, that he made
+no further use of the papal absolution. But, like his father and
+grandfather, he used the papal authority to set aside his plighted
+word, and his conduct in this respect suggests that it was well for
+England that the renewal of the Scottish troubles reduced for the
+rest of the reign the temptation, which the bull held out to him,
+to play fast and loose with the liberties of his subjects. The
+standards of contemporary morality were not, however, infringed by
+Edward's action, dishonourable and undignified as it seems to us of
+later times</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg230" id=
+"pg230">230</a></span>Winchelsea's turn was at last come. On
+February 12, 1306, Clement suspended him from his office, and
+summoned him to appear before the <i>curia</i>. On March 25 the
+archbishop humbled himself before Edward and begged for his
+protection. But the king overwhelmed him with reproaches and
+refused to show him any mercy. Within two months, the primate took
+ship for France and made his way to the papal court, which was then
+established at Bordeaux. He remained in exile, though in the
+English king's dominions, for the rest of Edward's life. A less
+harsh punishment was meted out to the Bishop of Durham, who then
+came back from the court of Clement with the magnificent title of
+Patriarch of Jerusalem. For a second time Edward laid violent hands
+upon the rich temporalities of the see, and Bek, like Winchelsea,
+remained under a cloud for the remainder of the reign.</p>
+
+<p>Clement expected to be paid for yielding so much to the king. A
+papal agent, William de Testa, was sent to England, and to him
+Edward gave the administration of the temporalities of Canterbury.
+William's energy in collecting first-fruits aroused a storm of
+opposition from the clergy. The laity, disgusted to find that the
+king was negotiating for the transference of a crusading tenth to
+himself, associated themselves with their protest. Clement
+thereupon despatched the Cardinal Peter of Spain to England, that
+he might attempt to arrange a general pacification, and complete
+the marriage of the Prince of Wales to Isabella of France, which
+had been agreed upon in 1303. Before the cardinal's arrival,
+Edward's last parliament met in January, 1307, at Carlisle. The
+renewed disturbances in Scotland necessitated a meeting on the
+border, but the main transactions of the estates bore upon matters
+ecclesiastical. The lords and commons joined in demanding from the
+king a remedy against the oppressions of the apostolic see. A
+spirited and strongly worded protest was addressed to the pope. Nor
+were the estates contented with mere remonstrances. The statute of
+Carlisle renewed the abortive measure of 1305 <i>De asportis
+religiosorum</i>, by prohibiting tallages of religious houses being
+sent out of the realm. Had the petition of the estates been drafted
+into a statute, the parliament of Carlisle would have anticipated
+the statute of <i>Praemunire</i> and many other anti-papal
+enactments. But Peter of Spain arrived, and Edward thought it
+injudicious <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg231" id=
+"pg231">231</a></span>to provoke a contest with the papacy. Even
+the petition actually approved was left in suspense to await
+further negotiations between the king and the cardinal. Before any
+decision was come to, Edward died, and this anti-Roman movement,
+like so many which had preceded it, resulted in little more than
+brave words. When, two generations later, a more resolute temper
+seized upon king and estates, they fell back upon the petitions and
+proceedings of the parliament of Carlisle for precedents for
+resisting the papal authority. With all its pitiful conclusion,
+Edward's ecclesiastical policy at least marks a step in advance
+upon the dependent attitude of Henry III.</p>
+
+<p>In the period of peace after the conquest of Scotland, Edward
+busied himself with strengthening the administration of his own
+kingdom and with enforcing the laws against violence and outrage.
+Under the strongest of medieval kings, the state of society was
+very disorderly, and even a ruler like Edward had often to be
+contented with holding up in his legislation an ideal of conduct
+which he was powerless to enforce in detail. Complaints had long
+been made that the greater nobles encroached upon poor men's
+inheritances, that gangs of marauders ranged over the country,
+wreaking every sort of violence and outrage, and that the law
+courts would give no redress to the sufferers from such outrageous
+deeds, since judges and juries were alike terrorised by overmighty
+offenders and dared not administer equal justice. Accordingly in
+the Lenten parliament of 1305 was drawn up the ordinance of
+Trailbaston, by which the king was empowered to issue writs of
+inquiry, addressed to special justices in the various shires, and
+authorising them to take vigorous action against these
+<i>trailbastons</i>, or men with clubs, whose outrages had become
+so grievous. It was not so much a new law as an administrative act;
+but it formed a precedent for later times, and the energy of the
+justices of trailbaston effected a real, if temporary, improvement
+in the condition of the country. So important was the measure that
+a chronicler calls the year in which this was enacted the "year of
+trailbaston".[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Liber de antiquis legibus</i>, p. 250.</p>
+
+<p>Never did Edward's prospects seem brighter than in the early
+days of 1306. Scotland was obedient; the French alliance was firmly
+cemented; the pope was complacent; the Archbishop <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg232" id="pg232">232</a></span>of Canterbury
+was in exile and the Bishop of Durham in disgrace; the commons were
+grateful for the better order secured by the commissions of
+trailbaston, and the king had in the papal absolution a weapon in
+reserve, which he could always use against a renewal of baronial
+opposition, though, for the moment, neither nobles nor commons
+seemed likely to give trouble. Once more there was some talk of
+Edward leading a crusade, and the French lawyer, Peter Dubois, at
+this time dedicated to him the first draft of his remarkable
+treatise on the recovery of the Holy Land.[1] Nor did the project
+seem altogether impracticable. Though Edward was sixty-seven years
+of age, he remained slim, vigorous and straight as a palm tree. He
+could mount his horse and ride to the hunt or the field with the
+activity of youth. His eyes were not dimmed with age and his teeth
+were still firm in his jaws.[2] The worst trouble which immediately
+beset him, was the undutiful conduct of the young Prince of Wales,
+who foolishly quarrelled with Bishop Langton, and preferred to
+amuse himself with unworthy favourites rather than submit himself
+to the severe training in arms and affairs to which Edward had long
+striven to inure him. When all thus seemed favourable, a sudden
+storm burst in Scotland which plunged the old king into renewed
+troubles.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>De recuperatione terre sancte</i>, ed. C.V.
+Langlois (1891).</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] John of London, <i>Commendatio
+lamentabilis</i>, pp. 5-6.</p>
+
+<p>In 1304 Robert Bruce, Earl of Carrick, became by his father's
+death the head of his house. Though he had long adhered to the
+regency which had governed Scotland in Balliol's name, he had now
+made terms with Edward, and had taken a conspicuous part in
+bringing about the pacification of Scotland under its new
+constitution. But the double policy, which had involved him in the
+shifts and tergiversations of his earlier career, still dominated
+the mind of the ambitious earl. At the moment of his submission to
+Edward, he entered into an intimate alliance with Bishop Lamberton
+of St. Andrews, the old partisan of Wallace. Lamberton was then,
+like Bruce, on Edward's side, and as John of Brittany had not yet
+personally taken up his new charge, the blind confidence of Edward
+entrusted him with the foremost place among the commissioners who
+acted as wardens of Scotland during the king's lieutenant's
+absence. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg233" id=
+"pg233">233</a></span>Bruce, still remembering his grandfather's
+claim on the throne, welcomed the definitive setting aside of
+Balliol. While Edward believed that Scotland was quietening down
+under its new constitution, Bruce was secretly conspiring with the
+Scottish magnates, with a view to making himself king. His chief
+difficulty was with the late regent, John Comyn the Red, lord of
+Badenoch. The Bruces and the Comyns had long been at variance, and
+the Red Comyn, who was the nephew of the deposed King John,
+regarded himself as the representative of the Balliol claim to the
+throne, and was not unmindful how his father had withdrawn his
+pretensions in 1291 rather than divide the Balliol interest.
+Meanwhile the antagonism of the two houses was the best safeguard
+for the continuance of Edward's rule.</p>
+
+<p>Bruce was violent as well as able and ambitious. He invited
+Comyn to a conference for January 10, 1306, in the Franciscan
+friary at Dumfries. On that day the king's justices were holding
+the assizes in the castle, and Brace and Comyn, with a few
+followers, met in the cloister of the convent. Hot words were
+exchanged, and Bruce drew his sword and wounded Comyn. The lord of
+Badenoch took refuge in the church, and some of Bruce's friends
+followed him and slew him on the steps of the high altar. This
+cruel murder involved a violent breach between Bruce and the king.
+The earl took to the hills, declared himself the champion of
+national independence, and renewed his claim to the crown. He was
+joined by a great multitude of the people and by a certain number
+of the magnates. Conspicuous among the latter was Bishop Wishart of
+Glasgow, who broke his sixth oath of fealty, using the timber given
+him by Edward for building the steeple of his cathedral in
+constructing military engines to besiege the castles which were
+still held for the English king. Before long Bishop Lamberton, the
+chief of the Edwardian government, also went over. The support of
+the two bishops enabled Bruce to be crowned on March 25 at Scone.
+All Scotland was soon in revolt, and only the garrisons and a few
+magnates remained faithful to Edward.</p>
+
+<p>News of the death of Comyn and the revolt of Bruce reached
+Edward, while engaged in hunting in Dorset and Wiltshire. He at
+once called upon Church and State to unite against the sacreligious
+murderer and traitor. Clement V. excommunicated the Earl of
+Carrick, and deprived Lamberton and Wishart of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg234" id="pg234">234</a></span>their
+bishoprics. The warlike zeal of the English barons was stimulated
+by liberal grants of the forfeited estates of Bruce and his
+partisans. Feeling the infirmities of age coming upon him, Edward
+saw that his best chance of success was to inspire his son with
+something of his spirit. The Prince of Wales accordingly received a
+grant of Gascony, and on Whitsunday, May 22, was dubbed knight at
+Westminster along with over two hundred other aspirants to arms. A
+magnificent feast in Westminster Hall succeeded the ceremony. Two
+swans, adorned with golden chains, were brought in, and the old
+king set to all the revellers the example of vowing on the swans to
+revenge the murder of Comyn. Edward swore that when he had expiated
+this wrong to Holy Church, he would never more bear arms against
+Christian man, but would immediately turn his steps towards the
+Holy Land to redeem the Holy Sepulchre. The Prince of Wales' vow
+was never to rest two nights in the same spot until he had reached
+Scotland to assist his father in his purpose. Then all the young
+knights were despatched northwards to overthrow the Scottish
+pretender.</p>
+
+<p>A liberal grant from the estates facilitated the military
+preparations. But since the beginning of the year, Edward's
+strength had rapidly broken. He was no longer able to ride, and his
+movements were consequently very tedious. His army gathered
+together with more than the usual slowness, and Aymer of Valence,
+Earl of Pembroke, the king's cousin, was sent forward as warden of
+Scotland to meet Bruce with such forces as were ready. On June 26
+Aymer fell upon Bruce at Methven, near Perth, and inflicted a
+severe defeat upon him. The power of the pretender died away as
+rapidly as it had arisen. The Bishops of St. Andrews and Glasgow
+were made prisoners, and Bruce's brothers, wife, and daughter fell
+into the enemy's hands. The brothers were promptly beheaded, though
+one of them was an ecclesiastic, and the ladies were confined in
+English nunneries. Bruce himself fled to Kintyre, and thence to
+Rathlin island, off the coast of Antrim.</p>
+
+<p>Edward went north in July, and, after a long stay in
+Northumberland, took up his quarters early in October with the
+Austin canons of Lanercost, near Carlisle. There he remained for
+above five months. In January, 1307, the parliament, whose
+anti-clerical policy has already been recounted, assembled at
+Carlisle, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg235" id=
+"pg235">235</a></span>remained in session until March. With the
+spring, Brace crossed over from Ireland, and re-appeared in his own
+lands in the south-west. In May he revenged the rout of Methven by
+inflicting a bloody check on Aymer of Valence near Ayr, and within
+three days gained another victory over Edward's son-in-law, Earl
+Ralph of Gloucester. These blows only spurred on Edward to
+increased efforts. The levies were summoned to meet at Carlisle
+and, regardless of his infirmities, the old king resolved to lead
+his troops in person. On July 3 he once more mounted his horse and
+started for the border. But his constitution could not respond to
+the demands made on it by his unbroken spirit. After a journey of
+two miles he was forced to rest for the night. Next day he could
+only traverse a similar distance, and his exertions so fatigued him
+that he was compelled to remain at his lodgings all the following
+day. This repose enabled him to make his way, on July 6, to
+Burgh-on-Sands, less than seven miles from Carlisle, where he spent
+the night. On July 7, as he was being raised in his bed by his
+attendants to take his morning meal, he fell back in their arms and
+expired.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+<h4>GAVESTON, THE ORDAINERS, AND BANNOCKBURN.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg236" id=
+"pg236">236</a></span>Edward of Carnarvon was over twenty-three
+years of age when he became king. Tall, graceful, and handsome,
+with magnificent health and exceptional bodily strength, the young
+king was, so far as externals went, almost as fine a man as his
+father. Yet no one could have been more absolutely destitute of all
+those qualities which constitute Edward I.'s claims to greatness.
+An utter want of serious purpose blasted his whole career. It was
+in vain that his father subjected him to a careful training in
+statecraft and in military science. Though not lacking in
+intelligence, the young prince from the first to the last concerned
+himself with nothing but his own amusements. A confirmed gambler
+and a deep drinker, Edward showed a special bent for unkingly and
+frivolous diversions. Save in his devotion for the chase, his
+tastes had nothing in common with the high-born youths with whom he
+was educated. He showed himself a coward on the battlefield, and
+shirked even the mimic warfare of the tournament. He repaid the
+contempt and dislike of his own class by withdrawing himself from
+the society of the nobles, and associating himself with buffoons,
+singers, play-actors, coachmen, ditchers, watermen, sailors, and
+smiths. Of the befitting comrades of his youth, the only one of the
+higher aristocracy with whom he had any true intimacy was his
+nephew, Gilbert of Clare, while the only member of his household
+for whom he showed real affection was the Gascon knight, Peter of
+Gaveston.[1] Attributing his son's levity to Gaveston's corrupting
+influence, the old king had banished the foreign favourite early in
+1307. But no change in his surroundings could stir up the prince's
+frivolous nature to fulfil the duties of his station. Edward's most
+kingly qualities were <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg237" id=
+"pg237">237</a></span>love of fine clothes and of ceremonies.
+Passionately fond of rowing, driving, horse-breeding, and the
+rearing of dogs, his ordinary occupations were those of the athlete
+or the artisan. He was skilful with his hands, and an excellent
+mechanic, proficient at the anvil and the forge, and proud of his
+skill in digging ditches and thatching roofs. Interested in music,
+and devoted to play-acting, he was badly educated, taking the
+coronation oath in the French form provided for a king ignorant of
+Latin. Vain, irritable, and easily moved to outbursts of childish
+wrath, he was half-conscious of the weakness of his will, and was
+never without a favourite, whose affection compensated him for his
+subjects' contempt. The household of so careless a master was
+disorderly beyond the ordinary measure of the time. While Edward
+irritated the nobles by his neglect of their counsel, he vexed the
+commons by the exactions of his purveyors.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] That is Gabaston, dep. Basses
+Pyr&eacute;n&eacute;es, cant. Morlaas.</p>
+
+<p>The task which lay before Edward might well have daunted a
+stronger man. The old king had failed in the great purpose of his
+life. Scotland was in full revolt and had found a man able to guide
+her destinies. The crown was deeply in debt; the exchequer was bare
+of supplies, and the revenues both of England and Gascony were
+farmed by greedy and unpopular companies of Italian bankers, such
+as the Frescobaldi of Florence, the king's chief creditors. The
+nobles, though restrained by the will of the old king, still
+cherished the ideals of the age of the Barons' War, and were
+convinced that the best way to rule England was to entrust the
+machinery of the central government, which Edward I. had elaborated
+with so much care, to the control of a narrow council of earls and
+prelates. Winchelsea, though broken in health, looked forward in
+his banishment to the renewal of the alliance of baronage and
+clergy, and to the reassertion of hierarchical ideals. The papal
+<i>,curia</i>, already triumphant in the last days of the reign of
+the dead king, was anticipating a return to the times of Henry III,
+when every dignity of the English Church was at its mercy. The
+strenuous endeavour which had marked the last reign gave place to
+the extreme of negligence.</p>
+
+<p>Edward at once broke with the policy of his father. After
+receiving, at Carlisle, the homage of the English magnates, he
+crossed the Solway to Dumfries, where such Scottish barons <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg238" id="pg238">238</a></span>as had not
+joined Robert Bruce took oaths of fealty to him. He soon
+relinquished the personal conduct of the war, and travelled slowly
+to Westminster on the pretext of following his father's body to its
+last resting-place. He replaced his father's ministers by
+dependants of his own. Bishop Walter Langton, the chief minister of
+the last years of Edward I., was singled out for special vengeance.
+He was stripped of his offices, robbed of his treasure, and thrown
+into close confinement, without any regard to the immunities of a
+churchman from secular jurisdiction. Langton's place as treasurer
+was given to Walter Reynolds, an illiterate clerk, who had won the
+chief place in Edward's household through his skill in theatricals.
+Ralph Baldock, Bishop of London, was replaced in the chancery by
+John Langton, Bishop of Chichester. The barons of the exchequer,
+the justices of the high courts, and the other ministers of the old
+king were removed in favour of more complacent successors. Signal
+favour was shown to all who had fallen under Edward I.'s
+displeasure. Bishop Bek, of Durham, was restored to his palatinate,
+and the road to return opened to Winchelsea, though ill-health
+detained him on the Continent for some time longer. Conspicuous
+among the returned exiles was Peter of Gaveston, whom the king
+welcomed with the warmest affection. He at once invested his
+"brother Peter" with the rich earldom of Cornwall, which the old
+king, with the object of conferring it on one of his sons by his
+second marriage, had kept in his hands since Earl Edmund's death. A
+little later Edward married the favourite to his niece, Margaret of
+Clare, the eldest sister of Earl Gilbert of Gloucester. Of the
+tried comrades of Edward I. the only one who remained in authority
+was Henry Lacy, Earl of Lincoln. The abandonment of the Scottish
+campaign soon followed. It was no wonder that the Scots lords, who
+had performed homage to Edward at Dumfries, began to turn to Bruce.
+Already king of the Scottish commons, Robert was in a fair way to
+become accepted by the whole people.</p>
+
+<p>The readiness with which the barons acquiesced in Edward's
+reversal of his father's policy shows that they had regarded the
+late king's action with little favour. Lincoln, the wisest and most
+influential of the earls, even found reasons for the grant of
+Cornwall to Gaveston, and kept in check his son-in-law, Earl Thomas
+of Lancaster, who was the most disposed to grumble <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg239" id="pg239">239</a></span>at the elevation
+of the Gascon favourite. Gilbert of Gloucester was but newly come
+to his earldom. He was personally attached to the king, his old
+playmate and uncle, and was not unfriendly to his Gascon
+brother-in-law. The recent concentration of the great estates in
+the hands of a few individuals gave these three earls a position of
+overwhelming importance both in the court and in the country, and
+with their good-will Edward was safe. But the weakness of the king
+and the rashness of the favourite soon caused murmurs to arise.</p>
+
+<p>Early in 1308 Edward crossed over to France, leaving Gaveston as
+regent, and was married on January 25, at Boulogne, to Philip the
+Fair's daughter Isabella, a child of twelve, to whom he had been
+plighted since 1298. The marriage was attended by the French king
+and a great gathering of the magnates of both countries.
+Opportunity was taken of the meeting for Edward to perform homage
+for Aquitaine. After the arrival of the royal couple in England,
+their coronation took place on February 25. Time had been when the
+reign began with the king's crowning; but Edward had taken up every
+royal function immediately on his father's death, and set a
+precedent to later sovereigns by dating his own accession from the
+day succeeding the decease of his predecessor. The coronation
+ceremony, minutely recorded, provided precedents for later ages. It
+was some recognition of the work of the last generation that the
+coronation oath was somewhat more rigid and involved a more
+definite recognition of the rights of the community than on earlier
+occasions. Winchelsea was still abroad, and the hallowing was
+performed by Henry Woodlock, Bishop of Winchester.</p>
+
+<p>Discontent was already simmering. Not even Lincoln's weighty
+influence could overcome the irritation of the earls at the
+elevation of the Gascon knight into their circle. The very virtues
+of the vigorous favourite turned to his discredit. At a tournament
+given by him, at his own castle of Wallingford, to celebrate his
+marriage with the king's niece, the new-made earl, with a party of
+valiant knights, challenged a troop, which included the Earls of
+Hereford, Warenne, and Arundel, and utterly discomfited his
+rivals.[1] The victory of the upstart over magnates of such dignity
+was accounted for by treachery, and <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg240" id="pg240">240</a></span>the prohibition of a coronation
+tournament, probably a simple measure of police, was ascribed to
+the unwillingness of Peter to give his opponents a legitimate
+opportunity of vindicating their skill. There had been much
+resentment at Gaveston's appointment as regent during the king's
+absence in France. A further outburst of indignation followed when
+the Gascon, magnificently arrayed and bedecked with jewels, bore
+the crown of St. Edward in the coronation procession. The queen's
+uncles, who had escorted her to her new home, left England
+disgusted that Edward's love for Gaveston led him to neglect his
+bride, and the want of reserve shown in the personal dealings of
+the king and his "idol" suggested the worst interpretation of their
+relations, though this is against the weight of evidence. Rumours
+spread that the favourite had laid hands on the vast treasures
+which Bishop Walter Langton had deposited at the New Temple, and
+had extorted from the king even larger sums, which he had sent to
+his kinsfolk in Gascony by the agency of the Italian farmers of the
+revenue.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Ann. Paulini</i>, p. 258, and Monk of
+Malmesbury, p. 156, are to be preferred to Trokelowe, p. 65.</p>
+
+<p>Gaveston was a typical Gascon, vain, loquacious, and
+ostentatious, proud of his own ready wit and possessed of a fatal
+talent for sharp and bitter sayings. He seems to have been a brave
+and generous soldier. There is little proof that he was specially
+vicious or incompetent, and, had he been allowed time to establish
+himself, he might well have been the parent of a noble house, as
+patriotic and as narrowly English as the Valence lords of Pembroke
+had become in the second generation. But his sudden elevation
+rather turned his head, and the dull but dignified English earls
+were soon mortally offended by his airs of superiority, and by his
+intervention between them and the sovereign. "If," wrote the
+annalist of St. Paul's, London, "one of the earls or magnates
+sought any special favour of the king, the king forthwith sent him
+to Peter, and whatever Peter said or ordered at once took place,
+and the king ratified it. Hence the whole people grew indignant
+that there should be two kings in one kingdom, one the king in
+name, the other the king in reality." Gaveston's vanity was touched
+by the sullen hostility of the earls. He returned their suspicion
+by an openly expressed contempt. He amused himself and the king by
+devising nicknames for them. Thomas of Lancaster was the old pig or
+the play-actor, Aymer of Pembroke was Joseph the Jew, Gilbert <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg241" id="pg241">241</a></span>of
+Gloucester was the cuckoo, and Guy of Warwick was the black dog of
+Arden. Such jests were bitterly resented. "If he call me dog," said
+Warwick on hearing of the insult, "I will take care to bite him."
+The barons formed an association, bound by oath to drive Gaveston
+into exile and deprive him of his earldom. All over the country
+there were secret meetings and eager preparations for war. The
+outlook became still more alarming when the Earl of Lincoln at last
+changed his policy. Convinced of the unworthiness of Gaveston, he
+turned against him, and the whole baronage followed his lead. Only
+Hugh Despenser and a few lawyers adhered to the favourite.
+Gloucester did not like to take an active part against his
+brother-in-law, but his stepfather, Monthermer, was conspicuous
+among the enemies of the Gascon. Winchelsea, too, came to England
+and threw his powerful influence on the side of the opposition.</p>
+
+<p>In April, 1308, a parliament of nobles met and insisted upon the
+exile of the favourite. The magnates took up a high line. "Homage
+and the oath of allegiance," they declared, "are due to the crown
+rather than to the person of the king. If the king behave
+unreasonably, his lieges are bound to bring him back to the ways of
+righteousness." On May 18 letters patent were issued promising that
+Gaveston should be banished before June 25. Gaveston, bending
+before the storm, surrendered his earldom and prepared for
+departure, while Winchelsea and the bishops declared him
+excommunicate if he tarried in England beyond the appointed day.
+The king did his best to lighten his friend's misfortune. Fresh
+grants of land and castles compensated for the loss of Cornwall and
+gave him means for armed resistance. The grant of Gascon counties,
+jurisdictions, cities and castles to the value of 3,000 marks a
+year provided him with a dignified refuge. The pope and cardinals
+were besought to relieve him from the sentence hung over his head
+by the archbishop. It is significant of Edward's early intention to
+violate his promise, that in his letters to the curia he still
+describes Gaveston as Earl of Cornwall. Peter was soon appointed
+the king's lieutenant in Ireland. This time he was called Earl of
+Cornwall in a document meant for English use. As midsummer
+approached, Edward accompanied him to Bristol and bade him a
+sorrowful farewell. Attended by a numerous and splendid household,
+Gaveston crossed over to Ireland and <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg242" id="pg242">242</a></span>took up the government of that
+country, where his energy and liberality won him considerable
+popularity.</p>
+
+<p>Edward was inconsolable at the loss of his friend. For the first
+time in his reign he threw himself into politics with interest, and
+intrigued with rare perseverance to bring about his recall.
+Meanwhile the business of the state fell into deplorable confusion.
+No supplies were raised; no laws were passed; no effort was made to
+stay the progress of Robert Bruce. The magnates refused to help the
+king, and in April, 1309, Edward was forced to meet a parliament of
+the three estates at Westminster. There he received a much-needed
+supply, but the barons and commons drew up a long schedule of
+grievances, in which they complained of the abuses of purveyance,
+the weakness of the government, the tyranny of the royal officials,
+and the delays in obtaining justice. The estates refused point
+blank the king's request for the recall of Gaveston and demanded an
+answer to their petitions in the next parliament.</p>
+
+<p>Edward saw in submission to the estates the only way of bringing
+back his brother Peter from his gilded exile. He persuaded the pope
+to annul the ecclesiastical censures with which Winchelsea had
+sought to prevent Gaveston's return, and then recalled his friend
+on his own authority. Gaveston at once quitted Ireland and was met
+at Chester by Edward. Together they attended a parliament of
+magnates held in July at Stamford. There Edward announced that he
+accepted the petitions of the estates and issued a statute limiting
+purveyance. But the real work of this assembly was the ratification
+of the recall of the favourite, which was assured since Edward had
+won over some of the chief earls to agree to it. Gloucester was
+easily moved to champion his brother-in-law's cause. Lincoln
+reverted to his former friendship for the Gascon, and managed both
+to overbear the hostility of Lancaster and to induce Earl Warenne,
+"who had never shown a cheerful face to Peter since the Wallingford
+tournament," to become his friend. Warwick, alone of the earls, was
+irreconcilable. But Edward had gained his point. It was even agreed
+that the returned exile should regain his earldom of Cornwall.</p>
+
+<p>The annalists moralise on the instability of the magnates; and
+the sudden revolution may perhaps be set down as much to their
+incapacity as to the dexterity of the king. But Peter's <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg243" id="pg243">243</a></span>second
+period of power was even shorter than his first. He had learnt
+nothing from his misfortunes, save perhaps increased contempt for
+his enemies. He was more insolent, greedy, and bitter in speech
+than ever. Early in 1310 the barons were again preparing to renew
+their attacks. The second storm burst in a parliament of magnates
+held at London in March, 1310. The barons came to this parliament
+in military array, and Edward once more found himself at their
+mercy. The conditions of 1258 exactly repeated themselves. Once
+more an armed baronial parliament made itself the mouthpiece of the
+national discontent against a weak king, an incompetent
+administration, and foreign favourites. The magnates were no longer
+contented with simply demanding the banishment of Gaveston. They
+were ready with a constructive programme of reform, and they went
+back to the policy of the Mad Parliament. As the king could not be
+trusted, the royal power must once more be put into commission in
+the hands of a committee of magnates. So stiff were the barons in
+their adhesion to the precedents of 1258, that they made no
+pretence of taking the commons into partnership with them. To them
+the work of Edward I. had been done to no purpose. Baronial
+assemblies and full parliaments of the estates were still equally
+competent to transact all the business of the nation. It is vain to
+see in this ignoring of the commons any aristocratic jealousy of
+the more popular element in the constitution. There can be no doubt
+but that any full parliament would have co-operated with the barons
+as heartily in 1310 as it had done in 1309. It was simply that
+popular co-operation was regarded as unnecessary. As in 1258, the
+magnates claimed to speak for the whole nation.</p>
+
+<p>The barons drew up a statement of the "great perils and dangers"
+to which England was exposed through the king's dependence on bad
+counsellors. The franchises of Holy Church were threatened; the
+king was reduced to live by extortion; Scotland was lost; and the
+crown was "grievously dismembered" in England and Ireland.
+"Wherefore, sire," the petition concludes, "your good folk pray you
+humbly that, for the salvation of yourself and them and of the
+crown, you will assent that these perils shall be avoided and
+redressed by ordinance of your baronage." Edward at once
+surrendered at discretion, perhaps in the vain hope of saving
+Gaveston. On March 16 he issued a <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg244" id="pg244">244</a></span>charter, which empowered the
+barons to elect certain persons to draw up ordinances to reform the
+realm and the royal household. The powers of the committee were to
+last until Michaelmas, 1311. A barren promise that the king's
+concession should not be counted a precedent made Edward's
+submission seem a little less abject. Four days later the ordainers
+were appointed, the method of their election being based upon the
+precedents of 1258.</p>
+
+<p>Twenty-one lords ordainers represented in somewhat unequal
+proportions the three great ranks of the magnates. At the head of
+the seven bishops was Winchelsea, while both Bishop Baldock of
+London, the dismissed chancellor, and his successor, John Langton
+of Chichester, were included among the rest. All the eight earls
+attending the parliament became ordainers. Side by side with
+moderate men, such as Gloucester, Lincoln, and John of Brittany,
+Earl of Richmond, were the extreme men of the opposition,
+Lancaster, Pembroke, Warwick, Hereford, the king's brother-in-law,
+and Edmund Fitzalan, Earl of Arundel. Warenne and the insignificant
+Earl of Oxford do not seem to have been present in parliament, and
+are therefore omitted. With these exceptions, and of course that of
+the Earl of Cornwall, the whole of the earls were arrayed against
+the king. The six barons, who completed the list of nominees, were
+either colourless in their policy or dependent on the earls and
+their episcopal allies. The ordainers set to work at once. Two days
+after their appointment, they issued six preliminary ordinances by
+which they resolved that the place of their sitting should be
+London, that none of the ordainers should receive gifts from the
+crown, that no royal grants should be valid without the consent of
+the majority, that the customs should be paid directly into the
+exchequer, that the foreign merchants who had lately farmed them
+should be arrested, and that the Great Charter should be firmly
+kept. During the next eighteen months they remained hard at
+work.</p>
+
+<p>Gaveston, conscious of his impending doom, betook himself to the
+north as early as February. As soon as he could escape, Edward
+hurried northwards to join him. An expedition against the Scots was
+then summoned for September. It was high time that something should
+be done. During the three years that Edward had reigned, Robert
+Bruce had made alarming progress. <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg245" id="pg245">245</a></span>One after the other the Scottish
+magnates had joined his cause, and a few despairing partisans and
+some scattered ill-garrisoned, ill-equipped strongholds alone
+upheld the English cause north of the Tweed. But even then Edward
+did not wage war in earnest. His real motive for affecting zeal for
+martial enterprise was his desire to escape from his taskmasters,
+and to keep Gaveston out of harm's way. The earls gave him no
+encouragement. On the pretext that their services were required in
+London at the meetings of the ordainers, the great majority of the
+higher baronage took no personal part in the expedition. Gloucester
+was the only ordainer who was present, and the only other earls in
+the host were Warenne and Gaveston himself. The chief strength of
+Edwards army was a swarm of ill-disciplined Welsh and English
+infantry, more intent on plunder than on victory. In September
+Edward advanced to Roxburgh and made his way as far as Linlithgow.
+No enemy was to be found, for Bruce was not strong enough to risk a
+pitched battle, even against Edward's army. He hid himself in the
+mountains and moors, and contented himself with cutting off
+foraging parties, destroying stragglers, and breaking down the
+enemy's communications. Within two months Edward discreetly retired
+to Berwick, and there passed many months at the border town.
+Technically he was in Scotland; practically he might as well have
+been in London for all the harm he was doing to Bruce. However,
+Gaveston showed more martial zeal than his master. He led an
+expedition which penetrated as far as Perth, and reduced the
+country between the Forth and the Grampians to Edward's obedience.
+Gloucester also pacified the forest of Ettrick. To these two all
+the little honour of the campaign belonged.</p>
+
+<p>The Earl of Lincoln governed England as regent during the king's
+absence. In February, 1311, he died, and Gloucester abandoned the
+campaign to take up the regency. The death of the last of Edward
+I.'s lay ministers was followed in March by that of another
+survivor of the old generation, Bishop Bek of Durham. The old
+landmarks were quickly passing away, and the forces that still made
+for moderation were sensibly diminished. Gilbert of Gloucester,
+alone of the younger generation, still aspired to the position of a
+mediator. The most important result of Lincoln's death was the
+unmuzzling of his son-in-law, Thomas of Lancaster. In his own <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg246" id="pg246">246</a></span>right the
+lord of the three earldoms of Lancaster, Leicester, and Derby,
+Thomas then received in addition his father-in-law's two earldoms
+of Lincoln and Salisbury. The enormous estates and innumerable
+jurisdictions attached to these five offices gave him a territorial
+position greater by far than that of any other English lord. "I do
+not believe," writes the monk of Malmesbury, "that any duke or
+count of the Roman empire could do as much with the revenues of his
+estates as the Earl of Lancaster." Nor were Earl Thomas' personal
+connexions less magnificent than his feudal dignities. As a
+grandson of Henry III., he was the first cousin of the king.
+Through his mother, Blanche of Artois, Queen of Navarre and
+Countess of Champagne, he was the grandson of the valiant Robert of
+Artois, who had fallen at Mansura, and the great-grandson of Louis
+VIII. of France. His half-sister, Joan of Champagne, was the wife
+of Philip the Fair, so that the French king was his brother-in-law
+as well as his cousin, and Isabella, Edward's consort, was his
+niece. Unluckily, the personality of the great earl was not equal
+to his pedigree or his estates. Proud, hard to work with, jealous,
+and irascible, he was essentially the leader of opposition, the
+grumbler, and the <i>frondeur</i>. When the time came for a
+constructive policy, Thomas broke down almost as signally as Edward
+himself. His ability was limited, his power of application small,
+and his passions violent and ungovernable. Greedy, selfish,
+domineering, and narrow, he had few scruples and no foresight,
+little patriotism, and no breadth of view. At this moment he had to
+play a part which was within his powers. The simple continuance of
+the traditions of policy, which he inherited with his pedigree and
+his estates; was all that was necessary. As the greatest of the
+English earls, the head of a younger branch of the royal house, and
+the inheritor of the estates and titles of Montfort and Ferrars, he
+was trebly bound to act as leader of the baronial opposition, the
+champion of the charters, the enemy of kings, courtiers,
+favourites, and foreigners. He was steadfast in his prejudices and
+hatreds, and the ordainers found in him a leader who could at least
+save them from the reproach of inconstancy and the lack of fixed
+purpose shown at the parliament of Stamford.</p>
+
+<p>It was the first duty of Earl Thomas to perform homage and
+fealty for his new earldoms of Lincoln and Salisbury. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg247" id="pg247">247</a></span>Attended by a
+hundred armed knights, he rode towards the border. Edward was at
+Berwick, and Thomas declined to proffer his homage outside the
+kingdom. On Edward refusing to cross the Tweed, Thomas declared
+that he would take forcible possession of his lands. Civil war was
+only avoided by Edward giving way. The king met Thomas on English
+soil at Haggerston, four miles from Berwick. There the earl
+performed homage, and exchanged the kiss of peace with his king,
+but he would not even salute the upstart Earl of Cornwall, who
+injudiciously accompanied Edward, and the king departed deeply
+indignant at this want of courtesy. Returning to Berwick, Edward
+lingered there until the completion of the work of the ordainers
+made it necessary for him to face parliament. Leaving Gaveston
+protected by the strong walls of Bamburgh, the king quitted the
+border at the end of July, and met his parliament a month later in
+London. Though the ordainers had been appointed by a baronial
+parliament, the three estates were summoned to hear and ratify the
+results of their labours. Thirty-five more ordinances, covering a
+very wide field, were then laid before them. Disorderly and
+disproportioned, like most medieval legislation, they ranged from
+trivial personal questions and the details of administration to the
+broadest schemes for the future. Many of them were simply efforts
+to get the recognised law enforced. There were clauses forbidding
+alienation of domain, the abuses of purveyance, the usurpations of
+the courts of the royal household, the enlargement of the forests,
+and the employment of unlawful sources of revenue. Under the last
+head, the new custom, which Edward I. had persuaded the foreign
+merchants to pay, was specifically abolished. Provisions of such a
+character show that the king had made no effort to observe either
+the Great Charter or the laws of Edward I. Even the recent statute
+of Stamford, and the six ordinances of the previous year, had to be
+re-enacted. Similar restatements of sound principles were too
+common in the fourteenth century to make the ordinances an epoch.
+The vital clauses were those providing for the control of the king
+and for penalties against his favourites.</p>
+
+<p>Under the first of these heads, the ordainers worked out to the
+uttermost consequences their favourite distinction between the
+crown and the king. The crown was to be strengthened, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg248" id="pg248">248</a></span>but the king was
+to be deprived of every shred of power. The great offices of state
+in England, Ireland, and Gascony were to be filled up with the
+counsel and consent of the barons, a provision which, if literally
+interpreted, meant that the barons intended to govern Gascony as
+well as England. The king was not to go to war, raise an army, or
+leave the kingdom without the permission of parliament. He was to
+"live of his own," however scanty a living that might be. Special
+judges were to hear complaints against royal ministers and
+bailiffs. Parliaments were to meet once or twice a year. It was a
+complete programme of limited monarchy. But there was no reference
+to the commons and clergy. We are still in the atmosphere of the
+Provisions of Oxford, and there is no Earl Simon to emphasise the
+fuller conception of national control.</p>
+
+<p>To Edward and to the barons, the penal clauses were the very
+essence of the ordinances. The twentieth ordinance declared that
+Peter of Gaveston, "as a public enemy of the king and kingdom, be
+forthwith exiled, for all time and without hope of return," from
+all dominions subject to the English king. He was to leave England
+before All Saints' day, and the port of Dover was to be his place
+of embarkation. Other ordinances dealt with lesser offenders. Exile
+was once more to be the doom of the Frescobaldi, and the other
+alien merchants who had acted as Edward's financial agents;
+Gaveston's kinsfolk, followers and abettors incurred their master's
+fate. All Gascons were to be sent to their own country, their
+allegiance to the crown in no wise saving them from the hatred
+meted out to all aliens. Neither high nor low were spared: Henry de
+Beaumont, the grandson of an Eastern emperor, and his sister, the
+lady Vesey, were to leave the realm; John Charlton, the pushing
+Shropshire squire who was worming his way by court favour into the
+estates of the degenerate descendants of the house of Gwenwynwyn,
+was, with the other English partisans of the favourite, to be
+driven from the royal service.</p>
+
+<p>Edward made a last desperate attempt to save Gaveston. He would
+agree to all the other ordinances, if he were still allowed to keep
+his brother Peter in England and in possession of the earldom of
+Cornwall. But the estates refused to yield the root of the whole
+matter. Threatened with the prospect of a new battle of Lewes, if
+he remained obdurate, Edward bowed <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg249" id="pg249">249</a></span>to his destiny. The ordinances
+were published in every shire, and new ministers, chosen with the
+approval of the estates, deprived the king of the government of the
+country.</p>
+
+<p>Early in November, Gaveston sailed to Flanders, but within a few
+weeks Edward insisted upon his return. Rumours spread that Gaveston
+was in England, hiding himself away in his former castles of
+Wallingford and Tintagel, or in the king's castle of Windsor. The
+thin veil of mystery was soon withdrawn. Early in 1312, Peter
+openly accompanied the king to York, where, on January 18, Edward
+issued a proclamation to the effect that Gaveston had been
+unlawfully exiled, that he was back in England by the king's
+command, and prepared to answer to all charges against him. A few
+weeks later, Edward restored him to his earldom and estates. King
+and favourite still tarried in the north, preparing for the
+inevitable struggle. It was believed that they intrigued with
+Robert Bruce for a refuge in Scotland. Bruce, according to the
+story, declined to have anything to do with them. "If the King of
+England will not keep faith with his own subjects," he is reported
+to have said, "how then will he keep faith with me?"</p>
+
+<p>The ordainers looked upon Gaveston's return as a declaration of
+war. Winchelsea pronounced him excommunicate, and five of the eight
+earls who sat among the ordainers, bound themselves by oaths to
+maintain the ordinances and pursue the favourite to the death.
+These were Thomas of Lancaster, Aymer of Pembroke, Humphrey of
+Hereford, Edmund of Arundel, and Guy of Warwick. Gilbert of
+Gloucester declined to take part in the confederacy, but promised
+to accept whatever the five earls might determine. Moreover, John,
+Earl Warenne, who had hitherto kept aloof from the ordainers, at
+last threw in his lot with them, won over, it was believed, by the
+eloquence of Archbishop Winchelsea. The ordainers then divided
+England into large districts, appointing one of the baronial
+leaders to the charge of each. Gloucester himself undertook the
+government of the south-east, while Robert Clifford and Henry Percy
+agreed to guard the march, to prevent Gaveston escaping to the
+Scots. Pembroke and Warenne marched to the north to lay hands on
+the favourite, and Lancaster himself followed them.</p>
+
+<p>While the ordainers were acting, Edward and Gaveston were
+aimlessly wandering about in the north. They failed to <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg250" id="pg250">250</a></span>raise an army or
+to win the people to their side, and on the approach of Lancaster,
+they fled before him from York to Newcastle. The earl followed
+quickly. On the afternoon of Ascension day, May 4, Lancaster,
+Clifford, and Percy suddenly swooped down on Newcastle. The king
+and his friend escaped with the utmost difficulty to Tynemouth,
+leaving their luggage, jewels, horses, and other possessions to the
+victor. Next day they fled by sea to Scarborough. The queen, left
+behind at Tynemouth, fell into her uncle Lancaster's power.</p>
+
+<p>The royal castle of Scarborough, whose Norman keep and spacious
+wards occupy a rocky peninsula surrounded, except on the town side,
+by the North Sea, had lately been transferred from the custody of
+Henry Percy, one of the confederate barons, to that of Gaveston.
+There was no fitter place wherein the favourite could stand at bay
+against his pursuers. Accordingly Edward left Gaveston, after a
+tender parting, and betook himself to York. Lancaster thereupon
+occupied a position midway between Scarborough and Knaresborough,
+while Pembroke, Warenne, and Henry Percy laid siege to Scarborough.
+Gaveston soon found that he was unable to resist them. His troops,
+scarcely adequate to man the extensive walls, were too many for the
+scanty store of provisions which the castle contained. After less
+than a fortnight's siege, he persuaded the two earls and Percy to
+allow him easy terms of surrender. The three baronial leaders
+pledged themselves on the Gospels to protect Gaveston from all
+manner of evil until August 1. During the interval parliament was
+to decide as to what was to be his future fate. If the terms agreed
+upon by parliament were unsatisfactory to him, he was to return to
+Scarborough, which was still to be garrisoned by his followers,
+with leave to purchase supplies.</p>
+
+<p>Pembroke undertook the personal custody of the prisoner, and
+escorted him by slow stages from Scarborough to the south, where he
+was to be retained in honourable custody at his own castle of
+Wallingford. Three weeks after the surrender, the convoy reached
+Deddington, a small town in Oxfordshire, a few miles south of
+Banbury. There Gaveston was lodged in the house of the vicar of the
+parish, and told to take a few days' rest after the fatigues of the
+journey. Pembroke himself did not remain at Deddington, but went on
+to Bampton in the Bush, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg251" id=
+"pg251">251</a></span>where his countess then was. Thereupon on
+June 10, at sunrise, the Earl of Warwick, the most rancorous of
+Peter's enemies, occupied Deddington with a strong force. Bursting
+into the bedchamber of his victim, Earl Guy exclaimed in a loud
+voice: "Arise, traitor, thou art taken". Peter was at once led with
+every mark of indignity to Warwick castle. Thus the black dog of
+Arden showed that he could bite.</p>
+
+<p>Warwick was not personally pledged to Gaveston's safety, though,
+as one of the confederates, he was clearly bound by their acts. His
+seizure of Peter was only warrantable by the, fear that Pembroke,
+with his royalist leanings, was likely to play the extreme party
+false; but in any case Warwick was as much obliged as Pembroke to
+observe the terms of the capitulation. Neither Warwick nor his
+allies took this view of the matter. They rejoiced at the good
+fortune which had remedied the disastrous capitulation of
+Scarborough, and resolved to put an end to the favourite without
+delay. Lancaster was then at Kenilworth; Hereford, Arundel, and
+other magnates were also present, and all agreed in praising
+Warwick's energy. On Monday morning, June 19, the three earls rode
+the few miles from Kenilworth to Warwick, and Earl Guy handed over
+Peter to them. They then escorted their captive to a place called
+Blacklow hill, about two miles out of Warwick on the Kenilworth
+road, but situated in Lancaster's lands. The crowd following the
+cavalcade was moved to tears when Peter, kneeling to Lancaster,
+cried in vain for mercy from the "gentle earl". On reaching
+Blacklow hill, the three earls withdrew, though remaining near
+enough to see what was going on. Then two Welshmen in Lancaster's
+service laid hands upon the victim. One drove his sword through his
+body, the other cut off his head. The corpse remained where it had
+fallen, but the head was brought to the earls as a sign that the
+deed was done. After this the earls rode back to Kenilworth. Guy of
+Warwick remained all the time in his castle. He had already taken
+his share in the cruel act of treachery. It was, however, important
+that Lancaster should take the responsibility for the deed. Four
+cobblers of Warwick piously bore the headless corpse within their
+town. But the grim earl sent it back, because it was not found on
+his fee. At last some Oxford Dominicans took charge of the body and
+deposited it temporarily in their <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg252" id="pg252">252</a></span>convent, not daring to inter it in
+holy ground, as Gaveston had died excommunicate.</p>
+
+<p>The ostentatious violence of the confederate earls broke up
+their party. Aymer of Pembroke, indignant at their breach of faith,
+regarded the whole transaction as a stain on his honour. He
+besought Gloucester's intervention, but was only told that he
+should be more cautious in his future negotiations. He harangued
+the clerks and burgesses of Oxford, but university and town agreed
+that the matter was no business of theirs. Then in disgust he
+betook himself to the king, whom he found still surrounded with the
+Beaumonts, Mauleys, and other friends of Gaveston, against whom the
+ordinances had decreed banishment. Warenne, whose honour was only
+less impeached than Pembroke's, also deserted the ordainers for the
+court. Edward bitterly deplored the death of his friend. He gladly
+welcomed the deserters, and prepared to wreak vengeance on the
+ordainers.</p>
+
+<p>Edward plucked up courage to return to London, where in July he
+addressed the citizens, and persuaded them to maintain the peace of
+the city against the barons. He next visited Dover, and there he
+strengthened the fortifications of the castle, took oaths of fealty
+from the Cinque Ports, and negotiated with the King of France.
+Thence he returned to London, hoping that the precautions he had
+taken would secure his position in the parliament which he had
+summoned to meet at Westminster. But the four earls still held the
+field, and answered the summons to parliament by occupying Ware
+with a strong military force. A thousand men-at-arms were drawn by
+Lancaster from his five earldoms, while the Welsh from Brecon, who
+followed the Earl of Hereford, and the vigorous foresters of Arden,
+who mustered under the banner of Warwick, made a formidable show.
+Yet at the last moment neither side was eager to begin hostilities.
+The four earls' violence damaged their cause, and many who had no
+love of Gaveston, or desire to avenge him, inclined to the king's
+party. Gilbert of Gloucester busied himself with mediating between
+the two sides. At this juncture two papal envoys, sent to end the
+interminable outstanding disputes with France, arrived in England,
+along with Louis, Count of &Eacute;vreux, the queen's uncle. Edward
+availed himself of the presence of French jurists in the count's
+train to <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg253" id=
+"pg253">253</a></span>obtain legal opinion that the ordinances were
+invalid, as against natural equity and civil law. These
+technicalities did little service to the king's cause, and better
+work was done when Louis and the papal envoys joined with
+Gloucester in mediating between the opposing forces. At length
+moderate counsels prevailed. Edward could only resist the four
+earls through the support of his new allies, and Pembroke and
+Warenne were as little anxious to fight as Gloucester himself. They
+were quite willing to make terms which seemed to the king treason
+to his friend's memory.</p>
+
+<p>The negotiations were still proceeding when, on November 13,
+1312, the birth of a son to Edward and Isabella revived the almost
+dormant feeling of loyalty to the sovereign. The king ceased to
+brood over the loss of his brother Peter, and became more willing
+to accept the inevitable. He gave some pleasure to his subjects by
+refusing the suggestion of the queen's uncle that the child should
+be called Louis, and christened him Edward after his own father. At
+last, on December 22, terms of peace were agreed upon. The earls
+and barons concerned in Gaveston's death were to appear before the
+king in Westminster Hall, and humbly beg his pardon and good-will.
+In return for this the king agreed to remit all rancour caused by
+the death of the favourite. Lancaster and Warwick, who took no
+personal part in the negotiations, sent in a long list of
+objections to the details of the treaty. Nearly a year elapsed
+before the earls personally acknowledged their fault. During that
+interval there was no improvement in the position of affairs.
+Parliament granted no money; and Edward only met his daily expenses
+by loans, contracted from every quarter, and by keeping tight hands
+on the confiscated estates of the Templars. Both the king and the
+leading earls made every excuse to escape attending the ineffective
+parliaments of that miserable time. Two short visits to France gave
+Edward a pretext for avoiding his subjects. There were some hasty
+musterings of armed men on pretence of tournaments. But the king
+was still formidable enough to make it desirable for the barons to
+carry out the treaty. Finally, in October, 1313, Lancaster,
+Hereford, and Warwick made their public submission in Westminster
+Hall. Pardons were at once issued to them and to over four hundred
+minor offenders. Feasts of reconciliation were held, <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg254" id="pg254">254</a></span>and it seemed as
+if the old feuds were at last ended. Gaveston's corpse was removed
+from Oxford to Langley, in Hertfordshire, and buried in the church
+of a new convent of Dominicans set up by Edward to pray for the
+favourite's soul.</p>
+
+<p>Just before the end of the disputes Archbishop Winchelsea died
+in May, 1313. He left behind him the reputation of a saint and a
+hero, and a movement was undertaken for his canonisation. With all
+his faults, he was the greatest churchman of his time, and the most
+steadfast and unselfish of ecclesiastical statesmen. Despite his
+palsy, he had shown wonderful activity since his return. The brain
+and soul of the ordainers, he equally made it his business to
+uphold extreme hierarchical privilege. Bitterly as he hated Walter
+Langton, he was indignant that a bishop should be imprisoned and
+despoiled by the lay power, and took up his cause with such energy
+that he effected his liberation, only to find that Langton made
+peace with the king and turned his back on the ordainers. The
+after-swell of the storms, excited by the petition of Lincoln and
+the statute of Carlisle, still continued troublous during
+Winchelsea's later years. The pope complained of the violated
+privileges of the Church and of the accumulated arrears of King
+John's tribute; and Winchelsea was anxious to promote the papal
+cause. But the barons in Edward's early parliaments still used the
+bold language of the magnates of 1301, and the letter of 1309,
+drawn up by the parliament of Stamford, is no unworthy pendant of
+the Lincoln letter. As time went on, the disorders of the
+government and the weakness of the king surrendered everything to
+the pope. It was soon as it had been in the days of Henry III.,
+when pope and king combined to despoil the English Church.</p>
+
+<p>The suppression of the order of the Temple shows how absolutely
+England was forced to follow in the wake of the papacy and the King
+of France. There was no spontaneous movement against the society as
+in France; there was not even the fierce malice and insatiable
+greed which could find their only satisfaction in the ruin of the
+brethren; and there is not much evidence that the Templars were
+unpopular. The whole attack was the result of commands given from
+without. It was at the repeated request of Philip of France and
+Clement V. that Edward reluctantly ordered the apprehension of all
+the Templars within England, Scotland, and Ireland on January 8,
+1308. Their <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg255" id=
+"pg255">255</a></span>property was taken into the king's hands, and
+their persons were confined in the royal prisons under the custody
+of the sheriffs. For their trial, Clement appointed a mixed
+commission including Winchelsea, Archbishop Greenfield of York,
+several English bishops, one French bishop, and certain papal
+inquisitors specially assigned for the purpose, the chief of whom
+were the Abbot of Lagny and Sicard de Lavaur, Canon of Narbonne,
+who came to England in 1309. At last the victims were collected at
+London and York, where the trials were to be conducted for the
+southern and northern provinces. There was much hesitation among
+the English bishops. The foes of the Templars lamented the
+prelates' lack of zeal and their scruples in collecting evidence,
+and suggested that the torture, which had so freely been used in
+France, would soon extract confessions. But the northern bishops
+declared that torture was unknown in England, and asked, if it were
+to be adopted, whether it was to be applied by clerks or laymen,
+and whether torturers should be imported from beyond sea. In the
+end, torture was used, but not to any great extent.</p>
+
+<p>A great mass of depositions, mostly vague and worthless, or
+derived from the suspicious confessions of apostates and weaklings,
+was gathered together, and in 1311 laid before provincial councils,
+but neither province came to any fixed decision. "Inasmuch," says
+Hemingburgh, "as the Templars were not found altogether guilty or
+altogether innocent, they referred the dubious matter to the pope."
+They sent the evidence they had collected to swell the mass of
+testimony from all Christendom, which was laid before the council
+of Vienne. When the pope suppressed the order in April, 1312, and
+transferred its lands to the Knights of St. John, the papal decrees
+were quietly carried out in England. One or two Templars died in
+prison, but none were executed; and the majority were dismissed
+with pensions or secluded in monasteries. Edward and his nobles
+took good care to make a large profit out of the transaction. The
+resources of the Temple alone kept the king from destitution during
+the period between the death of Gaveston and his reconciliation
+with the earls. Many barons laid violent hands on estates belonging
+to the order, and long held on to them despite papal expostulation.
+The Hospitallers found that the lands of their rivals came to them
+so slowly, and encumbered <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg256" id=
+"pg256">256</a></span>with so many charges, that their new property
+became burdensome rather than helpful to their society. Thus it was
+that they never made any use of the New Temple in London, and,
+before long, let it out to the common-lawyers. In the fall of the
+Templars, the pope and the Church set the first great example of
+the suppression of a religious order to kings, who before long
+bettered the precedent given them. The sordid story is mainly
+important to our history as an example of the completeness of the
+influence of the papal autocracy, and of the submissiveness of
+clergy and laity to its behests. It was a lurid commentary on the
+practical working of the ecclesiastical system that the business of
+condemning an innocent order first brought into England the papal
+inquisitor and the use of torture. Yet the whole process was but so
+pale a reflection of the horrors wrought in France that the
+conclusion arises that England owed more to the weakness of Edward
+II than France to the strength of Philip IV.</p>
+
+<p>Winchelsea's death removed a real check on Edward, especially as
+the king was on such good terms with the papacy that he had little
+difficulty in obtaining a successor amenable to his will.
+Undeterred by Clement's bull reserving to himself the appointment,
+the monks of Christ Church at once proceeded to elect Thomas of
+Cobham, a theologian and a canonist of distinction, a man of high
+birth, great sanctity, and unblemished character, and in every way
+worthy of the primacy. But his merits did not weigh for a moment
+with Clement against the wishes of the king. He rejected Cobham and
+conferred the primacy on Edwards favourite, Walter Reynolds, who
+had already obtained the bishopric of Worcester through the king's
+influence. A good deal of money, it was believed, found its way to
+the coffers of the <i>curia</i>; and the indignation of the English
+Church found voice in the impassioned protests of the chroniclers.
+"Lady Money rules everything in the pope's court," lamented the
+monk of Malmesbury. "For eight years Pope Clement has ruled the
+Universal Church: but what good he has done escapes memory.
+England, alone of all countries, feels the burden of papal
+domination. Out of the fulness of his power, the pope presumes to
+do many things, and neither prince nor people dare contradict him.
+He reserves all the fat benefices for himself, and excommunicates
+all who resist him: his legates come and spoil the land: those
+armed with his bulls come and <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg257"
+id="pg257">257</a></span>demand prebends. He has given all the
+deaneries to foreigners, and cut down the number of resident
+canons. Why does the pope exercise greater power over the clergy
+than the emperor over the laity? Lord Jesus! either take away the
+pope from our midst or lessen the power which he presumes to have
+over the people." Such lamentations bore no fruit, and the
+simoniacal nomination of Reynolds was but the first of a series of
+appointments which robbed the episcopate of dignity and moral
+worth.</p>
+
+<p>While Church and State in England were thus distressed, the
+cause of Robert Bruce was making steady progress in Scotland. It is
+some measure of the difficulties against which Bruce had to contend
+that, after six years, he was still by no means master of all that
+land. But least of all among the causes which retarded his advance
+can be placed the armed forces of England. During six years Edward
+II.'s one personal expedition had been a complete failure. A more
+formidable obstacle in Bruce's way was the stubborn resistance
+offered to him by the valour and skill of the small but highly
+trained garrisons which the wisdom of Edward I. had established in
+the fortresses of southern and central Scotland. Each castle took a
+long time to subdue, and demanded engineering resources and a
+persistency of effort, which were difficult to obtain from a
+popular army. The garrisons co-operated with the Scottish nobles
+who still adhered to Edward through jealousy of the upstart Bruces
+and love of feudal independence, rather than by reason of any
+sympathy with the English cause. Additional obstacles to Robert's
+progress were the hostility of the Church, to which he was still
+the excommunicated murderer of Comyn; the captivity of so many
+Scottish prelates and barons in England; the efforts of the pope
+and the King of France to bring about suspensions of hostilities,
+and the grievous famines which desolated Scotland no less than
+southern Britain. But during these years the King of Scots
+gradually overcame these difficulties. His hardest fighting in the
+field was with rival Scots rather than with the English intruders.
+In 1308 he defeated the Comyns of Buchan, and established himself
+on the ruins of that house in the north-east. In the same year his
+brother, Edward Bruce, conquered Galloway, where the Balliol
+tradition long prevented the domination of the rival family.</p>
+
+<p>Secure from retaliation so long as domestic troubles lasted,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg258" id="pg258">258</a></span>the
+Scots devastated the northern counties of England, whose
+inhabitants were forced to purchase relief from further attacks by
+paying large sums of money to the invaders. Formal truces were more
+than once made, but they were ill observed, and each violation of
+an armistice involved some loss to Edward and some gain to Robert.
+Meanwhile the garrisons were carefully isolated, and one by one
+signalled out for attack. In 1312 Berwick itself was only saved
+from surprise by the opportune barking of a dog. In January, 1313,
+Perth was captured by assault. Next day Robert slew the leading
+native burgesses who had adhered to the English, while he permitted
+the English inhabitants to return freely to their own country. The
+whole town was destroyed, since walled towns, like castles, had
+given the English their chief hold upon the country.</p>
+
+<p>Such was the state of Scotland when the reconciliation between
+Edward and the earls restored England to the appearance of unity.
+As if conscious that no time was to be lost in strengthening his
+position, Bruce redoubled his efforts to make himself master of the
+fortresses which still remained in the enemy's hands. Regardless of
+the rigour of the season, he set actively to work in the early
+weeks of 1314, and remarkable success attended his efforts. In
+February, the border stronghold of Roxburgh was taken by a night
+attack. "And all that fair castle, like the other castles which he
+had acquired, they pulled down to the ground, lest the English
+should afterwards by holding the castle bear rule over the
+land."[1] In March, Edinburgh castle was secured by some Scots who
+climbed up the precipitous northern face of the castle rock,
+overpowered the garrison, and opened the gates to their comrades
+outside. Flushed with this great success, Bruce began the siege of
+Stirling, the only important English garrison then held by the
+English in the heart of Scotland. He pressed the besieged so hard
+that they agreed to surrender to the enemy, if they were not
+relieved before Midsummer day, the feast of St. John the Baptist.
+While Robert was watching Stirling, his brother Edward devastated
+the country round Carlisle, lording it for three days at the
+bishop's castle of Rose, and levying heavy blackmail on the men of
+Cumberland.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Lanercost Chronicle</i>, p. 223.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg259" id=
+"pg259">259</a></span>If Stirling were lost, all Scotland would be
+at Bruce's mercy. Even Edward was stirred by the disgrace involved
+in the utter abandonment of his father's conquest; and from March
+onwards he began to make spasmodic efforts to collect men and ships
+to enable him to advance to the relief of the beleaguered garrison.
+At first it seemed sufficient to raise the feudal levies and a
+small infantry force from the northern shires, but as time went on
+the necessity of meeting the Scottish pikemen by corresponding
+levies of foot soldiers became evident, and over 20,000 infantry
+were summoned from the northern counties and Wales.[1] But the
+notice given was far too short, and June was well advanced before
+anything was ready.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For the numbers at Bannockburn, see
+<i>Foedera</i>, ii., 248, and Round, <i>Commune</i> of London, pp.
+289-301.</p>
+
+<p>Even the Scottish peril could not quicken the sluggish
+patriotism of the ordainers. Four earls, Lancaster, Warenne,
+Warwick, and Arundel, answered Edward's summons by reminding him
+that the ordinances prescribed that war should only be undertaken
+with the approval of parliament, and by declining to follow him to
+a campaign undertaken on his own responsibility. They would send
+quotas, but begged to be excused from personal attendance. Yet even
+without them, a gallant array slowly gathered together at Berwick,
+and one at least of the opposition earls, Humphrey of Hereford, was
+there, with Gilbert of Gloucester and Aymer of Pembroke and 2,000
+men-at-arms. An enormous baggage train enabled the knights and
+barons to appear in the field in great magnificence, though it
+destroyed the mobility of the force. "The multitude of waggons,"
+wrote the monk of Malmesbury, "if they had been extended in a
+single line would have occupied the space of twenty leagues." The
+splendour and number of the army inspired the king and his friends
+with the utmost confidence. Though the host started from Berwick
+less than a week before the appointed day, the king moved, says the
+Malmesbury monk, not as if he were about to lead an army to battle,
+but rather as if he were going on a pilgrimage to Compostella.
+"There was but short delay for sleep, and a shorter delay for
+taking food. Hence horses, horsemen, and infantry were worn out
+with fatigue and hunger." There was no order <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg260" id="pg260">260</a></span>or method in the
+proceedings of the host. The presence of the king meant that there
+was no effective general, and Hereford and Gloucester quarrelled
+for the second place.</p>
+
+<p>It was not until Sunday, June 23, that Edward at last took up
+his quarters a few miles south of Stirling, with a worn-out and
+dispirited army. Yet, if Stirling were to be saved, immediate
+action was necessary. Gloucester and Hereford made a vigorous but
+unsuccessful effort to penetrate at once into the castle, and Bruce
+came down just in time to throw himself between them and the walls.
+Henry Bohun, who had forced his way forward at the head of a force
+of Welsh infantry, was slain, and his troops dispersed. Gloucester
+was unhorsed, and thereupon the English retreated to their camp.
+Fearing an attack under cover of darkness, they had little sleep
+that night, and many of the watchers consoled themselves with
+revelry and drunkenness. When St. John's day dawned, they were too
+weary to fight effectively. Bruce advanced from the woods and
+stationed his troops on the low ridge bounding the northern slope
+of the little brook, called the Bannockburn, which runs about two
+miles south of Stirling on its course towards the Forth. Of the
+three divisions, or battles, into which the Scots were divided, two
+stood on the same front, side by side, while King Robert commanded
+the rear battle, which was to serve as a reserve. He marshalled his
+forces much in the same way that Wallace had adopted at Falkirk.
+There was the same close array of infantry, protected by a wall of
+shields and a thick hedge of pikes. Each man wore light but
+adequate armour, and, besides the pike, bore an axe at his side for
+work at close quarters. Pits were dug before the Scots lines, and
+covered over with hurdles so light that they would not bear the
+weight of a mail-clad warrior and his horse. Save for a small
+cavalry force kept in reserve in the rear, the men-at-arms were
+ordered to dismount and take their place in the dense array, lest,
+like their comrades at Falkirk, they should ride off in alarm when
+they saw the preponderance of the enemy's horse. The Scots were
+less numerous than the English, but they were an army and not a
+mob; their commander was a man of rare military insight, and their
+tactics were those which, twelve years before, had defeated the
+chivalry of France at Courtrai.</p>
+
+<p>The English had feared that the Scots would not fight a pitched
+battle, and were astonished to see them at daybreak prepared to
+receive an attack. Their contempt for their enemy made them eager
+to accept the challenge, but Gloucester, who, though only
+twenty-three, had more of the soldier's eye than most of the
+magnates, urged Edward to postpone the encounter for a day, that
+the army might recover from its fatigue, and the clergy advised
+delay out of respect to St. John the Baptist. Unmoved by prudence
+or piety, Edward denounced his nephew as a coward, and ordered an
+immediate advance.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg261" id=
+"pg261">261</a></span>The English, forgetting the lessons of the
+Welsh wars, sent on the archers in front of the cavalry. Bruce,
+seeing that their missiles were playing havoc on his dense ranks,
+directed his small cavalry force to charge the archers on their
+left flank. The unsupported bowmen at once fell back in confusion,
+leaving the cavalry to do its work. Meanwhile the English
+men-at-arms were advancing in three "battles," the first of which
+then came into action. Many of the English fell into the pits
+prepared for them, and the Scottish shields and pikes broke the
+attack of those who evaded these obstacles. Gloucester fought with
+rare gallantry, but was badly seconded by his followers. At last
+his horse was slain under him, and he was knocked down and killed.
+The troop which he led fled panic-stricken from the field. The
+Scots then advanced with such vigour that the English never
+recovered from the disorder into which their first disaster had
+thrown them. While these things were going on, the second and third
+English "battles" had been making feeble efforts to take their part
+in the fight. But the first line cut them off from direct access to
+the foe, and the archers of the second battle did more harm to
+their friends than to their enemies by shooting wildly, straight in
+front of them. There was no single directing force, nor, after
+Gloucester's fall, even one conspicuous leader who would set an
+example of blind valour. Hundreds of English knights, who had not
+drawn their swords, were soon fleeing in terror before the enemy.
+Edward, who had taken up his station in the rear battle, rode off
+the field and never dismounted until he reached Dunbar, whence he
+fled by sea to Berwick.</p>
+
+<p>Abandoned by their leaders, the English retreated as best they
+could. Many of their best knights lay dead on the field, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg262" id="pg262">262</a></span>and more
+were drowned in the Forth or Bannock, or swallowed up in the bogs,
+than were slain in the fight. The Scots, whose losses were slight,
+showed a prudent tendency to capture rather than slay the knights
+and barons, in order that they might hold them up to ransom, and
+though many desisted from the pursuit to plunder the baggage train,
+those who followed the English fugitives reaped an abundant harvest
+of captives. Hereford was chased into Bothwell castle, which was
+still held for the English. But next day the Scottish official who
+commanded there for Edward opened the gates to Bruce, and the earl
+became a prisoner. Pembroke escaped with difficulty on foot, along
+with a contingent of Welsh infantry. The mighty English army had
+ceased to exist; and with the surrender of Stirling, next day,
+Bruce's career attained its culminating point. His long years of
+trial were at last over, and the clever adventurer could henceforth
+enjoy in security the crown which he had so gallantly won.</p>
+
+<p>The military results of Bannockburn were of extreme importance.
+The ablest of contemporary annalists aptly compared Bruce's victory
+to the battle of Courtrai. An even nearer analogy was the fight at
+Morgarten where, within two years, the pikemen of the Forest
+Cantons were to scatter the chivalry of the Hapsburgers as
+effectively as the Flemings won the day at Courtrai or the Scots at
+Bannockburn. The English had forgotten the military lessons of
+Edward I., as completely as they had forgotten his political
+lessons, and their reliance on the obsolete and unsupported cavalry
+charge was their undoing. Bruce, on the other hand, had improved
+upon the teaching of Wallace and Edward I. His use of his
+men-at-arms on foot anticipates the English tactics of the Hundred
+Years' War. The presence of these heavily armed troopers in his
+ranks gave him a strength in defence, and an impetuosity in attack,
+which made it a simple matter to break up the undisciplined
+squadrons opposed to him. Bannockburn rang the death-knell of the
+tactics which since Hastings had been regarded as the perfection of
+military art. The political lessons of the victory were of not less
+importance. It is almost too much to say that Bannockburn won for
+Scotland its independence, for Scottish independence had already
+been vindicated. But the easy victory brought home to men's minds
+the full measure of the Scottish triumph. It was <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg263" id="pg263">263</a></span>already clear
+that so long as Edward lived, England would never make the
+continued effort which, as Edward I.'s wars both in Wales and
+Scotland had shown, could alone systematically conquer a nation.
+Bruce's difficulties were not so much with the English as with the
+Scots. It was no small task to unite the English of the Lothians,
+the Welsh of the south-west, the Norsemen of the extreme north, and
+the Celts of the hills into a single Scottish nation. He had
+against him the separatist local feeling which Scottish history and
+ethnology made inevitable, and it took time for him to obtain that
+prestige, which should hedge a king, and raise him above the crowd
+of feudal earls and clan chieftains, who thought themselves as good
+as the sometime Earl of Carrick. Such dignity and distinction
+Bannockburn supplied, and such measure of national unity and strong
+monarchical authority as Scotland ever enjoyed, came from the
+triumph of him who became, even more than Wallace, the hero of the
+new nation. For the next few years the Scots took the aggressive.
+They induced the French kings to renew the alliance which Philip
+IV. had made with them in the early years of the contest. They
+obtained papal recognition for their king and the withdrawal of the
+ban of the Church on Comyn's murderer; they plundered northern
+England from end to end, and broke down Anglo-Norman rule in
+Ireland; they plotted for the resurrection of the Welsh
+principality; and, worse than all, they made common cause with the
+baronial opposition. Hence it followed that the political results
+of the victory were as important to England as they were to
+Scotland itself. The troubled history of the next eight years
+reveals in detail the effects of Bannockburn on England. Edward's
+defeat threw him into the power of the ordainers. The ordainers,
+when called upon to govern, showed themselves as incapable as ever
+Edward or his favourites had been. The results were misrule,
+aristocratic faction, popular distress, and mob violence.
+Ineffective as are the first seven years of the reign of Edward of
+Carnarvon, the eight years which followed Bruce's victory plunged
+England deeper into the pit of degradation, from which neither the
+king nor the king's foes were strong, wise, or honest enough to
+release her.</p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+
+<h4>LANCASTER, PEMBROKE, AND THE DESPENSERS.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg264" id=
+"pg264">264</a></span>Bannockburn was almost welcomed by the
+ordainers, for it afforded new opportunities of humiliating the
+defeated king. While Edward tarried at Berwick, Lancaster was in
+his castle of Pontefract with a force far larger than his cousin's.
+Loudly declaring that the true cause of the disaster was Edward's
+neglect to carry out the ordinances, he announced his intention of
+immediately enforcing their observance. At a parliament at York, in
+September, Edward delivered himself altogether into Thomas's hands,
+ordering the immediate execution of the ordinances, and replacing
+his ministers and sheriffs by nominees of the ordainers. The only
+boon that he obtained was that the earls postponed the removal from
+court of Hugh Despenser and Henry Beaumont, the two faithful
+friends who had guarded him in his flight from Bannockburn.
+Despenser, however, thought it prudent to avoid his enemies by
+going into hiding. Edward's submission did not help him against the
+Scots. The earls resolved that the question of an expedition was to
+be postponed until the next parliament, on the ground that it was
+imprudent to take action until Hereford and the other captives had
+been released. It was a sorry excuse, for King Robert and his
+brother were devastating the northern counties with fire and sword,
+and it gave new ground to the suspicion of an understanding between
+the Scottish king and the ordainers. But the victor of Bannockburn
+showed surprising moderation. He suffered the bodies of Gloucester
+and the slain barons to be buried among their ancestors, and
+released Gloucester's father-in-law, Monthermer, without ransom,
+declaring that the thing in the world which he most desired was to
+live in peace with the English. He welcomed an exchange of
+prisoners, by which <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg265" id=
+"pg265">265</a></span>his wife, Elizabeth de Burgh, his sister, his
+daughter, and the Bishop of Glasgow were restored to Scotland. The
+release of Hereford soon added to the king's troubles.</p>
+
+<p>In January, 1315, Edward's humiliation was completed at a London
+parliament. Hugh Despenser and Walter Langton were removed from the
+council. The "superfluous members" of the royal household,
+denounced as "excessively burdensome to the king and the land,"
+were dismissed, and drastic ordinances were drawn up for the
+regulation of the diminished following still allowed to the king.
+Edward was put on an allowance of &pound;10 a day, and the
+administration of his revenues taken out of his hands. The grant
+made was accompanied by the condition that its spending should be
+entirely in the hands of the barons, and the estates arranged after
+their own fashion for the new Scottish campaign. When summer came,
+Lancaster insisted on taking the command himself, and thus gave a
+new grievance to Pembroke, who had already been appointed general.
+Lancaster was henceforth the indispensable man. When parliament met
+at Lincoln, in January, 1316, the few magnates who attended would
+transact no business until his arrival. On his tardy appearance in
+the last days of the session, it was resolved "that the lord king
+should do nothing grave or arduous without the advice of the
+council, and that the Earl of Lancaster should hold the chief place
+in the council". It was only after some hesitation that the earl
+accepted this position. Once more the king was forced to confirm
+the ordinances. Liberal grants were made by the estates, and every
+rural township was called upon to furnish and pay a foot soldier to
+fight the Scots.</p>
+
+<p>The commander of the army and the chief counsellor of the king,
+Lancaster, was in a stronger position than any subject since the
+days of Simon of Montfort. He could afford to despise aristocratic
+jealousy and royal malignity. To the commons he was the good earl,
+who was standing up for the rights of the people. He was the
+darling of the clergy, who looked upon him as the pillar of
+orthodoxy, the disciple of Winchelsea, and the upholder of the
+rights of Holy Church. The warlike and energetic barons of the
+north were his sworn followers, and, apart from his hold upon
+public opinion, he could always fall back on the resources of his
+five earldoms. But events <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg266" id=
+"pg266">266</a></span>were soon to show that the successful leader
+of opposition was absolutely incapable of carrying out a
+constructive policy. He had no ideals, no principles, no feeling of
+the importance of administrative efficiency, no sense of
+responsibility, no power of controlling his followers. He never
+understood that his business was no longer to oppose but to act.
+The clear-headed monk of Malmesbury paints the disastrous results
+of his inaction: "Whatsoever pleased the king, the earl's servants
+strove to overthrow; and whatever pleased the earl, was declared by
+the king's servants to be treasonable; and so, at the suggestion of
+the evil one, the households of earl and king put themselves in the
+way and would not allow their masters, by whom the land should have
+been defended, to be of one accord". Even the implied understanding
+with the King of Scots was not abandoned by the man on whom the
+responsibility rested of defeating him. When Bruce devastated the
+north of England he still spared the lands of the king's "chief
+counsellor," as of old he had spared the lands of the opposition
+leader. When, in 1316, Lancaster mustered his forces at Newcastle
+against the Scots, Edward repaid him for his inaction in 1314 by
+declining to accompany him over the border. "Thereupon," wrote the
+border annalist,[1] "the earl at once went back; for neither
+trusted the other." Edward, who forgot and forgave nothing,
+secretly negotiated with the pope for absolution from his oath to
+the ordinances. He gradually built up a court party, and soon
+restored Hugh Despenser to his position in the household. As might
+be expected in such circumstances no effective resistance was made
+to the Scots.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Lanercost Chronicle</i>, p. 233.</p>
+
+<p>It was a time of severe distress in England. In 1315 a rainy
+summer ruined the harvest. Great floods swept away the hay from the
+fields, and drowned the sheep and cattle. In 1316 famine raged,
+especially in the north. For a hundred years, we are told, such
+scarcity of corn had not been known. A bushel of wheat was sold at
+London for forty pence, and the Northumbrians were driven to feed
+on dogs, horses, and other unwonted food. Pestilence followed in
+the train of famine. It was in vain that parliament passed laws,
+limiting the repasts of the barons' households to two courses of
+meat, and fixing the price of the chief sorts of victuals. The only
+result was <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg267" id=
+"pg267">267</a></span>that dealers refused to bring their produce
+to market. Then the legislation, passed in a panic, was repealed in
+a panic. "It is better," said a chronicler, "to buy things at a
+high rate than not to be able to buy them at all."</p>
+
+<p>Private wars raged from end to end of south Britain. On the
+upper Severn, Griffith of Welshpool, the younger son of Griffith ap
+Gwenwynwyn, laid regular siege to Powys castle, the stronghold of
+John Charlton, his niece's husband and his rival for the lordship
+of upper Powys. As Charlton was a courtier, Griffith attached
+himself to the ordainers. After Bannockburn, the captivity of
+Hereford, the lord of Brecon, and the death without heirs of
+Gloucester, the lord of Glamorgan, removed the strongest restraints
+on the men of south Wales. The royal warden of Glamorgan, Payne of
+Turberville, displaced Gloucester's old officers. One of the
+sufferers was Llewelyn Bren, "a great and powerful Welshman in
+those parts," who had held high office under Earl Gilbert. In 1315
+Llewelyn, after seeking justice in vain at the king's court, rose
+in revolt against Turberville. He gathered the Welshmen on the
+hills, burst upon Caerphilly, while the constable was holding a
+court outside the castle, took the outer ward by surprise and burnt
+it to ashes. There was fear lest this revolt should be the
+starting-point of a general Welsh rising. Llewelyn's hill
+strongholds threatened Brecon on the north and the vale of
+Glamorgan on the south; and Hereford, then released from his
+Scottish captivity, was entrusted with the suppression of the
+revolt. Before long all the lords of the march joined Hereford in
+stamping out the movement. Among them were the two Roger Mortimers,
+the Montagues and the Giffords, and Henry of Lancaster, Earl
+Thomas's brother, and lord in his own right of Monmouth and
+Kidwelly. Overwhelmed by such mighty opponents, Llewelyn
+surrendered to Hereford, hoping thus to save his followers.</p>
+
+<p>Lancaster himself suffered from the spirit of anarchy that was
+abroad. His own Lancashire vassals rose against his authority,
+under Adam Banaster, a former member of his household. Adam
+belonged to an important Lancashire family, which had long stood in
+close relations to Wales, and had committed a homicide for which he
+despaired of pardon. He now posed as the champion of the king
+against the earl, believing that anything that caused trouble to
+Thomas would <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg268" id=
+"pg268">268</a></span>give no small delight at court. Lancaster
+showed more energy in upholding his own rights than in maintaining
+the honour of England. He raised such an overwhelming force that
+Banaster, unable to hold the field against him, shut himself up in
+his house. His refuge was stormed and his head brought to Earl
+Thomas as a trophy of victory. While Banaster was raiding
+Lancashire and Llewelyn south Wales, the Scots were devastating the
+country as far south as Furness, and Edward Bruce, King Robert's
+brother, was conquering Ireland. There was little wonder that
+Edward Bruce hoped to cross over to Wales when he had done his work
+in Ireland, or that the Welsh, buoyed up, as in the last
+generation, by the prophesies of Merlin, believed that the time was
+come when they would expel the Saxons, and win back the empire of
+Britain.</p>
+
+<p>Of much longer duration than the wars of Llewelyn Bren and Adam
+Banaster, were the formidable disturbances which raged for many
+years at Bristol. Fourteen Bristol magnates had long a
+preponderating influence in the government of the town. The commons
+bitterly resented their superiority and declared that every burgess
+should enjoy equal rights. A royal inquiry was ordered, but the
+judges, bribed, as was believed, by the fourteen, gave a decision
+which was unacceptable to the commons. Lord Badlesmere, warden of
+the castle, sided with the oligarchs, and thus the whole authority
+of the state was brought to bear against the popular party. But it
+was an easy matter to resist the government of Edward II. The
+commons took arms and a riot broke out in court. Twenty men were
+killed in the disturbances, and the judges fled for their lives.
+Eighty burgesses were proved by inquest at Gloucester to have been
+the ringleaders. As they refused to appear to answer the charges,
+they were outlawed. Indignation at Bristol then rose to such a
+height that the fourteen fled in their turn, and for more than two
+years Bristol succeeded in holding out against the royal mandate.
+At last, in 1316, the town was regularly besieged by the Earl of
+Pembroke. The castle was not within the burgesses' power, and its
+<i>petrariae</i>, breaking down the walls and houses of the
+borough, compelled the townsmen to surrender. A few of the chief
+rebels were punished, but a pardon was issued to the mass of the
+burgesses.</p>
+
+<p>More dangerous than any of these troubles was the attack <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg269" id="pg269">269</a></span>made by
+Edward Bruce on the English power in Ireland. That power had been
+on the wane during the last two generations. Edward I. had formed
+schemes for the better administration of the country, but little
+had come of them. The English government in Dublin gradually lost
+such control as it had possessed over the remoter parts of the
+island. The shire organisation, set up in an earlier generation,
+became little more than nominal. The constitutional movement of the
+thirteenth century extended to the island, and the Irish
+parliament, then growing up out of the old council, reflected in a
+blurred fashion the organisation of the English parliament of the
+three estates. But royal lieutenants and councils, shires and
+sheriffs, parliaments and justices had only the most superficial
+influence on Irish life. Real authority was divided between the
+Norman lords of the plain and the Celtic chieftains of the hills.
+Each feudal lord hated his fellows, and bitter as were the feuds of
+Fitzgeralds and Burghs, they were mild as compared with the
+rancorous hereditary factions which divided the native septs from
+each other. These divisions alone made it possible for the king's
+officers to keep up some semblance of royal rule. If they were
+seldom obeyed, the divisions in the enemies' camps prevented any
+chance of their being overthrown. Thus the Irish went on living a
+rude, turbulent life of perpetual purposeless war and bloodshed.
+Ireland was a wilder, larger, more remote Welsh march, and the
+resemblance was heightened by the fact that many of the
+Anglo-Norman principalities were in the hands of great English or
+marcher families, and that the Irish foot-soldier played only a
+less important part than the Welsh archer and pikeman among the
+light-armed soldiers of the English crown.</p>
+
+<p>The easiest way to keep up a show of English government was to
+form an alliance between the crown and some of the baronial houses.
+Richard de Burgh, Earl of Ulster, the most powerful of the feudal
+lords of Ireland, was the only one who at that period bore the
+title of earl. He had long been interested in general English
+affairs, and his kinswomen had intermarried into great British
+houses. One of his daughters married Robert Bruce when he was Earl
+of Carrick, and another was more recently wedded to Earl Gilbert of
+Gloucester. Despite the Bruce connexion, the Earl of Ulster was
+still trusted by the English party, and the king gave him the
+command <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg270" id=
+"pg270">270</a></span>of an Irish army which he had intended to
+send against Scotland in 1314. Richard was too busy fighting the
+Ulster clans of O'Donnell and O'Neil, and too jealous of the
+Fitzgeralds, his feudal rivals, to throw his heart into the
+hopeless task of gathering together the two nations and many clans
+of Ireland into a single host. The death of Earl Gilbert at
+Bannockburn broke his nearest tie with England, and the release of
+Elizabeth Bruce in exchange for Hereford gave his daughter the
+actual enjoyment of the throne of Scotland. His natural instincts
+as an Irishman and as a baron were to restrain the power of his
+overlord. When the news of Bruce's victory produced a great stir
+among the Irish clans, he stood aside and let events take their
+course.</p>
+
+<p>Though the Gael of the Scottish Highlands played little part at
+Bannockburn, the Irish rejoiced at the Scots' success as that of
+their kinsmen. "The Kings of the Scots," said the Irish Celts,
+"derive their origin from our land. They speak our tongue and have
+our laws and customs." However little true this was in fact, it was
+a good excuse for some of the Irish clans to offer the throne of
+Ireland to the King of Scots. Robert rejected the proposal for
+himself, but was willing to give his able and adventurous brother
+Edward the chance of winning another crown for his house. Edward,
+"who thought that Scotland was too little for his brother and
+himself," cheerfully fell in with the scheme. On May 25, 1315, he
+landed near Carrickfergus and received a rapturous welcome from the
+O'Neils, the greatest of the septs of the north-east. Before long
+all Celtic Ulster flocked to his banners, and Edmund Butler, then
+justice of Ireland, strove with little success to make head against
+the Scottish invasion. The completeness of Bruce's union with the
+native Irish gave him his best chance of attaining his object. Up
+to this point the attitude of the Earl of Ulster had been most
+undecided. He at last threw in his lot with the justiciar. When
+parties began to shape themselves it was clear that "all the Irish
+of Ireland" were in league with Bruce. The danger was that "a great
+part of the great lords and lesser English folk" also joined the
+invader. Conspicuous among these were the Lacys of Meath.</p>
+
+<p>Edward Bruce showed energy and vigour. He made his way
+southwards, and in September won a victory over the forces of <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg271" id="pg271">271</a></span>the Earl
+of Ulster and the justiciar at Dundalk, then in the south of
+Ulster. After this he pushed into Meath and Leinster and was joined
+by the O'Tooles and the other clans of the Wicklow mountains, while
+the adhesion of Phelim O'Connor, King of Connaught, brought the
+whole of the Celtic west into his alliance. The barons, however,
+took the alarm. During the winter Butler contracted friendship with
+many of the Norman colonists. From that time the struggle assumed
+the character of a war between Celtic Ireland and feudal Ireland,
+the native clansmen and the Anglo-Norman settlers. Thus, though
+Bruce and his wild allies found it easy to make themselves masters
+of the open country, all the castles and towns were closed to them
+and could only be won by long-continued efforts. Before long,
+Butler drove them to the hills. Ere the winter was over, Edward
+found it prudent to retire to Ulster.</p>
+
+<p>During 1316 the struggle raged unceasingly. Bruce was crowned
+King of Ireland, the O'Neil, it was said, having abdicated his
+rights in his favour. But the summer saw the utter defeat of the
+O'Connors by the justiciar at the bloody battle of Athenry, where
+King Phelim and the noblest of his sept perished. A little later
+the King of Scots came to the help of his brother. With his aid,
+Edward was able to reduce Carrickfergus, which had hitherto defied
+his efforts. Then the brothers led their forces from one end of
+Ireland to the other. Dublin prepared for a siege by burning its
+suburbs and devastating the country around. But though the two
+Bruces penetrated as far as Limerick, they did not capture a single
+castle or a walled town. They lost so many men during their winter
+campaign, that they were forced in the spring to retire to Ulster.
+The hopeless disunion of both parties in Ireland seemed likely to
+prolong the struggle indefinitely. The men of Dublin and the Earl
+of Ulster were at feud with each other, and the citizens captured
+the earl and shut him up in Dublin castle. However little the earl
+could be trusted, this was a step likely to throw all Ulster into
+the arms of the Bruces. But a stronger justice of Ireland then
+superseded Edmund Butler. Roger Mortimer of Wigmore, the mightiest
+baron of the Welsh march, and a man of real ability, rare energy,
+extreme ruthlessness, and savage cruelty, crossed over from
+Haverfordwest early in 1317 at the head of a large force of marcher
+knights and men-at-arms, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg272" id=
+"pg272">272</a></span>versed from their youth up in the traditions
+of Celtic warfare. Mortimer set himself to work to break up the
+ill-assorted coalition that supported Bruce. He released the Earl
+of Ulster from his Dublin prison; he procured the banishment of the
+heads of the house of Lacy; he won over some of the Irish septs to
+his side; he stimulated the civil war which had devastated
+Connaught since the fall of the O'Connors. Edward Bruce was once
+more confined to Ulster, where he still struggled on bravely. In
+the autumn of 1318 he led a foray southwards, and met his fate in a
+skirmish near Dundalk on October 14, when his force was scattered
+in confusion by John of Bermingham, one of the neighbouring lords.
+The four quarters of the luckless King of Ireland were exposed in
+the four chief towns of the island as a trophy of victory, and
+Bermingham was rewarded by the new earldom of Louth.</p>
+
+<p>Edward Bruce's enterprise ended with his death, and Ireland
+rapidly settled down into its normal condition of impotent
+turbulence. Though at first sight the invader utterly failed, yet
+he pricked the bubble of the English power in Ireland. His gallant
+attempt at winning the throne is the critical event in a long
+period of Irish history. From the days of Henry III to the days of
+Edward Bruce, the lordship of the English kings in Ireland was to
+some extent a reality. From 1315 to the reign of Henry VIII, the
+English dominion was little more than a name as regards the greater
+part of Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>No one attained success, in the years after
+Bannockburn,&mdash;neither Banaster, nor Llewelyn Bren, nor the
+Bristol commons nor Edward Bruce and his Irish allies. Before long,
+the incompetence of Lancaster became as manifest as the
+incompetence of Edward II. Lancaster's failure led to the
+dissolution of the baronial opposition into fiercely opposing
+factions. Personal and territorial jealousies slowly undermined a
+unity which had always been more apparent than real. The Earl of
+Pembroke had never forgiven the treachery of Deddington. Though
+Warwick was dead, Pembroke still pursued Lancaster with unrelenting
+hatred. No partisan of prerogative, and an enemy of Edward's
+personal following, Earl Aymer separated himself from his old
+associates and strove to form a middle party between the faction of
+the king and the faction of Lancaster. Warerine, coarse, turbulent,
+and vicious, at once violent <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg273"
+id="pg273">273</a></span>and crafty, still acted with him. The lord
+of Conisborough had long grudged the master of Pontefract and
+Sandal his great position in Yorkshire. The natural rivalries of
+neighbouring potentates were further emphasised by personal
+animosity of the deadliest kind. Lancaster had long been at
+variance with his wife, Alice Lacy. On May 9, 1317, the Countess of
+Lancaster ran away from him, with the active help of Warenne and by
+the secret contrivance of the king. Private war at once broke out
+between the two earls. Lancaster was too strong for his enemy.
+Before winter had begun, Conisborough and Warenne's other Yorkshire
+castles fell into his hands. Lancaster's partisans even laid hold
+of the king's castle of Knaresborough, while other Lancastrian
+bands occupied Alton castle in Staffordshire. Intermittent
+hostilities continued until the summer of 1318. Twice Edward
+himself went to the north, and on one occasion appeared in force
+outside Pontefract. But the more moderate of the baronage managed
+to prevent open hostilities between the king and the earl.
+Lancaster was, as ever, fighting for his own hand. His self-seeking
+narrowness gave Pembroke the chance of winning for his middle party
+a preponderating authority.</p>
+
+<p>Pembroke found more trustworthy allies than Warenne in
+Bartholomew, Lord Badlesmere, the sometime instigator of the
+Bristol troubles, and a bitter opponent of Lancaster, and in Roger
+of Amory, the husband of one of the three co-heiresses who now
+divided the Gloucester inheritance. Edward, who had profited by the
+divisions of his enemies to revive the court party, formed a
+coalition between his friends and the followers of Pembroke. All
+lovers of order, of moderation, and of the supremacy of the law
+necessarily made common cause with them. Thus it followed that the
+same machinery, which Lancaster a few years earlier had turned
+against the king, was now turned against him. An additional motive
+to bring peaceable Englishmen into line was found in the capture of
+Berwick by Bruce in April, 1318. After this negotiations for peace
+began. The king and Lancaster treated as two independent princes.
+Lancaster was no longer supported by any prominent earl, and even
+his clerical friends were falling from him. Ordainers as jealous as
+Arundel, royalists as fierce as Mortimer, served along with
+trimmers like Pembroke and Badlesmere, in acting as mediators.
+Lancaster <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg274" id=
+"pg274">274</a></span>could no more resist than Edward could in
+1312. On August 9 he accepted at Leek, in Staffordshire, the
+conditions drawn up for him.</p>
+
+<p>The treaty of Leek marks the triumph of the middle party and the
+removal of Lancaster from the first place in the royal council. A
+pardon was granted to him and his followers, but Thomas gained
+little else by the compact. Pembroke and his friends showed
+themselves as jealous of Edward as ever the ordainers had been. The
+ordinances were once more confirmed, and a new council of seventeen
+was nominated, including eight bishops, four earls, four barons,
+and one banneret. The earls were Pembroke, Arundel, Richmond, and
+Hereford. Of these the Breton Earl of Richmond was the most
+friendly to the king, but it was significant to find so truculent a
+politician as Hereford making common cause with Pembroke. The most
+important of the four barons was Roger Mortimer of Wigmore.
+Lancaster though not paramount was still powerful, but his habit of
+absenting himself from parliaments made it useless to offer him a
+place in the council, and he was represented by a single banneret,
+nominated by him. Of these councillors two bishops, one earl, one
+baron, and Lancaster's nominee were to be in constant attendance.
+They were virtually to control Edward's policy, and to see that he
+consulted parliament in all matters that required its assent. A few
+days after the treaty Edward and Lancaster met at Hathern, near
+Loughborough, and exchanged the kiss of peace. Roger of Amory and
+other magnates of the middle party reconciled themselves to
+Lancaster, and he condescendingly restored them to his favour. But
+he would not deign to admit Hugh Despenser to his presence, and
+declared that he was still free to carry on his quarrel against
+Warenne. In October, a parliament at York confirmed the treaty of
+Leek, adding new members to the council and appointing another
+commission to reform the king's household. From that time until
+1321, Pembroke and his friends controlled the English state, though
+often checked both by the king and even more by Lancaster, who
+still stood ostentatiously aloof from parliaments and campaigns.
+These years, though neither glorious nor prosperous, were the most
+peaceable and uneventful of the whole of Edward II.'s reign. They
+are noteworthy for the only serious attempt made to check the
+progress of the Scots after <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg275"
+id="pg275">275</a></span>Bannockburn. From 1318 to 1320 king and
+court were almost continually in the north. York became the regular
+meeting-place of parliaments for even a longer period.</p>
+
+<p>Since 1314, the Scots had mercilessly devastated the whole north
+of England. The population made little attempt at resistance, and
+sought to buy them off by large payments of money. The Scots took
+the cash and soon came again for more. They wandered at will over
+the open country, and only the castles and walled towns afforded
+protection against them. Their forays extended as far south as
+Lancashire and Yorkshire, and, so early as 1315, Carlisle and
+Berwick were regularly besieged by them. It was to no purpose that
+in 1317 the pope issued a bull insisting upon a truce. The English
+welcomed an armistice on any terms, but the Scots' interest was in
+the continuance of the war, and they paid no attention to the papal
+proposal. The result was a renewal of Bruce's excommunication, and
+the placing of all Scotland under interdict. Yet no papal censures
+checked Robert's career or lessened his hold over Scotland. Next
+year he showed greater activity than ever. In April, 1318, he
+captured the town of Berwick by treachery. Peter of Spalding, one
+of the English burgesses who formed the town guard, was bribed to
+allow a band of Scots to seize that section of the town wall of
+which he was guardian. Then the intruders captured the gates and
+admitted their comrades. Thus the last Scottish town to be held by
+the English went back to its natural rulers. The English burgesses
+were expelled, though Bruce showed wonderful moderation, and few of
+his enemies were slain. Berwick castle held out for a time, until
+lack of victuals caused its surrender. In May the Scots marched
+through Northumberland and Durham into Yorkshire, burnt
+Northallerton and Boroughbridge, and exacted a thousand marks from
+Ripon, as the price of respecting the church of St. Wilfred. They
+then spent three days at Knaresborough, and made their way home
+through Craven.</p>
+
+<p>Such successes show clearly enough that the treaty of Leek was
+not signed a moment too soon. It was, however, too late for any
+great effort against the Scots in 1318. A strenuous endeavour was
+made to levy a formidable expedition for 1319. In strict accordance
+with the ordinances, the parliament, which met at York in May of
+that year, agreed that there should be <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg276" id="pg276">276</a></span>a muster at Berwick for July
+22, and granted a liberal subsidy. An insolent offer of peace,
+coupled with a promise of freedom of life and limb to Bruce, should
+he resign his crown, provoked from the Scots king the reply that
+Scotland was his kingdom both by hereditary right and the law of
+arms, and that he was indifferent whether he had peace with the
+English king or not. On July 22, the feast of St. Mary Magdalen and
+the anniversary of Falkirk fight, the barons assembled at
+Newcastle. Thomas of Lancaster was there with his brother Henry.
+Warenne, newly reconciled with Lancaster by a large surrender of
+lands, also attended, as did Pembroke, Arundel, Hereford, and the
+husbands of the three Gloucester co-heiresses. There was a braver
+show of earls than even in 1314. An offer of lands, when Scotland
+was conquered, attracted a large number of volunteer infantry,
+while the cupidity of the seamen was appealed to by a promise of
+ample plunder. In August the host and fleet moved northwards, and
+closely beset Berwick.</p>
+
+<p>The Scots were too astute to offer battle. While the English
+were employed at Berwick, Sir James Douglas led their main force
+into the heart of Yorkshire. Douglas hoped to capture Queen
+Isabella, who was staying near York. A spy betrayed this design to
+the English, and Isabella was hurried off by water to Nottingham,
+while Douglas pressed on into the heart of Yorkshire. The
+Yorkshiremen had to defend their own shire while their best
+soldiers were with the king at Berwick. A hastily gathered assembly
+of improvised warriors flocked into York. Archbishop Melton put
+himself at their head, and the clergy, both secular and religious,
+formed a considerable element in the host. Then they marched out
+against the Scots, and found them at Myton in Swaledale. The Scots
+despised the disorderly mob of squires and farmers, priests and
+canons, monks and friars. "These are not warriors," they cried,
+"but huntsmen. They will do nought against us." Concealing their
+movements by kindling great fires of hay, they bore down upon the
+Yorkshiremen and put them to flight with much loss. The fight was
+called "the white battle of Myton" on account of the large number
+of white-robed monks who took part in it The archbishop escaped
+with the utmost difficulty. Many fugitives were drowned in the
+Swale, and not one would have escaped had not night stopped the
+Scots' pursuit. The victors then <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg277" id="pg277">277</a></span>pushed as far south as Pontefract.
+On the news of the battle, the besiegers of Berwick were dismayed.
+There was talk of dividing the army, and sending one part to drive
+Douglas out of Yorkshire while the other continued the siege. But
+the magnates, in no mood to run risks, insisted on an immediate
+return to England. Before Edward had reached Yorkshire, Douglas had
+made his way home over Stainmoor and Gilsland. Thereupon the king
+sent back his troops, each man to his own house. The magnificent
+army had accomplished nothing at all. So inglorious a termination
+of the campaign naturally gave rise to suspicions of treason. A
+story was spread abroad that Lancaster had received &pound;4,000
+from the King of Scots and had consequently done his best to help
+his ally. The rumour was so seriously believed that the earl
+offered to purge himself by ordeal of hot iron. In despair Edward
+made a two years' truce with the Scots. It was the best way of
+avoiding another Bannockburn.</p>
+
+<p>Troublous times soon began again. Since Edward surrendered
+himself to the guidance of Pembroke and Badlesmere, he had enjoyed
+comparative repose and dignity. It was only when a great
+enterprise, like the Scots campaign, was attempted that the evil
+results of anarchy and the still-abiding influence of Lancaster
+made themselves felt. But Edward bore no love to Pembroke and his
+associates, and was quietly feeling his way towards the
+re-establishment of the court party. His chief helpers in this work
+were the two Despensers, father and son, both named Hugh. The elder
+Despenser, then nearly sixty years of age, had grown grey in the
+service of Edward I. A baron of competent estate, he inherited from
+his father, the justiciar who fell at Evesham, an hereditary bias
+towards the constitutional tradition, but he looked to the monarch
+or to the popular estates, rather than to the baronage, as the best
+embodiment of his ideals. Ambitious and not over-scrupulous, he saw
+more advantage to himself in playing the game of the king than in
+joining a swarm of quarrelsome opposition lords. From the beginning
+of the reign he had identified himself with Gaveston and the
+courtiers, and had incurred the special wrath of Lancaster and the
+ordainers. Excluded from court, forced into hiding, excepted from
+several pacifications as he had been, Despenser never long absented
+himself from the court. His ambition was kindled by the
+circumstance that his eldest son had <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg278" id="pg278">278</a></span>become the most intimate personal
+friend of the king. Brought up as a boy in the household of Edward
+when Prince of Wales, the ties of old comradeship gradually drew
+the younger Hugh into Gaveston's old position as the chief
+favourite. Neither a foreigner nor an adventurer, Despenser had the
+good sense to avoid the worst errors of his predecessor. As
+chamberlain, he was in constant attendance on the king; and having
+married Edward's niece Eleanor, the eldest of the Gloucester
+co-heiresses, he sought to establish himself among the higher
+aristocracy. Royal grants and offices rained upon father and son.
+The household officers were changed at their caprice. The only safe
+way to the king's favour was by purchasing their good-will. Their
+good fortune stirred up fierce animosities, and the barons showed
+that they could hate a renegade as bitterly as a foreign
+adventurer.</p>
+
+<p>The Despensers' ambition to attain high rank was the more
+natural from the havoc which death had played among the earls.
+"Time was," said the monk of Malmesbury, "when fifteen earls and
+more followed the king to war; but now only five or six gave him
+their assistance." The five earldoms of Thomas of Lancaster meant
+the extinction of as many ancient houses. The earldoms of Chester,
+Cornwall, and Norfolk had long been in the king's hands. If the
+comital rank was not to be extinguished altogether, it had to be
+recruited with fresh blood. And who were so fit to fill up the
+vacant places as these well-born favourites?</p>
+
+<p>A little had been done under Edward II to remedy the desolation
+of the earldoms. The revival of the earldom of Cornwall in favour
+of Gaveston had not been a happy experiment. But the king's elder
+half-brother, Thomas of Brotherton, invested with the estates and
+dignities of the Bigods, was made earl marshal and Earl of Norfolk.
+In 1321 the earldom of Kent, extinct since the fall of Hubert de
+Burgh, was revived in favour of Edmund of Woodstock, the younger
+half-brother of the king. The titular Scottish earldoms of some
+English barons, such as the Umfraville earls of Angus, kept up the
+name, if not the state of earls, and we have seen the reward of the
+victor of Dundalk in the creation of a new earldom of Louth in
+Ireland. But there were certain hereditary dignities whose
+suspension seemed unnatural. Conspicuous among these was the
+Gloucester earldom which, from the days <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg279" id="pg279">279</a></span>of the valiant son of Henry
+I. to the death of the last male Clare at Bannockburn, had played a
+unique part in English history.</p>
+
+<p>Both the Despensers desired to be earls, and the younger Hugh
+wished that the Gloucester earldom should be revived in his favour.
+Assured of the good-will of the king, both had to contend against
+the jealousy of the baronage and the exclusiveness of the existing
+earls. The younger Hugh had also to reckon with his two
+brothers-in-law, with whom he had divided the Clare estates. These
+were Hugh of Audley, who had married Margaret the widow of
+Gaveston, and Roger of Amory, the husband of Elizabeth, the
+youngest of the Clare sisters. There had been difficulty enough in
+effecting the partition of the Gloucester inheritance among the
+three co-heiresses. In 1317 the division was made, and Despenser
+had become lord of Glamorgan, which politically and strategically
+was most important of all the Gloucester lands.[1] Yet even then,
+Despenser was not satisfied with his position. His rival Audley had
+been allotted Newport and Netherwent, while Amory had been assigned
+the castle of Usk and estates higher up the Usk valley. Annoyed
+that he should be a lesser personage in south Wales than Earl
+Gilbert had been, Despenser began to intrigue against his wife's
+brothers-in-law. Each of the co-heirs had already become deadly
+rivals. Their hostility was the more keen since the three had
+already taken different sides in English politics. Despenser was
+the soul of the court faction; Amory was the ally of Pembroke and
+Badlesmere, the men of the middle party; and Audley was an
+uncompromising adherent of Thomas of Lancaster. There was every
+chance that each one of the three would have competent backing. To
+each the triumph of his friends meant the prospect of his becoming
+Earl of Gloucester.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See for this, W.H. Stevenson, <i>A Letter of
+the Younger Despenser in 1321</i> in <i>Engl. Hist. Rev.</i>, xii.
+(1897), 755-61.</p>
+
+<p>Despenser, abler and more restless than the others, and
+confident in the royal favour, was the first to take the
+aggressive. He wished to base his future greatness upon a compact
+marcher principality in south Wales, and to that end not only laid
+his hands upon the outlying possessions of the Clares but coveted
+the lands of all his weaker neighbours. He took advantage of <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg280" id="pg280">280</a></span>a family
+arrangement for the succession to Gower, to strike the first blow.
+The English-speaking peninsula of Gower, with the castle of
+Swansea, was still held by a junior branch of the decaying house of
+Braose, whose main marcher lordships had been divided a century
+earlier between the Bohuns and the Mortimers. Its spendthrift
+ruler, William of Braose, was the last male of his race. He strove
+to make what profit he could for himself out of his succession, and
+had for some time been treating with Humphrey of Hereford. Gower
+was immediately to the south-west of Hereford's lordship of Brecon.
+Its acquisition would extend the Bohun lands to the sea, and make
+Earl Humphrey the greatest lord in south Wales. At the last moment,
+however, Braose broke off with him and sought to sell Gower to John
+of Mowbray, the husband of his daughter and heiress. When Braose
+died in 1320, Mowbray took possession of Gower in accordance with
+the "custom of the march". The royal assent had not been asked,
+either for licence to alienate, or for permission to enter upon the
+estate. Despenser coveted Gower for himself. He had already got
+Newport, had he Swansea also he would rule the south coast from the
+Lloughor to the Usk. Accordingly, he declared that the custom of
+the march trenched upon the royal prerogative, and managed that
+Gower should be seized by the king's officers, as a first step
+towards getting it for himself.</p>
+
+<p>Despenser's action provoked extreme indignation among all the
+marcher lords. They denounced the apostate from the cause of his
+class for upsetting the balance of power in the march, and declared
+that in treating a lordship beyond the Wye like a landed estate in
+England, Hugh had, like Edward I., "despised the laws and customs
+of the march". It was easy to form a coalition of all the marcher
+lords against him. The leaders of it were Humphrey of Hereford,
+Roger Mortimer of Chirk, justice of Wales, and his nephew, Roger
+Mortimer of Wigmore, the head of the house, who had overthrown
+Edward Bruce's monarchy of Ireland. As Braose co-heirs their
+position was unassailable. But every other baron had his grievance.
+John of Mowbray resented the loss of Gower; Henry of Lancaster
+feared for Monmouth and Kidwelly; Audley wished to win back
+Newport, and Amory, Usk. Behind the confederates was Thomas of
+Lancaster himself, eager to regain his lost position of leadership.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg281" id="pg281">281</a></span>The
+league at once began to wage war against Despenser in south Wales,
+and approached the court with a demand that he should be banished
+as a traitor.</p>
+
+<p>Edward made his way to Gloucester in March, 1321, and strove to
+protect Despenser and to calm the wild spirits of the marchers. But
+private war had already broken out after the marcher fashion, and
+the king retired without effecting his purpose. Left to themselves
+the marcher allies easily overran the Despenser lands, inherited or
+usurped. Neither Cardiff nor Caerphilly held out long against them:
+the Welsh husbandmen, like the English knights and barons of
+Glamorgan, were hostile to the Despensers. The king could do
+nothing to help his friends. In May, Lancaster formed a league of
+northern barons in the chapter-house of the priory at Pontefract.
+In June, another northern gathering was held in the Norman nave of
+the parish church of Sherburn-in-Elmet, a few miles to the north of
+Pontefract. This was attended by the Archbishop of York and two of
+his suffragans, and a great number of clergy, secular and regular,
+as well as by many barons and knights. It was in fact an informal
+parliament of the Lancastrian party. A long list of complaints were
+drawn up which, under fair words, demanded the removal of bad
+ministers, and among them the chamberlain. The clerical members of
+the conference met separately at the rectory, where they showed
+more circumspection, but an equally partisan bias.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Bp. Stubbs works all this out, <i>Chron. Ed.
+I. and II</i>., ii., pref., lxxxvi.-xc.</p>
+
+<p>The conferences at Pontefract and Sherburn showed that Lancaster
+and the northerners were in full sympathy with the men of the west.
+The middle party again made common cause with the followers of
+Lancaster. Amory's interests were sufficiently involved to make him
+an eager enemy of Despenser, and Badlesmere was almost as keen.
+Though Pembroke still professed to mediate, it was generally
+believed that he was delighted to get rid of the Despensers. Even
+Warenne took sides against them, though the discredited earl was
+fast becoming of no account. Such being the drift of opinion, the
+fate of the favourites was settled when the estates assembled in
+London in July. Edward had delayed a meeting of parliament as long
+as he could, and was helpless in its hands. Great pains were taken
+this time to prevent the repetition of the informalities <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg282" id="pg282">282</a></span>which had
+attended the attack on Gaveston. There was an unprecedented
+gathering of magnates, who came to the parliament with a large
+armed following, encamped like an army in all the villages to the
+north of the city. The commons were fully represented, and the
+clerical estate was expressly summoned. Articles were at once drawn
+up against the Despensers. They had aspired to royal power; had
+turned the heart of the king from his subjects; had excited civil
+war, and had taught that obedience was due to the crown rather than
+to the king. This last charge came strangely from those who had
+urged that doctrine as a pretext for withdrawing support from
+Gaveston. It is a good illustration of the tendency of the
+Despensers to cloak their personal ambitions with loud-sounding
+constitutional phrases.</p>
+
+<p>The peers pronounced sentence of banishment and forfeiture
+against both the elder and the younger Hugh. They were not to be
+recalled save by consent of the peers in parliament assembled. The
+easy revolution was completed by the issuing of pardons to nearly
+five hundred members of the triumphant coalition. The elder
+Despenser at once withdrew to the continent. The younger Hugh found
+friends among the mariners of the Cinque Ports. These at first
+protected him in England, and then put at his disposal a little
+fleet of vessels with which, when driven from the land, he took to
+piracy in the narrow seas.</p>
+
+<p>The fall of the Despensers was brought about very much after the
+same fashion as the first exile of Gaveston. Like Gaveston, they
+speedily returned, and in circumstances which suggest an even
+closer parallel with the events that led to the recall of the
+Gascon. The triumphant coalition in each case fell to pieces as
+soon as it had done its immediate work. Once more the loss of his
+friend and comrade stirred up Edward to an energy and perseverance
+such as he never displayed on other occasions. But the second
+triumph of the king assumed a more complete character than his
+earlier snatched victory. Accident favoured Edward's design of
+bringing back his favourites, and throwing off once more the
+baronial thraldom. On October 13, 1321, Queen Isabella, on her way
+to Canterbury, claimed hospitality at Leeds castle, situated
+between Maidstone and the archiepiscopal city. The castle belonged
+to Badlesmere, whose wife was then residing there, with his
+kinsman, Bartholomew Burghersh, and a competent garrison. Lady
+Badlesmere refused <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg283" id=
+"pg283">283</a></span>to admit the queen, declaring that, without
+her lord's orders, she could not venture to entertain any one.
+Bitterly indignant at the insult, the queen took up her quarters in
+the neighbouring priory and attempted to force an entrance. The
+castle, however, was not to be taken by the hasty attack of a small
+company. Six of Isabella's followers were slain, and the attempt
+was abandoned. Isabella called upon her husband to avenge her; and
+the king at once resolved to capture Leeds castle at any cost, and
+prepared to undertake the enterprise in person. He offered high
+wages to all crossbowmen, archers, knights, and squires who would
+follow him to Leeds, and summoned the levies of horse and foot from
+the towns and shires of the south-east. His trust in the loyalty of
+his subjects met with an unexpectedly favourable response. In a few
+days a large army gathered round the king under the walls of Leeds.
+Among the many magnates who appeared among the royal following were
+six earls: Pembroke, Badlesmere's own associate; the king's two
+brothers, Norfolk and Kent; Warenne, Richmond, and Arundel, who as
+Despenser's kinsman felt himself bound to fight on his side. On
+October 23 the castle was closely besieged by this overwhelming
+force, and on October 31 was forced to surrender. Burghersh was
+shut up in the Tower and Lady Badlesmere in Dover castle. Thirteen
+of the garrison, "stout men and valiant," were hanged by the angry
+king.</p>
+
+<p>During the siege of Leeds, the magnates of the march, headed by
+Hereford and Roger Mortimer, collected a force at
+Kingston-on-Thames, where they were joined by Badlesmere. But they
+dared not advance towards the relief of the Kentish castle, and,
+after a fortnight they dispersed to their own homes. Lancaster
+hated Badlesmere so bitterly that he made no move against the king,
+and sullenly bided his time in the north. His inaction paralysed
+the barons as effectively as in earlier days it had hindered the
+plans of the king. Flushed with his victory, Edward gradually
+unfolded his designs. His tool, Archbishop Reynolds, summoned a
+convocation of the southern province for December 1 at St. Paul's,
+and obtained from the assembled clergy the opinion that the
+proceedings against the Despensers were invalid. On January 1,
+1322, Reynolds solemnly declared this sentence in St. Paul's.
+Edward did not wait for the archbishop. Attended by many of <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg284" id="pg284">284</a></span>the
+warriors who had fought at Leeds, he marched to the west, occupying
+on his journey the lands and castles of his enemies. He kept his
+Christmas court at Cirencester, and thence advanced towards the
+Severn. As the inaction of Lancaster kept the northern barons
+quiet, Edward's sole task was to wreak his revenge on the marcher
+lords. They were unprepared for resistance, and waited in vain for
+Lancaster to come to their help. Without a leader, they made feeble
+and ill-devised efforts to oppose the king's advance. Their command
+of the few bridges over the Severn prevented the king from crossing
+the river, and leading his troops directly into the march. Foiled
+at Gloucester, Worcester, and Bridgnorth, Edward made his way up
+the stream to Shrewsbury. The two Mortimers, who held the town and
+the passage of the river, could have stopped him if they had
+chosen. But they feared to undertake strong measures while
+Lancaster's action remained uncertain. They suffered Edward to
+cross the stream and surrendered to him. The collapse of the
+fiercest of the marcher lords frightened the rest into surrender.
+Edward wandered back through the middle and southern marches,
+occupying without resistance the main strongholds of his enemies.
+At Hereford, he sharply rebuked the bishop for upholding the barons
+against their natural lord. At Berkeley, he received from Maurice
+of Berkeley the keys of the stately fortress which was so soon to
+be the place of his last humiliation. Early in February, he was
+back at Gloucester, where, on February 11, he recalled the
+Despensers.</p>
+
+<p>Humphrey of Hereford, Roger of Amory, and a few other marchers
+managed to escape the king's pursuit, and rode northwards to join
+Thomas of Lancaster. Thomas had long been ready at Pontefract with
+his followers in arms. But he let the time for effective action
+slip, and was only goaded into doing anything when the fugitives
+from the march impressed him with the critical state of affairs.
+The quarrel of king and barons was not the only trouble besetting
+England. The two years' truce with Scotland had expired, and Robert
+Bruce was once more devastating the northern counties. But neither
+Edward nor Lancaster cared anything for this. Andrew Harclay, the
+governor of Carlisle, strongly urged the king to defend his
+subjects from the Scots rather than make war against them. Edward
+answered that rebels must be put down before foreign <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg285" id="pg285">285</a></span>enemies could be
+encountered, and pressed northwards with his victorious troops.</p>
+
+<p>Lancaster was then besieging Tickhill, a royal castle in
+southern Yorkshire. After wasting three weeks before its walls, he
+led his force south to Burton-on-Trent, which he occupied on March
+10. Edward soon approached the Trent on his northward march. The
+barons thereupon lost courage, and, abandoning the defence of the
+passage over the river, fled northwards to Pontefract, the centre
+of Lancaster's power in Yorkshire. Edward advanced against them,
+taking on his road Lancaster's castle of Tutbury, where Roger of
+Amory was captured, mortally wounded. The Lancastrians were
+panic-stricken. They fled from Pontefract as they had fled from
+Burton, retreating northwards, probably simply to avoid the king,
+possibly to join hands with Robert Bruce. On March 16 the fugitives
+reached Boroughbridge, on the south bank of the Ure, where a long
+narrow bridge, hardly wide enough for horsemen in martial array,
+crossed the stream. The north bank of the river, and the approaches
+to the bridge, were held in force by the levies of Cumberland and
+Westmoreland which Barclay had summoned at the king's request, in
+order to prevent a junction between the Lancastrians and the Scots.
+Barclay was a brave and capable commander and had well learnt the
+lessons of Scottish warfare.[1] He dismounted all his knights and
+men-at-arms, and arranged them on the northern side of the river,
+along with some of his pikemen. The rest of the pikemen he ordered
+to form a "schiltron" after the Scottish fashion, so that their
+close formation might resist the cavalry of which the Lancastrian
+force consisted. He bade his archers shoot swiftly and continually
+at the enemy.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For the tactics of Boroughbridge see <i>Engl.
+Hist. Review</i>, xix. (1904), 711-13.</p>
+
+<p>Seeing this disposition of the hostile force, the Lancastrian
+army divided. One band, under Hereford and Roger Clifford,
+dismounted and made for the bridge, which was defended by the
+schiltron of pikemen. The rest of the men-at-arms remained on
+horseback and followed Lancaster, to a ford near the bridge,
+whence, by crossing the water, they could take the schiltron in
+flank. Neither movement succeeded. Hereford and Clifford advanced,
+each with one attendant, to the bridge. <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg286" id="pg286">286</a></span>No sooner had the earl
+entered upon the wooden structure than he was slain by a Welsh
+spearman, who had hidden himself under it, and aimed a blow at
+Humphrey through the planking. Clifford was severely wounded, and
+escaped with difficulty. Discouraged by the loss of their leaders,
+the rest of the troops made only a feeble effort to force the
+passage. The same evil fortune attended the division that followed
+Lancaster. The archers of Harclay obeyed his orders so well that
+the Lancastrian cavalry scarcely dared enter the water. Lancaster
+lost his nerve, and besought Harclay for a truce until the next
+morning. His request was granted, but during the night all the
+followers of Hereford dispersed, thinking that there was no need
+for them to remain after the death of their lord. Lancaster's own
+troops were likewise thinned by desertions. The sheriff of York
+came up early in the morning with an armed force from the south,
+joined Harclay, and cut off the last hope of retreat. Further
+resistance being useless, Lancaster, Audley, Clifford, Mowbray, and
+the other leaders surrendered in a body.</p>
+
+<p>Edward was then at Pontefract in the chief castle of his
+deadliest enemy. Thither the prisoners of Boroughbridge were sent
+for their trial, and there they were hastily condemned by a body of
+seven earls and numerous barons, presided over by the king himself.
+Lancaster, not allowed to say a word in his defence, was at once
+sentenced to death as a rebel and a traitor. In consideration of
+his exalted rank, the grosser penalties of treason were commuted,
+as in the case of Gaveston, to simple decapitation. On the morning
+of March 22 Thomas was led out of his castle, clad in the garb of a
+penitent and mounted on a sorry steed. He was conducted to a little
+hill outside the walls. The crowd mocked at his sufferings and in
+scorn called him "King Arthur". In two or three blows of the axe,
+his head was struck off from his body. Nor was he the only victim.
+Audley, spared his life by reason of his marriage to the king's
+niece, was, like the two Mortimers, consigned to prison. Clifford
+and Mowbray were hanged at York, and Badlesmere at Canterbury. In
+all, more than twenty knights and barons paid the penalty of
+death.</p>
+
+<p>It is hard to waste much pity on Lancaster. He was the victim of
+his own fierce passions and, still more, of his own utter
+incompetence. His attitude all through the crisis had been inept in
+the extreme, and the poor fight that he made for <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg287" id="pg287">287</a></span>his life at
+Boroughbridge was a fitting conclusion to a feeble career. But with
+all his faults he remained popular to the end, especially with the
+clergy and commons. He was hailed as a martyr to freedom and sound
+government. Pilgrimages were made to the scene of his death, and
+miracles were wrought with his relics. A chapel arose on the little
+hill dedicated to his worship, and a loud cry arose for his
+canonisation. The abuse made by his enemies of their victory only
+strengthened his reputation among the people. The tragedy of his
+fall appealed to the rude sympathies of the north-countrymen, and
+the merit of the cause atoned in their minds for the weakness of
+the man.</p>
+
+<p>A parliament met at York on May 2, where the triumph of the king
+received its consummation. The Despensers had more advanced
+constitutional ideas than Lancaster, and pains were taken that this
+parliament should completely represent the three estates. It was a
+novel feature that twelve representatives of the commons of north
+Wales and twelve of the commons of south Wales attended, on this
+occasion, to speak on behalf of the region where the troubles had
+first begun. With the full approval of the estates, the ordinances
+were solemnly revoked, as infringing the rights of the crown. The
+important principle was laid down that "matters which are to be
+established for the estate of the king and for the estate of the
+realm shall be treated, accorded, and established in parliament by
+the king and by the council of the prelates, earls, and barons, and
+the commonalty of the realm". Thus, while the repeal of the
+ordinances seemed based upon their infringement of the royal
+prerogative, it was at least implied that they were also invalid
+because they were the work of a council of barons only, and not of
+a full parliament of the estates. This declaration of the necessity
+of popular co-operation in valid legislation is the most important
+constitutional advance of the reign of Edward II. It is a
+significant comment on the limitations of the baronial opposition
+that the ordinances should be the last great English law in the
+passing of which the commons were not consulted, and that a
+royalist triumph should be the occasion of the declaration of a
+vital principle.</p>
+
+<p>The king's friends then received their rewards. Harclay was made
+Earl of Carlisle and the elder Despenser became Earl <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg288" id="pg288">288</a></span>of Winchester.
+Fear of the marcher lords, even in their prison, withheld from the
+younger Hugh the title, though hardly the authority, of Earl of
+Gloucester. In other ways also the Despensers were anxious to
+prevent their victory suggesting too much of a reaction. Before
+parliament separated, it adopted a new series of ordinances
+confirming the Great Charter and re-enacting in more constitutional
+fashion some portions of the laws of 1312, which aimed at
+protecting the subject and strengthening the administration. Grants
+of men and money were made to fight the Scots, and once more the
+new customs were allowed to swell the royal revenue. Thus the
+revolution was completed. Edward, Gaveston, Lancaster, and Pembroke
+had each in their turn been tried and found wanting. Thanks to the
+jealousies of the barons, his own spasmodic energy, and the
+acuteness of the Despensers, Edward was still to have another
+chance, under the guidance of his new friends. We shall see how the
+restored rule of the Despensers was blighted by the same
+incompetence and selfishness which had ruined their predecessors in
+power. The triumph of the Despensers proved but the first act in
+the tragic fall of Edward II.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+
+<h4>THE FALL OF EDWARD II. AND THE RULE OF ISABELLA AND
+MORTIMER.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg289" id=
+"pg289">289</a></span>During the deliberations of the parliament of
+York, the truce with Bruce expired, and forthwith came the news
+that the Scots had once more crossed the border. On this occasion
+Bruce raided the country from Carlisle to Preston, burning every
+open town on his way, though sparing most of the religious houses.
+At Cartmel, Lancaster, and Preston, favoured monastic buildings
+alone stood entire amidst the desolation wrought by the Scots. No
+effective opposition was offered to them, and after a three weeks'
+foray, they recrossed the Solway.</p>
+
+<p>As in 1314 and 1318, the restoration of order was followed by an
+attempt to put down Bruce. In August, 1322, Edward assembled his
+forces at Newcastle and invaded Scotland. Berwick was
+unsuccessfully besieged and the Lothians laid waste. The Scots
+still had the prudence to withdraw beyond the Forth, and avoid
+battle in the open field. By the beginning of September, pestilence
+and famine had done their work on the invaders. Unable to find
+support in the desolate fields of Lothian, the, English returned to
+their own land, having accomplished nothing. The Scots followed on
+their tracks, but with such secrecy that they penetrated into the
+heart of Yorkshire before Edward was aware of their presence. In
+October they suddenly swooped down on the king, when he was staying
+at Byland abbey. Some troops which accompanied him were encamped on
+a hill between Byland and Rievaux. They were attacked by the Scots
+and defeated; their leader, John of Brittany, was taken prisoner,
+and Edward only avoided capture by a precipitate flight from Byland
+to Bridlington. All Yorkshire was reduced to abject terror, and
+Edward's hosts, the canons of Bridlington, removed with all their
+valuables <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg290" id=
+"pg290">290</a></span>to Lincolnshire, and sent one of their number
+to Bruce at Malton to purchase immunity for their estates. After a
+month the Scots went home, leaving famine, pestilence, and misery
+in their train. The Despensers thus proved themselves not less
+incompetent to defend England than Thomas of Lancaster.</p>
+
+<p>As the state afforded no protection, each private person had to
+make the best terms he could for himself. Even the king's
+favourite, Louis of Beaumont, the illiterate Bishop of Durham,
+entered into negotiations with the Scots, while the Archbishop of
+York issued formal permission to religious houses of his diocese to
+treat with the excommunicated followers of Bruce. Not only timid
+ecclesiastics, but well-tried soldiers found in private dealings
+with the Scots the only remedy for their troubles. After the Byland
+surprise, Harclay, the new Earl of Carlisle, the victor of
+Boroughbridge, and the warden of the marches, dismissed his troops,
+sought out Bruce at Lochmaben, and made an arrangement with him, by
+which it was resolved that a committee of six English and six
+Scottish magnates should be empowered to conclude peace between the
+two countries on the basis of recognising him as King of Scots.
+There was great alarm at court when Harclay's treason was known. A
+Cumberland baron, Anthony Lucy, was instructed to apprehend the
+culprit, and forcing his way into Carlisle castle by a stratagem,
+captured the earl with little difficulty. In March, 1323, Harclay
+suffered the terrible doom of treason. He justified his action to
+the last, declaring that his only motive was a desire to procure
+peace, and convincing many of the north-countrymen of the innocence
+of his motives. To such a pass had England been reduced that those
+who honestly desired that the farmers of 'Cumberland should once
+more till their fields in peace, saw no other means of gaining
+their end than by communication with the enemies of their
+country.</p>
+
+<p>The disgrace of Byland and the tragedy of Carlisle showed that
+it was idle to pretend to fight the Scots any longer. Negotiations
+for peace were entered upon; Pembroke and the younger Despenser
+being the chief English commissioners. Peace was found impossible,
+as English pride still refused to recognise the royal title of King
+Robert, but a thirteen years' truce was arranged without any
+difficulty. This treaty of 1323 practically concluded the Scottish
+war of independence. Bruce then easily <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg291" id="pg291">291</a></span>obtained papal recognition of
+his title, though English ill-will long stood in the way of the
+remission of his sentence of excommunication. His martial career,
+however, was past, and he could devote his declining years to the
+consolidation of his kingdom and the restoration of its material
+prosperity. He reorganised the national army, built up a new
+nobility by distributing among his faithful followers the estates
+of the obstinate friends of England, and first called upon the
+royal burghs of Scotland to send representatives to the Scottish
+parliament. He had made Scotland a nation, and nobly redeemed the
+tergiversation and violence of his earlier career.</p>
+
+<p>Among Harclay's motives for treating with the Scots had been his
+distrust of the Despensers. As generals against the Scots and as
+administrators of England, they manifested an equal incapacity.
+Their greed and insolence revived the old enmities, and they proved
+strangely lacking in resolution to grapple with emergencies.
+Nevertheless they ruled over England for nearly five years in
+comparative peace. This period, unmarked by striking events, is,
+however, evidence of the exhaustion of the country rather than of
+the capacity of the Earl of Winchester and the lord of Glamorgan.
+The details of the history bear witness to the relaxation of the
+reins of government, the prevalence of riot and petty rebellion,
+the sordid personal struggles for place and power, the weakness
+which could neither collect the taxes, enforce obedience to the
+law, nor even save from humiliation the most trusted agents of the
+government.</p>
+
+<p>The Despensers' continuance in power rested more on the absence
+of rivals than on their own capacity. The strongest of the royalist
+earls, Aymer of Pembroke, died in 1324. As he left no issue, his
+earldom swelled the alarmingly long roll of lapsed dignities. None
+of the few remaining earls could step into his place, nor give
+Edward the wise counsel which the creator of the middle party had
+always provided. Warenne was brutal, profligate, unstable, and
+distrusted; Arundel had no great influence; Richmond was a
+foreigner, and of little personal weight, and the successors of
+Humphrey of Hereford and Guy of Warwick were minors, suspected by
+reason of their fathers' treasons. The only new earl was Henry of
+Lancaster, who in 1324 obtained a partial restitution of his
+brother's estates and the title of Earl of Leicester. Prudent,
+moderate, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg292" id=
+"pg292">292</a></span>and high-minded, Henry stood in strong
+contrast to his more famous brother. But the tragedy of Pontefract
+and his unsatisfied claim on the Lancaster earldom stood between
+Henry and the government, and the imprudence of the Despensers soon
+utterly estranged him from the king, though he was the last man to
+indulge in indiscriminate opposition, and Edward dared not push his
+powerful cousin to extremities. In these circumstances, the king
+had no wise or strong advisers whose influence might counteract the
+Despensers. His loneliness and isolation made him increasingly
+dependent upon the favourites.</p>
+
+<p>The older nobles were already alienated, when the Despensers
+provoked a quarrel with the queen. Isabella was a woman of strong
+character and violent passions, with the lack of morals and
+scruples which might have been expected from a girlhood passed
+amidst the domestic scandals of her father's household. She
+resented her want of influence over her husband, and hated the
+Despensers because of their superior power with him. The favourites
+met her hostility by an open declaration of warfare. In 1324 the
+king deprived her of her separate estate, drove her favourite
+servants from court, and put her on an allowance of a pound a day.
+The wife of the younger Hugh, her husband's niece, was deputed to
+watch her, and she could not even write a letter without the Lady
+Despenser's knowledge. Isabella bitterly chafed under her
+humiliation. She was, she declared, treated like a maidservant and
+made the hireling of the Despensers. Finding, however, that nothing
+was to be gained by complaints, she prudently dissembled her wrath
+and waited patiently for revenge.</p>
+
+<p>The Despensers' chief helpers were among the clergy. Conspicuous
+among them were Walter Stapledon, Bishop of Exeter, the treasurer,
+and Robert Baldock, the chancellor. The records of Stapledon's
+magnificence survive in the nave of his cathedral church, and in
+Exeter College, Oxford; but the great builder and pious founder was
+a worldly, greedy, and corrupt public minister. So unpopular was he
+that, in 1325, it was thought wise to remove him from office.
+Thereupon another building prelate, William Melton, Archbishop of
+York, whose piety and charity long intercourse with courtiers had
+not extinguished, abandoned his northern flock for London and the
+treasury. But the best <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg293" id=
+"pg293">293</a></span>of officials could do little to help the
+unthrifty king. Edward was so poorly respected that he could not
+even obtain a bishopric for his chancellor. On two occasions the
+envoys sent to Avignon, to urge Baldock's claims on vacant sees,
+secured for themselves the mitre destined for the minister. In this
+way John Stratford became Bishop of Winchester and William
+Ayermine, Bishop of Norwich. Edward had not even the spirit to show
+manifest disfavour to these self-seeking prelates, but his inaction
+was so clearly the result of weakness that it involved no
+gratitude, and the two bishops secretly hated the ruling clique, as
+likely to do them an evil turn if it dared. Nor were the older
+prelates better contented or more loyal. The primate Reynolds was
+deeply irritated by Melton's appointment as treasurer. Burghersh,
+the Bishop of Lincoln, was a nephew of Badlesmere, and anxious to
+avenge his uncle. Adam Orleton, Bishop of Hereford, was a dependant
+of the Mortimers, who took his surname from one of their
+Herefordshire manors. Forgiven for his share in the revolt of 1322,
+he cleverly contrived in 1324 the escape of his patron, Roger
+Mortimer of Wigmore, from the Tower. The marcher made his way to
+France, but his ally felt the full force of the king's wrath. He
+was deprived of his temporalities, and, when the Church spread her
+ægis over him, the court procured the verdict of a Herefordshire
+jury against him. Thus the impolicy of the crown combined the
+selfish worldling with the zealot for the Church in a common
+opposition. Like Isabella, Orleton bided his time, and Edward
+feared to complete his disgrace.</p>
+
+<p>In such ways the king and the Despensers proclaimed their
+incapacity to the world. The Scottish truce, the wrongs of Henry of
+Lancaster, the humiliation of the queen, the alienation of the old
+nobles, the fears of greedy prelates,&mdash;each of these was
+remembered against them. Gradually every order of the community
+became disgusted. The feeble efforts of Edward to conciliate the
+Londoners met with little response. Weak rule and the insecurity of
+life and property turned away the heart of the commons from the
+king. It was no wonder that men went on pilgrimage to the little
+hill outside Pontefract, where Earl Thomas had met his doom, or
+that rumours spread that the king was a changeling and no true son
+of the great Edward. But though the power of the king and the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg294" id="pg294">294</a></span>Despensers
+was thoroughly undermined, the absence of leaders and the general
+want of public spirit still delayed the day of reckoning. At last,
+the threatening outlook beyond the Channel indirectly precipitated
+the crisis.</p>
+
+<p>The relations of France and England remained uneasy, despite the
+marriage of two English kings in succession to ladies of the
+Capetian house. The union of Edward I. and Margaret of France had
+not done much to help the settlement of the disputed points in the
+interpretation of the treaty of Paris of 1303, and the match
+between Edward II and his stepmother's niece had been equally
+ineffective. The restoration of Gascony in 1303 had never been
+completed, and in the very year of the treaty a decree of the
+parliament of Paris had withdrawn the homage of the county of
+Bigorre from the English duke. Within the ceded districts, the
+conflict of the jurisdictions of king and duke became increasingly
+accentuated. Having failed to hold Gascony by force of arms, Philip
+the Fair aspired to conquer it by the old process of stealthily
+undermining the traditional authority of the duke. Appeals to Paris
+became more and more numerous. The agents of the king wandered at
+will through Edward's Gascon possessions, and punished all loyalty
+to the lawful duke by dragging the culprits before their master's
+courts. The ineptitude which characterised all Edward's
+subordinates was particularly conspicuous among his Gascon
+seneschals and their subordinates. While the English king's
+servants drifted on from day to day, timid, without policy, and
+without direction, the agents of France, well trained, energetic,
+and determined, knew their own minds and gradually brought about
+the end which they had clearly set before themselves. In vain did
+bitter complaints arise of the aggressions of the officers of
+Philip. It was to no purpose that conferences were held, protocols
+drawn up, and much time and ink wasted in discussing trivialities.
+Neither Edward nor Philip wished to push matters to extremities. To
+the former the policy of drift was always congenial. The latter was
+content to wait until the pear was ripe. It seemed that in a few
+more years Gascony would become as thoroughly subject to the French
+crown as Champagne or Normandy.</p>
+
+<p>Philip the Fair died in 1314, and was followed in rapid
+succession by his three sons. The first of these, Louis X., had,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg295" id="pg295">295</a></span>like
+Edward II., to contend against an aristocratic reaction, and died
+in 1316, before he could even receive the homage of his
+brother-in-law. A king of more energy than Edward might have
+profited by the difficult situation which followed Louis' death.
+For a time there was neither pope, nor emperor, nor King of France.
+But Philip V. mounted the French throne when his brother's widow
+had given birth to a daughter, and continued the policy of his
+predecessors with regard to Gascony. Again the disputes between
+Norman and Gascon sailors threatened, as in 1293, to bring about a
+rupture. The ever-increasing aggressions of the suzerain culminated
+in summoning Edward's own seneschal of Saintonge to appear before
+the French king's court. Edward neglected to do homage, alleging
+his preoccupation in the Scottish war and similar excuses. But the
+threatened danger soon passed away, for again the interests and
+fears of both parties postponed the conflict. In avoiding any
+alliance with the Scots, the French king showed a self-restraint
+for which Edward could not but be grateful. In 1320 Edward
+performed in person his long-delayed homage at Amiens, though his
+grievances against his brother-in-law still remained unredressed.
+In 1322 the death of Philip V. renewed the troublesome homage
+question in a more acute form.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For the relations of Edward II. and Philip V.
+see Lehugeur, <i>Hist. de Philippe le Long</i>, pp. 240-66
+(1897).</p>
+
+<p>The obligation of performing homage to a rival prince weighed
+with increasing severity on the English kings at each rapid change
+of occupants of the throne of France. The same pretexts were again
+brought forward, as sufficient reasons for postponing or evading
+the unpleasant duly. But before the question was settled a new
+source of trouble arose in the affair of Saint-Sardos, which soon
+plunged the two countries into open war. The lord of Montpezat, a
+vassal of the Duke of Gascony, built a <i>bastide</i> at
+Saint-Sardos upon a site which he declared was held by himself of
+the duke, but which the French officials claimed as belonging to
+Charles IV. The dispute was taken before the parliament of Paris,
+which decided that the new town belonged to the King of France.
+Thereupon a royal force promptly took possession of it. Irritated
+at this high-handed action, the lord of Montpezat invoked the aid
+of Edward's seneschal of Gascony, who attacked and destroyed the
+<i>bastide</i> and massacred <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg296"
+id="pg296">296</a></span>the French garrison.[1] The answer of
+Charles the Fair to this aggression was decisive. Gascony was
+pronounced sequestrated and Charles of Valois, the veteran uncle of
+the king, was ordered to enforce the sentence at the head of an
+imposing army.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See for this affair Br&eacute;quigny,
+<i>M&eacute;moire sur les diff&eacute;rends entre la France et
+l'Angleterre sous Charles le Bel, in M&eacute;m. de l'Acad. des
+Inscriptions et Belles Lettres</i>, xli. (1780), pp. 641-92. M.
+D&eacute;prez is about to publish a Chancery Roll of Edward II.
+which includes all the official acts relating to it.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, in the summer of 1324 England and France were once more at
+war. But while England remonstrated and negotiated, France acted.
+Norman corsairs swept the Channel and pillaged the English coasts.
+Ponthieu yielded without resistance. Early in August, Charles of
+Valois entered the Agenais, and on the 15th Agen opened its gates.
+The victorious French soon appeared before La R&eacute;ole, where
+alone they encountered real resistance. Edmund, Earl of Kent, who
+had made vain attempts to procure peace at Paris, had been sent in
+July to act as lieutenant of Aquitaine. He had not sufficient force
+at his command to venture to meet the Count of Valois in the open
+field, and threw himself into La R&eacute;ole. The rocky height,
+crowned with a triple wall, and looking down on the vineyards and
+cornfields of the Garonne, defied for weeks the skill of the
+eminent Lorrainer engineers who directed Charles of Valois' siege
+train. But when Charles announced to Edmund that he would carry the
+town by assault, if not surrendered within four days, the timid
+earl signed a truce from September to Easter, and was allowed to
+withdraw to Bordeaux. A mere fringe of coast-land still remained
+faithful to the English duke, when Charles of Valois went back to
+Paris, having victoriously terminated his long and chequered
+career. Before the end of 1325 he died.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Petit, <i>Charles de Valois</i>, pp. 207-15
+(1900), gives the fullest modern account of these transactions.</p>
+
+<p>The truce involved a renewal of the negotiations. Bishop
+Stratford and William Ayermine, the astute chancery clerk, were
+commissioned in November, 1324, to treat with the French, but made
+little progress in their delicate task. At this stage Isabella,
+inspired probably by Adam Orleton, came forward with a proposal.
+She besought her husband to allow her to visit her brother, the
+French king, and use her influence with him to procure peace and
+the restitution of Gascony. With <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg297" id="pg297">297</a></span>the strange infatuation which
+marked all the acts of Edward and his favourites, Isabella's
+proposal was adopted, and in March, 1325, the queen crossed the
+Channel and made her way to her brother's court. The summer was
+consumed in negotiating a treaty, by which Edward's French fiefs
+were to be restored to him in their integrity, as soon as he had
+performed homage to the new king. Meanwhile the English garrison of
+Gascony was to withdraw to Bayonne, leaving the rest of the duchy
+in the hands of a French seneschal. Edward agreed to these terms,
+and put Gascony into Charles's hands. He was still unwilling to
+compromise his dignity by performing homage, while the Despensers
+were mortally afraid of his going to France, lest it should remove
+him from their influence. Isabella then made a second suggestion.
+She persuaded her brother to excuse the personal homage of her
+husband, if Edward would invest his young son, Edward, with Gascony
+and Ponthieu, and send him in his stead to tender his feudal duly.
+This also was agreed to by the English king, and in September the
+young prince, then about thirteen years old, was appointed Duke of
+Aquitaine and Count of Ponthieu, and despatched to join his mother
+at Paris, where he performed homage to his uncle.</p>
+
+<p>It was expected that Gascony and Ponthieu would then be
+restored, and that the queen and her son would return to England.
+But Charles IV. perpetrated a clever piece of trickery which showed
+how far off a real settlement still was. He "restored" to Edward
+those parts of Gascony which had been peacefully surrendered to him
+in the summer, and announced that he should keep the Agenais and La
+R&eacute;ole, as belonging to France by right of Charles of Valois'
+recent conquest. Bitterly mortified at this treachery, Edward took
+upon himself the title of "governor and administrator of his
+firstborn, Edward, Duke of Aquitaine, and of his estates". By this
+technical subtlety, he thought himself entitled to resume the
+control of the ceded districts and resist the attack which was
+bound to follow hard upon the new breach. Once more Charles IV.
+pronounced the sequestration of the duchy, and despite Edward's
+efforts, his power crumbled away before the peaceful advent of the
+French troops, charged with the execution of their master's
+edict.</p>
+
+<p>Long before the last Gascon castles had opened their gates to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg298" id=
+"pg298">298</a></span>Charles's officers, new developments at Paris
+made the question of Aquitaine a subordinate matter. Despite the
+breach of the negotiations, Isabella and her son still tarried at
+the French court. In answer to Edward's requests for their return,
+she sent back excuse after excuse, till his patience was fairly
+exhausted. At last, on December 1, 1325, Edward peremptorily
+ordered his wife to return home, and warned her not to consort with
+certain English traitors in the French court. The Duke of Aquitaine
+was similarly exhorted to return, with his mother if he could, but
+if not, without her. The reference to English traitors shows that
+Edward was aware that Isabella had already formed that close
+relation with the exiled lord of Wigmore which soon ripened into an
+adulterous connexion. Inspired by Roger Mortimer, Isabella declared
+that she was in peril of her life from the malice of the
+Despensers, and would never go back to her husband as long as the
+favourites retained power. A band of the exiles of 1322 gathered
+round her and her paramour, and sought to bring about their
+restoration as champions of the loudly expressed grievances of the
+queen, and the rights of her young son. The king's ambassadors at
+Paris, Stratford and Ayermine, recently made Bishop of Norwich by a
+papal provision which ignored the election of Robert Baldock the
+chancellor, united themselves with the queen and the fugitive
+marcher. With them, too, was associated Edmund of Kent, who was
+allowed by the treaty to return from Gascony through France. Bishop
+Stapledon, who had accompanied the queen to France, was so alarmed
+at the turn events were taking, that he fled in disguise to reveal
+his suspicions to the king. Thus England, already exposed to a
+danger of a French war, was threatened with the forcible overthrow
+of the Despensers and the reinstatement of Isabella by armed
+invaders.</p>
+
+<p>By the spring of 1326 the scandalous relations of Isabella and
+Mortimer were notorious all over England and France. Charles IV.
+grew disgusted at his sister's doings, and gave no countenance to
+her schemes. Isabella accordingly withdrew from Paris with her son
+and her paramour, and made her way to the Netherlands. There she
+found refuge in the county of Hainault, whose lord, William II, of
+Avesnes, was won over to support her by a contract to marry the
+Duke of Aquitaine to his daughter Philippa. A large advance from
+Philippa's marriage <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg299" id=
+"pg299">299</a></span>portion was employed in hiring a troop of
+knights and squires of Hainault and Holland. John of Hainault,
+brother of the count, took joint command of this band with Roger
+Mortimer. The ports of Holland and Zealand, both of which counties
+were united with Hainault under William II.'s rule, offered ample
+facilities for their embarkation.</p>
+
+<p>On September 23, 1326, the queen and her followers took ship at
+Dordrecht in Holland. Next day the fleet cast anchor in the port of
+Orwell, and that same day the expedition was landed and marched to
+Walton, where it spent the first night on English soil. The gentry
+of Suffolk and Essex flocked to the standard of the queen, who
+declared that she had come to avenge the wrongs of Earl Thomas of
+Lancaster and to drive the Despensers from power. Thomas of
+Brotherton, the earl marshal, made common cause with the invaders,
+and Henry, Earl of Leicester, hastened to associate himself with
+the champions of his martyred brother. A great force of native
+Englishmen swelled the queen's host, and reduced to insignificance
+the little band of Hainaulters and Hollanders. There was no
+resistance. Isabella marched to Bury St. Edmunds, "as if on a
+pilgrimage," and thence to Cambridge, where she tarried several
+days with the canons of Barnwell. From Cambridge she moved on to
+Baldock, where she despoiled the chancellor's manors and took his
+brother captive. At Dunstable, her next halt, she was on a great
+highway, within thirty-three miles of London.</p>
+
+<p>On hearing of his wife's landing, Edward threw himself on the
+compassion of the Londoners, but met with so cold a reception that
+early in October he withdrew to Gloucester. Besides the chancellor
+and the two Despensers, the only magnates of mark who remained
+faithful to him were the brothers-in-law, Edmund, Earl of Arundel,
+and Earl Warenne. On Edward's retreat from London, Bishop Stratford
+made his way to the capital, where he joined with Archbishop
+Reynolds in a hollow pretence of mediation. The Londoners gladly
+welcomed the queen's messengers and soon rose in revolt in her
+favour. They plundered and burnt the house of the Bishop of Exeter,
+who fled in alarm to St. Paul's. Seized at the very door of the
+church, Stapledon was brutally murdered by the mob in Cheapside,
+where his naked body lay exposed all day. Immediately after this,
+Reynolds fled in terror to his Kentish estates, where <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg300" id="pg300">300</a></span>he waited to see
+which was the stronger side. The king's younger son, John of
+Eltham, a boy of nine, who had been left behind by his father in
+the Tower, was proclaimed warden of the capital.</p>
+
+<p>On hearing of Edward's flight to the west, Isabella went after
+him in pursuit. On the day of Stapledon's murder, she had advanced
+as far as Wallingford, where, posing as the continuer of the policy
+of the lords ordainers, she issued a proclamation denouncing the
+Despensers. Thence she made her way to Oxford, where Bishop
+Orleton, who had already joined her, preached a seditious sermon
+before the university and the leaders of the revolt. Taking as his
+text, "My head, my head," he demonstrated that the sick head of the
+state could not be restored by all the remedies of Hippocrates, and
+would therefore have to be cut off. This was the first intimation
+that the insurgents would not be content with the fall of the
+Despensers. From Oxford, Isabella and Mortimer hurried to
+Gloucester, whence Edward had already fled to the younger
+Despenser's palatinate of Glamorgan. From Gloucester, they passed
+on through Berkeley to Bristol, where the elder Despenser, the Earl
+of Winchester, was in command. The feeling of the burgesses of the
+second town in England was so strongly adverse that the earl was
+unable to defend either the borough or the castle. In despair he
+opened the gates on October 26 to the queen, and was immediately
+consigned, without trial or inquiry, to the death of a traitor.
+After proclaiming the Duke of Aquitaine as warden of the realm
+during his father's absence, the queen's army marched on Hereford,
+where Isabella remained, while the Earl of Leicester, accompanied
+by a Welsh clerk, named Rhys ap Howel, was sent, with part of the
+army to hunt out the king.</p>
+
+<p>After his flight from Gloucester, Edward had wandered through
+the Welsh march to Chepstow, whence he took ship, hoping to make
+sail to Lundy, which Despenser had latterly acquired, and perhaps
+ultimately to Ireland. But contrary winds kept him in the narrows
+of the Bristol Channel, and on October 27 he landed again at
+Cardiff. A few days later he was at Caerphilly, but afraid to
+entrust himself to the protection of the mightiest of marcher
+castles, he moved restlessly from place to place in Glamorgan and
+Gower, imploring the help of the tenants of the Despensers, and
+issuing vain summonses and commissions that no one obeyed.
+Discovered by the local <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg301" id=
+"pg301">301</a></span>knowledge of Rhys ap Howel, or betrayed by
+those whom the Welshman's gold had corrupted, Edward was captured
+on November 16 in Neath abbey. With him Baldock and the younger
+Despenser were also taken. On November 20 the favourite was put to
+death at Hereford, while Baldock, saved from immediate execution by
+his clerkly privilege, was consigned to the cruel custody of
+Orleton, only to perish a few months later of ill-treatment. To
+Hereford also was brought Edmund of Arundel, captured in
+Shropshire, and condemned to suffer the fate of the Despensers. The
+king was entrusted to the custody of Henry of Leicester, who
+conveyed him to his castle of Kenilworth, where the unfortunate
+monarch passed the winter, "treated not otherwise than a captive
+king ought to be treated".</p>
+
+<p>It only remained to complete the revolution by making provision
+for the future government of England. With this object a parliament
+was summoned, at first by the Duke of Aquitaine in his father's
+name, and afterwards more regularly by writs issued under the great
+seal. It met on January 7, 1327, at Westminster, and, after the
+York precedent of 1322, contained representatives of Wales as well
+as of the three estates of England. Orleton, the spokesman of
+Mortimer, asked the estates whether they would have Edward II. or
+his son as their ruler. The London mob loudly declared for the Duke
+of Aquitaine, and none of the members of parliament ventured to
+raise a voice in favour of the unhappy king, save four prelates of
+whom the most important was the steadfast Archbishop Melton. The
+southern primate, deserting his old master, declared that the voice
+of the people was the voice of God. Stratford drew up six articles,
+in which he set forth that Edward of Carnarvon was incompetent to
+govern, led by evil counsellors, a despiser of the wholesome advice
+of the "great and wise men of the realm," neglectful of business,
+and addicted to unprofitable pleasures; that by his lack of good
+government he had lost Scotland, Ireland, and Gascony; that he had
+injured Holy Church, and had done to death or driven into exile
+many great men; that he had broken his coronation oath, and that it
+was hopeless to expect amendment from him.</p>
+
+<p>Even the agents of Mortimer shrunk from the odium of decreeing
+Edward's deposition, and the more prudent course <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg302" id="pg302">302</a></span>was preferred of
+inducing the king to resign his power into his son's hands. An
+effort to persuade the captive monarch to abdicate before his
+estates, was defeated by his resolute refusal. Thereupon a
+committee of bishops, barons, and judges was sent to Kenilworth to
+receive his renunciation in the name of parliament. On January 20,
+Edward, clothed in black, admitted the delegates to his presence.
+Utterly unmanned by misfortune, the king fell in a deep swoon at
+the feet of his enemies. Leicester and Stratford raised him from
+the ground, and, on his recovery, Orleton exhorted him to resign
+his throne to his son, lest the estates, irritated by his
+contumacy, should choose as their king some one who was not of the
+royal line. Edward replied that he was sorry that his people were
+tired of his rule, but that being so, he was prepared to yield to
+their wishes, and make way for the Duke of Aquitaine. On this, Sir
+William Trussell, as proctor of the three estates, formally
+renounced their homage and fealty, and Sir Thomas Blount, steward
+of the household, broke his staff of office, and announced that the
+royal establishment was disbanded. Thus the calamitous reign of
+Edward of Carnarvon came to a wretched end. His utter inefficiency
+as a king makes it impossible to lament his fate. Yet few
+revolutions have ever been conducted with more manifest
+self-seeking than that which hurled Edward from power. The angry
+spite of the adulterous queen, the fierce vengeance and greed of
+Roger Mortimer, the craft and cruelty of Orleton, the time-serving
+cowardice of Reynolds, the stupidity of Kent and Norfolk, the party
+spirit of Stratford and Ayermine, can inspire nothing but disgust.
+Among the foes of Edward, Henry of Leicester alone behaved as an
+honourable gentleman, anxious to vindicate a policy, but careful to
+subordinate his private wrongs to public objects. Though his name
+and wrongs were ostentatiously put forward by the dominant faction,
+it is clear from the beginning that he was only a tool in its
+hands, and that the reversal of the sentence of Earl Thomas was but
+the pretext by which the schemers and traitors sought to capture
+the government for their own selfish ends.</p>
+
+<p>The resignation of the king was promptly reported to parliament.
+On January 24 the Duke of Aquitaine was proclaimed Edward III., and
+from the next day his regnal years were reckoned as beginning.
+Henry of Leicester dubbed him <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg303"
+id="pg303">303</a></span>knight, and on January 29 he was crowned
+in Westminster Abbey. A few days later the young king met his
+parliament. A standing council was appointed to carry on the
+administration during his nonage. Of this body the Earl of
+Leicester acted as chief, though most of his colleagues were
+partisans of Mortimer and the queen. Orleton, who was made
+treasurer, continued to pull the wires as the confidential agent of
+Isabella and Mortimer. A show of devotion to the good old cause was
+thought politic, and therefore the sentences of 1322 were revoked,
+so that Earl Henry, restored to all his brother's estates, was
+henceforth styled Earl of Lancaster. The commons went beyond this
+in petitioning for the canonisation of Earl Thomas and Archbishop
+Winchelsea. The revolution was consummated by a new confirmation of
+the charters.</p>
+
+<p>Even in the first flush of victory, Isabella and Mortimer were
+too insecure and too bitter to allow Edward of Carnarvon to remain
+quietly in prison under the custody of the Earl of Lancaster. As
+long as he was alive, he might always become the possible
+instrument of their degradation. At Orleton's instigation the
+deposed king was transferred in April from his cousin's care to
+that of two knights, Thomas Gurney and John Maltravers. He was
+promptly removed from Kenilworth and hurried by night from castle
+to castle until, after some sojourn at Corfe, he was at last
+immured at Berkeley. Every indignity was put upon him, and the
+systematic course of ill-treatment, to which he was subjected, was
+clearly intended to bring about his speedy death. But the robust
+constitution of the athlete rose superior to the persecutions of
+his torturers, and to save further trouble he was barbarously
+murdered in his bed on the night of September 21. Piercing shrieks
+from the interior of the castle told the peasantry that some dire
+deed was being perpetrated within its gloomy walls. Next day it was
+announced that the lord Edward had died a natural death, and his
+corpse was exposed to the public view that suspicion might be
+averted. He was buried with the state that became a crowned king in
+the Benedictine Abbey Church of St. Peter, Gloucester. A few years
+later the piety or remorse of Edward III. erected over his father's
+remains the magnificent tomb which still challenges our admiration
+by the delicacy of its tabernacle work and the artistic beauty of
+the sculptured effigy of the murdered monarch.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg304" id=
+"pg304">304</a></span>The tragedy of Edward's end soon caused his
+misdeeds to be forgotten, and ere long the countryside flocked on
+pilgrimage to his tomb, as to the shrine of a saint. By a curious
+irony the burial place of Edward of Carnarvon rivalled in
+popularity the chapel on the hill at Pontefract where Thomas of
+Lancaster had perished by Edward's orders. Like his cousin, Edward
+became a popular, though not a canonised, saint. From the offerings
+made at his tomb the monks of Gloucester were in time supplied with
+the funds that enabled them to recast their romanesque choir in the
+newer "perpendicular" fashion of architecture, and embellish their
+church with all the rich additions which contrast so strangely with
+the grim impressiveness of the stately Norman nave. There was only
+one impediment to the people's worship of the dead king. The
+secrecy which enveloped his end led to rumours that he was still
+alive, and the prevalence of these reports soon proved almost as
+great a source of embarrassment to his supplanters, as his living
+presence had been in the first months of their unhallowed
+power.</p>
+
+<p>It was not easy for Isabella and Mortimer to restore the waning
+fortunes of England at home and abroad. We shall see that it was
+only by an almost complete surrender that they procured peace with
+France and a partial restoration of Gascony. In Scotland they were
+even less fortunate. Robert Bruce, though broken in health and
+spirits, took up an aggressive attitude, and it was found necessary
+to summon the feudal levies to meet on the border in the summer of
+1327 in order to repel his attack. While the troops were mustering
+at York, a fierce fight broke out in the streets, between the
+Hainault mercenaries, under John of Hainault, and the citizens. So
+threatening was the outlook that it was thought wise to send the
+Hainaulters back home. From this accident it happened that the
+young king went forth to his first campaign, attended only by his
+native-born subjects. The Scots began operations by breaking the
+truce and overrunning the borders. The campaign directed against
+them was as futile as any of the last reign, and the English,
+though three times more numerous than the enemy, dared not provoke
+battle. This inglorious failure may well have convinced Mortimer
+that the best chance of maintaining his power was to make peace at
+any price. Early in 1328, the negotiations for a treaty were
+concluded at York. During <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg305" id=
+"pg305">305</a></span>their progress, Edward, who was at York to
+meet his parliament, was married to Philippa of Hainault.</p>
+
+<p>The Scots treaty was confirmed in April by a parliament that met
+at Northampton. All claim to feudal superiority over Scotland was
+withdrawn; Robert Bruce was recognised as King of Scots, and his
+young son David was married to Joan of the Tower, Edward III.'s
+infant sister. This surrender provoked the liveliest indignation,
+and men called the treaty of Northampton the "shameful peace," and
+ascribed it to the treachery or timorousness of the queen and her
+paramour. But it is hard to see what other solution of the Scottish
+problem was practicable. For many years Bruce had been <i>de
+facto</i> King of Scots, and any longer hesitation to withhold the
+recognition which he coveted would have been sure to involve the
+north of England in the same desolation as that which he had
+inflicted before the truce of 1322. But the founder of Scottish
+independence was drawing near to the end of his career. His health
+had long been undermined by a terrible disease which the
+chroniclers thought to be leprosy. He died in 1329, and on his
+death-bed he bethought him of how he, who had shed so much
+Christian blood, had never been able to fulfil his vow of crusade.
+Accordingly he entreated James Douglas, his faithful
+companion-in-arms, to go on crusade against the Moors of Granada,
+taking with him the heart of his dead master. Douglas fulfilled the
+request, and perished in Spain, whither he had carried the heart of
+the Scottish liberator. With the accession of the little David
+Bruce, new troubles began for Scotland, though danger from England
+was for the moment averted by the English marriage and the treaty
+of Northampton.</p>
+
+<p>The ill-will produced by the "shameful peace" spread far and
+wide the profound dislike for Mortimer which pity for the fate of
+Edward had first aroused in the breasts of Englishmen. The greedy
+marcher was at no pains to make himself popular. Holding no great
+office of state, he strove to rule through his creatures Orleton,
+the treasurer, and the hardly less subservient chancellor, Bishop
+Hotham of Ely, or through lay partisans such as Sir Oliver Ingham
+and Sir Simon Bereford. But his best chance of remaining in power
+was through the besotted infatuation of the queen-mother, whose
+relations with him were not concealed from the public eye by any
+elaborate <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg306" id=
+"pg306">306</a></span>parade of secrecy. He still posed as the
+inheritor of the tradition of the lords ordainers, and never failed
+to put as much of the responsibility of his rule as he could on
+Henry of Lancaster and the old baronial leaders. But with all his
+force and energy, he was too narrowly selfish and grasping to take
+much trouble to frame an elaborate policy. As an administrator he
+was as incompetent as either Thomas of Lancaster or the
+Despensers.</p>
+
+<p>Mortimer's chief care was to add office to office, and estate to
+estate, in order that he might establish his house as supreme over
+all Wales and its march. Besides his own enormous inheritance, he
+ruled over Ludlow and Meath in the right of his wife, Joan of
+Joinville, the heiress of the Lacys. He had inherited Chirk and the
+other lands of his uncle, the sometime justice of Wales, who had
+died in Edward II.'s prison; and he procured for himself a grant of
+his uncle's old office for life, so that, while as justice of Wales
+he lorded it over the principality, as head of the Mortimers he
+could dominate the whole march. To complete his ascendency in the
+march became his great ambition. He obtained the custody of
+Glamorgan, the stronghold of his sometime rival, Hugh Despenser the
+younger. To this were added Oswestry and Clun, the Fitzalan march
+in western Shropshire, forfeited to the crown by the faithfulness
+with which Edmund Fitzalan, the late Earl of Arundel, had laid down
+his life for Edward II. Minor grants of lands, offices, wardships,
+and pensions were constantly lavished upon him by the complacency
+of his mistress. In Ireland he received complete palatine
+franchises over Trim, Meath, and Louth, along with the custody of
+the estates of the infant Earl of Kildare, the chief of the
+Leinster Geraldines. He extended his connexions by marrying his
+seven daughters to the heads of great families, and where possible
+to men of marcher houses. He soon numbered among his sons-in-law
+the representatives of the Charltons of Powys, the Hastingses of
+Abergavenny, now the chief heirs of Aymer of Pembroke, the Audleys
+of the Shropshire march, the Beauchamps of Warwick, the Berkeleys,
+the Grandisons, and the Braoses. Anxious to extend his dignity as
+well as his power, he procured his nomination as Earl of the March
+of Wales, "a title," says a chronicler, "hitherto unheard of in
+England". As earl of the march and justice of the principality, he
+ruled the lands west of the Severn with little less than <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg307" id="pg307">307</a></span>regal
+sway. His banquets, his tournaments, his pious foundations even,
+dazzled all men by their splendour.</p>
+
+<p>Mortimer was created Earl of March in the parliament held in
+October, 1328, at Salisbury, where John of Eltham was made Earl of
+Cornwall and James, Butler of Ireland, Earl of Ormonde. His
+assumption of this new title at last roused the sluggish
+indignation of Earl Henry of Lancaster, who felt that his own
+marcher interests were compromised, and bitterly resented the vain
+use made of his name, while he was carefully kept without any
+control of policy. He refused to attend the Salisbury parliament,
+though he and his partisans mustered in arms in the neighbourhood
+of that city. Civil war seemed imminent, and Mortimer's Welshmen
+devastated Lancaster's earldom of Leicester, but Archbishop Meopham
+(who had lately succeeded Reynolds in the primacy) managed to patch
+up peace. Not long afterwards Lancaster was smitten with blindness,
+and was thenceforth unable to take an active part in public
+affairs. Mortimer again triumphed for the moment, and, with cruel
+malice, excepted Lancaster's confidential agents from the pardon
+which he was forced to extend to the earl. His success over
+Lancaster was materially facilitated by the weakness of Edmund,
+Earl of Kent, who, after joining with Earl Henry in his refusal to
+attend the Salisbury parliament, deserted him at the moment of the
+capture of Leicester by the Earl of March. But his treachery did
+not save him from Mortimer's revenge. In conjunction with the
+queen, Mortimer plotted to lure on Earl Edmund to ruin. Their
+agents persuaded him that Edward II. was still alive and imprisoned
+in Corfe castle, and urged him to restore his brother to liberty.
+The earl rose to the bait, and agreed to be party to an
+insurrection which was to restore Edward of Carnarvon to freedom,
+if not to his throne. When Kent was involved in the meshes, he was
+suddenly arrested in the Winchester parliament of March, 1330, and
+accused of treason. Convicted by his own speeches and letters, he
+was adjudged to death by the lords, and on March 19 beheaded
+outside the walls of the city.</p>
+
+<p>The fall of Kent convinced Lancaster that his fate would not be
+long delayed, and that his best chance of saving himself and his
+cause lay in stirring up the king to energetic action against the
+Earl of March. The death of his uncle irritated <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg308" id="pg308">308</a></span>Edward, who at
+seventeen was old enough to feel the degrading nature of his
+thraldom, and was eager to govern the kingdom of which he was the
+nominal head. In June, 1330, the birth of a son, the future Black
+Prince, to Edward and Philippa seems to have impressed on the young
+monarch that he had come to man's estate. Lancaster accordingly
+found him eager to shake off the yoke of his mother's paramour. The
+opportunity came in October, 1330, when the magnates assembled at
+Nottingham to hold a parliament there. Isabella and Mortimer took
+up their abode in the castle, where Edward also resided. Suspicions
+were abroad, and the castle was closely guarded by Mortimer's Welsh
+followers. Sir William Montague, a close friend of Edward's, was
+chosen to strike the blow, and lay outside with a band of troops.
+Some rumour of the plot seems to have leaked out, and on October 19
+Mortimer angrily denounced Montague as a traitor, and accused the
+king of complicity with his designs. But Montague was safe outside
+the castle, and, when evening fell, all that Mortimer could do was
+to lock the gates and watch the walls. William Eland, constable of
+the castle, had been induced to join the conspiracy, and had
+revealed to Montague a secret entrance into the stronghold. On that
+very night, Montague and his men-at-arms effected an entrance
+through an underground passage into the castle-yard, where Edward
+joined them. They then made their way up to Mortimer's chamber,
+which as usual was next to that of the queen. Two knights, who
+guarded the door, were struck down, and the armed band burst into
+the room. After a desperate scuffle, the Earl of March was secured.
+Hearing the noise, the queen rushed into the room, and though
+Edward still waited without, cried, with seeming consciousness of
+his share in the matter, "Fair son, have pity on the gentle
+Mortimer". Her entreaties were unavailing, and the fallen favourite
+was hurried, under strict custody, to London.</p>
+
+<p>Edward then issued a proclamation announcing that he had taken
+the government of England into his own hands. Parliament, prorogued
+to Westminster, met on November 26, and its chief business was the
+trial of Mortimer before the lords. He was charged with accroaching
+to himself the royal power, stirring up dissension between Edward
+II and the queen, teaching Edward III. to regard the Earl of
+Lancaster as his enemy, deluding <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg309" id="pg309">309</a></span>Edmund of Kent into believing that
+his brother was alive and with procuring his execution, accepting
+bribes from the Scots for concluding the disgraceful peace, and
+with perpetrating grievous cruelties in Ireland. The lords,
+imitating the evil precedents set during Mortimer's time of power,
+condemned him without trial or chance of answer to the accusations
+made against him. On November 29 the fallen earl was paraded
+through London from his prison in the Tower to Tyburn Elms, and was
+there hanged on the common gallows. His vast estates were forfeited
+to the crown. His accomplice, Sir Simon Bereford, suffered the same
+fate; but Sir Oliver Ingham, another of his associates, was
+pardoned. Edward discreetly drew a veil over his mother's shame.
+Mortimer's notorious relations with her were not enumerated in the
+accusations brought against him, and Isabella, though removed from
+power and stripped of some of her recent acquisitions, was allowed
+to live in honourable retirement on her dower manors. Scrupulously
+visited by her dutiful son, she wandered freely from house to
+house, as she felt disposed. She died in 1358 at her castle of
+Hertford, in the habit of the Poor Clares&mdash;a sister order of
+the Franciscans. The later tradition that she was kept in
+confinement at Castle Rising has only this slender foundation in
+fact that Castle Rising was one of her favourite places of abode.
+With her withdrawal from public life Edward III.'s real reign
+begins.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+
+<p>THE PRELIMINARIES OF THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg310" id=
+"pg310">310</a></span>Edward III. had just entered upon his
+nineteenth year when he became king in fact as well as in name. In
+person he was not unworthy of his father and grandfather. Less
+strikingly tall than they, he was nobly built and finely
+proportioned. In full manhood, long hair, a thick moustache and a
+flowing beard adorned his regular and handsome countenance. His
+graciousness and affability were universally praised. His face
+shone, we are told, like the face of a god, so that to see him or
+to dream of him was certain to conjure up joyous images.[1] He
+delighted in the pomp of his office, wore magnificent garments, and
+played his kingly part with the same majesty and dignity as his
+grandfather. Despite the troubles of his youth, he was well
+educated. Richard of Bury is said to have been his tutor, and the
+early lessons of the author or instigator of the <i>Philobiblon</i>
+were never entirely lost by the prince who took Chaucer and
+Froissart into his service. More conspicuous was his love of art,
+his taste for sumptuous buildings and their magnificent
+embellishment, which left memorials in the stately castle of
+Windsor and its rich chapel of St. George, in St. Stephen's chapel
+at Westminster, and the Eastminster for Cistercian nuns hard by
+Tower hill. A fluent and eloquent speaker in French and English,
+Edward was also conversant with Latin, and perhaps Low-Dutch. Yet
+no king was less given to study or seclusion. Possessed, perhaps,
+of no exceptional measure of intellectual capacity, and not even
+endowed to any large extent with firmness of character, he won a
+great place in history by the extraordinary activity of his
+temperament and the vigour and energy with which he threw himself
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg311" id="pg311">311</a></span>into
+whatever work he set his hand to do. He was a consummate master of
+knightly exercises, delighting in tournaments, and especially in
+those which were marked by some touch of quaintness or fancy. He
+had the hereditary passion of his house for the chase. In his
+youthful campaigns in Scotland and in his maturer expeditions in
+France, he was accompanied by a little army of falconers and
+huntsmen, by packs of hounds, and many hawks trained with the
+utmost care. He honoured with his special friendship an Abbot of
+Leicester, famed throughout England as the most dexterous of
+hare-coursers.[2]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Continuation of Murimuth</i> (Engl. Hist.
+Soc.), pp. 225-27, which gives the best contemporary description of
+Edward's character.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] Knighton, ii., 127.</p>
+
+<p>Edward's abounding energy was even more gladly devoted to war
+than to the chase. He was an admirable exponent of those chivalric
+ideals which are glorified in the courtly pages of Froissart. Not
+content with the easy victories which fall in the tiltyard to the
+crowned king, Edward was anxious to show that his triumphs belonged
+to the knight and not to the monarch, and more than once jousted
+victoriously in disguise. The same spirit led him to challenge
+Philip of France to decide their quarrel by single combat, and to
+win a personal triumph when masking as a knight attached to the
+service of Sir Walter Manny. He was liberal to the verge of
+prodigality, good-tempered, easy of access, and, save when moved by
+deep gusts of fierce anger, kindly and compassionate. His easy good
+nature endeared him both to foreigners and to every class of his
+own subjects. Not only did he enter fully into the free-masonry
+which regarded the knights of all Christian nations as equal
+members of a sworn brotherhood of arms, but he extended his favours
+to the London vintner's son who earned his bread in his service,
+and entertained the wives of the leading London citizens, side by
+side with the noble ladies in whose honour he gave the most quaint
+and magnificent of his banquets. Pious after a somewhat formal
+fashion, he was unwearied in going on pilgrimage and lavish in his
+religious foundations. Though no prince was more careful to protect
+the state from the encroachments of churchmen, his orthodoxy and
+devoutness kept him in good repute with the austerest champions of
+the Church. He could choose fit agents to carry out his policy, and
+his campaigns were a marvellous training ground for gallant and
+capable warriors.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg312" id=
+"pg312">312</a></span>Edward seldom lost sight of the material and
+economic interests of his subjects. He was the friend of merchants,
+the father of English commerce, the patron of the infant woollen
+manufactures, and a zealous champion of the maritime greatness of
+his island realm, which boasted that he was "king of the sea".
+Though his financial exigencies often led him to sell excessive
+privileges to alien traders, this policy did little harm to his
+subjects, for few of them were ready as yet to embark in foreign
+commerce. A true patriot, who declared that his land of England was
+"nearer to his heart, more delightful, noble, and profitable than
+all other lands," he succeeded in making Englishmen conscious of
+their national life as they had never been before; and he won for
+his fatherland a foremost place among the kingdoms of the world.
+His network of diplomatic alliances was dexterously fashioned, and
+enabled him to supplement the resources of his own subjects.</p>
+
+<p>The breadth of Edward's ambitions hindered their complete
+accomplishment. Like Edward I., he undertook more than he could
+carry through, and, though his panegyrists praise his patience in
+adversity no less than his moderation in prosperity, his merely
+animal courage and vigour broke down under the weight of
+misfortune. Thus the glorious king, who in his youth vied with his
+grandfather, seemed in his old age to have nearly approached the
+fate of his wretched father. In early life he won the love of his
+subjects. It was only in the first years of his reign that the
+violence and greed of his disorderly household, which inherited the
+evil traditions of the previous generation, bore so heavily upon
+the people that Englishmen fled at his approach in dread of the
+purveyors, who confiscated every man's goods for the royal use.[1]
+The somewhat shallow opportunism which abandoned, with little
+attempt at resistance, every royal right that stood in the way of
+his receiving the full support of his parliament, at least had the
+merit of keeping Edward in general touch with his estates. The
+wanton breaches of good faith, by which he sometimes strove to win
+back what he had lightly conceded, were regarded as efforts to save
+the sovereign's dignity, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg313" id=
+"pg313">313</a></span>rather than as insidious attempts to restore
+the prerogative. Unjust as was the very basis of his French
+pretensions, they were backed up by a show of legal claim that
+satisfied the conscience of king and subject, and to contemporaries
+Edward seemed a king regardful of his honour and mindful of his
+plighted word. If his generosity verged on extravagance, and his
+affectation of popular manners and graciousness on unreality,
+Englishmen of the fourteenth century were no severe critics of a
+crowned king. It was only when in his later years Edward laid aside
+the soldier's life, and abandoned himself to the frivolous
+distractions and degrading amours[2] which provoked the censure
+even of his admirers, that the self-indulgent traits inherited from
+his unhappy father stood revealed.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] The <i>Speculum regis Edwardi</i> (ed.
+Moisant) was written before 1333, and the attribution of its
+composition to Archbishop Islip and the inferences drawn in Stubbs'
+<i>Const. Hist.</i>, ii., 394, are therefore unwarranted; see
+Professor Tait's note in <i>Engl. Hist. Review</i>, xvi. (1901),
+110-15.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] <i>Chron. Anglia</i>, 1328-1388, p. 401.</p>
+
+<p>Edward was before all things a soldier. He was not only the
+consummate knight, the mirror of chivalry, but a capable tactician
+with a general's eye that took in the essential points of the
+situation at a glance. His restless energy ensured the rapidity of
+movement and alertness of action which won him many a triumph over
+less mobile and less highly trained antagonists; while they
+inspired his followers with faith in their cause and with the
+courage which succeeds against desperate odds. Yet the victor of
+Crecy cannot be numbered among the consummate generals of history.
+His campaigns were ill-planned; and he lacked the self-restraint
+and sense of proportion which would have prevented him from aiming
+at objects beyond his reach. The same want of relation between ends
+and means, the same want of definite policy and clear ideals,
+marred his statecraft. Yet contemporaries, conscious of his faults,
+magnified Edward as the brilliant and successful king who had won
+for himself an assured place among the greatest monarchs of
+history, "Never," says Froissart, "had there been such a king since
+the days of Arthur King of Great Britain."[1] Even to his own age
+his senile degradation pointed the moral of the triumphs of his
+manhood. The modern historian, who sees, beneath the superficial
+splendour of the days of Edward III., the misery and degradation
+that underlay the wreck of the dying Middle Ages, is in no danger
+of appraising too highly the merits of this <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg314" id="pg314">314</a></span>showy and
+ambitious monarch. Perhaps in our own days the reaction has gone
+too far, and we have been taught to undervalue the splendid energy
+and robustness of temperament which commanded the admiration of all
+Europe, and personified the strenuous ideals of the young English
+nation.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Froissart (ed. Luce), viii., 231; <i>cf</i>.
+Canon of Bridlington, p. 95.</p>
+
+<p>The internal history of the first few years of Edward's reign
+was uneventful. John Stratford became chancellor after Mortimer's
+fall, and remained for ten years the guiding spirit of the
+administration. Translated on Meopham's death in 1333 to
+Canterbury, he continued, as primate, to take a leading part in
+politics. His chief helper was his brother Robert, rewarded in 1337
+by the see of Chichester. The brothers were capable but not
+brilliant politicians. The worst disorders of the times of anarchy
+were put down, and parliaments readily granted sufficient money to
+meet the king's necessities. After a few years, the strife of
+parties was so far hushed that Burghersh was suffered to return to
+office, and it looks as if the balance between the Lancastrian
+party, upheld by the Stratfords, and the old middle party of
+Pembroke and Badlesmere, with which Burghersh had hereditary
+connexions, was maintained, as it had been during the least unhappy
+period of the preceding reign. The country was growing rich and
+prosperous. The annalists tell us of little save tournaments and
+mummings, and the setting up of seven new earldoms to remedy the
+gaps which death and forfeiture had made in the higher circle of
+the baronage. The earldom of Devon was revived for the house of
+Courtenay; that of Salisbury in favour of the trusty William
+Montague, and an Audley, son of Despenser's rival, was raised to
+the earldom of Gloucester. William Bohun, a younger son of the
+Humphrey slain at Boroughbridge, became Earl of Northampton, an
+Ufford, Earl of Suffolk, a Clinton Earl of Huntingdon, a Hastings
+Earl of Pembroke, and Henry of Grosmont, the Earl of Lancaster's
+first born, Earl of Derby. A new rank was added to the English
+peerage when the king's little son, Earl of Chester in 1333, was
+made Duke of Cornwall in 1337. The old feuds seemed dead and with
+them the old disorder. But Edward was ambitious of military glory,
+and it was natural that he should seek to reverse the degrading
+part which he had been forced to play in relation to Scotland and
+France. His hands being tied by treaties, it was not easy for him
+to make the first move. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg315" id=
+"pg315">315</a></span>Before long, however, circumstances arose
+which gave him a chance of taking up a line of his own with regard
+to Scotland. From that time Scottish affairs mainly absorbed his
+attention until the outbreak of troubles with France.</p>
+
+<p>The establishment of Robert Bruce on the Scottish throne had
+been attended by a considerable disturbance of the territorial
+balance in the northern kingdom. Many Scottish magnates, deprived
+of their lands and driven into exile, had abodes in England, and
+all might well look for the favour of the king in whose service
+they had been ruined. The treaty of Northampton made no provision
+for their restoration, and Edward showed himself disposed to uphold
+it. Their estates were in the hands of their supplanters, the
+nobles who had gathered round the throne of the Bruces. Thus it was
+that the exiles were cut off from all hope of return, and saw their
+only possibility of restitution in the break-up of the friendship
+of Edward and David. In like case were the English magnates who
+still entertained hopes of making effective the grants of Scottish
+estates which they had received from Edward I. and Edward II. For
+both classes alike every fresh year of peace between the realms
+decreased their chances of obtaining their desires. They failed to
+persuade Edward to go to war with his brother-in-law and repudiate
+formally the obligations imposed upon him by his mother and her
+paramour. But the minority of King David had unloosed the spirits
+of disorder in Scotland. Though the vigorous and capable regent,
+Sir Thomas Randolph, Earl of Moray, showed himself competent to
+stem the tide of aristocratic reaction which swelled round the
+throne of his infant cousin, he was one of the old generation of
+heroes that had aided King Robert to gain his throne. Were he to
+die, or become incapable of acting, there was no one who could
+supply his place. The Disinherited&mdash;thus they styled
+themselves&mdash;were encouraged both by the apathy of Edward III.
+and the weakness of Scotland to make a bold stroke on their own
+behalf.</p>
+
+<p>At the head of the disinherited was Edward Balliol, the son of
+the deposed King John. Brought up in England, first under the care
+of his cousin, Earl Warenne, and afterwards in the household of the
+half-brothers of Edward II., Edward Balliol, who succeeded in 1315
+to the French estates on which his father spent his latter years,
+divided his time between England <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg316" id="pg316">316</a></span>and France. The forfeiture of his
+father still kept him out of Barnard Castle and the other Balliol
+lands in England. Young and warlike, poor and ambitious, with few
+lands and great pretensions, he never formally abandoned either the
+lordship of Galloway or the throne of Scotland. In 1330 he received
+permission to take up his quarters in England during pleasure. He
+soon associated himself with his fellow-exiles in a bold attempt to
+win back their patrimony. Chief among his followers were three
+titular Scottish earls, closely related by intermarriage, each of
+whom was also a baron of high rank in England. Of these the
+French-born Henry of Beaumont, kinsman of Eleanor of Castile, and
+brother of Bishop Louis of Durham, was the oldest and most
+experienced. As the husband of a sister of the last of the Comyn
+Earls of Buchan, he posed as the heir of the greatest of the
+Scottish houses which had paid the penalty of its opposition to
+King Robert, and was summoned to the English parliament as Earl of
+Buchan. Beaumont's great-nephew, the young Gilbert of Umfraville,
+lord of Redesdale, was a grandson of another Comyn heiress, and his
+ancestors had inherited in the middle of the thirteenth century the
+ancient Scottish earldom of Angus, though they also had incurred
+forfeiture for their adhesion to the English policy. David of
+Strathbolgie, Earl of Athol, had a better right to be called a Scot
+than Umfraville or Beaumont. But his father abandoned Bruce, and
+was driven into England, where he held the Kentish barony of
+Chilham, and sat in the English parliament under his Scottish
+title. The younger Athol was son-in-law to the titular Earl of
+Moray, and all three kinsmen were bound by common interests to
+embrace the policy of Edward Balliol. Many lesser men associated
+themselves with the three earls and the claimant to a throne.
+Nearly every nobleman of the Scottish border made himself a party
+to a scheme of adventure which had its best parallels in the Norman
+invasions of Wales and Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>The object of the disinherited was to raise an army and
+prosecute their Scottish claims by force. Edward III. gave them no
+open countenance, and took up an ostentatiously correct attitude.
+He solemnly forbade all breach of the peace, and prevented the
+adventurers from adopting the easy course of marching from England
+to an open attack on Scotland. No obstacles, however, were imposed
+to hinder their raising a <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg317" id=
+"pg317">317</a></span>small but efficient army of 500 men-at-arms
+and 1,000 archers. Mercenaries, both English and foreign, were
+hired to supplement their scanty numbers, and among those who took
+service with them was a young gentleman of Hainault, Walter Manny,
+whose father had a few years before perished in the service of
+Edward II. in Gascony, and who had first come to England in the
+service of his countrywoman, Queen Philippa. Ships were collected
+in the Humber, and on the last day of July, 1332, the disinherited
+and their followers sailed from Ravenspur on a destination which
+was officially supposed to be unknown. A week later, on August 6,
+they landed at Kinghorn in Fife.</p>
+
+<p>Scotland was singularly unready to meet invasion. The regent
+Moray had died a few weeks earlier, and his successor, Donald, Earl
+of Mar, incompetent to carry on his vigorous policy, had perhaps
+already been intriguing with the adventurers. The only resistance
+to Balliol's landing, made by the Earl of Fife, was altogether
+unsuccessful. The little army established itself easily in the
+enemies' territory, and, after two days' rest at Dunfermline,
+advanced over the Ochils towards Perth. The regent had by that time
+gathered together an imposing army. As the invaders approached
+Strathearn on their way northwards, they found Mar encamped on
+Dupplin Moor, on the left bank of the Earn, and holding in force
+the only bridge available for crossing the river. There was some
+parleying between the two hosts. "We are sons of magnates of this
+land," declared the disinherited to Mar. "We are come hither with
+the lord Edward of Balliol, the right heir of the realm, to demand
+the lands which belong to us by hereditary right." Mar returned a
+warlike answer to their words, and both armies made preparation for
+battle.</p>
+
+<p>The disinherited, though few in number, were well trained in
+warfare, and from the beginning showed capacity to out-general the
+unwieldy host and feeble leader opposed to them. At sunset, some of
+their forces crossed the Earn by a ford which the Scots had
+neglected to guard, and falling upon an outlying portion of the
+enemies' camp, where the infantry were quartered, slaughtered the
+surprised Scots at their leisure. Luckily for Mar, the whole of his
+knights and men-at-arms were far away, uselessly watching the
+bridge, over which they <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg318" id=
+"pg318">318</a></span>had expected the disinherited to force a
+passage. Thus saved from the night ambuscade, the kernel of the
+Scottish army prepared next morning, August 12, to attack the
+disinherited. Puffed up by the memory of Bannockburn and the
+consciousness of superior numbers, they marched to battle as if
+certain of victory. All fought on foot, and the men-at-arms were
+drawn up in a dense central mass, supported at each side by wings.
+The disinherited were sufficiently schooled in northern warfare to
+adopt the same tactics. Save for a few score of horsemen in
+reserve, their heavily armed troops, leaving their horses in the
+rear, formed a compact column after the Scottish fashion. But
+archers were distributed in open order on the right and left
+flanks, with both extremities pushed forward, so that they formed
+the horns of a half-moon. Then the Scots advanced to the charge,
+and both sides joined in battle. The irresistible weight of the
+Scottish main phalanx forced back the little column of the
+disinherited, and for a moment it looked as if the battle were won.
+Meanwhile the archers on the flanks poured a galling shower on the
+collateral Scottish columns. The unvisored helmets of the Scots
+made them an easy prey to the storm of missiles, and they were
+driven back on to the main body. By this time the disinherited had
+rallied from the first shock; and still the deadly hail of arrows
+descended from right and left, until the whole of the Scottish army
+was thrown into panic-stricken disorder. Escape was impossible for
+the foremost ranks by reason of the closeness of their formation.
+At last, the rear files sought safely in flight, and were closely
+pursued by the victors, mounted on their fresh horses. A huge mass
+of slain, piled up upon each other, marked the place of combat. As
+at Bannockburn, the small disciplined host prevailed, but
+discipline was now with the English and numbers only with the
+Scots.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] The significance of the battle of Dupplin was
+first pointed out by Mr. J.E. Morris in <i>Engl. Hist. Review</i>,
+xii. (1897), 430-31.</p>
+
+<p>The victory of Dupplin Moor was for the moment decisive. Balliol
+occupied Perth, and received the submission of many of the Scottish
+magnates, among them being that Earl of Fife who first opposed his
+landing. A few weeks later, on September 24, Balliol was crowned
+King of Scots at Scone by the Bishop of Dunkeld. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg319" id="pg319">319</a></span>It was a
+soldier's coronation, and the magnates sat at the coronation feast
+in full armour, save their helmets. The disinherited then received
+the lands for which they had striven; and thereupon quitted the new
+king, either to secure their estates or to revisit their property
+in England. But the Scots, of no mind to receive a king from the
+foreigner, chose a new regent in Sir Andrew Moray, son of the
+companion of Wallace; and prepared to maintain King David. On
+December 16, Balliol was surprised at Annan by a hostile force
+under the young Earl of Moray, son of the late regent, and by Sir
+Archibald Douglas. His followers were cut off, his brother was
+slain, and he himself had the utmost difficulty in effecting his
+escape to England. He had only reigned four months.</p>
+
+<p>During Balliol's brief triumph, Edward III. had declared himself
+in his favour. Debarred by the treaty of Northampton from
+questioning the independence of King David, he was able to make
+what terms he liked with David's supplanter. In November a treaty
+was drawn up at Roxburgh, by which Balliol recognised the
+overlordship of Edward, and promised him the town, castle, and
+shire of Berwick. In return for these concessions, Edward III.
+acknowledged his namesake as lawful King of Scots. When, a few
+weeks later, his new vassal appeared as a fugitive on English soil,
+Edward had no longer any scruples in openly supporting him in an
+attempt to win back his throne. In the spring of 1333, Balliol and
+the disinherited once more crossed the frontier in sufficient force
+to undertake the siege of Berwick. The border stronghold held out
+manfully, but the Scots failed in an attempt to divert the
+attention of the English by an invasion of Cumberland. After
+Easter, Edward III. went in person to Berwick, and devoted the
+whole resources of England to ensuring its reduction. The siege
+lasted on until July, when the garrison, at the last gasp, offered
+to surrender, unless the town were relieved within fifteen days.
+The Scots made a great effort to save Berwick from capture, and the
+English king was forced to fight a pitched battle, before he could
+secure its possession.</p>
+
+<p>On July 19 Edward, leaving a sufficient portion of his army to
+maintain the blockade of Berwick, took up a position with the
+remainder on Halidon Hill, a short distance to the west of the
+town. The lessons of Bannockburn, Boroughbridge, and <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg320" id="pg320">320</a></span>Dupplin were not
+forgotten, and the English host was arranged much after the fashion
+which had procured the first victory of the disinherited. Knights
+and men-at-arms sent their horses to the rear and, from the king
+downwards, all, save a small reserve of horse, prepared to fight on
+foot. Edward divided his forces into three lines or "battles," each
+of which consisted of a central column of dismounted heavily armed
+troops, flanked by a right and a left wing of archers in open
+order, John of Eltham and the titular Earl of Buchan commanded the
+right battle, the king the centre, and Edward Balliol the left. The
+Scots still employed the traditional tactics which had failed so
+signally at Dupplin. Sir Archibald Douglas led his followers up the
+slopes of the hill in three dense columns. But a pitiless rain of
+arrows spread havoc among their ranks, and there were no answering
+volleys to disturb their foes. The battle was won for the English
+almost before the two lines had joined in close combat. It was only
+on Edward's right that the Scots were strong enough to push home
+their attack. On the centre and left, the English easily drove the
+enemy in panic flight down the slopes which they had ascended so
+confidently. The pursuit was long and bloody; few were taken
+prisoners, but many were slain or driven into the sea. Seven
+Scottish earls were believed by the English to have fallen, while
+the victors lost one knight, one squire, and a few infantry
+soldiers. Thus, for a second time the tactics, which had served the
+Scots so well in the defensive fight of Bannockburn, failed in
+offence to secure victory for them. The experience of this day
+completed the evolution of the new English battle array of
+men-at-arms fighting on foot and supported by wings of archers,
+which was soon to excite the wonder of Europe, when its
+possibilities were demonstrated on continental fields.</p>
+
+<p>Next day Berwick opened its gates, and was handed over to the
+English, according to the treaty of Roxburgh, to be for the rest of
+its history an English frontier town. Edward Balliol again
+conquered Scotland as easily as he had done on the former occasion,
+and far more effectually. It was no longer possible for the few
+remaining champions of the house of Bruce to safeguard the person
+of the little king and queen. David and Joan were accordingly sent
+off to France, where they were to grow up as good friends of King
+Philip. But Balliol had <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg321" id=
+"pg321">321</a></span>so clearly regained his throne through
+English help that he was no longer an independent agent. No sooner
+was his conquest assured than he was forced not only to confirm the
+surrender of Berwick, but to yield up the whole of south-eastern
+Scotland as the price of the English assistance. The depth of his
+humiliation was sounded when, in the treaty of Newcastle, June 12,
+1334, Edward, King of Scots, granted Edward, King of England, lands
+worth two thousand pounds a year in the marches of Scotland, and in
+part payment thereof yielded up to him, besides Berwick and its
+shire, the castle, town, and county of Roxburgh, the forests of
+Jedburgh Selkirk, and Ettrick, the town and county of Selkirk, and
+the towns, castles, and counties of Peebles, Dumfries, and
+Edinburgh. Of these Dumfries then included the Stewartry of
+Kirkcudbright, while the shire of Edinburgh took in the
+constabularies, the modern shires, of Haddington and Linlithgow.
+Thus the whole of Lothian, the whole of the central upland region,
+and Balliol's own inheritance of Galloway east of the Cree were
+directly transferred to the English crown, and were divided into
+sheriffdoms, and officered after the English fashion. On June 18
+Balliol personally performed homage for so much of Scotland as
+Edward chose to leave him. The wrongs of the disinherited had been
+the means of re-opening the whole Scottish question, and Edward
+III. seemed assured of a position as supreme as that which had once
+been held by Edward I.</p>
+
+<p>It was always easier in the Middle Ages to conquer a country
+than to keep it. And the experience of forty years might well have
+convinced Englishmen that no land was more difficult to hold than
+the stubborn and impenetrable northern kingdom, with its strenuous
+population, ever willing to cry a truce between local feuds when
+there was an opportunity of uniting against the southerners. Edward
+overshot his mark in grasping too eagerly the fairest portions of
+Balliol's realm. He needed for his policy a Scottish king, strong
+enough to maintain himself against his subjects, and loyal enough
+to remain true to the English connexion. Any faint chance of
+Balliol occupying such a position was completely destroyed by his
+studied humiliation. Henceforward the King of Scots, who had fought
+so well at Dupplin and Halidon, was but a pawn in Edward's game.
+Hated by the Scots as the betrayer of his <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg322" id="pg322">322</a></span>country, distrusted by the
+English who henceforth spied his actions and commanded his armies
+in his name, the gallant victor of Dupplin lost faith in himself
+and in his cause. After all, he was his father's son, and in no
+wise capable of bearing adversity and indignity with equanimity.
+His helplessness soon proved the worst obstacle in the way of the
+success of Edward's plans. Even with the aid of a large Scottish
+party, Edward I. had failed to bring about the subjection of
+Scotland. It was clearly impossible for his grandson to succeed in
+the same task when all Scotland was united against him, and braced
+to action by a series of glorious memories.</p>
+
+<p>Difficulties arose almost from the first. Not only had Balliol
+to contend against the implacable hostility of the Scottish
+patriots; the disinherited split up into rival factions after their
+triumph, and their divisions played the game of the partisans of
+the Bruces. The Earls of Athol and Buchan quarrelled with Balliol.
+Buchan, besieged by the partisans of David Bruce in a remote
+castle, was forced to surrender and quit Scotland for good. Athol
+was distinguished by the violence and suddenness of his
+tergiversations. After deserting Balliol for the patriots, he once
+more declared for the two Edwards, and persuaded many of the
+Scottish magnates to submit themselves to them. So long as the
+English king remained in Scotland, Athol was safe. On Edward's
+retirement to his kingdom in November, 1335, the nationalist
+leaders took the earl prisoner and put him to death. The war
+dragged on from year to year, with startling vicissitudes of
+fortune, but at no time was Balliol really established on the
+Scottish throne, and at no time did Edward III. really govern all
+the ceded districts.</p>
+
+<p>Scottish business detained the English king and court mainly in
+the north. Edward was in Scotland for most of the winter of 1334-5,
+keeping his Christmas court at Roxburgh. In the summer of 1335 he
+led an army into Scotland and penetrated as far as Perth. Again in
+1336, he marched from Perth along the east coast, as far as Elgin
+and Inverness. The Scots refused to give him battle, and their
+tactics of evasion and guerilla warfare soon exhausted his
+resources and demoralised his armies. This was Edward's last
+personal intervention in the business. He had long been irritated
+by the persistent interference of the French king in Scottish
+affairs, and his anger <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg323" id=
+"pg323">323</a></span>was not lessened by his hard plight forcing
+him, on more than one occasion, to grant short truces to the
+Scottish insurgents at Philip's intervention. His relations with
+France were becoming so strained that he preferred to spend 1337 in
+the south and entrust Thomas Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, with the
+conduct of the fruitless campaign of that year. Early in 1338,
+Edward made his way once more to Berwick, but his intention of
+invading Scotland was suddenly abandoned on the news of a
+threatened French expedition to England recalling him to the south.
+This was the decisive moment of the long struggle. Henceforth the
+English king could only devote a small share of his resources to an
+undertaking which he had not been able to compass when his whole
+energies were absorbed in it. The patriots, who had always
+dominated the open country, now attacked the castles and fortified
+towns, which were the bulwarks of the Edwardian power. Within three
+years all the more important of these fell into their hands. In
+1339 Edward Balliol's capital of Perth was beset by Robert, the
+Steward of Scotland, who had recently undertaken the regency for
+his uncle David. On the approach of danger, Balliol was ordered to
+England, and Sir Thomas Ughtred, an English knight and one of the
+disinherited of 1332, was entrusted with the command. By August he
+had been forced to surrender, and Stirling soon afterwards opened
+its gates to the gallant and energetic steward. In 1341 Edinburgh
+castle was captured by a clever stratagem, and a few weeks later
+David and Joan returned from France. The king, then seventeen years
+old, henceforth undertook the personal administration of his
+kingdom. Once more there was a King of Scots whom the Scottish
+people themselves desired. The first military enterprise of
+Edward's reign ended in complete failure.</p>
+
+<p>During the years of Edward Balliol's attempt on Scotland, it was
+the obvious interest of the English king to maintain such relations
+with France as to prevent the tightening of the traditional bond
+between the French and the Scottish courts. There were plenty of
+outstanding points of difference between England and France, but
+neither country was anxious for war, and the result of this mutual
+forbearance enabled Edward III. to deal with the Scots at his
+leisure. A survey of the relations of the two realms during the
+first ten years of Edward III.'s <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg324" id="pg324">324</a></span>reign will show how, despite the
+reluctance of either party to force matters to a crisis, the Kings
+of France and England gradually drifted into the hostility which,
+from 1337 onwards, paralysed the progress of the English cause in
+Scotland.</p>
+
+<p>At the moment of the fall of Edward II., England and France were
+still nominally engaged in the war which had followed the second
+seizure of Guienne by Charles IV. The difficulties experienced by
+Isabella and Mortimer in establishing their power made them as
+willing to give way to the French as to the Scots. Accordingly, on
+March 31, 1327, a treaty of peace was signed at Paris. By this
+treaty Edward only gained the restoration of certain of his Gascon
+vassals to the estates of which they had been deprived through
+their loyalty to the English connexion. He pledged himself to pay a
+large war indemnity, and accepted a partial restitution of his
+Gascon lands. Like so many of the treaties since 1259, it was a
+truce rather than a peace. Many details still remained for
+settlement, and it was pretty clear that the French, having the
+whip hand, would drive Gascony towards the goal of gradual
+absorption which had been so clearly marked out by Philip the
+Fair.</p>
+
+<p>Charles IV. restored to Edward such parts of Gascony as he chose
+to surrender. He retained in his hands Agen and the Agenais, and
+Bazas and the Bazadais, on the ground that Charles of Valois had
+won them by right of conquest in 1324. This policy reduced Edward's
+duchy to two portions of territory, very unequal in size and
+separated from each other by the lands conquered by the French
+king's uncle. The larger section of the English king's lands
+extended along the coast from the mouth of the Charente to the
+mouth of the Bidassoa. It included Saintes with Saintonge south of
+the Charente, Bordeaux and the Bordelais, Dax and the diocese of
+Dax, and Bayonne and its territory. But in no place did the
+boundaries go very far inland. Along the Dordogne, Libourne and
+Saint-&Eacute;milion were the easternmost English towns. Up the
+Garonne, the French were in possession of Langon, while, in the
+valley of the Adour, Saint-Sever, perched on its upland rock, was
+the landward outpost of the diminished Gascon duchy. In the east of
+the Agenais the two <i>ch&acirc;tellenies</i> of Penne and Puymirol
+formed a little <i>enclave</i> of ducal territory which extended
+from the Lot to the Garonne. But this second fragment of the
+ancient duchy <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg325" id=
+"pg325">325</a></span>was of no military and little commercial
+value, being commanded on all sides by the possessions of the
+French king. Moreover, the fiefs dependent on the Gascon duchy had
+fallen away with the attenuation of the duke's domain. In
+particular the viscounty of B&eacute;arn, now held by the Count of
+Foix, repudiated all allegiance to its English overlord. Even a
+thoroughly Gascon seigneur, such as the lord of Albret, was
+wavering in his fidelity to his duke. It was no longer safe for
+Gascons to risk the hostility of the king of the French.</p>
+
+<p>Within a year of the treaty of Paris, the death of Charles IV.
+further complicated Anglo-French relations. Like his brothers,
+Louis X. and Philip V., Charles the Fair left no male issue; but
+the pregnancy of his queen prevented the settlement of the
+succession being completed immediately after his decease. The
+barons of France, however, had no serious doubts as to their
+policy. The inadmissibility of a female ruler had already been
+determined at the accession of both Philip V. and Charles IV., and
+it was clear that the nearest male heir was Philip, Count of
+Valois, who had recently succeeded to the great appanage left
+vacant by the death in 1325 of his father, Charles of Valois, the
+inveterate enemy of the English. As the next representative of the
+male line, the French at once recognised Philip of Valois as
+regent. When his cousin's widow gave birth to a daughter, the
+regent was proclaimed as King Philip VI. without either delay or
+hesitation. Thus the house of Valois occupied the throne of France
+in the place of the direct Capetian line in which son had succeeded
+father since the days of Hugh Capet.</p>
+
+<p>Even Isabella and Mortimer protested against the succession of
+Philip of Valois. Admitted that the exclusion of women from the
+monarchy was already established by two precedents, could it not be
+plausibly argued that a woman, incapable herself of reigning, might
+form "the bridge and plank"[1] (as a contemporary put it) by which
+her sons might step into the rights of their ancestors? Strange as
+such a conception seems to our ideas, it was not unfamiliar to the
+jurists of that day. It was <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg326"
+id="pg326">326</a></span>in this fashion that the Capetian house
+claimed its boasted descent and continuity from the race of
+Charlemagne. Such a principle was actually the law in some parts of
+France, and it was a matter of every-day occurrence in the Parisis
+to transmit male fiefs to the sons of heiresses, themselves
+incapable of succession. Edward, as the son of Charles IV.'s
+sister, was nearer of kin to his uncle than Philip, the son of
+Charles's uncle. Surely a man's nephew had a better right to his
+succession than his first cousin could ever claim? From the purely
+juridical point of view, the claim put forward by Isabella on her
+son's behalf was not only plausible but strong.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Viollet, <i>Hist. des Institutions politiques
+et administratives de la France</i>, ii., 74, from a MS. source.
+See also Viollet, <i>Comment les Femmes ont &eacute;t&eacute;
+exclues en France de la Succession &agrave; la Couronne</i>, in
+<i>M&eacute;m. de l'Acad. des Inscriptions</i>, xxxiv., pt. ii.
+(1893).</p>
+
+<p>Happily for France, the magnates of the realm dealt with the
+succession question as statesmen and not as lawyers. A later age
+imagined that the French barons brought forward a text of the law
+of the Salian Pranks, as a complete answer to Edward's claim from
+the juridical point of view. But the famous Salic law was a
+figment, forged by the next generation of lawyers who were eager to
+give a complete refutation of the elaborate legal pleadings of the
+partisans of the English claim. No authentic Salic law dealt with
+the question of the succession to the throne,[1] and the bold step
+of transferring a doctrine of private inheritance to the domain of
+public law was one of the characteristic feats of the medieval
+jurist, anxious to heap up at any risk a mass of arguments that
+might overwhelm his antagonists' case. The barons of 1328 rose
+superior to legal subtleties. To them the question at issue was the
+preservation of the national identity of their country. The vital
+thing for them was to secure the throne of France, both at the
+moment and at future times, for a Frenchman. Any admission, however
+guarded, of the right of women to transmit claims to their sons
+opened out a vista of the foreign offspring of French princesses,
+married abroad, ruling France as strangers, and it might be as
+enemies. They chose Philip of Valois because he was a Frenchman
+born and bred, and because he had no interests or possessions
+outside the French realm. They could not endure the idea of being
+ruled by the English king. He was not only a stranger, but the
+hereditary enemy. The Capetian monarchy must at all costs be kept
+French.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Viollet, <i>op. cit.</i>, pp. 55-57;
+<i>cf</i>. D&eacute;sprez, <i>Les Pr&eacute;liminaires de la Giurre
+de Cent Ans</i>, p. 32.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg327" id=
+"pg327">327</a></span>Isabella did what she could on her son's
+behalf. She excited the <i>noblesse</i> of Aquitaine to support
+Edward's claim; but the lords of the south paid no heed to her
+exhortations. She was more successful with the Flemings, then in
+revolt against their Count, Louis of Nevers. Twelve notables of
+Bruges, headed by the burgomaster, William de Deken, visited
+England and offered to recognise Edward as King of France if he
+would support the Flemish democracy against their feudal lord.[1]
+But Philip VI.'s first act was to unite with the Count of Flanders,
+and the fatal day of Cassel laid low the fortunes of Bruges and
+restored the fugitive Louis to power. Isabella was forced to resign
+herself to simple protests.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See Pirenne, <i>La premi&egrave;re Tentative
+pour reconnaitre &Eacute;douard I. comme Roi de France in Ann. de
+la Soc. d'Hist. de Gand</i>, 1902.</p>
+
+<p>The inevitable demand from Philip VI. for Edward's homage for
+Guienne and Ponthieu soon brought the English government face to
+face with realities. The request for his vassal's submission,
+conveyed to England by Peter Roger, Abbot of Fecamp, the future
+Clement VI., was even more unwelcome than such demands commonly
+were. At first Isabella used brave words: "My son, who is the son
+of a king, will never do homage to the son of a count".[1] But a
+threat of a third seizure of Gascony soon brought the queen to her
+senses. Further insistence on the part of Philip was met with
+polite apologies for delay. At last, in May, 1329, the young king
+crossed the Channel, and on June 6 performed homage to Philip in
+the choir of the cathedral of Amiens. But even at the last moment
+there were explanations and reservations on both sides. Philip made
+it clear that he acknowledged no claim of his vassal to any
+territories, beyond those which he actually possessed. Edward's
+advisers protested that they abandoned no pretension to the whole
+by performing homage for a part. Moreover, the act of homage was
+couched in such ambiguous phrases that it remained doubtful whether
+Edward had performed "liege homage," as the King of France
+demanded, or only "simple homage," such as seemed to him less
+offensive to the dignity of a crowned king. Thus, though the
+cousins parted amicably and discussed proposals of a marriage <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg328" id="pg328">328</a></span>treaty
+between the English and French houses, the homage at Amiens settled
+nothing.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Grandes Chroniques de France</i>, v., 323
+(ed. P. Paris).</p>
+
+<p>The diplomatists still had plenty of work before them. The
+French statesmen insisted on the necessity of the ceremony at
+Amiens being interpreted as liege homage, involving the obligation
+of defending the overlord "against all those who can live or die".
+The English politicians complained of the "injustice and unreason
+of the King of France, who seeks the disinheritance of their master
+in Aquitaine". It was only by limiting the demands of both parties
+to points of detail, that a compromise was arrived at in the
+convention of the Wood of Vincennes on May 8, 1330. Further
+negotiations were still necessary; and at the moment when
+everything was trembling in the balance, the sudden occupation of
+Saintes by the Count of Alencon, brother of Philip VI., brought
+matters within a measurable distance of war. But Edward, then at
+the beginning of his real reign, had no mind for fighting. A more
+satisfactory convention, drawn up on March 9, 1331, at
+Saint-Germain-en-Laye, was ratified by Edward at Eltham on March
+30, when he recognised that he owed liege homage, and not merely
+simple homage, to the King of France. Next month, he crossed over
+to France so secretly that his subjects believed that he went
+disguised as a merchant or a pilgrim. At Pont-Sainte-Maxence, a
+little town on the Oise, a few miles below Compi&egrave;gne, Edward
+held an interview with Philip VI., who came thither with equal
+privacy. The French king does not seem to have insisted upon a
+renewal of homage, being content with the assurance already given
+as to the character of the previous ceremony. The informal
+interview, which the modern historian can only ascertain by painful
+scrutiny of the royal itineraries, proved more fertile in
+friendship than all the pomp of Amiens. Before Edward went home,
+Philip gave him complete satisfaction for the outrage at Saintes,
+and arrived at a financial settlement. Thus Edward and Philip at
+last became friends "so far as outside appearances went," as a
+chronicler of the time phrased it. The fundamental difference of
+interests and standpoint could be glossed over by no facile
+compromise, and the calm of the next six years was only the prelude
+to a storm destined to end the policy that had regulated the
+relations of the two courts from the days <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg329" id="pg329">329</a></span>of the peace of 1259 to those
+of the meeting at Pont-Sainte-Maxence.</p>
+
+<p>At first there was talk of further cementing the newly
+established friendship. There were suggestions of a marriage of
+Edward's infant son with Philip's daughter, a fresh interview
+between the monarchs, a treaty of perpetual alliance and a common
+crusade against the Turks. The last, and the most fantastic, of
+these projects was the one which was most seriously discussed. The
+chivalrous spirit of Philip of Valois rose eagerly to the idea of a
+great European expedition against the infidel, of which he was to
+be the chief commander. Inspired by John XXII., he took the cross,
+made preparations for an early start, and invoked Edward's
+co-operation. Edward cleverly utilised his kinsman's zeal as
+another lever for enforcing the settlement of outstanding
+differences. "Tell your master," he said to the French ambassador,
+Peter Roger, now Archbishop of Rouen, "that when he has fulfilled
+his promises, I will be more eager to go on the holy voyage than he
+is himself." But the chronic troubles, arising from the unceasing
+extension of the suzerain's claims in Aquitaine, and from the
+shelter given by Philip to David Bruce, had continued all through
+the years of professed friendship, and in 1334 an embassy to Paris,
+presided over by Archbishop Stratford, failed to establish a
+<i>modus vivendi</i>. In the same year John XXII. died without
+having either procured the crusade or crushed Louis of Bavaria. His
+successor, James Founder of Foix, who took the name of Benedict
+XII., pursued his general policy, though in a more diplomatic and
+self-seeking spirit. Benedict's great wish was to, unite France and
+England against his enemy, the Emperor Louis of Bavaria, and he
+dexterously played upon Philip's eagerness for the crusade to
+persuade him to abandon to the papacy the position, which he had
+assumed, of arbiter of the differences between Edward and the
+Scots. It was a signal, though transitory, triumph of this policy
+that a truce between England and Scotland was brought about by the
+mediation of the pope and not of the French king. But Benedict
+found that a crusade was impossible so long as the chief powers of
+the west were hopelessly estranged from each other. In 1336, he
+vetoed the crusading scheme until happier times had dawned. Philip,
+bitterly disappointed, sought <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg330"
+id="pg330">330</a></span>out Benedict at Avignon, but utterly
+failed to change his purpose. He was in his own despite released
+from the crusader's vow, though exhorted still to continue his
+preparations. The galleys, purchased from the crusading tenths of
+the Church, were transferred from the Mediterranean to the Channel.
+The French king might well find consolation for the abandonment of
+the holy war in a sudden descent on England.</p>
+
+<p>From that moment the horizon darkened. Philip VI., once more
+took up the cause of the Scots, and once more the Aquitanian
+troubles became acute. His irritation at Benedict led him to open
+up negotiations with Louis of Bavaria, whereat Benedict was greatly
+offended. Edward III. then sought to find friends who would help
+him against Philip. He was as much disgusted with the pope as was
+his French rival. The crusading fleet, equipped with the money of
+the Roman Church, threatened the English coast, and the
+<i>curia</i> was even more French in its sympathies than the
+temporising pontiff. It is no wonder then that both kings looked
+coldly on Benedict's offer of mediation between them. Yet,
+notwithstanding the indifference manifested by both courts, two
+cardinals, Peter Gomez, a Spaniard, and Bertrand of Montfavence, a
+Frenchman, were sent in the summer of 1337 as papal legates to
+France and England to settle the points in dispute. For the next
+three years these prelates pursued their mission with energy and
+persistence, though with little result.</p>
+
+<p>A fresh dispute further embittered the personal relations of
+Philip and Edward. In 1336, Edward offered a refuge in England to
+Robert of Artois, Philip's brother-in-law and mortal enemy. The
+grandson of the Count Robert of Artois who was slain in 1302 at
+Courtrai, Robert of Artois was indignant that the rich county of
+Artois should, according to local custom, have devolved upon his
+aunt Maud, the wife of Otto, Count of Burgundy, or Franche
+Comt&eacute;, and the mother-in-law of the last two kings of the
+direct Capetian line. Though he had failed in several suits to
+obtain it, Robert renewed his claim after his brother-in-law became
+King of France. It was soon proved that the charters upon which he
+relied to prove his title had been forged. The sudden death of the
+Countess of Artois, followed quickly by that of her daughter and
+heiress, added the suspicion of poisoning to the certainly of
+forgery. Robert <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg331" id=
+"pg331">331</a></span>was deprived of all his possessions and was
+exiled from France. Driven from his first refuge in Brabant by
+Philip's indignant hostility, he found shelter in England, where he
+was received with a favour which Philip bitterly resented.
+Condemned in his absence as a traitor, and devoured by a ferocious
+hatred of Philip and his Burgundian wife, Robert did all that he
+could to inflame the mind of Edward against the French king. French
+romance of the next generation, in the poem of the <i>Vow of the
+Heron</i>,[1] tells how Robert, returning to Edward's court from
+the chase, brought as his only victim a heron, which he offered to
+the king as the most timid of birds to the most cowardly of kings;
+"for, sire," he declared, "you have not dared to claim the realm of
+France which belongs to you by hereditary right". Stirred up by
+this challenge, Edward swore to God and the heron that within a
+year he would place the crown of France on Queen Philippa's brow.
+This famous legend is, however, a fiction. It was not until later
+that Edward seriously renewed the claim which he had advanced in
+1328. But when once war became certain, the challenge of the French
+throne was bound to be made, and the dissolution of the friendly
+personal relations of the two kings, which had so long prevented
+either from proceeding to extremities, was certainly in large part
+the work of Robert of Artois. For the moment, Edward probably
+thought that his welcome of Robert was only a fair return for
+Philip's reception of David Bruce.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Les voeus du h&eacute;ron</i> in Wright,
+<i>Political Poems and Songs</i>, i., 1-25 (Rolls Ser.)</p>
+
+<p>War being imminent, Edward looked beyond sea for foreign allies.
+Commercial and traditional ties closely bound England to the county
+of Flanders, but our friendship had latterly been with its people
+rather than with its princes. Louis of Nevers, the Count of
+Flanders, had been expelled in 1328 by a rising of the maritime
+districts of the county, and had been restored by force of arms
+through the agency of Philip of Valois. Gratitude and interest
+accordingly combined to make Count Louis a strong partisan of
+Philip of Valois. Though far from absolute, he was still possessed
+of sufficient authority over his unruly townsmen to make it
+impossible for Edward to negotiate successfully with them. In 1336
+the count answered Edward's advances by prohibiting all commercial
+relations between <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg332" id=
+"pg332">332</a></span>his subjects and England. Bitterly disgusted
+at the hostility of Flanders, Edward in 1337 passed a law through
+parliament which prohibited the export of wool to the Flemish
+weaving centres. This measure provoked an economic crisis at Ghent
+and Ypres; but for the moment such a catastrophe could only
+accentuate the differences between England and the count. It was
+otherwise, however, with the neighbouring princes of the imperial
+obedience. Count William I. of Hainault, Holland, and Zealand was
+Edward III.'s father-in-law, and, during the last months of his
+strenuous career, he welcomed Bishop Burghersh, Edward's chief
+diplomatist, to his favourite residence of Valenciennes, where from
+April, 1337, the English ambassadors kept great state, "sparing as
+little as if the king were present there in his own person," and
+striving with all their might to build up an alliance with the
+princes of the Low Countries. When the count died, his son and
+successor, William II., persisted, though with less energy, in his
+father's policy, and the Hainault connexion became the nucleus of a
+general Low German alliance. Burghersh was lavish in promises, and
+soon a large number of imperial vassals took Edward's pay and
+promised to fight his battles. Among these were Count Reginald of
+Gelderland, who since 1332 had been the husband of Edward III.'s
+sister Eleanor, and with him came the Counts of Berg, J&uuml;lich,
+Cleves, and Mark, the Count Palatine of the Rhine, and a swarm of
+minor potentates.</p>
+
+<p>Hardest to win over of the Netherlandish princes was Duke John
+III. of Brabant, a crafty statesman and a successful warrior, who
+had recently conquered limburg, and won a signal victory over a
+formidable coalition of his neighbours. Among his former foes had
+been the house of Avesnes, but he had reconciled himself with
+Hainault, by reason of his greater hatred for Louis of Flanders.
+The Flemish cities were the rivals in trade of his own land, and
+their count's friendship for his French suzerain ensured the
+establishment of Philip of Valois as temporary lord of Mechlin, the
+possession of which had long been indirectly disputed between
+Brabant and Flanders. The hesitating duke was at last won over by a
+favourable commercial treaty, which made Antwerp the staple of
+English wools, and ensured for the looms of Louvain and Brussels
+the advantages denied by Edward's hostility to the clothworkers of
+Ghent and Ypres. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg333" id=
+"pg333">333</a></span>Convinced that war with Philip was the surest
+way of adding Mechlin to his dominions, he then joined the circle
+of Edward's stipendiaries. The excommunicated and schismatic
+emperor, Louis of Bavaria, welcomed the advances of Burghersh. More
+than one tie already bound the Bavarian to England. The English
+Franciscan, William of Ockham, proved himself the most active and
+daring of the literary champions of the imperial claims against
+John XXII. Moreover, the emperor and Edward had married sisters,
+and their brother-in-law, the new Count of Hainault, Holland, and
+Zealand, was childless, so that they had common interests in
+keeping on good terms with him. Louis' bitter enemy, Benedict XII.,
+forbade all hope of French support, and blocked the way to all
+prospect of reconciliation with the Church. It was natural that
+Louis should take his revenge by an alliance with the prince who
+ignored the advice of the pontiff, and hated the Valois king. As
+the result of all this, an offensive and defensive alliance between
+Edward on the one hand and Louis and his Low German vassals on the
+other was signed at Valenciennes in the summer of 1337.</p>
+
+<p>The die seemed cast. Philip VI. pronounced the forfeiture of
+Gascony and Ponthieu. The French at once invaded Edward's duchy and
+county, while the French sailors in the Channel plundered the
+Anglo-Norman islands and the towns on the Sussex and Hampshire
+coasts. Edward redoubled his preparations for war, and issued a
+long manifesto to his subjects in which he set forth in violent
+language his grievances against Philip. It was at this unlucky
+moment that the two cardinal legates came upon the scene, reaching
+Paris in August, intent on arranging a pacification. The
+irritation, which Benedict showed against Edward for concluding an
+alliance with the schismatic emperor, did not make him more
+disposed to the work of conciliation. But the pope saw in the
+outbreak of a great war the destruction of his last hopes of
+humiliating the Bavarian, and once more played upon the weakness
+and impolicy of Philip. Though France was more ready than England,
+and Philip had everything to lose by delay, the French king allowed
+himself to be persuaded by the two legates to enter once more upon
+the paths of conciliation. As a preliminary measure, he revoked the
+order for the confiscation of Gascony, <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg334" id="pg334">334</a></span>and accepted a temporary
+armistice. As before in the Scottish business, Philip again played
+the game of the papacy. Unlike his adversary, Edward continued
+steadily in the line which he had determined upon, while welcoming
+any delay that gave him opportunity to get ready. He employed the
+interval in making peace more impossible than ever. On October 7,
+he renewed his claim to the French crown, repudiated the homage
+into which he had been tricked during his infancy, and sent Bishop
+Burghersh straight from Valenciennes to Paris as bearer of his
+defiance. Thus the autumn of 1337 saw a virtual declaration of war.
+In November the first serious hostilities took place. Sir Walter
+Manny devastated the Flemish island of Cadzand, taking away with
+him as prisoner the bastard brother of the Count of Flanders.</p>
+
+<p>Papal diplomacy had not yet exhausted its resources. Benedict
+XII. was deeply concerned at the conclusion of the Anglo-imperial
+alliance. He was convinced that the only possible way of avoiding
+its perils was to persuade Edward and Philip to bury their
+differences and unite with him against the emperor. He succeeded in
+obtaining short prolongations of the existing armistice and, in
+December, 1337, the two cardinal legates landed in England, and
+were gladly received by Edward, who was delighted to gain time by
+negotiations. For the next six months they tarried in England,
+hoping against hope that something definite would result from their
+efforts. Meanwhile the English hurried on their preparations for
+war, and Edward made ready to cross over to the continent. As
+months slipped away, the tension became more severe, and in May
+Edward denounced the truces, though he still kept up the pretence
+of negotiations, and so late as June appointed ambassadors to treat
+with Philip of Valois. The real interest centred in the hard
+fighting which at once broke out at sea between the rival seamen of
+England and Normandy. At first the advantage was with the Normans.
+Not only were many English ships captured, but repeated destructive
+forays were made on the coasts of the south-eastern counties.
+Portsmouth was burnt; the Channel Islands were ravaged; and so
+alarming were the French corsairs that, in July, 1338, the dwellers
+on the south coast were ordered to take refuge in fortresses, or
+withdraw their goods to a distance of four leagues from the
+sea.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg335" id=
+"pg335">335</a></span>At last the army and fleet were ready. On
+July 12, 1338, Edward appointed his son, the eight-year-old Duke of
+Cornwall, warden of England, and a few days later sailed from
+Orwell on a great ship named the <i>Christopher</i>. A favourable
+wind quickly bore the royal fleet to the mouth of the Scheldt.
+Thence the king and his army sailed up the river to Antwerp, the
+chief port of Brabant, where they landed on July 16. There, on July
+22, Edward revoked all commissions addressed to the King of France,
+and withheld from his agents all power to prejudice his own
+pretensions to the throne of the Valois. He passed more than a
+month at Antwerp, holding frequent conferences with his imperial
+allies, and thence proceeded through Brabant and J&uuml;lich to
+Cologne. From that city he went up the Rhine to Coblenz, where on
+September 5 he held an interview with his queen's imperial
+brother-in-law. Their meeting was celebrated with all the pomp and
+stateliness of the heyday of chivalry. Edward was accompanied by
+the highest nobles of his land, the emperor by all the electors,
+save King John of Bohemia, who, as a Luxemburger, was a convinced
+partisan of the French. Louis received his ally clothed in a purple
+dalmatic, with crown on head and with sceptre and orb in hand,
+surrounded by the electors and the higher dignitaries of the
+empire, and seated on a lofty throne erected in the Castorplatz,
+hard by the Romanesque basilica that watches over the junction of
+the Moselle with the Rhine. Another throne, somewhat lower in
+height, was occupied by the King of England, clothed in a robe of
+scarlet embroidered with gold, and surrounded by three hundred
+knights. Then, before the assembled crowd, Louis declared that
+Philip of France had forfeited the fiefs which he held of the
+empire. He put into Edward's hands a rod of gold and a charter of
+investiture, by which symbols he appointed him as "Vicar-general of
+the Empire in all the Germanies and in all the Almaines". Next day
+the allies heard a mass celebrated by the Archbishop of Cologne in
+the church of St. Castor. After the service the emperor swore to
+aid Edward against the King of France for seven years, while the
+barons of the empire took oaths to obey the imperial vicar and to
+march against his enemies. Thereupon the English king took farewell
+of the emperor, and returned to Brabant.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg336" id=
+"pg336">336</a></span>All was ready for war. The interview at
+Coblenz was the deathblow to the papal diplomacy, and the sluggish
+Philip awaited in the Vermandois the expected attack of the
+Anglo-imperial armies. Yet the best part of a year was still to
+elapse before lances were crossed in earnest. The lords of the
+empire had no real care for the cause of Edward. They were
+delighted to take his presents, to pledge themselves to support
+him, and to insist upon the regular payment of the subsidies he had
+promised. But John of Brabant was more intent on winning Mechlin
+than on invading France, and even William of Avesnes was
+embarrassed by the ties which bound him to Philip, his uncle, even
+more than to Edward, his brother-in-law. They contented themselves
+with taking Edward's money and giving him little save promises in
+return. It became evident that an imperial vicar would be obeyed
+even less than an emperor. Every week of delay was dangerous to
+Edward, who had exhausted his resources in the pompous pageantry of
+his Rhenish journey, and in magnificent housekeeping in Brabant. It
+was then Edward's interest, as it had previously been Philip's, to
+bring matters to a crisis. That he failed to do this must be
+ascribed to the lukewarmness of his allies, the poverty of his
+exchequer, and, above all, to the still active diplomacy of
+Benedict XII.</p>
+
+<p>The cardinal legates appeared in Brabant, but their tone was
+different from that which they had taken in the previous spring in
+England. Profoundly irritated by the alliance of Edward and Louis,
+Benedict lectured the English king on the iniquity of his courses.
+The empire was vacant; the Coblenz grant was therefore of no
+effect; if Edward persisted in acting as vicar of the schismatic,
+he would be excommunicated. Benedict stood revealed as the partisan
+of France. It was in vain that Edward offered peace if France gave
+up the Scots and made full restitution of Gascony. Benedict ordered
+his legates to refuse to discuss the latter proposal, and, as the
+Gascon question lay at the root of the whole matter, an amicable
+settlement became more impossible than ever. Edward hotly defended
+his right to make what alliances he chose with his wife's kinsmen,
+and bitterly denounced the employment of the wealth of the Church
+in equipping the armies of his enemies. Though the cardinals, Peter
+and Bertrand, remained in Edward's camp, <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg337" id="pg337">337</a></span>they might, for all practical
+purposes, as well have been at Avignon. The papal diplomacy had
+failed.</p>
+
+<p>Edward employed the leisure forced upon him by these events in
+elaborating his claim to the French throne. His lawyers ransacked
+both Roman jurisprudence and feudal custom that they might lay
+before the pope and Christendom plausible reasons for their
+master's pretensions. They advanced pleas of an even bolder
+character. Was not the right of Edward to the French throne the
+same as that of Jesus Christ to the succession of David? The Virgin
+Mary, incapable of the succession on her own behalf, was yet able
+to transmit her rights to her Son. These contentions, sacred and
+profane, did not touch the vital issue. It was not the dynastic
+question that brought about the war, though, war being inevitable,
+Edward might well, as he himself said, use his claim as a buckler
+to protect himself from his enemies. The fundamental difference
+between the two nations lay in the impossible position of Edward in
+Gascony. He could not abandon his ancient patrimony, and Philip
+could not give up that policy of gradually absorbing the great
+fiefs which the French kings had carried on since the days of St.
+Louis. The support given to the Scots, the Anglo-imperial alliance,
+the growing national animosity of the two peoples, the rivalry of
+English and French merchants and sailors, all these and many
+similar causes were but secondary.[1] At this stage the claim to
+the French throne, though immensely complicating the situation, and
+interposing formidable technical obstacles to the conduct of
+negotiations, loomed larger in talk than in acts. It was only in
+1340, when Edward saw in his pretensions the best way of commanding
+the allegiance of Philip's sworn vassals, that the question of the
+French title became a serious matter.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] D&eacute;prez, <i>Les Pr&eacute;liminaires de
+la Guerre de Cent Ans</i>, pp. 400-406, admirably elucidates the
+situation.</p>
+
+<p>On which side did the responsibility for the war rest? National
+prejudices have complicated the question. English historians have
+seen in the aggression of Philip in Gascony, his intervention in
+Scottish affairs, and the buccaneering exploits of the Norman
+mariners, reasons adequate to provoke the patience even of a
+peace-loving monarch. French writers, unable to deny these facts,
+have insisted upon the slowness of <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg338" id="pg338">338</a></span>Philip to requite provocation, his
+servile deference to papal authority, his willingness to negotiate,
+and his dislike to take offence even at the denial of his right to
+the crown which he wore. Either king seems hesitating and reluctant
+when looked at from one point of view, and pertinaciously
+aggressive when regarded from the opposite standpoint. It is safer
+to conclude that the war was inevitable than to endeavour to
+apportion the blame which is so equally to be divided between the
+two monarchs. The modern eye singles out Edward's baseless claim
+and makes him the aggressor, but there was little, as the best
+French historians admit, in Edward's pretension that shocked the
+idea of justice in those days. Moreover this view, held too
+absolutely, is confuted by the secondary position taken by the
+claim during the negotiations which preceded hostilities. If in the
+conduct of the preliminaries we may assign to Edward the credit of
+superior insight, more resolute policy, and a more clearly
+perceived goal, the intellectual superiority, which he possessed
+over his rival, was hardly balanced by any special moral obliquity
+on his part; though to Philip, with all his weakness, must always
+be given the sympathy provoked by the defence of his land against
+the foreign invader. It is useless to refine the issue further. The
+situation had become impossible, and fighting was the only way out
+of the difficulty. When in the late summer of 1339 the curtain was
+rung down on the long-drawn-out diplomatic comedy, Edward had not
+yet finally assumed that title of King of France, which made an
+inevitable strife irreconcilable, and so prolonged hostilities that
+the struggle became the Hundred Years' War.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+
+<h4>THE EARLY CAMPAIGNS OF THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg339" id=
+"pg339">339</a></span>In the late summer of 1339 Edward III. was at
+last able to take the offensive against France. During the
+negotiations England strained every effort to provide her absent
+sovereign with men and money, but neither the troops nor the
+supplies were adequate. The army which assembled in September in
+the neighbourhood of Brussels consisted largely of imperial
+vassals, hired by the English King, and clamorous for the regular
+payment of their wages. Already Edward told his ministers that, had
+not "a good friend in Flanders" advanced him a large sum, he would
+have been obliged to return with shame to England. As it was,
+enough was raised to set the unwieldy host in motion, and on
+September 20 he marched from Valenciennes, and thence advanced into
+the bishopric of Cambrai, whose lord, though an imperial vassal,
+had declared for France and the papacy.</p>
+
+<p>The rolling uplands of the Cambr&eacute;sis were devastated with
+fire and sword. One night an English baron took the Cardinal
+Bertrand, who with his comrade Peter still accompanied Edward's
+host, to the summit of a high tower, whence they could witness the
+flaming homesteads and villages of the fertile and populous
+district. In that woeful spectacle the churchman saw the futility
+of his last two years of constant labour, and fell in a swoon to
+the ground. But the confederates could do little more than
+devastate the open country. Cambrai itself was besieged to no
+purpose, and Edward pressed on to the invasion of France. On
+October g he spent his first night on French soil at the abbey of
+Mont Saint-Martin. He learnt how slender was the tie which bound
+his foreign allies to him, for his brother-in-law, William of
+Hainault, refused to serve, except on imperial soil, against his
+uncle Philip VI. Consoled for this <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg340" id="pg340">340</a></span>defection by the arrival of the
+sluggish Duke of Brabant and of the Elector of Brandenburg, the
+eldest son of the emperor, Edward marched through the Vermandois,
+the Soissonais, and the Laonnais, burning and devastating, without
+meeting any serious resistance. Philip of Valois timidly held aloof
+in the neighbourhood of P&eacute;ronne.</p>
+
+<p>By the middle of October, when Edward was near St. Quentin on
+the Oise, the Duke of Brabant suggested the expediency of seeking
+out winter quarters. The slow-moving host was almost in mutiny,
+when the master crossbowman of the King of France brought a
+challenge from his lord. "Let the King of England," ran the
+message, "seek out a field favourable for a pitched battle, where
+there is neither wood, nor marsh, nor river." Edward cheerfully
+accepted a day for the combat, and chose his ground higher up the
+Oise valley, among the green meadowlands and hedgerows of the
+Thi&eacute;rache. The appointed day passed by, and the French came
+not. At last, when Edward almost despaired of a meeting, he was
+told that the French were arrayed at Buironfosse, on the plateau
+between the Oise and the upper Sambre, and that Philip was ready to
+fight the next day, Saturday, October 23. Edward once more chose a
+suitable field of action in a plain between La Flamangrie and
+Buironfosse, a league and a half from the French. "On the
+Saturday," wrote Edward to his son in England, "we were in the
+field, a full quarter of an hour before dawn, and took up our
+position in a fitting place to fight. In the early morning some of
+the enemy's scouts were taken, and they told us that his advanced
+guard was in battle array and coming out towards us. The news
+having come to our host, our allies, though they had hitherto borne
+themselves somewhat sluggishly, were in truth of such loyal intent
+that never were folk of such goodwill to fight. In the meantime one
+of our scouts, a knight of Germany, was taken, and he showed all
+our array to the enemy. Thereupon the foe withdrew his van, gave
+orders to encamp, made trenches around him, and cut down large
+trees in order to prevent us from approaching him. We tarried all
+day on foot in order of battle, until towards evening it seemed to
+our allies that we had waited long enough. And at vespers we
+mounted our horses and went near to Avesnes, and made him to know
+that we would await him there all the Sunday. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg341" id="pg341">341</a></span>On the Monday
+morning we had news that the lord Philip had withdrawn. And so
+would our allies no longer afterwards abide."</p>
+
+<p>Thus ended the inglorious campaign of the Thi&eacute;rache.
+Edward returned to Brussels "like a fox to his hole," and each side
+denounced the other for failing to keep the appointed tryst. The
+chivalry of the fourteenth century saw something ignoble in the
+sluggishness of Philip; but no modern soldier would blame him for
+his inactivity. Without striking a blow, he obtained the object of
+his campaign, for the enemy abandoned French territory. Had Edward
+been fully confident of victory, he could easily have forced a
+battle by advancing on Buironfosse; but he preferred to run the
+risk of a fiasco rather than abandon the defensive tactics on which
+he relied. Thus, even from the chivalrous point of view, he was by
+no means blameless. From the material standpoint, his first French
+campaign was a failure. It left its only mark on the devastated
+countryside, the beggared peasantry, the desolated churches and
+monasteries, the farmsteads and villages burnt to ashes.</p>
+
+<p>Edward seemed ruined both in reputation and purse. He had
+exhausted his resources in meeting the extravagant demands of his
+allies, and their help had profited him nothing at all. Yet his
+inexhaustible energy opened up a surer means of foreign assistance
+than had been supplied by the unruly vassals of Louis of Bavaria.
+At the moment when the imperial alliance was tried and found
+wanting, the way was opened up for close friendship between Edward
+and the Flemish cities. In earlier years the chivalrous devotion of
+Louis of Nevers to his overlord had secured the political
+dependence of Flanders upon the King of France. If the action of
+their count made the Flemings the tools of French policy, their
+commercial necessities bound them to England by chains forged by
+nature itself. Alone of the lands of northern and western Europe,
+Flanders was not a self-sufficing economic community.[1] Its great
+ports and weaving towns depended for their customers on foreign
+markets, and the raw material of their staple manufacture was
+mainly derived from England. When in 1337 Edward prohibited the
+export of wool to Flanders, his action at once <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg342" id="pg342">342</a></span>brought about
+the same result that the cessation of the supplies of American
+cotton would cause in the manufacturing districts of Lancashire. A
+wool famine, like the Lancashire cotton famine of 1862-65, plunged
+Ghent, Ypres, and Bruges into grievous distress. The starving
+weavers wandered through the farms begging their bread, and, when
+charity at home proved inadequate, they exposed their rags and
+their misery in the chief cities of northern France. Even wealthy
+merchants felt the pinch of the crisis which ruined the small
+craftsmen.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See for this Pirenne, <i>Histoire de
+Belgique</i>, vols. i. and ii., and Lamprecht, <i>Deutsche
+Geschichte</i>, iii., 304-324, and iv., 134-142.</p>
+
+<p>A common desire to avoid calamity bound together the warring
+classes and rival districts of Flanders, as they had never been
+united before. Bruges and Ypres had borne the brunt of earlier
+struggles, and had not even yet recovered from the exhaustion of
+the wars of the early years of the century. Their exhaustion left
+the way open to Ghent, where the old patricians and the rich
+merchants, the weavers and the fullers, forgot their ancient
+rivalries and worked together to remedy the crisis. A wealthy
+landholder and merchant-prince of Ghent, James van Artevelde, made
+himself the spokesman of all classes of that great manufacturing
+city. He was no demagogue nor artisan, though his eloquence and
+force had wonderful power over the impressionable craftsmen of the
+trading guilds. He was no Netherlandish patriot, as some moderns
+have imagined, though he was anxious to unite Flanders with her
+neighbour states, on the broad basis of their identity of economic
+and political interests. A man of Ghent, above all things, his
+policy was to save the imperilled industries of his native town,
+and to make it the centre of a new movement for the vindication of
+commercial liberty against feudal domination. By the winter of 1337
+this rich capitalist allied himself with the turbulent democracy of
+the weavers' guilds, and put himself at the head of affairs. Early
+in 1338 he began to negotiate with Edward III., and his loans to
+the distressed monarch had the result of removing the embargo on
+English wool. The famished craftsmen hailed the enemy of their
+class as a god who had come down from heaven for their
+salvation.</p>
+
+<p>Louis of Nevers and Philip of Valois took the alarm. Seeing in
+the ascendency of Artevelde the certainty that Flanders would join
+the English alliance, they left no stone unturned to avoid so dire
+a calamity. Artevelde, conscious of the narrow <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg343" id="pg343">343</a></span>basis of his own
+authority, was prudent enough to be moderate. Instead of pressing
+the English alliance to a conclusion, he accepted the suggestion of
+Philip VI., that Flanders should remain neutral. Louis of Nevers
+hated the notion; but in June, 1338, Edward and Philip agreed to
+recognise Flemish neutrality, and he was forced to acquiesce in it.
+Both monarchs promised to avoid Flemish territory, and offered free
+commercial relations between Flanders and their respective
+dominions.</p>
+
+<p>Artevelde and the men of Ghent were the real masters of
+Flanders. They kept their count in scarcely veiled captivity,
+forcing him to wear the Flemish colours and to profess acceptance
+of the policy that he disliked. In such circumstances the
+neutrality of Flanders could not last long. Both Edward and
+Artevelde regarded it simply as a step towards a declared alliance.
+Before long Philip became uneasy, and lavished concession on
+concession to keep the dominant party true to its promises. He gave
+up the degrading conditions which since the treaty of Athis had
+secured the subjection of Flanders. But Edward could offer more
+than his rival. He proposed to the count and the "good towns" of
+Ghent, Bruges, and Ypres that, in return for their alliance, he
+would aid them to win back the towns of Lille, Douai,
+B&eacute;thune, and Tournai, which the French king had usurped from
+the Flemings, as well as the county of Artois, which had been
+separated from Flanders since the days of Philip Augustus. He also
+offered ample commercial privileges, the establishment of the
+staple of wool at Bruges as well as at Antwerp, free trade for
+Flemish cloth with the English markets, and a good and fixed money
+which was to be legal tender in Flanders, Brabant, France, and
+England. The Flemings demanded in return that Edward, by formally
+assuming the title of King of France, should stand to them as their
+liege lord, and thus free themselves and their count from the
+ecclesiastical penalties and dishonour involved in their waging war
+against a king of France. Late in 1339, these terms were mutually
+accepted, and Count Louis avoided further humiliations by flight
+into France.</p>
+
+<p>In January, 1340, Edward entered Flemish territory and was
+magnificently entertained in the abbey of Saint Bavon at Ghent.
+"The three towns of Flanders," declared Artevelde to his guest,
+"are ready to recognise you as their sovereign lord, provided <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg344" id="pg344">344</a></span>that you
+engage yourself to defend them." The deputies of the three towns
+took oaths to Edward as their suzerain, and thereupon Edward was
+proclaimed King of France with much ceremony in the Friday market
+of Ghent. A new great seal was fashioned and new royal arms
+assumed, in which the lilies of France were quartered with the
+leopards of England. The new regnal year of Edward, which began on
+January 25, was styled the fourteenth of his reign in England, and
+the first of his reign in France. Urgent affairs called Edward back
+to his kingdom, but his debts to the Flemings were already so heavy
+that they only consented to his departure on his pledging himself
+to return before Michaelmas day, and on his leaving as hostages his
+queen, his two sons, and two earls. At last, on February 20, he
+crossed over from Sluys to Orwell. He had been absent from home for
+nearly a year and a half.</p>
+
+<p>From February 21 to June 22, 1340, Edward remained in England.
+During that period, formal treaties with the Flemings confirmed the
+hasty negotiations of Ghent. Benedict XII, still pursued Edward
+with remonstrances. He warned the English king to have no trust in
+allies like the Flemings, who had shamefully driven away their
+natural lords and whose faithlessness and inconstancy were
+by-words. He told him that his strength was not enough to conquer
+France, and reproached him with calling himself king of a land of
+which he possessed nothing. Somewhat inconsistently, he offered his
+mediation between Edward and Philip. But Philip was only less weary
+than Edward of the self-seeking pontiff. Benedict was forced to
+drink the cup of humiliation, for after the rejection of his
+mediation, he was confronted with a proposal that the schismatic
+Bavarian should arbitrate between the two crowns. Meanwhile, after
+many delays, Edward embarked a gallant army on a fleet of 200
+ships, and on June 22 a favourable west wind bore them from the
+Orwell towards Flanders. On arriving next day off Blankenberghe, he
+learned that a formidable French squadron was anchored in the mouth
+of the Zwyn, and that he could only land in Flanders as the reward
+of victory.</p>
+
+<p>From the outbreak of hostilities in 1337, there had been a good
+deal of fighting by sea, and in the first stages of warfare the
+advantage lay with the French. Since the days of Edward I., and
+Philip the Fair, the maritime energies of the two <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg345" id="pg345">345</a></span>countries had
+developed at an almost equal rate, and the parallel growth had been
+marked by bitter rivalry between the seamen of the two nations. The
+Normans had taken the leading share in this expansion of the French
+navy.[1] They welcomed the outbreak of war with enthusiasm, as
+giving them a chance of measuring their forces with their hated
+foes. Alone among the provinces of France, Normandy seems already
+to have experienced that intense national bitterness against the
+English which was soon to spread to all the rest of the country.
+Not content with the vigorous war of corsairs which had inflicted
+so much mischief on our southern coast and on English shipping, the
+Normans formed bold designs of a new Norman Conquest of England,
+and in return for the permanent establishment of the local estates
+of Normandy, agreed with Philip and his son John, who bore the
+title of Duke of Normandy, to equip a large fleet and army, with
+which England was to be invaded in the summer of 1339. Normandy,
+which monopolised the glory, was to monopolise the spoil. If
+England were conquered, Duke John, like Duke William before him,
+was to be King of England as well as Duke of Normandy. Thus the
+aggressions of Edward in France were to be answered by Norman
+aggressions in England.[2]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>C</i>. de la Ronci&egrave;re, <i>Hist,
+de</i> la <i>Marine Fran&ccedil;aise</i>; of. Nicolas, <i>Hist, of
+the Royal Navy</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] See on this subject A. Coville, <i>Les
+&Eacute;tats</i> de <i>Normandie</i>, pp. 41-52 (1894).</p>
+
+<p>Nothing came of this grandiose project, though the burning ruins
+of Southampton, the capture of the great <i>Christopher</i>, which
+had borne Edward in 1338 to Antwerp, and the occupation of the
+Channel Islands&mdash;the last remnants of the old duchy still
+under English rule&mdash;showed that the Normans were in earnest.
+The chief result of their energy was the equipment of the strongest
+French fleet that had ever been seen in the Channel. Though a few
+Genoese galleys under Barbavera and a few great Spanish ships
+swelled the number of the armada, 160 of the 200 ships that formed
+the fleet were Norman.[1] Of the two Frenchmen in command, one,
+Hugh Qui&egrave;ret, was a Picard knight, but the other, the more
+popular, was Nicholas B&eacute;huchet, a Norman of humble birth,
+then a knight and the chief confidant of Philip VI. Qui&egrave;ret
+and B&eacute;huchet had long challenged the command of the narrow
+seas. But for their <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg346" id=
+"pg346">346</a></span>error of dividing their forces and preferring
+a piratical war of reprisals, they might have cut off
+communications between England and the Netherlands. They had learnt
+wisdom by experience, and their ships were massed in Zwyn harbour
+to prevent the passage of Edward to his new allies.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] S. Luce, <i>La Marine normande &agrave;
+l'&Eacute;cluse</i>, in <i>La France pendant la Guerre de Cent
+Ans</i>, 3-31.</p>
+
+<p>The coast-line between Blankenberghe and the mouth of the
+Scheldt was strangely different in the fourteenth century from what
+it is at present.[1] The sandy flats, through which the Zwyn now
+trickles to the sea, formed a large open harbour, accessible to the
+biggest ships then known. It was protected on the north by the
+island of Cadzand, the scene of Manny's exploit in 1337, while at
+its head stood the town of Sluys, so called from the locks, or
+sluices, that regulated the waters of the ship canal, which bore to
+the great mart of Bruges the merchantmen of every land. It was in
+this harbour that Edward, on arriving off Blankenberghe, first
+spied the fleet of Qui&egrave;ret and B&eacute;huchet. He anchored
+at sea for the night, and on the afternoon of June 24, the
+anniversary of Bannockburn, he bore down on the French, having the
+sun, the tide, and the wind in his favour. On his approach
+Barbavera urged that the French should take to the open sea; but
+Qui&egrave;ret and B&eacute;huchet preferred to fight in the
+harbour. As an unsatisfactory compromise, however, the French moved
+a mile or so towards the enemy. Then they lashed their ships
+together and awaited attack.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For this see Professor Tait's inset map of the
+district in <i>Oxford Historical Atlas</i>, plate lvi.</p>
+
+<p>The English, unable to break the serried mass of their enemies,
+feigned a retreat, whereupon the Normans unlashed their ships and
+hurried in pursuit into the open water. At once the English turned
+and met them. The battle began when the English admiral, Robert
+Morley, lay alongside the <i>Christopher</i>, which, after its
+capture, had been taken into the enemy's service. Soon the ships of
+both fleets were closely grappled together in a fierce hand-to-hand
+fight which lasted until after nightfall. The desperate eagerness
+of the combatants strangely contrasted with the slackness of the
+campaign in the Thi&eacute;rache. "This battle," says Froissart,
+"was right fierce and horrible, for battles by sea are more
+dangerous and fiercer than battles by land, for at sea there is no
+retreat nor fleeing; there is no remedy but to fight and abide
+fortune, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg347" id=
+"pg347">347</a></span>every man to show his prowess." In the end
+the English won an overwhelming victory, which was completed next
+morning after more hard fighting. During the night Barbavera and
+his Genoese put to sea and escaped, but the magnificent Norman
+fleet was in the hands of the victor. The English loss was small,
+though it included Thomas of Monthermer, a son of Joan of Acre, and
+Edward himself was wounded in the thigh. The Norman force was
+almost annihilated. Qui&egrave;ret fell mortally wounded into
+Edward's hands; B&eacute;huchet was captured unhurt. A later Norman
+legend tells how B&eacute;huchet, when brought before the English
+king, answered some taunt by boxing the king's ears, whereupon the
+angry monarch hanged him forthwith from the mast of his ship.[1]
+But the tradition is unsupported by English authorities, and, with
+all his faults, Edward was not the man to deal thus with a captive
+knight who had fought his best. Master at last of the sea, Edward
+landed at Sluys amidst the rejoicings of the Flemings, and made his
+way to Ghent, where he greeted his wife, and first saw his infant
+son John, born during his absence, to whom Artevelde stood as
+godfather.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Luce, <i>Le Soufflet de l'&Eacute;cluse</i>,
+in <i>La Frame pendant la Guerre de Cent Ans</i>, 2nd s&eacute;rie,
+pp. 3-15.</p>
+
+<p>Edward's military fame was established over all Europe, and,
+says the Flemish writer, John van Klerk, "all who spoke the German
+tongue rejoiced at the defeat of the French". Yet the victory at
+Sluys was the prelude to a land campaign as ineffective as the raid
+into the Thi&eacute;rache. Eager to restore their lost lands to the
+Flemings, Edward made the mistake of dividing his army. He sent
+Robert of Artois to effect the reconquest of Artois, while he
+himself besieged Tournai, which was then in French hands. Robert's
+attempt to win back the lands of his ancestors was a sorry failure.
+Defeated outside Saint Omer, he was unable even to invest that
+town. Almost equally unsuccessful was Edward's siege of Tournai,
+which resisted with such energy that he was soon at the end of his
+resources. At last, in despair, Edward challenged Philip VI. to
+decide their claim to France by single combat. The Valois answered
+that he would gladly do so if, in the event of his winning, he
+might obtain Edward's kingdom. In the same spirit of caution,
+Philip tarried half-way between Saint Omer and Tournai, watching
+both armies and afraid to <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg348" id=
+"pg348">348</a></span>strike at either. The armies wore themselves
+out in this game of waiting until the widowed Countess of Hainault,
+then abbess of the Cistercian nuns of Fontenelles, was moved by the
+desolation of the country to intervene between the two kings. The
+mother of the Queen of England and the sister of the King of
+France, she succeeded not only by reason of her prayers, but
+through the refusal of the Duke of Brabant, the Count of Hainault,
+and the other imperial vassals to remain longer at the war. On
+September 25, 1340, a truce was signed at the solitary chapel of
+Esplechin, situated in the open country a little south of Tournai.
+By it hostilities between both kings and their respective allies
+were suspended, until midsummer day, 1341. Each king was to enjoy
+the lands actually in his possession, and commerce was to be
+carried on as if peace had been made. The most significant clause
+of the truce was that by which both kings pledged themselves that
+they "procure not that any innovation be done by the Church of
+Rome, or by others of Holy Church on either of the said kings. And
+if our most holy father the pope will do that, the two kings shall
+prevent it, so far as in them lies."</p>
+
+<p>The truce of Esplechin, renewed until 1345, put an end to the
+first, or Netherlandish, period of the Hundred Years' War. The
+imperial alliance, which had failed Edward, was soon to be solemnly
+dissolved. Early in 1341, Louis of Bavaria revoked Edward's
+vicariate, and announced his intention of becoming henceforth the
+friend of his uncle, the King of France. This alliance between
+Philip and Louis completed the discomfiture of Benedict XII. In
+1342 he died, and his successor was Peter Roger, the sometime
+Archbishop of Rouen, who assumed the title of Clement VI. By
+persuading Brabant and Hainault to be neutral between France and
+England, the new pontiff broke up the last remnant of the
+Anglo-imperial alliance. Even Flanders and England became
+estranged. Artevelde, who found it a hard matter to govern Flanders
+after the truce, would willingly have supported Edward. But Edward
+had henceforth less need of Artevelde than Artevelde had of him. In
+1345 Edward again appeared at Sluys and had an interview with him,
+and then returned to his own country without setting foot on
+Flemish soil. Artevelde soon afterwards met his death in a popular
+tumult. His family fled to England, <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg349" id="pg349">349</a></span><i>where</i> they lived on a
+pension from Edward. This was the end of the Anglo-Flemish
+alliance.</p>
+
+<p>After the treaty of Esplechin, Edward returned to Ghent. The
+conclusion of military operations was a signal to all his creditors
+to clamour for immediate settlement of their debts. Neither
+subsidies nor wool came from England, though the king wrote in
+piteous terms to his council. Edward was convinced that the real
+cause of his failure was the remissness of the home government, and
+resolved to wreak his vengeance on his ministers. He was encouraged
+to this effect by Bishop Burghersh, who still remembered his old
+feuds with Archbishop Stratford, and may well have believed that
+the archbishop, who had a financier's dread of war, had wilfully
+ruined his rival's diplomacy. But Edward dared not openly return to
+England, for his Flemish creditors regarded his personal presence
+as the best security for his debts. He was therefore reduced to the
+pitiful expedient of running away from them. One day he rode out of
+Ghent on the pretext of taking exercise, and hurried secretly and
+without escort to Sluys. Thence he took ship for England, and,
+after a tempestuous voyage of three days and nights, sailed up the
+Thames, and landed at the Tower on November 30, 1340, after
+nightfall. At cockcrow next morning, he summoned his ministers
+before him, denounced them as false traitors and drove them all
+from office. The judges were thrown into prison, and with them some
+of the leading merchants, including William de la Pole of Hull. A
+special commission, like that of 1289, scrutinised the acts of the
+royal officials throughout the kingdom, and exacted heavy fines
+from the many who were found wanting. Nothing but fear of provoking
+the wrath of the Church prevented Edward from consigning to prison
+the dismissed chancellor, Robert Stratford, Bishop of Chichester,
+and the late treasurer, Roger Northburgh, Bishop of Coventry. Their
+successors were lay knights, the new chancellor, Sir Robert
+Bourchier, being the first keeper of the great seal who was not a
+clerk.</p>
+
+<p>Earlier in the year the king had quarrelled with Archbishop
+Stratford, who resigned the chancellorship. But before Edward
+sailed from Orwell in June there had been a partial reconciliation,
+and the king left Stratford president of the council during his
+absence. When his brother and colleagues were dismissed, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg350" id="pg350">350</a></span>the
+archbishop was at Charing. Conscious that he was the chief object
+of Edward's vengeance, he at once took sanctuary with the monks of
+his cathedral. Every effort was made to drag him from his refuge.
+Some Louvain merchants, to whom he had bound himself for the king's
+debts, demanded that he should be surrendered to their custody
+until the money was paid. He was summoned to court and afterwards
+to parliament. But he prudently remained safe within the walls of
+Christ Church, and preached a course of sermons to the monks, in
+which he compared himself to St. Thomas of Canterbury, and hinted
+at the danger of his incurring his prototype's fate. Edward replied
+to this challenge by a lengthy pamphlet, called the <i>libellus
+famosus</i>. The violence and unmeasured terms of the tractate
+suggest the hand of Bishop Orleton, Stratford's lifelong foe, who
+had by Burghersh's recent death become the most prominent of the
+courtly prelates. The archbishop was declared to be the sole cause
+of the king's failures. He had left Edward without funds, and in
+trusting to him the king had leant on a broken reed. Stratford
+justified himself in another sermon in which he invited inquiry and
+demanded trial by his peers.</p>
+
+<p>Edward so far relented as to issue letters of safe-conduct
+enabling the archbishop to attend the parliament summoned for April
+23, 1341. But when Stratford took his place, the king refused to
+meet him, and ordered him to answer in the exchequer the complaints
+brought against him. The lords upheld the primate's cause, and
+declared that in no circumstances could a peer of parliament be
+brought to trial elsewhere than in full parliament. Edward's fury
+abated when he saw that he would get no grant unless he gave way.
+He restored Stratford to his favour, and acceded to his request
+that he should answer in parliament and not in the exchequer. The
+childish controversy ended with the personal victory of the primate
+and the formal re-assertion of the important principle of trial by
+peers. But not even then was Edward able to get a subsidy. He was
+further forced to embody in the statute of the year the doctrines
+that auditors of the accounts of the royal officers should be
+elected in parliament, and that all ministers should be chosen by
+the king, after consultation with his estates, and should resign
+their offices at each meeting of parliament and be prepared to
+answer all complaints before it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg351" id=
+"pg351">351</a></span>Thus the fallen minister brought the estates
+the greatest triumph over the prerogative won during Edward's
+reign. Before long Edward was magnanimous enough to resume friendly
+relations with him, but he was never suffered to take a prominent
+part in politics. He died in 1348, after spending his later years
+in the business of his see. It was a strange irony of fate that
+this worldly and politic ecclesiastic should have perforce become
+the champion of the rights of the Church and the liberties of the
+nation. His victory established a remarkable solidarity between the
+high ecclesiastical party and the popular opposition, which was to
+last nearly as long as the century. Disgust at this alliance moved
+Edward to take up the anti-clerical attitude which henceforth marks
+the policy of the crown until the accession of the house of
+Lancaster.</p>
+
+<p>The victory of the estates of 1341 was too complete to last. For
+a medieval king to hand over the business of government to a
+nominated ministry was in substance a return to the state of things
+in 1258 or 1312. Edward was not the sort of man to endure the
+thraldom that his father and great-grandfather had both found
+intolerable. Even at the moment of sealing the statute, he and his
+ministers protested that they were not bound to observe laws
+contrary to the constitution of the realm. Five months later, on
+October 1, 1341, the king issued letters, revoking the laws of the
+previous session. "We have never," he impudently declared, "really
+given our consent to the aforesaid pretended statute. But inasmuch
+as our rejecting it would have dissolved parliament in confusion,
+without any business having been transacted, and so all our affairs
+would have been ruined, we dissembled, as was our duty, and allowed
+the pretended statute to be sealed." For more than two years he did
+not venture to face a parliament, but the next gathering of the
+estates in April, 1343, repealed the offensive acts of 1341.
+Parliament was so reluctant to ratify the king's high-handed
+action, that he did not venture to ask it for any extraordinary
+grant of money. The only other important act of this parliament was
+a petition from lords and commons, urging the king to check the
+claims of a French pope, friendly to the "tyrant of France," to
+exercise ever-increasing rights of patronage over English
+benefices. The anti-clerical tide was still flowing.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg352" id=
+"pg352">352</a></span>Before parliament met in 1343, the French war
+had been renewed on another pretext. A new source of trouble arose
+in a disputed succession to the duchy of Brittany. The duke John
+III., the grandson of John II. and Edward I.'s sister Beatrice,
+died in April, 1341. He left no legitimate children, and his
+succession was claimed by his half-brother, John of Montfort, and
+his niece Joan of Penthi&egrave;vre. Montfort, the son of Duke
+Arthur II. by his second wife, had inherited from his mother the
+Norman county of Montfort l'Amaury, which became her possession as
+the representative on the spindle side of the line of Simon de
+Montfort the Albigensian crusader. Joan was the daughter of Guy,
+John III.'s brother of the full blood, in whose favour the great
+county of Penthi&egrave;vre-Tr&eacute;guier, including the whole of
+the north coast of the duchy from the river of Morlaix to within a
+few miles of the Rance, had been dissociated from the demesne and
+reconstituted as an appanage.[1] The heiress of Penthi&egrave;vre
+thus ruled directly over nearly a sixth of Brittany, and her power
+was further strengthened by her marriage with Charles of Blois,
+who, though a younger son, enjoyed great influence as the sister's
+son of Philip VI., and also by reason of his simple, saintly,
+honourable, and martial character. The house of Penthi&egrave;vre
+not only stood to Brittany as the house of Lancaster stood to
+England, as the natural head of the higher nobility; it also
+enjoyed the favour and protection of the French king, who was ever
+anxious to find friends among the chief sub-tenants of his great
+vassals. Against so formidable an opponent John of Montfort could
+only secure his rights by promptitude. Accordingly he made his way
+to Nantes and, receiving a warm welcome from his burgesses,
+proclaimed himself duke. Very few of the great feudatories threw in
+their lot with him. His strength was in the petty <i>noblesse</i>,
+the townsmen, and the enthusiasm of the Celtic population of <i>La
+Br&eacute;tagne bretonnante</i>, which made L&eacute;on,
+Cornouailles, and Vannes the strongholds of his cause. Yet the
+Penthi&egrave;vre influence took with it the Breton-speaking
+inhabitants of the diocese of Tr&eacute;guier, and the piety of
+Charles made the clergy, and especially the friars, devoted to
+him.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] On the importance of Penthi&egrave;vre, see A.
+de la Borderie, <i>La G&eacute;ographie feodale de la
+Br&eacute;tagne</i> (1889), pp. 60-65.</p>
+
+<p>The fight was not waged in Brittany only. Montfort had to <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg353" id="pg353">353</a></span>contend
+against the general sentiment of the French nobility and the strong
+interest and affection which bound Philip VI. to uphold the claims
+of Charles of Blois. After a few months the parliament of Paris
+decided in favour of the king's nephew against Montfort. Charles's
+wife was the nearest heir of the deceased duke, and had therefore a
+prior claim over her uncle. Montfort urged in vain that the
+superior rights of the male, which had made the Count of Valois
+King of France, equally gave the Count of Montfort the duchy of
+Brittany. He had to fight for his duchy. John, Duke of Normandy,
+the heir of France, marched to Brittany with a strong force, to
+secure the establishment of his cousin in accordance with the
+decree of parliament. The union of the royal troops, with the
+levies of Penthi&egrave;vre and the great feudatories of Brittany,
+was too powerful a combination to withstand. Montfort was shut up
+in Nantes, was forced to capitulate, and sent prisoner to Paris.
+His place was taken by his wife, Joan of Flanders, a daughter of
+Louis of Nevers. This lady shewed "the heart of a man and of a
+lion," as Froissart says. Her efforts, however, did not prevail
+against her formidable enemies. Bit by bit she was driven from one
+stronghold to another, until at last she was closely besieged in
+Hennebont by Charles of Blois. Before that, she had recognised
+Edward as King of France, and offered him the homage of her husband
+and son. Edward III. readily took up the cause of Montfort. He
+recked little of the inconsistency involved in the prince, who
+claimed France through his mother, supporting in Brittany a duke,
+whose pretensions were based upon grounds similar to the claim
+advanced by Philip of Valois on the French throne. As in Flanders,
+he found two rival nations contending in the bosom of a single
+French fief. He at once supported the Celtic party in Brittany as
+he had supported the Flemish party in Flanders. Both his allies had
+the same enemies in feudalism, the French monarchy, and the
+pretensions of high clericalism. Afraid to renew the attack in
+France without allies, Edward welcomed the support of the Montfort
+party, as giving him a chance of renewing his assaults on his
+adversary of Valois. He invested Montfort with the earldom of
+Richmond, of which John III had died possessed. He sent Sir Walter
+Manny with a force sufficient to raise the siege of Hennebont. The
+heroic Joan of Flanders was almost at the end of her <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg354" id="pg354">354</a></span>resources, when
+on an early June morning, in 1342, she espied the white sails of
+Manny's fleet working its way from the sea up the estuary of the
+Blavet, which bathes the walls of Hennebont. After the arrival of
+the English, Charles of Blois abandoned the siege in despair. For
+the rest of the year the war was waged on a more equal footing. In
+August Edward sent to Brest an additional force under William
+Bohun, Earl of Northampton, who attempted, though with little
+success, to invade the domains of the house of Penthi&egrave;vre. A
+hard-won victory against great odds near Morlaix was made memorable
+by Northampton's first applying the tactics of Halidon Hill to a
+pitched battle on the continent.[1] But the earl's troops were so
+few that they were forced to withdraw after their success into more
+friendly regions. Leon and Cornouailles then resumed allegiance to
+the house of Montfort. In the midst of the struggle Robert of
+Artois received a wound which soon ended his tempestuous
+career.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Baker, p.76, gives the place, Knighton, ii.,
+25, the details. See also my note in <i>Engl. Hist. Review,
+xix.</i> (1904), 713-15.</p>
+
+<p>Edward was eager to enter the field in person. Since his return
+to England in 1340, his only military experience had been a
+luckless winter campaign in the Lothians against King David. In
+October, 1342, he left the Duke of Cornwall as warden of England
+during his absence, and took ship at Sandwich for Brittany. He
+remained in the country until the early months of 1343, raiding the
+land from end to end, receiving many of the greater barons into his
+obedience, and striving in particular to conquer the regions
+included in the modern department of the Morbihan. There he
+besieged Vannes, the strongest and largest city of Brittany, says
+Froissart, after Nantes. The triumphs of his rival at last brought
+Philip VI. into Brittany. While Edward laboriously pursued the
+siege of Vannes, amidst the hardships of a wet and stormy winter,
+Philip watched his enemy from Ploermel, a few miles to the north.
+For a third time the situation of Buironfosse and Tournai was
+renewed. The rivals were within striking distance, but once more
+both Edward and Philip were afraid to strike. History still further
+repeated itself; for the cardinal-bishops of Palestrina and
+Frascati, sent by Clement VI. to end the struggle, travelled from
+camp to camp with talk of peace. The sufferings of both <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg355" id="pg355">355</a></span>armies
+gave the kings a powerful reason for listening to their advances.
+At last, on January 19, 1343, a truce for nearly four years was
+signed at Malestroit, midway between Ploermel and Vannes, "in
+reverence of mother church, for the honour of the cardinals, and
+that the parties shall be able to declare their reasons before the
+pope, not for the purpose of rendering a judicial decision, but in
+order to make a better peace and treaty". Scotland and the
+Netherlands were included in the truce, and it was agreed that each
+belligerent should continue in the enjoyment of the territories
+which he held at the moment. Vannes, the immediate apple of
+discord, was put into the hands of the pope.</p>
+
+<p>The spring of 1343 saw Edward back in England. The scene of
+interest shifted to the papal court at Avignon, where ambassadors
+from Edward and Philip appeared to declare their masters' rights.
+The protracted negotiations were lacking in reality. The English,
+distrusting Clement as a French partisan, did their best to
+complicate the situation by complaints against papal provisions in
+favour of aliens "not having knowledge of the tongue nor condition
+of those whose governance and care should belong to them". English
+indignation rose higher when, despite the terms of the truce and
+the promise of the cardinals, Montfort remained immured in his
+French prison, while Breton nobles of his faction were kidnapped
+and put to death by Philip. Clement declared himself against
+Edward's claims to the French throne, and, long before the
+negotiations had reached a formal conclusion, it was clear that
+nothing would come of them. At last in 1345 the English King
+denounced the truce and prepared to renew the war. His first
+concern was, necessarily finance, and he had already exhausted all
+his resources as a borrower. The financial difficulties, which had
+stayed his career in the Netherlands five years before, had reached
+their culmination. Stratford was avenged for the outrages of 1340,
+for Edward was in worse embarrassments than on that winter night
+when the glare of torches illuminated the sovereign's sudden return
+to the Tower. The king's Netherlandish, Rhenish, and Italian
+creditors would trust him no longer and vainly clamoured for the
+repayment of their advances. "We grieve," he was forced to reply to
+the Cologne magistrates, "nay, we blush, that we are unable to meet
+our obligations at the due time." Edward's anxiety to prepare for
+fresh campaigns <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg356" id=
+"pg356">356</a></span>made him careless as to his former
+obligations. His wholesale neglect to repay his debts drove the
+great banking houses of the Bardi and the Peruzzi into bankruptcy,
+and the failure of the English king's creditors plunged all
+Florence into deep distress. One good result came from the king's
+dishonour. The foreign sources of supply having dried up, Edward
+was forced to lean more exclusively upon his English subjects. A
+wealthy family of Hull merchants, recently transferred to London,
+became very flourishing. Its head, William de la Pole, who had
+financed every government scheme since the days of Mortimer, became
+a knight, a judge, a territorial magnate, and the first English
+merchant to found a baronial house. And as the credit of the
+English merchants was limited, Edward was forced more and more to
+rely upon parliamentary grants. The memory of the king's want of
+faith to the estates of 1341 had died away, and a parliament, which
+met in 1344, once more made Edward liberal contributions. Secure of
+his subjects' support, the frivolous king largely employed his
+resources in the chivalrous pageantry which stirred up the martial
+ardour of his barons and made the war popular. It was then that he
+resolved to set up a "round table" at Windsor after the fabled
+fashion of King Arthur. From this came the foundation of the Round
+Tower which Edward was to erect in his favourite abode, and the
+organised chivalry that was soon to culminate in the Order of the
+Garter. In the summer of 1345 Edward made that journey to Sluys,
+which has already been noted, and he held on ship-board his last
+interview with James van Artevelde. His immediate return to England
+showed that he had no mind to renew his Flemish alliances. In the
+same year the death of the queen's brother, William of Avesnes,
+established the rule of Louis of Bavaria in the three counties of
+Holland, Zealand, and Hainault in the right of his wife, Philippa's
+elder sister. Edward put in a claim on behalf of his queen, which
+further embittered his already uneasy relations with Louis, and led
+him to seek his field of combat anywhere rather than in the
+Netherlands. In Brittany the murder of the nobles of Montfort's
+faction had given an excuse for the renewal of partisan warfare as
+early as 1343, but Montfort was still under surveillance in France,
+even after his release from Philip's prison, and Joan of Flanders,
+the heroic defender of Hennebont, was hopelessly insane in England.
+At last in <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg357" id=
+"pg357">357</a></span>1345 Montfort ventured to flee from France to
+England, where he did homage to Edward as King of France for the
+duchy which he claimed. He then went to Brittany, and there shortly
+afterwards died. The new Duke of Brittany, also named John, was a
+mere boy when he was thus robbed of both his parents' care, and his
+cause languished for want of a head. Edward took upon himself the
+whole direction of Brittany as tutor of the little duke.
+Northampton was once more sent thither, but for a time the war
+degenerated into sieges of castles and petty conflicts.</p>
+
+<p>While action was thus impracticable in the Netherlands, and
+ineffective in Brittany, Gascony became, for the first time during
+the struggle, the scene of military operations of the first rank.
+The storm of warfare had hitherto almost spared the patrimony of
+the English king in southern France. No great effort was made
+either by the French to capture the last bulwarks of the Aquitanian
+inheritance, or by Edward to extend his duchy to its ancient
+limits. Cut off from other fields of expansion, Edward threw his
+chief energies into the enlargement of his power in southern
+France. He won over many of those Gascon nobles, including the
+powerful lord of Albret, who had been alienated by his former
+indifference. All was ready for action, and in June, 1345, Henry of
+Grosmont, Earl of Derby, the eldest son of Henry of Lancaster,
+landed at Bayonne with a sufficient English force to encourage the
+lords of Gascony to rally round the ducal banner. Soon after his
+landing, the death of his blind father made Derby Earl of
+Lancaster. During the next eighteen months, the earl successfully
+led three raids into the heart of the enemies' territory.[1] The
+first, begun very soon after his landing, occupied the summer of
+1345. Advancing from Libourne, the limit of the Anglo-Gascon power,
+Henry made his way up the Dordogne, a fleet of boats co-operating
+with his land forces. He took the important town of Bergerac, and
+thence, mounting the stream as far as Lalinde, he crossed the hills
+separating the Dordogne from the Isle, and unsuccessfully assaulted
+P&eacute;rigueux. Thence he advanced still further, and captured
+the stronghold of Auberoche, dominating the rocky valley of the
+Auv&eacute;z&egrave;re. Leaving <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg358" id="pg358">358</a></span>a garrison at Auberoche, Henry
+returned to his base, but upon his withdrawal the French closely
+besieged his conquest, and the earl made a sudden move to its
+relief. On October 21 he won a brisk battle outside the walls of
+Auberoche before the more sluggish part of his army had time to
+reach the scene of action. This famous exploit again established
+the Gascon duke in P&eacute;rigord.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For these campaigns, see Ribadieu, <i>Les
+Campagnes du Comt&eacute; de Derby en Guyenne, Saintonge et
+Poitou</i> (1865).</p>
+
+<p>Early in 1346 the victor of Auberoche led his forces up the
+Garonne valley. La R&eacute;ole, lost since 1325, was taken in
+January, and thence Earl Henry marched to the capture of many a
+town and fortress on the Garonne and the lower Lot. His most
+important acquisition was Aiguillon, commanding the junction of the
+Lot and the Garonne, for its possession opened up the way for the
+reconquest of the Agenais, the rich fruit of the last campaign of
+Charles of Valois. Duke John of Normandy then appeared upon the
+scene, and Henry of Lancaster withdrew before him to the line of
+the Dordogne. Aiguillon stood a siege from April to August, when
+the Duke of Normandy, then at the end of his resources, solicited a
+truce. News having come to Lancaster at Bergerac that Edward had
+begun his memorable invasion of Normandy, he contemptuously
+rejected the proposal. Before long, Duke John raised the siege and
+hurried to his father's assistance. Thereupon Lancaster returned to
+the Garonne and revictualled Aiguillon. Immediately after he
+started on his third raid. This time he bent his steps northwards,
+and late in September was at Ch&acirc;teauneuf on the Charente,
+whence he threatened Angoul&ecirc;me, and finally obtained its
+surrender. Crossing the Charente, he entered French Saintonge,
+where the important town of Saint-Jean-d'Angely opened its gates
+and took oaths to Edward <i>as</i> duke and king. Then he boldly
+dashed into the heart of Poitou, marching by Lusignan to Poitiers.
+"We rode before the city," wrote Lancaster, "and summoned it, but
+they would do nothing. Thereupon on the Wednesday after Michaelmas
+we stormed the city, and all those within were taken or slain. And
+the lords that were within fled away on the other side, and we
+tarried full eight days. Thus we have made a fair raid, God be
+thanked, and are come again to Saint-Jean, whence we propose to
+return to Bordeaux." This exploit ended Lancaster's Gascon career.
+In January, 1347, he was back in England, having restored the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg359" id="pg359">359</a></span>reputation
+of his king in Gascony, and set an example of heroism soon to be
+emulated by his cousin, the Black Prince.</p>
+
+<p>Edward resolved to take the field in person in the summer of
+1346. Special efforts were made to equip the army, and lovers of
+ancient precedent were dismayed when the king called upon all men
+of property to equip archers, hobblers, or men-at-arms, according
+to their substance, that they might serve abroad at the king's
+wages. But the nation responded to the king's call, and a host of
+some 2,400 cavalry and 10,000 archers and other infantry collected
+at Portsmouth between Easter and the early summer.[1] There were
+the usual delays of a medieval muster, and it was not until July
+was well begun that Edward, having constituted his second son
+Lionel of Antwerp, a boy of six, as regent, took ship at Portsmouth
+with his eldest son, then sixteen years of age, and, since 1343,
+Prince of Wales as well as Duke of Cornwall. The destination of the
+army was a secret, but Edward's original idea seems to have been to
+join Henry of Lancaster in Gascony, though we may well believe that
+the resources of medieval transport were hardly adequate to convey
+so large a force for so great a distance. Moreover, a persistent
+series of south-westerly winds prohibited all attempts to round the
+Breton peninsula, while Godfrey of Harcourt, a Norman lord who had
+incurred the wrath of Philip VI. and had been driven into exile,
+persistently urged on Edward the superior attractions of his native
+coast. When the fleet set sail from Portsmouth, it was directed to
+follow in the admiral's track; and as soon as the open sea was
+gained, the ships were instructed to make their way to the
+C&ocirc;tentin. On July 12 the English army reached Saint-Vaast de
+la Hougue, and spent five days in disembarking and ravaging the
+neighbourhood.[2] Immediately on landing, Edward dubbed the Prince
+of Wales a knight, along with other young nobles, one of whom was
+Roger <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg360" id=
+"pg360">360</a></span>Mortimer, the grandson and heir of the
+traitor Earl of March. At last, on July 18, the English army began
+to move by slow stages to the south. It met with little resistance,
+and plundered and burnt the rich countryside at its discretion. The
+English marvelled at the fertility of the country and the size and
+wealth of its towns. Barfleur was as big as Sandwich, Carentan
+reminded them of Leicester, Saint-Lo was the size of Lincoln, and
+Caen was more populous than any English city save London.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] On the details of this force, see Wrottesley,
+<i>Crecy and Calais,</i> in <i>Collections for a History of
+Staffordshire,</i> vol. xviii. (1897); <i>cf.</i> J.E. Morris in
+<i>Engl. Hist. Review, xiv.,</i> 766-69.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] Besides the sources for this campaign
+mentioned in Sir E.M. Thompson, <i>Chronicle of Geoffrey le
+Baker,</i> pp. 252-57, the disregarded <i>Acta bellicosa Edwardi,
+etc.,</i> published in Moisant, <i>Le Prince Noir en Aquitaine,
+pp.</i> 157-74, from a Corpus Christi Coll. Cambridge MS., should
+be mentioned. It has first been utilised in H. Pientout's valuable
+paper, <i>La prise de Caen par &Eacute;douard III. en 1346, in
+M&eacute;moires de l'Acad&eacute;mie de Caen</i> (1904).</p>
+
+<p>It was only at Caen that any real resistance was encountered. On
+July 26 Edward's soldiers entered the northern quarter of the town
+without opposition, to find the fortified enclosures of the two
+great abbeys of William the Conqueror and his queen undefended and
+desolate, the <i>grand bourg</i>, the populous quarter round the
+church of St. Peter open to them, and only the castle in the
+extreme north garrisoned. Caen was not a walled town, and the
+defenders preferred to limit themselves to holding the southern
+quarter, the <i>Ile Saint-Jean</i>, which lay between the district
+of St. Peter's and the river Orne, but was cut off from the rest by
+a branch of the Orne that ran just south of St. Peter's church.
+There was sharp fighting at the bridge which commanded access to
+the island; but the English archers prepared the way, and then the
+men-at-arms completed the work. After a determined conflict, the
+Island of St. John was captured, and its chief defenders, the Count
+of Eu, Constable of France, and the lord of Tancarville, the
+chamberlain, were taken prisoners. Meanwhile the English fleet,
+which had devastated the whole coast from Cherbourg to Ouistreham,
+arrived off the mouth of the Orne, laden with plunder and eager to
+get back home with its spoils. Edward thought it prudent to avoid a
+threatened mutiny by ordering the ships to recross the Channel, and
+take with them the captives and the loot which he had amassed at
+Caen. During a halt of five days at Caen, Edward discovered a copy
+of the agreement made between the Normans and King Philip for the
+invasion of England eight years before. This also he despatched to
+England, where it was read before the Londoners by the Archbishop
+of Canterbury in order to show that the aggression was not all on
+one side.</p>
+
+<p>On July 31, Edward resumed his eastward march. At <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg361" id="pg361">361</a></span>Lisieux, the
+next important stage, came the inevitable two cardinals with their
+inevitable proposals of mediation, which Edward put aside with
+scant civility. The army was soon once more on the move, and on
+August 7 struck the Seine at Elbeuf, a few miles higher up the
+river than Rouen. Here Edward was at last in touch with his enemy.
+During the English march through lower Normandy, Philip VI. had
+assembled a considerable army, with which he occupied the Norman
+capital. Nothing but the Seine and a few miles of country separated
+the two forces. But as at Buironfosse, at Tournai, and at Vannes,
+the French declined to attack, and Edward would not depart from his
+tradition of acting on the defensive. The English slowly made their
+way up the left bank of the Seine, avoiding the stronger castles
+and walled towns, and devastating the open country. The French
+followed them on the right bank, carefully watching their
+movements, and breaking all the bridges. So things went until, on
+August 13, Edward reached Poissy, a town within fifteen miles of
+the capital.</p>
+
+<p>The English advanced troops plundered up to the walls of Paris,
+whose citizens, watching in terror the flames that made lurid the
+western sky, implored their king to come to their help. From
+Saint-Denis Philip issued a challenge to Edward to meet him in the
+open field on a fixed day, Edward, however, was not to be tempted
+by such appeals to his chivalry. The day after Philip's message was
+sent, he repaired the bridge at Poissy, crossed the Seine, sent a
+stinging reply to Philip's letter, and moved rapidly northwards.
+Avoiding Pontoise, Beauvais, and other towns, he was soon within a
+few miles of the Somme. Long marching had fatigued his army, and he
+resolved to retreat to the Flemish frontier. The French soon
+followed him by a route some miles further towards the east. They
+reached the Somme earlier than the English, and were pouring into
+Amiens and Abbeville, while Edward's scouts were vainly seeking for
+an unguarded passage over the river. If the Somme could not be
+crossed, there was every chance of Edward's war-worn army being
+driven into a corner at Saint-Valery, between the broad and sandy
+estuary of the Somme and the open sea. When affairs had become thus
+critical, local guides revealed to the English a way across the
+estuary, where a white band of chalk, called the <i>Blanche
+taque</i>, cropping out <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg362" id=
+"pg362">362</a></span>of the sandy river bed, forms a hard,
+practicable ford from one bank of the river to the other. "Then,"
+writes an official reporter, "the King of England and his host took
+that water of the Somme, where never man passed before without
+loss, and fought their enemies, and chased them right up to the
+gate of Abbeville." That night Edward and his troops slept on the
+outskirts of the forest of Crecy. After traversing this, they took
+up a strong position on the northern side of the wood on Saturday,
+August 26. There, in the heart of his grandmother's inheritance of
+Ponthieu, Edward elected to make a stand, and, for the first time
+in all their campaigning, Philip felt sufficient confidence to
+engage in an offensive battle against his rival.</p>
+
+<p>Ponthieu is a land of low chalk downs, open fields, and dense
+woods, broken by valleys, through which the small streams that
+water it trickle down to the sea, and by the waterless depressions
+characteristic of a chalk country. The village of
+Cr&eacute;cy-en-Ponthieu is situated on the north bank of the
+little river Maye. Immediately to the east of the village, a
+lateral depression, running north and south, called the
+<i>Vall&eacute;e aux Clercs,</i> falls down into the Maye valley,
+and is flanked with rolling downs, perhaps 150 to 200 feet in
+height. On the summit of the western slopes of this valley, Edward
+stationed his army. Its right was held by the first of the three
+traditional "battles," under the personal command of the young
+Prince of Wales. Its front and right flank were protected by the
+hill, while still further to the right lay Crecy village embowered
+in its trees, beyond which the dense forest formed an excellent
+protection from attack. The second of the English battles, under
+the Earls' of Northampton and Arundel, held the less formidable
+slopes of the upper portion of the <i>Vall&eacute;e aux Clercs,</i>
+their left resting on the enclosures and woods of the village of
+Wadicourt. The third battle, commanded by the king himself, and
+stationed in the rear as a reserve, held the rolling upland plain,
+on the highest point of which was a windmill, commanding the whole
+field, in which Edward took up his quarters. The English
+men-at-arms left their horses in the rear. The archers of each of
+the two forward battles were thrown out at an angle on the flanks,
+so that the enemy, on approaching the serried mass of men-at-arms,
+had to encounter a severe discharge of arrows both <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg363" id="pg363">363</a></span>from the right
+and the left. It was the tactics of Halidon hill, perfected by
+experience and for the first time applied on a large scale against
+a continental enemy. The credit of it may well be assigned to
+Northampton, fresh from the fight at Morlaix, where similar tactics
+had already won the day.</p>
+
+<p>The English were in position early in the morning of Saturday,
+August 26, and employed their leisure in further strengthening
+their lines by digging shallow holes, like the pits at Bannockburn,
+in the hope of ensnaring the French cavalry, if they came to close
+quarters with the dismounted men-at-arms. The summer day had almost
+ended its course before the French army appeared. Philip and his
+men had passed the previous night at Abbeville, and had not only
+performed the long march from the capital of Ponthieu, but many of
+them, misled by bad information as to Edward's position, had made a
+weary detour to the north-west. It was not until the hour of
+vespers that the mass of the French host was marshalled in front of
+the village of Estr&eacute;es on the eastward plateau beyond the
+<i>Vall&eacute;e aux Clercs</i>. John of Hainault, who had become a
+thorough-going French partisan, advised Philip to delay battle
+until the following day. The French were tired; all the army had
+not yet come up; night would soon put an end to the combat; the
+evening sun, shining brightly after a violent summer storm, was
+blazing directly in the faces of the assailants. But the French
+nobles demanded an immediate advance. Confident in their numbers
+and prowess, they had already assured themselves of victory, and
+were quarrelling about the division of the captives they would
+make. Philip, too sympathetic with the feudal point of view to
+oppose his friends, ordered the advance.</p>
+
+<p>The battle began by the French sending forward a strong force of
+Genoese crossbowmen, to prepare the way for the cavalry charge. But
+the long bows of the English outshot the obsolete and cumbrous
+weapons of the Genoese, whose strings had been wetted by the recent
+storm. The Italians descended into the valley, but were soon
+demoralised by seeing their comrades fall all round them, while
+their own bolts failed to reach the enemy. They were already in
+full retreat back up the slope, when the impatience of the French
+horsemen burst all bounds. The reckless cavalry charge swept right
+through the disordered ranks of the crossbowmen, whose groans and
+cries as they were <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg364" id=
+"pg364">364</a></span>trampled underfoot by the mail-clad steeds,
+inspired the rear ranks of the French with the vain belief that the
+English were hard pressed, and made them eager to join the fray.
+The charge, as disorderly and as badly directed as the fatal attack
+of Bannockburn, never reached the English ranks. Shot down right
+and left by archers, terrified by the fearful booming of three
+small cannon that the English had dragged about during their
+wanderings, the French line soon became a confused mob of furious
+horsemen on panic-stricken horses. With gallantry even more
+conspicuous than their want of discipline, the French made no less
+than fifteen attempts to penetrate the enemies' lines. At one point
+only did they get near their goal, and that was on the right battle
+where the Prince of Wales himself was in command. A timely
+reinforcement sent by King Edward relieved the pressure, and the
+French were soon in full retreat, protected, as the English
+boasted, from further attack by the rampart of dead that they left
+behind them. The darkness, which ended the struggle, forbade all
+pursuit. Next day the fight was renewed by fresh French forces, but
+a fog hampered their movements, and they fell easy victims to the
+English. Then the defeated force retreated to Abbeville. The
+English loss was insignificant, but the field was covered with the
+bravest and noblest of the French. Among those who perished on the
+side of Philip were Louis of Nevers, the chivalrous Count of
+Flanders, who had sacrificed everything save his honour on the
+altar of feudal duty, and the blind King John of Bohemia, whose end
+was as romantic and futile as his life. Both these princes left as
+their successors sons of very different stamp in Louis de Male, and
+Charles of Moravia. Charles, who had recently been set up as King
+of the Romans by the clerical party against Louis of Bavaria, was
+present at Crecy, but a prudent retreat saved him from his father's
+fate.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of the Norman campaign, Philip urgently besought
+David, King of Scots, to make a diversion in his favour. Since 1341
+David, then a youth of seventeen, had been back in Scotland.
+Prolonged truces gave him little opportunity of trying his skill as
+a soldier, and his domestic rule was not particularly successful.
+The full effects of the Franco-Scottish alliance were revealed
+when, early in October, the Scottish king invaded the north of
+England, confident that, as all the fighting-men <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg365" id="pg365">365</a></span>were in France,
+he would meet no more formidable opponents than monks, peasants,
+and shepherds. The five days' resistance of Lord Wake's border peel
+of Castleton in Liddesdale showed the baselessness of this
+imagination. At its capture on October 10, David put to death its
+gallant captain, a knight named Walter Selby. Then the Scots
+streamed over the hills into Upper Tynedale, and soon devastated
+Durham. Such of the border lords as were not with the king in
+France had now prepared for resistance. Beside the Nevilles,
+Percys, and other great houses of the north, the Archbishop of
+York, William de la Zouch, took a vigorous part in organising the
+local levies, and in a very short space of time a sufficient army
+assembled to make head against the invaders. From their muster at
+Richmond, the northern barons marched into the land of St.
+Cuthbert, many priests following their archbishop as of old their
+predecessors had followed Melton or Thurstan. On October 17 the
+forces joined battle at Neville's Cross, a wayside landmark on the
+Red hills, a rough and broken region sloping down to the Wear,
+immediately to the west of the city of Durham. Neither host was
+large in size, and each stood facing the other, with the archers at
+either wing, after the fashion that had become Scottish as well as
+English. For a time neither army was willing to begin. At last the
+English archers, irritated at the delay, advanced upon the Scots
+with showers of missiles. Then the struggle grew general and after
+a fierce hand-to-hand fight the English prevailed. David was taken
+prisoner and was lodged in the Tower, and many of the noblest of
+the Scots lay dead on the field. The diversion was a failure; the
+local levies had proved amply sufficient to cope with the enemy. In
+thus playing the game of the French king, David began a policy
+which, from Neville's Cross to Flodden, brought embarrassment to
+England and desolation to Scotland. It was the inevitable penalty
+of two independent and hostile states existing in one little
+island.</p>
+
+<p>So war-worn were the victors of Crecy that all the profit they
+could win from the battle was the power to continue their march
+undisturbed to the sea coast. On September 4, Edward reached the
+walls of Calais, the last French town on the frontiers of Flanders,
+and the port whose corsairs had inflicted exceptional damage on
+English shipping during the whole of the war. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg366" id="pg366">366</a></span>With a keen eye
+to the military importance of the place, the King abandoned the
+easy course of returning with his troops to England, and at once
+sat down before Calais. It was an arduous and prolonged siege.
+Calais was girt by double walls and ditches of exceptional strength
+and was bravely defended by John de Vienne and a numerous garrison.
+Moreover the yielding soil of the sands and marshes around the town
+made it impossible for Edward to erect against the fortifications
+the cumbrous machines by which engineers then sought to batter down
+the walls of towns. The only method of taking the place was by
+starvation. At first Edward was not able to block every avenue of
+access to the beleaguered fortress. Winter came on; the troops
+demanded permission to go home; the sailors threatened mutiny, and
+the French were actively on the watch.</p>
+
+<p>Amidst these troubles, Edward III showed a persistence worthy of
+his grandfather. He remained at the seat of war, transacting much
+of the business of government in the town of wooden huts which,
+growing up round the besiegers' lines, made the winter siege
+endurable. In the worst period of the year sufficient forces to man
+the trenches could only be secured by wholesale charters of pardon
+to felonious and offending soldiers, on condition that they did not
+withdraw from service without the king's licence, so long as Edward
+himself remained beyond the seas.[1] A parliament of magnates met
+in March, 1347, and granted an aid. Instead of summoning the
+commons, Edward preferred to raise his chief supplies by another
+loan of 20,000 sacks of wool from the merchants, by additional
+customs dues voted by a merchant assembly, and by considerable
+loans from ecclesiastics and religious houses. In April and May all
+England was alive with martial preparation, and gradually a force
+far transcending the Crecy army was gathered round the walls of
+Calais, while a great fleet held the sea and prohibited the access
+of French ships to the doomed garrison. Northampton, ever fertile
+in expedients, discovered that, even after the high seas were
+blocked, boats still crept into Calais port by hugging the shallow
+shore. He ran long jetties of piles from the coast line into deep
+water, and thus cut off the last means of communication and of
+supplies. By June the town was suffering severely from famine.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See for this, <i>Rotulus Normannice</i> in
+<i>Cal. Patent Rolls,</i> 1345-48, especially PP. 473-526. For the
+vast force gathered later, see Wrottesley and Morris, U.S.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg367" id=
+"pg367">367</a></span>The French made a great effort, both by sea
+and land, to relieve Calais. On June 25 Northampton went out with
+his ships as far as the mouth of the Somme, where off Le Crotoy he
+won a naval victory which made the English command of the sea
+absolutely secure. A month later Philip, at the head of the land
+army, looked down upon the lines of Calais from the heights of
+Gu&icirc;nes. The two cardinals made their usual efforts for a
+truce, but the English would not allow their prey to be snatched
+from them at the eleventh hour. Then Philip challenged the enemy to
+a pitched battle, and four knights on each side were appointed to
+select the place of combat. The French, however, were of no mind to
+risk another Crecy, and on the morning of July 31 the smoke of
+their burning camp told the English that once more Philip had
+shrunk from a meeting. Then at last the garrison opened its gates
+on August 3, 1347. The defenders were treated chivalrously by the
+victor, who admired their courage and endurance. But the mass of
+the population were removed from their homes, and numerous grants
+of houses and property made to Englishmen. Edward resolved to make
+his conquest an English town, and, from that time onwards, it
+became the fortress through which an English army might at any time
+be poured into France, and the warehouse from which the spinners
+and weavers of Flanders were to draw their supplies of raw wool.
+For more than two hundred years, English Calais retained all its
+military and most of its commercial importance. Later conquests
+enabled a ring of forts to be erected round it which strengthened
+its natural advantages.</p>
+
+<p>Crecy, Neville's Cross, Aiguillon, and Calais did not exhaust
+the glories of this strenuous time. The war of the Breton
+succession, which Northampton had waged since 1345, was continued
+in 1346 by Thomas Dagworth, a knight appointed as his lieutenant on
+his withdrawal to join the army of Crecy and Calais. The Montfort
+star was still in the ascendant, and even the hereditary dominions
+of Joan of Penthi&egrave;vre were assailed. An English garrison was
+established at La Roche Derien, situated some four miles higher up
+the river Jaudy than the little open episcopal city of
+Tr&eacute;guier, and communicating by the river with the sea and
+with England. So troublesome did Montfort's garrison at La Roche
+become to the vassals of Penthi&egrave;vre, that in the summer of
+1347 Charles of Blois collected <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg368" id="pg368">368</a></span>an army, wherein nearly all the
+greatest feudal houses of Brittany were strongly represented, and
+sat down before La Roche. Dagworth, one of the ablest of English
+soldiers, was at Carhaix, in the heart of the central uplands, when
+he heard of the danger of the single English post within the lands
+of Penthi&egrave;vre. He at once hurried northwards, and on the
+night of June 19 rested at the abbey of B&eacute;gard, about ten
+miles to the south of La Roche. From B&eacute;gard two roads led to
+La Roche, one on each bank of the Jaudy. Thinking that Dagworth
+would pursue the shorter road on the left bank, Charles of Blois
+stationed a portion of his army at some distance from La Roche on
+that side of the Jaudy, while the rest remained with himself on the
+right bank before the walls of the town. Dagworth, however, chose
+the longer route, and before daybreak, on the morning of June 20,
+fell suddenly upon Charles. A fierce fight in the dark was ended
+after dawn in favour of Montfort by a timely sally of the
+beleaguered garrison. In the confusion Charles forgot to recall the
+division uselessly stationed beyond the Jaudy, and this error
+completed his ruin. Charles fought like a hero, and, after
+receiving seventeen wounds, yielded up his sword to a Breton lord
+rather than to the English commander. When his wounds were healed,
+Charles was sent to London, where he joined David of Scotland, the
+Count of Eu, and the Lord of Tancarville. It looked as if
+Montfort's triumph was secured.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of his successes Edward made a truce, yielding to
+the earnest request of the cardinals, "through his reverence to the
+apostolic see". The truce of Calais was signed on September 28, and
+included Scotland and Brittany as well as France within its scope.
+On October 12 Edward returned to his kingdom. Financial exhaustion,
+the need of repose, the unwillingness of his subjects to continue
+the combat, and the failure of the Flemish and Netherlandish
+alliances sufficiently explain this halt in the midst of victory.
+Yet from the military standpoint Edward's action, harmful
+everywhere to his partisans, was particularly fatal in Brittany,
+where most of Penthi&egrave;vre and nearly all upper Brittany were
+still obedient to Charles of Blois.[1] But Edward had embarked upon
+a course infinitely beyond his material resources. When a special
+effort could only give him the one town of Calais, how could he
+ever conquer all France?</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See on this A. de la Borderie, <i>Hist. de
+Br&eacute;tagne</i>, iii., 507, <i>et seq</i>.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
+
+<h4>FROM THE BLACK DEATH TO THE TREATY OF CALAIS.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg369" id=
+"pg369">369</a></span>At the conclusion of the truce of Calais in
+1347, Edward III and England were at the height of their military
+reputation. Perhaps the nation was in even a stronger position than
+the monarch. Edward had dissipated his resources in winning his
+successes, but the danger which faced the ruler had but slightly
+impaired the fortunes of his subjects. The country was in a
+sufficiently prosperous condition to bear its burdens without much
+real suffering. The widespread dislike of extraordinary taxation,
+which so often assumed the form of the familiar cry that the king
+must live of his own, had taken the shape of unwillingness to
+accept responsibility for the king's policy and a growing
+indisposition to meet his demands. But since the rule of Edward
+began, England enjoyed a prosperity so unbroken that far heavier
+burdens would hardly have brought about a diminution of the
+well-being which stood in glaring contrast to the desolation long
+inflicted by Edward's wars on France. A war waged exclusively on
+foreign soil did little harm to England, and offered careers
+whereby many an English adventurer was gaining a place among the
+landed classes. The simple archers and men-at-arms, who received
+high wages and good hopes of plunder in the king's foreign service,
+found in it a congenial and lucrative, if demoralising profession.
+In England, though wages were low, provisions were cheap and
+employment constant. The growth of the wool trade, then further
+stimulated by refugees from the "three towns of Flanders," against
+which Louis de Male was waging relentless war, was bringing comfort
+to many, and riches to a few. The maritime greatness of England
+that found its first results in the battle of Sluys was the fruit
+of a commercial activity on the sea which enabled English shipmen
+to deprive the Italians, Netherlanders, and Germans of the
+overwhelming <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg370" id=
+"pg370">370</a></span>share they had hitherto enjoyed of our
+foreign trade. The dark shadows of medieval life were indeed never
+absent from the picture; but medieval England seldom enjoyed
+greater wellbeing and tranquillity than during the first eighteen
+years of the personal rule of Edward III. One sign of the
+increasing attention paid to suppressing disorder was an act of
+1344, which empowered the local conservators of the peace, already
+an element in the administrative machinery, to hear and determine
+felonies. A later act made this a part of their regular functions,
+and gave them the title of justices of the peace, thus setting up a
+means of maintaining local order so effective that the old
+machinery of the local courts gradually gave way to it.</p>
+
+<p>A rude ending to this period of prosperity was brought about by
+the devastations of the pestilence known to modern readers as the
+Black Death, which since 1347 had decimated the Levant. This was
+the bubonic plague, almost as familiar in the east of to-day as in
+the mid-fourteenth century. It was brought along the chief
+commercial highways which bound the western world to the markets of
+the east. First introduced into the west at the great ports of the
+Mediterranean, Venice, Genoa, Marseilles, it spread over France and
+Italy by the early months of 1348. Avignon was a chief centre of
+the infection, and, amidst the desolation around him, Clement VI.
+strove with rare energy to give peace to a distracted world. The
+regions of western and northern France, which had felt the full
+force of the war, were among the worst sufferers. Aquitaine, too,
+was cruelly desolated, and among the victims was Edward III.'s
+daughter, Joan, who perished at Bordeaux on her way to Castile, as
+the bride of the prince afterwards infamous as Peter the Cruel.
+Early in August, 1348, the scourge crossed the channel, making its
+first appearance in England at Weymouth. Thence it spread
+northwards and westwards. Bristol was the first great English town
+to feel its ravages. Though the Gloucestershire men prohibited all
+intercourse between the infected port and their own villages, the
+plague was in no wise stayed by their precautions. The disease
+extended, by way of Gloucester and Oxford, to London, reaching the
+capital early in November, and continuing its ravages until the
+following Whitsuntide. When it had almost died out in London, it
+began, in the spring of 1349, to rage <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg371" id="pg371">371</a></span>severely in East Anglia,[1]
+while in Lancashire the worst time seems to have been from the
+autumn of 1349 to the beginning of 1350.[2] Scotland was so long
+exempt that the Scots, proud of their immunity, were wont to swear
+"by the foul death of England". In 1350 they gathered together an
+army in Ettrick forest with the object of invading the
+plague-stricken border shires. But the pestilence fell upon the
+host assembled for the foray, and all war was stopped while
+Scotland was devastated from end to end. Ireland began to suffer in
+August, 1349, the disease being at first confined to the Englishry
+of the towns, though, after a time, it made its way also to the
+pure Irish.[3]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] A. Jessopp, <i>The Black Death in East
+Anglia</i>, in <i>The Coming of the Friars and Other
+Essays</i>(1889). For general details see F. Seebohm, <i>The Black
+Death</i>, in <i>Fortnightly Review (1865 and 1866)</i>; J.E.T.
+Rogers, <i>England before and after the Black Death</i>, in
+<i>Fortnightly Review (1866)</i>; F.A. Gasquet's <i>Great
+Pestilence</i> (1893); and C. Creighton, <i>History of Epidemics in
+Britain</i>, i., 114-207(1891).</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] A.G. Little, <i>The Black Deaath in
+Lancashire</i>, in <i>Engl. Hist. Review</i>, v. (1890),
+534-30.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[3] See for Ireland, however, the vivid details in
+J. Clyn of Kilkenny, <i>Annales Hibevnia: ad annum 1349</i>, ed. R.
+Butler, <i>Irish Archaological Soc.</i> (1849).</p>
+
+<p>The wild exaggerations of the chroniclers reflect the horror and
+desolation wrought by the epidemic. There died so many, we are
+told, that the survivors scarcely sufficed to bury the victims, and
+not one man in ten remained alive. The more moderate estimate of
+Froissart sets down the proportion dead of the plague as one in
+three throughout all Christendom, and some modern inquirers have
+rashly reckoned the mortality in England as amounting to a half or
+a third of the population. In truth, complete statistics are
+necessarily wanting, and if the records of the admissions of the
+clergy attest that, in certain dioceses, half the livings changed
+hands during the years of pestilence, it is not permissible to
+infer from that circumstance that there was a similar rate of
+mortality from the plague over the whole of the population. The
+sudden and overwhelming character of the disorder increased the
+universal terror. One day a man was healthy: within a few hours of
+the appearance of the fatal swelling, or of the dark livid marks
+which gave the plague its popular name, he was a corpse. The
+pestilence seemed to single out the young and robust as its prey,
+and to spare the aged and sick. The churchyards were soon
+overflowing, and special plague pits had to be dug where the dead
+were heaped up by <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg372" id=
+"pg372">372</a></span>the hundred. Comparatively few magnates died,
+but the poor, the religious, and the clergy were chief sufferers.
+The law courts ceased to hold regular sessions. When the people had
+partially recovered from the first visitations of the plague,
+others befel them which were scarcely less severe. The years 1362
+and 1369 almost rivalled the horrors of 1348 and 1349.</p>
+
+<p>The immediate effects of the calamity were overwhelming. At
+first the horror of the foul death effaced all other considerations
+from men's minds. There were not enough priests to absolve the
+dying, and special indulgences, with full liberty to choose
+confessors at discretion, were promulgated from Avignon and from
+many diocesan chanceries. The price of commodities fell for the
+moment, since there were few, we are told, who cared for riches
+amidst the general fear of death. The pestilence played such havoc
+with the labouring population that the beasts wandered untended in
+the pastures, and rich crops of corn stood rotting in the fields
+from lack of harvesters to gather them. There was the same lack of
+clergy as of labourers, and the priest, like the peasant, demanded
+a higher wage for his services by reason of the scarcity of labour.
+A mower was not to be had for less than a shilling a day with his
+food, and a chaplain, formerly glad to receive two marks and his
+board, demanded ten pounds, or ten marks at the least.
+Non-residence, neglect of cures, and other evils followed. As
+Langland wrote:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza"><span>Persones and parisch prestes - playneth
+to heore bisschops,<br />
+</span> <span>That heore parisch hath ben pore - seththe the
+pestilence tyme,<br />
+</span> <span>And asketh leue and lycence - at Londun to
+dwelle,<br />
+</span> <span>To singe ther for simonye - for seluer is
+swete.[1]<br />
+</span></div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The lack of clergy was in some measure compensated by the rush
+of candidates for orders. Some of these new clerks were men who had
+lost their wives by the plague; many of them were illiterate, or if
+they knew how to read their mass-book, could not understand it. The
+close social life of the monasteries proved particularly favourable
+to the spread of the disease; the number of monks and nuns declined
+considerably, and, since there was no great desire to embrace the
+religious profession, many houses remained half empty for
+generations.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Vision of Piers Plowman</i>, i., p. g, ed.
+Skeat.</p>
+
+<p>No one in the Middle Ages believed in letting economic laws work
+out their natural results. If anything were amiss, it <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg373" id="pg373">373</a></span>was the duty of
+kings and princes to set things right. Accordingly Edward and his
+council at once strove to remedy the lack of labourers by
+ordinances that harvesters and other workmen should not demand more
+wages than they had been in the habit of receiving, while the
+bishops, following the royal example, ordered chaplains and vicars
+to be content with their accustomed salaries. As soon as parliament
+ventured to assemble, the royal orders were embodied in the famous
+statute of labourers of 1351. This measure has been condemned as an
+attempt of a capitalist parliament to force poor men to work for
+their masters at wages far below the market rates. But it was no
+new thing to fix wages by authority, and the medieval conception
+was that a just and living wage should be settled by law, rather
+than left to accident. The statute provided that prices, like
+wages, should remain as they had been before the pestilence, so
+that, far from only regarding the interests of the employer, it
+attempted to maintain the old ratio between the rate of wages and
+the price of commodities. Moreover it sought to provide for the
+cultivation of the soil by enacting that the sturdy beggar, who,
+though able, refused to work, should be forced to put his hand to
+the plough. Futile as the statute of labourers was, it was not much
+more ineffective than most laws of the time. Though real efforts
+were made to carry it out, the chronic weakness of a medieval
+executive soon recoiled before the hopeless task of enforcing
+impossible laws on an unwilling population. Class prejudices only
+showed themselves in the stipulation that, while the employer was
+forbidden to pay the new rate of wages under pain of heavy fines,
+the labourers who refused, to work on the old terms were imprisoned
+and only released upon taking oath to accept their ancient wages.
+In effect, however, the king's arm was not long enough to reach
+either class. The labourers, says a chronicler, were so puffed up
+and quarrelsome that they would not observe the new enactment, and
+the master's alternative was either to see his crops perish
+unharvested, or to gratify the greedy desires of the workmen by
+violating the statute. While labourers could escape punishment
+through their numbers, the employer was more accessible to the
+royal officers.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the labourers enjoyed the benefits of the scarcity of
+labour, while the employers suffered the full inconveniences of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg374" id="pg374">374</a></span>the
+change. Producers were to some extent recompensed by a great rise
+in prices, more especially in the case of those commodities into
+whose cost of production labour largely entered. For example the
+rise in the price of corn and meat was inconsiderable, while
+clothing, manufactured goods, and luxuries became extraordinarily
+dear. Of eatables fish rose most in value, because the fishermen
+had been swept away by the plague. Rents fell heavily. Landlords
+found that they could only retain their tenants by wholesale
+remissions. When farmers perished of the plague, it was often
+impossible to find others to take up their farms. It was even
+harder for lords, who farmed their own demesne, to provide
+themselves with the necessary labour. Hired labour could not be
+obtained except at ruinous rates. It was injudicious to press for
+the strict performance of villein services, lest the villein should
+turn recalcitrant and leave his holding. The lord preferred to
+commute his villein's service into a small payment. On the whole
+the best solution of the difficulty was for him to abandon the
+ancient custom of farming his demesne through his bailiffs, and to
+let out his lands on such rents as he could get to tenant farmers.
+Thus the feudal method of land tenure, which, since the previous
+century, had ceased to have much political significance, became
+economically ineffective, and began to give way to a system more
+like that which still obtains among us.</p>
+
+<p>Struck by these undoubted results of the pestilence, some modern
+writers have persuaded themselves that the Black Death is the one
+great turning-point in the social and economic history of England,
+and that nearly all which makes modern England what it is, is due
+to the effects of this pestilence. A wider survey suggests the
+extreme improbability of a single visitation having such
+far-reaching consequences. Moreover the Black Death was not an
+English but a European calamity, and it is strange to imagine that
+the effects of the plague in England should have been so much
+deeper than in France or Germany, and so different. In the
+fourteenth century there was little that was distinctly insular in
+the conditions of England, as compared with those of the continent.
+A trouble common to both regions alike could hardly have been the
+starting-point of such differentiation between them as later ages
+undoubtedly witnessed. There was a French counterpart to the
+statute of labourers.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg375" id=
+"pg375">375</a></span>In truth the Black Death was no isolated
+phenomenon. There were already in the air the seeds of the decay of
+the ancient order, and those seeds fructified more rapidly in
+England by reason of the plague.[1] It is only because of the
+impetus which it gave to changes already in progress that the
+pestilence had in a fashion more lasting results in England than
+elsewhere. The last thirty years of the reign of Edward were an
+epoch of social upheaval and unrest contrasting strongly with the
+uneventful times that had preceded the Black Death. It is not right
+to regard the period as one of misery or severe distress. The war
+of classes, which was beginning, sprang not so much from material
+discomfort of the poor, as from what unsympathetic annalists called
+their greediness, their pride, and their wantonness. The
+wage-earner was master of the situation and did not hesitate to
+make his power felt. While the spread of manufactures, the rise of
+prices, and the opening out of wider markets still secured the
+prosperity of the shopkeeper, the merchant, or the artisan of the
+towns, the whole brunt of the social change fell upon the landed
+classes, and most heavily upon the ecclesiastics and especially
+upon the monks. Broken down by the heavy demands of the state,
+unable to share with the layman in the new avenues to wealth opened
+up by the expanding resources of the country, the monks saw the
+chief sources of their prosperity drying up. Their rents were
+shrinking and it became increasingly difficult to cultivate their
+lands. They never recovered their ancient welfare, and were already
+getting out of touch with the national life.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See for this W. Cunningham, <i>Growth of
+English Industry and Commerce,</i> vol. i., p. 330 ff. (ed. 4);
+T.W. Page, <i>The End of Villainage in England</i> (American
+Economic Association, 1900); and, above all, P. Vinogradoff in
+<i>Engl. Hist. Review, xv.</i> (1900), 774-781.</p>
+
+<p>One immediate result of the plague was a renewed activity in
+founding religious houses. Upon the two plague pits west and east
+of the city of London, Sir Walter Manny set up his Charterhouse in
+Smithfield, and Edward III. his foundation for Cistercian nuns
+between Tower Hill and Aldgate. More characteristic of the times
+was the foundation of secular colleges, which were established
+either with mainly ecclesiastical objects or to encourage study at
+the universities. Both at Oxford and Cambridge there were more
+colleges set up in the first than in <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg376" id="pg376">376</a></span>the second half of the fourteenth
+century; and it is noteworthy that several Cambridge colleges
+incorporated after the plague were founded with the avowed motive
+of filling up the gaps in the secular clergy occasioned by it. The
+riots between the Oxford townsmen and the clerks of the university
+on St. Scholastica's day, 1354, resulted in the victory of the
+former because of the recent diminution in the number of the
+scholars. Yet even as regards the monasteries, it is easy to
+exaggerate the effects of the plague. Five years after the Black
+Death, the Cistercians of the Lancashire abbey of Whalley boasted
+that they had added twenty monks to their convent, and were busy in
+enlarging their church.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Cal. <i>Papal Registers, Petitions</i>, i.,
+264. Professor Tait, however, informs me that the monks took a
+sanguine view of their numbers. After the plague of 1362, we know
+that they were not much more numerous than in the previous
+century.</p>
+
+<p>Change was in the air in religion as well as in society. Along
+with democratic ideas filtering in with the exiles from the great
+Flemish cities, came a breath of that restless and unquiet spirit
+which soon awakened the concern of the inquisition in the
+Netherlands. There brotherhoods, some mystical and quietistic,
+others enthusiastic and fanatical, were growing in numbers and
+importance. Some of these bodies, Beguines, Beghards, and what not,
+were harmless enough, but the whole history of the Middle Ages
+bears testimony to the readiness with which religious excitement
+unchastened by discipline or direction, grew into dangerous heresy.
+The strangest of the new communities, the Flagellants, made its
+appearance in England immediately after the pestilence. In the
+autumn of 1349, some six score men crossed over from Holland and
+marched in procession through the open spaces of London, chanting
+doleful litanies in their own tongue. They wore nothing save a
+linen cloth that covered the lower part of their body, and on their
+heads hats marked with a red cross behind and before. Each of them
+bore in his right hand a scourge, with which he belaboured the
+naked back and shoulders of his comrade in the fore rank. Twice a
+day they repeated this mournful exercise, and even at other times
+were never seen in public but with cap on head and discipline in
+hand. Few Englishmen joined the Flagellants, but their appearance
+is not unworthy of notice as the first concrete evidence of the
+religious unrest which soon became more widespread. Before long the
+Yorkshireman, John Wycliffe, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg377"
+id="pg377">377</a></span>was studying arts at the little
+north-country foundation of the Balliols at Oxford, and John Ball,
+the Essex priest, was preaching his revolutionary socialism to the
+villeins. "We are all come," said he, "from one father and one
+mother, Adam and Eve. How can the gentry show that they are greater
+lords than we?"[1] In 1355 there were heretics in the diocese of
+York who maintained that it is impossible to merit eternal life by
+good works, and that original sin does not deserve
+damnation.[2]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] The sentiment, or its equivalent in Ball's
+famous distich, was not new; it was employed for mystical purposes
+in Richard Rolle's</p>
+
+<p class="two">"When Adam delf and Eue span, spir, if thou wil
+spede,<br />
+Whare was then the pride of man, that now merres his mede?"<br />
+</p>
+
+<p class="four"><i>Library of Early English Writers. Richard Rolle
+of Hampole and his followers</i>, ed. Horstman, i., 73 (1895).</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] Cal. <i>Papal Registers, Letters</i>, iii.,
+565.</p>
+
+<p>The Flagellants were denounced as heretics by Clement VI.; the
+Archbishop of York proceeded against the northern heretics, and in
+1366 the Archbishop of Canterbury forbade John Ball's preaching.
+But there were more insidious, because more measured, enemies of
+the Church than a handful of fanatics. The English were long
+convinced that the Avignon popes were playing the game of the
+French adversary, and Clement VI.'s efforts for peace never had a
+fair hearing. Since the beginning of the war, the king laid his
+hand on the alien priories, and, though in his scrupulous regard
+for clerical rights he had allowed the monks to remain in
+possession, he diverted the stream of tribute from the French
+mother houses to his own treasury. Bolder measures against papal
+provisions were taken in the years which immediately followed the
+pestilence. Finding remonstrances futile, the parliament of 1351,
+which passed the statute of labourers, enacted also the first
+statute of provisors. It recited that the anti-papal statute of
+Carlisle of 1307 was still law, and that the king had sworn to
+observe it. It claimed for all electing bodies and patrons the
+right to elect or to present freely to the benefices in their gift.
+It declared invalid all appointments brought about by way of papal
+provision. Provisors who had accepted appointments from Avignon
+were to be arrested. If convicted, they were to be detained in
+prison, until they had made their peace with the king, and found
+surely not to accept provisions in the future, and also not to seek
+their reinstatement by any process in the Roman <i>curia</i>. Two
+years <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg378" id=
+"pg378">378</a></span>later this measure was supplemented by the
+first statute of <i>præmunire</i>, which enacted that those who
+brought matters cognisable in the king's courts before foreign
+courts should be liable to forfeiture and outlawry. Though the
+papal court is not specially mentioned, it is clear that this
+measure <i>was</i> aimed against it.</p>
+
+<p>General measures proving insufficient, more specific legislation
+soon followed. In 1365 a fresh statute of <i>præmunire</i> was
+drawn up on the initiative of the crown, enacting that all who
+obtained citations, offices, or benefices from the Roman court
+should incur the penalties prescribed by the act of 1353. The
+prelates dissociated themselves from so stringent a law, but did
+not actively oppose it. When in 1366, Edward requested the guidance
+of the estates as to how he was to deal with the demand of Urban V.
+for the arrears of King John's tribute, withheld altogether for
+more than thirty years, the prelates joined the lay estates in
+answering that neither John nor any one else could put the realm
+into subjection without their consent. Even the ancient offering of
+Peter's pence ceased to be paid for the rest of Edward's reign. If
+these laws had been strictly carried out, the papal authority in
+England would have been gravely circumscribed. But medieval laws
+were too often the mere enunciations of an ideal. The statutes of
+provisors and <i>præmunire</i> were as little executed as were the
+statutes of labourers, or as some elaborate sumptuary legislation
+passed by the parliament of 1363. The catalogue of acts of papal
+interference in English ecclesiastical and temporal affairs is as
+long after the passing of these laws as before. Litigants still
+carried their suits to Avignon: provisions were still issued
+nominating to English benefices, and Edward himself set the example
+of disregarding his own laws by asking for the appointment of his
+ministers to bishoprics by way of papal provision. Papal ascendency
+was too firmly rooted in the fourteenth century to be eradicated by
+any enactment. To the average clergyman or theologian of the day
+the pope was still the "universal ordinary," the one divinely
+appointed source of ecclesiastical authority, the shepherd to whom
+the Lord had given the commission to feed His sheep. This theory
+could only be overcome by revolution; and the parliaments and
+ministers of Edward III. were in no wise of a revolutionary
+temper.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg379" id=
+"pg379">379</a></span>The anti-papal laws of the fourteenth century
+were the acts of the secular not of the ecclesiastical power. They
+were not simply anti-papal, they were also anti-clerical in their
+tendency, since to the men of the age an attack on the pope was an
+attack on the Church. No doubt the English bishop at Edward's court
+sympathised with his master's dislike of foreign ecclesiastical
+interference, and the English priest was glad to be relieved from
+payments to the curia. But the clergyman, whose soul grew indignant
+against the curialists, still believed that the pope was the
+divinely appointed autocrat of the Church universal. Being a man, a
+pope might be a bad pope; but the faithful Christian, though he
+might lament and protest, could not but obey in the last resort.
+The papacy was so essentially interwoven with the whole Church of
+the Middle Ages, that few figments have less historical basis than
+the notion that there was an anti-papal Anglican Church in the days
+of the Edwards. However, before another generation had passed away,
+ecclesiastical protests began.</p>
+
+<p>Monasticism no less than the papacy was of the very essence of
+the Church of the Middle Ages. Yet the monastic ideal had no longer
+the force that it had in previous generations, and even the latest
+embodiments of the religious life had declined from their original
+popularity. Pope John XXII. himself, in his warfare against William
+of Ockham and the Spiritual Franciscans who had supported Louis of
+Bavaria, denied in good round terms the Franciscan doctrine of
+"evangelical poverty". Ockham was now dead, and with him perished
+the last of the great cosmopolitan schoolmen, of whose birth indeed
+England might boast, but who early forsook Oxford for Paris.
+Conspicuous among the younger academical generation was Richard
+Fitzralph, Archbishop of Armagh, whose bitter attacks on the
+fundamental principles underlying the mendicant theory of the
+regular life are indicative of the changing temper of the age. A
+distinguished Oxford scholar, a learned and pungent writer, a
+popular preacher, a reputed saint, and a good friend of the pope,
+Fitzralph made himself, about 1357, the champion of the secular
+clergy against the friars by writing a treatise to prove that
+absolute poverty was neither practised nor commended by the
+apostles.[1] The indignant mendicants procured <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg380" id="pg380">380</a></span>the archbishop's
+citation to Avignon, and it was a striking proof of the
+ineffectiveness of recent legislation that Edward III. allowed him
+to plead his cause before the <i>curia</i>. By 1358 the friars
+gained the day, but their efforts to get Fitzralph's opinions
+condemned were frustrated by his death in 1360. Fitzralph had the
+sympathy not only of the seculars, but of the "possessioners," or
+property-holding monks.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See his <i>De Pauperie Salvatoris</i>, lib.
+i.-iv., printed by R.L. Poole, as appendix to Wycliffe, <i>De
+Dominio Divino</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The period of experiments in economic and anti-clerical
+legislation was also marked by other important new laws, such as
+the ordinance of the staple of 1354, providing that wool, leather,
+and other commodities were only to be sold at certain <i>staple</i>
+towns, a measure soon to be modified by the law of 1362, which
+settled the staple at Calais; the ordinance of 1357 for the
+government of Ireland, to which later reference will be made; the
+statute making English the language of the law courts in 1362, and
+a drastic act against purveyance in 1365. The statute of treasons
+of 1352, which laid down seven several offences as alone henceforth
+to be regarded as treason, also demands attention. Its
+classification is rude and unsystematic. While the slaying of the
+king's ministers or judges, and the counterfeiting of the great
+seal or the king's coin, are joined with the compassing the death
+of the king or his wife or heir, adherence to the king's enemies,
+the violation of the queen or the king's eldest daughter, as
+definite acts of treason, its omission to brand other notable
+indications of disloyally as traitorous, inspired the judges of
+later generations to elaborate the doctrine of constructive treason
+in order to extend in practice the scope of the act. It was,
+however, an advance for nobles and commons to have set any
+limitations whatever to the wide power claimed by the courts of
+defining treason.</p>
+
+<p>Partial respite from war did not diminish the martial ardour of
+the king and his nobles. The period of the Black Death was
+precisely the time when Edward completed a plan which he had begun
+by the erection of his Round Table at Windsor in 1344. By 1348 he
+instituted a chapel at Windsor, dedicated to St. George, served by
+a secular chapter, and closely connected with a foundation for the
+support of poor knights. Within a year this foundation also
+included the famous Order of the Garter, the type and model of all
+later orders of chivalry. On St. George's day the king celebrated
+the new institution by special <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg381" id="pg381">381</a></span>solemnities. The most famous of
+his companions-at-arms were associated with him as founders and
+first knights. Clad in russet coats sprinkled with blue garters, a
+blue garter on the right leg, and a mantle of blue ornamented with
+little shields bearing the arms of St. George, the Knights of the
+Garter heard mass sung by the Archbishop of Canterbury in St.
+George's chapel, and then feasted solemnly in their common hall.
+Ten years later the glorification of the king's birthplace was
+completed by the erection of new quarters for the king, more
+sumptuous and splendid than were elsewhere to be seen. The fame of
+the Knights of the Garter excited the emulation of King John of
+France, who set up a Round Table which grew in 1351 into the
+knightly Order of the Star.</p>
+
+<p>The rival brethren of the Garter and the Star found plenty of
+opportunities of demonstrating their prowess. Though between 1347
+and 1355 there was, so far as forms went, an almost continuous
+armistice for the space of eight years, its effect was not so much
+to stop fighting as to limit its scale. In reality the years of
+nominal truce were a period of harassing warfare in Brittany, the
+Calais march, Gascony, and the narrow seas, which even the ravages
+of the Black Death did not stop.</p>
+
+<p>In Brittany affairs were in a wretched condition. The nominal
+duke, John, was a child brought up in England under the
+guardianship of Edward III. Edward was not in a position to spend
+either men or money upon Brittany. As an easy way of discharging
+his obligations to his ward, he handed over the duchy to Sir Thomas
+Dagworth, the governor, who maintained the war from local resources
+and had a free hand as regards his choice of agents and measures.
+In return for power to appropriate to his own purposes the revenues
+of the duchy, Dagworth undertook the custody of the fortresses, the
+payment of the troops, the expenses of the administration, and the
+conduct of the war. In short, Brittany was leased out to him as a
+speculation, like a farm left derelict of husbandmen after the
+Black Death. Dagworth sublet to the highest bidders the lordships,
+fortresses, and towns of Brittany. He established at various
+centres of his influence a military adventurer, whose chief
+business was to make war support war and, moreover, bring in a good
+profit. The consequences were disastrous. Dagworth's captains were
+for the most part Englishmen, men of character, energy, and <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg382" id="pg382">382</a></span>resources,
+but utterly without scruples and with no other ambition than to
+raise a good revenue and maintain themselves in authority. The most
+famous of them were members of gentle but obscure houses, whose
+poverty debarred them from the ordinary avenues to fame and
+fortune, and whose vigour and ability made good use of their
+exceptional positions. Two Cheshire kinsmen, Hugh Calveley and
+Robert Knowles, thus won, each for himself, a place in history.
+Some of the adventurers were of obscurer origin, some were
+foreigners, German, French, or Netherlandish, and some few Breton
+gentlemen of Montfort's faction. Of these Crockart, the German, and
+Raoul de Caours, the Breton, were the most famous.</p>
+
+<p>The results of the system bore heavily on the Breton peasantry.
+Each lord of a castle levied systematic blackmail on the
+neighbouring parishes. These payments, called ransoms, were exacted
+as a condition of protection. The governor, though severely
+maltreating those who neglected to pay their ransom, did little to
+save his dependants from the ravages of the partisans of Charles of
+Blois. Despite such misdeeds, the war of partisans was brightened
+by many feats of heroism. The friends of Charles of Blois
+disregarded the truce and waged war as well as they could. Among
+them was already conspicuous the son of a nobleman of the
+neighbourhood of Dinan, the ugly, able, restless Bertrand du
+Guesclin, whose enterprise and valour won for him a great local
+reputation. In 1350 Dagworth was slain. The history of the
+following years is not to be found in the acts of his successor,
+Sir Walter Bentley, but in the private deeds of daring of the
+heroes of both sides. Conspicuous among these is the famous Battle
+of the Thirty, well known from the detailed narrative of Froissart,
+and the stirring verses of a contemporary French poem. This fight
+was fought on March 27, 1351, between thirty Breton gentlemen of
+the Blois faction, drawn from the garrison of Josselin, and a less
+noble but even more strenuous band of thirty English and other
+adventurers of the Montfort party, from the garrison of Ploermel,
+seven miles to the east. Beaumanoir, the commandant at Josselin,
+had been moved to indignation at the cruel treatment of peasants
+who had refused to pay ransom by Robert Bembro, the commander of
+Ploermel. He challenged the tyrant to combat, and thirty heroes of
+each party fought out their quarrel at a spot <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg383" id="pg383">383</a></span>marked by the
+half-way oak, equidistant from the two garrisons. After a long
+struggle, in which Bembro was slain, victory fell to the men from
+Josselin. Among the vanquished were Knowles, Calveley, and
+Crockart. This fight had absolutely no influence on the fortune of
+the war.</p>
+
+<p>In 1352 the French strove to carry on the Breton war on a
+grander scale, and a large army, commanded by Guy of Nesle, marshal
+of France, was sent to reinforce the partisans of Charles of Blois.
+They met Bentley at Mauron, a few miles north of Ploermel, where
+one of the most interesting battles of the war was fought Taught by
+the lesson of Crecy, Nesle had already, in obscure fights in
+Poitou, ordered the French knights and men-at-arms to fight on
+foot.[1] He here adopted the same plan for the first time in a
+battle of importance, but, after a severe struggle, Bentley won the
+day. In 1353 Edward III. made a treaty with his captive, Charles of
+Blois. In return for a huge ransom Charles was to obtain his
+liberty, be recognised as Duke of Brittany, marry one of Edward's
+daughters, and promise to remain neutral in the Anglo-French
+struggle. The treaty involved too great a dislocation of policy to
+be carried out. Charles, after visiting Brittany, renounced the
+compact and returned to his London prison. Thus the weary war of
+partisans still went on, and thenceforth the fortunes of Charles
+depended less upon negotiations than on the growing successes of
+Bertrand du Guesclin.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] See my paper on <i>Some Neglected Fights
+between Crecy and Poitiers</i> in <i>Engl. Hist. Review</i>, vol.
+xxi., Oct., 1905.</p>
+
+<p>During these years Calais was the centre of much fighting. Eager
+to win back the town, the French bribed an Italian mercenary, then
+in Edward's service, to admit them into the castle. The plot was
+discovered, and Edward and the Prince of Wales crossed over in
+disguise to help in frustrating the French assault. The French were
+enticed into Calais and taken as in a trap. Edward then sallied out
+of the town, and rashly engaged in personal encounter with a more
+numerous enemy. He was unexpectedly successful, and made wonderful
+display of his prowess as a knight. In revenge, the English
+devastated the neighbouring country by raids like that led by the
+Duke of Lancaster in 1351, which spread desolation from
+Th&eacute;rouanne to Etaples. Of more enduring importance were the
+gradual <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg384" id=
+"pg384">384</a></span>extensions of the English pale by the
+piecemeal conquest of the fortresses of the neighbourhood. The
+chief step in this direction was the capture of Gu&icirc;nes in
+1352. An archer named John Dancaster, who escaped from French
+custody in Gu&icirc;nes, led his comrades to the assault of the
+town by a way which he learnt during his imprisonment. The attack
+succeeded, and Dancaster, to avoid involving his master in a formal
+breach of the truce, professed to hold the town on his own account
+and to be willing to sell it to the highest bidder. Of course the
+highest bidder was Edward III. himself, and thus Gu&icirc;nes
+became the southern outpost of the Calais march.</p>
+
+<p>In Aquitaine and Languedoc there was no thought of repose. In
+1349 Lancaster led a foray to the gates of Toulouse, which wrought
+immense damage but led to no permanent results. There was incessant
+border warfare. The Anglo-Gascon forces spread beyond the limits of
+Edward's duchy and captured outposts in Poitou, P&eacute;rigord,
+Quercy, and the Agenais. In retaliation, the Count of Armagnac, a
+strong upholder of the French cause, did what mischief he could in
+those parts of Gascony adjacent to his own territories. On the
+whole the result of these struggles was a considerable extension of
+the English power.</p>
+
+<p>The most famous episode of these years was a naval battle fought
+off Winchelsea on August 29, 1350, against a strong fleet of
+Spanish privateers commanded by Charles of La Cerda. The Spaniards
+having plundered English wine ships, Edward summoned a fleet to
+meet them, and himself went on board, along with the Prince of
+Wales, Lancaster, and many of his chief nobles. The fight that
+ensued was remarkable not more for the reckless valour of the king
+and his nobles than for the dexterity of the English tactics. The
+great busses of Spain towered above the little English vessels,
+like castles over cottages. Yet the English did not hesitate to
+grapple their adversaries' craft and swarm up their sides on to the
+decks. Edward captured one of the chief of the Spanish ships,
+though his own vessel, the Cog <i>Thomas</i>, was so severely
+damaged that it had to be hastily abandoned for its prize. The
+glory of the victory of the "Spaniards on the sea" kept up the fame
+first won at Sluys.</p>
+
+<p>In these years of truce first appeared the worst scourge of the
+war, bands of mercenary soldiers, fighting on their own account and
+recklessly devastating the regions which they chose to visit. <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg385" id="pg385">385</a></span>The cry
+for peace rose higher than ever. Innocent VI., who succeeded
+Clement VI. in 1352, took up with great energy the papal policy of
+mediation. Thanks to his legates' good offices, preliminary
+articles of peace were actually agreed upon on April 6, 1354, at
+Gu&icirc;nes. By them Edward agreed to renounce his claim to the
+French throne if he were granted full sovereignly over Guienne,
+Ponthieu, Artois, and Gu&icirc;nes. When the chamberlain,
+Burghersh, laid before parliament, which was then sitting, the
+prospect of peace, "the commons with one accord replied that,
+whatever course the king and the magnates should take as regards
+the said treaty, was agreeable to them. On this reply the
+chamberlain said to the commons: 'Then you wish to agree to a
+perpetual treaty of peace, if one can be had?' And the said commons
+answered unanimously, 'Yea, yea'."[1] Vexatious delays, however,
+supervened, and at last the negotiations broke down hopelessly. The
+French refused to surrender their over-lordship over the ceded
+provinces, and the Easter parliament of 1355 agreed with the king
+that war must be renewed. Two years of war were to follow more
+fierce than even the struggles which had culminated in Crecy, La
+Roche, and Calais.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Rot. Pad.,</i> ii., 262.</p>
+
+<p>Two expeditions were organised to invade France in the summer of
+1355, one for Aquitaine under the Prince of Wales,[1] and the other
+for Normandy under Lancaster. Westerly winds long prevented their
+despatch. It was not until September that the Prince of Wales
+reached Bordeaux. The change of wind, which bore the prince to
+Gascony, enabled the host, collected by the King and Lancaster on
+the Thames, to make its way to Normandy. But the special reason
+which brought the English thither was already gone. The expedition
+was planned to co-operate with the King of Navarre. Charles,
+surnamed the Bad, traced on his father's side his descent to that
+son of Philip the Bold who obtained the county of Evreux in upper
+Normandy for his appanage. From his mother, the daughter of Louis
+X., he derived his kingdom of Navarre and a claim on the French
+monarchy of the same type as that of Edward III. Cunning,
+plausible, unscrupulous, and violent, <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg386" id="pg386">386</a></span>Charles had quarrelled
+fiercely with King John, whose daughter he had married. His vast
+estates in Normandy made him a valuable ally to Edward, and he had
+suggested joint action in that duchy against the French. Unluckily,
+while the west winds kept the English fleet beyond the Straits of
+Dover, John made terms with his son-in-law. Lancaster was
+compensated for his disappointment by the governorship of Brittany.
+The army equipped for the Norman expedition was diverted to Calais,
+whence in November, Edward and Lancaster led a purposeless foray in
+the direction of Hesdin, which hastily ended on the arrival of the
+news that the Scots had surprised the town of Berwick, and were
+threatening its castle. Thereupon Edward hastened back home. He had
+to keep the Scots quiet, before he could attack the French.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] For the Black Prince's career in Aquitaine,
+see Moisant, <i>Le Prince Noir en Aquitaine</i> (1894)</p>
+
+<p>When the Black Prince reached Bordeaux, he received a warm
+welcome from the Gascons, and at once set out at the head of an
+army, partly English and partly Gascon, on a foray into the enemy's
+territory. He made his way from Bazas to the upper Adour through
+the county of Armagnac, whose lord had incurred his wrath by his
+devotion to the house of Valois and his invasions of the Gascon
+duchy. Thence he worked eastwards, avoiding the greater towns, and
+plundering and devastating wherever he could. The Count of
+Armagnac, the French commander in the south, watched his progress
+from Toulouse, and prudently avoided any open encounter. The prince
+approached within a few miles of the capital of Languedoc, but
+found an easier prey in the rich towns and fertile plains in the
+valley of the Aude. He captured the "town" of Carcassonne, though
+he failed to reduce the fortress-crowned height of the "city". At
+Narbonne also he took the "town" and left the "city". His progress
+spread terror throughout the south, and the clerks of the
+university of Montpellier and the papal <i>curia</i> at Avignon
+trembled lest he should continue his raid in their direction. But
+November came, and Edward found it prudent to retire, choosing on
+his westward journey a route parallel to that which he had
+previously adopted. He had achieved his real purpose in desolating
+the region from which the French had derived the chief resources
+for their attacks on Gascony. The raiders boasted that Carcassonne
+was larger than York, Limoux not less great than Carcassonne, and
+Narbonne nearly <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg387" id=
+"pg387">387</a></span>as populous as London. Over this fair region,
+where wine and oil were more abundant than water, the black band of
+desolation, which had already marked so many of the fairest
+provinces of France, was cruelly extended.</p>
+
+<p>The prince kept his Christmas at Bordeaux. Even during the
+winter his troops remained active. Most of the Agenais was
+conquered by January, 1356, while in February the capture of
+P&eacute;rigueux opened up the way of invasion northwards.
+Meanwhile the prince mustered his forces for a vigorous summer
+campaign. While the towns on the Isle and the Lot were yielding to
+his son, Edward III. was avenging the capture of Berwick by a
+winter campaign in the Lothians. Before the end of January, 1356,
+Berwick was once more in his hands. Thence he passed to Roxburgh,
+where Edward Balliol surrendered to him all his rights over the
+Scottish throne. Thenceforth styling himself no longer overlord but
+King of Scotland, Edward mercilessly harried his new subjects. But
+storms dispersed the English victualling ships, and Edward's men
+could not live in winter on the country that they had made a
+wilderness. In a few weeks they were back over the border, though
+their raid was long remembered in Scottish tradition as the Burnt
+Candlemas.</p>
+
+<p>Another breach between Charles of Navarre and his father-in-law
+again opened to the English the way to Normandy. John lost patience
+at Charles's renewed intrigues, and in April arrested him and his
+friends at Rouen. Thereupon his brother, Philip of Navarre, rose in
+revolt. With him were many of the Norman lords, including Geoffrey
+of Harcourt, lord of Saint-Sauveur. The English were once more
+invited to Normandy, and on June 18 Lancaster landed at La Hougue
+with the double mission of aiding the Norman rebels and
+establishing John of Montfort, then arrived at man's estate, in his
+Breton duchy. It was the first English invasion of northern France
+during the war, in which they had, as in Brittany, the co-operation
+of a strong party in the land. The Navarre and Harcourt influence
+at once secured them the C&ocirc;tentin. Meanwhile, however, the
+French were besieging the fortresses of the county of Evreux. With
+the object of relieving this pressure, Lancaster, immediately after
+his landing, marched into the heart of Normandy, and soon reached
+Verneuil. It looked for the moment as if he were destined to
+emulate the <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg388" id=
+"pg388">388</a></span>exploits of Edward II. in 1346. But he
+abruptly turned back, leaving the county of Evreux to fall into
+French hands. The permanent result of his intervention was to
+reduce Normandy to a state of anarchy nearly as complete as that of
+Brittany. In the autumn Lancaster at last made his way to the land
+of which he had had nominal charge since the previous year. He left
+Philip of Navarre as commander in Normandy, and the war was
+supported from local resources. The C&ocirc;tentin being in
+friendly hands, Lancaster attacked the strongholds of the Blois
+party, which had hitherto been exempt from the war. In October he
+laid siege to Rennes and was detained before its walls until July,
+1357, when he agreed to desist from the attack in return for a huge
+ransom. Lancaster then established young Montfort as duke. At the
+same time Charles of Blois, released from his long imprisonment,
+once more reappeared in his wife's inheritance, though, as his
+ransom was still but partly paid, his scrupulous honour compelled
+him to abstain from personal intervention in the war. Thus Brittany
+got back both her dukes.</p>
+
+<p>The northern operations in 1356 sink into insignificance when
+compared with the exploits of the Black Prince in the south. After
+the capture of P&eacute;rigueux, there had been some idea of the
+prince making a northward movement and joining hands with Lancaster
+on the Loire. When Lancaster retired from Verneuil, however, the
+Black Prince was still in the valley of the Dordogne. Even when all
+was ready, attacks on the Gascon duchy compelled him to divert a
+large portion of his army for the defence of his own frontiers. Not
+until August 9 was he able to advance from P&eacute;rigueux to
+Brant&ocirc;me into hostile territory. It was a month too late to
+co-operate with Lancaster, and the 7,000 men, who followed his
+banners, were in equipment rather prepared for a raid than for a
+systematic conquest.</p>
+
+<p>Edward's outward march was in a generally northerly direction.
+Leaving Limoges on his right, he crossed the Vienne lower down the
+stream, and thence he led his troops over the Creuse at Argenton
+and over the Indre at Ch&acirc;teauroux. When he traversed the Cher
+at Vierzon, his followers rejoiced that they had at last got out of
+the limits of the ancient duchy of Guienne and were invading the
+actual kingdom of France. On penetrating beyond the Cher into the
+melancholy flats of the Sologne, the prince encountered the first
+serious resistance. He then turned <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg389" id="pg389">389</a></span>abruptly to the west, and chased
+the enemy into the strong castle of Romorantin, which he captured
+on September 3. There he heard that John of France, who had
+gathered together a huge force, was holding the passages over the
+Loire. Edward marched to meet the enemy, and on September 7 reached
+the neighbourhood of Tours, where he tarried in his camp for three
+days. But the few bridges were destroyed or strongly guarded, and
+the men-at-arms found it quite impossible to make their way over
+the broad and swift Loire. Moreover the news came that John had
+crossed the river near Blois, and was hurrying southwards.
+Thereupon the Black Prince turned in the same direction, seeing in
+this southward march his best chance of getting to close quarters.
+The French host was enormously the superior in numbers, but after
+Morlaix, Mauron, and Crecy, mere numerical disparity weighed but
+lightly on an English commander.</p>
+
+<p>For some days the armies marched in the same direction in
+parallel lines, neither knowing very clearly the exact position of
+the other. On September 14 Edward reached Ch&acirc;telherault on
+the Vienne. His troops were weary and war-worn, and his transport
+inordinately swollen by spoils. He rested two days at
+Ch&acirc;telherault, but was again on the move on hearing that the
+enemy was at Chauvigny, situated some twenty miles higher up the
+Vienne. Edward at once started in pursuit, only to find that the
+French had retired before him to Poitiers, eighteen miles due west
+of Chauvigny. Careless of his convoy, he hurried across country in
+the hope of catching the elusive enemy, but was only in time to
+fight a rear-guard skirmish at a manor named La Chaboterie, on the
+road from Chauvigny to Poitiers, on September, 17. That night the
+English lay in a wood hard by the scene of action, suffering
+terribly from want of water. Next day, Sunday, September 18, Edward
+pursued the French as near as he could to Poitiers, halting in
+battle array within a league of the town. A further check on his
+impatience now ensued. Innocent VI.'s legate, the Cardinal
+Talleyrand, brother of the Count of P&eacute;rigord, who was with
+the French army, crossed to the rival host with an offer of
+mediation. Edward received the cardinal courteously and spent most
+of the day in negotiations. But the French showed no eagerness to
+bring matters to a conclusion, and as every hour reinforcements
+poured into the enemy's camp the scanty patience of the English was
+exhausted. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg390" id=
+"pg390">390</a></span>They declared that the legate's talk about
+saving the effusion of Christian blood was only a blind to gain
+time, so that the French might overwhelm them. Edward broke off the
+negotiations, and, retiring to a position more remote from the
+enemy, passed the night quietly. Early next morning the cardinal
+again sought to treat, but this time his offers were rejected. On
+his withdrawal, the French attack began.</p>
+
+<p>The topographical details of the battle of Poitiers of September
+19, 1356, cannot be determined with certainty. We only know that
+the place of the encounter was called Maupertuis, which is
+generally identified with a farm now called La Cardinerie, some six
+miles south-east of Poitiers, and a little distance to the north of
+the Benedictine abbey of Nouaille. The abbey formed the southern
+limit of the field. On the west the place of combat was skirted by
+the little river Miausson, which winds its way through marshes in a
+deep-cut valley, girt by wooded hills. The French left their horses
+at Poitiers, having resolved, perhaps on the advice of a Scottish
+knight, Sir William Douglas, to fight on foot, after the English
+and Scottish fashion, and as they had already fought at Mauron and
+elsewhere. As at Mauron, a small band of cavalry was retained, both
+for the preliminary skirmishing which then usually heralded a
+battle, and in the hope of riding down some of the archers. But the
+French did not fully understand the English tactics, and took no
+care to combine men-at-arms with archers or crossbowmen, though
+these were less important against an army weak in archers and
+largely consisting of Gascons. Of the four "battles" the first,
+under the Marshals Audrehem and Clermont, included the little
+cavalry contingent; the second was under Charles, Duke of Normandy,
+a youth of nineteen; the third under the Duke of Orleans, the
+king's brother; and the rear was commanded by the king.</p>
+
+<p>The English army spent the night before the battle beyond the
+Miausson, but in the morning the prince, fearing an ambuscade
+behind the hill of Nouaill&eacute; on the east bank, abandoned his
+original position and crossed the stream in order to occupy it. He
+divided his forces into three "battles," led respectively by
+himself, Warwick, and William Montague, since 1343 by his father's
+death Earl of Salisbury. Though he found no enemy there, he
+remained with his "battle" on the hill, because it commanded the
+slopes to the north over on which the French were <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg391" id="pg391">391</a></span>now advancing.
+His remote position threw the brunt of the fighting upon the
+divisions of Warwick and Salisbury. They were stationed side by
+side in advance of him on ground lower than that held by him, but
+higher than that of the enemy, and beset with bushes and vineyards
+which sloped down on the left towards the marshes of the Miausson.
+Some distance in front of their position, a long hedge and ditch
+divided the upland, on which the "battles" of Warwick and Salisbury
+were stationed, from the fields in which the French were arrayed.
+At its upper end, remote from the Miausson, where Salisbury's
+command lay, the hedge was broken by a gap through which a farmer's
+track connected the fields on each side of it. The first fighting
+began when the English sent a small force of horsemen through the
+gap to engage with the French cavalry beyond. While Audrehem, on
+the French right, suspended his attack to watch the result,
+Clermont made his way straight for the gap, hoping to take
+Salisbury's division, on the upper or right-hand station, in flank.
+Before he reached the gap, however, he found the hedge and the
+approaches to the cart-road held in force by the English archers.
+Meanwhile the mail-clad men and horses of Audrehem's cavalry had
+approached dangerously near the left of the English line, where
+Warwick was stationed. Their complete armour made riders and steeds
+alike impervious to the English arrows, until the prince, seeing
+from his hill how things were proceeding, ordered some archers to
+station themselves on the marshy ground near the Miausson, in
+advance of the left flank of the English army. From this position
+they shot at the unprotected parts of the French horses, and drove
+the little band of cavalry from the field. By that time Clermon's
+attack on the gap had been defeated, and so both sections of the
+first French division retired.</p>
+
+<p>Then came the stronger "battle" of the eldest son of the French
+king. The fight grew more fierce, and for a long time the issue
+remained doubtful. The English archers exhausted their arrows to
+little purpose, and the dismounted French men-at-arms, offering a
+less sure mark than the horsemen, forced their way to the English
+ranks and fought a desperate hand-to-hand conflict with them. At
+last the Duke of Normandy's followers were driven back. Thereupon a
+panic seized the division commanded by the Duke of Orleans, which
+fled from <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg392" id=
+"pg392">392</a></span>the field without measuring swords with the
+enemy. The victors themselves were in a desperate plight. Many were
+wounded, and all were weary, especially the men-at-arms encased in
+heavy plate mail. The flight of Orleans gave them a short respite:
+but they soon had to face the assault of the rear battle of the
+enemy, gallantly led by the king. "No battle," we are told, "ever
+lasted so long. In former fights men knew, by the time that the
+fourth or the sixth arrow had been discharged, on which side
+victory was to be. But here a single archer shot with coolness a
+hundred arrows, and still neither side gave way."[1] At last the
+bowmen had only the arrows they snatched from the bodies of the
+dead and dying, and when these were exhausted, they were reduced to
+throwing stones at their foes, or to struggle in the
+<i>m&ecirc;l&eacute;e</i>, with sword and buckler, side by side
+with the men-at-arms. But the Black Prince from his hill had
+watched the course of the encounter, and at the right moment, when
+his friends were almost worn out, marched down, and made the fight
+more even. Before joining himself in the engagement, Edward had
+ordered the Captal de Buch, the best of his Gascons, to lead a
+little band, under cover of the hill, round the French position and
+attack the enemy in the rear. At first the Anglo-Gascon army was
+discouraged, thinking that the captal had fled, but they still
+fought on. Suddenly the captal and his men assaulted the French
+rear. This settled the hard fought day. Surrounded on every side,
+the French perished in their ranks or surrendered in despair. King
+John was taken prisoner, fighting desperately to the last, and with
+him was captured his youngest son Philip, the future Duke of
+Burgundy, a boy of twelve, whose epithet of "the Bold" was earned
+by his precocious valour in the struggle. Before nightfall the
+English host had sole possession of the field, and the best fought,
+best directed, and most important of the battles of the war ended
+in the complete triumph of the invaders.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Eulogium Hist.</i>, iii., 225.</p>
+
+<p>As after Crecy, the victors were too weak to continue the
+campaign. Next day they began their slow march back to their base.
+On October 2 Edward reached Libourne, and a few days later
+conducted the captive king into the Gascon capital. They were soon
+followed by the Cardinal Talleyrand on whose insistence the prince
+agreed to resume negotiations. On March <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg393" id="pg393">393</a></span>23, 1357, a truce to last
+until 1359 was arranged at Bordeaux. On May 24 the prince led the
+vanquished king through the streets of London.</p>
+
+<p>The English, weary of the burden of war, strove to use their
+advantages to procure a stable peace. Though Charles of Blois was
+released, he was muzzled for the future, and when John joined his
+ally David Bruce in the Tower, it was the obvious game of Edward to
+exact terms from his prisoners. David's spirit was broken, and he
+was glad to accept a treaty sealed in October, 1357, at Berwick, by
+which he was released for a ransom of 100,000 marks, to be paid by
+ten yearly instalments. The task was harder for a poor country like
+Scotland than the redemption of Richard I. had been for England. On
+hostages being given, David was released, and Edward, without
+relinquishing his own pretensions to be King of Scots, took no
+steps to enforce his claim. The event showed that Edward knew his
+man. The instalments of ransom could not be regularly paid, and
+David never became free from his obligations. Nothing save the
+tenacity of the Scottish nobles prevented him from accepting
+Edward's proposals to write off the arrears of his ransom in return
+for his accepting either the English king himself or his son,
+Lionel of Antwerp, as heir of Scotland. This attitude brought David
+into conflict with his natural heir, Robert, the Steward of
+Scotland, the son of his sister Margaret. The tension between uncle
+and nephew forced the Scots king to remain on friendly terms with
+Edward. For the rest of the reign, Scottish history was occupied by
+aristocratic feuds, by financial expedients for raising the king's
+ransom, by the gradual development of the practice of entrusting
+the powers of parliament to those committees of the estates
+subsequently famous as the lords of the articles, by David's
+matrimonial troubles after Joan's death, and by his unpopular
+visits to the court of his neighbour. Warfare between the realms
+there was none, save for the chronic border feuds. When David died
+in 1371, the Steward of Scotland land mounted the throne as Robert
+II. This first of the Stewart kings went back to the policy of the
+French alliance, but was too weak to inflict serious mischief on
+England.</p>
+
+<p>In January, 1358, preliminaries of peace were also arranged with
+the captive King of France, and sent to Paris and Avignon for
+ratification. Innocent VI. was overjoyed at his success, and <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg394" id="pg394">394</a></span>Frenchmen
+were willing to make any sacrifices to bring back their monarch,
+for immediately after Poitiers a storm of disorder burst over
+France. The states general met a few weeks after the battle, and
+the regent, Charles of Normandy, was helpless in their hands. This
+was the time of the power of Stephen Marcel, provost of the
+merchants of Paris, and of Robert Lecoq, Bishop of Laon. But the
+movement in Paris was neither in the direction of parliamentary
+government nor of democracy, and few men have less right to be
+regarded as popular heroes than Marcel and Lecoq. The estates were
+manipulated in the interests of aristocratic intrigue, and, behind
+the ostensible leaders, was the sinister influence of Charles of
+Navarre, who availed himself of the desolation of France to play
+his own game. For a time he was the darling of the Paris mob.
+Innocent VI. was deceived by his protestations of zeal for peace.
+As grandson of Louis X. he aspired to the French throne, and was
+anxious to prevent John's return. Edward had no good-will for a
+possible rival, but it was his interest to keep up the anarchy, and
+he had no scruple in backing up Charles. There was talk of Edward
+becoming King of France and holding the maritime provinces, while
+Charles as his vassal should be lord of Paris and the interior
+districts. English mercenaries, who had lost their occupation with
+the truce, enlisted themselves in the service of Navarre. Robert
+Knowles, James Pipe, and other ancient captains of Edward fought
+for their own hand in Normandy, and built up colossal fortunes out
+of the spoils of the country. Some of these hirelings appeared in
+Paris, where the citizens welcomed allies of the Navarrese, even
+when they were foreign adventurers. However, Charles went so far
+that a strong reaction deprived him of all power. He was able to
+prevent the ratification of the preliminaries of 1358. But in that
+year the death of Marcel was followed by the return of the regent
+to Paris, the expulsion of the foreign mercenaries, the collapse of
+the estates, and the restoration of the capital to the national
+cause. The short-lived horrors wreaked by the revolted peasantry
+were followed by the more enduring atrocities of the nobles who
+suppressed them. Military adventurers pillaged France from end to
+end, but the worst troubles ended when Charles of Navarre lost his
+pre-eminence.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] An admirable account of the state of France
+between 1356 and 1358 is in Denifie, <i>La Desolation des
+&Eacute;glises en France pendant la Guerre de Cent Ans</i>, ii.,
+134-316 (1899).</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg395" id=
+"pg395">395</a></span>When the truce of Bordeaux was on the verge
+of expiration, the French king negotiated a second treaty by which
+he bought off the threatened renewal of war. This was the treaty of
+London, March 24, 1359, by which John yielded up to Edward in full
+sovereignty the ancient empire of Henry II. Normandy, the
+suzerainty of Brittany, Anjou, and Maine, Aquitaine within its
+ancient limits, Calais and Ponthieu with the surrounding districts,
+were the territorial concessions in return for which Edward
+renounced his claim to the French throne. The vast ransom of
+4,000,000 golden crowns was to be paid for John's redemption; the
+chief princes of the blood were to be hostages for him, and in case
+of failure to observe the terms of the treaty he was to return to
+his captivity. The only provision in any sense favourable to France
+was that by which Edward promised to aid John against the King of
+Navarre.</p>
+
+<p>The treaty of London excited the liveliest anger in France. "We
+had rather," declared the assembled estates, "endure the great
+mischief that has afflicted us so long, than suffer the noble realm
+of France thus to be diminished and defrauded."[1] Spurred up by
+these patriotic manifestations, the regent rejected the treaty, and
+prepared as best he could for the storm of Edward's wrath which
+soon burst upon his country. Anxious to unite forces against the
+national enemy, he made peace with Charles of Navarre, who,
+abandoned by Edward, was delighted to be restored to his
+estates.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Froissart, v., 180, ed. Luce.</p>
+
+<p>Edward concentrated all his efforts on a new invasion of France.
+In November, 1359, he marched out of Calais with all his forces.
+His four sons attended him, and there was a great muster of earls
+and experienced warriors. Among the less known members of the host
+was the young Londoner, Geoffrey Chaucer, a page in Lionel of
+Antwerp's household. In three columns, each following a separate
+route, the English made their way from Calais towards the
+south-east. The French avoided a pitched battle, but hung on the
+skirts of the army and slew, or captured, stragglers and foragers.
+Chaucer was among those thus taken prisoner. Edward's ambition was
+to take Reims, and have himself crowned there as King of France. On
+December 4 he arrived at the gates of the city, and besieged it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg396" id="pg396">396</a></span>for
+six weeks. Then on January 11, 1360, the King despaired of success,
+abandoned the siege, and marched southwards through Champagne
+towards Burgundy. Despite the check at Reims, he was still so
+formidable that in March Duke Philip of Burgundy concluded with him
+the shameful treaty of Guillon, by which he purchased exemption
+from invasion by an enormous ransom and a promise of
+neutrality.</p>
+
+<p>Edward next turned towards Paris. The news that the French had
+effected a successful descent on Winchelsea and behaved with
+extreme brutality to the inhabitants, infuriated the English
+troopers, who perpetrated a hundredfold worse deeds in the suburbs
+of the French capital. It seemed as if the war was about to end
+with the siege and capture of Paris. The regent, unable to meet the
+English in the field, fell back in despair on negotiation. Innocent
+VI. again offered his good services. John sent from his English
+prison full powers to his son to make what terms he would, and on
+April 3, which was Good Friday, ambassadors from each power met
+under papal intervention at Longjumeau; but Edward still insisted
+on the terms of the treaty of London, for which the French were not
+yet prepared. On April 7 Edward began the siege of Paris by an
+attack on the southern suburbs, but was so little successful that
+he withdrew five days later. A terrible tempest destroyed his
+provision train and devastated his army. These disasters made
+Edward anxious for peace, and the negotiations, after two
+interruptions, were successfully renewed at Chartres, and
+facilitated by the signature of a truce for a year. The work of a
+definitive treaty was pushed forward, and on May 8, preliminaries
+of peace were signed between the prince of Wales and Charles of
+France at the neighbouring hamlet of Br&eacute;tigni, whither the
+peacemakers had transferred their sittings. There were still
+formalities to accomplish which took up many months. King John was
+escorted in July by the Prince of Wales to Calais, and in October
+he was joined by Edward III., who had returned to England about the
+time that the negotiations at Br&eacute;tigni were over. The peace
+took its final form at Calais in October 24, 1360. Next day John
+was released, and ratified the convention as a free man on French
+soil. This permanent treaty is more properly styled the treaty of
+Calais than the treaty of Br&eacute;tigni; but the alterations
+between the <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg397" id=
+"pg397">397</a></span>two were only significant in one particular
+respect. At Calais the English agreed to omit a clause inserted at
+Br&eacute;tigni by which Edward renounced his claims to the French
+throne, and John his claims over the allegiance of the inhabitants
+of the ceded districts. As the Calais treaty of October alone had
+the force of law, it was a real triumph of French diplomacy to have
+suppressed so vital a feature in the definitive document.[1] Even
+with this alleviation the terms were sufficiently humiliating to
+France. Edward and his heirs were to receive in perpetuity, "and in
+the manner in which the kings of France had held them," an ample
+territory both in southern and northern France. All Aquitaine was
+henceforth to be English, including Poitou, Saintonge,
+P&eacute;rigord, Angoumois, Limousin, Quercy, Rouergue, Agenais,
+and Bigorre. The greatest feudatories of these districts, the
+friendly Count of Foix as well as the hostile Count of Armagnac,
+and the Breton pretender to the viscounty of Limoges, were to do
+homage to Edward for all their lands within these bounds. Nor was
+this all. The county of Ponthieu, including Montreuil-sur-mer, was
+restored to its English lords, and added to the pale of Calais,
+which was to include the whole county of Gu&icirc;nes, made up two
+considerable northern dominions for Edward. With these cessions
+were included all adjacent islands, and all islands held by the
+English king at that time, so that the Channel islands were by
+implication recognised as English.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] On the importance of this, see the paper of
+MM. Petit-Dutaillis and P. Collier, <i>La Diplomatie
+fran&ccedil;aise et le Trait&eacute; de Br&eacute;tigny</i> in
+<i>Le Moyen Age</i>, 2e serie, tome i. (1897), pp. 1-35.</p>
+
+<p>The ransom of John was fixed at 3,000,000 gold crowns, that is
+£500,000 sterling. The vastness of this sum can be realised by
+remembering that the ordinary revenue of the English crown in time
+of peace did not much exceed &pound;60,000, while the addition to
+that of a sum of &pound;150,000 involved an effort which only a
+popular war could dispose Englishmen to make. Of this ransom
+600,000 crowns were to be paid at once, and the rest in annual
+instalments of 400,000 crowns until the whole payment was effected.
+During this period the prisoners from Poitiers, several of the
+king's near relatives, a long list of the noblest names in France,
+and citizens of some of its wealthiest cities, were to remain as
+hostages in Edward's hands. As to the Breton succession, Edward and
+John engaged to do <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg398" id=
+"pg398">398</a></span>their best to effect a peaceful settlement.
+If they failed in attaining this, the rival claimants were to fight
+it out among themselves, England and France remaining neutral.
+Whichever of the two became duke was to do homage to the King of
+France, and John of Montfort was, in any case, to be restored to
+his county of Montfort. A similar care for Edward's friends was
+shown in the article which preserved for Philip of Navarre his
+hereditary domains in Normandy. Forfeitures and outlawries were to
+be pardoned, and the rights of private persons to be respected.
+Nevertheless Calais was to remain at Edward's entire disposal, and
+the burgesses, dispossessed by him, were not to be reinstated. The
+French renounced their alliance with the Scots, and the English
+theirs with the Flemings. Time was allowed to carry out these
+complicated stipulations, and, by way of compensating Edward for
+the significant omission which has been mentioned, elaborate
+provisions were made for the mutual execution at a later date of
+charters of renunciation, by which Edward abandoned his claim to
+the French throne and John the over-lordship of the districts
+yielded to Edward. These were to be exchanged at Bruges about a
+year later.</p>
+
+<p>England rejoiced at the conclusion of so brilliant a peace, and
+laid no stress on the subtle change in the conditions which made
+the treaty far less definitive in reality than in appearance. In
+France the faithful flocked to the churches to give thanks for
+deliverance from the long anarchy. The perfect courtesy and good
+feeling which the two kings had shown to each other gilded the
+concluding ceremonies with a ray of chivalry. John was released
+almost at once, and allowed to retain with him in France some of
+the hostages, including his valiant son Philip, the companion of
+his captivity. John made Edward's peace with Louis of Flanders, and
+Edward persuaded John to pardon Charles and Philip of Navarre. At
+last the two weary nations looked forward to a long period of
+repose.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
+
+<h4>THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR FROM THE TREATY OF CALAIS TO THE TRUCE
+OF BRUGES.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg399" id=
+"pg399">399</a></span>It was an easier matter to conclude the
+treaty of Calais than to carry it out. Troubles followed the
+release of the French king and the expiration of the year during
+which the two parties were to yield up the ceded territory and
+effect the renunciations of their respective claims. John did his
+best to keep faith in both these matters. He ordered his vassals to
+submit themselves to their new lord, and appointed commissioners to
+hand over the lost provinces to the agents of the English king. In
+July, 1361, Sir John Chandos, Edward's lieutenant in France,
+received the special mission of taking possession of the new
+acquisitions in the name of his master. Chandos' reputation as a
+soldier made him acceptable to the French, and being recognised by
+the treaty as lord of Saint-Sauveur in the C&ocirc;tentin, he was
+interested in maintaining good relations between the two realms. He
+began his work by taking possession of Poitiers and Poitou, but
+found that many of the descendants of the greedy lords, who, more
+than a hundred years before, had played off Henry III against St.
+Louis, abandoned the rule of John with undisguised reluctance. It
+was worse with the towns, where national sentiment was stronger. La
+Rochelle held out for months, and, when its notables at last
+submitted, they declared: "We will accept the English with our lips
+but never with our hearts". Much patriotic feeling was manifested
+in Quercy. The consuls of Cahors made their submission, weeping and
+groaning. "Alas!" they declared, "how odious it is to lose our
+natural lord, and to pass over to a master we know not. But it is
+not we who abandon the King of France. It is he who, against our
+wishes, hands us over, like orphans, to the hands of the stranger."
+It was not until two years after the signing of the treaty that
+Edward entered into <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg400" id=
+"pg400">400</a></span>possession of the bulk of the lands granted
+to him. Even then there were districts in Poitou, notably
+Belleville, which never became English at all. One of the last
+districts to yield was Rouergue, whose count, John of Armagnac,
+only made his submission under the compulsion of irresistible
+necessity.</p>
+
+<p>It was even more difficult to get the English out of the lands
+which the treaty had assigned to the French. These districts were
+largely held by companies of mercenaries, little under Edward's
+control and indisposed to yield up the conquests won by their own
+hands because their nominal lord had thought fit to make a treaty
+with the French king. Despite the orders of Edward, the English
+garrisons in the north and centre of France flatly refused to
+surrender their strongholds. In Maine, Hugh Calveley took Bertrand
+du Guesclin prisoner when he sought to receive the submission of
+his castles, and only released him on payment of a heavy ransom. In
+Normandy, Du Guesclin had to buy off James Pipe, who dominated all
+the central district from the fortified abbey of Cormeilles, and to
+crush John Jowel in a pitched battle near Lisieux. Even when the
+castles were surrendered, the garrisons joined with each other to
+establish societies of warriors that now inflicted terrible woes on
+France. The exploits of these free companies hardly belong to
+English history, though many of their leaders and a large
+proportion of the rank and file were Englishmen. Cruel, fierce, and
+uncouth, they still preserved in all military dealings the strict
+discipline which had taught the English armies the way to victory.
+The combination of the order of a settled host with the rapacity of
+a gang of freebooters made them as irresistible as they were
+destructive. Though Edward formally repudiated them, it was more
+than suspected that they were secretly playing his game.</p>
+
+<p>Before long, this guerilla warfare became consolidated into
+military operations on a large scale. Charles of Navarre once more
+profited by the disorder of France to bring himself to the front.
+In 1361 John had availed himself of the death of Philip of Rouvres
+to treat the duchy of Burgundy as a lapsed fief, and conferred it
+on his youngest son, Philip the Bold. Charles then claimed to be
+the heir of Burgundy, and while he personally directed the forces
+of disorder in the south, his agents united with the English
+<i>condottieri</i> in Normandy. John Jowel still <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg401" id="pg401">401</a></span>held tight to
+his Norman conquests, and was, by Edward's direction, fighting
+openly for Charles of Navarre. The Captal de Buch, the hero of
+Poitiers, hurried from Gascony to protect the Navarrese lands from
+the invasion of Bertrand du Guesclin. On May 16, 1364, the little
+armies of the Captal and the Breton partisan met at Cocherel on the
+Eure, where Du Guesclin cleverly won the first important victory
+gained by the French in the open field during the whole course of
+the war. The Captal was taken prisoner, and the establishment of Du
+Guesclin in some of Charles of Navarre's Norman fiefs deprived the
+intriguer of his opportunities to do mischief in the north. Charles
+of Navarre's career was not yet over; but henceforth his chief
+field was his southern kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>The victorious Du Guesclin turned his attention to his native
+Brittany, where the war of Blois and Montfort still went on, for
+Joan of Penthi&egrave;vre insisted so strongly upon her rights that
+the efforts of Edward and John to end the contest had been without
+result. In 1362 John de Montfort was at last entrusted with the
+government of Brittany, and Du Guesclin quitted the service of
+France for that of Charles of Blois, that the treaty of 1360 might
+remain unbroken. But as in the early wars, the army of Blois was
+mainly French, and the host of Montfort was commanded by the
+Englishman, John Chandos, and largely consisted of English
+men-at-arms and archers. Calveley, Knowles, and the Breton Oliver
+de Clisson were among the captains of Duke John's forces.</p>
+
+<p>The decisive engagement took place on September 29, 1364, on the
+plateau, north of Auray, which is still marked by the church of St.
+Michael, erected as a thank-offering by the victor. It was another
+Poitiers on a small scale. The Anglo-Breton army held a good
+defensive position, facing northwards, with its back on the town of
+Auray. The troops of Charles of Blois and Du Guesclin advanced to
+attack them with more ardour than discipline or skill. Both sides
+fought on foot. The French knights had at last learnt to meet the
+storm of English arrows by strengthening their armour and by
+protecting themselves by large shields. Thus, as at Poitiers, they
+had little difficulty in making their way up to the enemy's ranks.
+But their order was confused, and they thought of nothing but the
+fierce delights of the <i>m&ecirc;l&eacute;e</i>. The Montfort
+party showed more intelligence, and <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg402" id="pg402">402</a></span>Chandos, like the captal at
+Poitiers, fell suddenly upon the flank of one of the enemy's
+divisions. This settled the fight; Charles of Blois was slain, Du
+Guesclin taken prisoner, and their army utterly scattered. Auray
+ended the war of the Breton succession. Even Joan of
+Penthi&egrave;vre was at last willing to treat. In 1365 the treaty
+of Gu&eacute;rande was signed, by which. Montfort was recognised as
+John IV. of Brittany, and did homage to the French crown. Joan was
+consoled by remaining in possession of the county of
+Penthi&egrave;vre and the viscounty of Limoges. Practically her
+defeat was an English victory, and Montfort remained in his duchy
+so long only as English influence prevailed. A second step towards
+the pacification of the north was made when the troubles in
+Brittany were ended within a few months of the destruction of the
+power of Charles the Bad in Normandy.</p>
+
+<p>The free companies lost their chief hunting-grounds; and a
+further relief came when some of them, like the White Company,
+found a better market for their swords in Italy. With all their
+faults, the companies opened out a career to talent such as had
+seldom been found before. John Hawkwood, the leader of the White
+Company, was an Essex man of the smaller landed class. He had
+played but a subordinate figure beside Knowles, Calveley, Pipe, and
+Jowel; but in Italy he won for himself the name of the greatest
+strategist of his age. Thus, though at the cost of murder and
+pillage, the English made themselves talked about all over the
+western world. "In my youth," wrote Petrarch, "the Britons, whom we
+call Angles or English, had the reputation of being the most timid
+of the barbarians. Now they are the most warlike of peoples. They
+have overturned the ancient military glory of the French by a
+series of victories so numerous and unexpected that those, who were
+not long since inferior to the wretched Scots, have so crushed by
+fire and sword the whole realm that, on a recent journey, I could
+hardly persuade myself that it was the France that I had seen in
+former years."[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Epistolæ Familiares</i>, iii., Ep. 14, p.
+162, ed. Fracassetti.</p>
+
+<p>It was to little purpose that King John laboured to redeem his
+plighted word and make France what it had been before the war.
+Though in November, 1361, neither he nor Edward sent commissioners
+to Bruges, where, according to the treaty of <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg403" id="pg403">403</a></span>Calais, the
+charters of renunciation were to be exchanged, John offered in 1362
+to carry out his promise. Edward, however, for reasons of his own,
+made no response to his advances. The result was that the
+renunciations were never made, and so the essential condition of
+the original settlement remained unfulfilled. The matter passed
+almost unnoticed at the time as a mere formality, but in later
+years Edward's lack of faith brought its own punishment in giving
+the French king a plausible excuse for still claiming suzerainty
+over the ceded provinces. Perhaps Edward still cherished the
+ambition of resuscitating his pretensions to the French crown. He
+found it as hard to give up a claim as ever his grandfather had
+done.</p>
+
+<p>John's good faith was conspicuously evinced by the efforts he
+made to raise the instalments of his ransom. His payments were in
+arrears: some of the hostages left in free custody by Edward's
+generosity broke their parole and escaped; and among them was his
+own son, Louis, Duke of Anjou. The father felt it his duty to step
+into the place thus left vacant. In 1363 he returned to his English
+prison, where he died in 1364, surrounded with every courtesy and
+attention that Edward could lavish upon him. During the last months
+of his life, England received visits from two other kings, David of
+Scotland and the Lusignan lord of Cyprus, who still called himself
+King of Jerusalem, and was wandering through the courts of Europe
+to stir up interest in the projected crusade.</p>
+
+<p>Charles of Normandy then became Charles V. He was no
+knight-errant like his father, and his diplomatic gifts, tact, and
+patience made him much better fitted than John for outwitting his
+English enemies and for restoring order to France. Slowly but
+surely he grappled with the companies, and at last an opening was
+found for their skill in the civil war which broke out in Castile.
+Peter the Cruel, since 1350 King of Castile, had made himself
+odious to many of his subjects. At last his bastard brother, Henry
+of Trastamara, rose in revolt against him. Peter, however, was
+capable and energetic, and not without support from certain
+sections of the Castilians. Moreover, he was friendly with Charles
+of Navarre, and allied with Edward III. On the other hand Henry
+found powerful backing from the King of Aragon, and made an appeal
+to the King of France. This gave Charles V. the chance he wanted.
+He hated Peter, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg404" id=
+"pg404">404</a></span>who was reputed to have murdered his own
+wife, Blanche of Bourbon sister of the Queen of France, and in
+1365 he agreed to give Henry assistance. Du Guesclin welded the
+scattered companies into an army and led them against the Spanish
+king. The pope fell in with the scheme as an indirect way of
+realising his crusading ambition. When Henry had become King of
+Castile, the companies would go on to attack the Moors of Granada.
+English and French mercenaries flocked gladly together under Du
+Guesclin's banner. Edward in vain ordered his subjects not to take
+part in an invasion of the lands of his friend and cousin, Peter of
+Castile. Though Chandos declined at the last moment to follow Du
+Guesclin into the peninsula, Sir Hugh Calveley would not desist
+from the quest of fresh adventure, even at the orders of his lord.
+Professional and knightly feeling bound Calveley to Du Guesclin
+more closely than their difference of nationality separated them,
+so that Calveley took his part in the Castilian campaign with
+perfect loyally to his ancient enemy. In December, 1365, Du
+Guesclin and his followers made their way through Roussillon and
+Aragon into Castile. The spring of 1366 saw Peter a fugitive in
+Aquitaine, and Henry of Trastamara crowned Henry II. of Castile.
+Most of the companies then went home, though Du Guesclin and
+Calveley remained to support the new king's throne.</p>
+
+<p>The deposed tyrant went to Bordeaux, where since 1363 the Black
+Prince had been resident as Prince of Aquitaine; for in 1362 Edward
+had erected his new possessions into a principality and conferred
+it on his eldest son, in the hope of conciliating the Gascons by
+some pretence of restoring their independence. At Bordeaux Peter
+persuaded the prince to restore him to his throne by force. Edward
+also agreed to support Peter, and sent his third son, John of
+Gaunt, to march through Brittany and Poitou with a powerful English
+reinforcement to his brother's resources, while the lord of
+Aquitaine assembled the whole, strength of his new principality for
+the expedition. At the bidding of his lord, Calveley cheerfully
+abandoned Du Guesclin, and thenceforth fought as courageously on
+the one side as he had previously done on the other. Charles of
+Navarre professed great desire to help forward the invaders, and
+his offers of friendship opened up to the prince the easiest way
+into Spain by way of the pass of Roncesvalles from Saint-<span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg405" id=
+"pg405">405</a></span>Jean-Pied-de-Port to Pamplona, the capital of
+Navarre. In February, 1367, the prince's army made its way in frost
+and snow through the valleys famous in romance. From Pamplona two
+roads diverged to Burgos, the ancient Castilian capital. The easier
+way ran south-westwards through Navarrese territory to the Ebro at
+Logro&ntilde;o, where beyond the river lay the Castilian frontier.
+The more difficult route went westwards through rugged mountains
+and high valleys by way of Salvatierra and Vitoria to a passage
+over the upper Ebro at Miranda. The Black Prince chose the latter
+route, and reached Vitoria in safely. Beyond the town King Henry's
+army held a position so strong that Edward found it impossible to
+dislodge him.</p>
+
+<p>The winter weather still held the upland valleys in its grip
+when March was far advanced. Men and horses suffered terribly from
+cold and hunger, and the prince, seeing that he could not long
+maintain his position, boldly resolved to transfer himself to the
+southern route. A flank march over snow-clad sierras brought him to
+the vale of the Ebro, and, crossing the stream at Logro&ntilde;o,
+he took up his position a few miles south-west of that town, near
+the Castilian village of Navarrete. On the prince's change of front
+King Henry also moved southward, crossing the Ebro a few miles
+above Logro&ntilde;o, and then advanced to N&aacute;jera, a village
+about six miles west of Navarrete, where he once more blocked the
+English path. The prince, however, had the advantage of position
+and could afford to wait until the Castilians attacked. On April 3
+Henry advanced over the little river Najarilla against the enemy.
+The Spanish host fought after a different fashion from that
+practised by both sides in the French wars. Only Du Guesclin and
+the small remnant of the companies which still abode in Spain
+dismounted. The mass of the Castilians remained on their horses.
+Their cavalry was of two sorts: besides a large number of
+men-at-arms bestriding armoured steeds, there were swarms of light
+horsemen, unencumbered by heavy armour and called <i>genitours</i>,
+from being mounted on the fleet Spanish steeds called jennets. The
+desperate valour of Du Guesclin and his followers could not prevent
+utter disaster. Henry fled in panic from the scene; Du Guesclin was
+again a prisoner, and the Najarilla was reddened by the blood of
+the thousands of fugitive Spaniards, for, caught as in a trap at
+the narrow bridge which offered the <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg406" id="pg406">406</a></span><i>sole</i> means of retreat, they
+were massacred without difficulty by the prince's troops. The
+victors marched on to Burgos, and, Don Henry having fled to France,
+Peter was restored with little further trouble to the Castilian
+throne.</p>
+
+<p>The Black Prince remained in Castile all through the summer,
+waiting for the rewards which Don Peter had promised him. His army
+melted away through fever and dysentery, and the prince himself
+contracted the beginnings of a mortal disorder. Thus the crowning
+victory of his career was the last of his triumphs. Like many other
+leaders of chivalry, he had not understood the limitations of his
+resources, and had dissipated on this bootless Spanish campaign
+means scarcely sufficient to grapple with the spirit of
+disaffection already undermining his power in Aquitaine. With
+shattered health and the mere skeleton of his gallant army, he made
+his way back over the Pyrenees. Henceforth misfortune dogged every
+step of his career.</p>
+
+<p>Since 1363 the constant residence of the Black Prince and his
+wife, Joan of Kent, in Gascony, had been broken only by his
+Castilian expedition. It was a wise policy to send the prince to
+hold a permanent court in Aquitaine, such as the land had never
+seen since Richard Coeur de Lion. All that affability,
+magnificence, and chivalry could do to make his domination
+attractive might be confidently anticipated from so brilliant and
+high-minded a knight as the prince of Aquitaine. The court of
+Bordeaux was as brilliant as the court of Windsor. "Never," boasted
+the Chandos Herald,[1] "was such good entertainment as his; for
+every day at his table he had more than four-score knights and four
+times as many squires. There was found all nobleness, merriment,
+freedom, and honour. His subjects loved him, for he did them much
+good." The sulky magnates of the south-west, such as John of
+Armagnac and Gaston Phoebus of Foix, found their bitterness
+tempered by the prince's courtesy, while the boastful knights of
+Gascony looked forward to a career of honourable service under the
+descendant of their ancient dukes. Feastings and tournaments were
+not enough to win all his subjects' hearts; and the Black Prince
+strove with some energy to show that he was a ruler of men as well
+as <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg407" id=
+"pg407">407</a></span>the centre of a court. It is to his credit
+that he cleared his inheritance from the free companies, so that
+Poitou and Limousin enjoyed far more prosperity and tranquillity
+than in the days of French ascendency. Such new taxation as Gascon
+custom allowed was only levied after grants from the three estates.
+Great pains were taken to improve the administration, the judicial
+system, and the coinage. Edward saw that his best policy was to
+rely upon the people of Gascony, and to look with suspicion on the
+great lords. But he did not understand how limited was the
+authority which tradition gave to the dukes of Aquitaine, and he
+was too stiff, too pedantic, too insular, to get on really cordial
+terms with his subjects. He never, like Gaston Phoebus or Richard
+Coeur de Lion, threw himself into the local life, language, and
+traditions of the country.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Le Prince Noir, po&egrave;me du
+h&eacute;raut d'Armes Chandos</i>, pp. 107-108, ed. F. Michel.</p>
+
+<p>The Black Prince's greatest successes were with the towns, and
+especially with those which had been continuously subject to
+English rule. The citizens of Bordeaux, who had feared lest
+Edward's claim to the French crown should involve them in more
+complete subjection, were appeased by promises that they should in
+any case remain subject to the English monarchy. Their liberties
+were increased and their wine trade was fostered, even to the loss
+of English merchants. The other towns were equally contented.
+Edward relied upon them as a counterpoise to the feudal lords, and
+their liberties exempted them from the extraordinary taxes by which
+he strove to restore the equilibrium of his finances. The
+half-independent magnates were soon convinced that their chivalrous
+lord was no friend of aristocratic privilege. Edward, even when
+using their services in war, carefully excluded them from the
+administration. They saw with disgust the chief offices monopolised
+by Englishmen. An English bishop, John Harewell of Bath, was
+Edward's chancellor and confidential adviser. An English knight,
+Thomas Felton, was seneschal of Aquitaine and head of the
+administration. The constableship was assigned to Chandos. The
+seneschalships of the several provinces were mainly in English
+hands. With English notions of the rights of the supreme power, the
+prince paid little attention to the franchises of either lord or
+prelate. He mortally offended John of Armagnac by requiring a
+direct oath of fealty from the Bishop of Rodez, who held all his
+lands of Armagnac as Count of Rouergue. Clerks <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg408" id="pg408">408</a></span>of lesser degree
+were outraged by the prince's attempts to hinder students from
+attending the university of Toulouse.</p>
+
+<p>The Spanish expedition immensely increased the Black Prince's
+difficulties. He exhausted his finances to equip his army, and both
+on their coming and going his soldiers cruelly pillaged the
+country. Edward now dismissed most of his troops and urged them to
+betake themselves to France. In January, 1368, he obtained from the
+estates of Aquitaine a new hearth tax of ten <i>sous</i> a hearth
+for five years. The tax was freely voted and collected from the
+great majority of the payers without trouble. The towns were mainly
+exempt from it by reason of their liberties; and the lesser lords
+were as yet not averse from English rule. But the greater
+feudatories saw in the new hearth-tax a pretext for revolt. They
+had no special zeal for the French monarchy, but the house of
+Valois was weak and far removed from their territories. Their great
+concern was the preservation of their independence, which seemed
+more threatened by a resident prince than by a distant overlord at
+Paris. Even before the imposition of the hearth-tax, the Count of
+Armagnac entered into a secret treaty with Charles V., who promised
+to increase his territories and respect his franchises, if he would
+return to the French allegiance. The lord of Albret married a
+sister of the French queen and followed Armagnac's lead. A little
+later the Counts of P&eacute;rigord and Comminges and other lords
+associated themselves with this policy. Thus the rule of the Black
+Prince in Aquitaine, acquiesced in by the mass of the people, was
+threatened by a feudal revolt. Armagnac appealed to the parliament
+of Paris against the hearth-tax. Charles V. accepted the appeal on
+the ground of the non-exchange of the renunciations which should
+have followed the treaty of Calais. Cited before the parliament in
+January, 1369, the Black Prince replied that he would go to Paris
+with helmet on head and with sixty thousand men at his back. His
+father once more assumed the title of King of France, and war broke
+out again.</p>
+
+<p>The relative positions of France and England were different from
+what they had been nine years before. Edward III. was sinking into
+an unhonoured old age, and the Prince of Aquitaine suffered from
+dropsy, and was incapable of taking the field. Of their former
+comrades some, like Walter Manny, were dead, and others too old for
+much more fighting. On the other side was<span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg409" id="pg409">409</a></span> Charles V., who had tamed
+Navarre and the feudal lords, had cleared the realm of the
+companies, had put down faction and disorder, and had made himself
+the head of a strong national party, resolved to effect the
+expulsion of the foreigner. His chief military counsellors were Du
+Guesclin, and Du Guesclin's old adversary in the Breton wars,
+Oliver de Clisson, now the zealous servant of the king. A wonderful
+outburst of French patriotism facilitated the reconquest of the
+lands that had passed to English rule nine years before. Even the
+tradition of military superiority availed little against commanders
+who were learning by their defeats how to meet their once
+invincible enemies.</p>
+
+<p>There was a like modification in the foreign alliances of the
+two kingdoms. Dynastic changes in the Netherlands had robbed Edward
+of supporters who, though costly and ineffective, had been imposing
+in outward appearance. Even after the dissolution of the alliances
+of the early years of the war, the temporising policy of Louis de
+Male at least neutralised the influence of Flanders. During the
+peace both Edward and Charles did their best to win the goodwill of
+the Flemish count. Louis' relation to the two rivals was the more
+important since his only child was a daughter named Margaret. In
+1356, this lady, to Edward's great disgust, was promised in
+marriage to Philip de Rouvre, Duke and Count of Burgundy, and Count
+of Artois. The death of Philip in 1361 saved Edward from the danger
+of a great state with one arm in the Burgundies and the other in
+Flanders and Artois; and the irritation of Louis de Male at Charles
+V.'s grant of the Burgundian duchy to his youngest son, Philip the
+Bold, gave the English king a new chance of winning his favour. At
+last, in 1364, Edward concluded a treaty with Flanders according to
+his dearest wishes. Edmund of Langley, Earl of Cambridge, his
+youngest son, was betrothed to the widowed Margaret, with Ponthieu,
+Gu&icirc;nes, and Calais as their appanage. Great as were Edward's
+sacrifices, they were worth making if a permanent union could be
+established between England and Flanders, equally threatening to
+France and to the lords of the Netherlands. Charles persuaded Urban
+V. to refuse the necessary dispensations for the marriage. Edward
+and Louis, irritated at the success of this countermove, waited
+patiently and renewed their alliance.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner was his understanding with Armagnac completed <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg410" id="pg410">410</a></span>than
+Charles strove to secure the support of northern as well as of
+southern feudalism against Edward. He offered his brother, Philip
+of Burgundy, to Margaret, along with the restoration of the
+districts of French Flanders, which he still held. In June, 1369,
+the marriage took place. Edmund of Cambridge lost his last chance
+of the great heiress, and Charles V. bought off the enmity of the
+Count of Flanders at the price of that union of Burgundy and
+Flanders which, in the next century, was to make the descendants of
+Philip and Margaret the most formidable opponents of the French
+monarchy. For the moment, however, Charles gained little. Flemish
+ships, indeed, fought against the English at sea, notably in
+Bourgneuf Bay in 1371, but next year Louis made peace with them.
+Despite his daughter's marriage, the Count of Flanders still showed
+that his sympathies were with England. The other princes of the
+Netherlands were much more decidedly on the French side than the
+Count of Flanders. Margaret of Hainault, Queen Philippa's sister,
+had, after the death of her husband the Emperor Louis of Bavaria,
+in 1347 fought with her son William for the possession of her three
+counties of Hainault, Holland, and Zealand, to which Philippa also
+had pretensions, naturally upheld by her husband. William obtained
+such advantages over his mother that Margaret was obliged to invoke
+the assistance of her brother-in-law. Eager to regain his influence
+in the Netherlands, Edward willingly agreed to be arbiter between
+Margaret and her son, and at his suggestion the disputed lands were
+divided between them. William was married to Maud of Lancaster,
+Duke Henry's elder daughter, and thus secured to the English
+alliance. On Margaret's death William inherited all the three
+counties: but Maud died, and William became insane, whereupon his
+brother and heir invoked the support of the Emperor Charles IV.,
+and was duly established in his fiefs. The claims of Philippa were
+ignored, and the Lancaster marriage with the lord of Holland, like
+the projected union of Edmund with the heiress of Flanders, failed
+to fulfil Edward's hopes.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Edward had to face the constant hostility of the
+emperor. Wenceslaus of Luxemburg, brother of Charles IV., had
+married the daughter and heiress of John III of Brabant, with the
+result of solidly establishing the house of Luxemburg in the
+strongest of the duchies of the Low Countries. With the Luxemburger
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg411" id="pg411">411</a></span>as
+with the Bavarian, Edward's relations were unfriendly. Two only of
+the Low German lords, the dukes of Gelderland and J&uuml;lich, were
+willing to take his pay. Early in the war they were assailed by the
+Luxemburgers, and the contest occupied all their energies. Thus
+Edward re-entered the struggle against France with no help save
+that of his own subjects. Urban V. died at Avignon in 1370, and his
+successor, Gregory XI., was as little friendly to English claims in
+France as his predecessors had been. Pope, emperor, and the
+Netherlandish princes, were all either French or neutral. And in
+1369 Peter of Castile lost his throne, and soon afterwards perished
+at his brother's hands. Henry of Trastamara, henceforth King of
+Castile, became the firm ally of the French, who had already the
+support of Aragon. Even Charles the Bad thought it prudent to
+declare for France.</p>
+
+<p>At each stage of the war the French took the initiative. The
+appeal of the southern nobles was the beginning of a national
+movement which, before March, 1369, was supported by more than 900
+towns, castles, and fortified places in Edward's allegiance. In
+April the French invaded Ponthieu and were welcomed as deliverers
+at Abbeville and the other towns of the county. John of Gaunt led
+an army during the summer from Calais southwards. He marched
+through Ponthieu, crossed the Somme at Blanchetaque, and ravaged
+the country up to the Seine. Then he retired exhausted, having
+gained no real advantage by this mere foray. Charles announced
+that, as Edward had supported the free companies, he fell under the
+excommunication threatened by the pope against the abettors of
+these pests of society, and that the vassals of the English crown
+were therefore relieved from allegiance to him. Soon afterwards he
+declared that Edward had forfeited all his possessions in
+France.</p>
+
+<p>Quercy and Rouergue, which had submitted last, were the first
+districts of Aquitaine to revolt. Cahors declared for France as
+soon as the Black Prince was cited to Paris. By the end of 1369 all
+Quercy had acknowledged Charles V., and John of Armagnac ruled
+Rouergue as his vassal. It was the same in the Garonne valley,
+where towns which had no quarrel with English rule, were swept away
+by the strong tide of national feeling that surged round their
+walls. A systematic attack was made upon the English power in
+Aquitaine. Charles V. fitted out new armies in which the townsmen
+and the country-folk <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg412" id=
+"pg412">412</a></span>fought side by side with the nobility. Two of
+his brothers, John, Duke of Berri, and Louis, Duke of Anjou,
+prepared to assail the intruders, Berri in the central uplands,
+Anjou in the Garonne valley. It was not enough to recover what was
+lost. Aggression must be met by aggression, and the Duke of
+Burgundy, Charles' third brother, equipped a fleet in Norman ports,
+either to invade England or at least to cut off the Black Prince
+from his base. Portsmouth was burnt, before England had made any
+effort to defend her shores.</p>
+
+<p>The English were strangely inactive. The Black Prince lay sick
+at Cognac, and of his subordinates Chandos, now seneschal of
+Poitou, alone showed vigour. Chandos, finding the lords of Poitou
+much more loyal to the English connexion than those of the south,
+was able to take the aggressive by invading Anjou. He was, however,
+soon recalled to protect Poitou, and on January 1, 1370, was
+mortally wounded at the bridge of Lussac. James Audley had already
+died of disease in another Poitevin town. While England was losing
+her best soldiers, Du Guesclin began a fresh series of raids in the
+Garonne valley. Soon the banner of the lilies waved within a few
+leagues of Bordeaux, and ancient towns of the English obedience,
+like Bazas and Bergerac, fell into the enemy's hands. With the
+capture of P&eacute;rigueux, the Limousin was isolated from Gascon
+succour. In August the Duke of Berri appeared before the walls of
+the <i>cit&eacute;,</i> or episcopal quarter, of Limoges, and the
+bishop promptly handed it over to him.</p>
+
+<p>Disasters at last stirred up the English to action. In 1370 John
+of Gaunt was sent with one army to Gascony and Sir Robert Knowles
+with another to Calais. The Black Prince, though unable to ride,
+was eager to command. It was arranged that while Lancaster led one
+force from Bordeaux to Limoges, Edward should accompany another
+that marched from Cognac towards the same destination. To resist
+this combination Du Guesclin strove to combine the separate armies
+of the Dukes of Anjou and Berri. However, he failed to prevent the
+junction of Lancaster and Edward, and their advance to Limoges. On
+September 19, the anniversary of Poitiers, the city of Limoges
+opened its gates after a five days' siege. The English took a
+terrible revenge. Not a house in the <i>cit&eacute;</i> was spared,
+and the cathedral rose over a mass of ruins. The whole population
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg413" id="pg413">413</a></span>was
+put to the sword, the Black Prince in his litter watching grimly
+the execution of his orders. A few gentlemen alone were saved for
+the sake of their ransoms. Among them was the brother of Pope
+Gregory XI., who not unnaturally became a warm friend of the
+patriotic party. The sack of Limoges was the last exploit of the
+Black Prince. Early in 1371, he returned to England, partly because
+of his state of health, and partly because he had no money to pay
+his soldiers. It is not unlikely that he was already on bad terms
+with John of Gaunt, who had necessarily taken the chief share in
+the campaign and was nominated his successor. Too late, efforts
+were made to conciliate the Gascons; in 1370 a supreme court was
+set up at Saintes to save the necessity of appeals to London which
+had become as onerous as the ancient frequency of resort to the
+parliament of Paris; and the hearth-tax, the ostensible cause of
+the rising, was formally renounced.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Robert Knowles's expedition of 1370 was as futile as that of
+Lancaster. He advanced from Calais into the heart of northern
+France. Taught by long experience the danger of joining battle, the
+French allowed him to wander where he would, plundering and
+ravaging the country. Roughly following the line of march of Edward
+III. in 1360, the English advanced through Artois and Vermandois to
+Laon and Reims, and thence southwards through Champagne. Then
+striking northwards from the Burgundian border, they appeared, at
+the end of September, before the southern suburbs of Paris. To
+dissipate the alarm felt at the presence of the English, Du
+Guesclin was summoned from the south and made constable of France.
+Before his arrival Knowles had moved on westwards 'towards the
+Beauce, intending to reach his own estates in Brittany for winter
+quarters. But his young captains got out of control. Led by a
+Gloucestershire knight, Sir John Minsterworth, "ready in hand but
+deceitful and perverse in mind," a considerable section of the
+troops refused to follow the old "tomb-robber" to Brittany, and
+determined to spend the winter where they were, under
+Minsterworth's leadership. Knowles would not give place to his
+subordinate, and made his way to Brittany with the part of his army
+which was still faithful to him. No sooner was he well started than
+Du Guesclin, after a march of ninety miles in three days, fell upon
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg414" id="pg414">414</a></span>his
+rearguard at Pontvallain in southern Maine and overwhelmed it on
+December 4, 1370. Knowles managed to reach Brittany with the bulk
+of his forces, and Minsterworth, the real cause of the disaster,
+ventured to go to England and denounce his leader as a traitor. He
+was forced to flee to France, where he openly joined the enemy.
+Seven years later he was captured and executed.</p>
+
+<p>Minsterworth was not the only traitor. In the earlier part of
+the war, there had fought on the English side a grand-nephew of the
+last independent Prince of Wales, Sir Owen ap Thomas ap Rhodri,[1]
+whose grandfather, Rhodri or Roderick, the youngest brother of the
+princes Llewelyn and David, had after the ruin of his house lived
+obscurely as a small Cheshire and Gloucestershire landlord. In 1365
+Owen was in France, engaged, no doubt, in one of the free
+companies, and on his father's death he returned to defend his
+inheritance from the claims of the Charltons of Powys. Having
+succeeded in this, he returned to France, and nothing more is heard
+of him until after the renewal of the war. In 1370 he appeared as a
+strenuous partisan of the French. Mindful of his ancestry he posed
+as the lawful Prince of Wales, and established communications with
+his countrymen, both in France and in Wales. Anxious to stir up
+discord in Edward's realm, the French king gladly upheld his
+claims. A gallant knight and an impulsive, energetic partisan, Sir
+Owen of Wales soon won a place of his own in the history of his
+time. In Gwynedd he was celebrated as Owain <i>Lawgoch,</i> Owen of
+the Red Hand. Conspiracies in his favour were ruthlessly stamped
+out, and a halo of legend and poetry soon encircled his name. In
+France Charles entrusted him and another Welshman, named John Wynn,
+with the equipment of a fleet at Rouen with which the champion was
+to descend on the principality and excite arising. Bad weather
+caused the complete destruction of the expedition of the Welsh
+pretender. Two years later, however, another fleet was fitted out
+on his behalf, and in June, 1372, Owen took possession of
+Guernsey.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] The place of Owen of Wales in history was for
+the first time clearly shown by Mr. Edward Owen in <i>Y
+Cymmrodor,</i> 1899-1900, pp. 1-105.</p>
+
+<p>At that time the fortune of war was strongly in favour of
+France, though the initial successes of Charles V. were damped by
+the doubtful results of the petty struggles which filled the year
+1371. During that year Du Guesclin, the soul of the French <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg415" id="pg415">415</a></span>attack,
+ejected the English from many places in Normandy and Poitou. On the
+other hand, the English won the hard fought battle over a Flemish
+fleet in Bourgneuf Bay, which has already been mentioned. They also
+showed some power of recovery in Aquitaine, where their recapture
+of Figeac in upper Quercy gave them a base for renewing their
+attacks on Rouergue. On the whole then, the year left matters much
+as they had been.</p>
+
+<p>The occupation of Guernsey by Owen of Wales was the beginning of
+a new series of French victories. Up to that time the northern
+coastlands of Aquitaine, lower Poitou, Saintonge, and Angoumois had
+remained almost entirely under their English lords. In the hope of
+resisting attack, the English projected the invasion of France both
+from Calais and from Guienne. To carry out the latter plan John
+Hastings, Earl of Pembroke, was despatched with a fleet and army
+from England, with a commission to succeed John of Gaunt as the
+king's lieutenant in Aquitaine. The Franco-Spanish alliance then
+began to bear its fruits. Henry of Trastamara equipped a strong
+Spanish fleet to meet the invaders in the Bay of Biscay. On June
+23, 1372, the two fleets fought an action off La Rochelle. The
+light Spanish galleys out-manoeuvred the heavy English ships, laden
+deep in the water with stores and filled with troops and horses.
+The Spaniards set on fire some of the English transports, which
+became unmanageable owing to the fright of the horses embarked upon
+them. The English fought valiantly, and night fell before the
+battle was decided. Next day, the Spaniards attacked again, and won
+a complete victory. The English fleet was destroyed, and Pembroke
+was taken a prisoner to Santander.</p>
+
+<p>The news of Pembroke's defeat encouraged the French to attempt
+the conquest of Poitou. Du Guesclin invaded the county from the
+north in co-operation with the Spaniards at sea, Owen of Wales
+abandoned the siege of Cornet castle, in Guernsey, which still held
+out against him, and hurried to join the Spaniards. At Santander he
+met the captive Pembroke, and bitterly reproached the marcher earl
+with the part his house had taken in driving the Welsh from their
+lands. In August Owen and the Spaniards were lying off La Rochelle.
+Sir Thomas Percy, seneschal of Poitou, and the Captal de Buch were
+with a considerable force at Soubise, near the mouth of the
+Charente. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg416" id=
+"pg416">416</a></span>Owen ascended the river and fell unexpectedly
+on the English at night. The English were utterly defeated and both
+leaders were taken prisoners, Thomas Percy, the future ally of Owen
+Glendower, being captured by one of Sir Owen's Welsh followers.
+Meanwhile, Du Guesclin, after receiving the surrender of Poitiers
+on August 7, pressed forward to the coast and was soon in touch
+with Owen and the Spaniards. On the same September day
+Angoul&ecirc;me and La Rochelle opened their gates to the French.
+In the course of the same month all the other towns of the district
+declared for the winning side. The nobles of Poitou were still to
+some extent English in sympathy, and a considerable band of them
+and their followers took refuge in Thouars. On December 1 this last
+stronghold of Poitevin feudalism surrendered. The tidings of
+disaster roused the old English king to his final martial effort. A
+fleet was raised and sailed from Sandwich, having on board the
+king, the Prince of Wales, the Duke of Lancaster, and many other
+magnates. Contrary winds kept the vessels near the English coast,
+and the vast sums lavished on the equipment of the expedition were
+wasted. In despair the Black Prince surrendered to his father his
+principality of Aquitaine. When the king begged the commons for a
+further war subsidy, he was told that the navy had been ruined by
+his harsh impressment of seamen, and his refusal to give them pay
+when detained in port waiting for orders. When the command of the
+sea passed to the French and their Spanish allies, all hope of
+retaining Aquitaine was lost.</p>
+
+<p>The final stages in the ruin of the English power in France need
+not detain us long. Despite his successes, Du Guesclin persevered
+in his policy of wearing down the English by delays and by avoiding
+pitched battles. He turned his attention to Brittany, where Duke
+John, in difficulties with his subjects, had invoked the aid of an
+English army. Thereupon the Breton barons called the French king to
+take possession of the duchy, whose lord was betraying it to the
+foreigner. The old party struggle was at an end: Celtic Brittany
+joined hands with French Brittany. Before the end of 1373, Duke
+John was a fugitive, and only a few castles with English garrisons
+upheld his cause. Of these Brest was the most important, and
+despite the Spaniards and Owen of Wales, the English were still
+strong enough at sea to retain possession of the place.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg417" id=
+"pg417">417</a></span>In July, 1373, John of Gaunt marched out of
+Calais with one of the strongest armies with which an English
+invader had ever entered France. Pursuing a general south-easterly
+direction, the English pitilessly devastated Artois, Picardy, and
+Champagne. Du Guesclin hastened back from Brittany to command the
+army engaged in watching Lancaster. He still continued his
+defensive tactics, but gave the enemy little rest. Lancaster was no
+match for so able a general as the Breton constable. At the end of
+September he moved from Troyes to Sens, and thence pushed into
+Burgundy. Then he turned westwards through the Nivernais and the
+Bourbonnais, and led his army through the uplands of Auvergne. By
+the end of the year he had traversed the Limousin, and made his way
+to Bordeaux. Half his army had perished of hunger, cold, and in
+petty warfare. The horses had suffered worse than the men, and the
+baggage train was almost destroyed. Without fighting a battle Du
+Guesclin had put the enemy out of action. Experience now showed how
+useless were the prolonged plundering raids which ten years before
+had filled all France with terror.</p>
+
+<p>Even in Gascony Lancaster could not hold his own. After
+declining battle with the Duke of Anjou, he returned to England,
+leaving Sir Thomas Felton as seneschal. The enemy had penetrated to
+the very heart of the old English district. La R&eacute;ole opened
+its gates to them; Saint-Sever, the seat of the Gascon high court,
+followed its example, By 1374 the English duchy was reduced to the
+coast lands around Bayonne and Bordeaux. That year the French laid
+siege to Chandos's castle of Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte. The siege
+was as long and as elaborately organised as the great siege of
+Calais. A ring of <i>bastilles</i> was erected round the doomed
+town, and cannon discharged huge balls of stone against its
+ramparts. After nearly a year's siege the garrison agreed to
+surrender on condition of a heavy payment. With the fall of the old
+home of the Harcourts the English power in Normandy perished. There
+was still, it is true, the influence of Charles of Navarre; but
+that desperate intriguer had compromised himself so much with both
+parties that no confidence could be placed in him.</p>
+
+<p>The misfortunes of the English inclined them to listen to
+proposals of peace. Though the papacy was more frankly on the
+French side than ever, it had not lost its ancient solicitude <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg418" id="pg418">418</a></span>to put an
+end to the war. With that object Gregory XI, though eager to return
+to Rome, tarried in the Rhone valley. Two of his legates appeared
+in Champagne at the time of John of Gaunt's abortive expedition.
+From that moment offers of peace were constantly pressed on both
+sides. Lancaster was at Calais, and Anjou was not far off at
+Saint-Omer, when definite proposals were exchanged. Before long it
+was found more convenient that the envoys should meet face to face,
+and for this reason the two dukes accepted the hospitality of Louis
+de Male, and held personal interviews at Bruges. More than once the
+negotiations broke down altogether. At no time was there much hope
+of a permanent peace. The English insisted on the terms of 1360,
+and the French demanded the cession of Calais and the release of
+the unpaid ransom of King John. However, on June 27, 1375, a truce
+for a year was signed at Bruges, which was further extended until
+June, 1377, just long enough to allow the old king to end his days
+in peace. France had once more to wrestle with the companies set
+free by the truce, so that England could still enjoy possession of
+Calais, Bordeaux, Bayonne, Brest, and the other scanty remnants of
+the cessions of the treaty of Calais. Satisfied at putting an end
+to the war, Gregory XI betook himself to Rome. Thus the truce
+outlasted the Babylonish captivity of the papacy as well as the
+life of Edward III.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
+
+<h4>ENGLAND DURING THE LATTER YEARS OF EDWARD III.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg419" id=
+"pg419">419</a></span>Never was Edward's glory so high as in the
+years immediately succeeding the treaty of Calais. The unspeakable
+misery of France heightened his magnificence by the strength of the
+contrast. At eight-and-forty he retained the vigour and energy of
+his younger days, though surrounded by a band of grown-up sons. In
+1362 the king celebrated his jubilee, or his fiftieth birthday,
+amidst feasts of unexampled splendour. Not less magnificent were
+the festivities that attended the visits of the three kings, of
+France, Cyprus, and Scotland, in 1364.</p>
+
+<p>Of the glories of these years we have detailed accounts from an
+eye-witness a writer competent, above all other men of his time, to
+set down in courtly and happy phrase the wonders that delighted his
+eyes. In 1361, John Froissart, an adventurous young clerk from
+Valenciennes, sought out a career for himself in the household of
+his countrywoman, Queen Philippa, bearing with him as his
+credentials a draft of a verse chronicle which was his first
+attempt at historical composition. He came to England at the right
+moment. The older generation of historians had laid down their pens
+towards the conclusion of the great war, and had left no worthy
+successors. The new-comer was soon to surpass them, not in
+precision and sobriety, but in wealth of detail, in literary charm,
+and in genial appreciation of the externals of his age. He recorded
+with an eye-witness's precision of colour, though with utter
+indifference to exactness, the tournaments and fetes, the banquets
+and the <i>largesses</i> of the noble lords and ladies of the most
+brilliant court in Christendom. He celebrated the courtesy of the
+knightly class, their devotion to their word of honour, the
+liberality with which captive foreigners was allowed to share in
+their sports and pleasures, and the implicit loyalty with which
+nearly all the many captive <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg420"
+id="pg420">420</a></span>knights repaid the trust placed on their
+word. To him Edward was the most glorious of kings, and Philippa,
+his patroness, the most beautiful, liberal, pious, and charitable
+of queens. For nine years he enjoyed the queen's bounty, and
+described with loyal partiality the exploits of English knights.
+With the death of his patroness and the beginning of England's
+misfortunes, the light-minded adventurer sought another master in
+the French-loving Wenceslaus of Brabant. The first edition of his
+chronicle, compiled when under the spell of the English court,
+contrasts strongly with the second version written at Brussels at
+the instigation of the Luxemburg duke of Brabant.</p>
+
+<p>Even Froissart saw that all was not well in England. The common
+people seemed to him proud, cruel, disloyal, and suspicious. Their
+delight was in battle and slaughter, and they hated the foreigner
+with a fierce hatred which had no counterpart in the cosmopolitan
+knightly class. They were the terror of their lords and delighted
+in keeping their kings under restraint. The Londoners were the most
+mighty of the English and could do more than all the rest of
+England. Other writers tell the same tale. The same fierce
+patriotism that Froissart notes glows through the rude battle songs
+in which Lawrence Minot sang the early victories of Edward from
+Halidon Hill to the taking of Gu&icirc;nes, and inspired Geoffrey
+le Baker to repeat with absolute confidence every malicious story
+which gossip told to the discredit of the French king and his
+people. It was under the influence of this spirit that the steps
+were taken, which we have already recorded, to extend the use of
+English, notably in the law courts. Yet the old bilingual habit
+clave long to the English. Despite the statute of 1362, the lawyers
+continued to employ the French tongue, until it crystallised into
+the jargon of the later <i>Year Books</i> or of Littleton's
+<i>Tenures</i>. Under Edward III, however, French remained the
+living speech of many Englishmen. John Gower wrote in French the
+earliest of his long poems. But he is a thorough Englishman for all
+that. He writes in French, but, as he says, he writes for
+England.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] "O gentile Engleterre, a toi j'escrits,"
+<i>Mirour de l'Omme,</i> in John Gower's <i>Works,</i> i., 378, ed.
+G.C. MaCaulay, to whom belongs the credit of recovering this long
+lost work.</p>
+
+<p>It was characteristic of the patriotic movement of the reign of
+Edward III, that a new courtly literature in the English <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg421" id="pg421">421</a></span>language
+rivalled the French vernacular literature which as yet had by no
+means ceased to produce fruit. The new type begins with the
+anonymous poems, "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight," and the
+"Pearl". While Froissart was the chief literary figure at the
+English court during the ten years after the treaty of Calais, his
+place was occupied in the concluding decade of the reign by
+Geoffrey Chaucer, the first great poet of the English literary
+revival. The son of a substantial London vintner, Chaucer spent his
+youth as a page in the household of Lionel of Antwerp, from which
+he was transferred to the service of Edward himself. He took part
+in more than one of Edward's French campaigns, and served in
+diplomatic missions to Italy, Flanders, and elsewhere. His early
+poems reflect the modes and metres of the current French tradition
+in an English dress, and only reach sustained importance in his
+lament on the death of the Duchess Blanche of Lancaster, written
+about 1370. It is significant that the favourite poet of the king's
+declining years was no clerk but a layman, and that the Tuscan
+mission of 1373, which perhaps first introduced him to the
+treasures of Italian poetry, was undertaken in the king's service.
+Thorough Englishman as Chaucer was, he had his eyes open to every
+movement of European culture. His higher and later style begins
+with his study of Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio. Though he wrote
+for Englishmen in their own tongue, his fame was celebrated by the
+French poet, Eustace Deschamps, as the "great translator" who had
+sown the flowers of French poesy in the realm of Aeneas and Brut
+the Trojan. His broad geniality stood in strong contrast to the
+savage patriotism of Minot. In becoming national, English
+vernacular art did not become insular. Chaucer wrote in the tongue
+of the southern midlands, the region wherein were situated his
+native London, the two universities, the habitual residences of the
+court, the chief seats of parliaments and councils, and the most
+frequented marts of commerce. For the first time a standard English
+language came into being, largely displacing for literary purposes
+the local dialects which had hitherto been the natural vehicles of
+writing in their respective districts. The Yorkshireman, Wycliffe,
+the westcountryman, Langland, adopted before the end of the reign
+the tongue of the capital for their literary language in preference
+to the speech of their native shires. The language of the extreme
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg422" id=
+"pg422">422</a></span>south, the descendant of the tongue of the
+West Saxon court, became the dialect of peasants and artisans. That
+a continuous life was reserved for the idiom of the north country,
+was due to its becoming the speech of a free Scotland, the language
+in which Barbour, Archdeacon of Aberdeen, commemorated for the
+court of the first Stewart king the exploits of Robert Bruce and
+the Scottish war of independence. The unity of England thus found
+another notable expression in the oneness of the popular speech.
+And the evolution of the northern dialect into the "Scottish" of a
+separate kingdom showed that, if England were united,
+English-speaking Britain remained divided.</p>
+
+<p>Other arts indicate the same tendency. Even in the thirteenth
+century English Gothic architecture differentiated itself pretty
+completely from its models in the Isle de France. The early
+fourteenth century, the age of the so-called "decorated style,"
+suggests in some ways a falling back to the French types, though
+the prosperity of England and the desolation of France make the
+English examples of fourteenth century building the more numerous
+and splendid. The occasional tendency of the later "flowing"
+decorated towards "flamboyant" forms, to be seen in some of the
+churches of Northamptonshire, marks the culminating point of this
+fresh approximation of French and English architecture. But the
+division between the two countries brought about by war was
+illustrated before the end of the reign in the growth of the most
+local of our medieval architectural types, that "perpendicular"
+style which is so strikingly different from the "flamboyant" art of
+the neighbouring kingdom. This specially English style begins early
+in the reign of Edward III, when the cult of the murdered Edward of
+Carnarvon gave to the monks of St. Peter's, Gloucester, the means
+to recast the massive columns and gloomy arcades of the eastern
+portions of their romanesque abbey church after the lighter and
+brighter patterns in which Gloucester set the fashion to all
+southern Britain. In the buildings of the later years of Edward's
+reign the old "flowing decorated" and the newer and stiffer
+"perpendicular" grew up side by side. If the two seem almost
+combined in the church of Edington, in Wiltshire, the foundation
+dedicated in 1361 for his native village by Edward's chancellor,
+Bishop Edington of Winchester, the triumph of the perpendicular is
+assured in the new choir which Archbishop <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg423" id="pg423">423</a></span>Thoresby began for York
+Minster, and in the reconstruction of the Norman cathedral of
+Winchester begun by Bishop Edington, and completed when his greater
+successor, William of Wykeham, carried out in a more drastic way
+the device already adopted at Gloucester of recasing the ancient
+structure so as to suit modern tastes. The full triumph of the new
+style is apparent in Wykeham's twin foundations at Winchester and
+Oxford. The separation of feeling between England and Scotland is
+now seen in architecture as well as in language. When the
+perpendicular fashion was carrying all before it in the southern
+realm, the Scottish builders erected their churches after the
+flamboyant type of their French allies. Thus while the twelfth and
+thirteenth century structures of the northern and southern kingdoms
+are practically indistinguishable, the differences between the two
+nations, which had arisen from the Edwardian policy of conquest,
+expressed themselves ultimately in the striking contrast between
+the flamboyant of Melrose or St. Giles' and the perpendicular of
+Winchester or Windsor.</p>
+
+<p>English patriotism, which had asserted itself in the literature
+and art of the people long before it dominated courtly circles,
+continued to express itself in more popular forms than even those
+of the poems of Chaucer. The older fashions of instructing the
+people were still in vogue in the early part of Edward's reign.
+Richard Rolle, the hermit of Hampole, whose <i>Prick</i> of
+<i>Conscience</i> and vernacular paraphrases of the Bible
+illustrate the older didactic literature, was carried off in his
+Yorkshire cell in the year of the Black Death. The cycles of
+miracle plays, which edified and amused the townsfolk of Chester
+and York, crystallised into a permanent shape early in this reign,
+and were set forth with ever-increasing elaborateness by an age
+bent on pageantry and amusement. The vernacular sermons and popular
+manuals of devotion increased in numbers and copiousness. In this
+the time of the Black Death is, as in other aspects of our story, a
+deep dividing line.</p>
+
+<p>The note of increasing strain and stress is fully expressed in
+the earlier forms of <i>The Vision of Piers Plowman,</i> which were
+composed before the death of Edward III. Its author, William
+Langland, a clerk in minor orders, debarred by marriage from a
+clerical career, came from the Mortimer estates in the march of
+Wales: but his life was mainly spent in London, and he wrote <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg424" id="pg424">424</a></span>in the
+tongue of the city of his adoption. The first form of the poem is
+dated 1362, the year of the second visitation of the Black Death,
+while the troubles of the end of the reign perhaps inspired the
+fuller edition which saw the light in 1377. It is a commonplace to
+contrast the gloomy pictures drawn by Langland with the highly
+coloured pictures of contemporary society for which Chaucer was
+gathering his materials. Yet this contrast may be pressed too far.
+Though Langland had a keen eye to those miseries of the poor which
+are always with us, the impression of the time gathered from his
+writings is not so much one of material suffering, as of social
+unrest and discontent. The poor ploughman, who cannot get meat,
+still has his cheese, curds, and cream, his loaf of beans and bran,
+his leeks and cabbage, his cow, calf, and cart mare.[1] The very
+beggar demanded "bread of clean wheat" and "beer of the best and
+brownest," while the landless labourer despised "night-old
+cabbage," "penny-ale," and bacon, and asked for fresh meat and fish
+freshly fried.[2] There is plenty of rough comfort and coarse
+enjoyment in the England through which "Long Will" stalked moodily,
+idle, hopeless, and in himself exemplifying many of the evils which
+he condemned. The England of Langland is bitter, discontented, and
+sullen. It is the popular answer to the class prejudice and
+reckless greed of the lords and gentry. Langland's own attitude
+towards the more comfortable classes is much that of the
+self-assertive and mutinous Londoner whom Froissart looked upon
+with such bitter prejudice. He boasts that he was loath to do
+reverence to lords and ladies, or to those clad in furs with
+pendants of silver, and refuses to greet "sergeants" with a "God
+save you". Every class of society is flagellated in his scathing
+criticisms. He is no revolutionist with a new gospel of reform,
+but, though content to accept the old traditions, he is the
+ruthless denouncer of abuses, and is thoroughly filled with the
+spirit which, four years after the second recension of his book,
+found expression in the Peasants Revolt of 1381. With all the
+archaism of his diction and metre, Langland, even more than
+Chaucer, reflects the modernity of his age.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Vision of Piers Plowman,</i> i.,220, ed.
+Skeat.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] <i>Ibid.,</i> i., 222.</p>
+
+<p>Even the universities were growing more national, for the war
+prevented Oxford students from seeking, after their English <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg425" id=
+"pg425">425</a></span>graduation, a wider career at Paris. William
+of Ockham, the last of the great English schoolmen that won fame in
+the European rather than in the English world, died about 1349 in
+the service of the Bavarian emperor. In the same year the plague
+swept away Thomas Bradwardine, the "profound doctor," at the moment
+of his elevation to the throne of Canterbury. Bradwardine, though a
+scholar of universal reputation, won his fame at Oxford without the
+supplementary course at Paris, and lived all his career in his
+native land. As an English university career became more
+self-sufficient, Oxford became the school of the politician and the
+man of affairs as much as of the pure student. The new tendency is
+illustrated by the careers of the brothers Stratford, both Oxford
+scholars, yet famous not for their writings but for lives devoted
+to the service of the State, though rewarded by the highest offices
+of the Church. His conspicuous position as a teacher of scholastic
+philosophy first brought John Wycliffe into academic prominence.
+But he soon won a wider fame as a preacher in London, an adviser of
+the court, an opponent of the "possessioner" monks, and of the
+forsworn friars, who, deserting apostolic poverty, vied with the
+monks in covetousness. His attacks on practical abuses in the
+Church marked him out as a politician as well as a philosopher. His
+earlier career ended in 1374, the year in which he first became the
+king's ambassador, not long after proceeding to the degree of
+doctor of divinity.[1] His later struggles must be considered in
+the light of the political history of the concluding episodes of
+Edward's reign. In a few years we shall find the Oxford champion
+abandoning the Latin language of universal culture, and appealing
+to the people in homely English. With Wycliffe's entry upon his
+wider career, it is hardly too much to say that Oxford ceased to be
+merely a part of the cosmopolitan training ground of the schoolmen,
+and became in some fashion a national institution. Cambridge, too
+young and obscure in earlier ages to have rivalled Oxford, first
+began to enjoy an increasing reputation.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] This was before Dec. 26, 1373. See Twemlow in
+<i>Engl. Hist. Review</i>, xv, (1900), 529-530.</p>
+
+<p>Hitherto culture had been not only cosmopolitan but clerical.
+Every university student and nearly every professional man was a
+clerk. But education was becoming possible for laymen, and <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg426" id="pg426">426</a></span>there were
+already lay professions outside the clerical caste. The wide
+cultivation and the vigorous literary output of laymen of letters
+like Chaucer and Cower are sufficient evidence of this. But the
+best proof is the complete differentiation of the common lawyers
+from the clergy. The inns of court of London became virtually a
+legal university, where highly trained men studied a juristic
+system, which was not the less purely English in spirit because its
+practitioners used the French tongue as their technical instrument.
+There were no longer lawyers in England who, like Bracton, strove
+to base the law of the land on the forms and methods of Roman
+jurisprudence. There were no longer kings, like Edward I., with
+Italian trained civilians at their court ready to translate the law
+of England into imperialist forms. The canonist still studied at
+Oxford or Cambridge, but his career was increasingly clerical, and
+the Church, unlike the State, was unable to nationalise itself,
+though the whole career of Wycliffe and the strenuous efforts of
+the kings and statesmen who passed the statutes of Provisors and
+Praemunire, showed that some of the English clergy, and many of the
+English laity, were willing to make the effort. English law, in
+divorcing itself from the universities and the clergy, became
+national as well as lay. There were no longer any Weylands who
+concealed their clerical beginnings, and hid away the subdeacon
+under the married knight and justice, the founder of a landowning
+family. The lawyers of Edward's reign were frankly laymen, marrying
+and giving in marriage, establishing new families that became as
+noble as any of the decaying baronial houses, and yet cherishing a
+corporate ideal and common spirit as lively and real as those of
+any monastery or clerical association.</p>
+
+<p>In enumerating the many convergent tendencies which worked
+together in strengthening the national life, we must not forget the
+growing importance of commerce. Merchant princes like the Poles
+could rival the financial operations of Lombard or Tuscan, and
+climb into the baronial class. The proud and mutinous temper of the
+Londoners was largely due to their ever-increasing wealth. We are
+on the threshold of the careers of commercial magnates, like the
+Philpots and the Whittingtons. Even when Edward III. was still on
+the throne, a London mayor of no special note, John Pyel, could set
+up in his native Northamptonshire village of Irthlingborough a
+college and church of remarkable <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg427" id="pg427">427</a></span>stateliness and dignity. The
+growth of the wool trade, and its gradual transfer to English
+hands, the development of the staple system, the rise of an English
+seaman class that knew all the havens of Europe, the beginnings of
+the English cloth manufacture, all indicate that English commerce
+was not only becoming more extensive, but was gradually
+emancipating itself from dependence on the foreigner. Thus before
+the end of Edward's reign England was an intensely national state,
+proudly conscious of itself, and haughtily contemptuous of the
+foreigner, with its own language, literature, style in art, law,
+universities, and even the beginnings of a movement towards the
+nationalisation of the Church. The cosmopolitanism of the earlier
+Middle Ages was everywhere on the wane. A modern nation had arisen
+out of the old world-state and world-spirit. In the England of
+Edward III., Chaucer, and Wycliffe, we have reached the
+consummation of the movement whose first beginnings we have traced
+in the early storms of the reign of Henry III. It is in the
+development of this tendency that the period from 1216 to 1377
+possesses such unity as it has.</p>
+
+<p>During the years of peace after the treaty of Calais, Edward
+III. completed the scheme for the establishment of his family begun
+with the grant of Aquitaine to the Black Prince. The state of the
+king's finances made it impossible for him to provide for numerous
+sons and daughters from the royal exchequer, and the system of
+appanages had seldom been popular or successful in England. Edward
+found an easier way of endowing his offspring by politic marriages
+that transferred to his sons the endowments and dignities of the
+great houses, which, in spite of lavish creations of new earldoms,
+were steadily dying out in the male line. Some of his daughters in
+the same way were married into baronial families whose attachment
+to the throne would, it was believed, be strengthened by
+intermarriage with the king's kin; while others, wedded to foreign
+princes, helped to widen the circle of continental alliances on
+which he never ceased to build large hopes. Collateral branches of
+the royal family were pressed into the same system, which was so
+systematically ordered that it has passed for a new departure in
+English history. This is, however, hardly the case. <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg428" id="pg428">428</a></span>Many previous
+kings, notably Edward I., carried out a policy based upon similar
+lines, and only less conspicuous by reason of the smaller number of
+children that they had to provide for. The descendants of Henry
+III. and Edward I. in no wise kept true to the monarchical
+tradition, but rather gave distinction to the baronial opposition
+by ennobling it with royal alliances. But the martial and vigorous
+policy of Edward III. had at least the effect of reducing to
+inactivity the tradition of constitutional opposition which had
+been the common characteristic of successive generations of the
+royal house of Lancaster, the chief collateral branch of the royal
+family. Subsequent history will show that the Edwardian family
+settlement was as unsuccessful as that of his grandfather. The
+alliances which Edward built up brought neither solidarity to the
+royal house, nor strength to the crown, nor union to the baronage.
+But the working out of this, as of so many of the new developments
+of the later part of Edward's reign, can only be seen after his
+death.</p>
+
+<p>Edward's eldest son became, as we have seen, Duke of Cornwall,
+Prince of Wales, and Earl of Chester even before he received
+Aquitaine. He was the first of the continuous line of English
+princes of Wales, for Edward III. never bore that title. The Black
+Prince's marriage with his cousin, Joan of Kent, was a love-match,
+and the estates of his bride were scarcely an important
+consideration to the lord of Wales and Cheshire. Yet the only child
+of the unlucky Edmund of Woodstock was no mean heiress, bringing
+with her the estates of her father's earldom of Kent, besides the
+inheritance of her mother's family, the Wakes of Liddell and
+Lincolnshire. The estates and earldom afterwards passed to Joan's
+son by a former husband, and the Holland earls of Kent formed a
+minor family connexion which closely supported the throne of
+Richard of Bordeaux. Though their paternal inheritance was that of
+Lancashire squires, the Hollands won a leading place in the history
+of the next generation.</p>
+
+<p>Edward III.'s second son, William of Hatfield, died in infancy.
+For his third son, Lionel of Antwerp, when still in his childhood,
+Edward found the greatest heiress of her time, Elizabeth, the only
+daughter of William de Burgh, the sixth lord of Connaught and third
+Earl of Ulster, the representative of one of the chief Anglo-Norman
+houses in Ireland. Even before his marriage, Lionel was made Earl
+of Ulster, a title sunk after <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg429"
+id="pg429">429</a></span>1362 in the novel dignity of the duchy of
+Clarence. This title was chosen because Elizabeth de Burgh was a
+grand-daughter of Elizabeth of Clare, the sister of the last Clare
+Earl of Gloucester, and a share of the Gloucester inheritance
+passed through her to the young duke. His marriage gave Lionel a
+special relation to Ireland, where, however, his two lordships of
+Ulster and Connaught were largely in the hands of the native septs,
+and where the royal authority had never won back the ground lost
+during the vigorous onslaught of Edward Bruce on the English power.
+In 1342 the estates of Ireland forwarded to Edward a long statement
+of the shortcomings of the English administration of the island.[1]
+No effective steps were taken to remedy those evils until, in 1361,
+Edward III. sent Lionel as governor to Ireland, declaring "that our
+Irish dominions have been reduced to such utter devastation and
+ruin that they may be totally lost, if our subjects there are not
+immediately succoured". Lionel's most famous achievement was the
+statute of Kilkenny. This law prohibited the intermixture of the
+Anglo-Normans in Ireland with the native Irish, which was rapidly
+undermining the basis of English rule and confounding Celts and
+Normans in a nation, ever divided indeed against itself, but united
+against the English. Lionel wearied of a task beyond his strength.
+His wife's early death lessened the ties which bound him to her
+land, and he went back to England declaring that he would never
+return to Ireland if he could help it. His succession as governor
+by a Fitzgerald showed that the plan of ruling Ireland through
+England was abandoned by Edward III. in favour of the cheaper but
+fatal policy of concealing the weakness of the English power by
+combining it with the strength of the strongest of the Anglo-Norman
+houses. Under this faulty system, the statute of Kilkenny became
+inoperative almost from its enactment.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Cal. of Close, Rolls, 1341-43, pp. 508-16.</p>
+
+<p>The widowed Duke of Clarence made a second great marriage. The
+Visconti, tyrants of Milan, were willing to pay heavily for the
+privilege of intermarriage with the great reigning families of
+Europe, and neither Edward III. nor the French king could resist
+the temptation of alliance with a family that was able to endow its
+daughters so richly. Accordingly, the Duke of Clarence became in
+1368 the husband of Violante <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg430"
+id="pg430">430</a></span>Visconti, the daughter of Galeazzo, lord
+of Pavia, and the niece of Bernab&ograve;, signor of Milan, the
+bitter foe of the Avignon papacy. Five months later, Lionel was
+carried away by a sudden sickness, and thus the Visconti marriage
+brought little fruit to England. Lionel's only child, Philippa, the
+offspring of his first marriage, was married, just before her
+father's death, to Edmund Mortimer, Earl of March, great-grandson
+of the traitor earl beheaded in 1330. Lionel's death added to the
+vast inheritance of the Mortimers and Joinvilles the lands and
+claims of Ulster and Clarence, and so Edward III.'s magnanimity in
+reviving the earldom of March after the disgrace of 1330 was
+rewarded by the devolution of its estates to his grand-daughter's
+child. The Earl of March was invested with a new political
+importance, for his wife was the nearest representative of Edward
+III, save for the dying Black Prince and his sickly son. The fierce
+blood and broad estates of the great marcher family continued to
+give importance to Philippa's descendants; and finally the house of
+Mortimer mounted the throne in the person of Edward IV.</p>
+
+<p>The estates of Lancaster were annexed to the reigning branch of
+the royal house by the marriage in 1359 of John of Gaunt, Edward's
+third surviving son, with Blanche of Lancaster, the heiress of Duke
+Henry, who became, after her sister Maud's death, the sole
+inheritor of the duchy of Lancaster. In 1362 John, who had hitherto
+been Earl of Richmond, yielded up this dignity to the younger John
+of Montfort, its rightful heir, and was created Duke of Lancaster
+at the same time that Lionel was made Duke of Clarence. Ten years
+after her marriage Blanche died, leaving John a son, Henry of
+Derby, the future Henry IV., whose wedding, after his grandfather's
+death, to one of the Bohun co-heiresses brought part of the estates
+of another great house within the grasp of Edward III.'s
+descendants. Moreover, the other Bohun co-heiress became in 1376
+the wife of Thomas of Woodstock, the youngest of Edward's sons, the
+Gloucester of the next reign. The three Bohun earldoms of Hereford,
+Essex, and Northampton were thus absorbed by the old king's
+children and grandchildren. John of Gaunt, like Lionel, lost his
+wife early and sought a second bride abroad. In 1372 he married
+Constance of Castile, a natural daughter of the deceased Peter the
+Cruel. Henceforth he was summoned to parliament as King of Castile
+and Leon as well as Duke of <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg431"
+id="pg431">431</a></span>Lancaster, though it was not until the
+next reign that he took any actual steps to assert his claim.</p>
+
+<p>John's next younger brother, Edmund of Langley, Earl of
+Cambridge in 1368? married Isabella, Constance of Castile's younger
+sister. He was the future Duke of York, and as the only one of
+Edward III.'s sons who did not marry an English heiress, was the
+most scantily endowed of them all. The union of his descendants
+with those of Lionel of Clarence gave the house of York a
+territorial importance which was, as we have seen, mainly derived
+from the Mortimer inheritance. Thus the two lines of descendants of
+Edward III. which had most future significance were those which
+represented through heiresses the rival houses of Lancaster and
+March. The history of the next century shows that the rivalry was
+only made more formidable by the connexion of both these lines with
+the royal family. In this, the most striking triumph of the
+Edwardian policy, is also the most signal indication of its
+failure. From it arose the factions of York and Lancaster.</p>
+
+<p>The legislation of the years of peace, from 1360 to 1369, is
+largely anti-papal and economic, and is so intimately connected
+with the laws of the preceding period that it has been dealt with
+in an earlier chapter. But however anti-papal, and therefore
+anti-clerical, some of Edward's laws were, his government was still
+mainly controlled by great ecclesiastical statesmen. Simon Langham,
+though a Benedictine monk, had as chancellor demanded in 1366 the
+opinion of the estates as to the unlawfulness of the Roman tribute,
+and the clerical estate, if it did not help forward the anti-Roman
+legislation, was content to stand aside, and let it take effect
+without protest. Shortly after taking part in the movement against
+papal tribute, Langham was removed from the see of Ely to that of
+Canterbury in succession to Islip. His conversion into a purely
+monastic college of his predecessor's mixed foundation for seculars
+and regulars in Canterbury Hall, Oxford, showed a bias which might
+have been expected in a former abbot of Westminster, while his
+willingness to follow in the footsteps of Kilwardby, and exchange
+his archbishopric for the dignity of a cardinal and residence at
+Avignon showed that he was a papalist as well as an English <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg432" id="pg432">432</a></span>patriot.
+His successor as primate, appointed in 1369 by papal provision, was
+William Whittlesea, a nephew of Archbishop Islip, whose weak health
+and colourless character made of little account his five years'
+tenure of the metropolitical dignity. With Canterbury in such
+feeble hands, the leadership in the Church and primacy in the
+councils of the crown passed to stronger men: such as John
+Thoresby, Archbishop of York till 1373; Thomas Brantingham,
+treasurer from 1369 to 1371, and Bishop of Exeter from 1370 to
+1394; and above all to Edward's old servant, William of Wykeham,
+chancellor from 1367 to 1371, and Bishop of Winchester, in
+succession to Edington, from 1367 until 1404. Wykeham was a
+strenuous and hard-working servant of the crown, a vigorous and
+careful ruler of his diocese, a mighty pluralist, a magnificent
+builder, and the most bountiful and original of all the pious
+founders of his age. "Everything," says Froissart, "was done
+through him and without him nothing was done."[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Froissart, <i>Chroniques</i>, ed. Luce, viii.,
+101.</p>
+
+<p>The year of the breach of the treaty of Calais was also marked
+by the third great visitation of the Black Death, and the death of
+Queen Philippa. Parliament cordially welcomed the resumption by
+Edward of the title of King of France, and made liberal subsidies
+for the prosecution of the campaign. Disappointment was all the
+more bitter when each campaign ended in disaster, and in the
+parliament of February, 1371, the storm burst. The circumstances of
+the ministerial crisis of 1341 were almost exactly renewed. As on
+the previous occasion, the state was in the hands of great
+ecclesiastics, whose conservative methods were thought inadequate
+for circumstances so perilous. John Hastings, second Earl of
+Pembroke of his house, a gallant young warrior and the intended
+son-in-law of the king, made himself the spokesman of the
+anti-clerical courtiers, probably with the good-will of the king.
+At Pembroke's instigation the earls, barons, and commons drew up a
+petition that, "inasmuch as the government of the realm has long
+been in the hands of the men of Holy Church, who in no case can be
+brought to account for their acts, whereby great mischief has
+happened in times past and may happen in times to come, may it
+therefore please the king that laymen of his own realm be elected
+to replace them, and that none but laymen henceforth be chancellor,
+treasurer, barons of the exchequer, clerk of privy <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg433" id="pg433">433</a></span>seal, or other
+great officers of the realm ".[1] Edward fell in with this request.
+Wykeham quitted the chancery, and Brantingham the treasury. Of
+their lay successors the new chancellor, Sir Robert Thorpe,
+chief-justice of the court of common pleas, was a close friend of
+the Earl of Pembroke, while the new treasurer, Sir Richard le
+Scrope of Bolton, a Yorkshire warrior, represented the interests of
+John of Gaunt, whose long absences abroad did not prevent his
+ultimately becoming a strong supporter of the lay policy. A subsidy
+of &pound;50,000 and a statute that no new tax should be laid on
+wool without parliamentary assent concluded the work of this
+parliament.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Rot. Pad.</i>, ii., 304.</p>
+
+<p>The lay ministers did not prove as efficient as their clerical
+predecessors. Want of acquaintance with administrative routine led
+them to assess the parliamentary grant so badly that an irregular
+reassembling of part of the estates was necessary, when it was
+found that the ministers had ludicrously over-estimated the number
+of parishes in England among which the grant of &pound;50,000 had
+been equally divided. Meanwhile the French war was proceeding worse
+than before. Thorpe died in 1372, and another lay chief-justice,
+Sir John Knyvett, succeeded him in the chancery. Pembroke, as we
+have seen, was taken prisoner to Santander within a few weeks of
+Thorpe's death. Fresh taxation was made necessary by every fresh
+defeat, and the clergy, who looked upon the misfortunes of the
+anti-clerical earl as God's punishment for his enmity to Holy
+Church, had their revenge against their lawyer supplanters, for the
+parliament of 1372 petitioned that lawyers, who used their position
+in parliament to advance their clients' affairs, should not be
+eligible for election as knights of the shire. Next year, the
+discontent of the estates came to a head after the failure of John
+of Gaunt's march from Calais to Bordeaux. The commons, by that time
+definitely organised as an independent house, answered the demand
+for fresh supplies by requesting the lords to appoint a committee
+of their number to confer with them on the state of the realm. The
+composition of the committee was not one that favoured the existing
+administration, and, guided by men like William of Wykeham, it made
+only a limited and conditional grant, which was strictly
+appropriated to the payment of the expenses of the war. The
+anti-clerical party was still strong <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg434" id="pg434">434</a></span>enough to send up denunciations of
+papal assumptions, and the anxiety to adjust the relations between
+the papacy and the crown led to some abortive negotiations with the
+legates of Gregory XI at Bruges in 1374, which were mainly
+memorable for the appearance of John Wycliffe as one of the royal
+commissioners. Disgust at the attitude of the commons may well have
+postponed the next parliament for nearly three years. But the truce
+of Bruges made frequent parliaments less necessary.</p>
+
+<p>The truce brought John of Gaunt back to England, and the rivalry
+between him and his elder brother, which had begun during their
+last joint campaigns in France, crystallised into definite parties
+the discordant tendencies that had been well marked since the
+crisis of 1371. The old king was a mere pawn in the game. His
+health had been broken by the debauchery and frivolity to which he
+had abandoned himself after the death of Queen Philippa. He was now
+entirely under the influence of Alice Perrers, a Hertfordshire
+squire's daughter, whose venality, greed, and shamelessness made
+her the fit tool for the self-seeking ring of courtiers. John of
+Gaunt sought her support as the best means of withdrawing the old
+king from the influence of the Prince of Wales, and the lay
+ministers were glad to maintain themselves in their tottering power
+by means of such powerful allies. Prominent among their party were
+courtier nobles&mdash;such as the chamberlain, Lord Latimer, and
+the steward of the household, Lord Neville of Raby,&mdash;and rich
+London financiers, chief among whom was Richard Lyons, men who made
+exorbitant profits out of the necessities of the administration.
+Faction sought to appear more respectable by professions of zeal
+for reform. The cry against papal encroachments was extended to a
+denunciation of the wealth and power of the clergy. John Wycliffe
+was called from his Oxford classrooms to expound the close
+connexion between dominion and grace, and to teach from London
+pulpits that the ungodly bishop or priest has no right to the
+temporal possessions given him on trust for the discharge of his
+high mission.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Until recently all historians have dated the
+beginning of Wycliffe's political career from 1366, but J. Loserth
+has proved that 1374, the date of the last demand for the Roman
+tribute, to be the right year. See his <i>Studien zur
+Kirchen-politik Englands im 14ten Jahrhundert</i>, in
+<i>Sitzungsberichte der Acad&eacute;mie der Wissenschaften in
+Wien</i>, philos. histor. classe, cxxxvi., 1897, and, more briefly,
+in <i>Engl. Hist. Review, xi.</i> (1896), 319-328.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg435" id="pg435">435</a></span>A
+vigorous opposition to the dominant faction was formed. At its head
+was the Black Prince. Hardly less important and much more active
+than the dying hero of Poitiers was Edmund Mortimer, Earl of March,
+the husband of Philippa of Clarence, and the father of the little
+Roger Mortimer whom nothing but the uncertain lives of the Prince
+of Wales and the sickly Richard of Bordeaux separated from the
+English throne. Hereditary antagonism accentuated incompatibility
+of personal interests. The ancient feuds of the houses of Mortimer
+and Lancaster still lived on in the hostility of their
+representatives. The understanding between the Prince of Wales and
+the Earl of March seems to have been complete. They had as their
+most powerful supporters the outraged dignitaries of the Church,
+who saw themselves kept out of office and threatened in their
+temporalities by the dominant faction. William of Wykeham, who had
+been the guardian of the Earl of March during his long minority,
+was the most experienced and wary of the clerical opposition to the
+lawyers and courtiers of the Lancaster faction. He had an eager and
+enthusiastic backer in the young and high-born Bishop of London,
+William Courtenay, the son of the Earl of Devon, and through his
+mother, Margaret Bohun, a great-grandson of Edward I. Office and
+descent combined to make Bishop Courtenay the custodian of the
+constitutional tradition, which was equally strong among the great
+baronial houses of ancient descent and such highly placed
+ecclesiastics as were zealous for the nation as well as for their
+order. His support was the more necessary since Simon of Sudbury,
+who in 1375 succeeded Whittlesea on the throne of St. Augustine,
+was a weak and time-serving politician.</p>
+
+<p>The storm, which had long been brewing, burst at last in the
+parliament of April, 1376. Of the acts of this memorable assembly,
+famous as the Good Parliament, and of the other concluding troubles
+of the reign we are fortunate in possessing not only copious
+official records, but a minute and highly dramatic account from the
+pen of a St. Alban's monk, who, alone of the monastic chroniclers
+of his age, represented the spirit which, in the days of Matthew
+Paris, made the great Hertfordshire abbey so famous a school of
+historiography.[1]</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Chron. Angliæ</i>, 1328-88, ed. E.M.
+Thompson (Rolls Ser.). Compare Mr. S. Armitage-Smith's <i>John of
+Gaunt</i> for an unfavourable estimate of its value.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg436" id=
+"pg436">436</a></span>The Good Parliament showed from the beginning
+a strong animosity against the courtiers. The time was not yet come
+when the commons could take the initiative, or supply leaders from
+its own ranks, and even among the commons capacity was unequally
+divided. Authority and influence were exclusively with the knights
+of the shire, and the citizens and burgesses were content to allow
+the country gentry to speak and act in their name. The knights of
+the shire demanded that, in accordance with the precedent of 1373,
+a committee of magnates should be associated with them in
+determining the policy to be adopted. The lords spiritual and
+temporal were as eager as the knights to attack the government, and
+a committee, of which the leading spirits included the Earl of
+March and the Bishop of London, supplied the element of direction
+and initiation in which the commons were lacking. The resolution
+which prevailed was shown by the estates agreeing to make no grant
+until grievances had been redressed, and by the choice of Sir Peter
+de la Mare as spokesman of the commons before the king. Sir Peter
+was elected, we are told, because he possessed abundant wisdom and
+eloquence, and enough boldness to say what was in his mind,
+regardless of the good-will of the great. Perhaps a further and
+more weighty reason was that he was steward of the Earl of March.
+He was the first person to hold an office indistinguishable in all
+essentials from that of the later Speaker. Under his guidance the
+commons worked out an elaborate policy of revenge and reform. The
+contempt with which John of Gaunt and the courtiers had at first
+regarded their action, gave place to fear. The duke found it
+prudent to stand aside, while a clean sweep of the administration
+was made.</p>
+
+<p>Charges were brought against the leading ministers of state,
+after a fashion in which the constitutional historian sees the
+beginnings of the process of the removal of great offenders by
+impeachment. Lord Latimer was the first victim. He had appropriated
+the king's money to his own uses; he had shown remissness and
+treachery during the last campaign in Brittany; he had taken
+bribes; he was, in a word, "useless to king and kingdom". His fate
+was promptly shared by Lyons, the London merchant, the accomplice
+of his frauds, who had availed himself of his court influence to
+make a "corner" in nearly all imported articles, to the
+impoverishment of the common people and the <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg437" id="pg437">437</a></span>disorganisation
+of trade. Lord Neville, whose eager partisanship of Latimer had led
+him to insult Sir Peter de la Mare, was threatened with similar
+proceedings. Even Alice Perrers was attacked, though, says the
+chronicler, the natural affection of Englishmen for their king was
+so great that they were slow to molest the lady whom the king
+loved. However, Alice's unblushing interference with the course of
+justice, her appearance in the courts at Westminster, sitting on
+the judges' bench, clamouring for the condemnation of her enemies
+and the acquittal of her friends, roused the knights of the shire
+to action. An ordinance against women being allowed to practise in
+the law courts was made the pretext for her removal from court, and
+Alice, fearful that worse might happen, took oath that she would
+have no further dealings with the king. Meantime Latimer and Lyons
+were condemned to forfeiture and imprisonment.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of these proceedings the knights lost their
+strongest support by the death of the Black Prince on June 8. John
+of Gaunt at once went down to the house of commons, and boldly
+suggested that the English should follow the example of the French
+and allow no woman to become heiress of the kingdom. This was a
+direct assertion of his own claims to stand next to the throne
+after Richard of Bordeaux, and before Roger Mortimer. Alarmed at
+the blow thus levelled against their chief remaining champion, the
+knights courageously held to their position. "The king," said they,
+"though old is still healthy, and may outlive us all. Moreover he
+has an heir in the ten-year-old prince Richard. While these are
+alive there is no need to discuss the question of the succession."
+They completed the drawing up of the long list of petitions, whose
+grudging and partial acceptance by the crown made the roll of the
+parliament of 1376 memorable as asserting principles, if not as
+vindicating practical ends. They forced Lancaster to agree to a
+council of twelve peers nominated in parliament to act as a
+standing committee of advisers, without which the king might do
+nothing of any importance. After this revival of the methods of the
+Mad Parliament and the lords ordainers, the Good Parliament
+separated on July 6. It had sat longer than any previous parliament
+of which there is record. It had persevered to the end in the teeth
+of discouragements of all kinds, and, even after his brother's
+death, Duke John dared not lift up his hand against it so long as
+the session continued.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg438" id=
+"pg438">438</a></span>When the estates separated Lancaster threw
+off the mask. The king, sunk in extreme dotage, was entirely in the
+hands of his unscrupulous son. The old man was kept quiet by the
+return of Alice Perrers to court. She had sworn on the rood never
+to see the king again, but the prelates were "like dumb dogs unable
+to bark" against her; and no effort was made to prosecute her for
+perjury. Latimer and Lyons returned from their luxurious
+imprisonment in the Tower to their places at court. The duke
+roundly declared that the late parliament was no parliament at all.
+No statute was based upon its petitions, the council of twelve was
+rudely dissolved, and Sir Peter de la Mare was imprisoned in
+Nottingham castle. William of Wykeham was deprived of his
+temporalities, and the rumour spread that his disgrace was due to
+his possession of a state secret, revealed to him by the dying
+queen Philippa, that John of Gaunt was no true son of the royal
+pair but a changeling. So timid was the disgraced bishop that he
+vied with the weak primate in his subserviency to Alice. The Earl
+of March, who was marshal of England, was ordered to inspect the
+fortresses beyond sea, whereupon, fearing a plot to assassinate
+him, he resigned his office, "preferring," says a friend, "to lose
+his marshal's staff rather than his life". The powerful
+north-country lord, Henry Percy, who had hitherto acted with the
+opposition, was bribed by the office of marshal to join the
+Lancastrian party.</p>
+
+<p>Grave difficulties still beset the government, and in January,
+1377, John of Gaunt had to face another parliament. Every
+precaution was taken to pack the commons with his partisans. Of the
+knights of the shire of the Good Parliament only eight were members
+of its successor,[1] while in the place of the imprisoned De la
+Mare, Sir Thomas Hungerford, steward of the Duke of Lancaster, was
+chosen Speaker, on this occasion by that very name. A packed
+committee of lords was assigned to advise the commons. In these
+circumstances it was not difficult to procure the reversal of the
+acts against Alice Perrers and Latimer, and the grant of a poll tax
+of a groat a head. The only measure of conciliation was a general
+pardon, a pretext for which was found in the jubilee of the king's
+accession. From this William of Wykeham was expressly excepted.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] <i>Return of Members of Parliament</i>, pt.
+i., 193-97; <i>Chron. Angliæ</i>, p. 112, understates the
+case.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg439" id=
+"pg439">439</a></span>The convocation of Canterbury proved less
+accommodating than the parliament. Under the able leadership of
+Bishop Courtenay, it took up the cause of the Bishop of Winchester,
+refused to join in a grant of money until he had taken his place in
+convocation, and, triumphing at last over the time-serving of
+Sudbury and the hesitation of Wykeham himself, persuaded the bishop
+to join their deliberations. Lancaster met the opposition of
+convocation by calling to his aid the Oxford doctor whom the clergy
+had already begun to look upon as the enemy of the privileges of
+their order. Wycliffe was not as yet under suspicion of direct
+dogmatic heresy. He had not yet clothed himself in the armour of
+his Balliol predecessor, Fitzralph, to wage war against the
+mendicant orders. But he had already formulated his theory that
+dominion was founded on grace, had declared that the pope had no
+right to excommunicate any one, or if he had that any simple priest
+could absolve the culprit from his sentence, and he had shown a
+hatred so bitter of clerical worldliness and clerical property that
+he was looked upon as the special enemy of the great land-holding
+prelates and of the "possessioner" monks, whose lands, he
+maintained, could be resumed by the representatives of the donors
+at their will. The strenuous advocate for reducing the clergy to
+apostolic poverty was not likely to find favour among the prelates.
+Wycliffe's only clerical supporters at this stage were the
+mendicant friars, from whose characteristic opinions as regards
+"evangelical poverty" he never at any time swerved.[1] He was,
+however, eloquent and zealous, and he had a following. Fear either
+of Wycliffe or of his mendicant allies forced the bishops to take
+decisive action. Even Sudbury awoke, "as from deep sleep".[2] The
+duke's dangerous supporter was summoned to answer before the
+bishops at St. Paul's.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] Shirley (preface to <i>Fasciculi
+Zizaniorum,</i> Rolls Ser., p. xxvi.) thought that Wycliffe was
+"the sworn foe of the mendicants" in 1377, and E.M. Thompson's
+emphatic words repudiating the contrary statement of the St.
+Alban's writer, <i>Chron. Anglice,</i> p. liii., illustrate the
+view prevalent in England in 1874. Lechler's <i>Wiclif und die
+Vorgeschichte der Reformation,</i> published in 1873 proves that it
+was not until Wycliffe denied the doctrine of transubstantiation in
+1379 or 1380 that the friars deserted him.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[2] <i>Chron. Anglice</i>, p. 117.</p>
+
+<p>On February 19, Wycliffe appeared in Courtenay's cathedral. Four
+mendicant doctors of divinity, chosen by Lancaster, came <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="pg440" id="pg440">440</a></span>with him
+to defend him against the "possessioners," while the Duke of
+Lancaster himself, and Henry Percy, the new marshal, also
+accompanied him to overawe the bishops by their authority. The
+court was to be held in the lady chapel at the east end of the
+cathedral, and Wycliffe and his friends found some difficulty in
+making their way through the dense crowd that filled the spacious
+nave and aisles. Percy, irritated at the pressure of the throng,
+began to force it back in virtue of his office. Courtenay ordered
+that the marshal should exercise no authority in his cathedral.
+Thereupon Percy in a rage declared that he would act as marshal in
+the church, whether the bishop liked it or not. When the lady
+chapel was reached, there was further disputing as to whether
+Wycliffe should sit or stand, and Lancaster taunted Courtenay for
+trusting overmuch to the greatness of his family. When the bishop
+replied with equal spirit, John muttered: "I would liefer drag him
+out of his church by the hair of his head than put up with such
+insolence". The words were overheard, and the Londoners, who hated
+the duke, broke into open riot at this insult to their bishop. It
+was rumoured that the duke had come to St. Paul's, hot from an
+attack on the liberties of the city that very morning in
+parliament. The court broke up in wild confusion, and the riot
+spread from church to city. Next day Percy's house was pillaged,
+and John's palace of the Savoy attacked. The duke and the marshal
+were forced to seek the protection of their opponent, the Princess
+of Wales, at Kennington. The followers of Lancaster could only
+escape rough treatment by hiding away their lord's badges. The
+citizens cried that the Bishop of Winchester and Peter de la Mare
+should have a fair trial. At last the personal authority of Bishop
+Courtenay restored his unruly flock to order. The old king
+performed his last public act by soothing the spokesmen of the
+citizens with the pleasant words and easy grace of which he still
+was master. The Princess of Wales used her influence for peace, and
+matters were smoothed over.</p>
+
+<p>At some risk of personal humiliation, Lancaster secured a
+substantial triumph. Convocation followed the lead of parliament
+and gave an ample subsidy. William of Wykeham purchased the
+restoration of his temporalities by an unworthy deference to Alice
+Perrers. Wycliffe remained powerful, flattered, and consulted,
+though his enemies had already drawn <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg441" id="pg441">441</a></span>up secret articles against him,
+which they had forwarded to the papal <i>curia</i>. Perhaps in the
+rapidly declining health of the king all parties saw that their
+real interest lay in the postponement of a crisis.</p>
+
+<p>In June Edward lay on his deathbed at Sheen. To the last his
+talk was all of hawking and hunting, and his mistress carefully
+kept from him all knowledge of his desperate condition. When he
+sank into his last lethargy, his courtiers deserted him, and Alice
+Perrers took to flight after robbing him of the very rings on his
+fingers. A simple priest, brought to the bedside by pity, performed
+for the half-conscious king the last offices of religion. Edward
+was just able to kiss the cross and murmur "Jesus have mercy". On
+June 21, 1377, he breathed his last.</p>
+
+<p>With Edward's death we break off a narrative whose course is but
+half run. John of Gaunt's rule was not over; Wycliffe was advancing
+from discontent to revolt; Chaucer was yet to rise for a higher
+flight; Langland had not yet put his complaint into its permanent
+form; the French war was renewed almost on the day of Edward's
+death; popular irritation against bad government, and social and
+economic repression were still preparing for the revolt of 1381.
+With all its defects the age of Edward is preeminently a strong
+age. Greedy, self-seeking, rough, and violent it may be; its
+passions and rivalries combined to make futile the exercise of its
+strength; it sounded the revolutionary note of all abrupt ages of
+transition, and it ends in disaster and demoralisation at home and
+abroad. But government is not everything, and least of all in the
+Middle Ages when what was then thought vigorous government appears
+miserably weak to modern notions. The strong rule decayed with the
+failure of the king's personal vigour. The ministers of Edward's
+dotage could not hold France nor even keep England quiet. England
+had grown impatient of the rule of a despot, though she was not yet
+able to govern herself after a constitutional fashion. It is in the
+incompatibility of the political ideals of royal authority and
+constitutional control, not less than in the want of purpose of her
+ruler and in the factions of her nobles that the explanation of the
+period must be sought. The age of Edward III. has been
+alternatively decried and exalted. Both verdicts are true, but
+neither contains the whole truth. The explanation of both is to be
+found in the annals of a later age.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg443" id=
+"pg443">443</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>APPENDIX.</h2>
+
+<h4>ON AUTHORITIES.</h4>
+
+<h4>(1216-1377.)</h4>
+
+<p>Our two main sources of knowledge for medieval history are
+records and chronicles. Chronicles are more accessible, easier to
+study, more continuous, readable, and coloured than records can
+generally be. Yet the record far excels the chronicle in scope,
+authority, and objectivity, and a prime characteristic of modern
+research is the increasing reliance on the record rather than the
+chronicle as the sounder basis of historical investigation. The
+medieval archives of England, now mainly collected in the Public
+Record Office, are unrivalled by those of any other country. From
+the accession of Henry III. several of the more important classes
+of records have become copious and continuous, while in the course
+of the reign nearly all the chief groups of documents have made a
+beginning. The whole of the period 1216 to 1377 can therefore be
+well studied in them.</p>
+
+<p>A large proportion of our archives is taken up with common
+forms, technicalities, and petty detail. It will never be either
+possible or desirable to print the mass of them <i>in extenso</i>,
+and most of the efforts made to render them accessible have taken
+the form of calendars, catalogues, and inventories. Such attempts
+began with the costly and unsatisfactory labours of the Record
+Commission (dissolved in 1836); and in recent years the work has
+again been taken up and pursued on better lines. The folio volumes
+of the Record Commission only remain so far of value as they have
+not been superseded by the more scholarly octavo calendars which
+are now being issued under the direction of the deputy-keeper of
+the records. These latter are all accompanied by copious indices
+which, though not always to be trusted implicitly, immensely
+facilitate the use of them. The records were preserved by the
+various royal courts. Of special importance for the political
+historian are the records of the Chancery and Exchequer.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg444" id=
+"pg444">444</a></span>Prominent among the Chancery records are the
+PATENT ROLLS, strips of parchment sewn together continuously for
+each regnal year, whereon are inscribed copies of the letters
+patent of the sovereign, so called because they were sent out open,
+with the great seal pendent. Beginning in 1200, they present a
+continuous series throughout all our period, except for 23 and 24
+Henry III. The publication of the complete Latin text of the
+<i>Patent Rolls of Henry III.</i> is now in progress, and two
+volumes have been issued, including respectively the years
+1216-1225 and 1225-1232. From the accession of Edward I. onwards
+the bulk of the rolls renders the method of a calendar in English
+more desirable. The <i>Calendars of the Patent Rolls</i> are now
+complete from 1272 to 1324 and from 1327 to 1348 (Edward I., 4
+vols.; Edward II., 4 vols.; Edward III., 7 vols.). For the years
+not thus yet dealt with the unsatisfactory <i>Calendarium Rotulorum
+Patentium</i> (1802, fol.) may still sometimes be of service.</p>
+
+<p>The letters close, or sealed letters addressed to individuals,
+usually of inferior public interest to the letters patent are
+preserved in the CLOSE ROLLS, compiled in the same fashion as the
+Patent Rolls. The whole extant rolls from 1204 to 1227 are printed
+in <i>Rotuli Literarum Clausarum</i> (2 vols. fol., 1833 and 1844,
+Rec. corn.), and it is proposed to continue the integral
+publication of the text for the rest of Henry III.'s reign on the
+same plan as that of the Patent Rolls. One volume of this
+continuation, 1227-1231 (8vo, 1902), has been issued. For the
+subsequent periods a calendar in English is being prepared similar
+in type to the <i>Calendar of Patent Rolls</i>. The periods at
+present covered by the <i>Calendar of Close Rolls</i> (1892-1905)
+are, Edward I., 1272-1296 (3 vols.): Edward II., the whole of the
+reign (4 vols.), and Edward III., 1327-1349 (8 vols.).</p>
+
+<p>A third series of records preserved by the Chancery officials is
+the ROLLS OF PARLIAMENT, including the petitions, pleas, and other
+parliamentary proceedings. None of these are extant before 1278,
+and the series for the succeeding century is often interrupted.
+Many of them are printed in the first two folios (vol. i., Edward
+I. and II.; vol. ii., Edward III.) of <i>Rotuli Parliamentorum</i>
+(1767-1777). A copious index volume was issued in 1832. A specimen
+of what may still be looked for is to be found in Professor
+Maitland's edition of one of the earliest rolls of parliament in
+<i>Memoranda de Parliamento</i> (1305) (Rolls series, 1893) with an
+admirable introduction. For the reigns of Edward I. and II. the
+deficiencies of the published rolls are supplemented by SIR F.
+PALGRAVE'S <i>Parliamentary Writs and Writs of Military Service</i>
+(vol. i., 1827, Edward I.; vol. ii., 1834, Edward II., fol., Rec.
+Corn.) with alphabetical digests and indices.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg445" id=
+"pg445">445</a></span>Formal grants under the great seal called
+<i>Charters</i>, characterised by a "salutation" clause, the names
+of attesting witnesses, and, under Henry III. after 1227, by the
+final formula <i>data per manum nostram apud</i>, etc., and
+implying normally the presence of the king, are contained in the
+CHARTER ROLLS, extant from the reign of John onwards. They are
+roughly analysed in the <i>Calendarium Rotulorum Chartarum</i>
+(1803, Rec. Com.); and the <i>Rotuli Chartarum</i> (fol., 1837,
+Rec. Corn.) contains the rolls <i>in extenso</i> up to 1216, Vol.
+i., 1226-1257, of an English <i>Calendar of Charter Rolls</i>,
+printing some of the documents in full, was published in 1903.</p>
+
+<p>The documents formerly known as ESCHEAT ROLLS, or INQUISITIONES
+POST MORTEM, are concerned with the inquiries made by the Crown on
+the death of every landholder as to the extent and character of his
+holding. Some of the information contained in these inquests was
+made accessible in the <i>Calendarium Inquisitionum sive
+Eschætarum</i> (vol. i., Henry III., Edward I. and II., 1806; vol.
+ii., Edward III., 1808, fol., Rec. Corn.). The errors and omissions
+of these volumes were partially remedied for the reigns of Henry
+III. and Edward I. by C. ROBERTS'S <i>Calendarium Genealogicum</i>
+(2 vols. 8vo, 1865). A scholarly guide to all this class of
+documents has been begun in the new <i>Calendar of Inquisitions
+Post Mortem and other Analogous Documents</i>, of which vol. i.
+(Henry III.) was issued in 1904. The first volume of a separate
+list of the analogous inquisitions <i>Ad pod damnum</i> is also
+announced.</p>
+
+<p>Of the FINE ROLLS containing the records of fines[1] made with
+the Crown for licence to alienate, exemption from service,
+wardships, pardons, etc., those of Henry III. have been made
+accessible in C. ROBERTS'S <i>Excerpta e Rotulis Finium</i>,
+1216-1272 (1835-36, 8vo). Other rolls such as the LIBERATE ROLLS
+have not yet been published for the reigns here treated.</p>
+
+<p class="three">[1] A <i>fine</i> in this technical sense is an
+agreement arrived at by a money transaction.</p>
+
+<p>Of special or local rolls, preserved in the Chancery, the most
+important for our period are the GASCON ROLLS. The earlier
+documents called by this name are not exclusively concerned with
+the affairs of Gascony; they are miscellaneous documents enrolled
+for convenience in common parchments by reason of the presence of
+the king in his Aquitanian dominions. Of these are F. MICHEL'S
+<i>Roles Gascons</i>, vol. i., published in the French government
+series of <i>Documents In&eacute;dits sur l'Histoire de France</i>
+(1885), including a "fragmentum rotuli Vasconiæ," 1242-1243, and
+"patentes littere facte in Wasconia," 1253-1254, years in which
+Henry III. was actually in Gascony. This publication was resumed in
+1896 by M. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg446" id=
+"pg446">446</a></span>CHARLES B&Eacute;MONT'S
+<i>Suppl&eacute;ment</i> to Michel's imperfect volume, containing
+innumerable corrections, an index, introduction, and some
+additional rolls of 1254 and 1259-1260. The later of these, the
+roll of Edward's delegated administration, is the first exclusively
+devoted to the concerns of Gascony. "Gascon Rolls" in this later
+sense begin with Edward I.'s accession, and M. B&eacute;mont has
+undertaken their publication for the whole of Edward's reign from
+photographs of the records supplied by the English to the French
+government. In 1900 vol. ii. of the <i>Roles Gascons,</i>
+containing the years 1273-1290, was issued. Other classes of
+Chancery Rolls accessible in print are <i>Rotuli Scotiæ,</i>
+1291-1516 (2 vols., 1814-1819, Rec. Corn.), and <i>Rotuli
+Walliæ</i>, 5-9 Edward I., privately printed by Sir Thomas
+Phillipps (1865). Among isolated Chancery records the <i>Rotuli
+Hundredorum</i> (Rec. Corn., 2 vols. fol., 1812-1818), containing
+the very important inquests made by Edward I.'s commissioners into
+the franchises of the barons, may specially be noticed here.</p>
+
+<p>Of not less importance than the Chancery records are those
+handed down from the Court of Exchequer. The most famous of these,
+the PIPE ROLLS, which, unlike the Chancery Enrolments, were "filed"
+or sewn skin by skin, are decreasingly important from the
+thirteenth century onwards as compared with their value for the
+twelfth. For this reason the Pipe Roll Society, founded in 1883,
+only undertook their publication up to 1200. Fragments of Pipe
+Rolls for our period can be seen in print in various local
+histories and transactions, as e.g., "Pipe Rolls of Northumberland"
+up to 1272 in HODGSON-HINDE'S History of Northumberland, pt. iii.,
+vol. iii., and 1273-1284, ed. Dickson (Newcastle, 1854-60), and of
+Notts and Derby (translated extracts) in YEATMAN's <i>History of
+Derby</i> (1886). The only gap in our series is for Henry III. Of
+other Exchequer records we may mention: (i) the ORIGINALIA ROLLS,
+containing the estreats or documents from the Chancery informing
+the Exchequer of moneys due to it, beginning in 20 Henry III., a
+summary of which is published in <i>Rotulorum Originalium</i> in
+Curia <i>Scaccarii Abbreviatio,</i> 20 Henry III,-51 Edward III (2
+vols. fol., Rec. Corn., 1805-1810); (2) the MEMORANDA ROLLS,
+containing records of charges upon the Exchequer, etc., are
+complete for this period. They were kept by the king's and the
+treasurer's remembrancer, and are illustrated in print by extracts
+from the Memoranda Rolls, 1297, in <i>Transactions of the Royal
+Hist. Soc.,</i> new series, iii., 281-291(1886), and by the roll of
+3 Henry III. in COOPER'S <i>Proceedings of the Record
+Commissioners</i> (1833); (3) MINISTERS ACCOUNTS, i.e., accounts of
+royal bailiffs, etc., for royal manors, etc., not included in the
+sheriffs' accounts, beginning with <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg447" id="pg447">447</a></span>Edward I., of which a list is
+given in the <i>P.R.O. Lists and Indexes</i>, Nos. v. and viii.;
+(4) of the PELL RECORDS, recording issues and payments, samples
+given in DEVON'S <i>Issues of the Exchequer</i> (Rec. Corn., 8vo,
+1837), DEVON'S <i>Issue Roll of Thomas of Brantingham in</i> 1370
+(Rec. Corn., 8vo, 1835). The pells of receipt were entered on the
+(5) RECEIPT ROLLS, specimens of which, along with the corresponding
+issues, are to be found in SIR JAMES RAMSAY'S abstracts of issue
+and receipt rolls for certain years of Edward III. in the
+<i>Antiquary</i>(1880-1888); (6) SUBSIDY ROLLS of various types,
+illustrated by <i>Nonarum Inquisitiones tempore Edwardi ZZZ.</i>
+(Rec. Corn., 1807), the record of a subsidy of a ninth collected by
+Edward III. in 1340-1341; (7) WARDROBE and HOUSEHOLD ACCOUNTS
+containing for the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries information
+on national as well as private royal finance; specimens in print
+include the important <i>Liber Quotidianus Contra-rotulatoris
+Garderobæ</i>, 28 <i>Ed. I.</i>(1299-1300), (1787, Soc.
+Antiq.).</p>
+
+<p>From the Exchequer records come also the following: (1) <i>Testa
+de Neville sive Liber Feodorum temp. Hen. ZZZ. et Edw. I.</i> (Rec.
+Corn., fol.,
+1807), a miscellaneous and ill-digested but valuable
+collection of thirteenth century inquisitions; (2) <i>Nomina
+Villarum, g</i> Ed. II., published in PALGRAVE'S <i>Parl.
+Writs</i>, ii., iii., 301-416; (3) <i>Kirkby's Quest, a</i> survey
+made by Bishop Kirkby, the treasurer, in 1284-85, of which the
+Yorkshire portion has been printed by the Surtees Soc., ea. Skaife
+(1867), and other portions elsewhere; (4) <i>Taxatio Ecclesiastica
+Angliæ et Walliæ</i>, 1291 (Rec. Corn., 1802), the taxation of
+benefices by Nicholas IV. by which assessments of papal and
+ecclesiastical taxes were long made. A very useful compilation,
+recently undertaken under the direction of the deputy-keeper, is
+<i>Inquisitions and Assessments relating to Feudal Aids</i>,
+1284-1431, of which three volumes, dealing in alphabetical order
+with the shires from Bedford to Norfolk, are published Cheshire and
+Durham are entirely omitted and Lancashire very scantily dealt with
+as exceptional jurisdictions. The work is based upon the various
+lay records enumerated above and other analogous inquests. Ancient
+compilations of miscellaneous documents by officials of the
+Exchequer are exemplified in <i>Liber Niger Scaccarii</i> (ed.
+Hearne, 2 vols., 1774), and in the <i>Red Book of the Exchequer</i>
+(ed. H. Hall, 3 vols., Rolls ser., 1896).</p>
+
+<p>The records of the common law courts, the King's Bench and the
+Court of Common Pleas, are of less direct historical value than
+those of the Chancery and the Exchequer. Extraordinarily bulky,
+they require a good deal of sifting to sort the wheat from the
+chaff. As yet a very small proportion of them has been printed, and
+few have <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg448" id=
+"pg448">448</a></span>even been calendared. A brief index of them
+has been compiled in the useful <i>List of Plea Rolls</i> (1894,
+<i>P.R.O. Lists and Indexes</i>, No. iv.). Of the various types of
+these records the FEET OF FINES have been largely used by the
+topographer and genealogist, and the feet of fines for many
+counties during this period have been calendared, summarised,
+excerpted, and printed, wholly or in part, by local archaeological
+societies, as for example, W. FARRER'S <i>Lancashire Final Concords
+till 1307</i> (Rec. Soc. for Lancashire and Cheshire, 1899), and
+many others. The PLEA ROLLS are of wider importance. For the days
+of Henry III. <i>Placita Coram Rege</i> (<i>i.e.</i>, of the King's
+Bench) and the <i>Placita de Banco</i> (<i>i.e.</i>, of the Common
+Pleas in later phrase) are classified as <i>Rotuli Curiæ
+Regis</i>, while the rolls of the local eyres for the same period
+are called <i>Assize Rolls</i>. Separate series for each court
+begin with Edward I. Specimens of most of these types have been
+printed. <i>Placitorum Abbreviatio Ric. I.&mdash;Edw. II.</i> (Rec.
+Com., fol., 1811) is a careless seventeenth century abstract.
+<i>Placita de Quo Warranto</i>, Edward I. to Edward III. (Rec.
+Com., fol., 1818), is a record of local eyres of particular
+importance for the reign of Edward I. as the corollary of the
+Hundred Rolls and the attack on the local franchises. HUNTER'S
+<i>Rotuli Selecti</i> (Rec. Com., 1834) contains pleas of the reign
+of Henry III. A typical year's pleadings of the King's Bench for
+1297 is given in full in PHILLIMORE's <i>Placita coram rege</i>, 25
+Edward I. (1898, British Rec. Soc.). Selections from the
+proceedings of the commission appointed by Edward I. in 1289 to
+hear complaints against judges and officials will shortly be
+published by Miss Hilda Johnstone and myself for the Royal
+Historical Society. Of special importance are the plea rolls issued
+by the Selden Society, which include for our period F.W. MAITLAND'S
+<i>Select Pleas of the Crown</i>, 1200-1225; BAILDON'S <i>Select
+Chancery Pleas</i>, 1364-1471; J.M. RIGG'S <i>Select Pleas of the
+Jewish Exchequer</i>; and G.J. TURNER'S <i>Select Pleas of the
+Forest</i>; all have translations and introductions, of which those
+of Professor Maitland are of exceptional value.</p>
+
+<p>To these types must be added the records of the local courts,
+now largely also in the Public Record Office, though vast numbers
+of court rolls and manorial documents are still in private hands,
+and among the archives of ecclesiastical and secular corporations.
+The Selden Society has done excellent work in publishing such
+muniments; as in particular, MAITLAND'S <i>Select Pleas in Manorial
+Courts</i>, vol. i., Henry III. and Edward I., illustrating the
+social and legal life of a medieval village; MAITLAND and BAILDON'S
+<i>Court Baron</i>; HUNTER' s <i>Leet Jurisdiction of Norwich</i>;
+C. GROSS's <i>Select Cases from the Coroners' Rolls</i>, 1265-1413.
+The records of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg449" id=
+"pg449">449</a></span>Bishopric of Durham, the County Palatine of
+Chester, the Principality of Wales, and the Duchy of Lancaster are
+deposited in the Public Record Office, and calendars and lists
+scattered over the <i>Deputy-Keeper of the Records' Reports</i>
+throw some light on their contents. Unluckily these records of
+franchise are incompletely preserved and often in bad condition.
+The best preserved for our period are the Durham records, described
+in LAPSLEY'S County <i>Palatine of Durham</i>, pp. 327-337 (Harvard
+Historical Studies); some of the most important are printed in
+<i>Registrum Palatinum Dunelmense</i>, ed. Hardy (Rolls Series, 4
+vols.), which is also an Episcopal register. Welsh records may be
+illustrated by the <i>Record of Carnarvon</i> (Rec. Corn., fol.,
+1838). Academic records are illustrated by the Oxford <i>Munimenta
+Academica</i> (ed. Anstey), Rolls Series. Municipal records are
+very numerous and important; full particulars as to them can be
+found in C. Gross's <i>Bibliography of British Municipal
+History</i> (Harvard Hist. Studies). Admirably edited examples of
+our wealth of municipal records for this period are to be found in
+<i>Records of the Borough of Nottingham</i> (ed. W.H. Stevenson),
+vol. i. (1882); <i>Records of the Borough of Leicester</i> (ed.
+Mary Bateson), vols. i. and ii. (1899 and 1901); and <i>Munimenta
+Gildhallæ Londoniensis</i> (ed. H.T. Riley), Rolls Series. The
+<i>Reports of the Historical Manuscripts Commission</i> afford much
+information as to every type of document in private or local
+custody. Ireland and Scotland have archives of their own; but there
+are no systematic records in the Register House at Edinburgh before
+the War of Independence. Among the enterprises now abandoned of the
+Public Record Office were <i>Calendars of Documents relating to
+Scotland and Ireland</i>. The Scottish series covers all this
+period (vols. i.-iv.), the Irish was stopped at 1307. They are
+derived, by a rather arbitrary selection, from various classes of
+English records, but contain much valuable material. JOSEPH
+STEVENSON'S <i>Documents illustrating the History of Scotland</i>
+(1286-1306) (Scot. Rec. Publications, 1870), and PALGRAVE'S
+Documents <i>and Records illustrating the History of Scotland</i>
+(Rec. Corn., 1837), are useful for the reign of Edward I. as are
+for limited periods of it the <i>Wallace Papers</i> (Maitland Club,
+1841) and <i>Scotland in 1298</i> (ed. Gough, 1888).</p>
+
+<p>A new class of records begins in the thirteenth century with
+BISHOPS' REGISTERS. These, so far as they survive, are preserved in
+the diocesan registries. Of printed registers for this period the
+most important is MARTIN'S <i>Registrum Epistolarum J. Peckham</i>
+(3 vols., Rolls Series, 1882-1886), the earliest surviving
+Canterbury register. Other registers printed or calendared are
+HINGESTON-RANDOLPH'S <i>Exeter Registers</i>, 1257-1291, 1307-1326,
+and 1327-1369 (5 vols., 1889, etc.); <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+"pg450" id="pg450">450</a></span>excerpts, particularly from the
+York registers, in RAINE'S <i>Letters from the Northern
+Registers,</i> Rolls Series; the two oldest York <i>Registers</i>
+of ARCHBISHOPS WALTER GREY (1215-1255) and WALTER GIFFARD
+(1266-1279), both in Surtees Society; the Wells <i>Registers</i> of
+BPS. DROKENSFORD, 1309-1329, and RALPH OF SHREWSBURY, 1329-1363
+(Somerset Record Society); the Worcester <i>Register</i> of BP.
+GIFFARD, 1268-1302 (Worcester Historical Society); the Winchester
+<i>Registers</i> of BISHOPS SANDALE and RIGAUD, 1316-1323, and
+WYKEHAM, 1366-1404 (Hampshire Record Society). A society called the
+Canterbury and York Society has recently been started to set forth
+episcopal registers systematically in print. It has begun to
+publish the earliest Lincoln <i>Register</i> extant, that of Hugh
+of Wells, bishop of Lincoln, 1209-1235, whose <i>Liber Antiquus de
+Ordinatione Vicariorum</i> was printed in 1888. Analogous documents
+are LUARD'S <i>Rob. Grosseteste Epistola</i> (Roll Series, 1861),
+and the like.</p>
+
+<p>Monastic CARTULARIES are less important for general history in
+this than in previous periods; large masses of monastic records of
+this age have survived, not a tithe of which is to be found in
+DUGDALE'S <i>Monasticon</i>. Some monastic records illustrate the
+domestic economy or religious life of the house as KIRK'S
+<i>Accounts of the Obedientiaries of Abingdon,</i> 1322-1479
+(Camden Soc.); J.W. CLARK's <i>Observances in use at Barnwell
+Priory,</i> 1295-1296(1897), and the like.</p>
+
+<p>For this period by far the most important series of foreign
+records is the magnificent collections of the papacy. A summary of
+many of these is to be found in BLISS, JOHNSON, and TWEMLOW's
+<i>Calendars of Papal Registers illustrating the History of Great
+Britain and Ireland; Papal Letters</i> (vols. i.-iv., 1198-1404),
+and <i>Petitions to the Pope</i> (vol. i., 1342-1419), of special
+importance for the fourteenth century. These useful calendars,
+however, do not always dispense us from consulting the grand series
+of papal records published or analysed under the care of the French
+School of Rome, which has not yet sufficiently been studied in this
+country. This enterprise is divided into two sections. In the first
+the <i>Registers from Gregory IX. to Benedict XI.</i> are in course
+of publication; in the second the letters of the Avignon popes
+relating to France are printed or analysed. Portions of the letters
+of John XXII, Benedict XII, and Clement VI, are already issued.
+PRESSUTI has published one volume of the <i>Registers of Honorius
+III</i> (1888). From the Vatican archives also comes THEINER'S
+<i>Vetera Monumenta Hib. et Scot. Historiam illustrantia</i>
+(1864), beginning in 1216.</p>
+
+<p>Extracts from various archives are found in such collections as
+RYMER's <i>Foedera</i> of which the Record Commission's edition in
+folio <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg451" id=
+"pg451">451</a></span>reaches just beyond the end of this period;
+WILKINS'S <i>Concilia</i> (1737), containing many extracts from
+episcopal registers and canons of councils; HADDAN and STUBBS'S
+<i>Councils</i>, vol. i. (for the thirteenth century Welsh Church);
+CHAMPOLLION-FIGEAC'S <i>Lettres des Rois et des Reines
+d'Angleterre</i> (2 vols., 1847, <i>Doc. In&eacute;dits</i>);
+STUBBS'S <i>Select Charters</i> (Henry III. and Edward I.), and
+B&Eacute;MONT'S excellent <i>Chartes des Libert&eacute;s
+anglaises</i> in the <i>Collection de Textes pour l'&Eacute;tude et
+l'Enseignement de l'Histoire</i>. Equally useful is COSNEAU'S
+<i>Grands Trait&eacute;s de la Guerre de Cent Ans</i> also in the
+same <i>Collection de Textes</i>. The <i>Statutes of the Realm</i>
+(vol. i., fol., 1810) contains the text of the laws and of the
+great charters of this period.</p>
+
+<p>Chronicles, with all their deficiencies, must ever be largely
+used as sources of continuous historical narrative. For the
+thirteenth century our chief reliance must still be placed upon the
+annals drawn up in various monasteries, some based upon little more
+than gossip or hearsay, others showing real efforts to acquire
+authentic information. The greatest centre of historical
+composition in thirteenth-century England was the Abbey of St.
+Alban's, whose chronicles form so important a series that they may
+appropriately be considered as a whole, before the other
+chroniclers are dealt with in approximately chronological order.
+The fame of St. Alban's as a school of history had its origin in
+the order of Abbot Simon (d. 1183) that the house should always
+appoint a special historiographer. The first of these whose work is
+now extant is ROGER OF WENDOVER (d. 1236), whose <i>Flores
+Historiarum</i> (ed. H.O. Coxe, Engl. Hist. Soc., 1842, or ed.
+Hewlett, Rolls Series, 1886-89&mdash;this latter edition is
+unscholarly) becomes original in 1216 and remains a chief source,
+copious and interesting, if not always precise, until 1235. On
+Wendover's death, MATTHEW PARIS, who took the monastic habit in
+1217, became the official St. Alban's chronicler. His great work,
+the <i>Chronica Majora</i>, is, up to 1235, little more than an
+expansion and embellishment of Wendover. He re-edited Wendover's
+work with a patriotic and anti-curialist bias quite alien to the
+spirit of the earlier writer, whose version should preferably be
+followed. Paris's book is a first-hand source from 1235 to 1259.
+The narrative of the years 1254-1259 is considerably later in
+composition to the history of the period 1235-1253, since on
+reaching 1253 Paris devoted himself to an abridgment of what he had
+already written, called the <i>Historia Minor</i>. On completing
+this he resumed his earlier book, and carried it on to the eve of
+his death in 1259, though he did not live to complete its final
+revision; that was the work of another monk who added a picture of
+his death-bed. The <i>Chronica Majora</i> has been excellently
+edited by <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg452" id=
+"pg452">452</a></span>Dr. H.R. Luard in seven volumes for the Rolls
+Series, with elaborate introductions tracing the literary history
+of the work and a magnificent index. The <i>Historia Minor</i> has
+been published in three volumes by Sir F. Madden in the Rolls
+Series. Paris also wrote the lives of the abbots of his house up to
+1255, a work not now extant, and the basis of the later <i>Gesta
+Abbatum S. Albani</i>, compiled by Thomas Walsingham (d. 1422?) and
+likewise issued in the Rolls Series. The thirteenth century
+biographies have some original value. Paris's <i>Life</i> of
+<i>Stephen Langton</i> is printed in LIEBERMANN'S <i>Ungedruckte
+Anglo-Normannische Geschichtsquellen</i> (1870).</p>
+
+<p>Paris, perhaps the greatest historian of the Middle Ages, has
+literary skill, a vivid though prolix style, a keen eye for the
+picturesque, bold and independent judgment, wonderful breadth and
+range, and an insatiable curiosity. He was a man of the world, a
+courtier and a scholar; he took immense pains to collect his facts
+from documents and eye-witnesses, and had great advantages in this
+respect through the intimate relations between his house and the
+court. Henry III himself contributed many items of information to
+him. His details are extraordinarily full, and he tells us almost
+as much about continental affairs as about those of his own
+country. He wrote with too flowing a pen to be careful about
+precision, and had too much love of the picturesque to resist the
+temptation of embellishing a good story. His narrative of
+continental transactions is in particular extremely inexact. But
+the chief cause of his offending also gives special value to his
+work; he was a man of strong views and his sympathies and
+prejudices colour every line he wrote. His standpoint is that of a
+patriotic Englishman, indignant at the alien invasions, at the
+misgovernment of the king, the greed of the curialists and the
+Poitevins, and with a professional bias against the mendicants. His
+writings make his age live.</p>
+
+<p>The falling off in the St. Alban's work of the next generation
+is characteristic of the decay of colour and detail which makes the
+chroniclers of the age of Edward I. inferior to those of his
+father's reign. The years after 1259 were briefly chronicled by
+uninspired continuators of Matthew Paris, and the reputation of St.
+Alban's as a school of history led to the frequent transference of
+their annals to other religious houses, where they were written up
+by local pens. This led to the dissemination of the series of
+jejune compilations which in the ages of Edward I. and II. were
+widely spread under the name of <i>Flores Historiarum</i>. Dr.
+Luard has published a critical edition of these <i>Flores</i> in
+three volumes of the Rolls Series, which range from the creation to
+1326, with an introduction determining <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg453" id="pg453">453</a></span>their complicated relations
+to each other. They are of no real value before 1259, and for the
+next sixty-seven years are only important by reason of the defects
+of our other sources. No unity or colour can be expected in books
+handed from house to house and kept up to date by jottings by
+different hands. The ascription of these <i>Flores</i> to a
+conjectural Matthew of Westminster by earlier editors is
+groundless. Dr. C. Horstmann, <i>Nova Legenda Anglie</i>, i., pp.
+xlix. <i>seq.</i>(1901), maintains that John of Tynemouth's
+<i>Historia Aurea</i>, still in manuscript, is the official St.
+Alban's history from 1327 to 1377.</p>
+
+<p>In the reign of Edward I. the credit of the school of St.
+Alban's was revived to some extent by WILLIAM RISHANGER, who made
+his profession in 1271 and died early in the reign of Edward II. To
+him is assigned a chronicle ranging from 1259 to 1306 published by
+H.T. Riley in the volume <i>Willelmi Rishanger et Anonymorum
+Chronica et Annales</i> (Rolls Series). Rishanger's authorship of
+the portion 1259-1272 is more probable than that of the section
+1272-1306, which, not compiled before 1327, is almost certainly by
+another hand, and the attribution of even the earlier section to
+Rishanger is doubted by so competent an authority as M.
+B&eacute;mont. The compilation is frigid and unequal. Of the
+miscellaneous contents of Mr. Riley's volume, the short <i>Gesta
+Edwardi I.</i> (pp. 411-423), of no great value, is clearly
+Rishanger's work. We may also ascribe to Rishanger the <i>Narratio
+de Bellis apud Lewes et Evesham</i> (ed. Halliwell, Camden Soc.,
+1840), which tells the story of the Barons' Wars with vigour,
+detail, and insight. Written by a true inheritor of the prejudices
+of Matthew Paris, this chronicle is a eulogy of Montfort. It was
+put together not before 1312.</p>
+
+<p>Another volume of <i>Chroniclers of St. Alban's</i> was edited
+by Mr. Riley for the Rolls Series in 1860. Three of its chronicles
+concern our period. These are: (1) <i>Opus Chronicorum</i>,
+1259-1296, a source of "Rishanger's" chronicle; (2) J. DE
+TROKELOWE'S <i>Annales</i>, 1307-1322; (3) H. DE BLANEFORDE'S
+<i>Chronica</i> (1323). These last two are important for Edward
+II.'s reign. After these works, historical writing further declined
+at St. Alban's. At the end of our period, however, another true
+disciple of Matthew Paris was found in the St. Alban's monk who
+added to a jejune compilation for the years 1328 to 1370 a vivid
+and personal narrative of the years 1376-1388, our chief source for
+the history of the last year of Edward III.'s reign. In his bitter
+prejudice against John of Gaunt and his clerical allies, such as
+Wychffe and the mendicants, the monk is so outspoken that his book
+was suppressed, and most manuscripts leave out the more offensive
+passages. It has been edited by Sir E. Maunde <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg454" id="pg454">454</a></span>Thompson as
+<i>Chronicon Angliæ</i>, 1328-1388 (Rolls Series). Before that its
+contents, like that of other St. Alban's annals, were partially
+known through the fifteenth century compilation under the name of a
+St. Alban's monk, THOMAS OF WALSINGHAM, whose <i>Historia
+Anglicana</i> (2 vols., Rolls Series, ed. Riley) is not an
+authority for our period.</p>
+
+<p>For the early years of Henry III. we have besides Wendover's
+<i>Flores</i>: (i) The CANON OF BARNWELL'S continuation of Howden
+published in STUBBS'S <i>Memoriale Fratris Walteri de Coventria</i>
+(Rolls Series), written in 1227 and copious for the years
+1216-1225. (2) RALPH OF COGGESHALL's <i>Chronicon Anglicanum</i>
+(ed. Stevenson, Rolls Series), ending at 1227 and important for its
+last twelve years. (3) The <i>Histoire des Ducs de Normandie et des
+Rois d'Angleterre</i>, which, published by F. Michel in 1840 (Soc.
+de l'histoire de France), was first appreciated at its full value
+by M. Petit-Dutaillis in the <i>Revue Historique</i>. tome 2
+(1892). (4) The <i>Chronique de l'Anonyme de B&eacute;thune</i>
+printed in 1904 in vol. xxiv. of the <i>Recueil des Historiens de
+la France</i>. (5) A French rhyming chronicle, the <i>Histoire de
+Guillaume le Mar&eacute;chal</i>, discovered and edited by P. Meyer
+for the Soc. de l'histoire de France. Written by a minstrel of the
+younger Marshal from materials supplied by the regent's favourite
+squire, it is, though poetry and panegyric, an important source for
+Marshal's regency.</p>
+
+<p>St. Alban's was not the only religious house that concerned
+itself with the production of chronicles. Other <i>Annales
+Monastici</i> have been edited in five volumes (Rolls Series, vol.
+v. is the index) by Dr. Luard. They are of special importance for
+the reign of Henry III. In vol. i. the meagre annals of the
+Glamorganshire abbey of Margam only extend to 1232. The <i>Annals
+of Tewkesbury</i> are useful from 1200 to 1263, and specially for
+the history of the Clares, the patrons of that house. The Annals of
+Burton-upon-Trent illustrate the years 1211 to 1261 with somewhat
+intermittent light, and are of unique value for the period of the
+Provisions of Oxford, containing many official documents. Vol. ii.
+includes the <i>Annals</i> of <i>Winchester</i> and
+<i>Waverley</i>. The former, extending to 1277, though mainly
+concerned with local affairs are useful for certain parts of the
+reign of Henry III., and particularly for the years 1267-1277. The
+annals of the Cistercian house of Waverley, near Farnham, go down
+to 1291. From 1259 to 1266 the narrative is contemporary and
+valuable; from 1266 to 1275, and partly from 1275 to 1277 it is
+borrowed from the Winchester Annals; from 1277 to its abrupt end it
+is again of importance. The <i>Annals of Bermondsey</i> in vol.
+iii. are a fifteenth century compilation. The <i>Annals</i> of the
+Austin <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg455" id=
+"pg455">455</a></span>canons of <i>Dunstable</i> are of great
+value, especially from the year 1201, when they become original,
+down to 1242. This section is written by RICHARD DE MORINS, prior
+of Dunstable from 1202 to 1242. After his death the annals become
+more local, though they give a clear narrative of the puzzling
+period 1258-1267. They stop in 1297. The chief contents of vol. iv,
+are the parallel <i>Annals of Oseney</i> and the <i>Chronicle</i>
+of THOMAS WYKES, a canon of that house, who took the religious
+habit in 1282. To 1258 the two histories are very similar, that of
+Wykes being slightly fuller. They then remain distinct until 1278,
+and again from 1280 to 1284 and 1285-1289. In the latter year Wykes
+stops, while Oseney goes on with independent value until 1293, and
+as a useless compilation till 1346. Wykes is of unique interest for
+the Barons' Wars, as he is the only competent chronicler who takes
+the royalist side. The Oseney writer, much less full and
+interesting, represents the ordinary baronial standpoint. Wykes is
+occasionally useful for the first years of Edward I.; after 1288
+his importance becomes small. The <i>Annals of Worcester</i> are
+largely a compilation from the Winchester Annals and the
+<i>Flores</i>; the local insertions have some value for the period
+1216-1258, and more for the latter part of the reign of Edward I.,
+at whose death they end.</p>
+
+<p>Other monastic chronicles of the thirteenth century, of small
+importance, enumerated by Dr. Luard (<i>Ann. Mon.</i>, iv., liii.)
+are not yet printed in full. Extracts from many are given in
+PERTZ'S <i>Monumenta Germaniæ Hist. Scriptores</i>, vols. xxvii.
+and xxviii. The <i>Annales Cestrienses</i> (to 1297) have been
+edited by R.C. Christie (Record Soc. of Lancashire and Cheshire);
+EDMUND OF HADENHAM'S <i>Chronicle</i> (down to 1307) is given in
+part in WHARTON'S <i>Anglia Sacra</i>, and M. B&eacute;mont
+publishes in an appendix to his <i>Simon de Montfort</i> (pp.
+373-380) a valuable fragment of a <i>Chronicle</i> of <i>Battle
+Abbey</i> on the Barons' Wars, 1258-1265. For the latter part of
+that period we have some useful notices in HENRY OF SILEGRAVE's
+brief <i>Chronicle</i> (ed. Hook, Caxton Soc., 1849), whose close
+relationship to the <i>Battle Chronicle</i> M. B&eacute;mont has
+first indicated. To these may be added the <i>Annals of Stanley
+Abbey</i> (1202-1271) in vol. ii. of <i>Chronicles of Stephen,
+Henry II. and Richard I.</i> (ed. Hewlett, Rolls Series, 1885), and
+the <i>Chronicle</i> of the Bury monk, JOHN OF TAXSTER or TAYSTER,
+which becomes copious from the middle of the thirteenth century and
+ends in 1265; it was partly printed in 1849 by Benjamin Thorpe as a
+continuation of Florence of Worcester (English Historical Society),
+and the years 1258-1262 are best read in Luard's edition of
+Bartholomew Cotton (Rolls Series). Taxster's work became the basis
+of several later compilations of the eastern counties, including:
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="pg456" id="pg456">456</a></span>(i)
+JOHN OF EVERSDEN, another Bury monk, independent from 1265 to 1301,
+also printed without his name by Thorpe, up to 1295, as a further
+continuation of Florence. (2) JOHN OF OXNEAD, a monk of St.
+Benet's, Hulme, a reputed continuator of Taxster and Eversden up to
+1280, who adds a good deal of his own for the years 1280-1293,
+edited somewhat carelessly by Sir Henry Ellis as <i>Chronica J. de
+Oxenedes</i> (Rolls Series). (3) BARTHOLOMEW COTTON, a monk of
+Norwich, whose <i>Historia Anglicana</i>, original from 1291 to
+1298, and specially important from 1285 to 1291, is edited by Luard
+(Rolls Series). Some thirteenth and early fourteenth century Bury
+chronicles are also in <i>Memorials</i> of <i>St. Edmund's
+Abbey</i>, ed. T. Arnold (vols. ii. and iii., Rolls Series). The
+<i>Chronicon de Mailros</i> (Bannatyne Club), from the Cistercian
+abbey of Melrose, goes to 1270; though utterly untrustworthy, it
+may be noticed as almost the only Scottish chronicle before the war
+of independence, and as containing a curious record of the miracles
+of Simon de Montfort.</p>
+
+<p>Among the historians of Edward I.'s reign is WALTER OF
+HEMINGBURGH, Canon of Guisborough in Cleveland (ed. H.C. Hamilton,
+2 vols., Engl. Hist. Soc.). His account of Henry III.'s reign is
+worthless, but from 1272 to 1312 his work is of great value, though
+never precise and full of gaps. It contains many documents and is
+remarkable for its stirring battle pictures. Hemingburgh probably
+laid down his pen when the narrative ceases early in the reign of
+Edward II. Another writer, identified by Horstmann with John of
+Tynemouth, carries the story from 1326 to 1346.</p>
+
+<p>In striking contrast to the flowing periods of Hemingburgh is
+the well-written and chronologically digested <i>Annals</i> of the
+Dominican friar NICHOLAS TREVET or TRIVET, the son of a judge of
+Henry III.'s reign (ed. Hog, Engl. Hist. Soc.). Beginning in 1138,
+his work assumes independent value for the latter years of Henry
+III. and is of first-rate importance for the reign of Edward I., at
+whose death it concludes, though Trevet was certainly alive in
+1324. It was largely used by the later St. Alban's chroniclers.</p>
+
+<p>Franciscan historiography begins earlier than Dominican with the
+remarkable tract of THOMAS OF ECCLESTON, written about 1260, <i>De
+Adventu Fratrum Minorum in Anglia</i>, published with other
+Minorite documents (including Adam Marsh's letters) in BREWER'S
+<i>Monumenta Franciscana</i> (Rolls Series, continued in a second
+volume by R. Hewlett). The first important Franciscan chronicle,
+called the <i>Chronicon de Lanercost</i> (ed. J. Stevenson,
+Bannatyne Club, 2 vols.), really comes from the Minorite convent of
+Carlisle. It covers the years 1201 to 1346. The early part is
+derived from the valueless chronicle of <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg457" id="pg457">457</a></span>Melrose, and its incoherent
+cult of the memory of Montfort does not save it from the grossest
+errors in dealing with his history. It becomes important for
+northern affairs from Edward I. onwards, giving full details with a
+strong anti-Scottish bias. Another north-country chronicle is Sir
+T. GREY'S <i>Scalacronica</i> (ed. Stevenson, Maitland Club, 1836),
+useful for the Scottish wars and for Edward III.'s reign up to
+1362.</p>
+
+<p>A sign of the times is the beginning of civic chronicles. The
+London series alone is important for English history. It begins
+with the <i>Liber de Antiquis Legibus</i>, or <i>Chronica Majorum
+et Vicecomitum Londoniarum</i> (1188-1274, ed. T. Stapleton, Camden
+Soc.). The work of ARNOLD FITZTHEDMAR, alderman of the German
+merchants in London, it is copious for the years 1236 to 1274, and
+is, with Wykes, the only chronicle of the Barons' Wars written with
+a royalist bias. Fourteenth century civic chronicles, based upon
+<i>Flores Historiarum</i>, and continued independently, form the
+main contents of the two volumes of <i>Chronicles of the Reigns of
+Edward I. and II.</i> (ed. by Dr. Stubbs for the Rolls Series).
+These are: (1) <i>Annales Londonienses</i>, perhaps written by
+ANDREW HORN, chamberlain of London, and compiler of the <i>Liber
+Horn</i>; they have much general value for the period 1301 to 1316,
+and deal more narrowly with London history from 1316 to 1330, when
+they conclude. (2) <i>Annales Paulini</i>, 1307-1341, compiled by
+one of the clergy of St. Paul's, but not by Adam Murimuth. These
+take up Dr. Stubbs's first volume. The second contains: (1) JOHN OF
+LONDON'S <i>Commendatio Lamentabilis in Transitu magni Regis
+Edwardi quarti</i>, a funeral eulogy containing the most elaborate
+contemporary analysis of Edward's character. (2) The CANON OF
+BRIDLINGTON'S <i>Gesta Edwardi de Carnarvon</i>, with a
+continuation down to the death of Edward III., of little value
+after 1339. It has frequent reference to the vaticinations of the
+local prophet, John of Bridlington, and was not put in its present
+shape before 1377. Its first part is based on earlier sources, and
+it is, for lack of better, a prime authority for north-country
+history and Anglo-Scottish relations; the continuation contains the
+best account of Edward Balliol's attempts on the Scottish throne.
+(3) <i>Vita Edwardi II.</i>, from 1307 to 1325, attributed by
+Hearne on slight grounds to a MONK OF MALMESBURY, with many notices
+of the history of Gloucestershire and Bristol, of which the famous
+rising is described at length. The writer is the most human of the
+annalists of the reign, prolix, self-conscious, moralising, and
+somewhat incoherent. He is the most outspoken of all the fourteenth
+century critics of the Roman curia, and has more insight than most
+of his contemporaries.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg458" id=
+"pg458">458</a></span>The following are of primary importance for
+the early years of Edward III.; it is significant that they are
+nearly all secular, not monastic, in origin. (1) <i>Continuatio
+Chronicorum</i>, 1303-1347, by ADAM MURIMUTH, a canon of St. Paul's
+much employed by Edward III. (ed. E.M. Thompson in Rolls Series), a
+mere continuation of the <i>Flores</i> until 1325, thence enlarged
+from personal sources, but still meagre until 1337, when it becomes
+a first-rate authority to 1346. Murimuth's adoption of Michaelmas
+day as the beginning of the year has often confused those who have
+imitated him. Chief among these is (2) GEOFFREY LE BAKER of
+Swinbrooke, an Oxfordshire man, and like Murimuth, a secular clerk,
+whose <i>Chronicon</i> (ed. E.M. Thompson), beginning in 1303 on
+the basis of Murimuth, has independent value after 1324, and is
+noteworthy for its touching details of Edward II.'s fall and death.
+It ends in 1356 with an excellent account of the battle of
+Poitiers. The early part of Baker's chronicle, widely circulated as
+<i>Vita et Mors Edwardi II.</i>, was previously assigned to Sir
+Thomas de la Moor, and was so edited by Stubbs, but Sir E.M.
+Thompson showed clearly that this Oxfordshire knight was Baker's
+patron and not the writer of a chronicle. With many defects, Baker
+can tell a story picturesquely. (3) ROBERT OF AVESBURY, a canon
+lawyer, wrote <i>De mirabilibus Gestis Edwardi III.</i>, of special
+importance for the war from 1339 to 1356, and containing many state
+documents. It is edited by E.M. Thompson in the same volume as
+Murimuth. (4) HENRY KNIGHTON, Canon of Leicester, wrote a
+<i>Chronicle</i> about 1366 which is valuable for the period
+1336-1366 and includes the best contemporary account of the Black
+Death. The latest edition by Lumby in the Rolls Series is not a
+scholarly work. (5) <i>Eulogium Historiarum</i> (ed. Haydon, Rolls
+Series) is contemporary and valuable for 1356-1366 only. There is a
+great dearth of English chronicles for the latter years of Edward
+III. The signal exception is the important St. Alban's <i>Chronicon
+Angliæ</i> already mentioned.</p>
+
+<p>In the age of Edward III. the <i>Flores Historiarum</i> were
+superseded by the <i>Polychronicon</i> (often called the "Brute"
+after WACE'S <i>Brut d'Angleterre</i>), the voluminous compilation
+(to 1352) of RANDOLPH HIGDEN, a monk of Chester (edited by
+Babington and Lumby, Rolls Series). ROBERT OF GLOUCESTER, PETER
+LANGTOFT, and ROBERT MANNYNG have been referred to elsewhere. The
+first is of some original value for the Barons' Wars and Edward I.,
+while Langtoft, a Yorkshire canon specially interested in the
+Scottish wars, is a contemporary for all Edward I.'s reign. Among
+rhyming chronicles, French in tongue but English in origin, may be
+mentioned <i>Le <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg459" id=
+"pg459">459</a></span>Si&egrave;ge de Carlaverock</i>, 1300 (ed.
+Nicolas, 1828), of value for heraldry, and CHANDOS HERALD'S
+<i>Prince Noir</i> (ed. H.O. Coxe, whose edition was pillaged by F.
+Michel for his more accessible version of 1883). <i>L'Histoire de
+Foulques Fitz Warin</i> (d. 1260?), a picturesque marcher hero, a
+prose romance of the end of the thirteenth century, can be read in
+Stevenson's edition of COGGESHALL (Rolls Series), or Englished by
+A. Kemp-Welch (1904).</p>
+
+<p>No contemporary Scottish chronicles of importance deal with the
+War of Independence, though fairly full Scottish versions of it
+exist in later books. The earliest of these is the <i>Bruce</i> of
+JOHN BARBOUR, Archdeacon of Aberdeen. Written in 1375 at the
+instigation of Robert II., Barbour's spirited verses are inspired
+by patriotic rather than historic motives. His details are minute,
+but impossible to control by other sources, and he is more valuable
+as the epic poet of Scottish liberty than as an historical
+authority. He is edited by Skeat (Early English Text Soc.),
+Jamieson, and Innes. The earliest prose Scottish chronicle, that of
+JOHN FORDUN, who died about 1384 (ed. Skene, in <i>Historians of
+Scotland</i>), is of value for the fourteenth century. ANDREW
+WYNTONN'S <i>Originale</i>, a metrical history written in the
+fifteenth century, has next to no authority until the end of this
+period (ed. Laing, in <i>Historians of Scotland</i>), BLIND HARRY'S
+<i>Wallace</i>, written in 1488, is romance not history.</p>
+
+<p>Wales is more fortunate than Scotland in preserving contemporary
+thirteenth century annals, of which a Latin chronicle, <i>Annales
+Cambriæ</i>, extending to 1288, and a Welsh one, <i>Brut y
+Tywysogion</i> (i.e., <i>Chronicle of the Princes</i>), down to
+1278, are edited by J. Williams in the Rolls Series, the latter
+with an English translation. A more critical version of the Welsh
+text of the <i>Brut</i> is that of J. RHYS and J.G. EVANS' <i>Red
+Book of Hergest</i>, vol. ii. (1890).</p>
+
+<p>The close relations between England and France for the whole of
+this period render the French chronicles by far the most important
+of foreign sources for English history. They are enumerated in
+detail by Auguste Molinier in vols. iii. (up to 1328) and iv.
+(after 1328) of the first part of <i>Les Sources de l'Histoire de
+France (Manuels de Bibliographie historique</i>). The chief French
+chronicles of the period 1226-1328 are collected in vols. xx.-xxiv.
+of the <i>Recueil des Historiens de la France</i> begun by Dom
+Bouquet. Some of them are of special importance for English
+history. For Anglo-Netherlandish relations under Edward I. see
+<i>Annales Gandenses</i> (1296-1310), "la chronique la plus
+remarquable de la fin du xiiie si&egrave;cle," the French
+<i>Chronique Art&eacute;sienne</i> (1295-1304), and the
+<i>Chronique Tournaisienne</i> (1296-1314), all edited by F.
+Funck-Brentano in the already mentioned <i>Collection <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg460" id="pg460">460</a></span>de Textes</i>.
+For the Hundred Years' War the French chroniclers are
+indispensable, especially for military history. The most famous of
+these writers, JEAN FROISSART, has been characterised in my text
+(p. 419). He can best be studied in Luce and Raynouart's excellent
+edition for the Soc. de l'Histoire de France (tomes i.-viii.,
+1869-1888) which completes the story up to Edward III.'s death.
+Luce's careful "sommaire et commentaire critique" often affords
+means of checking Froissart by other sources. The magnificent
+volumes of indexes of Kervyn de Lettenhove's complete edition
+(vols. XX.-XXV.) are still of immense use, though his text and
+comments are inferior to those of Luce, Froissart's spirit may well
+be caught in Lord Berners's racy English translation (Tudor
+Translations), or in G.C. Macaulay's useful abridgment. The three
+redactions of Froissart's first book (from 1327 to 1373-1377),
+which is all that concerns our period, have been clearly
+distinguished by Luce. (1) The first edition, written about 1373,
+at the request of Count Robert of Namur, is inspired by an English
+bias. Up to 1360 it is largely derived from the chronicle of JEAN
+LE BEL, Canon of St. Lambert of Li&egrave;ge; after that date it is
+original. (2) The second edition, only represented by two MSS., of
+which one is incomplete, is a modification of the first with a
+French bias. The earlier part is more independent of Jean le Bel.
+(3) The third edition, preserved in a single MS., ends with the
+death of Philip VI in 1350, and, written after 1400, is even more
+hostile to England than the second. The best edition of Jean le Bel
+is by Polain for the Acad&eacute;mie royale de Belgique.</p>
+
+<p>A few of the more important French chronicles after 1328 may be
+mentioned shortly. (1) <i>Grands Chroniques de France</i> (ed.
+Paulin Paris). Original from 1350 to 1377, a work of first-rate
+importance, where, if truth is altered, it is altered deliberately
+from political motives. (2) JEAN DE VENETTE, 1340-1368, written
+with a popular bias, and partly favourable to Charles of Navarre
+(edited as a supplement to G&eacute;raud's edition of Guillaume de
+Nangis, ii., 178-378, Soc. de l'Hist. de France). (3) <i>Chronique
+Normande du xiv'e si&egrave;cle</i>, 1337-1372 (ed. Molinier, Soc.
+de l'Hist. de France, 1882), exact and very important for the wars
+1337 to 1372. (4) <i>Chronique des quatre premiers Valois</i> (Soc.
+de l'Hist. de France). (5) CUVELIER'S poetical <i>Vie de Bertrand
+du Guesclin</i> (2 vols., <i>Doc. in&eacute;dits</i>). Further
+details can be found in Molinier's bibliography. Netherlandish
+sources for the Hundred Years' War are summarised in PIRENNE'S
+<i>Bibliographie de l'Histoire de Belgique</i> (1895). Of special
+importance is JAN VAN KLERK'S <i>Van den Derden Edewaert Rym
+Kronyk</i>. (1840), useful for 1337-1341, and written with an
+English bias.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg461" id=
+"pg461">461</a></span>The unofficial legal literature of the
+thirteenth and fourteenth centuries is of exceptional variety and
+value. Many lawyers' treatises throw light on matters far beyond
+legal technicalities. HENRY OF BRACTON or BRATTON'S <i>De Legibus
+et Consuetudinibus Angliæ</i> illustrates the union of English and
+Roman juridical ideas characteristic of the age of Henry III. It
+has been edited badly by Sir T. Twiss in six volumes (Rolls
+Series), and some portions well by Professor Maitland in his
+<i>Select passages from Bracton and Azo</i> (Selden Soc.).
+Maitland's <i>Bracton's Note Book</i> includes extracts from plea
+rolls seemingly made by Bracton. Bracton's book on the laws was
+translated, condensed, and rearranged by a writer of the next
+generation called Britton. It may be studied in a modern edition in
+NICHOLLS'S <i>Britton on the laws of England</i>, while
+<i>Fleta</i>, an almost contemporary Latin law book, must be read
+in Selden's seventeenth century edition. Another thirteenth century
+law-book, <i>Le Mirroir des Justices</i>, has been edited by
+Maitland and W.J. Whittaker for the Selden Society. From Edward
+I.'s time onwards unofficial reports of trials called YEAR BOOKS,
+written in French, become valuable for their vividness and detail,
+and for the light which they throw on the more technical records of
+the plea rolls. Many of them are printed in unsatisfactory
+seventeenth century editions, but the Year Books of five of Edward
+I.'s regnal years, between 1292 to 1307, together with the Year
+Book of 11-12 Edward III., are accessible in A.J. Horwood's
+editions in the Rolls Series. L.O. Pike has also edited in the
+Rolls Series the <i>Year books of Edward III.</i> from 1338 to
+1345, and Maitland's <i>Year books of Edward II.</i> for the Selden
+Society are the first two instalments of a scheme for publishing
+the Year Books of the reign. Besides their legal value, the Year
+Books are an almost unworked mine for social and economic, and
+often even political and ecclesiastical, history.</p>
+
+<p>Of literary aids to history T. WRIGHT'S <i>Political Songs</i>
+(Camden Soc.) illustrate this period to the reign of Edward II. One
+of Wright's pieces has been more elaborately edited in C.L.
+KINGSFORD'S Song of <i>Lewes</i> (1890), and C. Hardwick published
+a <i>Poem on the Times OF Edward II.</i> for the Percy Soc. (1849).
+With Edward III. such literature becomes copious. Of special
+importance are T. Wright's <i>Political POEMS and SONGS FROM the
+accession of Edward III.</i>, vol. i. (Rolls Series, 1859), J.
+Hall's <i>Poems of</i> LAURENCE MINOT, Skeat's editions of CHAUCER
+and LANGLAND, and G.C. Macaulay's edition of GOWER. The Latin works
+of Wycliffe, published by the Wycliffe Society, mainly belong to
+the succeeding period, but <i>De Dominio Divino</i> and <i>De
+Civili Dominio</i>, as well as some tracts <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="pg462" id="pg462">462</a></span>printed in the appendix to
+LEWIS'S <i>Life of Wiclif</i> and in Shirley's edition of
+<i>Fasciculi Zizanioram</i> (Rolls Series), were written before
+1377.</p>
+
+<p>Of modern works treating of this period, many monographs,
+dealing with particular points, have been mentioned in notes in the
+course of the narrative. Of general guides to the period the best
+by far are Stubbs and Pauli. STUBBS'S <i>Constitutional History</i>
+(vol. ii.) is as valuable for the chapters summarising the
+political history as for the more strictly constitutional matter.
+R. PAULI'S <i>Geschichte von England</i>, iii., 489-896, and iv.,
+1-505, 716-741, remains, after half a century, the fullest and most
+satisfactory working up in detail of these reigns, though the great
+additions to our material make parts of it a somewhat unsafe guide.
+It can be supplemented for particular aspects of history by the
+following: For legal history, POLLOCK and MAITLAND'S <i>History of
+English Law before the time of Edward I.</i>, especially vol. i.,
+book i. (chapters iv.-vi.), and book ii.; and most of vol. ii.; to
+which should be added the prefaces by Prof. Maitland and others to
+the volumes of the Selden Society. MAITLAND'S <i>Roman Canon Law in
+the Church of England</i> (1898) is also of great importance. For
+economic history, W.J. ASHLEY'S <i>Economic History</i>, parts i.
+and ii.; W. CUNNINGHAM's <i>Growth of English Industry and
+Commerce, Early and Middle Ages</i>; VINOGRADOFF'S <i>Villainage in
+England</i>, S. DOWELL'S <i>History of Taxation</i> (2nd edition),
+H. HALL'S <i>Customs Revenue of England</i>, and, as a collection
+of materials, J.E. THOROLD ROGERS' <i>History of Agriculture and
+Prices</i>, vols. i. and ii. For ecclesiastical history, W.R.W.
+STEPHENS'S <i>History of the English Church, 1066-1272</i>; W.W.
+CAPES'S <i>History of the English Church in the Fourteenth and
+Fifteenth Centuries</i>, and F. MAKOWER'S <i>The Constitutional
+History and Constitution of the Church of England</i> (translated
+from the German). For academic history, DENIFLE'S <i>Entstehung der
+Universit&auml;ten des Mittelalters bis 1400</i>, especially pp.
+1-40, 237-251 (Oxford) and pp. 367-376 (Cambridge),
+HAUR&Eacute;AU'S <i>Histoire de la Philosophie scholastique</i> and
+RASHDALL'S <i>Universities of the Middle Ages</i>, i., 1-74, and
+ii., part ii. (Oxford and Cambridge). For military history,
+K&Ouml;HLER'S <i>Entwickelung des Kriegswesens in der
+Ritterzeit</i>, OMAN'S <i>History of the Art of War in the Middle
+Ages</i>, CLARK'S <i>Mediæval Military Architecture</i>, and
+(above all) J.E. MORRIS'S <i>Welsh Wars of Edward I</i>. For naval
+history, NICOLAS'S <i>History of the Royal Navy</i>, and C. DE LA
+RONCI&Egrave;RE'S <i>Histoire de la Marine Fran&ccedil;aise</i>.
+For particular reigns the following may be found useful: For Henry
+III., PETIT-DUTAILLIS'S <i>&Eacute;tude sur Louis VIII.</i>,
+GASQUET'S <i>Henry III. and the Church</i> (1905), B&Eacute;MONT'S
+<i>Simon de <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg463" id=
+"pg463">463</a></span>Montfort</i>, PROTHERO'S <i>Simon de
+Montfort</i>, and BLAAUW'S <i>Barons' Wars</i> (2nd ed., 1871). For
+the reign of Edward I., SEELEY's <i>Life and Reign of Edward I.</i>
+(1872), my <i>Edward I.</i>; GOUGH'S <i>Itinerary of Edward I.</i>,
+MAXWELL'S <i>Robert the Bruce</i> (Heroes of the Nations), and
+MORRIS'S above-mentioned <i>Welsh Wars of Edward I.</i> For some
+aspects of Edward II.'s reign, STUBBS'S prefaces to <i>Chronicles
+of Edward I. and Edward II.</i> are of special value. For Edward
+III.'s reign, BARNES's <i>History of Edward III.</i> (1688) is not
+quite superseded by LONGMAN'S <i>Life and Times of Edward III.</i>
+(2 vols., 1869), and MACKINNON'S <i>History of Edward III.</i>
+(1900). For the Hundred Years' War, E. D&Eacute;PREZ'S
+<i>Pr&eacute;liminaires de la Guerre de Cent Ans</i> (1328-1342)
+(Bibl. de l'Ecole fran&ccedil;aise de Rome, 1902) for diplomatic
+history, and DENIFLE's <i>D&eacute;solation des &Eacute;glises et
+Monast&egrave;res de la France pendant la Guerre de Cent Ans</i>
+(ii., part i., 1899) for the best general survey of the war to
+1380. See also LUCE'S <i>La Jeunesse de Bertrand de Guesclin and La
+France pendant la Guerre de Cent Ans</i>, and (for Brittany) A. DE
+LA BORDERIE'S <i>Histoire de Br&eacute;tagne</i> (1899). The end of
+Edward III.'s reign is illustrated by S. ARMITAGE SMITH'S <i>John
+of Gaunt</i> (1904), J. LECHLER'S <i>Wiclif und die Vorgeschichte
+der Reformation</i> (2 vols., 1873), also translated, not very
+adequately, <i>Wycliffe and His English Precursors</i> (1878 and
+1881), F.D. MATTHEW'S introduction to <i>Wyclif's English Works</i>
+(Early English Text Society), and R.L. POOLE'S <i>Illustrations of
+the History of Mediæval Thought</i> (1884), and <i>Wycliffe</i>
+(1889). G.M. TREVELYAN's <i>England in the Age of Wycliffe</i>
+(1899) is interesting but not always very scholarly.</p>
+
+<p>Some account of the general foreign history of the period can be
+found in LAVISSE and RAMBAUD'S <i>Histoire
+g&eacute;n&eacute;rale</i> (tomes ii. and iii.), LOSERTH'S
+<i>Geschichte des sp&auml;teren Mittelalters</i> (good
+bibliographies), and, briefly, in my <i>Papacy and Empire</i> (up
+to 1273), and LODGE'S <i>Close of the Middle Ages</i> (after 1273).
+For French history of the period LAVISSE'S <i>Histoire de
+France</i> (iii., pt. i., 1137-1226, by A. LUCHAIRE; iii., pt. ii.,
+1226-1328, by C.V. LANGLOIS, and iv., pt. i., 1328-1422, by A.
+COVILLE) cover the whole of the period. More detailed works are,
+PETIT-DUTAILLIS'S <i>Louis VIII.</i>, E. BERGER'S <i>Blanche de
+Castile</i>, WALLON'S <i>Louis IX.</i>, BOUTARIC'S <i>Saint Louis
+et Alfonse de Poitiers</i>, C.V. LANGLOIS'S <i>Philippe le
+Hardi</i>, BOUTARIC'S <i>France sous Philippe le Bel</i>,
+LEHUGEUR'S <i>Philippe le Long</i>, PETIT'S <i>Charles de
+Valois</i>, FOURNIER'S <i>Royaume d'Arles et de Vienne</i>, L.
+DELISLE'S <i>Hist. de Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte</i>, and (for the
+south) the new edition of DE VIC and VAISS&Egrave;TE's <i>Hist.
+g&eacute;n&eacute;rale de Languedoc</i>. Much recent work has been
+done by French scholars towards the reconstruction <span class=
+"pagenum"><a name="pg464" id="pg464">464</a></span>of the external
+history of England during the whole of our period. For the Low
+Countries, PIRENNE'S <i>Hist. de Belgique</i>, ii., ASHLEY'S
+<i>James and Philip van Artevelde</i>, and VANDER KINDERE'S <i>Le
+Si&egrave;cle des Arteveldt</i>. PAULI is good for the relations of
+England and Germany.</p>
+
+<p>Maps illustrating the period are to be found in POOLE'S
+<i>Oxford Historical Atlas</i>, LONGNON'S <i>Atlas historique de la
+France</i>, and SPRUNER-MENKE'S <i>Historischer Hand-Atlas</i>;
+special maps of Edward I.'s Scottish expeditions in GOUGH'S
+<i>Itinerary of Edward I.</i>, of Edward III.'s and the Black
+Prince's campaigns in THOMPSON'S <i>Chronicon Galfridi le
+Baker</i>, and KERVYN'S <i>Froissart</i>, of John of Gaunt's in
+ARMITAGE-SMITH's <i>John of Gaunt</i>, and of Wales in the
+thirteenth century in <i>Owens College Historical Essays</i>. VIDAL
+DE LA BLACHE'S <i>Tableau de la G&eacute;ographie de la France</i>
+(LAVISSE, <i>Hist. de France</i>, i., pt. i.) is instructive for
+the physical features of the campaigns of the Hundred Years'
+War.</p>
+
+<p>Further details as to English authorities, ancient and modern,
+can be found in GROSS'S excellent Sources <i>and Literature of
+English History</i> (1900). The <i>Monumenta Germaniæ
+Historica</i>, <i>Scriptores</i>, vols. xxvii., xxviii., consist of
+excerpts from English writers of the twelfth and thirteenth
+centuries; the introductions (in Latin) by Pauli and Liebermann
+contain noteworthy estimates of the works from which the extracts
+are taken.</p>
+
+<p>NOTE TO PAGES 390-92.</p>
+
+<p>My reasons for my account of the battle of Poitiers demand
+longer explanation than can be given in a footnote. Like most
+modern writers, I have based my narrative on the <i>Chronicle</i>
+of Geoffrey le Baker as expounded by Sir E.M. Thompson, though I
+agree with Professor Oman in holding that Baker's "ampla
+profundaque vallis et mariscus, torrente quodam irriguus," must be
+the valley of the Miausson. I also, however, agree with Father
+Denifle in not setting great store on Chandos Herald, though I
+would not reject him altogether, as all prudent writers must reject
+Froissart. My conjectural account of the movements of the armies is
+an attempt to combine Baker with what may be true in the Herald. I
+hope elsewhere to be able to justify my narrative at length.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="pg465" id=
+"pg465">465</a></span>
+</p>
+<h3>INDEX.</h3>
+
+<table cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" border="2" style=
+"width: 80%;">
+<tbody>
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#A">A</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#B">B</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#C">C</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#D">D</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#E">E</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#F">F</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#G">G</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#H">H</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#I">I</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#J">J</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#K">K</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#L">L</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#M">M</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#N">N</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#O">O</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#P">P</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#Q">Q</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#R">R</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#S">S</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#T">T</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#U">U</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#V">V</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#W">W</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#Y">Y</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#Z">Z</a></td>
+<td class="cell_center"><a href="#TOP">TOP</a></td>
+</tr>
+</tbody>
+</table>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Aachen, <a href="#pg080">80</a>.<a name="A" id="A" /></li>
+
+<li>Abbeville, <a href="#pg145">145</a>, <a href=
+"#pg361">361-364</a>, <a href="#pg411">411</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aberconway Abbey, <a href="#pg165">165</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aberdeen, <a href="#pg198">198</a>, <a href=
+"#pg225">225</a></li>
+
+<li>Aberdeen, John Barbour, Archdeacon of. See Barbour, John.</li>
+
+<li>Abergavenny, town, castle and lordship, <a href=
+"#pg047">47</a>, <a href="#pg165">165</a>, <a href=
+"#pg174">174</a>, <a href="#pg180">180</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Abergavenny, Lords of. See Hastings.</li>
+
+<li>Aberystwyth, <a href="#pg161">161</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Abingdon, <a href="#pg057">57-59</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Abingdon, Edmund of. See Rich, Edmund.</li>
+
+<li>Acre. <a href="#pg134">134</a>, <a href="#pg184">184</a></li>
+
+<li>Acre, Joan of. See Joan.</li>
+
+<li>Acton Burnell, <a href="#pg165">165</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Adolf of Nassau, King of the Romans, <a href=
+"#pg191">191</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Adour, the river. <a href="#pg070">70</a>, <a href=
+"#pg324">324</a>, <a href="#pg386">386</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Agen, <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href="#pg206">206</a>, <a
+href="#pg324">324</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Agenais, the, <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href=
+"#pg140">140</a>, <a href="#pg296">296</a>, <a href=
+"#pg297">297</a>, <a href="#pg324">324</a>, <a href=
+"#pg358">358</a>, <a href="#pg384">384</a>, <a href=
+"#pg387">387</a>, <a href="#pg397">397</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Agnelius of Pisa, <a href="#pg050">50</a>, <a href=
+"#pg085">85</a>, <a href="#pg087">87</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aigueblanche, Peter of, Bishop of Hereford, <a href=
+"#pg055">55</a>, <a href="#pg063">63</a>, <a href=
+"#pg078">78</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aiguillon, <a href="#pg358">358</a>, <a href=
+"#pg367">367</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Albemarle, William of Fors, Earl of, <a href="#pg004">4</a>, <a
+href="#pg020">20</a>, <a href="#pg024">24-26</a>, <a href=
+"#pg103">103</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Albemarle and Devon, Isabella of Fors, Countess of, <a href=
+"#pg224">224</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Albigenses, the, <a href="#pg031">31</a>, <a href=
+"#pg033">33</a>, <a href="#pg055">55</a>, <a href="#pg070">70</a>,
+<a href="#pg352">352</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Albert the Great, <a href="#pg090">90</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Albret, Lord of, <a href="#pg073">73</a>, <a href=
+"#pg212">212</a>, <a href="#pg325">325</a>, <a href=
+"#pg357">357</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aldgate, <a href="#pg375">375</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Alencon, Count of, <a href="#pg328">328</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Alexander II., King-of Scots, <a href="#pg015">15</a>, <a href=
+"#pg023">23</a>, <a href="#pg058">58</a>, <a href=
+"#pg067">67</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Alexander III., King of Scots, <a href="#pg176">176</a>, <a
+href="#pg177">177</a>, <a href="#pg181">181</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Alexander, son of Alexander III of Scotland, <a href=
+"#pg177">177</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Alexander IV., Pope, <a href="#pg078">78</a>, <a href=
+"#pg079">79</a>, <a href="#pg088">88</a>, <a href=
+"#pg108">108-110</a>, <a href="#pg176">176</a>, <a href=
+"#pg177">177</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Alexander of Hales, See Hales.</li>
+
+<li>Alfonso X., King of Castile, <a href="#pg072">72</a>, <a href=
+"#pg073">73</a>, <a href="#pg080">80</a>, <a href="#pg104">104</a>,
+<a href="#pg143">143</a>, <a href="#pg144">144</a>, <a href=
+"#pg169">169</a>, <a href="#pg171">171</a>, <a href=
+"#pg172">172</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Alfonse of France, Count of Poitiers, <a href="#pg034">34</a>,
+<a href="#pg062">62</a>, <a href="#pg064">64</a>, <a href=
+"#pg071">71</a>, <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href=
+"#pg106">106</a>, <a href="#pg140">140</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Alice, Countess of Lancaster, <a href="#pg224">224</a>, <a
+href="#pg273">273</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Alice of Lusignan, <a href="#pg099">99</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aliens, <a href="#pg067">67</a>, <a href="#pg097">97</a>, <a
+href="#pg098">98</a>, <a href="#pg100">100</a>-103, <a href=
+"#pg112">112</a>, <a href="#pg175">175</a>, <a href=
+"#pg176">176</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Almaine, Henry of. See Henry of Almaine.</li>
+
+<li>"Almaines, The," <a href="#pg335">335</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Almond, the river, <a href="#pg213">213</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Alnwick Castle, <a href="#pg131">131</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Alton Castle, <a href="#pg273">273</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Amadeus III., Count of Savoy, <a href="#pg054">54</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Amesbury, <a href="#pg184">184</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Amice, mother of the elder Simon de Montfort, <a href=
+"#pg055">55</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Amiens, <a href="#pg112">112</a>, <a href="#pg170">170</a>, <a
+href="#pg187">187</a>, <a href="#pg222">222</a>, <a href=
+"#pg295">295</a>, <a href="#pg328">328</a>, <a href=
+"#pg361">361</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>cathedral, <a href="#pg055">55</a>, <a href="#pg295">295</a>,
+<a href="#pg295">295</a>;</li>
+
+<li>mise of, <a href="#pg295">295</a>, <a href=
+"#pg295">295</a>;</li>
+
+<li>treaty of (1279), <a href="#pg295">295</a>, <a href=
+"#pg295">295</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Amory, Roger of, <a href="#pg273">273</a>, <a href=
+"#pg274">274</a>, <a href="#pg276">276</a>, <a href=
+"#pg279">279</a>-281, <a href="#pg284">284</a>, <a href=
+"#pg285">285</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Anagni, <a href="#pg200">200</a>, <a href=
+"#pg222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Andrew, St., <a href="#pg219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Anne of Brittany, <a href="#pg178">178</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Angers, <a href="#pg035">35</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Anglesey, <a href="#pg075">75</a>, <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a
+href="#pg166">166</a>, <a href="#pg190">190</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Anglia, East, <a href="#pg131">131</a>, <a href=
+"#pg370">370</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Angoul&ecirc;me, <a href="#pg031">31</a>, <a href=
+"#pg358">358</a>, <a href="#pg416">416</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Angoul&ecirc;me, Isabella, Countess of. See Isabella, Queen of
+England.</li>
+
+<li>Angoumois, <a href="#pg081">81</a>, <a href="#pg397">397</a>,
+<a href="#pg415">415</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Anjou, <a href="#pg030">30</a>, <a href="#pg036">36</a>, <a
+href="#pg104">104</a>, <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href=
+"#pg146">146</a>, <a href="#pg148">148</a>, <a href=
+"#pg170">170</a>, <a href="#pg200">200</a>, <a href=
+"#pg395">395</a>, <a href="#pg412">412</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Anjou, Charles of. See Charles.</li>
+
+<li>Anjou, Louis, Duke of. See Louis.</li>
+
+<li>Annandale, <a href="#pg180">180</a>, <a href="#pg194">194</a>,
+<a href="#pg196">196</a>, <a href="#pg215">215</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Antrim, <a href="#pg234">234</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Antwerp, <a href="#pg332">332</a>, <a href="#pg335">335</a>, <a
+href="#pg343">343</a>, <a href="#pg345">345</a>, <a href=
+"#pg412">412</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Apulia, <a href="#pg079">79</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aquinas, St. Thomas, <a href="#pg090">90</a>, <a href=
+"#pg092">92</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aquitaine, <a href="#pg030">30</a>, <a href="#pg032">32</a>, <a
+href="#pg063">63</a>, <a href="#pg064">64</a>, <a href=
+"#pg069">69</a>, <a href="#pg072">72-74</a>, <a href=
+"#pg076">76</a>, <a href="#pg104">104</a>, <a href=
+"#pg105">105</a>, <a href="#pg140">140</a>, <a href=
+"#pg141">141</a>, <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a href=
+"#pg165">165</a>, <a href="#pg175">175</a>, <a href=
+"#pg239">239</a>, <a href="#pg297">297</a>, <a href=
+"#pg298">298</a>, <a href="#pg300">300</a>, <a href=
+"#pg327">327-329</a>, <a href="#pg357">357</a>, <a href=
+"#pg370">370</a>, <a href="#pg385">385</a>, <a href=
+"#pg395">395</a>, <a href="#pg397">397</a>, <a href=
+"#pg404">404</a>, <a href="#pg406">406</a>, <a href=
+"#pg407">407</a>, <a href="#pg411">411</a>, <a href=
+"#pg415">415</a>, <a href="#pg416">416</a>, <a href=
+"#pg427">427</a>, See also Gascony.</li>
+
+<li>Aquitaine, Dukes of. See under the Kings of England.</li>
+
+<li>Aquitaine, Edward, Prince of. See Edward the Black Prince.</li>
+
+<li>Aquitaine, Eleanor of, <a href="#pg064">64</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aragon, <a href="#pg146">146</a>, <a href="#pg169">169-172</a>,
+<a href="#pg200">200</a>, <a href="#pg403">403</a>, <a href=
+"#pg404">404</a>, <a href="#pg411">411</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aragon, James, King of. See James.</li>
+
+<li>Aragon, Peter, King of. See Peter.</li>
+
+<li>Archers;
+
+<ul>
+<li>English, <a href="#pg164">164</a>, <a href="#pg190">190</a>, <a
+href="#pg210">210</a>, <a href="#pg211">211</a>, <a href=
+"#pg261">261</a>, <a href="#pg285">285</a>, <a href=
+"#pg318">318</a>, <a href="#pg320">320</a>, <a href=
+"#pg363">363-365</a>, <a href="#pg369">369</a>, <a href=
+"#pg390">390-392</a>, <a href="#pg401">401</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Welsh, <a href="#pg210">210</a>, <a href="#pg214">214</a>, <a
+href="#pg269">269</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Scottish, <a href="#pg214">214</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Architecture;
+
+<ul>
+<li>gothic, <a href="#pg083">83</a>, <a href="#pg096">96</a>, <a
+href="#pg097">97</a>, <a href="#pg420">420</a>, <a href=
+"#pg422">422</a>, <a href="#pg423">423</a>, <a href=
+"#pg427">427</a>.</li>
+
+<li>ecclesiastical, <a href="#pg096">96</a>, <a href=
+"#pg097">97</a>.</li>
+
+<li>domestic, <a href="#pg097">97</a>.</li>
+
+<li>military, <a href="#pg097">97</a>, <a href=
+"#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>"decorated" style, <a href="#pg422">422</a>.</li>
+
+<li>"flamboyant", <a href="#pg422">422</a>, <a href=
+"#pg423">423</a>.</li>
+
+<li>"perpendicular", <a href="#pg304">304</a>, <a href=
+"#pg422">422</a>, <a href="#pg423">423</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Norman, <a href="#pg304">304</a>, <a href=
+"#pg423">423</a>.</li>
+
+<li>French, <a href="#pg422">422</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Arden, forest of, <a href="#pg252">252</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Argenton, <a href="#pg388">388</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aristotle, <a href="#pg089">89-92</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Armagh, Archbishop of. See Fitzralph, Richard.</li>
+
+<li>Armagnac, Counts of, <a href="#pg073">73</a>, <a href=
+"#pg164">164</a>, <a href="#pg384">384</a>, <a href=
+"#pg386">386</a>, <a href="#pg407">407</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Armagnac, John, Count of, <a href="#pg384">384</a>, <a href=
+"#pg386">386</a>, <a href="#pg397">397</a>, <a href=
+"#pg400">400</a>, <a href="#pg406">406</a>, <a href=
+"#pg407">407</a>, <a href="#pg411">411</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Arnold, T., his edition of <i>Memorials of St. Edmund's
+Abbey</i>, <a href="#pg455">455</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Art, <a href="#pg082">82</a>, <a href="#pg083">83</a>, <a href=
+"#pg094">94</a>, <a href="#pg096">96</a>, <a href="#pg427">427</a>,
+<i>See</i> also Architecture.</li>
+
+<li>Artevelde, James van, <a href="#pg342">342</a>, <a href=
+"#pg343">343</a>, <a href="#pg345">345-349</a>, <a href=
+"#pg356">356</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Arthur I., Count of Brittany, <a href="#pg179">179</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Arthur II., Duke of Brittany, <a href="#pg352">352</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Arthur, King, <a href="#pg313">313</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Arthurian Legend, the, <a href="#pg094">94</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Articuli super cartas, <a href="#pg218">218</a>, <a href=
+"#pg219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Artois, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a href="#pg196">196</a>, <a
+href="#pg330">330</a>, <a href="#pg343">343</a>, <a href=
+"#pg347">347</a>, <a href="#pg385">385</a>, <a href=
+"#pg413">413</a>, <a href="#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Artois, Robert of. See Robert.</li>
+
+<li>Arundel, the Countess of. <a href="#pg042">42</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Arundel, Edmund Fitzalan, Earl of, <a href="#pg239">239</a>, <a
+href="#pg244">244</a>, <a href="#pg249">249</a>, <a href=
+"#pg259">259</a>, <a href="#pg273">273</a>, <a href=
+"#pg274">274</a>, <a href="#pg276">276</a>, <a href=
+"#pg283">283</a>, <a href="#pg299">299</a>, <a href=
+"#pg301">301</a>, <a href="#pg307">307</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Arundel, Richard Fitzalan, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg362">362</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Arvon, <a href="#pg162">162</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ashley, W.J.;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his <i>Economic History</i>, <a href="#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>his <i>James and Philip van Artevelde</i>, <a href=
+"#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Assisi, <a href="#pg084">84</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Athenry, battle of, <a href="#pg271">271</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Athis, treaty of, <a href="#pg313">313</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Athol, David of Strathbolgie, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg316">316</a>, <a href="#pg322">322</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Auberoche, battle of, <a href="#pg357">357</a>, <a href=
+"#pg358">358</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aubigny, Philip of, <a href="#pg032">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aude, the river, <a href="#pg386">386</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Audley, Hugh of, <a href="#pg279">279</a>, <a href=
+"#pg280">280</a>, <a href="#pg286">286</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Audley, Earl of Gloucester. See Gloucester.</li>
+
+<li>Audley, James (1258), <a href="#pg103">103</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Audley, James (d. 1369), <a href="#pg412">412</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Audleys of Shropshire, <a href="#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Audrehem, Marshal, <a href="#pg390">390</a>, <a href=
+"#pg391">391</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aum&acirc;le, Counts of, <a href="#pg020">20</a>. See also
+Albemarle.</li>
+
+<li>Auray, <a href="#pg401">401</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>battle of, <a href="#pg401">401</a>, <a href=
+"#pg402">402</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Church of St. Michael, <a href="#pg401">401</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li><i>Ausculta, Fili</i>, bull, <a href="#pg221">221</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Austin Canons of Lanercost, <a href="#pg234">234</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Austin Friars, <a href="#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Austria, <a href="#pg033">33</a>, <a href="#pg044">44</a>, <a
+href="#pg054">54</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Austria, Duke of, <a href="#pg044">44</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Auvergne, <a href="#pg062">62</a>, <a href=
+"#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Auvergne, Counts of, <a href="#pg033">33</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Auv&eacute;z&egrave;re, the river, <a href=
+"#pg357">357</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Avalon, Hugh of. See Hugh, St.</li>
+
+<li>Avesbury, Robert of, chronicler, <a href="#pg458">458</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Avesnes, <a href="#pg340">340</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>house of, <a href="#pg332">332</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Avesnes, William of. See William, Count of Hainault.</li>
+
+<li>Avignon;
+
+<ul>
+<li>the papal court at, <a href="#pg229">229</a>, <a href=
+"#pg241">241</a>, <a href="#pg293">293</a>, <a href=
+"#pg330">330</a>, <a href="#pg333">333</a>, <a href=
+"#pg337">337</a>, <a href="#pg355">355</a>, <a href=
+"#pg370">370</a>, <a href="#pg372">372</a>, <a href=
+"#pg377">377</a>, <a href="#pg378">378</a>, <a href=
+"#pg380">380</a>, <a href="#pg385">385</a>, <a href=
+"#pg386">386</a>, <a href="#pg393">393</a>, <a href=
+"#pg430">430</a>, <a href="#pg431">431</a>.</li>
+
+<li>records of Popes of, <a href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Avon, the river, <a href="#pg127">127</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Axholme, <a href="#pg129">129</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ayermine, William, Bishop of Norwich, <a href="#pg293">293</a>,
+<a href="#pg296">296</a>, <a href="#pg298">298</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aymer of Valence, Bishop of Winchester, <a href=
+"#pg065">65</a>, <a href="#pg099">99</a>, <a href="#pg102">102</a>,
+<a href="#pg108">108</a>, <a href="#pg109">109</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aymer of Valence, Earl of Pembroke. See Pembroke.</li>
+
+<li>Ayr, <a href="#pg215">215</a>, <a href="#pg235">235</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>"Babylonish Captivity, the," <a href="#pg229">229</a>, <a href=
+"#pg418">418</a>.<a name="B" id="B" /></li>
+
+<li>Bacon, Roger, <a href="#pg091">91</a>, <a href=
+"#pg092">92</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bacon, Robert, <a href="#pg046">46</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Badenoch, John Comyn, lord of, <a href="#pg180">180</a>, See
+Comyn.</li>
+
+<li>Badlesmere, Bartholomew, Lord, <a href="#pg268">268</a>, <a
+href="#pg273">273</a>, <a href="#pg277">277</a>, <a href=
+"#pg279">279</a>, <a href="#pg283">283</a>, <a href=
+"#pg286">286</a>, <a href="#pg293">293</a>, <a href=
+"#pg314">314</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Badlesmere, Lady, <a href="#pg282">282</a>, <a href=
+"#pg283">283</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Baker, Geoffrey le, <i>Chronicle</i> of, <a href=
+"#pg420">420</a>, <a href="#pg458">458</a>, <a href=
+"#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>"Balance of Power," the, <a href="#pg138">138</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Baldock (town), <a href="#pg299">299</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Baldock, Ralph, chancellor and bishop of London, <a href=
+"#pg238">238</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Baldock, Robert, chancellor, <a href="#pg292">292</a>, <a href=
+"#pg293">293</a>, <a href="#pg298">298</a>, <a href=
+"#pg299">299</a>, <a href="#pg301">301</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Baldwin, Count of Flanders, Latin Emperor of the East, <a href=
+"#pg033">33</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ball, John, <a href="#pg376">376</a>, <a href=
+"#pg377">377</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Balliol College, Oxford, <a href="#pg376">376</a>, <a href=
+"#pg377">377</a>, <a href="#pg439">439</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Balliol, Edward, eldest son of King John of Scotland, <a href=
+"#pg194">194</a>, <a href="#pg315">315</a>, <a href=
+"#pg317">317</a>-324.</li>
+
+<li>Balliol, John (d. 1269), <a href="#pg093">93</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Balliol, John, lord of Barnard Castle, and of Galloway, son of
+the above, <a href="#pg179">179</a>, <a href="#pg181">181</a>, <a
+href="#pg183">183</a>. See also John, King of Scots.</li>
+
+<li>Balsham, Hugh, Bishop of Ely, <a href="#pg093">93</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Barnburgh Castle, <a href="#pg247">247</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bampton in the Bush, <a href="#pg250">250</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Banaster, Adam, <a href="#pg267">267</a>, <a href=
+"#pg268">268</a>, <a href="#pg272">272</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Banbury, <a href="#pg250">250</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Banff, <a href="#pg198">198</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bankers;
+
+<ul>
+<li>foreign, <a href="#pg097">97</a>, <a href=
+"#pg248">248</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Jewish, <a href="#pg160">160</a>, <a href=
+"#pg176">176</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Italian, <a href="#pg176">176</a>, <a href="#pg237">237</a>, <a
+href="#pg240">240</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Bannatyne club, publications of the, <a href="#pg455">455</a>,
+<a href="#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bannock, the river, <a href="#pg261">261</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bannockburn, battle of, <a href="#pg260">260</a>-264, <a href=
+"#pg267">267</a>, <a href="#pg270">270</a>, <a href=
+"#pg272">272</a>, <a href="#pg274">274</a>, <a href=
+"#pg277">277</a>, <a href="#pg279">279</a>, <a href=
+"#pg318">318</a>-320, <a href="#pg346">346</a>, <a href=
+"#pg363">363</a>, <a href="#pg364">364</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bar, Joan of. See Joan.</li>
+
+<li>Bar, Count of, <a href="#pg192">192</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Barbavera, <a href="#pg345">345</a>, <a href=
+"#pg347">347</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Barbezieux, <a href="#pg064">64</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Barbour, John, <i>Bruce</i>, <a href="#pg422">422</a>, <a href=
+"#pg459">459</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bardi, the, <a href="#pg356">356</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bardolf, William, <a href="#pg100">100</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Barfleur, <a href="#pg360">360</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bargate, the, Lincoln, <a href="#pg010">10</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Barnard Castle, <a href="#pg179">179</a>, <a href=
+"#pg316">316</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Barnes's <i>History of Edward III</i>., <a href=
+"#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Barnwell, <a href="#pg299">299</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Barnwell, Canon of, <a href="#pg013">13</a>, <a href=
+"#pg016">16</a>, <a href="#pg021">21</a>, <a href=
+"#pg453">453</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Barons' war, the, <a href="#pg133">133</a>-135, <a href=
+"#pg164">164</a>, <a href="#pg175">175</a>, <a href=
+"#pg237">237</a>, <a href="#pg452">452</a>, <a href=
+"#pg454">454</a>, <a href="#pg456">456</a>, <a href=
+"#pg461">461</a>, <a href="#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Barres, William des, <a href="#pg011">11</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Basset, Gilbert, <a href="#pg046">46</a>, <a href=
+"#pg047">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li style="list-style: none"><i>Bastides</i>, <a href=
+"#pg165">165</a>, <a href="#pg171">171</a>, <a href=
+"#pg295">295</a>, <a href="#pg296">296</a>.</li>
+
+<li style="list-style: none"><i>Bastilles</i>, <a href=
+"#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bath, <a href="#pg407">407</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bath and Wells, Bishop of. See Burnell, Robert; Drokensford;
+Shrewsbury, Ralph of, and Harewell, John.</li>
+
+<li>Battle Abbey, chronicle of, <a href="#pg455">455</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Battles of &mdash;&mdash;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Athenry, <a href="#pg271">271</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Auberoche, <a href="#pg358">358</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Auray, <a href="#pg401">401</a>, <a href="#pg402">402</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ayr, <a href="#pg235">235</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bannockburn, <a href="#pg260">260</a>-263.</li>
+
+<li>Boroughbridge, <a href="#pg285">285</a>-287.</li>
+
+<li>Bourgneuf Bay, <a href="#pg410">410</a>, <a href=
+"#pg415">415</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cassel, <a href="#pg327">327</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chalon, <a href="#pg140">140</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chesterfield, <a href="#pg130">130</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cocherel, <a href="#pg401">401</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Corte Nuova, <a href="#pg061">61</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Courtrai, <a href="#pg221">221</a>, <a href="#pg222">222</a>,
+<a href="#pg262">262</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Crecy, <a href="#pg362">362</a>-364.</li>
+
+<li>Dupplin Moor, <a href="#pg317">317</a>, <a href=
+"#pg318">318</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dunbar, <a href="#pg197">197</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dundalk, <a href="#pg271">271</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Evesham, <a href="#pg127">127</a>, <a href=
+"#pg128">128</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Falkirk, <a href="#pg213">213</a>-215.</li>
+
+<li>Halidon Hill, <a href="#pg319">319</a>, <a href=
+"#pg320">320</a>.</li>
+
+<li>La Rochelle, <a href="#pg415">415</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lewes, <a href="#pg116">116</a>, <a href="#pg117">117</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lincoln, <a href="#pg010">10</a>, <a href="#pg011">11</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lisieux, <a href="#pg400">400</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Madog's Field, <a href="#pg190">190</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maes Madog, <a href="#pg190">190</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mauron, <a href="#pg383">383</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Methven, <a href="#pg234">234</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Morgarten, <a href="#pg262">262</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Morlaix, <a href="#pg354">354</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Myton, <a href="#pg276">276</a>, <a href="#pg277">277</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Najera, <a href="#pg405">405</a>, <a href=
+"#pg406">406</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Neville's Cross, <a href="#pg365">365</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Orewyn Bridge, <a href="#pg163">163</a>, <a href=
+"#pg164">164</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Poitiers, <a href="#pg389">389</a>-392.</li>
+
+<li>Pontvallain, <a href="#pg414">414</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sandwich, <a href="#pg011">11</a>, <a href=
+"#pg012">12</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sluys, <a href="#pg346">346</a>, <a href="#pg347">347</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stirling Bridge, <a href="#pg207">207</a>, <a href=
+"#pg208">208</a>.</li>
+
+<li>The Thirty, <a href="#pg382">382</a>, <a href=
+"#pg383">383</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Winchelsea, <a href="#pg384">384</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Bayonne, <a href="#pg070">70</a>, <a href="#pg071">71</a>, <a
+href="#pg186">186</a>, <a href="#pg191">191</a>, <a href=
+"#pg196">196</a>, <a href="#pg297">297</a>, <a href=
+"#pg324">324</a>, <a href="#pg357">357</a>, <a href=
+"#pg417">417</a>, <a href="#pg418">418</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bazas, <a href="#pg032">32</a>, <a href="#pg071">71</a>, <a
+href="#pg324">324</a>, <a href="#pg386">386</a>, <a href=
+"#pg412">412</a>.</li>
+
+<li>B&eacute;arn, <a href="#pg141">141</a>, <a href=
+"#pg171">171</a>, <a href="#pg325">325</a>.</li>
+
+<li>B&eacute;arn, Gaston, Viscount of. See Gaston.</li>
+
+<li>Beatrice, daughter of Henry III. and wife of John II. of
+Brittany, <a href="#pg107">107</a>, <a href="#pg352">352</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Beatrice, sister of Amadeus III., Count of Savoy, wife of
+Raymond Berengar IV., Count of Provence, <a href=
+"#pg054">54</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Beaucaire, <a href="#pg062">62</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Beauce, the, <a href="#pg413">413</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Beauchamp, Thomas. See Warwick, Earl of.</li>
+
+<li>Beauchamp, William. See Warwick, Earl of. Beauchamps of
+Warwick, the, <a href="#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Beaumanoir, commandant at Josselin, <a href="#pg382">382</a>,
+<a href="#pg383">383</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Beaumaris Castle, <a href="#pg190">190</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Beaumont, Henry de, <a href="#pg248">248</a>, <a href=
+"#pg252">252</a>, <a href="#pg264">264</a>, <a href=
+"#pg316">316</a>, <a href="#pg320">320</a>, <a href=
+"#pg322">322</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Beaumont, Louis de, Bishop of Durham, <a href="#pg290">290</a>,
+<a href="#pg316">316</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Beaumont, Robert of, Earl of Leicester. See Leicester.</li>
+
+<li>Beaumonts, the, <a href="#pg252">252</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Beauvais, <a href="#pg361">361</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Becket, Archbishop, St. Thomas, <a href="#pg016">16</a>, <a
+href="#pg060">60</a>, <a href="#pg350">350</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bedale, <a href="#pg182">182</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bedford, Castle of, <a href="#pg025">25</a>, <a href=
+"#pg026">26</a>, <a href="#pg032">32</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>scutage of, <a href="#pg026">26</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Bedfordshire, <a href="#pg447">447</a>.</li>
+
+<li>B&eacute;gard, Abbey of, <a href="#pg368">368</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Beghards, the, <a href="#pg376">376</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Beguines, the, <a href="#pg376">376</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Behuchet, Nicholas, <a href="#pg345">345</a>-347.</li>
+
+<li>Bek, Anthony, Bishop of Durham, <a href="#pg178">178</a>, <a
+href="#pg185">185</a>, <a href="#pg197">197</a>, <a href=
+"#pg213">213</a>, <a href="#pg215">215</a>, <a href=
+"#pg219">219</a>, <a href="#pg223">223</a>, <a href=
+"#pg230">230</a>, <a href="#pg232">232</a>, <a href=
+"#pg238">238</a>, <a href="#pg245">245</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bek, Thomas, Bishop of St. David's, <a href=
+"#pg185">185</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Belleville, <a href="#pg400">400</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bembro, Robert, <a href="#pg382">382</a>, <a href=
+"#pg383">383</a>.</li>
+
+<li>B&eacute;mont, Charles, <a href="#pg064">64</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his <i>R&ocirc;les Gascons</i>, <a href="#pg445">445</a>, <a
+href="#pg446">446</a>.</li>
+
+<li>his <i>Chartes des libert&eacute;s anglaises</i>, <a href=
+"#pg208">208</a>, <a href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>his Simon <i>de Montfort</i>, <a href="#pg455">455</a>, <a
+href="#pg462">462</a>, <a href="#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>B&eacute;nauge, <a href="#pg073">73</a>.</li>
+
+<li>B&eacute;ne, Amaury of, <a href="#pg090">90</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Benedict XI., Pope, <a href="#pg228">228</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Benedict XII, Pope, <a href="#pg329">329</a>, <a href=
+"#pg330">330</a>, <a href="#pg333">333</a>, <a href=
+"#pg334">334</a>, <a href="#pg336">336</a>, <a href=
+"#pg348">348</a>, <a href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bengeworth, near Evesham, <a href="#pg127">127</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bentley, Sir Walter, <a href="#pg382">382</a>, <a href=
+"#pg383">383</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bere Castle, <a href="#pg165">165</a>, <a href=
+"#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bereford, Sir Simon, <a href="#pg305">305</a>, <a href=
+"#pg309">309</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Berg, Count of, <a href="#pg332">332</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Berger's <i>Blanche de Castile</i>, <a href=
+"#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bergerac, <a href="#pg032">32</a>, <a href="#pg357">357</a>, <a
+href="#pg358">358</a>, <a href="#pg412">412</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Berkeley Castle, <a href="#pg300">300</a>, <a href=
+"#pg303">303</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Berkeleys, the, <a href="#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Berkhampstead, siege of, <a href="#pg006">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Berkshire, <a href="#pg059">59</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Berkstead, Stephen, Bishop of Chichester, <a href=
+"#pg119">119</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bermingham, John of. See Louth, Earl of.</li>
+
+<li>Bernab&ograve;, Visconti, Lord of Milan, <a href=
+"#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Berners, Lord, translator of Froissart, <a href=
+"#pg459">459</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Berri, John, Duke of, <a href="#pg412">412</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bertrand, Cardinal, <a href="#pg330">330</a>, <a href=
+"#pg336">336</a>, <a href="#pg339">339</a>. See Montfavence.</li>
+
+<li>Berwick, <a href="#pg182">182</a>, <a href="#pg194">194</a>, <a
+href="#pg196">196</a>, <a href="#pg198">198</a>, <a href=
+"#pg206">206</a>, <a href="#pg207">207</a>, <a href=
+"#pg212">212</a>, <a href="#pg213">213</a>, <a href=
+"#pg245">245</a>, <a href="#pg247">247</a>, <a href=
+"#pg258">258</a>, <a href="#pg259">259</a>, <a href=
+"#pg261">261</a>, <a href="#pg264">264</a>, <a href=
+"#pg273">273</a>, <a href="#pg275">275</a>-277, <a href=
+"#pg289">289</a>, <a href="#pg319">319</a>, <a href=
+"#pg321">321</a>, <a href="#pg386">386</a>, <a href=
+"#pg393">393</a>.</li>
+
+<li>B&eacute;thune, <a href="#pg343">343</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>Chronique de l'Anonyme de</i> <a href="#pg454">454</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Bibliographies, historical, <a href="#pg459">459</a>, <a href=
+"#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bidassoa, the, <a href="#pg324">324</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bigod, the house of, <a href="#pg278">278</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bigod, Hugh, justiciar, <a href="#pg100">100</a>, <a href=
+"#pg102">102</a>, <a href="#pg104">104</a>, <a href=
+"#pg109">109</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bigod, Roger, earl marshal and Earl of Norfolk. See Norfolk,
+Earl of.</li>
+
+<li>Bigorre, county of. <a href="#pg071">71</a>, <a href=
+"#pg080">80</a>, <a href="#pg164">164</a>, <a href=
+"#pg294">294</a>, <a href="#pg397">397</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Biscay, Bay of, <a href="#pg035">35</a>, <a href=
+"#pg415">415</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blaauw's <i>Barons' Wars</i>, <a href="#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Black Prince, the. See Edward, Prince of Wales and
+Aquitaine.</li>
+
+<li>Black death, the, <a href="#pg370">370</a>-376, <a href=
+"#pg380">380</a>, <a href="#pg381">381</a>, <a href=
+"#pg423">423</a>, <a href="#pg424">424</a>, <a href=
+"#pg432">432</a>, <a href="#pg457">457</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blacklow Hill, <a href="#pg251">251</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blanche of Artois, Queen of Navarre, <a href="#pg144">144</a>,
+<a href="#pg246">246</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blanche of Bourbon, wife of Peter the Great of Castile, <a
+href="#pg404">404</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blanche of Castile, Queen of Louis VIII. and regent of France,
+<a href="#pg004">4</a>, <a href="#pg011">11</a>, <a href=
+"#pg034">34</a>, <a href="#pg062">62</a>, <a href=
+"#pg080">80</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster, <a href="#pg421">421</a>, <a
+href="#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blanche taque, the, in estuary of Somme, <a href=
+"#pg361">361</a>, <a href="#pg362">362</a>, <a href=
+"#pg411">411</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blaneforde's <i>Chronicle</i>, <a href="#pg453">453</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blankenberghe, <a href="#pg344">344</a>, <a href=
+"#pg346">346</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blavet, the river, <a href="#pg354">354</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blaye, <a href="#pg036">36</a>, <a href="#pg064">64</a>, <a
+href="#pg191">191</a>, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bliss' <i>Calendars of Papal Registers</i>, <a href=
+"#pg449">449</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blois, <a href="#pg388">388</a>, <a href="#pg389">389</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blois, Charles of. See Charles.</li>
+
+<li>Blois, Theobald, Count of, <a href="#pg011">11</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blount, Sir Thos, <a href="#pg302">302</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blundeville, Randolph of, Earl of Chester. See Chester,
+Randolph, Earl of.</li>
+
+<li>Boccaccio, <a href="#pg421">421</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bohemia, <a href="#pg054">54</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bohemia, Ottocar, King of, <a href="#pg080">80</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bohun, Humphrey, Earl of Hereford. See Hereford.</li>
+
+<li>Bohun, Humphrey of Brecon, son of the Earl of Hereford, <a
+href="#pg115">115</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bohun, Margaret, <a href="#pg435">435</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bohun, William, Earl of Northampton. See Northampton.</li>
+
+<li>Bohuns, the, <a href="#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bollers, house of, <a href="#pg024">24</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bologna, <a href="#pg084">84</a>, <a href="#pg089">89</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bolton, <a href="#pg433">433</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bonhommes, order of, <a href="#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Boniface VIII., Pope, <a href="#pg172">172</a>, <a href=
+"#pg195">195</a>, <a href="#pg200">200</a>, <a href=
+"#pg203">203</a>, <a href="#pg211">211</a>, <a href=
+"#pg217">217</a>, <a href="#pg219">219</a>-223, <a href=
+"#pg228">228</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Boniface of Savoy, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href=
+"#pg060">60</a>, <a href="#pg061">61</a>, <a href="#pg066">66</a>,
+<a href="#pg073">73</a>, <a href="#pg099">99</a>, <a href=
+"#pg103">103</a>, <a href="#pg128">128</a>, <a href=
+"#pg135">135</a>, <a href="#pg139">139</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bordeaux, <a href="#pg032">32</a>, <a href="#pg033">33</a>, <a
+href="#pg036">36</a>, <a href="#pg064">64</a>, <a href=
+"#pg070">70</a>-74, <a href="#pg077">77</a>, <a href=
+"#pg146">146</a>, <a href="#pg170">170</a>, <a href=
+"#pg171">171</a>, <a href="#pg191">191</a>, <a href=
+"#pg193">193</a>, <a href="#pg196">196</a>, <a href=
+"#pg222">222</a>, <a href="#pg230">230</a>, <a href=
+"#pg296">296</a>, <a href="#pg324">324</a>, <a href=
+"#pg358">358</a>, <a href="#pg370">370</a>, <a href=
+"#pg385">385</a>-387, <a href="#pg393">393</a>, <a href=
+"#pg404">404</a>, <a href="#pg406">406</a>, <a href=
+"#pg407">407</a>, <a href="#pg412">412</a>, <a href=
+"#pg417">417</a>, <a href="#pg418">418</a>, <a href=
+"#pg433">433</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>truce of, <a href="#pg395">395</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Bordeaux, Bertrand de Goth, Archbishop of. See Clement V.</li>
+
+<li>Bordelais, the, <a href="#pg324">324</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Borderie's <i>Histoire de Br&eacute;tagne</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Boroughbridge, <a href="#pg275">275</a>, <a href=
+"#pg286">286</a>, <a href="#pg290">290</a>. battle of, <a href=
+"#pg285">285</a>-287, <a href="#pg319">319</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Boroughs; growth of, <a href="#pg122">122</a>, <a href=
+"#pg195">195</a>, <a href="#pg426">426</a>-427; representation of,
+<a href="#pg139">139</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bothwell Castle, <a href="#pg262">262</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Boulogne, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a href="#pg121">121</a>, <a
+href="#pg239">239</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bouquet, Dom, his <i>Recueil des Historiens de la France</i>,
+<a href="#pg459">459</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bourbon, Blanche of. See Blanche.</li>
+
+<li>Bourbonnais, <a href="#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bourchier, Sir Robert, <a href="#pg349">349</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Bourg</i>, of Limoges, the, <a href="#pg142">142</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bourg, <a href="#pg191">191</a>, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bourgneuf, Bay of, <a href="#pg410">410</a>, <a href=
+"#pg415">415</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bourne, <a href="#pg095">95</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Boutaric's <i>St. Louis et Alfonse de Poitiers</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his <i>France sous Philippe le Bel</i>, <a href=
+"#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Bouvines, battle of, <a href="#pg011">11</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Brabant, <a href="#pg148">148</a>, <a href="#pg192">192</a>, <a
+href="#pg331">331</a>, <a href="#pg332">332</a>, <a href=
+"#pg335">335</a>, <a href="#pg336">336</a>, <a href=
+"#pg340">340</a>, <a href="#pg348">348</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Brabant, Dukes of. See John II., John III., and
+Wenceslaus.</li>
+
+<li>Brabant, Mary of. See Mary, Queen of France.</li>
+
+<li>Brabazon, Roger de, chief justice after 1295, <a href=
+"#pg181">181</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bracton, Henry of, <a href="#pg094">94</a>, <a href=
+"#pg148">148</a>, <a href="#pg426">426</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his book <i>De Legibus</i>, <a href="#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>his Note Book, <a href="#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Bradwardine, Thomas, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href=
+"#pg425">425</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Brandenburg, <a href="#pg080">80</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Brandenburg, Elector of, <a href="#pg340">340</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Brantingham, Thomas, treasurer, Bishop of Exeter, <a href=
+"#pg432">432</a>, <a href="#pg433">433</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Brant&ocirc;me, <a href="#pg388">388</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Braose, house of, <a href="#pg001">1</a>, <a href=
+"#pg280">280</a>, <a href="#pg300">300</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Braose, William de, <a href="#pg037">37</a>, <a href=
+"#pg038">38</a>, <a href="#pg044">44</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his daughter, <a href="#pg037">37</a>, <a href=
+"#pg038">38</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Bratton, Henry. See Bracton.</li>
+
+<li>Braybrook, Henry de, <a href="#pg025">25</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Br&eacute;aut&eacute;, Falkes de, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a
+href="#pg005">5</a>, <a href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href=
+"#pg008">8</a>, <a href="#pg010">10</a>, <a href="#pg014">14</a>,
+<a href="#pg018">18</a>, <a href="#pg020">20</a>, <a href=
+"#pg024">24</a>-27, <a href="#pg043">43</a>, <a href=
+"#pg044">44</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Brechin, <a href="#pg197">197</a>, <a href=
+"#pg225">225</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Brecon, <a href="#pg172">172</a>-174, <a href="#pg189">189</a>,
+<a href="#pg190">190</a>, <a href="#pg252">252</a>, <a href=
+"#pg267">267</a>, <a href="#pg280">280</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bren, Llewelyn. See Llewelyn.</li>
+
+<li>Brentwood, <a href="#pg045">45</a>, <a href=
+"#pg047">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bremen, <a href="#pg097">97</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Brest, <a href="#pg354">354</a>, <a href="#pg416">416</a>, <a
+href="#pg418">418</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Br&eacute;tagne bretonnante, La</i>, <a href=
+"#pg352">352</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Br&eacute;tigni, treaty of, <a href="#pg396">396</a>-398. See
+also Calais, treaty of.</li>
+
+<li>Bretons. See Brittany.</li>
+
+<li>Brewer's <i>Monumenta Franciscana</i>, <a href=
+"#pg455">455</a>, <a href="#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bridgnorth, <a href="#pg025">25</a>, <a href=
+"#pg284">284</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bridlington, <a href="#pg289">289</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bridlington, Canon of, his <i>Gesta Edwardi de
+Carnarvon</i>.</li>
+
+<li>Bridlington, John of, <a href="#pg457">457</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Brie, <a href="#pg060">60</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Brigham, treaty of, <a href="#pg178">178</a>, <a href=
+"#pg181">181</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bristol, <a href="#pg004">4</a>, <a href="#pg056">56</a>, <a
+href="#pg112">112</a>, <a href="#pg168">168</a>, <a href=
+"#pg241">241</a>, <a href="#pg268">268</a>, <a href=
+"#pg273">273</a>, <a href="#pg370">370</a>, <a href=
+"#pg457">457</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>council meets at, <a href="#pg004">4</a>.</li>
+
+<li>confirmation of the Great Charter at, <a href=
+"#pg005">5</a>.</li>
+
+<li>castle of, <a href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href=
+"#pg268">268</a>.</li>
+
+<li>channel, <a href="#pg076">76</a>, <a href=
+"#pg300">300</a>.</li>
+
+<li>disturbances at, <a href="#pg268">268</a>, <a href=
+"#pg457">457</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Brittany, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a href="#pg035">35</a>, <a
+href="#pg036">36</a>, <a href="#pg041">41</a>, <a href=
+"#pg044">44</a>, <a href="#pg054">54</a>, <a href="#pg178">178</a>,
+<a href="#pg179">179</a>, <a href="#pg186">186</a>, <a href=
+"#pg352">352</a>, <a href="#pg353">353</a>, <a href=
+"#pg356">356</a>, <a href="#pg357">357</a>, <a href=
+"#pg381">381</a>-383, <a href="#pg386">386</a>-388, <a href=
+"#pg395">395</a> <a href="#pg401">401</a>-404, <a href=
+"#pg413">413</a>-417, <a href="#pg436">436</a>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Celtic, <a href="#pg416">416</a>.</li>
+
+<li>French, <a href="#pg416">416</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Brittany, Counts, afterwards Dukes, of. See Arthur I., Arthur
+II., John II., John III., John IV., John V., Peter Mauclerc.</li>
+
+<li>Brittany, Constance of, wife of Randolph of Chester. See
+Constance of Brittany.</li>
+
+<li>Brittany, John of, Earl of Richmond. See John of Brittany, Earl
+of Richmond.</li>
+
+<li>Britton, lawyer, <a href="#pg094">94</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his treatise <i>On the Laws of England</i>, <a href=
+"#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Bromfield, <a href="#pg162">162</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Brotherton, Thomas of, Earl of Norfolk. See Thomas of
+Brotherton.</li>
+
+<li>Bruce, David. See David II., King of Scots.</li>
+
+<li>Bruce, Edward, "King of Ireland.", <a href="#pg257">257</a>, <a
+href="#pg269">269</a>-272, <a href="#pg280">280</a>, <a href=
+"#pg429">429</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bruce, Elizabeth, Queen of Scots. See Elizabeth.</li>
+
+<li>Bruce, Joan, Queen of Scots. See Joan.</li>
+
+<li>Bruce, Robert, Lord of Annandale,
+
+<ul>
+<li>claimant to the Scots throne (d.1295), <a href=
+"#pg177">177</a>, <a href="#pg180">180</a>-184, <a href=
+"#pg194">194</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Bruce, Robert, Earl of Carrick, son of the above (d. 1304), <a
+href="#pg177">177</a>, <a href="#pg194">194</a>, <a href=
+"#pg206">206</a>, <a href="#pg215">215</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bruce, Robert, Earl of Carrick, son of the above, <a href=
+"#pg206">206</a>, <a href="#pg215">215</a>, <a href=
+"#pg227">227</a>, <a href="#pg232">232</a>, <a href=
+"#pg233">233</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See also Robert, King of Scots.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li><i>Bruce</i>, John Barbour's, <a href="#pg458">458</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bruges, <a href="#pg143">143</a>, <a href="#pg210">210</a>, <a
+href="#pg211">211</a>, <a href="#pg327">327</a>, <a href=
+"#pg343">343</a>, <a href="#pg344">344</a>, <a href=
+"#pg346">346</a>, <a href="#pg398">398</a>, <a href=
+"#pg402">402</a>, <a href="#pg418">418</a>, <a href=
+"#pg434">434</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>the Matins of. <a href="#pg221">221</a>.</li>
+
+<li>truce of (1375), <a href="#pg418">418</a>, <a href=
+"#pg434">434</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Brussels, <a href="#pg332">332</a>, <a href="#pg339">339</a>,
+<a href="#pg341">341</a>, <a href="#pg420">420</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Brut, the Trojan, <a href="#pg421">421</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Brut d'Angleterre</i>, Wace's, <a href="#pg095">95</a>, <a
+href="#pg458">458</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Brut y Tywysogion</i>, <a href="#pg459">459</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Buch, Captal de, <a href="#pg212">212</a>, <a href=
+"#pg392">392</a>, 40l, <a href="#pg402">402</a>, <a href=
+"#pg415">415</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Buchan, Comyn, John, Earl of, <a href="#pg198">198</a>, <a
+href="#pg206">206</a>, <a href="#pg257">257</a>, <a href=
+"#pg316">316</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Buchan, Henry de Beaumont, Earl of, <a href="#pg316">316</a>,
+<a href="#pg320">320</a>, <a href="#pg322">322</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>See also Beaumont, Henry de.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Builth, town and castle, <a href="#pg037">37</a>, <a href=
+"#pg038">38</a>, <a href="#pg163">163</a>, <a href=
+"#pg167">167</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Buironfosse, <a href="#pg340">340</a>, <a href=
+"#pg341">341</a>, <a href="#pg354">354</a>, <a href=
+"#pg361">361</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bulgaria, <a href="#pg033">33</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Burgh, the family of, <a href="#pg269">269</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Burgh, Elizabeth de, wife of Robert, King of Scots;
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Elizabeth, Queen of Scots.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Burgh, Elizabeth de, wife of Lionel of Clarence, <a href=
+"#pg428">428</a>, <a href="#pg429">429</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Burgh, Hubert de, Earl of Kent, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a
+href="#pg005">5</a>, <a href="#pg009">9</a>, <a href=
+"#pg011">11</a>-13, <a href="#pg017">17</a>17-47, <a href=
+"#pg051">51</a>, <a href="#pg053">53</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Burgh, Richard de, Earl of Ulster. See Ulster.</li>
+
+<li>Burgh, Richard de, Lord of Connaught, <a href=
+"#pg048">48</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Burgh, William de, Lord of Connaught and Earl of Ulster, <a
+href="#pg428">428</a>. See Ulster.</li>
+
+<li>Burgh-on-Sands, <a href="#pg235">235</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Burghersh, Bartholomew, Bishop of Lincoln, <a href=
+"#pg282">282</a>, <a href="#pg283">283</a>, <a href=
+"#pg285">285</a>, <a href="#pg293">293</a>, <a href=
+"#pg314">314</a>, <a href="#pg332">332</a>-334, <a href=
+"#pg349">349</a>, <a href="#pg350">350</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Burgos, <a href="#pg073">73</a>, <a href="#pg405">405</a>, <a
+href="#pg406">406</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Burgundy, <a href="#pg096">96</a>, <a href="#pg119">119</a>, <a
+href="#pg140">140</a>, <a href="#pg191">191</a>, <a href=
+"#pg396">396</a>, <a href="#pg400">400</a>, <a href=
+"#pg401">401</a>, <a href="#pg410">410</a>, <a href=
+"#pg412">412</a>, <a href="#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Burgundy, Duke of. See Philip the Bold and Philip de
+Rouvres.</li>
+
+<li>Burnell, Robert, Chancellor, and Bishop of Bath and Wells, <a
+href="#pg139">139</a>, <a href="#pg143">143</a>, <a href=
+"#pg147">147</a>, <a href="#pg170">170</a>, <a href=
+"#pg184">184</a>, <a href="#pg185">185</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Burton-on-Trent, <a href="#pg285">285</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bury, Richard of, Bishop of Durham, <a href=
+"#pg310">310</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bury St. Edmunds, <a href="#pg131">131</a>, <a href=
+"#pg172">172</a>, <a href="#pg199">199</a>-201, <a href=
+"#pg299">299</a>, <a href="#pg454">454</a>, <a href=
+"#pg455">455</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Busses, Spanish, <a href="#pg384">384</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Butler, Edmund, <a href="#pg270">270</a>, <a href=
+"#pg271">271</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Butler of Ireland, James, the, <a href="#pg307">307</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Byland Abbey, <a href="#pg289">289</a>, <a href=
+"#pg290">290</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bytham Castle, <a href="#pg020">20</a>, <a href=
+"#pg021">21</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Cader Idris, <a href="#pg165">165</a>.<a name="C" id=
+"C" /></li>
+
+<li>Cadzand, island of, <a href="#pg334">334</a>, <a href=
+"#pg346">346</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Caen, <a href="#pg360">360</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>abbeys of, <a href="#pg360">360</a>,</li>
+
+<li>church of St. Peter at, <a href="#pg360">360</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Caerlaverock. See Carlaverock.</li>
+
+<li>Caerleon, Morgan of, <a href="#pg015">15</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Caerphilly Castle, <a href="#pg166">166</a>, <a href=
+"#pg267">267</a>, <a href="#pg281">281</a>, <a href=
+"#pg300">300</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cahors, <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href="#pg399">399</a>, <a
+href="#pg411">411</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>bishopric of, <a href="#pg140">140</a>.</li>
+
+<li>See Quercy.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Calais, <a href="#pg012">12</a>, <a href="#pg365">365</a>-369,
+<a href="#pg380">380</a>, <a href="#pg381">381</a>, <a href=
+"#pg383">383</a>-386, <a href="#pg395">395</a>, <a href=
+"#pg398">398</a>, <a href="#pg411">411</a>-413, <a href=
+"#pg415">415</a>, <a href="#pg417">417</a>-419, <a href=
+"#pg433">433</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>treaty of, <a href="#pg396">396</a>-398, <a href=
+"#pg402">402</a>, <a href="#pg403">403</a>, <a href=
+"#pg419">419</a>, <a href="#pg421">421</a>, <a href=
+"#pg427">427</a>, <a href="#pg432">432</a>.</li>
+
+<li>See also Br&eacute;tigni.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li><i>Calendar of Close Rolls</i>, <a href="#pg444">444</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Calendar of Charter Rolls</i>, <a href="#pg445">445</a>.
+Calendars of <i>Documents relating to Scotland and Ireland</i>, <a
+href="#pg449">449</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Calendar of Inquisitions Post-mortem and other analogous
+documents</i>, <a href="#pg445">445</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Calendars of Papal Registers</i>, <a href=
+"#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Calendar of the Patent Rolls</i>, <a href=
+"#pg444">444</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Calendarium Genealogicum</i>, C. Roberts', <a href=
+"#pg445">445</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Calendarium Inquisitionum sive Eschætarum</i>, <a href=
+"#pg445">445</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Calendarium Rotulorum Cartarum</i>, <a href=
+"#pg445">445</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Calveley, Sir Hugh, <a href="#pg382">382</a>, <a href=
+"#pg383">383</a>, <a href="#pg400">400</a>-402, <a href=
+"#pg404">404</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cambrai, <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href=
+"#pg339">339</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cambr&eacute;sis, the, <a href="#pg339">339</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cambridge, <a href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href="#pg085">85</a>, <a
+href="#pg131">131</a>, <a href="#pg182">182</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>university of, <a href="#pg085">85</a>, <a href=
+"#pg083">83</a>, <a href="#pg093">93</a>, <a href="#pg375">375</a>,
+<a href="#pg425">425</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Cambridge, Edmund of Langley, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg431">431</a>. See Edmund.</li>
+
+<li>Camville, Nichola de, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a href=
+"#pg009">9</a>.</li>
+
+<li>"Candlemas, The Burnt," <a href="#pg387">387</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Canfranc, treaty of, <a href="#pg171">171</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Canons, Austin, annals by, <a href="#pg454">454</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Canterbury,; <a href="#pg007">7</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>cathedral, <a href="#pg012">12</a>, <a href="#pg019">19</a>, <a
+href="#pg054">54</a>, <a href="#pg084">84</a>, <a href=
+"#pg350">350</a>, <a href="#pg085">85</a>, <a href=
+"#pg230">230</a>, <a href="#pg440">440</a>; <a href=
+"#pg286">286</a>: <a href="#pg096">96</a>, <a href=
+"#pg439">439</a>;</li>
+
+<li>hall, Oxford, <a href="#pg431">431</a>;</li>
+
+<li>register, <a href="#pg449">449</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Canterbury, Archbishops of.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Langton, Stephen;</li>
+
+<li>Grand, Richard le;</li>
+
+<li>Neville, Ralph, and Blunt, John (archbishops elect);</li>
+
+<li>Rich, Edmund;</li>
+
+<li>Boniface of Savoy;</li>
+
+<li>Kilwardby, Robert;</li>
+
+<li>Peckham, John;</li>
+
+<li>Winchelsea, Robert;</li>
+
+<li>Cobham, Thomas (archbishop elect);</li>
+
+<li>Reynolds, Walter;</li>
+
+<li>Meopham, Simon;</li>
+
+<li>Stratford, John;</li>
+
+<li>Bradwardine, Thomas;</li>
+
+<li>Islip, Simon;</li>
+
+<li>Langham, Simon;</li>
+
+<li>Whittlesea, William, and Sudbury, Simon.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Cantilupe, St. Thomas of, chancellor and Bishop of Hereford, <a
+href="#pg093">93</a>, <a href="#pg120">120</a>, <a href=
+"#pg129">129</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cantilupe, Walter of, Bishop of Worcester, <a href=
+"#pg066">66</a>, <a href="#pg081">81</a>, <a href="#pg121">121</a>,
+<a href="#pg126">126</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cantilupes, the, <a href="#pg001">1</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cantreds, the four, <a href="#pg075">75</a>, <a href=
+"#pg076">76</a>, <a href="#pg133">133</a>, <a href=
+"#pg167">167</a>, <a href="#pg168">168</a>. See also
+Perveddwlad.</li>
+
+<li>Caours, Raoul de, <a href="#pg382">382</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Capes's, W. W., <i>History of the English Church</i>, <a href=
+"#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Capetians, the, <a href="#pg033">33</a>, <a href=
+"#pg034">34</a>, <a href="#pg064">64</a>, <a href="#pg144">144</a>,
+<a href="#pg294">294</a>, <a href="#pg325">325</a>, <a href=
+"#pg326">326</a>, <a href="#pg330">330</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Captal de Buch, the. See Buch.</li>
+
+<li>Captivity, the Babylonish, of the Papacy, <a href=
+"#pg229">229</a>, <a href="#pg418">418</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Carcassonne, <a href="#pg062">62</a>, <a href="#pg386">386</a>,
+<a href="#pg387">387</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cardiff Castle, <a href="#pg047">47</a>, <a href=
+"#pg281">281</a>, <a href="#pg300">300</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cardigan and Cardiganshire, <a href="#pg015">15</a>, <a href=
+"#pg024">24</a>, <a href="#pg075">75</a>, <a href="#pg076">76</a>,
+<a href="#pg161">161</a>, <a href="#pg168">168</a>, <a href=
+"#pg189">189</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cardinerie, La, <a href="#pg391">391</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Carlaverock, castle, <a href="#pg218">218</a>, <a href=
+"#pg220">220</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>chronicle of the <i>siege</i> of, <a href="#pg458">458</a>, <a
+href="#pg459">459</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Carentan, <a href="#pg360">360</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Carhaix, <a href="#pg368">368</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Carlisle, town and castle, <a href="#pg001">1</a>, <a href=
+"#pg015">15</a>, <a href="#pg196">196</a>, <a href=
+"#pg197">197</a>, <a href="#pg212">212</a>, <a href=
+"#pg215">215</a>, <a href="#pg218">218</a>, <a href=
+"#pg234">234</a>, <a href="#pg237">237</a>, 25%, <a href=
+"#pg275">275</a>, <a href="#pg284">284</a>, <a href=
+"#pg289">289</a>, <a href="#pg290">290</a>, <a href=
+"#pg456">456</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>parliament Of 1307 at, <a href="#pg230">230</a>, <a href=
+"#pg231">231</a>, <a href="#pg234">234</a>;</li>
+
+<li>Statute Of, <a href="#pg230">230</a>, <a href="#pg254">254</a>,
+<a href="#pg377">377</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Carlisle, Andrew Harclay, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg287">287</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Carmarthen, town and castle, and Carmarthenshire, <a href=
+"#pg015">15</a>, <a href="#pg024">24</a>, <a href="#pg047">47</a>,
+<a href="#pg075">75</a>, <a href="#pg076">76</a>, <a href=
+"#pg162">162</a>, <a href="#pg166">166</a>, <a href=
+"#pg168">168</a>, <a href="#pg189">189</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>justice of, <a href="#pg166">166</a>, <a href=
+"#pg168">168</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Carmelites, the, <a href="#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Carnarvon, town and castle, <a href="#pg165">165</a>, <a href=
+"#pg189">189</a>, <a href="#pg190">190</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Carnarvon, Edward of. See Edward.</li>
+
+<li>Carnarvonshire, <a href="#pg166">166</a>, <a href=
+"#pg167">167</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Carrick, Earl of. See Bruce, Robert.</li>
+
+<li>Carrickfergus, <a href="#pg270">270</a>, 27l.</li>
+
+<li><i>Carta menatoria</i>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cartmel, <a href="#pg289">289</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cartularies, <a href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cassel, battle of, <a href="#pg327">327</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cassingham (Kensham), William of, <a href=
+"#pg007">7-9</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Castile, <a href="#pg104">104</a>, <a href="#pg144">144</a>, <a
+href="#pg235">235</a>, <a href="#pg370">370</a>, <a href=
+"#pg403">403</a>, <a href="#pg405">405</a>, <a href=
+"#pg406">406</a>, <a href="#pg411">411</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Castile, Alfonso, King of. See Alfonso.</li>
+
+<li>Castile, Blanche of. See Blanche.</li>
+
+<li>Castile, Constance of, <a href="#pg430">430</a>. See
+Constance.</li>
+
+<li>Castile, Eleanor of. See Eleanor.</li>
+
+<li>Castile, Ferdinand the Saint, King of. See Ferdinand.</li>
+
+<li>Castile, Henry of Trastamara, King of. See Henry.</li>
+
+<li>Castile, Isabella of. See Isabella.</li>
+
+<li>Castile, Peter the Cruel, King Of. See Peter.</li>
+
+<li>Castile, John, King of Leon and Duke Lancaster, <a href=
+"#pg430">430</a>, <a href="#pg431">431</a>. See John of Gaunt.</li>
+
+<li>Castle of;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Aberconway or Conway, <a href="#pg165">165</a>, <a href=
+"#pg189">189</a>, <a href="#pg195">195</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Abergavenny, <a href="#pg047">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aberyswyth, <a href="#pg160">160</a>, <a href=
+"#pg161">161</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Alnwick, <a href="#pg131">131</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Alton, <a href="#pg273">273</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bamburgh, <a href="#pg247">247</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Barnard, <a href="#pg179">179</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Beaumaris, <a href="#pg190">190</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bedford, <a href="#pg025">25</a>, <a href="#pg026">26</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bere, <a href="#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Berkeley, <a href="#pg284">284</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Berwick, <a href="#pg208">208</a>, <a href="#pg275">275</a>, <a
+href="#pg321">321</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bothwell, <a href="#pg262">262</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bristol,<a href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href="#pg265">265</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Builth, <a href="#pg163">163</a></li>
+
+<li>Bytham, <a href="#pg020">20</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Caen, <a href="#pg360">360</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Caerphilly, <a href="#pg166">166</a>, <a href=
+"#pg267">267</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cardiff, <a href="#pg047">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Carlaverock, <a href="#pg218">218</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Carmarthen, <a href="#pg160">160</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Carnarvon, <a href="#pg189">189</a>, <a href=
+"#pg190">190</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Castleton, Liddesdale, <a href="#pg365">365</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chepstow, <a href="#pg047">47</a>, <a href=
+"#pg300">300</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Christchurch, <a href="#pg224">224</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clare, <a href="#pg115">115</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Colchester, <a href="#pg006">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Conway. See Aberconway.</li>
+
+<li>Conisborough, <a href="#pg149">149</a>, <a href=
+"#pg273">273</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Corfe, <a href="#pg303">303</a>, <a href="#pg307">307</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cornet, <a href="#pg415">415</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Criccieth, <a href="#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dolwyddelen, <a href="#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dover, <a href="#pg005">5</a>, <a href="#pg009">9</a>, <a href=
+"#pg010">10</a>, <a href="#pg109">109</a>, <a href=
+"#pg129">129</a>, <a href="#pg252">252</a>, <a href=
+"#pg288">288</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Drysllwyn, <a href="#pg158">158</a>, <a href=
+"#pg160">160</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dublin, <a href="#pg271">271</a>, <a href=
+"#pg272">272</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dumfries, <a href="#pg238">238</a>, <a href=
+"#pg321">321</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dunbar, <a href="#pg197">197</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dynevor, <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a href=
+"#pg168">168</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Edinburgh, <a href="#pg218">218</a>, <a href="#pg321">321</a>,
+<a href="#pg323">323</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Flint, <a href="#pg161">161</a>, <a href="#pg167">167</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fotheringhay, <a href="#pg021">21</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gloucester, <a href="#pg125">125</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Grosmont, <a href="#pg047">47</a>, <a href=
+"#pg357">357</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Harlech, <a href="#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hawarden, <a href="#pg161">161</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hedingham, <a href="#pg006">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Josselin, <a href="#pg382">382</a>, <a href=
+"#pg383">383</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kenilworth, <a href="#pg126">126</a>, <a href="#pg127">127</a>,
+<a href="#pg130">130</a>, <a href="#pg131">131</a>, <a href=
+"#pg251">251</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kilkenny, <a href="#pg049">49</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kidwelly, <a href="#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Knaresborough, <a href="#pg273">273</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Leeds (Kent), <a href="#pg282">282</a>, <a href=
+"#pg283">283</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Limoges, <a href="#pg142">142</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lincoln, <a href="#pg009">9</a>, <a href="#pg011">11</a>.</li>
+
+<li>London. See Tower of London, the.</li>
+
+<li>Maud's, <a href="#pg038">38</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Monmouth, <a href="#pg047">47</a>, <a href=
+"#pg048">48</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montgomery, <a href="#pg037">37</a>, <a href=
+"#pg040">40</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mount Sorrel, <a href="#pg008">8</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Newcastle-upon-Tyne, <a href="#pg183">183</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Norham, <a href="#pg181">181</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Norwich, <a href="#pg006">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Nottingham, <a href="#pg308">308</a>, <a href=
+"#pg438">438</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Orford, <a href="#pg006">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Peebles, <a href="#pg321">321</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pevensey, <a href="#pg117">117</a>, <a href="#pg120">120</a>,
+<a href="#pg126">126</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pontefract, <a href="#pg264">264</a>, <a href=
+"#pg286">286</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Powys, <a href="#pg267">267</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rhuddlan, <a href="#pg161">161</a>, <a href="#pg162">162</a>,
+<a href="#pg164">164</a>, <a href="#pg166">166</a>, <a href=
+"#pg167">167</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rising, <a href="#pg309">309</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rochester, <a href="#pg114">114</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rockingham, <a href="#pg020">20</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Romorantin, <a href="#pg389">389</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rose, <a href="#pg258">258</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Roxburgh, <a href="#pg208">208</a>, <a href=
+"#pg321">321</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte, <a href="#pg399">399</a>, <a href=
+"#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Scarborough, <a href="#pg250">250</a>, <a href=
+"#pg251">251</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Skelton, <a href="#pg180">180</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Skenfrith, <a href="#pg047">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stirling, <a href="#pg191">191</a>, <a href="#pg217">217</a>,
+<a href="#pg225">225</a>, <a href="#pg258">258</a>-260, <a href=
+"#pg262">262</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Swansea, <a href="#pg280">280</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tickhill, <a href="#pg285">285</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tintagel, <a href="#pg249">249</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tunbridge, <a href="#pg039">39</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tutbury, <a href="#pg285">285</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Usk, <a href="#pg047">47</a>, <a href="#pg279">279</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wallingford, <a href="#pg239">239</a>, <a href=
+"#pg249">249</a>, <a href="#pg250">250</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wark, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Warwick, <a href="#pg251">251</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Whitecastle, <a href="#pg047">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wigmore, <a href="#pg125">125</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Windsor, <a href="#pg112">112</a>, <a href="#pg249">249</a>, <a
+href="#pg310">310</a>, <a href="#pg356">356</a>, <a href=
+"#pg380">380</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wolvesey (Winchester), <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a href=
+"#pg102">102</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Castles, <a href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href="#pg024">24</a>, <a
+href="#pg025">25</a>, <a href="#pg102">102</a>, <a href=
+"#pg103">103</a>, <a href="#pg119">119</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>royal, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a href="#pg100">100</a>, <a
+href="#pg109">109</a>.</li>
+
+<li>adulterine, <a href="#pg014">14</a>, <a href="#pg015">15</a>,
+<a href="#pg018">18</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Welsh, <a href="#pg044">44</a>, <a href="#pg111">111</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of South Wales, <a href="#pg047">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Edward I.'s, <a href="#pg161">161</a>, <a href=
+"#pg165">165</a>, <a href="#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>concentric, <a href="#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Scottish, <a href="#pg181">181</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Castleton Castle, Liddesdale, <a href="#pg365">365</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Castor, Church of St., Coblenz, <a href="#pg335">335</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Castorplatz, the, Coblenz, <a href="#pg335">335</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Caversham, <a href="#pg015">15</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Celestine V., Pope, <a href="#pg199">199</a>, <a href=
+"#pg200">200</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Celts, Irish, <a href="#pg270">270</a>, <a href=
+"#pg429">429</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Celts of Scotland, the, <a href="#pg263">263</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chaboterie, la, <a href="#pg389">389</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chalon, little battle of, <a href="#pg140">140</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Champagne, Blanche of Artois, Queen of Navarre and Countess of.
+See Blanche.</li>
+
+<li>Champagne, Edmund, Count of, <a href="#pg144">144</a>, <a href=
+"#pg187">187</a>. See also Edmund of Lancaster. Champagne, Henry,
+Count of. See Henry.</li>
+
+<li>Champagne, Joan of. See Joan.</li>
+
+<li>Champagne, Theobald IV., Count of. See Theobald.</li>
+
+<li>Champagne, <a href="#pg035">35</a>, <a href="#pg036">36</a>, <a
+href="#pg144">144</a>, <a href="#pg146">146</a>, <a href=
+"#pg187">187</a>, <a href="#pg246">246</a>, <a href=
+"#pg294">294</a>, <a href="#pg396">396</a>, <a href=
+"#pg413">413</a>, <a href="#pg417">417</a>, <a href=
+"#pg418">418</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Champollion-Figeac's Lettres des rots d'Angleterre, <a href=
+"#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chancellor, office of, <a href="#pg053">53</a>, <a href=
+"#pg064">64</a>, <a href="#pg102">102</a>, <a href=
+"#pg120">120</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chancery courts, for Wales, <a href="#pg166">166</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>records, <a href="#pg446">446</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Chandos, Sir John, <a href="#pg399">399</a>, <a href=
+"#pg401">401</a>, <a href="#pg402">402</a>, <a href=
+"#pg404">404</a>, <a href="#pg407">407</a>, <a href=
+"#pg412">412</a>, <a href="#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chandos Herald, <a href="#pg266">266</a>, <a href=
+"#pg459">459</a>, <a href="#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Channel, the Bristol, <a href="#pg076">76</a>, <a href=
+"#pg300">300</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>the English, <a href="#pg035">35</a>, <a href="#pg297">297</a>,
+<a href="#pg330">330</a>, <a href="#pg333">333</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Channel Islands, the, <a href="#pg030">30</a>, <a href=
+"#pg073">73</a>, <a href="#pg345">345</a>, <a href=
+"#pg397">397</a>, <a href="#pg414">414</a>, <a href=
+"#pg415">415</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charente, the river, <a href="#pg063">63</a>, <a href=
+"#pg105">105</a>, <a href="#pg170">170</a>, <a href=
+"#pg324">324</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charing, <a href="#pg350">350</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charles IV., the Emperor, <a href="#pg364">364</a>, <a href=
+"#pg410">410</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charles IV., the Fair, King of France, <a href=
+"#pg295">295</a>-298, <a href="#pg324">324</a>-326.</li>
+
+<li>Charles V., King of France, <a href="#pg403">403</a>, <a href=
+"#pg404">404</a>, <a href="#pg408">408</a>-412, <a href=
+"#pg414">414</a>, <a href="#pg415">415</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charles of Anjou, younger brother of Louis IX., Count of
+Provence and Charles I., King of Sicily, <a href="#pg064">64</a>,
+<a href="#pg119">119</a>, <a href="#pg120">120</a>, <a href=
+"#pg139">139</a>, <a href="#pg143">143</a>, <a href=
+"#pg144">144</a>, <a href="#pg169">169</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charles the Bad, Count of Evreux and King of Navarre, <a href=
+"#pg385">385</a>-387, <a href="#pg394">394</a>, <a href=
+"#pg395">395</a>, <a href="#pg398">398</a>, <a href=
+"#pg400">400</a>-404, <a href="#pg411">411</a>, <a href=
+"#pg417">417</a>, <a href="#pg460">460</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charles of Blois, claimant to Duchy of Brittany, <a href=
+"#pg352">352</a>-354, <a href="#pg367">367</a>, <a href=
+"#pg368">368</a>, <a href="#pg382">382</a>, <a href=
+"#pg383">383</a>, <a href="#pg388">388</a>, <a href=
+"#pg393">393</a>, <a href="#pg401">401</a>, <a href=
+"#pg402">402</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charles of La Cerda, <a href="#pg384">384</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charles of Moravia, King of the Romans, <a href=
+"#pg364">364</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Charles IV., the Emperor.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Charles, Duke of Normandy, <a href="#pg390">390</a>, <a href=
+"#pg391">391</a>, <a href="#pg394">394</a>, <a href=
+"#pg396">396</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See also Charles V., King of France.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Charles of Salerno, afterwards Charles II. of Sicily, <a href=
+"#pg169">169</a>, <a href="#pg171">171</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charles, Count ofValois, <a href="#pg191">191</a>, <a href=
+"#pg296">296</a>, <a href="#pg297">297</a>, <a href=
+"#pg324">324</a>, <a href="#pg325">325</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charlemagne, <a href="#pg326">326</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charlton, Tohn, lord of Powys, <a href="#pg248">248</a>, <a
+href="#pg267">267</a>, <a href="#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charltons of Powys, the, <a href="#pg306">306</a>, <a href=
+"#pg414">414</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charter, the Great, <a href="#pg001">1</a>, <a href=
+"#pg013">13</a>, <a href="#pg065">65</a>, <a href="#pg101">101</a>,
+<a href="#pg115">115</a>, <a href="#pg119">119</a>, <a href=
+"#pg125">125</a>, <a href="#pg131">131</a>, <a href=
+"#pg203">203</a>, <a href="#pg206">206</a>, <a href=
+"#pg244">244</a>, <a href="#pg247">247</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>the forest, <a href="#pg013">13</a>, <a href="#pg065">65</a>,
+<a href="#pg119">119</a>, <a href="#pg131">131</a>, <a href=
+"#pg206">206</a>;</li>
+
+<li>Rolls, the, <a href="#pg445">445</a>, see Rolls.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Charterhouse, the London, <a href="#pg375">375</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charters, confirmations of the, <a href="#pg001">1</a>, <a
+href="#pg005">5</a>, <a href="#pg013">13</a>, <a href=
+"#pg028">28</a>, <a href="#pg029">29</a>, <a href="#pg040">40</a>,
+<a href="#pg065">65</a>, <a href="#pg131">131</a>, <a href=
+"#pg205">205</a>, <a href="#pg208">208</a>, <a href=
+"#pg209">209</a>, <a href="#pg216">216</a>, <a href=
+"#pg219">219</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>of London. <a href="#pg134">134</a>:</li>
+
+<li><i>Carta Mercatoria</i>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>;</li>
+
+<li>as sources for history, <a href="#pg444">444</a>, <a href=
+"#pg445">445</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Chartley, <a href="#pg130">130</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chartres, <a href="#pg396">396</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chateauneuf, <a href="#pg358">358</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chateauroux, <a href="#pg388">388</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chatelherault, <a href="#pg389">389</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chaucer, Geoffrey, <a href="#pg310">310</a>, <a href=
+"#pg395">395</a>, <a href="#pg421">421</a>-424, <a href=
+"#pg426">426</a>, <a href="#pg427">427</a>, <a href=
+"#pg441">441</a>, <a href="#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chauvigny, <a href="#pg389">389</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chaworth, Payne of, <a href="#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cheapside, <a href="#pg299">299</a>, <a href=
+"#pg300">300</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chepstow, <a href="#pg047">47</a>, <a href=
+"#pg300">300</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cher, the river, <a href="#pg388">388</a>, <a href=
+"#pg389">389</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cherbourg, <a href="#pg193">193</a>, <a href=
+"#pg360">360</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cheshire, <a href="#pg074">74</a>-76, <a href="#pg122">122</a>,
+<a href="#pg132">132</a>, <a href="#pg224">224</a>, <a href=
+"#pg278">278</a>, <a href="#pg428">428</a>, <a href=
+"#pg447">447</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>palatine earldom of, <a href="#pg014">14</a>, <a href=
+"#pg024">24</a>;</li>
+
+<li>palatine courts of, <a href="#pg167">167</a>;</li>
+
+<li>records of county palatine of, <a href="#pg449">449</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Chester, <a href="#pg161">161</a>, <a href="#pg242">242</a>, <a
+href="#pg423">423</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chester, Edward, Earl of. See Edward I., Edward II. and Edward
+III.</li>
+
+<li>Chester, John de Lacy, Constable of. See Lacy.</li>
+
+<li>Chester, John the Scot, Exl of, <a href="#pg042">42</a>, <a
+href="#pg046">46</a>, <a href="#pg179">179</a>. See also
+Huntingdon.</li>
+
+<li>Chester, Simon de Montbrt, Earl of. See Leicester.</li>
+
+<li>Chester, Randolph Blundeville, Earl of, <a href="#pg001">1</a>,
+<a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a href="#pg004">4</a>, <a href=
+"#pg006">6</a>, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a href="#pg010">10</a>, <a
+href="#pg013">13</a>, <a href="#pg017">17</a>, <a href=
+"#pg021">21</a>, <a href="#pg022">22</a>, <a href=
+"#pg024">24</a>-26, <a href="#pg035">35</a>, <a href=
+"#pg035">35</a>, <a href="#pg041">41</a> <a href="#pg042">42</a>,
+<a href="#pg075">75</a>, <a href="#pg097">97</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chesterfield, battle of, <a href="#pg130">130</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chichester,<a href="#pg008">8</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chichester, Bishops of. See Berkstead, Stephen; Neville, Ralth,
+and Stratford, Robert.</li>
+
+<li>Chilham, barony of, Kenf, <a href="#pg316">316</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chilterns, the, <a href="#pg129">129</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chinon, <a href="#pg063">63</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chirk, <a href="#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chirk, Roger Mortimer of. See Mortimer, Roger, of Chirk.</li>
+
+<li>Christchurch Castle, <a href="#pg222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Christopher, The</i>, <a href="#pg335">335</a>, <a href=
+"#pg345">345</a>, <a href="#pg346">346</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chroniclers, the, <a href="#pg093">93</a>-95, <a href=
+"#pg419">419</a>, <a href="#pg420">420</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chronicles as sources of history, <a href="#pg443">443</a>, <a
+href="#pg451">451</a>-460.</li>
+
+<li>Cinque Ports, the, I, <a href="#pg007">7</a>, <a href=
+"#pg008">8</a>, <a href="#pg033">33</a>, <a href=
+"#pg113">113</a>-115, <a href="#pg122">122</a>, <a href=
+"#pg129">129</a>, <a href="#pg161">161</a>, <a href=
+"#pg186">186</a>, <a href="#pg210">210</a>, <a href=
+"#pg252">252</a>, <a href="#pg282">282</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cirencester, <a href="#pg284">284</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cistercian, nuns of Eastminster, <a href="#pg310">310</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>monks of Whalley, <a href="#pg316">316</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Cistercians, the, <a href="#pg011">11</a>, <a href=
+"#pg060">60</a>, <a href="#pg076">76</a>, <a href="#pg165">165</a>,
+<a href="#pg375">375</a>, <a href="#pg376">376</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clare Castle, <a href="#pg115">115</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>the house of, <a href="#pg133">133</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Clare, Eleanor de, <a href="#pg278">278</a>. See Despenser
+Eleanor de.</li>
+
+<li>Clare, Elizabeth of, <a href="#pg279">279</a>, <a href=
+"#pg429">429</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clare, Gilbert of, Earl of Gloucester. See Gloucester.</li>
+
+<li>Clare, Margaret of, <a href="#pg238">238</a>, <a href=
+"#pg279">279</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clare, Richard of, Earl of Gloucester. See Gloucester.</li>
+
+<li>Clarence, Duchy of, <a href="#pg429">429</a>. See Lionel of
+Antwerp.</li>
+
+<li>Clarendon, <a href="#pg178">178</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clares, the poor, <a href="#pg309">309</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clark's, G. T., <i>Medi&aelig;val Military Architecture</i>, <a
+href="#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clark's, J. W., Observances <i>in</i> use <i>at Barnwell
+Priory</i>, <a href="#pg150">150</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clement IV., Pope, <a href="#pg092">92</a>, <a href=
+"#pg121">121</a>, <a href="#pg135">135</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clement V., Pope, <a href="#pg229">229</a>-231, <a href=
+"#pg233">233</a>, <a href="#pg234">234</a>, <a href=
+"#pg241">241</a>, <a href="#pg254">254</a>-256.</li>
+
+<li>Clement VI., Pope, <a href="#pg348">348</a>, <a href=
+"#pg354">354</a>, <a href="#pg370">370</a>, <a href=
+"#pg377">377</a>, <a href="#pg385">385</a>, <a href=
+"#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clergy, taxation of the, <a href="#pg195">195</a>, <a href=
+"#pg219">219</a>, <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Clericis laicos</i>, the bull, <a href="#pg200">200</a>, <a
+href="#pg201">201</a>, <a href="#pg203">203</a>, <a href=
+"#pg208">208</a>, <a href="#pg222">222</a>, <a href=
+"#pg223">223</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clerkenwell, <a href="#pg108">108</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clermont, Marshal, <a href="#pg390">390</a>, <a href=
+"#pg391">391</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cleves, Count Of, <a href="#pg332">332</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clifford, Robert, <a href="#pg249">249</a>, <a href=
+"#pg250">250</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clifford, Roger, <a href="#pg285">285</a>, <a href=
+"#pg286">286</a>. Cliffords, the, <a href="#pg001">1</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clinton, Earl of Huntingdon. See Huntingdon.</li>
+
+<li>Clisson, Oliver de, <a href="#pg401">401</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cloth, manufacture of English, <a href="#pg427">427</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clydesdale, <a href="#pg205">205</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clwyd, the river, <a href="#pg075">75</a>, <a href=
+"#pg076">76</a>, <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a href=
+"#pg167">167</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clun, <a href="#pg167">167</a>, <a href="#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cobham, Thomas of, Archbishop elect of Canterbury, <a href=
+"#pg256">256</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Coblenz, <a href="#pg335">335</a>, <a href=
+"#pg336">336</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cocherel, battle of, <a href="#pg401">401</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cog Thomas, the, <a href="#pg384">384</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Coggeshall's <i>Chronicle</i>, <a href="#pg454">454</a>, <a
+href="#pg459">459</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cognac, <a href="#pg065">65</a>, <a href="#pg412">412</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Coinage, <a href="#pg175">175</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Colchester, Castle of, <a href="#pg006">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Coldstream, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Colleges, growth of, <a href="#pg093">93</a>, <a href=
+"#pg375">375</a>, <a href="#pg376">376</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cologne, <a href="#pg092">92</a>, <a href=
+"#pg335">335</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cologne, Archbishop of, <a href="#pg033">33</a>, <a href=
+"#pg080">80</a>, <a href="#pg335">335</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Colons, faction of the, <a href="#pg070">70</a>, <a href=
+"#pg074">74</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Commerce under Edward III., <a href="#pg311">311</a>, <a href=
+"#pg427">427</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Comminges, Counts of, <a href="#pg073">73</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Commons, house of, <a href="#pg122">122</a>, <a href=
+"#pg243">243</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Companies, the free, <a href="#pg402">402</a>, <a href=
+"#pg403">403</a>, <a href="#pg414">414</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Company, the White, <a href="#pg403">403</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Compi&egrave;gne, <a href="#pg328">328</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Compostella, <a href="#pg201">201</a>, <a href=
+"#pg259">259</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Comyn, John, the elder, lord of Badenoch, <a href=
+"#pg180">180</a>, <a href="#pg198">198</a>, <a href=
+"#pg206">206</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Comyn, John, of Badenoch, the younger, or the Red, regent of
+Scotland, <a href="#pg217">217</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>, <a
+href="#pg226">226</a>, <a href="#pg233">233</a>, <a href=
+"#pg257">257</a>, <a href="#pg263">263</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Comyn, John, of Buchan. See Buchan, Earl of.</li>
+
+<li>Confirmation of the charters, <a href="#pg208">208</a>, <a
+href="#pg209">209</a>. See Charters.</li>
+
+<li>Conisborough Castle, <a href="#pg149">149</a>, <a href=
+"#pg273">273</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Connaught, <a href="#pg037">37</a>, <a href="#pg046">46</a>, <a
+href="#pg271">271</a>, <a href="#pg272">272</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Connaught, Phelim O'Connor, King of, <a href="#pg271">271</a>,
+<a href="#pg272">272</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Connaught, King of, <a href="#pg037">37</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Conrad, son of Frederick II., <a href="#pg078">78</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Conservators of the Peace, <a href="#pg119">119</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Consilium ordinarium</i>, the, <a href="#pg029">29</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Constable, office of, <a href="#pg202">202</a>, <a href=
+"#pg204">204</a>, <a href="#pg209">209</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Constance of Brittany, <a href="#pg036">36</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Constance of Castile, daughter of Peter the Cruel, wife of
+John, Duke of Lancaster, <a href="#pg430">430</a>, <a href=
+"#pg431">431</a>,</li>
+
+<li>Convocation, <a href="#pg440">440</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Conway, the river, <a href="#pg068">68</a>, <a href=
+"#pg077">77</a>, <a href="#pg161">161</a>, <a href=
+"#pg162">162</a>, <a href="#pg164">164</a>, <a href=
+"#pg166">166</a>, <a href="#pg180">180</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Corfe Castle, <a href="#pg303">303</a>, <a href=
+"#pg307">307</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cormeilles, Abbey of, <a href="#pg400">400</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cornet Castle, <a href="#pg415">415</a>,</li>
+
+<li>Cornouailles, <a href="#pg354">354</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cornwall, <a href="#pg241">241</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>earldom of, <a href="#pg224">224</a>, <a href="#pg242">242</a>,
+<a href="#pg248">248</a>, <a href="#pg278">278</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Cornwall, Dunstanville, Earls of, <a href="#pg002">2</a>.</li>
+
+<li style="list-style: none">See Dunstanville.</li>
+
+<li>Cornwall, Edmund, Earl of. See Edmund.</li>
+
+<li>Cornwall, Edward, Duke of. See Edward, the Black Prince.</li>
+
+<li>Cornwall, John of Eltham, Earl of. See John.</li>
+
+<li>Cornwall, Peter GavestOn, Earl of. See Gaveston.</li>
+
+<li>Cornwall, Richard, Earl of. See Richard.</li>
+
+<li>Corte Nuova, battle of, <a href="#pg061">61</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cosneau's <i>Grands Trait&eacute;s de la Guerre de Cent
+Ans</i>, <a href="#pg451">451</a>.</li>
+
+<li>C&ocirc;tentin, the, <a href="#pg359">359</a>, <a href=
+"#pg387">387</a>, <a href="#pg388">388</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cotton, Bartholomew's <i>Historia Anglicana</i>, <a href=
+"#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Coucy, Enguerrand de, <a href="#pg008">8</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Councils, General, at Lyons, <a href="#pg067">67</a>, <a href=
+"#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Court of King's Bench, records of, <a href="#pg447">447</a>, <a
+href="#pg448">448</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Court of Common Pleas, records of, <a href=
+"#pg447">447</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Court of the County, IOI, <a href="#pg103">103</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Courts of Chancery and Exchequer in Wales, <a href=
+"#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Courtenay, House of, Earls of Devon, <a href=
+"#pg314">314</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Courtenay, William, Bishop of London, <a href="#pg435">435</a>,
+<a href="#pg439">439</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Courtrai, <a href="#pg211">211</a>, <a href="#pg330">330</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>battle of, <a href="#pg221">221</a>, <a href="#pg222">222</a>,
+<a href="#pg262">262</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Coventry, Roger Northburgh, Bishops of. See Northburgh,
+Roger.</li>
+
+<li>Coville's <i>Histoire</i> de <i>France</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Craven, <a href="#pg275">275</a>. Cr&eacute;cy, battle of, <a
+href="#pg190">190</a>, <a href="#pg313">313</a>, <a href=
+"#pg362">362</a>-366, <a href="#pg383">383</a>, <a href=
+"#pg385">385</a>, <a href="#pg389">389</a>, <a href=
+"#pg392">392</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cr&eacute;cy-en-Ponthieu, <a href="#pg362">362</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cree, the river, <a href="#pg321">321</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cressingham, Hugh, <a href="#pg198">198</a>, <a href=
+"#pg205">205</a>, <a href="#pg207">207</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Creuse, the river, <a href="#pg388">388</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Criccieth Castle, <a href="#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Crockart, <a href="#pg382">382</a>, <a href=
+"#pg383">383</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Crossbowmen, Genoese, <a href="#pg363">363</a>, <a href=
+"#pg364">364</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Crotoy, Le, <a href="#pg367">367</a>. Crusades, the, <a href=
+"#pg011">11</a>, <a href="#pg013">13</a>, <a href="#pg027">27</a>,
+<a href="#pg028">28</a>, <a href="#pg031">31</a>, <a href=
+"#pg033">33</a>, <a href="#pg036">36</a>, <a href="#pg058">58</a>,
+<a href="#pg061">61</a>, <a href="#pg069">69</a>, <a href=
+"#pg070">70</a>, <a href="#pg078">78</a>, <a href="#pg088">88</a>,
+<a href="#pg134">134</a>, <a href="#pg139">139</a>, <a href=
+"#pg143">143</a>, <a href="#pg146">146</a>, <a href=
+"#pg164">164</a>, <a href="#pg176">176</a>, <a href=
+"#pg184">184</a>, <a href="#pg232">232</a>, <a href=
+"#pg234">234</a>, <a href="#pg305">305</a>, <a href=
+"#pg329">329</a>, <a href="#pg330">330</a>, <a href=
+"#pg403">403</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Crutched friars, the, <a href="#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cumberland, <a href="#pg258">258</a>, <a href="#pg285">285</a>,
+<a href="#pg290">290</a>, <a href="#pg319">319</a>. Cunningham's,
+W., <i>Growth of English Industry,</i> <a href=
+"#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Curzon, Robert, <a href="#pg089">89</a>, go.</li>
+
+<li>Customs, <a href="#pg244">244</a>. "Custom, the Great and
+Ancient," <a href="#pg147">147</a>; "the New and Small," <a href=
+"#pg225">225</a>. Cuvelier's <i>Vie de Bertrand de Guesclin, <a
+href="#pg460">460</a>.</i></li>
+
+<li>Cymry, the, <a href="#pg188">188</a>. See also Wales.</li>
+
+<li>Cyprus, <a href="#pg419">419</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cyprus, Lusignan kings of, <a href="#pg403">403</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Dagworth, Sir Thomas, <a href="#pg367">367</a>, <a href=
+"#pg368">368</a>, <a href="#pg381">381</a>, <a href=
+"#pg382">382</a>.<a name="D" id="D" /></li>
+
+<li>Damietta, Crusade of, <a href="#pg013">13</a>, <a href=
+"#pg019">19</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Damietta, Archbishop of. See Roches;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Peter des, <a href="#pg020">20</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Damme, <a href="#pg211">211</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Dampierre, Guy, Count of Flanders. See Guy.</li>
+
+<li>Dancaster, John, <a href="#pg384">384</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dante, <a href="#pg421">421</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Darlington, John of, Archbishop of Dublin, <a href=
+"#pg099">99</a>.</li>
+
+<li>David I., King of Scots, <a href="#pg228">228</a>.</li>
+
+<li>David II., son of Robert Bruce, King of Scots, <a href=
+"#pg305">305</a>, <a href="#pg315">315</a>, <a href=
+"#pg320">320</a>, <a href="#pg323">323</a>, <a href=
+"#pg329">329</a>, <a href="#pg354">354</a>, <a href=
+"#pg364">364</a>, <a href="#pg365">365</a>, <a href=
+"#pg368">368</a>, <a href="#pg393">393</a>, <a href=
+"#pg403">403</a>.</li>
+
+<li>David I., an Llewelyn, Prince of Wales, <a href=
+"#pg068">68</a>, <a href="#pg075">75</a>.</li>
+
+<li>David II., ap Griffith, Prince of Wales, <a href=
+"#pg075">75</a>, <a href="#pg111">111</a>, <a href=
+"#pg161">161</a>, <a href="#pg165">165</a>, <a href=
+"#pg414">414</a>.</li>
+
+<li>David, Earl of Huntingdon. See Huntingdon.</li>
+
+<li>David of Strathbolgie, Earl of Athol. See Athol.</li>
+
+<li>Dax, <a href="#pg070">70</a>, <a href="#pg324">324</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dean, Forest of, <a href="#pg124">124</a>.</li>
+
+<li>"Decorated" style of architecture, 96</li>
+
+<li>Deddington, <a href="#pg250">250</a>, <a href="#pg251">251</a>,
+<a href="#pg272">272</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Deganwy, Castle of, <a href="#pg076">76</a>, <a href=
+"#pg077">77</a>, <a href="#pg111">111</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Delisle's <i>Histoire de Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte,</i> <a
+href="#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Denbigh, town, lordship and castle of, <a href=
+"#pg161">161</a>, <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a href=
+"#pg189">189</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Denifle's <i>D&eacute;solation des Eglises de France</i>, etc.,
+<a href="#pg463">463</a>, <a href="#pg464">464</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his <i>Entstehung der Universit&auml;ten</i>, <a href=
+"#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>D&eacute;prez's <i>Pr&eacute;liminaires de la Guerre de Cent
+Ans, <a href="#pg463">463</a>.</i></li>
+
+<li>Derby, Henry of Grosmont, Earl of, <a href="#pg314">314</a>.
+See also Lancaster.</li>
+
+<li>Derby, Robert Ferrars, Earl of, <a href="#pg065">65</a>, <a
+href="#pg123">123</a>, <a href="#pg130">130</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Derby, Thomas, Earl of Lancaster and. See Lancaster.</li>
+
+<li>Derby, William of Ferrars, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg001">1</a>.</li>
+
+<li style="list-style: none"><a href="#pg013">13</a>, <a href=
+"#pg042">42</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Deschamps, Eustace, <a href="#pg421">421</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Despenser, Eleanor de, wife of Hugh le Despenser, the younger,
+<a href="#pg278">278</a>, <a href="#pg392">392</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Despenser, Hugh, justiciar, <a href="#pg100">100</a>, <a href=
+"#pg109">109</a>, <a href="#pg112">112</a>, <a href=
+"#pg113">113</a>, <a href="#pg119">119</a>, <a href=
+"#pg120">120</a>, <a href="#pg128">128</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Despenser, Hugh, the elder, Earl of Winchester, son of the
+justiciar, <a href="#pg241">241</a>, <a href="#pg265">265</a>, <a
+href="#pg274">274</a>, <a href="#pg277">277</a>-300, <a href=
+"#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Despenser, Hugh, the younger, Lord of Glamorgan, son of the
+foregoing, <a href="#pg266">266</a>, <a href="#pg277">277</a>-301,
+<a href="#pg306">306</a>, <a href="#pg314">314</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Devizes, Castle of, <a href="#pg045">45</a>, <a href=
+"#pg047">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Devon, earldom of, Falkes de Br&eacute;aut&eacute; as warden
+of, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a href="#pg006">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Devon, Courtenays, earls of, <a href="#pg314">314</a>, <a href=
+"#pg435">435</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Dictum de Kenilworth</i>, the, <a href="#pg131">131</a>, <a
+href="#pg132">132</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dinan, <a href="#pg035">35</a>, <a href="#pg382">382</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Disafforestments, <a href="#pg217">217</a>-2l9.</li>
+
+<li>Diserth, Castle of, <a href="#pg076">76</a>, <a href=
+"#pg111">111</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Disinherited, the (after Evesham), <a href=
+"#pg128">128</a>-132;
+
+<ul>
+<li>the, Scotch, <a href="#pg315">315</a>, <a href=
+"#pg318">318</a>, <a href="#pg321">321</a>, <a href=
+"#pg323">323</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li><i>Disseisin</i>, novel, <a href="#pg025">25</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dolwyddelen Castle, <a href="#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dominic, St., <a href="#pg084">84</a>, <a href=
+"#pg085">85</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dominicans, <a href="#pg084">84</a>, <a href="#pg085">85</a>,
+<a href="#pg088">88</a>, <a href="#pg091">91</a>, <a href=
+"#pg251">251</a>, <a href="#pg254">254</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Don, the river. <a href="#pg198">198</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Donaldbane, brother of Malcolm Canmore.</li>
+
+<li>Dordogne, the river, <a href="#pg032">32</a>, <a href=
+"#pg069">69</a>, <a href="#pg073">73</a>, <a href="#pg324">324</a>,
+<a href="#pg357">357</a>, <a href="#pg388">388</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dordrecht, <a href="#pg299">299</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dorking, <a href="#pg008">8</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dorsetshire, <a href="#pg233">233</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Douai, <a href="#pg343">343</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Douglas, Sir Archibald, <a href="#pg319">319</a>, <a href=
+"#pg320">320</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Douglas, Sir James, <a href="#pg276">276</a>, <a href=
+"#pg277">277</a>, <a href="#pg305">305</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Douglas, Sir William, <a href="#pg197">197</a>, <a href=
+"#pg206">206</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Douglas, Sir William (at Poitiers), <a href=
+"#pg390">390</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dover, town and castle, <a href="#pg005">5</a>, <a href=
+"#pg008">8</a>, g, <a href="#pg011">11</a>, <a href=
+"#pg013">13</a>, <a href="#pg040">40</a>, <a href="#pg084">84</a>,
+<a href="#pg109">109</a>, <a href="#pg129">129</a>, <a href=
+"#pg143">143</a>, <a href="#pg172">172</a>, <a href=
+"#pg192">192</a>-194, <a href="#pg248">248</a>, <a href=
+"#pg252">252</a>, <a href="#pg283">283</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>straits of, <a href="#pg386">386</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Dovey the river, <a href="#pg075">75</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dowell's, S., <i>History of Taxation</i>, <a href=
+"#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Downs, the north, <a href="#pg116">116</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>the south, <a href="#pg116">116</a>,</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Drokensford, Bishop of Bath and Wells, <a href=
+"#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dublin, <a href="#pg269">269</a>, <a href="#pg271">271</a>;
+Castle of, <a href="#pg271">271</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dublin, Archbishop of. See Hotham, William of, Archbishop of,
+<a href="#pg211">211</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dubois, Peter, <a href="#pg232">232</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dugdale's <i>Monasticon</i>, <a href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dumfries, <a href="#pg233">233</a>, <a href="#pg238">238</a>,
+<a href="#pg321">321</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dunbar, <a href="#pg197">197</a>, <a href="#pg261">261</a>;
+battle of, <a href="#pg187">187</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dunfermline, <a href="#pg225">225</a>, <a href=
+"#pg271">271</a>, <a href="#pg272">272</a>, <a href=
+"#pg278">278</a>, <a href="#pg317">317</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dunkeld, Bishop of, <a href="#pg318">318</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Duns Scotus, <a href="#pg091">91</a>, <a href=
+"#pg092">92</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dunstable, <a href="#pg025">25</a>, <a href=
+"#pg299">299</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dunstanville, house of, <a href="#pg002">2</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dupplin Moor, <a href="#pg317">317</a>. battle of, <a href=
+"#pg318">318</a>-322.</li>
+
+<li>Durham, <a href="#pg275">275</a>, <a href="#pg365">365</a>, <a
+href="#pg447">447</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>bishopric of, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a href="#pg197">197</a>,
+<a href="#pg198">198</a>, <a href="#pg223">223</a>;</li>
+
+<li>records of, <a href="#pg448">448</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Durham, Bishops of.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Bek, Anthony;</li>
+
+<li>Beaumont, Louis de;</li>
+
+<li>and Bury, Richard of.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Dynevor Castle, <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a href=
+"#pg168">168</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Earn, the river, <a href="#pg317">317</a>.<a name="E" id=
+"E" /></li>
+
+<li>Eastminster, the, London, <a href="#pg310">310</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Eastry, Henry of, prior of Christ Church, Canterbury, <a href=
+"#pg199">199</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ebro, the river, <a href="#pg405">405</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Eccleston, William of, his <i>De adventu fratrum minorum</i>,
+<a href="#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Edinburgh, town and castle, <a href="#pg193">193</a>, <a href=
+"#pg197">197</a>, <a href="#pg213">213</a>, <a href=
+"#pg225">225</a>. <a href="#pg258">258</a>, <a href=
+"#pg321">321</a>, <a href="#pg323">323</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Edington, church of, <a href="#pg422">422</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Edington, William of, Bishop of Winchester, <a href=
+"#pg422">422</a>, <a href="#pg423">423</a>, <a href=
+"#pg432">432</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Edmund of Almaine, Earl of Cornwall, son of Richard of
+Cornwall, <a href="#pg168">168</a>, <a href="#pg170">170</a>, <a
+href="#pg172">172</a>, <a href="#pg224">224</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Edmund, Earl of Lancaster, Leicester and Derby, some time
+titular King of Sicily, son of Henry III., <a href="#pg078">78</a>,
+<a href="#pg079">79</a>, <a href="#pg129">129</a>, <a href=
+"#pg134">134</a>, <a href="#pg144">144</a>-146, <a href=
+"#pg187">187</a>, <a href="#pg188">188</a>, <a href=
+"#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Edmund of Langley, son of Edward III., Earl of Cambridge,
+afterward Duke of York, <a href="#pg400">400</a>, <a href=
+"#pg410">410</a>, <a href="#pg431">431</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Edmund of Woodstock, son of Edward I., Earl of Kent, <a href=
+"#pg278">278</a>, <a href="#pg296">296</a>, <a href=
+"#pg298">298</a>, <a href="#pg302">302</a>, <a href=
+"#pg307">307</a>-309, <a href="#pg428">428</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Edmund (Rich). St. See Rich, Edmund.</li>
+
+<li>Edmund, St., of East Anglia, <a href="#pg019">19</a>, <a href=
+"#pg053">53</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Edward the Confessor, saint and king, <a href="#pg053">53</a>,
+<a href="#pg181">181</a>, <a href="#pg198">198</a>, <a href=
+"#pg240">240</a>. translation of, <a href="#pg134">134</a>, <a
+href="#pg135">135</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Edward I., <a href="#pg136">136</a>-235, <a href=
+"#pg243">243</a>, <a href="#pg247">247</a>, <a href=
+"#pg262">262</a>, <a href="#pg263">263</a>, <a href=
+"#pg277">277</a>, <a href="#pg278">278</a>, <a href=
+"#pg294">294</a>, <a href="#pg311">311</a>, <a href=
+"#pg315">315</a>, <a href="#pg321">321</a>, <a href=
+"#pg322">322</a>, <a href="#pg344">344</a>, <a href=
+"#pg352">352</a>, <a href="#pg426">426</a>, <a href=
+"#pg428">428</a>, <a href="#pg430">430</a>, <a href=
+"#pg435">435</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>authorities for reign of, <a href="#pg444">444</a>, <a href=
+"#pg446">446</a>, <a href="#pg448">448</a>, <a href=
+"#pg450">450</a>, <a href="#pg454">454</a>-457, <a href=
+"#pg459">459</a>, <a href="#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Edward II., <a href="#pg236">236</a>-304, <a href=
+"#pg306">306</a>-308, <a href="#pg315">315</a>, <a href=
+"#pg317">317</a>, <a href="#pg324">324</a>, <a href=
+"#pg422">422</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>sources for the reign of, <a href="#pg444">444</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Edward III., <a href="#pg229">229</a>, <a href=
+"#pg301">301</a>-441;
+
+<ul>
+<li>sources for the reign of, <a href="#pg444">444</a>, <a href=
+"#pg448">448</a>, <a href="#pg457">457</a>-460.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Edward, son of Henry III., <a href="#pg071">71</a>, <a href=
+"#pg073">73</a>, <a href="#pg076">76</a>, <a href="#pg087">87</a>,
+<a href="#pg094">94</a>, <a href="#pg096">96</a>, <a href=
+"#pg099">99</a>, <a href="#pg102">102</a>, <a href=
+"#pg103">103</a>103, <a href="#pg107">107</a>, <a href=
+"#pg108">108</a>, <a href="#pg111">111</a>, <a href=
+"#pg112">112</a>, <a href="#pg119">119</a>, <a href=
+"#pg122">122</a>-135. See also Edward I.</li>
+
+<li>Edward of Carnarvon, Prince of Wales, <a href="#pg178">178</a>,
+<a href="#pg179">179</a>, <a href="#pg192">192</a>, <a href=
+"#pg204">204</a>, <a href="#pg208">208</a>, <a href=
+"#pg211">211</a>, <a href="#pg212">212</a>, <a href=
+"#pg220">220</a>-222, <a href="#pg230">230</a>, <a href=
+"#pg232">232</a>, <a href="#pg234">234</a>. See also Edward
+II.</li>
+
+<li>Edward of Windsor, Duke of Aquitaine, <a href="#pg253">253</a>,
+<a href="#pg297">297</a>-299.</li>
+
+<li>Edward, Prince of Wales and of Aquitaine, called the Black
+Prince, <a href="#pg308">308</a>, <a href="#pg314">314</a>, <a
+href="#pg335">335</a>, <a href="#pg340">340</a>, <a href=
+"#pg359">359</a>, <a href="#pg364">364</a>, <a href=
+"#pg383">383</a>, <a href="#pg385">385</a>-393, <a href=
+"#pg395">395</a>, <a href="#pg396">396</a>, <a href=
+"#pg404">404</a>-409, <a href="#pg411">411</a>-413, <a href=
+"#pg416">416</a>, <a href="#pg427">427</a>, <a href=
+"#pg428">428</a>, <a href="#pg430">430</a>, <a href=
+"#pg434">434</a>-437.</li>
+
+<li>Education, <a href="#pg088">88</a>, <a href="#pg425">425</a>,
+<a href="#pg426">426</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>of clergy, <a href="#pg168">168</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Elbeuf, <a href="#pg361">361</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Egypt, <a href="#pg070">70</a>, <a href="#pg074">74</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Elderslie, <a href="#pg205">205</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Eleanor of Aquitaine, Queen of Henry II., <a href=
+"#pg011">11</a>, <a href="#pg064">64</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Eleanor of Castile, Queen of Edward I., <a href=
+"#pg073">73</a>, <a href="#pg145">145</a>, <a href=
+"#pg165">165</a>, <a href="#pg110">110</a>, <a href=
+"#pg184">184</a>, <a href="#pg216">216</a>, <a href=
+"#pg316">316</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Eleanor, second daughter of Raymond Berenger IV., Count of
+Provence, Queen of Henry III., <a href="#pg054">54</a>, <a href=
+"#pg070">70</a>, <a href="#pg073">73</a>, <a href="#pg077">77</a>,
+<a href="#pg112">112</a>, <a href="#pg113">113</a>, <a href=
+"#pg115">115</a>, <a href="#pg120">120</a>, <a href=
+"#pg128">128</a>, <a href="#pg175">175</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Eleanor, younger sister of Henry III., married (1) William
+Marshal, (2) Simon de Montfort, <a href="#pg023">23</a>, <a href=
+"#pg024">24</a>, <a href="#pg056">56</a>, <a href="#pg059">59</a>,
+<a href="#pg105">105</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Elgin, <a href="#pg198">198</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>, <a
+href="#pg332">332</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Elizabeth, daughter of Edward I., Countess of Holland,
+afterwards of Hereford, <a href="#pg223">223</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Elizabeth de Burgh, queen of Robert (Bruce), King of Scots, <a
+href="#pg234">234</a>, <a href="#pg265">265</a>, <a href=
+"#pg270">270</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ellis, Sir Henry, ed. of <i>Chronica I. De Oxenedes</i>, <a
+href="#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Eland, William, <a href="#pg308">308</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ely, bishopric of, isle of.</li>
+
+<li>Ely, Bishops of.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Marsh, Adam;</li>
+
+<li>Balsham, Hugh;</li>
+
+<li>Langham, Simon;</li>
+
+<li>Hotham, John.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Eltham, <a href="#pg328">328</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Eltham, John of. See John.</li>
+
+<li>Englefield, <a href="#pg167">167</a>.</li>
+
+<li>English language, <a href="#pg094">94</a>, <a href=
+"#pg103">103</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>in law courts, <a href="#pg380">380</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Eric, King of Norway, <a href="#pg348">348</a>, <a href=
+"#pg349">349</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Escheats, <a href="#pg223">223</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Esplechin, treaty of, <a href="#pg348">348</a>, <a href=
+"#pg349">349</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Essex, <a href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href="#pg045">45</a>, <a
+href="#pg299">299</a>, <a href="#pg402">402</a>. earldom of, <a
+href="#pg002">2</a>, <a href="#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Essex, Countess of. See Isabella of Gloucester.</li>
+
+<li>Estates, the three, <a href="#pg065">65</a>, <a href=
+"#pg066">66</a>, <a href="#pg301">301</a>, <a href=
+"#pg433">433</a>, <a href="#pg436">436</a>, <a href=
+"#pg437">437</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Etsi de statu</i>, bull, <a href="#pg203">203</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Etaples, <a href="#pg383">383</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ettrick forest, <a href="#pg197">197</a>, <a href=
+"#pg206">206</a>, <a href="#pg321">321</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Eu, Count of, constable of France, <a href="#pg360">360</a>, <a
+href="#pg368">368</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Eure, the river, <a href="#pg401">401</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Eulogium Historiarum,</i> <a href="#pg458">458</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Eustace the Monk, <a href="#pg011">11</a>, <a href=
+"#pg012">12</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Evans, J.G., his edition of the <i>Red Book of Hergest</i>. <a
+href="#pg459">459</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Eversden, John of, <a href="#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Evesham, battle of, <a href="#pg127">127</a>-129, <a href=
+"#pg132">132</a>, <a href="#pg277">277</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Abbey, <a href="#pg128">128</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Evreux, <a href="#pg385">385</a>, <a href="#pg388">388</a>, <a
+href="#pg389">389</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Evreux, Counts of.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Charles the Bad, King of Navarre;</li>
+
+<li>Philip the Bold.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Evreux, Louis, Count of. See Louis.</li>
+
+<li>Exchequer courts for Wales, <a href="#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Exchequer records, <a href="#pg446">446</a>, <a href=
+"#pg447">447</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Exeter, Bishops of.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Brantingham, Thomas;</li>
+
+<li>Stapledon, Walter.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Exeter College, Oxford, <a href="#pg292">292</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Exports, <a href="#pg143">143</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Eynsham, Walter of, <a href="#pg038">38</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Eyville, John d'. <a href="#pg131">131</a>, <a href=
+"#pg132">132</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Fair of Lincoln, the. See Lincoln, battle of.<a name="F" id=
+"F" /></li>
+
+<li>Falkirk, <a href="#pg213">213</a>, <a href="#pg221">221</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>battle of, <a href="#pg213">213</a>-215, <a href=
+"#pg217">217</a>, <a href="#pg276">276</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Famine, of 1316, the, <a href="#pg266">266</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>of wool, in Flanders, <a href="#pg342">342</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Farnham, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a href="#pg009">9</a>, <a
+href="#pg454">454</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Farrer's, W., <i>Lancashire Final Concords</i>, <a href=
+"#pg448">448</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Faucigny, <a href="#pg056">56</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fecamp, <a href="#pg027">27</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fecamp, Peter Roger, Abbot of. See Clement VI.</li>
+
+<li><i>Feet of Fines</i>, <a href="#pg448">448</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Felton, Sir Thomas, Seneschal of Aquitaine, <a href=
+"#pg407">407</a>, <a href="#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ferdinand of Portugal, Count of Flanders, <a href=
+"#pg055">55</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ferdinand III. the Saint, King of Cast&amp;, <a href=
+"#pg070">70</a>, <a href="#pg145">145</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ferrars, house of, <a href="#pg246">246</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ferrars, Robert of, Earl of Derby. See Derby.</li>
+
+<li>Ferrars, William of, Earl of Derby. See Derby.</li>
+
+<li>Fife, <a href="#pg177">177</a>, <a href="#pg317">317</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fife, Earl of, <a href="#pg317">317</a>, <a href=
+"#pg318">318</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fifteen, the Council of, <a href="#pg100">100</a>, <a href=
+"#pg103">103</a>, <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href=
+"#pg107">107</a>, <a href="#pg109">109</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Figeac, <a href="#pg415">415</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Firstfruits, <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fitzalan, Edmund, and Richard, Earls of Arundel. See
+Arundel.</li>
+
+<li>Fitzalan of Bedale, Brian, <a href="#pg182">182</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fitzalans, the, <a href="#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>FitzAthulf, Constantine, sheriff of London, <a href=
+"#pg022">22</a>, <a href="#pg044">44</a>.</li>
+
+<li>FitzGeoffrey, John, <a href="#pg100">100</a>, <a href=
+"#pg103">103</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fitzgerald, governor of Ireland, <a href="#pg429">429</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fitzgerald, Maurice, justiciar of Ireland, <a href=
+"#pg048">48</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fitzgeralds, the, <a href="#pg269">269</a>, <a href=
+"#pg270">270</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fitzralph, Richard, Archbishop of Armagh, <a href=
+"#pg425">425</a>, <a href="#pg439">439</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fitzthedmar, Arnold, <a href="#pg097">97</a>, <a href=
+"#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>FitzWalter, Robert, <a href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href=
+"#pg007">7</a>, g, <a href="#pg013">13</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Flemings, the. See Flanders.</li>
+
+<li><i>Fleta</i>, law-book, <a href="#pg094">94</a>, <a href=
+"#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fletching, <a href="#pg115">115</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Flint, county of, <a href="#pg167">167</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>town and castle of, <a href="#pg161">161</a>, <a href=
+"#pg167">167</a>, <a href="#pg189">189</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Flodden, battle of, <a href="#pg365">365</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Florence, <a href="#pg237">237</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Florence, count of Holland, <a href="#pg180">180</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Florence of Worcester, Continuators of the <i>Chronicle</i> of,
+<a href="#pg455">455</a>, <a href="#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Flores Historiarum</i>, Roger of Wendover's, <a href=
+"#pg450">450</a>, <a href="#pg451">451</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Flores Historiarum</i> (fourteenth century), <a href=
+"#pg452">452</a>, <a href="#pg454">454</a>, <a href=
+"#pg455">455</a>, <a href="#pg457">457</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Flagellants, the, <a href="#pg376">376</a>, <a href=
+"#pg377">377</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Flamangrie, La, <a href="#pg340">340</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Flanders, county of, <a href="#pg033">33</a>, <a href=
+"#pg070">70</a>, <a href="#pg142">142</a>, <a href=
+"#pg143">143</a>, <a href="#pg148">148</a>, <a href=
+"#pg204">204</a>-206, <a href="#pg210">210</a>, <a href=
+"#pg211">211</a>, <a href="#pg216">216</a>, <a href=
+"#pg221">221</a>, <a href="#pg249">249</a>, <a href=
+"#pg262">262</a>, <a href="#pg327">327</a>, <a href=
+"#pg331">331</a>, <a href="#pg332">332</a>, <a href=
+"#pg339">339</a>, <a href="#pg341">341</a>-344, <a href=
+"#pg347">347</a>-349, <a href="#pg353">353</a>, <a href=
+"#pg365">365</a>, <a href="#pg367">367</a>-369, <a href=
+"#pg376">376</a>, <a href="#pg398">398</a>, <a href=
+"#pg410">410</a>, <a href="#pg415">415</a>, <a href=
+"#pg421">421</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Flanders, counts of.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Ferdinand of Portugal,</li>
+
+<li>Guy of Dampierre,</li>
+
+<li>Louis of Male,</li>
+
+<li>Louis of Nevers,</li>
+
+<li>Robert of Bethune</li>
+
+<li>and Thomas of Savoy.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Flanders, Joan, Countess of. See Joan.</li>
+
+<li>Flanders, Margaret of. See Margaret.</li>
+
+<li><i>Foedera</i>, Rymer's, <a href="#pg450">450</a>, <a href=
+"#pg451">451</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Foix, <a href="#pg329">329</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Foix, Count of, <a href="#pg192">192</a>, <a href=
+"#pg325">325</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Foix, Gaston Phoebus, Count of, <a href="#pg397">397</a>, <a
+href="#pg406">406</a>, <a href="#pg407">407</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fontenelles, Cistercian Abbey of, <a href=
+"#pg348">348</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fontevraud, <a href="#pg065">65</a>, <a href=
+"#pg074">74</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fordun, John, his <i>Chronicle</i>, <a href=
+"#pg459">459</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Forests, charter of the, <a href="#pg013">13</a>, <a href=
+"#pg119">119</a>, <a href="#pg126">126</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>perambulation of the, <a href="#pg218">218</a>;</li>
+
+<li>enlargement of the, <a href="#pg247">247</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Fors, William of, Earl of Albemarle. See Albemarle.</li>
+
+<li>Fors, Isabella of. See Albemarle, Countess of.</li>
+
+<li>Forth, the, <a href="#pg206">206</a>, <a href="#pg207">207</a>,
+<a href="#pg213">213</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>, <a href=
+"#pg227">227</a>, <a href="#pg245">245</a>, <a href=
+"#pg261">261</a>, <a href="#pg289">289</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fotheringhay, Castle of, <a href="#pg021">21</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Foulquois, Guy, Cardinal-bishop of Sabina. See Clement IV.</li>
+
+<li>Fountains Abbey, <a href="#pg021">21</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fournier, James, <a href="#pg329">329</a>. See Benedict
+XII.</li>
+
+<li>Fournier's <i>Royaume d'Arles</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>France, <a href="#pg004">4</a>, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a
+href="#pg018">18</a>, <a href="#pg027">27</a>, <a href=
+"#pg054">54</a>, <a href="#pg062">62</a>, <a href="#pg069">69</a>,
+<a href="#pg077">77</a>, <a href="#pg078">78</a>, <a href=
+"#pg092">92</a>, <a href="#pg096">96</a>-98, <a href=
+"#pg104">104</a>-108, <a href="#pg120">120</a>, <a href=
+"#pg121">121</a>, <a href="#pg134">134</a>, <a href=
+"#pg138">138</a>, <a href="#pg140">140</a>-147, <a href=
+"#pg169">169</a>-172, <a href="#pg175">175</a>, <a href=
+"#pg176">176</a>, <a href="#pg178">178</a>, <a href=
+"#pg184">184</a>, <a href="#pg186">186</a>-190, <a href=
+"#pg192">192</a>-196, <a href="#pg210">210</a>, <a href=
+"#pg211">211</a>, <a href="#pg216">216</a>, <a href=
+"#pg239">239</a>, <a href="#pg252">252</a>, <a href=
+"#pg253">253</a>-256, <a href="#pg263">263</a>, <a href=
+"#pg293">293</a>-298, <a href="#pg304">304</a>, <a href=
+"#pg311">311</a>, <a href="#pg313">313</a>-316, <a href=
+"#pg320">320</a>, <a href="#pg323">323</a>-368, <a href=
+"#pg370">370</a>, <a href="#pg374">374</a>, <a href=
+"#pg375">375</a>, <a href="#pg381">381</a>-418;
+
+<ul>
+<li>records of, <a href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>chronicles of, <a href="#pg459">459</a>, <a href=
+"#pg460">460</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>France, King of, Edward III. takes title of, <a href=
+"#pg432">432</a>.</li>
+
+<li>France, Kings of.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Philip Augustus,</li>
+
+<li>Louis VIII.,</li>
+
+<li>Louis IX.,</li>
+
+<li>Philip III.,</li>
+
+<li>Philip IV.,</li>
+
+<li>Louis X.,</li>
+
+<li>Philip V.,</li>
+
+<li>Charles IV.,</li>
+
+<li>Philip VI.,</li>
+
+<li>John and Charles V.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Francis, St., of Assisi, <a href="#pg085">85</a>, <a href=
+"#pg203">203</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Franciscans, the, <a href="#pg084">84</a>, <a href=
+"#pg085">85</a>, <a href="#pg088">88</a>, <a href="#pg091">91</a>,
+<a href="#pg117">117</a>, <a href="#pg379">379</a>, <a href=
+"#pg380">380</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>the spiritual, <a href="#pg374">374</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Franks, the Salian, <a href="#pg326">326</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Frankton, Stephen of, <a href="#pg164">164</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Frascati, <a href="#pg354">354</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fraser, William, Bishop of St. Andrews, <a href=
+"#pg177">177</a>, <a href="#pg180">180</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Frederick II., the emperor, <a href="#pg004">4</a>, <a href=
+"#pg028">28</a>, <a href="#pg033">33</a>, <a href="#pg055">55</a>,
+<a href="#pg058">58</a>, <a href="#pg061">61</a>, <a href=
+"#pg062">62</a>, <a href="#pg066">66</a>, <a href="#pg067">67</a>,
+<a href="#pg078">78</a>, <a href="#pg088">88</a>, <a href=
+"#pg146">146</a>, <a href="#pg169">169</a>.</li>
+
+<li>French language, the, <a href="#pg083">83</a>, <a href=
+"#pg094">94</a>, <a href="#pg095">95</a>, <a href="#pg103">103</a>,
+<a href="#pg181">181</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Frescobaldi, the, <a href="#pg176">176</a>, <a href=
+"#pg237">237</a>, <a href="#pg248">248</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Freynet, Gilbert of. See Gilbert.</li>
+
+<li>Friars, the, <a href="#pg083">83</a>, go, <a href=
+"#pg091">91</a>, <a href="#pg134">134</a>, <a href=
+"#pg172">172</a>, <a href="#pg175">175</a>, <a href=
+"#pg425">425</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>the four orders of; <a href="#pg097">97</a>.</li>
+
+<li>See Austin or hermits of order of St. Augustine, <a href=
+"#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bonhommes, <a href="#pg086">86</a>;</li>
+
+<li>Carmelite or White, <a href="#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Crutched, <a href="#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dominicans;</li>
+
+<li>Francisans, <a href="#pg084">84</a>-88;</li>
+
+<li>&mdash; of the Penance of Jesus Christ or</li>
+
+<li>&mdash; of the Sack, <a href="#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Trinitarians or Maturins, <a href="#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Froissart, John, <a href="#pg310">310</a>, <a href=
+"#pg311">311</a>, <a href="#pg313">313</a>, <a href=
+"#pg346">346</a>, <a href="#pg347">347</a>, <a href=
+"#pg353">353</a>, <a href="#pg354">354</a>, <a href=
+"#pg371">371</a>, <a href="#pg382">382</a>, <a href=
+"#pg419">419</a>-421, <a href="#pg424">424</a>, <a href=
+"#pg432">432</a>, <a href="#pg460">460</a>, <a href=
+"#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Froissart, <i>Chroniques</i>, ed. Luce, <a href=
+"#pg460">460</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>ed. Kervyn, <a href="#pg460">460</a>, <a href=
+"#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Fronsac, Viscount of, <a href="#pg071">71</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Funck-Brentano's, F., editions of the <i>Chronique
+Art&eacute;sienne</i> and <i>Annales Gandenses</i>, <a href=
+"#pg459">459</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Furness, <a href="#pg268">268</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Gabaston, <a href="#pg236">236</a>.<a name="G" id="G" /></li>
+
+<li>Gaetano, Benedict. See Boniface VIII.</li>
+
+<li>Galeazzo Visconti, Lord of Pavia, <a href=
+"#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Galloway, <a href="#pg179">179</a>, <a href="#pg227">227</a>,
+<a href="#pg316">316</a>, <a href="#pg321">321</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Garonne, the river, <a href="#pg032">32</a>, <a href=
+"#pg036">36</a>, <a href="#pg073">73</a>, <a href="#pg296">296</a>,
+<a href="#pg324">324</a>, <a href="#pg358">358</a>, <a href=
+"#pg411">411</a>, <a href="#pg412">412</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Garter, Order of the, <a href="#pg356">356</a>, <a href=
+"#pg380">380</a>, <a href="#pg381">381</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gascony, <a href="#pg027">27</a>, <a href="#pg030">30</a>-36,
+<a href="#pg055">55</a>, <a href="#pg062">62</a>-65, <a href=
+"#pg069">69</a>-74, <a href="#pg080">80</a>, <a href=
+"#pg081">81</a>, <a href="#pg097">97</a>, <a href=
+"#pg104">104</a>-107, <a href="#pg138">138</a>, <a href=
+"#pg140">140</a>-142, <a href="#pg144">144</a>, <a href=
+"#pg145">145</a>, <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a href=
+"#pg168">168</a>, <a href="#pg170">170</a>-172, <a href=
+"#pg176">176</a>, <a href="#pg177">177</a>, <a href=
+"#pg186">186</a>-189, <a href="#pg191">191</a>, <a href=
+"#pg192">192</a>, <a href="#pg195">195</a>, <a href=
+"#pg202">202</a>, <a href="#pg210">210</a>-212, <a href=
+"#pg216">216</a>, <a href="#pg217">217</a>, <a href=
+"#pg221">221</a>, <a href="#pg222">222</a>, <a href=
+"#pg229">229</a>, <a href="#pg234">234</a>, <a href=
+"#pg237">237</a>, <a href="#pg240">240</a>, <a href=
+"#pg241">241</a>, <a href="#pg248">248</a>, <a href=
+"#pg257">257</a>, <a href="#pg294">294</a>-298, <a href=
+"#pg303">303</a>, <a href="#pg304">304</a>, <a href=
+"#pg317">317</a>, <a href="#pg324">324</a>, <a href=
+"#pg325">325</a>, <a href="#pg327">327</a>, <a href=
+"#pg333">333</a>, <a href="#pg334">334</a>, <a href=
+"#pg336">336</a>, <a href="#pg337">337</a>, <a href=
+"#pg357">357</a>-359, <a href="#pg381">381</a>, <a href=
+"#pg384">384</a>-392, <a href="#pg399">399</a>-401, <a href=
+"#pg406">406</a>-408, <a href="#pg411">411</a>-415, <a href=
+"#pg417">417</a>, <a href="#pg446">446</a>. See also
+Aquitaine.</li>
+
+<li>Gaston, Viscount of B&eacute;arn, <a href="#pg070">70</a>-73,
+<a href="#pg141">141</a>, <a href="#pg142">142</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gaveston, Peter, Earl of Cornwall, <a href=
+"#pg236">236</a>-255, <a href="#pg277">277</a>-279, <a href=
+"#pg282">282</a>, <a href="#pg286">286</a>, <a href=
+"#pg288">288</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gelderland, Duke of, <a href="#pg411">411</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Genitours</i>, <a href="#pg405">405</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Genoa, <a href="#pg192">192</a>, <a href="#pg370">370</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Genoese, the, <a href="#pg347">347</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>crossbowmen, <a href="#pg363">363</a>, <a href=
+"#pg364">364</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Geraldines of Leinster, the, <a href="#pg307">307</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Germany, <a href="#pg078">78</a>-80, <a href="#pg092">92</a>,
+<a href="#pg097">97</a>, <a href="#pg169">169</a>, <a href=
+"#pg335">335</a>, <a href="#pg340">340</a>, <a href=
+"#pg369">369</a>, <a href="#pg370">370</a>, <a href=
+"#pg374">374</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ghent, <a href="#pg143">143</a>, <a href="#pg205">205</a>, <a
+href="#pg208">208</a>, <a href="#pg211">211</a>, <a href=
+"#pg332">332</a>, <a href="#pg342">342</a>-344&gt; <a href=
+"#pg347">347</a>, <a href="#pg349">349</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ghent, Gilbert of, g. See Lincoln, Earls of.</li>
+
+<li>Giffard, Walter, Archbishop of York, <a href="#pg139">139</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his register, <a href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Giffords, the, <a href="#pg267">267</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gilbert of Freynet, <a href="#pg084">84</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gilsland, <a href="#pg277">277</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gironde, the river, <a href="#pg063">63</a>, <a href=
+"#pg073">73</a>, <a href="#pg191">191</a>, <a href=
+"#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Glamorgan, lordship of, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a href=
+"#pg047">47</a>, <a href="#pg148">148</a>, <a href=
+"#pg166">166</a>, <a href="#pg168">168</a>, <a href=
+"#pg172">172</a>, <a href="#pg174">174</a>, <a href=
+"#pg189">189</a>, <a href="#pg190">190</a>, <a href=
+"#pg192">192</a>, <a href="#pg193">193</a>, <a href=
+"#pg223">223</a>, <a href="#pg267">267</a>, <a href=
+"#pg279">279</a>, <a href="#pg181">181</a>, <a href=
+"#pg291">291</a>, <a href="#pg300">300</a>, <a href=
+"#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Glamorgan, Lords of. See Gloucester, Earls of.</li>
+
+<li>Glasgow, Robert Wishart, Bishop of. See Wishart.</li>
+
+<li>Glendower, Owen, <a href="#pg416">416</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gloucester, <a href="#pg003">3</a>, <a href="#pg011">11</a>, <a
+href="#pg019">19</a>, <a href="#pg046">46</a>-48, <a href=
+"#pg051">51</a>, <a href="#pg068">68</a>, <a href="#pg085">85</a>,
+<a href="#pg112">112</a>, <a href="#pg114">114</a>, <a href=
+"#pg119">119</a>, <a href="#pg124">124</a>, <a href=
+"#pg125">125</a>, <a href="#pg264">264</a>, <a href=
+"#pg268">268</a>, <a href="#pg284">284</a>, <a href=
+"#pg299">299</a>, <a href="#pg300">300</a>, <a href=
+"#pg370">370</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>St. Peter's Church, <a href="#pg303">303</a>, <a href=
+"#pg304">304</a>, <a href="#pg422">422</a>, <a href=
+"#pg423">423</a>;</li>
+
+<li>statute of, <a href="#pg148">148</a>, <a href=
+"#pg149">149</a>;</li>
+
+<li>earldom of, <a href="#pg040">40</a>, <a href="#pg044">44</a>,
+<a href="#pg110">110</a>, <a href="#pg111">111</a>, <a href=
+"#pg223">223</a>, <a href="#pg276">276</a>, <a href=
+"#pg278">278</a>, <a href="#pg279">279</a>, <a href=
+"#pg429">429</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Gloucester, Richard of Clare, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg100">100</a>, <a href="#pg103">103</a>, <a href=
+"#pg107">107</a>, <a href="#pg108">108</a>, <a href=
+"#pg112">112</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gloucester, Earl of, Gilbert of Clare, son of the above, <a
+href="#pg223">223</a>, <a href="#pg236">236</a>, <a href=
+"#pg238">238</a>-242; <a href="#pg244">244</a>, <a href=
+"#pg245">245</a>, <a href="#pg249">249</a>, <a href=
+"#pg252">252</a>, <a href="#pg253">253</a>, <a href=
+"#pg259">259</a>, <a href="#pg261">261</a>, <a href=
+"#pg267">267</a>, <a href="#pg269">269</a>, <a href=
+"#pg270">270</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gloucester, Earl of, Gilbert of Clare, son of the above, <a
+href="#pg110">110</a>, <a href="#pg115">115</a>-117, <a href=
+"#pg120">120</a>, <a href="#pg123">123</a>-128, <a href=
+"#pg130">130</a>-132, <a href="#pg139">139</a>, <a href=
+"#pg161">161</a>, <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a href=
+"#pg166">166</a>, <a href="#pg168">168</a>, <a href=
+"#pg172">172</a>-174, <a href="#pg184">184</a>, <a href=
+"#pg188">188</a>, <a href="#pg189">189</a>, <a href=
+"#pg202">202</a>, <a href="#pg223">223</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gloucester, Ralph of Monthermer, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg224">224</a>, <a href="#pg235">235</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gloucester, Audley, Earl of, <a href="#pg314">314</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gloucester, Thomas of Woodstock, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg430">430</a>. See Thomas.</li>
+
+<li>Gloucester, Isabella, Countess of, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a
+href="#pg013">13</a>. See Isabella, queen of King John.</li>
+
+<li>Gloucester, Robert of, <a href="#pg095">95</a>, <a href=
+"#pg458">458</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gloucestershire, <a href="#pg370">370</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gomez, Peter, Cardinal, <a href="#pg330">330</a>, <a href=
+"#pg336">336</a>, <a href="#pg339">339</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gordon, Adam, <a href="#pg129">129</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gothic architecture, <a href="#pg083">83</a>, <a href=
+"#pg096">96</a>, <a href="#pg097">97</a>. See Architecture.</li>
+
+<li>Gough's <i>Itinerary of Edward I</i>., <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>, <a href="#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gower, <a href="#pg279">279</a>, <a href="#pg280">280</a>, <a
+href="#pg300">300</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gower, John, <a href="#pg420">420</a>, <a href=
+"#pg426">426</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his works, <a href="#pg460">460</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Grampians, the, <a href="#pg245">245</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Granada, <a href="#pg305">305</a>, <a href=
+"#pg404">404</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Grand, Richard le, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href=
+"#pg038">38</a>, <a href="#pg039">39</a>, <a href="#pg041">41</a>
+<a href="#pg044">44</a>, <a href="#pg050">50</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Grandisons, the, <a href="#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Greek, study of, <a href="#pg091">91</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Greenfield, William, Archbishop of York, <a href=
+"#pg255">255</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gregory IX., Pope, <a href="#pg028">28</a>, <a href=
+"#pg038">38</a>, <a href="#pg039">39</a>, <a href="#pg050">50</a>,
+<a href="#pg055">55</a>, <a href="#pg057">57</a>, <a href=
+"#pg058">58</a>, <a href="#pg060">60</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gregory X., Pope, <a href="#pg139">139</a>, <a href=
+"#pg142">142</a>, <a href="#pg143">143</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gregory XI, Pope, <a href="#pg411">411</a>, <a href=
+"#pg413">413</a>, <a href="#pg418">418</a>, <a href=
+"#pg434">434</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Grey, Reginald, <a href="#pg162">162</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Grey, Richard of, <a href="#pg100">100</a>, <a href=
+"#pg103">103</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Grey's Sir T., <i>Scalachronica</i>, <a href=
+"#pg457">457</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Grey, Walter, Archbishop of York, <a href="#pg002">2</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his register, <a href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Griffith ap Gwenwynwyn, <a href="#pg076">76</a>, <a href=
+"#pg267">267</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Griffith ap Llewelyn, <a href="#pg023">23</a>, <a href=
+"#pg067">67</a>, <a href="#pg068">68</a>, <a href=
+"#pg075">75</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Griffith of Welshpool, <a href="#pg267">267</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Grosmont, castle of, <a href="#pg047">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Grosmont, Henry of, Earl of Derby. See Derby and
+Lancaster.</li>
+
+<li>Gross's, C., <i>Select Cases from the Coroners' Rolls</i>, <a
+href="#pg448">448</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his <i>Bibliography of British Municipal History</i>, <a href=
+"#pg449">449</a>.</li>
+
+<li>his <i>Sources of English History</i>, <a href=
+"#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Grosseteste, Robert, Bishop of Lincoln, <a href=
+"#pg058">58</a>, <a href="#pg066">66</a>, <a href="#pg067">67</a>,
+<a href="#pg081">81</a>, <a href="#pg087">87</a>, <a href=
+"#pg090">90</a>-94;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his <i>Epistoae</i>, <a href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Gualo the legate, <a href="#pg002">2-5</a>, <a href=
+"#pg010">10</a>, <a href="#pg011">11</a>, <a href=
+"#pg013">13</a>-15, <a href="#pg018">18</a>, <a href=
+"#pg290">290</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gu&eacute;rande, treaty of, <a href="#pg402">402</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Guernsey, <a href="#pg414">414</a>, <a href="#pg415">415</a>.
+See also Channel Islands.</li>
+
+<li>Guesclin, Bertrand du, <a href="#pg382">382</a>, <a href=
+"#pg383">383</a>, <a href="#pg400">400</a>-402, <a href=
+"#pg404">404</a>, <a href="#pg405">405</a>, <a href=
+"#pg412">412</a>, <a href="#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Guienne, <a href="#pg324">324</a>, <a href="#pg327">327</a>, <a
+href="#pg385">385</a>, <a href="#pg389">389</a>, <a href=
+"#pg415">415</a>. See also Aquitaine and Gascony.</li>
+
+<li>Guillon, treaty of, <a href="#pg396">396</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gu&icirc;nes, <a href="#pg367">367</a>, <a href=
+"#pg384">384</a>, <a href="#pg385">385</a>, <a href=
+"#pg397">397</a>, <a href="#pg420">420</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gu&icirc;nes, Baldwin of, <a href="#pg048">48</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gu&icirc;nes, Count of, <a href="#pg008">8</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gurney, Thomas, <a href="#pg303">303</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Guy of Brittany, Count of Penthi&egrave;vre, <a href=
+"#pg352">352</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Guy of Dampierre, Count of Flanders, <a href="#pg143">143</a>,
+<a href="#pg192">192</a>, <a href="#pg193">193</a>, <a href=
+"#pg202">202</a>, <a href="#pg210">210</a>, <a href=
+"#pg211">211</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Guy of Lusignan, Lord of Cognac, <a href="#pg065">65</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gwent, <a href="#pg015">15</a>, <a href="#pg039">39</a>, <a
+href="#pg047">47</a>, <a href="#pg111">111</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gwenwynwyn, house of, <a href="#pg248">248</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gwynedd, <a href="#pg012">12</a>, <a href="#pg024">24</a>, <a
+href="#pg076">76</a>, <a href="#pg077">77</a>, <a href=
+"#pg111">111</a>, <a href="#pg161">161</a>, <a href=
+"#pg162">162</a>, <a href="#pg165">165</a>, <a href=
+"#pg166">166</a>, <a href="#pg189">189</a>, <a href=
+"#pg190">190</a>, <a href="#pg414">414</a>. See also Wales,
+North.</li>
+
+<li>Gwynedd, house of, <a href="#pg075">75</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Haddan and Stubbs'<i>Councils</i>, <a href="#pg451">451</a>.<a
+name="H" id="H" /></li>
+
+<li>Haddington, <a href="#pg321">321</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hadenham's, Edmund of, <i>Chronicle</i>, <a href=
+"#pg455">455</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Haggerston, <a href="#pg247">247</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hainault, <a href="#pg298">298</a>, <a href="#pg299">299</a>,
+<a href="#pg317">317</a>, <a href="#pg332">332</a>, <a href=
+"#pg356">356</a>, <a href="#pg410">410</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hainault, Counts of. See John and William.</li>
+
+<li>Hainault, Countess of, Abbess of Fontenelles, <a href=
+"#pg348">348</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hainault, Philippa of. See Philippa Queen.</li>
+
+<li>Hales, Alexander of, <a href="#pg089">89</a>-92.</li>
+
+<li>Halidon Hill, battle of, <a href="#pg319">319</a>, <a href=
+"#pg321">321</a>, <a href="#pg354">354</a>, <a href=
+"#pg363">363</a>, <a href="#pg420">420</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Halifax, John of, <a href="#pg089">89</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hall's, H., <i>Customs Revenue</i>, <a href=
+"#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hall's, J, ed. of Minot's <i>Poems</i>, <a href=
+"#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hamilton, H.C., ed. of Walter of Hemingburgh, <a href=
+"#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hampole, <a href="#pg423">423</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hampshire, <a href="#pg043">43</a>, <a href=
+"#pg333">333</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hapsburg, house of, <a href="#pg262">262</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hapsburg, Rudolf of. See Rudolf.</li>
+
+<li>Harby, <a href="#pg184">184</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Harclay, Andrew, governor of Carlisle. See Carlisle, Earl
+of.</li>
+
+<li>Harcourt, Geoffrey of, <a href="#pg387">387</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Harcourts, the, <a href="#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hardy, <i>Registrum Palatinum Dunelmense</i>, <a href=
+"#pg449">449</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Harewell, John, Bishop of Bath, <a href="#pg407">407</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Harlech Castle, <a href="#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Harry's, Blind, <i>Wallace</i>, <a href="#pg458">458</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hastings, battle of, <a href="#pg262">262</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hastings, John, first Earl of Pembroke. See Pembroke.</li>
+
+<li>Hastings, John, second Earl of Pembroke. See Pembroke.</li>
+
+<li>Hastingses of Abergavenny, the, <a href="#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hathern, <a href="#pg274">274</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Haur&eacute;au's <i>Histoire de la philosophie
+scholastique</i>, <a href="#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Haverfordwest, <a href="#pg271">271</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hawarden, <a href="#pg161">161</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hawkwood, John, <a href="#pg402">402</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hay, <a href="#pg125">125</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Haydon's ed. of <i>Eulogium Historiarum</i>, <a href=
+"#pg458">458</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hearne, <a href="#pg457">457</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hebrew, study of, <a href="#pg091">91</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hebrews, <a href="#pg097">97</a>, <a href="#pg175">175</a>, <a
+href="#pg176">176</a>. See also Jews.</li>
+
+<li>Hedingham Castle, <a href="#pg006">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hengham, Justice, <a href="#pg173">173</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Henley, Walter of, <a href="#pg094">94</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hemingburgh, Walter of, <a href="#pg094">94</a>, <a href=
+"#pg186">186</a>, <a href="#pg196">196</a>, <a href=
+"#pg255">255</a>, <a href="#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hennebont, <a href="#pg353">353</a>. <a href="#pg354">354</a>,
+<a href="#pg356">356</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Henry I., King of England, <a href="#pg278">278</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Henry II., <a href="#pg003">3</a>, <a href="#pg014">14</a>, <a
+href="#pg028">28</a>, <a href="#pg074">74</a>, <a href=
+"#pg089">89</a>, <a href="#pg395">395</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Henry III., <a href="#pg001">1-135</a>, <a href=
+"#pg137">137</a>, <a href="#pg147">147</a>, <a href=
+"#pg175">175</a>, <a href="#pg231">231</a>, <a href=
+"#pg237">237</a>, <a href="#pg246">246</a>, <a href=
+"#pg254">254</a>, <a href="#pg272">272</a>, <a href=
+"#pg399">399</a>, <a href="#pg427">427</a>, <a href=
+"#pg428">428</a>, <a href="#pg444">444</a>, <a href=
+"#pg451">451</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>chroniclers for the reign of, <a href=
+"#pg451">451</a>-455.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Henry VIII., <a href="#pg167">167</a>, <a href=
+"#pg171">171</a>, <a href="#pg272">272</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Henry, King of the Romans, son of Frederick II., <a href=
+"#pg033">33</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Henry II. of Navarre, <a href="#pg144">144</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Henry II. of Trastarnara, King of Castile, <a href=
+"#pg403">403</a>-406, <a href="#pg411">411</a>, <a href=
+"#pg415">415</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Henry, Earl of Derby, afterwards King Henry IV., <a href=
+"#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Henry of Lancaster, younger son of Earl Edmund, <a href=
+"#pg267">267</a>, <a href="#pg268">268</a>, <a href=
+"#pg276">276</a>, <a href="#pg280">280</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Earl of Leicester, <a href="#pg291">291</a>-293, <a href=
+"#pg299">299</a>, <a href="#pg301">301</a>-303;</li>
+
+<li>Earl of Lancaster, <a href="#pg303">303</a>, <a href=
+"#pg306">306</a>-308, <a href="#pg314">314</a>, <a href=
+"#pg357">357</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Henry of Grosmont, Earl of Derby, then Earl afterwards Duke of
+Lancaster, <a href="#pg314">314</a>, <a href="#pg357">357</a>-359,
+<a href="#pg383">383</a>-388, <a href="#pg410">410</a>, <a href=
+"#pg412">412</a>, <a href="#pg413">413</a>, <a href=
+"#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hereford, <a href="#pg112">112</a>, <a href="#pg124">124</a>,
+<a href="#pg125">125</a>, <a href="#pg206">206</a>, <a href=
+"#pg265">265</a>, <a href="#pg301">301</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>earldom of, <a href="#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Hereford, Bishops of.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Aigueblanche, Peter of;</li>
+
+<li>Cantilupe, St. Thomas of;</li>
+
+<li>Orleton, Adam. Hereford, Humphrey Bohun, Earl of, gg, <a href=
+"#pg100">100</a>, <a href="#pg103">103</a>, <a href=
+"#pg110">110</a>, <a href="#pg111">111</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Hereford, Humphrey Bohun, grandson of above, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg172">172</a>, <a href="#pg174">174</a>, <a href=
+"#pg188">188</a>, <a href="#pg189">189</a>, <a href=
+"#pg202">202</a>, <a href="#pg204">204</a>, <a href=
+"#pg213">213</a>, <a href="#pg215">215</a>, <a href=
+"#pg216">216</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hereford, Humphrey Bohun, son of above, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg223">223</a>, <a href="#pg224">224</a>, <a href=
+"#pg239">239</a>, <a href="#pg244">244</a>, <a href=
+"#pg249">249</a>, <a href="#pg251">251</a>-253, <a href=
+"#pg259">259</a>, <a href="#pg264">264</a>, <a href=
+"#pg267">267</a>, <a href="#pg270">270</a>, <a href=
+"#pg274">274</a>, <a href="#pg276">276</a>, <a href=
+"#pg280">280</a>, <a href="#pg283">283</a>-286, <a href=
+"#pg291">291</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Herefordshire, <a href="#pg293">293</a>, <a href=
+"#pg434">434</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Heretics, Albigensian, <a href="#pg033">33</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hertford, <a href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href=
+"#pg309">309</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hesdin, <a href="#pg386">386</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hewlett's editions of <i>Chronicles,</i> <a href=
+"#pg451">451</a>, <a href="#pg455">455</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hexham, <a href="#pg197">197</a>, <a href="#pg212">212</a>.
+Hexhamshire, <a href="#pg223">223</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Higden's, Randolph, <i>Polychronicon,</i> <a href=
+"#pg457">457</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Highlands, the, <a href="#pg227">227</a>, <a href=
+"#pg228">228</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hingeston-Randelph's <i>Exeter Registers</i>, <a href=
+"#pg449">449</a>.</li>
+
+<li>History, study of, <a href="#pg093">93</a>, <a href=
+"#pg094">94</a>, <a href="#pg095">95</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hohenstaufen, the, <a href="#pg078">78</a>, <a href=
+"#pg079">79</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Holderness, ruled by Counts of Aumale <a href=
+"#pg020">20</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Holland, <a href="#pg192">192</a>, <a href="#pg299">299</a>, <a
+href="#pg332">332</a>, <a href="#pg356">356</a>, <a href=
+"#pg376">376</a>, <a href="#pg410">410</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Holland, Florence, Count of, <a href="#pg180">180</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hollands, Earls of Kent, <a href="#pg428">428</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Holy Land, the, <a href="#pg232">232</a>, <a href=
+"#pg234">234</a>. See Palestine and Crusades.</li>
+
+<li>Holywood, John of, <a href="#pg089">89</a>. See also
+Halifax.</li>
+
+<li>Honorius III, Pope, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a href=
+"#pg013">13</a>, <a href="#pg018">18</a>, <a href="#pg019">19</a>,
+<a href="#pg024">24</a>, <a href="#pg027">27</a>. <a href=
+"#pg028">28</a>, <a href="#pg030">30</a>, <a href=
+"#pg033">33</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Honorius IV., Pope, <a href="#pg170">170</a>, <a href=
+"#pg171">171</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hood, Robin, <a href="#pg042">42</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Horn, Andrew, <a href="#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Horstmann, Dr., his <i>Legmda Anglie</i>,</li>
+
+<li><a href="#pg453">453</a>, <a href="#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Horwood's, A.J., editions of <i>Year Books</i>, <a href=
+"#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hospitallers, the, <a href="#pg255">255</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hotham, John, Bishop of Ely, <a href="#pg305">305</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hotham, William of, Archbishop of Dublin, <a href=
+"#pg211">211</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hougue, La, <a href="#pg387">387</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hoveden, or Howden, Roger of, <a href="#pg093">93</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his continuator, <a href="#pg454">454</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Howlett's ed. of <i>Momimenta Franciscana</i>, <a href=
+"#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Howel the Good, <a href="#pg160">160</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Huelgas, las, monastery of, <a href="#pg073">73</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hugh, Choir of St., at Lincoln, <a href="#pg096">96</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hlugh of Avalon, Bishop of Lincoln, St., <a href=
+"#pg019">19</a>, Little a. Hugh of Lincoln, <a href=
+"#pg175">175</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hugh X., of Lusignan, <a href="#pg065">65</a>. See also
+Lusignan.</li>
+
+<li>Hugh XI. of Lusignan, <a href="#pg065">65</a>. See also
+Lusignan.</li>
+
+<li>Hull, <a href="#pg349">349</a>, <a href="#pg356">356</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hulme, a. Benet's, <a href="#pg455">455</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Humanism, <a href="#pg093">93</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Humber, the, I, <a href="#pg317">317</a>. <i>Hundred Rolls</i>,
+the, <a href="#pg149">149</a>, <a href="#pg446">446</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hungary, Primate of, visits Canterbury, <a href=
+"#pg019">19</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hungerford, Sir Thomas, <a href="#pg438">438</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hunter's <i>Leet Jurisdiction of Norwich</i>, <a href=
+"#pg448">448</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>Rotuli Selecti</i>, <a href="#pg448">448</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Huntingdon, David, Earl of, <a href="#pg179">179</a>, <a href=
+"#pg180">180</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Huntingdon, Honour of, <a href="#pg022">22</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Huntingdon, Earl of, John the Scot, <a href=
+"#pg022">22</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Huntingdon, Clinton, Earl Of, <a href="#pg314">314</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Husbandry, Walter of Henley's treatise on, <a href=
+"#pg094">94</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li><i>Imperium</i>, the, <a href="#pg092">92</a>.<a name="I" id=
+"I" /></li>
+
+<li>Immunities, baronial, <a href="#pg148">148</a>, <a href=
+"#pg149">149</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Indre, the river, <a href="#pg388">388</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ingham, Sir Oliver, <a href="#pg305">305</a>, <a href=
+"#pg309">309</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Infantry;
+
+<ul>
+<li>English, <a href="#pg245">245</a>, <a href="#pg285">285</a>, <a
+href="#pg320">320</a>, <a href="#pg362">362</a>, <a href=
+"#pg363">363</a>, <a href="#pg390">390</a>.</li>
+
+<li>French, <a href="#pg383">383</a>, <a href=
+"#pg390">390</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Irish, <a href="#pg269">269</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Scotch, <a href="#pg207">207</a>, <a href="#pg213">213</a>, <a
+href="#pg214">214</a>, <a href="#pg260">260</a>, <a href=
+"#pg318">318</a>, <a href="#pg320">320</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Welsh, <a href="#pg126">126</a>-128, <a href="#pg164">164</a>,
+<a href="#pg210">210</a>, <a href="#pg212">212</a>-214, <a href=
+"#pg245">245</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Innocent III., Pope, <a href="#pg002">2</a>-5, <a href=
+"#pg028">28</a>, <a href="#pg039">39</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Innocent IV., Pope, <a href="#pg061">61</a>, <a href=
+"#pg062">62</a>, <a href="#pg066">66</a>, <a href="#pg067">67</a>,
+<a href="#pg078">78</a>, <a href="#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Innocent VI., Pope, <a href="#pg385">385</a>, <a href=
+"#pg389">389</a>, <a href="#pg393">393</a>, <a href=
+"#pg394">394</a>, <a href="#pg396">396</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Inquisition, the, in England, <a href="#pg255">255</a>, <a
+href="#pg256">256</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>in the Netherlands, <a href="#pg376">376</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Interregnum, the Great, <a href="#pg143">143</a>. Inverness, <a
+href="#pg322">322</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Iolande, daughter of Peter Mauclerc, Count of Brittany, <a
+href="#pg033">33</a>, <a href="#pg034">34</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ireland, <a href="#pg016">16</a>, <a href="#pg029">29</a>, <a
+href="#pg037">37</a>, <a href="#pg044">44</a>, <a href=
+"#pg048">48</a>, <a href="#pg071">71</a>, <a href="#pg073">73</a>,
+<a href="#pg180">180</a>, <a href="#pg188">188</a>, <a href=
+"#pg204">204</a>, <a href="#pg235">235</a>, <a href=
+"#pg241">241</a>-243, <a href="#pg248">248</a>, <a href=
+"#pg254">254</a>, <a href="#pg263">263</a>, <a href=
+"#pg269">269</a>-272, <a href="#pg278">278</a>, <a href=
+"#pg300">300</a>, <a href="#pg301">301</a>, <a href=
+"#pg306">306</a>, <a href="#pg309">309</a>, <a href=
+"#pg316">316</a>, <a href="#pg371">371</a>, <a href=
+"#pg380">380</a>, <a href="#pg428">428</a>, <a href=
+"#pg429">429</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ireland, the Butler of, made Earl of Ormonde. See Ormonde.</li>
+
+<li>Irthlingborough, Northamptonshire, <a href=
+"#pg427">427</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Irvine, <a href="#pg206">206</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Isabella of Castile, daughter of Peter the Cruel, wife of
+Edmund, Earl of Cambridge, <a href="#pg431">431</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Isabella Marshal, wife of Richard of Cornwall. See
+Marshal.</li>
+
+<li>Isabella of Angouleme, Queen of John, and wife of Hugh of
+Lusignan, <a href="#pg031">31</a>, <a href="#pg062">62</a>, <a
+href="#pg064">64</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Isabella of France, Queen of Edward II., <a href=
+"#pg211">211</a>, <a href="#pg216">216</a>, <a href=
+"#pg230">230</a>, <a href="#pg239">239</a>, <a href=
+"#pg246">246</a>, <a href="#pg253">253</a>, <a href=
+"#pg276">276</a>, <a href="#pg282">282</a>, <a href=
+"#pg283">283</a>, <a href="#pg292">292</a>, <a href=
+"#pg297">297</a>-309, <a href="#pg324">324</a>, <a href=
+"#pg325">325</a>, <a href="#pg327">327</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Isabella of Gloucester, divorced wife of John, wife of Hubert
+de Burgh, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a href="#pg013">13</a>, <a href=
+"#pg023">23</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Isabella, sister of Henry III., queen of Frederick II, <a href=
+"#pg033">33</a>, <a href="#pg061">61</a>, <a href=
+"#pg073">73</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Isabella, younger sister of Alexander II., wife of Roger Bigod,
+Earl of Norfolk, <a href="#pg023">23</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Islands, the Channel. See Channel Islands, the.</li>
+
+<li>Isleworth, <a href="#pg112">112</a>, <a href=
+"#pg113">113</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Isle, the river, <a href="#pg357">357</a>, <a href=
+"#pg387">387</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Isle de France, the, <a href="#pg422">422</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Isle Saint-Jean, Caen, <a href="#pg360">360</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Islip, Simon, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href=
+"#pg312">312</a>, <a href="#pg431">431</a>, <a href=
+"#pg432">432</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Italy, <a href="#pg055">55</a>, <a href="#pg070">70</a>, <a
+href="#pg078">78</a>, <a href="#pg097">97</a>, <a href=
+"#pg134">134</a>, <a href="#pg139">139</a>, <a href=
+"#pg229">229</a>, <a href="#pg355">355</a>, <a href=
+"#pg369">369</a>, <a href="#pg370">370</a>, <a href=
+"#pg402">402</a>, <a href="#pg421">421</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>James, King of Sicily, son of Peter of Aragon, <a href=
+"#pg171">171</a>, <a href="#pg172">172</a>; afterwards James II. of
+Aragon, <a href="#pg192">192</a>.<a name="J" id="J" /></li>
+
+<li>Jaudy, the river, <a href="#pg368">368</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Jedburgh, <a href="#pg321">321</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Jerusalem, Latin kingdom of, <a href="#pg004">4</a>, <a href=
+"#pg403">403</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Jerusalem, Patriarch of, <a href="#pg230">230</a>. See Bek,
+Antony.</li>
+
+<li>Jews, in England, the, <a href="#pg018">18</a>, <a href=
+"#pg077">77</a>, <a href="#pg088">88</a>, <a href="#pg097">97</a>,
+<a href="#pg131">131</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>expulsion of the, <a href="#pg175">175</a>, <a href=
+"#pg176">176</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Joan of Champagne, Queen of Philip the Fair, <a href=
+"#pg146">146</a>, <a href="#pg187">187</a>, <a href=
+"#pg246">246</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Joan of Ponthieu, Queen of Ferdinand the Saint, <a href=
+"#pg051">51</a>, <a href="#pg073">73</a>, <a href=
+"#pg145">145</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Joan of the Tower, sister of Edward III., Queen of David Bruce,
+<a href="#pg305">305</a>, <a href="#pg393">393</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Joan, sister of Henry III., Queen of Alexander II. of Scotland,
+<a href="#pg023">23</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Joan, Countess of Flanders, wife of Thomas of Savoy, <a href=
+"#pg033">33</a>, <a href="#pg055">55</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Joan, Countess of Kent, Princess of Wales, wife of Edward the
+Black Prince, <a href="#pg406">406</a>, <a href=
+"#pg428">428</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Joan, daughter of Edward III., <a href="#pg370">370</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Joan, eldest daughter of Charles of Valois, <a href=
+"#pg194">194</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Joan of Acre, daughter of Edward I. and Countess of Gloucester,
+<a href="#pg173">173</a>, <a href="#pg223">223</a>, <a href=
+"#pg347">347</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Joan of Bar, grand-daughter of Edward I., <a href=
+"#pg224">224</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Joan of Flanders, Countess of Penthievre, wife of Charles of
+Blois, <a href="#pg353">353</a>, <a href="#pg354">354</a>, <a href=
+"#pg356">356</a>, <a href="#pg367">367</a>, <a href=
+"#pg402">402</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Joan of Toulouse, daughter of Raymond of Toulouse, wife of
+Alfonso of Poitiers <a href="#pg062">62</a>, <a href=
+"#pg105">105</a>, <a href="#pg106">106</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Joan, Princess of North Wales, wife of Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, <a
+href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a href=
+"#pg023">23</a>, <a href="#pg038">38</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Joan, sister of Richard I., grandmother of Joan of Poitiers, <a
+href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href="#pg126">126</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John, King, <a href="#pg001">1</a>, <a href="#pg005">5</a>, <a
+href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href="#pg013">13</a>, <a href=
+"#pg014">14</a>, <a href="#pg017">17</a>, <a href="#pg025">25</a>,
+<a href="#pg027">27</a>-31, <a href="#pg033">33</a>, <a href=
+"#pg044">44</a>, <a href="#pg046">46</a>, <a href="#pg052">52</a>,
+<a href="#pg101">101</a>, <a href="#pg104">104</a>, <a href=
+"#pg115">115</a>, <a href="#pg209">209</a>, <a href=
+"#pg254">254</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John, King of Bohemia, <a href="#pg335">335</a>, <a href=
+"#pg364">364</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John, King of France, <a href="#pg358">358</a>, <a href=
+"#pg378">378</a>, <a href="#pg381">381</a>, <a href=
+"#pg386">386</a>, <a href="#pg389">389</a>, <a href=
+"#pg392">392</a>, <a href="#pg393">393</a>, <a href=
+"#pg395">395</a>-<a href="#pg400">400</a>, <a href=
+"#pg403">403</a>, <a href="#pg418">418</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John (Balliol), King of Scots, <a href="#pg177">177</a>, <a
+href="#pg193">193</a>, <a href="#pg194">194</a>, <a href=
+"#pg196">196</a>, <a href="#pg197">197</a>, <a href=
+"#pg208">208</a>, <a href="#pg216">216</a>, <a href=
+"#pg232">232</a>, <a href="#pg233">233</a>, <a href=
+"#pg257">257</a>, <a href="#pg323">323</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John XXII., Pope, <a href="#pg089">89</a>, <a href=
+"#pg329">329</a>, <a href="#pg379">379</a>, <a href=
+"#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John, Duke of Berri, <a href="#pg412">412</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John II., Duke of Brabant, <a href="#pg192">192</a>, <a href=
+"#pg210">210</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John III., Duke of Brabant, <a href="#pg332">332</a>, <a href=
+"#pg336">336</a>, <a href="#pg340">340</a>, <a href=
+"#pg348">348</a>, <a href="#pg410">410</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John II., Duke of Brittany, <a href="#pg107">107</a>, <a href=
+"#pg352">352</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John III., Duke of Brittany, <a href="#pg352">352</a>, <a href=
+"#pg353">353</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John IV., Duke of Brittany (Montfort), <a href=
+"#pg352">352</a>, <a href="#pg357">357</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John V., Duke of Brittany (Montfort), <a href="#pg357">357</a>,
+<a href="#pg367">367</a>, <a href="#pg368">368</a>, <a href=
+"#pg381">381</a>, <a href="#pg387">387</a>, <a href=
+"#pg397">397</a>, <a href="#pg398">398</a>, <a href=
+"#pg401">401</a>, <a href="#pg402">402</a>, <a href=
+"#pg416">416</a>, <a href="#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John, Duke of Normandy, <a href="#pg345">345</a>, <a href=
+"#pg358">358</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See also John, King of France.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>John of Avesnes, Count of Hainault, <a href=
+"#pg210">210</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John of Brittany, Earl of Richmond, son of John II., Duke of
+Brittany, and nephew of Edward I., <a href="#pg179">179</a>, <a
+href="#pg188">188</a>, <a href="#pg191">191</a>, <a href=
+"#pg227">227</a>, <a href="#pg228">228</a>, <a href=
+"#pg232">232</a>, <a href="#pg244">244</a>, <a href=
+"#pg289">289</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John of Eltham, son of Edward II., Earl of Cornwall, <a href=
+"#pg300">300</a>, <a href="#pg307">307</a>, <a href=
+"#pg320">320</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John of Gaunt, son of Edward III., Duke of Lancaster, <a href=
+"#pg347">347</a>, <a href="#pg404">404</a>, <a href=
+"#pg411">411</a>-413, <a href="#pg415">415</a>-418, <a href=
+"#pg430">430</a>, <a href="#pg431">431</a>, <a href=
+"#pg434">434</a>, <a href="#pg436">436</a>-441, <a href=
+"#pg453">453</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John of Hainault, brother of William II. of Hainault, <a href=
+"#pg299">299</a>, <a href="#pg363">363</a>.</li>
+
+<li>John of Montfort, Earl of Richmond, <a href="#pg430">430</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See John V., Duke of Brittany.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>John of Montfort, half-brother of John III. of Brittany, <a
+href="#pg352">352</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See John IV., Duke of Brittany.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>John the Scot, Earl of Chester. See Chester.</li>
+
+<li>Joinville, Joan of, <a href="#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Joinvilles, the, <a href="#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Joinville's <i>History of St. Louis</i>, <a href=
+"#pg016">16</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Josselin Castle, <a href="#pg382">382</a>, <a href=
+"#pg383">383</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Jowel, John, <a href="#pg400">400</a>-402.</li>
+
+<li>Judges, the, <a href="#pg025">25</a>, <a href="#pg044">44</a>,
+<a href="#pg046">46</a>, <a href="#pg172">172</a>.</li>
+
+<li>J&uuml;lich, Dukes of, <a href="#pg332">332</a>, <a href=
+"#pg335">335</a>, <a href="#pg411">411</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Jurisprudence, Anglo-Norman, <a href="#pg184">184</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Roman, <a href="#pg094">94</a>, <a href="#pg095">95</a>, <a
+href="#pg337">337</a>, <a href="#pg426">426</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Justiciar, office of, <a href="#pg052">52</a>, <a href=
+"#pg065">65</a>, <a href="#pg102">102</a>, <a href=
+"#pg109">109</a>, <a href="#pg112">112</a>, <a href=
+"#pg113">113</a>, <a href="#pg120">120</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Justiciars.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Burgh, Hubert de;</li>
+
+<li>Marshal, William;</li>
+
+<li>Roches, Peter des;</li>
+
+<li>Segrave, Stephen.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Justiciars of Ireland.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Marsh, Geoffrey,</li>
+
+<li>and Fitzgerald, Maurice.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Justiciars of Scotland.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Ormesby, William.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Keighley, Henry of, knight of the shire for Lancashire, <a
+href="#pg219">219</a>.<a name="K" id="K" /></li>
+
+<li>Kelso, <a href="#pg178">178</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Kenilworth, Dictum de</i>, <a href="#pg131">131</a>, <a
+href="#pg132">132</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kenilworth Castle, <a href="#pg126">126</a>, <a href=
+"#pg127">127</a>, <a href="#pg129">129</a>-132, <a href=
+"#pg251">251</a>, <a href="#pg301">301</a>-333.</li>
+
+<li>Kennington, <a href="#pg440">440</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kensham, <a href="#pg007">7</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kent, <a href="#pg011">11</a>, <a href="#pg114">114</a>, <a
+href="#pg299">299</a>, <a href="#pg316">316</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>earldom of, <a href="#pg283">283</a>, <a href=
+"#pg428">428</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Kent, Earl of, Hubert de Burgh. See Burgh.</li>
+
+<li>Kent, Edmund of Woodstock, Earl of. See Edmund.</li>
+
+<li>Kerry (Wales), <a href="#pg041">41</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Vale of, <a href="#pg037">37</a>;</li>
+
+<li>scutage of, <a href="#pg040">40</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Kervyn de Lettenhove's edition of <i>Froissart</i>, <a href=
+"#pg460">460</a>, <a href="#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kesteven, South, <a href="#pg020">20</a>, <a href=
+"#pg021">21</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kidwelly, castle and lordship, <a href="#pg166">166</a>, <a
+href="#pg267">267</a>, <a href="#pg280">280</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kildare, Curragh of, <a href="#pg049">49</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kildare, Earl of, <a href="#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kilkenny, Castle, <a href="#pg049">49</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>statute of, <a href="#pg429">429</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Kilwardby, Robert, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href=
+"#pg143">143</a>, <a href="#pg150">150</a>, <a href=
+"#pg431">431</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kinghorn, <a href="#pg317">317</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kingsford's, C.L., Song of <i>Lewes</i>, <a href=
+"#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kingston-on-Thames, <a href="#pg012">12</a>, <a href=
+"#pg283">283</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kinloss, <a href="#pg225">225</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kintyre, <a href="#pg234">234</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kirk's <i>Accounts of the Obedientiaries of Abingdon</i>, <a
+href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kirkby, John, treasurer of Edward I and Bishop of Ely, <a href=
+"#pg164">164</a>, <a href="#pg184">184</a>, <a href=
+"#pg447">447</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kirkby's <i>Quest</i>, <a href="#pg447">447</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kirkcudbright, stewartry of, <a href="#pg321">321</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kirkliston, <a href="#pg213">213</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Klerk, Jan van, his <i>Chronicle</i>, <a href="#pg347">347</a>,
+<a href="#pg460">460</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Knaresborough, castle and town, <a href="#pg250">250</a>, <a
+href="#pg273">273</a>, <a href="#pg275">275</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Knighton's, Henry, <i>Chronicle</i>, <a href="#pg328">328</a>,
+<a href="#pg458">458</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Knights, of the Shire, <a href="#pg103">103</a>, <a href=
+"#pg119">119</a>, <a href="#pg122">122</a>, <a href=
+"#pg139">139</a>, <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a href=
+"#pg195">195</a>, <a href="#pg436">436</a>-438;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Templars, <a href="#pg254">254</a>-257;</li>
+
+<li>of St. John, <a href="#pg255">255</a>;</li>
+
+<li>of the Garter, <a href="#pg380">380</a>, <a href=
+"#pg381">381</a>;</li>
+
+<li>of the Star, <a href="#pg381">381</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Knowles, Sir Robert, <a href="#pg382">382</a>, <a href=
+"#pg383">383</a>, <a href="#pg394">394</a>, <a href=
+"#pg401">401</a>, <a href="#pg402">402</a>, <a href=
+"#pg412">412</a>-414</li>
+
+<li>Knyvett, Sir John, <a href="#pg433">433</a>.</li>
+
+<li>K&ouml;hler's <i>Entwickelung des Kriegswesens in der
+Ritterzeit</i>, <a href="#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Labourers, Statute of, <a href="#pg373">373</a>.<a name="L" id=
+"L" /></li>
+
+<li>Lacy, Alice, Countess of Lancaster, <a href="#pg224">224</a>,
+<a href="#pg273">273</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lacy, Henry, Earl of Lincoln. See Lincoln.</li>
+
+<li>Lacy, Hugh de, Earl of Ulster. See Ulster.</li>
+
+<li>Lacy, John de, Constable of Chester. <a href="#pg042">42</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See also Lincoln, Earls of.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Lacy, the house of, <a href="#pg001">1</a>, <a href=
+"#pg048">48</a>, <a href="#pg049">49</a>, <a href="#pg272">272</a>;
+
+
+<ul>
+<li>the house of, in Meath, <a href="#pg270">270</a>, <a href=
+"#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Lagny, Abbot of, <a href="#pg255">255</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lalinde, <a href="#pg357">357</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lamberton, Bishop of St. Andrews, <a href=
+"#pg232">232</a>-234.</li>
+
+<li>Lambeth, treaty of, <a href="#pg012">12</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lancashire, <a href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href="#pg219">219</a>,
+<a href="#pg267">267</a>, <a href="#pg268">268</a>, <a href=
+"#pg275">275</a>, <a href="#pg342">342</a>, <a href=
+"#pg370">370</a>, <a href="#pg371">371</a>, <a href=
+"#pg376">376</a>, <a href="#pg447">447</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lancaster, Alice, Countess of. See Alice.</li>
+
+<li>Lancaster, Blanche, Duchess of. See Blanche.</li>
+
+<li>Lancaster, Edmund, Earl of. See Edmund.</li>
+
+<li>Lancaster, Henry, Earl of. See Henry.</li>
+
+<li>Lancaster, Henry of Grosmont, Earl and Duke of. See Henry.</li>
+
+<li>Lancaster, honour of, <a href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href=
+"#pg014">14</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>town, <a href="#pg289">289</a>.</li>
+
+<li>house of, <a href="#pg314">314</a>, <a href="#pg351">351</a>,
+<a href="#pg352">352</a>, <a href="#pg396">396</a>, <a href=
+"#pg428">428</a>, <a href="#pg431">431</a>, <a href=
+"#pg435">435</a>, <a href="#pg438">438</a>.</li>
+
+<li>records of Duchy of, <a href="#pg449">449</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Lancaster, John of Gaunt, Duke of. See John.</li>
+
+<li>Lanercost, <a href="#pg234">234</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>chronicle of, <a href="#pg456">456</a>, <a href=
+"#pg457">457</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Langham, Simon, Chancellor and Archbishop of Canterbury, <a
+href="#pg431">431</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Langland, William, <a href="#pg372">372</a>, <a href=
+"#pg421">421</a>, <a href="#pg423">423</a>, <a href=
+"#pg424">424</a>, <a href="#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Langley, <a href="#pg254">254</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Langley, Geoffrey of, <a href="#pg076">76</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Langlois, Charles V., his <i>Philippe le Hardi</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his <i>Histoire de France</i>, <a href="#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Langon, <a href="#pg324">324</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Langtoft's, Peter, <i>Chronicle</i>, <a href="#pg095">95</a>,
+<a href="#pg458">458</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Langton, John, Bishop of Chichester, <a href="#pg238">238</a>,
+<a href="#pg244">244</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Langton, Simon, Archdeacon of Canterbury, <a href=
+"#pg011">11</a>, <a href="#pg013">13</a>, <a href="#pg050">50</a>,
+<a href="#pg085">85</a>.</li>
+
+<li style="list-style: none">Langton, Stephen, Archbishop of
+Canterbury, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a href="#pg012">12</a>, <a
+href="#pg015">15</a>, <a href="#pg017">17</a>-20, <a href=
+"#pg024">24</a>-27, <a href="#pg041">41</a> <a href=
+"#pg050">50</a>, <a href="#pg060">60</a>, <a href="#pg084">84</a>,
+<a href="#pg087">87</a>, <a href="#pg089">89</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Langton, Walter, Bishop of Lichfield, <a href="#pg185">185</a>,
+<a href="#pg219">219</a>, <a href="#pg223">223</a>, <a href=
+"#pg232">232</a>, <a href="#pg238">238</a>, <a href=
+"#pg240">240</a>, <a href="#pg254">254</a>, <a href=
+"#pg265">265</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Language;
+
+<ul>
+<li>English, <a href="#pg094">94</a>-96, <a href="#pg103">103</a>,
+<a href="#pg380">380</a>, <a href="#pg420">420</a>-423, <a href=
+"#pg425">425</a>, <a href="#pg427">427</a>.</li>
+
+<li>French, <a href="#pg082">82</a>, <a href="#pg083">83</a>, <a
+href="#pg094">94</a>, <a href="#pg095">95</a>, <a href=
+"#pg103">103</a>, <a href="#pg181">181</a>, <a href=
+"#pg237">237</a>, <a href="#pg347">347</a>, <a href=
+"#pg420">420</a>, <a href="#pg421">421</a>, <a href=
+"#pg426">426</a>.</li>
+
+<li>German, <a href="#pg347">347</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Latin, <a href="#pg082">82</a>, <a href="#pg083">83</a>, <a
+href="#pg093">93</a>, <a href="#pg094">94</a>, <a href=
+"#pg103">103</a>, <a href="#pg237">237</a>, <a href=
+"#pg310">310</a>, <a href="#pg425">425</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Scottish, <a href="#pg422">422</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Languedoc, <a href="#pg033">33</a>, <a href="#pg384">384</a>,
+<a href="#pg386">386</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Laon, <a href="#pg413">413</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Laon, Robert Lecoq, Bishop of, <a href="#pg394">394</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Laonnais, the, <a href="#pg340">340</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lapsley's County <i>Palatine of Durham</i>, <a href=
+"#pg448">448</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Latimer, Lord, Chamberlain, <a href="#pg434">434</a>, <a href=
+"#pg436">436</a>-438.</li>
+
+<li>Latin-language, <a href="#pg082">82</a>, <a href=
+"#pg083">83</a>, <a href="#pg093">93</a>-95, <a href=
+"#pg103">103</a>, <a href="#pg310">310</a>, <a href=
+"#pg425">425</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lavisse and Rambaud's <i>Histoire G&eacute;n&eacute;rale</i>,
+<a href="#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lavisse's <i>Histoire de France</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Law, study of English, <a href="#pg083">83</a>, <a href=
+"#pg094">94</a>, <a href="#pg095">95</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>literature of, <a href="#pg094">94</a>, <a href=
+"#pg095">95</a>;</li>
+
+<li>the Salic, <a href="#pg326">326</a>;</li>
+
+<li>English, <a href="#pg426">426</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Laws, Celtic, of Highlanders and Strathclyde Welsh, <a href=
+"#pg228">228</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lawyers, Italian, <a href="#pg426">426</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>English, <a href="#pg426">426</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Layamon's English version of Wace's <i>Brut</i>, <a href=
+"#pg095">95</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lechler's <i>Wycliffe</i>, <a href="#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lecoq, Robert, Bishop of Laon, <a href="#pg394">394</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Leeds Castle (Kent), <a href="#pg282">282</a>-284.</li>
+
+<li>Leek, treaty of, <a href="#pg274">274</a>, <a href=
+"#pg275">275</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lehugeur's <i>Philippe le Long</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Leicester, <a href="#pg051">51</a>, <a href="#pg119">119</a>,
+<a href="#pg277">277</a>, <a href="#pg272">272</a>, <a href=
+"#pg302">302</a>, <a href="#pg307">307</a>, <a href=
+"#pg360">360</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>earldom of, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a href="#pg024">24</a>, <a
+href="#pg129">129</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Leicester, Abbot of, <a href="#pg311">311</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Leicester, Countess of. See Eleanor.</li>
+
+<li>Leicester, Henry, Earl of, <a href="#pg299">299</a>. See Henry,
+Earl of Lancaster.</li>
+
+<li>Leicester, Robert Beaumont, Earl of, <a href="#pg055">55</a>,
+<a href="#pg056">56</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Leicester, Simon de Montfort, Earl of, <a href="#pg055">55</a>,
+<a href="#pg056">56</a>, <a href="#pg059">59</a>, <a href=
+"#pg066">66</a>, <a href="#pg070">70</a>-73, <a href=
+"#pg077">77</a>, <a href="#pg080">80</a>, <a href="#pg081">81</a>,
+<a href="#pg083">83</a>, <a href="#pg087">87</a>, <a href=
+"#pg092">92</a>, <a href="#pg097">97</a>-134, <a href=
+"#pg136">136</a>, <a href="#pg137">137</a>, <a href=
+"#pg265">265</a>, <a href="#pg453">453</a>, <a href=
+"#pg455">455</a>, <a href="#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Leicester, Simon de Montfort, the elder, Count of Toulouse and
+titular Earl of, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a href=
+"#pg055">55</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Leicester, Thomas, Earl of. See Thomas, Earl of Lancaster.</li>
+
+<li>Leicestershire, g, <a href="#pg114">114</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Leinster, <a href="#pg037">37</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Leon, <a href="#pg352">352</a>, <a href="#pg354">354</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Leon, <a href="#pg431">431</a>.</li>
+
+<li>L'Estrange, Roger, <a href="#pg164">164</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Levant, the, <a href="#pg370">370</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lewes, <a href="#pg007">7</a>, <a href="#pg115">115</a>-118, <a
+href="#pg120">120</a>, <a href="#pg127">127</a>, <a href=
+"#pg132">132</a>, <a href="#pg137">137</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>battle of, <a href="#pg115">115</a>-118, <a href=
+"#pg248">248</a>;</li>
+
+<li>mise of, <a href="#pg119">119</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Lewis' <i>Life of Wiclif</i>, <a href="#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Libellus Famosus</i>, Edward III.'s, <a href=
+"#pg350">350</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Libourne, <a href="#pg324">324</a>, <a href="#pg357">357</a>,
+<a href="#pg392">392</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lichfield, Bishops of.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Langton, Walter;</li>
+
+<li>Northburgh, Roger.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Liddesdale, <a href="#pg365">365</a>. See also Liddell.</li>
+
+<li>Liddell, <a href="#pg428">428</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Liebermann, Dr., works by, <a href="#pg452">452</a>, <a href=
+"#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Liege, William, Bishop of. See William.</li>
+
+<li>Liege, <a href="#pg057">57</a>, <a href="#pg139">139</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lille, <a href="#pg210">210</a>, <a href="#pg343">343</a>, <a
+href="#pg344">344</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Limburg, <a href="#pg332">332</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Limerick, <a href="#pg049">49</a>, <a href=
+"#pg271">271</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Limoges, <a href="#pg031">31</a>, <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a
+href="#pg140">140</a>-142, <a href="#pg388">388</a>, <a href=
+"#pg397">397</a>, <a href="#pg402">402</a>, <a href=
+"#pg413">413</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>sack of, <a href="#pg412">412</a>, <a href=
+"#pg413">413</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Limousin, <a href="#pg106">106</a>, <a href="#pg397">397</a>,
+<a href="#pg407">407</a>, <a href="#pg412">412</a>, <a href=
+"#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lincoln, <a href="#pg001">1</a>, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a
+href="#pg010">10-12</a>, <a href="#pg085">85</a>, <a href=
+"#pg096">96</a>, <a href="#pg184">184</a>, <a href=
+"#pg215">215</a>, <a href="#pg226">226</a>, <a href=
+"#pg229">229</a>, <a href="#pg360">360</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Castle, <a href="#pg009">9-11</a>.</li>
+
+<li>battle of, <a href="#pg010">10</a>-12.</li>
+
+<li>Cathedral, <a href="#pg096">96</a>.</li>
+
+<li>parliament of (1301), <a href="#pg218">218</a>, <a href=
+"#pg220">220</a>, <a href="#pg223">223</a>, <a href=
+"#pg229">229</a>.</li>
+
+<li>parliament at (1316), <a href="#pg265">265</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Lincoln, Bishops of.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Wells, Hugh of;</li>
+
+<li>Hugh, St., of Avalon;</li>
+
+<li>Grosse-teste, Robert;</li>
+
+<li>Burghersh, Henry.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Lincoln, Richard le Grand, Chancellor of. See Canterbury.</li>
+
+<li>Lincoln, Gilbert of Ghent, Earl of, g.</li>
+
+<li>Lincoln, Henry Lacy, Earl of, <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a
+href="#pg185">185</a>, <a href="#pg188">188</a>, <a href=
+"#pg196">196</a>, <a href="#pg214">214</a>, <a href=
+"#pg229">229</a>, <a href="#pg238">238</a>, <a href=
+"#pg239">239</a>, <a href="#pg241">241</a>, <a href=
+"#pg242">242</a>, <a href="#pg244">244</a>, <a href=
+"#pg245">245</a>, <a href="#pg254">254</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lincoln, John de Lacy, Earl of, <a href="#pg045">45</a>, <a
+href="#pg047">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lincoln, Randolph de Blundeville, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg014">14</a>. See also Chester.</li>
+
+<li>Lincoln, Thomas of Lancaster, Earl of. See Thomas, Earl of
+Lancaster.</li>
+
+<li>Lincolnshire, <a href="#pg289">289</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Linlithgow, <a href="#pg213">213</a>, <a href="#pg221">221</a>,
+<a href="#pg245">245</a>, <a href="#pg321">321</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lionel of Antwerp, son of Edward III., Duke of Clarence and
+Earl of Ulster, <a href="#pg359">359</a>, <a href="#pg393">393</a>,
+<a href="#pg395">395</a>, <a href="#pg421">421</a>, <a href=
+"#pg428">428</a>-431.</li>
+
+<li>Lisieux, <a href="#pg361">361</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>battle near, <a href="#pg400">400</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Literature in the thirteenth century, <a href="#pg082">82</a>,
+<a href="#pg083">83</a>, <a href="#pg093">93</a>-96;
+
+<ul>
+<li>French, <a href="#pg094">94</a>, <a href="#pg095">95</a>;</li>
+
+<li>English, <a href="#pg095">95</a>, <a href="#pg096">96</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Literature in the fourteenth century;
+
+<ul>
+<li>English, <a href="#pg420">420</a>-423, <a href=
+"#pg427">427</a>;</li>
+
+<li>French, <a href="#pg421">421</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Littleton's <i>Tenures</i>, <a href="#pg420">420</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Llandaff, Bishop of, <a href="#pg174">174</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Llandilo, <a href="#pg162">162</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Llewelyn ap Griffith, Prince of Wales, <a href=
+"#pg075">75</a>-77, <a href="#pg098">98</a>, <a href=
+"#pg104">104</a>, <a href="#pg111">111</a>, <a href=
+"#pg114">114</a>, <a href="#pg115">115</a>, <a href=
+"#pg125">125</a>, <a href="#pg126">126</a>, <a href=
+"#pg132">132</a>-134, <a href="#pg161">161-169</a>, <a href=
+"#pg189">189</a>, <a href="#pg414">414</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, Prince of North Wales, <a href=
+"#pg001">1</a>, <a href="#pg015">15</a>, <a href="#pg023">23</a>,
+<a href="#pg024">24</a>, <a href="#pg026">26</a>, <a href=
+"#pg029">29</a>, <a href="#pg037">37</a>, <a href="#pg038">38</a>,
+<a href="#pg044">44</a>, <a href="#pg046">46</a>-48, <a href=
+"#pg051">51</a>, <a href="#pg057">57</a>, <a href="#pg067">67</a>,
+<a href="#pg068">68</a>, <a href="#pg075">75</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Llewelyn Bren, <a href="#pg267">267</a>, <a href=
+"#pg268">268</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lleyn, <a href="#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lloughor, <a href="#pg280">280</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lochmaben Castle, <a href="#pg194">194</a>, <a href=
+"#pg215">215</a>, <a href="#pg290">290</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lodge's <i>Close of the Middle Ages</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Logrono, <a href="#pg405">405</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Loire, the river, <a href="#pg034">34</a>, <a href=
+"#pg388">388</a>, <a href="#pg389">389</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lombards, <a href="#pg097">97</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lombardy,
+
+<ul>
+<li>cities of, <a href="#pg139">139</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>London, <a href="#pg001">1</a>, <a href="#pg008">8-11</a>, <a
+href="#pg013">13</a>, <a href="#pg026">26</a>, <a href=
+"#pg041">41</a> <a href="#pg045">45</a>, <a href="#pg057">57</a>,
+<a href="#pg084">84</a>, <a href="#pg088">88</a>, <a href=
+"#pg097">97</a>, <a href="#pg108">108</a>, <a href=
+"#pg112">112</a>-114, <a href="#pg116">116</a>, <a href=
+"#pg117">117</a>, <a href="#pg121">121</a>, <a href=
+"#pg126">126</a>, <a href="#pg128">128</a>, <a href=
+"#pg129">129</a>, <a href="#pg132">132</a>, <a href=
+"#pg134">134</a>, <a href="#pg193">193</a>, <a href=
+"#pg194">194</a>. <a href="#pg199">199</a>, <a href=
+"#pg206">206</a>, <a href="#pg207">207</a>, <a href=
+"#pg215">215</a>, <a href="#pg216">216</a>, <a href=
+"#pg226">226</a>, <a href="#pg243">243</a>-245, <a href=
+"#pg247">247</a>, <a href="#pg252">252</a>, <a href=
+"#pg255">255</a>, <a href="#pg256">256</a>, <a href=
+"#pg281">281</a>, <a href="#pg282">282</a>, <a href=
+"#pg292">292</a>, <a href="#pg293">293</a>, <a href=
+"#pg299">299</a>, <a href="#pg308">308</a>, <a href=
+"#pg309">309</a>, <a href="#pg311">311</a>, <a href=
+"#pg356">356</a>, <a href="#pg360">360</a>, <a href=
+"#pg368">368</a>, <a href="#pg370">370</a>, <a href=
+"#pg375">375</a>, <a href="#pg376">376</a>, <a href=
+"#pg383">383</a>, <a href="#pg393">393</a>, <a href=
+"#pg395">395</a>, <a href="#pg396">396</a>. <a href=
+"#pg413">413</a>, <a href="#pg420">420</a>, <a href=
+"#pg421">421</a>, <a href="#pg423">423</a>, <a href=
+"#pg425">425</a>-427. <a href="#pg440">440</a>, <a href=
+"#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>London, Bishops of, <a href="#pg119">119</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Sainte-Mere-Eglise, William of;</li>
+
+<li>Basset, Fulk;</li>
+
+<li>Baldock, Ralph;</li>
+
+<li>Courtenay, William.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>London, Mayors of.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Serlo;</li>
+
+<li>Waleys, Henry le,</li>
+
+<li>and Pyel, John.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>London, Sheriffs of.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See FitzAthulf, Constantine.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>London, treaty of, <a href="#pg395">395</a>-397.</li>
+
+<li>Longjumeau, <a href="#pg396">396</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Longman's <i>Life and Times of Edward III.</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Longnon's <i>Atlas historique de la France</i>, <a href=
+"#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Longsword, William, Earl of Salisbury. See Salisbury.</li>
+
+<li>Lorraine, <a href="#pg296">296</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Loserth's <i>Geschichte des spateren Mittelalters</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lot, the river, <a href="#pg324">324</a>, <a href=
+"#pg358">358</a>, <a href="#pg387">387</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lothians, the, <a href="#pg225">225</a>, <a href=
+"#pg227">227</a>, <a href="#pg263">263</a>, <a href=
+"#pg289">289</a>, <a href="#pg321">321</a>, <a href=
+"#pg354">354</a>, <a href="#pg387">387</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Loughborough, <a href="#pg274">274</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Louis, Count of Evreux, <a href="#pg252">252</a>, <a href=
+"#pg253">253</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Louis, Duke of Anjou, brother of Charles V. of France. <a href=
+"#pg403">403</a>, <a href="#pg412">412</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Louis of Bavaria, the Emperor, <a href="#pg329">329</a>, <a
+href="#pg333">333</a>, <a href="#pg341">341</a>, <a href=
+"#pg349">349</a>, <a href="#pg356">356</a>, <a href=
+"#pg364">364</a>, <a href="#pg379">379</a>, <a href=
+"#pg410">410</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Louis of France, afterwards Louis VIII., <a href=
+"#pg001">1-16</a>, <a href="#pg022">22</a>, <a href=
+"#pg027">27</a>, <a href="#pg029">29</a>-34, <a href=
+"#pg246">246</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Louis IX. (St. Louis), King of France, <a href="#pg004">4</a>,
+<a href="#pg005">5</a>, <a href="#pg016">16</a>, <a href=
+"#pg034">34</a>, <a href="#pg054">54</a>, <a href="#pg062">62</a>,
+<a href="#pg064">64</a>, <a href="#pg069">69</a>, <a href=
+"#pg070">70</a>-74, <a href="#pg083">83</a>, <a href=
+"#pg098">98</a>, <a href="#pg104">104</a>-107, <a href=
+"#pg112">112</a>, <a href="#pg113">113</a>, <a href=
+"#pg119">119</a>, <a href="#pg134">134</a>, <a href=
+"#pg135">135</a>, <a href="#pg140">140</a>, <a href=
+"#pg142">142</a>, <a href="#pg144">144</a>, <a href=
+"#pg169">169</a>, <a href="#pg399">399</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Louis X., King of France, <a href="#pg295">295</a>, <a href=
+"#pg325">325</a>, <a href="#pg386">386</a>, <a href=
+"#pg394">394</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Louis of Male, Count of Flanders, <a href="#pg364">364</a>, <a
+href="#pg369">369</a>, <a href="#pg398">398</a>, <a href=
+"#pg409">409</a>, <a href="#pg410">410</a>, <a href=
+"#pg418">418</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Louis of Nevers, Count of Flanders, <a href="#pg327">327</a>,
+<a href="#pg331">331</a>, <a href="#pg332">332</a>, <a href=
+"#pg334">334</a>, <a href="#pg336">336</a>, <a href=
+"#pg341">341</a>-343, <a href="#pg353">353</a>, <a href=
+"#pg364">364</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Louth, <a href="#pg306">306</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Earldom of, <a href="#pg278">278</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Louth, John of Bermingham, Earl of, <a href="#pg272">272</a>,
+<a href="#pg278">278</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Louvain, <a href="#pg332">332</a>, <a href=
+"#pg350">350</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Luard, Dr. H. R., his <i>Roberti Grosse-teste Epistolæ</i>, <a
+href="#pg449">449</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his editions of <i>Annales Monastici</i>, <a href=
+"#pg454">454</a>, <a href="#pg455">455</a>.</li>
+
+<li>B. Cotton, <a href="#pg456">456</a>, and <i>Flores
+Historiarum</i>, <a href="#pg452">452</a>-453.</li>
+
+<li>and Matthew Paris' <i>Chronica Majora</i>, <a href=
+"#pg452">452</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Luce's <i>Jeunesse de Betrand du Guesclin</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>La France pendant la Guerre de Cent An</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Luce and Raynouart's edition of Froissart's <i>Chronicle</i>,
+<a href="#pg460">460</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Lucy</i>, Anthony, <a href="#pg290">290</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ludlow, <a href="#pg125">125</a>, <a href=
+"#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lundy Island, <a href="#pg300">300</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lusignan, Alice of, gg.</li>
+
+<li>Lusignan, Aymer of. See Valence, Aymer de.</li>
+
+<li>Lusignan, Guy of, <a href="#pg117">117</a>, <a href=
+"#pg142">142</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lusignan, House of, <a href="#pg035">35</a>, <a href=
+"#pg063">63</a>, <a href="#pg065">65</a>, <a href="#pg103">103</a>,
+<a href="#pg104">104</a>, <a href="#pg108">108</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lusignan, Hugh X. of, <a href="#pg031">31</a>, <a href=
+"#pg032">32</a>, <a href="#pg034">34</a>, <a href="#pg062">62</a>,
+<a href="#pg064">64</a>, <a href="#pg065">65</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lusignan, Hugh XI. of, <a href="#pg065">65</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lusignan (town), <a href="#pg358">358</a>, <a href=
+"#pg403">403</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lusignan, William of. See Valence, William of.</li>
+
+<li>Lussac, bridge of, <a href="#pg412">412</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Luxemburg, house of, <a href="#pg410">410</a>, <a href=
+"#pg411">411</a>, <a href="#pg420">420</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lyons, Richard, <a href="#pg434">434</a>, <a href=
+"#pg436">436</a>-438.</li>
+
+<li>Lyons, <a href="#pg078">78</a>, <a href="#pg229">229</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lyons, Council at (1245), <a href="#pg067">67</a>, <a href=
+"#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lyons, Council at (1274), <a href="#pg142">142</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lyrics, English, <a href="#pg095">95</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lys, the river, <a href="#pg211">211</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Macaulay's, G. C., edition of Gower's <i>Works</i>, <a href=
+"#pg420">420</a>, <a href="#pg461">461</a>.<a name="M" id=
+"M" /></li>
+
+<li>Mackinnon's <i>History of Edward III.</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Macon, league of, <a href="#pg145">145</a>, <a href=
+"#pg146">146</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Madden's, Sir F., edition of Matthew Paris' <i>Historia
+Minor</i>, <a href="#pg451">451</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Madog ap Llewelyn, <a href="#pg189">189</a>, <a href=
+"#pg190">190</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maelgwn, <a href="#pg189">189</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maenan, <a href="#pg165">165</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maes Madog, battle of, <a href="#pg190">190</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maidstone, <a href="#pg282">282</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maine, <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href="#pg395">395</a>, <a
+href="#pg400">400</a>, <a href="#pg414">414</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mains. Elector of, <a href="#pg080">80</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maitland's, F. W., <i>Memoranda de Parliamento</i>, <a href=
+"#pg228">228</a>, <a href="#pg444">444</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>Select Pleas in Manorial Courts</i>, <a href=
+"#pg448">448</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Select Pleas of the Crown,</i> <a href=
+"#pg148">148</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Bracton's Note Book,</i> <a href="#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Le Mirroir des Jistices,</i> <a href="#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Select Passages from Bracton, etc.</i>, <a href=
+"#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Year Books of Edward II., <a href="#pg461">461</a> and Canon
+<i>Law</i>, <a href="#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Maitland, F. W., and Pollock, Sir F., <i>History of English
+Law</i>, <a href="#pg162">162</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Makower's, F., Constitutional History of the Church of
+England, <a href="#pg462">462</a>.</i></li>
+
+<li>Malestroit, truce of, <a href="#pg354">354</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Malmesbury, the Monk of, <a href="#pg246">246</a>, <a href=
+"#pg256">256</a>, <a href="#pg259">259</a>, <a href=
+"#pg266">266</a>, <a href="#pg278">278</a>, <a href=
+"#pg457">457</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Malmesbury, William of, <a href="#pg093">93</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Malton, <a href="#pg289">289</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maltravers, John, <a href="#pg303">303</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mandeville, Geoffrey de, <a href="#pg020">20</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Manfred, King of Sicily, <a href="#pg078">78</a>, <a href=
+"#pg079">79</a>, <a href="#pg120">120</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mangonels, <a href="#pg026">26</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Manny, Sir Walter, <a href="#pg311">311</a>, <a href=
+"#pg317">317</a>, <a href="#pg334">334</a>, <a href=
+"#pg346">346</a>, <a href="#pg353">353</a>, <a href=
+"#pg354">354</a>, <a href="#pg375">375</a>, <a href=
+"#pg408">408</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mannyng, Robert, <a href="#pg095">95</a>, <a href=
+"#pg458">458</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mansura, <a href="#pg246">246</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maps for period, <a href="#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mar, Donald, Earl of, <a href="#pg317">317</a>, <a href=
+"#pg318">318</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Marcel, Stephen, <a href="#pg394">394</a>.</li>
+
+<li>March of Calais, <a href="#pg384">384</a>.</li>
+
+<li>March (of Scotland), Patrick, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg197">197</a>.</li>
+
+<li>March of Wales, the, <a href="#pg001">1</a>, <a href=
+"#pg003">3</a>, <a href="#pg014">14</a>, <a href="#pg015">15</a>,
+<a href="#pg024">24</a>, 10l, <a href="#pg133">133</a>, <a href=
+"#pg138">138</a>, <a href="#pg167">167</a>, <a href=
+"#pg168">168</a>, <a href="#pg172">172</a>, <a href=
+"#pg174">174</a>.</li>
+
+<li>March of Wales, Earl of the, <a href="#pg306">306</a>, <a href=
+"#pg307">307</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See also Mortimer, Edmund, and Mortimer, Roger.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>March, Edmund Mortimer, Earl of (d. 1381), <a href=
+"#pg430">430</a>, <a href="#pg434">434</a>, <a href=
+"#pg435">435</a>.</li>
+
+<li>March, Roger Mortimer, first Earl of (d. 1330), <a href=
+"#pg307">307</a>-309.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See also Mortimer, Roger, of Wigmore (d. 1330).</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Marche, Counts of La, <a href="#pg031">31</a>, <a href=
+"#pg032">32</a>, <a href="#pg062">62</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Marche, La, <a href="#pg031">31</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mare, Sir Peter de la, <a href="#pg436">436</a>, <a href=
+"#pg438">438</a>, <a href="#pg440">440</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Margam, annals of abbey of, <a href="#pg453">453</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Margaret of England, Queen of Alexander III. of Scotland, <a
+href="#pg177">177</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Margaret of Flanders, <a href="#pg409">409</a>, <a href=
+"#pg410">410</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Margaret of France, sister of Philip the Fair, and second Queen
+of</li>
+
+<li>Edward I., <a href="#pg187">187</a>, <a href="#pg211">211</a>,
+<a href="#pg216">216</a>, <a href="#pg278">278</a>, <a href=
+"#pg294">294</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Margaret of Hainault, sister of Queen Philippa, Empress of
+Louis of</li>
+
+<li>Bavaria, <a href="#pg333">333</a>, <a href=
+"#pg410">410</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Margaret of Provence, Queen of Louis IX. of France, <a href=
+"#pg054">54</a>, <a href="#pg144">144</a>-146.</li>
+
+<li>Margaret, Queen of Eric, King of Norway, and mother of
+Margaret, Queen of Scots, <a href="#pg177">177</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Margaret, Queen of Scots, the Maid of Norway, daughter of
+Margaret and Eric of Norway, <a href="#pg177">177</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Margaret, sister of Alexander II. of Scotland, wife of Hubert
+de Burgh, <a href="#pg023">23</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Margaret, sister of David of Scotland, <a href=
+"#pg393">393</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Margaret, Viscountess of Limoges, <a href=
+"#pg142">142</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Margaret, wife of Philip of Burgundy, <a href=
+"#pg410">410</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mark, Count of, <a href="#pg332">332</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Marlborough, statute of, <a href="#pg134">134</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Marseilles, <a href="#pg192">192</a>, <a href=
+"#pg370">370</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Marsh, Adam, <a href="#pg081">81</a>, <a href="#pg087">87</a>,
+<a href="#pg091">91</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>Letters of</i> <a href="#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Marsh, Geoffrey, justiciar of Ireland, <a href="#pg037">37</a>,
+<a href="#pg048">48</a>, <a href="#pg049">49</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Marshal, office of, <a href="#pg202">202</a>, <a href=
+"#pg204">204</a>, <a href="#pg206">206</a>, <a href=
+"#pg209">209</a>, <a href="#pg214">214</a>, <a href=
+"#pg215">215</a>, <a href="#pg278">278</a>, <a href=
+"#pg438">438</a>, <a href="#pg440">440</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Marshal, house of, <a href="#pg037">37</a>, <a href=
+"#pg045">45</a>, <a href="#pg065">65</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Marshal, the Earls.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Pembroke, Earl of;</li>
+
+<li>Thomas of Brotherton, Earl;</li>
+
+<li>March, Mortimer, Edmund, Earl of March;</li>
+
+<li>and Percy, Henry.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Marshal, Gilbert. See Pembroke, Gilbert Marshal, Earl of.</li>
+
+<li>Marshal, Isabella, wife of Richard of Cornwall, <a href=
+"#pg061">61</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Marshal, Richard. See Pembroke, Richard Marshal, Earl of.</li>
+
+<li>Marshal, William. See Pembroke, William Marshal, the elder,
+Earl of, regent of England.</li>
+
+<li>Marshal, William, the younger. See Pembroke, William Marshal,
+the younger, Earl of.</li>
+
+<li>Martin IV., Pope, <a href="#pg146">146</a>, <a href=
+"#pg169">169</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Martin, papal envoy, <a href="#pg066">66</a>, <a href=
+"#pg067">67</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Martin's, C. Trice, <i>Registrum Epistolarum J. Peckham</i>, <a
+href="#pg449">449</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mary of Brabant, Queen of France, <a href=
+"#pg187">187</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maturins, the, <a href="#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mauclerc, Peter, Count of Brittany. See Peter.</li>
+
+<li>Maud, daughter of Henry, Duke of Lancaster, <a href=
+"#pg410">410</a>, <a href="#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maud of Artois, wife of Otto, Count of Burgundy, <a href=
+"#pg330">330</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maud's Castle, <a href="#pg038">38</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maul&eacute;on, Savary de, <a href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href=
+"#pg031">31</a>-34.</li>
+
+<li>Mauley, Peter de, <a href="#pg027">27</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mauleys, the family of, <a href="#pg252">252</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maupertuis, <a href="#pg390">390</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mauron, battle of, <a href="#pg383">383</a>, <a href=
+"#pg389">389</a>, <a href="#pg390">390</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maxwell's <i>Robert the Bruce</i>, <a href=
+"#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Maye, the river, <a href="#pg362">362</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Meath, <a href="#pg048">48</a>, <a href="#pg270">270</a>, <a
+href="#pg271">271</a>, <a href="#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Meaux, treaty of, <a href="#pg034">34</a>, <a href=
+"#pg062">62</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mechlin, <a href="#pg332">332</a>, <a href="#pg333">333</a>, <a
+href="#pg336">336</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mediterranean, the, <a href="#pg330">330</a>, <a href=
+"#pg370">370</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Melton, William, Archbishop of York, <a href=
+"#pg301">301</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Melrose Abbey, <a href="#pg423">423</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Melrose, chronicle of, <a href="#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Menai Straits, the, <a href="#pg163">163</a>, <a href=
+"#pg190">190</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mendicants, the, 5 <a href="#pg054">54</a>, <a href=
+"#pg004">4</a>-88, <a href="#pg090">90</a>-94, <a href=
+"#pg379">379</a>, <a href="#pg380">380</a>. <a href=
+"#pg456">456</a>, <a href="#pg457">457</a>. See also Friars.</li>
+
+<li>Meopham, Simon, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href=
+"#pg307">307</a>, <a href="#pg314">314</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mercenaries, <a href="#pg040">40</a>, <a href="#pg044">44</a>,
+<a href="#pg317">317</a>, <a href="#pg384">384</a>, <a href=
+"#pg400">400</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Merchants;
+
+<ul>
+<li>statute of, <a href="#pg165">165</a>.</li>
+
+<li>foreign, <a href="#pg244">244</a>, <a href="#pg248">248</a>, <a
+href="#pg426">426</a>, <a href="#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>English, <a href="#pg426">426</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Meredith ap Owen, <a href="#pg076">76</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Merioneth, <a href="#pg076">76</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Merionethshire, <a href="#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Merlin, <a href="#pg268">268</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Merton, <a href="#pg045">45</a>, <a href="#pg099">99</a>.</li>
+
+<li>"Merton, Rule of,", <a href="#pg093">93</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Merton, Walter of, <a href="#pg089">89</a>, <a href=
+"#pg093">93</a>, <a href="#pg147">147</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Messina, Archbishop of, <a href="#pg079">79</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Methven, battle of, <a href="#pg234">234</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Metingham, John of, <a href="#pg201">201</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Meyer, Paul, his edition of the <i>Histoire de Guillaume
+le</i></li>
+
+<li><i>Mar&eacute;chal&gt;/i&gt;, <a href="#pg016">16</a>, <a href=
+"#pg454">454</a>.</i></li>
+
+<li><i>Miausson, the river, <a href="#pg390">390</a>, <a href=
+"#pg391">391</a>.</i></li>
+
+<li><i>Michel, Francisque, <a href="#pg445">445</a>, <a href=
+"#pg446">446</a>, <a href="#pg459">459</a>.</i></li>
+
+<li><i>Milan, <a href="#pg061">61</a>, <a href=
+"#pg430">430</a>.</i></li>
+
+<li><i>Ministers' Accounts, <a href="#pg446">446</a>, <a href=
+"#pg447">447</a>.</i></li>
+
+<li>Minorites, the, <a href="#pg084">84</a>, <a href=
+"#pg087">87</a>, <a href="#pg091">91</a>, <a href="#pg455">455</a>,
+<a href="#pg456">456</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See also Franciscans.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Minot, Lawrence, <a href="#pg420">420</a>, <a href=
+"#pg421">421</a>, <a href="#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Minsterworth, Sir John, <a href="#pg413">413</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Miracle plays, <a href="#pg423">423</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mirambeau, <a href="#pg036">36</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Miranda, <a href="#pg405">405</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Mirroir des Justices, Le</i>, <a href="#pg460">460</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mise of Amiens, the, <a href="#pg112">112</a>, <a href=
+"#pg113">113</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mise of Lewes, the, <a href="#pg119">119</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Model Parliament, the.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Parliament.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Mohammedans, the, <a href="#pg019">19</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Molinier, Auguste, Sources <i>de l'histoire de France</i>, <a
+href="#pg459">459</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Monasteries, <a href="#pg086">86</a>-88, <a href=
+"#pg094">94</a>, <a href="#pg375">375</a>, <a href=
+"#pg376">376</a>, <a href="#pg425">425</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Monasticon</i>, Dugdale's, <a href="#pg449">449</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Monmouth, castle and town of, <a href="#pg047">47</a>, <a href=
+"#pg048">48</a>, <a href="#pg267">267</a>, <a href=
+"#pg280">280</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Monnow, the river, <a href="#pg047">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mont Cenis, the, <a href="#pg140">140</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montague, Sir William, <a href="#pg308">308</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See also Salisbury, Earls of.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Montague;
+
+<ul>
+<li>the house of, <a href="#pg267">267</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Montfavence, Bertrand of, Cardinal, <a href="#pg330">330</a>,
+<a href="#pg336">336</a>, <a href="#pg339">339</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montfichet, Richard of, <a href="#pg066">66</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montfort l'Amaury, <a href="#pg352">352</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montfort, county of, <a href="#pg398">398</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montfort, Amaury of, <a href="#pg056">56</a>, <a href=
+"#pg113">113</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montfort, the house of (Dukes of Brittany), <a href=
+"#pg352">352</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See also John IV. and John V., Dukes of Brittany.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Montfort, the house of (Earls of Leicester), <a href=
+"#pg124">124</a>, <a href="#pg246">246</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montfort, Henry of, <a href="#pg114">114</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montfort, John of, the elder. See Brittany, John, Duke of.</li>
+
+<li>Montfort, John of, the younger. See Brittany, John, Duke
+of.</li>
+
+<li>Montfort, Peter of, <a href="#pg100">100</a>, <a href=
+"#pg103">103</a>, <a href="#pg112">112</a>, <a href=
+"#pg128">128</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montfort, Simon of, Count of Toulouse, <a href="#pg055">55</a>.
+
+
+<ul>
+<li>See also Leicester.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Montfort Simon of, Earl of Leicester. See Lester.</li>
+
+<li>Montfort, Simon of, the younger, son of Simon, Earl of
+Leicester, <a href="#pg113">113</a>, <a href="#pg126">126</a>, <a
+href="#pg127">127</a>, <a href="#pg129">129</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montgomery, castle and town of, <a href="#pg024">24</a>, <a
+href="#pg037">37</a>, <a href="#pg040">40</a>, <a href=
+"#pg133">133</a>, <a href="#pg167">167</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Monthermer, Ralph of, <a href="#pg223">223</a>, <a href=
+"#pg241">241</a>, <a href="#pg264">264</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Monthermer, Thomas of, <a href="#pg347">347</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Montjoie</i>, <a href="#pg022">22</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montmorenci, Matthew of, <a href="#pg192">192</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montpellier, University of, <a href="#pg386">386</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montpezat, lord of, <a href="#pg295">295</a>, <a href=
+"#pg296">296</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montreuil-sur-mer, <a href="#pg143">143</a>, <a href=
+"#pg216">216</a>, <a href="#pg397">397</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>treaty of, <a href="#pg216">216</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Montrose, <a href="#pg198">198</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mont-Saint-Martin, Monastery of, <a href="#pg339">339</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Monumenta Franciscana</i>, Brewer's, <a href=
+"#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Monumenta Hist. Germanicae, Scriptores</i>, Pertz', <a href=
+"#pg455">455</a>, <a href="#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Moors of Granada, <a href="#pg090">90</a>, <a href=
+"#pg305">305</a>, <a href="#pg401">401</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Moor, Sir Thomas de la, <a href="#pg458">458</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Moray, <a href="#pg208">208</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Moray, Randolph, Earl of, <a href="#pg315">315</a>-317.</li>
+
+<li>Moray, Sir Andrew, <a href="#pg319">319</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Morbihan, <a href="#pg354">354</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Morgan of Caerleon, <a href="#pg015">15</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Morgan, leader of Glamorganshire rebels, <a href=
+"#pg189">189</a>, <a href="#pg190">190</a>, <a href=
+"#pg192">192</a>, <a href="#pg193">193</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Morgarten, battle of. <a href="#pg262">262</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Morlaix, <a href="#pg352">352</a>, <a href="#pg354">354</a>, <a
+href="#pg363">363</a>, <a href="#pg389">389</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>battle of, <a href="#pg389">389</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Morley, Robert, <a href="#pg346">346</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mortimer, Edmund (d. 1303), <a href="#pg163">163</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mortimer, Edmund (d. 1381). See March, Edmund Mortimer, Earl
+of.</li>
+
+<li>Mortimer, Roger, of Chirk, <a href="#pg267">267</a>, <a href=
+"#pg284">284</a>, <a href="#pg286">286</a>, <a href=
+"#pg293">293</a>, <a href="#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mortimer, Roger, of Wigmore (d. 1282) 76 <a href=
+"#pg100">100</a>,, <a href="#pg103">103</a>, <a href=
+"#pg111">111</a>, <a href="#pg125">125</a>, <a href=
+"#pg128">128</a>-133, <a href="#pg139">139</a>, <a href=
+"#pg163">163</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mortimer, Roger, of Wigmore (d. 1330), <a href=
+"#pg267">267</a>, <a href="#pg271">271</a>-274, <a href=
+"#pg280">280</a>, <a href="#pg283">283</a>, <a href=
+"#pg284">284</a>, <a href="#pg286">286</a>, <a href=
+"#pg293">293</a>, <a href="#pg298">298</a>-303, <a href=
+"#pg305">305</a>-309, <a href="#pg314">314</a>. See also March,
+Roger Mortimer, first Earl of.</li>
+
+<li>Mortimer, Roger, grandson of Roger Mortimer, first Earl of
+March, <a href="#pg359">359</a>, <a href="#pg360">360</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mortimer, Roger, son of Edmund, Earl of March, <a href=
+"#pg435">435</a>, <a href="#pg437">437</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mortimer, the house of, <a href="#pg001">1</a>, <a href=
+"#pg126">126</a>, <a href="#pg148">148</a>, <a href=
+"#pg423">423</a>, <a href="#pg431">431</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Mortmain</i>, Statute of, <a href="#pg174">174</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Moselle, the river, <a href="#pg335">335</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mountchensi, Joan of, <a href="#pg065">65</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mount Sorrel, <a href="#pg009">9</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mowbray, John of (of Scotland), <a href="#pg227">227</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mowbray, John of, <a href="#pg280">280</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Murimuth, Adam, <a href="#pg458">458</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Myton, battle of, <a href="#pg276">276</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Najarilla, the river, <a href="#pg405">405</a>.<a name="N" id=
+"N" /></li>
+
+<li>N&aacute;jera, battle of, <a href="#pg405">405</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Nantes, <a href="#pg035">35</a>, <a href="#pg036">36</a>, <a
+href="#pg352">352</a>-354.</li>
+
+<li>Naples, <a href="#pg078">78</a>, <a href="#pg079">79</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Narbonne, <a href="#pg386">386</a>, <a href=
+"#pg387">387</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Nassau.</i>, Adolf of. King of the Romans. See Adolf, King
+of the Romans.</li>
+
+<li>Navarre, Blanche of Artois, Queen of. See Blanche.</li>
+
+<li>Navarre, Henry III., King of. See Henry.</li>
+
+<li>Navarre, King of, Charles the Bad. See Charles.</li>
+
+<li>Navarre, Philip of. See Philip.</li>
+
+<li>Navarre, Theobald IV., King of. See Theobald.</li>
+
+<li>Navarre, <a href="#pg070">70</a>, <a href="#pg144">144</a>, <a
+href="#pg246">246</a>, <a href="#pg401">401</a>, <a href=
+"#pg405">405</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Navarete, <a href="#pg405">405</a>,</li>
+
+<li>Navy, the English, <a href="#pg012">12</a>, <a href=
+"#pg186">186</a>, <a href="#pg187">187</a>, <a href=
+"#pg192">192</a>, <a href="#pg344">344</a>-347, <a href=
+"#pg415">415</a>, <a href="#pg416">416</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>the French, <a href="#pg121">121</a>, <a href="#pg186">186</a>,
+<a href="#pg187">187</a>, <a href="#pg193">193</a>, <a href=
+"#pg345">345</a>, <a href="#pg415">415</a>, <a href=
+"#pg416">416</a>;</li>
+
+<li>the Norman, <a href="#pg347">347</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Neath Abbey, <a href="#pg301">301</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Netherlands, the, <a href="#pg191">191</a>, <a href=
+"#pg279">279</a>, <a href="#pg298">298</a>, <a href=
+"#pg318">318</a>, <a href="#pg332">332</a>, <a href=
+"#pg333">333</a>, <a href="#pg346">346</a>, <a href=
+"#pg355">355</a>-357, <a href="#pg368">368</a>-370, <a href=
+"#pg376">376</a>, <a href="#pg410">410</a>, <a href=
+"#pg411">411</a>, <a href="#pg458">458</a>, <a href=
+"#pg459">459</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Neufbourg, house of, <a href="#pg065">65</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Neufbourg, Henry of, Earl of Warwick. See Warwick.</li>
+
+<li>Nevers, Louis of. See Louis of Nevers, Count of Flanders.</li>
+
+<li>Nevers, the Count of, <a href="#pg007">7</a>, g.</li>
+
+<li>Neville of Raby, Lord, <a href="#pg434">434</a>, <a href=
+"#pg436">436</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Neville, Ralph, Bishop of Chichester and Chancellor, <a href=
+"#pg035">35</a>, <a href="#pg050">50</a>, <a href=
+"#pg052">52</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Nevilles, the, <a href="#pg365">365</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Neville's Cross, battle of, <a href="#pg365">365</a>, <a href=
+"#pg367">367</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Newark, <a href="#pg003">3</a>, <a href="#pg010">10</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Newcastle-on-Tyne, <a href="#pg183">183</a>, <a href=
+"#pg250">250</a>, <a href="#pg266">266</a>, <a href=
+"#pg276">276</a>, <a href="#pg289">289</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Newport-on-Usk, <a href="#pg126">126</a>, <a href=
+"#pg279">279</a>, <a href="#pg280">280</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Nicholas IV., Pope, <a href="#pg171">171</a>, <a href=
+"#pg199">199</a>, <a href="#pg447">447</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Nicolas's <i>History of the Royal Navy</i>, <a href=
+"#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Nine, Council of, <a href="#pg119">119</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Niort, <a href="#pg032">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Nivernais, the, <a href="#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Norfolk, <a href="#pg206">206</a>, <a href="#pg447">447</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>earldom of, <a href="#pg224">224</a>, <a href=
+"#pg278">278</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Norfolk, Roger Bigod, Earl of, <a href="#pg023">23</a>, <a
+href="#pg066">66</a>, <a href="#pg099">99</a>-100, <a href=
+"#pg103">103</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Norfolk, Roger Bigod, Earl of, nephew of above, <a href=
+"#pg202">202</a>, <a href="#pg204">204</a>, <a href=
+"#pg206">206</a>, <a href="#pg213">213</a>, <a href=
+"#pg216">216</a>, <a href="#pg218">218</a>, <a href=
+"#pg223">223</a>, <a href="#pg224">224</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Norfolk, Thomas of Brotherton, Earl of See Thomas.</li>
+
+<li>Norham Castle, <a href="#pg181">181</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Norman architecture, <a href="#pg304">304</a>, <a href=
+"#pg423">423</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Normandy, <a href="#pg016">16</a>, <a href="#pg030">30</a>, <a
+href="#pg035">35</a>-37, <a href="#pg044">44</a>, <a href=
+"#pg069">69</a>, <a href="#pg073">73</a>, <a href="#pg104">104</a>,
+<a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href="#pg141">141</a>, <a href=
+"#pg294">294</a>, <a href="#pg295">295</a>, <a href=
+"#pg334">334</a>, <a href="#pg345">345</a>-347, <a href=
+"#pg352">352</a>, <a href="#pg358">358</a>-365, <a href=
+"#pg385">385</a>-388, <a href="#pg394">394</a>, <a href=
+"#pg395">395</a>, <a href="#pg400">400</a>. <a href=
+"#pg401">401</a>, <a href="#pg403">403</a>, <a href=
+"#pg414">414</a>, <a href="#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Normandy, Charles, Duke of, <a href="#pg403">403</a>. See
+Charles.</li>
+
+<li>Normandy, John, Duke of, <a href="#pg353">353</a>. See John,
+King of France.</li>
+
+<li>Normans, the, <a href="#pg103">103</a>, <a href=
+"#pg148">148</a>, <a href="#pg186">186</a>, <a href=
+"#pg187">187</a>, <a href="#pg345">345</a>, <a href=
+"#pg347">347</a>, <a href="#pg360">360</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>in Ireland, the, <a href="#pg271">271</a>, <a href=
+"#pg429">429</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Norsemen in Scotland, the, <a href="#pg263">263</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Northallerton, <a href="#pg375">375</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Northampton, <a href="#pg024">24</a>, <a href="#pg025">25</a>,
+<a href="#pg085">85</a>, <a href="#pg089">89</a>, <a href=
+"#pg114">114</a>, <a href="#pg120">120</a>. <a href=
+"#pg164">164</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>parliaments at, <a href="#pg131">131</a>, <a href=
+"#pg305">305</a>;</li>
+
+<li>treaty of Brigham confirmed at, <a href="#pg178">178</a>;</li>
+
+<li>treaty of, <a href="#pg305">305</a>, <a href="#pg315">315</a>,
+<a href="#pg319">319</a>;</li>
+
+<li>earldom of, <a href="#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Northampton, William Bohun, Earl of, <a href="#pg314">314</a>,
+<a href="#pg354">354</a>, <a href="#pg362">362</a>, <a href=
+"#pg363">363</a>, <a href="#pg366">366</a>, <a href=
+"#pg367">367</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Northamptonshire, <a href="#pg021">21</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Northburgh, Roger, Bishop of Lichfield or Coventry and
+treasurer, <a href="#pg349">349</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Northumberland, <a href="#pg131">131</a>, <a href=
+"#pg234">234</a>, <a href="#pg275">275</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Norway, Eric, King of, <a href="#pg177">177</a>. See Eric.</li>
+
+<li>Norway, Margaret, the Maid of, Queen of Scotland, <a href=
+"#pg177">177</a>-179. See Margaret.</li>
+
+<li>Norwich, <a href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href="#pg131">131</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Norwich, Bishops of. See Ayermine, William, and Pandulf.</li>
+
+<li>Nottingham, <a href="#pg085">85</a>, <a href="#pg114">114</a>,
+<a href="#pg276">276</a>, <a href="#pg308">308</a>, <a href=
+"#pg438">438</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Nouaill&eacute;, <a href="#pg390">390</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Ochils, the, <a href="#pg317">317</a>.<a name="O" id=
+"O" /></li>
+
+<li>Ockham, William of, <a href="#pg425">425</a>.</li>
+
+<li>O'Connor, Phelim, King of Connaught. See Connaught.</li>
+
+<li>Odiham, <a href="#pg008">8</a>.</li>
+
+<li>O'Donnells, the, <a href="#pg270">270</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ol&eacute;ron, Isle of, <a href="#pg020">20</a>, <a href=
+"#pg032">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Oliver, illegitimate son of King John, g.</li>
+
+<li>Oloron, treaty of, <a href="#pg171">171</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Oman's <i>History of the Art of War in the Middle Ages</i>, <a
+href="#pg462">462</a>, <a href="#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>O'Neils, the, <a href="#pg270">270</a>, <a href=
+"#pg271">271</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Oise, the river, <a href="#pg328">328</a>, <a href=
+"#pg340">340</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ordainers, the Lords, <a href="#pg244">244</a>, <a href=
+"#pg247">247</a>-249, <a href="#pg263">263</a>, <a href=
+"#pg264">264</a>, <a href="#pg274">274</a>, <a href=
+"#pg277">277</a>, <a href="#pg300">300</a>, <a href=
+"#pg306">306</a>, <a href="#pg437">437</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Order of the Garter, the, <a href="#pg356">356</a>, <a href=
+"#pg380">380</a>, <a href="#pg381">381</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Order of the Star, the, <a href="#pg381">381</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Orders, the Religious, <a href="#pg084">84</a>-88, <a href=
+"#pg376">376</a>, <a href="#pg377">377</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Orders of Friars, <a href="#pg084">84</a>, <a href=
+"#pg085">85</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Orewyn Bridge, battle of, <a href="#pg163">163</a>, <a href=
+"#pg164">164</a>, <a href="#pg190">190</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Originalia</i> Rolls, the, <a href="#pg446">446</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Orkneys, the, <a href="#pg179">179</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Orleans, Duke of, <a href="#pg390">390</a>-392.</li>
+
+<li>Orleton, Adam, Bishop of Hereford, <a href="#pg293">293</a>, <a
+href="#pg296">296</a>, <a href="#pg300">300</a>-303, <a href=
+"#pg305">305</a>, <a href="#pg350">350</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ormonde, the Butler of Ireland, made Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg307">307</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ormesby, William, justiciar, <a href="#pg198">198</a>, <a href=
+"#pg205">205</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Orne, the river, <a href="#pg360">360</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Orvieto, <a href="#pg139">139</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Orwell, port and river, <a href="#pg299">299</a>, <a href=
+"#pg344">344</a>, <a href="#pg349">349</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Oseney Abbey, <a href="#pg020">20</a>, <a href="#pg057">57</a>;
+
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>Annals</i> of, <a href="#pg455">455</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Oswestry, <a href="#pg167">167</a>, <a href=
+"#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>O'Tooles, the, <a href="#pg271">271</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Otto, nuncio to England, <a href="#pg027">27</a>, <a href=
+"#pg028">28</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>legate, <a href="#pg057">57</a>-61, <a href=
+"#pg092">92</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Otto, Count of Burgundy, <a href="#pg330">330</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ottobon, Cardinal, legate, <a href="#pg128">128</a>, <a href=
+"#pg130">130</a>, <a href="#pg132">132</a>-134.</li>
+
+<li>Ottocar, King of Bohemia, <a href="#pg080">80</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ouistreham, <a href="#pg360">360</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ouse, the river, <a href="#pg116">116</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Owain <i>Lawgoch. See</i> Owen of Wales.</li>
+
+<li>Owen of Wales, Sir Owen ap Thomas ap Rhodri, <a href=
+"#pg414">414</a>, <a href="#pg416">416</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Owen the Red, son of Griffith ap Llewelyn, <a href=
+"#pg075">75</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Owens College <i>Historical Essays</i>, <a href=
+"#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Oxford, <a href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href="#pg011">11</a>, <a
+href="#pg028">28</a>, <a href="#pg046">46</a>, <a href=
+"#pg050">50</a>, <a href="#pg057">57</a>-59, <a href=
+"#pg084">84</a>, <a href="#pg085">85</a>, <a href="#pg099">99</a>,
+<a href="#pg102">102</a>, <a href="#pg107">107</a>, <a href=
+"#pg114">114</a>, <a href="#pg251">251</a>, <a href=
+"#pg254">254</a>, <a href="#pg300">300</a>, <a href=
+"#pg329">329</a>, <a href="#pg370">370</a>, <a href=
+"#pg376">376</a>, <a href="#pg423">423</a>, <a href=
+"#pg431">431</a>, <a href="#pg434">434</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>University of, <a href="#pg089">89</a>-93, <a href=
+"#pg120">120</a>, <a href="#pg199">199</a>, <a href=
+"#pg251">251</a>, <a href="#pg375">375</a>, <a href=
+"#pg376">376</a>, <a href="#pg424">424</a>-426.</li>
+
+<li>Balliol College, <a href="#pg093">93</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Merton College, <a href="#pg093">93</a>.</li>
+
+<li>the Provisions of, <a href="#pg100">100</a>-104, <a href=
+"#pg109">109</a>-113, <a href="#pg119">119</a>, <a href=
+"#pg125">125</a>, <a href="#pg194">194</a>, <a href=
+"#pg202">202</a>.</li>
+
+<li>parliament at, <a href="#pg113">113</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Exeter College, <a href="#pg292">292</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Oxfordshire, <a href="#pg250">250</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Oxnead, John of, <a href="#pg456">456</a>, Pai</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Painting in Westminster Abbey, <a href="#pg096">96</a>.<a name=
+"P" id="P" /></li>
+
+<li>Palatine, the Elector, <a href="#pg080">80</a>, <a href=
+"#pg332">332</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Palermo, <a href="#pg079">79</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Palestine, <a href="#pg028">28</a>, <a href="#pg134">134</a>,
+<a href="#pg135">135</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Palestrina, Cardinal-bishop of, <a href="#pg354">354</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Palgrave's, Sir F.T., <i>Parliamentary Writs and Writs of
+Military Service</i>, <a href="#pg444">444</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>his <i>Documents illustrating the History of Scotland</i>, <a
+href="#pg449">449</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Pamplona, <a href="#pg405">405</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pandulf, Papal Legate and Bishop of Norwich, <a href=
+"#pg017">17</a>, <a href="#pg018">18</a>, <a href="#pg021">21</a>,
+<a href="#pg024">24</a>, <a href="#pg057">57</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pantheism, <a href="#pg090">90</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Papacy, the, <a href="#pg029">29</a>, <a href="#pg078">78</a>,
+<a href="#pg088">88</a>, <a href="#pg377">377</a>-379.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See also under Popes.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Paris, <a href="#pg050">50</a>, <a href="#pg059">59</a>, <a
+href="#pg069">69</a>, <a href="#pg084">84</a>, <a href=
+"#pg085">85</a>, <a href="#pg089">89</a>, <a href="#pg096">96</a>,
+<a href="#pg104">104</a>, <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href=
+"#pg120">120</a>, <a href="#pg129">129</a>, <a href=
+"#pg140">140</a>, <a href="#pg170">170</a>, <a href=
+"#pg187">187</a>, <a href="#pg193">193</a>, <a href=
+"#pg194">194</a>, <a href="#pg211">211</a>, <a href=
+"#pg296">296</a>-298, <a href="#pg326">326</a>, <a href=
+"#pg329">329</a>, <a href="#pg333">333</a>, <a href=
+"#pg334">334</a>, <a href="#pg353">353</a>, <a href=
+"#pg361">361</a>, <a href="#pg379">379</a>, <a href=
+"#pg393">393</a>, <a href="#pg394">394</a>, <a href=
+"#pg396">396</a>, <a href="#pg411">411</a>, <a href=
+"#pg413">413</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>University of, <a href="#pg083">83</a>, <a href=
+"#pg089">89</a>, <a href="#pg093">93</a>.</li>
+
+<li>College of the Sorbonne in, <a href="#pg093">93</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cathedral of, <a href="#pg096">96</a>.</li>
+
+<li>parliament of, <a href="#pg141">141</a>, <a href=
+"#pg294">294</a>, <a href="#pg295">295</a>, <a href=
+"#pg353">353</a>, <a href="#pg413">413</a>.</li>
+
+<li>treaty of (1259), <a href="#pg104">104</a>-107, <a href=
+"#pg140">140</a>, <a href="#pg142">142</a>.</li>
+
+<li>treaty of (1303), <a href="#pg222">222</a>, <a href=
+"#pg225">225</a>.</li>
+
+<li>treaty of (1327), <a href="#pg324">324</a>, <a href=
+"#pg325">325</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Paris, Matthew, <a href="#pg014">14</a>, <a href=
+"#pg040">40</a>, <a href="#pg061">61</a>, <a href="#pg066">66</a>,
+<a href="#pg076">76</a>, <a href="#pg087">87</a>, <a href=
+"#pg093">93</a>, <a href="#pg094">94</a>, <a href="#pg435">435</a>,
+<a href="#pg451">451</a>-453.</li>
+
+<li>Parliament, of 1257, <a href="#pg079">79</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>the mad (1258), of Oxford, <a href="#pg099">99</a>-101, <a
+href="#pg104">104</a>, <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href=
+"#pg243">243</a>.</li>
+
+<li>growth Of, <a href="#pg101">101</a>, <a href="#pg102">102</a>,
+<a href="#pg108">108</a>, <a href="#pg248">248</a>, <a href=
+"#pg421">421</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at Oxford (1264), <a href="#pg113">113</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at Northampton (1267), <a href="#pg131">131</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at Bury (1267), <a href="#pg131">131</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of 1273, <a href="#pg139">139</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at Westminster (1275), <a href="#pg147">147</a>, <a href=
+"#pg153">153</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of 1283, <a href="#pg164">164</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at Shrewsbury (1284), <a href="#pg165">165</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at Acton Burnell (1284), <a href="#pg165">165</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of 1289, <a href="#pg172">172</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at London (1294), <a href="#pg194">194</a>.</li>
+
+<li>the model(1295), <a href="#pg195">195</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of the perambulation (1300), <a href="#pg217">217</a>, <a href=
+"#pg218">218</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at Lincoln (1301), <a href="#pg218">218</a>, <a href=
+"#pg220">220</a>, <a href="#pg223">223</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at Westminster (1305), <a href="#pg227">227</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of Carlisle (1307), <a href="#pg230">230</a>, <a href=
+"#pg231">231</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of 1308, <a href="#pg241">241</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at Westminster (1309), <a href="#pg242">242</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at Stamford (1309), <a href="#pg242">242</a>, <a href=
+"#pg245">245</a>, <a href="#pg254">254</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of London (1310), <a href="#pg243">243</a>, <a href=
+"#pg244">244</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at London (1315), <a href="#pg265">265</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at Lincoln (1316), <a href="#pg265">265</a>.</li>
+
+<li>the Irish, <a href="#pg269">269</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at York (1318), <a href="#pg274">274</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at York (1319), <a href="#pg276">276</a>.</li>
+
+<li>in London (July, 1320), <a href="#pg281">281</a>, <a href=
+"#pg282">282</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at York (May, 1322), <a href="#pg287">287</a>-289.</li>
+
+<li>at Westminster (January, 1327), <a href="#pg301">301</a></li>
+
+<li>at Salisbury (October, 1328), <a href="#pg307">307</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at Northampton (1329), <a href="#pg305">305</a>.</li>
+
+<li>at Winchester (March, 1330), <a href="#pg307">307</a>.</li>
+
+<li>prorogued to Westminster (November, 1330), <a href=
+"#pg308">308</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of April <a href="#pg023">23</a>, 1341, <a href=
+"#pg350">350</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of April, 1343, <a href="#pg351">351</a>, <a href=
+"#pg352">352</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of 1347, <a href="#pg366">366</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of 1371, <a href="#pg432">432</a>, <a href=
+"#pg433">433</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of 1372, <a href="#pg433">433</a>.</li>
+
+<li>the Good (April, 1376), <a href="#pg435">435</a>-438.</li>
+
+<li>of 1377, <a href="#pg438">438</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of Paris, see Paris, parliament of.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Parthenai, <a href="#pg062">62</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Passelewe, Robert, <a href="#pg043">43</a>, <a href=
+"#pg044">44</a>, <a href="#pg055">55</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Pastaureaux</i>, the, <a href="#pg071">71</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Patrick, Earl of March, <a href="#pg197">197</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See also March (Scotland), Earl of.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Pauli's, R., <i>Geschichte von England</i>, <a href=
+"#pg462">462</a>, <a href="#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pavia, Galeazzo Visconti, Lord of, <a href=
+"#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Paynel, Fulk, <a href="#pg035">35</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Pearl</i>, the, poem of, <a href="#pg421">421</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Peasants' revolt, the, <a href="#pg424">424</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Peasants, revolts of French, <a href="#pg394">394</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Peckham, John, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href=
+"#pg162">162</a>, <a href="#pg163">163</a>, <a href=
+"#pg167">167</a>, <a href="#pg175">175</a>, <a href=
+"#pg184">184</a>184, <a href="#pg199">199</a>, <a href=
+"#pg449">449</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Peebles, <a href="#pg321">321</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Pell Records</i>, the, <a href="#pg447">447</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pembroke, earldom of, <a href="#pg189">189</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pembroke, Gilbert Marshal, Earl of, <a href="#pg051">51</a>, <a
+href="#pg058">58</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pembroke, Richard Marshal. Earl of, <a href="#pg045">45</a>-51,
+<a href="#pg053">53</a>, <a href="#pg056">56</a>, <a href=
+"#pg087">87</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pembroke, William Marshal, the elder, Regent and Earl of, <a
+href="#pg001">1-18</a>, <a href="#pg023">23</a>, <a href=
+"#pg040">40</a>, <a href="#pg209">209</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>History of</i>, <a href="#pg016">16</a>, <a href=
+"#pg095">95</a>, <a href="#pg454">454</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Pembroke, William Marshal, the younger, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg016">16</a>, <a href="#pg023">23</a>, <a href="#pg024">24</a>,
+<a href="#pg351">351</a>, <a href="#pg454">454</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pembroke, Aymer of Valence, Earl of, <a href="#pg234">234</a>,
+<a href="#pg235">235</a>, <a href="#pg240">240</a>, <a href=
+"#pg244">244</a>, <a href="#pg249">249</a>-253, <a href=
+"#pg268">268</a>, <a href="#pg272">272</a>-274, <a href=
+"#pg276">276</a>, <a href="#pg277">277</a>, <a href=
+"#pg279">279</a>, <a href="#pg283">283</a>, <a href=
+"#pg288">288</a>, <a href="#pg290">290</a>, <a href=
+"#pg291">291</a>, <a href="#pg306">306</a>, <a href=
+"#pg314">314</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pembroke. John Hastings, second Earl of that house, <a href=
+"#pg415">415</a>, <a href="#pg432">432</a>, <a href=
+"#pg433">433</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pembroke. William of. See William of Valence.</li>
+
+<li>Pembrokeshire, palatine county of, <a href="#pg023">23</a>, <a
+href="#pg047">47</a>, <a href="#pg124">124</a>, <a href=
+"#pg125">125</a>, <a href="#pg166">166</a>, <a href=
+"#pg265">265</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Penance of Jesus Christ, Friars of the, <a href=
+"#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Penne, <a href="#pg324">324</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Penrith, <a href="#pg177">177</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Penthi&egrave;vre, county of, <a href="#pg352">352</a>-354, <a
+href="#pg368">368</a>, <a href="#pg402">402</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Penthi&egrave;vre-Tr&eacute;guier, county of, <a href=
+"#pg352">352</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Perche, Count of, <a href="#pg008">8-10</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Percy, Henry, grandson of Earl Warenne, <a href=
+"#pg206">206</a>, <a href="#pg212">212</a>, <a href=
+"#pg249">249</a>, <a href="#pg250">250</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Percy, Henry, marshal of England, <a href=
+"#pg438">438</a>-440.</li>
+
+<li>Percy, Sir Thomas, seneschal of Poitou, <a href=
+"#pg415">415</a>, <a href="#pg416">416</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Percy, the family of, <a href="#pg365">365</a>.</li>
+
+<li>P&eacute;rigord, <a href="#pg032">32</a>, <a href=
+"#pg100">100</a>, <a href="#pg358">358</a>, <a href=
+"#pg384">384</a>, <a href="#pg397">397</a>.</li>
+
+<li>P&eacute;rigord, Count of, <a href="#pg389">389</a>.</li>
+
+<li>P&eacute;rigueux, <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href=
+"#pg357">357</a>, <a href="#pg387">387</a>, <a href=
+"#pg388">388</a>, <a href="#pg412">412</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>bishopric of, <a href="#pg140">140</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>P&eacute;ronne, <a href="#pg340">340</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Perpendicular style in architecture, <a href=
+"#pg304">304</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Perrers, Alice, <a href="#pg434">434</a>, <a href=
+"#pg436">436</a>-438. <a href="#pg440">440</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Perth, <a href="#pg197">197</a>, <a href="#pg215">215</a>, <a
+href="#pg225">225</a>, <a href="#pg234">234</a>, <a href=
+"#pg245">245</a>, <a href="#pg258">258</a>, <a href=
+"#pg317">317</a>, <a href="#pg318">318</a>, <a href=
+"#pg322">322</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pertz's <i>Monumenta</i>, <a href="#pg454">454</a>, <a href=
+"#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Peruzzi, the, <a href="#pg356">356</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Perveddwlad, <a href="#pg075">75</a>, <a href=
+"#pg076">76</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Peter, Cardinal. See Gomez, Peter.</li>
+
+<li>Peter III., King of Aragon, <a href="#pg146">146</a>, <a href=
+"#pg169">169</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Peter Mauclerc, Count of Brittany, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a
+href="#pg008">8</a>, <a href="#pg033">33</a>, <a href=
+"#pg035">35</a>, <a href="#pg036">36</a>, <a href="#pg056">56</a>,
+<a href="#pg062">62</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Peter of Aigueblanche, Bishop of Hereford, <a href=
+"#pg055">55</a>, <a href="#pg056">56</a>,
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Aigueblanche.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Peter of Gaveston. See Gaveston.</li>
+
+<li>Peter of Savoy, Earl of Richmond, <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a
+href="#pg108">108</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Peter of Spain, Cardinal, <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Peter Roger, Archbishop of Rouen. See Roger, Peter, and Clement
+VI.</li>
+
+<li>Peter the Chamberlain, <a href="#pg119">119</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Peter the Cruel, King of Castile, <a href="#pg370">370</a>, <a
+href="#pg403">403</a>, <a href="#pg411">411</a>, <a href=
+"#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Peterhouse, Cambridge, <a href="#pg093">93</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Peter's Pence, <a href="#pg378">378</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Petit's <i>Charles de Valois</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Petit-Dutaillis, M., <a href="#pg454">454</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>his <i>&Eacute;tude sur Louis VIII.</i>., <a href=
+"#pg462">462</a>, <a href="#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Petrarch, Francis, <a href="#pg402">402</a>, <a href=
+"#pg421">421</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Petrariae</i>, <a href="#pg026">26</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pevensey Castle, <a href="#pg117">117</a>, <a href=
+"#pg120">120</a>, <a href="#pg136">136</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Philip II., Augustus, King of France, <a href="#pg001">1</a>,
+<a href="#pg003">3</a>, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a href=
+"#pg023">23</a>, <a href="#pg029">29</a>-31, <a href=
+"#pg104">104</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Philip III., the Bold, King of France, <a href=
+"#pg134">134</a>, <a href="#pg140">140</a>-146, <a href=
+"#pg169">169</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Philip IV., the Fair, King of France, <a href="#pg146">146</a>,
+<a href="#pg170">170</a>, <a href="#pg186">186</a>-196, <a href=
+"#pg199">199</a>-201, <a href="#pg203">203</a>, <a href=
+"#pg210">210</a>-212, <a href="#pg216">216</a>-218, <a href=
+"#pg221">221</a>-223, <a href="#pg229">229</a>, <a href=
+"#pg239">239</a>, <a href="#pg256">256</a>, <a href=
+"#pg294">294</a>, <a href="#pg324">324</a>, <a href=
+"#pg345">345</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Philip V., the Long, King of France, <a href="#pg295">295</a>,
+<a href="#pg325">325</a>, <a href="#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Philip VI. of Valois, King of France, <a href="#pg311">311</a>,
+<a href="#pg320">320</a>, <a href="#pg325">325</a>-348, <a href=
+"#pg351">351</a>-364, <a href="#pg367">367</a>, <a href=
+"#pg368">368</a>, <a href="#pg460">460</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Philip, Count of Savoy, <a href="#pg139">139</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Philip, Count of Valois, <a href="#pg325">325</a>. See also
+Philip VI., King of France.</li>
+
+<li>Philip of Navarre, <a href="#pg388">388</a>, <a href=
+"#pg398">398</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Philip of Rouvres, Duke of Burgundy, <a href="#pg400">400</a>,
+<a href="#pg409">409</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Philip the Bold, Count of &Eacute;vreux, <a href=
+"#pg385">385</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Philip the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, son of John, King of France,
+<a href="#pg392">392</a>, <a href="#pg398">398</a>, <a href=
+"#pg400">400</a>, <a href="#pg410">410</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Philippa, daughter of Lionel, Duke of Clarence, Countess of
+March, <a href="#pg430">430</a>, <a href="#pg434">434</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Philippa of Hainault, Queen of Edward III., <a href=
+"#pg298">298</a>, <a href="#pg299">299</a>, <a href=
+"#pg305">305</a>, <a href="#pg308">308</a>, <a href=
+"#pg317">317</a>, <a href="#pg331">331</a>, <a href=
+"#pg356">356</a>, <a href="#pg410">410</a>, <a href=
+"#pg419">419</a>, <a href="#pg420">420</a>, <a href=
+"#pg432">432</a>, <a href="#pg434">434</a>, <a href=
+"#pg438">438</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Philippine, daughter of Guy of Dampierre, Count of Flanders, <a
+href="#pg192">192</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Philpots, the, <a href="#pg426">426</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Philobiblon,</i> the, of Richard of Bury, 3IO.</li>
+
+<li>Philosophy, <a href="#pg083">83</a>, <a href=
+"#pg093">93</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Picardy, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a href="#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pike, L.O., his editions of the <i>Year Books</i>, <a href=
+"#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pipe, James, <a href="#pg394">394</a>, <a href=
+"#pg400">400</a>, <a href="#pg402">402</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pipe Rolls, <a href="#pg446">446</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pipton, treaty of, <a href="#pg125">125</a>, <a href=
+"#pg133">133</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pirenne's <i>Bibliographie de l'histoire de Belgique</i>, <a
+href="#pg460">460</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>Histoire de Belgique</i>, <a href="#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Pisa, Agnellus of. See Agnellus.</li>
+
+<li>Plague, the. See Black Death.</li>
+
+<li>Plays, miracle, <a href="#pg423">423</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Plessis, John du, Earl of Warwick, <a href="#pg099">99</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Warwick.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Ploermel, <a href="#pg354">354</a>, <a href="#pg355">355</a>,
+<a href="#pg383">383</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Plympton, <a href="#pg026">26</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Poissy, <a href="#pg361">361</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Poitevins, <a href="#pg030">30</a>, <a href="#pg031">31</a>, <a
+href="#pg044">44</a>, <a href="#pg047">47</a>, <a href=
+"#pg051">51</a>, <a href="#pg053">53</a>, <a href="#pg055">55</a>,
+<a href="#pg065">65</a>, <a href="#pg084">84</a>, <a href=
+"#pg098">98</a>, <a href="#pg099">99</a>, <a href="#pg102">102</a>,
+<a href="#pg103">103</a>, <a href="#pg107">107</a>, <a href=
+"#pg115">115</a>, <a href="#pg117">117</a>, <a href=
+"#pg451">451</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Poitiers, <a href="#pg030">30</a>, <a href="#pg031">31</a>, <a
+href="#pg047">47</a>, <a href="#pg190">190</a>, <a href=
+"#pg358">358</a>, <a href="#pg389">389</a>, <a href=
+"#pg394">394</a>, <a href="#pg397">397</a>, <a href=
+"#pg399">399</a>, <a href="#pg416">416</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>battle of, <a href="#pg390">390</a>-392, <a href=
+"#pg401">401</a>, <a href="#pg402">402</a>, <a href=
+"#pg412">412</a>, <a href="#pg434">434</a>.</li>
+
+<li>sources for, <a href="#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Poitiers, Alfonse of. See Alfonse.</li>
+
+<li>Poitou, <a href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href="#pg025">25</a>, <a
+href="#pg027">27</a>, <a href="#pg030">30</a>-32, <a href=
+"#pg034">34</a>-37, <a href="#pg041">41</a> <a href=
+"#pg043">43</a>, <a href="#pg047">47</a>, <a href="#pg053">53</a>,
+<a href="#pg062">62</a>, <a href="#pg064">64</a>, <a href=
+"#pg105">105</a>, <a href="#pg229">229</a>, <a href=
+"#pg358">358</a>, <a href="#pg383">383</a>, <a href=
+"#pg397">397</a>, 39, <a href="#pg400">400</a>, <a href=
+"#pg404">404</a>, <a href="#pg407">407</a>, <a href=
+"#pg412">412</a>, <a href="#pg415">415</a>, <a href=
+"#pg416">416</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>scutage of, <a href="#pg040">40</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Poitou, Count of, Richard, son of King John, Count of. See
+Richard.</li>
+
+<li>Polain's edition of <i>Jean le Bel</i>, <a href=
+"#pg460">460</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pole, the house of, <a href="#pg426">426</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pole, William de la, <a href="#pg356">356</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pollock, Sir P., and Maitland's <i>History of English Law</i>,
+<a href="#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Polychronicon,</i> Higden's, <a href="#pg458">458</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pons, <a href="#pg064">64</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pont-Sainte-Maxence, <a href="#pg328">328</a>, <a href=
+"#pg329">329</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pontefract, <a href="#pg273">273</a>, <a href="#pg276">276</a>,
+<a href="#pg281">281</a>, <a href="#pg284">284</a>-286, <a href=
+"#pg292">292</a>, <a href="#pg293">293</a>, <a href=
+"#pg304">304</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Castle, <a href="#pg264">264</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Ponthieu, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a href="#pg054">54</a>, <a
+href="#pg073">73</a>, <a href="#pg164">164</a>, <a href=
+"#pg224">224</a>, <a href="#pg296">296</a>, <a href=
+"#pg297">297</a>, <a href="#pg327">327</a>, <a href=
+"#pg333">333</a>, <a href="#pg362">362</a>, <a href=
+"#pg363">363</a>, <a href="#pg385">385</a>, <a href=
+"#pg395">395</a>, <a href="#pg411">411</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pontigny, <a href="#pg060">60</a>, <a href=
+"#pg074">74</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pontoise, <a href="#pg361">361</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pontvallain, battle of, <a href="#pg414">414</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Poole's, R.L., <i>Mediæval Thought</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his <i>Wycliffe</i>, <a href="#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>his <i>Oxford Historical Atlas</i>, <a href=
+"#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Popes.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See under Innocent III.,</li>
+
+<li>Honorius III.,</li>
+
+<li>Gregory IX.,</li>
+
+<li>Innocent IV.,</li>
+
+<li>Alexander IV.,</li>
+
+<li>Urban IV.,</li>
+
+<li>Clement IV.,</li>
+
+<li>Gregory X.,</li>
+
+<li>Nicholas III.,</li>
+
+<li>Martin IV.,</li>
+
+<li>Honorius IV.,</li>
+
+<li>Nicholas IV.,</li>
+
+<li>Celestine V.,</li>
+
+<li>Boniface VIII.,</li>
+
+<li>Benedict XL,</li>
+
+<li>Clement V.,</li>
+
+<li>John XXII.,</li>
+
+<li>Benedict XII.,</li>
+
+<li>Clement VI.,</li>
+
+<li>Urban V.,</li>
+
+<li>Gregory XL.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Port Blanc, <a href="#pg035">35</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ports, the Cinque, <a href="#pg001">1</a>, <a href=
+"#pg007">7</a>, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a href=
+"#pg113">113</a>-115, <a href="#pg122">122</a>, <a href=
+"#pg129">129</a>, <a href="#pg161">161</a>, <a href=
+"#pg186">186</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Portsmouth, <a href="#pg034">34</a>-36, <a href=
+"#pg063">63</a>, <a href="#pg186">186</a>, <a href=
+"#pg188">188</a>, <a href="#pg189">189</a>, <a href=
+"#pg192">192</a>, <a href="#pg334">334</a>, <a href=
+"#pg359">359</a>, <a href="#pg412">412</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Portugal, Ferdinand of, <a href="#pg055">55</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Powys, <a href="#pg076">76</a>, <a href="#pg267">267</a>, <a
+href="#pg306">306</a>, <a href="#pg414">414</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>Castle, <a href="#pg267">267</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Powys, Charltons of. See Charltons.</li>
+
+<li><i>Praemunire</i> statute of, <a href="#pg230">230</a>, <a
+href="#pg378">378</a>, <a href="#pg426">426</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Preachers, Order of, <a href="#pg084">84</a>, <a href=
+"#pg087">87</a>. See Dominicans.</li>
+
+<li>Pressuti's Registers of <i>Honorius III.</i>, <a href=
+"#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Preston, <a href="#pg289">289</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Prices, rise in, after the Black Death, <a href=
+"#pg373">373</a>, <a href="#pg374">374</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Principality of Wales, the, <a href="#pg165">165</a>-167.</li>
+
+<li>Priories, the alien, <a href="#pg377">377</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Proclamation in English, French and Latin, <a href=
+"#pg103">103</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Prothero's <i>Simon de Montfort</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Proven&ccedil;als, <a href="#pg053">53</a>, <a href=
+"#pg057">57</a>, <a href="#pg084">84</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Provence, <a href="#pg054">54</a>, <a href="#pg063">63</a>, <a
+href="#pg064">64</a>, <a href="#pg134">134</a>, <a href=
+"#pg144">144</a>, <a href="#pg146">146</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Provence, Raymond Berengar IV., Count of, <a href=
+"#pg054">54</a>.
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Raymond Berengar.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Proving, <a href="#pg146">146</a>, <a href=
+"#pg171">171</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Provisions, papal, <a href="#pg038">38</a>, <a href=
+"#pg039">39</a>, <a href="#pg058">58</a>, <a href="#pg150">150</a>,
+<a href="#pg151">151</a>, <a href="#pg256">256</a>, <a href=
+"#pg377">377</a>, <a href="#pg378">378</a>, <a href=
+"#pg426">426</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>of Oxford, the, <a href="#pg100">100</a>-104, <a href=
+"#pg109">109</a>-113, <a href="#pg119">119</a>, <a href=
+"#pg125">125</a>, <a href="#pg131">131</a>, <a href=
+"#pg194">194</a>, <a href="#pg202">202</a>, <a href=
+"#pg248">248</a>, <a href="#pg435">435</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of Westminster, the, <a href="#pg108">108</a>, <a href=
+"#pg134">134</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of Worcester, <a href="#pg121">121</a>, <a href=
+"#pg124">124</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Provisors, statute of, <a href="#pg377">377</a>, <a href=
+"#pg378">378</a>, <a href="#pg426">426</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Public Record Office, the, <a href="#pg443">443</a>, <a href=
+"#pg448">448</a>, <a href="#pg449">449</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Purveyance, <a href="#pg242">242</a>, <a href="#pg247">247</a>,
+<a href="#pg380">380</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Puymirol, <a href="#pg324">324</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pyel, John, mayor of London, <a href="#pg427">427</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pyrenees, the, <a href="#pg069">69</a>, <a href=
+"#pg141">141</a>, <a href="#pg192">192</a>, <a href=
+"#pg406">406</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Quercy, <a href="#pg106">106</a>, <a href="#pg140">140</a>, <a
+href="#pg170">170</a>, <a href="#pg384">384</a>, <a href=
+"#pg397">397</a>, <a href="#pg399">399</a>, <a href=
+"#pg411">411</a>, <a href="#pg415">415</a>.<a name="Q" id=
+"Q" /></li>
+
+<li><i>Quia Emptores</i> statute, <a href="#pg173">173</a>, <a
+href="#pg185">185</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Qui&egrave;ret, Hugh, <a href="#pg345">345</a>-347</li>
+
+<li>Quincy, Saer de, Earl of Winchester. See Winchester.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Rageman, statute of, <a href="#pg148">148</a>.<a name="R" id=
+"R" /></li>
+
+<li>Ragman. Roll, the, <a href="#pg198">198</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rance, the river, <a href="#pg352">352</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Randolph, Sir Thomas, Earl of Moray, <a href=
+"#pg315">315</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rashdall's <i>Universities of the Middle Ages</i>, <a href=
+"#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rathlin Island, <a href="#pg234">234</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rationalism, <a href="#pg091">91</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ravenspur, <a href="#pg317">317</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Raymond Berengar IV., Count of Provence, <a href=
+"#pg054">54</a>, <a href="#pg063">63</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Raymond VII., Count of Toulouse, <a href="#pg033">33</a>-35, <a
+href="#pg062">62</a>, <a href="#pg071">71</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Record of Carnarvon, the, <a href="#pg449">449</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Record Commission, the, <a href="#pg443">443</a>, <a href=
+"#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Records, as sources for history, <a href="#pg443">443</a>-451;
+
+<ul>
+<li>of Court of Chancery, <a href="#pg443">443</a>, <a href=
+"#pg444">444</a>;</li>
+
+<li>of Court of Exchequer, <a href="#pg443">443</a>;</li>
+
+<li>of Common Law Courts, <a href="#pg447">447</a>;</li>
+
+<li>of King's Bench and Court of Common Pleas;</li>
+
+<li>of Scotland, <a href="#pg447">447</a>, <a href=
+"#pg448">448</a>;</li>
+
+<li>Welsh, <a href="#pg449">449</a>;</li>
+
+<li>Papal, <a href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li><i>Recueil des historiens de la France</i>, begun by Dom
+Bouquet, <a href="#pg453">453</a>, <a href="#pg459">459</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Red Hills, the, <a href="#pg365">365</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Redesdale, <a href="#pg197">197</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Redesdale, Gilbert of Umfraville, Lord of. See Umfraville.</li>
+
+<li>Regalis Devotionis, Bull, <a href="#pg229">229</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Reginald, Count of Gelderland, <a href="#pg332">332</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Registers, Bishops, <a href="#pg449">449</a>, <a href=
+"#pg450">450</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Papal Calendars of, <a href="#pg449">449</a>, <a href=
+"#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Reims, <a href="#pg395">395</a> <a href="#pg396">396</a>, <a
+href="#pg413">413</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Reims, Archbishop of, <a href="#pg019">19</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Renaissance of the twelfth century, the, <a href=
+"#pg088">88</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rennes, <a href="#pg388">388</a>.</li>
+
+<li>R&eacute;ole, La, <a href="#pg032">32</a>, <a href=
+"#pg296">296</a>, <a href="#pg297">297</a>, <a href=
+"#pg358">358</a>, <a href="#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Reports of Deputy-keeper of the Records</i>, <a href=
+"#pg449">449</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>of Historical Manuscripts Commission</i>, <a href=
+"#pg449">449</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Revolt, the peasants', <a href="#pg424">424</a>. Reynolds,
+Walter, Treasurer of England and Archbishop of Canterbury <a href=
+"#pg238">238</a>, <a href="#pg256">256</a>, <a href=
+"#pg257">257</a>, <a href="#pg283">283</a>, <a href=
+"#pg299">299</a>, <a href="#pg300">300</a>, <a href=
+"#pg301">301</a>, <a href="#pg302">302</a>, <a href=
+"#pg307">307</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rhine, the, <a href="#pg335">335</a>, <a href=
+"#pg336">336</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rhine, Count Palatine of the, <a href="#pg080">80</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rhineland, the, <a href="#pg191">191</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rhos, Cantred of, <a href="#pg167">167</a>, <a href=
+"#pg189">189</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rhone Valley, the, <a href="#pg418">418</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rhuddlan Castle, <a href="#pg161">161</a>, <a href=
+"#pg162">162</a>, <a href="#pg164">164</a>, <a href=
+"#pg166">166</a>, <a href="#pg167">167</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rhunoviog, Cantred of, <a href="#pg189">189</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rhys ap Howel, <a href="#pg300">300</a>, <a href=
+"#pg301">301</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rhys ap Meredith, <a href="#pg161">161</a>, <a href=
+"#pg168">168</a>, <a href="#pg172">172</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rhys, J., and J.G. Evans' <i>Red Book of Hergest</i>, <a href=
+"#pg458">458</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rich, St. Edmund, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href=
+"#pg050">50</a>, <a href="#pg051">51</a>, <a href="#pg054">54</a>,
+<a href="#pg057">57</a>, <a href="#pg059">59</a>, <a href=
+"#pg060">60</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Richard I., <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href="#pg393">393</a>,
+<a href="#pg406">406</a>, <a href="#pg407">407</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Richard of Bordeaux, son of the Black Prince, <a href=
+"#pg428">428</a>, <a href="#pg435">435</a>, <a href=
+"#pg437">437</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Richard, son of King John, titular Count of Poitou, Earl of
+Cornwall and King of the Romans, <a href="#pg023">23</a>, <a href=
+"#pg032">32</a>-34, <a href="#pg040">40</a>, <a href=
+"#pg041">41</a> <a href="#pg048">48</a>, <a href="#pg061">61</a>,
+<a href="#pg062">62</a>, <a href="#pg066">66</a>, <a href=
+"#pg067">67</a>, <a href="#pg077">77</a>, <a href="#pg080">80</a>,
+<a href="#pg086">86</a>, <a href="#pg099">99</a>, <a href=
+"#pg102">102</a>, <a href="#pg104">104</a>, <a href=
+"#pg105">105</a>, <a href="#pg108">108</a>, <a href=
+"#pg113">113</a>, <a href="#pg116">116</a>, <a href=
+"#pg117">117</a>, <a href="#pg129">129</a>, <a href=
+"#pg135">135</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Richmond, John, Earl of, <a href="#pg056">56</a>. See John of
+Gaunt.</li>
+
+<li>Richmond, John of Brittany, Earl of. See John of Brittany.</li>
+
+<li>Richmond, Peter Mauclerc, Earl of, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a
+href="#pg033">33</a>. See Peter, Count or Duke of Brittany.</li>
+
+<li>Richmond, Peter of Savoy, Earl of. See Peter of Savoy.</li>
+
+<li>Richmond (place), <a href="#pg365">365</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Richmond, Simon de Montfort, made Earl of. See Leicester, Earl
+of</li>
+
+<li>Rievaux, <a href="#pg289">289</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rigaud, Bishop of Winchester, <a href="#pg450">450</a></li>
+
+<li>Rigaud, Eudes, Archbishop of Rouen, <a href="#pg081">81</a>, <a
+href="#pg119">119</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rigg's, J.M., <i>Select Pleas of the Jewish Exchequer</i>, <a
+href="#pg448">448</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Riley's, H.T., his edition of <i>Rishanger</i>, etc., <a href=
+"#pg453">453</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rioms, <a href="#pg191">191</a>, <a href="#pg192">192</a>, <a
+href="#pg210">210</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ripon, <a href="#pg275">275</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rishanger, William, <a href="#pg453">453</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rivaux, Peter of, treasurer, <a href="#pg043">43</a>, <a href=
+"#pg044">44</a>, <a href="#pg046">46</a>, <a href="#pg048">48</a>,
+<a href="#pg051">51</a>, <a href="#pg055">55</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Robert I, Bruce, King of Scots, <a href="#pg233">233</a>, <a
+href="#pg235">235</a>, <a href="#pg238">238</a>, <a href=
+"#pg242">242</a>, <a href="#pg244">244</a>, <a href=
+"#pg245">245</a>, <a href="#pg249">249</a>, <a href=
+"#pg257">257</a>, <a href="#pg263">263</a>, <a href=
+"#pg266">266</a>, <a href="#pg269">269</a>-273, <a href=
+"#pg275">275</a>, <a href="#pg276">276</a>, <a href=
+"#pg284">284</a>, <a href="#pg289">289</a>-291, <a href=
+"#pg304">304</a>, <a href="#pg305">305</a>, <a href=
+"#pg315">315</a>, <a href="#pg316">316</a>, <a href=
+"#pg320">320</a>, <a href="#pg422">422</a>. See also Bruce,
+Robert.</li>
+
+<li>Robert II, Steward of Scotland, afterwards King Robert II., <a
+href="#pg393">393</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Robert, Steward of Scotland, <a href="#pg323">323</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Robert, Count of Artois, <a href="#pg196">196</a>, <a href=
+"#pg210">210</a>, <a href="#pg246">246</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Robert of Artois, enemy of Philip VI., <a href=
+"#pg330">330</a>, <a href="#pg331">331</a>, <a href=
+"#pg347">347</a>, <a href="#pg354">354</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Robert, Count of Namur, <a href="#pg459">459</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Roberts' <i>Calendarium Genealogicum</i>, <a href=
+"#pg445">445</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Roche Derien, La, battle of, <a href="#pg367">367</a>, <a href=
+"#pg368">368</a>, <a href="#pg385">385</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rochelle, La, <a href="#pg031">31</a>, <a href="#pg032">32</a>,
+<a href="#pg399">399</a>, <a href="#pg415">415</a>, <a href=
+"#pg416">416</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rochelle, battle of La, <a href="#pg415">415</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Roches, Peter des, Bishop of Winchester, <a href=
+"#pg003">3</a>, <a href="#pg004">4</a>, <a href="#pg010">10</a>, <a
+href="#pg019">19</a>, <a href="#pg020">20</a>, <a href=
+"#pg024">24</a>, <a href="#pg029">29</a>, <a href="#pg036">36</a>,
+<a href="#pg043">43</a>, <a href="#pg045">45</a>, <a href=
+"#pg050">50</a>, <a href="#pg053">53</a>, <a href="#pg084">84</a>,
+<a href="#pg081">81</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rochester, Castle and city, <a href="#pg014">14</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rockingham Castle, <a href="#pg020">20</a>, <a href=
+"#pg021">21</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rodez, Bishop of, <a href="#pg407">407</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Roger, Peter, <a href="#pg329">329</a>. See also Clement VI
+Pope.</li>
+
+<li>Rogers, J.E. Thorold, <i>History of Agriculture and Prices</i>,
+<a href="#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Roles Gascons, <a href="#pg445">445</a>, <a href=
+"#pg446">446</a>. See Rolls.</li>
+
+<li>Roll, the Ragman, <a href="#pg198">198</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rolle, Richard, <a href="#pg423">423</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rolls;
+
+<ul>
+<li>the hundred, <a href="#pg149">149</a>, <a href=
+"#pg446">446</a>.</li>
+
+<li>patent, <a href="#pg443">443</a>, <a href=
+"#pg444">444</a>.</li>
+
+<li>the close, <a href="#pg444">444</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of parliament, <a href="#pg444">444</a>.</li>
+
+<li>series, the, <a href="#pg444">444</a>, <a href=
+"#pg449">449</a>, <a href="#pg451">451</a>, <a href=
+"#pg453">453</a>, <a href="#pg457">457</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of Court of Chancery, <a href="#pg445">445</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charter, <a href="#pg445">445</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Escheat</i> or <i>Inquisitiones post mortem</i>, <a href=
+"#pg445">445</a>.</li>
+
+<li>fine, <a href="#pg445">445</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Excerpta e Rotulis Finium</i> (C. Roberts'), <a href=
+"#pg445">445</a>.</li>
+
+<li>exchequer, <a href="#pg446">446</a>, <a href=
+"#pg447">447</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Assize, <a href="#pg448">448</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Coroners, <a href="#pg448">448</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li><i>Romana Mater</i>, bull, <a href="#pg203">203</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Romances, <a href="#pg094">94</a>, <a href=
+"#pg095">95</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Romanesque architecture, <a href="#pg422">422</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Romans, Adolf of Nassau, King of the, see Adolf of Nassau;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Charles of Moravia, King of the, see Charles IV;</li>
+
+<li>Henry, King of the, see Henry;</li>
+
+<li>Rudolf of Hapsburg, King of the, see Rudolf;</li>
+
+<li>William of Holland, King of the, see William of Holland.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Rome, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a href="#pg018">18</a>, <a href=
+"#pg019">19</a>, <a href="#pg027">27</a>, <a href="#pg039">39</a>.
+<a href="#pg176">176</a>, <a href="#pg217">217</a>, <a href=
+"#pg221">221</a>, <a href="#pg418">418</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Romney, <a href="#pg007">7</a>, <a href="#pg008">8</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Romont, <a href="#pg056">56</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Romorantin Castle, <a href="#pg389">389</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Roncesvalles, Pass of, <a href="#pg404">404</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ronci&egrave;re, de la, <i>Histoire de la Marine
+Fran&ccedil;aise</i>, <a href="#pg404">404</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rose Castle, <a href="#pg258">258</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Roslin, <a href="#pg225">225</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rostein, the family of, <a href="#pg070">70</a>, <a href=
+"#pg074">74</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rotuli. See Rolls.</li>
+
+<li>Round Table at Windsor, <a href="#pg356">356</a>, <a href=
+"#pg380">380</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rouen, <a href="#pg361">361</a>, <a href="#pg387">387</a>, <a
+href="#pg414">414</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Archbishops of, <a href="#pg081">81</a>. See Rigaud, Eudes,
+Roger, Peter.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Rouergue, <a href="#pg397">397</a>, <a href="#pg400">400</a>,
+<a href="#pg407">407</a>, <a href="#pg411">411</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Counts of. See Armagnac, Count of Roussillon, <a href=
+"#pg404">404</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Roxburgh, town and castle, <a href="#pg197">197</a>, <a href=
+"#pg206">206</a>, <a href="#pg208">208</a>, <a href=
+"#pg212">212</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>, <a href=
+"#pg245">245</a>, <a href="#pg258">258</a>, <a href=
+"#pg319">319</a>-322, <a href="#pg387">387</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>treaty of, <a href="#pg320">320</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Royan, <a href="#pg063">63</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rudel, Elie, lord of Bergerac, <a href="#pg032">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rudolf of Hapsburg, King of the Romans, <a href=
+"#pg143">143</a>, <a href="#pg144">144</a>, <a href=
+"#pg169">169</a>, <a href="#pg170">170</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Runnymede, <a href="#pg005">5</a>, <a href="#pg209">209</a>, <a
+href="#pg219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ruthin, <a href="#pg162">162</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rye, <a href="#pg007">7</a>, <a href="#pg008">8</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rymer's <i>Foedera</i>, <a href="#pg450">450</a>, <a href=
+"#pg451">451</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Sabina, Guy Foulquois, Cardinal-bishop of, papal legate, <a
+href="#pg119">119</a>, <a href="#pg121">121</a><a name="S" id=
+"S" />;
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Clement IV.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Sacerdotium, the, <a href="#pg092">92</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sack, Friars of the, <a href="#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sailors, English, <a href="#pg427">427</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saints, English, honour paid to, <a href="#pg019">19</a>, <a
+href="#pg053">53</a>.</li>
+
+<li>St. Albans, <a href="#pg190">190</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>abbey, <a href="#pg435">435</a>;</li>
+
+<li>chroniclers of abbey of, <a href="#pg451">451</a>, <a href=
+"#pg454">454</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>St Albans, Abbot Simon of, <a href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>St Andrews, <a href="#pg182">182</a>, <a href="#pg215">215</a>.
+Bishops of. See Fraser and Lamberton.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Bavon, abbey of, <a href="#pg453">453</a>.</li>
+
+<li>St. Davids, Bishop of. See Bek, Thomas.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Denis, <a href="#pg361">361</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-&Eacute;milion, <a href="#pg032">32</a>, <a href=
+"#pg324">324</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Germain-en-Laye, <a href="#pg328">328</a>.</li>
+
+<li>St. Giles, John of, <a href="#pg091">91</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Gilles, house of, <a href="#pg064">64</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-James-de-Beuvron, <a href="#pg036">36</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Jean-d'Angely, <a href="#pg358">358</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port, <a href="#pg405">405</a>.</li>
+
+<li>St. John, John of, <a href="#pg188">188</a>, <a href=
+"#pg191">191</a>, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Lo, <a href="#pg360">360</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Macaire, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Mah&eacute;, <a href="#pg186">186</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Malo, <a href="#pg035">35</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Omer, <a href="#pg104">104</a>, <a href="#pg347">347</a>,
+<a href="#pg348">348</a>, <a href="#pg418">418</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Pol-de-Leon, <a href="#pg036">36</a>.</li>
+
+<li>St. Paul's, London, <a href="#pg057">57</a>, <a href=
+"#pg199">199</a>, <a href="#pg283">283</a>, <a href=
+"#pg299">299</a>, <a href="#pg440">440</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>canons of, <a href="#pg013">13</a>.</li>
+
+<li>dean of, <a href="#pg188">188</a>.</li>
+
+<li>annalist of, <a href="#pg240">240</a>.</li>
+
+<li>See also London.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Quentin, <a href="#pg340">340</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Sardos, <a href="#pg295">295</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte, <a href="#pg399">399</a>, <a href=
+"#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Sever, <a href="#pg141">141</a>, <a href=
+"#pg324">324</a>, <a href="#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Vaast-de-la-Hougue, <a href="#pg359">359</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Valery, <a href="#pg361">361</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sainte-M&egrave;re-Eglise, William of, Bishop of London, <a
+href="#pg003">3</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saints, English, <a href="#pg019">19</a>, <a href=
+"#pg053">53</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saintes, <a href="#pg036">36</a>, <a href="#pg063">63</a>, <a
+href="#pg324">324</a>, <a href="#pg328">328</a>, <a href=
+"#pg413">413</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saintonge, <a href="#pg036">36</a>, <a href="#pg063">63</a>, <a
+href="#pg064">64</a>, <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href=
+"#pg170">170</a>, <a href="#pg295">295</a>, <a href=
+"#pg324">324</a>, <a href="#pg358">358</a>, <a href=
+"#pg397">397</a>, <a href="#pg415">415</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Salerno, Charles, Prince of, <a href="#pg145">145</a>, <a href=
+"#pg170">170</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Salic Law, the, <a href="#pg326">326</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Salisbury, <a href="#pg089">89</a>, <a href="#pg202">202</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>cathedral, <a href="#pg096">96</a>.</li>
+
+<li>treaty of, <a href="#pg178">178</a>.</li>
+
+<li>parliaments at, <a href="#pg202">202</a>, <a href=
+"#pg307">307</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Salisbury, Henry, of Lacy, Earl of. See Lincoln.</li>
+
+<li>Salisbury, Thomas of Lancaster, Earl of. See Thomas.</li>
+
+<li>Salisbury, William Longsword, Earl of, <a href="#pg008">8</a>,
+<a href="#pg032">32</a>, <a href="#pg044">44</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Salisbury, William Montague, Earl of; <a href="#pg314">314</a>
+
+<ul>
+<li>See also Montague, William.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Salisbury, William Montague, Earl of (son of the above), <a
+href="#pg390">390</a>, <a href="#pg391">391</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Salvatierra, <a href="#pg405">405</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sambre, the river, <a href="#pg340">340</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sanchia of Provence, second wife of Richard of Cornwall, <a
+href="#pg061">61</a>, <a href="#pg063">63</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sandal Castle, <a href="#pg273">273</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sandale, Bishop of Winchester, <a href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sandwich, <a href="#pg009">9</a>, <a href="#pg011">11</a>, <a
+href="#pg212">212</a>, <a href="#pg354">354</a>, <a href=
+"#pg360">360</a>, <a href="#pg416">416</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Santander, <a href="#pg415">415</a>, <a href=
+"#pg433">433</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Satires, English, <a href="#pg095">95</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Savoy; <a href="#pg139">139</a>
+
+<ul>
+<li>palace of the, <a href="#pg440">440</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Savoy, Amadeus III., Count of Savoy, <a href="#pg054">54</a>.
+See Amadeus.</li>
+
+<li>Savoy, Boniface of, <a href="#pg066">66</a>. See Boniface.</li>
+
+<li>Savoy, Peter of, <a href="#pg061">61</a>, <a href=
+"#pg063">63</a>. See Peter.</li>
+
+<li>Savoy, Philip of. See Philip.</li>
+
+<li>Savoy, Thomas of. See Thomas.</li>
+
+<li>Savoyards, the, <a href="#pg053">53</a>, <a href=
+"#pg055">55</a>, <a href="#pg057">57</a>, <a href="#pg082">82</a>,
+<a href="#pg098">98</a>, <a href="#pg099">99</a>, <a href=
+"#pg102">102</a>, <a href="#pg103">103</a>, <a href=
+"#pg145">145</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saxony.</li>
+
+<li><i>Scalachronica</i>, Sir T. Grey's, <a href=
+"#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Scarborough Castle, <a href="#pg250">250</a>, <a href=
+"#pg251">251</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Scheldt, the river, <a href="#pg335">335</a>, <a href=
+"#pg346">346</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Schiltron of pikemen, <a href="#pg213">213</a>, <a href=
+"#pg260">260</a>, <a href="#pg285">285</a>, <a href=
+"#pg318">318</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Schism between eastern and western Churches, <a href=
+"#pg142">142</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Scholasticism, <a href="#pg090">90</a>, <a href=
+"#pg093">93</a>, <a href="#pg094">94</a>, <a href=
+"#pg425">425</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Science, <a href="#pg083">83</a>, <a href="#pg093">93</a>, <a
+href="#pg094">94</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Scimus Fili</i>, papal letter, <a href=
+"#pg219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Scone, <a href="#pg183">183</a>, <a href="#pg198">198</a>, <a
+href="#pg206">206</a>, <a href="#pg233">233</a>, <a href=
+"#pg318">318</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Scotland, <a href="#pg012">12</a>, <a href="#pg015">15</a>, <a
+href="#pg023">23</a>, <a href="#pg044">44</a>, <a href=
+"#pg054">54</a>, <a href="#pg067">67</a>, <a href="#pg075">75</a>,
+<a href="#pg098">98</a>, <a href="#pg104">104</a>, <a href=
+"#pg138">138</a>, <a href="#pg164">164</a>, <a href=
+"#pg172">172</a>, <a href="#pg176">176</a>, <a href=
+"#pg177">177</a>, <a href="#pg179">179</a>-184, <a href=
+"#pg188">188</a>, <a href="#pg190">190</a>, <a href=
+"#pg192">192</a>-198, <a href="#pg205">205</a>-208, <a href=
+"#pg217">217</a>-221, <a href="#pg223">223</a>-228, <a href=
+"#pg231">231</a>-238, <a href="#pg243">243</a>-245, <a href=
+"#pg249">249</a>, <a href="#pg254">254</a>, <a href=
+"#pg257">257</a>-263, <a href="#pg275">275</a>, <a href=
+"#pg284">284</a>, <a href="#pg285">285</a>, <a href=
+"#pg289">289</a>-291, <a href="#pg295">295</a>, <a href=
+"#pg301">301</a>, <a href="#pg304">304</a>, <a href=
+"#pg305">305</a>, <a href="#pg309">309</a>, <a href=
+"#pg310">310</a>, <a href="#pg314">314</a>-324, <a href=
+"#pg329">329</a>-331, <a href="#pg336">336</a>, <a href=
+"#pg337">337</a>, <a href="#pg354">354</a>, <a href=
+"#pg364">364</a>, <a href="#pg365">365</a>, <a href=
+"#pg371">371</a>, <a href="#pg386">386</a>, <a href=
+"#pg387">387</a>, <a href="#pg393">393</a>, <a href=
+"#pg398">398</a>, <a href="#pg402">402</a>, <a href=
+"#pg419">419</a>, <a href="#pg422">422</a>, <a href=
+"#pg423">423</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Scrope, Sir Richard le, treasurer, <a href=
+"#pg433">433</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sculpture, <a href="#pg096">96</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Scutage of Bedford, the, <a href="#pg026">26</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>of Kerry, <a href="#pg040">40</a>.</li>
+
+<li>of Poitou, <a href="#pg040">40</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Seeley's <i>Life and Reign of Edward I.</i>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Segrave, John, <a href="#pg224">224</a>, <a href=
+"#pg225">225</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Segrave, Stephen, <a href="#pg035">35</a>, <a href=
+"#pg043">43</a>, <a href="#pg051">51</a>, <a href=
+"#pg055">55</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Seine, the river, <a href="#pg361">361</a>, <a href=
+"#pg411">411</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Selby, William, <a href="#pg365">365</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Selden Society, the, <a href="#pg448">448</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Selkirk; <a href="#pg321">321</a>, <a href="#pg371">371</a>
+
+<ul>
+<li>forest of, <a href="#pg197">197</a>, <a href="#pg206">206</a>,
+<a href="#pg214">214</a>, <a href="#pg245">245</a>.</li>
+
+<li>See Ettrick.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Sens, <a href="#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sens, William of, <a href="#pg096">96</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Septs, the Irish, <a href="#pg429">429</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Serlo, Mayor of London, <a href="#pg022">22</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Severn, the river, <a href="#pg076">76</a>, <a href=
+"#pg111">111</a>, <a href="#pg114">114</a>, <a href=
+"#pg125">125</a>, <a href="#pg126">126</a>, <a href=
+"#pg267">267</a>, <a href="#pg284">284</a>, <a href=
+"#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sheen, <a href="#pg440">440</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sherburn-in-Elmet, <a href="#pg281">281</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sheriffs, <a href="#pg043">43</a>, <a href="#pg103">103</a>, <a
+href="#pg119">119</a>, <a href="#pg128">128</a>, <a href=
+"#pg148">148</a>, <a href="#pg167">167</a>, <a href=
+"#pg172">172</a>, <a href="#pg254">254</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>for Scotland, <a href="#pg227">227</a>, <a href=
+"#pg228">228</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Shire, system in Wales, <a href="#pg166">166</a>, <a href=
+"#pg167">167</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>courts, <a href="#pg076">76</a>;</li>
+
+<li>knights of the, <a href="#pg103">103</a>, <a href=
+"#pg119">119</a>, <a href="#pg122">122</a>, <a href=
+"#pg139">139</a>, <a href="#pg164">164</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Shrewsbury, <a href="#pg048">48</a>, <a href="#pg085">85</a>,
+<a href="#pg284">284</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Castle of, <a href="#pg025">25</a>.</li>
+
+<li>treaty of, <a href="#pg133">133</a>, <a href="#pg138">138</a>.
+parliament at, <a href="#pg165">165</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Shrewsbury, Ralph of, Bishop of Bath and Wells, <a href=
+"#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Shropshire, <a href="#pg048">48</a>, <a href="#pg147">147</a>,
+<a href="#pg167">167</a>, <a href="#pg301">301</a>, <a href=
+"#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sicilian Vespers, the, <a href="#pg146">146</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sicily, <a href="#pg004">4</a>, <a href="#pg078">78</a>, <a
+href="#pg079">79</a>, <a href="#pg081">81</a>, <a href=
+"#pg098">98</a>, <a href="#pg120">120</a>, <a href=
+"#pg139">139</a>, <a href="#pg146">146</a>, <a href=
+"#pg169">169</a>, <a href="#pg171">171</a>, <a href=
+"#pg172">172</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Silegrave's Henry of, <i>Chronicle</i>, <a href=
+"#pg455">455</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Simony, <a href="#pg168">168</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Siward, Richard, <a href="#pg046">46</a>-48, <a href=
+"#pg051">51</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Skeat's editions of Chaucer and Langland, <a href=
+"#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Skelton Castle, <a href="#pg180">180</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Skenfrith, Castle of, <a href="#pg047">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Skicsea Castle, <a href="#pg020">20</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sluys, <a href="#pg205">205</a>, <a href="#pg210">210</a>, <a
+href="#pg344">344</a>, <a href="#pg346">346</a>-349, <a href=
+"#pg356">356</a>, <a href="#pg369">369</a>; &amp;t&amp; of, <a
+href="#pg346">346</a>, <a href="#pg347">347</a>, <a href=
+"#pg369">369</a>, <a href="#pg384">384</a>, <a href=
+"#pg457">457</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Smith's, S. Armitage, <i>John of Gaunt</i>, <a href=
+"#pg435">435</a>, <a href="#pg463">463</a>, <a href=
+"#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Smithfield, <a href="#pg375">375</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Snowdon, <a href="#pg068">68</a>, <a href="#pg075">75</a>, <a
+href="#pg076">76</a>, <a href="#pg162">162</a>-164, <a href=
+"#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Soissonais, the, <a href="#pg340">340</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Soisy, <a href="#pg060">60</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sellers, Rostand de, seneschal of Gascony, <a href=
+"#pg062">62</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sologne, the, <a href="#pg389">389</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Solway, the, <a href="#pg238">238</a>, <a href=
+"#pg289">289</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Somme, the river, <a href="#pg361">361</a>, <a href=
+"#pg362">362</a>, <a href="#pg367">367</a>, <a href=
+"#pg397">397</a>, <a href="#pg411">411</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sorbon, Robert of, <a href="#pg093">93</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Soubise, <a href="#pg415">415</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Southampton, <a href="#pg370">370</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Southwark, <a href="#pg022">22</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Spalding, Peter of, <a href="#pg275">275</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Spain, <a href="#pg192">192</a>, <a href="#pg305">305</a>, <a
+href="#pg404">404</a>-406, <a href="#pg415">415</a>, <a href=
+"#pg416">416</a>. See also Aragon and Castile.</li>
+
+<li>Spain, Peter of, Cardinal. See Peter.</li>
+
+<li>Speaker, office of, <a href="#pg438">438</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Spruner-Menke's <i>Historischer Hand-Atlas</i>, <a href=
+"#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Staffordshire, l3O, <a href="#pg273">273</a>, <a href=
+"#pg274">274</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stammoor, <a href="#pg277">277</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stamford, <a href="#pg085">85</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>parliaments at, <a href="#pg242">242</a>, <a href=
+"#pg246">246</a>, <a href="#pg254">254</a>.</li>
+
+<li>statute of, <a href="#pg247">247</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Stanley Abbey, Chronicle of, <a href="#pg455">455</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Staple, ordinance of the, <a href="#pg380">380</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>system the, <a href="#pg427">427</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Stapledon, Walter, Bishop of Exeter, <a href="#pg292">292</a>,
+<a href="#pg298">298</a>-300.</li>
+
+<li>Statute of &mdash;&mdash;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Acton Burnell, <a href="#pg165">165</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Carlisle (1307), <a href="#pg230">230</a>, <a href=
+"#pg231">231</a>, <a href="#pg254">254</a>, <a href=
+"#pg377">377</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>De Donis</i>, <a href="#pg153">153</a>, <a href=
+"#pg154">154</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gloucester, <a href="#pg148">148</a>, <a href=
+"#pg149">149</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Kilkenny, <a href="#pg429">429</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Marlborough, <a href="#pg134">134</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Merchants, <a href="#pg165">165</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mortmain, <a href="#pg174">174</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Praemunire</i>, <a href="#pg230">230</a>, <a href=
+"#pg378">378</a>, <a href="#pg426">426</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Provisors, <a href="#pg377">377</a>, <a href="#pg378">378</a>,
+<a href="#pg426">426</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Quia Emptores</i>, <a href="#pg173">173</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rageman, <a href="#pg148">148</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stamford, <a href="#pg247">247</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Treasons (1352), <a href="#pg380">380</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wales, <a href="#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Westminster, the first, <a href="#pg147">147</a>, <a href=
+"#pg148">148</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>the second, <a href="#pg153">153</a>, <a href=
+"#pg154">154</a>.</li>
+
+<li>the third, <a href="#pg173">173</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>1341 as to election of auditors of royal officers, <a href=
+"#pg350">350</a>, <a href="#pg351">351</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li style="list-style: none"><i>Statutum de Tallagio won
+concedendo</i>, <a href="#pg208">208</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stephen, papal collector, <a href="#pg039">39</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stephen, King, <a href="#pg003">3</a>, <a href="#pg010">10</a>,
+<a href="#pg014">14</a>, <a href="#pg020">20</a>, <a href=
+"#pg101">101</a>, <a href="#pg101">101</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stephens, W. R W., his <i>History of the English Church</i>, <a
+href="#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stevenson's, J., <i>Documents of Scotland</i>, <a href=
+"#pg449">449</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>Chronicon de Lanenost</i>, <a href="#pg456">456</a>;</li>
+
+<li>edition of <i>Coggeshall's Chronicon Anglicanum</i>, <a href=
+"#pg458">458</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Stevenson's, W.H., <i>Records of Nottingham</i>, <a href=
+"#pg449">449</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Steward, of England, Simon de Montfort, <a href=
+"#pg056">56</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>of Scotland, the, <a href="#pg197">197</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Stewart Kings of Scotland, <a href="#pg393">393</a>, <a href=
+"#pg422">422</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stirling Bridge, battle of, <a href="#pg207">207</a>, <a href=
+"#pg208">208</a>, <a href="#pg212">212</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stirling, castle and town, <a href="#pg182">182</a>, <a href=
+"#pg197">197</a>, <a href="#pg207">207</a>, <a href=
+"#pg215">215</a>, <a href="#pg217">217</a>, <a href=
+"#pg225">225</a>, <a href="#pg258">258</a>-260, <a href=
+"#pg323">323</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stone, use of, in building houses, <a href=
+"#pg097">97</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stratford, <a href="#pg132">132</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stratford, John, chancellor, Bishop of Winchester and
+Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href="#pg293">293</a>, <a href=
+"#pg296">296</a>, <a href="#pg298">298</a>, <a href=
+"#pg299">299</a>, <a href="#pg302">302</a>, <a href=
+"#pg305">305</a>, <a href="#pg314">314</a>, <a href=
+"#pg349">349</a> <a href="#pg350">350</a>, <a href=
+"#pg360">360</a>, <a href="#pg381">381</a>, <a href=
+"#pg425">425</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stratford, Robert, Bishop of Chichester, chancellor, <a href=
+"#pg314">314</a>, <a href="#pg349">349</a>, <a href=
+"#pg425">425</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Strathearn, <a href="#pg317">317</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Strathspey, <a href="#pg206">206</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stratton, Adam of, <a href="#pg173">173</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Strongbow, <a href="#pg015">15</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stubbs' <i>Select Charters</i>, <a href="#pg450">450</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Councils, <a href="#pg451">451</a>;</li>
+
+<li>edition of Walter of Coventry,<a href="#pg453">453</a>;</li>
+
+<li><i>Chronicles of Edward I and Edward II.</i>, <a href=
+"#pg457">457</a>, <a href="#pg458">458</a>, <a href=
+"#pg463">463</a>;</li>
+
+<li><i>Constitutional History</i>, <a href="#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li><i>Studium</i>, the, <a href="#pg092">92</a>, <a href=
+"#pg093">93</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Studium Generale</i>, <a href="#pg089">89</a>. See
+University.</li>
+
+<li>Subinfeudation, <a href="#pg173">173</a>, <a href=
+"#pg174">174</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Subsidy Rolls</i>, <a href="#pg447">447</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sudbury, Simon of, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href=
+"#pg435">435</a>, <a href="#pg439">439</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Suffolk, <a href="#pg059">59</a>, <a href=
+"#pg299">299</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Suffolk, Ufford, Earl of, <a href="#pg314">314</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Surrey, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a href="#pg045">45</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sussex, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a href="#pg114">114</a>, <a
+href="#pg333">333</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Swale, the river, <a href="#pg276">276</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Swaledale, <a href="#pg276">276</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Swansea, castle and town, <a href="#pg280">280</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Swinbrooke, <a href="#pg458">458</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Syria, <a href="#pg078">78</a>, <a href="#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Taillebourg, battle of, <a href="#pg063">63</a>, <a href=
+"#pg070">70</a>.<a name="T" id="T" /></li>
+
+<li><i>Tallagio non concedendo, Statutum de</i>, <a href=
+"#pg208">208</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Talleyrand, the Cardinal, <a href="#pg389">389</a>, <a href=
+"#pg392">392</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tancarville, Lord of, Chamberlain of France, <a href=
+"#pg360">360</a>, <a href="#pg368">368</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tany, Luke de, seneschal of Gascony, <a href="#pg141">141</a>,
+<a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a href="#pg163">163</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tarascon, Treaty of, <a href="#pg171">171</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Taxatio Ecclesiastica Angliæ et Walliæ</i>, <a href=
+"#pg447">447</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Taxation, <a href="#pg005">5</a>, <a href="#pg027">27</a>, <a
+href="#pg029">29</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>papal, <a href="#pg029">29</a>, <a href="#pg039">39</a>, <a
+href="#pg058">58</a>, <a href="#pg078">78</a>, <a href=
+"#pg079">79</a>, <a href="#pg081">81</a>, <a href=
+"#pg230">230</a>;</li>
+
+<li>of clergy, <a href="#pg195">195</a>, <a href=
+"#pg219">219</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Taxes, on exports, <a href="#pg147">147</a>, <a href=
+"#pg148">148</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>on land, <a href="#pg148">148</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Taxster, John de, Chronicle of, <a href="#pg455">455</a>, <a
+href="#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tayster. See Taxster.</li>
+
+<li>Teivi, the river, <a href="#pg076">76</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Templars, Order of the, <a href="#pg015">15</a>, <a href=
+"#pg026">26</a>, <a href="#pg253">253</a>-255;
+
+<ul>
+<li>suppression of the, <a href="#pg254">254</a>-256.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Temple, Church of the, <a href="#pg015">15</a>, <a href=
+"#pg041">41</a> <a href="#pg164">164</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>the New, <a href="#pg240">240</a>, <a href=
+"#pg256">256</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Temple, Knights of the. See Templars.</li>
+
+<li>Tertiaries, <a href="#pg087">87</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Testa de Neville</i>, the, <a href="#pg447">447</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Thames, the, <a href="#pg112">112</a>, <a href=
+"#pg349">349</a>, <a href="#pg385">385</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Theiner's <i>Vetera Monumenta Hib. et Scot. Historiam
+Illustrantia</i>, <a href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Theobald IV, Count of Champagne and King of Navarre, <a href=
+"#pg070">70</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Theology, <a href="#pg021">21</a>, <a href="#pg083">83</a>, <a
+href="#pg089">89</a>, <a href="#pg090">90</a>, <a href=
+"#pg091">91</a>, <a href="#pg093">93</a>, <a href=
+"#pg129">129</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Th&eacute;rouanne, <a href="#pg383">383</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Thi&eacute;rache, the, <a href="#pg340">340</a>, <a href=
+"#pg341">341</a>, <a href="#pg347">347</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Thirty, battle of the, <a href="#pg382">382</a>, <a href=
+"#pg383">383</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, Leicester and Derby, <a href=
+"#pg224">224</a>, <a href="#pg238">238</a>, <a href=
+"#pg239">239</a>, <a href="#pg240">240</a>-288, <a href=
+"#pg290">290</a>, <a href="#pg299">299</a>, <a href=
+"#pg302">302</a>, <a href="#pg303">303</a>, <a href=
+"#pg304">304</a>, <a href="#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Thomas of Brotherton, Earl of Norfolk, son of Edward I., <a
+href="#pg278">278</a>, <a href="#pg283">283</a>, <a href=
+"#pg302">302</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Thomas of Savoy, uncle of Eleanor of Provence, <a href=
+"#pg055">55</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Thomas of Woodstock, Earl of Gloucester, <a href=
+"#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Thomas, St. Aquinas See Aquinas, St. Thomas.</li>
+
+<li>Thomas, St., of Canterbury, <a href="#pg019">19</a>, <a href=
+"#pg059">59</a>, <a href="#pg060">60</a>, <a href="#pg350">350</a>;
+
+
+<ul>
+<li>translation of relics of, <a href="#pg019">19</a>. See also
+Becket.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Thomas, St., of Cantilupe, <a href="#pg093">93</a>. See
+Cantilupe.</li>
+
+<li>Thomist teaching, <a href="#pg092">92</a>. See Aquinas, St.
+Thomas.</li>
+
+<li>Thompson's, Sir E. Maunde, <i>Chronicon Angliæ</i>, <a href=
+"#pg453">453</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>Chronicon Galfridi le Baker</i>, <a href="#pg458">458</a>,
+<a href="#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Thoresby, John, Archbishop of York, <a href=
+"#pg423">423</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Thorpe, Benjamin, his <i>Florence of Worcester</i>, <a href=
+"#pg455">455</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Thorpe, Sir Robert, Chancellor and Chief Justice, <a href=
+"#pg433">433</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Thouars, <a href="#pg031">31</a>, <a href="#pg034">34</a>, <a
+href="#pg062">62</a>, <a href="#pg416">416</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>house of, <a href="#pg031">31</a>, <a href=
+"#pg035">35</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Thouars, the Viscount of, <a href="#pg062">62</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tintagel Castle, <a href="#pg249">249</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tickhill Castle, <a href="#pg285">285</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Torksey, <a href="#pg010">10</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Torture, <a href="#pg256">256</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Toulouse, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a href="#pg062">62</a>, <a
+href="#pg064">64</a>, <a href="#pg384">384</a>, <a href=
+"#pg386">386</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Toulouse, Joan, Countess of. See Joan.</li>
+
+<li>Toulouse, Raymond VII., Count of. See Raymond VII.</li>
+
+<li>Touraine, <a href="#pg030">30</a>, <a href=
+"#pg105">105</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tournai, <a href="#pg211">211</a>, <a href="#pg343">343</a>, <a
+href="#pg347">347</a>, <a href="#pg348">348</a>, <a href=
+"#pg354">354</a>, <a href="#pg361">361</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tournaments, <a href="#pg311">311</a>, <a href=
+"#pg314">314</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tours, <a href="#pg031">31</a>, <a href="#pg389">389</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tout's <i>Edward I.</i>, <a href="#pg463">463</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>Papacy and Empire</i>, <a href="#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Tower, of London, the, <a href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href=
+"#pg045">45</a>, <a href="#pg075">75</a>, <a href="#pg112">112</a>,
+<a href="#pg113">113</a>. <a href="#pg132">132</a>, <a href=
+"#pg293">293</a>, <a href="#pg300">300</a>, <a href=
+"#pg309">309</a>, <a href="#pg349">349</a>, <a href=
+"#pg355">355</a>, <a href="#pg365">365</a>, <a href=
+"#pg393">393</a>, <a href="#pg438">438</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>the Round, Windsor, <a href="#pg356">356</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Tower Hill, <a href="#pg310">310</a>, <a href=
+"#pg375">375</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Towns, growth of, <a href="#pg097">97</a>, <a href=
+"#pg122">122</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Gascon, <a href="#pg106">106</a>;</li>
+
+<li>Welsh, <a href="#pg168">168</a>;</li>
+
+<li>"Staple", <a href="#pg380">380</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Towy, the river, <a href="#pg076">76</a>, <a href=
+"#pg161">161</a>, <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a href=
+"#pg166">166</a>-168.</li>
+
+<li>Trade, <a href="#pg097">97</a>, <a href="#pg165">165</a>, <a
+href="#pg194">194</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Trailbaston, Ordinance of, <a href="#pg231">231</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Translations into English, <a href="#pg095">95</a>, <a href=
+"#pg096">96</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Treasons, Statute of, <a href="#pg380">380</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Treasurer, office of, <a href="#pg052">52</a>, <a href=
+"#pg065">65</a>, <a href="#pg102">102</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Treaty of &mdash;&mdash;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Aberconway, <a href="#pg159">159</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Amiens, <a href="#pg145">145</a>, <a href=
+"#pg170">170</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Athis. <a href="#pg343">343</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Berwick, <a href="#pg393">393</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bordeaux, <a href="#pg395">395</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Br&eacute;tigni, <a href="#pg396">396</a>-398.</li>
+
+<li>Brigham, <a href="#pg178">178</a>, <a href=
+"#pg181">181</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bruges, <a href="#pg418">418</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Calais (1347), <a href="#pg368">368</a>, <a href=
+"#pg369">369</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>(1360), <a href="#pg396">396</a>-400, <a href="#pg418">418</a>,
+<a href="#pg419">419</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Canfranc, l7l.</li>
+
+<li>Coblenz, <a href="#pg335">335</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Esplechin, <a href="#pg348">348</a>, <a href=
+"#pg349">349</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gu&eacute;rande, <a href="#pg402">402</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Guillond. <a href="#pg396">396</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lambeth, <a href="#pg012">12</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Leek, <a href="#pg274">274</a>, <a href="#pg275">275</a>.</li>
+
+<li>London, <a href="#pg395">395</a>-397.</li>
+
+<li>Malestroit, <a href="#pg355">355</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Meaux, <a href="#pg062">62</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Montreuil, <a href="#pg216">216</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Newcastle, <a href="#pg321">321</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Northampton, <a href="#pg315">315</a>, <a href=
+"#pg319">319</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Oloron, <a href="#pg171">171</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Paris (1259), <a href="#pg104">104</a>-107, <a href=
+"#pg140">140</a>, <a href="#pg142">142</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>(1303), <a href="#pg222">222</a>, <a href=
+"#pg225">225</a>.</li>
+
+<li>(1327), <a href="#pg325">325</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Pipton, <a href="#pg125">125</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Roxburgh, <a href="#pg320">320</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-Germain, <a href="#pg328">328</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Salisbury, <a href="#pg178">178</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Shrewsbury, <a href="#pg133">133</a>, <a href=
+"#pg138">138</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tarascon, <a href="#pg171">171</a>, <a href=
+"#pg184">184</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Valenciennes, <a href="#pg333">333</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vincennes, <a href="#pg328">328</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li><i>Tr&eacute;buchet</i>, the, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a href=
+"#pg009">9</a>, <a href="#pg012">12</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tr&eacute;guier, <a href="#pg035">35</a>, <a href=
+"#pg367">367</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>County of Penthi&egrave;vre-Tr&eacute;guier, <a href=
+"#pg352">352</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Trent, the river, <a href="#pg010">10</a>, <a href=
+"#pg129">129</a>, <a href="#pg198">198</a>, <a href=
+"#pg206">206</a>, <a href="#pg228">228</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Trevelyan's, G.M., <i>England in the Age of Wycliffe</i>, <a
+href="#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Trevet. See Trivet.</li>
+
+<li>Trier, <a href="#pg080">80</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Trim, <a href="#pg306">306</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Trinitarian Friars, the, <a href="#pg086">86</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Trivet, Nicholas, Dominican chronicler, <a href=
+"#pg136">136</a>, <a href="#pg456">456</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Trokelowe, J. de, Annales, <a href="#pg453">453</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Troyes, <a href="#pg027">27</a>, <a href="#pg417">417</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Trussell, Sir William, <a href="#pg302">302</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tunbridge, <a href="#pg039">39</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tunis, <a href="#pg134">134</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Turner's, G. J., <i>Pleas of the Forest</i>, <a href=
+"#pg448">448</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>Select Pleas of the Forest</i>, <a href=
+"#pg448">448</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Minority of Henry III.</i>, <a href="#pg001">1</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Turberville, Payne of, <a href="#pg267">267</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Turberville, Sir Thomas, <a href="#pg192">192</a>, <a href=
+"#pg193">193</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Turks, the, <a href="#pg184">184</a>, <a href=
+"#pg329">329</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tuscans, <a href="#pg097">97</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tuscany, <a href="#pg421">421</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tutbury Castle, <a href="#pg285">285</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tweed, the river, <a href="#pg181">181</a>, <a href=
+"#pg196">196</a>, <a href="#pg245">245</a>, <a href=
+"#pg247">247</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tweeddale, <a href="#pg225">225</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Twemlow's <i>Calendars of Papal Registers</i>, <a href=
+"#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Twenge, Sir Robert, <a href="#pg039">39</a>, <a href=
+"#pg044">44</a>, <a href="#pg059">59</a>.</li>
+
+<li>"Twenty-Four," the, <a href="#pg099">99</a>, <a href=
+"#pg100">100</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Twiss, Sir T.'s edition of Bracton, <a href=
+"#pg461">461</a>,</li>
+
+<li>Tyburn Elms, <a href="#pg309">309</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tvnedale, <a href="#pg177">177</a>, <a href="#pg197">197</a>,
+<a href="#pg365">365</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tynemouth, <a href="#pg250">250</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tyre, Archbishop of, <a href="#pg011">11</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Ufford, Earl of Suffolk. See Suffolk.<a name="U" id="U" /></li>
+
+<li>Ughtred, Sir Thomas, <a href="#pg323">323</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ulster, <a href="#pg037">37</a>, <a href="#pg270">270</a>, <a
+href="#pg272">272</a>, <a href="#pg428">428</a>, <a href=
+"#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ulster, Hugh de Lacy, Earl of, <a href="#pg037">37</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ulster, Lionel of Clarence, Earl of, <a href="#pg428">428</a>,
+<a href="#pg429">429</a>. See also Lionel.</li>
+
+<li>Ulster, Richard de Burgh, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg269">269</a>-272.</li>
+
+<li>Umfravilles, the, <a href="#pg278">278</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Umfraville, Gilbert of, Lord of Redesdale, <a href=
+"#pg316">316</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Unam Sanctam</i> Bull, <a href="#pg222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Union, treaty of, between England and Scotland, <a href=
+"#pg178">178</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Universities, the, <a href="#pg083">83</a>, <a href=
+"#pg088">88</a>-94, <a href="#pg375">375</a>, <a href=
+"#pg421">421</a>, <a href="#pg424">424</a>-426. See also Cambridge,
+Montpellier, Oxford, Paris.</li>
+
+<li>Urban IV., Pope, <a href="#pg110">110</a>, <a href=
+"#pg113">113</a>, <a href="#pg121">121</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Urban V., Pope, <a href="#pg378">378</a>, <a href=
+"#pg411">411</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ure, the river, <a href="#pg285">285</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Usk Castle and town, <a href="#pg047">47</a>, <a href=
+"#pg279">279</a>, <a href="#pg280">280</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Usk, River, <a href="#pg126">126</a>, <a href="#pg280">280</a>;
+
+
+<ul>
+<li>Valley, the, <a href="#pg279">279</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Usury, <a href="#pg018">18</a>, <a href="#pg175">175</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Vaiss&egrave;te's <i>Histoire de Languedoc</i>, <a href=
+"#pg462">462</a>.<a name="V" id="V" /></li>
+
+<li>Vall&eacute;e aux Clercs, near Crecy, <a href="#pg362">362</a>,
+<a href="#pg363">363</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Valois, house of, <a href="#pg325">325</a>, <a href=
+"#pg386">386</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Valois, Charles of, <a href="#pg194">194</a>. See Charles.</li>
+
+<li>Valence, Aymer of. See Pembroke, Aymer, Earl of, and Aymer,
+Bishop of Winchester.</li>
+
+<li>Valence, William of, Lord of Pembroke, <a href="#pg065">65</a>,
+<a href="#pg098">98</a>, <a href="#pg109">109</a>, <a href=
+"#pg117">117</a>, <a href="#pg124">124</a>, <a href=
+"#pg125">125</a>, <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a href=
+"#pg165">165</a>, <a href="#pg202">202</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Valence, William of Savoy, Bishop-elect of. <a href=
+"#pg054">54</a>-56.</li>
+
+<li>Valenciennes, <a href="#pg332">332</a>-334, <a href=
+"#pg419">419</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vander Kindere's <i>Si&egrave;cle des Artevelde</i>, <a href=
+"#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vannes, <a href="#pg354">354</a>, <a href="#pg355">355</a>, <a
+href="#pg361">361</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Venice, <a href="#pg370">370</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vercelli, Church of St. Andrew at, <a href=
+"#pg015">15</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vermandois, the, <a href="#pg336">336</a>, <a href=
+"#pg340">340</a>, <a href="#pg413">413</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Verneuil, <a href="#pg388">388</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vescy, John de, <a href="#pg131">131</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vescy, Lady, <a href="#pg248">248</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vespers, the Sicilian, <a href="#pg146">146</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vic, De, his <i>Histoire de Languedoc</i>, <a href=
+"#pg462">462</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vidal de la Blache's <i>Tableau de la G&eacute;ographie de la
+France</i>, <a href="#pg464">464</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vienne, the river, <a href="#pg141">141</a>, <a href=
+"#pg388">388</a>, <a href="#pg389">389</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Council of. <a href="#pg255">255</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Vierzon, <a href="#pg388">388</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Villeins, the, <a href="#pg377">377</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vincennes, Convention of the Wood of, <a href=
+"#pg328">328</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vinogradoff's <i>Villainage in England</i>, <a href=
+"#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Visconti, Bernab&ograve;, <a href="#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Visconti, Galeazzo, <a href="#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Visconti of Milan, the, <a href="#pg429">429</a>, <a href=
+"#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Visconti, Violante, daughter of Galeazzo, of Pavia, <a href=
+"#pg430">430</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Vision of Piers Plowman</i>, Langland's, <a href=
+"#pg423">423</a>, <a href="#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Viterbo, <a href="#pg056">56</a>, <a href="#pg134">134</a>, <a
+href="#pg135">135</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vitoria, <a href="#pg040">40</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vyve-Saint-Bavon, truce of, <a href="#pg211">211</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Wadicourt, <a href="#pg362">362</a>.<a name="W" id="W" /></li>
+
+<li>Wace's <i>Brut</i>, <a href="#pg095">95</a>, <a href=
+"#pg457">457</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wages affected by Black Death, <a href=
+"#pg372">372</a>-375.</li>
+
+<li>Wake, Lord, <a href="#pg365">365</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wakes, the, of Liddell and Lincolnshire, <a href=
+"#pg428">428</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Waleis, Henry le, Mayor of London, <a href=
+"#pg142">142</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wales, <a href="#pg014">14</a>-16, <a href="#pg018">18</a>, <a
+href="#pg024">24</a>, <a href="#pg029">29</a>, <a href=
+"#pg037">37</a>, <a href="#pg038">38</a>, <a href="#pg047">47</a>,
+<a href="#pg048">48</a>, <a href="#pg051">51</a>, <a href=
+"#pg058">58</a>, <a href="#pg067">67</a>, <a href="#pg069">69</a>,
+<a href="#pg074">74</a>-77, <a href="#pg098">98</a>, <a href=
+"#pg099">99</a>, <a href="#pg101">101</a>, <a href=
+"#pg102">102</a>, <a href="#pg104">104</a>, <a href=
+"#pg110">110</a>, <a href="#pg114">114</a>, <a href=
+"#pg117">117</a>, <a href="#pg118">118</a>, <a href=
+"#pg122">122</a>-128, <a href="#pg131">131</a>, <a href=
+"#pg134">134</a>, <a href="#pg138">138</a>, <a href=
+"#pg139">139</a>, <a href="#pg148">148</a>, <a href=
+"#pg161">161-168</a>, <a href="#pg172">172</a>, <a href=
+"#pg176">176</a>, <a href="#pg188">188</a>-191, <a href=
+"#pg193">193</a>, <a href="#pg194">194</a>, <a href=
+"#pg204">204</a>, <a href="#pg212">212</a>, <a href=
+"#pg224">224</a>, <a href="#pg252">252</a>, <a href=
+"#pg259">259</a>-263, <a href="#pg268">268</a>, <a href=
+"#pg269">269</a>, <a href="#pg279">279</a>-281, <a href=
+"#pg287">287</a>, <a href="#pg300">300</a>, <a href=
+"#pg301">301</a>, <a href="#pg306">306</a>, <a href=
+"#pg307">307</a>, <a href="#pg316">316</a>, <a href=
+"#pg414">414</a>-416, <a href="#pg423">423</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>statute of, <a href="#pg166">166</a>.</li>
+
+<li>records of, <a href="#pg448">448</a>.</li>
+
+<li>annals of, <a href="#pg459">459</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Wallace, Sir William, of Elderslie, <a href=
+"#pg205">205</a>-208, <a href="#pg212">212</a>, <a href=
+"#pg217">217</a>-221, <a href="#pg226">226</a>, <a href=
+"#pg227">227</a>, <a href="#pg232">232</a>, <a href=
+"#pg262">262</a>, <a href="#pg263">263</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wallon's <i>Louis IX.</i>, <a href="#pg463">463</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wallingford Castle and town, <a href="#pg239">239</a>, <a href=
+"#pg242">242</a>, <a href="#pg249">249</a>, <a href=
+"#pg250">250</a>, <a href="#pg300">300</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Walsingham, Thomas, <i>Gesta Abbatum S. Albani</i>, <a href=
+"#pg452">452</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>Historia Anglicana</i> of, <a href="#pg454">454</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Walton, <a href="#pg299">299</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wardrobe accounts, <a href="#pg447">447</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ware, <a href="#pg252">252</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Warenne, William, Earl (d. 1240), <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a
+href="#pg045">45</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Warenne, John, Earl (d. 1304), son of above, <a href=
+"#pg065">65</a>, <a href="#pg099">99</a>, <a href="#pg102">102</a>,
+<a href="#pg114">114</a>-117, <a href="#pg120">120</a>, <a href=
+"#pg124">124</a>, <a href="#pg125">125</a>, <a href=
+"#pg149">149</a>, <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a href=
+"#pg197">197</a>, <a href="#pg198">198</a>, <a href=
+"#pg202">202</a>, <a href="#pg205">205</a>-207, <a href=
+"#pg212">212</a>, <a href="#pg214">214</a>, <a href=
+"#pg224">224</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Warenne, John, Earl (d. 1347), grand-son of above, <a href=
+"#pg224">224</a>, <a href="#pg239">239</a>, <a href=
+"#pg242">242</a>, <a href="#pg244">244</a>, <a href=
+"#pg245">245</a>, <a href="#pg249">249</a>-253, <a href=
+"#pg259">259</a>, <a href="#pg272">272</a>-274, <a href=
+"#pg283">283</a>, <a href="#pg291">291</a>, <a href=
+"#pg299">299</a>, <a href="#pg315">315</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wark, the Lord of, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Warwick Castle, <a href="#pg251">251</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Warwick, Beauchamps of. See Beauchamps;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Neufbourg, Earls of, <a href="#pg065">65</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Warwick, Guy of Beauchamp, Earl of, <a href="#pg241">241</a>,
+<a href="#pg244">244</a>, <a href="#pg249">249</a>, <a href=
+"#pg251">251</a>, <a href="#pg259">259</a>, <a href=
+"#pg272">272</a>, <a href="#pg291">291</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Warwick, Henry of Neufbourg, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg001">1</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Warwick, John du Plessis, Earl of, <a href="#pg065">65</a>, <a
+href="#pg099">99</a>, <a href="#pg103">103</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Warwick, Thomas of Beauchamp, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg390">390</a>, <a href="#pg391">391</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Warwick, William Beauchamp, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg190">190</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Waverley, Annals of Abbey of, <a href="#pg454">454</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Weald, the, <a href="#pg007">7</a>, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a
+href="#pg115">115</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wear, the river, <a href="#pg365">365</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wells, Hugh of, Bishop of Lincoln, <a href="#pg002">2</a>, <a
+href="#pg003">3</a>, <a href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wells, Bishops of Bath and;
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Burnell;</li>
+
+<li>Robert;</li>
+
+<li>Drokensford;</li>
+
+<li>Sandale.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Wenceslaus of Luxemburg, Duke of Brabant, brother of the
+Emperor Charles IV., <a href="#pg410">410</a>, <a href=
+"#pg420">420</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wendover, Roger of, <a href="#pg021">21</a>, <a href=
+"#pg022">22</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his <i>Flores Historiarum</i>, <a href="#pg451">451</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Westminster, <a href="#pg019">19</a>, <a href="#pg021">21</a>,
+<a href="#pg046">46</a>, <a href="#pg054">54</a>, <a href=
+"#pg071">71</a>, <a href="#pg135">135</a>, <a href=
+"#pg143">143</a>, <a href="#pg147">147</a>, <a href=
+"#pg161">161</a>, <a href="#pg206">206</a>, <a href=
+"#pg217">217</a>, <a href="#pg227">227</a>, <a href=
+"#pg243">243</a>, <a href="#pg238">238</a>, <a href=
+"#pg242">242</a>, <a href="#pg301">301</a>, <a href=
+"#pg308">308</a>, <a href="#pg310">310</a>, <a href=
+"#pg437">437</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Abbey, <a href="#pg019">19</a>, <a href="#pg096">96</a>, <a
+href="#pg134">134</a>, <a href="#pg135">135</a>, <a href=
+"#pg184">184</a>, <a href="#pg198">198</a>, <a href=
+"#pg303">303</a>.</li>
+
+<li>the Provisions of, <a href="#pg108">108</a>, <a href=
+"#pg134">134</a>.</li>
+
+<li>the first statute of, <a href="#pg147">147</a>. <a href=
+"#pg148">148</a>.</li>
+
+<li>second statute of, <a href="#pg153">153</a>, <a href=
+"#pg154">154</a>.</li>
+
+<li>third statute of, <a href="#pg173">173</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hall, <a href="#pg201">201</a>, <a href="#pg234">234</a>, <a
+href="#pg253">253</a>.</li>
+
+<li>St. Stephen's Chapel, <a href="#pg310">310</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Westminster, Abbot of, <a href="#pg099">99</a>, <a href=
+"#pg100">100</a>, <a href="#pg431">431</a>. See also Langham,
+Simon.</li>
+
+<li>Westminster, Matthew of, imaginary chronicler, <a href=
+"#pg452">452</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Westmoreland, <a href="#pg285">285</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Weyland, Sir Thomas, Chief Justice cf the Common Pleas, <a
+href="#pg172">172</a>, <a href="#pg426">426</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Weymouth, <a href="#pg370">370</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Whalley Abbey, <a href="#pg376">376</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wharton's <i>Anglia Sacra</i>, <a href="#pg454">454</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Whitecastle, <a href="#pg047">7</a>.</li>
+
+<li>White Friars, the, <a href="#pg086">86</a>. Whittaker, W.J.,
+his edition of <i>Le Mirroir des Justices</i>, <a href=
+"#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Whittingtons, the, <a href="#pg426">426</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Whittle sea, William, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href=
+"#pg432">432</a>, <a href="#pg435">435</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wicklow, <a href="#pg271">271</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wigford, <a href="#pg010">10</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wight, Isle of, <a href="#pg006">6</a>, <a href=
+"#pg224">224</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wigmore, Castle, <a href="#pg125">125</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>house of, <a href="#pg129">129</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Wigmore, Roger Mortimer of. See Mortimer, Roger.</li>
+
+<li>Wilkin of the Weald, <a href="#pg007">7-9</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wilkins' <i>Concilia</i>, <a href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+
+<li>William I. of Avesnes, Count of Hainault,. Holland and Zealand.
+<a href="#pg298">298</a>, <a href="#pg299">299</a>, <a href=
+"#pg332">332</a>, <a href="#pg333">333</a>.</li>
+
+<li>William II. of Avesnes, Count of Hainault, Holland and Zealand.
+Son of the above, <a href="#pg332">332</a>, <a href=
+"#pg336">336</a>, <a href="#pg339">339</a>, <a href=
+"#pg356">356</a>.</li>
+
+<li>William of Bavaria, Count of Hainault, Holland and Zealand, <a
+href="#pg410">410</a>.</li>
+
+<li>William of Hatfield, son of Edward III., <a href=
+"#pg428">428</a>.</li>
+
+<li>William of Holland, King of the Romans, <a href=
+"#pg078">78</a>, <a href="#pg079">79</a>.</li>
+
+<li>William of Norwich, St., <a href="#pg175">175</a>.</li>
+
+<li>William of Savoy, Bishop-elect of Valence and Winchester, <a
+href="#pg054">54</a>-56.</li>
+
+<li>William of Valence, Lord of Pembroke, <a href="#pg065">65</a>,
+<a href="#pg098">98</a>, <a href="#pg109">109</a>, <a href=
+"#pg117">117</a>, <a href="#pg124">124</a>, <a href=
+"#pg125">125</a>, <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a href=
+"#pg165">165</a>, <a href="#pg202">202</a>.</li>
+
+<li>William I. the Conqueror, <a href="#pg052">52</a>, <a href=
+"#pg073">73</a>, <a href="#pg345">345</a>, <a href=
+"#pg360">360</a>.</li>
+
+<li>William the Lion, King of Scots, <a href="#pg177">177</a>, <a
+href="#pg178">178</a>, <a href="#pg180">180</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wiltshire, <a href="#pg184">184</a>, <a href="#pg233">233</a>,
+<a href="#pg422">422</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Winchelsea, <a href="#pg007">7</a>, <a href="#pg008">8</a>, <a
+href="#pg129">129</a>, <a href="#pg205">205</a>, <a href=
+"#pg384">384</a>, <a href="#pg396">396</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>naval battle off, <a href="#pg384">384</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Winchelsea, Robert, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href=
+"#pg199">199</a>-204, <a href="#pg206">206</a>, <a href=
+"#pg208">208</a>, <a href="#pg217">217</a>, <a href=
+"#pg219">219</a>, <a href="#pg220">220</a>, <a href=
+"#pg222">222</a>, <a href="#pg223">223</a>, <a href=
+"#pg228">228</a>-232, <a href="#pg238">238</a>, <a href=
+"#pg239">239</a>, <a href="#pg241">241</a>, <a href=
+"#pg242">242</a>, <a href="#pg244">244</a>, <a href=
+"#pg249">249</a>, <a href="#pg254">254</a>-256, <a href=
+"#pg265">265</a>, <a href="#pg303">303</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Winchester, <a href="#pg001">1</a>, <a href="#pg009">9</a>, <a
+href="#pg102">102</a>, <a href="#pg109">109</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>bishopric of, <a href="#pg108">108</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cathedral of, <a href="#pg056">56</a>, <a href=
+"#pg423">423</a>.</li>
+
+<li>parliament of March, 1330, at, <a href="#pg307">307</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Annals of, <a href="#pg454">454</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Winchester, Bishops of;
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Edington, William;</li>
+
+<li>Roches, Peter des;</li>
+
+<li>Stratford, John;</li>
+
+<li>Aymer of Valence;</li>
+
+<li>Woodlock, Henry;</li>
+
+<li>William of Savoy;</li>
+
+<li>Wykeham, William of.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Winchester, Hugh Despenser, the elder, Earl of, <a href=
+"#pg287">287</a>. See Despenser.</li>
+
+<li>Winchester, Saer de Quincy, Earl of, <a href="#pg009">9</a>, <a
+href="#pg013">13</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Windsor, town and castle, <a href="#pg110">110</a>, 112, <a
+href="#pg249">249</a>, <a href="#pg310">310</a>, <a href=
+"#pg356">356</a>, <a href="#pg406">406</a>, <a href=
+"#pg423">423</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Round Table at, <a href="#pg356">356</a>, <a href=
+"#pg380">380</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chapel, St. George's at, <a href="#pg380">380</a>, <a href=
+"#pg423">423</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Wingham, Henry, <a href="#pg099">99</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wishart, Robert, Bishop of Glasgow, <a href="#pg206">206</a>,
+<a href="#pg227">227</a>, <a href="#pg233">233</a>, <a href=
+"#pg234">234</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wither, WIlliam, <a href="#pg030">30</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wolvesey Castle, Winchester, <a href="#pg102">102</a>, <a href=
+"#pg103">103</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Women In the law courts, <a href="#pg347">347</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>French law of succession of, <a href="#pg437">437</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Woodlock, Henry, Bishop of Winchester, <a href=
+"#pg239">239</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Woodstock, <a href="#pg075">75</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wool trade <a href="#pg148">148</a>, <a href="#pg332">332</a>,
+<a href="#pg369">369</a>, <a href="#pg427">427</a>, <a href=
+"#pg433">433</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Worcester, <a href="#pg001">1-3</a>, <a href="#pg015">15</a>,
+<a href="#pg044">44</a>, <a href="#pg085">85</a>, <a href=
+"#pg121">121</a>, <a href="#pg122">122</a>, <a href=
+"#pg126">126</a>, <a href="#pg127">127</a>, <a href=
+"#pg284">284</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>Bishops of, see Cantilupe, Walter; Reynolds, Walter.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Worcester, Provisions of, <a href="#pg121">121</a>, <a href=
+"#pg124">124</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>Annals</i> of, <a href="#pg455">455</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Wright's, T., <i>Political Songs</i>, <a href="#pg461">461</a>;
+
+
+<ul>
+<li><i>Political Songs and Poems</i>, <a href=
+"#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li><i>Writs, Parliamentary</i>, edited by Sir F. Palgrave, <a
+href="#pg444">444</a>, <a href="#pg447">447</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wycliffe, John, <a href="#pg376">376</a>, <a href=
+"#pg377">377</a>, 42l, <a href="#pg425">425</a>, <a href=
+"#pg427">427</a>, <a href="#pg434">434</a>, <a href=
+"#pg439">439</a>-441, <a href="#pg453">453</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his writings, <a href="#pg461">461</a>-463.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Wye, the river, <a href="#pg047">47</a>, <a href=
+"#pg076">76</a>, <a href="#pg111">111</a>, <a href=
+"#pg126">126</a>, <a href="#pg163">163</a>, <a href=
+"#pg280">280</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wykeham, William of, Bishop of Winchester, <a href=
+"#pg423">423</a>, <a href="#pg432">432</a>, <a href=
+"#pg433">433</a>, <a href="#pg435">435</a>, <a href=
+"#pg438">438</a>-440;
+
+<ul>
+<li>his <i>Register</i>, <a href="#pg450">450</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>Wykes, Thomas, <i>Chronicle of</i>, <a href=
+"#pg455">455</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wynn, John, <a href="#pg414">414</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wyntoun, Andrew, <i>Originale</i> by, <a href=
+"#pg459">459</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Yale, <a href="#pg162">162</a>.<a name="Y" id="Y" /></li>
+
+<li>Yarmouth, <a href="#pg192">192</a>, <a href="#pg193">193</a>,
+<a href="#pg210">210</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Year Books</i>, the, <a href="#pg095">95</a>, <a href=
+"#pg420">420</a>, <a href="#pg461">461</a>.</li>
+
+<li>York, <a href="#pg023">23</a>, <a href="#pg164">164</a>, <a
+href="#pg212">212</a>, <a href="#pg226">226</a>, <a href=
+"#pg249">249</a>, <a href="#pg250">250</a>, <a href=
+"#pg255">255</a>, <a href="#pg264">264</a>, <a href=
+"#pg276">276</a>, <a href="#pg286">286</a>, <a href=
+"#pg301">301</a>, <a href="#pg304">304</a>, <a href=
+"#pg305">305</a>, <a href="#pg377">377</a>, <a href=
+"#pg387">387</a>, <a href="#pg423">423</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>parliaments at, <a href="#pg274">274</a>, <a href=
+"#pg275">275</a>, <a href="#pg287">287</a>-289.</li>
+
+<li>house of, <a href="#pg431">431</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>York, Archbishops of.;
+
+<ul>
+<li>See Giffard, Walter;</li>
+
+<li>Greenfield, William;</li>
+
+<li>Grey, Walter;</li>
+
+<li>Melton, William;</li>
+
+<li>Thoresby, John;</li>
+
+<li>Zouch, William de la.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+
+<li>York, Edmund of Langley, Earl of Cambridge, Duke of, <a href=
+"#pg431">431</a>, see Edmund.</li>
+
+<li>Yorkshire, <a href="#pg096">96</a>, <a href="#pg180">180</a>,
+<a href="#pg205">205</a>, <a href="#pg273">273</a>-277, <a href=
+"#pg285">285</a>, <a href="#pg286">286</a>, <a href=
+"#pg289">289</a>, <a href="#pg421">421</a>, <a href=
+"#pg423">423</a>, <a href="#pg447">447</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ypres, <a href="#pg332">332</a>, <a href="#pg341">341</a>, <a
+href="#pg344">344</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Yrvon, the river, <a href="#pg163">163</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ystradvellte, <a href="#pg174">174</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul class="IX">
+<li>Zealand, county of, <a href="#pg299">299</a>, <a href=
+"#pg332">332</a>, <a href="#pg356">356</a>, <a href=
+"#pg410">410</a>.<a name="Z" id="Z" /></li>
+
+<li>Zouch, William de la, Archbishop of York, <a href=
+"#pg365">365</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Zwyn, the river, <a href="#pg344">344</a>, <a href=
+"#pg346">346</a>;
+
+<ul>
+<li>harbour, <a href="#pg346">346</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+</ul>
+
+<h4>CORRIGENDA</h4>
+
+<p>Chapter II, Paragraph 5, for Roger Bigod read Hugh Bigod.</p>
+
+<p>Chapter X, Paragraph 4, for Earl of Cornwall read Earl of
+Lancaster.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The History of England, by T.F. Tout
+
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@@ -0,0 +1,21496 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The History of England, by T.F. Tout
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The History of England
+ From the Accession of Henry III. to the Death of Edward III. (1216-1377)
+
+Author: T.F. Tout
+
+Editor: William Hunt and Reginald L. Poole
+
+Release Date: September 10, 2005 [EBook #16679]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Lee Dawei, Anurag Garg, Turgut Dincer and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND
+
+FROM THE ACCESSION OF HENRY III. TO THE DEATH OF EDWARD III.
+(1216-1377)
+
+BY
+T.F. TOUT, M.A.
+Professor of Mediaeval and Modern History
+in the University of Manchester.
+
+
+
+
+THE POLITICAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND IN TWELVE VOLUMES
+
+Seventy-six years have passed since Lingard completed his HISTORY OF
+ENGLAND, which ends with the Revolution of 1688. During that period
+historical study has made a great advance. Year after year the mass of
+materials for a new History of England has increased; new lights have
+been thrown on events and characters, and old errors have been
+corrected. Many notable works have been written on various periods of
+our history; some of them at such length as to appeal almost
+exclusively to professed historical students. It is believed that the
+time has come when the advance which has been made in the knowledge of
+English history as a whole should be laid before the public in a single
+work of fairly adequate size. Such a book should be founded on
+independent thought and research, but should at the same time be
+written with a full knowledge of the works of the best modern
+historians and with a desire to take advantage of their teaching
+wherever it appears sound.
+
+The vast number of authorities, printed and in manuscript, on which a
+History of England should be based, if it is to represent the existing
+state of knowledge, renders co-operation almost necessary and certainly
+advisable. The History, of which this volume is an instalment, is an
+attempt to set forth in a readable form the results at present attained
+by research. It will consist of twelve volumes by twelve different
+writers, each of them chosen as being specialty capable of dealing with
+the period which he undertakes, and the editors, while leaving to each
+author as free a hand as possible, hope to insure a general similarity
+in method of treatment, so that the twelve volumes may in their
+contents, as well as in their outward appearance, form one History.
+
+As its title imports, this History will primarily deal with politics,
+with the History of England and, after the date of the union with
+Scotland, Great Britain, as a state or body politic; but as the life of
+a nation is complex, and its condition at any given time cannot be
+understood without taking into account the various forces acting upon
+it, notices of religious matters and of intellectual, social, and
+economic progress will also find place in these volumes. The footnotes
+will, so far as is possible, be confined to references to authorities,
+and references will not be appended to statements which appear to be
+matters of common knowledge and do not call for support. Each volume
+will have an Appendix giving some account of the chief authorities,
+original and secondary, which the author has used. This account will be
+compiled with a view of helping students rather than of making long
+lists of books without any notes as to their contents or value. That
+the History will have faults both of its own and such as will always in
+some measure attend co-operative work, must be expected, but no pains
+have been spared to make it, so far as may be, not wholly unworthy of
+the greatness of its subject.
+
+Each volume, while forming part of a complete History, will also in
+itself be a separate and complete book, will be sold separately, and
+will have its own index, and two or more maps.
+
+Vol. I. to 1066. By Thomas Hodgkin, D.C.L., Litt.D., Fellow of
+University College, London; Fellow of the British Academy.
+
+Vol. II. 1066 to 1216. By George Burton Adams, M.A., Professor of
+History in Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
+
+Vol. III. 1216 to 1377. By T.F. Tout, M.A., Professor of Medieval and
+Modern History in the Victoria University of Manchester; formerly
+Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford.
+
+Vol. IV. 1377 to 1485. By C. Oman, M.A., Fellow of All Souls' College,
+and Deputy Professor of Modern History in the University of Oxford.
+
+Vol. V. 1485 to 1547. By H.A.L. Fisher, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of New
+College, Oxford.
+
+Vol. VI. 1547 to 1603. By A.F. Pollard, M.A., Professor of
+Constitutional History in University College, London.
+
+Vol. VII. 1603 to 1660. By F.C. Montague, M.A., Professor of History in
+University College, London; formerly Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford.
+
+Vol. VIII. 1660 to 1702. By Richard Lodge, M.A., Professor of History
+in the University of Edinburgh; formerly Fellow of Brasenose College,
+Oxford.
+
+Vol. IX. 1702 to 1760. By I.S. Leadam, M.A., formerly Fellow of
+Brasenose College, Oxford.
+
+Vol. X. 1760 to 1801. By the Rev. William Hunt, M.A., D. Litt, Trinity
+College, Oxford.
+
+Vol. XI. 1801 to 1837. By the Hon. George C. Brodrick, D.C.L., late
+Warden of Merton College, Oxford, and J K. Fotheringham, M.A., Magdalen
+College, Oxford, Lecturer in Classics at King's College, London.
+
+Vol. XII. 1837 to 1901. By Sidney J Low, M.A., Balliol College, Oxford,
+formerly Lecturer on History at King's College, London.
+
+
+
+
+The Political History of England
+IN TWELVE VOLUMES
+
+EDITED BY WILLIAM HUNT, D. LITT., AND
+REGINALD L. POOLE, M.A.
+
+III.
+THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND
+
+FROM THE ACCESSION OF HENRY III. TO THE
+DEATH OF EDWARD III.
+1216-1377
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE REGENCY OF WILLIAM MARSHAL.
+
+ 19 Oct., 1216. Death of King John
+ Position of parties
+ The Church on the king's side
+ 28 Oct. Coronation of Henry III
+ 11 Nov. Great council at Bristol
+ 12 Nov. The first charter of Henry III
+ 1216-17. Progress of the war
+ 1217. Rising of Wilkin of the Weald
+ Louis' visit to France
+ 22 April. Return of Louis from France
+ Sieges of Dover, Farnham, and Mount Sorrel
+ 20 May. The fair of Lincoln
+ 23 Aug. The sea-fight off Sandwich
+ 11 Sept. Treaty of Lambeth
+ 6 Nov. Reissue of the great charter
+ Restoration of order by William Marshal
+ 14 May, 1219. Death of William Marshal
+ His character and career
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE RULE OF HUBERT DE BURGH.
+
+ 1219. Pandulf the real successor of William Marshal
+ July, 1221. Langton procures Pandulf's recall
+ Ascendency of Hubert de Burgh
+Jan.-Feb., 1221. The rebellion of Albemarle
+ July, 1222. The sedition of Constantine FitzAthulf
+ 1221-24. Marriage alliances
+ 1219-23. War in Wales
+ April, 1223. Henry III. declared by the pope competent to govern
+ June, 1224. Revolt of Falkes de Breaute
+ 20 June-14 Aug. Siege of Bedford
+ Fall of Falkes
+ Papal and royal taxation
+ April, 1227. End of the minority
+ Relations with France during the minority
+ The Lusignans and the Poitevin barons
+ 1224. Louis VIII.'s conquest of Poitou
+ 1225. Expedition of Richard of Cornwall and William
+ Longsword to Gascony
+ Nov., 1226. Accession of Louis IX. in France
+ 1229-30. Henry III.'s campaign in Brittany and Poitou
+21-30 July, 1230. Siege of Mirambeau
+ 1228. The Kerry campaign
+ 2 May, 1230. Death of William of Braose
+ 1231. Henry III.'s second Welsh campaign
+ Aug. Death of Archbishop Richard le Grand
+ Gregory IX. and Henry III.
+ 1232. Riots of Robert Twenge
+ 29 July. Fall of Hubert de Burgh
+ 1231. Death of William Marshal the Younger
+ 1232. Death of Randolph of Blundeville, Earl of Chester
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE ALIEN INVASION.
+
+ 1232-34. Rule of Peter des Roches
+ Aug., 1233. Revolt of Richard Marshal
+ 23 Nov. Fight near Monmouth
+ 1234. Richard Marshal in Ireland
+ 1 April. Defeat and death of the Earl Marshal near Kildare
+ 2 April. Edmund Rich consecrated Archbishop of Canterbury
+ 9 April. Fall of Peter des Roches
+ Beginning of Henry III.'s personal government
+ Character of Henry III.
+ The alien invasions
+ 14 Jan., 1236. Henry's marriage to Eleanor of Provence
+ The Savoyards in England
+ Revival of Poitevin influence
+ 1239. Simon of Montfort Earl of Leicester
+ 1237. The legation of Cardinal Otto
+ 1239. Quarrel of Gregory IX. and Frederick II.
+ 1235. Robert Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln
+ 16 Nov., 1240. Death of Edmund Rich in exile
+ Henry III. and Frederick II.
+ Attempted reconquest of Poitou
+May-Sept., 1242. The campaign of Taillebourg
+ 1243. Truce with France
+ The Lusignans in England
+ The baronial opposition
+ Grosseteste's opposition to Henry III., and Innocent IV.
+ 1243. Relations with Scotland and Wales
+ 1240. Death of Llewelyn ap Iorwerth
+ 1246. Death of David ap Llewelyn
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+POLITICAL RETROGRESSION and NATIONAL PROGRESS.
+
+ 1248-58. Characteristics of the history of these ten years
+ Decay of Henry's power in Gascony
+ 1248-52. Simon de Montfort, seneschal of Gascony
+ Aug., 1253. Henry III. in Gascony
+ 1254. Marriage and establishment of Edward the king's son
+ Edward's position in Gascony
+ Edward's position in Cheshire
+ 1254. Llewelyn ap Griffith sole Prince of North Wales
+ Edward in the four cantreds and in West Wales
+ 1257. Welsh campaign of Henry and Edward
+ Revival of the baronial opposition
+ 1255. Candidature of Edmund, the king's son, for Sicily
+ 1257. Richard of Cornwall elected and crowned King of the Romans
+ Leicester as leader of the opposition
+ Progress in the age of Henry III
+ The cosmopolitan and the national ideals
+ French influence
+ The coming of the friars
+ 1221. Gilbert of Freynet and the first Dominicans in England
+ 1224. Arrival of Agnellus of Pisa and the first Franciscans
+ in England
+ Other mendicant orders in England
+ The influence of the friars
+ The universities
+ Prominent English schoolmen
+ Paris and Oxford
+ The mendicants at Oxford
+ Roger Bacon and Duns Scotus
+ Academic influence in public life
+ Beginnings of colleges
+ Intellectual characteristics of thirteenth century
+ Literature in Latin and French
+ Literature in English
+ Art
+ Gothic architecture
+ The towns and trade
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE BARONS' WAR.
+
+ 2 April, 1258. Parliament at London
+ 11 June. The Mad Parliament
+ The Provisions of Oxford
+ 22 June. Flight of the Lusignans
+ Appointment of the Fifteen
+ Working of the new Constitution
+ 4 Dec., 1259. Treaty of Paris
+ Its unpopularity in England and France
+ 1259. Dissensions among the baronial leaders
+ 1259. Provisions of Westminster
+ 1261. Henry III.'s repudiation of the Provisions
+ 1263. Reconstitution of parties
+ The changed policy of the marchers
+ Outbreak of civil war
+ The appeal to Louis IX
+ 23 Jan., 1264. Mise of Amiens
+ Renewal of the struggle
+ 4 April. Sack of Northampton
+ The campaign in Kent and Sussex
+ 14 May. Battle of Lewes
+ Personal triumph of Montfort
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE RULE OF MONTFORT AND THE ROYALIST RESTORATION.
+
+ 15 May. Mise of Lewes
+ 15 Dec. Provisions of Worcester
+Jan.-Mar., 1265. The Parliament of 1265
+ Split up of the baronial party
+ Quarrel of Leicester and Gloucester
+ 28 May. Edward's escape
+ 22 June. Treaty of Pipton
+ Small results of the alliance of Llewelyn and the barons
+ The campaign in the Severn valley
+ 4 Aug. Battle of Evesham
+ The royalist restoration
+ 1266. The revolt of the Disinherited
+ 15 May. Battle of Chesterfield
+ 31 Oct. The _Dictum de Kenilworth_
+ Michaelmas. The Ely rebellion
+ April, 1267. Gloucester's support of the Disinherited
+ July. End of the rebellion
+ 25 Sept. Treaty of Shrewsbury
+ 1267. Statute of Marlborough
+ 1270-72. Edward's Crusade
+ 16 Nov., 1272. Death of Henry III
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE EARLY FOREIGN POLICY AND LEGISLATION OF EDWARD I.
+
+ Character of Edward I.
+ 1272-74. Rule of the regency
+ Edward's doings in Italy and France
+ Edward's relations with Philip III.
+ 1273-74. Wars of Bearn and Limoges
+ Edward I. and Gregory X.
+ May-July, 1274. Council of Lyons
+ Relations of Edward I. and Rudolf of Hapsburg
+ 23 May, 1279. Treaty of Amiens
+ 1281. League of Macon
+ 1282. Sicilian vespers
+ 1285. Deaths of Philip III., Charles of Anjou, Peter of
+ Aragon, and Martin IV.
+ Bishop Burnell
+ 1275. Statute of Westminster, the first
+ 1278. Statute of Gloucester
+ Hundred Rolls and _placita de quo warranto_
+ Archbishops Kilwardby and Peckham
+ 1279. Statute of Mortmain
+ 1285. _Circumspecte agatis_
+ 1285. Statute of Westminster, the second (De _Donis_)
+ 1285. Statute of Winchester
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE CONQUEST OF NORTH WALES.
+
+ Execution of the Treaty of Shrewsbury
+ Llewelyn's refusal of homage
+ 1277. Edward's first Welsh campaign
+ 1277. Treaty of Aberconway
+ Edward's attempts to introduce English law into the
+ ceded districts
+ 1282. The Welsh revolt
+ 1282. Edward's second Welsh campaign
+ Llewelyn's escape to the Upper Wye
+ 11 Dec. Battle of Orewyn Bridge
+ 1283. Parliaments and financial expedients
+ Subjection of Gwynedd completed
+ 3 Oct. Parliament of Shrewsbury and execution of David
+ The Edwardian castles
+ Mid-Lent, 1284. Statute of Wales
+ Effect of the conquest upon the march
+ Peckham and the ecclesiastical settlement of _Wales_
+ 1287. Revolt of Rhys ap Meredith
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE SICILIAN AND THE SCOTTISH ARBITRATIONS.
+
+ Edward I. at the height of his fame
+April, 1286-Aug 1289, Edward's long visit to France
+ 1289. The Sicilian arbitration
+ 1287. Treaty of Oloron
+ 1288. Treaty of Canfranc
+ 1291. Treaty of Tarascon
+ Maladministration during Edward's absence
+ Judicial and official scandals
+ 1289. Special commission for the trial of offenders
+ 1290. Statute of Westminster, the third (_Quia emptores_)
+ The feud between Gloucester and Hereford
+ 1291. The courts at Ystradvellte and Abergavenny
+ Humiliation of the marcher earls
+ 1290. Expulsion of the Jews
+ The rise of the Italian bankers
+ 1272-86. Early relations of Edward to Scotland
+ 1286. Death of Alexander III. of Scotland
+ 1286-89. Regency in the name of the Maid of Norway
+ 1289. Treaty of Salisbury
+ 1290. Treaty of Brigham
+ Death of the Maid of Norway
+ The claimants to the Scottish throne
+ May, 1291. Parliament of Norham. Edward recognised as overlord
+ of Scotland
+ 1291-92. The great suit for Scotland
+ 17 Nov., 1292. John Balliol declared King of Scots
+ Edward's conduct in relation to Scotland
+ 1290. Death of Eleanor of Castile
+ Transition to the later years of the reign
+ Edward's later ministers
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE FRENCH AND SCOTTISH WARS AND THE CONFIRMATION OF
+THE CHARTERS.
+
+ Commercial rivalry of English and French seamen
+ 15 May, 1293. Battle off Saint-Mahe
+ 1294. Edmund of Lancaster's failure to procure a settlement
+ with Philip IV.
+ The French occupation of Gascony
+ June, 1294. War with France
+ Preparations for a French campaign
+ 1294. Revolts of Madog, Maelgwn, and Morgan
+ Edward's danger at Aberconway
+ 22 Jan., 1293. Battle of Maes Madog
+ July. Welsh revolts suppressed
+ 1295. Failure of the Gascon campaign
+ Failure of attempted coalition against France
+ Organisation of the English navy
+ Treason of Sir Thomas Turberville
+ The naval attack on England
+ Rupture between Edward and the Scots
+ 5 July. Alliance between the French and Scots
+ Nov. The "Model Parliament"
+ 1296. Gascon expedition and death of Edmund of Lancaster
+ Edward's invasion of Scotland
+ 27 April. Battle of Dunbar
+ 10 July. Submission of John Balliol
+ Conquest and administration of Scotland
+ The Ragman Roll
+ Sept., 1294. Consecration of Archbishop Winchelsea
+ 29 Feb., 1296. Boniface VIII. issues _Clericis laicos_.
+ Conflict of Edward and Winchelsea
+ 24 Feb., 1297. Parliament at Salisbury
+ Conflict of Edward with the earls
+ July. Break up of the clerical opposition
+ Increasing moderation of baronial opposition
+ 24 Aug. Edward's departure for Flanders
+ May. Revolt of the Scots under William Wallace.
+ 11 Sept. Battle of Stirling Bridge.
+ 12 Oct. Confirmation of the charters with new clauses.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE SCOTTISH FAILURE.
+
+ 1297. Edward's unsuccessful campaign in Flanders
+ 31 Jan., 1298. Truce of Tournai, and end of the French war
+ July. Edward's invasion of Scotland
+ 22 July. Battle of Falkirk
+ Slowness of Edward's progress towards the conquest
+ of Scotland
+ 19 June, 1299. Treaty of Montreuil
+ 9 Sept. Marriage of Edward and Margaret of France
+ Mar., 1300. _Articuli super cartas_
+ July-Aug. Carlaverock campaign
+20 Jan.-14 Feb., 1301. Parliament of Lincoln
+ The barons' letter to the pope
+ Edward of Carnarvon, Prince of Wales
+ 1302. Philip IV.'s troubles with the Flemings and Boniface VIII
+ 20 May, 1303. Peace of Paris between Edward and Philip
+ Increasing strength of Edward's position
+ The decay of the earldoms
+ Additions to the royal demesne
+ 1303. Conquest of Scotland seriously undertaken
+ 24 July, 1304. Capture of Stirling
+ Aug., 1305. Execution of Wallace and completion of the conquest
+ The settlement of the government of Scotland
+ 1305. Disgrace of Winchelsea and Bek
+ Edward I. and Clement V.
+ 1307. Statute of Carlisle
+ 1305. Ordinance of Trailbaston
+ 10 Jan., 1306. Murder of Comyn
+ Rising of Robert Bruce
+ 25 Mar. Bruce crowned King of Scots
+ Preparations for a fresh conquest of Scotland
+ 7 July, 1307. Death of Edward I.
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+GAVESTON, THE ORDAINERS, AND BANNOCKBURN.
+
+ Character of Edward II.
+ 1307. Peter Gaveston Earl of Cornwall
+ 25 Jan., 1308. Marriage of Edward with Isabella of France
+ 25 Feb. Coronation of Edward II.
+ Power and unpopularity of Gaveston
+ 8 May. Gaveston exiled
+ July 1309. Return of Gaveston condoned by Parliament at Stamford
+ 1310. Renewal of the opposition of the barons to Gaveston
+ 16 Mar. Appointment of the lords ordainers
+ Sept. Abortive campaign against the Scots
+ Character and policy of Thomas, Earl of Lancaster
+ 1311. The ordinances
+Nov., 1311, Jan., 1312. Gaveston's second exile and return
+ The earls at war against Edward and Gaveston
+ Gaveston's surrender at Scarborough
+ 19 June, 1312. Murder of Gaveston
+ Consequent break up of the baronial party
+ Oct., 1313. Edward and Lancaster reconciled
+ May. Death of Archbishop Winchelsea
+ 1312. Fall of the Templars
+ Walter Reynolds Archbishop of Canterbury
+ Complaints of papal abuses
+ Progress of Bruce's power in Scotland
+ 1314. The siege of Stirling
+ An army collected for its relief
+ 24 June, Battle of Bannockburn
+ The results of the battle
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+LANCASTER, PEMBROKE, AND THE DESPENSERS.
+
+ Failure of the rule of Thomas of Lancaster
+ 1315. Revolts of Llewelyn Bren
+ 1315. Rising of Adam Banaster.
+ 1316. The Bristol disturbances.
+ 1315. Edward Bruce's attack on the English in Ireland.
+ 1317. Roger Mortimer in Ireland.
+ 1318. Death of Edward Bruce at Dundalk.
+ Lancaster's failure and the break up of his party.
+ Pembroke and the middle party.
+ 9 Aug. Treaty of Leek and the supremacy of the middle party.
+ 1314-18. Progress of Robert Bruce.
+ 1319. Renewed attack on Scotland.
+ Battle of Myton.
+ Rise of the Despensers.
+ 1317. The partition of the Gloucester inheritance.
+ 1320. War between the husbands of the Gloucester heiresses
+ in South Wales.
+ June, 1321. Conferences at Pontefract and Sherburn.
+ July. The exile of the Despensers.
+ Break up of the opposition after their victory.
+23-31 Oct., 1321. The siege of Leeds Castle.
+Jan.-Feb., 1322. Edward's successful campaign in the march.
+ 11 Feb. Recall of the Despensers.
+ The king's march against the northern barons.
+ 16 Mar. Battle of Boroughbridge.
+ 22 Mar. Execution of Lancaster.
+ 2 May. Parliament at York and repeal of the ordinances.
+ The triumph of the Despensers.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE FALL OF EDWARD II. AND THE RULE OF ISABELLA AND MORTIMER.
+
+ Aug. Renewed attack on the Scots.
+ Oct. Edward II.'s narrow escape at Byland.
+ Mar., 1323. Treason and execution of Andrew Harclay.
+ Incapacity of the Despensers as administrators.
+ Their quarrels with the old nobles.
+ 1324. Their breach with Queen Isabella.
+ Their chief helpers: Walter Stapledon and Ralph Baldock.
+ Reaction against the Despensers.
+ 1303-14. Relations of England and France.
+ 1314-22. Edward's dealings with Louis X. and Philip V.
+ 1322. Accession of Charles IV.
+ 1324. Affair of Saint-Sardos.
+ Renewal of war. Sequestration of Gascony. Charles
+ of Valois' conquest of the Agenais and La Reole.
+ Isabella's mission to Paris.
+ Edward of Aquitaine's homage to Charles IV.
+ 1325. Treachery of Charles IV. and second sequestration of
+ Gascony.
+ 1326. Relations of Mortimer and Isabella
+ The Hainault marriage
+ 23 Sept. Landing of Isabella and Mortimer
+ Riots in London: murder of Stapledon
+ 26 Oct. Execution of the elder Despenser
+ 16 Nov. Capture of Edward and the younger Despenser
+ Triumph of the revolution
+ 7 Jan., 1327. Parliament's recognition of Edward of Aquitaine as king
+ 20 Jan. Edward II.'s resignation of the crown
+ 24 Jan. Proclamation of Edward III.
+ 22 Sept., 1328. Murder of Edward II.
+ 1327-30. Rule of Isabella and Mortimer
+ 1327. Abortive Scottish campaign
+ April, 1328. Treaty of Northampton; "the shameful peace"
+ Character and ambition of Mortimer
+ Oct. Mortimer Earl of the March of Wales
+ Henry of Lancaster's opposition to him
+ Mar., 1330. Execution of the Earl of Kent
+ Oct. Parliament at Nottingham
+ 19 Oct. Arrest of Mortimer
+ 29 Nov. His execution
+ 1330-58. Later life of Isabella
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE PRELIMINARIES OF THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR.
+
+ Character and policy of Edward III.
+ 1330-40. The rule of the Stratfords
+ 1337. The new earldoms
+ Scotland during the minority of David Bruce
+ Edward Balliol and the Disinherited
+ 6 Aug., 1332. The Disinherited in Scotland
+ Battle of Dupplin Moor
+ 6 Aug.-16 Dec. Edward Balliol's brief reign and expulsion
+ Treaty of Roxburgh
+ 1333. Attempt to procure his restoration
+ Siege of Berwick
+ 19 July. Battle of Halidon Hill
+ Edward Balliol restored
+ 12 June, 1334. Treaty of Newcastle, ceding to Edward south-eastern
+ Scotland
+ Failure of Edward Balliol
+ 1334-36. Edward III.'s Scottish campaigns
+ 1341. Return of David Bruce from France
+ 1327-37. Relations of England and France
+ 31 Mar., 1327. Treaty of Paris
+ Edward's lands in Gascony after the treaty of Paris
+ 1328. Accession of Philip of Valois in France
+ Protests of the English regency
+ 1328. The legal and political aspects of the succession
+ question
+ Edward III.'s claim to France
+ 6 June, 1329. Edward's homage to Philip VI.
+ 8 May, 1330. Convention of the Wood of Vincennes
+ 9 Mar., 1331. Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye
+ April. Interview of Pont-Sainte-Maxence
+ Crusading projects of John XXII.
+ 1336. Abandonment of the crusade by Benedict XII
+ Strained relations between England and France
+ 1337. Mission of the Cardinals Peter and Bertrand
+ Edward and Robert of Artois
+ The _Vow_ of the Heron
+ Preparations for war
+ Breach with Flanders and stoppage of export of wool
+ Alliance with William I. and II. of Hainault
+ Edward's other Netherlandish allies
+ 1337. Breach between France and England
+ Nov. Sir Walter Manny at Cadzand
+ Fruitless negotiations and further hostilities
+ July, 1338. Edward III.'s departure for Flanders
+ 5 Sept. Interview of Edward and the Emperor Louis of
+ Bavaria at Coblenz
+ The Anglo-imperial alliance
+ Further fruitless negotiations
+ Renewal of Edward's claim to the French crown
+ The responsibility for the war
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+THE EARLY CAMPAIGNS OF THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR.
+
+ 1339. Edward's invasion of France
+ Oct. Campaign of the Thierache
+ 23 Oct. The failure at Buironfosse
+ Alliance between Edward and the Flemish cities
+ James van Artevelde
+ Jan., 1340. Edward III. at Ghent
+ His proclamation as King of France
+ 20 Feb. His return to England
+ 22 June. His re-embarkation for Flanders
+ Parallel naval development of England and France
+ The Norman navy and the projected invasion of
+ England
+ 24 June. Battle of Sluys
+ Ineffective campaigns in Artois and the Tournaisis
+ 25 Sept. Truce of Esplechin
+ 30 Nov. Edward's return to London
+ The ministers displaced and a special commission
+ appointed to try them
+ 30 Nov. Controversy between Edward and Archbishop Stratford.
+ 23 April, 1341. Parliament at London supporting Stratford and forcing
+ Edward to choose ministers after consulting it.
+ 1 Oct. Edward's repudiation of his concessions.
+ April, 1343. Repeal of the statutes of 1341.
+ John of Montfort and Charles of Blois claim the
+ duchy of Brittany.
+ War of the Breton succession.
+ June, 1342. The siege of Hennebont raised.
+ 1343. Battle of Morlaix.
+ 19 Jan., 1343. Edward III. in Brittany.
+ Truce of Malestroit.
+ Edward's financial and political troubles.
+ End of the Flemish alliance.
+ June, 1345. Henry of Derby in Gascony.
+ 21 Oct. Battle of Auberoche.
+ 1346. Siege of Aiguillon and raid in Poitou.
+ Preparations for Edward III.'s campaign.
+ July-Aug. The march through Normandy.
+ 26 July. Capture of Caen.
+ Aug. The march up the Seine valley.
+ The retreat northwards.
+ The passage of the Somme at the _Blanche taque_.
+ 26 Aug. Battle of Crecy.
+ 17 Oct. Battle of Neville's Cross.
+ 4 Sept. Siege of Calais.
+ 3 Aug., 1347. Capture of Calais.
+ 20 June. Battle of La Roche Derien.
+ 28 Sept. Truce of Calais.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+FROM THE BLACK DEATH TO THE TREATY OF CALAIS.
+
+ 1347-48. Prosperity of England after the truce.
+ 1348-50. The Black Death and its results.
+ 1351. Statute of labourers.
+ Social and economic unrest.
+ Religious unrest.
+ The Flagellants.
+ The anti-clerical movement.
+ 1351. First statute of provisors.
+ 1353. First statute of _praemunire_.
+ Richard Fitzralph and the attack on the mendicants.
+ 1354. Ordinance Of the Staple.
+ 1352. Statute of treasons.
+ 1349. Foundation of the Order of the Garter.
+ Dagworth's administration of Brittany.
+ Hugh Calveley and Robert Knowles.
+ 27 Mar., 1351. Battle of the Thirty.
+ 1352. Battle of Mauron
+ Fighting round Calais
+ 1352. Capture of Guines
+ 29 Aug., 1350. Battle of the Spaniards-on-the-sea
+ 6 April, 1354. Preliminaries of peace signed at Guines
+ 1355. Failure of the negotiations and renewal of the war
+ Failure of John of Gaunt in Normandy
+ Sept.-Nov. Black Prince's raid in Languedoc
+ 1356. Operations of John of Gaunt in Normandy in alliance
+ with Charles of Navarre and Geoffrey of Harcourt
+ 9 Aug.-2 Oct. Black Prince's raid northwards to the Loire
+ 19 Sept. Battle of Poitiers.
+ 23 Mar., 1357. Truce of Bordeaux
+ Oct. Treaty of Berwick
+ 1357-71. The last years of David II.
+ 1371. Accession of Robert II. in Scotland
+ 1358. Preliminaries of peace signed between Edward III.
+ and John
+ State of France after Poitiers
+ 24 Mar., 1359. Treaty of London
+ The rejection of the treaty by the French
+Nov., 1359-April, 1360. Edward III.'s invasion of Northern France
+ Champagne and Burgundy
+ 11 Jan., 1360. Treaty of Guillon
+ 7 April. Siege of Paris
+ 8 May. Treaty of Bretigni
+ 24 Oct. Treaty of Calais
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR FROM THE TREATY OF CALAIS TO THE TRUCE
+OF BRUGES.
+
+ Difficulties in carrying out the treaty of Calais
+ Guerilla warfare: exploits of Calveley, Pipe, and
+ Jowel
+ 16 May, 1364. Battle of Cocherel
+ 29 Sept. Battle of Auray
+ 1365. Treaty of Guerande
+ Exploits of the free companies: John Hawkwood
+ 1361. The charters of renunciation not exchanged
+ 1364. Death of King John: accession of Charles V.
+ 1366. Expulsion of Peter the Cruel from Castile by Du
+ Guesclin and the free companies
+ Feb., 1367. The Black Prince's expedition to Spain
+ 3 April. Battle of Najera
+ The Black Prince's rule in Aquitaine
+ His difficulties with the great nobles
+ Jan., 1368. The hearth tax imposed
+ Jan., 1369. Renewal of the war.
+ Changed military and political conditions.
+ Relations of England and Flanders.
+ 1371. Battle in Bourgneuf Bay.
+ Successes of the French.
+ Sept., 1370. Sack of the _cite_ of Limoges.
+ 1371. The Black Prince's return to England with shattered
+ health.
+ 1370. Futile expeditions of Lancaster and Knowles.
+ Treason of Sir John Minsterworth.
+ Battle of Pontvallain.
+ 1370-72. Exploits of Sir Owen of Wales.
+ 23 June, 1370. Defeat of Pembroke at La Rochelle.
+ Aug. Defeat of Thomas Percy at Soubise.
+ 1372. Edward III.'s last military expedition.
+ Expulsion of the English from Poitou and Brittany.
+July-Dec., 1373. John of Gaunt's march from Calais to Bordeaux.
+ 1374. Ruin of the English power in France.
+ 27 June, 1375. Truce of Bruges.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+ENGLAND DURING THE LATTER YEARS OF EDWARD III.
+
+ Glories of the years succeeding the treaty of Calais.
+ 1361-69. John Froissart in England.
+ His picture of the life of court and people.
+ The national spirit in English literature.
+ Gower and Minot.
+ Geoffrey Chaucer.
+ The standard English language.
+ Lowland Scottish.
+ The national spirit in art.
+ "Flowing decorated" and "perpendicular" architecture.
+ Contrast between England and Scotland.
+ The national spirit in popular English literature.
+ William Langland.
+ His picture of the condition of the poor.
+ The national spirit and the universities.
+ Early career of John Wycliffe.
+ Spread of cultivation among the laity.
+ The national spirit in English law.
+ The national spirit in commerce.
+ Edward III.'s family settlement.
+ Marriage of the Black Prince and Joan of Kent.
+ Marriages of Lionel of Antwerp with Elizabeth de
+ Burgh and Violante Visconti.
+ Lionel in Ireland.
+ Statute of Kilkenny.
+ 1361-69. Philippa of Clarence's marriage with the Earl of
+ March.
+ John of Gaunt and the Duchy of Lancaster.
+ Continuation of ancient rivalries between houses now
+ represented by branches of the royal family.
+ The great prelates of the end of Edward III.'s reign.
+ Feb., 1371. Parliament: clerical ministers superseded by laymen.
+ Clerical and anti-clerical, constitutional and court
+ parties.
+ Edward III.'s dotage.
+ Alice Perrers.
+ Struggle of parties at court.
+ Increasing bitterness of the opposition to the courtiers.
+April-July, 1376. The "Good Parliament".
+ Fall of the courtiers.
+ 8 June. Death of the Black Prince.
+ John of Gaunt restored to power.
+ Jan., 1377. Packed parliament, and the reaction against the Good
+ Parliament.
+ Persistence of the clerical opposition.
+ The attack on John Wycliffe.
+ 10 Feb. Wycliffe before Bishop Courtenay.
+ John of Gaunt's substantial triumph.
+ 21 June. Death of Edward III.
+ Characteristics of his age.
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+ON AUTHORITIES.
+
+(1216-1377.)
+
+Comparative value of records and chronicles.
+Record sources for the period.
+Chancery Records:--
+ Patent Rolls
+ Close Rolls
+ Rolls of Parliament
+ Charter Rolls
+ Inquests Post-Mortem
+ Fine Rolls
+ Gascon Rolls
+ Hundred Rolls
+Exchequer Records
+Plea Rolls and records of the common law courts
+Records of local courts
+Scotch and Irish records
+Ecclesiastical records
+ Bishops' registers
+ Monastic Cartularies
+ Papal records
+Chroniclers of the period.
+St. Alban's Abbey as a school of history.
+Matthew Paris.
+Later St. Alban's chroniclers.
+Other chroniclers of Henry III.
+Other monastic annals.
+Chroniclers of Edward I.
+Civic chronicles.
+Chroniclers of Edward II.
+Chroniclers of Edward III.
+Scottish and Welsh chronicles.
+French chronicles illustrating English history.
+The three redactions of Froissart.
+Other French chroniclers of the Hundred Years' War.
+Legal literature.
+Literary aids to history.
+Modern works on the period.
+Maps.
+Bibliographies.
+Note on authorities for battle of Poitiers.
+
+INDEX.
+
+MAPS.
+(At the End of the Volume)
+1. Map of Wales and the March at the end of the XIIIth century.
+2. Map of Southern Scotland and Northern England in the XIIIth and
+ XIVth centuries.
+3. Map of France in the XIIIth and XIVth centuries.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE REGENCY OF WILLIAM MARSHAL.
+
+
+When John died, on October 19, 1216, the issue of the war between him
+and the barons was still doubtful. The arrival of Louis of France,
+eldest son of King Philip Augustus, had enabled the barons to win back
+much of the ground lost after John's early triumphs had forced them to
+call in the foreigner. Beyond the Humber the sturdy north-country
+barons, who had wrested the Great Charter from John, remained true to
+their principles, and had also the support of Alexander II., King of
+Scots. The magnates of the eastern counties were as staunch as the
+northerners, and the rich and populous southern shires were for the
+most part in agreement with them. In the west, the barons had the aid
+of Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, the great Prince of North Wales. While ten
+earls fought for Louis, the royal cause was only upheld by six. The
+towns were mainly with the rebels, notably London and the Cinque Ports,
+and cities so distant as Winchester and Lincoln, Worcester and
+Carlisle. Yet the baronial cause excited little general sympathy. The
+mass of the population stood aloof, and was impartially maltreated by
+the rival armies.
+
+John's son Henry had at his back the chief military resources of the
+country; the two strongest of the earls, William Marshal, Earl of
+Pembroke, and Randolph of Blundeville, Earl of Chester; the fierce
+lords of the Welsh March, the Mortimers, the Cantilupes, the Cliffords,
+the Braoses, and the Lacys; and the barons of the West Midlands, headed
+by Henry of Neufbourg, Earl of Warwick, and William of Ferrars, Earl of
+Derby. This powerful phalanx gave to the royalists a stronger hold in
+the west than their opponents had in any one part of the much wider
+territory within their sphere of influence. There was no baronial
+counterpart to the successful raiding of the north and east, which John
+had carried through in the last months of his life. A baronial centre,
+like Worcester, could not hold its own long in the west. Moreover, John
+had not entirely forfeited his hereditary advantages. The
+administrative families, whose chief representative was the justiciar
+Hubert de Burgh, held to their tradition of unswerving loyalty, and
+joined with the followers of the old king, of whom William Marshal was
+the chief survivor. All over England the royal castles were in safe
+hands, and so long as they remained unsubdued, no part of Louis'
+dominions was secure. The crown had used to the full its rights over
+minors and vacant fiefs. The subjection of the south-west was assured
+by the marriage of the mercenary leader, Falkes de Breaute, to the
+mother of the infant Earl of Devon, and by the grant of Cornwall to the
+bastard of the last of the Dunstanville earls. Though Isabella,
+Countess of Gloucester, John's repudiated wife, was as zealous as her
+new husband, the Earl of Essex, against John's son, Falkes kept a tight
+hand over Glamorgan, on which the military power of the house of
+Gloucester largely depended. Randolph of Chester was custodian of the
+earldoms of Leicester and Richmond, of which the nominal earls, Simon
+de Montfort and Peter Mauclerc, were far away, the one ruling Toulouse,
+and the other Brittany. The band of foreign adventurers, the mainstay
+of John's power, was still unbroken. Ruffians though these hirelings
+were, they had experience, skill, and courage, and were the only
+professional soldiers in the country.
+
+The vital fact of the situation was that the immense moral and
+spiritual forces of the Church remained on the side of the king.
+Innocent III. had died some months before John, but his successor,
+Honorius III., continued to uphold his policy. The papal legate, the
+Cardinal Gualo, was the soul of the royalist cause. Louis and his
+adherents had been excommunicated, and not a single English bishop
+dared to join openly the foes of Holy Church. The most that the
+clerical partisans of the barons could do was to disregard the
+interdict and continue their ministrations to the excommunicated host.
+The strongest English prelate, Stephen Langton, Archbishop of
+Canterbury, was at Rome in disgrace. Walter Grey, Archbishop of York,
+and Hugh of Wells, Bishop of Lincoln, were also abroad, while the
+Bishop of London, William of Sainte-Mere-Eglise, was incapacitated by
+illness. Several important sees, including Durham and Ely, were vacant.
+The ablest resident bishop, Peter des Roches of Winchester, was an
+accomplice in John's misgovernment.
+
+The chief obstacle in the way of the royalists had been the character
+of John, and the little Henry of Winchester could have had no share in
+the crimes of his father. But the dead king had lately shown such rare
+energy that there was a danger lest the accession of a boy of nine
+might not weaken the cause of monarchy. The barons were largely out of
+hand. The war was assuming the character of the civil war of Stephen's
+days, and John's mercenaries were aspiring to play the part of feudal
+potentates. It was significant that so many of John's principal
+supporters were possessors of extensive franchises, like the lords of
+the Welsh March, who might well desire to extend these feudal
+immunities to their English estates. The triumph of the crown through
+such help might easily have resolved the united England of Henry II.
+into a series of lordships under a nominal king.
+
+The situation was saved by the wisdom and moderation of the papal
+legate, and the loyalty of William Marshal, who forgot his interests as
+Earl of Pembroke in his devotion to the house of Anjou. From the moment
+of John's death at Newark, the cardinal and the marshal took the lead.
+They met at Worcester, where the tyrant was buried, and at once made
+preparations for the coronation of Henry of Winchester. The ceremony
+took place at St. Peter's Abbey, Gloucester, on October 28, from which
+day the new reign was reckoned as beginning. The marshal, who had
+forty-three years before dubbed the "young king" Henry a knight, then
+for a second time admitted a young king Henry to the order of chivalry.
+When the king had recited the coronation oath and performed homage to
+the pope, Gualo anointed him and placed on his head the plain gold
+circlet that perforce did duly for a crown.[1] Next day Henry's leading
+supporters performed homage, and before November 1 the marshal was made
+justiciar.
+
+ [1] There is some conflict of evidence on this point, and Dr.
+ Stubbs, following Wendover, iv., 2, makes Peter of Winchester
+ crown Henry. But the official account in _Faedera, i._, 145, is
+ confirmed by _Ann. Tewkesbury_, p. 62; _Histoire de G. le
+ Marechal_, lines 15329-32; _Hist. des ducs de Normandie, et des
+ rois d'Angleterre_, p. 181, and _Ann. Winchester_, p. 83.
+ Wykes, p. 60, and _Ann. Dunstable_, p. 48, which confirm
+ Wendover, are suspect by reason of other errors.
+
+On November 2 a great council met at Bristol. Only four earls appeared,
+and one of these, William of Fors, Earl of Albemarle, was a recent
+convert. But the presence of eleven bishops showed that the Church had
+espoused the cause of the little king, and a throng of western and
+marcher magnates made a sufficient representation of the lay baronage.
+The chief business was to provide for the government during the
+minority. Gualo withstood the temptation to adopt the method by which
+Innocent III. had ruled Sicily in the name of Frederick II. The king's
+mother was too unpopular and incompetent to anticipate the part played
+by Blanche of Castile during the minority of St. Louis. After the
+precedents set by the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem, the barons took the
+matter into their own hands. Their work of selection was not an easy
+one. Randolph of Chester was by far the most powerful of the royalist
+lords, but his turbulence and purely personal policy, not less than his
+excessive possessions and inordinate palatine jurisdictions, made him
+unsuitable for the regency. Yet had he raised any sort of claim, it
+would have been hardly possible to resist his pretensions.[1] Luckily,
+Randolph stood aside, and his withdrawal gave the aged earl marshal the
+position for which his nomination as justiciar at Gloucester had
+already marked him out. The title of regent was as yet unknown, either
+in England or France, but the style, "ruler of king and kingdom," which
+the barons gave to the marshal, meant something more than the ordinary
+position of a justiciar. William's friends had some difficulty in
+persuading him to accept the office. He was over seventy years of age,
+and felt it would be too great a burden. Induced at last by the legate
+to undertake the charge, from that moment he shrank from none of its
+responsibilities. The personal care of the king was comprised within
+the marshal's duties, but he delegated that branch of his work to Peter
+des Roches.[2] These two, with Gualo, controlled the whole policy of the
+new reign. Next to them came Hubert de Burgh, John's justiciar, whom
+the marshal very soon restored to that office. But Hubert at once went
+back to the defence of Dover, and for some time took little part in
+general politics.
+
+ [1] The fears and hopes of the marshal's friends are well
+ depicted in _Histoire de Guillaume le Marechal_, lines
+ 15500-15708.
+
+ [2] The panegyrist of the marshal emphasises strongly the fact
+ that Peter's charge was a delegation, _ibid._, lines
+ 17993-18018.
+
+On November 12, the legate and the regent issued at Bristol a
+confirmation of the Great Charter. Some of the most important articles
+accepted by John in 1215 were omitted, including the "constitutional
+clauses" requiring the consent of the council of barons for
+extraordinary taxation. Other provisions, which tied the hands of the
+government, were postponed for further consideration in more settled
+times. But with all its mutilations the Bristol charter of 1216 marked a
+more important moment than even the charter of Runnymede. The
+condemnation of Innocent III. would in all probability have prevented
+the temporary concession of John from becoming permanent. Love of
+country and love of liberty were doubtless growing forces, but they were
+still in their infancy, while the papal authority was something ultimate
+against which few Christians dared appeal. Thus the adoption by the free
+will of the papal legate, and the deliberate choice of the marshal of
+the policy of the Great Charter, converted, as has well been said, "a
+treaty won at the point of the sword into a manifesto of peace and sound
+government".[1] This wise change of policy cut away the ground from under
+the feet of the English supporters of Louis. The friends of the young
+Henry could appeal to his innocence, to his sacred unction, and to his
+recognition by Holy Church. They offered a programme of limited
+monarchy, of the redress of grievances, of vested rights preserved, and
+of adhesion to the good old traditions that all Englishmen respected.
+From that moment the Charter became a new starting-point in our history.
+
+ [1] Stubbs, _Const. Hist._, ii., 21.
+
+In strange contrast to this programme of reform, the aliens, who had
+opposed the charter of Runnymede, were among the lords by whose counsel
+and consent the charter of Bristol was issued. In its weakness the new
+government sought to stimulate the zeal both of the foreign mercenaries
+and of the loyal barons by grants and privileges which seriously
+entrenched upon the royal authority. Falkes de Breaute was confirmed in
+the custody of a compact group of six midland shires, besides the
+earldom of Devon, and the "county of the Isle of Wight,"[1] which he
+guarded in the interests of his wife and stepson. Savary de Mauleon, who
+in despair of his old master's success had crossed over to Poitou before
+John's death, was made warden of the castle of Bristol. Randolph of
+Chester was consoled for the loss of the regency by the renewal of
+John's recent grant of the Honour of Lancaster which was by this time
+definitely recognised as a shire.[2]
+
+ [1] _Histoire des ducs de Normandie_, etc., p. 181.
+
+ [2] Tait, _Medieval Manchester and the Beginnings of
+ Lancashire_, p. 180.
+
+The war assumed the character of a crusade. The royalist troops wore
+white crosses on their garments, and were assured by the clergy of
+certain salvation. The cruel and purposeless ravaging of the enemy's
+country, which had occupied John's last months of life, became rare,
+though partisans, such as Falkes de Breaute, still outvied the French
+in plundering monasteries and churches. The real struggle became a war
+of castles. Louis endeavoured to complete his conquest of the
+south-east by the capture of the royal strongholds, which still limited
+his power to the open country. At first the French prince had some
+successes. In November he increased his hold on the Home counties by
+capturing the Tower of London, by forcing Hertford to surrender, and by
+pressing the siege of Berkhampsted. As Christmas approached the
+royalists proposed a truce. Louis agreed on the condition that
+Berkhampsted should be surrendered, and early in 1217 both parties held
+councils, the royalists at Oxford and the barons at Cambridge. There
+was vague talk of peace, but the war was renewed, and Louis captured
+Hedingham and Orford in Essex, and besieged the castles of Colchester
+and Norwich. Then another truce until April 26 was concluded, on the
+condition that the royalists should surrender these two strongholds.
+
+Both sides had need to pause. Louis, at the limit of his resources, was
+anxious to obtain men and money from France. He was not getting on well
+with his new subjects. The eastern counties grumbled at his taxes.
+Dissensions arose between the English and French elements in his host.
+The English lords resented the grants and appointments he gave to his
+countrymen. The French nobles professed to despise the English as
+traitors. When Hertford was taken, Robert FitzWalter demanded that its
+custody should be restored to him. Louis roughly told him that
+Englishmen, who had betrayed their natural lord, were not to be
+entrusted with such charges. It was to little purpose that he promised
+Robert that every man should have his rights when the war was over. The
+prospects of ending the war grew more remote every day. The royalists
+took advantage of the discouragement of their opponents. The regent was
+lavish in promises. There should be no inquiry into bygones, and all
+who submitted to the young king should be guaranteed all their existing
+rights. The result was that a steady stream of converts began to flow
+from the camp of Louis to the camp of the marshal. For the first time
+signs of a national movement against Louis began to be manifest. It
+became clear that his rule meant foreign conquest.
+
+Louis wished to return to France, but despite the truce he could only
+win his way to the coast by fighting. The Cinque Ports were changing
+their allegiance. A popular revolt had broken out in the Weald, where a
+warlike squire, William of Cassingham,[1] soon became a terror to the
+French under his nickname of Wilkin of the Weald. As Louis traversed the
+disaffected districts, Wilkin fell upon him near Lewes, and took
+prisoners two nephews of the Count of Nevers. On his further march to
+Winchelsea, the men of the Weald broke down the bridges behind him,
+while on his approach the men of Winchelsea destroyed their mills, and
+took to their ships as avowed partisans of King Henry. The French prince
+entered the empty town, and had great difficulty in keeping his army
+alive. "Wheat found they there," says a chronicler; "in great plenty,
+but they knew not how to grind it. Long time were they in such a plight
+that they had to crush by hand the corn of which they made their bread.
+They could catch no fish. Great store of nuts found they in the town;
+these were their finest food."[2] Louis was in fact besieged by the
+insurgents, and was only released by a force of knights riding down from
+London to help him. These troops dared not travel by the direct road
+through the Weald, and made their way to Romney through Canterbury. Rye
+was strongly held against them and the ships of the Cinque Ports
+dominated the sea, so that Louis was still cut off from his friends at
+Romney. A relieving fleet was despatched from Boulogne, but stress of
+weather kept it for a fortnight at Dover, while Louis was starving at
+Winchelsea. At last the French ships appeared off Winchelsea. Thereupon
+the English withdrew, and Louis finding the way open to France returned
+home.
+
+ [1] Mr. G.J. Turner has identified Cassingham with the modern
+ Kensham, between Rolvenden and Sandhurst, in Kent.
+
+ [2] _Histoire des ducs de Normandie_, etc., p. 183.
+
+A crowd of waverers changed sides. At their head were William
+Longsword, Earl of Salisbury, the bastard great-uncle of the little
+king, and William, the young marshal, the eldest son of the Earl of
+Pembroke. The regent wandered from town to town in Sussex, receiving
+the submission of the peasantry, and venturing to approach as near
+London as Dorking. The victorious Wilkin was made Warden of the Seven
+Hundreds of the Weald. The greatest of the magnates of Sussex and
+Surrey, William, Earl Warenne, followed the example of his tenantry,
+and made his peace with the king. The royalists fell upon the few
+castles held by the barons. While one corps captured Odiham, Farnham,
+Chichester, and other southern strongholds, Falkes de Breaute overran
+the Isle of Ely, and Randolph of Chester besieged the Leicestershire
+fortress of Mount Sorrel. Enguerrand de Coucy, whom Louis had left in
+command, remained helpless in London. His boldest act was to send a
+force to Lincoln, which occupied the town, but failed to take the
+castle. This stronghold, under its hereditary warden, the valiant old
+lady, Nichola de Camville,[1] had already twice withstood a siege.
+
+ [1] On Nichola de Camville or de la Hay see M. Petit-Dutaillis
+ in _Melanges Julien Havet_, pp. 369-80.
+
+Louis found no great encouragement in France, for Philip Augustus, too
+prudent to offend the Church, gave but grudging support to his
+excommunicated son. When, on the eve of the expiration of the truce,
+Louis returned to England, his reinforcements comprised only 120
+knights. Among them, however, were the Count of Brittany, Peter
+Mauclerc, anxious to press in person his rights to the earldom of
+Richmond, the Counts of Perche and Guines, and many lords of Picardy,
+Artois and Ponthieu. Conscious that everything depended on the speedy
+capture of the royal castles, Louis introduced for the first time into
+England the _trebuchet_, a recently invented machine that cast great
+missiles by means of heavy counterpoises. "Great was the talk about
+this, for at that time few of them had been seen in France."[1] On April
+22, Louis reached Dover, where the castle was still feebly beset by the
+French. On his nearing the shore, Wilkin of the Weald and Oliver, a
+bastard of King John's, burnt the huts of the French engaged in watching
+the castle. Afraid to land in their presence, Louis disembarked at
+Sandwich. Next day he went by land to Dover, but discouraged by tidings
+of his losses, he gladly concluded a short truce with Hubert de Burgh.
+He abandoned the siege of Dover, and hurried off towards Winchester,
+where the two castles were being severely pressed by the royalists. But
+his progress was impeded by his siege train, and Farnham castle blocked
+his way.
+
+ [1] _Histoire des ducs de Normandie, etc._, p. 188; cf.
+ _English Hist. Review_, xviii. (1903), 263-64.
+
+Saer de Quincy, Earl of Winchester, joined Louis outside the walls of
+Farnham. Saer's motive was to persuade Louis to hasten to the relief of
+his castle of Mount Sorrel. The French prince was not in a position to
+resist pressure from a powerful supporter. He divided his army, and
+while the Earl of Winchester, along with the Count of Perche and Robert
+FitzWalter, made their way to Leicestershire, he completed his journey
+to Winchester, threw a fresh force into the castles, and, leaving the
+Count of Nevers in charge, hurried to London. There he learnt that
+Hubert de Burgh at Dover had broken the truce, and he at once set off
+to renew the siege of the stronghold which had so continually baulked
+his plans. But little good came of his efforts, and the much-talked-of
+_trebuchet_ proving powerless to effect a breach, Louis had to resign
+himself to a weary blockade. While he was besieging Dover, Saer de
+Quincy had relieved Mount Sorrel, whence he marched to the help of
+Gilbert of Ghent, the only English baron whom Louis ventured to raise
+to comital rank as Earl of Lincoln. Gilbert was still striving to
+capture Lincoln Castle, but Nichola de Camville had resisted him from
+February to May. With the help of the army from Mount Sorrel, the
+castle and its _chatelaine_ were soon reduced to great straits.
+
+The marshal saw that the time was come to take the offensive, and
+resolved to raise the siege. Having no field army, he stripped his
+castles of their garrisons, and gave rendezvous to his barons at
+Newark. There the royalists rested three days, and received the
+blessing of Gualo and the bishops. They then set out towards Lincoln,
+commanded by the regent in person, the Earl of Chester, and the Bishop
+of Winchester, whom the legate appointed as his representative. The
+strong water defences of the rebel city on the south made it
+unadvisable for them to take the direct route towards it. Their army
+descended the Trent to Torksey, where it rested the night of May 19.
+Early next day, the eve of Trinity Sunday, it marched in four "battles"
+to relieve Lincoln Castle.
+
+There were more than 600 knights besieging the castle and holding the
+town, and the relieving army only numbered 400 knights and 300
+cross-bowmen. But the barons dared not risk a combat that might have
+involved them in the fate of Stephen in 1141. They retreated within the
+city and allowed the marshal to open up communications with the castle.
+The marshal's plan of battle was arranged by Peter des Roches, who was
+more at home in the field than in the church. The cross-bowmen under
+Falkes de Breaute were thrown into the castle, and joined with the
+garrison in making a sally from its east gate into the streets of the
+town. While the barons were thus distracted, the marshal burst through
+the badly defended north gate. The barons taken in front and flank
+fought desperately, but with no success. Falkes' cross-bowmen shot down
+their horses, and the dismounted knights soon failed to hold their own
+in the open ground about the cathedral. The Count of Perche was slain
+by a sword-thrust through the eyehole of his helmet. The royalists
+chased the barons down the steep lanes which connect the upper with the
+lower town. When they reached level ground the baronial troops rallied,
+and once more strove to reascend the hill. But the town was assailed on
+every side, and its land defences yielded with little difficulty. The
+Earl of Chester poured his vassals through one of the eastern gates,
+and took the barons in flank. Once more they broke, and this time they
+rallied not again, but fled through the Wigford suburb seeking any
+means of escape. Some obstruction in the Bar-gate, the southern exit
+from the city, retarded their flight, and many of the leaders were
+captured. The remnant fled to London, thinking that "every bush was
+full of marshals," and suffering severely from the hostility of the
+peasantry. Only three persons were slain in the battle, but there was a
+cruel massacre of the defenceless citizens after its close. So vast was
+the booty won by the victors that in scorn they called the fight the
+Fair of Lincoln![1]
+
+ [1] For a discussion of the battle, see _English Hist. Review_,
+ xviii. (1903), 240-65.
+
+Louis' prospects were still not desperate. The victorious army
+scattered, each man to his own house, so that the marshal was in no
+position to press matters to extremities. But there was a great rush to
+make terms with the victor, and Louis thought it prudent to abandon the
+hopeless siege of Dover, and take refuge with his partisans, the
+Londoners. Meanwhile the marshal hovered round London, hoping
+eventually to shut up the enemy in the capital. On June 12, the
+Archbishop of Tyre and three Cistercian abbots, who had come to England
+to preach the Crusade, persuaded both parties to accept provisional
+articles of peace. Louis stipulated for a complete amnesty to all his
+partisans; but the legate declined to grant pardon to the rebellious
+clerks who had refused to obey the interdict, conspicuous among whom
+was the firebrand Simon Langton, brother of the archbishop. Finding no
+compromise possible, Louis broke off the negotiations rather than
+abandon his friends. Gualo urged a siege of London, but the marshal saw
+that his resources were not adequate for such a step. Again many of his
+followers went home, and the court abode first at Oxford and afterwards
+at Gloucester. It seemed as if the war might go on for ever.
+
+Blanche of Castile, Louis' wife, redoubled her efforts on his behalf. In
+response to her entreaties a hundred knights and several hundred
+men-at-arms took ship for England. Among the knights was the famous
+William des Barres, one of the heroes of Bouvines, and Theobald, Count
+of Blois. Eustace the Monk, a renegade clerk turned pirate, and a hero
+of later romance, took command of the fleet. On the eve of St.
+Bartholomew, August 23, Eustace sailed from Calais towards the mouth of
+the Thames. Kent had become royalist; the marshal and Hubert de Burgh
+held Sandwich, so that the long voyage up the Thames was the only way of
+taking succour to Louis. Next day the old earl remained on shore, but
+sent out Hubert with the fleet. The English let the French pass by,
+and then, manoeuvring for the weather gage, tacked and assailed them
+from behind.[1] The fight raged round the great ship of Eustace, on
+which the chief French knights were embarked. Laden with stores, horses,
+and a ponderous _trebuchet_, it was too low in the water to manoeuvre or
+escape. Hubert easily laid his own vessel alongside it. The English, who
+were better used to fighting at sea than the French, threw powdered lime
+into the faces of the enemy, swept the decks with their crossbow bolts
+and then boarded the ship, which was taken after a fierce fight. The
+crowd of cargo boats could offer little resistance as they beat up
+against the wind in their retreat to Calais; the ships containing the
+soldiers were more fortunate in escaping. Eustace was beheaded, and his
+head paraded on a pole through the streets of Canterbury.
+
+ [1] This successful attempt of the English fleet to manoeuvre
+ for the weather gage, that is to secure a position to the
+ windward of their opponents, is the first recorded instance of
+ what became the favourite tactics of British admirals. For the
+ legend of Eustace see _Witasse le Moine_, ed. Foerster (1891).
+
+The battle of St. Bartholomew's Day, like that of Lincoln a triumph of
+skill over numbers, proved decisive for the fortunes of Louis. The
+English won absolute control of the narrow seas, and cut off from Louis
+all hope of fighting his way back to France. As soon as he heard of the
+defeat of Eustace, he reopened negotiations with the marshal. On the
+29th there was a meeting between Louis and the Earl at the gates of
+London. The regent had to check the ardour of his own partisans, and it
+was only after anxious days of deliberation that the party of
+moderation prevailed. On September 5 a formal conference was held on an
+island of the Thames near Kingston. On the 11th a definitive treaty was
+signed at the archbishop's house at Lambeth.
+
+The Treaty of Lambeth repeated with little alteration the terms
+rejected by Louis three months before. The French prince surrendered
+his castles, released his partisans from their oaths to him, and
+exhorted all his allies, including the King of Scots and the Prince of
+Gwynedd, to lay down their arms. In return Henry promised that no
+layman should lose his inheritance by reason of his adherence to Louis,
+and that the baronial prisoners should be released without further
+payment of ransom. London, despite its pertinacity in rebellion, was to
+retain its ancient franchises. The marshal bound himself personally to
+pay Louis 10,000 marks, nominally as expenses, really as a bribe to
+accept these terms. A few days later Louis and his French barons
+appeared before the legate, barefoot and in the white garb of
+penitents, and were reconciled to the Church. They were then escorted
+to Dover, whence they took ship for France. Only on the rebellious
+clergy did Gualo's wrath fall. The canons of St. Paul's were turned out
+in a body; ringleaders like Simon Langton were driven into exile, and
+agents of the legate traversed the country punishing clerks who had
+disregarded the interdict. But Honorius was more merciful than Gualo,
+and within a year even Simon received his pardon. The laymen of both
+camps forgot their differences, when Randolph of Chester and William of
+Ferrars fought in the crusade of Damietta, side by side with Saer of
+Winchester and Robert FitzWalter. The reconciliation of parties was
+further shown in the marriage of Hubert de Burgh to John's divorced
+wife, Isabella of Gloucester, a widow by the death of the Earl of
+Essex, and still the foremost English heiress. On November 6 the
+pacification was completed by the reissue of the Great Charter in what
+was substantially its final form. The forest clauses of the earlier
+issues were published in a much enlarged shape as a separate Forest
+Charter, which laid down the great principle that no man was to lose
+life or limb for hindering the king's hunting.
+
+It is tempting to regard the defeat of Louis as a triumph of English
+patriotism. But it is an anachronism to read the ideals of later ages
+into the doings of the men of the early thirteenth century. So far as
+there was national feeling in England, it was arrayed against Henry. To
+the last the most fervently English of the barons were steadfast on the
+French prince's side, and the triumph of the little king had largely
+been procured by John's foreigners. To contemporary eyes the rebels
+were factious assertors of class privileges and feudal immunities.
+Their revolt against their natural lord brought them into conflict with
+the sentiment of feudal duty which was still so strong in faithful
+minds. And against them was a stronger force than feudal loyally. From
+this religious standpoint the Canon of Barnwell best sums up the
+situation: "It was a miracle that the heir of France, who had won so
+large a part of the kingdom, was constrained to abandon the realm
+without hope of recovering it. It was because the hand of God was not
+with him. He came to England in spite of the prohibition of the Holy
+Roman Church, and he remained there regardless of its anathema."
+
+The young king never forgot that he owed his throne to the pope and his
+legate. "When we were bereft of our father in tender years," he declared
+long afterwards, "when our subjects were turned against us, it was our
+mother, the Holy Roman Church, that brought back our realm under our
+power, anointed us king, crowned us, and placed us on the throne."[1]
+The papacy, which had secured a new hold over England by its alliance
+with John, made its position permanent by its zeal for the rights of his
+son. By identifying the monarchy with the charters, it skilfully
+retraced the false step which it had taken. Under the aegis of the Roman
+see the national spirit grew, and the next generation was to see the
+temper fostered by Gualo in its turn grow impatient of the papal
+supremacy. It was Gualo, then, who secured the confirmation of the
+charters. Even Louis unconsciously worked in that direction, for, had he
+not gained so strong a hold on the country, there would have been no
+reason to adopt a policy of conciliation. We must not read the history
+of this generation in the light of modern times, or even with the eyes
+of Matthew Paris.
+
+ [1] Grosseteste, _Epistolae_, p. 339.
+
+The marshal had before him a task essentially similar to that which
+Henry II had undertaken after the anarchy of Stephen's reign. It was
+with the utmost difficulty that the sum promised to Louis could be
+extracted from the war-stricken and famished tillers of the soil. The
+exchequer was so empty that the Christmas court of the young king was
+celebrated at the expense of Falkes de Breaute. Those who had fought
+for the king clamoured for grants and rewards, and it was necessary to
+humour them. For example, Randolph of Blundeville, with the earldom of
+Lincoln added to his Cheshire palatinate and his Lancashire Honour, had
+acquired a position nearly as strong as that of the Randolph of the
+reign of Stephen. "Adulterine castles" had grown up in such numbers
+that the new issue of the Charter insisted upon their destruction. Even
+the lawful castles were held by unauthorised custodians, who refused to
+yield them up to the king's officers. Though Alexander, King of Scots,
+purchased his reconciliation with Rome by abandoning Carlisle and
+performing homage to Henry, the Welsh remained recalcitrant. One
+chieftain, Morgan of Caerleon, waged war against the marshal in Gwent,
+and was dislodged with difficulty. During the war Llewelyn ap Iorwerth
+conquered Cardigan and Carmarthen from the marchers, and it was only
+after receiving assurances that he might retain these districts so long
+as the king's minority lasted that he condescended to do homage at
+Worcester in March, 1218.
+
+In the following May Stephen Langton came back from exile and threw the
+weight of his judgment on the regent's side. Gradually the worst
+difficulties were surmounted. The administrative machinery once more
+became effective. A new seal was cast for the king, whose documents had
+hitherto been stamped with the seal of the regent. Order was so far
+restored that Gualo returned to Italy. He was a man of high character
+and noble aims, caring little for personal advancement, and curbing his
+hot zeal against "schismatics" in his desire to restore peace to
+England. His memory is still commemorated in his great church of St.
+Andrew, at Vercelli, erected, it may be, with the proceeds of his
+English benefices, and still preserving the manuscript of legends of
+its patron saint, which its founder had sent thither from his exile.
+
+At Candlemas, 1219, the aged regent was smitten with a mortal illness.
+His followers bore him up the Thames from London to his manor of
+Caversham, where his last hours were disturbed by the intrigues of
+Peter of Winchester for his succession, and the importunity of selfish
+clerks, clamouring for grants to their churches. He died on May 14,
+clad in the habit of the Knights of the Temple, in whose new church in
+London his body was buried, and where his effigy may still be seen. The
+landless younger son of a poor baron, he had supported himself in his
+youth by the spoils of the knights he had vanquished in the
+tournaments, where his successes gained him fame as the model of
+chivalry. The favour of Henry, the "young king," gave him political
+importance, and his marriage with Strongbow's daughter made him a
+mighty man in England, Ireland, Wales, and Normandy. Strenuous and
+upright, simple and dignified, the young soldier of fortune bore easily
+the weight of office and honour which accrued to him before the death
+of his first patron. Limited as was his outlook, he gave himself
+entirely to his master-principle of loyally to the feudal lord whom he
+had sworn to obey. This simple conception enabled him to subordinate
+his interests as a marcher potentate to his duty to the English
+monarchy. It guided him in his difficult work of serving with unbending
+constancy a tyrant like John. It shone most clearly when in his old age
+he saved John's son from the consequences of his father's misdeeds. A
+happy accident has led to the discovery in our own days of the long
+poem, drawn up in commemoration of his career[1] at the
+instigation of his son. This important work has enabled us to enter
+into the marshal's character and spirit in much the same way as
+Joinville's _History of St. Louis_ has made us familiar with the
+motives and attributes of the great French king. They are the two men
+of the thirteenth century whom we know most intimately. It is well that
+the two characters thus portrayed at length represent to us so much of
+what is best in the chivalry, loyalty, statecraft, and piety of the
+Middle Ages.
+
+ [1] _Histoire de Guillaume le Marechal_, published by P. Meyer
+ for the Soc. de l'histoire de France. Petit-Dutaillis, _Etude
+ sur Louis VIII._ (1894), and G.J. Turner, _Minority of Henry
+ III._, part i, in _Transactions of the Royal Hist. Soc._, new
+ ser., viii. (1904), 245-95, are the best modern commentaries on
+ the history of the marshal's regency.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE RULE OF HUBERT DE BURGH.
+
+
+William Marshal had recognized that the regency must end with him.
+"There is no land," he declared, "where the people are so divided as
+they are in England. Were I to hand over the king to one noble, the
+others would be jealous. For this reason I have determined to entrust
+him to God and the pope. No one can blame me for this, for, if the land
+is not defended by the pope, I know no one who can protect it." The
+fortunate absence of Randolph of Chester on crusade made it easy to
+carry out this plan. Accordingly the king of twelve years was supposed
+to be capable of acting for himself. But the ultimate authority resided
+with the new legate Pandulf, who, without any formal designation, was
+the real successor of the marshal. This arrangement naturally left
+great power to Peter des Roches, who continued to have the custody of
+the king's person, and to Hubert the justiciar, who henceforth acted as
+Pandulf's deputy. Next to them came the Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Langton's share in the struggle for the charters was so conspicuous,
+that we do not always remember that it was as a scholar and a
+theologian that he acquired his chief reputation among his
+contemporaries. On his return from exile he found such engrossing
+occupation in the business of his see, that he took little part in
+politics for several years. His self-effacement strengthened the
+position of the legate.
+
+Pandulf was no stranger to England. As subdeacon of the Roman Church he
+received John's submission in 1213, and stood by his side during nearly
+all his later troubles. He had been rewarded by his election to the
+bishopric of Norwich, but was recalled to Rome before his consecration,
+and only came back to England in the higher capacity of legate on
+December 3, 1218, after the recall of Gualo. He had been the cause of
+Langton's suspension, and there was probably no love lost between him
+and the archbishop. It was in order to avoid troublesome questions of
+jurisdiction that Pandulf, at the pope's suggestion, continued to
+postpone his consecration as bishop, since that act would have
+subordinated him to the Archbishop of Canterbury. But neither he nor
+Langton was disposed to push matters to extremities. Just as Peter des
+Roches balanced Hubert de Burgh, so the archbishop acted as a makeweight
+to the legate. When power was thus nicely equipoised, there was a
+natural tendency to avoid conflicting issues. In these circumstances the
+truce between parties, which had marked the regency, continued for the
+first years after Earl William's death. In all doubtful points the will
+of the legate seems to have prevailed. Pandulf's correspondence shows
+him interfering in every matter of state. He associated himself with the
+justiciar in the appointment of royal officials; he invoked the papal
+authority to put down "adulterine castles," and to prevent any baron
+having more than one royal stronghold in his custody; he prolonged the
+truce with France, and strove to pacify the Prince of North Wales; he
+procured the resumption of the royal domain, and rebuked Bishop Peter
+and the justiciar for remissness in dealing with Jewish usurers; he
+filled up bishoprics at his own discretion. Nor did he neglect his own
+interests; his kinsfolk found preferment in his English diocese, and he
+appropriated certain livings for the payment of his debts, "so far as
+could be done without offence". But in higher matters he pursued a wise
+policy. In recognising that the great interest of the Church was peace,
+he truly expressed the policy of the mild Honorius. For more than two
+years he kept Englishmen from flying at each other's throats. If they
+paid for peace by the continuance of foreign rule, it was better to be
+governed by Pandulf than pillaged by Falkes. The principal events of
+these years were due to papal initiative.[1] Honorius looked askance on
+the maimed rites of the Gloucester coronation, and ordered a new
+hallowing to take place at the accustomed place and with the accustomed
+ceremonies. This supplementary rite was celebrated at Westminster on
+Whitsunday, May 17, 1220. Though Pandulf was present, he discreetly
+permitted the Archbishop of Canterbury to crown Henry with the diadem of
+St. Edward. "This coronation," says the Canon of Barnwell, "was
+celebrated with such good order and such splendour that the oldest
+magnates who were present declared that they had seen none of the king's
+predecessors crowned with so much goodwill and tranquillity." Nor was
+this the only great ecclesiastical function of the year. On July 7
+Langton celebrated at Canterbury the translation of the relics of St.
+Thomas to a magnificent shrine at the back of the high altar. Again the
+legate gave precedence to the archbishop, and the presence of the young
+king, of the Archbishop of Reims, and the Primate of Hungary, gave
+distinction to the solemnity. It was a grand time for English saints.
+When Damietta was taken from the Mohammedans, the crusaders dedicated
+two of its churches to St. Thomas of Canterbury and St. Edmund the King.
+A new saint was added to the calendar, who, if not an Englishman, had
+done good work for the country of his adoption. In 1220 Honorius III.
+canonised Hugh of Avalon, the Carthusian Bishop of Lincoln, on the
+report of a commission presided over by Langton himself.
+
+ [1]: H.R. Luard, _On the Relations between England and Rome
+ during the Earlier Portion of the Reign of Henry III._ (1877),
+ illustrates papal influence at this period.
+
+No real unity of principle underlay the external tranquillity. As time
+went on Peter des Roches bitterly resented the growing preponderance of
+Hubert de Burgh. Not all the self-restraint of the legate could commend
+him to Langton, whose obstinate insistence upon his metropolitical
+authority forced Pandulf to procure bulls from Rome specifically
+releasing him from the jurisdiction of the primate. In these
+circumstances it was natural for Bishop Peter and the legate to join
+together against the justiciar and the archbishop. Finding that the
+legate was too strong for him, Langton betook himself to Rome, and
+remained there nearly a year. Before he went home he persuaded Honorius
+to promise not to confer the same benefice twice by papal provision,
+and to send no further legate to England during his lifetime. Pandulf
+was at once recalled, and left England in July, 1221, a month before
+his rival's return. He was compensated for the slight put upon him by
+receiving his long-deferred consecration to Norwich at the hands of the
+pope. There is small reason for believing that he was exceptionally
+greedy or unpopular. But his withdrawal removed an influence which had
+done its work for good, and was becoming a national danger. Langton
+henceforth could act as the real head of the English Church. In 1222,
+he held an important provincial council at Oseney abbey, near Oxford,
+where he issued constitutions, famous as the first provincial canons
+still recognised as binding in our ecclesiastical courts. He began once
+more to concern himself with affairs of state, and Hubert found him a
+sure ally. Bishop Peter, disgusted with his declining influence,
+welcomed his appointment as archbishop of the crusading Church at
+Damietta. He took the cross, and left England with Falkes de Breaute as
+his companion. Learning that the crescent had driven the cross out of
+his new see, he contented himself with making the pilgrimage to
+Compostella, and soon found his way back to England, where he sought
+for opportunities to regain power.
+
+Relieved of the opposition of Bishop Peter, Hubert insisted on
+depriving barons of doubtful loyalty of the custody of royal castles,
+and found his chief opponent in William Earl of Albemarle. In dignity
+and possessions, Albemarle was not ill-qualified to be a feudal leader.
+The son of William de Fors, of Oleron, a Poitevin adventurer of the
+type of Falkes de Breaute, he represented, through his mother, the line
+of the counts of Aumale, who had since the Conquest ruled over
+Holderness from their castle at Skipsea. The family acquired the status
+of English earls under Stephen, retaining their foreign title,
+expressed in English in the form of Albemarle, being the first house of
+comital rank abroad to hold an earldom with a French name unassociated
+with any English shire. During the civil war Albemarle's
+tergiversations, which rivalled those of the Geoffrey de Mandeville of
+Stephen's time, had been rewarded by large grants from the victorious
+party. Since 1219 he suffered slight upon slight, and in 1220 was
+stripped of the custody of Rockingham Castle. Late in that year Hubert
+resolved to enforce an order, promulgated in 1217, which directed
+Albemarle to restore to his former subtenant Bytham Castle, in South
+Kesteven, of which he was overlord, and of which he had resumed
+possession on account of the treason of his vassal. The earl hurried
+away in indignation from the king's Christmas court, and in January,
+1221, threw himself into Bytham, eager to hold it by force against the
+king. For a brief space he ruled over the country-side after the
+fashion of a baron of Stephen's time. He plundered the neighbouring
+towns and churches, and filled the dungeons of Castle Bytham with
+captives. On the pretext of attending a council at Westminster he
+marched southwards, but his real motive was disclosed when he suddenly
+attacked the castle of Fotheringhay. His men crossed the moat on the
+ice, and, burning down the great gate, easily overpowered the scanty
+garrison. "As if he were the only ruler of the kingdom," says the Canon
+of Barnwell, "he sent letters signed with his seal to the mayors of the
+cities of England, granting his peace to all merchants engaged in
+plying their trades, and allowing them free licence of going and coming
+through his castles." Nothing in the annals of the time puts more
+clearly this revival of the old feudal custom that each baron should
+lord it as king over his own estates.
+
+Albemarle's power did not last long. He incurred the wrath of the
+Church, and both in Kesteven and in Northamptonshire set himself
+against the interests of Randolph of Chester. Before January was over
+Pandulf excommunicated him, and a great council granted a special
+scutage, "the scutage of Bytham," to equip an army to crush the rebel.
+Early in February a considerable force marched northwards against him.
+The Earl of Chester took part in the campaign, and both the legate and
+the king accompanied the army. Before the combined efforts of Church
+and State, Albemarle dared not hold his ground, and fled to Fountains,
+where he took sanctuary. His followers abandoned Fotheringhay, but
+stood a siege at Bytham. After six days this castle was captured on
+February 8. Even then secret sympathisers with Albemarle were able to
+exercise influence on his behalf, and Pandulf himself was willing to
+show mercy. The earl came out of sanctuary, and was pardoned on
+condition of taking the crusader's vow. No effort was made to insist on
+his going on crusade, and within a few months he was again in favour.
+"Thus," says Roger of Wendover, "the king set the worst of examples,
+and encouraged future rebellions." Randolph of Chester came out with
+the spoils of victory. He secured as the price of his ostentatious
+fidelity the custody of the Honour of Huntingdon, during the nonage of
+the earl, his nephew, John the Scot.
+
+A tumult in the capital soon taught Hubert that he had other foes to
+fight against besides the feudal party. At a wrestling match, held on
+July 25, 1222, between the city and the suburbs, the citizens won an
+easy victory. The tenants of the Abbot of Westminster challenged the
+conquerors to a fresh contest on August 1 at Westminster. But the
+abbot's men were more anxious for revenge than good sport, and seeing
+that the Londoners were likely to win, they violently broke up the
+match. Suspecting no evil, the citizens had come without arms, and were
+very severely handled by their rivals. Driven back behind their walls,
+the Londoners clamoured for vengeance. Serlo the mercer, their mayor, a
+prudent and peace-loving man, urged them to seek compensation of the
+abbot. But the citizens preferred the advice of Constantine FitzAthulf,
+who insisted upon an immediate attack on the men of Westminster. Next
+day the abbey precincts were invaded, and much mischief was done. The
+alarm was the greater because Constantine was a man of high position,
+who had recently been a sheriff of London, and had once been a
+strenuous supporter of Louis of France. It was rumoured that his
+followers had raised the cry, "Montjoie! Saint Denis!" The quarrels of
+neighbouring cities were as dangerous to sound rule as the feuds of
+rival barons, and Hubert took instant measures to put down the
+sedition. With the aid of Falkes de Breaute's mercenaries, order was
+restored, and Constantine was led before the justiciar. Early next day
+Falkes assembled his forces, and crossed the river to Southwark. He
+took with him Constantine and two of his supporters, and hanged all
+three, without form of trial, before the city knew anything about it.
+Then Falkes and his soldiers rushed through the streets, capturing,
+mutilating, and frightening away the citizens. Constantine's houses and
+property were seized by the king. The weak Serlo was deposed from the
+mayoralty, and the city taken into the king's hands. It was the last
+time that Hubert and Falkes worked together, and something of the
+violence of the _condottiere_ captain sullied the justiciar's
+reputation. As the murderer of Constantine, Hubert was henceforth
+pursued with the undying hatred of the Londoners.
+
+During the next two years parties became clearly defined. Hubert more
+and more controlled the royal policy, and strove to strengthen both his
+master and himself by marriage alliances. Powerful husbands were sought
+for the king's three sisters. On June 19, 1221, Joan, Henry's second
+sister, was married to the young Alexander of Scotland, at York. At the
+same time Hubert, a widower by Isabella of Gloucester's death, wedded
+Alexander's elder sister, Margaret, a match which compensated the
+justiciar for his loss of Isabella's lands. Four years later, Isabella,
+the King of Scot's younger sister, was united with Roger Bigod, the
+young Earl of Norfolk, a grandson of the great William Marshal, whose
+eldest son and successor, William Marshal the younger, was in 1224
+married to the king's third sister, Eleanor. The policy of
+intermarriage between the royal family and the baronage was defended by
+the example of Philip Augustus in France, and on the ground of the
+danger to the royal interests if so strong a magnate as the earl
+marshal were enticed away from his allegiance by an alliance with a
+house unfriendly to Henry.[1]
+
+ [1] _Royal Letters_, i., 244-46.
+
+The futility of marriage alliances in modifying policy was already made
+clear by the attitude of Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, the husband of Henry's
+bastard sister Joan. This resourceful prince had already raised himself
+to a high position by a statecraft which lacked neither strength nor
+duplicity. Though fully conscious of his position as the champion of a
+proud nation, and, posing as the peer of the King of Scots, Llewelyn
+saw that it was his interest to continue the friendship with the
+baronial opposition which had profited him so greatly in the days of
+the French invasion. The pacification arranged in 1218 sat rightly upon
+him, and he plunged into a war with William Marshal the younger that
+desolated South Wales for several years. In 1219 Llewelyn devastated
+Pembrokeshire so cruelly that the marshal's losses were currently,
+though absurdly, reported to have exceeded the amount of the ransom of
+King Richard. There was much more fighting, but Llewelyn's progress was
+impeded by difficulties with his own son Griffith, and with the princes
+of South Wales, who bore impatiently the growing hold of the lord of
+Gwynedd upon the affections of southern Welshmen. There was war also in
+the middle march, where in 1220 a royal army was assembled against
+Llewelyn; but Pandulf negotiated a truce, and the only permanent result
+of this effort was the fortification of the castle and town at
+Montgomery, which had become royal demesne on the extinction of the
+ancient house of Bollers a few years earlier. But peace never lasted
+long west of the Severn, and in 1222 William Marshal drove Llewelyn out
+of Cardigan and Carmarthen. Again there were threats of war. Llewelyn
+was excommunicated, and his lands put under interdict. The marshal
+complained bitterly of the poor support which Henry gave him against
+the Welsh, but Hubert restored cordiality between him and the king. In
+these circumstances the policy of marrying Eleanor to the indignant
+marcher was a wise one. Llewelyn however could still look to the active
+friendship of Randolph of Chester. While the storm of war raged in
+South Wales, the march between Cheshire and Gwynedd enjoyed unwonted
+peace, and in 1223 a truce was patched up through Randolph's mediation.
+
+Earl Randolph needed the Welsh alliance the more because he definitely
+threw in his lot with the enemies of Hubert de Burgh. In April, 1223, a
+bull of Honorius III. declared Henry competent to govern in his own
+name, a change which resulted in a further strengthening of Hubert's
+power. Towards the end of the year Randolph joined with William of
+Albemarle, the Bishop of Winchester and Falkes de Breaute, in an
+attempt to overthrow the justiciar. The discontented barons took arms
+and laid their grievances before the king. They wished, they said, no
+ill to king or kingdom, but simply desired to remove the justiciar from
+his counsels. Hot words passed between the indignant Hubert and Peter
+des Roches, and the conference broke up in confusion. The barons still
+remained mutinous, and, while the king held his Christmas court at
+Northampton, they celebrated the feast at Leicester. At last Langton
+persuaded both parties to come to an agreement on the basis of king's
+friends and barons alike surrendering their castles and wardships. This
+was a substantial victory for the party of order, and during the next
+few months much was done to transfer the castles to loyal hands.
+Randolph himself surrendered Shrewsbury and Bridgnorth.
+
+Comparative peace having been restored, and the judicial bench purged
+of feudal partisans, private persons ventured to complain of outrageous
+acts of "novel disseisin", or unlawful appropriation of men's lands. In
+the spring of 1224 the king's justices went throughout the country,
+hearing and deciding pleas of this sort. Sixteen acts of novel
+disseisin were proved against Falkes de Breaute. Despite all the
+efforts of Langton and Hubert, that able adventurer, though stripped of
+some of his castles, fully maintained the position which he first
+acquired in the service of John. He was not the man to put up tamely
+with the piecemeal destruction of his power by legal process, and,
+backed up secretly by the feudal leaders, resolved to take the law into
+his own hands. One of the most active of the judges in hearing
+complaints against him was Henry of Braybrook. Falkes bade his brother,
+William de Breaute fall upon the justice, who had been hearing suits at
+Dunstable, and take him prisoner. William faithfully fulfilled his
+brother's orders, and on June 17 the unlucky judge was safely shut up
+in a dungeon of Bedford Castle, of which William had the custody, as
+his brother's agent. So daring an outrage on the royal authority was
+worse than the action of William of Albemarle four years before. Hubert
+and the archbishop immediately took strong measures to enforce the
+sanctity of the law. While Langton excommunicated Falkes and his
+abettors, Hubert hastily turned against the traitor the forces which
+were assembling at Northampton with the object of reconquering Poitou.
+Braybrook was captured on Monday. On Thursday the royal troops besieged
+Bedford.
+
+The siege lasted from June 20 to August 14. The "noble castle of
+Bedford" was new, large, and fortified with an inner and outer baily,
+and two strong towers. Falkes trusted that it would hold out for a year,
+and had amply provided it with provisions and munitions of war. In
+effect, though William de Breaute and his followers showed a gallant
+spirit, it resisted the justiciar for barely two months. When called
+upon to surrender the garrison answered that they would only yield at
+their lord's orders, and that the more as they were not bound to the
+king by homage or fealty. Nothing was left but a fight to the death. The
+royalists made strenuous efforts. A new scutage, the "scutage of
+Bedford," was imposed on the realm. Meanwhile Falkes fled to his
+accomplice, the Earl of Chester, and afterwards took refuge with
+Llewelyn. But the adventurer found such cold comfort from the great men
+who had lured him to his ruin that he perforce made his way back to
+England, along with a motley band of followers, English and French,
+Scottish and Welsh.[1] A hue and cry was raised after him, and, like
+William of Albemarle, he was forced to throw himself into sanctuary,
+while Randolph of Chester openly joined the besiegers of Bedford. In his
+refuge in a church at Coventry, Falkes was persuaded to surrender to the
+bishop of the diocese, who handed him over to Langton.
+
+ [1] The names of his _familia_ taken with him are in _Patent
+ Rolls of Henry III._, 1216-1227, pp. 461-62.
+
+During Falkes's wanderings his brother had been struggling valiantly
+against overwhelming odds. _Petrariae_ and mangonels threw huge stones
+into the castle, and effected breaches in keep and curtain. Miners
+undermined the walls, while over-against the stronghold two lofty
+structures of wood were raised, from which the crossbowmen, who manned
+them, were able to command the whole of the interior. At last the
+castle was captured in four successive assaults. In the first the
+barbican was taken; in the next the outer baily was stormed; in the
+third the interior baily was won; and in the last the keep was split
+asunder. The garrison then allowed the women and captives, including
+the wife of Falkes and the unlucky Braybrook, to make their way to the
+enemies' lines. Next day the defenders themselves surrendered. The only
+mercy shown to these gallant men was that they were allowed to make
+their peace with the Church before their execution. Of the eighty
+prisoners, three Templars alone were spared.
+
+Falkes threw himself upon the king's mercy, appealing to his former
+services to Henry and his father. He surrendered to the King the large
+sums of money which he had deposited with his bankers, the Templars of
+London, and ordered his castellans in Plympton and the other
+west-country castles of his wife to open their gates to the royal
+officers. In return for these concessions he was released from
+excommunication. His life was spared, but his property was confiscated,
+and he was ordered to abjure the realm. Even his wife deserted him,
+protesting that she had been forced to marry him against her will. On
+October 26 he received letters of safe conduct to go beyond sea. As he
+left England, he protested that he had been instigated by the English
+magnates in all that he had done. On landing at Fecamp he was detained
+by his old enemy Louis, then, by his father's death, King of France.
+But Louis VIII. was the last man to bear old grudges against the Norman
+adventurer, especially as Falkes's rising had enabled him to capture
+the chief towns of Poitou.
+
+Even in his exile Falkes was still able to do mischief. He obtained his
+release from Louis' prison about Easter, 1225, on the pretence of going
+on crusade. He then made his way to Rome where he strove to excite the
+sympathy of Honorius III., by presenting an artful memorial, which
+throws a flood of light upon his character, motives, and hopes.
+Honorius earnestly pleaded for his restitution, but Hubert and Langton
+stood firm against him. They urged that the pope had been misinformed,
+and declined to recall the exile. Honorius sent his chaplain Otto to
+England, but the nuncio found it impossible to modify the policy of the
+advisers of the king. Falkes went back from Italy to Troyes, where he
+waited for a year in the hope that his sentence would be reversed. At
+last Otto gave up his cause in despair, and devoted himself to the more
+profitable work of exacting money from the English clergy. Falkes died
+in 1226. With him disappears from our history the lawless spirit which
+had troubled the land since the war between John and his barons. The
+foreign adventurers, of whom he was the chief, either went back in
+disgust to their native lands, or, like Peter de Mauley, became loyal
+subjects and the progenitors of a harmless stock of English barons. The
+ten years of storm and stress were over. The administration was once
+more in English hands, and Hubert enjoyed a few years of well-earned
+power.
+
+New difficulties at once arose. The defeat of the feudalists and their
+Welsh allies involved heavy special taxation, and the king's honour
+required that an effort should be made both to wrest Poitou from Louis
+VIII., and to strengthen the English hold over Gascony. Besides
+national obligations, clergy and laity alike were still called upon to
+contribute towards the cost of crusading enterprises, and in 1226 the
+papal nuncio, Otto, demanded that a large proportion of the revenues of
+the English clergy should be contributed to the papal coffers. To the
+Englishman of that age all extraordinary taxation was a grievance quite
+irrespective of its necessity. The double incidence of the royal and
+papal demands was met by protests which showed some tendency towards
+the splitting up of the victorious side into parties. It was still easy
+for all to unite against Otto, and the papal agent was forced to go
+home empty handed, for councils both of clergy and barons agreed to
+reject his demands. Whatever other nations might offer to the pope,
+argued the magnates, the realms of England and Ireland at least had a
+right to be freed from such impositions by reason of the tribute which
+John had agreed to pay to Innocent III. The demand of the king's
+ministers for a fifteenth to prosecute the war with France was
+reluctantly conceded, but only on the condition of a fresh confirmation
+of the charters in a form intended to bring home to the king his
+personal obligation to observe them. Hubert de Burgh, however, was no
+enthusiast for the charters. His standpoint was that of the officials
+of the age of Henry II. To him the re-establishment of order meant the
+restoration of the prerogative. There he parted company with the
+archbishop, who was an eager upholder of the charters, for which he was
+so largely responsible. The struggle against the foreigner was to be
+succeeded by a struggle for the charters.
+
+In January, 1227, a council met at Oxford. The king, then nearly twenty
+years old, declared that he would govern the country himself, and
+renounced the tutelage of the Bishop of Winchester. Henry gave himself
+over completely to the justiciar, whom he rewarded for his faithful
+service by making him Earl of Kent. In deep disgust Bishop Peter left
+the court to carry out his long-deferred crusading vows. For four years
+he was absent in Palestine, where his military talents had ample scope
+as one of the leaders of Frederick II.'s army, while his diplomatic
+skill sought, with less result, to preserve some sort of relations
+between the excommunicated emperor and the new pope, Gregory IX., who
+in this same year succeeded Honorius. In April Gregory renewed the bull
+of 1223 in which his predecessor recognised Henry's competence to
+govern.
+
+Thus ended the first minority since the Conquest. The successful
+restoration of law and order when the king was a child, showed that a
+strong king was not absolutely necessary for good government. From the
+exercise of royal authority by ministers without the personal
+intervention of the monarch arose the ideas of limited monarchy, the
+responsibility of the official, and the constitutional rights of the
+baronial council to appoint ministers and control the administration.
+We also discern, almost for the first time, the action of an inner
+ministerial council which was ultimately to develop into the _consilium
+ordinarium_ of a later age.
+
+No sudden changes attended the royal majority. Those who had persuaded
+Henry to dismiss Bishop Peter had no policy beyond getting rid of a
+hated rival. The new Earl of Kent continued to hold office as justiciar
+for five years, and his ascendency is even more marked in the years
+1227 to 1232 than it had been between 1224 and 1227. Hubert still found
+the task of ruling England by no means easy. With the mitigation of
+home troubles foreign affairs assumed greater importance, and England's
+difficulties with France, the efforts to establish cordial relations
+with the empire, the ever-increasing aggressions of Llewelyn of Wales,
+and the chronic troubles of Ireland, involved the country in large
+expenses with little compensating advantage. Not less uneasy were the
+results of the growing encroachments of the papacy and the increasing
+inability of the English clergy to face them. Papal taxation, added to
+the burden of national taxation, induced discontent that found a ready
+scapegoat in the justiciar. The old and the new baronial opposition
+combined to denounce Hubert as the true cause of all evils. The
+increasing personal influence of the young king complicated the
+situation. In his efforts to deal with all these problems Hubert became
+involved in the storm of obloquy which finally brought about his fall.
+
+At the accession of Henry III., the truce for five years concluded
+between his father and Philip Augustus on September 18, 1214, had still
+three years to run. The expedition of Louis to England might well seem
+to have broken it, but the prudent disavowal by Philip II. of his son's
+sacrilegious enterprise made it a point of policy for the French King
+to regard it as still in force, and neither John nor the earl marshal
+had a mind to face the enmity of the father as well as the invasion of
+the son. Accordingly the truce ran out its full time, and in 1220
+Honorius III., ever zealous for peace between Christian sovereigns,
+procured its prolongation for four years. Before this had expired, the
+accession of Louis VIII. in 1223 raised the old enemy of King Henry to
+the throne of France. Louis still coveted the English throne, and
+desired to complete the conquest of Henry's French dominions in France.
+His accession soon involved England in a new struggle, luckily delayed
+until the worst of the disorders at home had been overcome.
+
+Peace was impossible because Louis, like Philip, regarded the
+forfeiture of John as absolute, and as involving the right to deny to
+Henry III. a legitimate title to any of his lands beyond sea. Henry, on
+the other hand, was still styled Duke of Normandy, Count of Anjou,
+Count of Poitou, and Duke of Aquitaine. Claiming all that his father
+had held, he refused homage to Philip or Louis for such French lands as
+he actually possessed. For the first time since the Conquest, an
+English king ruled over extensive French territories without any feudal
+subjection to the King of France. However, Henry's French lands, though
+still considerable, were but a shadow of those once ruled by his
+father. Philip had conquered all Normandy, save the Channel Islands,
+and also the whole of Anjou and Touraine. For a time he also gained
+possession of Poitou, but before his death nearly the whole of that
+region had slipped from his grasp. Poitiers, alone of its great towns,
+remained in French hands. For the rest, both the barons and cities of
+Poitou acknowledged the over-lordship of their English count. Too much
+importance must not be ascribed to this revival of the English power.
+Henry claimed very little domain in Poitou, which practically was
+divided between the feudal nobles and the great communes. So long as
+they maintained a virtual freedom, they were indifferent as to their
+overlord. If they easily transferred their allegiance from Philip to
+Henry, it was because the weakness of absentee counts was less to be
+dreaded than the strength of a monarch near at hand. Meanwhile the
+barons carried on their feuds one against the other, and all alike
+joined in oppressing the townsmen.
+
+During Henry's minority the crown was not strong enough to deal with
+the unruly Foitevins. Seneschals quickly succeeded each other; the
+barons expected the office to be filled by one of their own order, and
+the towns, jealous of hostile neighbours, demanded the appointment of
+an Englishman. At last, in 1221, Savary de Mauleon, one of King John's
+mercenaries, a poet, and a crusader against infidels and Albigenses,
+was made seneschal. His English estates ensured some measure of
+fidelity, and his energy and experience were guarantees of his
+competence, though, as a younger member of the great house of Thouars,
+he belonged by birth to the inner circle of the Poitevin nobility,
+whose treachery, levity, and self-seeking were proverbial. The powerful
+Viscounts of Thouars were constantly kept in check by their traditional
+enemies the Counts of La Marche, whose representative, Hugh of
+Lusignan, was by far the strongest of the local barons. His cousin, and
+sometime betrothed, Isabella, Countess of Angouleme, the widow of King
+John, had left England to resume the administration of her dominions.
+Early in 1220 she married Hugh, justifying herself to her son on the
+ground that it would be dangerous to his interests if the Count of La
+Marche should contract an alliance with the French party. But this was
+mere excuse. The union of La Marche and Angouleme largely increased
+Count Hugh's power, and he showed perfect impartiality in pursuing his
+own interests by holding a balance between his stepson and the King of
+France. Against him neither Savary nor the Poitevin communes could
+contend with success. The anarchy of Poitou was an irresistible
+temptation to Louis VII. "Know you," he wrote to the men of Limoges,
+"that John, king of England, was deprived by the unanimous judgment of
+his peers of all the lands which he held of our father Philip. We have
+now received in inheritance all our father's rights, and require you to
+perform the service that you owe us." While the English government
+weakly negotiated for the prolongation of the truce, and for the pope's
+intervention, Louis concluded treaties with the Poitevin barons, and
+made ready an army to conquer his inheritance. Foremost among his local
+partisans appeared Henry's stepfather.
+
+The French army met at Tours on June 24, 1224, and marched through
+Thouars to La Rochelle, the strongest of the Poitevin towns, and the
+most devoted to England. On the way Louis forced Savary de Mauleon to
+yield up Niort, and to promise to defend no other place than La
+Rochelle, before which city he sat down on July 15. At first Savary
+resisted vigorously. The siege of Bedford, however, prevented the
+despatch of effective help from England, and Savary was perhaps already
+secretly won over by Louis. Be this as it may, the town surrendered on
+August 3, and with it went all Aquitaine north of the Dordogne. Savary
+took service with the conqueror, and was made warden of La Rochelle and
+of the adjacent coasts, while Lusignan received the reward of his
+treachery in a grant of the Isle of Oleron. When Louis returned to the
+north, the Count of La Marche undertook the conquest of Gascony. He
+soon made himself master of St. Emilion, and of the whole of Perigord.
+The surrender of La Reole opened up the passage of the Garonne, and the
+capture of Bazas gave the French a foothold to the south of that river.
+Only the people of Bordeaux showed any spirit in resisting Hugh. But
+their resistance proved sufficient, and he withdrew baffled before
+their walls.
+
+The easiness of Louis' conquests showed their instability. "I am sure,"
+wrote one of Henry's officers, "that you can easily recover all that you
+have lost, if you send speedy succour to these regions." After the
+capture of Bedford, Hubert undertook the recovery of Poitou and the
+defence of Gascony. Henry's younger brother Richard, a youth of sixteen,
+was appointed Earl of Cornwall and Count of Poitou, dubbed knight by his
+brother, and put in nominal command of the expedition despatched to
+Gascony in March, 1225. His experienced uncle, William Longsword, Earl
+of Salisbury, and Philip of Aubigny, were sent with him as his chief
+counsellors. Received with open arms by Bordeaux, he boasted on May 2
+that he had conquered all Gascony, save La Reole, and had received the
+allegiance of every Gascon noble, except Elie Rudel, the lord of
+Bergerac. The siege of La Reole, the only serious military operation of
+the campaign, occupied Richard all the summer and autumn, and it was not
+until November 13 that the burgesses opened their gates. As soon as the
+French had retired, the lord of Bergerac, "after the fashion of the
+Poitevins," renounced Louis and professed himself the liegeman of Earl
+Richard. Then the worst trouble was that Savary de Mauleon's ships
+commanded the Bay of Biscay, and rendered communication between Bordeaux
+and England very difficult.[1] Once more the men of the Cinque Ports
+came to the king's aid, and there was severe fighting at sea, involving
+much plunder of merchant vessels and dislocation of trade.
+
+ [1] The names of his _familia_ taken with him are in _Patent
+ Rolls of Henry III._, 1216-1227, pp. 461-62.
+
+The English sought to supplement their military successes by diplomacy.
+Richard of Cornwall made an alliance with the counts of Auvergne, and
+the home administration negotiated with all possible enemies of the
+French King. A proposal to affiance Henry's sister, Isabella, to Henry,
+King of the Romans, the infant son of Frederick II., led to no results,
+for the Archbishop of Cologne, the chief upholder of the scheme in
+Germany, was murdered, and the young king found a bride in Austria. Yet
+the project counteracted the negotiations set on foot by Louis to
+secure Frederick II. for his own side, and induced the Emperor to take
+up a position of neutrality. An impostor appeared in Flanders who gave
+out that he was the old Count Baldwin, sometime Latin Emperor of the
+East, who had died in prison in Bulgaria twenty years before. Baldwin's
+daughter, Joan, appealed to Louis for support against the false
+Baldwin, whereupon Henry recognised his claims and sought his alliance.
+Nothing but the capture and execution of the impostor prevented Henry
+from effecting a powerful diversion in Flanders. Peter Mauclerc, Count
+of Brittany, was won over by an offer of restitution to his earldom of
+Richmond, and by a promise that Henry would marry his daughter Iolande.
+Intrigues were entered into with the discontented Norman nobles, and
+the pope was importuned to save Henry from French assaults at the same
+moment that the king made a treaty of alliance with his first cousin,
+the heretical Raymond VII. of Toulouse. Honorius gave his ward little
+save sympathy and good advice. His special wish was to induce Louis to
+lead a French expedition into Languedoc against the Albigensian
+heretics. As soon as Louis resolved on this, the pope sought to prevent
+Henry from entering into unholy alliance with Raymond. It was the
+crusade of 1226, not the good-will of the Pope or the fine-drawn
+English negotiations, which gave Gascony a short respite. Louis VIII.
+died on November 8 in the course of his expedition, and the Capetian
+monarchy became less dangerous during the troubles of a minority, in
+which his widow, Blanche, strove as regent to uphold the throne of
+their little son, Louis IX.
+
+The first months of Louis IX.'s reign showed how unstable was any
+edifice built upon the support of the treacherous lords of Poitou.
+Within six weeks of Louis VIII.'s death, Hugh of Lusignan, the viscount
+of Thouars, Savary de Mauleon, and many other Poitevin barons,
+concluded treaties with Richard of Cornwall, by which in return for
+lavish concessions they went back to the English obedience. In the
+spring of 1227, however, the appearance of a French army south of the
+Loire caused these same lords to make fresh treaties with Blanche.
+Peter of Brittany also became friendly with the French regent, and gave
+up his daughter's English marriage. With allies so shifty, further
+dealings seemed hopeless. Before Easter, Richard patched up a truce and
+went home in disgust. The Capetians lost Poitou, but Henry failed to
+take advantage of his rival's weakness, and the real masters of the
+situation were the local barons. Fifteen more years were to elapse
+before the definitive French conquest of Poitou.
+
+During the next three years the good understanding between the Bretons,
+the Poitevins, and the regent Blanche came to an end, and the progress
+of the feudal reaction against the rule of the young King of France
+once more excited hopes of improving Henry's position in south-western
+France. Henry III. was eager to win back his inheritance, though Hubert
+de Burgh had little faith in Poitevin promises, and, conscious of his
+king's weakness, managed to prolong the truce, until July 22, 1229.
+Three months before that, Blanche succeeded in forcing the unfortunate
+Raymond VII. to accept the humiliating treaty of Meaux, which assured
+the succession to his dominions to her second son Alfonse, who was to
+marry his daughter and heiress, Joan. The barons of the north and west
+were not yet defeated, and once more appealed to Henry to come to their
+aid. Accordingly, the English king summoned his vassals to Portsmouth
+on October 15 for a French campaign. When Henry went down to Portsmouth
+he found that there were not enough ships to convey his troops over
+sea. Thereupon he passionately denounced the justiciar as an "old
+traitor," and accused him of being bribed by the French queen. Nothing
+but the intervention of Randolph of Chester, Hubert's persistent enemy,
+put an end to the undignified scene.
+
+Count Peter of Brittany, who arrived at Portsmouth on the 9th, did
+homage to Henry as King of France, and received the earldom of Richmond
+and the title of Duke of Brittany which he had long coveted, but which
+the French government refused to recognise. He persuaded Henry to
+postpone the expedition until the following spring. When that time came
+Henry appointed Ralph Neville, the chancellor, and Stephen Segrave, a
+rising judge, as wardens of England, and on May 1, 1230, set sail from
+Portsmouth. It was the first time since 1213 that an English king had
+crossed the seas at the head of an army, and every effort was made to
+equip a sufficient force. Hubert the justiciar, Randolph of Chester,
+William the marshal, and most of the great barons personally shared in
+the expedition, and the ports of the Channel, the North Sea, and the
+Bay of Biscay were ransacked to provide adequate shipping. Many Norman
+vessels served as transports, apparently of their owners' free-will.
+
+On May 3 Henry landed at St. Malo, and thence proceeded to Dinan, the
+meeting-place assigned for his army, the greater part of which landed at
+Port Blanc, a little north of Treguier. Peter Mauclerc joined him, and a
+plan of operations was discussed. The moment was favourable, for a great
+number of the French magnates were engaged in war against Theobald, the
+poet-count of Champagne, and the French army, which was assembled at
+Angers, represented but a fraction of the military strength of the land.
+Fulk Paynel, a Norman baron who wished to revive the independence of the
+duchy, urged Henry to invade Normandy. Hubert successfully withstood
+this rash proposal, and also Fulk's fatal suggestion that Henry should
+divide his army and send two hundred knights for the invasion of
+Normandy. Before long the English marched through Brittany to Nantes,
+where they wasted six weeks. At last, on the advice of Hubert, they
+journeyed south into Poitou. The innate Poitevin instability had again
+brought round the Lusignans, the house of Thouars, and their kind to the
+French side, and Henry found that his own mother did her best to
+obstruct his progress. He was too strong to make open resistance safe,
+and his long progress from Nantes to Bordeaux was only once checked by
+the need to fight his way. This opposition came from the little town and
+castle of Mirambeau, situated in Upper Saintonge, rather more than
+half-way between Saintes and Blaye.[1] From July 21 to 30 Mirambeau
+stoutly held out, but Henry's army was reinforced by the chivalry of
+Gascony, and by a siege-train borrowed from Bordeaux and the loyal lords
+of the Garonne. Against such appliances of warfare Mirambeau could not
+long resist. On its capitulation Henry pushed on to Bordeaux.
+
+ [1] E. Berger, _Bibl. Ecole des Chartes_, 1893, _pp. 35-36_,
+ shows that Mirambeau, not Mirebeau, was besieged by Henry; see
+ also his _Blanche de Castille_ (1895).
+
+Useless as the march through Poitou had been, it was then repeated in
+the reverse way. With scarcely a week's rest, Henry left the Gascon
+capital on August 10, and on September 15 ended his inglorious campaign
+at Nantes. Although he was unable to assert himself against the
+faithless Poitevins, the barons of the province were equally impotent
+to make head against him. On reaching Brittany, Hubert once more
+stopped further military efforts. After a few days' rest at Nantes,
+Henry made his way by slow stages through the heart of Brittany. It was
+said that his army had no better occupation than teaching the local
+nobles to drink deep after the English fashion. The King had wasted all
+his treasure, and the poorer knights were compelled to sell or pawn
+their horses and arms to support themselves. The farce ended when the
+King sailed from St. Pol de Leon, and late in October landed at
+Portsmouth. He left a portion of his followers in Brittany, under the
+Earls of Chester and Pembroke. Randolph himself, as a former husband of
+Constance of Brittany, had claims to certain dower lands which
+appertained to Count Peter's mother-in-law. He was put in possession of
+St. James de Beuvron, and thence he raided Normandy and Anjou. By this
+time the coalition against the count of Champagne had broken down, and
+Blanche was again triumphant. It was useless to continue a struggle so
+expensive and disastrous, and on July 4, 1231, a truce for three years
+was concluded between France, Brittany, and England. Peter des Roches,
+then returning through France from his crusade, took an active part in
+negotiating the treaty. Just as the king was disposed to make the
+justiciar the scapegoat of his failure, Hubert's old enemy appeared
+once more upon the scene. The responsibility for blundering must be
+divided among the English magnates, and not ascribed solely to their
+monarch. If Hubert saved Henry from reckless adventures, he certainly
+deserves a large share of the blame for the Poitevin fiasco.
+
+The grave situation at home showed the folly of this untimely revival
+of an active foreign policy. The same years that saw the collapse of
+Henry's hopes in Normandy and Poitou, witnessed troubles both in
+Ireland and in Wales. In both these regions the house of the Marshals
+was a menace to the neighbouring chieftains, and Hugh de Lacy, Earl of
+Ulster, and Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, made common cause against it and
+vigorously attacked their rivals both in Leinster and in South Wales.
+Nor was this the only disturbance. The summons of the Norman chieftains
+of Ireland to Poitou gave the king of Connaught a chance of attacking
+the justiciar of Ireland, Geoffrey Marsh, who ultimately drove the
+Irish back with severe loss. Llewelyn was again as active and hostile
+as ever. Irritated by the growing strength of the new royal castle of
+Montgomery, he laid siege to it in 1228. Hubert de Burgh, then
+castellan of Montgomery, could only save his castle by summoning the
+levies of the kingdom. At their head Hubert went in person to hold the
+field against Llewelyn, taking the king with him. The Welsh withdrew as
+usual before a regular army, and Hubert and the king, late in
+September, marched a few miles westwards of Montgomery to the vale of
+Kerry, where they erected a castle. But Llewelyn soon made the English
+position in Kerry untenable. Many of the English lords were secretly in
+league with him, and the army suffered severely from lack of food. In
+the fighting that ensued the Welsh got the better of the English,
+taking prisoner William de Braose, the heir of Builth, and one of the
+greatest of the marcher lords. At last king and justiciar were glad to
+agree to demolish the new castle on receiving from Llewelyn the
+expenses involved in the task. The dismantled ruin was called "Hubert's
+folly". "And then," boasts the Welsh chronicler, "the king returned to
+England with shame."
+
+In 1230 Llewelyn inflicted another slight upon his overlord. William de
+Braose long remained the Welsh prince's captive, and only purchased his
+liberty by agreeing to wed his daughter to Llewelyn's son, and
+surrendering Builth as her marriage portion. The captive had employed
+his leisure in winning the love of Llewelyn's wife, Joan, Henry's
+half-sister. At Easter, Llewelyn took a drastic revenge on the
+adulterer. He seized William in his own castle at Builth, and on May 2
+hanged him on a tree in open day in the presence of 900 witnesses.
+Finding that neither the king nor the marchers moved a finger to avenge
+the outrage done to sister and comrade, Llewelyn took the aggressive in
+regions which had hitherto been comparatively exempt from his assaults.
+In 1231 he laid his heavy hand on all South Wales, burning down
+churches full of women, as the English believed, and signalling out for
+special attack the marshal's lands in Gwent and Pembroke. Once more the
+king penetrated with his barons into Mid Wales, while the pope and
+archbishop excommunicated Llewelyn and put his lands under interdict.
+Yet neither temporal nor spiritual arms were of avail against the
+Welshman. Henry's only exploit in this, his second Welsh campaign, was
+to rebuild Maud's Castle in stone. He withdrew, and in December agreed
+to conclude a three years' truce, and procure Llewelyn's absolution.
+Hubert once more bore the blame of his master's failure.
+
+On July 9, 1228, Stephen Langton died. Despite their differences as to
+the execution of the charters, his removal lost the justiciar a
+much-needed friend. Affairs were made worse by the unteachable folly of
+the monks of Christ Church. Regardless of the severe warning which they
+had received in the storms that preceded the establishment of Langton's
+authority, the chapter forthwith proceeded to the election of their
+brother monk, Walter of Eynsham. The archbishop-elect was an ignorant
+old monk of weak health and doubtful antecedents, and Gregory IX.
+wisely refused to confirm the election. On the recommendation of the
+king and the bishops, Gregory himself appointed as archbishop Richard,
+chancellor of Lincoln, an eloquent and learned secular priest of
+handsome person, whose nickname of "le Grand" was due to his tall
+stature. The first Archbishop of Canterbury since the Conquest directly
+nominated by the pope--for even in Langton's case there was a form of
+election--Richard le Grand at once began to quarrel with the justiciar,
+demanding that he should surrender the custody of Tunbridge castle on
+the ground of some ancient claim of the see of Canterbury. Failing to
+obtain redress in England, Richard betook himself to Rome in the spring
+of 1231. There he regaled the pope's ears with the offences of Hubert,
+and of the worldly bishops who were his tools. In August, Richard's
+death in Italy left the Church of Canterbury for three years without a
+pastor.
+
+While Gregory IX. did more to help Henry against Louis than Honorius
+III., the inflexible character and lofty hierarchical ideals of this
+nephew of Innocent III. made his hand heavier on the English Church
+than that of his predecessor. Above all, Gregory's expenses in pursuing
+his quarrel with Frederick II. made the wealth of the English Church a
+sore temptation to him. With his imposition of a tax of one-tenth on
+all clerical property to defray the expenses of the crusade against the
+emperor, papal taxation in England takes a newer and severer phase. The
+rigour with which Master Stephen, the pope's collector, extorted the
+tax was bitterly resented. Not less loud was the complaint against the
+increasing numbers of foreign ecclesiastics forced into English
+benefices by papal authority, and without regard for the rights of the
+lawful patrons and electors. A league of aggrieved tax-payers and
+patrons was formed against the Roman agents. At Eastertide, 1232, bands
+of men, headed by a knight named Robert Twenge, who took the nickname
+of William Wither, despoiled the Romans of their gains, and distributed
+the proceeds to the poor. These doings were the more formidable from
+their excellent organisation, and the strong sympathy everywhere
+extended to them. Hubert, who hated foreign interference, did nothing
+to stop Twenge and his followers. His inaction further precipitated his
+ruin. Archbishop Richard had already poisoned the pope's mind against
+him, and his suspected connivance with the anti-Roman movement
+completed his disfavour. Bitter letters of complaint arrived in England
+denouncing the outrages inflicted on the friends of the apostolic see.
+It is hard to dissociate the pope's feeling in this matter from his
+rejection of the nomination of the king's chancellor, Ralph Neville,
+Bishop of Chichester, to the see of Canterbury, as an illiterate
+politician.
+
+The dislike of the taxes made necessary by the Welsh and French wars,
+such as the "scutage of Poitou" and the "scutage of Kerry," swelled the
+outcry against the justiciar. So far back as 1227 advantage had been
+taken of Henry's majority to exact large sums of money for the
+confirmation of all charters sealed during his nonage. The barons made
+it a grievance that his brother Richard was ill-provided for, and a
+rising in 1227 extorted a further provision for him from what was
+regarded as the niggardliness of the justiciar. Nor did Hubert, with
+all his rugged honesty, neglect his own interests. He secured for
+himself lucrative wardships, such as the custody for the second time of
+the great Gloucester earldom, and of several castles, including the not
+very profitable charge of Montgomery, and the important governorship of
+Dover. On the very eve of his downfall he was made justice of Ireland.
+His brother was bishop of Ely, and other kinsmen were promoted to high
+posts. He was satisfied that he spent all that he got in the King's
+service, in promoting the interests of the kingdom, but his enemies
+regarded him as unduly tenacious of wealth and office. All classes
+alike grew disgusted with the justiciar. The restoration of the malign
+influence of Peter of Winchester completed his ruin. The king greedily
+listened to the complaints of his old guardian against the minister who
+overshadowed the royal power. At last, on July 29, 1232, Henry plucked
+up courage to dismiss him.
+
+With Hubert's fall ends the second period of Henry's reign. William
+Marshal expelled the armed foreigner. Hubert restored the
+administration to English hands. Matthew Paris puts into the mouth of a
+poor smith who refused to fasten fetters on the fallen minister words
+which, though probably never spoken, describe with sufficient accuracy
+Hubert's place in history: "Is he not that most faithful Hubert who so
+often saved England from the devastation of the foreigners and restored
+England to England?" Hubert was, as has been well said, perhaps the
+first minister since the Conquest who made patriotism a principle of
+policy, though it is easy in the light of later developments to read
+into his doings more than he really intended. But whatever his motives,
+the results of his action were clear. He drove away the mercenaries,
+humbled the feudal lords, and set limits to the pope's interference. He
+renewed respect for law and obedience to the law courts. Even in the
+worst days of anarchy the administrative system did not break down, and
+the records of royal orders and judicial judgments remain almost as
+full in the midst of the civil war as in the more peaceful days of
+Hubert's rule. But it was easy enough to issue proclamations and writs.
+The difficulty was to get them obeyed, and the work of Hubert was to
+ensure that the orders of king and ministers should really be respected
+by his subjects. He made many mistakes. He must share the blame of the
+failure of the Kerry campaign, and he was largely responsible for the
+sorry collapse of the invasion of Poitou. He neither understood nor
+sympathised with Stephen Langton's zeal for the charters. A
+straightforward, limited, honourable man, he strove to carry out his
+rather old-fashioned conception of duty in the teeth of a thousand
+obstacles. He never had a free hand, and he never enjoyed the hearty
+support of any one section of his countrymen. Hated by the barons whom
+he kept away from power, he alienated the Londoners by his high-handed
+violence, and the tax-payers by his heavy exactions. The pope disliked
+him, the aliens plotted against him, and the king, for whom he
+sacrificed so much, gave him but grudging support. But the reaction
+which followed his retirement made many, who had rejoiced in his
+humiliation, bitterly regret it.
+
+Three notable enemies of Hubert went off the stage of history within a
+few months of his fall. The death of Richard le Grand has already been
+recorded. William Marshal, the brother-in-law of the king, the gallant
+and successful soldier, the worthy successor of his great father, came
+home from Brittany early in 1231. His last act was to marry his sister,
+Isabella, to Richard of Cornwall. Within ten days of the wedding his
+body was laid beside his father in the Temple Church at London. In
+October, 1232, died Randolph of Blundeville, the last representative of
+the male stock of the old line of the Earls of Chester, and long the
+foremost champion of the feudal aristocracy against Hubert. The contest
+between them had been fought with such chivalry that the last public act
+of the old earl was to protect the fallen justiciar from the violence of
+his foes. For more than fifty years Randolph had ruled like a king over
+his palatine earldom; had, like his master, his struggles with his own
+vassals, and had perforce to grant to his own barons and boroughs
+liberties which he strove to wrest from his overlord for himself and his
+fellow nobles. He was not a great statesman, and hardly even a
+successful warrior. Yet his popular personal qualities, his energy, his
+long duration of power, and his enormous possessions, give him a place
+in history. His memory, living on long in the minds of the people,
+inspired a series of ballads which vied in popularity with the cycle of
+Robin Hood,[1] though, unfortunately, they have not come down to us. His
+estates were divided among his four sisters. His nephew, John the Scot,
+Earl of Huntingdon, received a re-grant of the Chester earldom; his
+Lancashire lands had already gone to his brother-in-law, William of
+Ferrars, Earl of Derby; other portions of his territories went to his
+sister, the Countess of Arundel, and the Lincoln earldom, passing
+through another sister, Hawise of Quincy, to her son-in-law, John of
+Lacy, constable of Chester, raised the chief vassal of the palatinate to
+comital rank. None of these heirs of a divided inheritance were true
+successors to Randolph. With him died the last of the great Norman
+houses, tenacious beyond its fellows, and surpassing in its two
+centuries of unbroken male descent the usual duration of the medieval
+baronial family. Its collapse made easier the alien invasion which
+threatened to undo Hubert's work.
+
+ [1] "Ich can rymes of Robyn Hode, and of Randolf erl of
+ Chestre," _Vision of Piers Plowman_, i., 167; ii., 94.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE ALIEN INVASION.
+
+
+With the dismissal of Hubert on July 29, 1232, Peter des Roches resumed
+his authority over Henry III. Mindful of past failures, the bishop's
+aim was to rule through dependants, so that he could pull the wires
+without making himself too prominent. His chief agents in pursuing this
+policy were Peter of Rivaux, Stephen Segrave, and Robert Passelewe. Of
+these, Peter of Rivaux was a Poitevin clerk, officially described as
+the bishop's nephew, but generally supposed to have been his son.
+Stephen Segrave, the son of a small Leicestershire landholder, was a
+lawyer who had held many judicial and administrative posts, including
+the regency during the king's absence abroad in 1230. He abandoned his
+original clerical profession, received knighthood, married nobly, and
+was the founder of a baronial house in the midlands. His only political
+principle was obedience to the powers that were in the ascendant.
+Passelewe, a clerk who had acted as the agent of Randolph of Chester
+and Falkes of Breaute at the Roman court, was, like Segrave, a mere
+tool.
+
+The Bishop of Winchester began to show his hand. Between June 26 and
+July 11, nineteen of the thirty-five sheriffdoms were bestowed on Peter
+of Rivaux for life. As Segrave was sheriff of five shires, and the
+bishop himself had acquired the shrievalty of Hampshire, this involved
+the transference of the administration of over two-thirds of the
+counties to the bishop's dependants. On the downfall of Hubert, Segrave
+became justiciar. He was not the equal of his predecessors either in
+personal weight or in social position, and did not aspire to act as
+chief minister. The appointment of a mere lawyer to the great Norman
+office of state marks the first stage in the decline, which before long
+degraded the justiciarship into a simple position of headship over the
+judges, the chief justiceship of the next generation. Hubert's offices
+and lands were divided among his supplanters. Peter of Rivaux became
+keeper of wards and escheats, castellan of many castles on the Welsh
+march, and the recipient of even more offices and wardships in Ireland
+than in England. The custody of the Gloucester earldom went to the
+Bishop of Winchester. The last steps of the ministerial revolution were
+completed at the king's Christmas court at Worcester. There Rivaux, who
+had yielded up before Michaelmas most of his shrievalties, was made
+treasurer, with Passelewe as his deputy. Of the old ministers only the
+chancellor, Ralph Neville, Bishop of Chichester, was suffered to remain
+in office. Finally the king's new advisers imported a large company of
+Poitevin and Breton mercenaries, hoping with their help to maintain
+their newly won position. The worst days of John seemed renewed.
+
+The Poitevin gang called upon Hubert to render complete accounts for
+the whole period of his justiciarship. When he pleaded that King John
+had given him a charter of quittance, he was told that its force had
+ended with the death of the grantor. He was further required to answer
+for the wrongs which Twenge's bands had inflicted on the servants of
+the pope. He was accused of poisoning William Earl of Salisbury,
+William Marshal, Falkes de Breaute, and Archbishop Richard. He had
+prevented the king from contracting a marriage with a daughter of the
+Duke of Austria; he had dissuaded the king from attempting to recover
+Normandy; he had first seduced and then married the daughter of the
+King of Scots; he had stolen from the treasury a talisman which made
+its possessor invincible in war and had traitorously given it to
+Llewelyn of Wales; he had induced Llewelyn to slay William de Braose;
+he had won the royal favour by magic and witchcraft, and finally he had
+murdered Constantine FitzAthulf.
+
+Many of these accusations were so monstrous that they carried with them
+their own refutation. It was too often the custom in the middle ages to
+overwhelm an enemy with incredible charges for it to be fair to accuse
+the enemies of Hubert of any excessive malignity. The substantial
+innocence of Hubert is clear, for the only charges brought against him
+were either errors of judgment and policy, or incredible crimes.
+Nevertheless he was in such imminent danger that he took sanctuary with
+the canons of Merton in Surrey. Thereupon the king called upon the
+Londoners to march to Merton and bring their ancient foe, dead or
+alive, to the city. Randolph of Chester interposed between his fallen
+enemy and the royal vengeance. He persuaded Henry to countermand the
+march to Merton and to suffer the fallen justiciar to leave his refuge
+with some sort of safe conduct. But the king was irritated to hear that
+Hubert had journeyed into Essex. Again he was pursued, and once more he
+was forced to take sanctuary, this time in a chapel near Brentwood.
+From this he was dragged by some of the king's household and brought to
+London, where he was imprisoned in the Tower. The Bishop of London
+complained to the king of this violation of the rights of the Church,
+and Hubert was allowed to return to his chapel. However, the levies of
+Essex surrounded the precincts, and he was soon forced by hunger to
+surrender. He offered to submit himself to the king's will, and was for
+a second time confined in the Tower. On November 10, he was brought
+before a not unfriendly tribunal, in which the malice of the new
+justiciar was tempered by the baronial instincts of the Earls of
+Cornwall, Warenne, Pembroke, and Lincoln. He made no effort to defend
+himself, and submitted absolutely to the judgment of the king. It was
+finally agreed that he should be allowed to retain the lands which he
+had inherited from his father, and that all his chattels and the lands
+that he had acquired himself should be forfeited to the crown. Further,
+he was to be kept in prison in the castle of Devizes under the charge
+of the four earls who had tried him.
+
+Peter des Roches was soon in difficulties. The earls who had saved
+Hubert began to oppose the whole administration. Their leader was
+Richard, Earl of Pembroke, the second son of the great regent, and
+since his brother's death head of the house of Marshal. Richard was
+bitterly prejudiced against the king and his courtiers by an attempt to
+refuse him his brother's earldom. A gallant warrior, handsome and
+eloquent, pious, upright, and well educated, Richard, the best of the
+marshal's sons, stood for the rest of his short life at the head of the
+opposition. He incited his friends to refuse to attend a council
+summoned to meet at Oxford, on June 24, 1233. The king would have
+sought to compel their presence, had not a Dominican friar, Robert
+Bacon, when preaching before the court, warned him that there would be
+no peace in England until Bishop Peter and his son were removed from
+his counsels. The friar's boldness convinced him that disaffection was
+widespread, and he promised the magnates at a later council at London
+that he would, with their advice, correct whatever he found there was
+need to reform. Meanwhile the Poitevins brought into England fresh
+swarms of hirelings from their own land, and Peter des Roches urged
+Henry to crush rebellion in the bud. As a warning to greater offenders,
+Gilbert Basset was deprived of a manor which he had held since the
+reign of King John, and an attempt was made to lay violent hands upon
+his brother-in-law, Richard Siward. The two barons resisted, whereupon
+all their estates were transferred to Peter of Rivaux. Yet Richard
+Marshal still continued to hope for peace, and, after the failure of
+earlier councils, set off to attend another assembly fixed for August
+1, at Westminster. On his way he learnt from his sister Isabella, the
+wife of Richard of Cornwall, that Peter des Roches was laying a trap
+for him. In high indignation he took horse for his Welsh estates, and
+prepared for rebellion.
+
+The king summoned the military tenants to appear with horses and arms
+at Gloucester on the 14th. There Richard Marshal was declared a traitor
+and an invasion of his estates was ordered. But the king had not
+sufficient resources to carry out his threats, and October saw the
+barons once more wrangling with Henry at Westminster, and claiming that
+the marshal should be tried by his peers. Peter of Winchester declared
+that there were no peers in England as there were in France, and that
+in consequence the king had power to condemn any disloyal subject
+through his justices. This daringly unconstitutional doctrine provoked
+a renewed outcry. The bishops joined the secular magnates, and
+threatened their colleague with excommunication. A formidable civil war
+broke out. Siward and Basset harried the lands of the Poitevins, while
+the marshal made a close alliance with Llewelyn of Wales. The king
+still had formidable forces on his side. Richard of Cornwall was
+persuaded by Bishop Peter to take up arms for his brother, and the two
+new earls, John the Scot of Chester, and John de Lacy of Lincoln,
+joined the royal forces. Hubert de Burgh took advantage of the
+increasing confusion to escape from Devizes castle to a church in the
+town. Dragged back with violence to his prison, he was again, as at
+Brentwood, restored to sanctuary through the exertions of the bishop of
+the diocese. There he remained, closely watched by his foes, until
+October 30, when Siward and Basset drove away the guard, and took him
+off with them to the marshal's castle of Chepstow.
+
+The tide of war flowed to the southern march of Wales. Llewelyn and
+Richard Marshal devastated Glamorgan, which, as a part of the
+Gloucester inheritance, was under the custody of the Bishop of
+Winchester. They took nearly all its castles, including that of
+Cardiff. Thence they subdued Usk, Abergavenny, and other neighbouring
+strongholds, while an independent army, including the marshal's
+Pembrokeshire vassals and the men of the princes of South Wales, wasted
+months in a vain attack on Carmarthen. The king's vassals were again
+summoned to Gloucester, whence Henry led them early in November towards
+Chepstow, the centre of the marshal's estates in Gwent. Earl Richard
+devastated his lands so effectively that the king could not support his
+army on them, and was compelled to move up the Wye valley towards the
+castles of Monmouth, Skenfrith, Whitecastle, and Grosmont, the strong
+quadrilateral of Upper Gwent which still remained in the hands of the
+king's friends. Marching to the most remote of these, Grosmont, on the
+upper Monnow, Henry spent several days in the castle, while his army
+lay around under canvas. On the night of November 11, the sleeping
+soldiers were suddenly set upon by the barons and their Welsh allies;
+they fled unarmed to the castle, or scattered in confusion. The
+assailants seized their horses, harness, arms and provisions, but
+refrained from slaying or capturing them. The royal forces never
+rallied. Many gladly went home, giving as their excuse that they were
+unable to fight since they had lost their equipment. Henry and his
+ministers withdrew to Gloucester. More convinced than ever of the
+treachery of Englishmen, the king entrusted the defence of the border
+castles to mercenaries from Poitou.
+
+The fighting centred round Monmouth, which Richard approached on the
+25th with a small company. A sudden sortie almost overwhelmed the
+little band. The marshal held his own heroically against twelve, until
+at last Baldwin of Guines, the warden of the castle, took him prisoner.
+Thereupon Baldwin fell to the ground, his armour pierced by a lucky
+bolt from a crossbow. His followers, smitten with panic, abandoned the
+marshal, and bore their leader home. By that time, however, the bulk of
+the marshal's forces had come upon the scene. A general engagement
+followed, in which the Anglo-Welsh army drove the enemy back into
+Monmouth and took possession of the castle. This set the marshal free
+to march northwards and join Llewelyn in a vigorous attack upon
+Shrewsbury. In January, 1234, they burnt that town and retired to their
+own lands loaded with booty. Meanwhile Siward devastated the estates of
+the Poitevins and of Richard of Cornwall. Afraid to be cut off from his
+retreat to England the king abandoned Gloucester, where he had kept his
+melancholy Christmas court, and found a surer refuge in Bishop Peter's
+cathedral city. Thereupon Gloucestershire suffered the fate of
+Shropshire. "It was a wretched sight for travellers in that region to
+see on the highways innumerable dead bodies lying naked and unburied,
+to be devoured by birds of prey, and so polluting the air that they
+infected healthy men with mortal sickness."[1]
+
+ [1] Wendover, iv., 291.
+
+The king swore that he would never make peace with the marshal, unless
+he threw himself on the royal mercy as a confessed traitor with a rope
+round his neck. Having, however, exhausted all his military resources,
+he cunningly strove to entice Richard from Wales to Ireland. The two
+Peters wrote to Maurice Fitzgerald, then justiciar of Ireland, and to
+the chief foes of the marshal, urging them to fall upon his Irish
+estates and capture the traitor, dead or alive. Many of the most
+powerful nobles of Ireland lent themselves to the conspiracy. The Lacys
+of Meath, his old enemies, joined with Fitzgerald, Geoffrey Marsh, and
+Richard de Burgh, the greatest of the Norman lords of Connaught, and
+the nephew of Hubert, in carrying out the plot. The confederates fell
+suddenly upon the marshal's estates and devastated them with fire and
+sword. On hearing of this attack Richard immediately left Wales, and,
+accompanied by only fifteen knights, took ship for Ireland. On his
+arrival Geoffrey Marsh, the meanest of the conspirators, received him
+with every profession of cordiality, and urged him to attack his
+enemies without delay. Geoffrey was an old man; he had long held the
+great post of justiciar of Ireland; and he was himself the liegeman of
+the marshal. Richard therefore implicitly trusted him, and forthwith
+took the field.
+
+The first warlike operations of Earl Richard were successful. After a
+short siege he obtained possession of Limerick, and his enemies were
+fain to demand a truce. Richard proposed a conference to be held on
+April 1, 1234, on the Curragh of Kildare. The conference proved
+abortive, for Geoffrey Marsh cunningly persuaded the marshal to refuse
+any offer of terms which the magnates would accept, and Richard found
+that he had been duped into taking up a position that he was not strong
+enough to maintain. Marsh withdrew from his side, on the ground that he
+could not fight against Lacy, whose sister he had married. The marshal
+foresaw the worst. "I know," he declared, "that this day I am delivered
+over to death, but it is better to die honourably for the cause of
+justice than to flee from the field and become a reproach to
+knighthood."
+
+The forsworn Irish knights slunk away to neighbouring places of
+sanctuary or went over to the enemy. When the final struggle came, later
+on the same April 1, Richard had few followers save the faithful fifteen
+knights who had crossed over with him from Wales. The little band,
+outnumbered by more than nine to one, struggled desperately to the end.
+At last the marshal, unhorsed and severely wounded, fell into the hands
+of his enemies. They bore him, more dead than alive, to his own castle
+of Kilkenny, which had just been seized by the justiciar. After a few
+days Richard's tough constitution began to get the better of his wounds.
+Then his enemies, showing him the royal warranty for their acts, induced
+him to admit them into his castles. An ignorant or treacherous surgeon,
+called in by the justiciar, cauterised his wounds so severely that his
+sufferings became intense. He died of fever on the 16th, and was buried,
+as he himself had willed, in the Franciscan church at Kilkenny. No one
+rejoiced at the death of the hero save the traitors who had lured him to
+his doom and the Poitevins who had suborned them. Their victim, the weak
+king, mourned for his friend as David had lamented Saul and Jonathan.[1]
+The treachery of his enemies brought them little profit. While Richard
+Marshal lay on his deathbed, a new Archbishop of Canterbury drove the
+Poitevins from office.
+
+ [1] _Dunstable Ann._, p. 137.
+
+In the heyday of the Poitevins' power the Church sounded a feeble but
+clear note of alarm. The pope expostulated with Henry for his treatment
+of Hubert de Burgh, and Agnellus of Pisa, the first English provincial
+of the newly arrived Franciscan order, strove to reconcile Richard
+Marshal with his sovereign in the course of the South-Welsh campaign.
+More drastic action was necessary if vague remonstrance was to be
+translated into fruitful action. The three years' vacancy of the see of
+Canterbury, after the death of Richard le Grand, paralysed the action
+of the Church. After the pope's rejection of the first choice of the
+convent of Christ Church, the chancellor, Ralph Neville, the monks
+elected their own prior, and him also Gregory refused as too old and
+incompetent. Their third election fell upon John Blunt, a theologian
+high in the favour of Peter des Roches, who sent him to Rome, well
+provided with ready money, to secure his confirmation. Simon Langton,
+again restored to England, and archdeacon of Canterbury, persuaded the
+pope to veto Blunt's appointment on the ground of his having held two
+benefices without a dispensation. His rejection was the first check
+received by the Poitevin faction. It was promptly followed by a more
+crushing blow. Weary of the long delay, Gregory persuaded the Christ
+Church monks then present at Rome to elect Edmund Rich, treasurer of
+Salisbury. Edmund, a scholar who had taught theology and arts with
+great distinction at Paris and Oxford, was still more famous for his
+mystical devotion, for his asceticism and holiness of life. He was
+however an old man, inexperienced in affairs, and, with all his
+gracious gifts, somewhat wanting in the tenacity and vigour which
+leadership involved. Yet in sending so eminent a saint to Canterbury,
+Rome conferred on England a service second only to that which she had
+rendered when she secured the archbishopric for Stephen Langton.
+
+Before his consecration as archbishop on April 2, 1234, Edmund had
+already joined with his suffragans on February 2 in upholding the good
+fame of the marshal and in warning the king of the disastrous results
+of preferring the counsels of the Poitevins to those of his
+natural-born subjects. A week after his consecration Edmund succeeded
+in carrying out a radical change in the administration. On April 9 he
+declared that unless Henry drove away the Poitevins, he would forthwith
+pronounce him excommunicate. Yielding at once, Henry sent the Bishop of
+Winchester back to his diocese, and deprived Peter of Rivaux of all his
+offices. The followers of the two Peters shared their fate, and Henry,
+despatching Edmund to Wales to make peace with Llewelyn and the
+marshal, hurried to Gloucester in order to meet the archbishop on his
+return. His good resolutions were further strengthened by the news of
+Earl Richard's death. On arriving at Gloucester he held a council in
+which the ruin of the Poitevins was completed. A truce, negotiated by
+the archbishop with Llewelyn, was ratified. The partisans of the
+marshal were pardoned, even Richard Siward being forgiven his long
+career of plunder. Gilbert Marshal, the next brother of the childless
+Earl Richard, was invested with his earldom and office, and Henry
+himself dubbed him a knight. Hubert de Burgh was included in the
+comprehensive pardon. Indignant that his name and seal should have been
+used to cover his ex-ministers' treachery to Earl Richard, Henry
+overwhelmed them with reproaches, and strove by his violence against
+them to purge himself from complicity in their acts. The Poitevins
+lurked in sanctuary, fearing for the worst. Segrave forgot his
+knighthood, resumed the tonsure, and took refuge in a church in
+Leicester. The king's worst indignation was reserved for Peter of
+Rivaux. Peter protested that his orders entitled him to immunity from
+arrest, but it was found that he wore a mail shirt under his clerical
+garments, and, without a word of reproach from the archbishop, he was
+immured in a lay prison on the pretext that no true clerk wore armour.
+Of the old ministers Ralph Neville alone remained in office.
+
+With Bishop Peter's fall disappeared the last of the influences that
+had prevailed during the minority. The king, who felt his dignity
+impaired by the Poitevin domination, resolved that henceforward he
+would submit to no master. He soon framed a plan of government that
+thoroughly satisfied his jealous and exacting nature. Henceforth no
+magnates, either of Church or State, should stand between him and his
+subjects. He would be his own chief minister, holding in his own hands
+all the strings of policy, and acting through subordinates whose sole
+duly was to carry out their master's orders. Under such a system the
+justiciarship practically ceased to exist. The treasurership was held
+for short periods by royal clerks of no personal distinction. Even the
+chancellorship became overshadowed. Henry quarrelled with Ralph Neville
+in 1238, and withdrew from him the custody of the great seal, though he
+allowed him to retain the name and emoluments of chancellor. On
+Neville's death the office fell into abeyance for nearly twenty years,
+during which time the great seal was entrusted to seven successive
+keepers. Like his grandfather, Henry wished to rule in person with the
+help of faithful but unobtrusive subordinates. This system, which was
+essentially that of the French monarchy, presupposed for success the
+constant personal supervision of an industrious and strong-willed king.
+Henry III was never a strenuous worker, and his character failed in the
+robustness and self-reliance necessary for personal rule. The magnates,
+who regarded themselves as the king's natural-born counsellors, were
+bitterly incensed, and hated the royal clerks as fiercely as they had
+disliked the ministers of his minority. Opposed by the barons,
+distrusted by the people, liable to be thrown over by their master at
+each fresh change of his caprice, the royal subordinates showed more
+eagerness in prosecuting their own private fortunes than in consulting
+the interests of the State. Thus the nominal government of Henry proved
+extremely ineffective. Huge taxes were raised, but little good came
+from them. The magnates held sullenly aloof; the people grumbled; the
+Church lamented the evil days. Yet for five and twenty years the
+wretched system went on, not so much by reason of its own strength as
+because there was no one vigorous enough to overthrow it.
+
+The author of all this mischief was a man of some noble and many
+attractive qualities. Save when an occasional outburst of temper showed
+him a true son of John, Henry was the kindest, mildest, most amiable of
+men. He was the first king since William the Conqueror in whose private
+life the austerest critics could find nothing blameworthy. His piety
+stands high, even when estimated by the standards of the thirteenth
+century. He was well educated and had a touch of the artist's
+temperament, loving fair churches, beautiful sculpture, delicate
+goldsmith's work, and richly illuminated books. He had a horror of
+violence, and never wept more bitter tears than when he learned how
+treacherously his name had been used to lure Richard Marshal to his
+doom. But he was extraordinarily deficient in stability of purpose. For
+the moment it was easy to influence him either for good or evil, but
+even the ablest of his counsellors found it impossible to retain any
+hold over him for long. One day he lavished all his affection on Hubert
+de Burgh; the next he played into the hands of his enemies. In the same
+way he got rid of Peter des Roches, the preceptor of his infancy, the
+guide of his early manhood. Jealous, self-assertive, restless, and
+timid, he failed in just those qualities that his subjects expected to
+find in a king. Born and brought up in England, and never leaving it
+save for short and infrequent visits to the continent, he was proud of
+his English ancestors and devoted to English saints, more especially to
+royal saints such as Edward the Confessor and Edmund of East Anglia.
+Yet he showed less sympathy with English ways than many of his
+foreign-born predecessors. Educated under alien influences, delighting
+in the art, the refinement, the devotion, and the absolutist principles
+of foreigners, he seldom trusted a man of English birth. Too weak to
+act for himself, too suspicious to trust his natural counsellors, he
+found the friendship and advice for which he yearned in foreign
+favourites and kinsmen. Thus it was that the hopes excited by the fall
+of the Poitevins were disappointed. The alien invasion, checked for a
+few years, was renewed in a more dangerous shape.
+
+During the ten years after the collapse of Peter des Roches, swarms of
+foreigners came to England, and spoiled the land with the king's entire
+good-will. Henry's marriage brought many Provencals and Savoyards to
+England. The renewed troubles between pope and emperor led to a renewal
+of Roman interference in a more exacting form. The continued
+intercourse with foreign states resulted in fresh opportunities of
+alien influence. A new attempt on Poitou brought as its only result the
+importation of the king's Poitevin kinsmen. The continued close
+relationship between the English and the French baronage involved the
+frequent claim of English estates and titles by men of alien birth.
+Even such beneficial movements as the establishment of the mendicant
+orders in England, and the cosmopolitan outlook of the increasingly
+important academic class contributed to the spread of outlandish ideas.
+As wave after wave of foreigners swept over England, Englishmen
+involved them in a common condemnation. And all saw in the weakness of
+the king the very source of their power.
+
+The first great influx of foreigners followed directly from Henry's
+marriage. For several years active negotiations had been going on to
+secure him a suitable bride. There had also at various times been talk
+of his selecting a wife from Brittany, Austria, Bohemia, or Scotland,
+and in the spring of 1235 a serious negotiation for his marriage with
+Joan, daughter and heiress of the Count of Ponthieu, only broke down
+through the opposition of the French court. Henry then sought the hand
+of Eleanor, a girl twelve years old, and the second of the four
+daughters of Raymond Berengar IV., Count of Provence, and his wife
+Beatrice, sister of Amadeus III., Count of Savoy. The marriage contract
+was signed in October. Before that time Eleanor had left Provence under
+the escort of her mother's brother, William, bishop-elect of Valence.
+On her way she spent a long period with her elder sister Margaret, who
+had been married to Louis IX. of France in 1234. On January 14, 1236,
+she was married to Henry at Canterbury by Archbishop Edmund, and
+crowned at Westminster on the following Sunday.
+
+The new queen's kinsfolk quickly acquired an almost unbounded
+ascendency over her weak husband. With the exception of the reigning
+Count Amadeus of Savoy, her eight maternal uncles were somewhat
+scantily provided for. The prudence of the French government prevented
+them from obtaining any advantage for themselves at the court of their
+niece the Queen of France, and they gladly welcomed the opportunity of
+establishing themselves at the expense of their English nephew.
+Self-seeking and not over-scrupulous, able, energetic, and with the
+vigour and resource of high-born soldiers of fortune, several of them
+play honourable parts in the history of their own land, and are by no
+means deserving of the complete condemnation meted out to them by the
+English annalists.[1] The bishop-elect of Valence was an able and
+accomplished warrior. He stayed on in England after accomplishing his
+mission, and with him remained his clerk, the younger son of a house of
+Alpine barons, Peter of Aigueblanche, whose cunning and dexterity were
+as attractive to Henry as the more martial qualities of his master.
+Weary of standing alone, the king eagerly welcomed a trustworthy
+adviser who was outside the entanglements of English parties, and made
+Bishop William his chief counsellor. It was believed that he was
+associated with eleven others in a secret inner circle of royal
+advisers, whose advice Henry pledged himself by oath to follow. Honours
+and estates soon began to fall thickly on William and his friends. He
+made himself the mouthpiece of Henry's foreign policy. When he
+temporarily left England, he led a force sent by the king to help
+Frederick II. in his war against the cities of northern Italy. His
+influence with Henry did much to secure for his brother, Thomas of
+Savoy, the hand of the elderly countess Joan of Flanders. With Thomas
+as the successor of Ferdinand of Portugal, the rich Flemish county,
+bound to England by so many political and economic ties, seemed in safe
+hands, and preserved from French influence. In 1238 Thomas visited
+England, and received a warm welcome and rich presents from the king.
+
+ [1] For Eleanor's countrymen see Mugnier, _Les Savoyards en
+ Angleterre au XIIIe siecle, et Pierre d'Aigueblanche, eveque
+ d'Hereford_ (1890).
+
+Despite the establishment of the Savoyards, the Poitevin influence began
+to revive. Peter des Roches, who had occupied himself after his fall by
+fighting for Gregory IX. against the revolted Romans, returned to
+England in broken health in 1236, and was reconciled to the king. Peter
+of Rivaux was restored to favour, and made keeper of the royal wardrobe.
+Segrave and Passelewe again became justices and ministers. England was
+now the hunting-ground of any well-born Frenchmen anxious for a wider
+career than they could obtain at home.[1] Among the foreigners attracted
+to England to prosecute legal claims or to seek the royal bounty came
+Simon of Montfort, the second son of the famous conqueror of the
+Albigenses. Amice, the mother of the elder Simon, was the sister and
+heiress of Robert of Beaumont, the last of his line to hold the earldom
+of Leicester. After Amice's death her son used the title and claimed the
+estates of that earldom. But these pretensions were but nominal, and
+since 1215 Randolph of Chester had administered the Leicester lands as
+if his complete property. However, Amaury of Montfort, the Count of
+Toulouse's eldest son, ceded to his portionless younger brother his
+claims to the Beaumont inheritance, and in 1230 Simon went to England to
+push his fortunes. Young, brilliant, ambitious and attractive, he not
+only easily won the favour of the king, but commended himself so well to
+Earl Randolph that in 1231 the aged earl was induced to relax his grasp
+on the Leicester estates. In 1239 the last formalities of investiture
+were accomplished. Amaury renounced his claims, and after that Simon
+became Earl of Leicester and steward of England. A year before that he
+had secured the great marriage that he had long been seeking. In
+January, 1238, he was wedded to the king's own sister, Eleanor, the
+childless widow of the younger William Marshal. Simon was for the moment
+high in the affection of his brother-in-law. To the English he was
+simply another of the foreign favourites who turned the king's heart
+against his born subjects.
+
+ [1] This is well illustrated by Philip de Beaumanoir's
+ well-known romance, _Jean de Dammartin et Blonde d'Oxford_ (ed.
+ by Suchier, Soc. des anciens Textes francais, and by Le Roux de
+ Lincy, Camden Soc.).
+
+In 1238 Peter des Roches died. With all his faults the Poitevin was an
+excellent administrator at Winchester,[1] and left his estates in
+such a prosperous condition that Henry coveted the succession for the
+bishop-elect of Valence, though William already had the prospect of the
+prince-bishopric of liege. But the monks of St. Swithun's refused to
+obey the royal order, and Henry sought to obtain his object from the
+pope. Gregory gave William both Liege and Winchester, but in 1239 death
+ended his restless plans. William's death left more room for his
+kinsfolk and followers. His clerk, Peter of Aigueblanche, returned to
+the land of promise, and in 1240 secured his consecration as Bishop of
+Hereford. William's brother, Peter of Savoy, lord of Romont and
+Faucigny, was invited to England in the same year. In 1241 he was
+invested with the earldom of Richmond, which a final breach with Peter
+of Brittany had left in the king's hands. Peter, the ablest member of
+his house, thus became its chief representative in England.[2]
+
+ [1] See H. Hall, _Pipe Roll of the Bishop of Winchester_,
+ 1207-8.
+
+ [2] For Peter see Wurstemberger, _Peter II., Graf von Savoyen_
+ (1856).
+
+With the Provencals and Savoyards came a fresh swarm of Romans. In 1237
+the first papal legates _a latere_ since the recall of Pandulf landed
+in England. The deputy of Gregory IX. was the cardinal-deacon Otto, who
+in 1226 had already discharged the humbler office of nuncio in England.
+It was believed that the legate was sent at the special request of
+Henry III., and despite the remonstrances of the Archbishop of
+Canterbury. Those most unfriendly to the legate were won over by his
+irreproachable conduct. He rejected nearly all gifts. He was unwearied
+in preaching peace; travelled to the north to settle outstanding
+differences between Henry and the King of Scots, and thence hurried to
+the west to prolong the truce with Llewelyn. His zeal for the
+reformation of abuses made the canons of the national council, held
+under his presidency at St. Paul's on November 18, 1237, an epoch in
+the history of our ecclesiastical jurisprudence.
+
+Despite his efforts the legate remained unpopular. The pluralists and
+nepotists, who feared his severity, joined with the foes of all
+taxation and the enemies of all foreigners in denouncing the legate. To
+avoid the danger of poison, he thought it prudent to make his own
+brother his master cook. During the council of London it was necessary
+to escort him from his lodgings and back again with a military force.
+In the council itself the claim of high-born clerks to receive
+benefices in plurality found a spokesman in so respectable a prelate as
+Walter of Cantilupe, the son of a marcher baron, whom Otto had just
+enthroned in his cathedral at Worcester, and the legate, "fearing for
+his skin," was suspected of mitigating the severity of his principles
+to win over the less greedy of the friends of vested interests. His
+Roman followers knew and cared little about English susceptibilities,
+and feeling was so strong against them that any mischance might excite
+an explosion. Such an accident occurred on St. George's day, April 23,
+1238, when the legate was staying with the Austin Canons of Oseney,
+near Oxford, while the king was six miles off at Abingdon. Some of the
+masters of the university went to Oseney to pay their respects to the
+cardinal, and were rudely repulsed by the Italian porter. Irritated at
+this discourtesy, they returned with a host of clerks, who forced their
+way into the abbey. Amongst them was a poor Irish chaplain, who made
+his way to the kitchen to beg for food. The chief cook, the legate's
+brother, threw a pot of scalding broth into the Irishman's face. A
+clerk from the march of Wales shot the cook dead with an arrow. A
+fierce struggle followed, in the midst of which Otto, hastily donning
+the garb of his hosts, took refuge in the tower of their church, where
+he was besieged by the infuriated clerks, until the king sent soldiers
+from Abingdon to release him. Otto thereupon laid Oxford under an
+interdict, suspended all lectures, and put thirty masters into prison.
+English opinion, voiced by the diocesan, Grosseteste, held that the
+cardinal's servants had provoked the riot, and found little to blame in
+the violence of the clerks.
+
+In 1239 Gregory IX. began his final conflict with Frederick II., and
+demanded the support of all Europe. As before, from 1227 to 1230, the
+pressure of the papal necessity was at once felt in England. The legate
+had to raise supplies at all costs. Crusaders were allowed to renounce
+their vows for ready money. Every visitation or conference became an
+excuse for procurations and fees. Presents were no longer rejected, but
+rather greedily solicited. On the pretence that it was necessary to
+reform the Scottish Church, "which does not recognise the Roman Church
+as its sole mother and metropolitan," Otto excited the indignation of
+Alexander II. by attempts to extend his jurisdiction to Scotland,
+hitherto unvisited by legates. In England his claims soon grew beyond
+all bearing. At last he demanded a fifth of all clerical goods to
+enable the pope to finance the anti-imperial crusade. Even this was
+more endurable than the order received from Rome that 300 clerks of
+Roman families should be "provided" to benefices in England in order
+that Gregory might obtain the support of their relatives against
+Frederick. Both as feudal suzerain and as spiritual despot, the pope
+lorded it over England as fully as his uncle Innocent III.
+
+Weakness, piety, and self-interest combined to make Henry III.
+acquiesce in the legate's exactions. "I neither wish nor dare," said
+he, "to oppose the lord pope in anything." The union of king and legate
+was irresistible. The lay opposition was slow and feeble. Gilbert
+Marshal, though showing no lack of spirit, was not the man to play the
+part which his brother Richard had filled so effectively. Richard, Earl
+of Cornwall, who constituted himself the spokesman of the magnates,
+made a special grievance of the marriage of Simon of Montfort with his
+sister Eleanor. England, he said, was like a vineyard with a broken
+hedge, so that all that went by could steal the grapes. He took arms,
+and subscribed the first of the long series of plans of constitutional
+reform that the reign was to witness, according to which the king was
+to be guided by a chosen body of counsellors. But at the crisis of the
+movement he held back, having accomplished nothing.
+
+There was more vigour in the ecclesiastical opposition. Robert
+Grosseteste,[1] a Suffolk man of humble birth, had already won for
+himself a position of unique distinction at Oxford and Paris. A teacher
+of rare force, a scholar of unexampled range, a thinker of daring
+originality, and a writer who had touched upon almost every known
+subject, he was at the height of his fame when, in 1235, his appointment
+as Bishop of Lincoln gave the fullest opportunities for the employment
+of his great gifts in the public service. He was convinced that the
+preoccupation of the clergy in worldly employment and the constant
+aggressions of the civil upon the ecclesiastical courts lay at the root
+of the evils of the time. His conviction brought him into conflict with
+the king rather than the legate, though for the moment his absorption in
+the cares of his diocese distracted his attention from general
+questions. The bishops generally had become so hostile that Otto shrank
+from meeting them in another council, and strove to get money by
+negotiating individually with the leading churchmen. The old foe of
+papal usurpations, Robert Twenge, renewed his agitation on behalf of the
+rights of patrons, and the clergy of Berkshire drew up a remonstrance
+against Otto's extortions.
+
+ [1] For Grosseteste, see F.S. Stevenson, _Robert Grosseteste,
+ Bishop of Lincoln_ (1899).
+
+Archbishop Edmund saw the need of opposing both legate and king; but he
+was hampered by his ecclesiastical and political principles, and still
+more, perhaps, by the magnitude of the rude task thrown upon him. He
+had set before himself the ideal of St. Thomas, not only in the
+asceticism of his private life, but in his zeal for his see and the
+Church. But few men were more unlike the strong-willed and bellicose
+martyr of Canterbury than the gentle and yielding saint of Abingdon. A
+plentiful crop of quarrels, however, soon showed that Edmund had, in
+one respect, copied only too faithfully the example of his predecessor.
+He was engaged in a controversy of some acerbity with the Archbishop of
+York, and he was involved in a long wrangle with the monks of his
+cathedral, which took him to Rome soon after the legate's arrival. He
+got little satisfaction there, and found a whole sea of troubles to
+overwhelm him on his return. At last came the demand of the fifth from
+Otto. Edmund joined in the opposition of his brethren to this exaction,
+but his attitude was complicated by his other difficulties. Leaning in
+his weakness on the pope, he found that Gregory was a taskmaster rather
+than a director. At last he paid his fifth, but, broken in health and
+spirits, he was of no mind to withstand the demands of the Roman clerks
+for benefices. If he could not be another St. Thomas defending the
+liberties of the Church, he could at least withdraw like his prototype
+from the strife, and find a refuge in a foreign house of religion.
+Seeking out St. Thomas's old haunt at Pontigny, he threw himself with
+ardour into the austere Cistercian life. On the advice of his
+physicians, he soon sought a healthier abode with the canons of Soisy,
+in Brie, at whose house he died on November 16, 1240. His body was
+buried at Pontigny in the still abiding minster which had witnessed the
+devotions of Becket and Langton, and miracles were soon wrought at his
+tomb. Within eight years of his death he was declared a saint; and
+Henry, who had thwarted him in life, and even opposed his canonisation,
+was among the first of the pilgrims who worshipped at his shrine. It
+needed a tougher spirit and a stronger character than Edmund's to
+grapple with the thorny problems of his age.
+
+The retirement of the archbishop enabled Otto to carry through his
+business, and withdraw from England on January 7, 1241. On August 21
+Gregory IX. died, with his arch-enemy at the gates of Rome and all his
+plans for the time frustrated. High-minded, able and devout, he wagered
+the whole fortunes of the papacy on the result of his secular struggle
+with the emperor. In Italy as in England, the spiritual hegemony of the
+Roman see and the spiritual influence of the western Church were
+compromised by his exaltation of ecclesiastical politics over religion.
+
+The monks of Christ Church won court favour by electing as archbishop,
+Boniface of Savoy, Bishop-elect of Belley, one of the queen's uncles.
+There was no real resistance to the appointment, though a prolonged
+vacancy in the papacy made it impossible for him to receive formal
+confirmation until 1243, and it was not until 1244 that he condescended
+to visit his new province. Meanwhile his kinsmen were carrying
+everything before them. Richard of Cornwall lost his first wife,
+Isabella, daughter of William Marshal, in 1240, an event which broke
+almost the last link that bound him to the baronial opposition. He
+withdrew himself from the troubles of English politics by going on
+crusade, and with him went his former enemy, Simon of Leicester.
+Richard was back in England early in 1242, and on November 23, 1243,
+his marriage with Sanchia of Provence, the younger sister of the queens
+of France and England, completed his conversion to the court party.
+
+Henry III.'s cosmopolitan instincts led him to take as much part in
+foreign politics as his resources allowed. In 1235 he married his
+sister Isabella to Frederick II., and henceforth manifested a strong
+interest in the affairs of his imperial brother-in-law. His relations
+with France were still uneasy, and he hoped to find in Frederick's
+support a counterpoise to the steady pressure of French hostility. All
+England watched with interest the progress of the emperor's arms. Peter
+of Savoy led an English contingent to fight for Frederick against the
+Milanese, and Matthew Paris, the greatest of the English chroniclers,
+narrates the campaign of Corte Nuova with a detail exceeding that which
+he allows to the military enterprises of his own king. Frederick
+constantly corresponded with both the king and Richard of Cornwall, and
+it was nothing but solicitude for the safely of the heir to the throne
+that led the English magnates to reject the emperor's request that
+Richard should receive a high command under him. Even Frederick's
+breach with the pope in 1239 did not destroy his friendship with Henry.
+The situation became extremely complicated, since Innocent IV. derived
+large financial support for his crusade from the unwilling English
+clergy, while Henry still professed to be Frederick's friend. The king
+allowed Otto to proclaim Frederick's excommunication in England, and
+then urged the legate to quit the country because the emperor strongly
+protested against the presence of an avowed enemy at his
+brother-in-law's court. Neither pope nor emperor could rely upon the
+support of so half-hearted a prince. Renewed trouble with France
+explains in some measure the anxiety of Henry to remain in good
+relations with the emperor despite Frederick's quarrel with the pope.
+
+The position of the French monarchy was far stronger than it had been
+when Henry first intervened in continental politics. Blanche of Castile
+had broken the back of the feudal coalition, and even Peter Mauclerc had
+made his peace with the monarchy at the price of his English earldom.
+Louis IX. attained his majority in 1235, and his first care was to
+strengthen his power in his newly won dominions. If Poitou were still in
+the hands of the Count of La Marche and the Viscount of Thouars, the
+royal seneschals of Beaucaire and Carcassonne after 1229 ruled over a
+large part of the old dominions of Raymond of Toulouse. In 1237 the
+treaty of Meaux was further carried out by the marriage of Raymond's
+daughter and heiress, Joan, to Alfonse, the brother of the French king.
+In 1241 Alfonse came of age, and Louis at once invested him with Poitou
+and Auvergne. The lords of Poitou saw that the same process which had
+destroyed the feudal liberties of Normandy now endangered their
+disorderly independence. Hugh of Lusignan and his wife had been present
+at Alfonse's investiture, and the widow of King John had gone away
+highly indignant at the slights put upon her dignity.[1] She bitterly
+reproached her husband with the ignominy involved in his submission.
+Easily moved to new treasons, Hugh became the soul of a league of
+Poitevin barons formed at Parthenay, which received the adhesion of
+Henry's seneschal of Gascony, Rostand de Sollers, and even of Alfonse's
+father-in-law, the depressed Raymond of Toulouse. At Christmas Hugh
+openly showed his hand. He renounced his homage to Alfonse, declared his
+adhesion to his step-son, Richard of Cornwall, the titular count of
+Poitou, and ostentatiously withdrew from the court with his wife. The
+rest of the winter was taken up with preparations for the forthcoming
+struggle.
+
+ [1] See the graphic letter of a citizen of La Rochelle to
+ Blanche, published by M. Delisle in _Bibliotheque de l'Ecole
+ des Chartes_, serie ii., iv., 513-55 (1856).
+
+Untaught by experience, Henry III. listened to the appeals of his
+mother and her husband. Richard of Cornwall, who came back from his
+crusade in January, 1242, was persuaded that he had another chance of
+realising his vain title of Count of Poitou. But the king had neither
+men nor money and the parliament of February 2 refused to grant him
+sums adequate for his need, so that, despairing of dealing with his
+barons in a body, Henry followed the legate's example of winning men
+over individually. He made a strong protest against the King of
+France's breach of the existing truce, and his step-father assured him
+that Poitou and Gascony would provide him with sufficient soldiers if
+he brought over enough money to pay them. Thereupon, leaving the
+Archbishop of York as regent, Henry took ship on May 9 at Portsmouth
+and landed on May 13 at Royan at the mouth of the Gironde. He was
+accompanied by Richard of Cornwall, seven earls, and 300 knights.
+
+Meanwhile Louis IX. marshalled a vast host at Chinon, which from April
+to July overran the patrimony of the house of Lusignan, and forced many
+of the confederate barons to submit. Peter of Savoy and John Mansel,
+Henry's favourite clerk, then made seneschal of Gascony, assembled the
+Aquitanian levies, while Peter of Aigueblanche, the Savoyard Bishop of
+Hereford, went to Provence to negotiate the union between Earl Richard
+and Sanchia, and, if possible, to add Raymond Berengar to the coalition
+against the husband of his eldest daughter. Henry hoped to win tactical
+advantages by provoking Louis to break the truce, and mendaciously
+protested his surprise at being forced into an unexpected conflict with
+his brother-in-law. Towards the end of July, Louis, who had conquered
+all Poitou, advanced to the Charente, and occupied Taillebourg. If the
+Charente were once crossed, Saintonge would assuredly follow the
+destinies of Poitou; and the Anglo-Gascon army advanced from Saintes to
+dispute the passage of the river. On July 21 the two armies were in
+presence of each other, separated only by the Charente. Besides the
+stone bridge at Taillebourg, the French had erected a temporary wooden
+structure higher up the stream, and had collected a large number of
+boats to facilitate their passage. Seeing with dismay the oriflamme
+waving over the sea of tents which, "like a great and populous city,"
+covered the right bank, the soldiers of Henry retreated precipitately
+to Saintes. There was imminent danger of their retreat being cut off,
+but Richard of Cornwall went to the French camp, and obtained an
+armistice of a few hours, which gave his brother time to reach the
+town.
+
+Next day Louis advanced at his ease to the capital of Saintonge. The
+Anglo-Gascons went out to meet him, and, despite their inferior numbers,
+fought bravely amidst the vineyards and hollow lanes to the west of the
+city. But the English king was the first to flee, and victory soon
+attended the arms of the French. Immediately after the battle, the lords
+of Poitou abandoned Richard for Alfonse. Henry fled from Saintes to
+Pons, from Pons to Barbezieux, and thence sought a more secure refuge at
+Blaye, leaving his tent, the ornaments of his chapel, and the beer
+provided for his English soldiers as booty for the enemy. The outbreak
+of an epidemic in the French army alone prevented a siege of Bordeaux,
+by necessitating the return of St. Louis to the healthier north. Henry
+lingered at Bordeaux until September, when he returned to England.[1]
+Meanwhile the French dictated peace to the remaining allies of Henry. On
+the death of Raymond of Toulouse, in 1249, Alfonse quietly succeeded to
+his dominions. The next twenty years saw the gradual extension of the
+French administrative system to Poitou, Auvergne, and the Toulousain.
+English Gascony was reduced to little more than the districts round
+Bordeaux and Bayonne. Even a show of hostility was no longer useful, and
+on April 7, 1243, a five years' truce between Henry and Louis was signed
+at Bordeaux. The marriage of Beatrice of Provence, the youngest of the
+daughters of Raymond Berengar, to Charles of Anjou, Louis' younger
+brother, removed Provence from the sphere of English influence. On his
+father-in-law's death in 1245, Charles of Anjou succeeded to his
+dominions to the prejudice of his two English brothers-in-law, and
+became the founder of a Capetian line of counts of Provence, which
+brought the great fief of the empire under the same northern French
+influences which Alfonse of Poitiers was diffusing over the lost
+inheritances of Eleanor of Aquitaine and the house of Saint-Gilles.
+
+ [1] The only good modern account of this expedition is that by
+ M. Charles Bemont, _La campagne de Poitou, 1242-3_, in _Annales
+ du Midi_, v., 389-314 (1893). For the Lusignans see Boissonade,
+ _Quomodo comites Engolismenses erga reges Angliae et Franciae
+ se gesserint_, 1152-1328 (1893).
+
+A minor result of Louis' triumph was the well-deserved ruin of Hugh of
+Lusignan and Isabella of Angouleme. The proud spirit of Isabella did
+not long tolerate her humiliation. She retired to Fontevraud and died
+there in 1246. Hugh X. followed her to the tomb in 1248. Their eldest
+son, Hugh XI., succeeded him, but the rest of their numerous family
+turned for support to the inexhaustible charity of the King of England.
+Thus in 1247 a Poitevin invasion of the king's half-brothers and
+sisters recalled to his much-tried subjects the Savoyard invasion of
+ten years earlier. In that single year three of the king's brothers and
+one of his sisters accepted his invitation to make a home in England.
+Of these, Guy, lord of Cognac, became proprietor of many estates.
+William, called from the Cistercian abbey in which he was born William
+of Valence, secured, with the hand of Joan of Munchensi, a claim to the
+great inheritance that was soon to be scattered by the extinction of
+the male line of the house of Marshal. Aymer of Valence, a very
+unclerical churchman, obtained in 1250 his election as bishop of
+Winchester, though his youth and the hostility of his chapter delayed
+his consecration for ten years. Alice their sister found a husband of
+high rank in the young John of Warenne, Earl of Warenne or Surrey,
+while a daughter of Hugh XI. married Robert of Ferrars, Earl of Ferrars
+or Derby. Others of their kindred flocked to the land of promise. Any
+Poitevin was welcome, even if not a member of the house of Lusignan.
+Thus the noble adventurer John du Plessis, came over to England,
+married the heiress of the Neufbourg Earls of Warwick, and in 1247 was
+created Earl of Warwick. The alien invasion took a newer and more
+grievous shape.
+
+The expenses of the war were still to be paid; and in 1244 Henry
+assembled a council, declaring that, as he had gone to Gascony on the
+advice of his barons, they were bound to make him a liberal grant
+towards freeing him from the debts which he had incurred beyond sea.
+Prelates, earls, and barons each deliberated apart, and a joint
+committee, composed of four members of each order, drew up an
+uncompromising reply. The king had not observed the charters; previous
+grants had been misapplied, and the abeyance of the great offices of
+state made justice difficult and good administration impossible. The
+committee insisted that a justiciar, a chancellor, and a treasurer
+should forthwith be appointed. This was the last thing that the jealous
+king desired. Helpless against a united council, he strove to break up
+the solidarity between its lay and clerical elements by laying a papal
+order before the prelates to furnish him an adequate subsidy. The leader
+of the bishops was now Grosseteste, who from this time until his death
+in 1253 was the pillar of the opposition. "We must not," he declared,
+"be divided from the common counsel, for it is written that if we be
+divided we shall all die forthwith." At last a committee of twelve
+magnates was appointed to draw up a plan of reform. The unanimity of all
+orders was shown by the co-operation on this body of prelates such as
+Boniface of Savoy with patriots of the stamp of Grosseteste and Walter
+of Cantilupe, while among the secular lords, Richard of Cornwall and
+'Simon of Leicester worked together with baronial leaders like Norfolk
+and Richard of Montfichet, a survivor of the twenty-five executors of
+Magna Carta. The obstinacy of the king may well have driven the estates
+into drawing up the remarkable paper constitution preserved for us by
+Matthew Paris.[1] By it the execution of the charters and the
+supervision of the administration were to be entrusted to four
+councillors, chosen from among the magnates, and irremovable except with
+their consent. It is unlikely that the scheme was ever carried out; but
+its conception shows an advance in the claims of the opposition, and
+anticipates the policy of restraining an incompetent ruler by a
+committee responsible to the estates, which, for the next two centuries,
+was the popular specific for royal maladministration. For the moment
+neither side gained a decided victory. Though the barons persisted in
+their refusal of an extraordinary grant, they agreed to pay an aid to
+marry the king's eldest daughter to the son of Frederick II.
+
+ [1] _Chron. Maj_., iv., 366-68.
+
+Further demands arose from the quarrel between Innocent IV.' and the
+emperor. A new papal envoy, Master Martin, came to England to extort
+from the clergy money to enable Innocent to carry on his war against
+Frederick. The lords told Martin that if he did not quit the realm
+forthwith he would be torn in pieces. In terror he prayed for a safe
+conduct. "May the devil give you a safe conduct to hell," was the only
+reply that the angry Henry vouchsafed. Even his complaisance was
+exhausted by Master Martin.
+
+On July 26, 1245, a few weeks before Martin's expulsion, Innocent IV.
+opened a general council at Lyons, in which Frederick was deposed from
+the imperial dignity. Grosseteste, the chief English prelate to attend
+the gathering, was drawn in conflicting directions by his zeal for pope
+against emperor and by his dislike of curialist exactions. This
+attitude of the bishop is reflected in the remonstrance, in the name of
+the English people, laid before Innocent, declaring the faithfulness of
+England to the Holy See and the wrongs with which her fidelity had been
+requited. The increasing demands for money, the intrusion of aliens
+into English cures, and Martin's exactions were set forth at length.
+Innocent refused to entertain the petition, forced all the bishops at
+Lyons to join in the deprivation of the emperor, and required every
+English bishop to seal with his own seal the document by which John had
+pledged the nation to a yearly tribute. No one could venture to stand
+up against the successor of St. Peter, and so, despite futile
+remonstrance, Innocent still had it all his own way. In 1250
+Grosseteste again met Innocent face to face at Lyons, and urged him to
+"put to flight the evils and purge the abominations" which the Roman
+see had done so much to foster. But this outspoken declaration was
+equally without result. Bold as were Grosseteste's words, he fully
+accepted the curialist theory which regarded the pope as the universal
+bishop, the divinely appointed source of all ecclesiastical
+jurisdiction. He could therefore do no more than protest. If the pope
+chose to disregard him, there was nothing to be done but wait patiently
+for better times. The plague of foreign ecclesiastics was still to
+torment the English Church for many a year.
+
+The king's difficulties were increased by fresh troubles in Scotland
+and Wales. The friendship between Henry and his brother-in-law,
+Alexander II., was weakened by the death of the Queen of Scots and by
+Alexander's marriage to a French lady in 1239. At last, in 1244,
+relations were so threatening that the English levies were mustered for
+a campaign at Newcastle. However, on the mediation of Richard of
+Cornwall, Alexander bound himself not to make alliances with England's
+enemies, and the trouble passed away. In Wales the difficulties were
+more complicated. Llewelyn ap Iorwerth died in 1240, full of years and
+honour. In the last years of his reign broken health and the revolts of
+his eldest son Griffith made the old chieftain anxious for peace with
+England, as the best way of securing the succession to all his
+dominions of David, his son by Joan of Anjou. Henry III., anxious that
+David as his nephew should inherit the principality, granted a
+temporary cessation of hostilities. After Llewelyn's death David was
+accepted as Prince of Snowdon, and made his way to Gloucester, where he
+performed homage, and was dubbed knight by his uncle. Next year,
+however, hostilities broke out, and Henry, disgusted with his nephew,
+made a treaty with the wife of Griffith, Griffith himself being David's
+prisoner. In 1241 Henry led an expedition from Chester into North
+Wales, and forced David to submit. He surrendered Griffith to his
+uncle's safe keeping and promised to yield his principality to Henry if
+he died without a son. Three years later Griffith broke his neck in an
+attempt to escape from the Tower. The death of his rival emboldened
+David to take up a stronger line against his uncle. A fresh Welsh
+expedition was necessary for the summer of 1245, in which the English
+advanced to the Conway, but were speedily forced to retire. David held
+his own until his death, without issue, in March, 1246, threw open the
+question of the Welsh succession.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+POLITICAL RETROGRESSION AND NATIONAL PROGRESS.
+
+
+The ten years from 1248 to 1258 saw the continuance of the
+misgovernment, discontent, and futile opposition which have already
+been sufficiently illustrated. The history of those years must be
+sought not so much in the relations of the king and his English
+subjects as in Gascony, in Wales, in the crusading revival, and in the
+culmination of the struggle of papacy and empire. In each of these
+fields the course of events reacted sharply upon the domestic affairs
+of England, until at last the failures of Henry's foreign policy gave
+unity and determination to the party of opposition whose first
+organised success, in 1258, ushered in the Barons' War.
+
+The relations between England and France remained anomalous. Formal
+peace was impossible, since France would yield nothing, and the English
+king still claimed Normandy and Aquitaine. Yet neither Henry nor Louis
+had any wish for war. They had married sisters: they were personally
+friendly, and were both lovers of peace. In such circumstances it was
+not hard to arrange truces from time to time, so that from 1243 to the
+end of the reign there were no open hostilities. In 1248 the friendly
+feeling of the two courts was particularly strong. Louis was on the eve
+of departure for the crusade and many English nobles had taken the
+cross. Henry, who was himself contemplating a crusade, was of no mind
+to avail himself of his kinsman's absence to disturb his realm.
+
+The French could afford to pass over Henry's neglect to do homage, for
+Gascony seemed likely to emancipate itself from the yoke of its English
+dukes without any prompting from Paris. After the failure of 1243, a
+limited amount of territory between the Dordogne and the Pyrenees alone
+acknowledged Henry. This narrower Gascony was a thoroughly feudalised
+land: the absentee dukes had little authority, domain, or revenue: and
+the chief lordships were held by magnates, whose relations to their
+overlord were almost formal, and by municipalities almost as free as
+the cities of Flanders or the empire. The disastrous campaign of
+Taiilebourg lessened the prestige of the duke, and Henry quitted
+Gascony without so much as attempting to settle its affairs. In the
+following years weak seneschals, with insufficient powers and quickly
+succeeding each other, were unable to grapple with ever-increasing
+troubles. The feudal lords dominated the countryside, pillaged traders,
+waged internal war and defied the authority of the duke. In the
+autonomous towns factions had arisen as fierce as those of the cities
+of Italy. Bordeaux was torn asunder by the feuds of the Rosteins and
+Colons. Bayonne was the scene of a struggle between a few privileged
+families, which sought to monopolise municipal office, and a popular
+opposition based upon the seafaring class. The neighbouring princes
+cast greedy eyes on a land so rich, divided, and helpless. Theobald
+IV., the poet, Count of Champagne and King of Navarre, coveted the
+valley of the Adour. Gaston, Viscount of Bearn, the cousin of Queen
+Eleanor, plundered and destroyed the town of Dax. Ferdinand the Saint
+of Castile and James I. of Aragon severally claimed all Gascony. Behind
+all these loomed the agents of the King of France. Either Gascony must
+fall away altogether, or stronger measures must be taken to preserve
+it.
+
+In this extremity Henry made Simon of Montfort seneschal or governor of
+Gascony, with exceptionally full powers and an assured duration of
+office for seven years. Simon had taken the crusader's vow, but was
+persuaded by the king to abandon his intention of following Louis to
+Egypt. He at once threw himself into his rude task with an energy that
+showed him to be a true son of the Albigensian crusader. In the first
+three months he traversed the duchy from end to end; rallied the royal
+partisans; defeated rebels; kept external foes in check, and
+administered the law without concern for the privileges of the great.
+In 1249 he crushed the Rostein faction at Bordeaux. The same fate was
+meted out to their partisans in the country districts. Order was
+restored, but the seneschal utterly disregarded impartiality or
+justice. He sought to rule Gascony by terrorism and by backing up one
+faction against the other. It was the same with minor cities, like
+Bazas and Bayonne, and with the tyrants of the countryside. The
+Viscount of Fronsac saw his castle razed and his estates seized. Gaston
+of Bearn, tricked by the seneschal out of the succession of Bigorre,
+was captured, sent to England, and only allowed to return to his home,
+humiliated and powerless to work further evil. The lesser barons had to
+acknowledge Simon their master. On the death of Raymond of Toulouse in
+1249, his son-in-law and successor, Alfonse of Poitiers, had all he
+could do to secure his inheritance, and was too closely bound by the
+pacific policy of his brother to give Simon much trouble. The truce
+with France was easily renewed by reason of St. Louis' absence on a
+crusade. The differences between Gascony and Theobald of Navarre were
+mitigated in 1248 at a personal interview between Leicester and the
+poet-king.
+
+Gascony for the moment was so quiet that the rebellious hordes called
+the _Pastoureaux_, who had desolated the royal domain, withdrew from
+Bordeaux in terror of Simon's threats. But the expense of maintaining
+order pressed heavily on the seneschal's resources, and his master
+showed little disposition to assist him. Moreover Gascony could not
+long keep quiet. There were threats of fresh insurrections, and the
+whole land was burning with indignation against its governor.
+Complaints from the Gascon estates soon flowed with great abundance
+into Westminster. For the moment Henry paid little attention to them.
+His son Edward was ten years of age, and he was thinking of providing
+him with an appanage, sufficient to support a separate household and so
+placed as to train the young prince in the duties of statecraft. Before
+November, 1249, he granted to Edward all Gascony, along with the
+profits of the government of Ireland, which were set aside to put
+Gascony in a good state of defence. Simon's strong hand was now more
+than ever necessary to keep the boy's unruly subjects under control.
+The King therefore continued Simon as seneschal of Gascony, though
+henceforth the earl acted as Edward's minister. "Complete happily,"
+Henry wrote to the seneschal, "all our affairs in Gascony and you shall
+receive from us and our heirs a recompense worthy of your services."
+For the moment Leicester's triumph seemed complete, but the Gascons,
+who had hoped that Edward's establishment meant the removal of their
+masterful governor, were bitterly disappointed at the continuance of
+his rule. Profiting by Simon's momentary absence in England, they once
+more rose in revolt. Henry wavered for the moment. "Bravely," declared
+he to his brother-in-law, "hast thou fought for me, and I will not deny
+thee help. But complaints pour in against thee. They say that thou hast
+thrown into prison, and condemned to death, folk who have been summoned
+to thy court under pledge of thy good faith." In the end Simon was sent
+back to Gascony, and by May, 1251, the rebels were subdued.
+
+Next year Gaston of Bearn stirred up another revolt, and, while Simon
+was in England, deputies from the Aquitanian cities crossed the sea and
+laid new complaints before Henry. A stormy scene ensued between the
+king and his brother-in-law. Threatened with the loss of his office,
+Simon insisted that he had been appointed for seven years, and that he
+could not be removed without his own consent. Henry answered that he
+would keep no compacts with traitors. "That word is a lie," cried
+Simon; "were you not my king it would be an ill hour for you when you
+dared to utter it." The sympathy of the magnates saved Leicester from
+the king's wrath, and before long he returned to Gascony, still
+seneschal, but with authority impaired by the want of his sovereign's
+confidence. Though the king henceforth sided with the rebels, Simon
+remained strong enough to make headway against the lord of Bearn.
+Before long, however, Leicester unwillingly agreed to vacate his office
+on receiving from Henry a sum of money. In September, 1252, he laid
+down the seneschalship and retired into France. While shabbily treated
+by the king, he had certainly shown an utter absence of tact or
+scruple. But the tumults of Gascony raged with more violence than ever
+now that his strong hand was withdrawn. Those who had professed to rise
+against the seneschal remained in arms against the king. Once more the
+neighbouring princes cast greedy eyes on the defenceless duchy. In
+particular, Alfonso the Wise, King of Castile, who succeeded his father
+Ferdinand in 1252, renewed his father's claims to Gascony.
+
+The only way to save the duchy was for Henry to go there in person.
+Long delays ensued before the royal visit took place, and it was not
+until August, 1253, that Bordeaux saw her hereditary duke sail up the
+Gironde to her quays. The Gascon capital remained faithful, but within
+a few miles of her walls the rebels were everywhere triumphant. It
+required a long siege to reduce Benauge to submission, and months
+elapsed before the towns and castles of the lower Garonne and Dordogne
+opened their gates. Even then La Reole, whither all the worst enemies
+of Montfort had fled, held out obstinately. Despairing of military
+success, Henry fell back upon diplomacy. The strength of the Gascon
+revolt did not lie in the power of the rebels themselves but in the
+support of the neighbouring princes and the French crown. By renewing
+the truce with the representatives of Louis, Henry protected himself
+from the danger of French intervention, and at the same time he cut off
+a more direct source of support to the rebels by negotiating treaties
+with such magnates as the lord of Albret, the Counts of Comminges and
+Armagnac, and the Viscount of Bearn. His master-stroke was the
+conclusion, in April, 1254, of a peace with Alfonso of Castile, whereby
+the Spanish king abandoned his Gascon allies and renounced his claims
+on the duchy. In return it was agreed that the lord Edward should marry
+Alfonso's half-sister, Eleanor, heiress of the county of Ponthieu
+through her mother, Joan, whom Henry had once sought for his queen. As
+Edward's appanage included Aquitaine, Alfonso, in renouncing his
+personal claims, might seem to be but transferring them to his sister.
+
+In May, 1254, Queen Eleanor joined Henry at Bordeaux. With her went her
+two sons, Edward and Edmund, her uncle, Archbishop Boniface, and a great
+crowd of magnates. In August Edward went with his mother to Alfonso's
+court at Burgos, where he was welcomed with all honour and dubbed to
+knighthood by the King of Castile, and in October he and Eleanor were
+married at the Cistercian monastery of Las Huelgas. His appanage
+included all Ireland, the earldom of Chester, the king's lands in Wales,
+the Channel Islands, the whole of Gascony, and whatsoever rights his
+father still had over the lands taken from him and King John by the
+Kings of France. Thus he became the ruler of all the outlying
+dependencies of the English crown, and the representative of all the
+claims on the Aquitanian inheritance of Eleanor and the Norman
+inheritance of William the Conqueror. The caustic St. Alban's chronicler
+declared that Henry left to himself such scanty possessions that he
+became a "mutilated kinglet".[1] But Henry was too jealous of power
+utterly to renounce so large a share of his dominions. His grants to his
+son were for purposes of revenue and support, and the government of
+these regions was still strictly under the royal control. Yet from this
+moment writs ran in Edward's name, and under his father's direction the
+young prince was free to buy his experience as he would. Soon after his
+son's return with his bride, Henry III. quitted Gascony, making his way
+home through France, where he visited his mother's tomb at Fontevraud
+and made atonement at Pontigny before the shrine of Archbishop Edmund.
+Of more importance was his visit to King Louis, recently returned from
+his Egyptian captivity. The cordial relations established by personal
+intercourse between the two kings prepared the way for peace two years
+later.
+
+ [1] Matthew Paris, _Chron. Maj._, v., 450.
+
+Edward remained in Gascony about a year after his father. He checked
+with a stern hand the disorders of his duchy, strove to make peace
+between the Rosteins and Colons, and failing to do so, took in 1261 the
+decisive step of putting an end to the tumultuous municipal
+independence of the Gascon capital by depriving the jurats of the right
+of choosing their mayor.[1] Thenceforth Bordeaux was ruled by a
+mayor nominated by the duke or his lieutenant. Edward's rule in Gascony
+has its importance as the first experiment in government by the boy of
+fifteen who was later to become so great a king. Returning to London in
+November, 1255, he still forwarded the interests of his Gascon
+subjects, and an attempt to protect the Bordeaux wine-merchants from
+the exactions of the royal officers aroused the jealousy of Henry, who
+declared that the days of Henry II. had come again, when the king's
+sons rose in revolt against their father. Despite this characteristic
+wail, Edward gained his point. Yet his efforts to secure the well-being
+of Gascony had not produced much result. The hold of the English duke
+on Aquitaine was as precarious under Edward as it had been in the days
+of Henry's direct rule.
+
+ [1] See Bemont, _Roles Gascons_, i., supplement, pp.
+ cxvi.-cxviii.
+
+The affairs of Wales and Cheshire involved Edward in responsibilities
+even more pressing than those of Gascony. On the death of John the Scot
+without heirs in 1237, the palatinate of Randolph of Blundeville became
+a royal escheat. Its grant to Edward made him the natural head of the
+marcher barons. The Cheshire earldom became the more important since
+the Welsh power had been driven beyond the Conway. Since the death of
+David ap Llewelyn in 1246, divisions in the reigning house of Gwynedd
+had continued to weaken the Welsh. Llewelyn and Owen the Red, the two
+elder sons of the Griffith ap Llewelyn who had perished in attempting
+to escape from the Tower, took upon themselves the government of
+Gwynedd, dividing the land, by the advice of the "good men," into two
+equal halves. The English seneschal at Carmarthen took advantage of
+their weakness to seize the outlying dependencies of Gwynedd south of
+the Dovey. War ensued, for the brothers resisted this aggression. But
+in April, 1247, they were forced to do homage at Woodstock for Gwynedd
+and Snowdon. Henry retained not only Cardigan and Carmarthen, but the
+debatable lands between the eastern boundary of Cheshire and the river
+Clwyd, the four cantreds of the middle country or Perveddwlad, so long
+the scene of the fiercest warfare between the Celt and the Saxon. Thus
+the work of Llewelyn ap Iorwerth was completely undone, and his
+grandsons were confined to Snowdon and Anglesey, the ancient cradles of
+their house.
+
+It suited English policy that even, the barren lands of Snowdon should
+be divided. As time went on, other sons of Griffith ap Llewelyn began
+to clamour for a share of their grandfather's inheritance. Owen, the
+weaker of the two princes, made common cause with them, and David,
+another brother, succeeded in obtaining his portion of the common
+stock. Llewelyn showed himself so much the most resourceful and
+energetic of the brethren that, when open war broke out between them in
+1254, he easily obtained the victory. Owen was taken prisoner, and
+David was deprived of his lands. Llewelyn, thus sole ruler of Gwynedd,
+at once aspired to follow in the footsteps of his grandfather. He
+overran Merioneth, and frightened the native chieftains beyond the
+Dovey into the English camp. His ambitions were, however, rudely
+checked by the grant of Cheshire and the English lands in Wales to
+Edward.
+
+Besides the border palatinate, Edward's Welsh lands included the four
+cantreds of Perveddwlad, and the districts of Cardigan and Carmarthen.
+Young as he was, he had competent advisers, and, while he was still in
+Aquitaine, designs were formed of setting up the English shire system
+in his Welsh lands, so as to supersede the traditional Celtic methods
+of government by feudal and monarchical centralisation. Efforts were
+made to subject the four cantreds to the shire courts at Chester; and
+Geoffrey of Langley, Edward's agent in the south, set up shire-moots at
+Cardigan and Carmarthen, from which originated the first beginnings of
+those counties. The bitterest indignation animated Edward's Welsh
+tenants, whether on the Clwyd or on the Teivi and Towy. They rose in
+revolt against the alien innovators, and called upon Llewelyn to
+champion their grievances. Llewelyn saw the chance of extending his
+tribal power into a national principality over all Wales by posing as
+the upholder of the Welsh people. He overran the four cantreds in a
+week, finding no resistance save before the two castles of Deganwy and
+Diserth. He conquered Cardigan with equal ease, and prudently granted
+out his acquisition to the local chieftain Meredith ap Owen. Nor were
+Edward's lands alone exposed to his assaults. In central Wales Roger
+Mortimer was stripped of his marches on the upper Wye, and Griffith ap
+Gwenwynwyn, the lord of upper Powys, driven from the regions of the
+upper Severn. In the spring of 1257 the lord of Gwynedd appeared in
+regions untraversed by the men of Snowdon since the days of his
+grandfather. He devastated the lands of the marchers on the Bristol
+Channel and slew Edward's deputy in battle. "In those days," says
+Matthew Paris, "the Welsh saw that their lives were at stake, so that
+those of the north joined together in indissoluble alliance with those
+of the south. Such a union had never before been, since north and south
+had always been opposed." The lord of Snowdon assumed the title of
+Prince of Wales.
+
+Edward was forced to defend his inheritance. Henry III. paid little
+heed to his misfortunes, and answered his appeal for help by saying:
+"What have I to do with the matter? I have given you the land; you must
+defend it with your own resources. I have plenty of other business to
+do." Nevertheless, Henry accompanied his son on a Welsh campaign in
+August, 1257. The English army got no further than Deganwy, and
+therefore did not really invade Llewelyn's dominions at all. After
+waiting idly on the banks of the Conway for some weeks, it retired
+home, leaving the open country to be ruled by Llewelyn as he would, and
+having done nothing but revictual the castles of the four cantreds.
+Next year a truce was made, which left Llewelyn in possession of the
+disputed districts. Troubles at home were calling off both father and
+son from the Welsh war, and thus Llewelyn secured his virtual triumph.
+Though fear of the progress of the lord of Gwynedd filled every marcher
+with alarm, yet the dread of the power of Edward was even more nearly
+present before them. The marcher lords deliberately stood aside, and
+the result was inevitable disaster. Edward found that the territories
+handed over to him by his father had to be conquered before they could
+be administered, and Henry III.'s methods of government made it a
+hopeless business to find either the men or the money for the task.
+
+England still resounded with complaints of misgovernment, and demands
+for the execution of the charters. Before going to Bordeaux in 1253,
+Henry obtained from the reluctant parliament a considerable subsidy,
+and pledged himself as "a man, a Christian, a knight, and a crowned and
+anointed king," to uphold the charters. During his absence a
+parliament, summoned by the regents, Queen Eleanor and Richard of
+Cornwall, for January, 1254, showed such unwillingness to grant a
+supply that a fresh assembly was convened in April, to which knights of
+the shire, for the first time since the reign of John, and
+representatives of the diocesan clergy, for the first occasion on
+record, were summoned, as well as the baronial and clerical grandees.
+Nothing came of the meeting save fresh complaints. The Earl of
+Leicester became the spokesman of the opposition. Hurrying back from
+France he warned the parliament not to fall into the "mouse-traps" laid
+for them by the king. In default of English money, enough to meet the
+king's necessities was extorted from the Jews, recently handed over to
+the custody of Richard of Cornwall. After his return from France at the
+end of 1254, Henry's renewed requests for money gave coherence to the
+opposition. Between 1254 and 1258 the king's exactions, and an
+effective organisation for withstanding them, developed on parallel
+lines. To the old sources of discontent were added grievances
+proceeding from enterprises of so costly a nature that they at last
+brought about a crisis.
+
+The foremost grievance against the king was still his co-operation with
+the papacy in spoiling the Church of England. Though the death of the
+excommunicated Frederick II. in 1250 was a great gain for Innocent IV.,
+the contest of the papacy against the Hohenstaufen raged as fiercely as
+ever. Both in Germany and in Italy Innocent had to carry on his
+struggle against Conrad, Frederick's son. After Conrad's death, in
+1254, there was still Frederick's strenuous bastard, Manfred, to be
+reckoned with in Naples and Sicily. Innocent IV. died in 1254, but his
+successor, Alexander IV., continued his policy. A papalist King of
+Naples was wanted to withstand Manfred, and also a papalist successor
+to the pope's phantom King of the Romans, William of Holland, who died
+in 1256.
+
+Candidates to both crowns were sought for in England. Since 1250
+Innocent IV. had been sounding Richard, Earl of Cornwall, as to his
+willingness to accept Sicily. The honourable scruple against hostility
+to his kinsman, which Richard shared with the king, prevented him from
+setting up his claims against Conrad. But the deaths both of Conrad and
+of Frederick II.'s son by Isabella of England weakened the ties between
+the English royal house and the Hohenstaufen, and Henry was tempted by
+Innocent's offer of the Sicilian throne for his younger son, Edmund, a
+boy of nine, along with a proposal to release him from his vow of
+crusade to Syria, if he would prosecute on his son's behalf a crusading
+campaign against the enemies of the Church in Naples. Innocent died
+before the negotiations were completed, but Alexander IV. renewed the
+offer, and in April, 1255, Peter of Aigueblanche, Bishop of Hereford,
+accepted the preferred kingdom in Edmund's name. Sicily was to be held
+by a tribute of money and service, as a fief of the holy see, and was
+never to be united with the empire. Henry was to do homage to the pope
+on his son's behalf, to go to Italy in person or send thither a
+competent force, and to reimburse the pope for the large sums expended
+by him in the prosecution of the war. In return the English and
+Scottish proceeds of the crusading tenth, imposed on the clergy at
+Lyons, were to be paid to Henry. On October 18, 1255, a cardinal
+invested Edmund with a ring that symbolised his appointment. Henry
+stood before the altar and swore by St. Edward that he would himself go
+to Apulia, as soon as he could safely pass through France.
+
+The treaty remained a dead letter. Henry found it quite impossible to
+raise either the men or the money promised, and abandoned any idea of
+visiting Sicily in person. Meanwhile Naples and Sicily were united in
+support of Manfred, and discomfited the feeble forces of the papal
+legates who acted against him in Edmund's name. At last the Archbishop
+of Messina came from the pope with an urgent request for payment of the
+promised sums. It was in vain that Henry led forth his son, clothed in
+Apulian dress, before the Lenten parliament of 1257, and begged the
+magnates to enable him to redeem his bond. When they heard the king's
+speech "the ears of all men tingled". Nothing could be got save from
+the clergy, so that Henry was quite unable to meet his obligations. He
+besought Alexander to give him time, to make terms with Manfred, to
+release Edmund from his debts on condition of ceding a large part of
+Apulia to the Church,--to do anything in short save insist upon the
+original contract. The pope deferred the payment, but the respite did
+Henry no good. Edmund's Sicilian monarchy vanished into nothing, when,
+early in 1258, Manfred was crowned king at Palermo. Before the end of
+the year, Alexander cancelled the grant of Sicily to Edmund. Yet his
+demands for the discharge of Henry's obligations had contributed not a
+little towards focussing the gathering discontent.[1]
+
+ [1] For Edmund's Sicilian claims, see W.E. Rhodes' article on
+ _Edmund, Earl of Lancaster_, in the _English Historical
+ Review_, x. (1895), 20-27.
+
+While Henry was seeking the Sicilian crown for his son, his brother
+Richard was elected to the German throne. Since William of Holland's
+death in January, 1256, the German magnates, divided between the
+Hohenstaufen and the papalist parties, had hesitated for nearly a year
+as to the choice of his successor. As neither party was able to secure
+the election of its own partisan, a compromise was mooted. At last the
+name of Richard of Cornwall was brought definitely forward. He was of
+high rank and unblemished reputation; a friend of the pope yet a kinsman
+of the Hohenstaufen; he was moderate and conciliatory; he had enough
+money to bribe the electors handsomely, and he was never likely to be so
+deeply rooted in Germany as to stand in the way of the princes of the
+empire. The Archbishop of Cologne became his paid partisan, and the
+Count Palatine of the Rhine accepted his candidature on conditions. The
+French party set up as his rival Alfonso X. of Castile, who, despite his
+newly formed English alliance, was quite willing to stand against
+Richard. At last, in January, 1257, the votes of three electors,
+Cologne, Mainz, and the Palatine, were cast for Richard, who also
+obtained the support of Ottocar, King of Bohemia. However, in April,
+Trier, Saxony, and Brandenburg voted for Alfonso. The double election of
+two foreigners perpetuated the Great Interregnum for some sixteen years.
+Alfonso's title was only an empty show, but Richard took his appointment
+seriously. He made his way to Germany, and was crowned King of the
+Romans on May 17, 1257, at Aachen. He remained in the country nearly
+eighteen months, and succeeded in establishing his authority in the
+Rhineland, though beyond that region he never so much as showed his
+face.[1] The elevation of his brother to the highest dignity in
+Christendom was some consolation to Henry for the Sicilian failure.
+
+ [1] See for Richard's career, Koch's _Richard von Cornwallis_,
+ 1209-1257, and the article on _Richard, King of the Romans_, in
+ the _Dictionary of National Biography_.
+
+The nation was disgusted to see maladministration grow worse and worse;
+the nobles were indignant at the ever-increasing sway of the
+foreigners; and several years of bad harvests, high prices, rain,
+flood, and murrain sharpened the chronic misery of the poor. The
+withdrawal of Earl Richard to his new kingdom deprived the king and
+nation of an honourable if timid counsellor, though a more capable
+leader was at last provided in the disgraced governor of Gascony. Simon
+still deeply resented the king's ingratitude for his services, and had
+become enough of an Englishman to sympathise with the national
+feelings. Since his dismissal in 1253 he had held somewhat aloof from
+politics. He knew so well that his interests centred in England that he
+declined the offer of the French regency on the death of Blanche of
+Castile. He prosecuted his rights over Bigorre with characteristic
+pertinacity, and lawsuits about his wife's jointure from her first
+husband exacerbated his relations with Henry. It cannot, however, be
+said that the two were as yet fiercely hostile. Simon went to Henry's
+help in Gascony in 1254, served on various missions and was nominated
+on others from which he withdrew. His chosen occupations during these
+years of self-effacement were religious rather than political; his
+dearest comrades were clerks rather than barons.
+
+Among Montfort's closer intimates, Bishop Grosseteste was removed by
+death in 1253. But others of like stamp still remained, such as Adam
+Marsh, the Franciscan mystic, whose election to the see of Ely was
+quashed by the malevolence of the court; Eudes Rigaud, the famous
+Archbishop of Rouen, and Walter of Cantilupe, Bishop of Worcester, who
+formed a connecting link between the aristocracy and the Church.
+Despite the ineffectiveness of the clerical opposition to the papacy,
+the spirit of independence expressed in Grosseteste's protests had not
+yet deserted the churchmen. Clerks had felt the pinch of the papal
+exactions, had been bled to the uttermost to support the Sicilian
+candidature, and had seen aliens and non-residents usurping their
+revenues and their functions. More timid and less cohesive than the
+barons, they had quicker brains, more ideas, deeper grievances, and
+better means of reaching the masses. If resentment of the Sicilian
+candidature was the spark that fired the train, the clerical opposition
+showed the barons the method of successful resistance. The rejection of
+Henry's demands for money in the assemblies of 1257 started the
+movement that spread to the baronage in the parliaments of 1258. In the
+two memorable gatherings of that year the discontent, which had
+smouldered for a generation, at last burst into flame. In the next
+chapter we shall see in what fashion the fire kindled.
+
+The futility of the political history of the weary middle period of the
+reign suggests, to those who make the history of the state the
+criterion of every aspect of the national fortunes, a corresponding
+barrenness and lack of interest in other aspects of national life. Yet
+a remedy for Henry's misrule was only found because the age of
+political retrogression was in all other fields of action an epoch of
+unexampled progress. The years during which the strong centralised
+government of the Angevin kings was breaking down under Henry's weak
+rule were years which, to the historian of civilisation, are among the
+most fruitful in our annals. In vivid contrast to the tale of misrule,
+the historian can turn to the revival of religious and intellectual
+life, the growing delight in ideas and knowledge, the consummation of
+the best period of art, and the spread of a nobler civilisation which
+make the middle portion of the thirteenth century the flowering time of
+English medieval life. It is part of this strange contrast that Henry,
+the obstacle to all political progress, was himself a chief supporter
+of the religious and intellectual movements which were so deeply
+influencing the age.
+
+Much has been said of the alien invasion, and of the strong national
+opposition it excited. But insularity is not a good thing in itself,
+and the natural English attitude to the foreigners tended to confound
+good and bad alike in a general condemnation. Even the Savoyards were
+by no means as evil as the English thought them, and Henry in welcoming
+his kinsmen was not merely moved by selfish and unworthy motives; he
+believed that he was showing his openness to ideas and his welcome to
+all good things from whencesoever they came. There were, in fact, two
+tendencies, antagonistic yet closely related, which were operative, not
+only in England but all over western Europe, during this period.
+Nations, becoming conscious and proud of their unity, dwelt, often
+unreasonably, on the points wherein they differed from other peoples,
+and strongly resented alien interference. At the same time the closer
+relations between states, the result of improved government, better
+communications, increased commercial and social intercourse, the
+strengthening of common ideals, and the development of cosmopolitan
+types of the knight, the scholar, and the priest, were deepening the
+union of western Christendom on common lines. Neither the political nor
+the military nor the ecclesiastical ideals of the early middle ages
+were based upon nationality, but rather on that ecumenical community of
+tradition which still made the rule of Rome, whether in Church or
+State, a living reality. In the thirteenth century the papal tradition
+was still at its height. The jurisdiction of the papal _curia_ implied
+a universal Christian commonwealth. World-wide religious orders united
+alien lands together by ties more spiritual than obedience to the papal
+lawyers. The academic ideal was another and a fresh link that connected
+the nations together. To the ancient reasons for union--symbolised by
+the living Latin speech of all clerks, of all scholars, of all engaged
+in serious affairs-were added the newer bonds of connexion involved in
+the common knightly and social ideals, in the general spread of a
+common art and a common vernacular language and literature.
+
+As Latin expressed the one series of ties, so did French represent the
+other. The France of St. Louis meant two things. It meant, of course,
+the French state and the French nationality, but it meant a great deal
+more than that. The influence of the French tongue and French ideals
+was wider than the political influence of the French monarchy. French
+was the common language of knighthood, of policy, of the literature
+that entertained lords and ladies, of the lighter and less technical
+sides of the cosmopolitan culture which had its more serious
+embodiments in Latin. To the Englishman of the thirteenth century the
+French state was the enemy; but the English baron denounced France in
+the French tongue, and leant a ready ear to those aspects of life
+which, cosmopolitan in reality, found their fullest exposition in
+France and among French-speaking peoples. In the age which saw
+hostility to Frenchmen become a passion, a Frenchman like Montfort
+could become the champion of English patriotism, English scholars could
+readily quit their native land to study at Paris, the French vernacular
+literature was the common property of the two peoples, and French words
+began to force their way into the stubborn vocabulary of the English
+language, which for two centuries had almost entirely rejected these
+alien elements. In dwelling, however briefly, on the new features which
+were transforming English civilisation during this memorable period, we
+shall constantly see how England gained by her ever-increasing
+intercourse with the continent, by necessarily sharing in the new
+movements which had extended from the continent to the island, no
+longer, as in the eleventh century, to be described as a world apart.
+Neither the coming of the friars, nor the development of university
+life and academic schools of philosophy, theology, and natural science,
+nor the triumph of gothic art, nor the spread of vernacular literature,
+not even the scholarly study of English law nor the course of English
+political development-not one of these movements could have been what
+it was without the close interconnexion of the various parts of the
+European commonwealth, which was becoming more homogeneous at the same
+time that its units were acquiring for themselves sped characteristics
+of their own.
+
+In the early days of Henry III.'s reign, a modest alien invasion
+anticipated the more noisy coming of the Poitevin or the Provencal. The
+most remarkable development of the "religious" life that the later
+middle age was to witness had just been worked out in Italy. St.
+Francis of Assisi had taught the cult of absolute poverty, and his
+example held up to his followers the ideal of the thorough and literal
+imitation of Christ's life. Thus arose the early beginnings of the
+Minorite or Franciscan rule. St. Dominic yielded to the fascination of
+the Umbrian enthusiast, and inculcated on his Order of Preachers a
+complete renunciation of worldly goods which made a society, originally
+little more than a new type of canons regular, a mendicant order like
+the Franciscans, bound to interpret the monastic vow of poverty with
+such literalness as to include corporate as well as individual
+renunciation of possessions, so that the order might not own lands or
+goods, and no member of it could live otherwise than by labour or by
+alms. In the second chapter of the Dominican order, at Whitsuntide,
+1221, an organisation into provinces was carried out; and among the
+eight provinces, each with its prior, then instituted, was the province
+of England, where no preaching friar had hitherto set foot, and over it
+Gilbert of Freynet was appointed prior. Then Dominic withdrew to
+Bologna, where he died on August 6. Within a few days of the saint's
+death, Friar Gilbert with thirteen companions made his way to England.
+In the company of Peter des Roches the Dominican pioneers went to
+Canterbury, where Archbishop Langton was then residing. At the
+archbishop's request Gilbert preached in a Canterbury church, and
+Langton was so much delighted by his teaching that henceforth he had a
+special affection for the new order. From Canterbury the friars
+journeyed to London and Oxford. Mindful of the work of their leaders at
+Paris and Bologna, they built their first English chapel, house, and
+schools in the university town. Soon these proved too small for them,
+and they had to seek ampler quarters outside the walls. From these
+beginnings the Dominicans spread over England.
+
+The Franciscans quickly followed the Dominicans. On September 10, 1224,
+there landed at Dover a little band of four clerks and five laymen,
+sent by St. Francis himself to extend the new teaching into England. At
+their head was the Italian, Agnellus of Pisa, a deacon, formerly warden
+of the Parisian convent, who was appointed provincial minister in
+England. His three clerical companions were all Englishmen, though the
+five laymen were Italians or Frenchmen. Like the Dominican pioneers,
+the Franciscan missionaries first went to Canterbury, where the favour
+of Simon Langton, the archdeacon, did for them what the goodwill of his
+brother Stephen had done for their precursors. Leaving some of their
+number at Canterbury, four of the Franciscans went on to London, and
+thence a little later two of them set out for Oxford. Alike at London
+and at Oxford, they found a cordial welcome from the Dominicans, eating
+in their refectories, and sleeping in their dormitories, until they
+were able to erect modest quarters in both places. The brethren of the
+new order excited unbounded enthusiasm. Necessity and choice combined
+to compel them to interpret their vow of poverty as St. Francis would
+have wished. They laboured with their own hands at the construction of
+their humble churches. The friars at Oxford knew the pangs of debt and
+hunger, rejected pillows as a vain luxury, and limited the use of boots
+and shoes to the sick and infirm. The faithful saw the brethren singing
+songs as they picked their way over the frozen mud or hard snow, blood
+marking the track of their naked feet, without their being conscious of
+it. The joyous radiance of Francis himself illuminated the lives of his
+followers. "The friars," writes their chronicler, "were so full of fun
+among themselves that a deaf mute could hardly refrain from laughter at
+seeing them." With the same glad spirit they laboured for the salvation
+of souls, the cure of sickness, and the relief of distress. The
+emotional feeling of the age quickly responded to their zeal. Within a
+few years other houses had arisen at Gloucester, at Nottingham, at
+Stamford, at Worcester, at Northampton, at Cambridge, at Lincoln, at
+Shrewsbury. In a generation there was hardly a town of importance in
+England that had not its Franciscan convent, and over against it a
+rival Dominican house.
+
+The esteem felt for the followers of Francis and Dominic led to an
+extraordinary extension of the mendicant type. New orders of friars
+arose, preserving the essential attribute of absolute poverty, though
+differing from each other and from the two prototypes in various
+particulars. Some of these lesser orders found their way to England. In
+the same year as Agnellus, there came to England the Trinitarian
+friars, called also the Maturins, from the situation of their first
+house in Paris, an order whose special function was the redemption of
+captives. In 1240 returning crusaders brought back with them the first
+Carmelite friars, for whom safer quarters had to be found than in their
+original abodes in Syria. This society spread widely, and in 1287, to
+the disgust of the older monks, it laid aside the party-coloured habit,
+forced upon it in derision by the infidels, and adopted the white robe,
+which gave them their popular name of White Friars. Hard upon these, in
+1244, came also the Crutched Friars, so called from the red cross set
+upon their backs or breasts; but these were never deeply rooted in
+England. The multiplication of orders of friars became an abuse, so
+that, at the Council of Lyons of 1245, Innocent IV abolished all save
+four. Besides Dominicans and Franciscans the pope only continued the
+Carmelites, and an order first seen in England a few years later, the
+Austin friars or the hermits of the order of St. Augustine. These made
+up the traditional four orders of friars of later history. Yet even the
+decree of a council could not stay the growth of new mendicant types.
+In 1257 the Friars of the Penance of Jesus Christ, popularly styled
+Friars of the Sack, from their coarse sackcloth garb, settled down in
+London, exempted by papal dispensation from the fate of suppression;
+and even later than this King Richard's son, Edmund of Cornwall,
+established a community of Bonhommes at Ashridge in Buckinghamshire.
+
+The friars were not recluses, like the older orders, but active
+preachers and teachers of the people. The parish clergy seldom held a
+strong position in medieval life. The estimation in which the monastic
+ideal was held limited their influence. They were, as a rule, not much
+raised above the people among whom they laboured. If the parish priest
+were a man of rank or education, he was too often a non-resident and a
+pluralist, bestowing little personal attention on his parishioners. Nor
+were the numerous parishes served by monks in much better plight. The
+monastery took the tithes and somehow provided for the services; but the
+efforts of Grosseteste to secure the establishment of permanent
+stipendiary vicarages in his diocese exemplify the reluctance of the
+religious to give their appropriations the benefit of permanent pastors,
+paid on an adequate scale. It was an exceptional thing for the parish
+clergymen to do more than discharge perfunctorily the routine duties of
+their office, and preaching was almost unknown among them. The friars
+threw themselves into pastoral work with such devotion as to compel the
+reluctant admiration of their natural rivals, the monks. "At first,"
+says Matthew Paris,[1] "the Preachers and the Minorites lived a life of
+poverty and extreme sanctity. They busied themselves in preaching,
+hearing confessions, the recital of divine service, in teaching and
+study. They embraced voluntary poverty for God's sake, abandoning all
+their worldly goods and not even reserving for themselves their food for
+to-morrow." A special field of labour was in the crowded suburbs of the
+larger towns, where so often they chose to erect their first convents.
+The care of the sick and of lepers was their peculiar function. Their
+sympathy and charity carried everything before them, and they remained
+the chief teachers of the poor down to the Reformation. They ingratiated
+themselves with the rich as much as with the poor. Henry III. and Edward
+selected mendicants as their confessors. The strongest and holiest of
+the bishops, Grosseteste, became their most active friend. Simon of
+Montfort sought the advice and friendship of a friar like Adam Marsh.
+The mere fact that Stephen Langton and Peter des Roches were their first
+patrons in England shows how they appealed alike to the best and worst
+clerical types of the time.
+
+ [1] _Chron. Maj._, v., 194.
+
+Men and women of all ranks, while still living in the world and
+fulfilling their ordinary occupations, associated themselves to the
+mendicant brotherhoods. Besides these _tertiaries_, as they were
+called, still wider circles sought the friars' direction in all
+spiritual matters and showed eagerness to be buried within their
+sanctuaries. Nor did the friars limit themselves to pastoral care. They
+won a unique place in the intellectual history of the time. They made
+themselves the spokesmen of all the movements of the age. They were
+eager to make peace, and Agnellus himself mediated between Henry III.
+and the earl marshal. They were the strenuous preachers of the
+crusades, whether against the infidel or against Frederick II. The
+Franciscans taught a new and more methodical devotion to the Virgin
+Mother. The friars upheld the highest papal claims, were constantly
+selected as papal agents and tax-gatherers, and yet even this did not
+deprive them of their influence over Englishmen. Their zeal for truth
+often made them defenders of unpopular causes, and it was much to their
+honour that they did not hesitate to incur the displeasure of the
+Londoners by their anxiety to save innocent Jews accused of the murder
+of Christian children. The parish clergy hated and envied them as
+successful rivals, and bitterly resented the privilege which they
+received from Alexander IV of hearing confessions throughout the world.
+Not less strong was the hostility of the monastic orders which is often
+expressed in Matthew Paris's free-spoken abuse of them. They were
+accused of terrorising dying men out of their possessions, of laxity in
+the confessional, of absolving their friends too easily, of overweening
+ambition and restless meddlesomeness. They were violent against
+heretics and enemies of the Church. They answered hate with hate. They
+despised the seculars as drones and the monks as lazy and corrupt. The
+dissensions between the various orders of friars, and particularly
+between the sober and intellectual Dominicans and the radical and
+mystic Franciscans, were soon as bitter as those between monks and
+friars, or monks and seculars. But when all allowances have been made,
+the good that they wrought far outbalanced the evil, and in England at
+least, the mendicant orders exhibited a nobler conception of religion,
+and of men's duly to their fellowmen than had as yet been set before
+the people. If the main result of their influence was to strengthen
+that cosmopolitan conception of Christendom of which the papacy was the
+head and the friars the agents, their zeal for righteousness often led
+them beyond their own rigid platform, and Englishmen honoured the
+wandering friar as the champion of the nation's cause.
+
+Like the religious orders, the universities were part of the world
+system and only indirectly represented the struggling national life.
+The ferment of the twelfth century revival crystallised groups of
+masters or doctors into guilds called universities, with a strong class
+tradition, rigid codes of rules, and intense corporate spirit. The
+schools at Oxford, whose continuous history can be traced from the days
+of Henry II., had acquired a considerable reputation by the time that
+his grandson had ascended the throne. Oxford university, with an
+autonomous constitution of its own since _1214_, was presided over by a
+chancellor who, though in a sense the representative of the distant
+diocesan at Lincoln, was even in the earliest times the head of the
+scholars, and no mere delegate of the bishop. Five years earlier the
+Oxford schools were sufficiently vigorous to provoke a secession, from
+which the first faint beginnings of a university at Cambridge arose. A
+generation later there were other secessions to Salisbury and
+Northampton, but neither of these schools succeeded in maintaining
+themselves. Cambridge itself had a somewhat languid existence
+throughout the whole of the thirteenth century, and was scarcely
+recognised as a _studium generale_ until the bull of John XXII. in 1318
+made its future position secure. In early days the university owed
+nothing to endowments, buildings, social prestige, or tradition. The
+two essentials was the living voice of the graduate teacher and the
+concourse of students desirous to be taught. Hence migrations were
+common and stability only gradually established. When, late in Henry
+III.'s reign, the chancellor, Walter of Merton, desired to set up a
+permanent institution for the encouragement of poor students, he
+hesitated whether to establish it at Oxford, or Cambridge, or in his
+own Surrey village. Oxford, though patriots coupled it with Paris and
+Bologna, only gradually rose into repute. But before the end of Henry
+III.'s reign it had won an assured place among the great universities
+of western Europe, though lagging far behind that of the supreme
+schools of Paris.
+
+The growing fame of the university of Oxford was a matter of national
+importance. Down to the early years of the thirteenth century a young
+English clerk who was anxious to study found his only career abroad,
+and was too often cut off altogether from his mother country. Among the
+last of this type were the Paris mathematician, John of Holywood or
+Halifax, Robert Curzon, cardinal, legate, theologian, and crusader, and
+Alexander of Hales. Stephen Langton, who did important work in revising
+the text of the Vulgate, might well have been one of those lost to
+England but for the wisdom of Innocent III who restored him, in the
+fulness of his reputation and powers, to the service of the English
+Church. Not many years younger than Langton was his successor Edmund of
+Abingdon, but the difference was enough to make the younger primate a
+student of the Oxford schools in early life. Though he left Oxford for
+Paris, Edmund returned to an active career in England, when experience
+convinced him of the vanity of scholastic success. Bishop Grosseteste,
+another early Oxford teacher of eminence, probably studied at Paris,
+for so late as 1240 he held up to the Oxford masters of theology the
+example of their Paris brethren for their imitation. The double
+allegiance of Edmund and Grosseteste was typical. A long catalogue of
+eminent names adorned the annals of Oxford in the thirteenth century,
+but the most distinguished of her earlier sons were drawn away from her
+by the superior attractions of Paris. England furnished at least her
+share of the great names of thirteenth century scholasticism, but of
+very few of these could it be said that their main obligation was to
+the English university. It was at Paris that the academic organisation
+developed which Oxford adopted. At Paris the great intellectual
+conflicts of the century were fought. There the ferment seethed round
+that introduction of Aristotle's teaching from Moorish sources which
+led to the outspoken pantheism of an Amaury of Bene. There also was the
+reconciliation effected between the new teacher and the old faith which
+made Aristotle the pillar of the new scholasticism that was to justify
+by reason the ways of God to man. In Paris also was fought the contest
+between the aggressive mendicant friars and the secular doctors whom
+they wished to supplant in the divinity schools.
+
+There is little evidence of even a pale reflection of these struggles
+in contemporary Oxford. English scholars bore their full share in the
+fight. It was the Englishman Curzon who condemned the heresies of
+Amaury of Bene. Another Englishman, Alexander of Hales, issued in his
+_Summa Theologiae_ the first effective reconciliation of Aristotelian
+metaphysic with Christian doctrine which his Paris pupils, Thomas
+Aquinas, the Italian, and Albert the Great, the German, were to work
+out in detail in the next generation. Hales was the first secular
+doctor in Europe who in 1222, in the full pride of his powers,
+abandoned his position in the university to embrace the voluntary
+poverty of the Franciscans and resume his teaching, not in the regular
+schools but in a Minorite convent. And at the same time another English
+doctor at Paris, John of St. Giles, notable as a physician as well as a
+theologian, dramatically marked his conversion to the Dominican order
+by assuming its habit in the midst of a sermon on the virtues of
+poverty. All these famous Englishmen worked and taught at Paris, and it
+was only a generation later that their successors could establish on
+the Thames the traditions so long upheld on the banks of the Seine.
+
+The establishment of the Dominicans and Franciscans at Oxford gave an
+immense impetus to the activity of the university. The Franciscans
+appointed as the first _lector_ of their Oxford convent the famous
+secular teacher Grosseteste, who ever after held the Minorites in the
+closest estimation. Grosseteste was the greatest scholar of his day,
+knowing Greek and Hebrew as well as the accustomed studies of the
+period. A clear and independent thinker, he was not, like so many of
+his contemporaries, overborne by the weight of authority, but appealed
+to observation and experience in terms which make him the precursor of
+Roger Bacon. Grosseteste's successor as _lector_ was himself a
+Minorite, Adam Marsh, whose reputation was so great that Grosseteste
+was afraid to leave him when sick in a French town, lest the Paris
+masters should persuade him to teach in their schools. Adam's loyalty
+to his native university withstood any such temptation, and from that
+time Oxford began to hold up its head against Paris. Even before this,
+Grosseteste persuaded John of St. Giles to transfer his teaching from
+Paris to Oxford, where he remained for the rest of his life.
+
+The intense intellectual activity of the thirteenth century flowed in
+more than one channel, and Englishmen took their full share both in
+building up and in destroying. Two Englishmen of the next generation
+mark in different ways the reaction against the moderate
+Aristotelianism and orthodox rationalism which their countryman Hales
+first brought into vogue. These were the Franciscan friars, Roger Bacon
+and Duns Scotus. Bacon, though he studied at Paris as well as at
+Oxford, is much more closely identified with England than with the
+Continent. His sceptical, practical intellect led him to heap scorn on
+Hales and his followers and to plunge into audacities of speculation
+which cost him long seclusions in his convent and enforced abstinence
+from writing and study. In his war against the Aristotelians, the
+intrepid friar upheld recourse to experiment and observation as
+superior to deference to authority, in language which stands in strange
+contrast to the traditions of the thirteenth century. Grosseteste, who
+also had preferred the teachings of experience to the appeal to the
+sages of the past, was the only academic leader that escaped Bacon's
+scathing censure. When his order kept him silent, Roger was bidden to
+resume his pen by Pope Clement IV. A generation still later, Duns
+Scotus, probably a Lowland Scot, who taught at Paris and died at
+Cologne in 1308, emphasised, sharply enough, but in less drastic
+fashion, the reaction against the teaching of Hales and Aquinas, by
+accepting a dualism between reason and authority that broke away from
+the Thomist tradition of the thirteenth century and prepared the way
+for the scholastic decadence of the fourteenth. After France, England
+took a leading part in all these movements; and even in France English
+scholars had a large share in making that land the special home of the
+_Studium_, as Italy was of the _Sacerdotium_ and Germany of the
+_Imperium_.
+
+This intellectual ferment had its results on practical life. Though the
+university was cosmopolitan, the individual members of it were not the
+less good citizens. A patriot like Grosseteste strove to his uttermost
+to keep Englishmen for Oxford or to win them back from Paris. Oxford
+clerks fought the battle of England against the legate Otto, and we
+shall see them siding with Montfort. The eminently practical temper of
+the academic class could not neglect the world of action for the
+abstract pursuit of science. Eager as men were to know, to prove, and
+to inquire, the age had little of the mystical temperament about it.
+The studies which made for worldly success, such as civil and canon
+law, attracted the thousands for whom philosophy or theology had little
+attraction. Never before was there a career so fully opened to talent.
+The academic teacher's fame took him from the lecture-room to the
+court, from the university to the episcopal throne, and so it was that
+the university influenced action almost as profoundly as it influenced
+thought, and affected all classes of society alike. The struggles of
+poor students like Edmund of Abingdon or Grosseteste must not make us
+think that the universities of this period were exclusively frequented
+by humble scholars. The academic career of a rich baron's son like
+Thomas of Cantilupe, living in his own hired house at Paris with a
+train of chaplains and tutors, receiving the visits of the French king,
+and feeding poor scholars with the remnants from his table, is as
+characteristic as the more common picture of the student begging his
+way from one seat of learning to another, and suffering the severest
+privations rather than desert his studies. Yet the function of the
+_studium_ as promoting a healthy circulation between the various orders
+of medieval society, must not be ignored.
+
+Partly to help on the poor, partly to encourage men to devote
+themselves to the pursuit of knowledge, endowments began to arise which
+soon enhanced the splendour of universities though they lessened their
+mobility and their freedom. The mendicant convents at Paris and Oxford
+prepared the way for secular foundations, at first small and
+insignificant, like that which, in the days of Henry III., John Balliol
+established at Oxford for the maintenance of poor scholars, but soon
+increasing in magnitude and distinction. The great college set up by
+St. Louis' confessor at Paris for the endowment of scholars, desirous
+of studying the unlucrative but vital subject of theology, was soon
+imitated by the chancellor of Henry III. Side by side with Robert of
+Sorbon's college of 1257, arose Walter of Merton's foundation of 1263,
+and twenty years later Bishop Balsham's college of Peterhouse extended
+the "rule of Merton" to Cambridge.
+
+The academic movement was not all clear gain. The humanism, of the
+twelfth century was crushed beneath the weight of the specialised
+science and encyclopaedic learning of the thirteenth. We should seek in
+vain among most theologians or the philosophers of our period for any
+spark of literary art; and the tendency dominant in them affected for
+evil all works written in Latin. Even the historians show a falling
+away from the example of William of Malmesbury or of Roger of Hoveden.
+The one English chronicler of the thirteenth century who is a
+considerable man of letters, Matthew Paris, belongs to the early half
+of it, before the academic tradition was fully established, and even
+with him prolixity impairs the art without injuring the colour of his
+work. The age of Edward I., the great time of triumphant scholasticism,
+is recorded in chronicles so dreary that it is hard to make the dry
+bones live. Walter of Hemingburgh, the most attractive historian of the
+time, belongs to the next generation: and his excellencies are only
+great in comparison with his fellows. Something of this decadence may
+be attributed to the falling away of the elder monastic types, whose
+higher life withered up from want of able recruits, for the secular and
+mendicant careers offered opportunities so stimulating that few men of
+purpose, or earnest spiritual character, cared to enter a Benedictine
+or a Cistercian house of religion. Something more may be assigned to
+the growing claims of the vulgar tongue on literary aspirants. But the
+chief cause of the literary defects of thirteenth century writers must
+be set down to the doctrine that the study of "arts"--of grammar,
+rhetoric and the rest--was only worthy of schoolboys and novices, and
+was only a preliminary to the specialised faculties which left little
+room for artistic presentation. Science in short nearly killed
+literature.
+
+It was the same with the vulgar tongues as with Latin. French remained
+the common language of the higher classes of English society, and the
+history of French literature belongs to the history of the western
+world rather than to that of England. The share taken in it by
+English-born writers is less important than in the great age of romance
+when the contact of Celt and Norman on British soil added the Arthurian
+legend to the world's stock of poetic material. The practical motive,
+which destroyed the art of so many Latin writers, impaired the literary
+value of much written in the vernacular. We have technical works in
+French and even in English, such as Walter of Henley's treatise on
+_Husbandry_, composed in French for the guidance of stewards of manors,
+and translated, it is said by Grosseteste, into English for the benefit
+of a wider public. Grosseteste is also said to have drawn up in French
+a handbook of rules for the management of a great estate, and he
+certainly wrote French poetry. The legal literature, written in Latin
+or French, and illustrated by such names as Bracton, Britton, and
+"Fleta," shows that there was growing up a school of earnest students
+of English law who, though anxious, like Bracton, to bring their
+conclusions under the rules of Roman jurisprudence, began to treat
+their science with an independence which secured for English custom the
+opportunity of independent development. Of more literary interest than
+such technicalities were the rhyming chronicles, handed on from the
+previous age, of which one of the best, the recently discovered history
+of the great William Marshal, has already been noticed. The spontaneity
+of this poem proves that its language was still the natural speech of
+the writer, and impels its French editor to claim for it a French
+origin. As the century grew older there was no difficulty in deciding
+whether French works were written by Englishmen or Frenchmen. The
+Yorkshire French of Peter Langtoft's _Chronicle_, and the jargon of the
+_Year Books_, attest how the political separation of the two lands, and
+the preponderance in northern France of the dialect of Paris, placed
+the insular French speech in strong contrast to the language of polite
+society beyond the Channel. Yet barbarous as Anglo-French became, it
+retained the freshness of a living tongue, and gained some ground at
+the expense of Latin, notably in the law courts and in official
+documents.
+
+English was slowly making its way upwards. There was a public ready to
+read vernacular books, and not at home with French. For their sake a
+great literature of translations and adaptations was made, beginning
+with Layamon's English version of Wace's _Brut_, which by the end of
+the century made the cycle of French romance accessible to the English
+reader. Many works of edification and devotion were written in English;
+and Robert of Gloucester's rhyming history appealed to a larger public
+than the Yorkshire French of Langtoft. It is significant of the trend
+of events that the early fourteenth century saw Langtoft himself done
+into English by Robert Mannyng, of Bourne. While as yet no continuous
+works of high merit were written in English, there was no lack of
+experiments, of novelties, and of adaptations. Much evidence of depth
+of feeling, power of expression, and careful art lies hidden away in
+half-forgotten anonymous lyrics, satires, and romances. The language in
+which these works were written was steadily becoming more like our
+modern English. The dialectical differences become less acute; the
+inflections begin to drop away; the vocabulary gradually absorbs a
+larger romance element, and the prosody drops from the forms of the
+West Saxon period into measures and modes that reflect a living
+connexion with the contemporary poetry of France. Thus, even in the
+literature of a not too literary age, we find abundant tokens of that
+strenuous national life which was manifesting itself in so many
+different ways.
+
+Art rather than literature reflected the deeper currents of the
+thirteenth century. Architecture, the great art of the middle age, was
+in its perfection. The inchoate gothic which the Cistercians brought
+from Burgundy to the Yorkshire dales, and William of Sens transplanted
+from his birthplace to Canterbury, was superseded by the more developed
+art of St. Hugh's choir at Lincoln. In the next generation the new
+style, imported from northern France, struck out ways of its own, less
+soaring, less rigidly logical, yet of unequalled grace and
+picturesqueness, such as we see in Salisbury cathedral, which
+altogether dates from the reign of Henry III. Here also, as in
+literature, foreign models stood side by side with native products.
+Henry III.'s favourite foundation at Westminster reproduced on English
+soil the towering loftiness, the vaulted roofs, the short choir, and
+the ring of apsidal chapels, of the great French minsters. This was
+even more emphatically the case with the decorations, the goldsmith's
+and metal work, the sculpture, painting, and glass, which the best
+artists of France set up in honour of the English king's favourite
+saint. In these crafts English work would not as yet bear a comparison
+with foreign, and even the glories of the statuary of the facade of
+Wells cannot approach the sculptured porches of Amiens or Paris. As the
+century advanced some of the fashions of the French builders, notably
+as regards window tracery, were taken up in the early "Decorated" of
+the reign of Edward I.; and here the claims of English to essential
+equality with French building can perhaps be better substantiated than
+in the infancy of the art. But all these comparisons are misleading.
+The impulse to gothic art came to England from France, like the impulse
+to many other things. Its working out was conducted on English local
+lines, ever becoming more divergent from those of the prototype, though
+not seldom stimulated by the constant intercourse of the two lands.
+
+The new gothic art enriched the medieval town with a splendour of
+buildings hitherto unknown, which symbolised the growth of material
+prosperity as well as of a keener artistic appreciation. In the greater
+towns the four orders of friars erected their large and plain churches,
+designed as halls for preaching to great congregations. The development
+of domestic architecture is even more significant than the growth of
+ecclesiastical and military buildings. Stone houses were no longer the
+rare luxuries of Jews or nobles. Never were the towns more prosperous
+and more energetic. They were now winning for themselves both economic
+and administrative independence. Magnates, such as Randolph of Chester,
+followed the king's example by granting charters to the smaller towns.
+Even the lesser boroughs became not merely the abodes of agriculturists
+but the homes of organised trading communities. It was the time when
+the merchant class first began to manifest itself in politics, and the
+power of capital to make itself felt. Capital was almost monopolised by
+Jews, Lombards, or Tuscans, and the fierce English hatred of the
+foreigner found a fresh expression in the persecution of the Hebrew
+money-lenders and in the increasing dislike felt for the alien bankers
+and merchants who throve at Englishmen's expense. The fact that so much
+of English trade with the continent was still in the hands of Germans,
+Frenchmen, and Italians made this feeling the more intense. But there
+were limits even to the ill-will towards aliens. The foreigner could
+make himself at home in England, and the rapid naturalisation of a
+Montfort in the higher walks of life is paralleled by the absorption
+into the civic community of many a Gascon or German merchant, like that
+Arnold Fitz Thedmar,[1] a Bremen trader's son, who became alderman
+of London and probably chronicler of its history. Yet even the greatest
+English towns did not become strong enough to cut themselves off from
+the general life of the people. They were rather a new element in that
+rich and purposeful nation that had so long been enduring the rule of
+Henry of Winchester. The national energy spurned the feebleness of the
+court, and the time was at hand when the nation, through its natural
+leaders, was to overthrow the wretched system of misgovernment under
+which it had suffered. Political retrogression was no longer to bar
+national progress.
+
+ [1] See for Arnold the _Chronica majorum et vicecomitum
+ Londoniarum_ in _Liber de antiquis legibus_, and Riley's
+ introduction to his translation of _Chronicles of the Mayors
+ and Sheriffs of London_ (1863).
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE BARONS' WAR.
+
+
+During the early months of 1258, the aliens ruled the king and realm,
+added estate to estate, and defied all attempts to dislodge them. Papal
+agents traversed the country, extorting money from prelates and
+churches. The Welsh, in secret relations with the lords of the march,
+threatened the borders, and made a confederacy with the Scots. The
+French were hostile, and the barons disunited, without leaders, and
+helpless. A wretched harvest made corn scarce and dear. A wild winter,
+followed by a long late frost, cut off the lambs and destroyed the
+farmers' hopes for the summer. A murrain of cattle followed, and the
+poor were dying of hunger and pestilence. Henry III. was in almost as
+bad a plight as his people. He had utterly failed to subdue Llewelyn. A
+papal agent threatened him with excommunication and the resumption of
+the grant of Sicily. He could not control his foreign kinsfolk, and the
+rivalry of Savoyards and Poitevins added a new element of turmoil to
+the distracted relations of the magnates. His son had been forced to
+pawn his best estates to William of Valence, and the royal exchequer
+was absolutely empty. Money must be had at all risks, and the only way
+to get it was to assemble the magnates.
+
+On April 2 the chief men of Church and State gathered together at
+London. For more than a month the stormy debates went on. The king's
+demands were contemptuously waved aside. His exceptional misdeeds, it
+was declared, were to be met by exceptional measures. Hot words were
+spoken, and William of Valence called Leicester a traitor. "No, no,
+William," the earl replied, "I am not a traitor, nor the son of a
+traitor; your father and mine were men of a different stamp," An
+opposition party formed itself under the Earls of Gloucester,
+Leicester, Hereford, and Norfolk. Even the Savoyards partially fell
+away from the court, and a convocation of clergy at Merton, presided
+over by Archbishop Boniface, drew up canons in the spirit of
+Grosseteste. In parliament all that Henry could get was a promise to
+adjourn the question of supply until a commission had drafted a
+programme of reform. On May 2 Henry and his son Edward announced their
+acceptance of this proposal; parliament was forthwith prorogued, and
+the barons set to work to mature their scheme.
+
+On June 11 the magnates once more assembled, this time at Oxford. A
+summons to fight the Welsh gave them an excuse to appear attended with
+their followers in arms. The royalist partisans nicknamed the gathering
+the Mad Parliament, but its proceedings were singularly business-like.
+A petition of twenty-nine articles was presented, in which the abuses
+of the administration were laid bare in detail. A commission of
+twenty-four was appointed who were to redress the grievances of the
+nation, and to draw up a new scheme of government. According to the
+compact Henry himself selected half this body. It was significant of
+the falling away of the mass of the ruling families from the monarchy,
+that six of Henry's twelve commissioners were churchmen, four were
+aliens, three were his brothers, one his brother-in-law, one his
+nephew, one his wife's uncle. The only earls that accepted his
+nomination were the Poitevin adventurer, John du Plessis, Earl of
+Warwick, and John of Warenne, who was pledged to a royalist policy by
+his marriage to Henry's half-sister, Alice of Lusignan. The only
+bishops were, the queen's uncle, Boniface of Canterbury, and Fulk
+Basset of London, the richest and noblest born of English prelates,
+who, though well meaning, was too weak in character for continued
+opposition. Yet these two were the most independent names on Henry's
+list. The rest included the three Lusignan brothers, Guy, William, and
+Aymer, still eight years after his election only elect of Winchester;
+Henry of Almaine, the young son of the King of the Romans; the
+pluralist official John Mansel; the chancellor, Henry Wingham; the
+Dominican friar John of Darlington, distinguished as a biblical critic,
+the king's confessor and the pope's agent; and the Abbot of
+Westminster, an old man pledged by long years of dependence to do the
+will of the second founder of his house. In strong contrast to these
+creatures of court favour were the twelve nominees of the barons. The
+only ecclesiastic was Walter of Cantilupe, Bishop of Worcester, and the
+only alien was Earl Simon of Leicester. With him were three other
+earls, Richard of Clare, Earl of Gloucester, Roger Bigod, earl marshal
+and Earl of Norfolk, and Humphrey Bohun, Earl of Hereford. Those of
+baronial rank were Roger Mortimer, the strongest of the marchers, Hugh
+Bigod, the brother of the earl marshal, John FitzGeoffrey, Richard
+Grey, William Bardolf, Peter Montfort, and Hugh Despenser.
+
+The twenty-four drew up a plan of reform which left little to be
+desired in thoroughness. The Provisions of Oxford, as the new
+constitution was styled, were speedily laid before the barons and
+adopted. By it a standing council of fifteen was established, with
+whose advice and consent Henry was henceforth to exercise all his
+authority. Even this council was not to be without supervision. Thrice
+in the year another committee of twelve was to treat with the fifteen
+on the common affairs of the realm. This rather narrow body was
+created, we are told, to save the expense involved in too frequent
+meetings of the magnates. A third aristocratic junto of twenty-four was
+appointed to make grants of money to the crown. All aliens were to be
+expelled from office and from the custody of royal castles. New
+ministers, castellans, and escheators were appointed under stringent
+conditions and under the safeguard of new oaths. The original
+twenty-four were not yet discharged from office. They had still to draw
+up schemes for the reform of the household of king and queen, and for
+the amendment of the exchange of London. Moreover, "Be it remembered,"
+ran one of the articles, "that the estate of Holy Church be amended by
+the twenty-four elected to reform the realm, when they shall find time
+and place".
+
+For the first time in our history the king was forced to stand aside
+from the discharge of his undoubted functions, and suffer them to be
+exercised by a committee of magnates. The conception of limited
+monarchy, which had been foreshadowed in the early struggles of Henry's
+long reign, was triumphantly vindicated, and, after weary years of
+waiting, the baronial victors demanded more than had ever been
+suggested by the most free interpretation of the Great Charter. The
+body that controlled the crown was, it is true, a narrow one. But
+whatever was lost by its limitation, was more than gained by the
+absolute freedom of the whole movement from any suspicion of the
+separatist tendencies of the earlier feudalism. The barons tacitly
+accepted the principle that England was a unity, and that it must be
+ruled as a single whole. The triumph of the national movement of the
+thirteenth century was assured when the most feudal class of the
+community thus frankly abandoned the ancient baronial contention that
+each baron should rule in isolation over his own estates, a tradition
+which, when carried out for a brief period under Stephen, had set up
+"as many kings or rather tyrants as lords of castles". The feudal
+period was over: the national idea was triumphant. This victory becomes
+specially significant when we remember how large a share the barons of
+the Welsh march, the only purely feudal region in the country, took in
+the movement against the King.
+
+The unity of the national government being recognised, it was another
+sign of the times that its control should be transferred from the
+monarch to a committee of barons. At this point the rigid conceptions
+of the triumphant oligarchy stood in the way of a wide national policy.
+Since the reign of John the custom had arisen of consulting the
+representatives of the shire-courts on matters of politics and finance.
+In 1258 there is not the least trace of a suggestion that parliament
+could ever include a more popular element than the barons and prelates.
+On the contrary, the Provisions diminished the need even for those
+periodical assemblies of the magnates which had been in existence since
+the earliest dawn of our history. For all practical purposes small
+baronial committees were to perform the work of magnates and people as
+well as of the crown. Yet it must be recognised that the barons showed
+self-control, as well as practical wisdom, in handing over functions
+discharged by the baronage as a whole to the various committees of
+their selection. The danger of general control by the magnates was that
+a large assembly, more skilled in opposition than in constructive work,
+was almost sure to become infected by faction. By strictly limiting and
+defining who the new rulers of England were to be, the barons
+approached a combination of aristocratic control with the stability and
+continuity resulting from limited numbers and defined functions. It is
+likely, however, that in bestowing such extensive powers on their
+nominees, they were influenced by the well-grounded belief that the new
+constitution could only be established by main force, and that, even
+when abandoned by the king, the aliens would make a good fight before
+they gave up all that they had so long held in England. The success of
+the new scheme largely depended upon the immediate execution of the
+ordinance for the expulsion of the foreigners.
+
+The first step taken to carry out the Provisions was the appointment of
+the new ministers. The barons insisted on the revival of the office of
+justiciar, and a strenuous and capable chief minister was found in Hugh
+Bigod. It was advisable to go cautiously, and some of the king's
+ministers were allowed to continue in office. An appeal to force was
+necessary before the new constitution could be set up in detail. The
+Savoyards bought their safety by accepting it; but the Poitevins,
+seeing that flight or resistance were the only alternatives before
+them, were spirited enough to prefer the bolder course. They were
+specially dangerous because Edward and his cousin, Henry of Almaine,
+the son of the King of the Romans, were much under their influence. In
+the Dominican convent at Oxford the baronial leaders formed a sworn
+confederacy not to desist from their purpose until the foreigners had
+been expelled. There were more hot words between Leicester and William,
+the most capable of the Lusignans. The Poitevins soon found that they
+could not maintain themselves in the face of the general hatred. On
+June 22 they fled from Oxford in the company of their ally, Earl
+Warenne. They rode straight for the coast, but failing to reach it,
+occupied Winchester, where they sought to maintain themselves in
+Aymer's castle of Wolvesey. The magnates of the parliament then turned
+against them the arms they professed to have prepared against the
+Welsh. Headed by the new justiciar, Hugh Bigod, they besieged Wolvesey.
+Warenne abandoned the aliens, and they gladly accepted the terms
+offered to them by their foes. They were allowed to retain their lands
+and some of their ready money, on condition of withdrawing from the
+realm and surrendering their castles. By the middle of July they had
+crossed over to France. With them disappeared the whole of the
+organised opposition to the new government. Edward, deprived of their
+support, swore to observe the Provisions.
+
+Immediately on the flight of the Lusignans the council of Fifteen was
+chosen after a fashion which seemed to give the king's friends an equal
+voice with the champions of the aristocracy. Four electors appointed
+it, and of these two were the nominees of the baronial section, and two
+of the royalist section of the original twenty-four. The result of
+their work showed that there was only one party left after the Wolvesey
+fiasco. While only three of the king's twelve had places on the
+permanent council, no less that nine of the fifteen were chosen from
+the baronial twelve. It was useless for Archbishop Boniface, John
+Mansel, and the Earl of Warwick to stand up against the Bishop of
+Worcester, the Earls of Leicester, Norfolk, Hereford, and Gloucester,
+against John FitzGeoffrey, Peter Montfort, Richard Grey, and Roger
+Mortimer. Moreover, of the three, John Mansel alone could still be
+regarded as a royalist partisan. There were three of the fifteen chosen
+from outside the twenty-four. Of these, Peter of Savoy, Earl of
+Richmond, might, like his brother Boniface, be regarded as an alien,
+though hatred of the Poitevins had by this time made Englishmen of the
+Savoyards. The other two, the marcher-lord James of Audley and William
+of Fors, Earl of Albemarle, were of baronial sympathies. It was the
+same with the other councils.
+
+Inquiry was made as to abuses. Gradually the royal officials were
+replaced by men of popular leanings. The sheriffs were changed and were
+strictly controlled, and four knights from each shire assembled in
+October to present to the king the grievances of the people against the
+out-going sheriffs. The custody of the castles was put into trusty and,
+for the most part, into English hands. Finally the king was forced to
+issue a proclamation, in which he commanded all true men "steadfastly
+to hold and to defend the statutes that be made or are to be made by
+our counsellors". This document was issued in English as well as in
+French and Latin. A copy of the English version was sent to every
+sheriff, with instructions to read it several times a year in the
+county court, so that a knowledge of its contents might be attained by
+every man. It is perhaps the first important proclamation issued in
+English since the coming of the Normans. Early in 1259 Richard, King of
+the Romans, set out to revisit England. He was met at Saint Omer by a
+deputation of magnates, who told him that he could only be allowed to
+land after taking an oath to observe the Provisions. Richard blustered,
+but soon gave in his submission. His adhesion to the reforms marks the
+last step in the revolution.
+
+The new constitution worked without interruption until the end of 1259.
+Throughout that period domestic affairs were uneventful, and the
+efforts of the ministry were chiefly concerned in securing peace
+abroad. In 1258 Wales had been in revolt, Scotland unfriendly, and
+France threatening. A truce, ill observed, was made with Llewelyn, who
+found it worth while to be cautious, seeing that his natural enemies,
+but sometime associates, the marchers, had a preponderant share in the
+government. The Scots were easier to satisfy, for there was at the time
+no real hostility between either kings or peoples. The chief event of
+this period is the conclusion of the first peace with France since the
+wars of John and Philip Augustus. The protracted negotiations which
+preceded it took the king and his chief councillors abroad, and that
+made it easier to carry on the new domestic system without friction.
+
+Since the friendly personal intercourse held between Henry and Louis
+IX. in 1254, the relations between England and France had become less
+cordial. The revival of the English power in Gascony, the
+Anglo-Castilian alliance, and the election of Richard of Cornwall to
+the German kingship irritated the French, to whom the persistent
+English claim to Normandy and Anjou, and the repudiation of the
+Aquitanian homage, were perpetual sources of annoyance. The French
+championship of Alfonso against Richard achieved the double end of
+checking English pretensions, and cooling the friendship between
+England and Castile. St. Louis, however, was always ready to treat for
+peace, while the revolution of 1258 made all parties in England anxious
+to put a speedy end to the unsettled relations between the two realms.
+Negotiations were begun as early as 1257, and made some progress; but
+the decisive step was taken immediately after the prorogation of the
+reforming parliament in the spring of 1258. During May a strangely
+constituted embassy treated for peace at Paris, where Montfort and Hugh
+Bigod worked side by side with two of the Lusignans and Peter of Savoy.
+They concluded a provisional treaty in time for the negotiators to take
+their part in the Mad Parliament. The unsettled state of affairs in
+England, however, delayed the ratification of the treaty. Arrangements
+had been made for its publication at Cambrai, but the fifteen dared not
+allow Henry to escape from their tutelage, and Louis refused to treat
+save with the king himself. There were difficulties as to the relation
+of the pope and the King of the Romans to the treaty, while Earl
+Simon's wife Eleanor and her children refused to waive their very
+remote claims to a share in the Norman and Angevin inheritances, which
+her brother was prepared to renounce. As ever, Montfort held to his
+personal rights with the utmost tenacity, and the self-seeking
+obstinacy of the chief negotiator of the treaty caused both bad blood
+and delay. At last he was bought off by the promise of a money payment,
+and the preliminary ratifications were exchanged in the summer of 1259.
+On November 14 Henry left England for Paris for the formal conclusion
+of the treaty. There were great festivities on the occasion of the
+meeting of the two kings, but once more Montfort and his wife blocked
+the way. Not until the very morning of the day fixed for the final
+ceremony were they satisfied by Henry's promise to deposit on their
+behalf a large sum in the hands of the French. Immediately afterwards
+Henry did homage to Louis for Gascony.
+
+The chief condition of the treaty of Paris was Henry's definitive
+renunciation of all his claims on Normandy, Anjou, Maine, Touraine, and
+Poitou, and his agreement to hold Gascony as a fief of the French
+crown. In return for this, Louis not only recognised him as Duke of
+Aquitaine, but added to his actual possessions there by ceding to him
+all that he held, whether in fief or in demesne, in the three dioceses
+of Limoges, Cahors, and Perigueux. Besides these immediate cessions,
+the French king promised to hand over to Henry certain districts then
+held by his brother, Alfonse of Poitiers, and his brother's wife Joan
+of Toulouse, in the event of their dominions escheating to the crown by
+their death without heirs. These regions included Agen and the Agenais,
+Saintonge to the south of the Charente, and in addition the whole of
+Quercy, if it could be proved by inquest that it had been given by
+Richard I. to his sister Joan, grandmother of Joan of Poitiers, as her
+marriage portion. Moreover the French king promised to pay to Henry the
+sums necessary to maintain for two years five hundred knights to be
+employed "for the service of God, or the Church, or the kingdom of
+England."[1]
+
+ [1] For the treaty and its execution see M. Gavrilovitch,
+ _Etude sur le traite de Paris de 1259_ (1899).
+
+The treaty was unpopular both in France and England. The French
+strongly objected to the surrender of territory, and were but little
+convinced of the advantage gained by making the English king once more
+the vassal of France. English opinion was hostile to the abandonment of
+large pretensions in return for so small an equivalent. On the French
+side it is true that Louis sacrificed something to his sense of justice
+and love of peace. But the territory he ceded was less in reality than
+in appearance. The French king's demesnes in Quercy, Perigord, and
+Limousin were not large, and the transference of the homage of the
+chief vassals meant only a nominal change of overlordship, and was
+further limited by a provision that certain "privileged fiefs" were
+still to be retained under the direct suzerainty of the French crown.
+As to the eventual cessions, Alfonse and his wife were still alive and
+likely to live many years. Even the cession of Gascony was hampered by
+a stipulation that the towns should take an "oath of security," by
+which they pledged themselves to aid France against England in the
+event of the English king breaking the provisions of the treaty.
+Perhaps the most solid advantage Henry gained by the treaty was
+financial, for he spent the sums granted to enable him to redeem his
+crusading vow in preparing for war against his own subjects. It was,
+however, an immense advantage for England to be able during the
+critical years which followed to be free from French hostility. If,
+therefore, the French complaints against the treaty were exaggerated,
+the English dissatisfaction was unreasonable. The real difficulty for
+the future lay in the fact that the possession of Gascony by the king
+of a hostile nation was incompatible with the proper development of the
+French monarchy. For fifty years, however, a chronic state of war had
+not given Gascony to the French; and Louis IX. was, perhaps, politic as
+well as scrupulous in abandoning the way of force and beginning a new
+method of gradual absorption, that in the end gained the Gascon fief
+for France more effectively than any conquest. The treaty of Paris was
+not a final settlement. It left a score of questions still open, and
+the problems of its gradual execution involved the two courts in
+constant disputes down to the beginning of the Hundred Years' War. For
+seventy years the whole history of the relations between the two
+nations is but a commentary on the treaty of Paris.
+
+During his visit to Paris Henry arranged a marriage between his
+daughter Beatrice and John of Brittany, the son of the reigning duke.
+In no hurry to get back to the tutelage of the fifteen, he prolonged
+his stay on the continent till the end of April, 1260. Yet, abroad as
+at home, he could not be said to act as a free man. It was not the king
+so much as Simon of Montfort who was the real author of the French
+treaty. Indeed, it is from the conclusion of the Peace of Paris that
+Simon's preponderance becomes evident. He was at all stages the chief
+negotiator of the peace and, save when his personal interests stood in
+the way, he controlled every step of the proceedings. If in 1258 he was
+but one of several leaders of the baronial party in England, he came
+back from France in 1260 assured of supremacy. During his absence
+abroad, events had taken place in England which called for his
+presence.
+
+After their triumph in 1258, the baronial leaders relaxed their efforts.
+Contented with their position as arbiters of the national destinies,
+they made little effort to carry out the reforms contemplated at Oxford.
+The ranks of the victors were broken up by private dissensions. Before
+leaving for France, Earl Simon violently quarrelled with Richard, Earl
+of Gloucester. It was currently believed that Gloucester had grown
+slack, and Simon rose in popular estimation as a thorough-going reformer
+who had no mind to substitute the rule of a baronial oligarchy for the
+tyranny of the king. His position was strengthened by his personal
+qualities which made him the hero of the younger generation; and his
+influence began to modify the policy of Edward the king's son, who,
+since the flight of his Poitevin kinsmen, was gradually arriving at
+broader views of national policy. Even before his father's journey to
+France, Edward took up a line of his own. In the October parliament of
+1259, he listened to a petition presented to the council by the younger
+nobles[1] who complained that, though the king had performed all his
+promises, the barons had not fulfilled any of theirs. Edward thereupon
+stirred up the oligarchy to issue an instalment of the promised reforms
+in the document known as the Provisions of Westminster. During Henry's
+absence in France the situation became strained. The oligarchic party,
+headed by Gloucester, was breaking away from Montfort; and Edward was
+forming a liberal royalist party which was not far removed from
+Montfort's principles. Profiting by these discords, the Lusignans
+prepared to invade England. The papacy was about to declare against the
+reformers. When the monks of Winchester elected an Englishman as their
+bishop in the hope of getting rid of the queen's uncle, Alexander IV.
+summoned Aymer to his court and consecrated him bishop with his own
+hands.
+
+ [1] "Communitas bacheleriae Angliae," _Burton Ann_., p. 471.
+ _See on_ this, _Engl. Hist. Review_, xvii. (1902), 89-94.
+
+Early in 1260, Montfort went back to England and made common cause with
+Edward. Despite the king's order that no parliament should be held
+during his absence abroad, Montfort insisted that the Easter parliament
+should meet as usual at London. The discussions were hot. Montfort
+demanded the expulsion of Peter of Savoy from the council, and Edward
+and Gloucester almost came to blows. The Londoners closed their gates on
+both parties, but the mediation of the King of the Romans prevented a
+collision. Henry hurried home, convinced that Edward was conspiring
+against him. The king threw himself into the city of London, and with
+Gloucester's help collected an army. Meanwhile Montfort and Edward, with
+their armed followers, were lodged at Clerkenwell, ready for war. Again
+the situation became extremely critical, and again King Richard proved
+the best peacemaker. Henry held out against his son for a fortnight, but
+such estrangement was hard for him to endure. "Do not let my son appear
+before me," he cried, "for if I see him, I shall not be able to refrain
+from kissing him." A reconciliation was speedily effected, and nothing
+remained of the short-lived alliance of Edward with Montfort save that
+his feud with Gloucester continued until the earl's death.
+
+The dissensions among the barons encouraged Henry to shake off the
+tutelage of the fifteen. As soon as he was reconciled with his son, he
+charged Leicester with treason.[1] "But, thanks _be_ to God, the earl
+answered to all these points with such force that the king could do
+nothing against him." Unable to break down his enemy by direct attack,
+Henry followed one of the worst precedents of his father's reign by
+beseeching Alexander IV. to relieve him of his oath to observe the
+Provisions. On April 13, 1261, a bull was issued annulling the whole of
+the legislation of 1258 and 1259, and freeing the king from his sworn
+promise.
+
+ [1] Bemont, _Simon de Montfort_, Appendix xxxvii., pp. 343-53.
+
+William of Valence was already back in England, and restored to his old
+dignities. His return was the easier because his brother, Aymer, the
+most hated of the Poitevins, had died soon after his consecration to
+Winchester. On June 14, 1261, the papal bull was read before the
+assembled parliament at Winchester. There Henry removed the baronial
+ministers and replaced them by his own friends. Chief among the
+sufferers was Hugh Despenser, who had succeeded Hugh Bigod as
+justiciar; and Bigod himself was expelled from the custody of Dover
+Castle. In the summer Henry issued a proclamation, declaring that the
+right of choosing his council and garrisoning his castles was among the
+inalienable attributes of the crown. England was little inclined to
+rebel, for the return of prosperity and good harvests made men more
+contented.
+
+The repudiation of the Provisions restored unity to the baronage. The
+defections had been serious, and it was said that only five of the
+twenty-four still adhered to the opposition. But the crisis forced
+Leicester and Gloucester to forget their recent feuds, and co-operate
+once more against the king. They saw that their salvation from Henry's
+growing strength lay in appealing to a wider public than that which
+they had hitherto addressed. Still posing as the heads of the
+government established by the Provisions, they summoned three knights
+from each shire to attend an assembly at St. Alban's. This appeal to
+the landed gentry alarmed the king so much that he issued counter-writs
+to the sheriffs ordering them to send the knights, not to the baronial
+camp at St. Alban's, but to his own court at Windsor. Neither party was
+as yet prepared for battle. The death of Alexander IV, soon after the
+publication of his bull tied the hands of the king. At the same time
+the renewed dissensions of Leicester and Gloucester paralysed the
+baronage. Before long Simon withdrew to the continent, leaving
+everything in Gloucester's hands. At last, on December 7, a treaty of
+pacification was patched up, and the king announced that he was ready
+to pardon those who accepted its conditions. But there was no
+permanence in the settlement, and the king, the chief gainer by it, was
+soon pressing the new pope, Urban IV., to confirm the bull of
+Alexander. On February 25, 1262, Urban renewed Henry's absolution from
+his oath in a bull which was at once promulgated in England. Montfort
+then came back from abroad and rallied the baronial party. In January,
+1263, Henry once more confirmed the Provisions, and peace seemed
+restored. The death of Richard of Gloucester during 1262 increased
+Montfort's power. His son, the young Earl Gilbert, was Simon's devoted
+disciple, but he was still a minor and the custody of his lands was
+handed over to the Earl of Hereford. Montfort's personal charm
+succeeded in like fashion in winning over Henry of Almaine.
+
+The events of 1263 are as bewildering and as indecisive as those of the
+two previous years. Amidst the confusion of details and the violent
+clashing of personal and territorial interests, a few main principles
+can be discerned. First of all the royalist party was becoming
+decidedly stronger, and fresh secessions of the barons constantly
+strengthened its ranks. Conspicuous among these were the lords of the
+march of Wales, who in 1258 had been almost as one man on the side of
+the opposition, but who by the end of 1263 had with almost equal
+unanimity rallied to the crown.[1] The causes of this change of
+front are to be found partly in public and partly in personal reasons.
+In 1258 Henry III., like Charles I. in 1640, had alienated every class
+of his subjects, and was therefore entirely at the mercy of his
+enemies. By 1263 his concessions had procured for him a following, so
+that he now stood in the same position as Charles after his concessions
+to the Long Parliament made it possible for him to begin the Civil War
+in 1642. A new royalist party was growing up with a wider policy and
+greater efficiency than the old coterie of courtiers and aliens. Of
+this new party Edward was the soul. He had dissociated himself from
+Earl Simon, but he carried into his father's camp something of Simon's
+breadth of vision and force of will. He set to work to win over
+individually the remnant that adhered to Leicester. What persuasion and
+policy could not effect was accomplished by bribes and promises. Edward
+won over the Earl of Hereford, whose importance was doubled by his
+custody of the Gloucester lands, the ex-justiciar Roger Bigod, and
+above all Roger Mortimer.
+
+ [1] On this, and the whole marcher and Welsh aspect of the
+ period, 1258-1267, see my essay on Wales and _the March during
+ the Barons' Wars_ in _Owens College Historical Essays_, pp.
+ 76-136 (1902).
+
+The change of policy of the marchers was partly at least brought about
+by their constant difficulties with the Prince of Wales. During the
+period immediately succeeding the Provisions of Oxford, Llewelyn ceased
+to devastate the marches. A series of truces was arranged which, if
+seldom well kept, at least avoided war on a grand scale. Within Wales
+Llewelyn fully availed himself of the respite from English war.
+Triumphant over the minor chiefs, he could reckon upon the support of
+every Welsh tenant of a marcher lord, and at last grew strong enough to
+disregard the truces and wage open war against the marchers. It was in
+vain that Edward, the greatest of the marcher lords, persuaded David,
+the Welsh prince's brother, to rise in revolt against him. Llewelyn
+devastated the four cantreds to the gates of Chester, and at last,
+after long sieges, forced the war-worn defenders of Deganwy and Diserth
+to surrender the two strong castles through which alone Edward had
+retained some hold over his Welsh lands. It was the same in the middle
+march, where Llewelyn turned his arms against the Mortimers, and robbed
+them of their castles. Even in the south the lord of Gwynedd carried
+everything before him. "If the Welsh are not stopped," wrote a southern
+marcher, "they will destroy all the lands of the king as far as the
+Severn and the Wye, and they ask for nothing less than the whole of
+Gwent." Up to this point the war had been a war of Welsh against
+English, but Montfort sought compensation for his losses in England by
+establishing relations with the Welsh. The alliance between Montfort
+and their enemy had a large share in bringing about the secession of
+the marchers. Their alliance with Edward neutralised the action of
+Montfort, and once more enabled Henry to repudiate the Provisions.
+
+In the summer of 1263, Edward and Montfort both raised armies.
+Leicester made himself master of Hereford, Gloucester, and Bristol, and
+when Edward threw himself into Windsor Castle, he occupied Isleworth,
+hoping to cut his enemy off from London, where the king and queen had
+taken refuge in the Tower. But the hostility of the Londoners made the
+Tower an uneasy refuge for them. On one occasion, when the queen
+attempted to make her way up the Thames in the hope of joining her son
+at Windsor, the citizens assailed her barge so fiercely from London
+Bridge that she was forced to return to the Tower. The foul insults
+which the rabble poured upon his mother deeply incensed Edward and he
+became a bitter foe of the city for the rest of his life. For the
+moment the hostility of London was decisive against Henry. Once more
+the king was forced to confirm the Provisions, agree to a fresh
+banishment of the aliens, and restore Hugh Despenser to the
+justiciarship. This was the last baronial triumph. In a few weeks
+Edward again took up arms, and was joined by many of Montfort's
+associates, including his cousin, Henry of Almaine. Even the Earl of
+Gloucester was wavering. The barons feared the appeal to arms, and
+entered into negotiations. Neither side was strong enough to obtain
+mastery over the other, and a recourse to arbitration seemed the best
+way out of an impossible situation. Accordingly, on December, 1263, the
+two parties agreed to submit the question of the validity of the
+Provisions to the judgment of Louis IX.
+
+The king and his son at once crossed the channel to Amiens, where the
+French king was to hear both sides. A fall from his horse prevented
+Leicester attending the arbitration, and the barons were represented by
+Peter Montfort, lord of Beaudesert castle in Warwickshire, and
+representative of an ancient Anglo-Norman house that was not akin to
+the family of Earl Simon. Louis did not waste time, and on January 23,
+1264, issued his decision in a document called the "Mise of Amiens,"
+which pronounced the Provisions invalid, largely on the ground of the
+papal sentence. Henry was declared free to select his own wardens of
+castles and ministers, and Louis expressly annulled "the statute that
+the realm of England should henceforth be governed by native-born
+Englishmen". "We ordain," he added, "that the king shall have full
+power and free jurisdiction over his realm as in the days before the
+Provisions." The only consolation to the barons was that Louis declared
+that he did not intend to derogate from the ancient liberties of the
+realm, as established by charter or custom, and that he urged a general
+amnesty on both parties. In all essential points Louis decided in
+favour of Henry. Though the justest of kings, he was after all a king,
+and the limitation of the royal authority by a baronial committee
+seemed to him to be against the fundamental idea of monarchy. The pious
+son of the Church was biassed by the authority of two successive popes,
+and he was not unmoved by the indignation of his wife, the sister of
+Queen Eleanor. A few weeks later Urban IV. confirmed the award.
+
+The Mise of Amiens was too one-sided to be accepted. The decision to
+refer matters to St. Louis had been made hastily, and many enemies of
+the king had taken no part in it. They, at least, were free to
+repudiate the judgment and they included the Londoners, the Cinque
+Ports, and nearly the whole of the lesser folk of England. The
+Londoners set the example of rebellion. They elected a constable and a
+marshal, and joining forces with Hugh Despenser, the baronial
+justiciar, who still held the Tower, marched out to Isleworth, where
+they burnt the manor of the King of the Romans. "And this," wrote the
+London Chronicler, "was the beginning of trouble and the origin of the
+deadly war by which so many thousand men perished." The Londoners did
+not act alone. Leicester refused to be bound by the award, though
+definitely pledged to obey it. It was, he maintained, as much perjury
+to abandon the Provisions as to be false to the promise to accept the
+Mise of Amiens. After a last attempt at negotiation at a parliament at
+Oxford, he withdrew with his followers and prepared for resistance.
+"Though all men quit me," he cried, "I will remain with my four sons
+and fight for the good cause which I have sworn to defend--the honour
+of Holy Church and the good of the realm." This was no mere boast. The
+more his associates fell away, the more the Montfort family took the
+lead. While Leicester organised resistance in the south, he sent his
+elder sons, Simon and Henry, to head the revolt in the midlands and the
+west.
+
+There was already war in the march of Wales when Henry Montfort crossed
+the Severn and strove to make common cause with Llewelyn. But the Welsh
+prince held aloof from him, and Edward himself soon made his way to the
+march. At first all went well for young Montfort. Edward, unable to
+capture Gloucester and its bridge, was forced to beg for a truce.
+Before long he found himself strong enough to repudiate the armistice
+and take possession of Gloucester. Master of the chief passage over the
+lower Severn, Edward abandoned the western campaign and went with his
+marchers to join his father at Oxford, where he at once stirred up the
+king to activity. The masters of the university, who were strong
+partisans of Montfort, were chased away from the town. Then the royal
+army marched against Northampton, the headquarters of the younger
+Simon, who was resting there, and, on April 4, the king and his son
+burst upon the place. Their first assault was unsuccessful, but next
+day the walls were scaled, the town captured, and many leading barons,
+including young Simon, taken prisoner. The victors thereupon marched
+northwards, devastated Montfort's Leicestershire estates, and thence
+proceeded to Nottingham, which opened its gates in a panic.
+
+Leicester himself had not been idle. While his sons were courting
+disaster in the west and midlands, he threw himself into London, where
+he was rapturously welcomed. The Londoners, however, became very
+unruly, committed all sorts of excesses against the wealthy royalists,
+and cruelly plundered and murdered the Jews. Montfort himself did not
+disdain to share in the spoils of the Jewry, though he soon turned to
+nobler work. He was anxious to open up communications with his allies
+in the Cinque Ports. But Earl Warenne, in Rochester castle, blocked the
+passage of the Dover road over the Medway. Accordingly Montfort marched
+with a large following of Londoners to Rochester, captured the town,
+and assaulted the castle with such energy that it was on the verge of
+surrendering. The news of Warenne's peril reached Henry in the
+midlands. In five days the royalists made their way from Nottingham to
+Rochester, a distance of over 160 miles. On their approach Montfort
+withdrew into London.
+
+Flushed with their successes at Northampton and Rochester, the
+royalists marched through Kent and Sussex, plundering and devastating
+the lands of their enemies. Though masters of the open country, they
+had to encounter the resistance of the Clare castles, and the solid
+opposition of the Cinque Ports. Their presence on the south coast was
+specially necessary, for Queen Eleanor, who had gone abroad, was
+waiting, with an army of foreign mercenaries, on the Flemish coast, for
+an opportunity of sailing to her husband's succour. The royal army was
+hampered by want of provisions, and was only master of the ground on
+which it was camped. As a first fruit of the alliance with Llewelyn,
+Welsh soldiers lurked behind every hedge and hill, cut off stragglers,
+intercepted convoys, and necessitated perpetual watchfulness. At last
+the weary and hungry troops found secure quarters in Lewes, the centre
+of the estates of Earl Warenne.
+
+Montfort then marched southwards from the capital. Besides the baronial
+retinues, a swarm of Londoners, eager for the fray, though unaccustomed
+to military restraints, accompanied him. On May 13 he encamped at
+Fletching, a village hidden among the dense oak woods of the Weald,
+some nine miles north of Lewes. A last effort of diplomacy was
+attempted by Bishop Cantilupe of Worcester who, despite papal censures,
+still accompanied the baronial forces. But the royalists would not
+listen to the mediation of so pronounced a partisan. Nothing therefore
+was left but the appeal to the sword.
+
+The royal army was the more numerous, and included the greater names.
+Of the heroes of the struggle of 1258 the majority was in the king's
+camp, including most of the lords of the Welsh march, and the hardly
+less fierce barons of the north, whose grandfathers had wrested the
+Great Charter from John. The returned Poitevins with their followers
+mustered strongly, and the confidence of the royalists was so great
+that they neglected all military preparations. The poverty of
+Montfort's host in historic families attested the complete
+disintegration of the party since 1263. Its strength lay in the young
+enthusiasts, who were still dominated by the strong personality and
+generous ideals of Leicester, such as the Earl of Gloucester, or
+Humphrey Bohun of Brecon, whose father, the Earl of Hereford, was
+fighting upon the king's side. Early on the morning of May 14 Montfort
+arrayed his troops and marched southward in the direction of Lewes.
+Dawn had hardly broken when the troops were massed on the summit of the
+South Downs, overlooking Lewes from the north-west.
+
+Lewes is situated on the right bank of a great curve of the river Ouse,
+which almost encircles the town. To the south are the low-lying marshes
+through which the river meanders towards the sea, while to the north,
+east, and west are the bare slopes of the South Downs, through which
+the river forces its way past the gap in which the town is situated. To
+the north of the town lies the strong castle of the Warennes, wherein
+Edward had taken up his quarters, while in the southern suburb the
+Cluniac priory of St. Pancras, the chief foundation of the Warennes,
+afforded lodgings for King Henry and the King of the Romans. When Simon
+reached the summit of the downs, his movements were visible from the
+walls. But the royal army was still sleeping and its sentinels kept
+such bad watch that the earl was able to array his troops at his
+leisure.
+
+From the summit of the hills two great spurs, separated by a waterless
+valley, slope down towards the north and west sides of the town. The
+more northerly led straight to the castle, and the more southerly to
+the priory. Montfort's plan was to throw his main strength on the
+attack on the priory, while deluding the enemy into the belief that his
+chief object was to attack the castle. He was not yet fully recovered
+from his fall from his horse, and it was known that he generally
+travelled in a closed car or horse-litter. This vehicle he posted in a
+conspicuous place on the northerly spur, and planted over it his
+standard. In front of it were massed the London militia, mainly
+infantry and the least effective element in his host. Meanwhile the
+knights and men-at-arms were mustered on the southerly spur under the
+personal direction of Montfort, who held himself in the rear with the
+reserve, while the foremost files were commanded by the young Earl of
+Gloucester, whom Simon solemnly dubbed to knighthood before the
+assembled squadrons. Then the two divisions of the army advanced
+towards Lewes, hoping to find their enemies still in their beds.
+
+At the last moment the alarm was given, and before the barons
+approached the town, the royalists, pouring out of castle, town, and
+priory, hastily took up their position face to face to the enemy. All
+turned out as Montfort had foreseen. Edward, emerging from the castle
+with his cousin Henry of Almaine, his Poitevin uncles, and the warriors
+of the march, observed the standard of Montfort on the hill, and
+supposing that the earl was with his banner, dashed impetuously against
+the left wing of Leicester's troops. He soon found himself engaged with
+the Londoners, who broke and fled in confusion before his impetuous
+charge. Eager to revenge on the flying citizens the insults they had
+directed against his parents, he pursued the beaten militia for many a
+mile, inflicting terrible damage upon them. On his way he captured
+Simon's standard and horse-litter, and slew its occupants, though they
+were three royalist members of the city aristocracy detained there for
+sure keeping. When the king's son drew rein he was many miles from
+Lewes, whither he returned, triumphant but exhausted.
+
+The removal of Edward and the marchers from the field enabled Montfort
+to profit by his sacrifice of the Londoners. The followers of the two
+kings on the left of the royalist lines could not withstand the weight
+of the squadrons of Leicester and Gloucester. The King of the Romans
+was driven to take refuge in a mill, where he soon made an ignominious
+surrender. Henry himself lost his horse under him and was forced to
+yield himself prisoner to Gilbert of Gloucester. The mass of the army
+was forced back on to the town and priory, which were occupied by the
+victors. Scarcely was their victory assured when Edward and the
+marchers came back from the pursuit of the Londoners. Thereupon the
+battle was renewed in the streets of the town. It was, however, too
+late for the weary followers of the king's son to reverse the fortunes
+of the day. Some threw themselves into the castle, where the king's
+standard still floated; Edward himself took sanctuary in the church of
+the Franciscans; many strove to escape eastwards over the Ouse bridge
+or by swimming over the river. The majority of the latter perished by
+drowning or by the sword: but two compact bands of mail-clad horsemen
+managed to cut their way through to safety. One of these, a force of
+some two hundred, headed by Earl Warenne himself, and his
+brothers-in-law, Guy of Lusignan and William of Valence, secured their
+retreat to the spacious castle of Pevensey, of which Warenne was
+constable, and from which the possibility of continuing their flight by
+sea remained open. Of greater military consequence was the successful
+escape of the lords of the Welsh march, whose followers were next day
+the only section of the royalist army which was still a fighting force.
+This was the only immediate limitation to the fulness of Montfort's
+victory. After seven weary years, the judgment of battle secured the
+triumph of the "good cause," which had so long been delayed by the
+weakness of his confederates and the treachery of his enemies. Not the
+barons of 1258, but Simon and his personal following _were_ the real
+conquerors at Lewes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE RULE OF MONTFORT AND THE ROYALIST RESTORATION.
+
+
+On the day after the battle, Henry III. accepted the terms imposed upon
+him by Montfort in a treaty called the "Mise of Lewes," by which he
+promised to uphold the Great Charter, the Charter of the Forests, and
+the Provisions of Oxford. A body of arbitrators was constituted, in
+which the Bishop of London was the only Englishman, but which included
+Montfort's friend, Archbishop Eudes Rigaud of Rouen; the new papal
+legate, Guy Foulquois, cardinal-bishop of Sabina; and Peter the
+chamberlain, Louis IX.'s most trusted counsellor, with the Duke of
+Burgundy or Charles of Anjou, to act as umpire. These arbitrators were,
+however, to be sworn to choose none save English councillors, and Henry
+took oath to follow the advice of his native-born council in all
+matters of state. An amnesty was secured to Leicester and Gloucester;
+and Edward and Henry of Almaine surrendered as hostages for the good
+behaviour of the marchers, who still remained under arms. By the
+establishment of baronial partisans as governors of the castles,
+ministers, sheriffs, and conservators of the peace, the administration
+passed at once into the hands of the victorious party. Three weeks
+later writs were issued for a parliament which included four knights
+from every shire. In this assembly the final conditions of peace were
+drawn up, and arrangements made for keeping Henry under control for the
+rest of his life, and Edward after him, for a term of years to be
+determined in due course. Leicester and Gloucester were associated with
+Stephen Berkstead, the Bishop of Chichester, to form a body of three
+electors. By these three a Council of Nine was appointed, three of whom
+were to be in constant attendance at court; and without their advice
+the king was to do nothing. Hugh Despenser was continued as justiciar,
+while the chancery went to the Bishop of Worcester's nephew, Thomas of
+Cantilupe, a Paris doctor of canon law, and chancellor of the
+University of Oxford.
+
+Once more a baronial committee put the royal authority into commission,
+and ruled England through ministers of its own choice. While agreeing
+in this essential feature, the settlement of 1264 did not merely
+reproduce the constitution of 1258. It was simpler than its forerunner,
+since there was no longer any need of the cumbrous temporary machinery
+for the revision of the whole system of government, nor for the
+numerous committees and commissions to which previously so many
+functions had been assigned. The main tasks before the new rulers were
+not constitution-making but administration and defence. Moreover, the
+later constitution shows some recognition of the place due to the
+knights of the shire and their constituents. It is less closely
+oligarchical than the previous scheme. This may partly be due to the
+continued divisions of the greater barons, but it is probably also in
+large measure owing to the preponderance of Simon of Montfort. The
+young Earl of Gloucester and the simple and saintly Bishop of
+Chichester were but puppets in his hands. He was the real elector who
+nominated the council, and thus controlled the government. Every act of
+the new administration reflects the boldness and largeness of his
+spirit.
+
+The pacification after Lewes was more apparent than real, and there
+were many restless spirits that scorned to accept the settlement which
+Henry had so meekly adopted. The marchers were in arms in the west, and
+were specially formidable because they detained in their custody the
+numerous prisoners captured at the sack of Northampton. The fugitives
+from Lewes were holding their own behind the walls of Pevensey, though
+Earl Warenne and other leaders had made their escape to France, where
+they joined the army which Queen Eleanor had collected on the north
+coast for the purpose of invading England and restoring her husband to
+power. The papacy and the whole official forces of the Church were in
+bitter hostility to the new system. The collapse of Henry's rule had
+ruined the papal plans in Sicily, where Manfred easily maintained his
+ground against so strong a successor of the unlucky Edmund as Charles
+of Anjou. The papal legate, Guy Foulquois, was waiting at Boulogne for
+admission into England, and, far from being conciliated by his
+appointment as an arbitrator, was dexterously striving to make the
+arbitration ineffective, by summoning the bishops adhering to Montfort
+to appear before him, and sending them back with orders to
+excommunicate Earl Simon and all his supporters. The only gleam of hope
+was to be found in the unwillingness of the King of France to interfere
+actively in the domestic disputes of England. The death of Urban IV.
+for the moment brought relief, but, after a long vacancy, the new pope
+proved to be none other than the legate Guy, who in February, 1265,
+mounted the papal throne as Clement IV. It was to no purpose that
+Walter of Cantilupe assembled the patriotic bishops and appealed to a
+general council, or that radical friars like the author of the _Song of
+Lewes_ formulated the popular policy in spirited verse. The greatest
+forces of the time were steadily opposed to the revolutionary
+government, and rare strength and boldness were necessary to make head
+against them.
+
+Before the end of 1264 the vigour of Earl Simon triumphed over some of
+his immediate difficulties. In August he summoned the military forces
+of the realm to meet the threatened invasion. Adverse storms, however,
+dispersed Queen Eleanor's fleet, and her mercenaries, weary of the long
+delays that had exhausted her resources, went home in disgust. This
+left Simon free to betake himself to the west, and on December 15 he
+forced the marcher lords to accept a pacification called the Provisions
+of Worcester, by which they agreed to withdraw for a year and a day to
+Ireland, leaving their families and estates in the hands of the ruling
+faction.
+
+On the day after the signature of the treaty, Henry, who accompanied
+Simon to the west, issued from Worcester the writs for a parliament
+that sat in London from January to March in 1265. From the
+circumstances of the case this famous assembly could only be a meeting
+of the supporters of the existing government. So scanty was its
+following among the magnates that writs of summons were only issued to
+five earls and eighteen barons, though the strong muster of bishops,
+abbots, and priors showed that the papal anathema had done little to
+shake the fidelity of the clergy to Montfort's cause. The special
+feature of the gathering, however, was the summoning of two knights
+from every shire, side by side with the barons of the faithful Cinque
+Ports and two representatives from every city and borough, convened by
+writs sent, not to the sheriff, after later custom, but to the cities
+and boroughs directly. It was the presence of this strong popular
+element which long caused this parliament to be regarded as the first
+really representative assembly in our history, and gained for Earl
+Simon the fame of being the creator of the House of Commons. Modern
+research has shown that neither of these views can be substantiated. It
+was no novelty for the crown to strengthen the baronial parliaments by
+the representatives of the shire-moots, and there were earlier
+precedents for the holding meetings of the spokesmen of the cities and
+boroughs. What was new was the combination of these two types of
+representatives in a single assembly, which was convoked, not merely
+for a particular administrative purpose, but for a great political
+object. The real novelty and originality of Earl Simon's action lay in
+his giving a fresh proof of his disposition to fall back upon the
+support of the ordinary citizen against the hostility or indifference
+of the magnates, to whom the men of 1258 wished to limit all political
+deliberation. This is in itself a sufficient indication of policy to
+give Leicester an almost unique position among the statesmen to whom
+the development of our representative institutions are due. But just as
+his parliament was not in any sense our first representative assembly,
+so it did not include in any complete sense a House of Commons at all.
+We must still wait for a generation before the rival and disciple of
+Montfort, Edward, the king's son, established the popular element in
+our parliament on a permanent basis. Yet in the links which connect the
+early baronial councils with the assemblies of the three estates of the
+fourteenth century, not one is more important than Montfort's
+parliament of January, 1265.
+
+The chief business of parliament was to complete the settlement of the
+country. Simon won a new triumph in making terms with the king's son.
+Edward had witnessed the failure of his mother's attempts at invasion,
+the futility of the legatine anathema, and the collapse of the marchers
+at Worcester. He saw it was useless to hold out any longer, and
+unwillingly bought his freedom at the high price that Simon exacted. He
+transferred to his uncle the earldom of Chester, including all the
+lands in Wales that might still be regarded as appertaining to it. This
+measure put Simon in that strong position as regards Wales and the west
+which Edward had enjoyed since the days of his marriage. It involved a
+breach in the alliance between Edward and the marchers, and the
+subjection of the most dangerous district of the kingdom to Simon's
+personal authority. It was safe to set free the king's son, when his
+territorial position and his political alliances were thus weakened.
+
+At the moment of his apparent triumph, Montfort's authority began to
+decline. It was something to have the commons on his side: but the
+magnates were still the greatest power in England, and in pressing his
+own policy to the uttermost, Simon had fatally alienated the few great
+lords who still adhered to him. There was a fierce quarrel in
+parliament between Leicester and the shifty Robert Ferrars, Earl of
+Derby. For the moment Leicester prevailed, and Derby was stripped of
+his lands and was thrown into prison. But his fate was a warning to
+others, and the settlement between Montfort and Edward aroused the
+suspicions of the Earl of Gloucester. Gilbert of Clare was now old
+enough to think for himself, and his close personal devotion to
+Montfort could not blind him to the antagonism of interests between
+himself and his friend. He was gallant, strenuous, and high-minded, but
+quarrelsome, proud, and unruly, and his strong character was balanced
+by very ordinary ability. His outlook was limited, and his ideals were
+those of his class; such a man could neither understand nor sympathise
+with the broader vision and wider designs of Leicester. Moreover, with
+all Simon's greatness, there was in him a fierce masterfulness and an
+inordinate ambition which made co-operation with him excessively
+difficult for all such as were not disposed to stand to him in the
+relation of disciple to master. And behind the earl were his
+self-seeking and turbulent sons, set upon building up a family interest
+that stood directly in the way of the magnates' claim to control the
+state. Thus personal rivalries and political antagonisms combined to
+lead Earl Gilbert on in the same course that his father, Earl Richard,
+had traversed. The closest ally of Leicester became his bitterest
+rival. The victorious party split up in 1265, as it had split up in
+1263. And the dissolution of the dominant faction once more gave Edward
+a better chance of regaining the upper hand than was to be hoped for
+from foreign mercenaries and from papal support.
+
+Gloucester was the natural leader of the lords of the Welsh march. He
+was not only the hereditary lord of Glamorgan, but had received the
+custody of William of Valence's forfeited palatinate of Pembroke. He
+had shown self-control in separating himself so long from the marcher
+policy; and his growing suspicion of the Montforts threw him back into
+his natural alliance with them. Even after the treaty of Worcester, the
+marchers remained under arms. They had obtained from the weakness of
+the government repeated prolongations of the period fixed for their
+withdrawal into Ireland. It was soon rumoured that they were sure of a
+refuge in Gloucester's Welsh estates, and Leicester, never afraid of
+making enemies, bitterly reproached Earl Gilbert with receiving the
+fugitives into his lands. Shortly after the breaking up of parliament,
+Gloucester fled to the march, and a little later William of Valence and
+Earl Warenne landed in Pembrokeshire with a small force of men-at-arms
+and crossbowmen. There was no longer any hope of carrying out the
+Provisions of Worcester, and once more Montfort was forced to proceed
+to the west to put down rebellion.
+
+By the end of April Montfort was at Gloucester, accompanied by the king
+and Edward, who, despite his submission, remained virtually a prisoner.
+Earl Gilbert was master of all South Wales, and closely watched his
+rival's movements from the neighbouring Forest of Dean. It was with
+difficulty that Earl Simon and his royal captives advanced from
+Gloucester to Hereford, but Earl Gilbert preferred to negotiate rather
+than to push matters to extremities. He went in person to Hereford and
+renewed his homage to the king. Arbitrators were appointed to settle
+the disputes between the two earls, and a proclamation was issued
+declaring that the rumour of dissension between them was "vain, lying,
+and fraudulently invented". For the next few days harmony seemed
+restored.
+
+Gloucester's submission lured Leicester into relaxing his precautions.
+His enemies took advantage of his remissness to hatch an audacious plot
+which soon enabled them to renew the struggle under more favourable
+conditions. Since his nominal release, Edward had been allowed the
+diversions of riding and hunting, and on May 28 he was suffered to go
+out for a ride under negligent or corrupt guard. Once well away from
+Hereford, the king's son fled from his lax custodians and joined Roger
+Mortimer, who was waiting for him in a neighbouring wood. On the next
+day he was safe behind the walls of Mortimer's castle of Wigmore, and,
+the day after, met Earl Gilbert at Ludlow, where he promised to uphold
+the charters and expel the foreigners. Valence and Warenne hurried from
+Pembrokeshire and made common cause with Edward and Gilbert. Edward
+then took the lead in the councils of the marchers, who, from that
+moment, obtained a unity of purpose and policy that they had hitherto
+lacked. He and his allies could claim to be the true champions of the
+Charters and the Provisions of Oxford against the grasping foreigner
+who strove to rule over king and barons alike.
+
+Montfort's small force was cut off from its base by the rapidity of the
+marchers' movements. It was in vain that all the supporters of the
+existing government were summoned to the assistance of the hard-pressed
+army at Hereford. Before the end of June, Edward completed the conquest
+of the Severn valley by the capture of the town and castle of
+Gloucester. A broad river and a strong army stood between Montfort and
+succour from England. Leicester then turned to Llewelyn of Wales, who
+took up his quarters at Pipton, near Hay. There, on June 22, a treaty
+was signed between the Welsh prince and the English king by which Henry
+was forced to make huge concessions to Llewelyn in order to secure his
+alliance. Llewelyn was recognised as prince of all Wales. The
+overlordship over all the barons of Wales was granted to him, and the
+numerous conquests, which he had made at the expense of the marchers,
+were ceded to him in full possession.
+
+Thus Llewelyn, like his grandfather in the days of the Great Charter,
+profited by the dissensions of the English to obtain the recognition of
+his claims which had invariably been refused when England was united.
+The Welsh prince gained a unique opportunity of making his weight felt
+in general English politics, but with all his ability he hardly rose to
+the occasion. Montfort had pressing need of his help. A few days after
+the treaty of Pipton, Gloucester Castle opened its gates to Edward, and
+the marchers advanced westwards to seek out Earl Simon at Hereford.
+Leicester fled in alarm before their overwhelming forces. He was driven
+from the Wye to the Usk, and, beaten in a sharp fight on Newport
+bridge, found refuge only by retreating up the Usk valley, whence he
+escaped northwards into the hilly region where Llewelyn ruled over the
+lands once dominated by the Mortimers. Before long Montfort's English
+followers grew weary of the hard conditions of mountain warfare. With
+their heavy armour and barbed horses it was difficult for them to
+emulate the tactics of the Welsh, and they revolted against the simple
+diet of milk and meat that contented their Celtic allies. They could
+not get on without bread, and, as bread was not to be found among the
+hills, they forced their leader to return to the richer regions of the
+east. Llewelyn did little to help them in their need, and did not
+accompany them in their march back to the Severn valley, though a large
+but disorderly force of Welsh infantry still remained with Simon as the
+fruit of the alliance with their prince.
+
+By the end of July, Simon was once more in the Severn valley, seeking
+for a passage over the river. On August 2 he found a ford over the
+stream some miles south of Worcester. There he crossed with all his
+forces and encamped for the night at Kempsey, one of Bishop Cantilupe's
+manors on the left bank. His skill as a general had extricated him from
+a position of the utmost peril. All might yet be regained if he could
+join forces with an army of relief which his son Simon had slowly
+levied in the south and midlands. But his quarrel with Gloucester and
+his alliance with the Welsh had done much to undermine Montfort's
+popularity, and the younger Simon had no appreciation of the necessity
+for decisive action. Summoned from the long siege of Pevensey by his
+father's danger, he wasted time in plundering the lands of the
+royalists, and only left London on July 8, whence he led his men by
+slow stages to Kenilworth. On July 31 young Simon's troops took up
+their quarters for the night in the open country round Kenilworth
+castle. They had no notion that the enemy was at hand and troubled
+neither to defend themselves nor to keep watch. Edward, warned by spies
+of their approach, abandoned his close guard of the Severn fords, and
+in the early morning of August 1 fell suddenly upon the sleeping host
+and scattered it with little difficulty. The younger Simon and a few of
+his followers took refuge in the castle. As a fighting force the army
+of relief ceased to exist.
+
+Leicester, knowing nothing of his son's disaster, made his way, on
+August 3, from Kempsey to Evesham, where he rested for the night. Next
+morning, after mass and breakfast, the army was about to continue its
+march, when scouts descried troops advancing upon the town. At first it
+was hoped that they were the followers of young Simon, but their near
+approach revealed them to be the army of the marchers. With
+extraordinary rapidity Edward led his troops back to Worcester as soon
+as he had won the fight at Kenilworth. Learning there that Simon had
+crossed the river in his absence, he at once turned back to meet him,
+seeking to elude his vigilance by a long night march by circuitous
+routes. The result was that for the second time he caught his enemy in
+a trap.
+
+Evesham, like Lewes, stands on a peninsula. It is situated on the right
+bank of a wide curve of the Avon, and approachable only by crossing
+over the river, or by way of the sort of isthmus between the two bends
+of the Avon a little to the north of the town. Edward occupied this
+isthmus with his best troops, and thus cut off all prospect of escape
+by land. The other means of exit from the town was over the bridge
+which connects it with its south-eastern suburb of Bengeworth, on the
+left bank of the river. Edward, however, took the precaution to detach
+Gloucester with a strong force to hold Bengeworth, and thus prevent
+Simon's escape over the bridge. The weary and war-worn host of
+Montfort, then, was out-generalled in such fashion that effective
+resistance to a superior force, flushed by recent victory, was
+impossible. Simon himself saw that his last hour was come; yet he could
+not but admire the skilful plan which had so easily discomfited him.
+"By the arm of St. James," he declared, "they come on cunningly. Yet
+they have not taught themselves that order of battle; they have learnt
+it from me. God have mercy upon our souls, for our bodies are theirs."
+
+Edward and Gloucester both advanced simultaneously to the attack. A
+storm broke at the moment of the encounter, and the battle was fought
+in a darkness that obscured the brightness of an August day.
+Leicester's Welsh infantry broke at once before the charge of the
+mail-clad horsemen, and took refuge behind hedges and walls, where they
+were hunted out and butchered after the main fight was over. But the
+men-at-arms struggled valiantly against Edward's superior forces,
+though they were soon borne down by sheer numbers. Simon fought like a
+hero and met a soldier's death. With him were slain his son Henry, his
+faithful comrade Peter Montfort, the baronial justiciar Hugh Despenser,
+and many other men of mark. A large number of prisoners fell into the
+victor's hands, and King Henry, who unwillingly followed Simon in all
+his wanderings, was wounded in the shoulder by his son's followers, and
+only escaped a worse fate by revealing his identity with the cry: "Slay
+me not! I am Henry of Winchester, your King." The marchers gratified
+their rage by massacring helpless fugitives, and by mutilating the
+bodies of the slain. Earl Simon's head was sent as a present to the
+wife of Roger Mortimer; and it was with difficulty that the mangled
+corpse found its last rest in the church of Evesham Abbey. His memory
+long lived in the hearts of his adopted countrymen, and especially
+among monks and friars, who despite the ban of the Church, hailed him
+as another St. Thomas, for he too had lain down his life for the cause
+of justice and religion. Miracles were worked at his tomb; liturgies
+composed in his honour, and an informal popular canonisation, which no
+papal censures could prevent, kept his memory green. His faults were
+forgotten in the pathos of his end. His work survived the field of
+Evesham and the reaction which succeeded it. His victorious nephew
+learnt well the lesson of his career, and the true successor of the
+martyred earl was the future Edward I.
+
+No thoughts of policy disturbed the fierce passion of revenge which
+possessed the victorious marchers. On August 7 Henry issued a
+proclamation announcing that he had resumed the personal exercise of
+the royal power. The baronial ministers and sheriffs were replaced by
+royalist partisans. The acts of the revolutionary government were
+denounced as invalid. The faithful city of London was cruelly
+humiliated for its zeal for Earl Simon. The exiles, headed by Queen
+Eleanor and Archbishop Boniface, returned from their long sojourn
+beyond sea. With them came to England a new legate, the Cardinal
+Ottobon, specially sent from the papal court to punish the bishops and
+clergy that had persisted in their adherence to the popular cause. Four
+prelates were excommunicated and suspended from their functions,
+including Berkstead of Chichester and Cantilupe of Worcester. But the
+aged Bishop of Worcester was delivered from persecution by death;
+"snatched away," as a kindly foe says, "lest he should see evil days".
+His nephew, Thomas of Cantilupe, the baronial chancellor, fled to
+Paris, where he forsook politics for the study of theology. The widowed
+Countess of Leicester was not saved by her near kindred to the king
+from lifelong banishment. At last a general sentence of forfeiture was
+pronounced against all who had fought against Edward, either at
+Kenilworth or Evesham. There was a greedy scramble for the spoils of
+victory. The greatest of these, Montfort's forfeited earldom of
+Leicester, went to Edmund, the king's younger son. Edward took back the
+earldom of Chester and all his old possessions. Roger Mortimer was
+rewarded by grants of land and franchises which raised the house of
+Wigmore to a position only surpassed by that of the strongest of the
+earldoms.
+
+At first the Montfort party showed an inclination to accept the defeat
+at Evesham as decisive. Even young Simon of Montfort, who still held
+out at Kenilworth, considered it prudent to restore his prisoner, the
+King of the Romans, to liberty. But the victors' resolve to deprive all
+their beaten foes of their estates, drove the vanquished into fresh
+risings. The first centre of the revolt of the disinherited was at
+Kenilworth, but before long the younger Simon abandoned the castle to
+join a numerous band which had found a more secure retreat in the isle
+of Axholme, amidst the marshes of the lower Trent. There they held
+their own until the winter, when they were persuaded by Edward to
+accept terms. A little later, Simon again revolted and joined the
+mariners of the Cinque Ports, whose towns still held out against the
+king, save Dover, which Edward had captured after a siege. Under
+Simon's leadership the Cinque Ports played the part of pirates on all
+merchants going to and from England. At last in March, 1266, Edward
+forced Winchelsea to open its gates to him. He next turned his arms
+against a valiant freebooter, Adam Gordon, who lurked with his band of
+outlaws in the dense beech woods of the Chilterns. With the capture of
+Adam Gordon, after a hand-to-hand tussle with Edward in which the
+king's son narrowly escaped with his life, the resistance in the south
+was at an end.
+
+As one centre of rebellion was pacified other disturbances arose. In
+the spring of 1266, Robert Ferrars, Earl of Derby, newly released from
+the prison into which Earl Simon had thrown him, raised a revolt in his
+own county. On May 15, 1266, Derby was defeated by Henry of Almaine at
+Chesterfield. His earldom was transferred to Edmund, the king's son,
+already Montfort's successor as Earl of Leicester, and in 1267 also
+Earl of Lancaster, a new earldom, deriving its name from the youngest
+of the shires.[1] Reduced to the Staffordshire estate of
+Chartley, the house of Ferrars fell back into the minor baronage.
+Kenilworth was still unconquered. Its walls were impregnable except to
+famine, and before his flight to Axholme young Simon had procured
+provisions adequate for a long resistance. The garrison harried the
+neighbourhood with such energy that the whole levies of the realm were
+assembled to subdue it. After a fruitless assault, the royalists
+settled down to a blockade which lasted from midsummer to Christmas.
+The legate, Ottobon, appearing in the besiegers' camp to excommunicate
+the defenders, they in derision dressed up their surgeon in the red
+robes of a cardinal, in which disguise he answered Ottobon's curses by
+a travesty of the censures of the Church.
+
+ [1] For Edmund's estates and whole career, see W.E. Rhodes'
+ _Edmund, Earl of Lancaster_, in _Engl. Hist. Review_, x.
+ (1895), 19-40 and 209-37.
+
+The blockade soon tried the patience of the barons. It was hard to keep
+any medieval army long together, and the lords, anxious to go back to
+their homes, complained of the harsh policy that compelled their long
+attendance. The royalist host split up into two parties, led
+respectively by Roger Mortimer and Earl Gilbert of Gloucester. The
+cruel lord of Wigmore was the type of the extreme reaction. Intent only
+on vengeance, booty, and ambition, Mortimer clamoured for violent
+measures, and was eager to reject all compromises. Gloucester, on the
+other hand, posed as the mediator, and urged the need of pacifying the
+disinherited by mitigating the sentence of forfeiture which had driven
+them into prolonged resistance. In the first flush of victory, Edward
+had been altogether on Mortimer's side, but gradually statecraft and
+humanity turned him from the reckless policy of the marcher. Edward's
+adhesion to counsels of moderation changed the situation. While
+Mortimer pressed the siege of Kenilworth, Edward and Gloucester met a
+parliament at Northampton which agreed to uphold the policy of 1258 and
+mitigate the hard lot of the disinherited. A document drawn up in the
+camp at Kenilworth received the approval of parliament and was
+published on October 31. The _Dictum de Kenilworth_, as it was called,
+was largely taken up with assertions of the authority of the crown, and
+denunciations of the memory of Earl Simon. More essential points were
+the re-enactment of the Charters and the redress of some of the
+grievances against which the Provisions of 1258 were directed. The
+vital article, however, laid down that the stern sentence of forfeiture
+against adherents of the fallen cause was to be remitted, and allowed
+rebels to redeem their estates by paying a fine, which in most cases
+was to be assessed at five years' value of their lands. Hard as were
+these terms, they were milder than those which had previously been
+offered to the insurgents. Yet the defenders of Kenilworth could not
+bring themselves to accept them until December, when disease and famine
+caused them to surrender. Despite their long-deferred submission, the
+garrison was admitted to the terms of the _Dictum_.
+
+Even then resistance was not yet over. A forlorn hope of the
+disinherited, headed by John d'Eyville, established themselves about
+Michaelmas in the isle of Ely, where they made themselves the terror of
+all East Anglia, plundering towns so far apart as Norwich and
+Cambridge, maltreating the Jews, and holding the rich citizens to
+ransom. Early in 1267 the north-country baron, John of Vescy, rose in
+Northumberland, and violently resumed possession of his forfeited
+castle of Alnwick. While Henry tarried at Cambridge, Edward went north
+and soon won over Vescy by the clemency which made the lord of Alnwick
+henceforth one of his most devoted servants.
+
+More formidable than the revolt of Eyville or Vescy was the ambiguous
+attitude of Earl Gilbert of Gloucester. Roger Mortimer was once more
+intriguing against him, and striving to upset the Kenilworth
+compromise. After a violent scene between the two enemies in the
+parliament at Bury, Gloucester withdrew to the march of Wales, where he
+waged war against Mortimer. In April, 1267, he made his way with a
+great following to London, professing that he wished to hold a
+conference with the legate. It was a critical moment. Edward was still
+in the north; Henry was wasting his time at Cambridge; the Londoners
+welcomed Earl Gilbert as a champion of the good old cause; the legate
+took refuge in the Tower, and the earl did not hesitate to lay siege to
+the stronghold. Before long Gloucester was joined by Eyville and many
+of the Ely fugitives. It seemed as if Gloucester was in as strong
+position as Montfort had ever won, and that after two years of warfare
+the verdict of Evesham was about to be reversed.
+
+Edward marched south and joined forces with his father, who had moved
+from Cambridge to Stratford, near London. Everything seemed to suggest
+that the eastern suburbs of London would witness a fight as stubborn as
+Lewes or Evesham. But Gloucester was not the man to press things to
+extremities, and Edward though firm was conciliatory. He delivered
+Ottobon from the hands of the rebels,[1] and then arranged a peace upon
+terms which secured Gloucester's chief object of procuring better
+conditions for the disinherited. Not only Earl Gilbert but Eyville and
+his associates were admitted to the royal favour. A few desperadoes
+still held out until July in the isle of Ely, and Edward devoted himself
+to tracking them to their lairs. He built causeways of wattles over the
+fens, which protected the disinherited in their last refuge. When he had
+clearly shown his superiority, he offered the garrison of Ely the terms
+of the _Dictum de Kenilworth_. With their acceptance of these conditions
+the English struggle ended, in July, 1267, nearly two years after the
+battle of Evesham.
+
+ [1] _Engl. Hist. Review_, xvii. (1902), 522.
+
+Llewelyn still remained under arms. He had profited by the two years of
+strife to deal deadly blows against the marchers. He conquered the
+Mid-Welsh lands which had been granted to Mortimer, and devastated
+Edward's Cheshire earldom. When Gloucester grew discontented with the
+course of events, the old friend of Montfort became the close ally of
+the man who had ruined Montfort's cause. A Welsh chronicler treats
+Gloucester's march to London as a movement which naturally followed the
+alliance of Gloucester and Llewelyn. On Gloucester's submission,
+Llewelyn was left to his own resources. Edward had it in his power to
+avenge past injuries by turning all his forces against his old enemy.
+But the country was weary of war, and Edward preferred to end the
+struggle. The legate Ottobon urged both Edward and the Welsh prince to
+make peace, and in September, 1267, Henry and his son went down to
+Shrewsbury, accompanied by Ottobon, who received from the king full
+powers to treat with Llewelyn, and a promise that Henry would accept any
+terms that he thought fit to conclude. Llewelyn thereupon sent
+ambassadors to Shrewsbury, and the negotiations went on so smoothly that
+on September 25 a definite treaty of peace was signed. On Michaelmas day
+Henry met Llewelyn at Montgomery, received his homage, and witnessed the
+formal ratification of the treaty.
+
+By the treaty of Shrewsbury Llewelyn was recognised as Prince of Wales,
+and as overlord of all the Welsh magnates, save the representative of
+the old line of the princes of South Wales. The four cantreds, Edward's
+old patrimony, were ceded to him; and though he promised to surrender
+many of his conquests, he was allowed to remain in possession of great
+tracts of land in Mid and South Wales, in the heart of the marcher
+region.[1] Substantially the Welsh prince was recognised as holding the
+position which he claimed from Montfort in the days of the treaty of
+Pipton. Alone of Montfort's friends, Llewelyn came out of an
+unsuccessful struggle upon terms such as are seldom obtained even by
+victory in the field. The triumph of the Welsh prince is the more
+remarkable because Edward and his ally, Mortimer, were the chief
+sufferers by the treaty. But Edward had learnt wisdom during his
+apprenticeship. He recognised that the exhaustion of the country
+demanded peace at any price, and he dreaded the possibility of the
+alliance of Llewelyn and Earl Gilbert. But whatever Edward's motives
+may have been in concluding the treaty, it left Llewelyn in so strong a
+position that he was encouraged to those fresh aggressions which in the
+next reign proved the ruin of his power. The Welsh wars of Edward I.
+are the best elucidation of the importance of the treaty of Shrewsbury.
+The Welsh principality, which Edward as king was to destroy, was as
+much the creation of the Barons' War as the outcome of the fierce
+Celtic enthusiasm which found its bravest champion in the son of
+Griffith.
+
+ [1] For the growth of Llewelyn's power see the maps of Wales in
+ 1247 and 1267 in Owens College _Historical Essays_, pp. 76 and
+ 135.
+
+It was time to redeem the promises by which the moderate party had been
+won over to the royalist cause. The statute of Marlborough of 1267
+re-enacted in a more formal fashion the chief of the Provisions of
+Westminster of 1259, and thus prevented the undoing of all the progress
+attained during the years of struggle. Ottobon in 1268 held a famous
+council at London, in which important canons were enacted with a view
+to the reformation of the Church. A little later the Londoners received
+back their forfeited charters and the disinherited were restored to
+their estates. After these last measures of reparation, England sank
+into a profound repose that lasted for the rest of the reign of Henry
+III. A happy beginning of the years of peace was the dedication of the
+new abbey of Westminster, and the translation of the body of St. Edward
+to the new shrine, whose completion had long been the dearest object of
+the old king's life.
+
+At this time Louis IX. was meditating his second crusade, and in every
+country in Europe the friars were preaching the duty of fighting the
+infidel. Nowhere save in France did the Holy War win more powerful
+recruits than in England. In 1268 Edward himself took the cross, [1] and
+with him his brother Edmund of Lancaster, his cousin Henry of Almaine,
+and many leading lords of both factions. Financial difficulties delayed
+the departure of the crusaders, and it was not until 1270 that Edward
+and Henry were able to start. On reaching Provence, they learnt that
+Louis had turned his arms against Tunis, whither they followed him with
+all speed. On Edward's arrival off Tunis, he found that Louis was dead
+and that Philip III., the new French king, had concluded a truce with
+the misbelievers. Profoundly mortified by this treason to Christendom,
+Edward set forth with his little squadron to Acre, the chief town of
+Palestine that still remained in Christian hands. Henry of Almaine
+preferred to return home at once, but on his way through Italy was
+murdered at Viterbo by the sons of Earl Simon of Montfort, a deed of
+blood which revived the bitterest memories of the Barons' War. Edward
+remained in Palestine until August, 1272, and threw all his wonted fire
+and courage into the hopeless task of upholding the fast-decaying Latin
+kingdom. At last alarming news of his father's health brought him back
+to Europe.
+
+ [1] For Edward's crusade see Riant's article in _Archives de
+ l'Orient Latin_, i., 617-32 (1881).
+
+On November 16, 1272, Henry III., then in his sixty-sixth year, died at
+Westminster. His remains were laid at rest in the neighbouring abbey
+church, hard by the shrine of St. Edward. With him died the last of his
+generation. St. Louis' death in August, 1270, has already been recorded.
+The death of Clement IV. in 1268 was followed by a three years' vacancy
+in the papacy. This was scarcely over when Richard, King of the Romans,
+prostrated by the tragedy of Viterbo, preceded his brother to the tomb.
+Still earlier, Boniface of Canterbury had ended his tenure of the chair
+of St. Augustine. The new reign begins with fresh actors and fresh
+motives of action.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE EARLY FOREIGN POLICY AND LEGISLATION OF EDWARD I.
+
+
+The Dominican chronicler, Nicholas Trivet, thus describes the
+personality of Edward I.: "He was of elegant build and lofty stature,
+exceeding the height of the ordinary man by a head and shoulders. His
+abundant hair was yellow in childhood, black in manhood, and snowy white
+in age. His brow was broad, and his features regular, save that his left
+eyelid drooped somewhat, like that of his father, and hid part of the
+pupil. He spoke with a stammer, which did not, however, detract from the
+persuasiveness of his eloquence. His sinewy, muscular arms were those of
+the consummate swordsman, and his long legs gave him a firm hold in the
+saddle when riding the most spirited of steeds. His chief delight was in
+war and tournaments, but he derived great pleasure from hawking and
+hunting, and had a special joy in chasing down stags on a fleet horse
+and slaying them with a sword instead of a hunting spear. His
+disposition was magnanimous, but he was intolerant of injuries, and
+reckless of dangers when seeking revenge, though easily won over by a
+humble submission."[1] The defects of his youth are well brought out by
+the radical friar who wrote the _Song of Lewes_. Even to the partisan of
+Earl Simon, Edward was "a valiant lion, quick to attack the strongest,
+and fearing the onslaught of none. But if a lion in pride and
+fierceness, he was a panther in inconstancy and mutability, changing his
+word and promise, cloaking himself by pleasant speech. When he is in a
+strait he promises whatever you wish, but as soon as he has escaped he
+forgets his promise. The treachery or falsehood, whereby he is advanced,
+he calls prudence; the way whereby he arrives whither he will, crooked
+though it be, he regards as straight; whatever he likes he says is
+lawful, and he thinks he is released from the law, as though he were
+greater than a king."[2]
+
+ [1] _Annals_, pp. 181-82.
+
+ [2] _Song_ of _Lewes_, pp. 14-15, ed. Kingsford.
+
+Hot and impulsive in disposition, easily persuaded that his own cause
+was right, and with a full share in the pride of caste, Edward
+committed many deeds of violence in his youth, and never got over his
+deeply rooted habit of keeping the letter of his promise while
+violating its spirit. Yet he learnt to curb his impetuous temper, and
+few medieval kings had a higher idea of justice or a more strict regard
+to his plighted word. "Keep troth" was inscribed upon his tomb, and his
+reign signally falsified the prediction of evil which the Lewes
+song-writer ventured to utter. A true sympathy bound him closely to his
+nobles and people. His unstained family life, his piety and religious
+zeal, his devotion to friends and kinsfolk, his keen interest in the
+best movements of his time, showed him a true son of Henry III. But his
+strength of will and seriousness of purpose stand in strong contrast to
+his father's weakness and levity. A hard-working, clear-headed,
+practical, and sober temperament made him the most capable king of all
+his line. He may have been wanting in originality or deep insight, yet
+it is impossible to dispute the verdict that has declared him to be the
+greatest of all the Plantagenets.
+
+The broad lines of Edward's policy during the thirty-five years of his
+kingship had already been laid down for him during his rude schooling.
+The ineffectiveness of his father's government inspired him with a love
+of strong rule, and this enabled him to grapple with the chronic
+maladministration which made even a well-ordered medieval kingdom a
+hot-bed of disorder. The age of Earl Simon had been fertile in new
+ideals and principles of government. Edward held to the best of the
+traditions of his youth, and his task was not one of creation so much
+as of selection. His age was an age of definition. The series of great
+laws, which he made during the earlier half of his reign, represented a
+long effort to appropriate what was best in the age that had gone
+before, and to combine it in orderly sequence. The same ideals mark the
+constitutional policy of his later years. The materials for the future
+constitution of England were already at his hand. It was a task well
+within Edward's capacity to strengthen the authority of the crown by
+associating the loyal nobles and clergy in the work of ruling the
+state, and to build up a body politic in which every class of the
+nation should have its part. Yet he never willingly surrendered the
+most insignificant of his prerogatives, and if he took the people into
+partnership with him, he did so with the firm belief that he would be a
+more powerful king if his subjects loved and trusted him. Though
+closely associated with his nobles by many ties of kinship and
+affection, he was the uncompromising foe of feudal separatism, and
+hotly resented even the constitutional control which the barons
+regarded as their right. In the same way the unlimited franchises of
+the lords of the Welsh march, the almost regal authority which the
+treaty of Shrewsbury gave to the Prince of Wales, the rejection of his
+claims as feudal overlord of Scotland, were abhorrent to his autocratic
+disposition. True son of the Church though he was, he was the bitter
+foe of ecclesiastical claims which, constantly encroaching beyond their
+own sphere, denied kings the fulness of their authority.
+
+Edward's policy was thoroughly comprehensive. He is not only the
+"English Justinian" and the creator of our later constitution; he has
+rightly been praised for his clear conception of the ideal of a united
+Britain which brought him into collision with Welsh and Scots. His
+foreign policy lay as near to his heart as the conquest of Wales or
+Scotland, or the subjection of priests and nobles. He was eager to make
+Gascony obey him, anxious to keep in check the French king, and to
+establish a sort of European balance of power, of which England, as in
+Wolsey's later dreams, was to be the tongue of the balance. Yet,
+despite his severe schooling in self-control, he undertook more than he
+could accomplish, and his failure was the more signal because he found
+the utmost difficulty in discovering trustworthy subordinates.
+Moreover, the limited resources of a medieval state, and the even more
+limited control which a medieval ruler had over these resources, were
+fatal obstacles in the way of too ambitious a policy. Edward had
+inherited his father's load of debt, and could only accomplish great
+things by further pledging his credit to foreign financiers, against
+whom his subjects raised unending complaints. Yet, if his methods of
+attaining his objects were sometimes mean and often violent, there was
+a rare nobility about his general purpose.
+
+Every precaution was taken to secure Edward's succession and the
+establishment of the provisional administration which was to rule until
+his return. Before leaving England in 1270, Edward had appointed as his
+agents Walter Giffard, Archbishop of York, Roger Mortimer, and Robert
+Burnell, his favourite clerk. The vacancy of the see of Canterbury
+after Boniface's death placed Giffard in a position of peculiar
+eminence. Appointed first lord of the council, he virtually became
+regent; and he associated with himself in the administration of the
+realm his two colleagues in the management of the new king's private
+affairs. Early in 1273 a parliament of magnates and representatives of
+shires and boroughs took oaths of allegiance to the king and continued
+the authority of the three regents. By the double title of Edward's
+personal delegation and the recognition of the estates, Giffard,
+Mortimer, and Burnell ruled the country for the two years which were to
+elapse before the sovereign's return. Their government was just,
+economical, and peaceful. Even Gilbert of Gloucester remained quiet,
+and, save for the refusal of the Prince of Wales to perform his feudal
+obligations, the calm of the last years of the old reign continued. It
+is evidence of constitutional progress that the administration was
+carried on with so little friction in the absence of the monarch. Roger
+Mortimer, the most formidable of the feudal baronage, was himself one
+of the agents of this salutary change. The marcher chieftain put down
+with promptitude an attempted revolt of north-country knights which
+threatened public tranquillity.
+
+Edward first heard of his father's death in Sicily, but the tidings of
+the maintenance of peace rendered it unnecessary for him to hasten his
+return, and he made his way slowly through Italy. In Sicily he was
+entertained by his uncle, Charles of Anjou. Thence he went to Orvieto,
+where the new pope, Gregory X., who, as archdeacon of Liege, had been
+the comrade of his crusade, was then residing. From king and pope alike
+Edward earnestly sought vengeance for the murder of Henry of Almaine.
+Proceeding northwards, he was received with great pomp by the cities of
+Lombardy, and made personal acquaintance with Savoy and its count,
+Philip, his aged great-uncle. Crossing the Mont Cenis, he was welcomed
+by bands of English magnates who had gone forth to meet him. He was
+soon at the head of a little army, and in the true spirit of a hero of
+romance halted to receive the challenge of the boastful Count of
+Chalon. The tournament between the best knights of England and Burgundy
+was fought out with such desperation that it became a serious battle.
+At last Edward unhorsed the count in a personal encounter, which added
+greatly to his fame. This "Little Battle of Chalon" was the last
+victory of his irresponsible youth.
+
+The serious business of kingcraft began when Edward met his cousin,
+Philip III., at Paris. The news from England was still so good that
+Edward resolved to remain in France with the twofold object of settling
+his relations with the French monarchy and of receiving the homage and
+regulating the affairs of Aquitaine. Despite the treaty of Paris of
+1259, there were so many subjects of dispute between the English and
+French kings that, beneath the warm protestations of affection between
+the kinsmen, there was, as a French chronicler said, but a cat-and-dog
+love between them.[1] The treaty had not been properly executed, and the
+English had long complained that the French had not yielded up to
+England their king's rights over the three bishoprics of Limoges,
+Cahors, and Perigueux, which St. Louis had ceded. New complications
+arose after the death of Alfonse of Poitiers in the course of the
+Tunisian crusade. By the treaty of Paris the English king should then
+have entered into possession of Saintonge south of the Charente, the
+Agenais, and lower Quercy. But the ministers of Philip III. laid hands
+upon the whole of Alfonse's inheritance and refused to surrender these
+districts to the English. The welcome which Edward received from his
+cousin at Paris could not blind him to the incompatibility of their
+interests, nor to the impossibility of obtaining at the moment the
+cession of the promised lands. He did not choose to tarry at Paris while
+the diplomatists unravelled the tangled web of statecraft. Nor would he
+tender an unconditional homage to the prince who withheld from him his
+inheritance. Already a stickler for legal rights, even when used to his
+own detriment, Edward was unable to deny his subjection to the overlord
+of Aquitaine. He therefore performed homage, but he phrased his
+submission in terms which left him free to urge his claims at a more
+convenient season. "Lord king," he said to Philip, "I do you homage for
+all the lands which I ought to hold of you." The vagueness of this
+language suggested that, if Edward could not get Saintonge, he might
+revive his claim to Normandy. The king appointed a commission to
+continue the negotiations with the French court, and then betook himself
+to Aquitaine.[2]
+
+ [1] "Hic amor dici potest amor cati et canis," _Chron. Limov._,
+ in _Recueil des Hist. de la France_, xxi., 784.
+
+ [2] C.V. Langlois' _Le Regne de Philippe le Hardi_ (1887), and
+ Gavrilovitch's _Le Traite de Paris_, give the best modern
+ accounts of Edward's early dealings with the French crown.
+
+It was nearly ten years since the presence of the monarch had
+restrained the turbulence of the Gascon duchy. Edward had before him
+the task of watching over its internal administration, and checking the
+subtle policy whereby the agents of the French crown were gradually
+undermining his authority. Two wars, the war of Bearn and the war of
+Limoges, desolated Gascony from the Pyrenees to the Vienne. It was
+Edward's first task to bring these troubles to an end. Age and
+experience had not diminished the ardour which had so long made Gaston
+of Bearn the focus of every trouble in the Pyrenean lands. He defied a
+sentence of the ducal court of Saint Sever, and was already at war with
+the seneschal, Luke of Tany, when Edward's appearance brought matters
+to a crisis. During the autumn and winter of 1273-74, Edward hunted out
+Gaston from his mountain strongholds, and at last the Bearnais,
+despairing of open resistance, appealed to the French king. Philip
+accepted the appeal, and ordered Edward to desist from molesting Gaston
+during its hearing. The English king, anxious not to quarrel openly
+with the French court, granted a truce. The suit of Gaston long
+occupied the parliament of Paris, but the good-will of the French
+lawyers could not palliate the wanton violence of the Viscount of
+Bearn. The French, like the English, were sticklers for formal right,
+and were unwilling to push matters to extremities. Edward had the
+reward of his forbearance, for Philip advised Gaston to go to England
+and make his submission. Gratified by his restoration to Bearn in 1279,
+Gaston remained faithful for the next few years. Edward was less
+successful in dealing with Limoges. There had been for many years a
+struggle between the commune of the castle, or _bourg_, of Limoges and
+Margaret the viscountess. It was to no purpose that the townsfolk had
+invoked the treaty of Paris, whereby, as they maintained, the French
+king transferred to the King of England his ancient jurisdiction over
+them. They were answered by a decree of the parliament of Paris that
+the homage of the commune of Limoges belonged not to the crown but to
+the viscountess, and that therefore the treaty involved no change in
+their allegiance. Edward threw himself with ardour on to the side of
+the burgesses. Guy of Lusignan, still the agent of his brother abroad,
+though prudently excluded from England, was sent to Limoges, where he
+incited the commune to resist the viscountess. In May, 1274, Edward
+himself took up his quarters in Limoges, and for a month ruled there as
+sovereign. But the French court reiterated the decree which made the
+commune the vassal of the viscountess. To persevere in upholding the
+rebels meant an open breach with the French court in circumstances more
+unfavourable than in the case of Gaston of Bearn. Once more Edward
+refused to allow his ambition to prevail over his sense of legal
+obligation. With rare self-restraint he renounced the fealty of
+Limoges, and abandoned his would-be subjects to the wrath of the
+viscountess. This was an act of loyalty to feudal duty worthy of St.
+Louis. If Edward, on later occasions, pressed his own legal claims
+against his vassals, he set in his own case a pattern of strict
+obedience to his overlord.
+
+While Edward was still abroad, his friend Gregory X. held from May to
+July, 1274, the second general council at Lyons, wherein there was much
+talk of a new crusade, and an effort was made, which came very near
+temporary success, towards healing the schism of the Eastern and
+Western Churches. At Gregory's request Edward put off his coronation,
+lest the celebration might call away English prelates from Lyons. When
+the council was over, he at last turned towards his kingdom. At Paris
+he was met by the mayor of London, Henry le Waleis, and other leading
+citizens, who set before him the grievous results of the long disputes
+with Flanders, which had broken off the commercial relations between
+the two countries, and had inflicted serious losses on English trade.
+Edward strove to bring the Flemings to their senses by prohibiting the
+export of wool from England to the weaving towns of Flanders. The looms
+of Ghent and Bruges were stopped by reason of the withholding of the
+raw material, and the distress of his subjects made Count Guy of
+Flanders anxious to end so costly a quarrel. On July 28 Edward met Guy
+at Montreuil and signed a treaty which re-established the old
+friendship between lands which stood in constant economic need of each
+other. There was no longer any occasion for further delay, and on
+August 2 Edward and his queen crossed over to Dover. Received with open
+arms by his subjects, he was crowned at Westminster on August 19 by the
+new Archbishop of Canterbury, Robert Kilwardby, philosopher,
+theologian, and Dominican friar, whom Gregory X. had placed over the
+church of Canterbury, despite the vigorous efforts which Edward made to
+secure the primacy for Robert Burnell. He had been absent from England
+for four years.
+
+Edward's sojourn in France was fruitful of results which he was unable
+to reap for the moment. Conscious of the inveterate hostility of the
+French king, he strove to establish relations with foreign powers to
+counterbalance the preponderance of his rival. When the death of
+Richard of Cornwall reopened the question of the imperial succession,
+Charles of Anjou had been anxious to obtain the prize for his nephew,
+Philip III., on the specious pretext that the headship of Christendom
+would enable the King of France to "collect chivalry from all the
+world" and institute the crusade which both Gregory X. and Edward so
+ardently desired. But the most zealous enthusiast for the holy war
+could hardly be deceived by the false zeal with which the Angevin
+cloaked his overweening ambition. It was a veritable triumph for
+Edward, when Gregory X., though attracted for a moment by the prospect
+of a strong emperor capable of landing a crusade, accepted the choice
+of the German magnates who, in terror of France, elected as King of the
+Romans the strenuous but not overmighty Swabian count, Rudolf of
+Hapsburg. As Alfonso of Castile's pretensions were purely nominal, this
+election ended the Great Interregnum by restoring the empire on a
+narrower but more practical basis. Though Gregory strove to reconcile
+the French to Rudolf's accession, common suspicion of France bound
+Edward and the new King of the Romans in a common friendship.
+
+Family disputes soon destroyed the unity of policy of the Capetian
+house. Philip III., well meaning but weak, was drifting into complete
+dependence on Charles of Anjou, whom Edward distrusted, alike as the
+protector of the murderers of Henry of Almaine and as the supplanter of
+his mother in the Provencal heritage. Margaret of Provence, the widow
+of St. Louis, had a common grievance with Edward and his mother against
+Charles of Anjou. She hated him the more inasmuch as he was depriving
+her of all influence over her son, King Philip. It was easy in such
+circumstances for the two widowed queens of France and England to form
+grandiose schemes for ousting Charles from Provence. Rudolf lent
+himself to their plans by investing Margaret with the county. Edward's
+filial piety and political interests made him a willing partner in
+these designs. In 1278 he betrothed his daughter Joan of Acre to
+Hartmann, the son of the King of the Romans. The plan of Edward and
+Rudolf was to revive in some fashion the kingdom of Arles[1] in favour
+of the young couple. Though Rudolf was unfaithful to this policy, and
+abandoned the proposed English marriage in favour of a match between
+his daughter and the son of the King of Sicily, the two queens
+persisted in their plans, and new combinations against Charles and
+Philip for some years threatened the peace of Europe.
+
+ [1] Fournier's _Le Royaume d'Arles et de Vienne_ (1891) gives
+ the best modern account of Edward's relations to the Middle
+ Kingdom.
+
+It is unlikely that Edward hoped for serious results from schemes so
+incoherent and backed with such slender resources. Besides his alliance
+with the emperor, he strove to injure the French king by establishing
+close relations with his brother-in-law, Alfonso of Castile, who since
+1276 was at war with the French. Earlier than this, he made himself the
+champion of Blanche of Artois, the widow of Henry III. of Navarre and
+Champagne. He wished that Joan, their only child, should bring her
+father's lands to one of his own sons, and, though disappointed in this
+ambition, he managed to marry his younger brother, Edmund of Lancaster,
+to Blanche. Though the French took possession of Navarre, whereby they
+alike threatened Gascony and Castile, they suffered Blanche to rule in
+Champagne in her daughter's name, and Edmund was associated with her in
+the government of that county. The tenure of a great French fief by the
+brother of the English king was a fresh security against the
+aggressions of the kings of France and Sicily. It probably facilitated
+the conclusion of the long negotiations as to the interpretation of the
+treaty of Paris, and the partition of the inheritance of Alfonse of
+Poitiers. Edward's position against France was further strengthened in
+1279 by the death of his wife's mother, Joan of Castile, the widow of
+Ferdinand the Saint and the stepmother of Alfonso the Wise, whereupon
+he took possession of Ponthieu in Eleanor's name. Scarcely had he
+established himself at Abbeville, the capital of the Picard county,
+than the negotiations at Paris were so far ripened that Philip III.
+went to Amiens, where Edward joined him. On May 23 both kings agreed to
+accept the treaty of Amiens by which the more important of the
+outstanding difficulties between the two nations were amicably
+regulated. By it Philip recognised Eleanor as Countess of Ponthieu, and
+handed over a portion of the inheritance of Alfonse of Poitiers to
+Edward. Agen and the Agenais were ceded at once, and a commission was
+appointed to investigate Edward's claims over lower Quercy. In return
+for this Edward yielded up his illusory rights over the three
+bishoprics of Limoges, Perigueux, and Cahors. It was a real triumph for
+English diplomacy.
+
+No lasting peace could arise from acts which emphasised the essential
+incompatibility of French and English interests by enlarging the
+territory of the English kings in France. The undercurrent of hostility
+still continued; and the proposal of Pope Nicholas III. that Edward
+should act as mediator between Philip III. and Alfonso of Castile led
+to difficulties that deeply incensed Edward, and embroiled him once
+more both with France and Spain. Under Angevin influence, both Philip
+and Alfonso rejected Edward's mediation in favour of that of the Prince
+of Salerno, Charles of Anjou's eldest son. Disgust at this
+unfriendliness made Edward again support the plans of Margaret of
+Provence against the Angevins. In 1281 Margaret's intrigues formed a
+combination of feudal magnates called the League of Macon, with the
+object of prosecuting her claims over Provence by force of arms. Edward
+and his mother, Eleanor, his Savoyard kinsfolk, and Edmund of Lancaster
+all entered into the league. But it was hopeless for a disorderly crowd
+of lesser chieftains, with the nominal support of a distant prince like
+Edward, to conquer Provence in the teeth of the hostility of the
+strongest and the ablest princes of the age. The League of Macon came
+to nothing, like so many other ambitious combinations of a time in
+which men's capacity to form plans transcended their capacity to
+execute them. Margaret herself soon despaired of the way of arms and
+was bought off by a money compensation. The league mainly served to
+keep alive the troubles that still separated England and France. In
+1284 Philip gained a new success in winning the hand of Joan of
+Champagne, Count Edmund's step-daughter, for his son, the future Philip
+the Fair. When Joan attained her majority, Edmund lost the custody of
+Champagne, which went to the King of France as the natural protector of
+his son and his son's bride. With his brother's withdrawal from Provins
+to Lancaster, Edward lost one of his means of influencing the course of
+French politics.
+
+A compensation for these failures was found in 1282 when the Sicilian
+vespers rang the knell of the Angevin power in Sicily. When the
+revolted islanders chose Peter, King of Aragon, as their sovereign,
+Charles, seeking to divert him from Sicily by attacking him at home,
+inspired his partisan, Pope Martin IV., to preach a crusade against
+Aragon. It was in vain that Edward strove to mediate between the two
+kings.
+
+The only response made to his efforts was a fantastic proposal that
+they should fight out their differences in a tournament at Bordeaux
+with him as umpire, but Edward refused to have anything to do with the
+pseudo-chivalrous venture. At last, in 1285, Philip III. lent himself
+to his uncle's purpose so far as to lead a papalist crusade over the
+Pyrenees. The movement was a failure. Philip lost his army and his life
+in Aragon, and his son and successor, Philip IV., at once withdrew from
+the undertaking. In the year of the crusade of Aragon, Charles of
+Anjou, Peter of Aragon, and Martin IV. died. With them the struggles,
+which had begun with the attack on Frederick II, reached their
+culminating point. Their successors continued the quarrel with
+diminished forces and less frantic zeal, and so gave Edward his best
+chance to pose as the arbiter of Europe. Though Edward's continental
+policy lay so near his heart that it can hardly be passed over, it was
+fuller of vain schemes than of great results. Yet it was not altogether
+fruitless, since twelve years of resolute and moderate action raised
+England, which under Henry III. was of no account in European affairs,
+to a position only second to that of France, and that under conditions
+more nearly approaching the modern conception of a political balance
+and a European state system than feudalism, imperialism, and papalism
+had hitherto rendered possible.
+
+In domestic policy, seven years of monotonous administration had in a
+way prepared for vigorous reforms. Edward's return to England in 1274
+was quickly followed by the dismissal of Walter of Merton, the
+chancellor of the years of quiescence. He was succeeded by Robert
+Burnell, who, though foiled in his quest of Canterbury, obtained an
+adequate standing by his preferment to the bishopric of Bath and Wells.
+For the eighteen years of life which still remained to him, Bishop
+Burnell held the chancery and possessed the chief place in Edward's
+counsels. The whole of this period was marked by a constant legislative
+activity which ceased so soon after Burnell's death that it is tempting
+to assign at least as large a part of the law-making of the reign to
+the minister as to the sovereign. A consummate lawyer and diplomatist,
+Burnell served Edward faithfully. Nor was his fidelity impaired either
+by the laxity which debarred him from higher ecclesiastical preferment
+or by his ambitious endeavours to raise the house of Shropshire squires
+from which he sprang into a great territorial family. Edward gave him
+his absolute confidence and was blind even to his defects.
+
+The first general parliament of the reign to which the king summoned
+the commons was held at Westminster in the spring of 1275. Its work was
+the statute of Westminster the First, a comprehensive measure of many
+articles which covered almost the whole field of legislation, and is
+especially noteworthy for the care which its compilers took to uphold
+sound administration and put down abuses. Not less important was the
+provision of an adequate revenue for the debt-burdened king. The same
+parliament made Edward a permanent grant of a custom on wool,
+wool-fells, and leather, which remained henceforth a chief source of
+the regular income of the crown. The later imposition of further duties
+soon caused men to describe the customs of 1275 as the "Great and
+Ancient Custom". It was significant of the economic condition of
+England that the great custom was a tax on exports, not imports, and
+that, with the exception of leather, it was a tax on raw materials.
+Granted the more willingly since the main incidence of it was upon the
+foreign merchants, who bought up English wool for the looms of Flanders
+and Brabant, the custom proved a source of revenue which could easily
+be manipulated, increased, and assigned in advance to the Italian
+financiers, willing to lend money to a necessitous king. A new step in
+our financial history was attained when this tax on trade steps into
+the place so long held by the taxes on land, from which the Normans and
+Angevins had derived their enormous revenue.
+
+The statute of Westminster the First had a long series of fellows. Next
+year came the statute of Rageman, which supplemented an earlier inquest
+into abuses by instituting a special inquiry in cases of trespass. In
+1277 the first Welsh war interrupted the current of legislation. The
+break was compensated for in 1278 by the passing of the important
+statute of Gloucester, the consummation of a policy which Edward had
+adopted as soon as he set foot on English soil. The troubles of Edward's
+youth had made clear to him the obstacles thrown in the path of orderly
+government by the great territorial franchises. He had been forced to
+modify his policy to gratify the lord of Glamorgan, and win over the
+house of Mortimer by the erection of a new franchise that was a
+palatinate in all but name. But such great "regalities" were, after all,
+exceptional. Much more irritating to an orderly mind were the
+innumerable petty immunities which made half the hundreds in England the
+appendages of baronial estates, and such common privileges as "return of
+writs," which prevented the sheriff's officers from executing his
+mandates on numerous manors where the lords claimed that the execution
+of writs must be entrusted to their bailiffs.[1] These widespread powers
+in private hands were the more annoying to the king since they were
+commonly exercised with no better warrant than long custom, and without
+direct grant from him.
+
+ [1] See on "return of writs" and a host of similar immunities,
+ Pollock and Maitland's _History of English Law_, i., 558-82.
+
+Bracton had already laid down the doctrine that no prescription can
+avail against the rights of the crown, and it was a commonplace with the
+lawyers of the age that nothing less than a clear grant by royal charter
+could justify such delegation of the sovereign's powers into private
+hands. Within a few months of his landing, Edward sent out commissioners
+to inquire into the baronial immunities. The returns of these inquests,
+which were carried out hundred by hundred, are embodied in the precious
+documents called the Hundred Rolls. The study of these reports inspired
+the procedure of the statute of Gloucester, by which royal officers were
+empowered to traverse the land demanding by what warrant the lords of
+franchises exercised their powers. The demand of the crown for
+documentary proof of royal delegation would have destroyed more than
+half the existing liberties. But aristocratic opinion deserted Edward
+when he strove to carry out so violent a revolution. The irritation of
+the whole baronage is well expressed in the story of how Earl Warenne,
+unsheathing a rusty sword, declared to the commissioners: "Here is my
+warrant. My ancestors won their lands with the sword. With my sword I
+will defend them against all usurpers." Nor was this mere boasting. The
+return of the king's officers tells us that Warenne would not say of
+whom, or by what services, he held his Yorkshire stronghold of
+Conisborough, and that his bailiffs refused them entrance into his
+liberties and would not suffer his tenants to answer or appear before
+them.[1] Edward found it prudent not to press his claims. He disturbed
+few men in their franchises, and was content to have collected the mass
+of evidence embodied in the _placita de quo warranto_, and thus to have
+stopped the possibility of any further growth of the franchises. A few
+years later he accepted the compromise that continuous possession since
+the coronation of Richard I. was a sufficient answer to a writ of _quo
+warranto_. In this lies the whole essence of Edward's policy in relation
+to feudalism, a policy very similar to that of St. Louis. Every man is
+to have his own, and the king is not to inquire too curiously what a
+man's own was. But no extension of any private right was to be
+tolerated. Thus feudalism as a principle of political jurisdiction
+gradually withered away, because it was no longer suffered to take fresh
+root. The later land legislation of Edward's reign pushed the idea still
+further.
+
+ [1] _Kirkby's Quest for Yorkshire_, pp. 3, 227, 231, Surtees
+ Soc.
+
+In 1278 it had been the turn of the barons to suffer. Next came the
+turn of the Church. Though Edward was a true son of the Church, he saw
+as clearly as William the Conqueror and Henry II. the essential
+incompatibility between the royal supremacy and the pretensions of the
+extreme ecclesiastics. The limits of Church and State, the growth of
+clerical wealth and immunities, and the relations of the world-power of
+the pope to the local authority of the king, were problems which no
+strong king could afford to neglect, and perhaps were incapable of
+solution on medieval lines. Edward saw that the most practical way of
+dealing with clerical claims was for him to stand in good personal
+relations to the chief dispensers of ecclesiastical jurisdiction. With
+a pope like Gregory X. it was easy for Edward to be on friendly terms;
+but it was more difficult to feel any cordiality for the dogmatic
+canonists or the furious Guelfic partisans who too often occupied the
+chair of St. Peter. Yet Edward was shrewd enough to see that it was
+worth while making sacrifices to keep on his side the power which,
+alike under Innocent III. and Clement IV., had given valuable
+assistance to his grandfather and father in their struggle against
+domestic enemies. Moreover the enormous growth of the system of papal
+provisions had given the papacy the preponderating authority in the
+selection of the bishops of the English Church. It was only by yielding
+to the popes, whenever it was possible, that Edward could secure the
+nomination of his own candidates to the chief ecclesiastical posts in
+his own realm.
+
+In the earlier years of his reign Edward was luckier in his relations
+to the popes than to his own archbishops. But he found that his power
+at Rome broke down just where he wanted to exercise it most. He was
+disgusted to find how little influence he had in the selection of the
+Archbishops of Canterbury. Gregory X. sent to Canterbury the Dominican
+Robert Kilwardby, the first mendicant to hold high place in the English
+Church. Kilwardby was translated in 1278 to the cardinal bishopric of
+Porto, a post of greater dignity but less emolument and power than the
+English archbishopric. A cardinal bishop was bound to reside at Rome,
+and the real motive for this doubtful promotion was the desire to
+remove Kilwardby from England and to send a more active man in his
+place. Edward's indiscreet devotion to Bishop Burnell led him again to
+press his friend's claims, but, though he persuaded the monks of Christ
+Church to elect him, Nicholas III. quashed the appointment, and
+selected the Franciscan friar, John Peckham, as archbishop. Peckham, a
+famous theologian and physicist, had been a distinguished professor at
+Paris, Oxford, and Rome. He was high-minded, honourable and zealous, a
+saint as well as a scholar, an enthusiast for Church reform and a
+vigorous upholder of the extremest hierarchical pretensions. Fussy,
+energetic, tactless, he was the true type of the academic ecclesiastic,
+and alike in his personal qualities and his wonderful grasp of detail,
+he may be compared to Archbishop Laud. Though received by Edward with a
+rare magnanimity, Friar John allowed no personal considerations of
+gratitude to interpose between him and his duty. Reaching England in
+June, 1279, he presided, within six weeks of his landing, at a
+provincial council at Reading. In this gathering canons were passed
+against pluralities which frightened every benefice hunter among the
+clerks of the royal household. Orders were also issued for the
+periodical denunciation of ecclesiastical penalties against all
+violators of the Great Charter in a fashion that suggested that the
+king was an habitual offender against the fundamental laws of his
+realm.
+
+Edward wrathfully laid the usurpations of the new primate before
+parliament, and forced Peckham to withdraw all the canons dealing with
+secular matters, and particularly those which concerned the Great
+Charter. The king set up the counter-claims of the State against the
+pretensions of the Church, and the estates passed the statute of
+Mortmain of 1279 as the layman's answer to the canons of Reading. Like
+most of Edward's laws the statute of Mortmain was based on earlier
+precedents. The wealth of the Church had long inspired statesmen with
+alarm, and a true follower of St. Francis like Peckham was specially
+convinced of the need of reducing the clergy to apostolic poverty. By
+the new law all grants of land to ecclesiastical corporations were
+expressly prohibited, under the penalty of the land being forfeited to
+its supreme lord. The statute was not a mere political weapon of the
+moment. It had a wider importance as a step in the development of
+Edward's anti-feudal policy, and may be regarded as a counterpart of
+the inquest into franchises, and as a means of protecting the State as
+well as of disciplining the Church. A corporation never died, and never
+paid reliefs or wardships. Its property never escheated for want of
+heirs, and, as scutages were passing out of fashion, ecclesiastics were
+less valuable to the king in times of war than lay lords. The recent
+exigencies of the Welsh war had emphasised the need of strengthening
+the military defences of the crown, and the new statute secured this by
+preventing the further devolution of lands into the dead hand of the
+Church. But all medieval laws were rather enunciations of an ideal than
+measures which practical statesmen aimed at carrying out in detail. The
+statute of Mortmain hardly stayed the creation of fresh monasteries and
+colleges, or the further endowment of old ones. All that was necessary
+for the pious founder was to obtain a royal dispensation from the
+operation of the statute. There was little need to fear that the new
+law would stand in the way of the power of the ecclesiastical estate.
+
+A more distinct challenge to the Church was provoked by a further
+aggression of Peckham in 1281. In that year the primate summoned a
+council at Lambeth, wherein he sought to withdraw from the cognisance of
+the civil courts all suits concerning patronage and the disposition of
+the personal effects of ecclesiastics. To extend the jurisdiction of the
+_forum ecclesiasticum_ was the surest way of exciting the hostility of
+the common lawyers and the king. Once more Edward annulled the
+proceedings of a council, and once more the submission of Peckham saved
+the land from a conflict which might have assumed the proportions of
+Becket's struggle against Henry II. Four years later Edward pressed his
+advantage still further by the royal ordinance of 1285, called
+_Circumspecte agatis_, which, though accepting the supremacy of the
+Church courts within their own sphere, narrowly defined the limits of
+their power in matters involving a temporal element. Again Peckham was
+fain to acquiesce. His policy had not only irritated the king, but
+alienated his fellow bishops. He visited his province with pertinacity
+and minuteness, and he was the less able to stand up against the king as
+he was engaged in violent quarrels with all his own suffragans. The
+leader of the bishops in resisting his claims was Thomas of Cantilupe.
+Restored to England by the liberal policy of Edward, Montfort's
+chancellor after Lewes had been raised to the see of Hereford, where his
+sanctity and devotion won him the universal love of his flock. Involved
+in costly lawsuits with the litigious primate, Thomas was forced to
+leave his diocese to plead his cause before the papal _curia_. He died
+in Italy in 1282, and his relics, carried back by his followers to his
+own cathedral, won the reputation of working miracles. A demand arose
+for his canonisation, and Edward before his death had secured the
+appointment of the papal commission, which, a few years later, added St.
+Thomas of Hereford to the list of saints.[1] Thus the chancellor of
+Montfort obtained the honour of sanctity through the action of the
+victor of Evesham.
+
+ [1] The _processus canonisationis_ of Cantilupe, printed in the
+ Bollandist _Acta Sanctorum_, Oct. 1, 539-705, illustrates many
+ aspects of this period.
+
+The second Welsh war interrupted both the conflict between Edward and
+the archbishop, and the course of domestic legislation. Yet even in the
+midst of his campaigns Edward issued the statute of Acton Burnell of
+1283, which provided a better way of recovering merchants' debts, and
+the statute of Rhuddlan of 1284 for the regulation of the king's
+exchequer. The king's full activity as a lawgiver was renewed after the
+settlement of his conquest by the statute of Wales of 1284, and the
+legislation of his early years culminated in the two great acts of
+1285, the statute of Westminster the Second, and the statute of
+Winchester. That year, which also witnessed the passing of the
+_Circumspecte agatis_, stands out as the most fruitful in lawmaking in
+the whole of Edward's reign.
+
+The second statute of Westminster, passed in the spring parliament,
+partook of the comprehensive character of the first statute of that
+name. There were clauses by which, as the Canon of Oseney puts it,
+"Edward revived the ancient laws which had slumbered through the
+disturbance of the realm: some corrupted by abuse he restored to their
+proper form: some less evident and apparent he declared: some new ones,
+useful and honourable, he added". Among the more conspicuous
+innovations of the second statute of Westminster was the famous clause
+De _donis conditionalibus_, which forms a landmark in the law of real
+property. It facilitated the creation of entailed estates by providing
+that the rights of an heir of an estate, granted upon conditions, were
+not to be barred on account of the alienation of such an estate by its
+previous tenant. Thus arose those estates for life, which in later ages
+became a special feature of the English land system, and which, by
+restricting the control of the actual possessor of a property over his
+land, did much to perpetuate the worst features of medieval
+land-holding. It is a modern error to regard the legitimation of
+estates in tail as a triumph of reactionary feudalism over the will of
+Edward. Apart from the fact that there is not a tittle of contemporary
+evidence to justify such a view, it is manifest that the interest of
+the king was in this case exactly the same as that of each individual
+lord of a manor. The greater prospect of reversion to the donor, and
+the other features of the system of entails, which commended them to
+the petty baron, were still more attractive to the king, the greatest
+proprietor as well as the ultimate landlord of all the realm. Other
+articles of the Westminster statute were only less important than the
+clause _De donis_, notable among them being the institution of justices
+of _nisi prius_, appointed to travel through the shires three times a
+year to hear civil causes. This was part of the simplification and
+concentration of judicial machinery, whereby Edward made tolerable the
+circuit system which under Henry III. had been a prolific source of
+grievances.
+
+While in the statute of Westminster Edward prepared for the future, the
+companion statute of Winchester, the work of the autumn parliament,
+revived the jurisdiction of the local courts; reformed the ancient
+system of watch and ward, and brought the ancient system of popular
+courts into harmony with the jurisdiction emanating from the crown,
+which had gone so far towards superseding it. This measure marks the
+culmination of Edward's activity as a lawgiver. During the five next
+years there were no more important statutes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE CONQUEST OF NORTH WALES.
+
+
+The treaty of Shrewsbury of 1267 had not brought enduring peace to
+Wales and the march. The pacification was in essentials a simple
+recognition of accomplished facts, but, so far as it involved promises
+of restitution and future good behaviour, its provisions were barely
+carried out, even in the scanty measure in which any medieval treaty
+was executed. Moreover, the treaty by no means covered the whole ground
+of variance between the English and the Welsh. like the treaty of Paris
+of 1259, it was as much the starting-point of new difficulties as the
+solution of old ones. Many troublesome questions of detail had been
+postponed for later settlement, and no serious effort was made to
+grapple with them. Even during the life of the old king, there had been
+war in the south between the Earl of Gloucester and Llewelyn. However,
+the Welsh prince paid, with fair regularity, the instalments of the
+indemnity to which he had been bound, and there was no disposition on
+the part of the English authorities to question the basis of the
+settlement. Even the marchers maintained an unwonted tranquillity. They
+had lost so much during the recent war that they had no great desire to
+take up arms again. Llewelyn himself was the chief obstacle to peace.
+The brilliant success of his arms and diplomacy seems somewhat to have
+turned his brain. Visions of a wider authority constantly floated
+before him. His bards prophesied the expulsion of the Saxon, and he had
+done such great deeds in the first twenty years of his reign, that a
+man of more practical temperament might have been forgiven for
+indulging in dreams of future success. Three obstacles stood in the way
+of the development of his power. These were his vassalage to the
+English crown, the hostility of the marcher barons, and the impatience
+with which the minor Welsh chieftains submitted to his authority. For
+five years he impatiently endured these restraints. He then took
+advantage of the absence of the new king to rid himself of them.
+
+Five days after the accession of Edward I., the lieutenants of the king
+received the last payment of the indemnity which Llewelyn condescended
+to make. Their demand that the Welsh prince should take an oath of
+fealty to his new sovereign was answered by evasive delays. Arrears of
+the indemnity accumulated, and the state of the march became more
+disturbed. The regents showed moderation, though one of them, Roger
+Mortimer, had himself been the greatest sufferer from the treaty of
+Shrewsbury. In the south, Humphrey Bohun, grandson of the old Earl of
+Hereford and earl himself in 1275 by his grandfather's death, was
+engaged in private war with Llewelyn. In direct defiance of the terms
+of 1267, Humphrey strove to maintain himself in the march of Brecon,
+which had been definitely ceded to Llewelyn. It was to the credit of
+the regents that they refused to countenance this glaring violation of
+the treaty. Meanwhile Llewelyn busied himself with erecting a new
+stronghold on the upper Severn, which was a menace alike to the royal
+castle of Montgomery and to his own vassal, Griffith ap Gwenwynwyn, the
+tributary lord of Powys. Yet the regents were content to remonstrate,
+and to urge on all parties the need of strict adherence to the terms of
+the treaty. The Earl of Warwick was appointed in the spring of 1274 as
+head of a commission, empowered to do justice on all transgressions of
+the peace, and Llewelyn was ordered to meet him at Montgomery Ford. But
+Llewelyn was busy at home, where his brother David had joined hands
+with Griffith ap Gwenwynwyn in a plot against him. Llewelyn easily
+crushed the conspiracy; David, after a feeble attempt to maintain
+himself in his own patrimony, took flight to England, and Griffith of
+Powys, driven from his dominions, was also obliged to seek the
+protection of Edward. Henceforth Llewelyn ruled directly over Powys as
+well as Gwynedd. His success encouraged him to persevere in defying his
+overlord.
+
+Rash as he was, Llewelyn recognised that he was not strong enough to
+stand up single-handed against England. Former experience, however,
+suggested that it was an easy matter to make a party with the barons
+against the crown. But times had changed since the Great Charter and
+the Barons' War; and a policy, which could obtain concessions from John
+or Henry III., was powerless against a king who commanded the
+allegiance of all his subjects. Yet there was enough friction between
+the new king and his feudatories to make the attempt seem feasible, and
+Llewelyn revived the Montfort tradition, by claiming the hand of
+Eleanor, Earl Simon's daughter, which had been promised to him since
+1265. The alarm created by this shows that Edward perceived the danger
+that it might involve. But his policy of conciliation had now restored
+to their estates the last of the "disinherited," and, since the murder
+of Henry of Almaine, the name of Montfort was no longer one to conjure
+with. The exiled sons of Earl Simon welcomed Llewelyn's advances, and,
+in 1275, Eleanor was despatched from France to Wales under the escort
+of her clerical brother Amaury. On their way, Eleanor and Amaury were
+captured by English sailors. Edward detained the lady at the queen's
+court, and gave some scandal to the stricter clergy by shutting up
+Amaury in Corfe castle. He had foiled the Welsh prince's game, but he
+had given him a new grievance.
+
+During these transactions negotiations had been proceeding between the
+English court and Llewelyn. In November, 1274, Edward went to
+Shrewsbury in the hope of receiving the prince, but he was delayed by
+illness, and Llewelyn made this an excuse for non-appearance. Next year
+the king journeyed to Chester with the same object, but his mission was
+equally fruitless. Summons after summons was despatched to the
+recalcitrant vassal. Llewelyn heeded them no more than requests to pay
+up the arrears which he owed the English crown. After two years of
+hesitation Edward lost all patience. Irritated to the quick by
+Llewelyn's offer to perform homage in a border town on conditions
+altogether impossible of acceptance, the king summoned a council of
+magnates for November 12, 1276, and laid the whole case before them. It
+was agreed that the king should go against Llewelyn as a rebel and
+disturber of the peace; and the feudal levies were summoned to meet at
+Worcester on June 24, 1277. As a preliminary to the great effort,
+Warwick was sent to Chester, Roger Mortimer to Montgomery, and Payne of
+Chaworth to Carmarthen. All the available marcher forces and every
+trooper of the royal household were despatched to enable them to
+operate during the winter and spring. Their movements were brilliantly
+successful. On the reappearance of its ancient lord, the middle march
+threw off the yoke of Llewelyn and went back to its obedience to
+Mortimer. Griffith ap Gwenwynwyn was restored to upper Powys; the sons
+of Griffith of Bromfield cast off their allegiance to Llewelyn and were
+received back as direct vassals of the king. A Tony was once more
+ruling in Elvael, a Gifford in Llandovery, and a Bohun in Brecon. Rhys
+ap Meredith yielded up Dynevor, and was content to be recognised as
+lord of the humbler stronghold of Drysllwyn. Chaworth's bands conquered
+all Cardiganshire. Thus the wider "principality" of Llewelyn was
+shattered at the first assault, and when the decisive moment came,
+Llewelyn was thrown back upon his hereditary clansmen of Gwynedd. Of
+all the acquisitions of the treaty of Shrewsbury, the four cantreds
+alone still held for their prince.[1]
+
+ [1] On the whole subject of this chapter Mr. J.E. Morris's
+ _Welsh Wars of Edward I._ throws a flood of new light,
+ especially on the military history, the organisation of the
+ Edwardian army, and the political condition of the march.
+
+When the baronial levies mustered at Worcester, the work was already
+half accomplished. Of the thousand lances that there assembled, small
+forces were detached to help Mortimer in mid Wales and to reinforce the
+marcher army in west Wales, which was now commanded by Edmund of
+Lancaster, the king's brother. The mass of the troops followed Edward
+to Chester, whence the main attack was to be made. Edward's plan of
+operations was simplicity itself. He knew that the Welsh desired no
+pitched battle, and he was indisposed to lose his soldiers in
+unnecessary conflict. Swarms of workmen cleared a wide road through the
+dense forests of the four cantreds. The route chosen was as near as
+possible to the coast, where a strong fleet, mainly from the Cinque
+Ports, kept up communications with the land forces. The advance was
+cautious and slow, with long halts at Flint and at Rhuddlan, where
+hastily erected forts secured the king's base and safe-guarded a
+possible retreat. By the end of August the king was at Deganwy, and the
+four cantreds were conquered. During all this time fresh forces were
+hurried up. Some 15,000 infantry, largely drawn from southern and
+central Wales, swelled the king's host.
+
+Llewelyn was closely shut up in the Snowdon country. His position was
+safe enough from a direct assault, and his only fear was want of
+provisions. He trusted, however, that supplies would come in from
+Anglesea, whose rich cornfields were yellowing for the harvest. But the
+fleet of the Cinque Ports cut off communications between Anglesea and
+the mainland, and ferried over a strong detachment of Edward's troops,
+which occupied the island. English harvest-men gathered for Edward the
+crops of Welsh corn, and left Llewelyn to face the beginnings of a
+mountain-winter without the means of feeding his followers. By
+September the real fight was over. Edward withdrew to Rhuddlan and
+dismissed the greater part of his followers. Enough were left to block
+the approaches to Snowdon, and Llewelyn, seeing no gain in further
+delay, made his submission on November 9.
+
+The treaty of Aberconway, which Edward dictated, reduced Llewelyn to
+the position of a petty North Welsh chieftain, which he had held thirty
+years before. He gave up the homage of the greater Welsh magnates, and
+resigned all his former conquests. The four cantreds thus passed away
+from his power, and even Anglesea was only allowed to him for life and
+subject to a yearly tribute. He was compelled to do homage, and ordered
+to pay a crushing indemnity, twice as much as the expenses of the war.
+But Edward was in a generous mood. After Llewelyn's personal submission
+at Rhuddlan, the king remitted the indemnity and the rent for Anglesea.
+It was a boon to Llewelyn that the treacherous David received his
+reward not' in Gwynedd itself but in Duffryn Clwyd and Rhuvoniog, two
+of the four cantreds of the Perveddwlad. Llewelyn's humiliation was
+completed by his enforced attendance at Edward's Christmas court at
+Westminster. Next year, however, he received a further sign of royal
+favour. He was allowed to marry Eleanor Montfort, and Edward himself
+was present at their wedding. But on the morning of the ceremony,
+Llewelyn was forced to make a promise not to entertain the king's
+fugitives and outlaws.
+
+The treaty of Aberconway left Edward free to revive in the rest of Wales
+the policy which, when originally begun in 1254,[1] had, like a rising
+flood, floated Llewelyn into his wider principality. The lords marchers
+resumed their ancient limits. Princes like Griffith of Powys and Rhys of
+Drysllwyn sank into a position which is indistinguishable from that of
+their Anglo-Norman neighbours. David, in the vale of Clwyd had no better
+prospects. The heirs of lower Powys were put under the guardianship of
+Roger Mortimer's younger son, another Roger, who, on the death of his
+wards by drowning, received possession of their lands, and henceforth,
+as Roger Mortimer of Chirk, became a new marcher baron. Meanwhile Edward
+busied himself with schemes for establishing settled government in the
+conquered territories. To a man of his training and temperament, this
+meant the establishment of English law and administration. He could see
+no merits in the archaic Welsh customs which regarded all crimes as
+capable of atonement by a money payment, treated a wrecked ship as the
+lawful perquisite of the local proprietor, and hardly distinguished
+legitimate from illegitimate children in determining the descent of
+property. He convinced himself that the land laws of Wales were already
+those of Anglo-Norman feudalism. He subjected the cantreds of Rhos and
+Englefield to the Cheshire county court, and breathed a new life into
+the decayed shire organisation of Cardiganshire and Carmarthenshire.
+Flint and Rhuddlan dominated the two former, Aberystwyth and Carmarthen
+the latter. Round the king's castles grew up petty boroughs of English
+traders, who would, it was believed, teach the Welsh to love commerce
+and peaceful ways.
+
+ [1] See page 76.
+
+For five years all seemed to go well, though underneath the apparent
+calm a storm was gradually gathering. The Welsh of the ceded districts
+bitterly resented the imposition of a strange yoke and complained that
+the king had broken his promise to respect their laws. "Are the Welsh
+worse than Jews?" was their cry, "and yet the king allows the Jews to
+follow their own laws in England." But Edward coldly answered that,
+though it would be a breach of his coronation oath to maintain customs
+of Howel the Good, which were contrary to the Decalogue, he was willing
+to listen to specific complaints. It was, however, a very difficult
+matter to persuade Edward's bailiffs and agents to carry out his
+commands, and many acts of oppression were wrought for which there was
+no redress. Nobles like David and Rhys found their franchises
+threatened by the encroachments of the neighbouring shire-courts.
+Lesser Welshmen were liable to be robbed and insulted by the workmen
+who were building Edward's castles, or by the soldiers who were
+garrisoning them. At last even the Welsh who had helped Edward to put
+down Llewelyn saw that they had been preparing their own ruin, and
+turned to their former enemy for the redress refused them at
+Westminster. David himself made common cause with his brother, and the
+spirit of resistance spread among the half-hearted Cymry of the south.
+Edward's oppression did more than Llewelyn's triumphs to weld together
+the Welsh clans into a single people. A rising was planned in the
+strictest secrecy; and on the eve of Palm Sunday, March 21, 1282, David
+swooped down on Hawarden, a weak castle in private hands, and captured
+it. Llewelyn promptly crossed the Conway and turned his arms against
+the royal strongholds of Flint and Rhuddlan, which withstood him,
+though he devastated the countryside in every direction. Meanwhile
+David hurried south and found the local lords in Cardigan and the vale
+of Towy already in arms. With their help he captured the castles of the
+upper Towy, but lower down the river Rhys remained staunch to the king,
+whereupon David hurried over the hills to Cardiganshire and took
+Aberystwyth. North and south were in full revolt.
+
+Edward, taken unawares, prepared to reassert his authority. Certain
+faithful barons were "affectionately requested" to serve the king for
+pay, and a fairly large army was gathered together, though the
+scattered character of the rebellion necessitated its acting in small
+bands. Meanwhile the military tenants and the Cinque Ports were
+summoned to join in an attack on Llewelyn on the lines of the campaign
+of 1277. Edward's task was more difficult than on the previous
+occasion. Though Rhuddlan, not Chester as in 1277, had become his
+starting-point against Gwynedd, he dared not advance so long as David
+threatened his left flank from Denbigh, and the rising in the south was
+far more formidable than that of five years before. A considerable part
+of the levies had to be despatched to the help of Earl Gilbert of
+Gloucester, who was charged with the reconquest of the vale of Towy. On
+June 17 as the earl's soldiers were returning, laden with plunder, to
+their headquarters at Dynevor, they were suddenly attacked by the Welsh
+at Llandilo, and were driven back on their base. Gloucester hastily
+retreated to Carmarthen. He was superseded by William of Valence, whose
+activity against the Welsh had been quickened by the loss of his son at
+Llandilo. Llewelyn then came south, and pressed the English so hard
+that for several weeks nothing of moment was accomplished.
+
+The advance against Gwynedd was delayed until the late summer. Edward
+still tarried at Rhuddlan, with a host constantly varying in numbers,
+for his soldiers had long overpassed the period of feudal service.
+Every effort was made to bring fresh troops to the field, and Luke de
+Tany, seneschal of Gascony, came upon the scene with a small levy of
+the chivalry of Aquitaine. To Tany was assigned the task of conquering
+Anglesey, but it was not until September that he was able to occupy the
+island. In the same month a strenuous effort was made to dislodge the
+hostile Welsh in the vale of Clwyd; the Earl of Lincoln at last took
+Denbigh from David; Reginald Grey, justice of Chester, captured Ruthin,
+higher up the valley, and Earl Warenne seized Bromfield and Yale. Each
+noble fought for his own hand, and Edward was forced to reward their
+services by immediately granting to them their conquests, and thus
+created a new marcher interest which, later on, stood in the way of an
+effective settlement. But things were getting desperate, and it was
+well for Edward that the security of his left flank at last enabled him
+to advance to the Conway. Thereupon Llewelyn returned to Snowdon, where
+he was joined by the homeless David. Meanwhile Tany, then master of
+Anglesey, opened up communications with the coast of Arvon by a bridge
+of boats over the Menai Straits. Winter was already at hand when
+Llewelyn and his brother were at last shut up amidst the fastnesses of
+Snowdon.
+
+Late in October Archbishop Peckham appeared on the scene. He had
+excommunicated Llewelyn at the beginning of the war, but was still
+anxious to negotiate a peace. Edward did his best to put him off, but
+Peckham's importunity extorted from him a short truce, during which the
+primate visited Snowdon, taking with him an offer of an ample estate in
+England if the prince would surrender his patrimony. Llewelyn furnished
+Peckham with long catalogues of grievances. He was quite willing to
+gain time by discussing his wrongs.
+
+Edward's army shared his irritation at Peckham's interference, and,
+while the archbishop was still in Snowdon, a breach of the truce
+destroyed any hopes of peace. On November 6 Tany led his troops over
+the bridge of boats at low water and marched inland. But his operations
+were ill-planned, and the Welsh came down from the hills and easily put
+him to flight. Meanwhile the tide had risen and the flood cut off
+access to the bridge over the Menai. In their panic the soldiers rushed
+into the water rather than face the enemy. Many leading men were
+drowned, including Tany himself, the author of the treachery. Flushed
+with this success Llewelyn rejected Peckham's terms. In great disgust
+the archbishop went back to England, bitterly denouncing the Welsh. But
+defeat only strengthened the iron resolution of Edward. He issued fresh
+summonses for men and money. Contrary to all precedent, he determined
+to continue the campaign through the winter.
+
+Llewelyn was probably ignorant of the perilous plight into which the
+king had fallen. With the approach of bad weather he became afraid that
+he would be starved out in Snowdon. Any risk was better than being
+caught like a rat in a trap, and, fearing lest a cordon should be drawn
+round the mountains, he made his way southwards, leaving David in
+command. His enemy, Roger Mortimer, was just dead, and Mortimer's
+eldest son Edmund, a youth brought up for the clerical profession, was
+not likely to hold the middle marches with the same strong grasp as his
+father. Thither accordingly Llewelyn made his way, hoping that on his
+approach the tribesmen of the upper Wye, over whom he had ruled so
+long, would abandon their English lord for their Cymric chieftain. A
+force gathered round him, and he occupied a strong position on a hill
+overlooking the river Yrvon, which flows into the right bank of the
+Wye, just above Builth. The right bank of the Yrvon was held by the
+English of Builth. But the only way over the stream was by Orewyn
+bridge, which was held by a detachment of the Welsh. Their position
+seemed so secure that, on December 11, Llewelyn left his troops to
+confer with some of the local chieftains. The English were, however,
+shown a ford over the river; a band crossed in safety, and, taking the
+defenders of Orewyn bridge in the rear, opened up the passage over it
+to their comrades. The English ascended the hill, their mail-clad
+squadrons interlaced with archers, in order that the Welsh infantry
+might be assailed by missiles before they were exposed to the shock of
+a cavalry charge. In the absence of their leader, the Welsh were a
+helpless mass of sheep, and were easily put to flight. Meanwhile
+Llewelyn, hearing the din of battle, hurried back to direct his
+followers. On the way he was slain by Stephen of Frankton, a Shropshire
+veteran of the Barons' War, who fought under the banner of Roger
+l'Estrange. The discovery of important papers on the body first told
+the conquerors the rank of their victim.
+
+Thus perished the able and strenuous chief, who had struggled so long
+to win for himself in Wales a position similar to that occupied by the
+King of Scots in the north. His death did not end, but it much
+simplified, the struggle. The south and midland districts were entirely
+subdued, and the interest of the war again shifted to the mountains of
+Snowdon, where David strove to maintain himself as Prince of Wales. His
+best chance lay in the exhaustion of his enemy, but Edward stuck grimly
+to his task. His coffers were exhausted, and his army for the most part
+went home. Yet Edward tarried at Rhuddlan for over six months, dividing
+his energy between watching the Welsh and replenishing his treasure and
+troops. His treasurer, John Kirkby, wandered from shire to shire
+soliciting voluntary contributions. Then in January, 1283, an anomalous
+parliament was summoned, consisting mainly of ecclesiastics, knights of
+the shire, and burgesses, and meeting in two divisions, at York and at
+Northampton, according as the members came from the northern or
+southern ecclesiastical provinces. The grant of a thirtieth so little
+satisfied the king that he laid violent hands on the crusading-tenth,
+which was deposited in the Temple. Meanwhile the chivalry of Gascony
+and Ponthieu were tempted by high wages to supply the void left by the
+retirement of the English.
+
+Early in 1283 a gallant force from beyond sea, among which figured the
+Counts of Armagnac and Bigorre, reached Rhuddlan. After their arrival
+the king took the offensive, crossed the Conway and transferred his
+headquarters to the Cistercian abbey of Aberconway. Fearful once more
+of being enclosed in the mountains, David sought a new hiding-place
+among the heights of Cader Idris. He shifted his quarters to the castle
+of Bere, hidden away in a remote valley sloping down from the mountain
+to the sea. The unwearied Edward once more issued summonses for a fresh
+campaign. David was at the extremity of his resources. Before the new
+arrivals enabled Edward to move, William of Valence marched up from the
+south, and in April forced Bere to surrender. David fled before the
+siege began; but he was a fugitive without an army, and the campaign
+was reduced to a weary tracking out of the last little bands that still
+scorned to surrender. In June David was betrayed by men of his own
+tongue, and Edward summoned for Michaelmas at Shrewsbury a parliament
+whose chief business was the trial of David. On October 3 the last
+Cymric Prince of Wales suffered the ignominious doom of a traitor, a
+murderer, and a blasphemer. The magnates then adjourned to the
+chancellor's neighbouring seat of Acton Burnell, where the rejoicings
+incident to the king's visit to his friend's new mansion were combined
+with passing the statute of Merchants.
+
+Edward's love of thoroughness made him linger in Wales to settle the
+government of the newly won lands. His first care was to hold Snowdon
+with the ring of fortresses which, in their ruin, still bear abiding
+witness to the solidity of the conqueror's work. Round each castle
+arose a new town, created as artificially as were the _bastides_ of
+Aquitaine, within whose walls English traders and settlers were tempted
+by high privileges to take up their abodes, and whose strictly military
+character was emphasised by the general provision that the constable of
+the castle was to be _ex officio_ the mayor of the municipality. Chief
+among these was Aberconway, whose strategic importance Edward
+understood so fully that he forced the Cistercian monks to take up new
+quarters at Maenan, higher up the valley, in order that there might be
+room for the castle and town which were henceforth to guard the
+entrance to Snowdon. Equally important was the future capital of
+Gwynedd, Carnarvon, where on April 25, 1284, a son was born to Edward
+and Eleanor, who seventeen years later was to become the first English
+Prince of Wales. Elsewhere fortresses of Welsh origin were rebuilt and
+enlarged to complete the stone circuit round the mountains. Such were
+Criccieth, the key of Lleyn; Dolwyddelen, which dominated the upper
+Conway; and Harlech and Bere, the two strongholds that curbed the
+mountaineers of Merioneth. In the south the same policy was carried
+out. Alike in Gwynedd and in the vale of Towy, both in his castle
+building and in his town foundations, Edward was simply carrying on the
+traditions of earlier ages, and applying to his new lands those
+principles of government which, since the Norman Conquest, had become
+the tradition of the marcher lords. Even in his architectural schemes
+there was nothing novel in Edward's policy. Gilbert of Gloucester at
+Caerphilly, and Payne of Chaworth at Kidwelly, had already worked out
+the pattern of "concentric" defences that were to find their fullest
+expression in the new castles of the principality. In each of these
+strongholds an adequate garrison of highly trained and well-paid troops
+kept the Welsh in check.
+
+The civil government of the Edwardian conquests was provided for by the
+statute of Wales, issued on Mid-Lent Sunday, 1284, at Rhuddlan,
+Edward's usual headquarters. It declared that the land of Wales,
+heretofore subject to the crown in feudal right, was entirely
+transferred to the king's dominion. To the whole of the annexed
+districts the English system of shire government was extended, though
+such local customs as appealed to Edward's sense of justice were
+suffered to be continued. Gwynedd and its appurtenances were divided
+into the three shires of Anglesey, Carnarvon, and Merioneth, and were
+collectively put under the justice of Snowdon, whose seat was to be at
+Carnarvon, where courts of chancery and exchequer for north Wales were
+set up. The shires of Cardigan and Carmarthen were re-organised so as
+to include the southern districts which had been subject to Llewelyn,
+or to the Welsh lords who had fallen with him. These were put under the
+justice of west Wales, whose chancery and exchequer were established at
+Carmarthen. It is significant that Edward prepared the way for making
+these districts into shires by persuading his brother Edmund, to whom
+they had been granted, to abandon his claims over them in return for
+ample compensation elsewhere. Without this step the new shires would
+only have been palatinates of the Glamorgan or Pembroke type, and the
+creation of such franchises was directly contrary to Edward's policy.
+It was different in the vale of Clwyd, where it would have been natural
+for Edward to have extended the shire system to the four cantreds.
+Military exigences had, however, already erected most of these lands
+into new marcher lordships, and Edward was perforce content with the
+union of some fragments of Rhos to the shire of Carnarvon, and with
+joining together Englefield and some adjoining districts in the new
+county of Flint. This arrangement secured the strongholds of Flint and
+Rhuddlan for the king. But the district was too small to make it worth
+while to set up a separate organisation for it, and Flintshire was put
+under the justice and courts of Chester, so that it became a dependency
+of the neighbouring palatinate.[1]
+
+ [1] For the shires of Walessee my paper on _The Welsh Shires_
+ in _Y Cymmrodor_, ix. (1888), 201-26.
+
+The lordships of the march were not directly influenced by this
+legislation. They continued to hold their position as franchises until
+the reign of Henry VIII., and under Edward III. were declared by
+statute to be no part of the principality but directly subject to the
+English crown. Yet the removal of the pressure of a native principality
+profoundly affected these districts. The policy of definition made its
+mark even here. The liberties of each marcher were defined and
+circumscribed, and, while scrupulously respected, were incapable of
+further extension. The vague jurisdictions of the sheriffs of the
+border shires were cleared up, and if this process involved some
+limitation of the royal authority in districts like Clun and Oswestry,
+which virtually ceased to be parts of Shropshire, there was a
+compensating advantage in the increased clearness with which the border
+line was drawn and the royal authority consolidated. Gradually the
+marcher lordships passed by lapse into the royal hands, and even from
+the beginning there were regions, such as Montgomery and Builth, which
+knew no lord but the king. All this was, however, an indirect result of
+the Edwardian conquest. Strictly speaking it was no conquest of all
+Wales but merely of the principality, the ancient dominions of
+Llewelyn, to which most of the crown lands in Wales were joined.
+
+Ecclesiastical settlement followed the political reorganisation.
+Peckham was as zealous as Edward in compelling the conquered to follow
+the law-abiding traditions of the king's ancient inheritance. He
+laboured strenuously for the rebuilding of churches, the preservation
+and extension of ecclesiastical property, the education of the clergy,
+and the extirpation of clerical matrimony and simony. Despite his
+unsympathetic attitude, he did good work for the Welsh Church by his
+manful resistance to all attempts of Edward and his subordinates to
+encroach upon her liberties. He quaintly thought it would promote the
+civilisation of Wales if the people were forced to "learn civility" by
+living in towns and sending their children to school in England. His
+assiduous visitation of the Welsh dioceses in 1284 did something to
+kindle zeal, and win the Welsh clergy from the idleness wherein, he
+believed, lay the root of all their shortcomings.
+
+In the autumn of 1284 Edward went on an extended progress in Wales. He
+passed through the four cantreds into Gwynedd, and thence worked his
+way southwards through Cardigan and Carmarthen, ending his tour by
+visits to the marcher lords of the south. He crossed over from
+Glamorgan, where he had been entertained by Gilbert of Clare, to
+Bristol, where he held his Christmas court. Wales was to see no more of
+its new ruler for seven years. During that time the principality gave
+Edward little trouble, though the marchers, as will be seen, were a
+constant anxiety to him. In 1287, while Edward was in Gascony, the
+regent, Edmund of Cornwall, was called upon to deal with a revolt of
+Rhys, son of Meredith, the loyalist lord of the vale of Towy, who
+resented the authority of the justice of Carmarthen over his patrimony.
+His grievances were those of a marcher rather than those of a Welshman.
+Yet his rising in 1287 was formidable enough to require the raising of
+a great army for its suppression. The Welsh chieftain could not long
+hold out against the odds brought against him, and the confiscation of
+his lands swelled the district directly depending on the sheriff of
+Carmarthen. The support of the countryside enabled Rhys to evade his
+pursuers for nearly three years. At last he was captured, and with the
+execution of the last of the lords of Dynevor, the triumph of Edward
+became complete.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE SICILIAN AND THE SCOTTISH ARBITRATIONS.
+
+
+Edward I. had now attained the height of his fame. He had conquered
+Llewelyn; he had reformed the administration; he had put himself as a
+lawmaker in the same rank as St. Louis or Frederick II.; and he had
+restored England to a leading position in the councils of Europe.
+Moreover, he had won a character for justice and fairness which did him
+even greater service, since the several deaths of prominent sovereigns
+during 1285 left him almost alone of his generation among princes of a
+lesser stature. Of the chief rulers of Europe in the early years of
+Edward's reign, Rudolf of Hapsburg alone survived; and the King of the
+Romans had little weight outside Germany many. Edward had outlived his
+brother-in-law Alfonso of Castile, his cousin Philip the Bold, his
+uncle Charles of Anjou, and Peter of Aragon. But the conflicts, in
+which these kings had been engaged, were continued by their successors.
+Above all, the contest for Sicily still raged. The successors of Martin
+IV., though deprived of the active support of France, would not abandon
+the claims of the captive Charles of Salerno; and James of Aragon,
+Peter's second son, maintained himself in Sicily, despite papal
+censures and despite the virtual desertion of his cause by his elder
+brother, Alfonso III., the new king of Aragon. Each side was at a
+standstill, though each side struggled on. The personal hatreds, which
+made it impossible to reconcile the older generation, were dying out,
+and the chief obstacle in the way of a settlement was the stubbornness
+of the papacy. If any one could reconcile the quarrel, it was the King
+of England; and to him Charles' sons and the nobles of his dominions
+appealed to procure his release.
+
+Edward was anxious to proffer his services as a peacemaker, dream of a
+Europe, united for the liberation of the holy places, had not been
+expelled from his mind by his schemes for the advancement of his
+kingdom. If he could inspire his neighbour kings with something of his
+spirit, the crusade might still be possible. Other matters also called
+Edward's attention to the continent. He had to do homage to the new
+French king; he had to press for the execution of the treaty of Amiens,
+and his presence was again necessary in Gascony. His realm was in such
+profound peace that he could safely leave it. Accordingly in May, 1286,
+he took ship for France. With him went his wife Eleanor of Castile, his
+chancellor Bishop Burnell, and a large number of his nobles. He
+entrusted the regency to his cousin, Edmund, Earl of Cornwall, the son
+and successor of Earl Richard; and England saw him no more until
+August, 1289. Edward first made his way to Amiens, where he met the new
+King of France, Philip the Fair. The two kings went together to Paris,
+where Edward spent two months. There he performed homage for Gascony,
+and made a new agreement as to the execution of the treaty of Amiens,
+by which he renounced his claims over Quercy for a money payment, and
+was put in possession of Saintonge, south of the Charente. The
+settlement was the easier as for the moment neither king had his
+supreme interest in Gascony. Edward's real business was to make peace
+between Anjou and Aragon, and Philip IV. showed every desire to help
+him. Before Edward left Paris, he had negotiated a truce between the
+Kings of France and Aragon. Soon afterwards he went to Bordeaux. He
+made Gascony his headquarters for three years, and strove with all his
+might to convert the truce into a peace.
+
+Grave obstacles arose, chief among which was the determination of the
+papacy to make no terms with the King of Aragon so long as his brother
+still reigned over Sicily. Honorius IV., in approving Edward's
+preliminary action, and exhorting him to obtain the liberation of the
+Prince of Salerno, carefully guarded himself against recognising the
+schismatic Aragonese. Edward himself was no partisan of either side. He
+was heartily anxious for peace and desirous to free his kinsman from
+the rigours of his long imprisonment. His wish for a close alliance
+between England and Aragon was unacceptable to the partisanship both of
+Honorius IV. and his successor Nicholas IV. Papal coldness, however,
+did not turn Edward from his course. In the summer of 1287 he met
+Alfonso at Oloron in Bearn, where a treaty was drawn up by which the
+Aragonese king agreed to release Charles of Salerno on condition that
+he would either, within three years, procure from the pope the
+recognition of James in Sicily, or return to captivity and forfeit
+Provence. Besides this, an alliance between England and Aragon was to
+be cemented by the marriage of one of Edward's daughters to Alfonso.
+Delighted with the success of his undertaking, Edward, on his return to
+Bordeaux, again took the cross and prepared to embark on the crusade.
+
+Nicholas IV. interposed between Edward and his vows by denouncing the
+treaty of Oloron.[1] Though well-meaning, he was not strong enough to
+shake himself free from partisan traditions, and though honestly anxious
+to bring about a crusade, he could not see that he made the holy war
+impossible by interposing obstacles in the way of the one prince who
+seriously intended to take the cross. While denouncing Edward's treaty,
+Nicholas encouraged his crusading zeal by granting him a new
+ecclesiastical tenth for six years, a tax made memorable by the fact
+that it occasioned the stringent valuation of benefices, called the
+taxation of Pope Nicholas, which was the standard clerical rate-book
+until the reign of Henry VIII. Despite the pope, Edward still persevered
+in his mediation, and in October, 1288, a new treaty for Charles'
+liberation was signed at Canfranc, in Aragon, which only varied in
+details from the agreement of 1287. Charles was released, but he
+straightway made his way to Rome, where Nicholas absolved him from his
+oath and crowned him King of Sicily. Edward was bitterly disappointed.
+He tarried in the south until July, 1289, usefully employed in promoting
+the prosperity of his duchy, crushing conspiracies, furthering the
+commerce of Bordeaux, and founding new _bastides_. At last tidings of
+disorder at home called him back to his kingdom before the purpose of
+his continental sojourn had been accomplished. But he still pressed on
+his thankless task, and in 1291 peace was made at Tarascon, between
+Aragon and the Roman see, on the hard condition of Alfonso abandoning
+his brother's cause. On Alfonso's death soon afterwards the war was
+renewed, for James then united the Sicilian and Aragonese thrones and
+would not yield up either. It was not until 1295 that Boniface VIII., a
+stronger pope than Nicholas, ended the struggle on terms which left the
+stubborn Aragonese masters of Sicily.
+
+ [1] For his policy, see O. Schiff, _Studien zur Geschichte P.
+ Nikolaus IV._ (1897).
+
+Things had not gone well in England during Edward's absence. Edmund of
+Cornwall had shown vigour in putting down the revolt of Rhys, but he
+was not strong enough to control either the greater barons or the
+officers of the crown. Grave troubles were already brewing in Scotland.
+A fierce quarrel between the Earls of Gloucester and Hereford broke out
+with regard to the boundaries of Glamorgan and Brecon, and the private
+war between the two marchers proved more formidable to the peace of the
+realm than the revolt of the Welsh prince. Even more disastrous to the
+country was the scandalous conduct of the judges and royal officials,
+who profited by the king's absence to pile up fortunes at the expense
+of his subjects. The highest judges of the land forged charters,
+condoned homicides, sold judgments, and practised extortion and
+violence. A great cry arose for the king's return. In the Candlemas
+parliament of 1289 Earl Gilbert of Gloucester met a request for a
+general aid by urging that nothing should be granted until Englishmen
+once more saw the king's face. Alarmed at this threat, Edward returned,
+and landed at Dover on August 12, 1289.
+
+The whole situation was changed by the king's arrival. Edward met the
+innumerable complaints against his subordinates by dismissing nearly all
+the judges from office, and appointing a special commission to
+investigate the charges brought against royal officials of every rank.
+Thomas Weyland, chief justice of the common pleas, anticipated inquiry
+by taking sanctuary with the Franciscan friars of Bury St. Edmunds. A
+knight and a married man, he had taken subdeacon's orders in early life
+and sought to little purpose to be protected by his clergy. His refuge
+was watched by the local sheriffs; finally, he was starved into
+surrender, and suffered to abjure the realm.[1] He fled to France,
+whence he never returned. For some years the commission investigated the
+offences of the ministers of the crown. Though much that was irregular
+was proved against them, many charges broke down under inquiry, and, as
+time went on, the official class saw that their interest lay in
+condoning rather than in punishing scandals. Some of the worst
+offenders, such as the greedy and corrupt Adam of Stratton, were never
+restored to office;[2] but Hengham, the chief justice of the King's
+Bench, was soon reinstated. There were not enough good lawyers in
+England to make it prudent for Edward to dispense with the services of
+such a man. A rigorous maintenance of a high standard of official
+morality meant getting rid of nearly all the king's ministers, and any
+successors would have been inferior in experience and not superior in
+honesty. Edward had to work with such material as he had, and on the
+whole he made the best of it. Scandalous as were the proceedings of his
+agents, their iniquities are but trifles as compared with the offences
+of the counsellors of Philip the Fair.
+
+ [1] For the _abjuratio regni_ see A. Reville in the _Revue
+ Historique_, 1. (1892), 1-42.
+
+ [2] For Adam of Stratton see Hall, _Red Book of the Exchequer_,
+ iii., cccxv.-cccxxxi. Extracts from the Assize rolls recording
+ the proceedings of the special commission will soon be
+ published by the Royal Historical Society.
+
+Fear of Edward drove nobles into obedience as well as ministers into
+honesty. Gloucester desisted unwillingly from his attacks on Brecon,
+and was constrained to divorce his wife and marry the king's daughter,
+Joan of Acre. In becoming the king's son-in-law, he was forced to
+surrender his estates to the crown, receiving them back entailed on the
+heirs of the marriage or, in their default, on the heirs of Joan. Thus
+the system of entails made possible by the statute _De donis_ was used
+by Edward to strengthen his hold over the most powerful of his
+feudatories and increase the prospect of his estates escheating to the
+crown. Considered in this light, Gilbert's marriage with the king's
+daughter seems less a reward of loyalty than a punishment for
+lawlessness. In the same year as this marriage, Edward passed another
+law directed against the baronage. This was the statute of Westminster
+the Third, called from its opening words, _Quia emptores_. It enacted
+that, when part of an estate was alienated by its lord, the grantee
+should not be permitted to become the subtenant of the grantor, but
+should stand to the ultimate lord of the fief in the same feudal
+relation as the grantor himself. This prohibition of further
+subinfeudation stopped the creation of new manors and prevented the
+rivetting of new links in the feudal chain, which were the necessary
+condition of its strength. Though passed at the request of the barons,
+it was a measure much more helpful to the king than to his vassals. It
+stood to the barons as the statute of Mortmain stood to the Church.
+
+Edward was bent on showing that he was master, and his new son-in-law
+and the Earl of Hereford became the victims of his policy. He forced the
+reluctant Gloucester to admit that the pretensions of the lord of
+Glamorgan to be the overlord of the bishop of LLandaff and the guardian
+of the temporalities of the see during a vacancy were usurpations.
+Seeing that his marcher prerogatives were thus rapidly becoming
+undermined, Gloucester put the most cherished marcher right to the test
+by renewing the private war with the Earl of Hereford which had
+disturbed the realm during Edward's absence. The king issued peremptory
+orders for the immediate cessation of hostilities. These mandates
+Hereford obeyed, but Gloucester did not. Resolved that law not force was
+henceforth to settle disputes in the march, Edward summoned a novel
+court at Ystradvellte, in Brecon, wherein a jury from the neighbouring
+shires and liberties was to decide the case between the two earls in the
+presence of the chief marchers. Gloucester refused to appear, and the
+marchers declined to take part in the trial, pleading that it was
+against their liberties. The case was adjourned to give the
+recalcitrants every chance, and after a preliminary report by the
+judges, Edward resolved to hear the suit in person. In October, 1291, he
+presided at Abergavenny over the court before which the earls were
+arraigned. They were condemned to imprisonment and forfeiture. Content
+with humbling their pride and annihilating their privileges, Edward
+suffered them to redeem themselves from captivity by the payment of
+heavy fines, and before long gave them back their lands. The king's
+victory was so complete that neither of the earls could forgive it. In
+1295, Gloucester died, without opportunity of revenge; but Hereford
+lived on, brooding over his wrongs, and in later years signally avenged
+the trial at Abergavenny. Meanwhile the conqueror of the principality
+had shown unmistakably that the liberties of the march were an
+anachronism, since the marchers had no longer the work of defending
+English interests against the Welsh nation.[1]
+
+ [1] Mr. J.E. Morris in chap. vi. of his _Welsh Wars of Edward
+ I._ has admirably summarised this suit. See also G.T. Clark's
+ _Land of Morgan_.
+
+Another measure that followed Edward's home-coming was the expulsion of
+the Jews. Despite constant odium and intermittent persecution, the
+Jewish financiers who had settled in England after the Norman conquest
+steadily improved their position down to the reign of Henry III. The
+personal dependants of the crown, they were well able to afford to share
+their gains from usury with their protectors. They lived in luxury,
+built stone houses, set up an organisation of their own, and even
+purchased lands. Henry III.'s financial embarrassments forced him to
+rely upon them, and the alliance of the Jews and the crown stimulated
+the religious bigotry of the popular party to ill-treat the Jews during
+the Barons' War. Stories of Jews murdering Christian children were
+eagerly believed; and the cult of St. Hugh of Lincoln and St. William of
+Norwich,[1] two pretended victims of Hebrew cruelty, testified to the
+hatred which Englishmen bore to the race.
+
+ [1] See for this saint, Thomas of Monmouth, _Life and Miracles
+ of St. William of Norwich_, ed. Jessopp and James (1896).
+
+Under Edward I. the condition of the Jews became more precarious. The
+king hated them alike on religious and economical grounds. He rigorously
+insisted that they should wear a distinctive dress, and at last
+altogether prohibited usury. Driven from their chief means of earning
+their living, the Jews had recourse to clipping and sweating the coin.
+Indiscriminate severities did little to abate these evils. Meanwhile
+active missionary efforts were made to win over the Jews to the
+Christian faith. They were compelled to listen to long sermons from
+mendicant friars, and their obstinacy in adhering to their own creed was
+denounced as a deliberate offence against the light. Peckham shut up
+their synagogues, and Eleanor of Provence, who had entered a convent,
+joined with the archbishop in urging her son to take severe measures
+against them. There was a similar movement in France, and Edward, during
+his long stay abroad, had expelled the Jews from Aquitaine. In 1290 he
+applied the same policy to England, and their exile was so popular an
+act that parliament made him a special grant as a thankoffering. But
+though Edward thus drove the Jews to seek new homes beyond sea, he
+allowed them to carry their property with them, and punished the
+mariners who took advantage of the helplessness of their passengers to
+rob and murder them. Though individual Jews were found from time to time
+in England during the later middle ages, their official re-establishment
+was only allowed in the seventeenth century.[1]
+
+ [1] For the Jews see J. Jacobs, _Jews in Angevin England_;
+ Tovey, _Anglia Judaica_; J.M. Rigg, _Select Pleas of the Jewish
+ Exchequer_; and for their exile B.L. Abrahams, _Expulsion of
+ the Jews from England in 1290_.
+
+Two generations at least before their expulsion, the Jews had been
+outrivalled in their financial operations by societies of Italian
+bankers, whose admirable organisation and developed system of credit
+enabled them to undertake banking operations of a magnitude quite beyond
+the means of the Hebrews. First brought into England as papal agents for
+remitting to Rome the spoils of the Church, they found means of evading
+the canonical prohibitions of usury, and became the loanmongers of
+prince and subject alike. To the crown the Italians were more useful
+than the Jews had been. The value of the Jews to the monarch had been in
+the special facilities enjoyed by him in taxing them. The utility of the
+Italian societies was in their power of advancing sums of money that
+enabled the king to embark on enterprises hitherto beyond the limited
+resources of the medieval state. The Italians financed all Edward's
+enterprises from the crusade of 1270 to his Welsh and Scottish
+campaigns. From them Edward and his son borrowed at various times sums
+amounting to almost half a million of the money of the time. In return
+the Italians, chief among whom was the Florentine Society of the
+Frescobaldi, obtained privileges which made them as deeply hated as ever
+the Hebrews had been.[1]
+
+ [1] See on this subject E.A. Bond's article in _Archaeologia_,
+ vol. xxviii., pp. 207-326; W.E. Rhodes, _Italian Bankers in
+ England under Edward I. and II._ in _Owens Coll. Historical
+ Essays_, pp. 137-68; and R.J. Whitwell, _Italian Bankers and
+ the English Crown_ in _Transactions of Royal Hist. Soc._, N.S.,
+ xvii. (1903), pp. 175-234.
+
+Among the troubles which had called Edward back from Gascony was the
+condition of Scotland, where a long period of prosperity had ended with
+the death of Edward's brother-in-law, Alexander III., in 1286. Alexander
+III. attended his brother-in-law's coronation in 1274, and the
+irritation excited by his limiting his homage to his English lordships
+of Tynedale and Penrith did not cause any great amount of friction. But
+the homage question was only postponed, and at Michaelmas, 1278,
+Alexander was constrained to perform unconditionally this unwelcome act.
+"I, Alexander King of Scotland," were his words, "become the liege man
+of the lord Edward, King of England, against all men." But by carefully
+refraining from specifying for what he became Edward's vassal, Alexander
+still suggested that it was for his English lordships. Edward with equal
+caution declared that he received the homage, "saving his right and
+claim to the homage of Scotland when he may wish to speak concerning
+it". Both parties were content with mutual protestations. Edward was so
+friendly to Alexander that he allowed him to appoint Robert Bruce, Earl
+of Carrick, his proxy in professing fealty, so as to minimise the king's
+feeling of humiliation. The King of Scots went home loaded with
+presents, and for the rest of his life his relations with Edward
+remained cordial.
+
+The closing years of Alexander's reign were overshadowed by domestic
+misfortunes and the prospects of difficulties about the succession. His
+wife, Margaret of England, had died in 1275, and was followed to the
+tomb by their two sons, Alexander and David. A delicate girl, Margaret,
+then alone represented the direct line of the descendants of William the
+Lion. Margaret was married, when still young, to Eric, King of Norway,
+and died in 1283 in giving birth to her only child, a daughter named
+Margaret. No children were born of Alexander's second marriage; and in
+March, 1286, the king broke his neck, when riding by night along the
+cliffs of the coast of Fife. Before his death, however, he persuaded the
+magnates of Scotland to recognise his granddaughter as his successor.
+The Maid of Norway, as Margaret was called, was proclaimed queen, and
+the administration was put into the hands of six guardians, who from
+1286 to 1289 carried on the government with fair success. As time went
+on, the baronage got out of hand and a feud between the rival
+south-western houses of Balliol and Bruce foreshadowed worse troubles.
+
+William Eraser, Bishop of St. Andrews, the chief of the regents, visited
+Edward in Gascony and urged the necessity of action. The best solution
+of all problems was that the young Queen of Scots should be married to
+Edward of Carnarvon, a boy a few months her junior. But both the Scots
+nobles and the King of Norway were jealous and suspicious, and any
+attempt to hurry forward such a proposal would have been fatal to its
+accomplishment. However, negotiations were entered into between England,
+Scotland, and Norway. In 1289 the guardians of Scotland agreed to
+nominate representatives to treat on the matter. Edward took up his
+quarters at Clarendon, while his agents, conspicuous among whom was
+Anthony Bek, Bishop of Durham, negotiated with the envoys of Norway and
+Scotland. On November 6 the three powers concluded the treaty of
+Salisbury, by which they agreed that Margaret should be sent to England
+or Scotland before All Saints' Day, 1290, "free and quit of all contract
+of marriage or espousals". Edward promised that if Margaret came into
+his custody he would, as soon as Scotland was tranquil, hand her over to
+the Scots as "free and quit" as when she came to him; and the "good folk
+of Scotland" engaged that, if they received their queen thus free, they
+would not marry her "save with the ordinance, will, and counsel of
+Edward and with the agreement of the King of Norway". In March, 1290, a
+parliament of Scots magnates met at Brigham, near Kelso, and ratified
+the treaty. Fresh negotiations were begun for the marriage of Edward of
+Carnarvon and the Queen of Scots, resulting in the treaty of Brigham of
+July 18, which Edward confirmed a month later at Northampton. By this
+Edward agreed that, in the event of the marriage taking place, the laws
+and customs of Scotland should be perpetually maintained. Should
+Margaret die without issue, Scotland was to go to its natural heir, and
+in any case was to remain "separate and divided from the realm of
+England".
+
+The treaty of Brigham was as wise a scheme as could have been devised
+for bringing about the unity of Britain. In the care taken to meet the
+natural scruples of the smaller nation we are reminded of the treaty of
+Union of 1707. But a nearer parallel is to be found in the conditions
+under which the union between France and Brittany was gradually
+accomplished after the marriage of Anne of Brittany. In both cases
+alike, in France and in England, the stronger party was content with
+securing the personal union of the two crowns, and strove to reconcile
+the weaker party by providing safeguards against violent or over-rapid
+amalgamation. It was left for the future to decide whether the habit of
+co-operation, continued for generations, might not ultimately involve a
+more organic union. Unluckily for this island, the policy which
+ultimately made the stubborn Celts of Brittany content with union with
+France, never had a chance of being carried out here. Edward made every
+preparation for bringing over the Maid of Norway to her kingdom and her
+husband, and neither the Scots nor the Norwegians grudged his leading
+share in accomplishing their common wishes. But the child's health gave
+way before the hardships of the journey. Before All Saints' day had come
+round, she died in one of the Orkneys, where the ship which conveyed her
+had put in.
+
+The death of the queen threatened Scotland with revolution. The regents'
+commission became of doubtful legality, and a swarm of claimants for the
+vacant throne arose, whose resources, if not their rights, were
+sufficiently evenly balanced to make civil strife inevitable. Since
+southern Scotland had become a wholly feudal, largely Norman, and partly
+English state, there had been no grave difficulties with regard to the
+succession. Now that they arose, there was doubt as to the principles on
+which claims to the throne should be settled. There was no legitimate
+representative left of the stock of William the Lion. The male line of
+his brother David, Earl of Huntingdon, had died out with John the Scot,
+the last independent Earl of Chester. The nearest claimants to the
+succession were therefore to be found in the descendants of David's
+three daughters. But there was no certainty that any rights could be
+transmitted through the female line. Moreover there was a doubt whether,
+allowing that a woman could transmit the right to rule, the succession
+should proceed according to primogeniture or in accordance with the
+nearness of the claimant to the source of his claim. If the former view
+were held then John of Balliol, lord of Barnard castle in Durham and of
+Galloway in Scotland, had the best right as the grandson of Earl David's
+eldest daughter. Yet less than a century before, the passing over of
+Arthur of Brittany in favour of his uncle John, had recalled to men's
+mind the ancient doctrine that a younger son is nearer to the parent
+stock than a grandson sprung from his elder brother; and if the view,
+then expressed in the _History of William the Marshal_,[1] was still to
+hold good, Robert Bruce, lord of Skelton in Yorkshire, and of Annandale
+in the northern kingdom, was the nearest in blood to David of Huntingdon
+as the son of his second daughter. Beyond this there was the further
+question of the divisibility of the kingdom. So fully was southern
+Scotland feudalised that it seemed arguable that the monarchy, or at
+least its demesne lands, might be divided among all the representatives
+of the coheiresses, after the fashion in which the Huntingdon estates
+had been allotted to all the representatives of Earl David. In that case
+John of Hastings, lord of Abergavenny, put in a claim as the grandson of
+Earl David's youngest daughter.
+
+ [1] _Hist. de Guillaume le Marechal_, ii., _64_, II. 11899-902.
+
+ Oil, sire, quer c'est raison
+ Quer plus pres est sanz achaison
+ Le filz de la terre son pere
+ Que le nies: dreiz est qu'il i pere.
+
+When so much was uncertain, every noble who boasted any connexion with
+the royal house safeguarded his interests, or advertised his pedigree,
+by enrolling himself among the claimants. Five or six of the competitors
+had no better ground of right than descent from bastards of the royal
+house, especially from the numerous illegitimate offspring of William
+the Lion. The others went back to more remote ancestors. A foreign
+prince, Florence, Count of Holland, demanded the succession as a
+descendant of a sister of Earl David, declaring that David had forfeited
+his rights by rebellion. John Comyn, lord of Badenoch, brought forward
+his descent from Donaldbane, brother of Malcolm Canmore. One claim reads
+like a fairy tale, with stories of an unknown king dying, leaving a son
+to be murdered by a wicked uncle, and a daughter to escape to obscurity
+in Ireland, where she married and transmitted her rights to her
+children. There was no authority in Scotland strong enough to decide
+these claims. Once more Robert Bruce raised the standard of disorder,
+and the appeal of Bishop Fraser to Edward to undertake the settlement of
+the question showed that the English king's mediation was the readiest
+way of restoring order.
+
+In 1291 Edward summoned the magnates of both realms, along with certain
+popular representatives, to meet at Norham, Bishop Bek's border castle
+on the Tweed. Trained civilians and canonists also attended, while
+abbeys and churches contributed extracts from chronicles, carefully
+compiled by royal order, with a view of illustrating the king's claims.
+On May 10 Edward met the assembly in Norham parish church. Roger
+Brabazon, the chief justice, declared in the French tongue that Edward
+was prepared to do justice to the claimants as "superior and direct lord
+of Scotland". Before, however, he could act, his master required that
+his overlordship should be recognised by the Scots. It is likely that
+this demand was not unexpected. Even in the treaty of Brigham Edward had
+been careful not to withdraw his claim of superiority, and his action
+with relation to Alexander III.'s homage was well known. But the
+sensitiveness which their late king had shown in the face of Edward's
+earlier claims was shared by the Scots lords, and shrinking from
+recognising facts which they ought to have faced before they solicited
+his intervention, they begged for delay and drew up remonstrances.
+Edward granted them, a respite for three weeks, though he swore by St.
+Edward that he would rather die than diminish the rights due to the
+Confessor's crown. He had already summoned the northern levies, and was
+prepared to enforce his claim by force. His uncompromising attitude put
+the Scots in an awkward position. But they had gone to Norham to get his
+help, and they were not prepared to run the risk of an English invasion
+as well as civil war. Most of the claimants had as many interests in
+England as in Scotland, and a breach with Edward would involve the
+forfeiture of their southern lands as well as the loss of a possible
+kingdom in the north. When the magnates reassembled, the competitors set
+the example of acknowledging Edward as overlord. Fresh demands followed
+their submission, and were at once conceded. Edward was to have seisin
+of Scotland and its royal castles, though he pledged himself to return
+both land and fortresses to him who should be chosen king.
+
+Edward then undertook the examination of the suit. He delegated the
+hearing of the claims to a commission, of whom the great majority,
+eighty, were Scotsmen, nominated in equal numbers by Bruce and Balliol,
+the two senior competitors, while the remaining twenty-four consisted of
+Englishmen, and included many of Edward's wisest counsellors. In
+deference to Scottish feeling, Edward ordered the court to meet on
+Scottish territory, at Berwick, and appointed August 2 for the opening
+day. Meanwhile the full consequences of the Scottish submission were
+carried out. On Edward's taking seisin of Scotland, the regency came to
+an end. The nomination of the provisional government resting with
+Edward, he reappointed the former regents, and allowed the Scots barons
+to elect their chancellor. But with the regents Edward associated a
+northern baron, Brian Fitzalan of Bedale, and the Scottish bishop, who
+was appointed chancellor, had to act jointly with one of Edward's
+clerks. Edward then made a short progress, reaching as far as Stirling
+and St. Andrews. He was back at Berwick for the meeting of the
+commissioners on August 2.
+
+The first session of the court was a brief one. The twelve competitors
+put in their claims, and Bruce and Balliol supported theirs by argument.
+However, on August 12, the trial was adjourned for nearly a year, until
+June 2, 1292. On its resumption in Edward's presence, the more difficult
+issues were carefully worked out. A new and fantastic claim, sent in by
+Eric of Norway, as the nearest of kin to his daughter, did not delay
+matters. The judges were instructed to settle in the first instance the
+relative claims of Bruce and Balliol, and also to decide by what law
+these should be determined. On October 14, they declared their first
+judgment. They rejected Bruce's plea that the decision should follow the
+"natural law by which kings rule," and accepted Balliol's contention
+that they should follow the laws of England and Scotland. They further
+laid down that the law of succession to the throne was that of other
+earldoms and dignities. They pronounced in favour of primogeniture as
+against proximity of blood.
+
+These decisions practically settled the case, but a further adjournment
+was resolved upon, and upon the reassembling of the court on November 6
+the only question still open, that of whether the kingdom could be
+divided, was taken up. John of Hastings came on the scene with the
+contention that the monarchy should be divided among the representatives
+of Earl David's daughters. Bruce had the effrontery to associate himself
+with Hastings' demand. A short adjournment was arranged to settle this
+issue, and on November 17 the final scene took place in the hall of
+Berwick castle. Besides the commissioners, the king was there in full
+parliament, and eleven claimants, who still persevered, were present or
+represented by proxy. Nine of these were severally told that they would
+obtain nothing by their petitions. Bruce was informed that his claim to
+the whole was incompatible with his present claim for a third. It was
+laid down that the kingdom of Scotland was indivisible, and that the
+right of Balliol had been established.
+
+The seal of the regency was broken: Edward handed over the seisin of
+Scotland to John Balliol, who three days later took the oath of fealty
+as King of Scots, promising that he would perform all the service due to
+Edward from his kingdom, Balliol hurried to his kingdom, and was crowned
+at Scone on St. Andrew's day. He then returned to England, and kept
+Christmas with his overlord at Newcastle, where, on December 26, he did
+homage to Edward in the castle hall. But within a few days a difficulty
+arose. John resented Edward's retaining the jurisdiction over a law-suit
+in which a Berwick merchant, a Scotsman, was a party. He was reassured
+by Edward that he only did so, because the case had arisen during the
+vacancy, when Edward was admittedly ruling Scotland. But Edward
+significantly added a reservation of his right of hearing appeals, even
+in England; and when the King of Scots went back to his realm, early in
+January, he must have already foreseen that there was trouble to come.
+
+Edward never lost sight of his own interests, and it is clear that he
+took full advantage of the needs of the Scots to establish a close
+supremacy over the northern kingdom. Making allowance for this sinister
+element, his general policy in dealing with the great suit had been
+singularly prudent and correct. He was anxious to ascertain the right
+heir; he gave the Scots a preponderating voice in the tribunal; he
+rejected the temptation which Bruce and Hastings dangled before him of
+splitting up the realm into three parts, and he restored the land and
+its castles as soon as the suit was settled. There is nothing to show
+that up to this point his action had produced any resentment in
+Scotland, and little evidence that there was any strong national feeling
+involved. Scottish chroniclers, who wrote after the war of independence,
+have given a colour to Edward's policy which contemporary evidence does
+not justify. From the point of his generation, his action was just and
+legal. He had, in fact, performed a signal service to Scotland in
+vindicating its unity; and by maintaining the rigid doctrines of
+Anglo-Norman jurisprudence, he rescued it from the vague philosophy
+which Bruce called natural law, and the recrudescence of Celtic custom
+that gave even bastards a hope of the succession. The real temptation
+came when, after his triumph, Edward sought to extract from the
+submission of the Scots consequences which had no warranty in custom,
+and made Scottish resistance inevitable.
+
+The expulsion of the Jews, the reform of the administration, the statute
+_Quia emptores_, the treaty of Tarascon, the humiliation of Gloucester,
+and the successful issue of the Scottish arbitration, mark the
+culminating point in the reign of Edward I. The king had ruled twenty
+years with almost uniform success, and his only serious disappointment
+had been the failure of the crusade. The last hope of the Latin East
+faded when, in 1291, Acre, so long the bulwark of the crusaders against
+the Turks, opened its gates to the infidel. With the fall of Acre went
+the last chance of the holy war. Before long the peace of Europe, which
+Edward thought that he had established, was once more rudely disturbed.
+Difficulties soon arose with Scotland, with France, with the Church, and
+with the barons. These troubles bore the more severely on the king
+because this period saw also the removal of nearly all of those in whom
+he had placed special trust. The gracious Eleanor of Castile died in
+1290, at Harby, in Nottinghamshire, near Lincoln,[1] and the devotion of
+the king to the partner of his youth found a striking expression in the
+sculptured crosses, which marked the successive resting-places of her
+corpse on its last journey from Harby to Westminster Abbey. A few months
+later Edward's mother, Eleanor of Castile, ended her long life in the
+convent of Amesbury, in Wiltshire. The ministers of Edward's early reign
+were also removed by death. Bishop Kirkby, the treasurer, died in 1290,
+and Burnell, the chancellor, in 1292, soon after he had performed his
+last public act in the declaration of the king's judgment as to the
+Scottish succession. Archbishop Peckham died in the same year. New
+domestic ties were formed, and fresh ministers were found, but the
+ageing king became more and more lonely, as he was compelled to rely
+upon a younger and a less faithful generation. Of his old comrades the
+chief remaining was Henry Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, while the removal of
+Burnell brought forward to the first rank prelates whose position had
+hitherto been somewhat obscured by his predominance. Prominent among
+these were the brothers Thomas Bek, Bishop of St. David's, and Anthony
+Bek, Bishop of Durham, members of a conspicuous Lincolnshire baronial
+family. Both of these for a time strikingly combined devotion to the
+royal service with loyalty to those clerical and aristocratic traditions
+which, strictly interpreted, were almost incompatible with faithful
+service to a secular monarch. Even more important henceforth was the
+king's treasurer, Walter Langton, Bishop of Lichfield, the most trusted
+minister of Edward's later life, a faithful but not too scrupulous
+prelate of the ministerial type, who stood to the second half of the
+reign in almost the same close relation as that in which Burnell stood
+to the years which we have now traversed.
+
+ [1] See for this W.H. Stevenson, _Death of Eleanor of Castile_,
+ in _English Hist. Review_, iii. (1888), pp. 315-318.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE FRENCH AND SCOTTISH WARS AND THE CONFIRMATION OF THE CHARTERS.
+
+
+Troubles arose between France and England soon after Edward had settled
+the Scottish succession. Neither Edward nor Philip the Fair sought a
+conflict. Edward was satisfied with his diplomatic successes, and
+Philip's designs upon Gascony were better pursued by chicane than by
+warfare. But questions arose of a different kind from the disputes as to
+feudal right, which had been hitherto the principal matters in debate
+between the two crowns.
+
+There had long been keen commercial rivalry between the Cinque Ports and
+the traders of Normandy. The sailors of Bayonne and other Gascon
+harbours had associated themselves with the English against the Normans,
+and both sides loudly complained to their respective rulers of the
+piracies and homicides committed by their enemies. Edward and Philip did
+what they could to smooth over matters, but were alike unable to prevent
+their subjects flying at each other's throats. The story spread that a
+Norman ship was to be seen in the Channel with' English sailors and dogs
+hanging suspended from her yard-arms: "And so," says Hemingburgh, "they
+sailed over the sea, making no difference between a dog and an
+Englishman". Indignation at this outrage drove the English to act
+together in large organised squadrons. The French adopted the same
+tactics, and a collision soon ensued. On May 15, 1293, an Anglo-Gascon
+merchant fleet encountered a Norman fleet off Saint Mahe in Brittany. A
+pitched battle, probably prearranged, at once ensued. It ended in a
+complete victory for the less numerous English squadron, which
+immediately returned to Portsmouth, laden with booty.
+
+Even after this, Edward strove to keep the peace, and endeavoured to
+exact compensation from his subjects. They answered with a highly
+coloured narrative of the dispute which threw the whole blame upon the
+Normans. Philip, changing his policy, took up his subjects' cause, and
+summoned Edward to answer in January, 1294, before the Parliament of
+Paris for the piracy exercised by his mariners, the misdeeds of his
+Gascon subjects, and the violent measures taken by his officers against
+any who appealed to the court of Paris. Edward sent his brother, Edmund,
+to reply for him. As Count of Champagne and the step-father of Philip's
+wife, Joan, Edmund seemed a peculiarly acceptable negotiator. After long
+debates, the personal intervention of the French queen, and Philip's
+step-mother, Mary of Brabant, resulted in an agreement being arranged.
+The overlord's grievances could not be denied, and it was urged that the
+formal surrender of part of Gascony might be made by way of recognising
+them. French garrisons were therefore to be admitted into six Gascon
+strongholds; twenty Gascon hostages were to be delivered over to Philip,
+while the seisin of the duchy was also to be transferred to the French
+king, who pledged himself not to change the officials nor to occupy the
+land in force. The whole business was in fact to be as formal as the
+delivery of the seisin of Scotland to Edward during the suit for the
+succession. Meanwhile, Edward and Philip were to arrange a meeting at
+Amiens to settle the conditions of a permanent peace, by which Edward
+was to take Philip's sister, Margaret, as his second wife, and the
+Gascon duchy was to be settled upon the offspring of the union. That
+Edward or Edmund should ever have contemplated such terms is a strong
+proof of their zeal for peace. It soon became clear that Edmund had been
+outrageously duped, and that the whole negotiation was a trick to secure
+for Philip the permanent possession of Gascony. The constable of France
+appeared on the Aquitanian frontier. The English seneschal surrendered
+the six castles and the seisin of the land. Gradually the French king
+began to take actual possession of the government. Moreover, after three
+months, the proceedings against Edward in the parliament of Paris were
+resumed; Edward was declared contumacious on the ground of his
+non-appearance, and sentence of forfeiture was passed.
+
+Philip's treachery was thus manifest? and in great disgust Edmund
+withdrew from France. Edward was deeply indignant. In a parliament, held
+in June, 1294, which was attended by the King of Scots, war was resolved
+upon. The feudal tenants were summoned to assemble at Portsmouth on
+September 1; and Edward appealed for help to his Gascon subjects,
+beseeching their pardon for having negotiated the fatal treaty, and
+promising a speedy effort to restore them to his obedience. He sent them
+his nephew, John of Brittany, as his lieutenant and captain-general,
+under whom John of St. John was to act as seneschal of Gascony.
+Ambassadors were despatched to all neighbouring courts to build up a
+coalition against the French. Strenuous efforts were made to get
+together men and money, and the clergy were forced to make a grant of a
+half of their spiritual income. Edward overbore their opposition amidst
+a scene of excitement in which the Dean of St. Paul's fell dead at the
+king's feet. The shires were mulcted of a tenth and the boroughs of a
+sixth. And besides these constitutional exactions, the king laid violent
+hands on all the coined money deposited in the treasuries of the
+churches, and appropriated the wool of the merchants, which he only
+restored on the payment of a heavy pecuniary redemption. Meanwhile,
+about Michaelmas the lieutenant and the seneschal sailed with a fairly
+strong force. Further levies were summoned to assemble at Portsmouth at
+later dates. Besides the ordinary tenants of the crown, writs were sent
+to the chief magnates of Ireland and Scotland; and Wales and its march
+were called upon to furnish all the men that could be mustered. The
+Earls of Cornwall and Lincoln were appointed to the command, and Edward
+himself proposed to follow them to Gascony as soon as he could.
+
+At the moment of the departure of John of Brittany a sudden insurrection
+in Wales frustrated Edward's plans. All Wales was ripe for revolt. In
+the principality the Cymry resented English rule, and the sulky marchers
+stood aloof in sullen discontent, while their native tenants, seeing in
+the recent humiliation of Gloucester and Hereford the degradation of all
+their lords, lost respect for such powerless masters. Both in the
+principality and in the marches, Edward's demand for compulsory service
+in Gascony was universally regarded as a new aggression. The intensity
+of the resistance to his demand can be measured by the general nature of
+the insurrection, and by the admirable way in which it was organised. As
+by a common signal all Wales rose at Michaelmas, 1294. One Madog,
+probably a bastard son of Llewelyn, son of Griffith, raised all Gwynedd,
+took possession of Carnarvon castle, and closely besieged the other
+royal strongholds. In west Wales a chieftain named Maelgwn was equally
+successful in Carmarthen and Cardigan. The marches were in arms equally
+with the principality. In the north, Lincoln's tenants in Rhos and
+Rhuvoniog besieged Denbigh, and threatened the king's fortresses in
+Flint. Maelgwn's sphere of operations included the earldom of Pembroke,
+while Brecon rose against Hereford, and Glamorgan against Gilbert of
+Gloucester. Morgan, the leader of the Glamorganshire rebels, loudly
+declared that he did not rebel against the king but against the Earl of
+Gloucester. With the beginning of winter the state of Wales was more
+critical than in the worst times of the winter of 1282.
+
+Edward postponed his attack on Philip in order to throw all his energies
+into the reduction of Wales. The levies assembled at Portsmouth for the
+Gascon expedition were hurried beyond the Severn. The king held another
+parliament and exacted a fresh supply. Criminals were offered pardon and
+good wages, if they would serve, first in Wales and then in Gascony.
+Before Christmas about a thousand men-at-arms were mustered at various
+border centres under the royal standards, while every marcher lord was
+busily engaged in putting down his own rebels. Before so great a force
+the Welsh could do but little, and the spring saw the extinction of the
+rebellion. But there was hard fighting both in the south and in the
+north. Edward himself undertook the reconquest of Gwynedd. He was at
+Conway before the end of the year, and in his haste he threw himself
+into the town while the mass of his army remained on the right bank of
+the river. High tides and winter floods made the crossing of the stream
+impossible, and for a short time the king was actually besieged by the
+rebels. Conway was unprepared for resistance and almost destitute of
+supplies. The garrison thought it a terrible hardship that they had to
+live on salt meat and bread, and to drink water mixed with honey. They
+were encouraged by Edward refusing to taste better fare than his
+troopers, and declining to partake of the one small measure of wine
+reserved for his use. William Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, conveyed his
+troops across the estuary and raised the siege. Yet the insurgents were
+still able to fight a pitched battle. About January 22, 1295, Warwick
+found the Welsh established in a strong position in a plain between two
+woods. They had fixed the butts of their lances into the ground, hoping
+thus to resist the shock of a cavalry charge. Improving on the tactics
+of Orewyn bridge, the earl stationed between his squadrons of knights,
+archers and crossbowmen, whose missiles inflicted such loss on the Welsh
+lines that the cavalry soon found it safe to charge. The Welsh were
+utterly broken, and never in a single day did they suffer such enormous
+losses. Even more important than its results in breaking the back of
+Madog's insurrection, this battle of Maes Madog--or Madog's field, as
+the Welsh called the place of their defeat--is of the highest importance
+in the development of infantry tactics. The order of the victorious
+force strikingly anticipates the great battles in Scotland and France of
+a later generation. In obscure fights, like Orewyn bridge and Maes
+Madog, the English learnt the famous battle array which was to overwhelm
+the Scots in the later years of Edward's reign and prepare the way for
+the triumphs of Crecy and Poitiers.
+
+Madog still held out, and with the advent of spring, 1295, Edward began
+to hunt him from his lairs. Gwynedd was cleared of the enemy and
+Anglesey was reconquered. Carnarvon castle arose from its ruins in the
+stately form that we still know, while on the Anglesey side of the Menai
+the new stronghold of Beaumaris arose, to ensure the subjection of the
+granary of Gwynedd. In May Edward felt strong enough to undertake a
+progress in South Wales. After receiving the submissions of the rebels
+of Cardigan and Carmarthen, he won back for the lords of Brecon and
+Glamorgan the lands which, without his help, they had been unable to
+conquer. The Welsh chieftains were leniently treated. While Madog was
+imprisoned in the Tower, Morgan was at once set at liberty. By July
+Edward was able to leave Wales. Yet his triumph had taxed all his
+resources, and left him, overwhelmed with debt, to face the irritation
+of subjects unaccustomed to such demands upon their loyalty and
+patriotism. But nothing broke his dauntless spirit, and once more he
+busied himself in obtaining revenge on the false King of France.
+
+It was inevitable that the Welsh war should have reduced to slender
+proportions the expedition of John of Brittany and John of St. John for
+the recovery of Gascony. After a tedious voyage the English expedition
+sailed up the Gironde late in October, 1294. Their forces, strong enough
+to capture Bourg and Blaye, were not sufficient to attack Bordeaux.
+Leaving the capital in the hands of its conquerors, the English sailed
+past Bordeaux to Rioms, where they disembarked. The small towns of the
+neighbourhood were taken and garrisoned, and the Gascon lords began to
+flock to the camp of their duke. Before long the army was large enough
+to be divided. John of Brittany remained at Rioms, while John of St.
+John marched overland to Bayonne. The French garrison was unable to
+overpower the enthusiasm of the Bayonnais for Edward, and the capture of
+the second town of Gascony was the greatest success attained by the
+invaders. With the spring of 1295, however, Charles of Valois, brother
+of the King of France, was sent to operate against John of Brittany. The
+English and Gascons found themselves unable to make head against him.
+There was ill-feeling between the two nations that made up the army, and
+also between the nobly-born knights and men-at-arms and the foot
+soldiers. The infantry mutinied, and John of Brittany fled by night down
+the river from Rioms, leaving many of his knights and all his horses and
+armour in the town. Next day Rioms opened its gates to Charles of
+Valois, who gained immense spoils and many distinguished prisoners. Save
+for the capture of Bayonne, the expedition had been a disastrous
+failure.
+
+Edward failed even more signally in his efforts to defeat Philip by
+diplomacy. He had left no effort unspared to build up a great coalition
+against the French king. He "sent a great quantity of sterling money
+beyond the sea," and made alliances with all the princes and barons that
+he could find.[1] At first it seemed that he had succeeded. Adolf of
+Nassau, the poor and dull, but strenuous and hard-fighting King of the
+Romans, concluded a treaty with England, and did not think it beneath
+the dignity of the lord of the world to take the pay of the English
+monarch. Many vassals of the empire, especially in the Netherlands, the
+Rhineland, and Burgundy followed Adolf's example. Edward strengthened
+his party further by marrying three of his daughters to the Duke of
+Brabant, the son of the Count of Holland, and the Count of Bar as the
+price of their adherence to the coalition. He made closer his ancient
+friendship with Guy of Dampierre, the old Count of Flanders, by
+betrothing Edward of Carnarvon to his daughter Philippine. At the same
+time he sought the friendship of the lords of the Pyrenees, such as the
+Count of Foix, and of the kings of the Spanish peninsula. But nothing
+came of the hopes thus excited, save fair promises and useless
+expenditure. Before long Philip of France was able to build up a French
+party in appearance as formidable-in reality as useless as Edward's
+attempted confederation. Edward's most important ally, Guy of Flanders,
+was forced to renounce his daughter's marriage to the heir of England
+and hand her over to Philip's custody. The time was not yet come for
+effective European coalitions; the real fighting had to be done by the
+parties directly interested in the quarrel.
+
+ [1] See a contemporary notice printed by F. Funck-Brentano in
+ _Revue Historique_, xxxix. (1889), pp. 329-30.
+
+The command of the sea continued to be a vital question. The Norman
+sailors were eager to avenge their former defeats, and Philip saw that
+the best way to preserve his hold over Gascony was to be master of the
+Channel and the Bay of Biscay. Edward prepared to meet attack by
+establishing an organisation of the English navy which marks an epoch in
+the history of our admiralty. He divided the vessels told off to guard
+the sea into three classes, and set over each a separate admiral. John
+of Botecourt was made admiral of the Yarmouth and eastern fleet; William
+of Leyburn was set over the navy at Portsmouth; and the western and
+Irish squadron was put under a valiant knight of Irish origin. Meanwhile
+the French planned an invasion of England, and promised James of Aragon
+that, when England was conquered, its king should be considered his
+personal prize. Galleys were hired at Marseilles and Genoa for service
+in the Channel, and Sir Thomas Turberville, a Glamorganshire knight
+captured at Rioms, turned traitor and was restored to England in the
+hope that he might obtain the custody of some seaport and betray it to
+the enemy. Turberville strove in vain to induce Morgan to head another
+revolt in Glamorgan, and urged upon Philip the need of an alliance with
+the Scots. At last the invasion was attempted, and the French admiral,
+Matthew of Montmorenci, sacked and burnt the town of Dover. Luckily,
+however, Turberville's treason was discovered, and the Yarmouth fleet
+soon avenged the attack on Dover by burning Cherbourg. In the face of
+such resistance, Philip IV. abandoned his plan of invasion and tried to
+establish a sort of "continental blockade" of English ports in which a
+modern writer has seen an anticipation of the famous dream of
+Napoleon.[1] Though nothing came of these grandiose schemes, yet the
+efforts made to organise invasion had their permanent importance as
+resulting in the beginnings of the French royal navy. As late as 1297 a
+Genoese was appointed admiral of France in the Channel, and strongly
+urged the invasion of England and its devastation by fire and flame. But
+the immediate result of Philip's efforts to cut off England from the
+continent was that his Flemish allies found in his policy a new reason
+for abandoning his service. On January 7, 1297, a fresh treaty of
+alliance between Edward and Guy, Count of Flanders, was concluded.
+
+ [1] See for this Jourdain, _Memoire sur les Commencements de la
+ Marine francaise sous Philippe le Bel_ (1880), and C. de la
+ Ronciere, _Le Blocus continental de l'Angleterre sous Philippe
+ le Bel_ in _Revue des Questions historiques_, lx. (1896),
+ 401-41.
+
+More effective than Philip's efforts to combine the Continent against
+the English were his endeavours to stir up opposition to Edward in
+Britain. The Welsh rising of 1294 had taken place independently of him,
+but it was not Philip's fault that Morgan did not once more excite
+Glamorgan to rebellion. A better opening for intrigue was found in
+Scotland. Ever since the accession of John Balliol, there had been
+appeals from the Scottish courts to those of Edward. Certain suits begun
+under the regency, which had acted in Edward's name from 1290 to 1292,
+gave the overlord an opportunity of inserting the thin end of the wedge;
+and it looked as if, after a few years, appeals from Edinburgh to London
+would be as common as appeals from Bordeaux to Paris. But whatever were
+the ancient relations of England and Scotland, it is clear that the
+custom of appeals to the English king had never previously been
+established. It was no wonder then that what seemed to Edward an
+inevitable result of King John's submission, appeared to the Scots an
+unwarrantable restriction of their independence.
+
+The weakness and simplicity of King John left matters to take their
+course for a time, but the king, who was not strong enough to stand up
+against Edward, was not the man to resist the pressure of his own
+subjects. On his return from the London parliament of June, 1294, the
+Scots barons virtually deposed him. A committee was set up by parliament
+consisting of four bishops, four earls, and four barons which, though
+established professedly on the model of the twelve peers of France, had
+a nearer prototype in the fifteen appointed under the Provisions of
+Oxford. To this body the whole power of the Scottish monarchy was
+transferred, so that John became a mere puppet, unable to act without
+the consent of his twelve masters. Under this new government the
+relations of England and Scotland soon became critical. The Scots denied
+all right of appeal to the English courts, and expelled from their
+country the nobles whose possessions in England gave them a greater
+interest in the southern than in the northern kingdom. Among the
+dispossessed barons was Robert Bruce, son of the claimant, by marriage
+already Earl of Carrick, and now by his father's recent death lord of
+Annandale. In defiance of Edward's prohibition the Scots received French
+ships, and subjected English traders at Berwick to many outrages. At
+last, on July 5, 1295, an alliance was signed between Scotland and
+France, by which Edward Balliol, the eldest son of King John, was
+betrothed to Joan, the eldest daughter of Charles of Valois, the brother
+of the French king. On this, Edward demanded the surrender of three
+border castles, and on the refusal of the Scots, cited John to appear at
+Berwick on March 1, 1296. Thus, by a process similar to that which had
+embroiled Edward with his French overlord, the King of Scots also was
+forced to face the alternative of certain war or humiliating surrender.
+
+To Edward a breach with Scotland was unwelcome. In 1294 the Welsh had
+prevented him using all his power against France, and in 1295 the Scots
+troubles further postponed his prospects of revenge. But no suggestion
+of compromise or delay came from him. On his return to London early in
+August, 1295, he busied himself with preparing to resist the enemies
+that were gathering around him on every side. It was the moment of the
+raid on Dover, and the French question was still the more pressing. In a
+parliament of magnates at London, Edmund of Lancaster told the story of
+his Paris embassy with such effect that two cardinal-legates, whom the
+new pope, Boniface VIII., had sent in the hope of making peace, were put
+off politely, on the ground that Edward could make no treaty without the
+consent of his ally, the King of the Romans. Edmund was appointed
+commander of a new expedition to Gascony, though his weak health delayed
+his departure. Meanwhile Edward called upon every class of his subjects
+to co-operate with him in his defence of the national honour. He was
+statesman enough to see that he could only cope with the situation, if
+England as a whole rallied round him. His best answer to the Scots and
+the French was the convention of the "model parliament" of November,
+1295.
+
+The deep political purpose with which this parliament was assembled is
+reflected even in the formal language of the writs. "Inasmuch as a most
+righteous law of the emperors," wrote Edward, "ordains that what touches
+all should be approved by all, so it evidently appears that common
+dangers should be met by remedies agreed upon in common. You know well
+how the King of France has cheated me out of Gascony, and how he still
+wickedly retains it. But now he has beset my realm with a great fleet
+and a great multitude of warriors, and proposes, if his power equal his
+unrighteous design, to blot out the English tongue from the face of the
+earth." To avert this peril, Edward summoned not only a full and
+representative gathering of magnates, but also two knights from every
+shire and two burgesses from every borough. Moreover, the lower clergy
+were also required to take part in the assembly, the archdeacons and
+deans in person, the clergy of every cathedral church by one proctor,
+the beneficed clerks of each diocese by two proctors. Thus the assembly
+became so systematic a representation of the three estates' that after
+ages have regarded it as the type upon which subsequent popular
+parliaments were to be modelled. This gathering marks the end of the
+parliamentary experiments of the earlier part of the reign. It met on
+November 27, and each estate, deliberating separately, contributed its
+quota to the national defence. The barons and knights offered an
+eleventh, and the boroughs a seventh. It was a bitter disappointment to
+Edward that the clergy could not be induced to make a larger grant than
+a tenth. Enough, however, was obtained to equip the two armies which, in
+the spring of 1296, were to operate against the French and the Scots.
+
+The Gascon expedition was the first to start. Early in March, 1296,
+Edmund of Lancaster, accompanied by the Earl of Lincoln, landed at Bourg
+and Blaye. John of St. John was still maintaining himself in that
+district as well as at Bayonne. On the appearance of the reinforcements
+the Gascon lords began to flock to the English camp, and a large force
+was at once able to take the field. On March 28 an attempt was made to
+capture Bordeaux by a sudden assault. On its failure Edmund, who did not
+possess the equipment necessary for a formal siege, sailed up the river
+to Saint-Macaire and occupied the town. But the castle held out
+gallantly, and after a three weeks' siege Edmund retired to his original
+position on the lower Gironde. Even there he found difficulty in holding
+his own, and before long shifted his quarters to Bayonne. He had
+exhausted his resources, and found that his army could not be kept
+together without pay. "Thereupon," writes Hemingburgh, "his face fell
+and he sickened about Whitsuntide. So with want of money came want of
+breath too, and after a few days he went the way of all flesh." Lincoln,
+his successor, managed still to stand his ground against Robert of
+Artois. At last Artois made a successful night attack upon the English,
+captured St. John, and destroyed all his war-train and baggage. The
+darkness of the night and the shelter of the neighbouring woods alone
+saved the English army from total destruction. "After this," boasted
+William of Nangis, "no Englishman or Gascon dared to go out to battle
+against the Count of Artois and the French." At Easter, 1297, a truce
+was concluded which left nearly all Gascony in French hands.
+
+Soon after the departure of his brother for Gascony, Edward went to war
+against the Scots, regarding the non-appearance of King John on March 1
+at Berwick as a declaration of hostility. The lord of Wark offered to
+betray his castle to the Scots, and Edward's successful effort to save
+it first brought him to the Tweed. Meanwhile the men of Annandale under
+their new lord, the Earl of Buchan, engaged in a raid on Carlisle, but
+failed to capture the city, and speedily returned home. On March 28, the
+day on which his brother attacked Bordeaux, Edward crossed the Tweed at
+Coldstream, and marched down its left bank towards Berwick. On March 30
+Berwick was captured. The townsmen fought badly, and the heroes of the
+resistance were thirty Flemish merchants, who held their factory, called
+the Red Hall, until the building was fired, and the defenders perished
+in the flames. The garrison of the castle, commanded by Sir William
+Douglas, laid down their arms at once.
+
+Edward spent a month in Berwick, strengthening the fortifications of the
+town, and preparing for an invasion of Scotland. Early in April, King
+John renounced his homage and, immediately afterwards, the Scots lords
+who had attacked Carlisle devastated Tynedale and Redesdale, penetrating
+as far as Hexham. Edward's command of the sea made it impossible for the
+raiders to cut off his communications with his base, and they quickly
+returned to their own land, where they threw themselves into Dunbar.
+Though the lord of Dunbar, Patrick, Earl of March, was serving with the
+English king, his countess, who was at Dunbar, invited them into the
+fortress. Dunbar blocked the road into Scotland, and Edward sent forward
+Earl Warenne with a portion of the army in the hope of recapturing the
+position. Warenne laid siege to Dunbar, but on the third day, April 27,
+the main Scots army came to its relief. Leaving some of the young nobles
+to continue the siege, Warenne drew up his army in battle array. The
+Scots thought that the English were preparing for flight, and rushed
+upon them with loud cries and blowing of horns. Discovering too late
+that the enemy was ready for battle, they fell back in confusion as far
+as Selkirk Forest. Next day Edward came up from Berwick and received the
+surrender of Dunbar. Henceforth his advance was but a military
+promenade.
+
+Edward turned back from Dunbar to receive the submission of the Steward
+of Scotland at Roxburgh, and to welcome a large force of Welsh infantry,
+whose arrival enabled him to dismiss the English foot, fatigued with the
+slight effort of a month's easy campaigning. Thence he made his way to
+Edinburgh, which yielded after an eight days' siege. Stirling castle,
+the next barrier to his progress, was abandoned by its garrison, and
+there Edward was reinforced by some Irish contingents. He then advanced
+to Perth, keeping St. John's feast on June 24 in St. John's own town. On
+July 10 Balliol surrendered to the Bishop of Durham at Brechin,
+acknowledging that he had forfeited his throne by his rebellion. Edward
+continued his triumphal progress, preceded at every stage by Bishop Bek
+at the head of the warriors of the palatinate of St. Cuthbert. He made
+his way through Montrose up the east coast to Aberdeen, and thence up
+the Don and over the hills to Banff and Elgin, the farthest limit of his
+advance. He returned by a different route, bringing back with him from
+Scone the stone on which the Scots kings had been wont to sit at their
+coronation. This he presented as a trophy of victory to the monks of
+Westminster, where it was set up as a chair for the priest celebrating
+mass at the altar over against the shrine of St. Edward, though soon
+used as the coronation seat of English kings.
+
+In less than five months Edward had conquered a kingdom. On August 22 he
+was back at Berwick, whither he had summoned a parliament of the nobles
+and prelates of both kingdoms, in order that the work of organising the
+future government of Scotland might be completed. Meanwhile a crowd of
+Scots of every class flocked to the victor's court and took oaths of
+fealty to him. Their names, along with those of the persons who made
+similar recognitions of his sovereignly during his Scottish progress,
+were recorded with notarial precision in one of those formal documents
+with which Edward delighted to mark the stages in the accomplishment of
+his task. This record, popularly styled the Ragman Roll, containing the
+names of about two thousand freeholders and men of substance in
+Scotland, is of extreme value to the Scottish genealogist and
+antiquary.[1] The last entries are dated August 28, the day on which
+Edward met his parliament at Berwick. The administration of Scotland was
+provided for. John, Earl Warenne, became the king's lieutenant, Hugh
+Cressingham, treasurer, and William Ormesby, justiciar. When the land
+was subdued Edward showed a strong desire to treat the people well. The
+only precaution taken by him against the renewal of disturbances was an
+order that the former King of Scots, John Comyn of Buchan, John Comyn of
+Badenoch, and other magnates of the patriotic party were to dwell in
+England, south of the Trent, until the conclusion of the war with
+France. As soon as his business was accomplished at Berwick, Edward
+turned his steps southwards. At last he seemed free to lead a great army
+against Philip the Fair; and, in order to prepare for the French
+expedition, he summoned another parliament to meet at Bury St. Edmunds
+on the morrow of All Souls' day, November 3. At Bury the barons,
+knights, and burgesses made liberal offerings for the war. But a new
+difficulty arose in the absolute refusal of the clergy to vote any
+supplies. Once more the cup of hope was dashed from Edward's lips, and
+he found himself forced to enter into another weary conflict, this time
+with his English liegemen.
+
+ [1] It is printed by the Bannatyne Club, and summarised in
+ _Cal. Doc. Scot._, ii., 193-214.
+
+So long as Peckham had lived, there had always been a danger of a
+conflict between Church and State. Friar John had ended his restless
+career in 1292, and Edward showed natural anxiety to secure as his
+successor a prelate more amenable to the secular authority and more
+national in his sentiments. The papacy remained vacant after the death
+of Nicholas IV. in 1292, so that there was no danger of Rome taking the
+appointment into its own hands, and the happy accident, which had given
+the monks of Christchurch a statesmanlike prior in Henry of Eastry,
+minimised the chances of a futile conflict between the king and the
+canonical electors. Eastry took care that the archbishop-elect should
+be a person acceptable to the sovereign. Robert Winchelsea, the new
+primate, was an Englishman and a secular clerk, who had taught with
+distinction at Paris and Oxford, but had received no higher
+ecclesiastical promotion than the archdeaconry of Essex and a canonry
+of St. Paul's, and was mainly conspicuous for the sanctity of his life,
+his ability as a preacher, and his zeal for making the cathedral of
+London a centre of theological instruction. The vacancy in, the papacy
+forced upon the archbishop-elect a wearisome delay of eighteen months
+in Italy; but at last in September, 1294, he received consecration and
+the _pallium_ from the newly elected hermit-pope, Celestine V.
+Winchelsea on his return strove to show that a secular archbishop could
+be as austere in life, and as zealous for the rights of Holy Church, as
+his mendicant predecessors. His desire to walk in the steps of Peckham
+soon brought him into conflict with the king, and in this conflict he
+showed an appreciation of the political situation, and a power of
+interpreting English opinion, which made him the most formidable of
+Edward's domestic opponents. He gained his first victory in the
+parliament of 1295 by preventing the clergy from making a larger grant
+than a tenth. But this triumph sank into insignificance as compared
+with the refusal of all aid by the parliament of Bury.
+
+A change in the papacy immensely strengthened Winchelsea's position
+against Edward. In December, 1294, Celestine, overpowered with the
+burden of an office too heavy for his strength, made his great
+renunciation and sought to resume his hermit life. The Cardinal
+Benedict Gaetano was at once elected his successor and took the style
+of Boniface VIII. The son of a noble house of the neighbourhood of
+Anagni, a canonist, a politician, and a zealot, the new pope had made
+personal acquaintance with Edward and England from having attended
+Cardinal Ottobon on his English legation, and was eager to appease
+discord between Christian princes in order to forward the crusade. He
+hated war the more because it was largely waged with the money drawn
+from the clergy, and was indignant that the custom of taxing the
+Church, which was begun under the guise of crusading tenths, had become
+so frequent that both Philip and Edward applied it in order to raise
+revenue from ecclesiastics for frankly secular warfare. Within a few
+weeks of his accession he despatched two cardinals to mediate peace
+between the Kings of France and England, and was disgusted at the long
+delays with which both kings had sought to frustrate his intervention.
+On February 29, 1296, Boniface issued his famous bull _Clericis
+laicos_, in which he declared it unlawful for any lay authority to
+exact supplies from the clergy without the express authority of the
+apostolic see. Princes imposing, and clerics submitting to such
+exactions were declared _ipso_ facto excommunicate.
+
+Boniface's contention had been urged by his predecessors, and it is
+improbable that he sought to do more than assert the ancient law of the
+Church and save the clergy all over the Latin world from exactions
+which were fast becoming intolerable. His object was quite general,
+though a pointed reference to the extortions of Edward in 1294 showed
+that he had the case of England before his mind. He had no wish to
+throw down the gauntlet to the princes of Christendom, or to quarrel
+with Edward and Philip, between whom he was still conducting
+negotiations. It was his misfortune that he was constantly forced to
+face fresh conditions which rendered it almost possible to apply the
+ancient doctrines. Strong national kings, like Edward and Philip, had
+already shown impatience with such traditions of the Church as limited
+their temporal authority. The pope's untimely restatement of the
+theories of the twelfth century at once involved him in his first
+fierce difference with Philip the Fair, and put him into a position in
+which he could only win peace by explaining away the doctrine of
+_Clericis laicos_. While on the continent the conflict of Church and
+State took the form of a dispute between the French king and the
+papacy, in England it assumed the shape of a struggle between Edward
+and the Archbishop of Canterbury.
+
+In November, 1296, at Bury, Winchelsea admitted the justice of the
+French war, but pleaded the pope's decretal as an absolute bar to any
+grant from the clerical estate. No decision was arrived at, and the
+problem was discussed again in the convocation of Canterbury in
+January, 1297. "We have two lords over us," declared the archbishop to
+his clergy, "the king and the pope; and, although we owe obedience to
+both of these, we owe greater obedience to our spiritual than to our
+temporal lord." All that they could do was to entreat the pope's
+permission to allow them to pay Caesar that which Caesar by himself had
+no right to demand. Edward burst into a fury on hearing of this new
+pretext for delay. He declared that the clergy must pay a fifth, under
+penalty of his withdrawing his protection from a body which strove to
+stand outside the commonwealth. The clergy remained firm, and separated
+without making any grant. Thereupon, on January 30, the chief justice,
+John of Metingham, sitting in Westminster Hall, pronounced the clergy
+to be outlays. "Henceforth," he declared, "there shall be no justice
+meted out to a clerk in the court of the lord king, however atrocious
+be the injury from which he may have suffered. But sentence against a
+clerk shall be given at the instance of all who have a complaint
+against him." Winchelsea retaliated by publishing the sentence of
+excommunication against violators of the papal bull. Two days later the
+king ordered the sheriffs to take possession of the lay fees held by
+clerks in the province of Canterbury. A few ecclesiastics, who
+privately made an offering of a fifth, were alone exempted from this
+command.
+
+Edward's conflict with the Church was followed within a month by a
+dispute of almost equal gravity with a section of the barons. He
+summoned a baronial parliament to assemble on February 24 at Salisbury,
+and went down in person to explain his plan of campaign. One force was
+to help his new ally, Guy of Flanders, while another was to act in
+Gascony. Edward himself was to accompany the army to Flanders. He
+requested some of the earls, including Norfolk and Hereford, to fight
+for him in Gascony. The deaths of Edmund of Lancaster, Gilbert of
+Gloucester, and William of Pembroke had robbed the baronage of its
+natural leaders. Earl Warenne was fully engaged in the north, and
+Lincoln was devoted to the king's side. The removal of other possible
+spokesmen made Norfolk and Hereford the champions of the party of
+opposition. For years the friends of aristocratic authority had been
+smarting under the growing influence of the crown. The time was ripe
+for a revival of the baronial opposition which a generation earlier had
+won the Provisions of Oxford. Moreover both the earls had personal
+slights to avenge. Hereford bitterly resented the punishment meted out
+to him for waging private war against Earl Gilbert in the march.
+Norfolk was angry because, during the last Welsh campaign, Edward had
+suspended him from the exercise of the marshalship. The form of
+Edward's request at Salisbury gave them a technical advantage which
+they were not slow to seize. Ignoring the broader issues which lay
+between them and the king, they took their stand on their traditional
+rights as constable and marshal to attend the king in person. "Freely,"
+declared the earl marshal, "will I go with thee, O king, and march
+before thee in the first line of thy army, as my hereditary duty
+requires." Edward answered: "Thou shalt go without me along with the
+rest to Gascony". The marshal replied: "I am not bound to go save with
+thee, nor will I go". Edward flew into a passion: "By God, sir earl,
+thou shalt either go or hang". Norfolk replied with equal spirit: "By
+that same oath, sir king, I will neither go nor hang". The parliament
+broke up in disorder. Before long a force of 1,500 men-at-arms gathered
+together under the leadership of the constable and marshal.
+
+During these stormy times Edward had been straining every nerve to
+equip an adequate army for foreign service. Once more he laid violent
+hands upon the wool and hides of the merchants, while a huge
+male--tolt, varying from forty shillings a sack for raw wool to
+sixty-six shillings and eightpence a sack for carded wool, was exacted
+for such wool as the king's officers suffered to remain in the owner's
+possession. Moreover, vast stores of wheat, barley, and oats, salt pork
+and salt beef were requisitioned all over the land. Men said that the
+king's tyranny could no longer be borne, and that the rights decreed to
+all Englishmen by the Great Charter were in imminent danger. The
+movement, which had begun as a defence of feudal right, became a
+popular revolt in favour of national liberty. The commons joined the
+barons and clergy in the general opposition to the headstrong king.
+
+Edward saw that he must divide his enemies if he wished to effect his
+purpose. The clergy were the easiest to deal with. Boniface VIII. was
+already yielding in his struggle against Philip the Fair. In the bull
+_Romana mater_ of February 2, 1297, he had authorised voluntary
+contributions of the French clergy in the case of pressing necessity,
+without previous recourse to the permission of the apostolic see. The
+same attitude had already been taken up by the royalist clergy in
+England, who redeemed their outlawry by offering to the king the fifth
+of their revenues. In March Edward made things easier for the
+recalcitrants by suspending the edict confiscating the lay fees of the
+Church. Even Winchelsea saw the wisdom of abandoning his too heroic
+attitude. In a convocation, held on March 24, he practically applied
+the doctrine of _Romana mater_ to the English situation. "Let each
+man," he declared, "save his own soul and follow his own conscience.
+But my conscience does not allow me to offer money for the king's
+protection or on any other pretext." In the event nearly all the clergy
+bought off the king's wrath by the voluntary payment of a fifth.
+Winchelsea was obdurate. His estates remained for five months in the
+king's hands, and he was forced, like another St. Francis, to depend on
+the charity of the faithful. But even Winchelsea did not hold out
+indefinitely. On July 14 he was publicly reconciled with the king
+outside Westminster Hall, and a few days later his goods were restored.
+On July 31 Boniface entirely receded from the doctrine of _Cleritis
+laicos_ in the bull _Etsi de statu_. Before this could be known in
+England, Winchelsea told his clergy that the king had agreed to confirm
+the Great Charter, if they would but make a grant to carry on the
+French war. A little later Edward of his own authority exacted a third
+from all clerical revenues. This persistence in his highhanded policy
+made any real reconciliation between Edward and Winchelsea impossible.
+The king never forgave the archbishop, whose action demonstrated to all
+England the divided allegiance of his clergy between their two masters.
+Winchelsea still retained his profound distrust of the king, who had
+set at naught the liberties of Church and realm.
+
+The baronial opposition was broken up by devices not dissimilar to
+those which neutralised the antagonism of the clergy. By strenuous
+efforts Edward obtained a fair sum of money for his expenses. He let it
+be understood that, if he took his subjects' wool, the talleys given in
+exchange would be redeemed when better times had arrived, and he
+scrupulously paid for the corn and meat that his officers had
+requisitioned. Meanwhile he summoned all possible fighting men from
+England, Wales, and Ireland to meet at London on July 7. The prospect
+of subjects of the crown being forced, whatsoever their feudal
+obligations might be, to wage war beyond sea, threatened to provoke a
+fresh crisis. But after many long altercations, Edward announced that
+neither the feudal tenants nor the twenty-pound freeholders had any
+legal obligation to go with him to Flanders, and offered pay to all who
+were willing to hearken to his "affectionate request" for their
+services. Under these conditions a considerable force of stipendiaries
+was levied without much difficulty.
+
+Hereford and Norfolk abandoned active in favour of passive hostility.
+They refused to serve as constable and marshal, and Edward appointed
+barons of less dignity and greater loyalty to act in their place. While
+all England was busy with the equipment of troops and the provision of
+supplies, they sullenly held aloof. At last, when all was ready, Edward
+issued an appeal to his subjects, protesting the purity of his motives,
+and emphasising the inexorable necessity under which he was forced to
+play the tyrant in the interests of the whole realm. By the beginning
+of August such barons as were willing to go to Flanders began to
+assemble in arms at London. The young Edward of Carnarvon was appointed
+regent during his father's absence, and among the councillors who were
+to act in his name was the Archbishop of Canterbury. At last the king
+set off to embark at Winchelsea. While there, the earls presented to
+him a belated list of grievances. He refused to deal with their demand
+for the confirmation of the charters. "My full council," he declared to
+the envoys of the earls, "is not with me, and without it I cannot reply
+to your requests. Tell those who have sent you that, if they will come
+with me to Flanders, they will please me greatly. If they will not
+come, I trust they will do no harm to me, or at any rate to my
+kingdom." On August 24 he took ship for Flanders, and a few days later
+he and his troops safely landed at Sluys, whence they made their way to
+Ghent. Nearly a thousand men-at-arms and a great force of infantry,
+largely Welsh and Irish, swelled the expedition to considerable
+proportions. After all his troubles, Edward found that the loyalty of
+his subjects enabled him to carry out the ideal which he had formulated
+two years before. King and nation were to meet common dangers by action
+undertaken in common.
+
+Everything else was ruthlessly sacrificed in order that the king might
+take an army to Flanders. The Gascon expedition was quietly dropped.
+But the gravest difficulty arose not from Gascony but Scotland.
+Edward's choice of agents to carry out his Scottish policy had been
+singularly unhappy. Warenne, the governor, was a dull and lethargic
+nobleman more than sixty-six years of age. He complained of the bad
+climate of Scotland, and passed most of his time on his Yorkshire
+estates. In his absence Cressingham, the treasurer, and Ormesby, the
+justiciar, became the real representatives of the English power.
+Cressingham was a pompous ecclesiastic, who appropriated to his own
+uses the money set aside for the fortification of Berwick, and was
+odious to the Scots for his rapacity and incompetence. Ormesby was a
+pedantic lawyer, rigid in carrying out the king's orders but stiff and
+unsympathetic in dealing with the Scots. Under such rulers Scotland was
+neither subdued nor conciliated. No real effort was made to track to
+their hiding-places in the hills the numerous outlaws, who had
+abandoned their estates rather than take an oath of fealty to Edward.
+When the English governors took action, they were cruel and
+indiscriminating; and often too were lax and careless. Matters soon
+became serious. William Wallace of Elderslie slew an English official
+in Clydesdale, and threw in his lot with the outlaws. He was joined by
+Sir William Douglas, the former defender of Berwick. By May, 1297,
+Scotland was in full revolt. In the north, Andrew of Moray headed a
+rising in Strathspey. In central Scotland the justiciar barely escaped
+capture, while holding his court at Scone. The south-west, the home
+both of Wallace and Douglas, proved the most dangerous district. There
+the barons, imitating Bohun and Bigod, based their opposition to Edward
+on his claim upon their compulsory service in the French wars. Before
+long the son of the lord of Annandale, Robert Bruce, now called Earl of
+Carrick, Robert Wishart, Bishop of Glasgow, and other magnates were in
+arms, and in close association with Douglas and Wallace.
+
+Edward made light of this rebellion. Resolved to go to Flanders at all
+costs, he contented himself with calling upon the levies of the shires
+north of the Trent to protect his interests in Scotland. Early in July,
+Henry Percy, Warenne's grandson, rode through south-western Scotland,
+at the head of the Cumberland musters, and on July 7, the local
+insurgent leaders, with the exception of Wallace, made their submission
+to him at Irvine. Moreover, Edward released the two Comyns from their
+veiled imprisonment, and sent them back to Scotland to help in
+suppressing the insurrection. Henry Percy boasted that the Scots south
+of the Forth had been reduced to subjection. But a few days later
+Wallace was found to be strongly established in Ettrick forest and was
+threatening Roxburgh. At last Edward stirred up Warenne to return to
+his government. The king took the precaution of leaving some of his
+best warriors in England in case their services were needed against the
+recalcitrant barons or the Scots. Then, as has been said, on August 24
+he crossed over to Flanders.
+
+The constable and marshal were still in arms, and Winchelsea, who, in
+spite of his reconciliation with Edward, was in close communication
+with them, declined to take an active part on the council of regency.
+Two days before Edward took ship, Hereford and Norfolk appeared in arms
+at the exchequer at Westminster, and forbade the officials to continue
+the collection of supplies, until the Great Charter and the Charter of
+the Forest had been confirmed. They strove to win the support of the
+Londoners, who had long had a grievance against Edward for depriving
+them of their right to elect their own mayor, and for subjecting the
+city to the arbitrary rule of a warden nominated by the crown. They
+forbade their followers to commit acts of violence, but they made it
+clear that there could be no peace until the charters were confirmed.
+
+In August, Warenne grappled with the Scottish rising, but his own
+incompetence, and the half-heartedness of the Scottish magnates, on
+whom he relied, made his task very difficult. Wallace retreated beyond
+the Forth, and Warenne reached Stirling on September 10 in pursuit of
+him. He learnt that Wallace was holding the wooded heights, immediately
+to the north of Stirling bridge on the left bank of the Forth, not far
+from the abbey of Cambuskenneth. The Steward of Scotland, who, after
+the collapse of the revolt in the south-west, served under Warenne,
+offered his mediation. But no good result came from his action, and the
+English suspected treachery. Wallace took up a bold attitude, scorning
+either compromise or retreat. He had only a small following of cavalry,
+but his infantry was numerous and enthusiastic. The English resolved to
+attack him on September 11. The Forth at Stirling was crossed by a long
+wooden bridge, so narrow that only two horsemen could pass abreast. It
+was madness to send an army over the river by such a means in the face
+of a watchful enemy. But not only was the English plan of battle
+foolish it was also carried out weakly. Warenne overslept himself, and
+his subordinates wasted the early morning in useless discussions and
+altercations. When at last he woke up, he rejected the advice of a
+Scottish knight to send part of his cavalry over the river by a ford
+which thirty horsemen could traverse abreast, and ordered all his
+troops to cross by the bridge.
+
+Wallace, seeing that the enemy had delivered themselves into his hands,
+remained in the woods until a fair proportion of the English
+men-at-arms had made their way over the stream. He then suddenly
+swooped down upon the bridge, cutting off the retreat of those who had
+traversed it, and blocking all possibility of reinforcement. After a
+short fight the English to the north of the Forth were cut down almost
+to a man. The English on the Stirling side, seeing the fate of their
+comrades, fled in terror, and their Scots allies went over to their
+country men. Among the slain was the greedy Cressingham, whose skin the
+Scots tanned into leather. Warenne did not draw rein until he reached
+Berwick, and in one day all Scotland was lost. The castles of Roxburgh
+and Berwick alone upheld the English flag. Wallace and Moray governed
+all Scotland as "generals of the army of King John". Within a few weeks
+of their victory, they raided the three northern counties of England.
+
+Wallace had freed Scotland, but his wonderful success taught the
+contending factions in England the plain duty of union against the
+common enemy. A new parliament of the three estates was summoned for
+September 30. The opposition leaders came armed, and declared that there
+could be no supply of men or money until their demand for the
+confirmation of the charters was granted. No longer content with simple
+confirmation, they drew up, in the form of a statute, a petition
+requiring that no tallage or aid should henceforth be taken without the
+assent of the estates. This was the so-called _statutum de tallagio non
+concedendo_ which seventeenth-century parliaments and judges erroneously
+accepted as a statute. The helpless regency substantially accepted their
+demands, and, on October 12, issued a confirmation of the charters, to
+which fresh clauses were added, providing, with less generality than in
+the baronial request, that no male-tolts, or such manner of aids as had
+recently been extorted, should be imposed in the future without the
+common consent of all the realm, but making no reference to tallage.[1]
+Liberal supplies were then voted by all the three estates, and
+Winchelsea, who all through these proceedings acted as the brain of the
+baronage, exerted himself to explain away the last of the clerical
+difficulties raised by the _Clericis laicos_.
+
+ [1] The Latin, _Articuli inserti in magna carta_, given by
+ Hemingburgh, ii., 152, is quoted as a statute in the Petition
+ of Right of 1628, under the title _De tallagio non concedendo_.
+ The view of its relation to the French _Confirmatio cartavum_
+ is that taken by M. Bemont, _Chartes des libertes anglaises_,
+ especially pp. xliii., xliv. and 87. It is based on Bartholomew
+ Cotton's nearly contemporary statement (_Hist. Angl_., p. 337).
+
+On November 5 the king ratified, at Ghent, the action of his son's
+advisers. Thus the constitutional struggle was ended by the complete
+triumph of the baronial opposition. And the victory was the more
+signal, because it was gained not over a weak king, careless of his
+rights, but over the strongest of the Plantagenets, greedy to retain
+every scrap of authority. It is with good reason that the Confirmation
+of the Charters of 1297 is reckoned as one of the great turning points
+in the history of our constitution. Its provisions sum up the whole
+national advance which had been made since Gualo and William the
+marshal first identified the English monarchy with the principles
+wrested from John at Runnymede. In the years that immediately followed,
+it might well seem that the act of 1297, like the submission of John,
+was only a temporary expedient of a dexterous statecraft which
+consented with the lips but not with the heart. But in later times,
+when the details of the struggle were forgotten and the noise of the
+battle over, the event stood out in its full significance. Edward had
+been willing to take the people into partnership with him when he
+thought that they would be passive partners, anxious to do his
+pleasure. He was taught that the leaders of the people were henceforth
+to have their share with the crown in determining national policy.
+Common dangers were still to be met by measures deliberated in common,
+but the initiative was no longer exclusively reserved to the monarch.
+The sordid pedantry of the baronial leaders and the high-souled
+determination of the king compel our sympathy for Edward rather than
+his enemies. But all that made English history what it is, was involved
+in the issue, and the future of English freedom was assured when the
+obstinacy of the constable and marshal prevailed over the resolution of
+the great king.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE SCOTTISH FAILURE.
+
+
+The expedition of Edward to Flanders lost its best chance of success
+through the events which retarded its despatch. While the English king
+was wrangling with his barons, the French king was active. On the news
+of the alliance of Count Guy with the English, Robert of Artois was
+summoned from Gascony to the north. While Philip besieged Lille, and
+finally took it, Robert of Artois gained a brilliant victory over the
+Flemings at Furnes on August 20. Meanwhile John of Avesnes, Count of
+Hainault, was closely co-operating with the French, and kept Edward's
+son-in-law and ally, John, Duke of Brabant, from sending effective help
+to the Flemings. Moreover, the Flemish townsmen, in their dislike of
+their count, were largely on the side of the French. Edward's little
+army could do nothing to redress a balance that already inclined so
+heavily on the other side. The Flemings were disappointed at the scanty
+numbers of the English men-at-arms, and stared with wonder and contempt
+at the bare-legged Welsh archers and lancemen, with their uncouth garb,
+strange habits of eating and fighting, and propensity to pillage and
+disorder, though they recognised their hardihood and the effectiveness
+of their missiles.[1] The same disorderly spirit that had marred the
+Rioms campaign still prevailed among the English engaged on foreign
+service. No sooner were the troops landed at Sluys on August 28, than
+the mariners of the Cinque Ports renewed their old feud with the men of
+Yarmouth, and many ships were destroyed and lives lost in this untimely
+conflict. Edward advanced to Bruges, where he was joined by the Count of
+Flanders, but the disloyalty of the townsmen and the approach of King
+Philip forced the king and the earl to take shelter behind the stronger
+walls of Ghent. Immediately on their retreat, Philip occupied Bruges and
+Damme, thus cutting off the English from the direct road to the sea. The
+Anglo-Flemish army was afraid to attack the powerful force of the French
+king. But the French had learnt by experience a wholesome fear of the
+English and Welsh archers, and did not venture to approach Ghent too
+closely. The ridiculous result followed that the Kings of France and
+England avoided every opportunity of fighting out their quarrel, and
+lay, wasting time and money, idly watching each other's movements.
+
+ [1] See for Flemish criticisms of the Welsh, L. van Velthem,
+ _Spiegel Historiaal_, pp. 215-16, ed. Le Long, partly
+ translated by Funck Brentano in his edition of _Annales
+ Qandenses_, p. 7, a work giving full details of these
+ struggles.
+
+The only dignified way of putting an end to this impossible situation
+lay in negotiation. Edward's faithful servant, William of Hotham, the
+Dominican friar whom the pope had appointed Archbishop of Dublin, was
+in the English camp. Hotham, who had enjoyed Philip's personal
+friendship while teaching theology in the Paris schools, was an
+acceptable mediator between the two kings. A short truce was signed at
+Vyve-Saint-Bavon on the Lys on October 7. This allowed time for more
+elaborate negotiations to be carried on at Courtrai and Tournai, and on
+January 31, 1298, a truce, in which the allies of both kings were
+included, was signed at Tournai, to last until January 6, 1300. It was
+agreed to refer all questions in dispute to the arbitration of Boniface
+VIII, "not as pope but as a private person, as Benedict Gaetano". Both
+kings despatched their envoys to Rome, where with marvellous celerity
+Boniface issued, on June 30, 1298, a preliminary award. It suggested
+the possibility of a settlement on the basis of each belligerent
+retaining the possessions which he had held at the beginning of the
+struggle, and entering into an alliance strengthened by a double
+marriage. Edward was to marry the French king's sister Margaret, while
+Edward of Carnarvon was to be betrothed to Philip's infant daughter
+Isabella. The latter match involved the repudiation of the betrothal of
+Edward of Carnarvon with the daughter of the Count of Flanders. But all
+through the award there was no mention of the allies of either party.
+Boniface was too eager for peace to be over-scrupulous as to the
+honourable obligations of the two kings who sought his mediation.
+
+The English regency, which grappled so courageously with the baronial
+opposition, showed an equal energy in protecting the northern counties
+from the Scots. About the time of the confirmation of the charters,
+Wallace crossed the border and spread desolation and ruin from Carlisle
+to Hexham. Warenne and Henry Percy, who had attended the October
+parliament at London, were soon back in the north. By December the
+largest army which was ever assembled during Edward I.'s reign[1]
+was collected together on the borders, and preparations were made for a
+winter campaign after the fashion which had proved so effective in
+Wales. But all that Warenne was able to accomplish was the relief of
+Roxburgh. The quality of the troops was not equal to their quantity,
+and all his misfortunes had not taught him wisdom. Early in Lent Edward
+stopped active campaigning by announcing that no great operations were
+to be attempted until his return. Thereupon Warenne sent the bulk of
+the troops home, and remained at Berwick, awaiting the king's arrival.
+
+ [1] Morris, _Welsh Wars of Edward I._, pp. 284-86.
+
+Edward landed at Sandwich on March 14, 1298, and at once set about
+preparing to avenge Stirling Bridge. He met his parliament on
+Whitsunday, May 25, at York. The Scots barons were summoned to this
+assembly, but as they neither attended nor sent proxies, their absence
+was deemed to be proof of contumacy. A month later a large army was
+concentrated at Roxburgh. The earls and barons with their retinues
+mustered to the number of 1,100 horse, while 1,300 men-at-arms served
+under the king's banners for pay. Though Gascony was still in Philip's
+hands, the good relations that prevailed between England and France
+allowed the presence in Edward's host of a magnificent troop of Gascon
+lords, headed by the lord of Albret and the Captal de Buch, and
+conspicuous for the splendour of their armour and the costliness and
+beauty of their chargers. On this occasion Edward set little store on
+infantry, and was content to accept the services of those who came of
+their own free will. Yet even under these conditions some 12,000 foot
+were assembled, more than 10,000 of whom came from Wales and its march.
+
+The leaders of the opposition were present in Edward's host. On the eve
+of the invasion, the impatient king was kept back by the declaration of
+Hereford and Norfolk that they would not cross the frontier, until
+definite assurances were given that the king would carry out the
+confirmation of the charters which he had informally ratified on
+foreign soil. Etiquette or pride prevented Edward himself satisfying
+their demand, but the Bishop of Durham and three loyal earls pledged
+themselves that the king would fulfil all his promises on his return.
+Then the two earls suffered the expedition to proceed; and on July 6
+the army left Roxburgh, proceeding by moderate marches to Kirkliston on
+the Almond, where it encamped on the 15th. Here there was a few days'
+delay, while Bishop Bek captured some of the East Lothian castles which
+were threatening the English rear. Already there was a difficulty in
+obtaining supplies from the devastated country-side, and northerly
+winds prevented the provision ships from sailing from Berwick to the
+Forth. The worst hardships fell upon the Welsh infantry, who began to
+mutiny and talked of joining the Scots. Matters grew worse on the
+arrival of a wine ship, for such ample rations of wine were distributed
+to the Welsh that very many of them became drunk. So threatening was
+the state of affairs that Edward thought of retreating to Edinburgh. On
+July 21, however, the news was brought that Wallace and his followers
+were assembled in great force at Falkirk, some seventeen miles to the
+west. The prospect of battle at once restored the courage and
+discipline of the army, and Edward ordered an advance. That night the
+host bivouacked on the moors east of Linlithgow, "with shields for
+pillows and armour for beds". During the night the king, who was
+sleeping in the open field like the meanest trooper, received a kick
+from his horse which broke two of his ribs. Yet the early morning of
+July 22, the feast of St. Mary Magdalen, saw him riding at the head of
+his troops through the streets of Linlithgow. At last the Scots lances
+were descried on the slopes of a hill near Falkirk, and the English
+rested while the bishop and king heard mass. Then the army, which had
+eaten nothing since the preceding day, advanced to the battle.
+
+Wallace had a large following of infantry, but a mere handful of
+mounted men-at-arms. He ordered the latter to occupy the rear, and
+grouped his pikemen, the flower of his army, into four great circles,
+or "schiltrons," which, with the front ranks kneeling or sitting and
+the rear ranks standing, presented to the enemy four living castles,
+each with a bristling hedge of pikes, dense enough, it was hoped, to
+break the fierce shock of a cavalry charge. The spaces between the four
+schiltrons were occupied by the archers, the best of whom came from
+Ettrick Forest. The front was further protected by a morass, and
+perhaps also by a row of stout posts sunk into the ground and fastened
+together by ropes.
+
+Edward ordered the Welsh archers to prepare the way with their missiles
+for the advance of the men-at-arms. But the Welsh refused to move, so
+that Edward was forced to proceed by a direct cavalry charge. For this
+purpose he divided his men-at-arms into four "battles". The first of
+these was commanded by the Earl of Lincoln, with whom were the
+constable and marshal, who at last had an opportunity of serving the
+king in battle in the offices which belonged to them by hereditary
+right. On approaching the morass this first line was thrown into some
+confusion, and paused in its advance. Behind it the second battle,
+under command of the Bishop of Durham, who, perhaps, knew the ground
+better, wheeled to the east and took the Scots on their left flank. But
+Bek's followers disobeyed his orders to wait until the rest of the army
+came up, and they suffered heavy losses in attacking the left
+schiltron. Before long, however, Lincoln found a way round the morass
+westwards to the enemy's right, while the two rearmost battles, headed
+by the king and Earl Warenne, also advanced to the front. The combat
+thus became general. The Scots cavalry fled without striking a blow,
+and some of the English thought that Wallace himself rode off the field
+with them. The archers between the schiltrons were easily trampled
+down, so that the only effective resistance came from the circles of
+pikemen. The yeomanry of Scotland steadily held their own against the
+fierce charges of the mail-clad knights, and it looked for a time as if
+the day was theirs. But the despised infantry at last made their way to
+the front and poured in showers of arrows that broke down the Scottish
+ranks. Friend and foe were at such close quarters that the English who
+had no bows threw stones against the Scottish circles. When the way was
+thus prepared, the horsemen easily penetrated through the gaps made in
+the circles, and before long the Scottish pikemen were a crowd of
+panic-stricken fugitives. Edward's brilliant victory was won with
+comparatively little loss.
+
+It was years before the Scots again ventured to meet the English in the
+open field. Yet the king's victory was not followed by any real conquest
+even of southern Scotland. Edward advanced to Stirling, where he rested
+until he had recovered from his accident, while detachments of his
+troops penetrated as far as Perth and St. Andrews. Meanwhile the
+south-west rose in revolt, under Robert Bruce, Earl of Carrick, whose
+father had fought at Falkirk. Late in August, Edward made his way to Ayr
+and occupied it, while Bruce fled before him. Provisions were still
+scarce, and the army was weary of fighting. The Durham contingent
+deserted in a body,[1] and the earls were so lukewarm that Edward was
+fain to return by way of Carlisle, capturing Lochmaben, Bruce's
+Annandale stronghold, on the way. On September 8 the king reached
+Carlisle, where the constable and marshal declared that they had lost so
+many men and horses that they could no longer continue the campaign.
+Edward tried to stem the tide of desertion by promises of Scottish lands
+to those who would remain with his banners. But the distribution of
+these rewards proved only a fresh source of discontent. At last Edward
+was forced to dismiss the greater part of his forces. He lingered in the
+north until the end of the year, but there was no more real fighting;
+with the beginning of 1299 he returned to the south, convinced that the
+disloyalty of his barons had neutralised his triumphs in the field. The
+few castles which still upheld the English cause in Scotland were soon
+closely besieged.
+
+ [1] Lapsley, _County Palatine of Durham_, p. 128.
+
+During the whole of 1299 Edward was prevented by other work from
+prosecuting the war against the Scots. Even the borderers were sick of
+fighting, and Bishop Bek, who had hitherto afforded him an unswerving
+support with all the forces of his palatinate, was forced to desist
+from warlike operations by the refusal of his tenants to serve any
+longer beyond the bounds of the lands of St. Cuthbert. While the men of
+Durham abandoned the war, there was little reason to wonder at the
+indifference of the south country as to the progress of the Scots. In
+the Lenten parliament at London, the Earls of Hereford and Norfolk
+pressed Edward once more to fulfil his promise to carry out the
+confirmation of the charters. The king would not yield to their demand
+yet dared not refuse it. In his perplexity he had recourse to evasions
+which further embittered his relations with them. He promised that he
+would give an answer the next day, but when the morrow came, he
+secretly withdrew from the city. The angry barons followed him to his
+retreat and reminded him of his broken promise. Edward coolly replied
+that he left London because his health was suffering from the corrupt
+air of the town, and bade the barons return, as his council had his
+reply ready. The barons obeyed the king's orders, but their indignation
+passed all bounds when they found that the king's promised confirmation
+of the charters was vitiated by a new clause saving all the rights of
+the crown, and that nothing was said as to the promised perambulation
+of the forests. In bitter wrath the parliament broke up, and the
+Londoners, who shared the anger of the barons, threatened a revolt.
+After Easter these stormy scenes were repeated in a new parliament, and
+Edward was at last forced to yield a grudging assent to all the demands
+of the opposition, and even to appoint a commission for the
+perambulation of the forests. By the time the summer was at hand, the
+progress of the negotiations with France occupied Edward so fully that
+he had abundant excuse for not precipitating a new rupture with his
+barons, by insisting upon a fresh campaign against the Scots.
+
+A papal legate presided over a congress of English and French
+ambassadors at Montreuil-sur-mer, which belonged to Edward by right of
+the late queen, Eleanor as Countess of Ponthieu. The outcome of these
+deliberations was the treaty of Montreuil, concluded on June 19, 1299.
+It was not the final pacification which had been hoped for. Edward
+indeed abandoned his Flemish allies, but Philip would not relax his
+hold upon Gascony, and without that a definitive peace was impossible.
+The treaty of Montreuil was simply a marriage treaty. Edward was
+forthwith to marry Margaret, and his son was to be betrothed to
+Isabella of France. Neither the prolongation of the truce nor the
+affairs of the Flemings were mentioned in it, while all that Philip did
+for the Scots was to provide for the liberation of the deposed King
+John from his English prison. As soon as the ratifications were
+exchanged the king, who was then sixty years of age, and his youthful
+bride were married on September 9 at Canterbury by Archbishop
+Winchelsea.
+
+Edward's willingness to marry the sister of the king who still kept him
+out of Gascony can best be explained by his overmastering desire to
+renew operations in Scotland. Shortly after his marriage, he again
+busied himself with preparations for the long-delayed Scots campaign.
+It was high time that he took action. The English garrisons were
+surrendering one by one, and the Scottish magnates were deserting the
+English cause. Their conversion to patriotic principles was made easier
+by the decay of Wallace's power consequent on his defeat at Falkirk.
+After stormy scenes with his aristocratic rivals, Wallace withdrew from
+Scotland and went to the continent, where he implored the help of the
+King of France. Philip proved true to his new brother-in-law, and put
+Wallace in prison, only releasing him that he might go to Rome and
+enlist the sympathy of Boniface VIII. Meanwhile the Scots chose a new
+regency at the head of which was the younger John Comyn of Badenoch.
+Under these changed conditions the Scottish earls rapidly rallied round
+the national cause. Stirling, Edward's chief stronghold in central
+Scotland, was so hardly pressed that the men-at-arms were forced to eat
+their chargers. Yet when the English barons assembled about the
+beginning of winter, in obedience to Edward's summons, they stubbornly
+declared that they would not endure the hardships of a winter campaign
+until the king had fulfilled his pledges as regards the charters. Thus
+left to their own resources, the sorely tried garrison of Stirling
+surrendered to the Scots.
+
+In March, 1300, Edward met his parliament at Westminster. Despite the
+straits to which he was reduced, he was still unwilling to make a
+complete surrender. He avoided a formal re-issue of the charters by
+giving his sanction to a long series of articles, drawn up apparently by
+the barons. These articles provided for the better publication of the
+charters, and the appointment in every shire of a commission to punish
+all offences against them which were not already provided for by the
+common law; together with numerous technical clauses "for the relief of
+the grievances that the people have had by reason of the wars that have
+been, and for the amendment of their estate, and that they may be more
+ready in the king's service and more willing to aid him when he has need
+of them ". This document was known as _Articuli super cartas_.[1] At the
+same time the forest perambulation, which had long been ordered, was
+directed to be proceeded with at once. For this reason a chronicler
+calls this assembly "the parliament of the perambulation".[2] The
+reconciliation between the king and his subjects was attested by a grant
+of a twentieth.
+
+ [1] It is published in Bemont's _Chartes_, pp. 99-108, with
+ valuable comments; another draft analysed in _Hist. MSS.
+ Comm._, 6th Report, i., p. 344.
+
+ [2] Langtoft, ii, 320.
+
+Edward's concessions once more enabled him to face the Scots, and the
+summer saw a gallant army mustered at Carlisle, though some of the
+earls, including Roger Bigod, still held aloof. A two months' campaign
+was fought in south-western Scotland in July and August. But the
+peasants drove their cattle to the hills, and rainy weather impeded the
+king's movements. The chief exploit of the campaign was the capture of
+Carlaverock castle, though even in the glowing verse of the herald, who
+has commemorated the taking of this stronghold,[1] the military
+insignificance of the achievement cannot be concealed. Edward returned
+to the same district in October, but he effected so little that he was
+glad to agree to a truce with the Scots, which Philip the Fair urged him
+to accept. The armistice was to last until Whitsuntide, and Edward
+immediately returned to England. He had not yet satisfied his subjects,
+and was again forced to meet his estates.
+
+ [1] _The Siege of Carlaverock_, ed. Nicolas (1828).
+
+A full parliament assembled on January 20, 1301, at Lincoln. The
+special business was to receive the report of the forest perambulation;
+and the first anticipation of the later custom of continuing the same
+parliament from one session to another can be discerned in the
+direction to the sheriffs that they should return the same
+representatives of the shires and boroughs as had attended the Lenten
+parliament of 1300, and only hold fresh elections in the case of such
+members as had died or become incapacitated. During the ten days that
+the commons were in session stormy scenes occurred. Edward would only
+promise to agree to the disafforestments recommended by the
+perambulators, if the estates would assure him that he could do so,
+without violating his coronation oath or disinheriting his crown. The
+estates refused to undertake this grave responsibility, and a long
+catalogue of their grievances was presented to Edward by Henry of
+Keighley, knight of the shire for Lancashire, and one of the first
+members of the third estate of whose individual action history has
+preserved any trace. The commons demanded a fresh confirmation of the
+charters; the punishment of the royal ministers who had infringed them,
+or the _Articuli super cartas_ of the previous session, and the
+completion of the proposed disafforestments. In addition, the prelates
+declared that they could not assent to any tax being imposed upon the
+clergy contrary to the papal prohibition. Among the ministers specially
+signalled out for attack was the treasurer, Bishop Walter Langton, and
+in this Edward discerned the influence of Winchelsea, for he was
+Langton's personal enemy. The king's disgust at the primate's action
+was the more complete since Bishop Bek now arrayed himself on the side
+of the opposition. Edward showed his ill-will by consigning Henry of
+Keighley to prison. But the coalition was too formidable to be
+withstood. The king agreed to all the secular demands of the estates,
+accepted the hated disafforestments and directed the re-issue of a
+further confirmation of the charters, but refused his assent to the
+demand of the prelates. A grant of a fifteenth was then made, and
+Edward dismissed the popular representatives on January 30, retaining
+the prelates and nobles for further business. On February 14, the last
+confirmation of the charters concluded the long chapter of history,
+which had begun at Runnymede.
+
+Edward strove to separate his baronial and his clerical enemies, and
+found an opportunity, which he was not slow to use, in the
+uncompromising papalism of Winchelsea. Boniface VIII. had no sooner
+settled the relations of England and France than he threw himself with
+ardour into an attempt to establish peace between England and Scotland.
+Scottish emissaries, including perhaps Wallace himself, gave Boniface
+their version of the ancient relations of the two crowns. On June 27,
+1299, the pope issued the letter _Scimus, fili_, in which he claimed
+that Scotland specially belonged to the apostolic see, on the ground
+that it was converted through the relics of St. Andrew. He denied all
+feudal dependence of Scotland on Edward, and explained away the
+submissions of 1291 as arising from such momentary fear as might fall
+upon the most steadfast. If Edward persisted in his claims, he was to
+submit them to the judgment of the Roman _curia_ within the next six
+months. In 1300 Winchelsea, who fully accepted the new papal doctrine,
+sought out Edward in the midst of the Carlaverock campaign and presented
+him with Boniface's letter. Edward's hot temper fired up at the
+archbishop's ill-timed intervention, and subsequent military failures
+had not smoothed over the situation. His wrath reached its climax when
+Winchelsea once more stirred up opposition in the Lincoln parliament,
+and his refusal of a demand, which the primate had astutely added to the
+commons' requests, showed that he was prepared for war to the knife.
+Edward laid the papal letter before the earls and barons that still
+tarried with him at Lincoln. His appeal to their patriotism was not
+unsuccessful. A letter was drawn up, which was sealed, then and
+subsequently, by more than a hundred secular magnates, in which Boniface
+was roundly told that the King of England was in no wise bound to answer
+in the pope's court as to his rights over the realm of Scotland or as to
+any other temporal matter, and that the papal claim was unprecedented,
+and prejudicial to Edward's sovereignly. A longer historical statement
+was composed by the king's order in answer to Boniface. It is not
+certain that the two documents ever reached the pope, but they had great
+effect in influencing English opinion and in breaking down the alliance
+between the baronage and the ecclesiastical party.[1] Winchelsea's
+influence was fatally weakened, and the period of his overthrow was at
+hand.
+
+ [1] See, on the barons' letter, the _Ancestor_, for July and
+ October, 1903, and Jan., 1904.
+
+The triumph over Winchelsea made Edward's position stronger than it had
+been during the first days of the Lincoln parliament. That assembly
+ended amidst the festivities which attended the creation of Edward of
+Carnarvon as Prince of Wales, Earl of Chester, and Count of Ponthieu.
+The new prince, already seventeen years of age, had made his first
+campaign in the previous year. But all the pains that Edward took in
+training his son in warfare and in politics bore little fruit, and
+Edward of Carnarvon's introduction to active life was only to add
+another trouble to the many that beset the king.
+
+When the truce with Scotland expired, in the summer of 1301, Edward
+again led an army over the border, in which the Prince of Wales
+appeared, at the head of a large Welsh contingent. Little of military
+importance happened. Edward remained in Scotland over the cold season,
+and kept his Christmas court at Linlithgow. Men and horses perished
+amidst the rigours of the northern winter, and, before the end of
+January, 1302, the king was glad to accept a truce, suggested by Philip
+of France, to last until the end of November. Immediately afterwards he
+was called to the south by the negotiations for a permanent peace with
+France, which still hung fire despite his marriage to the French king's
+sister. The earlier stages of the negotiation were transacted at Rome,
+but it was soon clear to Edward that no good would come to him from the
+intervention of the _curia_. The fundamental difficulty still lay in the
+refusal of Philip to relax his grasp on Gascony. Not even the
+exaltation, consequent on the success of the famous jubilee of 1300,
+blinded Boniface to the patent fact that he dared not order the
+restitution of Gascony. "We cannot give you an award," declared the pope
+to the English envoys in 1300. "If we pronounced in your favour, the
+French would not abide by it, and could not be compelled, for they would
+make light of any penalty." "What the French once lay hold of," he said
+again, "they never let go, and to have to do with the French is to have
+to do with the devil."[1] A year later Boniface could do no more than
+appeal to the crusading zeal of Edward not to allow his claim on a patch
+of French soil to stand between him and his vow. With such commonplaces
+the papal mediation died away.
+
+ [1] See the remarkable report of the Bishop of Winchester to
+ Edward printed in _Engl. Hist. Review_, xvii. (1902), pp.
+ 518-27.
+
+Two events in 1302 indirectly contributed towards the establishment of
+a permanent peace. These were the successful revolt of Flanders from
+French domination, and the renewed quarrel between Philip and Boniface.
+On May 18, the Flemings, in the "matins of Bruges," cruelly avenged
+themselves for the oppressions which they had endured from Philip's
+officials, and on July 11 the revolted townsfolk won the battle of
+Courtrai, in which their heavy armed infantry defeated the feudal
+cavalry of France, a victory of the same kind as that Wallace had
+vainly hoped to gain at Falkirk. Even before the Flemish rising, the
+reassertion of high sacerdotal doctrine in the bull _Ausculta, fili_
+had renewed the strife between Boniface and the French king. A few
+months later the bull _Unam sanctam_ laid down with emphasis the
+doctrine that those who denied that the temporal sword belongs to St.
+Peter were heretics, unmindful of the teachings of Christ. Thus began
+the famous difference that went on with ever-increasing fury until the
+outrage at Anagni, on September 7, 1303, brought about the fall of
+Boniface and the overthrow of the Hildebrandine papacy. Meanwhile
+Philip was devoting his best energies to constant, and not altogether
+vain, attempts to avenge the defeat of Courtrai, and re-establish his
+hold on Flanders. With these two affairs on his hands, it was useless
+for him to persevere in his attempt to hold Gascony.
+
+In the earlier stages of his quarrel with Philip, Boniface built great
+hopes on Edward's support, and strongly urged him to fight for holy
+Church against the impious French king. But Edward had suffered too
+much from Boniface to fall into so obvious a trap. His hold over his
+own clergy was so firm that Winchelsea himself had no chance of taking
+up the papal call to battle. Thus it was that _Unam sanctam_ produced
+no such clerical revolt in England as _Clericis laicos_ had done. It
+was Edward's policy to make use of Philip's necessities to win back
+Gascony, and cut off all hope of French support from the Scottish
+patriots. Philip himself was the more disposed to agree with his
+brother-in-law's wishes, because about Christmas, 1302, Bordeaux threw
+off the French yoke and called in the English. The best way to save
+French dignity was by timely concession. Accordingly, on May 20, 1303,
+the definitive treaty of Paris was sealed, by which the two kings were
+pledged to "perpetual peace and friendship". Gascony was restored, and
+Edward agreed that he, or his son, should perform liege homage for it.
+With the discharge of this duty by the younger Edward at Amiens, in
+1304, the last stage of the pacification was accomplished. For the rest
+of the reign, England and France remained on cordial terms. Neither
+Edward nor Philip had resources adequate to the accomplishment of great
+schemes of foreign conquest. Though Edward got back Gascony, he owed
+it, not to his own power, but to the embarrassment of his rival.
+
+While completing his pacification with Philip the Fair, Edward was
+busily engaged in establishing his power at home, at the expense of the
+clerical and baronial opposition, which had stood for so many years in
+the way of the conquest of Scotland. Since the parliament of Lincoln,
+Winchelsea was no longer dangerous. He failed even to get Boniface on
+his side in a scandalous attack which he instigated on Bishop Langton.
+His constant efforts to enlarge his jurisdiction raised up enemies all
+over his diocese and province, and the mob of his cathedral city broke
+open his palace, while he was in residence there. His inability to
+introduce into England even a pale reflection of the struggle of Philip
+and the pope showed how clearly he had lost influence since the days of
+_Clericis laicos_. A more recent convert to higher clerical pretensions
+also failed. Bishop Bek of Durham lost all his power, and was deprived
+of his temporalities by the king in 1302. Two years later the
+insignificant Archbishop of York also incurred the royal displeasure,
+and was punished in the same fashion. With Durham, Norhamshire, and
+Hexhamshire all in the royal hands, the road into Scotland was
+completely open.
+
+The heavy hand of Edward fell upon earls as well as upon bishops. Even
+in the early days of his reign when none, save Gilbert of Gloucester,
+dared uplift the standard of opposition, Edward had not spared the
+greatest barons in his efforts to eliminate the idea of tenure from
+English political life. A subtle extension of his earlier policy began
+to emphasise the dependence of the landed dignitaries on his pleasure.
+The extinction of several important baronial houses made this the
+easier, and Edward took care to retain escheats in his own hands, or at
+least to entrust them only to persons of approved confidence. The old
+leaders of opposition were dead or powerless. Ralph of Monthermer, the
+simple north-country knight who had won the hand of Joan of Acre, ruled
+over the Gloutester-Glamorgan inheritance on behalf of his wife and
+Edward's little grandson, Gilbert of Clare. The Earl of Hereford died
+in 1299, and in 1302 his son and successor, another Humphrey Bohun, was
+bribed by a marriage with the king's daughter, Elizabeth, the widowed
+Countess of Holland, to surrender his lands to the crown and receive
+them back, like the Earl of Gloucester in 1290, entailed on the issue
+of himself and his consort. In the same year the childless earl
+marshal, Roger Bigod, conscious of his inability to continue any longer
+his struggle against royal assumptions and at variance with his brother
+and heir, made a similar surrender of his estates, which was the more
+humiliating since the estate in tail, with which he was reinvested, was
+bound to terminate with his life. In 1306, on the marshal's death, the
+Bigod inheritance lapsed to the crown. Much earlier than that, in 1293,
+Edward had extorted on her deathbed from the great heiress, Isabella of
+Fors, Countess of Albemarle and Devon, the bequest of the Isle of Wight
+and the adjacent castle of Christchurch. In 1300, on the death of the
+king's childless cousin, Earl Edmund, the wealthy earldom of Cornwall
+escheated to the crown. To Edward's contemporaries the acquisition of
+the earldoms of Norfolk and Cornwall seemed worthy to be put alongside
+the conquests of Wales and Scotland.[1]
+
+ [1] See John of London, _Commendatio lamentabilis_ in _Chron.
+ of Edw. I. and Edw. II._, ii., 8-9. See for the earldoms my
+ _Earldoms under Edward I._ in _Transactions of the Royal
+ Historical Society, new ser._, viii. (1894), 129-155.
+
+Even more important as adding to Edward's resources than these direct
+additions to the royal domains, was the increasing dependence of the
+remaining earls upon the crown. His sons-in-law of Gloucester and
+Hereford were entirely under his sway. In 1304 the aged Earl Warenne
+had died, and in 1306 his grandson and successor was bound closely to
+the royal policy by his marriage with Joan of Bar, Edward's
+grand-daughter. In the same way Edward's young nephew, Thomas of
+Lancaster, ruled over the three earldoms of Lancaster, Derby, and
+Leicester, and by his marriage to the daughter and heiress of Henry
+Lacy, was destined to add to his immense estates the additional
+earldoms of Lincoln and Salisbury. Edward of Carnarvon was learning the
+art of government in Wales, Cheshire, and Ponthieu. The policy of
+concentrating the higher baronial dignities in the royal family was no
+novelty, but Edward carried it out more systematically and successfully
+than any of his predecessors. He reaped the immediate advantages of his
+dexterity in the extinction of baronial opposition and in the zeal of
+the baronial levies against the Scots during the concluding years of
+his reign. Yet the later history of the Middle Ages bears witness to
+the grievous dangers to the wielder of the royal power which lurked
+beneath a system so attractive in appearance.
+
+The truce with the Scots ended in November, 1302, and Edward despatched
+a strong force to the north under John Segrave. On February 24, 1303,
+Segrave, attacked unexpectedly by the enemy at Roslin, near Edinburgh,
+suffered a severe defeat. The conclusion of the treaty of Paris gave
+Edward the opportunity for avenging the disaster. He summoned his
+levies to assemble at Roxburgh for Whitsuntide and, a fortnight before
+that time, appeared in person in Tweeddale. After seven weary years of
+waiting and failure, he was at last in a position to wear down the
+obstinate Scots by the same systematic and deliberate policy that had
+won for him the principality of Wales. The invasion of Scotland was
+henceforth to continue as long as the Scottish resistance. Adequate
+resources were procured to enable the royal armies to hold the field,
+and a politic negotiation with the foreign merchants resulted in a
+_carta mercatoria_ by which additional customs were imposed upon
+English exports. These imposts, known as the "new and small customs,"
+as opposed to the "old and great customs" established in 1275, were not
+sanctioned by parliamentary grant: but for the moment they provoked no
+opposition. Thus Edward was equipped both with men and money for his
+undertaking. At last the true conquest of Scotland began.
+
+No attempt was made in the Lothians to stop Edward's advance, but the
+Scots, under the regent, John Comyn of Badenoch, made a vigorous effort
+to hold the line of the Forth against him. Their plan seemed to promise
+well, for Stirling castle was still in Scottish hands. Edward crossed
+the river by a ford, and all organised efforts to oppose him at once
+ceased. Prudently leaving Stirling to itself for the present, he
+hurried to Perth. After spending most of June and July at Perth, he led
+his army northwards, nearly following the line of his advance in 1296,
+through Perth, Brechin, and Aberdeen, to Banff and Elgin. The most
+remote point reached was Kinloss, a few miles west of Elgin, in which
+neighbourhood he spent much of September. Then he slowly retraced his
+steps and took up his winter quarters at Dunfermline. In all this long
+progress, the only energetic resistance which Edward encountered was at
+Brechin. Flushed with his triumph, he ordered Stirling to be besieged,
+and from April, 1304, directed the operations himself. The garrison
+held out with the utmost gallantry, but at last a breach was effected
+in the walls, and on July 24 the defenders laid down their arms. Long
+before the Scots people despaired of withstanding the invader, the
+nobles grew cold in the defence of their country. In February, 1304,
+the regent and many of the earls made their submission. It was more
+than suspected that this result was brought about by the threat of
+Edward to divide their lands among his English followers. But on Comyn
+and his friends showing a desire to yield, the king readily promised
+them their lives and estates. Believing that his task was over, Edward
+returned to England in August after an absence of nearly fifteen
+months. He crossed the Humber early in December, kept his Christmas
+court at Lincoln, and reached London late in February. As a sign of the
+completion of the conquest, he ordered that the law courts, which since
+1297 had been established at York, should resume their sessions in
+London.
+
+A few heroes still upheld the independence of Scotland. Foremost among
+them was Sir William Wallace, who, since his mission to France in 1298,
+had disappeared from history. The submission of the barons to Edward
+gave him another chance. He took a strenuous part in the struggle of
+1303-4, and he was specially exempted from the easy pardons with which
+Edward purchased the submission of the greater nobles. It was the
+daring and skill of Wallace that prolonged the Scots' struggle until
+the spring of 1305. But he was then once more an outlaw and a fugitive,
+only formidable by his hold over the people, and by the possibility
+that the smallest spark of resistance might at any time be blown into a
+flame. At last he was captured through the zeal, or treachery, of a
+Scot in Edward's service. In August, Wallace was despatched to London
+to stand a public trial for treason, sedition, sacrilege, and murder.
+He denied that he had ever become Edward's subject, but did not escape
+conviction. With his execution, the last stage of Edward's triumph in
+Scotland was accomplished. Though the full measure of Wallace's fame
+belongs to a later age rather than his own, yet it was a sure instinct
+that made the Scottish people celebrate him as the popular hero of
+their struggle for independence. His courage, persistency, and daring
+stands in marked contrast to the self-seeking opportunism of the great
+nobles, who afterwards appropriated the results of his endeavours. Yet
+we can hardly blame Edward for making an example of him, when he fell
+into his power. Even if Wallace had successfully evaded the oath of
+fealty to Edward, it is scarcely reasonable to expect that the king
+would consider this technical plea as availing against his doctrine
+that all Scots were necessarily his subjects since the submission of
+1296. It was Wallace's glory that he fought his fight and paid the
+penalty of it.
+
+A full parliament of the three estates sat with the king at Westminster
+from February 28 to March 21, 1305. The proceedings of this assembly are
+known with a fulness exceeding that of the record of any of the other
+parliaments of the reign.[1] Among the matters enumerated in the writs
+as specially demanding attention was the "establishment of our realm of
+Scotland". Three Scottish magnates, Robert Wishart, Bishop of Glasgow,
+Robert Bruce, Earl of Carrick, and John Mowbray were particularly called
+upon to give their advice as to how Scotland was to be represented in a
+later parliament, in which the plans for its future government were to
+be drawn up. They informed the king that two bishops, two abbots, two
+barons, and two representatives of the commons, one from the south of
+the Forth and the other from the north thereof, would be sufficient for
+this purpose. This further "parliament" assembled on September 15, three
+weeks after the execution of Wallace. It consisted simply of twenty
+councillors of Edward, and the ten Scottish delegates. From the joint
+deliberations of these thirty sprang the "ordinance made by the lord
+king for the establishment of the land of Scotland".
+
+ [1] See _Memoranda, de parliamento_ (1305), ed. F.W. Maitland
+ (Rolls Series).
+
+Following the general lines of the settlement of the principality of
+Wales, the ordinance combined Edward's direct lordship over Scotland
+with a legal and administrative system separate from that of England.
+John of Brittany, Earl of Richmond, the king's sister's son, was made
+Edward's lieutenant and warden of Scotland, and under him were a
+chancellor, a chamberlain, and a controller. Scotland was to be split
+up for judicial purposes into districts corresponding to its racial and
+political divisions. Four pairs of justices were appointed for each of
+these regions, two for Lothian, two for Galloway and the south-west,
+two for the lands "between Forth and the mountains," that is the
+Lowland districts of the north-east, and two for the lands "beyond the
+mountains," that is for the Highlands and islands. Sheriffs "natives
+either of England or Scotland" were nominated for each of the shires,
+and it was significant that the great majority of them were Scots and
+that the hereditary sheriffdoms of the older system were still
+continued. The "custom of the Scots and the Welsh," that is the Celtic
+laws of the Highlanders and the Strathclyde Welsh, was "henceforth
+prohibited and disused". John of Brittany was to "assemble the good
+people of Scotland in a convenient place" where "the laws of King David
+and the amendments by other kings" were to be rehearsed, and such of
+these laws as are "plainly against God and reason" were to be reformed,
+all doubtful matters being referred to the judgment of Edward. The
+king's lieutenant was bidden to "remove such persons as might disturb
+the peace" to the south of the Trent, but their deportation was to be
+in "courteous fashion" and after taking the advice of the "good people
+of Scotland". Care for the preservation of the peace, and for
+administrative reform, is seen in the oath imposed upon officials and
+in the pains taken to secure the custody of the castles. The Scots
+parliament was to be retained, and recent precedents also suggested the
+probability of Scottish representation in the parliament of England. If
+Scotland were to be ruled by Edward at all, it would have been
+difficult to devise a wiser scheme for its administration. Yet the
+Scottish love of independence was not to be bartered away for better
+government. Within six months the new constitution was overthrown, and
+the chief part in its destruction was taken by the Scots by whose
+advice Edward had drawn it up.
+
+Edward at last felt himself in a position to take his long deferred
+revenge on Winchelsea. The primate still kept aloof from the councils of
+the king, and his spirit was as irreconcilable as ever. He gained his
+last victory in the Lenten parliament of 1305, when he prevented the
+promulgation of a statute, passed on the petition of the laity, but
+agreed to by all the estates, which forbade taxes on ecclesiastical
+property involving the exportation of money out of the country.[1] At
+this moment the long vacancy of the papacy, which followed the
+pontificate of Benedict XI., Boniface VIII.'s short-lived successor, had
+not yet come to an end. Soon, however, Winchelsea's zeal on behalf of
+papal taxation was to be ill requited. On June 5, 1305, Bertrand de
+Goth, a Gascon nobleman who since 1299 had been archbishop of Bordeaux,
+was elected to the papacy as Clement V., through the management of
+Philip the Fair. A dependant of the King of France and a subject of the
+King of England, the new pope showed a complaisance towards kings which
+stood in strong contrast to the ultramontane austerity of his
+predecessors. He refused to visit Italy, received the papal crown at
+Lyons, and spent the first years of his pontificate in Poitou and
+Gascony. Ultimately establishing himself at Avignon, he began that
+seventy years of Babylonish captivity of the apostolic see which greatly
+degraded the papacy. Though Clement's main concern was to fulfil the
+exacting conditions which, as it was believed, Philip had imposed upon
+him, he was almost as subservient to Edward as to the King of France.
+His deference to his natural lord enabled Edward to renounce the most
+irksome of the obligations which he had incurred to his subjects, to
+punish Winchelsea, and to restrain Roman authority by laws which
+anticipate the legislation of the age of Edward III.
+
+ [1] _Memoranda de parliamento_, preface, p. li. The statement
+ in the text is an inference suggested by Professor Maitland's
+ account of the statute _De asportis religiosorum_. For the last
+ struggle of Edward and Winchelsea, see Stubbs's preface to
+ _Chron. of Edw. I. and Edw. II._, i., xcix.-cxiii.
+
+At Clement V.'s coronation at Lyons, in November, England was
+represented by Winchelsea's old enemy, Bishop Walter Langton, and by
+the Earl of Lincoln. The first result of their work was the
+promulgation, on December 29, of the bull _Regalis devotionis_, by
+which the pope annulled the additions made to the charters in 1297 and
+succeeding years, and dispensed Edward from the oath which he had taken
+to observe them, on the ground that it was in conflict with his
+coronation vows. Next year Edward took advantage of this bull to revoke
+the disafforestments made by the parliament of Lincoln in 1301. It may
+be a sign either of the moderation, or of the well-grounded fears of
+the king, that he made no further use of the papal absolution. But,
+like his father and grandfather, he used the papal authority to set
+aside his plighted word, and his conduct in this respect suggests that
+it was well for England that the renewal of the Scottish troubles
+reduced for the rest of the reign the temptation, which the bull held
+out to him, to play fast and loose with the liberties of his subjects.
+The standards of contemporary morality were not, however, infringed by
+Edward's action, dishonourable and undignified as it seems to us of
+later times.
+
+Winchelsea's turn was at last come. On February 12, 1306,
+Clement suspended him from his office, and summoned him to appear
+before the _curia_. On March 25 the archbishop humbled himself before
+Edward and begged for his protection. But the king overwhelmed him with
+reproaches and refused to show him any mercy. Within two months, the
+primate took ship for France and made his way to the papal court, which
+was then established at Bordeaux. He remained in exile, though in the
+English king's dominions, for the rest of Edward's life. A less harsh
+punishment was meted out to the Bishop of Durham, who then came back
+from the court of Clement with the magnificent title of Patriarch of
+Jerusalem. For a second time Edward laid violent hands upon the rich
+temporalities of the see, and Bek, like Winchelsea, remained under a
+cloud for the remainder of the reign.
+
+Clement expected to be paid for yielding so much to the king. A papal
+agent, William de Testa, was sent to England, and to him Edward gave
+the administration of the temporalities of Canterbury. William's energy
+in collecting first-fruits aroused a storm of opposition from the
+clergy. The laity, disgusted to find that the king was negotiating for
+the transference of a crusading tenth to himself, associated themselves
+with their protest. Clement thereupon despatched the Cardinal Peter of
+Spain to England, that he might attempt to arrange a general
+pacification, and complete the marriage of the Prince of Wales to
+Isabella of France, which had been agreed upon in 1303. Before the
+cardinal's arrival, Edward's last parliament met in January, 1307, at
+Carlisle. The renewed disturbances in Scotland necessitated a meeting
+on the border, but the main transactions of the estates bore upon
+matters ecclesiastical. The lords and commons joined in demanding from
+the king a remedy against the oppressions of the apostolic see. A
+spirited and strongly worded protest was addressed to the pope. Nor
+were the estates contented with mere remonstrances. The statute of
+Carlisle renewed the abortive measure of 1305 _De asportis
+religiosorum_, by prohibiting tallages of religious houses being sent
+out of the realm. Had the petition of the estates been drafted into a
+statute, the parliament of Carlisle would have anticipated the statute
+of _Praemunire_ and many other anti-papal enactments. But Peter of
+Spain arrived, and Edward thought it injudicious to provoke a contest
+with the papacy. Even the petition actually approved was left in
+suspense to await further negotiations between the king and the
+cardinal. Before any decision was come to, Edward died, and this
+anti-Roman movement, like so many which had preceded it, resulted in
+little more than brave words. When, two generations later, a more
+resolute temper seized upon king and estates, they fell back upon the
+petitions and proceedings of the parliament of Carlisle for precedents
+for resisting the papal authority. With all its pitiful conclusion,
+Edward's ecclesiastical policy at least marks a step in advance upon
+the dependent attitude of Henry III.
+
+In the period of peace after the conquest of Scotland, Edward busied
+himself with strengthening the administration of his own kingdom and
+with enforcing the laws against violence and outrage. Under the
+strongest of medieval kings, the state of society was very disorderly,
+and even a ruler like Edward had often to be contented with holding up
+in his legislation an ideal of conduct which he was powerless to
+enforce in detail. Complaints had long been made that the greater
+nobles encroached upon poor men's inheritances, that gangs of marauders
+ranged over the country, wreaking every sort of violence and outrage,
+and that the law courts would give no redress to the sufferers from
+such outrageous deeds, since judges and juries were alike terrorised by
+overmighty offenders and dared not administer equal justice.
+Accordingly in the Lenten parliament of 1305 was drawn up the ordinance
+of Trailbaston, by which the king was empowered to issue writs of
+inquiry, addressed to special justices in the various shires, and
+authorising them to take vigorous action against these _trailbastons_,
+or men with clubs, whose outrages had become so grievous. It was not so
+much a new law as an administrative act; but it formed a precedent for
+later times, and the energy of the justices of trailbaston effected a
+real, if temporary, improvement in the condition of the country. So
+important was the measure that a chronicler calls the year in which
+this was enacted the "year of trailbaston".[1]
+
+ [1] _Liber de antiquis legibus_, p. 250.
+
+Never did Edward's prospects seem brighter than in the early days of
+1306. Scotland was obedient; the French alliance was firmly cemented;
+the pope was complacent; the Archbishop of Canterbury was in exile and
+the Bishop of Durham in disgrace; the commons were grateful for the
+better order secured by the commissions of trailbaston, and the king
+had in the papal absolution a weapon in reserve, which he could always
+use against a renewal of baronial opposition, though, for the moment,
+neither nobles nor commons seemed likely to give trouble. Once more
+there was some talk of Edward leading a crusade, and the French lawyer,
+Peter Dubois, at this time dedicated to him the first draft of his
+remarkable treatise on the recovery of the Holy Land.[1] Nor did the
+project seem altogether impracticable. Though Edward was sixty-seven
+years of age, he remained slim, vigorous and straight as a palm tree.
+He could mount his horse and ride to the hunt or the field with the
+activity of youth. His eyes were not dimmed with age and his teeth were
+still firm in his jaws.[2] The worst trouble which immediately beset him,
+was the undutiful conduct of the young Prince of Wales, who foolishly
+quarrelled with Bishop Langton, and preferred to amuse himself with
+unworthy favourites rather than submit himself to the severe training
+in arms and affairs to which Edward had long striven to inure him. When
+all thus seemed favourable, a sudden storm burst in Scotland which
+plunged the old king into renewed troubles.
+
+ [1] _De recuperatione terre sancte_, ed. C.V. Langlois (1891).
+
+ [2] John of London, _Commendatio lamentabilis_, pp. 5-6.
+
+In 1304 Robert Bruce, Earl of Carrick, became by his father's death the
+head of his house. Though he had long adhered to the regency which had
+governed Scotland in Balliol's name, he had now made terms with Edward,
+and had taken a conspicuous part in bringing about the pacification of
+Scotland under its new constitution. But the double policy, which had
+involved him in the shifts and tergiversations of his earlier career,
+still dominated the mind of the ambitious earl. At the moment of his
+submission to Edward, he entered into an intimate alliance with Bishop
+Lamberton of St. Andrews, the old partisan of Wallace. Lamberton was
+then, like Bruce, on Edward's side, and as John of Brittany had not yet
+personally taken up his new charge, the blind confidence of Edward
+entrusted him with the foremost place among the commissioners who acted
+as wardens of Scotland during the king's lieutenant's absence. Bruce,
+still remembering his grandfather's claim on the throne, welcomed the
+definitive setting aside of Balliol. While Edward believed that
+Scotland was quietening down under its new constitution, Bruce was
+secretly conspiring with the Scottish magnates, with a view to making
+himself king. His chief difficulty was with the late regent, John Comyn
+the Red, lord of Badenoch. The Bruces and the Comyns had long been at
+variance, and the Red Comyn, who was the nephew of the deposed King
+John, regarded himself as the representative of the Balliol claim to
+the throne, and was not unmindful how his father had withdrawn his
+pretensions in 1291 rather than divide the Balliol interest. Meanwhile
+the antagonism of the two houses was the best safeguard for the
+continuance of Edward's rule.
+
+Bruce was violent as well as able and ambitious. He invited Comyn to a
+conference for January 10, 1306, in the Franciscan friary at Dumfries.
+On that day the king's justices were holding the assizes in the castle,
+and Brace and Comyn, with a few followers, met in the cloister of the
+convent. Hot words were exchanged, and Bruce drew his sword and wounded
+Comyn. The lord of Badenoch took refuge in the church, and some of
+Bruce's friends followed him and slew him on the steps of the high
+altar. This cruel murder involved a violent breach between Bruce and
+the king. The earl took to the hills, declared himself the champion of
+national independence, and renewed his claim to the crown. He was
+joined by a great multitude of the people and by a certain number of
+the magnates. Conspicuous among the latter was Bishop Wishart of
+Glasgow, who broke his sixth oath of fealty, using the timber given him
+by Edward for building the steeple of his cathedral in constructing
+military engines to besiege the castles which were still held for the
+English king. Before long Bishop Lamberton, the chief of the Edwardian
+government, also went over. The support of the two bishops enabled
+Bruce to be crowned on March 25 at Scone. All Scotland was soon in
+revolt, and only the garrisons and a few magnates remained faithful to
+Edward.
+
+News of the death of Comyn and the revolt of Bruce reached Edward,
+while engaged in hunting in Dorset and Wiltshire. He at once called
+upon Church and State to unite against the sacreligious murderer and
+traitor. Clement V. excommunicated the Earl of Carrick, and deprived
+Lamberton and Wishart of their bishoprics. The warlike zeal of the
+English barons was stimulated by liberal grants of the forfeited
+estates of Bruce and his partisans. Feeling the infirmities of age
+coming upon him, Edward saw that his best chance of success was to
+inspire his son with something of his spirit. The Prince of Wales
+accordingly received a grant of Gascony, and on Whitsunday, May 22, was
+dubbed knight at Westminster along with over two hundred other
+aspirants to arms. A magnificent feast in Westminster Hall succeeded
+the ceremony. Two swans, adorned with golden chains, were brought in,
+and the old king set to all the revellers the example of vowing on the
+swans to revenge the murder of Comyn. Edward swore that when he had
+expiated this wrong to Holy Church, he would never more bear arms
+against Christian man, but would immediately turn his steps towards the
+Holy Land to redeem the Holy Sepulchre. The Prince of Wales' vow was
+never to rest two nights in the same spot until he had reached Scotland
+to assist his father in his purpose. Then all the young knights were
+despatched northwards to overthrow the Scottish pretender.
+
+A liberal grant from the estates facilitated the military preparations.
+But since the beginning of the year, Edward's strength had rapidly
+broken. He was no longer able to ride, and his movements were
+consequently very tedious. His army gathered together with more than
+the usual slowness, and Aymer of Valence, Earl of Pembroke, the king's
+cousin, was sent forward as warden of Scotland to meet Bruce with such
+forces as were ready. On June 26 Aymer fell upon Bruce at Methven, near
+Perth, and inflicted a severe defeat upon him. The power of the
+pretender died away as rapidly as it had arisen. The Bishops of St.
+Andrews and Glasgow were made prisoners, and Bruce's brothers, wife,
+and daughter fell into the enemy's hands. The brothers were promptly
+beheaded, though one of them was an ecclesiastic, and the ladies were
+confined in English nunneries. Bruce himself fled to Kintyre, and
+thence to Rathlin island, off the coast of Antrim.
+
+Edward went north in July, and, after a long stay in Northumberland,
+took up his quarters early in October with the Austin canons of
+Lanercost, near Carlisle. There he remained for above five months. In
+January, 1307, the parliament, whose anti-clerical policy has already
+been recounted, assembled at Carlisle, and remained in session until
+March. With the spring, Brace crossed over from Ireland, and
+re-appeared in his own lands in the south-west. In May he revenged the
+rout of Methven by inflicting a bloody check on Aymer of Valence near
+Ayr, and within three days gained another victory over Edward's
+son-in-law, Earl Ralph of Gloucester. These blows only spurred on
+Edward to increased efforts. The levies were summoned to meet at
+Carlisle and, regardless of his infirmities, the old king resolved to
+lead his troops in person. On July 3 he once more mounted his horse and
+started for the border. But his constitution could not respond to the
+demands made on it by his unbroken spirit. After a journey of two miles
+he was forced to rest for the night. Next day he could only traverse a
+similar distance, and his exertions so fatigued him that he was
+compelled to remain at his lodgings all the following day. This repose
+enabled him to make his way, on July 6, to Burgh-on-Sands, less than
+seven miles from Carlisle, where he spent the night. On July 7, as he
+was being raised in his bed by his attendants to take his morning meal,
+he fell back in their arms and expired.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+GAVESTON, THE ORDAINERS, AND BANNOCKBURN.
+
+
+Edward of Carnarvon was over twenty-three years of age when he became
+king. Tall, graceful, and handsome, with magnificent health and
+exceptional bodily strength, the young king was, so far as externals
+went, almost as fine a man as his father. Yet no one could have been
+more absolutely destitute of all those qualities which constitute
+Edward I.'s claims to greatness. An utter want of serious purpose
+blasted his whole career. It was in vain that his father subjected him
+to a careful training in statecraft and in military science. Though not
+lacking in intelligence, the young prince from the first to the last
+concerned himself with nothing but his own amusements. A confirmed
+gambler and a deep drinker, Edward showed a special bent for unkingly
+and frivolous diversions. Save in his devotion for the chase, his
+tastes had nothing in common with the high-born youths with whom he was
+educated. He showed himself a coward on the battlefield, and shirked
+even the mimic warfare of the tournament. He repaid the contempt and
+dislike of his own class by withdrawing himself from the society of the
+nobles, and associating himself with buffoons, singers, play-actors,
+coachmen, ditchers, watermen, sailors, and smiths. Of the befitting
+comrades of his youth, the only one of the higher aristocracy with whom
+he had any true intimacy was his nephew, Gilbert of Clare, while the
+only member of his household for whom he showed real affection was the
+Gascon knight, Peter of Gaveston.[1] Attributing his son's levity to
+Gaveston's corrupting influence, the old king had banished the foreign
+favourite early in 1307. But no change in his surroundings could stir
+up the prince's frivolous nature to fulfil the duties of his station.
+Edward's most kingly qualities were love of fine clothes and of
+ceremonies. Passionately fond of rowing, driving, horse-breeding, and
+the rearing of dogs, his ordinary occupations were those of the athlete
+or the artisan. He was skilful with his hands, and an excellent
+mechanic, proficient at the anvil and the forge, and proud of his skill
+in digging ditches and thatching roofs. Interested in music, and
+devoted to play-acting, he was badly educated, taking the coronation
+oath in the French form provided for a king ignorant of Latin. Vain,
+irritable, and easily moved to outbursts of childish wrath, he was
+half-conscious of the weakness of his will, and was never without a
+favourite, whose affection compensated him for his subjects' contempt.
+The household of so careless a master was disorderly beyond the
+ordinary measure of the time. While Edward irritated the nobles by his
+neglect of their counsel, he vexed the commons by the exactions of his
+purveyors.
+
+ [1] That is Gabaston, dep. Basses Pyrenees, cant. Morlaas.
+
+The task which lay before Edward might well have daunted a stronger
+man. The old king had failed in the great purpose of his life. Scotland
+was in full revolt and had found a man able to guide her destinies. The
+crown was deeply in debt; the exchequer was bare of supplies, and the
+revenues both of England and Gascony were farmed by greedy and
+unpopular companies of Italian bankers, such as the Frescobaldi of
+Florence, the king's chief creditors. The nobles, though restrained by
+the will of the old king, still cherished the ideals of the age of the
+Barons' War, and were convinced that the best way to rule England was
+to entrust the machinery of the central government, which Edward I. had
+elaborated with so much care, to the control of a narrow council of
+earls and prelates. Winchelsea, though broken in health, looked forward
+in his banishment to the renewal of the alliance of baronage and
+clergy, and to the reassertion of hierarchical ideals. The papal
+_curia_, already triumphant in the last days of the reign of the dead
+king, was anticipating a return to the times of Henry III, when every
+dignity of the English Church was at its mercy. The strenuous endeavour
+which had marked the last reign gave place to the extreme of
+negligence.
+
+Edward at once broke with the policy of his father. After receiving, at
+Carlisle, the homage of the English magnates, he crossed the Solway to
+Dumfries, where such Scottish barons as had not joined Robert Bruce
+took oaths of fealty to him. He soon relinquished the personal conduct
+of the war, and travelled slowly to Westminster on the pretext of
+following his father's body to its last resting-place. He replaced his
+father's ministers by dependants of his own. Bishop Walter Langton, the
+chief minister of the last years of Edward I., was singled out for
+special vengeance. He was stripped of his offices, robbed of his
+treasure, and thrown into close confinement, without any regard to the
+immunities of a churchman from secular jurisdiction. Langton's place as
+treasurer was given to Walter Reynolds, an illiterate clerk, who had
+won the chief place in Edward's household through his skill in
+theatricals. Ralph Baldock, Bishop of London, was replaced in the
+chancery by John Langton, Bishop of Chichester. The barons of the
+exchequer, the justices of the high courts, and the other ministers of
+the old king were removed in favour of more complacent successors.
+Signal favour was shown to all who had fallen under Edward I.'s
+displeasure. Bishop Bek, of Durham, was restored to his palatinate, and
+the road to return opened to Winchelsea, though ill-health detained him
+on the Continent for some time longer. Conspicuous among the returned
+exiles was Peter of Gaveston, whom the king welcomed with the warmest
+affection. He at once invested his "brother Peter" with the rich
+earldom of Cornwall, which the old king, with the object of conferring
+it on one of his sons by his second marriage, had kept in his hands
+since Earl Edmund's death. A little later Edward married the favourite
+to his niece, Margaret of Clare, the eldest sister of Earl Gilbert of
+Gloucester. Of the tried comrades of Edward I. the only one who
+remained in authority was Henry Lacy, Earl of Lincoln. The abandonment
+of the Scottish campaign soon followed. It was no wonder that the Scots
+lords, who had performed homage to Edward at Dumfries, began to turn to
+Bruce. Already king of the Scottish commons, Robert was in a fair way
+to become accepted by the whole people.
+
+The readiness with which the barons acquiesced in Edward's reversal of
+his father's policy shows that they had regarded the late king's action
+with little favour. Lincoln, the wisest and most influential of the
+earls, even found reasons for the grant of Cornwall to Gaveston, and
+kept in check his son-in-law, Earl Thomas of Lancaster, who was the
+most disposed to grumble at the elevation of the Gascon favourite.
+Gilbert of Gloucester was but newly come to his earldom. He was
+personally attached to the king, his old playmate and uncle, and was
+not unfriendly to his Gascon brother-in-law. The recent concentration
+of the great estates in the hands of a few individuals gave these three
+earls a position of overwhelming importance both in the court and in
+the country, and with their good-will Edward was safe. But the weakness
+of the king and the rashness of the favourite soon caused murmurs to
+arise.
+
+Early in 1308 Edward crossed over to France, leaving Gaveston as
+regent, and was married on January 25, at Boulogne, to Philip the
+Fair's daughter Isabella, a child of twelve, to whom he had been
+plighted since 1298. The marriage was attended by the French king and a
+great gathering of the magnates of both countries. Opportunity was
+taken of the meeting for Edward to perform homage for Aquitaine. After
+the arrival of the royal couple in England, their coronation took place
+on February 25. Time had been when the reign began with the king's
+crowning; but Edward had taken up every royal function immediately on
+his father's death, and set a precedent to later sovereigns by dating
+his own accession from the day succeeding the decease of his
+predecessor. The coronation ceremony, minutely recorded, provided
+precedents for later ages. It was some recognition of the work of the
+last generation that the coronation oath was somewhat more rigid and
+involved a more definite recognition of the rights of the community
+than on earlier occasions. Winchelsea was still abroad, and the
+hallowing was performed by Henry Woodlock, Bishop of Winchester.
+
+Discontent was already simmering. Not even Lincoln's weighty influence
+could overcome the irritation of the earls at the elevation of the
+Gascon knight into their circle. The very virtues of the vigorous
+favourite turned to his discredit. At a tournament given by him, at his
+own castle of Wallingford, to celebrate his marriage with the king's
+niece, the new-made earl, with a party of valiant knights, challenged a
+troop, which included the Earls of Hereford, Warenne, and Arundel, and
+utterly discomfited his rivals.[1] The victory of the upstart over
+magnates of such dignity was accounted for by treachery, and the
+prohibition of a coronation tournament, probably a simple measure of
+police, was ascribed to the unwillingness of Peter to give his opponents
+a legitimate opportunity of vindicating their skill. There had been much
+resentment at Gaveston's appointment as regent during the king's absence
+in France. A further outburst of indignation followed when the Gascon,
+magnificently arrayed and bedecked with jewels, bore the crown of St.
+Edward in the coronation procession. The queen's uncles, who had
+escorted her to her new home, left England disgusted that Edward's love
+for Gaveston led him to neglect his bride, and the want of reserve shown
+in the personal dealings of the king and his "idol" suggested the worst
+interpretation of their relations, though this is against the weight of
+evidence. Rumours spread that the favourite had laid hands on the vast
+treasures which Bishop Walter Langton had deposited at the New Temple,
+and had extorted from the king even larger sums, which he had sent to
+his kinsfolk in Gascony by the agency of the Italian farmers of the
+revenue.
+
+ [1] _Ann. Paulini_, p. 258, and Monk of Malmesbury, p. 156, are
+ to be preferred to Trokelowe, p. 65.
+
+Gaveston was a typical Gascon, vain, loquacious, and ostentatious,
+proud of his own ready wit and possessed of a fatal talent for sharp
+and bitter sayings. He seems to have been a brave and generous soldier.
+There is little proof that he was specially vicious or incompetent,
+and, had he been allowed time to establish himself, he might well have
+been the parent of a noble house, as patriotic and as narrowly English
+as the Valence lords of Pembroke had become in the second generation.
+But his sudden elevation rather turned his head, and the dull but
+dignified English earls were soon mortally offended by his airs of
+superiority, and by his intervention between them and the sovereign.
+"If," wrote the annalist of St. Paul's, London, "one of the earls or
+magnates sought any special favour of the king, the king forthwith sent
+him to Peter, and whatever Peter said or ordered at once took place,
+and the king ratified it. Hence the whole people grew indignant that
+there should be two kings in one kingdom, one the king in name, the
+other the king in reality." Gaveston's vanity was touched by the sullen
+hostility of the earls. He returned their suspicion by an openly
+expressed contempt. He amused himself and the king by devising
+nicknames for them. Thomas of Lancaster was the old pig or the
+play-actor, Aymer of Pembroke was Joseph the Jew, Gilbert of Gloucester
+was the cuckoo, and Guy of Warwick was the black dog of Arden. Such
+jests were bitterly resented. "If he call me dog," said Warwick on
+hearing of the insult, "I will take care to bite him." The barons
+formed an association, bound by oath to drive Gaveston into exile and
+deprive him of his earldom. All over the country there were secret
+meetings and eager preparations for war. The outlook became still more
+alarming when the Earl of Lincoln at last changed his policy. Convinced
+of the unworthiness of Gaveston, he turned against him, and the whole
+baronage followed his lead. Only Hugh Despenser and a few lawyers
+adhered to the favourite. Gloucester did not like to take an active
+part against his brother-in-law, but his stepfather, Monthermer, was
+conspicuous among the enemies of the Gascon. Winchelsea, too, came to
+England and threw his powerful influence on the side of the opposition.
+
+In April, 1308, a parliament of nobles met and insisted upon the exile
+of the favourite. The magnates took up a high line. "Homage and the
+oath of allegiance," they declared, "are due to the crown rather than
+to the person of the king. If the king behave unreasonably, his lieges
+are bound to bring him back to the ways of righteousness." On May 18
+letters patent were issued promising that Gaveston should be banished
+before June 25. Gaveston, bending before the storm, surrendered his
+earldom and prepared for departure, while Winchelsea and the bishops
+declared him excommunicate if he tarried in England beyond the
+appointed day. The king did his best to lighten his friend's
+misfortune. Fresh grants of land and castles compensated for the loss
+of Cornwall and gave him means for armed resistance. The grant of
+Gascon counties, jurisdictions, cities and castles to the value of
+3,000 marks a year provided him with a dignified refuge. The pope and
+cardinals were besought to relieve him from the sentence hung over his
+head by the archbishop. It is significant of Edward's early intention
+to violate his promise, that in his letters to the curia he still
+describes Gaveston as Earl of Cornwall. Peter was soon appointed the
+king's lieutenant in Ireland. This time he was called Earl of Cornwall
+in a document meant for English use. As midsummer approached, Edward
+accompanied him to Bristol and bade him a sorrowful farewell. Attended
+by a numerous and splendid household, Gaveston crossed over to Ireland
+and took up the government of that country, where his energy and
+liberality won him considerable popularity.
+
+Edward was inconsolable at the loss of his friend. For the first time
+in his reign he threw himself into politics with interest, and
+intrigued with rare perseverance to bring about his recall. Meanwhile
+the business of the state fell into deplorable confusion. No supplies
+were raised; no laws were passed; no effort was made to stay the
+progress of Robert Bruce. The magnates refused to help the king, and in
+April, 1309, Edward was forced to meet a parliament of the three
+estates at Westminster. There he received a much-needed supply, but the
+barons and commons drew up a long schedule of grievances, in which they
+complained of the abuses of purveyance, the weakness of the government,
+the tyranny of the royal officials, and the delays in obtaining
+justice. The estates refused point blank the king's request for the
+recall of Gaveston and demanded an answer to their petitions in the
+next parliament.
+
+Edward saw in submission to the estates the only way of bringing back
+his brother Peter from his gilded exile. He persuaded the pope to annul
+the ecclesiastical censures with which Winchelsea had sought to prevent
+Gaveston's return, and then recalled his friend on his own authority.
+Gaveston at once quitted Ireland and was met at Chester by Edward.
+Together they attended a parliament of magnates held in July at
+Stamford. There Edward announced that he accepted the petitions of the
+estates and issued a statute limiting purveyance. But the real work of
+this assembly was the ratification of the recall of the favourite,
+which was assured since Edward had won over some of the chief earls to
+agree to it. Gloucester was easily moved to champion his
+brother-in-law's cause. Lincoln reverted to his former friendship for
+the Gascon, and managed both to overbear the hostility of Lancaster and
+to induce Earl Warenne, "who had never shown a cheerful face to Peter
+since the Wallingford tournament," to become his friend. Warwick, alone
+of the earls, was irreconcilable. But Edward had gained his point. It
+was even agreed that the returned exile should regain his earldom of
+Cornwall.
+
+The annalists moralise on the instability of the magnates; and the
+sudden revolution may perhaps be set down as much to their incapacity
+as to the dexterity of the king. But Peter's second period of power was
+even shorter than his first. He had learnt nothing from his
+misfortunes, save perhaps increased contempt for his enemies. He was
+more insolent, greedy, and bitter in speech than ever. Early in 1310
+the barons were again preparing to renew their attacks. The second
+storm burst in a parliament of magnates held at London in March, 1310.
+The barons came to this parliament in military array, and Edward once
+more found himself at their mercy. The conditions of 1258 exactly
+repeated themselves. Once more an armed baronial parliament made itself
+the mouthpiece of the national discontent against a weak king, an
+incompetent administration, and foreign favourites. The magnates were
+no longer contented with simply demanding the banishment of Gaveston.
+They were ready with a constructive programme of reform, and they went
+back to the policy of the Mad Parliament. As the king could not be
+trusted, the royal power must once more be put into commission in the
+hands of a committee of magnates. So stiff were the barons in their
+adhesion to the precedents of 1258, that they made no pretence of
+taking the commons into partnership with them. To them the work of
+Edward I. had been done to no purpose. Baronial assemblies and full
+parliaments of the estates were still equally competent to transact all
+the business of the nation. It is vain to see in this ignoring of the
+commons any aristocratic jealousy of the more popular element in the
+constitution. There can be no doubt but that any full parliament would
+have co-operated with the barons as heartily in 1310 as it had done in
+1309. It was simply that popular co-operation was regarded as
+unnecessary. As in 1258, the magnates claimed to speak for the whole
+nation.
+
+The barons drew up a statement of the "great perils and dangers" to
+which England was exposed through the king's dependence on bad
+counsellors. The franchises of Holy Church were threatened; the king
+was reduced to live by extortion; Scotland was lost; and the crown was
+"grievously dismembered" in England and Ireland. "Wherefore, sire," the
+petition concludes, "your good folk pray you humbly that, for the
+salvation of yourself and them and of the crown, you will assent that
+these perils shall be avoided and redressed by ordinance of your
+baronage." Edward at once surrendered at discretion, perhaps in the
+vain hope of saving Gaveston. On March 16 he issued a charter, which
+empowered the barons to elect certain persons to draw up ordinances to
+reform the realm and the royal household. The powers of the committee
+were to last until Michaelmas, 1311. A barren promise that the king's
+concession should not be counted a precedent made Edward's submission
+seem a little less abject. Four days later the ordainers were
+appointed, the method of their election being based upon the precedents
+of 1258.
+
+Twenty-one lords ordainers represented in somewhat unequal proportions
+the three great ranks of the magnates. At the head of the seven bishops
+was Winchelsea, while both Bishop Baldock of London, the dismissed
+chancellor, and his successor, John Langton of Chichester, were
+included among the rest. All the eight earls attending the parliament
+became ordainers. Side by side with moderate men, such as Gloucester,
+Lincoln, and John of Brittany, Earl of Richmond, were the extreme men
+of the opposition, Lancaster, Pembroke, Warwick, Hereford, the king's
+brother-in-law, and Edmund Fitzalan, Earl of Arundel. Warenne and the
+insignificant Earl of Oxford do not seem to have been present in
+parliament, and are therefore omitted. With these exceptions, and of
+course that of the Earl of Cornwall, the whole of the earls were
+arrayed against the king. The six barons, who completed the list of
+nominees, were either colourless in their policy or dependent on the
+earls and their episcopal allies. The ordainers set to work at once.
+Two days after their appointment, they issued six preliminary
+ordinances by which they resolved that the place of their sitting
+should be London, that none of the ordainers should receive gifts from
+the crown, that no royal grants should be valid without the consent of
+the majority, that the customs should be paid directly into the
+exchequer, that the foreign merchants who had lately farmed them should
+be arrested, and that the Great Charter should be firmly kept. During
+the next eighteen months they remained hard at work.
+
+Gaveston, conscious of his impending doom, betook himself to the north
+as early as February. As soon as he could escape, Edward hurried
+northwards to join him. An expedition against the Scots was then
+summoned for September. It was high time that something should be done.
+During the three years that Edward had reigned, Robert Bruce had made
+alarming progress. One after the other the Scottish magnates had joined
+his cause, and a few despairing partisans and some scattered
+ill-garrisoned, ill-equipped strongholds alone upheld the English cause
+north of the Tweed. But even then Edward did not wage war in earnest.
+His real motive for affecting zeal for martial enterprise was his
+desire to escape from his taskmasters, and to keep Gaveston out of
+harm's way. The earls gave him no encouragement. On the pretext that
+their services were required in London at the meetings of the
+ordainers, the great majority of the higher baronage took no personal
+part in the expedition. Gloucester was the only ordainer who was
+present, and the only other earls in the host were Warenne and Gaveston
+himself. The chief strength of Edwards army was a swarm of
+ill-disciplined Welsh and English infantry, more intent on plunder than
+on victory. In September Edward advanced to Roxburgh and made his way
+as far as Linlithgow. No enemy was to be found, for Bruce was not
+strong enough to risk a pitched battle, even against Edward's army. He
+hid himself in the mountains and moors, and contented himself with
+cutting off foraging parties, destroying stragglers, and breaking down
+the enemy's communications. Within two months Edward discreetly retired
+to Berwick, and there passed many months at the border town.
+Technically he was in Scotland; practically he might as well have been
+in London for all the harm he was doing to Bruce. However, Gaveston
+showed more martial zeal than his master. He led an expedition which
+penetrated as far as Perth, and reduced the country between the Forth
+and the Grampians to Edward's obedience. Gloucester also pacified the
+forest of Ettrick. To these two all the little honour of the campaign
+belonged.
+
+The Earl of Lincoln governed England as regent during the king's
+absence. In February, 1311, he died, and Gloucester abandoned the
+campaign to take up the regency. The death of the last of Edward I.'s
+lay ministers was followed in March by that of another survivor of the
+old generation, Bishop Bek of Durham. The old landmarks were quickly
+passing away, and the forces that still made for moderation were
+sensibly diminished. Gilbert of Gloucester, alone of the younger
+generation, still aspired to the position of a mediator. The most
+important result of Lincoln's death was the unmuzzling of his
+son-in-law, Thomas of Lancaster. In his own right the lord of the three
+earldoms of Lancaster, Leicester, and Derby, Thomas then received in
+addition his father-in-law's two earldoms of Lincoln and Salisbury. The
+enormous estates and innumerable jurisdictions attached to these five
+offices gave him a territorial position greater by far than that of any
+other English lord. "I do not believe," writes the monk of Malmesbury,
+"that any duke or count of the Roman empire could do as much with the
+revenues of his estates as the Earl of Lancaster." Nor were Earl
+Thomas' personal connexions less magnificent than his feudal dignities.
+As a grandson of Henry III., he was the first cousin of the king.
+Through his mother, Blanche of Artois, Queen of Navarre and Countess of
+Champagne, he was the grandson of the valiant Robert of Artois, who had
+fallen at Mansura, and the great-grandson of Louis VIII. of France. His
+half-sister, Joan of Champagne, was the wife of Philip the Fair, so
+that the French king was his brother-in-law as well as his cousin, and
+Isabella, Edward's consort, was his niece. Unluckily, the personality
+of the great earl was not equal to his pedigree or his estates. Proud,
+hard to work with, jealous, and irascible, he was essentially the
+leader of opposition, the grumbler, and the _frondeur_. When the time
+came for a constructive policy, Thomas broke down almost as signally as
+Edward himself. His ability was limited, his power of application
+small, and his passions violent and ungovernable. Greedy, selfish,
+domineering, and narrow, he had few scruples and no foresight, little
+patriotism, and no breadth of view. At this moment he had to play a
+part which was within his powers. The simple continuance of the
+traditions of policy, which he inherited with his pedigree and his
+estates; was all that was necessary. As the greatest of the English
+earls, the head of a younger branch of the royal house, and the
+inheritor of the estates and titles of Montfort and Ferrars, he was
+trebly bound to act as leader of the baronial opposition, the champion
+of the charters, the enemy of kings, courtiers, favourites, and
+foreigners. He was steadfast in his prejudices and hatreds, and the
+ordainers found in him a leader who could at least save them from the
+reproach of inconstancy and the lack of fixed purpose shown at the
+parliament of Stamford.
+
+It was the first duty of Earl Thomas to perform homage and fealty for
+his new earldoms of Lincoln and Salisbury. Attended by a hundred armed
+knights, he rode towards the border. Edward was at Berwick, and Thomas
+declined to proffer his homage outside the kingdom. On Edward refusing
+to cross the Tweed, Thomas declared that he would take forcible
+possession of his lands. Civil war was only avoided by Edward giving
+way. The king met Thomas on English soil at Haggerston, four miles from
+Berwick. There the earl performed homage, and exchanged the kiss of
+peace with his king, but he would not even salute the upstart Earl of
+Cornwall, who injudiciously accompanied Edward, and the king departed
+deeply indignant at this want of courtesy. Returning to Berwick, Edward
+lingered there until the completion of the work of the ordainers made
+it necessary for him to face parliament. Leaving Gaveston protected by
+the strong walls of Bamburgh, the king quitted the border at the end of
+July, and met his parliament a month later in London. Though the
+ordainers had been appointed by a baronial parliament, the three
+estates were summoned to hear and ratify the results of their labours.
+Thirty-five more ordinances, covering a very wide field, were then laid
+before them. Disorderly and disproportioned, like most medieval
+legislation, they ranged from trivial personal questions and the
+details of administration to the broadest schemes for the future. Many
+of them were simply efforts to get the recognised law enforced. There
+were clauses forbidding alienation of domain, the abuses of purveyance,
+the usurpations of the courts of the royal household, the enlargement
+of the forests, and the employment of unlawful sources of revenue.
+Under the last head, the new custom, which Edward I. had persuaded the
+foreign merchants to pay, was specifically abolished. Provisions of
+such a character show that the king had made no effort to observe
+either the Great Charter or the laws of Edward I. Even the recent
+statute of Stamford, and the six ordinances of the previous year, had
+to be re-enacted. Similar restatements of sound principles were too
+common in the fourteenth century to make the ordinances an epoch. The
+vital clauses were those providing for the control of the king and for
+penalties against his favourites.
+
+Under the first of these heads, the ordainers worked out to the
+uttermost consequences their favourite distinction between the crown
+and the king. The crown was to be strengthened, but the king was to be
+deprived of every shred of power. The great offices of state in
+England, Ireland, and Gascony were to be filled up with the counsel and
+consent of the barons, a provision which, if literally interpreted,
+meant that the barons intended to govern Gascony as well as England.
+The king was not to go to war, raise an army, or leave the kingdom
+without the permission of parliament. He was to "live of his own,"
+however scanty a living that might be. Special judges were to hear
+complaints against royal ministers and bailiffs. Parliaments were to
+meet once or twice a year. It was a complete programme of limited
+monarchy. But there was no reference to the commons and clergy. We are
+still in the atmosphere of the Provisions of Oxford, and there is no
+Earl Simon to emphasise the fuller conception of national control.
+
+To Edward and to the barons, the penal clauses were the very essence of
+the ordinances. The twentieth ordinance declared that Peter of
+Gaveston, "as a public enemy of the king and kingdom, be forthwith
+exiled, for all time and without hope of return," from all dominions
+subject to the English king. He was to leave England before All Saints'
+day, and the port of Dover was to be his place of embarkation. Other
+ordinances dealt with lesser offenders. Exile was once more to be the
+doom of the Frescobaldi, and the other alien merchants who had acted as
+Edward's financial agents; Gaveston's kinsfolk, followers and abettors
+incurred their master's fate. All Gascons were to be sent to their own
+country, their allegiance to the crown in no wise saving them from the
+hatred meted out to all aliens. Neither high nor low were spared: Henry
+de Beaumont, the grandson of an Eastern emperor, and his sister, the
+lady Vesey, were to leave the realm; John Charlton, the pushing
+Shropshire squire who was worming his way by court favour into the
+estates of the degenerate descendants of the house of Gwenwynwyn, was,
+with the other English partisans of the favourite, to be driven from
+the royal service.
+
+Edward made a last desperate attempt to save Gaveston. He would agree
+to all the other ordinances, if he were still allowed to keep his
+brother Peter in England and in possession of the earldom of Cornwall.
+But the estates refused to yield the root of the whole matter.
+Threatened with the prospect of a new battle of Lewes, if he remained
+obdurate, Edward bowed to his destiny. The ordinances were published in
+every shire, and new ministers, chosen with the approval of the
+estates, deprived the king of the government of the country.
+
+Early in November, Gaveston sailed to Flanders, but within a few weeks
+Edward insisted upon his return. Rumours spread that Gaveston was in
+England, hiding himself away in his former castles of Wallingford and
+Tintagel, or in the king's castle of Windsor. The thin veil of mystery
+was soon withdrawn. Early in 1312, Peter openly accompanied the king to
+York, where, on January 18, Edward issued a proclamation to the effect
+that Gaveston had been unlawfully exiled, that he was back in England
+by the king's command, and prepared to answer to all charges against
+him. A few weeks later, Edward restored him to his earldom and estates.
+King and favourite still tarried in the north, preparing for the
+inevitable struggle. It was believed that they intrigued with Robert
+Bruce for a refuge in Scotland. Bruce, according to the story, declined
+to have anything to do with them. "If the King of England will not keep
+faith with his own subjects," he is reported to have said, "how then
+will he keep faith with me?"
+
+The ordainers looked upon Gaveston's return as a declaration of war.
+Winchelsea pronounced him excommunicate, and five of the eight earls
+who sat among the ordainers, bound themselves by oaths to maintain the
+ordinances and pursue the favourite to the death. These were Thomas of
+Lancaster, Aymer of Pembroke, Humphrey of Hereford, Edmund of Arundel,
+and Guy of Warwick. Gilbert of Gloucester declined to take part in the
+confederacy, but promised to accept whatever the five earls might
+determine. Moreover, John, Earl Warenne, who had hitherto kept aloof
+from the ordainers, at last threw in his lot with them, won over, it
+was believed, by the eloquence of Archbishop Winchelsea. The ordainers
+then divided England into large districts, appointing one of the
+baronial leaders to the charge of each. Gloucester himself undertook
+the government of the south-east, while Robert Clifford and Henry Percy
+agreed to guard the march, to prevent Gaveston escaping to the Scots.
+Pembroke and Warenne marched to the north to lay hands on the
+favourite, and Lancaster himself followed them.
+
+While the ordainers were acting, Edward and Gaveston were aimlessly
+wandering about in the north. They failed to raise an army or to win
+the people to their side, and on the approach of Lancaster, they fled
+before him from York to Newcastle. The earl followed quickly. On the
+afternoon of Ascension day, May 4, Lancaster, Clifford, and Percy
+suddenly swooped down on Newcastle. The king and his friend escaped
+with the utmost difficulty to Tynemouth, leaving their luggage, jewels,
+horses, and other possessions to the victor. Next day they fled by sea
+to Scarborough. The queen, left behind at Tynemouth, fell into her
+uncle Lancaster's power.
+
+The royal castle of Scarborough, whose Norman keep and spacious wards
+occupy a rocky peninsula surrounded, except on the town side, by the
+North Sea, had lately been transferred from the custody of Henry Percy,
+one of the confederate barons, to that of Gaveston. There was no fitter
+place wherein the favourite could stand at bay against his pursuers.
+Accordingly Edward left Gaveston, after a tender parting, and betook
+himself to York. Lancaster thereupon occupied a position midway between
+Scarborough and Knaresborough, while Pembroke, Warenne, and Henry Percy
+laid siege to Scarborough. Gaveston soon found that he was unable to
+resist them. His troops, scarcely adequate to man the extensive walls,
+were too many for the scanty store of provisions which the castle
+contained. After less than a fortnight's siege, he persuaded the two
+earls and Percy to allow him easy terms of surrender. The three
+baronial leaders pledged themselves on the Gospels to protect Gaveston
+from all manner of evil until August 1. During the interval parliament
+was to decide as to what was to be his future fate. If the terms agreed
+upon by parliament were unsatisfactory to him, he was to return to
+Scarborough, which was still to be garrisoned by his followers, with
+leave to purchase supplies.
+
+Pembroke undertook the personal custody of the prisoner, and escorted
+him by slow stages from Scarborough to the south, where he was to be
+retained in honourable custody at his own castle of Wallingford. Three
+weeks after the surrender, the convoy reached Deddington, a small town
+in Oxfordshire, a few miles south of Banbury. There Gaveston was lodged
+in the house of the vicar of the parish, and told to take a few days'
+rest after the fatigues of the journey. Pembroke himself did not remain
+at Deddington, but went on to Bampton in the Bush, where his countess
+then was. Thereupon on June 10, at sunrise, the Earl of Warwick, the
+most rancorous of Peter's enemies, occupied Deddington with a strong
+force. Bursting into the bedchamber of his victim, Earl Guy exclaimed
+in a loud voice: "Arise, traitor, thou art taken". Peter was at once
+led with every mark of indignity to Warwick castle. Thus the black dog
+of Arden showed that he could bite.
+
+Warwick was not personally pledged to Gaveston's safety, though, as one
+of the confederates, he was clearly bound by their acts. His seizure of
+Peter was only warrantable by the, fear that Pembroke, with his
+royalist leanings, was likely to play the extreme party false; but in
+any case Warwick was as much obliged as Pembroke to observe the terms
+of the capitulation. Neither Warwick nor his allies took this view of
+the matter. They rejoiced at the good fortune which had remedied the
+disastrous capitulation of Scarborough, and resolved to put an end to
+the favourite without delay. Lancaster was then at Kenilworth;
+Hereford, Arundel, and other magnates were also present, and all agreed
+in praising Warwick's energy. On Monday morning, June 19, the three
+earls rode the few miles from Kenilworth to Warwick, and Earl Guy
+handed over Peter to them. They then escorted their captive to a place
+called Blacklow hill, about two miles out of Warwick on the Kenilworth
+road, but situated in Lancaster's lands. The crowd following the
+cavalcade was moved to tears when Peter, kneeling to Lancaster, cried
+in vain for mercy from the "gentle earl". On reaching Blacklow hill,
+the three earls withdrew, though remaining near enough to see what was
+going on. Then two Welshmen in Lancaster's service laid hands upon the
+victim. One drove his sword through his body, the other cut off his
+head. The corpse remained where it had fallen, but the head was brought
+to the earls as a sign that the deed was done. After this the earls
+rode back to Kenilworth. Guy of Warwick remained all the time in his
+castle. He had already taken his share in the cruel act of treachery.
+It was, however, important that Lancaster should take the
+responsibility for the deed. Four cobblers of Warwick piously bore the
+headless corpse within their town. But the grim earl sent it back,
+because it was not found on his fee. At last some Oxford Dominicans
+took charge of the body and deposited it temporarily in their convent,
+not daring to inter it in holy ground, as Gaveston had died
+excommunicate.
+
+The ostentatious violence of the confederate earls broke up their
+party. Aymer of Pembroke, indignant at their breach of faith, regarded
+the whole transaction as a stain on his honour. He besought
+Gloucester's intervention, but was only told that he should be more
+cautious in his future negotiations. He harangued the clerks and
+burgesses of Oxford, but university and town agreed that the matter was
+no business of theirs. Then in disgust he betook himself to the king,
+whom he found still surrounded with the Beaumonts, Mauleys, and other
+friends of Gaveston, against whom the ordinances had decreed
+banishment. Warenne, whose honour was only less impeached than
+Pembroke's, also deserted the ordainers for the court. Edward bitterly
+deplored the death of his friend. He gladly welcomed the deserters, and
+prepared to wreak vengeance on the ordainers.
+
+Edward plucked up courage to return to London, where in July he
+addressed the citizens, and persuaded them to maintain the peace of the
+city against the barons. He next visited Dover, and there he
+strengthened the fortifications of the castle, took oaths of fealty
+from the Cinque Ports, and negotiated with the King of France. Thence
+he returned to London, hoping that the precautions he had taken would
+secure his position in the parliament which he had summoned to meet at
+Westminster. But the four earls still held the field, and answered the
+summons to parliament by occupying Ware with a strong military force. A
+thousand men-at-arms were drawn by Lancaster from his five earldoms,
+while the Welsh from Brecon, who followed the Earl of Hereford, and the
+vigorous foresters of Arden, who mustered under the banner of Warwick,
+made a formidable show. Yet at the last moment neither side was eager
+to begin hostilities. The four earls' violence damaged their cause, and
+many who had no love of Gaveston, or desire to avenge him, inclined to
+the king's party. Gilbert of Gloucester busied himself with mediating
+between the two sides. At this juncture two papal envoys, sent to end
+the interminable outstanding disputes with France, arrived in England,
+along with Louis, Count of Evreux, the queen's uncle. Edward availed
+himself of the presence of French jurists in the count's train to
+obtain legal opinion that the ordinances were invalid, as against
+natural equity and civil law. These technicalities did little service
+to the king's cause, and better work was done when Louis and the papal
+envoys joined with Gloucester in mediating between the opposing forces.
+At length moderate counsels prevailed. Edward could only resist the
+four earls through the support of his new allies, and Pembroke and
+Warenne were as little anxious to fight as Gloucester himself. They
+were quite willing to make terms which seemed to the king treason to
+his friend's memory.
+
+The negotiations were still proceeding when, on November 13, 1312, the
+birth of a son to Edward and Isabella revived the almost dormant
+feeling of loyalty to the sovereign. The king ceased to brood over the
+loss of his brother Peter, and became more willing to accept the
+inevitable. He gave some pleasure to his subjects by refusing the
+suggestion of the queen's uncle that the child should be called Louis,
+and christened him Edward after his own father. At last, on December
+22, terms of peace were agreed upon. The earls and barons concerned in
+Gaveston's death were to appear before the king in Westminster Hall,
+and humbly beg his pardon and good-will. In return for this the king
+agreed to remit all rancour caused by the death of the favourite.
+Lancaster and Warwick, who took no personal part in the negotiations,
+sent in a long list of objections to the details of the treaty. Nearly
+a year elapsed before the earls personally acknowledged their fault.
+During that interval there was no improvement in the position of
+affairs. Parliament granted no money; and Edward only met his daily
+expenses by loans, contracted from every quarter, and by keeping tight
+hands on the confiscated estates of the Templars. Both the king and the
+leading earls made every excuse to escape attending the ineffective
+parliaments of that miserable time. Two short visits to France gave
+Edward a pretext for avoiding his subjects. There were some hasty
+musterings of armed men on pretence of tournaments. But the king was
+still formidable enough to make it desirable for the barons to carry
+out the treaty. Finally, in October, 1313, Lancaster, Hereford, and
+Warwick made their public submission in Westminster Hall. Pardons were
+at once issued to them and to over four hundred minor offenders. Feasts
+of reconciliation were held, and it seemed as if the old feuds were at
+last ended. Gaveston's corpse was removed from Oxford to Langley, in
+Hertfordshire, and buried in the church of a new convent of Dominicans
+set up by Edward to pray for the favourite's soul.
+
+Just before the end of the disputes Archbishop Winchelsea died in May,
+1313. He left behind him the reputation of a saint and a hero, and a
+movement was undertaken for his canonisation. With all his faults, he
+was the greatest churchman of his time, and the most steadfast and
+unselfish of ecclesiastical statesmen. Despite his palsy, he had shown
+wonderful activity since his return. The brain and soul of the
+ordainers, he equally made it his business to uphold extreme
+hierarchical privilege. Bitterly as he hated Walter Langton, he was
+indignant that a bishop should be imprisoned and despoiled by the lay
+power, and took up his cause with such energy that he effected his
+liberation, only to find that Langton made peace with the king and
+turned his back on the ordainers. The after-swell of the storms,
+excited by the petition of Lincoln and the statute of Carlisle, still
+continued troublous during Winchelsea's later years. The pope
+complained of the violated privileges of the Church and of the
+accumulated arrears of King John's tribute; and Winchelsea was anxious
+to promote the papal cause. But the barons in Edward's early
+parliaments still used the bold language of the magnates of 1301, and
+the letter of 1309, drawn up by the parliament of Stamford, is no
+unworthy pendant of the Lincoln letter. As time went on, the disorders
+of the government and the weakness of the king surrendered everything
+to the pope. It was soon as it had been in the days of Henry III., when
+pope and king combined to despoil the English Church.
+
+The suppression of the order of the Temple shows how absolutely England
+was forced to follow in the wake of the papacy and the King of France.
+There was no spontaneous movement against the society as in France;
+there was not even the fierce malice and insatiable greed which could
+find their only satisfaction in the ruin of the brethren; and there is
+not much evidence that the Templars were unpopular. The whole attack
+was the result of commands given from without. It was at the repeated
+request of Philip of France and Clement V. that Edward reluctantly
+ordered the apprehension of all the Templars within England, Scotland,
+and Ireland on January 8, 1308. Their property was taken into the
+king's hands, and their persons were confined in the royal prisons
+under the custody of the sheriffs. For their trial, Clement appointed a
+mixed commission including Winchelsea, Archbishop Greenfield of York,
+several English bishops, one French bishop, and certain papal
+inquisitors specially assigned for the purpose, the chief of whom were
+the Abbot of Lagny and Sicard de Lavaur, Canon of Narbonne, who came to
+England in 1309. At last the victims were collected at London and York,
+where the trials were to be conducted for the southern and northern
+provinces. There was much hesitation among the English bishops. The
+foes of the Templars lamented the prelates' lack of zeal and their
+scruples in collecting evidence, and suggested that the torture, which
+had so freely been used in France, would soon extract confessions. But
+the northern bishops declared that torture was unknown in England, and
+asked, if it were to be adopted, whether it was to be applied by clerks
+or laymen, and whether torturers should be imported from beyond sea. In
+the end, torture was used, but not to any great extent.
+
+A great mass of depositions, mostly vague and worthless, or derived
+from the suspicious confessions of apostates and weaklings, was
+gathered together, and in 1311 laid before provincial councils, but
+neither province came to any fixed decision. "Inasmuch," says
+Hemingburgh, "as the Templars were not found altogether guilty or
+altogether innocent, they referred the dubious matter to the pope."
+They sent the evidence they had collected to swell the mass of
+testimony from all Christendom, which was laid before the council of
+Vienne. When the pope suppressed the order in April, 1312, and
+transferred its lands to the Knights of St. John, the papal decrees
+were quietly carried out in England. One or two Templars died in
+prison, but none were executed; and the majority were dismissed with
+pensions or secluded in monasteries. Edward and his nobles took good
+care to make a large profit out of the transaction. The resources of
+the Temple alone kept the king from destitution during the period
+between the death of Gaveston and his reconciliation with the earls.
+Many barons laid violent hands on estates belonging to the order, and
+long held on to them despite papal expostulation. The Hospitallers
+found that the lands of their rivals came to them so slowly, and
+encumbered with so many charges, that their new property became
+burdensome rather than helpful to their society. Thus it was that they
+never made any use of the New Temple in London, and, before long, let
+it out to the common-lawyers. In the fall of the Templars, the pope and
+the Church set the first great example of the suppression of a
+religious order to kings, who before long bettered the precedent given
+them. The sordid story is mainly important to our history as an example
+of the completeness of the influence of the papal autocracy, and of the
+submissiveness of clergy and laity to its behests. It was a lurid
+commentary on the practical working of the ecclesiastical system that
+the business of condemning an innocent order first brought into England
+the papal inquisitor and the use of torture. Yet the whole process was
+but so pale a reflection of the horrors wrought in France that the
+conclusion arises that England owed more to the weakness of Edward II
+than France to the strength of Philip IV.
+
+Winchelsea's death removed a real check on Edward, especially as the
+king was on such good terms with the papacy that he had little
+difficulty in obtaining a successor amenable to his will. Undeterred by
+Clement's bull reserving to himself the appointment, the monks of
+Christ Church at once proceeded to elect Thomas of Cobham, a theologian
+and a canonist of distinction, a man of high birth, great sanctity, and
+unblemished character, and in every way worthy of the primacy. But his
+merits did not weigh for a moment with Clement against the wishes of
+the king. He rejected Cobham and conferred the primacy on Edwards
+favourite, Walter Reynolds, who had already obtained the bishopric of
+Worcester through the king's influence. A good deal of money, it was
+believed, found its way to the coffers of the _curia_; and the
+indignation of the English Church found voice in the impassioned
+protests of the chroniclers. "Lady Money rules everything in the pope's
+court," lamented the monk of Malmesbury. "For eight years Pope Clement
+has ruled the Universal Church: but what good he has done escapes
+memory. England, alone of all countries, feels the burden of papal
+domination. Out of the fulness of his power, the pope presumes to do
+many things, and neither prince nor people dare contradict him. He
+reserves all the fat benefices for himself, and excommunicates all who
+resist him: his legates come and spoil the land: those armed with his
+bulls come and demand prebends. He has given all the deaneries to
+foreigners, and cut down the number of resident canons. Why does the
+pope exercise greater power over the clergy than the emperor over the
+laity? Lord Jesus! either take away the pope from our midst or lessen
+the power which he presumes to have over the people." Such lamentations
+bore no fruit, and the simoniacal nomination of Reynolds was but the
+first of a series of appointments which robbed the episcopate of
+dignity and moral worth.
+
+While Church and State in England were thus distressed, the cause of
+Robert Bruce was making steady progress in Scotland. It is some measure
+of the difficulties against which Bruce had to contend that, after six
+years, he was still by no means master of all that land. But least of
+all among the causes which retarded his advance can be placed the armed
+forces of England. During six years Edward II.'s one personal
+expedition had been a complete failure. A more formidable obstacle in
+Bruce's way was the stubborn resistance offered to him by the valour
+and skill of the small but highly trained garrisons which the wisdom of
+Edward I. had established in the fortresses of southern and central
+Scotland. Each castle took a long time to subdue, and demanded
+engineering resources and a persistency of effort, which were difficult
+to obtain from a popular army. The garrisons co-operated with the
+Scottish nobles who still adhered to Edward through jealousy of the
+upstart Bruces and love of feudal independence, rather than by reason
+of any sympathy with the English cause. Additional obstacles to
+Robert's progress were the hostility of the Church, to which he was
+still the excommunicated murderer of Comyn; the captivity of so many
+Scottish prelates and barons in England; the efforts of the pope and
+the King of France to bring about suspensions of hostilities, and the
+grievous famines which desolated Scotland no less than southern
+Britain. But during these years the King of Scots gradually overcame
+these difficulties. His hardest fighting in the field was with rival
+Scots rather than with the English intruders. In 1308 he defeated the
+Comyns of Buchan, and established himself on the ruins of that house in
+the north-east. In the same year his brother, Edward Bruce, conquered
+Galloway, where the Balliol tradition long prevented the domination of
+the rival family.
+
+Secure from retaliation so long as domestic troubles lasted, the Scots
+devastated the northern counties of England, whose inhabitants were
+forced to purchase relief from further attacks by paying large sums of
+money to the invaders. Formal truces were more than once made, but they
+were ill observed, and each violation of an armistice involved some
+loss to Edward and some gain to Robert. Meanwhile the garrisons were
+carefully isolated, and one by one signalled out for attack. In 1312
+Berwick itself was only saved from surprise by the opportune barking of
+a dog. In January, 1313, Perth was captured by assault. Next day Robert
+slew the leading native burgesses who had adhered to the English, while
+he permitted the English inhabitants to return freely to their own
+country. The whole town was destroyed, since walled towns, like
+castles, had given the English their chief hold upon the country.
+
+Such was the state of Scotland when the reconciliation between Edward
+and the earls restored England to the appearance of unity. As if
+conscious that no time was to be lost in strengthening his position,
+Bruce redoubled his efforts to make himself master of the fortresses
+which still remained in the enemy's hands. Regardless of the rigour of
+the season, he set actively to work in the early weeks of 1314, and
+remarkable success attended his efforts. In February, the border
+stronghold of Roxburgh was taken by a night attack. "And all that fair
+castle, like the other castles which he had acquired, they pulled down
+to the ground, lest the English should afterwards by holding the castle
+bear rule over the land."[1] In March, Edinburgh castle was secured by
+some Scots who climbed up the precipitous northern face of the castle
+rock, overpowered the garrison, and opened the gates to their comrades
+outside. Flushed with this great success, Bruce began the siege of
+Stirling, the only important English garrison then held by the English
+in the heart of Scotland. He pressed the besieged so hard that they
+agreed to surrender to the enemy, if they were not relieved before
+Midsummer day, the feast of St. John the Baptist. While Robert was
+watching Stirling, his brother Edward devastated the country round
+Carlisle, lording it for three days at the bishop's castle of Rose, and
+levying heavy blackmail on the men of Cumberland.
+
+ [1] _Lanercost Chronicle_, p. 223.
+
+If Stirling were lost, all Scotland would be at Bruce's mercy. Even
+Edward was stirred by the disgrace involved in the utter abandonment of
+his father's conquest; and from March onwards he began to make spasmodic
+efforts to collect men and ships to enable him to advance to the relief
+of the beleaguered garrison. At first it seemed sufficient to raise the
+feudal levies and a small infantry force from the northern shires, but
+as time went on the necessity of meeting the Scottish pikemen by
+corresponding levies of foot soldiers became evident, and over 20,000
+infantry were summoned from the northern counties and Wales.[1] But the
+notice given was far too short, and June was well advanced before
+anything was ready.
+
+ [1] For the numbers at Bannockburn, see _Foedera_, ii., 248,
+ and Round, _Commune_ of London, pp. 289-301.
+
+Even the Scottish peril could not quicken the sluggish patriotism of
+the ordainers. Four earls, Lancaster, Warenne, Warwick, and Arundel,
+answered Edward's summons by reminding him that the ordinances
+prescribed that war should only be undertaken with the approval of
+parliament, and by declining to follow him to a campaign undertaken on
+his own responsibility. They would send quotas, but begged to be
+excused from personal attendance. Yet even without them, a gallant
+array slowly gathered together at Berwick, and one at least of the
+opposition earls, Humphrey of Hereford, was there, with Gilbert of
+Gloucester and Aymer of Pembroke and 2,000 men-at-arms. An enormous
+baggage train enabled the knights and barons to appear in the field in
+great magnificence, though it destroyed the mobility of the force. "The
+multitude of waggons," wrote the monk of Malmesbury, "if they had been
+extended in a single line would have occupied the space of twenty
+leagues." The splendour and number of the army inspired the king and
+his friends with the utmost confidence. Though the host started from
+Berwick less than a week before the appointed day, the king moved, says
+the Malmesbury monk, not as if he were about to lead an army to battle,
+but rather as if he were going on a pilgrimage to Compostella. "There
+was but short delay for sleep, and a shorter delay for taking food.
+Hence horses, horsemen, and infantry were worn out with fatigue and
+hunger." There was no order or method in the proceedings of the host.
+The presence of the king meant that there was no effective general, and
+Hereford and Gloucester quarrelled for the second place.
+
+It was not until Sunday, June 23, that Edward at last took up his
+quarters a few miles south of Stirling, with a worn-out and dispirited
+army. Yet, if Stirling were to be saved, immediate action was
+necessary. Gloucester and Hereford made a vigorous but unsuccessful
+effort to penetrate at once into the castle, and Bruce came down just
+in time to throw himself between them and the walls. Henry Bohun, who
+had forced his way forward at the head of a force of Welsh infantry,
+was slain, and his troops dispersed. Gloucester was unhorsed, and
+thereupon the English retreated to their camp. Fearing an attack under
+cover of darkness, they had little sleep that night, and many of the
+watchers consoled themselves with revelry and drunkenness. When St.
+John's day dawned, they were too weary to fight effectively. Bruce
+advanced from the woods and stationed his troops on the low ridge
+bounding the northern slope of the little brook, called the
+Bannockburn, which runs about two miles south of Stirling on its course
+towards the Forth. Of the three divisions, or battles, into which the
+Scots were divided, two stood on the same front, side by side, while
+King Robert commanded the rear battle, which was to serve as a reserve.
+He marshalled his forces much in the same way that Wallace had adopted
+at Falkirk. There was the same close array of infantry, protected by a
+wall of shields and a thick hedge of pikes. Each man wore light but
+adequate armour, and, besides the pike, bore an axe at his side for
+work at close quarters. Pits were dug before the Scots lines, and
+covered over with hurdles so light that they would not bear the weight
+of a mail-clad warrior and his horse. Save for a small cavalry force
+kept in reserve in the rear, the men-at-arms were ordered to dismount
+and take their place in the dense array, lest, like their comrades at
+Falkirk, they should ride off in alarm when they saw the preponderance
+of the enemy's horse. The Scots were less numerous than the English,
+but they were an army and not a mob; their commander was a man of rare
+military insight, and their tactics were those which, twelve years
+before, had defeated the chivalry of France at Courtrai.
+
+The English had feared that the Scots would not fight a pitched battle,
+and were astonished to see them at daybreak prepared to receive an
+attack. Their contempt for their enemy made them eager to accept the
+challenge, but Gloucester, who, though only twenty-three, had more of
+the soldier's eye than most of the magnates, urged Edward to postpone
+the encounter for a day, that the army might recover from its fatigue,
+and the clergy advised delay out of respect to St. John the Baptist.
+Unmoved by prudence or piety, Edward denounced his nephew as a coward,
+and ordered an immediate advance.
+
+The English, forgetting the lessons of the Welsh wars, sent on the
+archers in front of the cavalry. Bruce, seeing that their missiles were
+playing havoc on his dense ranks, directed his small cavalry force to
+charge the archers on their left flank. The unsupported bowmen at once
+fell back in confusion, leaving the cavalry to do its work. Meanwhile
+the English men-at-arms were advancing in three "battles," the first of
+which then came into action. Many of the English fell into the pits
+prepared for them, and the Scottish shields and pikes broke the attack
+of those who evaded these obstacles. Gloucester fought with rare
+gallantry, but was badly seconded by his followers. At last his horse
+was slain under him, and he was knocked down and killed. The troop
+which he led fled panic-stricken from the field. The Scots then
+advanced with such vigour that the English never recovered from the
+disorder into which their first disaster had thrown them. While these
+things were going on, the second and third English "battles" had been
+making feeble efforts to take their part in the fight. But the first
+line cut them off from direct access to the foe, and the archers of the
+second battle did more harm to their friends than to their enemies by
+shooting wildly, straight in front of them. There was no single
+directing force, nor, after Gloucester's fall, even one conspicuous
+leader who would set an example of blind valour. Hundreds of English
+knights, who had not drawn their swords, were soon fleeing in terror
+before the enemy. Edward, who had taken up his station in the rear
+battle, rode off the field and never dismounted until he reached
+Dunbar, whence he fled by sea to Berwick.
+
+Abandoned by their leaders, the English retreated as best they could.
+Many of their best knights lay dead on the field, and more were drowned
+in the Forth or Bannock, or swallowed up in the bogs, than were slain
+in the fight. The Scots, whose losses were slight, showed a prudent
+tendency to capture rather than slay the knights and barons, in order
+that they might hold them up to ransom, and though many desisted from
+the pursuit to plunder the baggage train, those who followed the
+English fugitives reaped an abundant harvest of captives. Hereford was
+chased into Bothwell castle, which was still held for the English. But
+next day the Scottish official who commanded there for Edward opened
+the gates to Bruce, and the earl became a prisoner. Pembroke escaped
+with difficulty on foot, along with a contingent of Welsh infantry. The
+mighty English army had ceased to exist; and with the surrender of
+Stirling, next day, Bruce's career attained its culminating point. His
+long years of trial were at last over, and the clever adventurer could
+henceforth enjoy in security the crown which he had so gallantly won.
+
+The military results of Bannockburn were of extreme importance. The
+ablest of contemporary annalists aptly compared Bruce's victory to the
+battle of Courtrai. An even nearer analogy was the fight at Morgarten
+where, within two years, the pikemen of the Forest Cantons were to
+scatter the chivalry of the Hapsburgers as effectively as the Flemings
+won the day at Courtrai or the Scots at Bannockburn. The English had
+forgotten the military lessons of Edward I., as completely as they had
+forgotten his political lessons, and their reliance on the obsolete and
+unsupported cavalry charge was their undoing. Bruce, on the other hand,
+had improved upon the teaching of Wallace and Edward I. His use of his
+men-at-arms on foot anticipates the English tactics of the Hundred
+Years' War. The presence of these heavily armed troopers in his ranks
+gave him a strength in defence, and an impetuosity in attack, which
+made it a simple matter to break up the undisciplined squadrons opposed
+to him. Bannockburn rang the death-knell of the tactics which since
+Hastings had been regarded as the perfection of military art. The
+political lessons of the victory were of not less importance. It is
+almost too much to say that Bannockburn won for Scotland its
+independence, for Scottish independence had already been vindicated.
+But the easy victory brought home to men's minds the full measure of
+the Scottish triumph. It was already clear that so long as Edward
+lived, England would never make the continued effort which, as Edward
+I.'s wars both in Wales and Scotland had shown, could alone
+systematically conquer a nation. Bruce's difficulties were not so much
+with the English as with the Scots. It was no small task to unite the
+English of the Lothians, the Welsh of the south-west, the Norsemen of
+the extreme north, and the Celts of the hills into a single Scottish
+nation. He had against him the separatist local feeling which Scottish
+history and ethnology made inevitable, and it took time for him to
+obtain that prestige, which should hedge a king, and raise him above
+the crowd of feudal earls and clan chieftains, who thought themselves
+as good as the sometime Earl of Carrick. Such dignity and distinction
+Bannockburn supplied, and such measure of national unity and strong
+monarchical authority as Scotland ever enjoyed, came from the triumph
+of him who became, even more than Wallace, the hero of the new nation.
+For the next few years the Scots took the aggressive. They induced the
+French kings to renew the alliance which Philip IV. had made with them
+in the early years of the contest. They obtained papal recognition for
+their king and the withdrawal of the ban of the Church on Comyn's
+murderer; they plundered northern England from end to end, and broke
+down Anglo-Norman rule in Ireland; they plotted for the resurrection of
+the Welsh principality; and, worse than all, they made common cause
+with the baronial opposition. Hence it followed that the political
+results of the victory were as important to England as they were to
+Scotland itself. The troubled history of the next eight years reveals
+in detail the effects of Bannockburn on England. Edward's defeat threw
+him into the power of the ordainers. The ordainers, when called upon to
+govern, showed themselves as incapable as ever Edward or his favourites
+had been. The results were misrule, aristocratic faction, popular
+distress, and mob violence. Ineffective as are the first seven years of
+the reign of Edward of Carnarvon, the eight years which followed
+Bruce's victory plunged England deeper into the pit of degradation,
+from which neither the king nor the king's foes were strong, wise, or
+honest enough to release her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+LANCASTER, PEMBROKE, AND THE DESPENSERS.
+
+
+Bannockburn was almost welcomed by the ordainers, for it afforded new
+opportunities of humiliating the defeated king. While Edward tarried at
+Berwick, Lancaster was in his castle of Pontefract with a force far
+larger than his cousin's. Loudly declaring that the true cause of the
+disaster was Edward's neglect to carry out the ordinances, he announced
+his intention of immediately enforcing their observance. At a
+parliament at York, in September, Edward delivered himself altogether
+into Thomas's hands, ordering the immediate execution of the
+ordinances, and replacing his ministers and sheriffs by nominees of the
+ordainers. The only boon that he obtained was that the earls postponed
+the removal from court of Hugh Despenser and Henry Beaumont, the two
+faithful friends who had guarded him in his flight from Bannockburn.
+Despenser, however, thought it prudent to avoid his enemies by going
+into hiding. Edward's submission did not help him against the Scots.
+The earls resolved that the question of an expedition was to be
+postponed until the next parliament, on the ground that it was
+imprudent to take action until Hereford and the other captives had been
+released. It was a sorry excuse, for King Robert and his brother were
+devastating the northern counties with fire and sword, and it gave new
+ground to the suspicion of an understanding between the Scottish king
+and the ordainers. But the victor of Bannockburn showed surprising
+moderation. He suffered the bodies of Gloucester and the slain barons
+to be buried among their ancestors, and released Gloucester's
+father-in-law, Monthermer, without ransom, declaring that the thing in
+the world which he most desired was to live in peace with the English.
+He welcomed an exchange of prisoners, by which his wife, Elizabeth de
+Burgh, his sister, his daughter, and the Bishop of Glasgow were
+restored to Scotland. The release of Hereford soon added to the king's
+troubles.
+
+In January, 1315, Edward's humiliation was completed at a London
+parliament. Hugh Despenser and Walter Langton were removed from the
+council. The "superfluous members" of the royal household, denounced as
+"excessively burdensome to the king and the land," were dismissed, and
+drastic ordinances were drawn up for the regulation of the diminished
+following still allowed to the king. Edward was put on an allowance of
+L10 a day, and the administration of his revenues taken out of his
+hands. The grant made was accompanied by the condition that its
+spending should be entirely in the hands of the barons, and the estates
+arranged after their own fashion for the new Scottish campaign. When
+summer came, Lancaster insisted on taking the command himself, and thus
+gave a new grievance to Pembroke, who had already been appointed
+general. Lancaster was henceforth the indispensable man. When
+parliament met at Lincoln, in January, 1316, the few magnates who
+attended would transact no business until his arrival. On his tardy
+appearance in the last days of the session, it was resolved "that the
+lord king should do nothing grave or arduous without the advice of the
+council, and that the Earl of Lancaster should hold the chief place in
+the council". It was only after some hesitation that the earl accepted
+this position. Once more the king was forced to confirm the ordinances.
+Liberal grants were made by the estates, and every rural township was
+called upon to furnish and pay a foot soldier to fight the Scots.
+
+The commander of the army and the chief counsellor of the king,
+Lancaster, was in a stronger position than any subject since the days of
+Simon of Montfort. He could afford to despise aristocratic jealousy and
+royal malignity. To the commons he was the good earl, who was standing
+up for the rights of the people. He was the darling of the clergy, who
+looked upon him as the pillar of orthodoxy, the disciple of Winchelsea,
+and the upholder of the rights of Holy Church. The warlike and energetic
+barons of the north were his sworn followers, and, apart from his hold
+upon public opinion, he could always fall back on the resources of his
+five earldoms. But events were soon to show that the successful leader
+of opposition was absolutely incapable of carrying out a constructive
+policy. He had no ideals, no principles, no feeling of the importance of
+administrative efficiency, no sense of responsibility, no power of
+controlling his followers. He never understood that his business was no
+longer to oppose but to act. The clear-headed monk of Malmesbury paints
+the disastrous results of his inaction: "Whatsoever pleased the king,
+the earl's servants strove to overthrow; and whatever pleased the earl,
+was declared by the king's servants to be treasonable; and so, at the
+suggestion of the evil one, the households of earl and king put
+themselves in the way and would not allow their masters, by whom the
+land should have been defended, to be of one accord". Even the implied
+understanding with the King of Scots was not abandoned by the man on
+whom the responsibility rested of defeating him. When Bruce devastated
+the north of England he still spared the lands of the king's "chief
+counsellor," as of old he had spared the lands of the opposition leader.
+When, in 1316, Lancaster mustered his forces at Newcastle against the
+Scots, Edward repaid him for his inaction in 1314 by declining to
+accompany him over the border. "Thereupon," wrote the border
+annalist,[1] "the earl at once went back; for neither trusted the
+other." Edward, who forgot and forgave nothing, secretly negotiated with
+the pope for absolution from his oath to the ordinances. He gradually
+built up a court party, and soon restored Hugh Despenser to his position
+in the household. As might be expected in such circumstances no
+effective resistance was made to the Scots.
+
+ [1] _Lanercost Chronicle_, p. 233.
+
+It was a time of severe distress in England. In 1315 a rainy summer
+ruined the harvest. Great floods swept away the hay from the fields,
+and drowned the sheep and cattle. In 1316 famine raged, especially in
+the north. For a hundred years, we are told, such scarcity of corn had
+not been known. A bushel of wheat was sold at London for forty pence,
+and the Northumbrians were driven to feed on dogs, horses, and other
+unwonted food. Pestilence followed in the train of famine. It was in
+vain that parliament passed laws, limiting the repasts of the barons'
+households to two courses of meat, and fixing the price of the chief
+sorts of victuals. The only result was that dealers refused to bring
+their produce to market. Then the legislation, passed in a panic, was
+repealed in a panic. "It is better," said a chronicler, "to buy things
+at a high rate than not to be able to buy them at all."
+
+Private wars raged from end to end of south Britain. On the upper
+Severn, Griffith of Welshpool, the younger son of Griffith ap
+Gwenwynwyn, laid regular siege to Powys castle, the stronghold of John
+Charlton, his niece's husband and his rival for the lordship of upper
+Powys. As Charlton was a courtier, Griffith attached himself to the
+ordainers. After Bannockburn, the captivity of Hereford, the lord of
+Brecon, and the death without heirs of Gloucester, the lord of
+Glamorgan, removed the strongest restraints on the men of south Wales.
+The royal warden of Glamorgan, Payne of Turberville, displaced
+Gloucester's old officers. One of the sufferers was Llewelyn Bren, "a
+great and powerful Welshman in those parts," who had held high office
+under Earl Gilbert. In 1315 Llewelyn, after seeking justice in vain at
+the king's court, rose in revolt against Turberville. He gathered the
+Welshmen on the hills, burst upon Caerphilly, while the constable was
+holding a court outside the castle, took the outer ward by surprise and
+burnt it to ashes. There was fear lest this revolt should be the
+starting-point of a general Welsh rising. Llewelyn's hill strongholds
+threatened Brecon on the north and the vale of Glamorgan on the south;
+and Hereford, then released from his Scottish captivity, was entrusted
+with the suppression of the revolt. Before long all the lords of the
+march joined Hereford in stamping out the movement. Among them were the
+two Roger Mortimers, the Montagues and the Giffords, and Henry of
+Lancaster, Earl Thomas's brother, and lord in his own right of Monmouth
+and Kidwelly. Overwhelmed by such mighty opponents, Llewelyn
+surrendered to Hereford, hoping thus to save his followers.
+
+Lancaster himself suffered from the spirit of anarchy that was abroad.
+His own Lancashire vassals rose against his authority, under Adam
+Banaster, a former member of his household. Adam belonged to an
+important Lancashire family, which had long stood in close relations to
+Wales, and had committed a homicide for which he despaired of pardon.
+He now posed as the champion of the king against the earl, believing
+that anything that caused trouble to Thomas would give no small delight
+at court. Lancaster showed more energy in upholding his own rights than
+in maintaining the honour of England. He raised such an overwhelming
+force that Banaster, unable to hold the field against him, shut himself
+up in his house. His refuge was stormed and his head brought to Earl
+Thomas as a trophy of victory. While Banaster was raiding Lancashire
+and Llewelyn south Wales, the Scots were devastating the country as far
+south as Furness, and Edward Bruce, King Robert's brother, was
+conquering Ireland. There was little wonder that Edward Bruce hoped to
+cross over to Wales when he had done his work in Ireland, or that the
+Welsh, buoyed up, as in the last generation, by the prophesies of
+Merlin, believed that the time was come when they would expel the
+Saxons, and win back the empire of Britain.
+
+Of much longer duration than the wars of Llewelyn Bren and Adam
+Banaster, were the formidable disturbances which raged for many years
+at Bristol. Fourteen Bristol magnates had long a preponderating
+influence in the government of the town. The commons bitterly resented
+their superiority and declared that every burgess should enjoy equal
+rights. A royal inquiry was ordered, but the judges, bribed, as was
+believed, by the fourteen, gave a decision which was unacceptable to
+the commons. Lord Badlesmere, warden of the castle, sided with the
+oligarchs, and thus the whole authority of the state was brought to
+bear against the popular party. But it was an easy matter to resist the
+government of Edward II. The commons took arms and a riot broke out in
+court. Twenty men were killed in the disturbances, and the judges fled
+for their lives. Eighty burgesses were proved by inquest at Gloucester
+to have been the ringleaders. As they refused to appear to answer the
+charges, they were outlawed. Indignation at Bristol then rose to such a
+height that the fourteen fled in their turn, and for more than two
+years Bristol succeeded in holding out against the royal mandate. At
+last, in 1316, the town was regularly besieged by the Earl of Pembroke.
+The castle was not within the burgesses' power, and its _petrariae_,
+breaking down the walls and houses of the borough, compelled the
+townsmen to surrender. A few of the chief rebels were punished, but a
+pardon was issued to the mass of the burgesses.
+
+More dangerous than any of these troubles was the attack made by Edward
+Bruce on the English power in Ireland. That power had been on the wane
+during the last two generations. Edward I. had formed schemes for the
+better administration of the country, but little had come of them. The
+English government in Dublin gradually lost such control as it had
+possessed over the remoter parts of the island. The shire organisation,
+set up in an earlier generation, became little more than nominal. The
+constitutional movement of the thirteenth century extended to the
+island, and the Irish parliament, then growing up out of the old
+council, reflected in a blurred fashion the organisation of the English
+parliament of the three estates. But royal lieutenants and councils,
+shires and sheriffs, parliaments and justices had only the most
+superficial influence on Irish life. Real authority was divided between
+the Norman lords of the plain and the Celtic chieftains of the hills.
+Each feudal lord hated his fellows, and bitter as were the feuds of
+Fitzgeralds and Burghs, they were mild as compared with the rancorous
+hereditary factions which divided the native septs from each other.
+These divisions alone made it possible for the king's officers to keep
+up some semblance of royal rule. If they were seldom obeyed, the
+divisions in the enemies' camps prevented any chance of their being
+overthrown. Thus the Irish went on living a rude, turbulent life of
+perpetual purposeless war and bloodshed. Ireland was a wilder, larger,
+more remote Welsh march, and the resemblance was heightened by the fact
+that many of the Anglo-Norman principalities were in the hands of great
+English or marcher families, and that the Irish foot-soldier played
+only a less important part than the Welsh archer and pikeman among the
+light-armed soldiers of the English crown.
+
+The easiest way to keep up a show of English government was to form an
+alliance between the crown and some of the baronial houses. Richard de
+Burgh, Earl of Ulster, the most powerful of the feudal lords of
+Ireland, was the only one who at that period bore the title of earl. He
+had long been interested in general English affairs, and his kinswomen
+had intermarried into great British houses. One of his daughters
+married Robert Bruce when he was Earl of Carrick, and another was more
+recently wedded to Earl Gilbert of Gloucester. Despite the Bruce
+connexion, the Earl of Ulster was still trusted by the English party,
+and the king gave him the command of an Irish army which he had
+intended to send against Scotland in 1314. Richard was too busy
+fighting the Ulster clans of O'Donnell and O'Neil, and too jealous of
+the Fitzgeralds, his feudal rivals, to throw his heart into the
+hopeless task of gathering together the two nations and many clans of
+Ireland into a single host. The death of Earl Gilbert at Bannockburn
+broke his nearest tie with England, and the release of Elizabeth Bruce
+in exchange for Hereford gave his daughter the actual enjoyment of the
+throne of Scotland. His natural instincts as an Irishman and as a baron
+were to restrain the power of his overlord. When the news of Bruce's
+victory produced a great stir among the Irish clans, he stood aside and
+let events take their course.
+
+Though the Gael of the Scottish Highlands played little part at
+Bannockburn, the Irish rejoiced at the Scots' success as that of their
+kinsmen. "The Kings of the Scots," said the Irish Celts, "derive their
+origin from our land. They speak our tongue and have our laws and
+customs." However little true this was in fact, it was a good excuse
+for some of the Irish clans to offer the throne of Ireland to the King
+of Scots. Robert rejected the proposal for himself, but was willing to
+give his able and adventurous brother Edward the chance of winning
+another crown for his house. Edward, "who thought that Scotland was too
+little for his brother and himself," cheerfully fell in with the
+scheme. On May 25, 1315, he landed near Carrickfergus and received a
+rapturous welcome from the O'Neils, the greatest of the septs of the
+north-east. Before long all Celtic Ulster flocked to his banners, and
+Edmund Butler, then justice of Ireland, strove with little success to
+make head against the Scottish invasion. The completeness of Bruce's
+union with the native Irish gave him his best chance of attaining his
+object. Up to this point the attitude of the Earl of Ulster had been
+most undecided. He at last threw in his lot with the justiciar. When
+parties began to shape themselves it was clear that "all the Irish of
+Ireland" were in league with Bruce. The danger was that "a great part
+of the great lords and lesser English folk" also joined the invader.
+Conspicuous among these were the Lacys of Meath.
+
+Edward Bruce showed energy and vigour. He made his way southwards, and
+in September won a victory over the forces of the Earl of Ulster and
+the justiciar at Dundalk, then in the south of Ulster. After this he
+pushed into Meath and Leinster and was joined by the O'Tooles and the
+other clans of the Wicklow mountains, while the adhesion of Phelim
+O'Connor, King of Connaught, brought the whole of the Celtic west into
+his alliance. The barons, however, took the alarm. During the winter
+Butler contracted friendship with many of the Norman colonists. From
+that time the struggle assumed the character of a war between Celtic
+Ireland and feudal Ireland, the native clansmen and the Anglo-Norman
+settlers. Thus, though Bruce and his wild allies found it easy to make
+themselves masters of the open country, all the castles and towns were
+closed to them and could only be won by long-continued efforts. Before
+long, Butler drove them to the hills. Ere the winter was over, Edward
+found it prudent to retire to Ulster.
+
+During 1316 the struggle raged unceasingly. Bruce was crowned King of
+Ireland, the O'Neil, it was said, having abdicated his rights in his
+favour. But the summer saw the utter defeat of the O'Connors by the
+justiciar at the bloody battle of Athenry, where King Phelim and the
+noblest of his sept perished. A little later the King of Scots came to
+the help of his brother. With his aid, Edward was able to reduce
+Carrickfergus, which had hitherto defied his efforts. Then the brothers
+led their forces from one end of Ireland to the other. Dublin prepared
+for a siege by burning its suburbs and devastating the country around.
+But though the two Bruces penetrated as far as Limerick, they did not
+capture a single castle or a walled town. They lost so many men during
+their winter campaign, that they were forced in the spring to retire to
+Ulster. The hopeless disunion of both parties in Ireland seemed likely
+to prolong the struggle indefinitely. The men of Dublin and the Earl of
+Ulster were at feud with each other, and the citizens captured the earl
+and shut him up in Dublin castle. However little the earl could be
+trusted, this was a step likely to throw all Ulster into the arms of
+the Bruces. But a stronger justice of Ireland then superseded Edmund
+Butler. Roger Mortimer of Wigmore, the mightiest baron of the Welsh
+march, and a man of real ability, rare energy, extreme ruthlessness,
+and savage cruelty, crossed over from Haverfordwest early in 1317 at
+the head of a large force of marcher knights and men-at-arms, versed
+from their youth up in the traditions of Celtic warfare. Mortimer set
+himself to work to break up the ill-assorted coalition that supported
+Bruce. He released the Earl of Ulster from his Dublin prison; he
+procured the banishment of the heads of the house of Lacy; he won over
+some of the Irish septs to his side; he stimulated the civil war which
+had devastated Connaught since the fall of the O'Connors. Edward Bruce
+was once more confined to Ulster, where he still struggled on bravely.
+In the autumn of 1318 he led a foray southwards, and met his fate in a
+skirmish near Dundalk on October 14, when his force was scattered in
+confusion by John of Bermingham, one of the neighbouring lords. The
+four quarters of the luckless King of Ireland were exposed in the four
+chief towns of the island as a trophy of victory, and Bermingham was
+rewarded by the new earldom of Louth.
+
+Edward Bruce's enterprise ended with his death, and Ireland rapidly
+settled down into its normal condition of impotent turbulence. Though
+at first sight the invader utterly failed, yet he pricked the bubble of
+the English power in Ireland. His gallant attempt at winning the throne
+is the critical event in a long period of Irish history. From the days
+of Henry III to the days of Edward Bruce, the lordship of the English
+kings in Ireland was to some extent a reality. From 1315 to the reign
+of Henry VIII, the English dominion was little more than a name as
+regards the greater part of Ireland.
+
+No one attained success, in the years after Bannockburn,--neither
+Banaster, nor Llewelyn Bren, nor the Bristol commons nor Edward Bruce
+and his Irish allies. Before long, the incompetence of Lancaster became
+as manifest as the incompetence of Edward II. Lancaster's failure led
+to the dissolution of the baronial opposition into fiercely opposing
+factions. Personal and territorial jealousies slowly undermined a unity
+which had always been more apparent than real. The Earl of Pembroke had
+never forgiven the treachery of Deddington. Though Warwick was dead,
+Pembroke still pursued Lancaster with unrelenting hatred. No partisan
+of prerogative, and an enemy of Edward's personal following, Earl Aymer
+separated himself from his old associates and strove to form a middle
+party between the faction of the king and the faction of Lancaster.
+Warerine, coarse, turbulent, and vicious, at once violent and crafty,
+still acted with him. The lord of Conisborough had long grudged the
+master of Pontefract and Sandal his great position in Yorkshire. The
+natural rivalries of neighbouring potentates were further emphasised by
+personal animosity of the deadliest kind. Lancaster had long been at
+variance with his wife, Alice Lacy. On May 9, 1317, the Countess of
+Lancaster ran away from him, with the active help of Warenne and by the
+secret contrivance of the king. Private war at once broke out between
+the two earls. Lancaster was too strong for his enemy. Before winter
+had begun, Conisborough and Warenne's other Yorkshire castles fell into
+his hands. Lancaster's partisans even laid hold of the king's castle of
+Knaresborough, while other Lancastrian bands occupied Alton castle in
+Staffordshire. Intermittent hostilities continued until the summer of
+1318. Twice Edward himself went to the north, and on one occasion
+appeared in force outside Pontefract. But the more moderate of the
+baronage managed to prevent open hostilities between the king and the
+earl. Lancaster was, as ever, fighting for his own hand. His
+self-seeking narrowness gave Pembroke the chance of winning for his
+middle party a preponderating authority.
+
+Pembroke found more trustworthy allies than Warenne in Bartholomew,
+Lord Badlesmere, the sometime instigator of the Bristol troubles, and a
+bitter opponent of Lancaster, and in Roger of Amory, the husband of one
+of the three co-heiresses who now divided the Gloucester inheritance.
+Edward, who had profited by the divisions of his enemies to revive the
+court party, formed a coalition between his friends and the followers
+of Pembroke. All lovers of order, of moderation, and of the supremacy
+of the law necessarily made common cause with them. Thus it followed
+that the same machinery, which Lancaster a few years earlier had turned
+against the king, was now turned against him. An additional motive to
+bring peaceable Englishmen into line was found in the capture of
+Berwick by Bruce in April, 1318. After this negotiations for peace
+began. The king and Lancaster treated as two independent princes.
+Lancaster was no longer supported by any prominent earl, and even his
+clerical friends were falling from him. Ordainers as jealous as
+Arundel, royalists as fierce as Mortimer, served along with trimmers
+like Pembroke and Badlesmere, in acting as mediators. Lancaster could
+no more resist than Edward could in 1312. On August 9 he accepted at
+Leek, in Staffordshire, the conditions drawn up for him.
+
+The treaty of Leek marks the triumph of the middle party and the
+removal of Lancaster from the first place in the royal council. A
+pardon was granted to him and his followers, but Thomas gained little
+else by the compact. Pembroke and his friends showed themselves as
+jealous of Edward as ever the ordainers had been. The ordinances were
+once more confirmed, and a new council of seventeen was nominated,
+including eight bishops, four earls, four barons, and one banneret. The
+earls were Pembroke, Arundel, Richmond, and Hereford. Of these the
+Breton Earl of Richmond was the most friendly to the king, but it was
+significant to find so truculent a politician as Hereford making common
+cause with Pembroke. The most important of the four barons was Roger
+Mortimer of Wigmore. Lancaster though not paramount was still powerful,
+but his habit of absenting himself from parliaments made it useless to
+offer him a place in the council, and he was represented by a single
+banneret, nominated by him. Of these councillors two bishops, one earl,
+one baron, and Lancaster's nominee were to be in constant attendance.
+They were virtually to control Edward's policy, and to see that he
+consulted parliament in all matters that required its assent. A few
+days after the treaty Edward and Lancaster met at Hathern, near
+Loughborough, and exchanged the kiss of peace. Roger of Amory and other
+magnates of the middle party reconciled themselves to Lancaster, and he
+condescendingly restored them to his favour. But he would not deign to
+admit Hugh Despenser to his presence, and declared that he was still
+free to carry on his quarrel against Warenne. In October, a parliament
+at York confirmed the treaty of Leek, adding new members to the council
+and appointing another commission to reform the king's household. From
+that time until 1321, Pembroke and his friends controlled the English
+state, though often checked both by the king and even more by
+Lancaster, who still stood ostentatiously aloof from parliaments and
+campaigns. These years, though neither glorious nor prosperous, were
+the most peaceable and uneventful of the whole of Edward II.'s reign.
+They are noteworthy for the only serious attempt made to check the
+progress of the Scots after Bannockburn. From 1318 to 1320 king and
+court were almost continually in the north. York became the regular
+meeting-place of parliaments for even a longer period.
+
+Since 1314, the Scots had mercilessly devastated the whole north of
+England. The population made little attempt at resistance, and sought
+to buy them off by large payments of money. The Scots took the cash and
+soon came again for more. They wandered at will over the open country,
+and only the castles and walled towns afforded protection against them.
+Their forays extended as far south as Lancashire and Yorkshire, and, so
+early as 1315, Carlisle and Berwick were regularly besieged by them. It
+was to no purpose that in 1317 the pope issued a bull insisting upon a
+truce. The English welcomed an armistice on any terms, but the Scots'
+interest was in the continuance of the war, and they paid no attention
+to the papal proposal. The result was a renewal of Bruce's
+excommunication, and the placing of all Scotland under interdict. Yet
+no papal censures checked Robert's career or lessened his hold over
+Scotland. Next year he showed greater activity than ever. In April,
+1318, he captured the town of Berwick by treachery. Peter of Spalding,
+one of the English burgesses who formed the town guard, was bribed to
+allow a band of Scots to seize that section of the town wall of which
+he was guardian. Then the intruders captured the gates and admitted
+their comrades. Thus the last Scottish town to be held by the English
+went back to its natural rulers. The English burgesses were expelled,
+though Bruce showed wonderful moderation, and few of his enemies were
+slain. Berwick castle held out for a time, until lack of victuals
+caused its surrender. In May the Scots marched through Northumberland
+and Durham into Yorkshire, burnt Northallerton and Boroughbridge, and
+exacted a thousand marks from Ripon, as the price of respecting the
+church of St. Wilfred. They then spent three days at Knaresborough, and
+made their way home through Craven.
+
+Such successes show clearly enough that the treaty of Leek was not
+signed a moment too soon. It was, however, too late for any great
+effort against the Scots in 1318. A strenuous endeavour was made to
+levy a formidable expedition for 1319. In strict accordance with the
+ordinances, the parliament, which met at York in May of that year,
+agreed that there should be a muster at Berwick for July 22, and
+granted a liberal subsidy. An insolent offer of peace, coupled with a
+promise of freedom of life and limb to Bruce, should he resign his
+crown, provoked from the Scots king the reply that Scotland was his
+kingdom both by hereditary right and the law of arms, and that he was
+indifferent whether he had peace with the English king or not. On July
+22, the feast of St. Mary Magdalen and the anniversary of Falkirk
+fight, the barons assembled at Newcastle. Thomas of Lancaster was there
+with his brother Henry. Warenne, newly reconciled with Lancaster by a
+large surrender of lands, also attended, as did Pembroke, Arundel,
+Hereford, and the husbands of the three Gloucester co-heiresses. There
+was a braver show of earls than even in 1314. An offer of lands, when
+Scotland was conquered, attracted a large number of volunteer infantry,
+while the cupidity of the seamen was appealed to by a promise of ample
+plunder. In August the host and fleet moved northwards, and closely
+beset Berwick.
+
+The Scots were too astute to offer battle. While the English were
+employed at Berwick, Sir James Douglas led their main force into the
+heart of Yorkshire. Douglas hoped to capture Queen Isabella, who was
+staying near York. A spy betrayed this design to the English, and
+Isabella was hurried off by water to Nottingham, while Douglas pressed
+on into the heart of Yorkshire. The Yorkshiremen had to defend their
+own shire while their best soldiers were with the king at Berwick. A
+hastily gathered assembly of improvised warriors flocked into York.
+Archbishop Melton put himself at their head, and the clergy, both
+secular and religious, formed a considerable element in the host. Then
+they marched out against the Scots, and found them at Myton in
+Swaledale. The Scots despised the disorderly mob of squires and
+farmers, priests and canons, monks and friars. "These are not
+warriors," they cried, "but huntsmen. They will do nought against us."
+Concealing their movements by kindling great fires of hay, they bore
+down upon the Yorkshiremen and put them to flight with much loss. The
+fight was called "the white battle of Myton" on account of the large
+number of white-robed monks who took part in it The archbishop escaped
+with the utmost difficulty. Many fugitives were drowned in the Swale,
+and not one would have escaped had not night stopped the Scots'
+pursuit. The victors then pushed as far south as Pontefract. On the
+news of the battle, the besiegers of Berwick were dismayed. There was
+talk of dividing the army, and sending one part to drive Douglas out of
+Yorkshire while the other continued the siege. But the magnates, in no
+mood to run risks, insisted on an immediate return to England. Before
+Edward had reached Yorkshire, Douglas had made his way home over
+Stainmoor and Gilsland. Thereupon the king sent back his troops, each
+man to his own house. The magnificent army had accomplished nothing at
+all. So inglorious a termination of the campaign naturally gave rise to
+suspicions of treason. A story was spread abroad that Lancaster had
+received L4,000 from the King of Scots and had consequently done his
+best to help his ally. The rumour was so seriously believed that the
+earl offered to purge himself by ordeal of hot iron. In despair Edward
+made a two years' truce with the Scots. It was the best way of avoiding
+another Bannockburn.
+
+Troublous times soon began again. Since Edward surrendered himself to
+the guidance of Pembroke and Badlesmere, he had enjoyed comparative
+repose and dignity. It was only when a great enterprise, like the Scots
+campaign, was attempted that the evil results of anarchy and the
+still-abiding influence of Lancaster made themselves felt. But Edward
+bore no love to Pembroke and his associates, and was quietly feeling
+his way towards the re-establishment of the court party. His chief
+helpers in this work were the two Despensers, father and son, both
+named Hugh. The elder Despenser, then nearly sixty years of age, had
+grown grey in the service of Edward I. A baron of competent estate, he
+inherited from his father, the justiciar who fell at Evesham, an
+hereditary bias towards the constitutional tradition, but he looked to
+the monarch or to the popular estates, rather than to the baronage, as
+the best embodiment of his ideals. Ambitious and not over-scrupulous,
+he saw more advantage to himself in playing the game of the king than
+in joining a swarm of quarrelsome opposition lords. From the beginning
+of the reign he had identified himself with Gaveston and the courtiers,
+and had incurred the special wrath of Lancaster and the ordainers.
+Excluded from court, forced into hiding, excepted from several
+pacifications as he had been, Despenser never long absented himself
+from the court. His ambition was kindled by the circumstance that his
+eldest son had become the most intimate personal friend of the king.
+Brought up as a boy in the household of Edward when Prince of Wales,
+the ties of old comradeship gradually drew the younger Hugh into
+Gaveston's old position as the chief favourite. Neither a foreigner nor
+an adventurer, Despenser had the good sense to avoid the worst errors
+of his predecessor. As chamberlain, he was in constant attendance on
+the king; and having married Edward's niece Eleanor, the eldest of the
+Gloucester co-heiresses, he sought to establish himself among the
+higher aristocracy. Royal grants and offices rained upon father and
+son. The household officers were changed at their caprice. The only
+safe way to the king's favour was by purchasing their good-will. Their
+good fortune stirred up fierce animosities, and the barons showed that
+they could hate a renegade as bitterly as a foreign adventurer.
+
+The Despensers' ambition to attain high rank was the more natural from
+the havoc which death had played among the earls. "Time was," said the
+monk of Malmesbury, "when fifteen earls and more followed the king to
+war; but now only five or six gave him their assistance." The five
+earldoms of Thomas of Lancaster meant the extinction of as many ancient
+houses. The earldoms of Chester, Cornwall, and Norfolk had long been in
+the king's hands. If the comital rank was not to be extinguished
+altogether, it had to be recruited with fresh blood. And who were so
+fit to fill up the vacant places as these well-born favourites?
+
+A little had been done under Edward II to remedy the desolation of the
+earldoms. The revival of the earldom of Cornwall in favour of Gaveston
+had not been a happy experiment. But the king's elder half-brother,
+Thomas of Brotherton, invested with the estates and dignities of the
+Bigods, was made earl marshal and Earl of Norfolk. In 1321 the earldom
+of Kent, extinct since the fall of Hubert de Burgh, was revived in
+favour of Edmund of Woodstock, the younger half-brother of the king.
+The titular Scottish earldoms of some English barons, such as the
+Umfraville earls of Angus, kept up the name, if not the state of earls,
+and we have seen the reward of the victor of Dundalk in the creation of
+a new earldom of Louth in Ireland. But there were certain hereditary
+dignities whose suspension seemed unnatural. Conspicuous among these
+was the Gloucester earldom which, from the days of the valiant son of
+Henry I. to the death of the last male Clare at Bannockburn, had played
+a unique part in English history.
+
+Both the Despensers desired to be earls, and the younger Hugh wished
+that the Gloucester earldom should be revived in his favour. Assured of
+the good-will of the king, both had to contend against the jealousy of
+the baronage and the exclusiveness of the existing earls. The younger
+Hugh had also to reckon with his two brothers-in-law, with whom he had
+divided the Clare estates. These were Hugh of Audley, who had married
+Margaret the widow of Gaveston, and Roger of Amory, the husband of
+Elizabeth, the youngest of the Clare sisters. There had been difficulty
+enough in effecting the partition of the Gloucester inheritance among
+the three co-heiresses. In 1317 the division was made, and Despenser had
+become lord of Glamorgan, which politically and strategically was most
+important of all the Gloucester lands.[1] Yet even then, Despenser was
+not satisfied with his position. His rival Audley had been allotted
+Newport and Netherwent, while Amory had been assigned the castle of Usk
+and estates higher up the Usk valley. Annoyed that he should be a lesser
+personage in south Wales than Earl Gilbert had been, Despenser began to
+intrigue against his wife's brothers-in-law. Each of the co-heirs had
+already become deadly rivals. Their hostility was the more keen since
+the three had already taken different sides in English politics.
+Despenser was the soul of the court faction; Amory was the ally of
+Pembroke and Badlesmere, the men of the middle party; and Audley was an
+uncompromising adherent of Thomas of Lancaster. There was every chance
+that each one of the three would have competent backing. To each the
+triumph of his friends meant the prospect of his becoming Earl of
+Gloucester.
+
+ [1] See for this, W.H. Stevenson, _A Letter of the Younger
+ Despenser in 1321_ in _Engl. Hist. Rev._, xii. (1897), 755-61.
+
+Despenser, abler and more restless than the others, and confident in
+the royal favour, was the first to take the aggressive. He wished to
+base his future greatness upon a compact marcher principality in south
+Wales, and to that end not only laid his hands upon the outlying
+possessions of the Clares but coveted the lands of all his weaker
+neighbours. He took advantage of a family arrangement for the
+succession to Gower, to strike the first blow. The English-speaking
+peninsula of Gower, with the castle of Swansea, was still held by a
+junior branch of the decaying house of Braose, whose main marcher
+lordships had been divided a century earlier between the Bohuns and the
+Mortimers. Its spendthrift ruler, William of Braose, was the last male
+of his race. He strove to make what profit he could for himself out of
+his succession, and had for some time been treating with Humphrey of
+Hereford. Gower was immediately to the south-west of Hereford's
+lordship of Brecon. Its acquisition would extend the Bohun lands to the
+sea, and make Earl Humphrey the greatest lord in south Wales. At the
+last moment, however, Braose broke off with him and sought to sell
+Gower to John of Mowbray, the husband of his daughter and heiress. When
+Braose died in 1320, Mowbray took possession of Gower in accordance
+with the "custom of the march". The royal assent had not been asked,
+either for licence to alienate, or for permission to enter upon the
+estate. Despenser coveted Gower for himself. He had already got
+Newport, had he Swansea also he would rule the south coast from the
+Lloughor to the Usk. Accordingly, he declared that the custom of the
+march trenched upon the royal prerogative, and managed that Gower
+should be seized by the king's officers, as a first step towards
+getting it for himself.
+
+Despenser's action provoked extreme indignation among all the marcher
+lords. They denounced the apostate from the cause of his class for
+upsetting the balance of power in the march, and declared that in
+treating a lordship beyond the Wye like a landed estate in England,
+Hugh had, like Edward I., "despised the laws and customs of the march".
+It was easy to form a coalition of all the marcher lords against him.
+The leaders of it were Humphrey of Hereford, Roger Mortimer of Chirk,
+justice of Wales, and his nephew, Roger Mortimer of Wigmore, the head
+of the house, who had overthrown Edward Bruce's monarchy of Ireland. As
+Braose co-heirs their position was unassailable. But every other baron
+had his grievance. John of Mowbray resented the loss of Gower; Henry of
+Lancaster feared for Monmouth and Kidwelly; Audley wished to win back
+Newport, and Amory, Usk. Behind the confederates was Thomas of
+Lancaster himself, eager to regain his lost position of leadership. The
+league at once began to wage war against Despenser in south Wales, and
+approached the court with a demand that he should be banished as a
+traitor.
+
+Edward made his way to Gloucester in March, 1321, and strove to protect
+Despenser and to calm the wild spirits of the marchers. But private war
+had already broken out after the marcher fashion, and the king retired
+without effecting his purpose. Left to themselves the marcher allies
+easily overran the Despenser lands, inherited or usurped. Neither
+Cardiff nor Caerphilly held out long against them: the Welsh
+husbandmen, like the English knights and barons of Glamorgan, were
+hostile to the Despensers. The king could do nothing to help his
+friends. In May, Lancaster formed a league of northern barons in the
+chapter-house of the priory at Pontefract. In June, another northern
+gathering was held in the Norman nave of the parish church of
+Sherburn-in-Elmet, a few miles to the north of Pontefract. This was
+attended by the Archbishop of York and two of his suffragans, and a
+great number of clergy, secular and regular, as well as by many barons
+and knights. It was in fact an informal parliament of the Lancastrian
+party. A long list of complaints were drawn up which, under fair words,
+demanded the removal of bad ministers, and among them the chamberlain.
+The clerical members of the conference met separately at the rectory,
+where they showed more circumspection, but an equally partisan bias.[1]
+
+ [1] Bp. Stubbs works all this out, _Chron. Ed. I. and II_.,
+ ii., pref., lxxxvi.-xc.
+
+The conferences at Pontefract and Sherburn showed that Lancaster and
+the northerners were in full sympathy with the men of the west. The
+middle party again made common cause with the followers of Lancaster.
+Amory's interests were sufficiently involved to make him an eager enemy
+of Despenser, and Badlesmere was almost as keen. Though Pembroke still
+professed to mediate, it was generally believed that he was delighted
+to get rid of the Despensers. Even Warenne took sides against them,
+though the discredited earl was fast becoming of no account. Such being
+the drift of opinion, the fate of the favourites was settled when the
+estates assembled in London in July. Edward had delayed a meeting of
+parliament as long as he could, and was helpless in its hands. Great
+pains were taken this time to prevent the repetition of the
+informalities which had attended the attack on Gaveston. There was an
+unprecedented gathering of magnates, who came to the parliament with a
+large armed following, encamped like an army in all the villages to the
+north of the city. The commons were fully represented, and the clerical
+estate was expressly summoned. Articles were at once drawn up against
+the Despensers. They had aspired to royal power; had turned the heart
+of the king from his subjects; had excited civil war, and had taught
+that obedience was due to the crown rather than to the king. This last
+charge came strangely from those who had urged that doctrine as a
+pretext for withdrawing support from Gaveston. It is a good
+illustration of the tendency of the Despensers to cloak their personal
+ambitions with loud-sounding constitutional phrases.
+
+The peers pronounced sentence of banishment and forfeiture against both
+the elder and the younger Hugh. They were not to be recalled save by
+consent of the peers in parliament assembled. The easy revolution was
+completed by the issuing of pardons to nearly five hundred members of
+the triumphant coalition. The elder Despenser at once withdrew to the
+continent. The younger Hugh found friends among the mariners of the
+Cinque Ports. These at first protected him in England, and then put at
+his disposal a little fleet of vessels with which, when driven from the
+land, he took to piracy in the narrow seas.
+
+The fall of the Despensers was brought about very much after the same
+fashion as the first exile of Gaveston. Like Gaveston, they speedily
+returned, and in circumstances which suggest an even closer parallel
+with the events that led to the recall of the Gascon. The triumphant
+coalition in each case fell to pieces as soon as it had done its
+immediate work. Once more the loss of his friend and comrade stirred up
+Edward to an energy and perseverance such as he never displayed on
+other occasions. But the second triumph of the king assumed a more
+complete character than his earlier snatched victory. Accident favoured
+Edward's design of bringing back his favourites, and throwing off once
+more the baronial thraldom. On October 13, 1321, Queen Isabella, on her
+way to Canterbury, claimed hospitality at Leeds castle, situated
+between Maidstone and the archiepiscopal city. The castle belonged to
+Badlesmere, whose wife was then residing there, with his kinsman,
+Bartholomew Burghersh, and a competent garrison. Lady Badlesmere
+refused to admit the queen, declaring that, without her lord's orders,
+she could not venture to entertain any one. Bitterly indignant at the
+insult, the queen took up her quarters in the neighbouring priory and
+attempted to force an entrance. The castle, however, was not to be
+taken by the hasty attack of a small company. Six of Isabella's
+followers were slain, and the attempt was abandoned. Isabella called
+upon her husband to avenge her; and the king at once resolved to
+capture Leeds castle at any cost, and prepared to undertake the
+enterprise in person. He offered high wages to all crossbowmen,
+archers, knights, and squires who would follow him to Leeds, and
+summoned the levies of horse and foot from the towns and shires of the
+south-east. His trust in the loyalty of his subjects met with an
+unexpectedly favourable response. In a few days a large army gathered
+round the king under the walls of Leeds. Among the many magnates who
+appeared among the royal following were six earls: Pembroke,
+Badlesmere's own associate; the king's two brothers, Norfolk and Kent;
+Warenne, Richmond, and Arundel, who as Despenser's kinsman felt himself
+bound to fight on his side. On October 23 the castle was closely
+besieged by this overwhelming force, and on October 31 was forced to
+surrender. Burghersh was shut up in the Tower and Lady Badlesmere in
+Dover castle. Thirteen of the garrison, "stout men and valiant," were
+hanged by the angry king.
+
+During the siege of Leeds, the magnates of the march, headed by
+Hereford and Roger Mortimer, collected a force at Kingston-on-Thames,
+where they were joined by Badlesmere. But they dared not advance
+towards the relief of the Kentish castle, and, after a fortnight they
+dispersed to their own homes. Lancaster hated Badlesmere so bitterly
+that he made no move against the king, and sullenly bided his time in
+the north. His inaction paralysed the barons as effectively as in
+earlier days it had hindered the plans of the king. Flushed with his
+victory, Edward gradually unfolded his designs. His tool, Archbishop
+Reynolds, summoned a convocation of the southern province for December
+1 at St. Paul's, and obtained from the assembled clergy the opinion
+that the proceedings against the Despensers were invalid. On January 1,
+1322, Reynolds solemnly declared this sentence in St. Paul's. Edward
+did not wait for the archbishop. Attended by many of the warriors who
+had fought at Leeds, he marched to the west, occupying on his journey
+the lands and castles of his enemies. He kept his Christmas court at
+Cirencester, and thence advanced towards the Severn. As the inaction of
+Lancaster kept the northern barons quiet, Edward's sole task was to
+wreak his revenge on the marcher lords. They were unprepared for
+resistance, and waited in vain for Lancaster to come to their help.
+Without a leader, they made feeble and ill-devised efforts to oppose
+the king's advance. Their command of the few bridges over the Severn
+prevented the king from crossing the river, and leading his troops
+directly into the march. Foiled at Gloucester, Worcester, and
+Bridgnorth, Edward made his way up the stream to Shrewsbury. The two
+Mortimers, who held the town and the passage of the river, could have
+stopped him if they had chosen. But they feared to undertake strong
+measures while Lancaster's action remained uncertain. They suffered
+Edward to cross the stream and surrendered to him. The collapse of the
+fiercest of the marcher lords frightened the rest into surrender.
+Edward wandered back through the middle and southern marches, occupying
+without resistance the main strongholds of his enemies. At Hereford, he
+sharply rebuked the bishop for upholding the barons against their
+natural lord. At Berkeley, he received from Maurice of Berkeley the
+keys of the stately fortress which was so soon to be the place of his
+last humiliation. Early in February, he was back at Gloucester, where,
+on February 11, he recalled the Despensers.
+
+Humphrey of Hereford, Roger of Amory, and a few other marchers managed
+to escape the king's pursuit, and rode northwards to join Thomas of
+Lancaster. Thomas had long been ready at Pontefract with his followers
+in arms. But he let the time for effective action slip, and was only
+goaded into doing anything when the fugitives from the march impressed
+him with the critical state of affairs. The quarrel of king and barons
+was not the only trouble besetting England. The two years' truce with
+Scotland had expired, and Robert Bruce was once more devastating the
+northern counties. But neither Edward nor Lancaster cared anything for
+this. Andrew Harclay, the governor of Carlisle, strongly urged the king
+to defend his subjects from the Scots rather than make war against
+them. Edward answered that rebels must be put down before foreign
+enemies could be encountered, and pressed northwards with his
+victorious troops.
+
+Lancaster was then besieging Tickhill, a royal castle in southern
+Yorkshire. After wasting three weeks before its walls, he led his force
+south to Burton-on-Trent, which he occupied on March 10. Edward soon
+approached the Trent on his northward march. The barons thereupon lost
+courage, and, abandoning the defence of the passage over the river, fled
+northwards to Pontefract, the centre of Lancaster's power in Yorkshire.
+Edward advanced against them, taking on his road Lancaster's castle of
+Tutbury, where Roger of Amory was captured, mortally wounded. The
+Lancastrians were panic-stricken. They fled from Pontefract as they had
+fled from Burton, retreating northwards, probably simply to avoid the
+king, possibly to join hands with Robert Bruce. On March 16 the
+fugitives reached Boroughbridge, on the south bank of the Ure, where a
+long narrow bridge, hardly wide enough for horsemen in martial array,
+crossed the stream. The north bank of the river, and the approaches to
+the bridge, were held in force by the levies of Cumberland and
+Westmoreland which Barclay had summoned at the king's request, in order
+to prevent a junction between the Lancastrians and the Scots. Barclay
+was a brave and capable commander and had well learnt the lessons of
+Scottish warfare.[1] He dismounted all his knights and men-at-arms, and
+arranged them on the northern side of the river, along with some of his
+pikemen. The rest of the pikemen he ordered to form a "schiltron" after
+the Scottish fashion, so that their close formation might resist the
+cavalry of which the Lancastrian force consisted. He bade his archers
+shoot swiftly and continually at the enemy.
+
+ [1] For the tactics of Boroughbridge see _Engl. Hist. Review_,
+ xix. (1904), 711-13.
+
+Seeing this disposition of the hostile force, the Lancastrian army
+divided. One band, under Hereford and Roger Clifford, dismounted and
+made for the bridge, which was defended by the schiltron of pikemen.
+The rest of the men-at-arms remained on horseback and followed
+Lancaster, to a ford near the bridge, whence, by crossing the water,
+they could take the schiltron in flank. Neither movement succeeded.
+Hereford and Clifford advanced, each with one attendant, to the bridge.
+No sooner had the earl entered upon the wooden structure than he was
+slain by a Welsh spearman, who had hidden himself under it, and aimed a
+blow at Humphrey through the planking. Clifford was severely wounded,
+and escaped with difficulty. Discouraged by the loss of their leaders,
+the rest of the troops made only a feeble effort to force the passage.
+The same evil fortune attended the division that followed Lancaster.
+The archers of Harclay obeyed his orders so well that the Lancastrian
+cavalry scarcely dared enter the water. Lancaster lost his nerve, and
+besought Harclay for a truce until the next morning. His request was
+granted, but during the night all the followers of Hereford dispersed,
+thinking that there was no need for them to remain after the death of
+their lord. Lancaster's own troops were likewise thinned by desertions.
+The sheriff of York came up early in the morning with an armed force
+from the south, joined Harclay, and cut off the last hope of retreat.
+Further resistance being useless, Lancaster, Audley, Clifford, Mowbray,
+and the other leaders surrendered in a body.
+
+Edward was then at Pontefract in the chief castle of his deadliest
+enemy. Thither the prisoners of Boroughbridge were sent for their
+trial, and there they were hastily condemned by a body of seven earls
+and numerous barons, presided over by the king himself. Lancaster, not
+allowed to say a word in his defence, was at once sentenced to death as
+a rebel and a traitor. In consideration of his exalted rank, the
+grosser penalties of treason were commuted, as in the case of Gaveston,
+to simple decapitation. On the morning of March 22 Thomas was led out
+of his castle, clad in the garb of a penitent and mounted on a sorry
+steed. He was conducted to a little hill outside the walls. The crowd
+mocked at his sufferings and in scorn called him "King Arthur". In two
+or three blows of the axe, his head was struck off from his body. Nor
+was he the only victim. Audley, spared his life by reason of his
+marriage to the king's niece, was, like the two Mortimers, consigned to
+prison. Clifford and Mowbray were hanged at York, and Badlesmere at
+Canterbury. In all, more than twenty knights and barons paid the
+penalty of death.
+
+It is hard to waste much pity on Lancaster. He was the victim of his
+own fierce passions and, still more, of his own utter incompetence. His
+attitude all through the crisis had been inept in the extreme, and the
+poor fight that he made for his life at Boroughbridge was a fitting
+conclusion to a feeble career. But with all his faults he remained
+popular to the end, especially with the clergy and commons. He was
+hailed as a martyr to freedom and sound government. Pilgrimages were
+made to the scene of his death, and miracles were wrought with his
+relics. A chapel arose on the little hill dedicated to his worship, and
+a loud cry arose for his canonisation. The abuse made by his enemies of
+their victory only strengthened his reputation among the people. The
+tragedy of his fall appealed to the rude sympathies of the
+north-countrymen, and the merit of the cause atoned in their minds for
+the weakness of the man.
+
+A parliament met at York on May 2, where the triumph of the king
+received its consummation. The Despensers had more advanced
+constitutional ideas than Lancaster, and pains were taken that this
+parliament should completely represent the three estates. It was a
+novel feature that twelve representatives of the commons of north Wales
+and twelve of the commons of south Wales attended, on this occasion, to
+speak on behalf of the region where the troubles had first begun. With
+the full approval of the estates, the ordinances were solemnly revoked,
+as infringing the rights of the crown. The important principle was laid
+down that "matters which are to be established for the estate of the
+king and for the estate of the realm shall be treated, accorded, and
+established in parliament by the king and by the council of the
+prelates, earls, and barons, and the commonalty of the realm". Thus,
+while the repeal of the ordinances seemed based upon their infringement
+of the royal prerogative, it was at least implied that they were also
+invalid because they were the work of a council of barons only, and not
+of a full parliament of the estates. This declaration of the necessity
+of popular co-operation in valid legislation is the most important
+constitutional advance of the reign of Edward II. It is a significant
+comment on the limitations of the baronial opposition that the
+ordinances should be the last great English law in the passing of which
+the commons were not consulted, and that a royalist triumph should be
+the occasion of the declaration of a vital principle.
+
+The king's friends then received their rewards. Harclay was made Earl
+of Carlisle and the elder Despenser became Earl of Winchester. Fear of
+the marcher lords, even in their prison, withheld from the younger Hugh
+the title, though hardly the authority, of Earl of Gloucester. In other
+ways also the Despensers were anxious to prevent their victory
+suggesting too much of a reaction. Before parliament separated, it
+adopted a new series of ordinances confirming the Great Charter and
+re-enacting in more constitutional fashion some portions of the laws of
+1312, which aimed at protecting the subject and strengthening the
+administration. Grants of men and money were made to fight the Scots,
+and once more the new customs were allowed to swell the royal revenue.
+Thus the revolution was completed. Edward, Gaveston, Lancaster, and
+Pembroke had each in their turn been tried and found wanting. Thanks to
+the jealousies of the barons, his own spasmodic energy, and the
+acuteness of the Despensers, Edward was still to have another chance,
+under the guidance of his new friends. We shall see how the restored
+rule of the Despensers was blighted by the same incompetence and
+selfishness which had ruined their predecessors in power. The triumph
+of the Despensers proved but the first act in the tragic fall of Edward
+II.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE FALL OF EDWARD II. AND THE RULE OF ISABELLA AND MORTIMER.
+
+
+During the deliberations of the parliament of York, the truce with
+Bruce expired, and forthwith came the news that the Scots had once more
+crossed the border. On this occasion Bruce raided the country from
+Carlisle to Preston, burning every open town on his way, though sparing
+most of the religious houses. At Cartmel, Lancaster, and Preston,
+favoured monastic buildings alone stood entire amidst the desolation
+wrought by the Scots. No effective opposition was offered to them, and
+after a three weeks' foray, they recrossed the Solway.
+
+As in 1314 and 1318, the restoration of order was followed by an
+attempt to put down Bruce. In August, 1322, Edward assembled his forces
+at Newcastle and invaded Scotland. Berwick was unsuccessfully besieged
+and the Lothians laid waste. The Scots still had the prudence to
+withdraw beyond the Forth, and avoid battle in the open field. By the
+beginning of September, pestilence and famine had done their work on
+the invaders. Unable to find support in the desolate fields of Lothian,
+the, English returned to their own land, having accomplished nothing.
+The Scots followed on their tracks, but with such secrecy that they
+penetrated into the heart of Yorkshire before Edward was aware of their
+presence. In October they suddenly swooped down on the king, when he
+was staying at Byland abbey. Some troops which accompanied him were
+encamped on a hill between Byland and Rievaux. They were attacked by
+the Scots and defeated; their leader, John of Brittany, was taken
+prisoner, and Edward only avoided capture by a precipitate flight from
+Byland to Bridlington. All Yorkshire was reduced to abject terror, and
+Edward's hosts, the canons of Bridlington, removed with all their
+valuables to Lincolnshire, and sent one of their number to Bruce at
+Malton to purchase immunity for their estates. After a month the Scots
+went home, leaving famine, pestilence, and misery in their train. The
+Despensers thus proved themselves not less incompetent to defend
+England than Thomas of Lancaster.
+
+As the state afforded no protection, each private person had to make
+the best terms he could for himself. Even the king's favourite, Louis
+of Beaumont, the illiterate Bishop of Durham, entered into negotiations
+with the Scots, while the Archbishop of York issued formal permission
+to religious houses of his diocese to treat with the excommunicated
+followers of Bruce. Not only timid ecclesiastics, but well-tried
+soldiers found in private dealings with the Scots the only remedy for
+their troubles. After the Byland surprise, Harclay, the new Earl of
+Carlisle, the victor of Boroughbridge, and the warden of the marches,
+dismissed his troops, sought out Bruce at Lochmaben, and made an
+arrangement with him, by which it was resolved that a committee of six
+English and six Scottish magnates should be empowered to conclude peace
+between the two countries on the basis of recognising him as King of
+Scots. There was great alarm at court when Harclay's treason was known.
+A Cumberland baron, Anthony Lucy, was instructed to apprehend the
+culprit, and forcing his way into Carlisle castle by a stratagem,
+captured the earl with little difficulty. In March, 1323, Harclay
+suffered the terrible doom of treason. He justified his action to the
+last, declaring that his only motive was a desire to procure peace, and
+convincing many of the north-countrymen of the innocence of his
+motives. To such a pass had England been reduced that those who
+honestly desired that the farmers of 'Cumberland should once more till
+their fields in peace, saw no other means of gaining their end than by
+communication with the enemies of their country.
+
+The disgrace of Byland and the tragedy of Carlisle showed that it was
+idle to pretend to fight the Scots any longer. Negotiations for peace
+were entered upon; Pembroke and the younger Despenser being the chief
+English commissioners. Peace was found impossible, as English pride
+still refused to recognise the royal title of King Robert, but a
+thirteen years' truce was arranged without any difficulty. This treaty
+of 1323 practically concluded the Scottish war of independence. Bruce
+then easily obtained papal recognition of his title, though English
+ill-will long stood in the way of the remission of his sentence of
+excommunication. His martial career, however, was past, and he could
+devote his declining years to the consolidation of his kingdom and the
+restoration of its material prosperity. He reorganised the national
+army, built up a new nobility by distributing among his faithful
+followers the estates of the obstinate friends of England, and first
+called upon the royal burghs of Scotland to send representatives to the
+Scottish parliament. He had made Scotland a nation, and nobly redeemed
+the tergiversation and violence of his earlier career.
+
+Among Harclay's motives for treating with the Scots had been his
+distrust of the Despensers. As generals against the Scots and as
+administrators of England, they manifested an equal incapacity. Their
+greed and insolence revived the old enmities, and they proved strangely
+lacking in resolution to grapple with emergencies. Nevertheless they
+ruled over England for nearly five years in comparative peace. This
+period, unmarked by striking events, is, however, evidence of the
+exhaustion of the country rather than of the capacity of the Earl of
+Winchester and the lord of Glamorgan. The details of the history bear
+witness to the relaxation of the reins of government, the prevalence of
+riot and petty rebellion, the sordid personal struggles for place and
+power, the weakness which could neither collect the taxes, enforce
+obedience to the law, nor even save from humiliation the most trusted
+agents of the government.
+
+The Despensers' continuance in power rested more on the absence of
+rivals than on their own capacity. The strongest of the royalist earls,
+Aymer of Pembroke, died in 1324. As he left no issue, his earldom
+swelled the alarmingly long roll of lapsed dignities. None of the few
+remaining earls could step into his place, nor give Edward the wise
+counsel which the creator of the middle party had always provided.
+Warenne was brutal, profligate, unstable, and distrusted; Arundel had
+no great influence; Richmond was a foreigner, and of little personal
+weight, and the successors of Humphrey of Hereford and Guy of Warwick
+were minors, suspected by reason of their fathers' treasons. The only
+new earl was Henry of Lancaster, who in 1324 obtained a partial
+restitution of his brother's estates and the title of Earl of
+Leicester. Prudent, moderate, and high-minded, Henry stood in strong
+contrast to his more famous brother. But the tragedy of Pontefract and
+his unsatisfied claim on the Lancaster earldom stood between Henry and
+the government, and the imprudence of the Despensers soon utterly
+estranged him from the king, though he was the last man to indulge in
+indiscriminate opposition, and Edward dared not push his powerful
+cousin to extremities. In these circumstances, the king had no wise or
+strong advisers whose influence might counteract the Despensers. His
+loneliness and isolation made him increasingly dependent upon the
+favourites.
+
+The older nobles were already alienated, when the Despensers provoked a
+quarrel with the queen. Isabella was a woman of strong character and
+violent passions, with the lack of morals and scruples which might have
+been expected from a girlhood passed amidst the domestic scandals of
+her father's household. She resented her want of influence over her
+husband, and hated the Despensers because of their superior power with
+him. The favourites met her hostility by an open declaration of
+warfare. In 1324 the king deprived her of her separate estate, drove
+her favourite servants from court, and put her on an allowance of a
+pound a day. The wife of the younger Hugh, her husband's niece, was
+deputed to watch her, and she could not even write a letter without the
+Lady Despenser's knowledge. Isabella bitterly chafed under her
+humiliation. She was, she declared, treated like a maidservant and made
+the hireling of the Despensers. Finding, however, that nothing was to
+be gained by complaints, she prudently dissembled her wrath and waited
+patiently for revenge.
+
+The Despensers' chief helpers were among the clergy. Conspicuous among
+them were Walter Stapledon, Bishop of Exeter, the treasurer, and Robert
+Baldock, the chancellor. The records of Stapledon's magnificence
+survive in the nave of his cathedral church, and in Exeter College,
+Oxford; but the great builder and pious founder was a worldly, greedy,
+and corrupt public minister. So unpopular was he that, in 1325, it was
+thought wise to remove him from office. Thereupon another building
+prelate, William Melton, Archbishop of York, whose piety and charity
+long intercourse with courtiers had not extinguished, abandoned his
+northern flock for London and the treasury. But the best of officials
+could do little to help the unthrifty king. Edward was so poorly
+respected that he could not even obtain a bishopric for his chancellor.
+On two occasions the envoys sent to Avignon, to urge Baldock's claims
+on vacant sees, secured for themselves the mitre destined for the
+minister. In this way John Stratford became Bishop of Winchester and
+William Ayermine, Bishop of Norwich. Edward had not even the spirit to
+show manifest disfavour to these self-seeking prelates, but his
+inaction was so clearly the result of weakness that it involved no
+gratitude, and the two bishops secretly hated the ruling clique, as
+likely to do them an evil turn if it dared. Nor were the older prelates
+better contented or more loyal. The primate Reynolds was deeply
+irritated by Melton's appointment as treasurer. Burghersh, the Bishop
+of Lincoln, was a nephew of Badlesmere, and anxious to avenge his
+uncle. Adam Orleton, Bishop of Hereford, was a dependant of the
+Mortimers, who took his surname from one of their Herefordshire manors.
+Forgiven for his share in the revolt of 1322, he cleverly contrived in
+1324 the escape of his patron, Roger Mortimer of Wigmore, from the
+Tower. The marcher made his way to France, but his ally felt the full
+force of the king's wrath. He was deprived of his temporalities, and,
+when the Church spread her aegis over him, the court procured the
+verdict of a Herefordshire jury against him. Thus the impolicy of the
+crown combined the selfish worldling with the zealot for the Church in
+a common opposition. Like Isabella, Orleton bided his time, and Edward
+feared to complete his disgrace.
+
+In such ways the king and the Despensers proclaimed their incapacity to
+the world. The Scottish truce, the wrongs of Henry of Lancaster, the
+humiliation of the queen, the alienation of the old nobles, the fears
+of greedy prelates,--each of these was remembered against them.
+Gradually every order of the community became disgusted. The feeble
+efforts of Edward to conciliate the Londoners met with little response.
+Weak rule and the insecurity of life and property turned away the heart
+of the commons from the king. It was no wonder that men went on
+pilgrimage to the little hill outside Pontefract, where Earl Thomas had
+met his doom, or that rumours spread that the king was a changeling and
+no true son of the great Edward. But though the power of the king and
+the Despensers was thoroughly undermined, the absence of leaders and
+the general want of public spirit still delayed the day of reckoning.
+At last, the threatening outlook beyond the Channel indirectly
+precipitated the crisis.
+
+The relations of France and England remained uneasy, despite the
+marriage of two English kings in succession to ladies of the Capetian
+house. The union of Edward I. and Margaret of France had not done much
+to help the settlement of the disputed points in the interpretation of
+the treaty of Paris of 1303, and the match between Edward II and his
+stepmother's niece had been equally ineffective. The restoration of
+Gascony in 1303 had never been completed, and in the very year of the
+treaty a decree of the parliament of Paris had withdrawn the homage of
+the county of Bigorre from the English duke. Within the ceded
+districts, the conflict of the jurisdictions of king and duke became
+increasingly accentuated. Having failed to hold Gascony by force of
+arms, Philip the Fair aspired to conquer it by the old process of
+stealthily undermining the traditional authority of the duke. Appeals
+to Paris became more and more numerous. The agents of the king wandered
+at will through Edward's Gascon possessions, and punished all loyalty
+to the lawful duke by dragging the culprits before their master's
+courts. The ineptitude which characterised all Edward's subordinates
+was particularly conspicuous among his Gascon seneschals and their
+subordinates. While the English king's servants drifted on from day to
+day, timid, without policy, and without direction, the agents of
+France, well trained, energetic, and determined, knew their own minds
+and gradually brought about the end which they had clearly set before
+themselves. In vain did bitter complaints arise of the aggressions of
+the officers of Philip. It was to no purpose that conferences were
+held, protocols drawn up, and much time and ink wasted in discussing
+trivialities. Neither Edward nor Philip wished to push matters to
+extremities. To the former the policy of drift was always congenial.
+The latter was content to wait until the pear was ripe. It seemed that
+in a few more years Gascony would become as thoroughly subject to the
+French crown as Champagne or Normandy.
+
+Philip the Fair died in 1314, and was followed in rapid succession by
+his three sons. The first of these, Louis X., had, like Edward II., to
+contend against an aristocratic reaction, and died in 1316, before he
+could even receive the homage of his brother-in-law. A king of more
+energy than Edward might have profited by the difficult situation which
+followed Louis' death. For a time there was neither pope, nor emperor,
+nor King of France. But Philip V. mounted the French throne when his
+brother's widow had given birth to a daughter, and continued the policy
+of his predecessors with regard to Gascony. Again the disputes between
+Norman and Gascon sailors threatened, as in 1293, to bring about a
+rupture. The ever-increasing aggressions of the suzerain culminated in
+summoning Edward's own seneschal of Saintonge to appear before the
+French king's court. Edward neglected to do homage, alleging his
+preoccupation in the Scottish war and similar excuses. But the
+threatened danger soon passed away, for again the interests and fears
+of both parties postponed the conflict. In avoiding any alliance with
+the Scots, the French king showed a self-restraint for which Edward
+could not but be grateful. In 1320 Edward performed in person his
+long-delayed homage at Amiens, though his grievances against his
+brother-in-law still remained unredressed. In 1322 the death of Philip
+V. renewed the troublesome homage question in a more acute form.[1]
+
+ [1] For the relations of Edward II. and Philip V. see Lehugeur,
+ _Hist. de Philippe le Long_, pp. 240-66 (1897).
+
+The obligation of performing homage to a rival prince weighed with
+increasing severity on the English kings at each rapid change of
+occupants of the throne of France. The same pretexts were again brought
+forward, as sufficient reasons for postponing or evading the unpleasant
+duly. But before the question was settled a new source of trouble arose
+in the affair of Saint-Sardos, which soon plunged the two countries into
+open war. The lord of Montpezat, a vassal of the Duke of Gascony, built
+a _bastide_ at Saint-Sardos upon a site which he declared was held by
+himself of the duke, but which the French officials claimed as belonging
+to Charles IV. The dispute was taken before the parliament of Paris,
+which decided that the new town belonged to the King of France.
+Thereupon a royal force promptly took possession of it. Irritated at
+this high-handed action, the lord of Montpezat invoked the aid of
+Edward's seneschal of Gascony, who attacked and destroyed the _bastide_
+and massacred the French garrison.[1] The answer of Charles the Fair to
+this aggression was decisive. Gascony was pronounced sequestrated and
+Charles of Valois, the veteran uncle of the king, was ordered to enforce
+the sentence at the head of an imposing army.
+
+ [1] See for this affair Brequigny, _Memoire sur les differends
+ entre la France et l'Angleterre sous Charles le Bel, in Mem. de
+ l'Acad. des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres_, xli. (1780), pp.
+ 641-92. M. Deprez is about to publish a Chancery Roll of Edward
+ II. which includes all the official acts relating to it.
+
+Thus, in the summer of 1324 England and France were once more at war.
+But while England remonstrated and negotiated, France acted. Norman
+corsairs swept the Channel and pillaged the English coasts. Ponthieu
+yielded without resistance. Early in August, Charles of Valois entered
+the Agenais, and on the 15th Agen opened its gates. The victorious
+French soon appeared before La Reole, where alone they encountered real
+resistance. Edmund, Earl of Kent, who had made vain attempts to procure
+peace at Paris, had been sent in July to act as lieutenant of
+Aquitaine. He had not sufficient force at his command to venture to
+meet the Count of Valois in the open field, and threw himself into La
+Reole. The rocky height, crowned with a triple wall, and looking down
+on the vineyards and cornfields of the Garonne, defied for weeks the
+skill of the eminent Lorrainer engineers who directed Charles of
+Valois' siege train. But when Charles announced to Edmund that he would
+carry the town by assault, if not surrendered within four days, the
+timid earl signed a truce from September to Easter, and was allowed to
+withdraw to Bordeaux. A mere fringe of coast-land still remained
+faithful to the English duke, when Charles of Valois went back to
+Paris, having victoriously terminated his long and chequered career.
+Before the end of 1325 he died.[1]
+
+ [1] Petit, _Charles de Valois_, pp. 207-15 (1900), gives the
+ fullest modern account of these transactions.
+
+The truce involved a renewal of the negotiations. Bishop Stratford and
+William Ayermine, the astute chancery clerk, were commissioned in
+November, 1324, to treat with the French, but made little progress in
+their delicate task. At this stage Isabella, inspired probably by Adam
+Orleton, came forward with a proposal. She besought her husband to
+allow her to visit her brother, the French king, and use her influence
+with him to procure peace and the restitution of Gascony. With the
+strange infatuation which marked all the acts of Edward and his
+favourites, Isabella's proposal was adopted, and in March, 1325, the
+queen crossed the Channel and made her way to her brother's court. The
+summer was consumed in negotiating a treaty, by which Edward's French
+fiefs were to be restored to him in their integrity, as soon as he had
+performed homage to the new king. Meanwhile the English garrison of
+Gascony was to withdraw to Bayonne, leaving the rest of the duchy in
+the hands of a French seneschal. Edward agreed to these terms, and put
+Gascony into Charles's hands. He was still unwilling to compromise his
+dignity by performing homage, while the Despensers were mortally afraid
+of his going to France, lest it should remove him from their influence.
+Isabella then made a second suggestion. She persuaded her brother to
+excuse the personal homage of her husband, if Edward would invest his
+young son, Edward, with Gascony and Ponthieu, and send him in his stead
+to tender his feudal duly. This also was agreed to by the English king,
+and in September the young prince, then about thirteen years old, was
+appointed Duke of Aquitaine and Count of Ponthieu, and despatched to
+join his mother at Paris, where he performed homage to his uncle.
+
+It was expected that Gascony and Ponthieu would then be restored, and
+that the queen and her son would return to England. But Charles IV.
+perpetrated a clever piece of trickery which showed how far off a real
+settlement still was. He "restored" to Edward those parts of Gascony
+which had been peacefully surrendered to him in the summer, and
+announced that he should keep the Agenais and La Reole, as belonging to
+France by right of Charles of Valois' recent conquest. Bitterly
+mortified at this treachery, Edward took upon himself the title of
+"governor and administrator of his firstborn, Edward, Duke of
+Aquitaine, and of his estates". By this technical subtlety, he thought
+himself entitled to resume the control of the ceded districts and
+resist the attack which was bound to follow hard upon the new breach.
+Once more Charles IV. pronounced the sequestration of the duchy, and
+despite Edward's efforts, his power crumbled away before the peaceful
+advent of the French troops, charged with the execution of their
+master's edict.
+
+Long before the last Gascon castles had opened their gates to Charles's
+officers, new developments at Paris made the question of Aquitaine a
+subordinate matter. Despite the breach of the negotiations, Isabella
+and her son still tarried at the French court. In answer to Edward's
+requests for their return, she sent back excuse after excuse, till his
+patience was fairly exhausted. At last, on December 1, 1325, Edward
+peremptorily ordered his wife to return home, and warned her not to
+consort with certain English traitors in the French court. The Duke of
+Aquitaine was similarly exhorted to return, with his mother if he
+could, but if not, without her. The reference to English traitors shows
+that Edward was aware that Isabella had already formed that close
+relation with the exiled lord of Wigmore which soon ripened into an
+adulterous connexion. Inspired by Roger Mortimer, Isabella declared
+that she was in peril of her life from the malice of the Despensers,
+and would never go back to her husband as long as the favourites
+retained power. A band of the exiles of 1322 gathered round her and her
+paramour, and sought to bring about their restoration as champions of
+the loudly expressed grievances of the queen, and the rights of her
+young son. The king's ambassadors at Paris, Stratford and Ayermine,
+recently made Bishop of Norwich by a papal provision which ignored the
+election of Robert Baldock the chancellor, united themselves with the
+queen and the fugitive marcher. With them, too, was associated Edmund
+of Kent, who was allowed by the treaty to return from Gascony through
+France. Bishop Stapledon, who had accompanied the queen to France, was
+so alarmed at the turn events were taking, that he fled in disguise to
+reveal his suspicions to the king. Thus England, already exposed to a
+danger of a French war, was threatened with the forcible overthrow of
+the Despensers and the reinstatement of Isabella by armed invaders.
+
+By the spring of 1326 the scandalous relations of Isabella and Mortimer
+were notorious all over England and France. Charles IV. grew disgusted
+at his sister's doings, and gave no countenance to her schemes.
+Isabella accordingly withdrew from Paris with her son and her paramour,
+and made her way to the Netherlands. There she found refuge in the
+county of Hainault, whose lord, William II, of Avesnes, was won over to
+support her by a contract to marry the Duke of Aquitaine to his
+daughter Philippa. A large advance from Philippa's marriage portion was
+employed in hiring a troop of knights and squires of Hainault and
+Holland. John of Hainault, brother of the count, took joint command of
+this band with Roger Mortimer. The ports of Holland and Zealand, both
+of which counties were united with Hainault under William II.'s rule,
+offered ample facilities for their embarkation.
+
+On September 23, 1326, the queen and her followers took ship at
+Dordrecht in Holland. Next day the fleet cast anchor in the port of
+Orwell, and that same day the expedition was landed and marched to
+Walton, where it spent the first night on English soil. The gentry of
+Suffolk and Essex flocked to the standard of the queen, who declared
+that she had come to avenge the wrongs of Earl Thomas of Lancaster and
+to drive the Despensers from power. Thomas of Brotherton, the earl
+marshal, made common cause with the invaders, and Henry, Earl of
+Leicester, hastened to associate himself with the champions of his
+martyred brother. A great force of native Englishmen swelled the
+queen's host, and reduced to insignificance the little band of
+Hainaulters and Hollanders. There was no resistance. Isabella marched
+to Bury St. Edmunds, "as if on a pilgrimage," and thence to Cambridge,
+where she tarried several days with the canons of Barnwell. From
+Cambridge she moved on to Baldock, where she despoiled the chancellor's
+manors and took his brother captive. At Dunstable, her next halt, she
+was on a great highway, within thirty-three miles of London.
+
+On hearing of his wife's landing, Edward threw himself on the
+compassion of the Londoners, but met with so cold a reception that
+early in October he withdrew to Gloucester. Besides the chancellor and
+the two Despensers, the only magnates of mark who remained faithful to
+him were the brothers-in-law, Edmund, Earl of Arundel, and Earl
+Warenne. On Edward's retreat from London, Bishop Stratford made his way
+to the capital, where he joined with Archbishop Reynolds in a hollow
+pretence of mediation. The Londoners gladly welcomed the queen's
+messengers and soon rose in revolt in her favour. They plundered and
+burnt the house of the Bishop of Exeter, who fled in alarm to St.
+Paul's. Seized at the very door of the church, Stapledon was brutally
+murdered by the mob in Cheapside, where his naked body lay exposed all
+day. Immediately after this, Reynolds fled in terror to his Kentish
+estates, where he waited to see which was the stronger side. The king's
+younger son, John of Eltham, a boy of nine, who had been left behind by
+his father in the Tower, was proclaimed warden of the capital.
+
+On hearing of Edward's flight to the west, Isabella went after him in
+pursuit. On the day of Stapledon's murder, she had advanced as far as
+Wallingford, where, posing as the continuer of the policy of the lords
+ordainers, she issued a proclamation denouncing the Despensers. Thence
+she made her way to Oxford, where Bishop Orleton, who had already
+joined her, preached a seditious sermon before the university and the
+leaders of the revolt. Taking as his text, "My head, my head," he
+demonstrated that the sick head of the state could not be restored by
+all the remedies of Hippocrates, and would therefore have to be cut
+off. This was the first intimation that the insurgents would not be
+content with the fall of the Despensers. From Oxford, Isabella and
+Mortimer hurried to Gloucester, whence Edward had already fled to the
+younger Despenser's palatinate of Glamorgan. From Gloucester, they
+passed on through Berkeley to Bristol, where the elder Despenser, the
+Earl of Winchester, was in command. The feeling of the burgesses of the
+second town in England was so strongly adverse that the earl was unable
+to defend either the borough or the castle. In despair he opened the
+gates on October 26 to the queen, and was immediately consigned,
+without trial or inquiry, to the death of a traitor. After proclaiming
+the Duke of Aquitaine as warden of the realm during his father's
+absence, the queen's army marched on Hereford, where Isabella remained,
+while the Earl of Leicester, accompanied by a Welsh clerk, named Rhys
+ap Howel, was sent, with part of the army to hunt out the king.
+
+After his flight from Gloucester, Edward had wandered through the Welsh
+march to Chepstow, whence he took ship, hoping to make sail to Lundy,
+which Despenser had latterly acquired, and perhaps ultimately to
+Ireland. But contrary winds kept him in the narrows of the Bristol
+Channel, and on October 27 he landed again at Cardiff. A few days later
+he was at Caerphilly, but afraid to entrust himself to the protection
+of the mightiest of marcher castles, he moved restlessly from place to
+place in Glamorgan and Gower, imploring the help of the tenants of the
+Despensers, and issuing vain summonses and commissions that no one
+obeyed. Discovered by the local knowledge of Rhys ap Howel, or betrayed
+by those whom the Welshman's gold had corrupted, Edward was captured on
+November 16 in Neath abbey. With him Baldock and the younger Despenser
+were also taken. On November 20 the favourite was put to death at
+Hereford, while Baldock, saved from immediate execution by his clerkly
+privilege, was consigned to the cruel custody of Orleton, only to
+perish a few months later of ill-treatment. To Hereford also was
+brought Edmund of Arundel, captured in Shropshire, and condemned to
+suffer the fate of the Despensers. The king was entrusted to the
+custody of Henry of Leicester, who conveyed him to his castle of
+Kenilworth, where the unfortunate monarch passed the winter, "treated
+not otherwise than a captive king ought to be treated".
+
+It only remained to complete the revolution by making provision for the
+future government of England. With this object a parliament was
+summoned, at first by the Duke of Aquitaine in his father's name, and
+afterwards more regularly by writs issued under the great seal. It met
+on January 7, 1327, at Westminster, and, after the York precedent of
+1322, contained representatives of Wales as well as of the three
+estates of England. Orleton, the spokesman of Mortimer, asked the
+estates whether they would have Edward II. or his son as their ruler.
+The London mob loudly declared for the Duke of Aquitaine, and none of
+the members of parliament ventured to raise a voice in favour of the
+unhappy king, save four prelates of whom the most important was the
+steadfast Archbishop Melton. The southern primate, deserting his old
+master, declared that the voice of the people was the voice of God.
+Stratford drew up six articles, in which he set forth that Edward of
+Carnarvon was incompetent to govern, led by evil counsellors, a
+despiser of the wholesome advice of the "great and wise men of the
+realm," neglectful of business, and addicted to unprofitable pleasures;
+that by his lack of good government he had lost Scotland, Ireland, and
+Gascony; that he had injured Holy Church, and had done to death or
+driven into exile many great men; that he had broken his coronation
+oath, and that it was hopeless to expect amendment from him.
+
+Even the agents of Mortimer shrunk from the odium of decreeing Edward's
+deposition, and the more prudent course was preferred of inducing the
+king to resign his power into his son's hands. An effort to persuade
+the captive monarch to abdicate before his estates, was defeated by his
+resolute refusal. Thereupon a committee of bishops, barons, and judges
+was sent to Kenilworth to receive his renunciation in the name of
+parliament. On January 20, Edward, clothed in black, admitted the
+delegates to his presence. Utterly unmanned by misfortune, the king
+fell in a deep swoon at the feet of his enemies. Leicester and
+Stratford raised him from the ground, and, on his recovery, Orleton
+exhorted him to resign his throne to his son, lest the estates,
+irritated by his contumacy, should choose as their king some one who
+was not of the royal line. Edward replied that he was sorry that his
+people were tired of his rule, but that being so, he was prepared to
+yield to their wishes, and make way for the Duke of Aquitaine. On this,
+Sir William Trussell, as proctor of the three estates, formally
+renounced their homage and fealty, and Sir Thomas Blount, steward of
+the household, broke his staff of office, and announced that the royal
+establishment was disbanded. Thus the calamitous reign of Edward of
+Carnarvon came to a wretched end. His utter inefficiency as a king
+makes it impossible to lament his fate. Yet few revolutions have ever
+been conducted with more manifest self-seeking than that which hurled
+Edward from power. The angry spite of the adulterous queen, the fierce
+vengeance and greed of Roger Mortimer, the craft and cruelty of
+Orleton, the time-serving cowardice of Reynolds, the stupidity of Kent
+and Norfolk, the party spirit of Stratford and Ayermine, can inspire
+nothing but disgust. Among the foes of Edward, Henry of Leicester alone
+behaved as an honourable gentleman, anxious to vindicate a policy, but
+careful to subordinate his private wrongs to public objects. Though his
+name and wrongs were ostentatiously put forward by the dominant
+faction, it is clear from the beginning that he was only a tool in its
+hands, and that the reversal of the sentence of Earl Thomas was but the
+pretext by which the schemers and traitors sought to capture the
+government for their own selfish ends.
+
+The resignation of the king was promptly reported to parliament. On
+January 24 the Duke of Aquitaine was proclaimed Edward III., and from
+the next day his regnal years were reckoned as beginning. Henry of
+Leicester dubbed him knight, and on January 20 he was crowned in
+Westminster Abbey. A few days later the young king met his parliament.
+A standing council was appointed to carry on the administration during
+his nonage. Of this body the Earl of Leicester acted as chief, though
+most of his colleagues were partisans of Mortimer and the queen.
+Orleton, who was made treasurer, continued to pull the wires as the
+confidential agent of Isabella and Mortimer. A show of devotion to the
+good old cause was thought politic, and therefore the sentences of 1322
+were revoked, so that Earl Henry, restored to all his brother's
+estates, was henceforth styled Earl of Lancaster. The commons went
+beyond this in petitioning for the canonisation of Earl Thomas and
+Archbishop Winchelsea. The revolution was consummated by a new
+confirmation of the charters.
+
+Even in the first flush of victory, Isabella and Mortimer were too
+insecure and too bitter to allow Edward of Carnarvon to remain quietly
+in prison under the custody of the Earl of Lancaster. As long as he was
+alive, he might always become the possible instrument of their
+degradation. At Orleton's instigation the deposed king was transferred
+in April from his cousin's care to that of two knights, Thomas Gurney
+and John Maltravers. He was promptly removed from Kenilworth and
+hurried by night from castle to castle until, after some sojourn at
+Corfe, he was at last immured at Berkeley. Every indignity was put upon
+him, and the systematic course of ill-treatment, to which he was
+subjected, was clearly intended to bring about his speedy death. But
+the robust constitution of the athlete rose superior to the
+persecutions of his torturers, and to save further trouble he was
+barbarously murdered in his bed on the night of September 21. Piercing
+shrieks from the interior of the castle told the peasantry that some
+dire deed was being perpetrated within its gloomy walls. Next day it
+was announced that the lord Edward had died a natural death, and his
+corpse was exposed to the public view that suspicion might be averted.
+He was buried with the state that became a crowned king in the
+Benedictine Abbey Church of St. Peter, Gloucester. A few years later
+the piety or remorse of Edward III. erected over his father's remains
+the magnificent tomb which still challenges our admiration by the
+delicacy of its tabernacle work and the artistic beauty of the
+sculptured effigy of the murdered monarch.
+
+The tragedy of Edward's end soon caused his misdeeds to be forgotten,
+and ere long the countryside flocked on pilgrimage to his tomb, as to
+the shrine of a saint. By a curious irony the burial place of Edward of
+Carnarvon rivalled in popularity the chapel on the hill at Pontefract
+where Thomas of Lancaster had perished by Edward's orders. Like his
+cousin, Edward became a popular, though not a canonised, saint. From
+the offerings made at his tomb the monks of Gloucester were in time
+supplied with the funds that enabled them to recast their romanesque
+choir in the newer "perpendicular" fashion of architecture, and
+embellish their church with all the rich additions which contrast so
+strangely with the grim impressiveness of the stately Norman nave.
+There was only one impediment to the people's worship of the dead king.
+The secrecy which enveloped his end led to rumours that he was still
+alive, and the prevalence of these reports soon proved almost as great
+a source of embarrassment to his supplanters, as his living presence
+had been in the first months of their unhallowed power.
+
+It was not easy for Isabella and Mortimer to restore the waning
+fortunes of England at home and abroad. We shall see that it was only
+by an almost complete surrender that they procured peace with France
+and a partial restoration of Gascony. In Scotland they were even less
+fortunate. Robert Bruce, though broken in health and spirits, took up
+an aggressive attitude, and it was found necessary to summon the feudal
+levies to meet on the border in the summer of 1327 in order to repel
+his attack. While the troops were mustering at York, a fierce fight
+broke out in the streets, between the Hainault mercenaries, under John
+of Hainault, and the citizens. So threatening was the outlook that it
+was thought wise to send the Hainaulters back home. From this accident
+it happened that the young king went forth to his first campaign,
+attended only by his native-born subjects. The Scots began operations
+by breaking the truce and overrunning the borders. The campaign
+directed against them was as futile as any of the last reign, and the
+English, though three times more numerous than the enemy, dared not
+provoke battle. This inglorious failure may well have convinced
+Mortimer that the best chance of maintaining his power was to make
+peace at any price. Early in 1328, the negotiations for a treaty were
+concluded at York. During their progress, Edward, who was at York to
+meet his parliament, was married to Philippa of Hainault.
+
+The Scots treaty was confirmed in April by a parliament that met at
+Northampton. All claim to feudal superiority over Scotland was
+withdrawn; Robert Bruce was recognised as King of Scots, and his young
+son David was married to Joan of the Tower, Edward III.'s infant
+sister. This surrender provoked the liveliest indignation, and men
+called the treaty of Northampton the "shameful peace," and ascribed it
+to the treachery or timorousness of the queen and her paramour. But it
+is hard to see what other solution of the Scottish problem was
+practicable. For many years Bruce had been _de facto_ King of Scots,
+and any longer hesitation to withhold the recognition which he coveted
+would have been sure to involve the north of England in the same
+desolation as that which he had inflicted before the truce of 1322. But
+the founder of Scottish independence was drawing near to the end of his
+career. His health had long been undermined by a terrible disease which
+the chroniclers thought to be leprosy. He died in 1329, and on his
+death-bed he bethought him of how he, who had shed so much Christian
+blood, had never been able to fulfil his vow of crusade. Accordingly he
+entreated James Douglas, his faithful companion-in-arms, to go on
+crusade against the Moors of Granada, taking with him the heart of his
+dead master. Douglas fulfilled the request, and perished in Spain,
+whither he had carried the heart of the Scottish liberator. With the
+accession of the little David Bruce, new troubles began for Scotland,
+though danger from England was for the moment averted by the English
+marriage and the treaty of Northampton.
+
+The ill-will produced by the "shameful peace" spread far and wide the
+profound dislike for Mortimer which pity for the fate of Edward had
+first aroused in the breasts of Englishmen. The greedy marcher was at
+no pains to make himself popular. Holding no great office of state, he
+strove to rule through his creatures Orleton, the treasurer, and the
+hardly less subservient chancellor, Bishop Hotham of Ely, or through
+lay partisans such as Sir Oliver Ingham and Sir Simon Bereford. But his
+best chance of remaining in power was through the besotted infatuation
+of the queen-mother, whose relations with him were not concealed from
+the public eye by any elaborate parade of secrecy. He still posed as
+the inheritor of the tradition of the lords ordainers, and never failed
+to put as much of the responsibility of his rule as he could on Henry
+of Lancaster and the old baronial leaders. But with all his force and
+energy, he was too narrowly selfish and grasping to take much trouble
+to frame an elaborate policy. As an administrator he was as incompetent
+as either Thomas of Lancaster or the Despensers.
+
+Mortimer's chief care was to add office to office, and estate to
+estate, in order that he might establish his house as supreme over all
+Wales and its march. Besides his own enormous inheritance, he ruled
+over Ludlow and Meath in the right of his wife, Joan of Joinville, the
+heiress of the Lacys. He had inherited Chirk and the other lands of his
+uncle, the sometime justice of Wales, who had died in Edward II.'s
+prison; and he procured for himself a grant of his uncle's old office
+for life, so that, while as justice of Wales he lorded it over the
+principality, as head of the Mortimers he could dominate the whole
+march. To complete his ascendency in the march became his great
+ambition. He obtained the custody of Glamorgan, the stronghold of his
+sometime rival, Hugh Despenser the younger. To this were added Oswestry
+and Clun, the Fitzalan march in western Shropshire, forfeited to the
+crown by the faithfulness with which Edmund Fitzalan, the late Earl of
+Arundel, had laid down his life for Edward II. Minor grants of lands,
+offices, wardships, and pensions were constantly lavished upon him by
+the complacency of his mistress. In Ireland he received complete
+palatine franchises over Trim, Meath, and Louth, along with the custody
+of the estates of the infant Earl of Kildare, the chief of the Leinster
+Geraldines. He extended his connexions by marrying his seven daughters
+to the heads of great families, and where possible to men of marcher
+houses. He soon numbered among his sons-in-law the representatives of
+the Charltons of Powys, the Hastingses of Abergavenny, now the chief
+heirs of Aymer of Pembroke, the Audleys of the Shropshire march, the
+Beauchamps of Warwick, the Berkeleys, the Grandisons, and the Braoses.
+Anxious to extend his dignity as well as his power, he procured his
+nomination as Earl of the March of Wales, "a title," says a chronicler,
+"hitherto unheard of in England". As earl of the march and justice of
+the principality, he ruled the lands west of the Severn with little
+less than regal sway. His banquets, his tournaments, his pious
+foundations even, dazzled all men by their splendour.
+
+Mortimer was created Earl of March in the parliament held in October,
+1328, at Salisbury, where John of Eltham was made Earl of Cornwall and
+James, Butler of Ireland, Earl of Ormonde. His assumption of this new
+title at last roused the sluggish indignation of Earl Henry of
+Lancaster, who felt that his own marcher interests were compromised,
+and bitterly resented the vain use made of his name, while he was
+carefully kept without any control of policy. He refused to attend the
+Salisbury parliament, though he and his partisans mustered in arms in
+the neighbourhood of that city. Civil war seemed imminent, and
+Mortimer's Welshmen devastated Lancaster's earldom of Leicester, but
+Archbishop Meopham (who had lately succeeded Reynolds in the primacy)
+managed to patch up peace. Not long afterwards Lancaster was smitten
+with blindness, and was thenceforth unable to take an active part in
+public affairs. Mortimer again triumphed for the moment, and, with
+cruel malice, excepted Lancaster's confidential agents from the pardon
+which he was forced to extend to the earl. His success over Lancaster
+was materially facilitated by the weakness of Edmund, Earl of Kent,
+who, after joining with Earl Henry in his refusal to attend the
+Salisbury parliament, deserted him at the moment of the capture of
+Leicester by the Earl of March. But his treachery did not save him from
+Mortimer's revenge. In conjunction with the queen, Mortimer plotted to
+lure on Earl Edmund to ruin. Their agents persuaded him that Edward II.
+was still alive and imprisoned in Corfe castle, and urged him to
+restore his brother to liberty. The earl rose to the bait, and agreed
+to be party to an insurrection which was to restore Edward of Carnarvon
+to freedom, if not to his throne. When Kent was involved in the meshes,
+he was suddenly arrested in the Winchester parliament of March, 1330,
+and accused of treason. Convicted by his own speeches and letters, he
+was adjudged to death by the lords, and on March 19 beheaded outside
+the walls of the city.
+
+The fall of Kent convinced Lancaster that his fate would not be long
+delayed, and that his best chance of saving himself and his cause lay
+in stirring up the king to energetic action against the Earl of March.
+The death of his uncle irritated Edward, who at seventeen was old
+enough to feel the degrading nature of his thraldom, and was eager to
+govern the kingdom of which he was the nominal head. In June, 1330, the
+birth of a son, the future Black Prince, to Edward and Philippa seems
+to have impressed on the young monarch that he had come to man's
+estate. Lancaster accordingly found him eager to shake off the yoke of
+his mother's paramour. The opportunity came in October, 1330, when the
+magnates assembled at Nottingham to hold a parliament there. Isabella
+and Mortimer took up their abode in the castle, where Edward also
+resided. Suspicions were abroad, and the castle was closely guarded by
+Mortimer's Welsh followers. Sir William Montague, a close friend of
+Edward's, was chosen to strike the blow, and lay outside with a band of
+troops. Some rumour of the plot seems to have leaked out, and on
+October 19 Mortimer angrily denounced Montague as a traitor, and
+accused the king of complicity with his designs. But Montague was safe
+outside the castle, and, when evening fell, all that Mortimer could do
+was to lock the gates and watch the walls. William Eland, constable of
+the castle, had been induced to join the conspiracy, and had revealed
+to Montague a secret entrance into the stronghold. On that very night,
+Montague and his men-at-arms effected an entrance through an
+underground passage into the castle-yard, where Edward joined them.
+They then made their way up to Mortimer's chamber, which as usual was
+next to that of the queen. Two knights, who guarded the door, were
+struck down, and the armed band burst into the room. After a desperate
+scuffle, the Earl of March was secured. Hearing the noise, the queen
+rushed into the room, and though Edward still waited without, cried,
+with seeming consciousness of his share in the matter, "Fair son, have
+pity on the gentle Mortimer". Her entreaties were unavailing, and the
+fallen favourite was hurried, under strict custody, to London.
+
+Edward then issued a proclamation announcing that he had taken the
+government of England into his own hands. Parliament, prorogued to
+Westminster, met on November 26, and its chief business was the trial
+of Mortimer before the lords. He was charged with accroaching to
+himself the royal power, stirring up dissension between Edward II and
+the queen, teaching Edward III. to regard the Earl of Lancaster as his
+enemy, deluding Edmund of Kent into believing that his brother was
+alive and with procuring his execution, accepting bribes from the Scots
+for concluding the disgraceful peace, and with perpetrating grievous
+cruelties in Ireland. The lords, imitating the evil precedents set
+during Mortimer's time of power, condemned him without trial or chance
+of answer to the accusations made against him. On November 29 the
+fallen earl was paraded through London from his prison in the Tower to
+Tyburn Elms, and was there hanged on the common gallows. His vast
+estates were forfeited to the crown. His accomplice, Sir Simon
+Bereford, suffered the same fate; but Sir Oliver Ingham, another of his
+associates, was pardoned. Edward discreetly drew a veil over his
+mother's shame. Mortimer's notorious relations with her were not
+enumerated in the accusations brought against him, and Isabella, though
+removed from power and stripped of some of her recent acquisitions, was
+allowed to live in honourable retirement on her dower manors.
+Scrupulously visited by her dutiful son, she wandered freely from house
+to house, as she felt disposed. She died in 1358 at her castle of
+Hertford, in the habit of the Poor Clares--a sister order of the
+Franciscans. The later tradition that she was kept in confinement at
+Castle Rising has only this slender foundation in fact that Castle
+Rising was one of her favourite places of abode. With her withdrawal
+from public life Edward III.'s real reign begins.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE PRELIMINARIES OF THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR.
+
+
+Edward III. had just entered upon his nineteenth year when he became
+king in fact as well as in name. In person he was not unworthy of his
+father and grandfather. Less strikingly tall than they, he was nobly
+built and finely proportioned. In full manhood, long hair, a thick
+moustache and a flowing beard adorned his regular and handsome
+countenance. His graciousness and affability were universally praised.
+His face shone, we are told, like the face of a god, so that to see him
+or to dream of him was certain to conjure up joyous images.[1] He
+delighted in the pomp of his office, wore magnificent garments, and
+played his kingly part with the same majesty and dignity as his
+grandfather. Despite the troubles of his youth, he was well educated.
+Richard of Bury is said to have been his tutor, and the early lessons of
+the author or instigator of the _Philobiblon_ were never entirely lost
+by the prince who took Chaucer and Froissart into his service. More
+conspicuous was his love of art, his taste for sumptuous buildings and
+their magnificent embellishment, which left memorials in the stately
+castle of Windsor and its rich chapel of St. George, in St. Stephen's
+chapel at Westminster, and the Eastminster for Cistercian nuns hard by
+Tower hill. A fluent and eloquent speaker in French and English, Edward
+was also conversant with Latin, and perhaps Low-Dutch. Yet no king was
+less given to study or seclusion. Possessed, perhaps, of no exceptional
+measure of intellectual capacity, and not even endowed to any large
+extent with firmness of character, he won a great place in history by
+the extraordinary activity of his temperament and the vigour and energy
+with which he threw himself into whatever work he set his hand to do. He
+was a consummate master of knightly exercises, delighting in
+tournaments, and especially in those which were marked by some touch of
+quaintness or fancy. He had the hereditary passion of his house for the
+chase. In his youthful campaigns in Scotland and in his maturer
+expeditions in France, he was accompanied by a little army of falconers
+and huntsmen, by packs of hounds, and many hawks trained with the utmost
+care. He honoured with his special friendship an Abbot of Leicester,
+famed throughout England as the most dexterous of hare-coursers.[2]
+
+ [1] _Continuation of Murimuth_ (Engl. Hist. Soc.), pp. 225-27,
+ which gives the best contemporary description of Edward's
+ character.
+
+ [2] Knighton, ii., 127.
+
+Edward's abounding energy was even more gladly devoted to war than to
+the chase. He was an admirable exponent of those chivalric ideals which
+are glorified in the courtly pages of Froissart. Not content with the
+easy victories which fall in the tiltyard to the crowned king, Edward
+was anxious to show that his triumphs belonged to the knight and not to
+the monarch, and more than once jousted victoriously in disguise. The
+same spirit led him to challenge Philip of France to decide their
+quarrel by single combat, and to win a personal triumph when masking as
+a knight attached to the service of Sir Walter Manny. He was liberal to
+the verge of prodigality, good-tempered, easy of access, and, save when
+moved by deep gusts of fierce anger, kindly and compassionate. His easy
+good nature endeared him both to foreigners and to every class of his
+own subjects. Not only did he enter fully into the free-masonry which
+regarded the knights of all Christian nations as equal members of a
+sworn brotherhood of arms, but he extended his favours to the London
+vintner's son who earned his bread in his service, and entertained the
+wives of the leading London citizens, side by side with the noble
+ladies in whose honour he gave the most quaint and magnificent of his
+banquets. Pious after a somewhat formal fashion, he was unwearied in
+going on pilgrimage and lavish in his religious foundations. Though no
+prince was more careful to protect the state from the encroachments of
+churchmen, his orthodoxy and devoutness kept him in good repute with
+the austerest champions of the Church. He could choose fit agents to
+carry out his policy, and his campaigns were a marvellous training
+ground for gallant and capable warriors.
+
+Edward seldom lost sight of the material and economic interests of his
+subjects. He was the friend of merchants, the father of English
+commerce, the patron of the infant woollen manufactures, and a zealous
+champion of the maritime greatness of his island realm, which boasted
+that he was "king of the sea". Though his financial exigencies often
+led him to sell excessive privileges to alien traders, this policy did
+little harm to his subjects, for few of them were ready as yet to
+embark in foreign commerce. A true patriot, who declared that his land
+of England was "nearer to his heart, more delightful, noble, and
+profitable than all other lands," he succeeded in making Englishmen
+conscious of their national life as they had never been before; and he
+won for his fatherland a foremost place among the kingdoms of the
+world. His network of diplomatic alliances was dexterously fashioned,
+and enabled him to supplement the resources of his own subjects.
+
+The breadth of Edward's ambitions hindered their complete
+accomplishment. Like Edward I., he undertook more than he could carry
+through, and, though his panegyrists praise his patience in adversity no
+less than his moderation in prosperity, his merely animal courage and
+vigour broke down under the weight of misfortune. Thus the glorious
+king, who in his youth vied with his grandfather, seemed in his old age
+to have nearly approached the fate of his wretched father. In early life
+he won the love of his subjects. It was only in the first years of his
+reign that the violence and greed of his disorderly household, which
+inherited the evil traditions of the previous generation, bore so
+heavily upon the people that Englishmen fled at his approach in dread of
+the purveyors, who confiscated every man's goods for the royal use.[1]
+The somewhat shallow opportunism which abandoned, with little attempt at
+resistance, every royal right that stood in the way of his receiving the
+full support of his parliament, at least had the merit of keeping Edward
+in general touch with his estates. The wanton breaches of good faith, by
+which he sometimes strove to win back what he had lightly conceded, were
+regarded as efforts to save the sovereign's dignity, rather than as
+insidious attempts to restore the prerogative. Unjust as was the very
+basis of his French pretensions, they were backed up by a show of legal
+claim that satisfied the conscience of king and subject, and to
+contemporaries Edward seemed a king regardful of his honour and mindful
+of his plighted word. If his generosity verged on extravagance, and his
+affectation of popular manners and graciousness on unreality, Englishmen
+of the fourteenth century were no severe critics of a crowned king. It
+was only when in his later years Edward laid aside the soldier's life,
+and abandoned himself to the frivolous distractions and degrading
+amours[2] which provoked the censure even of his admirers, that the
+self-indulgent traits inherited from his unhappy father stood revealed.
+
+ [1] The _Speculum regis Edwardi_ (ed. Moisant) was written
+ before 1333, and the attribution of its composition to
+ Archbishop Islip and the inferences drawn in Stubbs' _Const.
+ Hist._, ii., 394, are therefore unwarranted; see Professor
+ Tait's note in _Engl. Hist. Review_, xvi. (1901), 110-15.
+
+ [2] _Chron. Anglia_, 1328-1388, p. 401.
+
+Edward was before all things a soldier. He was not only the consummate
+knight, the mirror of chivalry, but a capable tactician with a
+general's eye that took in the essential points of the situation at a
+glance. His restless energy ensured the rapidity of movement and
+alertness of action which won him many a triumph over less mobile and
+less highly trained antagonists; while they inspired his followers with
+faith in their cause and with the courage which succeeds against
+desperate odds. Yet the victor of Crecy cannot be numbered among the
+consummate generals of history. His campaigns were ill-planned; and he
+lacked the self-restraint and sense of proportion which would have
+prevented him from aiming at objects beyond his reach. The same want of
+relation between ends and means, the same want of definite policy and
+clear ideals, marred his statecraft. Yet contemporaries, conscious of
+his faults, magnified Edward as the brilliant and successful king who
+had won for himself an assured place among the greatest monarchs of
+history, "Never," says Froissart, "had there been such a king since the
+days of Arthur King of Great Britain."[1] Even to his own age his
+senile degradation pointed the moral of the triumphs of his manhood.
+The modern historian, who sees, beneath the superficial splendour of
+the days of Edward III., the misery and degradation that underlay the
+wreck of the dying Middle Ages, is in no danger of appraising too
+highly the merits of this showy and ambitious monarch. Perhaps in our
+own days the reaction has gone too far, and we have been taught to
+undervalue the splendid energy and robustness of temperament which
+commanded the admiration of all Europe, and personified the strenuous
+ideals of the young English nation.
+
+ [1] Froissart (ed. Luce), viii., 231; _cf_. Canon of
+ Bridlington, p. 95.
+
+The internal history of the first few years of Edward's reign was
+uneventful. John Stratford became chancellor after Mortimer's fall, and
+remained for ten years the guiding spirit of the administration.
+Translated on Meopham's death in 1333 to Canterbury, he continued, as
+primate, to take a leading part in politics. His chief helper was his
+brother Robert, rewarded in 1337 by the see of Chichester. The brothers
+were capable but not brilliant politicians. The worst disorders of the
+times of anarchy were put down, and parliaments readily granted
+sufficient money to meet the king's necessities. After a few years, the
+strife of parties was so far hushed that Burghersh was suffered to
+return to office, and it looks as if the balance between the
+Lancastrian party, upheld by the Stratfords, and the old middle party
+of Pembroke and Badlesmere, with which Burghersh had hereditary
+connexions, was maintained, as it had been during the least unhappy
+period of the preceding reign. The country was growing rich and
+prosperous. The annalists tell us of little save tournaments and
+mummings, and the setting up of seven new earldoms to remedy the gaps
+which death and forfeiture had made in the higher circle of the
+baronage. The earldom of Devon was revived for the house of Courtenay;
+that of Salisbury in favour of the trusty William Montague, and an
+Audley, son of Despenser's rival, was raised to the earldom of
+Gloucester. William Bohun, a younger son of the Humphrey slain at
+Boroughbridge, became Earl of Northampton, an Ufford, Earl of Suffolk,
+a Clinton Earl of Huntingdon, a Hastings Earl of Pembroke, and Henry of
+Grosmont, the Earl of Lancaster's first born, Earl of Derby. A new rank
+was added to the English peerage when the king's little son, Earl of
+Chester in 1333, was made Duke of Cornwall in 1337. The old feuds
+seemed dead and with them the old disorder. But Edward was ambitious of
+military glory, and it was natural that he should seek to reverse the
+degrading part which he had been forced to play in relation to Scotland
+and France. His hands being tied by treaties, it was not easy for him
+to make the first move. Before long, however, circumstances arose which
+gave him a chance of taking up a line of his own with regard to
+Scotland. From that time Scottish affairs mainly absorbed his attention
+until the outbreak of troubles with France.
+
+The establishment of Robert Bruce on the Scottish throne had been
+attended by a considerable disturbance of the territorial balance in
+the northern kingdom. Many Scottish magnates, deprived of their lands
+and driven into exile, had abodes in England, and all might well look
+for the favour of the king in whose service they had been ruined. The
+treaty of Northampton made no provision for their restoration, and
+Edward showed himself disposed to uphold it. Their estates were in the
+hands of their supplanters, the nobles who had gathered round the
+throne of the Bruces. Thus it was that the exiles were cut off from all
+hope of return, and saw their only possibility of restitution in the
+break-up of the friendship of Edward and David. In like case were the
+English magnates who still entertained hopes of making effective the
+grants of Scottish estates which they had received from Edward I. and
+Edward II. For both classes alike every fresh year of peace between the
+realms decreased their chances of obtaining their desires. They failed
+to persuade Edward to go to war with his brother-in-law and repudiate
+formally the obligations imposed upon him by his mother and her
+paramour. But the minority of King David had unloosed the spirits of
+disorder in Scotland. Though the vigorous and capable regent, Sir
+Thomas Randolph, Earl of Moray, showed himself competent to stem the
+tide of aristocratic reaction which swelled round the throne of his
+infant cousin, he was one of the old generation of heroes that had
+aided King Robert to gain his throne. Were he to die, or become
+incapable of acting, there was no one who could supply his place. The
+Disinherited--thus they styled themselves--were encouraged both by the
+apathy of Edward III. and the weakness of Scotland to make a bold
+stroke on their own behalf.
+
+At the head of the disinherited was Edward Balliol, the son of the
+deposed King John. Brought up in England, first under the care of his
+cousin, Earl Warenne, and afterwards in the household of the
+half-brothers of Edward II., Edward Balliol, who succeeded in 1315 to
+the French estates on which his father spent his latter years, divided
+his time between England and France. The forfeiture of his father still
+kept him out of Barnard Castle and the other Balliol lands in England.
+Young and warlike, poor and ambitious, with few lands and great
+pretensions, he never formally abandoned either the lordship of
+Galloway or the throne of Scotland. In 1330 he received permission to
+take up his quarters in England during pleasure. He soon associated
+himself with his fellow-exiles in a bold attempt to win back their
+patrimony. Chief among his followers were three titular Scottish earls,
+closely related by intermarriage, each of whom was also a baron of high
+rank in England. Of these the French-born Henry of Beaumont, kinsman of
+Eleanor of Castile, and brother of Bishop Louis of Durham, was the
+oldest and most experienced. As the husband of a sister of the last of
+the Comyn Earls of Buchan, he posed as the heir of the greatest of the
+Scottish houses which had paid the penalty of its opposition to King
+Robert, and was summoned to the English parliament as Earl of Buchan.
+Beaumont's great-nephew, the young Gilbert of Umfraville, lord of
+Redesdale, was a grandson of another Comyn heiress, and his ancestors
+had inherited in the middle of the thirteenth century the ancient
+Scottish earldom of Angus, though they also had incurred forfeiture for
+their adhesion to the English policy. David of Strathbolgie, Earl of
+Athol, had a better right to be called a Scot than Umfraville or
+Beaumont. But his father abandoned Bruce, and was driven into England,
+where he held the Kentish barony of Chilham, and sat in the English
+parliament under his Scottish title. The younger Athol was son-in-law
+to the titular Earl of Moray, and all three kinsmen were bound by
+common interests to embrace the policy of Edward Balliol. Many lesser
+men associated themselves with the three earls and the claimant to a
+throne. Nearly every nobleman of the Scottish border made himself a
+party to a scheme of adventure which had its best parallels in the
+Norman invasions of Wales and Ireland.
+
+The object of the disinherited was to raise an army and prosecute their
+Scottish claims by force. Edward III. gave them no open countenance,
+and took up an ostentatiously correct attitude. He solemnly forbade all
+breach of the peace, and prevented the adventurers from adopting the
+easy course of marching from England to an open attack on Scotland. No
+obstacles, however, were imposed to hinder their raising a small but
+efficient army of 500 men-at-arms and 1,000 archers. Mercenaries, both
+English and foreign, were hired to supplement their scanty numbers, and
+among those who took service with them was a young gentleman of
+Hainault, Walter Manny, whose father had a few years before perished in
+the service of Edward II. in Gascony, and who had first come to England
+in the service of his countrywoman, Queen Philippa. Ships were
+collected in the Humber, and on the last day of July, 1332, the
+disinherited and their followers sailed from Ravenspur on a destination
+which was officially supposed to be unknown. A week later, on August 6,
+they landed at Kinghorn in Fife.
+
+Scotland was singularly unready to meet invasion. The regent Moray had
+died a few weeks earlier, and his successor, Donald, Earl of Mar,
+incompetent to carry on his vigorous policy, had perhaps already been
+intriguing with the adventurers. The only resistance to Balliol's
+landing, made by the Earl of Fife, was altogether unsuccessful. The
+little army established itself easily in the enemies' territory, and,
+after two days' rest at Dunfermline, advanced over the Ochils towards
+Perth. The regent had by that time gathered together an imposing army.
+As the invaders approached Strathearn on their way northwards, they
+found Mar encamped on Dupplin Moor, on the left bank of the Earn, and
+holding in force the only bridge available for crossing the river.
+There was some parleying between the two hosts. "We are sons of
+magnates of this land," declared the disinherited to Mar. "We are come
+hither with the lord Edward of Balliol, the right heir of the realm, to
+demand the lands which belong to us by hereditary right." Mar returned
+a warlike answer to their words, and both armies made preparation for
+battle.
+
+The disinherited, though few in number, were well trained in warfare,
+and from the beginning showed capacity to out-general the unwieldy host
+and feeble leader opposed to them. At sunset, some of their forces
+crossed the Earn by a ford which the Scots had neglected to guard, and
+falling upon an outlying portion of the enemies' camp, where the
+infantry were quartered, slaughtered the surprised Scots at their
+leisure. Luckily for Mar, the whole of his knights and men-at-arms were
+far away, uselessly watching the bridge, over which they had expected
+the disinherited to force a passage. Thus saved from the night
+ambuscade, the kernel of the Scottish army prepared next morning,
+August 12, to attack the disinherited. Puffed up by the memory of
+Bannockburn and the consciousness of superior numbers, they marched to
+battle as if certain of victory. All fought on foot, and the
+men-at-arms were drawn up in a dense central mass, supported at each
+side by wings. The disinherited were sufficiently schooled in northern
+warfare to adopt the same tactics. Save for a few score of horsemen in
+reserve, their heavily armed troops, leaving their horses in the rear,
+formed a compact column after the Scottish fashion. But archers were
+distributed in open order on the right and left flanks, with both
+extremities pushed forward, so that they formed the horns of a
+half-moon. Then the Scots advanced to the charge, and both sides joined
+in battle. The irresistible weight of the Scottish main phalanx forced
+back the little column of the disinherited, and for a moment it looked
+as if the battle were won. Meanwhile the archers on the flanks poured a
+galling shower on the collateral Scottish columns. The unvisored
+helmets of the Scots made them an easy prey to the storm of missiles,
+and they were driven back on to the main body. By this time the
+disinherited had rallied from the first shock; and still the deadly
+hail of arrows descended from right and left, until the whole of the
+Scottish army was thrown into panic-stricken disorder. Escape was
+impossible for the foremost ranks by reason of the closeness of their
+formation. At last, the rear files sought safely in flight, and were
+closely pursued by the victors, mounted on their fresh horses. A huge
+mass of slain, piled up upon each other, marked the place of combat. As
+at Bannockburn, the small disciplined host prevailed, but discipline
+was now with the English and numbers only with the Scots.[1]
+
+ [1] The significance of the battle of Dupplin was first pointed
+ out by Mr. J.E. Morris in _Engl. Hist. Review_, xii. (1897),
+ 430-31.
+
+The victory of Dupplin Moor was for the moment decisive. Balliol
+occupied Perth, and received the submission of many of the Scottish
+magnates, among them being that Earl of Fife who first opposed his
+landing. A few weeks later, on September 24, Balliol was crowned King
+of Scots at Scone by the Bishop of Dunkeld. It was a soldier's
+coronation, and the magnates sat at the coronation feast in full
+armour, save their helmets. The disinherited then received the lands
+for which they had striven; and thereupon quitted the new king, either
+to secure their estates or to revisit their property in England. But
+the Scots, of no mind to receive a king from the foreigner, chose a new
+regent in Sir Andrew Moray, son of the companion of Wallace; and
+prepared to maintain King David. On December 16, Balliol was surprised
+at Annan by a hostile force under the young Earl of Moray, son of the
+late regent, and by Sir Archibald Douglas. His followers were cut off,
+his brother was slain, and he himself had the utmost difficulty in
+effecting his escape to England. He had only reigned four months.
+
+During Balliol's brief triumph, Edward III. had declared himself in his
+favour. Debarred by the treaty of Northampton from questioning the
+independence of King David, he was able to make what terms he liked
+with David's supplanter. In November a treaty was drawn up at Roxburgh,
+by which Balliol recognised the overlordship of Edward, and promised
+him the town, castle, and shire of Berwick. In return for these
+concessions, Edward III. acknowledged his namesake as lawful King of
+Scots. When, a few weeks later, his new vassal appeared as a fugitive
+on English soil, Edward had no longer any scruples in openly supporting
+him in an attempt to win back his throne. In the spring of 1333,
+Balliol and the disinherited once more crossed the frontier in
+sufficient force to undertake the siege of Berwick. The border
+stronghold held out manfully, but the Scots failed in an attempt to
+divert the attention of the English by an invasion of Cumberland. After
+Easter, Edward III. went in person to Berwick, and devoted the whole
+resources of England to ensuring its reduction. The siege lasted on
+until July, when the garrison, at the last gasp, offered to surrender,
+unless the town were relieved within fifteen days. The Scots made a
+great effort to save Berwick from capture, and the English king was
+forced to fight a pitched battle, before he could secure its
+possession.
+
+On July 19 Edward, leaving a sufficient portion of his army to maintain
+the blockade of Berwick, took up a position with the remainder on
+Halidon Hill, a short distance to the west of the town. The lessons of
+Bannockburn, Boroughbridge, and Dupplin were not forgotten, and the
+English host was arranged much after the fashion which had procured the
+first victory of the disinherited. Knights and men-at-arms sent their
+horses to the rear and, from the king downwards, all, save a small
+reserve of horse, prepared to fight on foot. Edward divided his forces
+into three lines or "battles," each of which consisted of a central
+column of dismounted heavily armed troops, flanked by a right and a
+left wing of archers in open order, John of Eltham and the titular Earl
+of Buchan commanded the right battle, the king the centre, and Edward
+Balliol the left. The Scots still employed the traditional tactics
+which had failed so signally at Dupplin. Sir Archibald Douglas led his
+followers up the slopes of the hill in three dense columns. But a
+pitiless rain of arrows spread havoc among their ranks, and there were
+no answering volleys to disturb their foes. The battle was won for the
+English almost before the two lines had joined in close combat. It was
+only on Edward's right that the Scots were strong enough to push home
+their attack. On the centre and left, the English easily drove the
+enemy in panic flight down the slopes which they had ascended so
+confidently. The pursuit was long and bloody; few were taken prisoners,
+but many were slain or driven into the sea. Seven Scottish earls were
+believed by the English to have fallen, while the victors lost one
+knight, one squire, and a few infantry soldiers. Thus, for a second
+time the tactics, which had served the Scots so well in the defensive
+fight of Bannockburn, failed in offence to secure victory for them. The
+experience of this day completed the evolution of the new English
+battle array of men-at-arms fighting on foot and supported by wings of
+archers, which was soon to excite the wonder of Europe, when its
+possibilities were demonstrated on continental fields.
+
+Next day Berwick opened its gates, and was handed over to the English,
+according to the treaty of Roxburgh, to be for the rest of its history
+an English frontier town. Edward Balliol again conquered Scotland as
+easily as he had done on the former occasion, and far more effectually.
+It was no longer possible for the few remaining champions of the house
+of Bruce to safeguard the person of the little king and queen. David
+and Joan were accordingly sent off to France, where they were to grow
+up as good friends of King Philip. But Balliol had so clearly regained
+his throne through English help that he was no longer an independent
+agent. No sooner was his conquest assured than he was forced not only
+to confirm the surrender of Berwick, but to yield up the whole of
+south-eastern Scotland as the price of the English assistance. The
+depth of his humiliation was sounded when, in the treaty of Newcastle,
+June 12, 1334, Edward, King of Scots, granted Edward, King of England,
+lands worth two thousand pounds a year in the marches of Scotland, and
+in part payment thereof yielded up to him, besides Berwick and its
+shire, the castle, town, and county of Roxburgh, the forests of
+Jedburgh Selkirk, and Ettrick, the town and county of Selkirk, and the
+towns, castles, and counties of Peebles, Dumfries, and Edinburgh. Of
+these Dumfries then included the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright, while the
+shire of Edinburgh took in the constabularies, the modern shires, of
+Haddington and Linlithgow. Thus the whole of Lothian, the whole of the
+central upland region, and Balliol's own inheritance of Galloway east
+of the Cree were directly transferred to the English crown, and were
+divided into sheriffdoms, and officered after the English fashion. On
+June 18 Balliol personally performed homage for so much of Scotland as
+Edward chose to leave him. The wrongs of the disinherited had been the
+means of re-opening the whole Scottish question, and Edward III. seemed
+assured of a position as supreme as that which had once been held by
+Edward I.
+
+It was always easier in the Middle Ages to conquer a country than to
+keep it. And the experience of forty years might well have convinced
+Englishmen that no land was more difficult to hold than the stubborn
+and impenetrable northern kingdom, with its strenuous population, ever
+willing to cry a truce between local feuds when there was an
+opportunity of uniting against the southerners. Edward overshot his
+mark in grasping too eagerly the fairest portions of Balliol's realm.
+He needed for his policy a Scottish king, strong enough to maintain
+himself against his subjects, and loyal enough to remain true to the
+English connexion. Any faint chance of Balliol occupying such a
+position was completely destroyed by his studied humiliation.
+Henceforward the King of Scots, who had fought so well at Dupplin and
+Halidon, was but a pawn in Edward's game. Hated by the Scots as the
+betrayer of his country, distrusted by the English who henceforth spied
+his actions and commanded his armies in his name, the gallant victor of
+Dupplin lost faith in himself and in his cause. After all, he was his
+father's son, and in no wise capable of bearing adversity and indignity
+with equanimity. His helplessness soon proved the worst obstacle in the
+way of the success of Edward's plans. Even with the aid of a large
+Scottish party, Edward I. had failed to bring about the subjection of
+Scotland. It was clearly impossible for his grandson to succeed in the
+same task when all Scotland was united against him, and braced to
+action by a series of glorious memories.
+
+Difficulties arose almost from the first. Not only had Balliol to
+contend against the implacable hostility of the Scottish patriots; the
+disinherited split up into rival factions after their triumph, and
+their divisions played the game of the partisans of the Bruces. The
+Earls of Athol and Buchan quarrelled with Balliol. Buchan, besieged by
+the partisans of David Bruce in a remote castle, was forced to
+surrender and quit Scotland for good. Athol was distinguished by the
+violence and suddenness of his tergiversations. After deserting Balliol
+for the patriots, he once more declared for the two Edwards, and
+persuaded many of the Scottish magnates to submit themselves to them.
+So long as the English king remained in Scotland, Athol was safe. On
+Edward's retirement to his kingdom in November, 1335, the nationalist
+leaders took the earl prisoner and put him to death. The war dragged on
+from year to year, with startling vicissitudes of fortune, but at no
+time was Balliol really established on the Scottish throne, and at no
+time did Edward III. really govern all the ceded districts.
+
+Scottish business detained the English king and court mainly in the
+north. Edward was in Scotland for most of the winter of 1334-5, keeping
+his Christmas court at Roxburgh. In the summer of 1335 he led an army
+into Scotland and penetrated as far as Perth. Again in 1336, he marched
+from Perth along the east coast, as far as Elgin and Inverness. The
+Scots refused to give him battle, and their tactics of evasion and
+guerilla warfare soon exhausted his resources and demoralised his
+armies. This was Edward's last personal intervention in the business.
+He had long been irritated by the persistent interference of the French
+king in Scottish affairs, and his anger was not lessened by his hard
+plight forcing him, on more than one occasion, to grant short truces to
+the Scottish insurgents at Philip's intervention. His relations with
+France were becoming so strained that he preferred to spend 1337 in the
+south and entrust Thomas Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, with the conduct
+of the fruitless campaign of that year. Early in 1338, Edward made his
+way once more to Berwick, but his intention of invading Scotland was
+suddenly abandoned on the news of a threatened French expedition to
+England recalling him to the south. This was the decisive moment of the
+long struggle. Henceforth the English king could only devote a small
+share of his resources to an undertaking which he had not been able to
+compass when his whole energies were absorbed in it. The patriots, who
+had always dominated the open country, now attacked the castles and
+fortified towns, which were the bulwarks of the Edwardian power. Within
+three years all the more important of these fell into their hands. In
+1339 Edward Balliol's capital of Perth was beset by Robert, the Steward
+of Scotland, who had recently undertaken the regency for his uncle
+David. On the approach of danger, Balliol was ordered to England, and
+Sir Thomas Ughtred, an English knight and one of the disinherited of
+1332, was entrusted with the command. By August he had been forced to
+surrender, and Stirling soon afterwards opened its gates to the gallant
+and energetic steward. In 1341 Edinburgh castle was captured by a
+clever stratagem, and a few weeks later David and Joan returned from
+France. The king, then seventeen years old, henceforth undertook the
+personal administration of his kingdom. Once more there was a King of
+Scots whom the Scottish people themselves desired. The first military
+enterprise of Edward's reign ended in complete failure.
+
+During the years of Edward Balliol's attempt on Scotland, it was the
+obvious interest of the English king to maintain such relations with
+France as to prevent the tightening of the traditional bond between the
+French and the Scottish courts. There were plenty of outstanding points
+of difference between England and France, but neither country was
+anxious for war, and the result of this mutual forbearance enabled
+Edward III. to deal with the Scots at his leisure. A survey of the
+relations of the two realms during the first ten years of Edward III.'s
+reign will show how, despite the reluctance of either party to force
+matters to a crisis, the Kings of France and England gradually drifted
+into the hostility which, from 1337 onwards, paralysed the progress of
+the English cause in Scotland.
+
+At the moment of the fall of Edward II., England and France were still
+nominally engaged in the war which had followed the second seizure of
+Guienne by Charles IV. The difficulties experienced by Isabella and
+Mortimer in establishing their power made them as willing to give way
+to the French as to the Scots. Accordingly, on March 31, 1327, a treaty
+of peace was signed at Paris. By this treaty Edward only gained the
+restoration of certain of his Gascon vassals to the estates of which
+they had been deprived through their loyalty to the English connexion.
+He pledged himself to pay a large war indemnity, and accepted a partial
+restitution of his Gascon lands. Like so many of the treaties since
+1259, it was a truce rather than a peace. Many details still remained
+for settlement, and it was pretty clear that the French, having the
+whip hand, would drive Gascony towards the goal of gradual absorption
+which had been so clearly marked out by Philip the Fair.
+
+Charles IV. restored to Edward such parts of Gascony as he chose to
+surrender. He retained in his hands Agen and the Agenais, and Bazas and
+the Bazadais, on the ground that Charles of Valois had won them by
+right of conquest in 1324. This policy reduced Edward's duchy to two
+portions of territory, very unequal in size and separated from each
+other by the lands conquered by the French king's uncle. The larger
+section of the English king's lands extended along the coast from the
+mouth of the Charente to the mouth of the Bidassoa. It included Saintes
+with Saintonge south of the Charente, Bordeaux and the Bordelais, Dax
+and the diocese of Dax, and Bayonne and its territory. But in no place
+did the boundaries go very far inland. Along the Dordogne, Libourne and
+Saint-Emilion were the easternmost English towns. Up the Garonne, the
+French were in possession of Langon, while, in the valley of the Adour,
+Saint-Sever, perched on its upland rock, was the landward outpost of
+the diminished Gascon duchy. In the east of the Agenais the two
+_chatellenies_ of Penne and Puymirol formed a little _enclave_ of ducal
+territory which extended from the Lot to the Garonne. But this second
+fragment of the ancient duchy was of no military and little commercial
+value, being commanded on all sides by the possessions of the French
+king. Moreover, the fiefs dependent on the Gascon duchy had fallen away
+with the attenuation of the duke's domain. In particular the viscounty
+of Bearn, now held by the Count of Foix, repudiated all allegiance to
+its English overlord. Even a thoroughly Gascon seigneur, such as the
+lord of Albret, was wavering in his fidelity to his duke. It was no
+longer safe for Gascons to risk the hostility of the king of the
+French.
+
+Within a year of the treaty of Paris, the death of Charles IV. further
+complicated Anglo-French relations. Like his brothers, Louis X. and
+Philip V., Charles the Fair left no male issue; but the pregnancy of
+his queen prevented the settlement of the succession being completed
+immediately after his decease. The barons of France, however, had no
+serious doubts as to their policy. The inadmissibility of a female
+ruler had already been determined at the accession of both Philip V.
+and Charles IV., and it was clear that the nearest male heir was
+Philip, Count of Valois, who had recently succeeded to the great
+appanage left vacant by the death in 1325 of his father, Charles of
+Valois, the inveterate enemy of the English. As the next representative
+of the male line, the French at once recognised Philip of Valois as
+regent. When his cousin's widow gave birth to a daughter, the regent
+was proclaimed as King Philip VI. without either delay or hesitation.
+Thus the house of Valois occupied the throne of France in the place of
+the direct Capetian line in which son had succeeded father since the
+days of Hugh Capet.
+
+Even Isabella and Mortimer protested against the succession of Philip
+of Valois. Admitted that the exclusion of women from the monarchy was
+already established by two precedents, could it not be plausibly argued
+that a woman, incapable herself of reigning, might form "the bridge and
+plank"[1] (as a contemporary put it) by which her sons might step into
+the rights of their ancestors? Strange as such a conception seems to
+our ideas, it was not unfamiliar to the jurists of that day. It was in
+this fashion that the Capetian house claimed its boasted descent and
+continuity from the race of Charlemagne. Such a principle was actually
+the law in some parts of France, and it was a matter of every-day
+occurrence in the Parisis to transmit male fiefs to the sons of
+heiresses, themselves incapable of succession. Edward, as the son of
+Charles IV.'s sister, was nearer of kin to his uncle than Philip, the
+son of Charles's uncle. Surely a man's nephew had a better right to his
+succession than his first cousin could ever claim? From the purely
+juridical point of view, the claim put forward by Isabella on her son's
+behalf was not only plausible but strong.
+
+ [1] Viollet, _Hist. des Institutions politiques et
+ administratives de la France_, ii., 74, from a MS. source. See
+ also Viollet, _Comment les Femmes ont ete exclues en France de
+ la Succession a la Couronne_, in _Mem. de l'Acad. des
+ Inscriptions_, xxxiv., pt. ii. (1893).
+
+Happily for France, the magnates of the realm dealt with the succession
+question as statesmen and not as lawyers. A later age imagined that the
+French barons brought forward a text of the law of the Salian Pranks, as
+a complete answer to Edward's claim from the juridical point of view.
+But the famous Salic law was a figment, forged by the next generation of
+lawyers who were eager to give a complete refutation of the elaborate
+legal pleadings of the partisans of the English claim. No authentic
+Salic law dealt with the question of the succession to the throne,[1]
+and the bold step of transferring a doctrine of private inheritance to
+the domain of public law was one of the characteristic feats of the
+medieval jurist, anxious to heap up at any risk a mass of arguments that
+might overwhelm his antagonists' case. The barons of 1328 rose superior
+to legal subtleties. To them the question at issue was the preservation
+of the national identity of their country. The vital thing for them was
+to secure the throne of France, both at the moment and at future times,
+for a Frenchman. Any admission, however guarded, of the right of women
+to transmit claims to their sons opened out a vista of the foreign
+offspring of French princesses, married abroad, ruling France as
+strangers, and it might be as enemies. They chose Philip of Valois
+because he was a Frenchman born and bred, and because he had no
+interests or possessions outside the French realm. They could not endure
+the idea of being ruled by the English king. He was not only a stranger,
+but the hereditary enemy. The Capetian monarchy must at all costs be
+kept French.
+
+ [1] Viollet, _op. cit._, pp. 55-57; _cf_. Desprez, _Les
+ Preliminaires de la Giurre de Cent Am_, p. 32.
+
+Isabella did what she could on her son's behalf. She excited the
+_noblesse_ of Aquitaine to support Edward's claim; but the lords of the
+south paid no heed to her exhortations. She was more successful with the
+Flemings, then in revolt against their Count, Louis of Nevers. Twelve
+notables of Bruges, headed by the burgomaster, William de Deken, visited
+England and offered to recognise Edward as King of France if he would
+support the Flemish democracy against their feudal lord.[1] But Philip
+VI.'s first act was to unite with the Count of Flanders, and the fatal
+day of Cassel laid low the fortunes of Bruges and restored the fugitive
+Louis to power. Isabella was forced to resign herself to simple
+protests.
+
+ [1] See Pirenne, _La premiere Tentative pour reconnaitre
+ Edouard I. comme Roi de France in Ann. de la Soc. d'Hist. de
+ Gand_, 1902.
+
+The inevitable demand from Philip VI. for Edward's homage for Guienne
+and Ponthieu soon brought the English government face to face with
+realities. The request for his vassal's submission, conveyed to England
+by Peter Roger, Abbot of Fecamp, the future Clement VI., was even more
+unwelcome than such demands commonly were. At first Isabella used brave
+words: "My son, who is the son of a king, will never do homage to the
+son of a count".[1] But a threat of a third seizure of Gascony soon
+brought the queen to her senses. Further insistence on the part of
+Philip was met with polite apologies for delay. At last, in May, 1329,
+the young king crossed the Channel, and on June 6 performed homage to
+Philip in the choir of the cathedral of Amiens. But even at the last
+moment there were explanations and reservations on both sides. Philip
+made it clear that he acknowledged no claim of his vassal to any
+territories, beyond those which he actually possessed. Edward's
+advisers protested that they abandoned no pretension to the whole by
+performing homage for a part. Moreover, the act of homage was couched
+in such ambiguous phrases that it remained doubtful whether Edward had
+performed "liege homage," as the King of France demanded, or only
+"simple homage," such as seemed to him less offensive to the dignity of
+a crowned king. Thus, though the cousins parted amicably and discussed
+proposals of a marriage treaty between the English and French houses,
+the homage at Amiens settled nothing.
+
+ [1] _Grandes Chroniques de France_, v., 323 (ed. P. Paris).
+
+The diplomatists still had plenty of work before them. The French
+statesmen insisted on the necessity of the ceremony at Amiens being
+interpreted as liege homage, involving the obligation of defending the
+overlord "against all those who can live or die". The English
+politicians complained of the "injustice and unreason of the King of
+France, who seeks the disinheritance of their master in Aquitaine". It
+was only by limiting the demands of both parties to points of detail,
+that a compromise was arrived at in the convention of the Wood of
+Vincennes on May 8, 1330. Further negotiations were still necessary;
+and at the moment when everything was trembling in the balance, the
+sudden occupation of Saintes by the Count of Alencon, brother of Philip
+VI., brought matters within a measurable distance of war. But Edward,
+then at the beginning of his real reign, had no mind for fighting. A
+more satisfactory convention, drawn up on March 9, 1331, at
+Saint-Germain-en-Laye, was ratified by Edward at Eltham on March 30,
+when he recognised that he owed liege homage, and not merely simple
+homage, to the King of France. Next month, he crossed over to France so
+secretly that his subjects believed that he went disguised as a
+merchant or a pilgrim. At Pont-Sainte-Maxence, a little town on the
+Oise, a few miles below Compiegne, Edward held an interview with Philip
+VI., who came thither with equal privacy. The French king does not seem
+to have insisted upon a renewal of homage, being content with the
+assurance already given as to the character of the previous ceremony.
+The informal interview, which the modern historian can only ascertain
+by painful scrutiny of the royal itineraries, proved more fertile in
+friendship than all the pomp of Amiens. Before Edward went home, Philip
+gave him complete satisfaction for the outrage at Saintes, and arrived
+at a financial settlement. Thus Edward and Philip at last became
+friends "so far as outside appearances went," as a chronicler of the
+time phrased it. The fundamental difference of interests and standpoint
+could be glossed over by no facile compromise, and the calm of the next
+six years was only the prelude to a storm destined to end the policy
+that had regulated the relations of the two courts from the days of the
+peace of 1259 to those of the meeting at Pont-Sainte-Maxence.
+
+At first there was talk of further cementing the newly established
+friendship. There were suggestions of a marriage of Edward's infant son
+with Philip's daughter, a fresh interview between the monarchs, a
+treaty of perpetual alliance and a common crusade against the Turks.
+The last, and the most fantastic, of these projects was the one which
+was most seriously discussed. The chivalrous spirit of Philip of Valois
+rose eagerly to the idea of a great European expedition against the
+infidel, of which he was to be the chief commander. Inspired by John
+XXII., he took the cross, made preparations for an early start, and
+invoked Edward's co-operation. Edward cleverly utilised his kinsman's
+zeal as another lever for enforcing the settlement of outstanding
+differences. "Tell your master," he said to the French ambassador,
+Peter Roger, now Archbishop of Rouen, "that when he has fulfilled his
+promises, I will be more eager to go on the holy voyage than he is
+himself." But the chronic troubles, arising from the unceasing
+extension of the suzerain's claims in Aquitaine, and from the shelter
+given by Philip to David Bruce, had continued all through the years of
+professed friendship, and in 1334 an embassy to Paris, presided over by
+Archbishop Stratford, failed to establish a _modus vivendi_. In the
+same year John XXII. died without having either procured the crusade or
+crushed Louis of Bavaria. His successor, James Founder of Foix, who
+took the name of Benedict XII., pursued his general policy, though in a
+more diplomatic and self-seeking spirit. Benedict's great wish was to,
+unite France and England against his enemy, the Emperor Louis of
+Bavaria, and he dexterously played upon Philip's eagerness for the
+crusade to persuade him to abandon to the papacy the position, which he
+had assumed, of arbiter of the differences between Edward and the
+Scots. It was a signal, though transitory, triumph of this policy that
+a truce between England and Scotland was brought about by the mediation
+of the pope and not of the French king. But Benedict found that a
+crusade was impossible so long as the chief powers of the west were
+hopelessly estranged from each other. In 1336, he vetoed the crusading
+scheme until happier times had dawned. Philip, bitterly disappointed,
+sought out Benedict at Avignon, but utterly failed to change his
+purpose. He was in his own despite released from the crusader's vow,
+though exhorted still to continue his preparations. The galleys,
+purchased from the crusading tenths of the Church, were transferred
+from the Mediterranean to the Channel. The French king might well find
+consolation for the abandonment of the holy war in a sudden descent on
+England.
+
+From that moment the horizon darkened. Philip VI., once more took up
+the cause of the Scots, and once more the Aquitanian troubles became
+acute. His irritation at Benedict led him to open up negotiations with
+Louis of Bavaria, whereat Benedict was greatly offended. Edward III.
+then sought to find friends who would help him against Philip. He was
+as much disgusted with the pope as was his French rival. The crusading
+fleet, equipped with the money of the Roman Church, threatened the
+English coast, and the _curia_ was even more French in its sympathies
+than the temporising pontiff. It is no wonder then that both kings
+looked coldly on Benedict's offer of mediation between them. Yet,
+notwithstanding the indifference manifested by both courts, two
+cardinals, Peter Gomez, a Spaniard, and Bertrand of Montfavence, a
+Frenchman, were sent in the summer of 1337 as papal legates to France
+and England to settle the points in dispute. For the next three years
+these prelates pursued their mission with energy and persistence,
+though with little result.
+
+A fresh dispute further embittered the personal relations of Philip and
+Edward. In 1336, Edward offered a refuge in England to Robert of Artois,
+Philip's brother-in-law and mortal enemy. The grandson of the Count
+Robert of Artois who was slain in 1302 at Courtrai, Robert of Artois was
+indignant that the rich county of Artois should, according to local
+custom, have devolved upon his aunt Maud, the wife of Otto, Count of
+Burgundy, or Franche Comte, and the mother-in-law of the last two kings
+of the direct Capetian line. Though he had failed in several suits to
+obtain it, Robert renewed his claim after his brother-in-law became King
+of France. It was soon proved that the charters upon which he relied to
+prove his title had been forged. The sudden death of the Countess of
+Artois, followed quickly by that of her daughter and heiress, added the
+suspicion of poisoning to the certainly of forgery. Robert was deprived
+of all his possessions and was exiled from France. Driven from his first
+refuge in Brabant by Philip's indignant hostility, he found shelter in
+England, where he was received with a favour which Philip bitterly
+resented. Condemned in his absence as a traitor, and devoured by a
+ferocious hatred of Philip and his Burgundian wife, Robert did all that
+he could to inflame the mind of Edward against the French king. French
+romance of the next generation, in the poem of the _Vow of the
+Heron_,[1] tells how Robert, returning to Edward's court from the chase,
+brought as his only victim a heron, which he offered to the king as the
+most timid of birds to the most cowardly of kings; "for, sire," he
+declared, "you have not dared to claim the realm of France which belongs
+to you by hereditary right". Stirred up by this challenge, Edward swore
+to God and the heron that within a year he would place the crown of
+France on Queen Philippa's brow. This famous legend is, however, a
+fiction. It was not until later that Edward seriously renewed the claim
+which he had advanced in 1328. But when once war became certain, the
+challenge of the French throne was bound to be made, and the dissolution
+of the friendly personal relations of the two kings, which had so long
+prevented either from proceeding to extremities, was certainly in large
+part the work of Robert of Artois. For the moment, Edward probably
+thought that his welcome of Robert was only a fair return for Philip's
+reception of David Bruce.
+
+ [1] _Les voeus du heron_ in Wright, _Political Poems and
+ Songs_, i., 1-25 (Rolls Ser.)
+
+War being imminent, Edward looked beyond sea for foreign allies.
+Commercial and traditional ties closely bound England to the county of
+Flanders, but our friendship had latterly been with its people rather
+than with its princes. Louis of Nevers, the Count of Flanders, had been
+expelled in 1328 by a rising of the maritime districts of the county,
+and had been restored by force of arms through the agency of Philip of
+Valois. Gratitude and interest accordingly combined to make Count Louis
+a strong partisan of Philip of Valois. Though far from absolute, he was
+still possessed of sufficient authority over his unruly townsmen to
+make it impossible for Edward to negotiate successfully with them. In
+1336 the count answered Edward's advances by prohibiting all commercial
+relations between his subjects and England. Bitterly disgusted at the
+hostility of Flanders, Edward in 1337 passed a law through parliament
+which prohibited the export of wool to the Flemish weaving centres.
+This measure provoked an economic crisis at Ghent and Ypres; but for
+the moment such a catastrophe could only accentuate the differences
+between England and the count. It was otherwise, however, with the
+neighbouring princes of the imperial obedience. Count William I. of
+Hainault, Holland, and Zealand was Edward III.'s father-in-law, and,
+during the last months of his strenuous career, he welcomed Bishop
+Burghersh, Edward's chief diplomatist, to his favourite residence of
+Valenciennes, where from April, 1337, the English ambassadors kept
+great state, "sparing as little as if the king were present there in
+his own person," and striving with all their might to build up an
+alliance with the princes of the Low Countries. When the count died,
+his son and successor, William II., persisted, though with less energy,
+in his father's policy, and the Hainault connexion became the nucleus
+of a general Low German alliance. Burghersh was lavish in promises, and
+soon a large number of imperial vassals took Edward's pay and promised
+to fight his battles. Among these were Count Reginald of Gelderland,
+who since 1332 had been the husband of Edward III.'s sister Eleanor,
+and with him came the Counts of Berg, Juelich, Cleves, and Mark, the
+Count Palatine of the Rhine, and a swarm of minor potentates.
+
+Hardest to win over of the Netherlandish princes was Duke John III. of
+Brabant, a crafty statesman and a successful warrior, who had recently
+conquered limburg, and won a signal victory over a formidable coalition
+of his neighbours. Among his former foes had been the house of Avesnes,
+but he had reconciled himself with Hainault, by reason of his greater
+hatred for Louis of Flanders. The Flemish cities were the rivals in
+trade of his own land, and their count's friendship for his French
+suzerain ensured the establishment of Philip of Valois as temporary
+lord of Mechlin, the possession of which had long been indirectly
+disputed between Brabant and Flanders. The hesitating duke was at last
+won over by a favourable commercial treaty, which made Antwerp the
+staple of English wools, and ensured for the looms of Louvain and
+Brussels the advantages denied by Edward's hostility to the
+clothworkers of Ghent and Ypres. Convinced that war with Philip was the
+surest way of adding Mechlin to his dominions, he then joined the
+circle of Edward's stipendiaries. The excommunicated and schismatic
+emperor, Louis of Bavaria, welcomed the advances of Burghersh. More
+than one tie already bound the Bavarian to England. The English
+Franciscan, William of Ockham, proved himself the most active and
+daring of the literary champions of the imperial claims against John
+XXII. Moreover, the emperor and Edward had married sisters, and their
+brother-in-law, the new Count of Hainault, Holland, and Zealand, was
+childless, so that they had common interests in keeping on good terms
+with him. Louis' bitter enemy, Benedict XII., forbade all hope of
+French support, and blocked the way to all prospect of reconciliation
+with the Church. It was natural that Louis should take his revenge by
+an alliance with the prince who ignored the advice of the pontiff, and
+hated the Valois king. As the result of all this, an offensive and
+defensive alliance between Edward on the one hand and Louis and his Low
+German vassals on the other was signed at Valenciennes in the summer of
+1337.
+
+The die seemed cast. Philip VI. pronounced the forfeiture of Gascony
+and Ponthieu. The French at once invaded Edward's duchy and county,
+while the French sailors in the Channel plundered the Anglo-Norman
+islands and the towns on the Sussex and Hampshire coasts. Edward
+redoubled his preparations for war, and issued a long manifesto to his
+subjects in which he set forth in violent language his grievances
+against Philip. It was at this unlucky moment that the two cardinal
+legates came upon the scene, reaching Paris in August, intent on
+arranging a pacification. The irritation, which Benedict showed against
+Edward for concluding an alliance with the schismatic emperor, did not
+make him more disposed to the work of conciliation. But the pope saw in
+the outbreak of a great war the destruction of his last hopes of
+humiliating the Bavarian, and once more played upon the weakness and
+impolicy of Philip. Though France was more ready than England, and
+Philip had everything to lose by delay, the French king allowed himself
+to be persuaded by the two legates to enter once more upon the paths of
+conciliation. As a preliminary measure, he revoked the order for the
+confiscation of Gascony, and accepted a temporary armistice. As before
+in the Scottish business, Philip again played the game of the papacy.
+Unlike his adversary, Edward continued steadily in the line which he
+had determined upon, while welcoming any delay that gave him
+opportunity to get ready. He employed the interval in making peace more
+impossible than ever. On October 7, he renewed his claim to the French
+crown, repudiated the homage into which he had been tricked during his
+infancy, and sent Bishop Burghersh straight from Valenciennes to Paris
+as bearer of his defiance. Thus the autumn of 1337 saw a virtual
+declaration of war. In November the first serious hostilities took
+place. Sir Walter Manny devastated the Flemish island of Cadzand,
+taking away with him as prisoner the bastard brother of the Count of
+Flanders.
+
+Papal diplomacy had not yet exhausted its resources. Benedict XII. was
+deeply concerned at the conclusion of the Anglo-imperial alliance. He
+was convinced that the only possible way of avoiding its perils was to
+persuade Edward and Philip to bury their differences and unite with him
+against the emperor. He succeeded in obtaining short prolongations of
+the existing armistice and, in December, 1337, the two cardinal legates
+landed in England, and were gladly received by Edward, who was
+delighted to gain time by negotiations. For the next six months they
+tarried in England, hoping against hope that something definite would
+result from their efforts. Meanwhile the English hurried on their
+preparations for war, and Edward made ready to cross over to the
+continent. As months slipped away, the tension became more severe, and
+in May Edward denounced the truces, though he still kept up the
+pretence of negotiations, and so late as June appointed ambassadors to
+treat with Philip of Valois. The real interest centred in the hard
+fighting which at once broke out at sea between the rival seamen of
+England and Normandy. At first the advantage was with the Normans. Not
+only were many English ships captured, but repeated destructive forays
+were made on the coasts of the south-eastern counties. Portsmouth was
+burnt; the Channel Islands were ravaged; and so alarming were the
+French corsairs that, in July, 1338, the dwellers on the south coast
+were ordered to take refuge in fortresses, or withdraw their goods to a
+distance of four leagues from the sea.
+
+At last the army and fleet were ready. On July 12, 1338, Edward
+appointed his son, the eight-year-old Duke of Cornwall, warden of
+England, and a few days later sailed from Orwell on a great ship named
+the _Christopher_. A favourable wind quickly bore the royal fleet to
+the mouth of the Scheldt. Thence the king and his army sailed up the
+river to Antwerp, the chief port of Brabant, where they landed on July
+16. There, on July 22, Edward revoked all commissions addressed to the
+King of France, and withheld from his agents all power to prejudice his
+own pretensions to the throne of the Valois. He passed more than a
+month at Antwerp, holding frequent conferences with his imperial
+allies, and thence proceeded through Brabant and Juelich to Cologne.
+From that city he went up the Rhine to Coblenz, where on September 5 he
+held an interview with his queen's imperial brother-in-law. Their
+meeting was celebrated with all the pomp and stateliness of the heyday
+of chivalry. Edward was accompanied by the highest nobles of his land,
+the emperor by all the electors, save King John of Bohemia, who, as a
+Luxemburger, was a convinced partisan of the French. Louis received his
+ally clothed in a purple dalmatic, with crown on head and with sceptre
+and orb in hand, surrounded by the electors and the higher dignitaries
+of the empire, and seated on a lofty throne erected in the Castorplatz,
+hard by the Romanesque basilica that watches over the junction of the
+Moselle with the Rhine. Another throne, somewhat lower in height, was
+occupied by the King of England, clothed in a robe of scarlet
+embroidered with gold, and surrounded by three hundred knights. Then,
+before the assembled crowd, Louis declared that Philip of France had
+forfeited the fiefs which he held of the empire. He put into Edward's
+hands a rod of gold and a charter of investiture, by which symbols he
+appointed him as "Vicar-general of the Empire in all the Germanies and
+in all the Almaines". Next day the allies heard a mass celebrated by
+the Archbishop of Cologne in the church of St. Castor. After the
+service the emperor swore to aid Edward against the King of France for
+seven years, while the barons of the empire took oaths to obey the
+imperial vicar and to march against his enemies. Thereupon the English
+king took farewell of the emperor, and returned to Brabant.
+
+All was ready for war. The interview at Coblenz was the deathblow to
+the papal diplomacy, and the sluggish Philip awaited in the Vermandois
+the expected attack of the Anglo-imperial armies. Yet the best part of
+a year was still to elapse before lances were crossed in earnest. The
+lords of the empire had no real care for the cause of Edward. They were
+delighted to take his presents, to pledge themselves to support him,
+and to insist upon the regular payment of the subsidies he had
+promised. But John of Brabant was more intent on winning Mechlin than
+on invading France, and even William of Avesnes was embarrassed by the
+ties which bound him to Philip, his uncle, even more than to Edward,
+his brother-in-law. They contented themselves with taking Edward's
+money and giving him little save promises in return. It became evident
+that an imperial vicar would be obeyed even less than an emperor. Every
+week of delay was dangerous to Edward, who had exhausted his resources
+in the pompous pageantry of his Rhenish journey, and in magnificent
+housekeeping in Brabant. It was then Edward's interest, as it had
+previously been Philip's, to bring matters to a crisis. That he failed
+to do this must be ascribed to the lukewarmness of his allies, the
+poverty of his exchequer, and, above all, to the still active diplomacy
+of Benedict XII.
+
+The cardinal legates appeared in Brabant, but their tone was different
+from that which they had taken in the previous spring in England.
+Profoundly irritated by the alliance of Edward and Louis, Benedict
+lectured the English king on the iniquity of his courses. The empire
+was vacant; the Coblenz grant was therefore of no effect; if Edward
+persisted in acting as vicar of the schismatic, he would be
+excommunicated. Benedict stood revealed as the partisan of France. It
+was in vain that Edward offered peace if France gave up the Scots and
+made full restitution of Gascony. Benedict ordered his legates to
+refuse to discuss the latter proposal, and, as the Gascon question lay
+at the root of the whole matter, an amicable settlement became more
+impossible than ever. Edward hotly defended his right to make what
+alliances he chose with his wife's kinsmen, and bitterly denounced the
+employment of the wealth of the Church in equipping the armies of his
+enemies. Though the cardinals, Peter and Bertrand, remained in Edward's
+camp, they might, for all practical purposes, as well have been at
+Avignon. The papal diplomacy had failed.
+
+Edward employed the leisure forced upon him by these events in
+elaborating his claim to the French throne. His lawyers ransacked both
+Roman jurisprudence and feudal custom that they might lay before the
+pope and Christendom plausible reasons for their master's pretensions.
+They advanced pleas of an even bolder character. Was not the right of
+Edward to the French throne the same as that of Jesus Christ to the
+succession of David? The Virgin Mary, incapable of the succession on her
+own behalf, was yet able to transmit her rights to her Son. These
+contentions, sacred and profane, did not touch the vital issue. It was
+not the dynastic question that brought about the war, though, war being
+inevitable, Edward might well, as he himself said, use his claim as a
+buckler to protect himself from his enemies. The fundamental difference
+between the two nations lay in the impossible position of Edward in
+Gascony. He could not abandon his ancient patrimony, and Philip could
+not give up that policy of gradually absorbing the great fiefs which the
+French kings had carried on since the days of St. Louis. The support
+given to the Scots, the Anglo-imperial alliance, the growing national
+animosity of the two peoples, the rivalry of English and French
+merchants and sailors, all these and many similar causes were but
+secondary.[1] At this stage the claim to the French throne, though
+immensely complicating the situation, and interposing formidable
+technical obstacles to the conduct of negotiations, loomed larger in
+talk than in acts. It was only in 1340, when Edward saw in his
+pretensions the best way of commanding the allegiance of Philip's sworn
+vassals, that the question of the French title became a serious matter.
+
+ [1] Deprez, _Les Preliminaires de la Guerre de Cent Am_, pp.
+ 400-406, admirably elucidates the situation.
+
+On which side did the responsibility for the war rest? National
+prejudices have complicated the question. English historians have seen
+in the aggression of Philip in Gascony, his intervention in Scottish
+affairs, and the buccaneering exploits of the Norman mariners, reasons
+adequate to provoke the patience even of a peace-loving monarch. French
+writers, unable to deny these facts, have insisted upon the slowness of
+Philip to requite provocation, his servile deference to papal
+authority, his willingness to negotiate, and his dislike to take
+offence even at the denial of his right to the crown which he wore.
+Either king seems hesitating and reluctant when looked at from one
+point of view, and pertinaciously aggressive when regarded from the
+opposite standpoint. It is safer to conclude that the war was
+inevitable than to endeavour to apportion the blame which is so equally
+to be divided between the two monarchs. The modern eye singles out
+Edward's baseless claim and makes him the aggressor, but there was
+little, as the best French historians admit, in Edward's pretension
+that shocked the idea of justice in those days. Moreover this view,
+held too absolutely, is confuted by the secondary position taken by the
+claim during the negotiations which preceded hostilities. If in the
+conduct of the preliminaries we may assign to Edward the credit of
+superior insight, more resolute policy, and a more clearly perceived
+goal, the intellectual superiority, which he possessed over his rival,
+was hardly balanced by any special moral obliquity on his part; though
+to Philip, with all his weakness, must always be given the sympathy
+provoked by the defence of his land against the foreign invader. It is
+useless to refine the issue further. The situation had become
+impossible, and fighting was the only way out of the difficulty. When
+in the late summer of 1339 the curtain was rung down on the
+long-drawn-out diplomatic comedy, Edward had not yet finally assumed
+that title of King of France, which made an inevitable strife
+irreconcilable, and so prolonged hostilities that the struggle became
+the Hundred Years' War.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+THE EARLY CAMPAIGNS OF THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR.
+
+
+In the late summer of 1339 Edward III. was at last able to take the
+offensive against France. During the negotiations England strained
+every effort to provide her absent sovereign with men and money, but
+neither the troops nor the supplies were adequate. The army which
+assembled in September in the neighbourhood of Brussels consisted
+largely of imperial vassals, hired by the English King, and clamorous
+for the regular payment of their wages. Already Edward told his
+ministers that, had not "a good friend in Flanders" advanced him a
+large sum, he would have been obliged to return with shame to England.
+As it was, enough was raised to set the unwieldy host in motion, and on
+September 20 he marched from Valenciennes, and thence advanced into the
+bishopric of Cambrai, whose lord, though an imperial vassal, had
+declared for France and the papacy.
+
+The rolling uplands of the Cambresis were devastated with fire and
+sword. One night an English baron took the Cardinal Bertrand, who with
+his comrade Peter still accompanied Edward's host, to the summit of a
+high tower, whence they could witness the flaming homesteads and
+villages of the fertile and populous district. In that woeful spectacle
+the churchman saw the futility of his last two years of constant
+labour, and fell in a swoon to the ground. But the confederates could
+do little more than devastate the open country. Cambrai itself was
+besieged to no purpose, and Edward pressed on to the invasion of
+France. On October g he spent his first night on French soil at the
+abbey of Mont Saint-Martin. He learnt how slender was the tie which
+bound his foreign allies to him, for his brother-in-law, William of
+Hainault, refused to serve, except on imperial soil, against his uncle
+Philip VI. Consoled for this defection by the arrival of the sluggish
+Duke of Brabant and of the Elector of Brandenburg, the eldest son of
+the emperor, Edward marched through the Vermandois, the Soissonais, and
+the Laonnais, burning and devastating, without meeting any serious
+resistance. Philip of Valois timidly held aloof in the neighbourhood of
+Peronne.
+
+By the middle of October, when Edward was near St. Quentin on the Oise,
+the Duke of Brabant suggested the expediency of seeking out winter
+quarters. The slow-moving host was almost in mutiny, when the master
+crossbowman of the King of France brought a challenge from his lord.
+"Let the King of England," ran the message, "seek out a field
+favourable for a pitched battle, where there is neither wood, nor
+marsh, nor river." Edward cheerfully accepted a day for the combat, and
+chose his ground higher up the Oise valley, among the green meadowlands
+and hedgerows of the Thierache. The appointed day passed by, and the
+French came not. At last, when Edward almost despaired of a meeting, he
+was told that the French were arrayed at Buironfosse, on the plateau
+between the Oise and the upper Sambre, and that Philip was ready to
+fight the next day, Saturday, October 23. Edward once more chose a
+suitable field of action in a plain between La Flamangrie and
+Buironfosse, a league and a half from the French. "On the Saturday,"
+wrote Edward to his son in England, "we were in the field, a full
+quarter of an hour before dawn, and took up our position in a fitting
+place to fight. In the early morning some of the enemy's scouts were
+taken, and they told us that his advanced guard was in battle array and
+coming out towards us. The news having come to our host, our allies,
+though they had hitherto borne themselves somewhat sluggishly, were in
+truth of such loyal intent that never were folk of such goodwill to
+fight. In the meantime one of our scouts, a knight of Germany, was
+taken, and he showed all our array to the enemy. Thereupon the foe
+withdrew his van, gave orders to encamp, made trenches around him, and
+cut down large trees in order to prevent us from approaching him. We
+tarried all day on foot in order of battle, until towards evening it
+seemed to our allies that we had waited long enough. And at vespers we
+mounted our horses and went near to Avesnes, and made him to know that
+we would await him there all the Sunday. On the Monday morning we had
+news that the lord Philip had withdrawn. And so would our allies no
+longer afterwards abide."
+
+Thus ended the inglorious campaign of the Thierache. Edward returned to
+Brussels "like a fox to his hole," and each side denounced the other
+for failing to keep the appointed tryst. The chivalry of the fourteenth
+century saw something ignoble in the sluggishness of Philip; but no
+modern soldier would blame him for his inactivity. Without striking a
+blow, he obtained the object of his campaign, for the enemy abandoned
+French territory. Had Edward been fully confident of victory, he could
+easily have forced a battle by advancing on Buironfosse; but he
+preferred to run the risk of a fiasco rather than abandon the defensive
+tactics on which he relied. Thus, even from the chivalrous point of
+view, he was by no means blameless. From the material standpoint, his
+first French campaign was a failure. It left its only mark on the
+devastated countryside, the beggared peasantry, the desolated churches
+and monasteries, the farmsteads and villages burnt to ashes.
+
+Edward seemed ruined both in reputation and purse. He had exhausted his
+resources in meeting the extravagant demands of his allies, and their
+help had profited him nothing at all. Yet his inexhaustible energy
+opened up a surer means of foreign assistance than had been supplied by
+the unruly vassals of Louis of Bavaria. At the moment when the imperial
+alliance was tried and found wanting, the way was opened up for close
+friendship between Edward and the Flemish cities. In earlier years the
+chivalrous devotion of Louis of Nevers to his overlord had secured the
+political dependence of Flanders upon the King of France. If the action
+of their count made the Flemings the tools of French policy, their
+commercial necessities bound them to England by chains forged by nature
+itself. Alone of the lands of northern and western Europe, Flanders was
+not a self-sufficing economic community.[1] Its great ports and weaving
+towns depended for their customers on foreign markets, and the raw
+material of their staple manufacture was mainly derived from England.
+When in 1337 Edward prohibited the export of wool to Flanders, his
+action at once brought about the same result that the cessation of the
+supplies of American cotton would cause in the manufacturing districts
+of Lancashire. A wool famine, like the Lancashire cotton famine of
+1862-65, plunged Ghent, Ypres, and Bruges into grievous distress. The
+starving weavers wandered through the farms begging their bread, and,
+when charity at home proved inadequate, they exposed their rags and
+their misery in the chief cities of northern France. Even wealthy
+merchants felt the pinch of the crisis which ruined the small craftsmen.
+
+ [1] See for this Pirenne, _Histoire de Belgique_, vols. i. and
+ ii., and Lamprecht, _Deutsche Geschichte_, iii., 304-324, and
+ iv., 134-142.
+
+A common desire to avoid calamity bound together the warring classes
+and rival districts of Flanders, as they had never been united before.
+Bruges and Ypres had borne the brunt of earlier struggles, and had not
+even yet recovered from the exhaustion of the wars of the early years
+of the century. Their exhaustion left the way open to Ghent, where the
+old patricians and the rich merchants, the weavers and the fullers,
+forgot their ancient rivalries and worked together to remedy the
+crisis. A wealthy landholder and merchant-prince of Ghent, James van
+Artevelde, made himself the spokesman of all classes of that great
+manufacturing city. He was no demagogue nor artisan, though his
+eloquence and force had wonderful power over the impressionable
+craftsmen of the trading guilds. He was no Netherlandish patriot, as
+some moderns have imagined, though he was anxious to unite Flanders
+with her neighbour states, on the broad basis of their identity of
+economic and political interests. A man of Ghent, above all things, his
+policy was to save the imperilled industries of his native town, and to
+make it the centre of a new movement for the vindication of commercial
+liberty against feudal domination. By the winter of 1337 this rich
+capitalist allied himself with the turbulent democracy of the weavers'
+guilds, and put himself at the head of affairs. Early in 1338 he began
+to negotiate with Edward III., and his loans to the distressed monarch
+had the result of removing the embargo on English wool. The famished
+craftsmen hailed the enemy of their class as a god who had come down
+from heaven for their salvation.
+
+Louis of Nevers and Philip of Valois took the alarm. Seeing in the
+ascendency of Artevelde the certainty that Flanders would join the
+English alliance, they left no stone unturned to avoid so dire a
+calamity. Artevelde, conscious of the narrow basis of his own
+authority, was prudent enough to be moderate. Instead of pressing the
+English alliance to a conclusion, he accepted the suggestion of Philip
+VI., that Flanders should remain neutral. Louis of Nevers hated the
+notion; but in June, 1338, Edward and Philip agreed to recognise
+Flemish neutrality, and he was forced to acquiesce in it. Both monarchs
+promised to avoid Flemish territory, and offered free commercial
+relations between Flanders and their respective dominions.
+
+Artevelde and the men of Ghent were the real masters of Flanders. They
+kept their count in scarcely veiled captivity, forcing him to wear the
+Flemish colours and to profess acceptance of the policy that he
+disliked. In such circumstances the neutrality of Flanders could not
+last long. Both Edward and Artevelde regarded it simply as a step
+towards a declared alliance. Before long Philip became uneasy, and
+lavished concession on concession to keep the dominant party true to
+its promises. He gave up the degrading conditions which since the
+treaty of Athis had secured the subjection of Flanders. But Edward
+could offer more than his rival. He proposed to the count and the "good
+towns" of Ghent, Bruges, and Ypres that, in return for their alliance,
+he would aid them to win back the towns of Lille, Douai, Bethune, and
+Tournai, which the French king had usurped from the Flemings, as well
+as the county of Artois, which had been separated from Flanders since
+the days of Philip Augustus. He also offered ample commercial
+privileges, the establishment of the staple of wool at Bruges as well
+as at Antwerp, free trade for Flemish cloth with the English markets,
+and a good and fixed money which was to be legal tender in Flanders,
+Brabant, France, and England. The Flemings demanded in return that
+Edward, by formally assuming the title of King of France, should stand
+to them as their liege lord, and thus free themselves and their count
+from the ecclesiastical penalties and dishonour involved in their
+waging war against a king of France. Late in 1339, these terms were
+mutually accepted, and Count Louis avoided further humiliations by
+flight into France.
+
+In January, 1340, Edward entered Flemish territory and was
+magnificently entertained in the abbey of Saint Bavon at Ghent. "The
+three towns of Flanders," declared Artevelde to his guest, "are ready
+to recognise you as their sovereign lord, provided that you engage
+yourself to defend them." The deputies of the three towns took oaths to
+Edward as their suzerain, and thereupon Edward was proclaimed King of
+France with much ceremony in the Friday market of Ghent. A new great
+seal was fashioned and new royal arms assumed, in which the lilies of
+France were quartered with the leopards of England. The new regnal year
+of Edward, which began on January 25, was styled the fourteenth of his
+reign in England, and the first of his reign in France. Urgent affairs
+called Edward back to his kingdom, but his debts to the Flemings were
+already so heavy that they only consented to his departure on his
+pledging himself to return before Michaelmas day, and on his leaving as
+hostages his queen, his two sons, and two earls. At last, on February
+20, he crossed over from Sluys to Orwell. He had been absent from home
+for nearly a year and a half.
+
+From February 21 to June 22, 1340, Edward remained in England. During
+that period, formal treaties with the Flemings confirmed the hasty
+negotiations of Ghent. Benedict XII, still pursued Edward with
+remonstrances. He warned the English king to have no trust in allies
+like the Flemings, who had shamefully driven away their natural lords
+and whose faithlessness and inconstancy were by-words. He told him that
+his strength was not enough to conquer France, and reproached him with
+calling himself king of a land of which he possessed nothing. Somewhat
+inconsistently, he offered his mediation between Edward and Philip. But
+Philip was only less weary than Edward of the self-seeking pontiff.
+Benedict was forced to drink the cup of humiliation, for after the
+rejection of his mediation, he was confronted with a proposal that the
+schismatic Bavarian should arbitrate between the two crowns. Meanwhile,
+after many delays, Edward embarked a gallant army on a fleet of 200
+ships, and on June 22 a favourable west wind bore them from the Orwell
+towards Flanders. On arriving next day off Blankenberghe, he learned
+that a formidable French squadron was anchored in the mouth of the
+Zwyn, and that he could only land in Flanders as the reward of victory.
+
+From the outbreak of hostilities in 1337, there had been a good deal of
+fighting by sea, and in the first stages of warfare the advantage lay
+with the French. Since the days of Edward I., and Philip the Fair, the
+maritime energies of the two countries had developed at an almost equal
+rate, and the parallel growth had been marked by bitter rivalry between
+the seamen of the two nations. The Normans had taken the leading share
+in this expansion of the French navy.[1] They welcomed the outbreak of
+war with enthusiasm, as giving them a chance of measuring their forces
+with their hated foes. Alone among the provinces of France, Normandy
+seems already to have experienced that intense national bitterness
+against the English which was soon to spread to all the rest of the
+country. Not content with the vigorous war of corsairs which had
+inflicted so much mischief on our southern coast and on English
+shipping, the Normans formed bold designs of a new Norman Conquest of
+England, and in return for the permanent establishment of the local
+estates of Normandy, agreed with Philip and his son John, who bore the
+title of Duke of Normandy, to equip a large fleet and army, with which
+England was to be invaded in the summer of 1339. Normandy, which
+monopolised the glory, was to monopolise the spoil. If England were
+conquered, Duke John, like Duke William before him, was to be King of
+England as well as Duke of Normandy. Thus the aggressions of Edward in
+France were to be answered by Norman aggressions in England.[2]
+
+ [1] _C_. de la Ronciere, _Hist, de_ la _Marine Francaise_; of.
+ Nicolas, _Hist, of the Royal Navy_.
+
+ [2] See on this subject A. Coville, _Les Etats_ de _Normandie_,
+ pp. 41-52 (1894).
+
+Nothing came of this grandiose project, though the burning ruins of
+Southampton, the capture of the great _Christopher_, which had borne
+Edward in 1338 to Antwerp, and the occupation of the Channel
+Islands--the last remnants of the old duchy still under English
+rule--showed that the Normans were in earnest. The chief result of their
+energy was the equipment of the strongest French fleet that had ever
+been seen in the Channel. Though a few Genoese galleys under Barbavera
+and a few great Spanish ships swelled the number of the armada, 160 of
+the 200 ships that formed the fleet were Norman.[1] Of the two Frenchmen
+in command, one, Hugh Quieret, was a Picard knight, but the other, the
+more popular, was Nicholas Behuchet, a Norman of humble birth, then a
+knight and the chief confidant of Philip VI. Quieret and Behuchet had
+long challenged the command of the narrow seas. But for their error of
+dividing their forces and preferring a piratical war of reprisals, they
+might have cut off communications between England and the Netherlands.
+They had learnt wisdom by experience, and their ships were massed in
+Zwyn harbour to prevent the passage of Edward to his new allies.
+
+ [1] _S_. Luce, _La Marine normande a l'Ecluse_, in _La France
+ pendant la Guerre de Cent Ans_, 3-31.
+
+The coast-line between Blankenberghe and the mouth of the Scheldt was
+strangely different in the fourteenth century from what it is at
+present.[1] The sandy flats, through which the Zwyn now trickles to the
+sea, formed a large open harbour, accessible to the biggest ships then
+known. It was protected on the north by the island of Cadzand, the scene
+of Manny's exploit in 1337, while at its head stood the town of Sluys,
+so called from the locks, or sluices, that regulated the waters of the
+ship canal, which bore to the great mart of Bruges the merchantmen of
+every land. It was in this harbour that Edward, on arriving off
+Blankenberghe, first spied the fleet of Quieret and Behuchet. He
+anchored at sea for the night, and on the afternoon of June 24, the
+anniversary of Bannockburn, he bore down on the French, having the sun,
+the tide, and the wind in his favour. On his approach Barbavera urged
+that the French should take to the open sea; but Quieret and Behuchet
+preferred to fight in the harbour. As an unsatisfactory compromise,
+however, the French moved a mile or so towards the enemy. Then they
+lashed their ships together and awaited attack.
+
+ [1] For this see Professor Tait's inset map of the district in
+ _Oxford Historical Atlas_, plate lvi.
+
+The English, unable to break the serried mass of their enemies, feigned
+a retreat, whereupon the Normans unlashed their ships and hurried in
+pursuit into the open water. At once the English turned and met them.
+The battle began when the English admiral, Robert Morley, lay alongside
+the _Christopher_, which, after its capture, had been taken into the
+enemy's service. Soon the ships of both fleets were closely grappled
+together in a fierce hand-to-hand fight which lasted until after
+nightfall. The desperate eagerness of the combatants strangely
+contrasted with the slackness of the campaign in the Thierache. "This
+battle," says Froissart, "was right fierce and horrible, for battles by
+sea are more dangerous and fiercer than battles by land, for at sea
+there is no retreat nor fleeing; there is no remedy but to fight and
+abide fortune, and every man to show his prowess." In the end the
+English won an overwhelming victory, which was completed next morning
+after more hard fighting. During the night Barbavera and his Genoese put
+to sea and escaped, but the magnificent Norman fleet was in the hands of
+the victor. The English loss was small, though it included Thomas of
+Monthermer, a son of Joan of Acre, and Edward himself was wounded in the
+thigh. The Norman force was almost annihilated. Quieret fell mortally
+wounded into Edward's hands; Behuchet was captured unhurt. A later
+Norman legend tells how Behuchet, when brought before the English king,
+answered some taunt by boxing the king's ears, whereupon the angry
+monarch hanged him forthwith from the mast of his ship.[1] But the
+tradition is unsupported by English authorities, and, with all his
+faults, Edward was not the man to deal thus with a captive knight who
+had fought his best. Master at last of the sea, Edward landed at Sluys
+amidst the rejoicings of the Flemings, and made his way to Ghent, where
+he greeted his wife, and first saw his infant son John, born during his
+absence, to whom Artevelde stood as godfather.
+
+ [1] Luce, _Le Soufflet de l'Ecluse_, in _La Frame pendant la
+ Guerre de Cent Ans_, 2nd serie, pp. 3-15.
+
+Edward's military fame was established over all Europe, and, says the
+Flemish writer, John van Klerk, "all who spoke the German tongue
+rejoiced at the defeat of the French". Yet the victory at Sluys was the
+prelude to a land campaign as ineffective as the raid into the
+Thierache. Eager to restore their lost lands to the Flemings, Edward
+made the mistake of dividing his army. He sent Robert of Artois to
+effect the reconquest of Artois, while he himself besieged Tournai,
+which was then in French hands. Robert's attempt to win back the lands
+of his ancestors was a sorry failure. Defeated outside Saint Omer, he
+was unable even to invest that town. Almost equally unsuccessful was
+Edward's siege of Tournai, which resisted with such energy that he was
+soon at the end of his resources. At last, in despair, Edward
+challenged Philip VI. to decide their claim to France by single combat.
+The Valois answered that he would gladly do so if, in the event of his
+winning, he might obtain Edward's kingdom. In the same spirit of
+caution, Philip tarried half-way between Saint Omer and Tournai,
+watching both armies and afraid to strike at either. The armies wore
+themselves out in this game of waiting until the widowed Countess of
+Hainault, then abbess of the Cistercian nuns of Fontenelles, was moved
+by the desolation of the country to intervene between the two kings.
+The mother of the Queen of England and the sister of the King of
+France, she succeeded not only by reason of her prayers, but through
+the refusal of the Duke of Brabant, the Count of Hainault, and the
+other imperial vassals to remain longer at the war. On September 25,
+1340, a truce was signed at the solitary chapel of Esplechin, situated
+in the open country a little south of Tournai. By it hostilities
+between both kings and their respective allies were suspended, until
+midsummer day, 1341. Each king was to enjoy the lands actually in his
+possession, and commerce was to be carried on as if peace had been
+made. The most significant clause of the truce was that by which both
+kings pledged themselves that they "procure not that any innovation be
+done by the Church of Rome, or by others of Holy Church on either of
+the said kings. And if our most holy father the pope will do that, the
+two kings shall prevent it, so far as in them lies."
+
+The truce of Esplechin, renewed until 1345, put an end to the first, or
+Netherlandish, period of the Hundred Years' War. The imperial alliance,
+which had failed Edward, was soon to be solemnly dissolved. Early in
+1341, Louis of Bavaria revoked Edward's vicariate, and announced his
+intention of becoming henceforth the friend of his uncle, the King of
+France. This alliance between Philip and Louis completed the
+discomfiture of Benedict XII. In 1342 he died, and his successor was
+Peter Roger, the sometime Archbishop of Rouen, who assumed the title of
+Clement VI. By persuading Brabant and Hainault to be neutral between
+France and England, the new pontiff broke up the last remnant of the
+Anglo-imperial alliance. Even Flanders and England became estranged.
+Artevelde, who found it a hard matter to govern Flanders after the
+truce, would willingly have supported Edward. But Edward had henceforth
+less need of Artevelde than Artevelde had of him. In 1345 Edward again
+appeared at Sluys and had an interview with him, and then returned to
+his own country without setting foot on Flemish soil. Artevelde soon
+afterwards met his death in a popular tumult. His family fled to
+England, _where_ they lived on a pension from Edward. This was the end
+of the Anglo-Flemish alliance.
+
+After the treaty of Esplechin, Edward returned to Ghent. The conclusion
+of military operations was a signal to all his creditors to clamour for
+immediate settlement of their debts. Neither subsidies nor wool came
+from England, though the king wrote in piteous terms to his council.
+Edward was convinced that the real cause of his failure was the
+remissness of the home government, and resolved to wreak his vengeance
+on his ministers. He was encouraged to this effect by Bishop Burghersh,
+who still remembered his old feuds with Archbishop Stratford, and may
+well have believed that the archbishop, who had a financier's dread of
+war, had wilfully ruined his rival's diplomacy. But Edward dared not
+openly return to England, for his Flemish creditors regarded his
+personal presence as the best security for his debts. He was therefore
+reduced to the pitiful expedient of running away from them. One day he
+rode out of Ghent on the pretext of taking exercise, and hurried
+secretly and without escort to Sluys. Thence he took ship for England,
+and, after a tempestuous voyage of three days and nights, sailed up the
+Thames, and landed at the Tower on November 30, 1340, after nightfall.
+At cockcrow next morning, he summoned his ministers before him,
+denounced them as false traitors and drove them all from office. The
+judges were thrown into prison, and with them some of the leading
+merchants, including William de la Pole of Hull. A special commission,
+like that of 1289, scrutinised the acts of the royal officials
+throughout the kingdom, and exacted heavy fines from the many who were
+found wanting. Nothing but fear of provoking the wrath of the Church
+prevented Edward from consigning to prison the dismissed chancellor,
+Robert Stratford, Bishop of Chichester, and the late treasurer, Roger
+Northburgh, Bishop of Coventry. Their successors were lay knights, the
+new chancellor, Sir Robert Bourchier, being the first keeper of the
+great seal who was not a clerk.
+
+Earlier in the year the king had quarrelled with Archbishop Stratford,
+who resigned the chancellorship. But before Edward sailed from Orwell
+in June there had been a partial reconciliation, and the king left
+Stratford president of the council during his absence. When his brother
+and colleagues were dismissed, the archbishop was at Charing. Conscious
+that he was the chief object of Edward's vengeance, he at once took
+sanctuary with the monks of his cathedral. Every effort was made to
+drag him from his refuge. Some Louvain merchants, to whom he had bound
+himself for the king's debts, demanded that he should be surrendered to
+their custody until the money was paid. He was summoned to court and
+afterwards to parliament. But he prudently remained safe within the
+walls of Christ Church, and preached a course of sermons to the monks,
+in which he compared himself to St. Thomas of Canterbury, and hinted at
+the danger of his incurring his prototype's fate. Edward replied to
+this challenge by a lengthy pamphlet, called the _libellus famosus_.
+The violence and unmeasured terms of the tractate suggest the hand of
+Bishop Orleton, Stratford's lifelong foe, who had by Burghersh's recent
+death become the most prominent of the courtly prelates. The archbishop
+was declared to be the sole cause of the king's failures. He had left
+Edward without funds, and in trusting to him the king had leant on a
+broken reed. Stratford justified himself in another sermon in which he
+invited inquiry and demanded trial by his peers.
+
+Edward so far relented as to issue letters of safe-conduct enabling the
+archbishop to attend the parliament summoned for April 23, 1341. But
+when Stratford took his place, the king refused to meet him, and
+ordered him to answer in the exchequer the complaints brought against
+him. The lords upheld the primate's cause, and declared that in no
+circumstances could a peer of parliament be brought to trial elsewhere
+than in full parliament. Edward's fury abated when he saw that he would
+get no grant unless he gave way. He restored Stratford to his favour,
+and acceded to his request that he should answer in parliament and not
+in the exchequer. The childish controversy ended with the personal
+victory of the primate and the formal re-assertion of the important
+principle of trial by peers. But not even then was Edward able to get a
+subsidy. He was further forced to embody in the statute of the year the
+doctrines that auditors of the accounts of the royal officers should be
+elected in parliament, and that all ministers should be chosen by the
+king, after consultation with his estates, and should resign their
+offices at each meeting of parliament and be prepared to answer all
+complaints before it.
+
+Thus the fallen minister brought the estates the greatest triumph over
+the prerogative won during Edward's reign. Before long Edward was
+magnanimous enough to resume friendly relations with him, but he was
+never suffered to take a prominent part in politics. He died in 1348,
+after spending his later years in the business of his see. It was a
+strange irony of fate that this worldly and politic ecclesiastic should
+have perforce become the champion of the rights of the Church and the
+liberties of the nation. His victory established a remarkable
+solidarity between the high ecclesiastical party and the popular
+opposition, which was to last nearly as long as the century. Disgust at
+this alliance moved Edward to take up the anti-clerical attitude which
+henceforth marks the policy of the crown until the accession of the
+house of Lancaster.
+
+The victory of the estates of 1341 was too complete to last. For a
+medieval king to hand over the business of government to a nominated
+ministry was in substance a return to the state of things in 1258 or
+1312. Edward was not the sort of man to endure the thraldom that his
+father and great-grandfather had both found intolerable. Even at the
+moment of sealing the statute, he and his ministers protested that they
+were not bound to observe laws contrary to the constitution of the
+realm. Five months later, on October 1, 1341, the king issued letters,
+revoking the laws of the previous session. "We have never," he
+impudently declared, "really given our consent to the aforesaid
+pretended statute. But inasmuch as our rejecting it would have
+dissolved parliament in confusion, without any business having been
+transacted, and so all our affairs would have been ruined, we
+dissembled, as was our duty, and allowed the pretended statute to be
+sealed." For more than two years he did not venture to face a
+parliament, but the next gathering of the estates in April, 1343,
+repealed the offensive acts of 1341. Parliament was so reluctant to
+ratify the king's high-handed action, that he did not venture to ask it
+for any extraordinary grant of money. The only other important act of
+this parliament was a petition from lords and commons, urging the king
+to check the claims of a French pope, friendly to the "tyrant of
+France," to exercise ever-increasing rights of patronage over English
+benefices. The anti-clerical tide was still flowing.
+
+Before parliament met in 1343, the French war had been renewed on
+another pretext. A new source of trouble arose in a disputed succession
+to the duchy of Brittany. The duke John III., the grandson of John II.
+and Edward I.'s sister Beatrice, died in April, 1341. He left no
+legitimate children, and his succession was claimed by his half-brother,
+John of Montfort, and his niece Joan of Penthievre. Montfort, the son of
+Duke Arthur II. by his second wife, had inherited from his mother the
+Norman county of Montfort l'Amaury, which became her possession as the
+representative on the spindle side of the line of Simon de Montfort the
+Albigensian crusader. Joan was the daughter of Guy, John III.'s brother
+of the full blood, in whose favour the great county of
+Penthievre-Treguier, including the whole of the north coast of the duchy
+from the river of Morlaix to within a few miles of the Rance, had been
+dissociated from the demesne and reconstituted as an appanage.[1] The
+heiress of Penthievre thus ruled directly over nearly a sixth of
+Brittany, and her power was further strengthened by her marriage with
+Charles of Blois, who, though a younger son, enjoyed great influence as
+the sister's son of Philip VI., and also by reason of his simple,
+saintly, honourable, and martial character. The house of Penthievre not
+only stood to Brittany as the house of Lancaster stood to England, as
+the natural head of the higher nobility; it also enjoyed the favour and
+protection of the French king, who was ever anxious to find friends
+among the chief sub-tenants of his great vassals. Against so formidable
+an opponent John of Montfort could only secure his rights by
+promptitude. Accordingly he made his way to Nantes and, receiving a warm
+welcome from his burgesses, proclaimed himself duke. Very few of the
+great feudatories threw in their lot with him. His strength was in the
+petty _noblesse_, the townsmen, and the enthusiasm of the Celtic
+population of _La Bretagne bretonnante_, which made Leon, Cornouailles,
+and Vannes the strongholds of his cause. Yet the Penthievre influence
+took with it the Breton-speaking inhabitants of the diocese of Treguier,
+and the piety of Charles made the clergy, and especially the friars,
+devoted to him.
+
+ [1] On the importance of Penthievre, see A. de la Borderie, _La
+ Geographie feodale de la Bretagne_ (1889), pp. 60-65.
+
+The fight was not waged in Brittany only. Montfort had to contend
+against the general sentiment of the French nobility and the strong
+interest and affection which bound Philip VI. to uphold the claims of
+Charles of Blois. After a few months the parliament of Paris decided in
+favour of the king's nephew against Montfort. Charles's wife was the
+nearest heir of the deceased duke, and had therefore a prior claim over
+her uncle. Montfort urged in vain that the superior rights of the male,
+which had made the Count of Valois King of France, equally gave the
+Count of Montfort the duchy of Brittany. He had to fight for his duchy.
+John, Duke of Normandy, the heir of France, marched to Brittany with a
+strong force, to secure the establishment of his cousin in accordance
+with the decree of parliament. The union of the royal troops, with the
+levies of Penthievre and the great feudatories of Brittany, was too
+powerful a combination to withstand. Montfort was shut up in Nantes,
+was forced to capitulate, and sent prisoner to Paris. His place was
+taken by his wife, Joan of Flanders, a daughter of Louis of Nevers.
+This lady shewed "the heart of a man and of a lion," as Froissart says.
+Her efforts, however, did not prevail against her formidable enemies.
+Bit by bit she was driven from one stronghold to another, until at last
+she was closely besieged in Hennebont by Charles of Blois. Before that,
+she had recognised Edward as King of France, and offered him the homage
+of her husband and son. Edward III. readily took up the cause of
+Montfort. He recked little of the inconsistency involved in the prince,
+who claimed France through his mother, supporting in Brittany a duke,
+whose pretensions were based upon grounds similar to the claim advanced
+by Philip of Valois on the French throne. As in Flanders, he found two
+rival nations contending in the bosom of a single French fief. He at
+once supported the Celtic party in Brittany as he had supported the
+Flemish party in Flanders. Both his allies had the same enemies in
+feudalism, the French monarchy, and the pretensions of high
+clericalism. Afraid to renew the attack in France without allies,
+Edward welcomed the support of the Montfort party, as giving him a
+chance of renewing his assaults on his adversary of Valois. He invested
+Montfort with the earldom of Richmond, of which John III had died
+possessed. He sent Sir Walter Manny with a force sufficient to raise
+the siege of Hennebont. The heroic Joan of Flanders was almost at the
+end of her resources, when on an early June morning, in 1342, she
+espied the white sails of Manny's fleet working its way from the sea up
+the estuary of the Blavet, which bathes the walls of Hennebont. After
+the arrival of the English, Charles of Blois abandoned the siege in
+despair. For the rest of the year the war was waged on a more equal
+footing. In August Edward sent to Brest an additional force under
+William Bohun, Earl of Northampton, who attempted, though with little
+success, to invade the domains of the house of Penthievre. A hard-won
+victory against great odds near Morlaix was made memorable by
+Northampton's first applying the tactics of Halidon Hill to a pitched
+battle on the continent.[1] But the earl's troops were so few that
+they were forced to withdraw after their success into more friendly
+regions. Leon and Cornouailles then resumed allegiance to the house of
+Montfort. In the midst of the struggle Robert of Artois received a
+wound which soon ended his tempestuous career.
+
+ [1] Baker, p.76, gives the place, Knighton, ii., 25, the
+ details. See also my note in _Engl. Hist. Review, xix._ (1904),
+ 713-15.
+
+Edward was eager to enter the field in person. Since his return to
+England in 1340, his only military experience had been a luckless
+winter campaign in the Lothians against King David. In October, 1342,
+he left the Duke of Cornwall as warden of England during his absence,
+and took ship at Sandwich for Brittany. He remained in the country
+until the early months of 1343, raiding the land from end to end,
+receiving many of the greater barons into his obedience, and striving
+in particular to conquer the regions included in the modern department
+of the Morbihan. There he besieged Vannes, the strongest and largest
+city of Brittany, says Froissart, after Nantes. The triumphs of his
+rival at last brought Philip VI. into Brittany. While Edward
+laboriously pursued the siege of Vannes, amidst the hardships of a wet
+and stormy winter, Philip watched his enemy from Ploermel, a few miles
+to the north. For a third time the situation of Buironfosse and Tournai
+was renewed. The rivals were within striking distance, but once more
+both Edward and Philip were afraid to strike. History still further
+repeated itself; for the cardinal-bishops of Palestrina and Frascati,
+sent by Clement VI. to end the struggle, travelled from camp to camp
+with talk of peace. The sufferings of both armies gave the kings a
+powerful reason for listening to their advances. At last, on January
+19, 1343, a truce for nearly four years was signed at Malestroit,
+midway between Ploermel and Vannes, "in reverence of mother church, for
+the honour of the cardinals, and that the parties shall be able to
+declare their reasons before the pope, not for the purpose of rendering
+a judicial decision, but in order to make a better peace and treaty".
+Scotland and the Netherlands were included in the truce, and it was
+agreed that each belligerent should continue in the enjoyment of the
+territories which he held at the moment. Vannes, the immediate apple of
+discord, was put into the hands of the pope.
+
+The spring of 1343 saw Edward back in England. The scene of interest
+shifted to the papal court at Avignon, where ambassadors from Edward
+and Philip appeared to declare their masters' rights. The protracted
+negotiations were lacking in reality. The English, distrusting Clement
+as a French partisan, did their best to complicate the situation by
+complaints against papal provisions in favour of aliens "not having
+knowledge of the tongue nor condition of those whose governance and
+care should belong to them". English indignation rose higher when,
+despite the terms of the truce and the promise of the cardinals,
+Montfort remained immured in his French prison, while Breton nobles of
+his faction were kidnapped and put to death by Philip. Clement declared
+himself against Edward's claims to the French throne, and, long before
+the negotiations had reached a formal conclusion, it was clear that
+nothing would come of them. At last in 1345 the English King denounced
+the truce and prepared to renew the war. His first concern was,
+necessarily finance, and he had already exhausted all his resources as
+a borrower. The financial difficulties, which had stayed his career in
+the Netherlands five years before, had reached their culmination.
+Stratford was avenged for the outrages of 1340, for Edward was in worse
+embarrassments than on that winter night when the glare of torches
+illuminated the sovereign's sudden return to the Tower. The king's
+Netherlandish, Rhenish, and Italian creditors would trust him no longer
+and vainly clamoured for the repayment of their advances. "We grieve,"
+he was forced to reply to the Cologne magistrates, "nay, we blush, that
+we are unable to meet our obligations at the due time." Edward's
+anxiety to prepare for fresh campaigns made him careless as to his
+former obligations. His wholesale neglect to repay his debts drove the
+great banking houses of the Bardi and the Peruzzi into bankruptcy, and
+the failure of the English king's creditors plunged all Florence into
+deep distress. One good result came from the king's dishonour. The
+foreign sources of supply having dried up, Edward was forced to lean
+more exclusively upon his English subjects. A wealthy family of Hull
+merchants, recently transferred to London, became very flourishing. Its
+head, William de la Pole, who had financed every government scheme
+since the days of Mortimer, became a knight, a judge, a territorial
+magnate, and the first English merchant to found a baronial house. And
+as the credit of the English merchants was limited, Edward was forced
+more and more to rely upon parliamentary grants. The memory of the
+king's want of faith to the estates of 1341 had died away, and a
+parliament, which met in 1344, once more made Edward liberal
+contributions. Secure of his subjects' support, the frivolous king
+largely employed his resources in the chivalrous pageantry which
+stirred up the martial ardour of his barons and made the war popular.
+It was then that he resolved to set up a "round table" at Windsor after
+the fabled fashion of King Arthur. From this came the foundation of the
+Round Tower which Edward was to erect in his favourite abode, and the
+organised chivalry that was soon to culminate in the Order of the
+Garter. In the summer of 1345 Edward made that journey to Sluys, which
+has already been noted, and he held on ship-board his last interview
+with James van Artevelde. His immediate return to England showed that
+he had no mind to renew his Flemish alliances. In the same year the
+death of the queen's brother, William of Avesnes, established the rule
+of Louis of Bavaria in the three counties of Holland, Zealand, and
+Hainault in the right of his wife, Philippa's elder sister. Edward put
+in a claim on behalf of his queen, which further embittered his already
+uneasy relations with Louis, and led him to seek his field of combat
+anywhere rather than in the Netherlands. In Brittany the murder of the
+nobles of Montfort's faction had given an excuse for the renewal of
+partisan warfare as early as 1343, but Montfort was still under
+surveillance in France, even after his release from Philip's prison,
+and Joan of Flanders, the heroic defender of Hennebont, was hopelessly
+insane in England. At last in 1345 Montfort ventured to flee from
+France to England, where he did homage to Edward as King of France for
+the duchy which he claimed. He then went to Brittany, and there shortly
+afterwards died. The new Duke of Brittany, also named John, was a mere
+boy when he was thus robbed of both his parents' care, and his cause
+languished for want of a head. Edward took upon himself the whole
+direction of Brittany as tutor of the little duke. Northampton was once
+more sent thither, but for a time the war degenerated into sieges of
+castles and petty conflicts.
+
+While action was thus impracticable in the Netherlands, and ineffective
+in Brittany, Gascony became, for the first time during the struggle, the
+scene of military operations of the first rank. The storm of warfare had
+hitherto almost spared the patrimony of the English king in southern
+France. No great effort was made either by the French to capture the
+last bulwarks of the Aquitanian inheritance, or by Edward to extend his
+duchy to its ancient limits. Cut off from other fields of expansion,
+Edward threw his chief energies into the enlargement of his power in
+southern France. He won over many of those Gascon nobles, including the
+powerful lord of Albret, who had been alienated by his former
+indifference. All was ready for action, and in June, 1345, Henry of
+Grosmont, Earl of Derby, the eldest son of Henry of Lancaster, landed at
+Bayonne with a sufficient English force to encourage the lords of
+Gascony to rally round the ducal banner. Soon after his landing, the
+death of his blind father made Derby Earl of Lancaster. During the next
+eighteen months, the earl successfully led three raids into the heart of
+the enemies' territory.[1] The first, begun very soon after his landing,
+occupied the summer of 1345. Advancing from Libourne, the limit of the
+Anglo-Gascon power, Henry made his way up the Dordogne, a fleet of boats
+co-operating with his land forces. He took the important town of
+Bergerac, and thence, mounting the stream as far as Lalinde, he crossed
+the hills separating the Dordogne from the Isle, and unsuccessfully
+assaulted Perigueux. Thence he advanced still further, and captured the
+stronghold of Auberoche, dominating the rocky valley of the Auvezere.
+Leaving a garrison at Auberoche, Henry returned to his base, but upon
+his withdrawal the French closely besieged his conquest, and the earl
+made a sudden move to its relief. On October 21 he won a brisk battle
+outside the walls of Auberoche before the more sluggish part of his army
+had time to reach the scene of action. This famous exploit again
+established the Gascon duke in Perigord.
+
+ [1] For these campaigns, see Ribadieu, _Les Campagnes du Comte
+ de Derby en Guyenne, Saintonge et Poitou_ (1865).
+
+Early in 1346 the victor of Auberoche led his forces up the Garonne
+valley. La Reole, lost since 1325, was taken in January, and thence
+Earl Henry marched to the capture of many a town and fortress on the
+Garonne and the lower Lot. His most important acquisition was
+Aiguillon, commanding the junction of the Lot and the Garonne, for its
+possession opened up the way for the reconquest of the Agenais, the
+rich fruit of the last campaign of Charles of Valois. Duke John of
+Normandy then appeared upon the scene, and Henry of Lancaster withdrew
+before him to the line of the Dordogne. Aiguillon stood a siege from
+April to August, when the Duke of Normandy, then at the end of his
+resources, solicited a truce. News having come to Lancaster at Bergerac
+that Edward had begun his memorable invasion of Normandy, he
+contemptuously rejected the proposal. Before long, Duke John raised the
+siege and hurried to his father's assistance. Thereupon Lancaster
+returned to the Garonne and revictualled Aiguillon. Immediately after
+he started on his third raid. This time he bent his steps northwards,
+and late in September was at Chateauneuf on the Charente, whence he
+threatened Angouleme, and finally obtained its surrender. Crossing the
+Charente, he entered French Saintonge, where the important town of
+Saint-Jean-d'Angely opened its gates and took oaths to Edward _as_ duke
+and king. Then he boldly dashed into the heart of Poitou, marching by
+Lusignan to Poitiers. "We rode before the city," wrote Lancaster, "and
+summoned it, but they would do nothing. Thereupon on the Wednesday
+after Michaelmas we stormed the city, and all those within were taken
+or slain. And the lords that were within fled away on the other side,
+and we tarried full eight days. Thus we have made a fair raid, God be
+thanked, and are come again to Saint-Jean, whence we propose to return
+to Bordeaux." This exploit ended Lancaster's Gascon career. In January,
+1347, he was back in England, having restored the reputation of his
+king in Gascony, and set an example of heroism soon to be emulated by
+his cousin, the Black Prince.
+
+Edward resolved to take the field in person in the summer of 1346.
+Special efforts were made to equip the army, and lovers of ancient
+precedent were dismayed when the king called upon all men of property to
+equip archers, hobblers, or men-at-arms, according to their substance,
+that they might serve abroad at the king's wages. But the nation
+responded to the king's call, and a host of some 2,400 cavalry and
+10,000 archers and other infantry collected at Portsmouth between Easter
+and the early summer.[1] There were the usual delays of a medieval
+muster, and it was not until July was well begun that Edward, having
+constituted his second son Lionel of Antwerp, a boy of six, as regent,
+took ship at Portsmouth with his eldest son, then sixteen years of age,
+and, since 1343, Prince of Wales as well as Duke of Cornwall. The
+destination of the army was a secret, but Edward's original idea seems
+to have been to join Henry of Lancaster in Gascony, though we may well
+believe that the resources of medieval transport were hardly adequate to
+convey so large a force for so great a distance. Moreover, a persistent
+series of south-westerly winds prohibited all attempts to round the
+Breton peninsula, while Godfrey of Harcourt, a Norman lord who had
+incurred the wrath of Philip VI. and had been driven into exile,
+persistently urged on Edward the superior attractions of his native
+coast. When the fleet set sail from Portsmouth, it was directed to
+follow in the admiral's track; and as soon as the open sea was gained,
+the ships were instructed to make their way to the Cotentin. On July 12
+the English army reached Saint-Vaast de la Hougue, and spent five days
+in disembarking and ravaging the neighbourhood.[2] Immediately on
+landing, Edward dubbed the Prince of Wales a knight, along with other
+young nobles, one of whom was Roger Mortimer, the grandson and heir of
+the traitor Earl of March. At last, on July 18, the English army began
+to move by slow stages to the south. It met with little resistance, and
+plundered and burnt the rich countryside at its discretion. The English
+marvelled at the fertility of the country and the size and wealth of its
+towns. Barfleur was as big as Sandwich, Carentan reminded them of
+Leicester, Saint-Lo was the size of Lincoln, and Caen was more populous
+than any English city save London.
+
+ [1] On the details of this force, see Wrottesley, _Crecy and
+ Calais,_ in _Collections for a History of Staffordshire,_ vol.
+ xviii. (1897); _cf._ J.E. Morris in _Engl. Hist. Review, xiv.,_
+ 766-69.
+
+ [2] Besides the sources for this campaign mentioned in Sir E.M.
+ Thompson, _Chronicle of Geoffrey le Baker,_ pp. 252-57, the
+ disregarded _Acta bellicosa Edwardi, etc.,_ published in
+ Moisant, _Le Prince Noir en Aquitaine, pp._ 157-74, from a
+ Corpus Christi Coll. Cambridge MS., should be mentioned. It has
+ first been utilised in H. Pientout's valuable paper, _La prise
+ de Caen par Edouard III. en 1346, in Memoires de l'Academie de
+ Caen_ (1904).
+
+It was only at Caen that any real resistance was encountered. On July
+26 Edward's soldiers entered the northern quarter of the town without
+opposition, to find the fortified enclosures of the two great abbeys of
+William the Conqueror and his queen undefended and desolate, the _grand
+bourg_, the populous quarter round the church of St. Peter open to
+them, and only the castle in the extreme north garrisoned. Caen was not
+a walled town, and the defenders preferred to limit themselves to
+holding the southern quarter, the _Ile Saint-Jean_, which lay between
+the district of St. Peter's and the river Orne, but was cut off from
+the rest by a branch of the Orne that ran just south of St. Peter's
+church. There was sharp fighting at the bridge which commanded access
+to the island; but the English archers prepared the way, and then the
+men-at-arms completed the work. After a determined conflict, the Island
+of St. John was captured, and its chief defenders, the Count of Eu,
+Constable of France, and the lord of Tancarville, the chamberlain, were
+taken prisoners. Meanwhile the English fleet, which had devastated the
+whole coast from Cherbourg to Ouistreham, arrived off the mouth of the
+Orne, laden with plunder and eager to get back home with its spoils.
+Edward thought it prudent to avoid a threatened mutiny by ordering the
+ships to recross the Channel, and take with them the captives and the
+loot which he had amassed at Caen. During a halt of five days at Caen,
+Edward discovered a copy of the agreement made between the Normans and
+King Philip for the invasion of England eight years before. This also
+he despatched to England, where it was read before the Londoners by the
+Archbishop of Canterbury in order to show that the aggression was not
+all on one side.
+
+On July 31, Edward resumed his eastward march. At Lisieux, the next
+important stage, came the inevitable two cardinals with their
+inevitable proposals of mediation, which Edward put aside with scant
+civility. The army was soon once more on the move, and on August 7
+struck the Seine at Elbeuf, a few miles higher up the river than Rouen.
+Here Edward was at last in touch with his enemy. During the English
+march through lower Normandy, Philip VI. had assembled a considerable
+army, with which he occupied the Norman capital. Nothing but the Seine
+and a few miles of country separated the two forces. But as at
+Buironfosse, at Tournai, and at Vannes, the French declined to attack,
+and Edward would not depart from his tradition of acting on the
+defensive. The English slowly made their way up the left bank of the
+Seine, avoiding the stronger castles and walled towns, and devastating
+the open country. The French followed them on the right bank, carefully
+watching their movements, and breaking all the bridges. So things went
+until, on August 13, Edward reached Poissy, a town within fifteen miles
+of the capital.
+
+The English advanced troops plundered up to the walls of Paris, whose
+citizens, watching in terror the flames that made lurid the western
+sky, implored their king to come to their help. From Saint-Denis Philip
+issued a challenge to Edward to meet him in the open field on a fixed
+day, Edward, however, was not to be tempted by such appeals to his
+chivalry. The day after Philip's message was sent, he repaired the
+bridge at Poissy, crossed the Seine, sent a stinging reply to Philip's
+letter, and moved rapidly northwards. Avoiding Pontoise, Beauvais, and
+other towns, he was soon within a few miles of the Somme. Long marching
+had fatigued his army, and he resolved to retreat to the Flemish
+frontier. The French soon followed him by a route some miles further
+towards the east. They reached the Somme earlier than the English, and
+were pouring into Amiens and Abbeville, while Edward's scouts were
+vainly seeking for an unguarded passage over the river. If the Somme
+could not be crossed, there was every chance of Edward's war-worn army
+being driven into a corner at Saint-Valery, between the broad and sandy
+estuary of the Somme and the open sea. When affairs had become thus
+critical, local guides revealed to the English a way across the
+estuary, where a white band of chalk, called the _Blanche taque_,
+cropping out of the sandy river bed, forms a hard, practicable ford
+from one bank of the river to the other. "Then," writes an official
+reporter, "the King of England and his host took that water of the
+Somme, where never man passed before without loss, and fought their
+enemies, and chased them right up to the gate of Abbeville." That night
+Edward and his troops slept on the outskirts of the forest of Crecy.
+After traversing this, they took up a strong position on the northern
+side of the wood on Saturday, August 26. There, in the heart of his
+grandmother's inheritance of Ponthieu, Edward elected to make a stand,
+and, for the first time in all their campaigning, Philip felt
+sufficient confidence to engage in an offensive battle against his
+rival.
+
+Ponthieu is a land of low chalk downs, open fields, and dense woods,
+broken by valleys, through which the small streams that water it
+trickle down to the sea, and by the waterless depressions
+characteristic of a chalk country. The village of Crecy-en-Ponthieu is
+situated on the north bank of the little river Maye. Immediately to the
+east of the village, a lateral depression, running north and south,
+called the _Vallee aux Clercs,_ falls down into the Maye valley, and is
+flanked with rolling downs, perhaps 150 to 200 feet in height. On the
+summit of the western slopes of this valley, Edward stationed his army.
+Its right was held by the first of the three traditional "battles,"
+under the personal command of the young Prince of Wales. Its front and
+right flank were protected by the hill, while still further to the
+right lay Crecy village embowered in its trees, beyond which the dense
+forest formed an excellent protection from attack. The second of the
+English battles, under the Earls' of Northampton and Arundel, held the
+less formidable slopes of the upper portion of the _Vallee aux Clercs,_
+their left resting on the enclosures and woods of the village of
+Wadicourt. The third battle, commanded by the king himself, and
+stationed in the rear as a reserve, held the rolling upland plain, on
+the highest point of which was a windmill, commanding the whole field,
+in which Edward took up his quarters. The English men-at-arms left
+their horses in the rear. The archers of each of the two forward
+battles were thrown out at an angle on the flanks, so that the enemy,
+on approaching the serried mass of men-at-arms, had to encounter a
+severe discharge of arrows both from the right and the left. It was the
+tactics of Halidon hill, perfected by experience and for the first time
+applied on a large scale against a continental enemy. The credit of it
+may well be assigned to Northampton, fresh from the fight at Morlaix,
+where similar tactics had already won the day.
+
+The English were in position early in the morning of Saturday, August
+26, and employed their leisure in further strengthening their lines by
+digging shallow holes, like the pits at Bannockburn, in the hope of
+ensnaring the French cavalry, if they came to close quarters with the
+dismounted men-at-arms. The summer day had almost ended its course
+before the French army appeared. Philip and his men had passed the
+previous night at Abbeville, and had not only performed the long march
+from the capital of Ponthieu, but many of them, misled by bad
+information as to Edward's position, had made a weary detour to the
+north-west. It was not until the hour of vespers that the mass of the
+French host was marshalled in front of the village of Estrees on the
+eastward plateau beyond the _Vallee aux Clercs_. John of Hainault, who
+had become a thorough-going French partisan, advised Philip to delay
+battle until the following day. The French were tired; all the army had
+not yet come up; night would soon put an end to the combat; the evening
+sun, shining brightly after a violent summer storm, was blazing
+directly in the faces of the assailants. But the French nobles demanded
+an immediate advance. Confident in their numbers and prowess, they had
+already assured themselves of victory, and were quarrelling about the
+division of the captives they would make. Philip, too sympathetic with
+the feudal point of view to oppose his friends, ordered the advance.
+
+The battle began by the French sending forward a strong force of
+Genoese crossbowmen, to prepare the way for the cavalry charge. But the
+long bows of the English outshot the obsolete and cumbrous weapons of
+the Genoese, whose strings had been wetted by the recent storm. The
+Italians descended into the valley, but were soon demoralised by seeing
+their comrades fall all round them, while their own bolts failed to
+reach the enemy. They were already in full retreat back up the slope,
+when the impatience of the French horsemen burst all bounds. The
+reckless cavalry charge swept right through the disordered ranks of the
+crossbowmen, whose groans and cries as they were trampled underfoot by
+the mail-clad steeds, inspired the rear ranks of the French with the
+vain belief that the English were hard pressed, and made them eager to
+join the fray. The charge, as disorderly and as badly directed as the
+fatal attack of Bannockburn, never reached the English ranks. Shot down
+right and left by archers, terrified by the fearful booming of three
+small cannon that the English had dragged about during their
+wanderings, the French line soon became a confused mob of furious
+horsemen on panic-stricken horses. With gallantry even more conspicuous
+than their want of discipline, the French made no less than fifteen
+attempts to penetrate the enemies' lines. At one point only did they
+get near their goal, and that was on the right battle where the Prince
+of Wales himself was in command. A timely reinforcement sent by King
+Edward relieved the pressure, and the French were soon in full retreat,
+protected, as the English boasted, from further attack by the rampart
+of dead that they left behind them. The darkness, which ended the
+struggle, forbade all pursuit. Next day the fight was renewed by fresh
+French forces, but a fog hampered their movements, and they fell easy
+victims to the English. Then the defeated force retreated to Abbeville.
+The English loss was insignificant, but the field was covered with the
+bravest and noblest of the French. Among those who perished on the side
+of Philip were Louis of Nevers, the chivalrous Count of Flanders, who
+had sacrificed everything save his honour on the altar of feudal duty,
+and the blind King John of Bohemia, whose end was as romantic and
+futile as his life. Both these princes left as their successors sons of
+very different stamp in Louis de Male, and Charles of Moravia. Charles,
+who had recently been set up as King of the Romans by the clerical
+party against Louis of Bavaria, was present at Crecy, but a prudent
+retreat saved him from his father's fate.
+
+In the midst of the Norman campaign, Philip urgently besought David,
+King of Scots, to make a diversion in his favour. Since 1341 David,
+then a youth of seventeen, had been back in Scotland. Prolonged truces
+gave him little opportunity of trying his skill as a soldier, and his
+domestic rule was not particularly successful. The full effects of the
+Franco-Scottish alliance were revealed when, early in October, the
+Scottish king invaded the north of England, confident that, as all the
+fighting-men were in France, he would meet no more formidable opponents
+than monks, peasants, and shepherds. The five days' resistance of Lord
+Wake's border peel of Castleton in Liddesdale showed the baselessness
+of this imagination. At its capture on October 10, David put to death
+its gallant captain, a knight named Walter Selby. Then the Scots
+streamed over the hills into Upper Tynedale, and soon devastated
+Durham. Such of the border lords as were not with the king in France
+had now prepared for resistance. Beside the Nevilles, Percys, and other
+great houses of the north, the Archbishop of York, William de la Zouch,
+took a vigorous part in organising the local levies, and in a very
+short space of time a sufficient army assembled to make head against
+the invaders. From their muster at Richmond, the northern barons
+marched into the land of St. Cuthbert, many priests following their
+archbishop as of old their predecessors had followed Melton or
+Thurstan. On October 17 the forces joined battle at Neville's Cross, a
+wayside landmark on the Red hills, a rough and broken region sloping
+down to the Wear, immediately to the west of the city of Durham.
+Neither host was large in size, and each stood facing the other, with
+the archers at either wing, after the fashion that had become Scottish
+as well as English. For a time neither army was willing to begin. At
+last the English archers, irritated at the delay, advanced upon the
+Scots with showers of missiles. Then the struggle grew general and
+after a fierce hand-to-hand fight the English prevailed. David was
+taken prisoner and was lodged in the Tower, and many of the noblest of
+the Scots lay dead on the field. The diversion was a failure; the local
+levies had proved amply sufficient to cope with the enemy. In thus
+playing the game of the French king, David began a policy which, from
+Neville's Cross to Flodden, brought embarrassment to England and
+desolation to Scotland. It was the inevitable penalty of two
+independent and hostile states existing in one little island.
+
+So war-worn were the victors of Crecy that all the profit they could
+win from the battle was the power to continue their march undisturbed
+to the sea coast. On September 4, Edward reached the walls of Calais,
+the last French town on the frontiers of Flanders, and the port whose
+corsairs had inflicted exceptional damage on English shipping during
+the whole of the war. With a keen eye to the military importance of the
+place, the King abandoned the easy course of returning with his troops
+to England, and at once sat down before Calais. It was an arduous and
+prolonged siege. Calais was girt by double walls and ditches of
+exceptional strength and was bravely defended by John de Vienne and a
+numerous garrison. Moreover the yielding soil of the sands and marshes
+around the town made it impossible for Edward to erect against the
+fortifications the cumbrous machines by which engineers then sought to
+batter down the walls of towns. The only method of taking the place was
+by starvation. At first Edward was not able to block every avenue of
+access to the beleaguered fortress. Winter came on; the troops demanded
+permission to go home; the sailors threatened mutiny, and the French
+were actively on the watch.
+
+Amidst these troubles, Edward III showed a persistence worthy of his
+grandfather. He remained at the seat of war, transacting much of the
+business of government in the town of wooden huts which, growing up
+round the besiegers' lines, made the winter siege endurable. In the
+worst period of the year sufficient forces to man the trenches could
+only be secured by wholesale charters of pardon to felonious and
+offending soldiers, on condition that they did not withdraw from service
+without the king's licence, so long as Edward himself remained beyond
+the seas.[1] A parliament of magnates met in March, 1347, and granted an
+aid. Instead of summoning the commons, Edward preferred to raise his
+chief supplies by another loan of 20,000 sacks of wool from the
+merchants, by additional customs dues voted by a merchant assembly, and
+by considerable loans from ecclesiastics and religious houses. In April
+and May all England was alive with martial preparation, and gradually a
+force far transcending the Crecy army was gathered round the walls of
+Calais, while a great fleet held the sea and prohibited the access of
+French ships to the doomed garrison. Northampton, ever fertile in
+expedients, discovered that, even after the high seas were blocked,
+boats still crept into Calais port by hugging the shallow shore. He ran
+long jetties of piles from the coast line into deep water, and thus cut
+off the last means of communication and of supplies. By June the town
+was suffering severely from famine.
+
+ [1] See for this, _Rotulus Normannice_ in _Cal. Patent Rolls,_
+ 1345-48, especially PP. 473-526. For the vast force gathered
+ later, see Wrottesley and Morris, U.S.
+
+The French made a great effort, both by sea and land, to relieve
+Calais. On June 25 Northampton went out with his ships as far as the
+mouth of the Somme, where off Le Crotoy he won a naval victory which
+made the English command of the sea absolutely secure. A month later
+Philip, at the head of the land army, looked down upon the lines of
+Calais from the heights of Guines. The two cardinals made their usual
+efforts for a truce, but the English would not allow their prey to be
+snatched from them at the eleventh hour. Then Philip challenged the
+enemy to a pitched battle, and four knights on each side were appointed
+to select the place of combat. The French, however, were of no mind to
+risk another Crecy, and on the morning of July 31 the smoke of their
+burning camp told the English that once more Philip had shrunk from a
+meeting. Then at last the garrison opened its gates on August 3, 1347.
+The defenders were treated chivalrously by the victor, who admired
+their courage and endurance. But the mass of the population were
+removed from their homes, and numerous grants of houses and property
+made to Englishmen. Edward resolved to make his conquest an English
+town, and, from that time onwards, it became the fortress through which
+an English army might at any time be poured into France, and the
+warehouse from which the spinners and weavers of Flanders were to draw
+their supplies of raw wool. For more than two hundred years, English
+Calais retained all its military and most of its commercial importance.
+Later conquests enabled a ring of forts to be erected round it which
+strengthened its natural advantages.
+
+Crecy, Neville's Cross, Aiguillon, and Calais did not exhaust the
+glories of this strenuous time. The war of the Breton succession, which
+Northampton had waged since 1345, was continued in 1346 by Thomas
+Dagworth, a knight appointed as his lieutenant on his withdrawal to
+join the army of Crecy and Calais. The Montfort star was still in the
+ascendant, and even the hereditary dominions of Joan of Penthievre were
+assailed. An English garrison was established at La Roche Derien,
+situated some four miles higher up the river Jaudy than the little open
+episcopal city of Treguier, and communicating by the river with the sea
+and with England. So troublesome did Montfort's garrison at La Roche
+become to the vassals of Penthievre, that in the summer of 1347 Charles
+of Blois collected an army, wherein nearly all the greatest feudal
+houses of Brittany were strongly represented, and sat down before La
+Roche. Dagworth, one of the ablest of English soldiers, was at Carhaix,
+in the heart of the central uplands, when he heard of the danger of the
+single English post within the lands of Penthievre. He at once hurried
+northwards, and on the night of June 19 rested at the abbey of Begard,
+about ten miles to the south of La Roche. From Begard two roads led to
+La Roche, one on each bank of the Jaudy. Thinking that Dagworth would
+pursue the shorter road on the left bank, Charles of Blois stationed a
+portion of his army at some distance from La Roche on that side of the
+Jaudy, while the rest remained with himself on the right bank before
+the walls of the town. Dagworth, however, chose the longer route, and
+before daybreak, on the morning of June 20, fell suddenly upon Charles.
+A fierce fight in the dark was ended after dawn in favour of Montfort
+by a timely sally of the beleaguered garrison. In the confusion Charles
+forgot to recall the division uselessly stationed beyond the Jaudy, and
+this error completed his ruin. Charles fought like a hero, and, after
+receiving seventeen wounds, yielded up his sword to a Breton lord
+rather than to the English commander. When his wounds were healed,
+Charles was sent to London, where he joined David of Scotland, the
+Count of Eu, and the Lord of Tancarville. It looked as if Montfort's
+triumph was secured.
+
+In the midst of his successes Edward made a truce, yielding to the
+earnest request of the cardinals, "through his reverence to the
+apostolic see". The truce of Calais was signed on September 28, and
+included Scotland and Brittany as well as France within its scope. On
+October 12 Edward returned to his kingdom. Financial exhaustion, the
+need of repose, the unwillingness of his subjects to continue the
+combat, and the failure of the Flemish and Netherlandish alliances
+sufficiently explain this halt in the midst of victory. Yet from the
+military standpoint Edward's action, harmful everywhere to his
+partisans, was particularly fatal in Brittany, where most of Penthievre
+and nearly all upper Brittany were still obedient to Charles of
+Blois.[1] But Edward had embarked upon a course infinitely beyond his
+material resources. When a special effort could only give him the one
+town of Calais, how could he ever conquer all France?
+
+ [1] See on this A. de la Borderie, _Hist. de Bretagne_, iii.,
+ 507, _et seq_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+FROM THE BLACK DEATH TO THE TREATY OF CALAIS.
+
+
+At the conclusion of the truce of Calais in 1347, Edward III and
+England were at the height of their military reputation. Perhaps the
+nation was in even a stronger position than the monarch. Edward had
+dissipated his resources in winning his successes, but the danger which
+faced the ruler had but slightly impaired the fortunes of his subjects.
+The country was in a sufficiently prosperous condition to bear its
+burdens without much real suffering. The widespread dislike of
+extraordinary taxation, which so often assumed the form of the familiar
+cry that the king must live of his own, had taken the shape of
+unwillingness to accept responsibility for the king's policy and a
+growing indisposition to meet his demands. But since the rule of Edward
+began, England enjoyed a prosperity so unbroken that far heavier
+burdens would hardly have brought about a diminution of the well-being
+which stood in glaring contrast to the desolation long inflicted by
+Edward's wars on France. A war waged exclusively on foreign soil did
+little harm to England, and offered careers whereby many an English
+adventurer was gaining a place among the landed classes. The simple
+archers and men-at-arms, who received high wages and good hopes of
+plunder in the king's foreign service, found in it a congenial and
+lucrative, if demoralising profession. In England, though wages were
+low, provisions were cheap and employment constant. The growth of the
+wool trade, then further stimulated by refugees from the "three towns
+of Flanders," against which Louis de Male was waging relentless war,
+was bringing comfort to many, and riches to a few. The maritime
+greatness of England that found its first results in the battle of
+Sluys was the fruit of a commercial activity on the sea which enabled
+English shipmen to deprive the Italians, Netherlanders, and Germans of
+the overwhelming share they had hitherto enjoyed of our foreign trade.
+The dark shadows of medieval life were indeed never absent from the
+picture; but medieval England seldom enjoyed greater wellbeing and
+tranquillity than during the first eighteen years of the personal rule
+of Edward III. One sign of the increasing attention paid to suppressing
+disorder was an act of 1344, which empowered the local conservators of
+the peace, already an element in the administrative machinery, to hear
+and determine felonies. A later act made this a part of their regular
+functions, and gave them the title of justices of the peace, thus
+setting up a means of maintaining local order so effective that the old
+machinery of the local courts gradually gave way to it.
+
+A rude ending to this period of prosperity was brought about by the
+devastations of the pestilence known to modern readers as the Black
+Death, which since 1347 had decimated the Levant. This was the bubonic
+plague, almost as familiar in the east of to-day as in the
+mid-fourteenth century. It was brought along the chief commercial
+highways which bound the western world to the markets of the east. First
+introduced into the west at the great ports of the Mediterranean,
+Venice, Genoa, Marseilles, it spread over France and Italy by the early
+months of 1348. Avignon was a chief centre of the infection, and, amidst
+the desolation around him, Clement VI. strove with rare energy to give
+peace to a distracted world. The regions of western and northern France,
+which had felt the full force of the war, were among the worst
+sufferers. Aquitaine, too, was cruelly desolated, and among the victims
+was Edward III.'s daughter, Joan, who perished at Bordeaux on her way to
+Castile, as the bride of the prince afterwards infamous as Peter the
+Cruel. Early in August, 1348, the scourge crossed the channel, making
+its first appearance in England at Weymouth. Thence it spread northwards
+and westwards. Bristol was the first great English town to feel its
+ravages. Though the Gloucestershire men prohibited all intercourse
+between the infected port and their own villages, the plague was in no
+wise stayed by their precautions. The disease extended, by way of
+Gloucester and Oxford, to London, reaching the capital early in
+November, and continuing its ravages until the following Whitsuntide.
+When it had almost died out in London, it began, in the spring of 1349,
+to rage severely in East Anglia,[1] while in Lancashire the worst time
+seems to have been from the autumn of 1349 to the beginning of 1350.[2]
+Scotland was so long exempt that the Scots, proud of their immunity,
+were wont to swear "by the foul death of England". In 1350 they gathered
+together an army in Ettrick forest with the object of invading the
+plague-stricken border shires. But the pestilence fell upon the host
+assembled for the foray, and all war was stopped while Scotland was
+devastated from end to end. Ireland began to suffer in August, 1349, the
+disease being at first confined to the Englishry of the towns, though,
+after a time, it made its way also to the pure Irish.[3]
+
+ [1] A. Jessopp, _The Black Death in East Anglia_, in _The
+ Coming of the Friars and Other Essays_(1889). For general
+ details see F. Seebohm, _The Black Death_, in _Fortnightly
+ Review (1865 and 1866)_; J.E.T. Rogers, _England before and
+ after the Black Death_, in _Fortnightly Review (1866)_; F.A.
+ Gasquet's _Great Pestilence_ (1893); and C. Creighton, _History
+ of Epidemics in Britain_, i., 114-207(1891).
+
+ [2] A.G. Little, _The Black Death in Lancashire_, in _Engl.
+ Hist. Review_, v. (1890), 524-30
+
+ [3] See for Ireland, however, the vivid details in J. Clyn of
+ Kilkenny, _Annales Hibevnia: ad annum 1349_, ed. R. Butler,
+ _Irish Archaological Soc._ (1849).
+
+The wild exaggerations of the chroniclers reflect the horror and
+desolation wrought by the epidemic. There died so many, we are told,
+that the survivors scarcely sufficed to bury the victims, and not one
+man in ten remained alive. The more moderate estimate of Froissart sets
+down the proportion dead of the plague as one in three throughout all
+Christendom, and some modern inquirers have rashly reckoned the
+mortality in England as amounting to a half or a third of the
+population. In truth, complete statistics are necessarily wanting, and
+if the records of the admissions of the clergy attest that, in certain
+dioceses, half the livings changed hands during the years of
+pestilence, it is not permissible to infer from that circumstance that
+there was a similar rate of mortality from the plague over the whole of
+the population. The sudden and overwhelming character of the disorder
+increased the universal terror. One day a man was healthy: within a few
+hours of the appearance of the fatal swelling, or of the dark livid
+marks which gave the plague its popular name, he was a corpse. The
+pestilence seemed to single out the young and robust as its prey, and
+to spare the aged and sick. The churchyards were soon overflowing, and
+special plague pits had to be dug where the dead were heaped up by the
+hundred. Comparatively few magnates died, but the poor, the religious,
+and the clergy were chief sufferers. The law courts ceased to hold
+regular sessions. When the people had partially recovered from the
+first visitations of the plague, others befel them which were scarcely
+less severe. The years 1362 and 1369 almost rivalled the horrors of
+1348 and 1349.
+
+The immediate effects of the calamity were overwhelming. At first the
+horror of the foul death effaced all other considerations from men's
+minds. There were not enough priests to absolve the dying, and special
+indulgences, with full liberty to choose confessors at discretion, were
+promulgated from Avignon and from many diocesan chanceries. The price
+of commodities fell for the moment, since there were few, we are told,
+who cared for riches amidst the general fear of death. The pestilence
+played such havoc with the labouring population that the beasts
+wandered untended in the pastures, and rich crops of corn stood rotting
+in the fields from lack of harvesters to gather them. There was the
+same lack of clergy as of labourers, and the priest, like the peasant,
+demanded a higher wage for his services by reason of the scarcity of
+labour. A mower was not to be had for less than a shilling a day with
+his food, and a chaplain, formerly glad to receive two marks and his
+board, demanded ten pounds, or ten marks at the least. Non-residence,
+neglect of cures, and other evils followed. As Langland wrote:--
+
+ Persones and parisch prestes - playneth to heore bisschops,
+ That heore parisch hath ben pore - seththe the pestilence tyme,
+ And asketh leue and lycence - at Londun to dwelle,
+ To singe ther for simonye - for seluer is swete.[1]
+
+The lack of clergy was in some measure compensated by the rush of
+candidates for orders. Some of these new clerks were men who had lost
+their wives by the plague; many of them were illiterate, or if they
+knew how to read their mass-book, could not understand it. The close
+social life of the monasteries proved particularly favourable to the
+spread of the disease; the number of monks and nuns declined
+considerably, and, since there was no great desire to embrace the
+religious profession, many houses remained half empty for generations.
+
+ [1] _Vision of Piers Plowman_, i., p. g, ed. Skeat.
+
+No one in the Middle Ages believed in letting economic laws work out
+their natural results. If anything were amiss, it was the duty of kings
+and princes to set things right. Accordingly Edward and his council at
+once strove to remedy the lack of labourers by ordinances that
+harvesters and other workmen should not demand more wages than they had
+been in the habit of receiving, while the bishops, following the royal
+example, ordered chaplains and vicars to be content with their
+accustomed salaries. As soon as parliament ventured to assemble, the
+royal orders were embodied in the famous statute of labourers of 1351.
+This measure has been condemned as an attempt of a capitalist
+parliament to force poor men to work for their masters at wages far
+below the market rates. But it was no new thing to fix wages by
+authority, and the medieval conception was that a just and living wage
+should be settled by law, rather than left to accident. The statute
+provided that prices, like wages, should remain as they had been before
+the pestilence, so that, far from only regarding the interests of the
+employer, it attempted to maintain the old ratio between the rate of
+wages and the price of commodities. Moreover it sought to provide for
+the cultivation of the soil by enacting that the sturdy beggar, who,
+though able, refused to work, should be forced to put his hand to the
+plough. Futile as the statute of labourers was, it was not much more
+ineffective than most laws of the time. Though real efforts were made
+to carry it out, the chronic weakness of a medieval executive soon
+recoiled before the hopeless task of enforcing impossible laws on an
+unwilling population. Class prejudices only showed themselves in the
+stipulation that, while the employer was forbidden to pay the new rate
+of wages under pain of heavy fines, the labourers who refused, to work
+on the old terms were imprisoned and only released upon taking oath to
+accept their ancient wages. In effect, however, the king's arm was not
+long enough to reach either class. The labourers, says a chronicler,
+were so puffed up and quarrelsome that they would not observe the new
+enactment, and the master's alternative was either to see his crops
+perish unharvested, or to gratify the greedy desires of the workmen by
+violating the statute. While labourers could escape punishment through
+their numbers, the employer was more accessible to the royal officers.
+
+Thus the labourers enjoyed the benefits of the scarcity of labour,
+while the employers suffered the full inconveniences of the change.
+Producers were to some extent recompensed by a great rise in prices,
+more especially in the case of those commodities into whose cost of
+production labour largely entered. For example the rise in the price of
+corn and meat was inconsiderable, while clothing, manufactured goods,
+and luxuries became extraordinarily dear. Of eatables fish rose most in
+value, because the fishermen had been swept away by the plague. Rents
+fell heavily. Landlords found that they could only retain their tenants
+by wholesale remissions. When farmers perished of the plague, it was
+often impossible to find others to take up their farms. It was even
+harder for lords, who farmed their own demesne, to provide themselves
+with the necessary labour. Hired labour could not be obtained except at
+ruinous rates. It was injudicious to press for the strict performance
+of villein services, lest the villein should turn recalcitrant and
+leave his holding. The lord preferred to commute his villein's service
+into a small payment. On the whole the best solution of the difficulty
+was for him to abandon the ancient custom of farming his demesne
+through his bailiffs, and to let out his lands on such rents as he
+could get to tenant farmers. Thus the feudal method of land tenure,
+which, since the previous century, had ceased to have much political
+significance, became economically ineffective, and began to give way to
+a system more like that which still obtains among us.
+
+Struck by these undoubted results of the pestilence, some modern
+writers have persuaded themselves that the Black Death is the one great
+turning-point in the social and economic history of England, and that
+nearly all which makes modern England what it is, is due to the effects
+of this pestilence. A wider survey suggests the extreme improbability
+of a single visitation having such far-reaching consequences. Moreover
+the Black Death was not an English but a European calamity, and it is
+strange to imagine that the effects of the plague in England should
+have been so much deeper than in France or Germany, and so different.
+In the fourteenth century there was little that was distinctly insular
+in the conditions of England, as compared with those of the continent.
+A trouble common to both regions alike could hardly have been the
+starting-point of such differentiation between them as later ages
+undoubtedly witnessed. There was a French counterpart to the statute of
+labourers.
+
+In truth the Black Death was no isolated phenomenon. There were already
+in the air the seeds of the decay of the ancient order, and those seeds
+fructified more rapidly in England by reason of the plague.[1] It is
+only because of the impetus which it gave to changes already in progress
+that the pestilence had in a fashion more lasting results in England
+than elsewhere. The last thirty years of the reign of Edward were an
+epoch of social upheaval and unrest contrasting strongly with the
+uneventful times that had preceded the Black Death. It is not right to
+regard the period as one of misery or severe distress. The war of
+classes, which was beginning, sprang not so much from material
+discomfort of the poor, as from what unsympathetic annalists called
+their greediness, their pride, and their wantonness. The wage-earner was
+master of the situation and did not hesitate to make his power felt.
+While the spread of manufactures, the rise of prices, and the opening
+out of wider markets still secured the prosperity of the shopkeeper, the
+merchant, or the artisan of the towns, the whole brunt of the social
+change fell upon the landed classes, and most heavily upon the
+ecclesiastics and especially upon the monks. Broken down by the heavy
+demands of the state, unable to share with the layman in the new avenues
+to wealth opened up by the expanding resources of the country, the monks
+saw the chief sources of their prosperity drying up. Their rents were
+shrinking and it became increasingly difficult to cultivate their lands.
+They never recovered their ancient welfare, and were already getting out
+of touch with the national life.
+
+ [1] See for this W. Cunningham, _Growth of English Industry and
+ Commerce,_ vol. i., p. 330 ff. (ed. 4); T.W. Page, _The End of
+ Villainage in England_ (American Economic Association, 1900);
+ and, above all, P. Vinogradoff in _Engl. Hist. Review, xv._
+ (1900), 774-781.
+
+One immediate result of the plague was a renewed activity in founding
+religious houses. Upon the two plague pits west and east of the city of
+London, Sir Walter Manny set up his Charterhouse in Smithfield, and
+Edward III. his foundation for Cistercian nuns between Tower Hill and
+Aldgate. More characteristic of the times was the foundation of secular
+colleges, which were established either with mainly ecclesiastical
+objects or to encourage study at the universities. Both at Oxford and
+Cambridge there were more colleges set up in the first than in the
+second half of the fourteenth century; and it is noteworthy that
+several Cambridge colleges incorporated after the plague were founded
+with the avowed motive of filling up the gaps in the secular clergy
+occasioned by it. The riots between the Oxford townsmen and the clerks
+of the university on St. Scholastica's day, 1354, resulted in the
+victory of the former because of the recent diminution in the number of
+the scholars. Yet even as regards the monasteries, it is easy to
+exaggerate the effects of the plague. Five years after the Black Death,
+the Cistercians of the Lancashire abbey of Whalley boasted that they
+had added twenty monks to their convent, and were busy in enlarging
+their church.[1]
+
+ [1] Cal. _Papal Registers, Petitions_, i., 264. Professor Tait,
+ however, informs me that the monks took a sanguine view of
+ their numbers. After the plague of 1362, we know that they were
+ not much more numerous than in the previous century.
+
+Change was in the air in religion as well as in society. Along with
+democratic ideas filtering in with the exiles from the great Flemish
+cities, came a breath of that restless and unquiet spirit which soon
+awakened the concern of the inquisition in the Netherlands. There
+brotherhoods, some mystical and quietistic, others enthusiastic and
+fanatical, were growing in numbers and importance. Some of these bodies,
+Beguines, Beghards, and what not, were harmless enough, but the whole
+history of the Middle Ages bears testimony to the readiness with which
+religious excitement unchastened by discipline or direction, grew into
+dangerous heresy. The strangest of the new communities, the Flagellants,
+made its appearance in England immediately after the pestilence. In the
+autumn of 1349, some six score men crossed over from Holland and marched
+in procession through the open spaces of London, chanting doleful
+litanies in their own tongue. They wore nothing save a linen cloth that
+covered the lower part of their body, and on their heads hats marked
+with a red cross behind and before. Each of them bore in his right hand
+a scourge, with which he belaboured the naked back and shoulders of his
+comrade in the fore rank. Twice a day they repeated this mournful
+exercise, and even at other times were never seen in public but with cap
+on head and discipline in hand. Few Englishmen joined the Flagellants,
+but their appearance is not unworthy of notice as the first concrete
+evidence of the religious unrest which soon became more widespread.
+Before long the Yorkshireman, John Wycliffe, was studying arts at the
+little north-country foundation of the Balliols at Oxford, and John
+Ball, the Essex priest, was preaching his revolutionary socialism to the
+villeins. "We are all come," said he, "from one father and one mother,
+Adam and Eve. How can the gentry show that they are greater lords than
+we?"[1] In 1355 there were heretics in the diocese of York who
+maintained that it is impossible to merit eternal life by good works,
+and that original sin does not deserve damnation.[2]
+
+ [1] The sentiment, or its equivalent in Ball's famous distich,
+ was not new; it was employed for mystical purposes in Richard
+ Rolle's
+
+ "When Adam delf and Eue span, spir, if thou wil spede,
+ Whare was then the pride of man, that now merres his mede?"
+
+ _Library of Early English Writers. Richard Rolle of Hampole and
+ his followers_, ed. Horstman, i., 73 (1895).
+
+ [2] Cal. _Papal Registers, Letters_, iii., 565.
+
+The Flagellants were denounced as heretics by Clement VI.; the
+Archbishop of York proceeded against the northern heretics, and in 1366
+the Archbishop of Canterbury forbade John Ball's preaching. But there
+were more insidious, because more measured, enemies of the Church than
+a handful of fanatics. The English were long convinced that the Avignon
+popes were playing the game of the French adversary, and Clement VI.'s
+efforts for peace never had a fair hearing. Since the beginning of the
+war, the king laid his hand on the alien priories, and, though in his
+scrupulous regard for clerical rights he had allowed the monks to
+remain in possession, he diverted the stream of tribute from the French
+mother houses to his own treasury. Bolder measures against papal
+provisions were taken in the years which immediately followed the
+pestilence. Finding remonstrances futile, the parliament of 1351, which
+passed the statute of labourers, enacted also the first statute of
+provisors. It recited that the anti-papal statute of Carlisle of 1307
+was still law, and that the king had sworn to observe it. It claimed
+for all electing bodies and patrons the right to elect or to present
+freely to the benefices in their gift. It declared invalid all
+appointments brought about by way of papal provision. Provisors who had
+accepted appointments from Avignon were to be arrested. If convicted,
+they were to be detained in prison, until they had made their peace
+with the king, and found surely not to accept provisions in the future,
+and also not to seek their reinstatement by any process in the Roman
+_curia_. Two years later this measure was supplemented by the first
+statute of _praemunire_, which enacted that those who brought matters
+cognisable in the king's courts before foreign courts should be liable
+to forfeiture and outlawry. Though the papal court is not specially
+mentioned, it is clear that this measure _was_ aimed against it.
+
+General measures proving insufficient, more specific legislation soon
+followed. In 1365 a fresh statute of _praemunire_ was drawn up on the
+initiative of the crown, enacting that all who obtained citations,
+offices, or benefices from the Roman court should incur the penalties
+prescribed by the act of 1353. The prelates dissociated themselves from
+so stringent a law, but did not actively oppose it. When in 1366,
+Edward requested the guidance of the estates as to how he was to deal
+with the demand of Urban V. for the arrears of King John's tribute,
+withheld altogether for more than thirty years, the prelates joined the
+lay estates in answering that neither John nor any one else could put
+the realm into subjection without their consent. Even the ancient
+offering of Peter's pence ceased to be paid for the rest of Edward's
+reign. If these laws had been strictly carried out, the papal authority
+in England would have been gravely circumscribed. But medieval laws
+were too often the mere enunciations of an ideal. The statutes of
+provisors and _praemunire_ were as little executed as were the statutes
+of labourers, or as some elaborate sumptuary legislation passed by the
+parliament of 1363. The catalogue of acts of papal interference in
+English ecclesiastical and temporal affairs is as long after the
+passing of these laws as before. Litigants still carried their suits to
+Avignon: provisions were still issued nominating to English benefices,
+and Edward himself set the example of disregarding his own laws by
+asking for the appointment of his ministers to bishoprics by way of
+papal provision. Papal ascendency was too firmly rooted in the
+fourteenth century to be eradicated by any enactment. To the average
+clergyman or theologian of the day the pope was still the "universal
+ordinary," the one divinely appointed source of ecclesiastical
+authority, the shepherd to whom the Lord had given the commission to
+feed His sheep. This theory could only be overcome by revolution; and
+the parliaments and ministers of Edward III. were in no wise of a
+revolutionary temper.
+
+The anti-papal laws of the fourteenth century were the acts of the
+secular not of the ecclesiastical power. They were not simply
+anti-papal, they were also anti-clerical in their tendency, since to the
+men of the age an attack on the pope was an attack on the Church. No
+doubt the English bishop at Edward's court sympathised with his master's
+dislike of foreign ecclesiastical interference, and the English priest
+was glad to be relieved from payments to the curia. But the clergyman,
+whose soul grew indignant against the curialists, still believed that
+the pope was the divinely appointed autocrat of the Church universal.
+Being a man, a pope might be a bad pope; but the faithful Christian,
+though he might lament and protest, could not but obey in the last
+resort. The papacy was so essentially interwoven with the whole Church
+of the Middle Ages, that few figments have less historical basis than
+the notion that there was an anti-papal Anglican Church in the days of
+the Edwards. However, before another generation had passed away,
+ecclesiastical protests began.
+
+Monasticism no less than the papacy was of the very essence of the
+Church of the Middle Ages. Yet the monastic ideal had no longer the
+force that it had in previous generations, and even the latest
+embodiments of the religious life had declined from their original
+popularity. Pope John XXII. himself, in his warfare against William of
+Ockham and the Spiritual Franciscans who had supported Louis of Bavaria,
+denied in good round terms the Franciscan doctrine of "evangelical
+poverty". Ockham was now dead, and with him perished the last of the
+great cosmopolitan schoolmen, of whose birth indeed England might boast,
+but who early forsook Oxford for Paris. Conspicuous among the younger
+academical generation was Richard Fitzralph, Archbishop of Armagh, whose
+bitter attacks on the fundamental principles underlying the mendicant
+theory of the regular life are indicative of the changing temper of the
+age. A distinguished Oxford scholar, a learned and pungent writer, a
+popular preacher, a reputed saint, and a good friend of the pope,
+Fitzralph made himself, about 1357, the champion of the secular clergy
+against the friars by writing a treatise to prove that absolute poverty
+was neither practised nor commended by the apostles.[1] The indignant
+mendicants procured the archbishop's citation to Avignon, and it was a
+striking proof of the ineffectiveness of recent legislation that Edward
+III. allowed him to plead his cause before the _curia_. By 1358 the
+friars gained the day, but their efforts to get Fitzralph's opinions
+condemned were frustrated by his death in 1360. Fitzralph had the
+sympathy not only of the seculars, but of the "possessioners," or
+property-holding monks.
+
+ [1] See his _De Pauperie Salvatoris_, lib. i.-iv., printed by
+ R.L. Poole, as appendix to Wycliffe, _De Dominio Divino_.
+
+The period of experiments in economic and anti-clerical legislation was
+also marked by other important new laws, such as the ordinance of the
+staple of 1354, providing that wool, leather, and other commodities
+were only to be sold at certain _staple_ towns, a measure soon to be
+modified by the law of 1362, which settled the staple at Calais; the
+ordinance of 1357 for the government of Ireland, to which later
+reference will be made; the statute making English the language of the
+law courts in 1362, and a drastic act against purveyance in 1365. The
+statute of treasons of 1352, which laid down seven several offences as
+alone henceforth to be regarded as treason, also demands attention. Its
+classification is rude and unsystematic. While the slaying of the
+king's ministers or judges, and the counterfeiting of the great seal or
+the king's coin, are joined with the compassing the death of the king
+or his wife or heir, adherence to the king's enemies, the violation of
+the queen or the king's eldest daughter, as definite acts of treason,
+its omission to brand other notable indications of disloyally as
+traitorous, inspired the judges of later generations to elaborate the
+doctrine of constructive treason in order to extend in practice the
+scope of the act. It was, however, an advance for nobles and commons to
+have set any limitations whatever to the wide power claimed by the
+courts of defining treason.
+
+Partial respite from war did not diminish the martial ardour of the
+king and his nobles. The period of the Black Death was precisely the
+time when Edward completed a plan which he had begun by the erection of
+his Round Table at Windsor in 1344. By 1348 he instituted a chapel at
+Windsor, dedicated to St. George, served by a secular chapter, and
+closely connected with a foundation for the support of poor knights.
+Within a year this foundation also included the famous Order of the
+Garter, the type and model of all later orders of chivalry. On St.
+George's day the king celebrated the new institution by special
+solemnities. The most famous of his companions-at-arms were associated
+with him as founders and first knights. Clad in russet coats sprinkled
+with blue garters, a blue garter on the right leg, and a mantle of blue
+ornamented with little shields bearing the arms of St. George, the
+Knights of the Garter heard mass sung by the Archbishop of Canterbury
+in St. George's chapel, and then feasted solemnly in their common hall.
+Ten years later the glorification of the king's birthplace was
+completed by the erection of new quarters for the king, more sumptuous
+and splendid than were elsewhere to be seen. The fame of the Knights of
+the Garter excited the emulation of King John of France, who set up a
+Round Table which grew in 1351 into the knightly Order of the Star.
+
+The rival brethren of the Garter and the Star found plenty of
+opportunities of demonstrating their prowess. Though between 1347 and
+1355 there was, so far as forms went, an almost continuous armistice
+for the space of eight years, its effect was not so much to stop
+fighting as to limit its scale. In reality the years of nominal truce
+were a period of harassing warfare in Brittany, the Calais march,
+Gascony, and the narrow seas, which even the ravages of the Black Death
+did not stop.
+
+In Brittany affairs were in a wretched condition. The nominal duke,
+John, was a child brought up in England under the guardianship of
+Edward III. Edward was not in a position to spend either men or money
+upon Brittany. As an easy way of discharging his obligations to his
+ward, he handed over the duchy to Sir Thomas Dagworth, the governor,
+who maintained the war from local resources and had a free hand as
+regards his choice of agents and measures. In return for power to
+appropriate to his own purposes the revenues of the duchy, Dagworth
+undertook the custody of the fortresses, the payment of the troops, the
+expenses of the administration, and the conduct of the war. In short,
+Brittany was leased out to him as a speculation, like a farm left
+derelict of husbandmen after the Black Death. Dagworth sublet to the
+highest bidders the lordships, fortresses, and towns of Brittany. He
+established at various centres of his influence a military adventurer,
+whose chief business was to make war support war and, moreover, bring
+in a good profit. The consequences were disastrous. Dagworth's captains
+were for the most part Englishmen, men of character, energy, and
+resources, but utterly without scruples and with no other ambition than
+to raise a good revenue and maintain themselves in authority. The most
+famous of them were members of gentle but obscure houses, whose poverty
+debarred them from the ordinary avenues to fame and fortune, and whose
+vigour and ability made good use of their exceptional positions. Two
+Cheshire kinsmen, Hugh Calveley and Robert Knowles, thus won, each for
+himself, a place in history. Some of the adventurers were of obscurer
+origin, some were foreigners, German, French, or Netherlandish, and
+some few Breton gentlemen of Montfort's faction. Of these Crockart, the
+German, and Raoul de Caours, the Breton, were the most famous.
+
+The results of the system bore heavily on the Breton peasantry. Each
+lord of a castle levied systematic blackmail on the neighbouring
+parishes. These payments, called ransoms, were exacted as a condition
+of protection. The governor, though severely maltreating those who
+neglected to pay their ransom, did little to save his dependants from
+the ravages of the partisans of Charles of Blois. Despite such
+misdeeds, the war of partisans was brightened by many feats of heroism.
+The friends of Charles of Blois disregarded the truce and waged war as
+well as they could. Among them was already conspicuous the son of a
+nobleman of the neighbourhood of Dinan, the ugly, able, restless
+Bertrand du Guesclin, whose enterprise and valour won for him a great
+local reputation. In 1350 Dagworth was slain. The history of the
+following years is not to be found in the acts of his successor, Sir
+Walter Bentley, but in the private deeds of daring of the heroes of
+both sides. Conspicuous among these is the famous Battle of the Thirty,
+well known from the detailed narrative of Froissart, and the stirring
+verses of a contemporary French poem. This fight was fought on March
+27, 1351, between thirty Breton gentlemen of the Blois faction, drawn
+from the garrison of Josselin, and a less noble but even more strenuous
+band of thirty English and other adventurers of the Montfort party,
+from the garrison of Ploermel, seven miles to the east. Beaumanoir, the
+commandant at Josselin, had been moved to indignation at the cruel
+treatment of peasants who had refused to pay ransom by Robert Bembro,
+the commander of Ploermel. He challenged the tyrant to combat, and
+thirty heroes of each party fought out their quarrel at a spot marked
+by the half-way oak, equidistant from the two garrisons. After a long
+struggle, in which Bembro was slain, victory fell to the men from
+Josselin. Among the vanquished were Knowles, Calveley, and Crockart.
+This fight had absolutely no influence on the fortune of the war.
+
+In 1352 the French strove to carry on the Breton war on a grander scale,
+and a large army, commanded by Guy of Nesle, marshal of France, was sent
+to reinforce the partisans of Charles of Blois. They met Bentley at
+Mauron, a few miles north of Ploermel, where one of the most interesting
+battles of the war was fought Taught by the lesson of Crecy, Nesle had
+already, in obscure fights in Poitou, ordered the French knights and
+men-at-arms to fight on foot.[1] He here adopted the same plan for the
+first time in a battle of importance, but, after a severe struggle,
+Bentley won the day. In 1353 Edward III. made a treaty with his captive,
+Charles of Blois. In return for a huge ransom Charles was to obtain his
+liberty, be recognised as Duke of Brittany, marry one of Edward's
+daughters, and promise to remain neutral in the Anglo-French struggle.
+The treaty involved too great a dislocation of policy to be carried out.
+Charles, after visiting Brittany, renounced the compact and returned to
+his London prison. Thus the weary war of partisans still went on, and
+thenceforth the fortunes of Charles depended less upon negotiations than
+on the growing successes of Bertrand du Guesclin.
+
+ [1] See my paper on _Some Neglected Fights between Crecy and
+ Poitiers_ in _Engl. Hist. Review_, vol. xxi., Oct., 1905.
+
+During these years Calais was the centre of much fighting. Eager to win
+back the town, the French bribed an Italian mercenary, then in Edward's
+service, to admit them into the castle. The plot was discovered, and
+Edward and the Prince of Wales crossed over in disguise to help in
+frustrating the French assault. The French were enticed into Calais and
+taken as in a trap. Edward then sallied out of the town, and rashly
+engaged in personal encounter with a more numerous enemy. He was
+unexpectedly successful, and made wonderful display of his prowess as a
+knight. In revenge, the English devastated the neighbouring country by
+raids like that led by the Duke of Lancaster in 1351, which spread
+desolation from Therouanne to Etaples. Of more enduring importance were
+the gradual extensions of the English pale by the piecemeal conquest of
+the fortresses of the neighbourhood. The chief step in this direction
+was the capture of Guines in 1352. An archer named John Dancaster, who
+escaped from French custody in Guines, led his comrades to the assault
+of the town by a way which he learnt during his imprisonment. The
+attack succeeded, and Dancaster, to avoid involving his master in a
+formal breach of the truce, professed to hold the town on his own
+account and to be willing to sell it to the highest bidder. Of course
+the highest bidder was Edward III. himself, and thus Guines became the
+southern outpost of the Calais march.
+
+In Aquitaine and Languedoc there was no thought of repose. In 1349
+Lancaster led a foray to the gates of Toulouse, which wrought immense
+damage but led to no permanent results. There was incessant border
+warfare. The Anglo-Gascon forces spread beyond the limits of Edward's
+duchy and captured outposts in Poitou, Perigord, Quercy, and the
+Agenais. In retaliation, the Count of Armagnac, a strong upholder of
+the French cause, did what mischief he could in those parts of Gascony
+adjacent to his own territories. On the whole the result of these
+struggles was a considerable extension of the English power.
+
+The most famous episode of these years was a naval battle fought off
+Winchelsea on August 29, 1350, against a strong fleet of Spanish
+privateers commanded by Charles of La Cerda. The Spaniards having
+plundered English wine ships, Edward summoned a fleet to meet them, and
+himself went on board, along with the Prince of Wales, Lancaster, and
+many of his chief nobles. The fight that ensued was remarkable not more
+for the reckless valour of the king and his nobles than for the
+dexterity of the English tactics. The great busses of Spain towered
+above the little English vessels, like castles over cottages. Yet the
+English did not hesitate to grapple their adversaries' craft and swarm
+up their sides on to the decks. Edward captured one of the chief of the
+Spanish ships, though his own vessel, the Cog _Thomas_, was so severely
+damaged that it had to be hastily abandoned for its prize. The glory of
+the victory of the "Spaniards on the sea" kept up the fame first won at
+Sluys.
+
+In these years of truce first appeared the worst scourge of the war,
+bands of mercenary soldiers, fighting on their own account and
+recklessly devastating the regions which they chose to visit. The cry
+for peace rose higher than ever. Innocent VI., who succeeded Clement VI.
+in 1352, took up with great energy the papal policy of mediation. Thanks
+to his legates' good offices, preliminary articles of peace were
+actually agreed upon on April 6, 1354, at Guines. By them Edward agreed
+to renounce his claim to the French throne if he were granted full
+sovereignly over Guienne, Ponthieu, Artois, and Guines. When the
+chamberlain, Burghersh, laid before parliament, which was then sitting,
+the prospect of peace, "the commons with one accord replied that,
+whatever course the king and the magnates should take as regards the
+said treaty, was agreeable to them. On this reply the chamberlain said
+to the commons: 'Then you wish to agree to a perpetual treaty of peace,
+if one can be had?' And the said commons answered unanimously, 'Yea,
+yea'."[1] Vexatious delays, however, supervened, and at last the
+negotiations broke down hopelessly. The French refused to surrender
+their over-lordship over the ceded provinces, and the Easter parliament
+of 1355 agreed with the king that war must be renewed. Two years of war
+were to follow more fierce than even the struggles which had culminated
+in Crecy, La Roche, and Calais.
+
+ [1] _Rot. Pad.,_ ii., 262.
+
+Two expeditions were organised to invade France in the summer of 1355,
+one for Aquitaine under the Prince of Wales,[1] and the other for
+Normandy under Lancaster. Westerly winds long prevented their despatch.
+It was not until September that the Prince of Wales reached Bordeaux.
+The change of wind, which bore the prince to Gascony, enabled the host,
+collected by the King and Lancaster on the Thames, to make its way to
+Normandy. But the special reason which brought the English thither was
+already gone. The expedition was planned to co-operate with the King of
+Navarre. Charles, surnamed the Bad, traced on his father's side his
+descent to that son of Philip the Bold who obtained the county of Evreux
+in upper Normandy for his appanage. From his mother, the daughter of
+Louis X., he derived his kingdom of Navarre and a claim on the French
+monarchy of the same type as that of Edward III. Cunning, plausible,
+unscrupulous, and violent, Charles had quarrelled fiercely with King
+John, whose daughter he had married. His vast estates in Normandy made
+him a valuable ally to Edward, and he had suggested joint action in that
+duchy against the French. Unluckily, while the west winds kept the
+English fleet beyond the Straits of Dover, John made terms with his
+son-in-law. Lancaster was compensated for his disappointment by the
+governorship of Brittany. The army equipped for the Norman expedition
+was diverted to Calais, whence in November, Edward and Lancaster led a
+purposeless foray in the direction of Hesdin, which hastily ended on the
+arrival of the news that the Scots had surprised the town of Berwick,
+and were threatening its castle. Thereupon Edward hastened back home. He
+had to keep the Scots quiet, before he could attack the French.
+
+ [1] For the Black Prince's career in Aquitaine, see Moisant,
+ _Le Prince Noir en Aquitaine_ (1894)
+
+When the Black Prince reached Bordeaux, he received a warm welcome from
+the Gascons, and at once set out at the head of an army, partly English
+and partly Gascon, on a foray into the enemy's territory. He made his
+way from Bazas to the upper Adour through the county of Armagnac, whose
+lord had incurred his wrath by his devotion to the house of Valois and
+his invasions of the Gascon duchy. Thence he worked eastwards, avoiding
+the greater towns, and plundering and devastating wherever he could.
+The Count of Armagnac, the French commander in the south, watched his
+progress from Toulouse, and prudently avoided any open encounter. The
+prince approached within a few miles of the capital of Languedoc, but
+found an easier prey in the rich towns and fertile plains in the valley
+of the Aude. He captured the "town" of Carcassonne, though he failed to
+reduce the fortress-crowned height of the "city". At Narbonne also he
+took the "town" and left the "city". His progress spread terror
+throughout the south, and the clerks of the university of Montpellier
+and the papal _curia_ at Avignon trembled lest he should continue his
+raid in their direction. But November came, and Edward found it prudent
+to retire, choosing on his westward journey a route parallel to that
+which he had previously adopted. He had achieved his real purpose in
+desolating the region from which the French had derived the chief
+resources for their attacks on Gascony. The raiders boasted that
+Carcassonne was larger than York, Limoux not less great than
+Carcassonne, and Narbonne nearly as populous as London. Over this fair
+region, where wine and oil were more abundant than water, the black
+band of desolation, which had already marked so many of the fairest
+provinces of France, was cruelly extended.
+
+The prince kept his Christmas at Bordeaux. Even during the winter his
+troops remained active. Most of the Agenais was conquered by January,
+1356, while in February the capture of Perigueux opened up the way of
+invasion northwards. Meanwhile the prince mustered his forces for a
+vigorous summer campaign. While the towns on the Isle and the Lot were
+yielding to his son, Edward III. was avenging the capture of Berwick by
+a winter campaign in the Lothians. Before the end of January, 1356,
+Berwick was once more in his hands. Thence he passed to Roxburgh, where
+Edward Balliol surrendered to him all his rights over the Scottish
+throne. Thenceforth styling himself no longer overlord but King of
+Scotland, Edward mercilessly harried his new subjects. But storms
+dispersed the English victualling ships, and Edward's men could not
+live in winter on the country that they had made a wilderness. In a few
+weeks they were back over the border, though their raid was long
+remembered in Scottish tradition as the Burnt Candlemas.
+
+Another breach between Charles of Navarre and his father-in-law again
+opened to the English the way to Normandy. John lost patience at
+Charles's renewed intrigues, and in April arrested him and his friends
+at Rouen. Thereupon his brother, Philip of Navarre, rose in revolt.
+With him were many of the Norman lords, including Geoffrey of Harcourt,
+lord of Saint-Sauveur. The English were once more invited to Normandy,
+and on June 18 Lancaster landed at La Hougue with the double mission of
+aiding the Norman rebels and establishing John of Montfort, then
+arrived at man's estate, in his Breton duchy. It was the first English
+invasion of northern France during the war, in which they had, as in
+Brittany, the co-operation of a strong party in the land. The Navarre
+and Harcourt influence at once secured them the Cotentin. Meanwhile,
+however, the French were besieging the fortresses of the county of
+Evreux. With the object of relieving this pressure, Lancaster,
+immediately after his landing, marched into the heart of Normandy, and
+soon reached Verneuil. It looked for the moment as if he were destined
+to emulate the exploits of Edward II. in 1346. But he abruptly turned
+back, leaving the county of Evreux to fall into French hands. The
+permanent result of his intervention was to reduce Normandy to a state
+of anarchy nearly as complete as that of Brittany. In the autumn
+Lancaster at last made his way to the land of which he had had nominal
+charge since the previous year. He left Philip of Navarre as commander
+in Normandy, and the war was supported from local resources. The
+Cotentin being in friendly hands, Lancaster attacked the strongholds of
+the Blois party, which had hitherto been exempt from the war. In
+October he laid siege to Rennes and was detained before its walls until
+July, 1357, when he agreed to desist from the attack in return for a
+huge ransom. Lancaster then established young Montfort as duke. At the
+same time Charles of Blois, released from his long imprisonment, once
+more reappeared in his wife's inheritance, though, as his ransom was
+still but partly paid, his scrupulous honour compelled him to abstain
+from personal intervention in the war. Thus Brittany got back both her
+dukes.
+
+The northern operations in 1356 sink into insignificance when compared
+with the exploits of the Black Prince in the south. After the capture
+of Perigueux, there had been some idea of the prince making a northward
+movement and joining hands with Lancaster on the Loire. When Lancaster
+retired from Verneuil, however, the Black Prince was still in the
+valley of the Dordogne. Even when all was ready, attacks on the Gascon
+duchy compelled him to divert a large portion of his army for the
+defence of his own frontiers. Not until August 9 was he able to advance
+from Perigueux to Brantome into hostile territory. It was a month too
+late to co-operate with Lancaster, and the 7,000 men, who followed his
+banners, were in equipment rather prepared for a raid than for a
+systematic conquest.
+
+Edward's outward march was in a generally northerly direction. Leaving
+Limoges on his right, he crossed the Vienne lower down the stream, and
+thence he led his troops over the Creuse at Argenton and over the Indre
+at Chateauroux. When he traversed the Cher at Vierzon, his followers
+rejoiced that they had at last got out of the limits of the ancient
+duchy of Guienne and were invading the actual kingdom of France. On
+penetrating beyond the Cher into the melancholy flats of the Sologne,
+the prince encountered the first serious resistance. He then turned
+abruptly to the west, and chased the enemy into the strong castle of
+Romorantin, which he captured on September 3. There he heard that John
+of France, who had gathered together a huge force, was holding the
+passages over the Loire. Edward marched to meet the enemy, and on
+September 7 reached the neighbourhood of Tours, where he tarried in his
+camp for three days. But the few bridges were destroyed or strongly
+guarded, and the men-at-arms found it quite impossible to make their
+way over the broad and swift Loire. Moreover the news came that John
+had crossed the river near Blois, and was hurrying southwards.
+Thereupon the Black Prince turned in the same direction, seeing in this
+southward march his best chance of getting to close quarters. The
+French host was enormously the superior in numbers, but after Morlaix,
+Mauron, and Crecy, mere numerical disparity weighed but lightly on an
+English commander.
+
+For some days the armies marched in the same direction in parallel
+lines, neither knowing very clearly the exact position of the other. On
+September 14 Edward reached Chatelherault on the Vienne. His troops
+were weary and war-worn, and his transport inordinately swollen by
+spoils. He rested two days at Chatelherault, but was again on the move
+on hearing that the enemy was at Chauvigny, situated some twenty miles
+higher up the Vienne. Edward at once started in pursuit, only to find
+that the French had retired before him to Poitiers, eighteen miles due
+west of Chauvigny. Careless of his convoy, he hurried across country in
+the hope of catching the elusive enemy, but was only in time to fight a
+rear-guard skirmish at a manor named La Chaboterie, on the road from
+Chauvigny to Poitiers, on September, 17. That night the English lay in
+a wood hard by the scene of action, suffering terribly from want of
+water. Next day, Sunday, September 18, Edward pursued the French as
+near as he could to Poitiers, halting in battle array within a league
+of the town. A further check on his impatience now ensued. Innocent
+VI.'s legate, the Cardinal Talleyrand, brother of the Count of
+Perigord, who was with the French army, crossed to the rival host with
+an offer of mediation. Edward received the cardinal courteously and
+spent most of the day in negotiations. But the French showed no
+eagerness to bring matters to a conclusion, and as every hour
+reinforcements poured into the enemy's camp the scanty patience of the
+English was exhausted. They declared that the legate's talk about
+saving the effusion of Christian blood was only a blind to gain time,
+so that the French might overwhelm them. Edward broke off the
+negotiations, and, retiring to a position more remote from the enemy,
+passed the night quietly. Early next morning the cardinal again sought
+to treat, but this time his offers were rejected. On his withdrawal,
+the French attack began.
+
+The topographical details of the battle of Poitiers of September 19,
+1356, cannot be determined with certainty. We only know that the place
+of the encounter was called Maupertuis, which is generally identified
+with a farm now called La Cardinerie, some six miles south-east of
+Poitiers, and a little distance to the north of the Benedictine abbey
+of Nouaille. The abbey formed the southern limit of the field. On the
+west the place of combat was skirted by the little river Miausson,
+which winds its way through marshes in a deep-cut valley, girt by
+wooded hills. The French left their horses at Poitiers, having
+resolved, perhaps on the advice of a Scottish knight, Sir William
+Douglas, to fight on foot, after the English and Scottish fashion, and
+as they had already fought at Mauron and elsewhere. As at Mauron, a
+small band of cavalry was retained, both for the preliminary
+skirmishing which then usually heralded a battle, and in the hope of
+riding down some of the archers. But the French did not fully
+understand the English tactics, and took no care to combine men-at-arms
+with archers or crossbowmen, though these were less important against
+an army weak in archers and largely consisting of Gascons. Of the four
+"battles" the first, under the Marshals Audrehem and Clermont, included
+the little cavalry contingent; the second was under Charles, Duke of
+Normandy, a youth of nineteen; the third under the Duke of Orleans, the
+king's brother; and the rear was commanded by the king.
+
+The English army spent the night before the battle beyond the Miausson,
+but in the morning the prince, fearing an ambuscade behind the hill of
+Nouaille on the east bank, abandoned his original position and crossed
+the stream in order to occupy it. He divided his forces into three
+"battles," led respectively by himself, Warwick, and William Montague,
+since 1343 by his father's death Earl of Salisbury. Though he found no
+enemy there, he remained with his "battle" on the hill, because it
+commanded the slopes to the north over on which the French were now
+advancing. His remote position threw the brunt of the fighting upon the
+divisions of Warwick and Salisbury. They were stationed side by side in
+advance of him on ground lower than that held by him, but higher than
+that of the enemy, and beset with bushes and vineyards which sloped
+down on the left towards the marshes of the Miausson. Some distance in
+front of their position, a long hedge and ditch divided the upland, on
+which the "battles" of Warwick and Salisbury were stationed, from the
+fields in which the French were arrayed. At its upper end, remote from
+the Miausson, where Salisbury's command lay, the hedge was broken by a
+gap through which a farmer's track connected the fields on each side of
+it. The first fighting began when the English sent a small force of
+horsemen through the gap to engage with the French cavalry beyond.
+While Audrehem, on the French right, suspended his attack to watch the
+result, Clermont made his way straight for the gap, hoping to take
+Salisbury's division, on the upper or right-hand station, in flank.
+Before he reached the gap, however, he found the hedge and the
+approaches to the cart-road held in force by the English archers.
+Meanwhile the mail-clad men and horses of Audrehem's cavalry had
+approached dangerously near the left of the English line, where Warwick
+was stationed. Their complete armour made riders and steeds alike
+impervious to the English arrows, until the prince, seeing from his
+hill how things were proceeding, ordered some archers to station
+themselves on the marshy ground near the Miausson, in advance of the
+left flank of the English army. From this position they shot at the
+unprotected parts of the French horses, and drove the little band of
+cavalry from the field. By that time Clermon's attack on the gap had
+been defeated, and so both sections of the first French division
+retired.
+
+Then came the stronger "battle" of the eldest son of the French king.
+The fight grew more fierce, and for a long time the issue remained
+doubtful. The English archers exhausted their arrows to little purpose,
+and the dismounted French men-at-arms, offering a less sure mark than
+the horsemen, forced their way to the English ranks and fought a
+desperate hand-to-hand conflict with them. At last the Duke of
+Normandy's followers were driven back. Thereupon a panic seized the
+division commanded by the Duke of Orleans, which fled from the field
+without measuring swords with the enemy. The victors themselves were in
+a desperate plight. Many were wounded, and all were weary, especially
+the men-at-arms encased in heavy plate mail. The flight of Orleans gave
+them a short respite: but they soon had to face the assault of the rear
+battle of the enemy, gallantly led by the king. "No battle," we are
+told, "ever lasted so long. In former fights men knew, by the time that
+the fourth or the sixth arrow had been discharged, on which side victory
+was to be. But here a single archer shot with coolness a hundred arrows,
+and still neither side gave way."[1] At last the bowmen had only the
+arrows they snatched from the bodies of the dead and dying, and when
+these were exhausted, they were reduced to throwing stones at their
+foes, or to struggle in the _melee_, with sword and buckler, side by
+side with the men-at-arms. But the Black Prince from his hill had
+watched the course of the encounter, and at the right moment, when his
+friends were almost worn out, marched down, and made the fight more
+even. Before joining himself in the engagement, Edward had ordered the
+Captal de Buch, the best of his Gascons, to lead a little band, under
+cover of the hill, round the French position and attack the enemy in the
+rear. At first the Anglo-Gascon army was discouraged, thinking that the
+captal had fled, but they still fought on. Suddenly the captal and his
+men assaulted the French rear. This settled the hard fought day.
+Surrounded on every side, the French perished in their ranks or
+surrendered in despair. King John was taken prisoner, fighting
+desperately to the last, and with him was captured his youngest son
+Philip, the future Duke of Burgundy, a boy of twelve, whose epithet of
+"the Bold" was earned by his precocious valour in the struggle. Before
+nightfall the English host had sole possession of the field, and the
+best fought, best directed, and most important of the battles of the war
+ended in the complete triumph of the invaders.
+
+ [1] _Eulogium Hist._, iii., 225.
+
+As after Crecy, the victors were too weak to continue the campaign.
+Next day they began their slow march back to their base. On October 2
+Edward reached Libourne, and a few days later conducted the captive
+king into the Gascon capital. They were soon followed by the Cardinal
+Talleyrand on whose insistence the prince agreed to resume
+negotiations. On March 23, 1357, a truce to last until 1359 was
+arranged at Bordeaux. On May 24 the prince led the vanquished king
+through the streets of London.
+
+The English, weary of the burden of war, strove to use their advantages
+to procure a stable peace. Though Charles of Blois was released, he was
+muzzled for the future, and when John joined his ally David Bruce in
+the Tower, it was the obvious game of Edward to exact terms from his
+prisoners. David's spirit was broken, and he was glad to accept a
+treaty sealed in October, 1357, at Berwick, by which he was released
+for a ransom of 100,000 marks, to be paid by ten yearly instalments.
+The task was harder for a poor country like Scotland than the
+redemption of Richard I. had been for England. On hostages being given,
+David was released, and Edward, without relinquishing his own
+pretensions to be King of Scots, took no steps to enforce his claim.
+The event showed that Edward knew his man. The instalments of ransom
+could not be regularly paid, and David never became free from his
+obligations. Nothing save the tenacity of the Scottish nobles prevented
+him from accepting Edward's proposals to write off the arrears of his
+ransom in return for his accepting either the English king himself or
+his son, Lionel of Antwerp, as heir of Scotland. This attitude brought
+David into conflict with his natural heir, Robert, the Steward of
+Scotland, the son of his sister Margaret. The tension between uncle and
+nephew forced the Scots king to remain on friendly terms with Edward.
+For the rest of the reign, Scottish history was occupied by
+aristocratic feuds, by financial expedients for raising the king's
+ransom, by the gradual development of the practice of entrusting the
+powers of parliament to those committees of the estates subsequently
+famous as the lords of the articles, by David's matrimonial troubles
+after Joan's death, and by his unpopular visits to the court of his
+neighbour. Warfare between the realms there was none, save for the
+chronic border feuds. When David died in 1371, the Steward of Scotland
+land mounted the throne as Robert II. This first of the Stewart kings
+went back to the policy of the French alliance, but was too weak to
+inflict serious mischief on England.
+
+In January, 1358, preliminaries of peace were also arranged with the
+captive King of France, and sent to Paris and Avignon for ratification.
+Innocent VI. was overjoyed at his success, and Frenchmen were willing
+to make any sacrifices to bring back their monarch, for immediately
+after Poitiers a storm of disorder burst over France. The states
+general met a few weeks after the battle, and the regent, Charles of
+Normandy, was helpless in their hands. This was the time of the power
+of Stephen Marcel, provost of the merchants of Paris, and of Robert
+Lecoq, Bishop of Laon. But the movement in Paris was neither in the
+direction of parliamentary government nor of democracy, and few men
+have less right to be regarded as popular heroes than Marcel and Lecoq.
+The estates were manipulated in the interests of aristocratic intrigue,
+and, behind the ostensible leaders, was the sinister influence of
+Charles of Navarre, who availed himself of the desolation of France to
+play his own game. For a time he was the darling of the Paris mob.
+Innocent VI. was deceived by his protestations of zeal for peace. As
+grandson of Louis X. he aspired to the French throne, and was anxious
+to prevent John's return. Edward had no good-will for a possible rival,
+but it was his interest to keep up the anarchy, and he had no scruple
+in backing up Charles. There was talk of Edward becoming King of France
+and holding the maritime provinces, while Charles as his vassal should
+be lord of Paris and the interior districts. English mercenaries, who
+had lost their occupation with the truce, enlisted themselves in the
+service of Navarre. Robert Knowles, James Pipe, and other ancient
+captains of Edward fought for their own hand in Normandy, and built up
+colossal fortunes out of the spoils of the country. Some of these
+hirelings appeared in Paris, where the citizens welcomed allies of the
+Navarrese, even when they were foreign adventurers. However, Charles
+went so far that a strong reaction deprived him of all power. He was
+able to prevent the ratification of the preliminaries of 1358. But in
+that year the death of Marcel was followed by the return of the regent
+to Paris, the expulsion of the foreign mercenaries, the collapse of the
+estates, and the restoration of the capital to the national cause. The
+short-lived horrors wreaked by the revolted peasantry were followed by
+the more enduring atrocities of the nobles who suppressed them.
+Military adventurers pillaged France from end to end, but the worst
+troubles ended when Charles of Navarre lost his pre-eminence.[1]
+
+ [1] An admirable account of the state of France between 1356
+ and 1358 is in Denifie, _La Desolation des Eglises en_ France
+ _pendant _la _Guerre de Cent Ans, ii.,_ 134-316 (1899).
+
+When the truce of Bordeaux was on the verge of expiration, the French
+king negotiated a second treaty by which he bought off the threatened
+renewal of war. This was the treaty of London, March 24, 1359, by which
+John yielded up to Edward in full sovereignty the ancient empire of
+Henry II. Normandy, the suzerainty of Brittany, Anjou, and Maine,
+Aquitaine within its ancient limits, Calais and Ponthieu with the
+surrounding districts, were the territorial concessions in return for
+which Edward renounced his claim to the French throne. The vast ransom
+of 4,000,000 golden crowns was to be paid for John's redemption; the
+chief princes of the blood were to be hostages for him, and in case of
+failure to observe the terms of the treaty he was to return to his
+captivity. The only provision in any sense favourable to France was
+that by which Edward promised to aid John against the King of Navarre.
+
+The treaty of London excited the liveliest anger in France. "We had
+rather," declared the assembled estates, "endure the great mischief that
+has afflicted us so long, than suffer the noble realm of France thus to
+be diminished and defrauded."[1] Spurred up by these patriotic
+manifestations, the regent rejected the treaty, and prepared as best he
+could for the storm of Edward's wrath which soon burst upon his country.
+Anxious to unite forces against the national enemy, he made peace with
+Charles of Navarre, who, abandoned by Edward, was delighted to be
+restored to his estates.
+
+ [1] Froissart, v., 180, ed. Luce.
+
+Edward concentrated all his efforts on a new invasion of France. In
+November, 1359, he marched out of Calais with all his forces. His four
+sons attended him, and there was a great muster of earls and
+experienced warriors. Among the less known members of the host was the
+young Londoner, Geoffrey Chaucer, a page in Lionel of Antwerp's
+household. In three columns, each following a separate route, the
+English made their way from Calais towards the south-east. The French
+avoided a pitched battle, but hung on the skirts of the army and slew,
+or captured, stragglers and foragers. Chaucer was among those thus
+taken prisoner. Edward's ambition was to take Reims, and have himself
+crowned there as King of France. On December 4 he arrived at the gates
+of the city, and besieged it for six weeks. Then on January 11, 1360,
+the King despaired of success, abandoned the siege, and marched
+southwards through Champagne towards Burgundy. Despite the check at
+Reims, he was still so formidable that in March Duke Philip of Burgundy
+concluded with him the shameful treaty of Guillon, by which he
+purchased exemption from invasion by an enormous ransom and a promise
+of neutrality.
+
+Edward next turned towards Paris. The news that the French had effected
+a successful descent on Winchelsea and behaved with extreme brutality to
+the inhabitants, infuriated the English troopers, who perpetrated a
+hundredfold worse deeds in the suburbs of the French capital. It seemed
+as if the war was about to end with the siege and capture of Paris. The
+regent, unable to meet the English in the field, fell back in despair on
+negotiation. Innocent VI. again offered his good services. John sent
+from his English prison full powers to his son to make what terms he
+would, and on April 3, which was Good Friday, ambassadors from each
+power met under papal intervention at Longjumeau; but Edward still
+insisted on the terms of the treaty of London, for which the French were
+not yet prepared. On April 7 Edward began the siege of Paris by an
+attack on the southern suburbs, but was so little successful that he
+withdrew five days later. A terrible tempest destroyed his provision
+train and devastated his army. These disasters made Edward anxious for
+peace, and the negotiations, after two interruptions, were successfully
+renewed at Chartres, and facilitated by the signature of a truce for a
+year. The work of a definitive treaty was pushed forward, and on May 8,
+preliminaries of peace were signed between the prince of Wales and
+Charles of France at the neighbouring hamlet of Bretigni, whither the
+peacemakers had transferred their sittings. There were still formalities
+to accomplish which took up many months. King John was escorted in July
+by the Prince of Wales to Calais, and in October he was joined by Edward
+III., who had returned to England about the time that the negotiations
+at Bretigni were over. The peace took its final form at Calais in
+October 24, 1360. Next day John was released, and ratified the
+convention as a free man on French soil. This permanent treaty is more
+properly styled the treaty of Calais than the treaty of Bretigni; but
+the alterations between the two were only significant in one particular
+respect. At Calais the English agreed to omit a clause inserted at
+Bretigni by which Edward renounced his claims to the French throne, and
+John his claims over the allegiance of the inhabitants of the ceded
+districts. As the Calais treaty of October alone had the force of law,
+it was a real triumph of French diplomacy to have suppressed so vital a
+feature in the definitive document.[1] Even with this alleviation the
+terms were sufficiently humiliating to France. Edward and his heirs were
+to receive in perpetuity, "and in the manner in which the kings of
+France had held them," an ample territory both in southern and northern
+France. All Aquitaine was henceforth to be English, including Poitou,
+Saintonge, Perigord, Angoumois, Limousin, Quercy, Rouergue, Agenais, and
+Bigorre. The greatest feudatories of these districts, the friendly Count
+of Foix as well as the hostile Count of Armagnac, and the Breton
+pretender to the viscounty of Limoges, were to do homage to Edward for
+all their lands within these bounds. Nor was this all. The county of
+Ponthieu, including Montreuil-sur-mer, was restored to its English
+lords, and added to the pale of Calais, which was to include the whole
+county of Guines, made up two considerable northern dominions for
+Edward. With these cessions were included all adjacent islands, and all
+islands held by the English king at that time, so that the Channel
+islands were by implication recognised as English.
+
+ [1] On the importance of this, see the paper of MM.
+ Petit-Dutaillis and P. Collier, _La Diplomatie francaise et le
+ Traite de Bretigny_ in _Le Moyen Age_, 2e serie, tome i.
+ (1897), pp. 1-35.
+
+The ransom of John was fixed at 3,000,000 gold crowns, that is ~500,000
+sterling. The vastness of this sum can be realised by remembering that
+the ordinary revenue of the English crown in time of peace did not much
+exceed L60,000, while the addition to that of a sum of L150,000
+involved an effort which only a popular war could dispose Englishmen to
+make. Of this ransom 600,000 crowns were to be paid at once, and the
+rest in annual instalments of 400,000 crowns until the whole payment
+was effected. During this period the prisoners from Poitiers, several
+of the king's near relatives, a long list of the noblest names in
+France, and citizens of some of its wealthiest cities, were to remain
+as hostages in Edward's hands. As to the Breton succession, Edward and
+John engaged to do their best to effect a peaceful settlement. If they
+failed in attaining this, the rival claimants were to fight it out
+among themselves, England and France remaining neutral. Whichever of
+the two became duke was to do homage to the King of France, and John of
+Montfort was, in any case, to be restored to his county of Montfort. A
+similar care for Edward's friends was shown in the article which
+preserved for Philip of Navarre his hereditary domains in Normandy.
+Forfeitures and outlawries were to be pardoned, and the rights of
+private persons to be respected. Nevertheless Calais was to remain at
+Edward's entire disposal, and the burgesses, dispossessed by him, were
+not to be reinstated. The French renounced their alliance with the
+Scots, and the English theirs with the Flemings. Time was allowed to
+carry out these complicated stipulations, and, by way of compensating
+Edward for the significant omission which has been mentioned, elaborate
+provisions were made for the mutual execution at a later date of
+charters of renunciation, by which Edward abandoned his claim to the
+French throne and John the over-lordship of the districts yielded to
+Edward. These were to be exchanged at Bruges about a year later.
+
+England rejoiced at the conclusion of so brilliant a peace, and laid no
+stress on the subtle change in the conditions which made the treaty far
+less definitive in reality than in appearance. In France the faithful
+flocked to the churches to give thanks for deliverance from the long
+anarchy. The perfect courtesy and good feeling which the two kings had
+shown to each other gilded the concluding ceremonies with a ray of
+chivalry. John was released almost at once, and allowed to retain with
+him in France some of the hostages, including his valiant son Philip,
+the companion of his captivity. John made Edward's peace with Louis of
+Flanders, and Edward persuaded John to pardon Charles and Philip of
+Navarre. At last the two weary nations looked forward to a long period
+of repose.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR FROM THE TREATY OF CALAIS TO THE TRUCE OF
+BRUGES.
+
+
+It was an easier matter to conclude the treaty of Calais than to carry
+it out. Troubles followed the release of the French king and the
+expiration of the year during which the two parties were to yield up
+the ceded territory and effect the renunciations of their respective
+claims. John did his best to keep faith in both these matters. He
+ordered his vassals to submit themselves to their new lord, and
+appointed commissioners to hand over the lost provinces to the agents
+of the English king. In July, 1361, Sir John Chandos, Edward's
+lieutenant in France, received the special mission of taking possession
+of the new acquisitions in the name of his master. Chandos' reputation
+as a soldier made him acceptable to the French, and being recognised by
+the treaty as lord of Saint-Sauveur in the Cotentin, he was interested
+in maintaining good relations between the two realms. He began his work
+by taking possession of Poitiers and Poitou, but found that many of the
+descendants of the greedy lords, who, more than a hundred years before,
+had played off Henry III against St. Louis, abandoned the rule of John
+with undisguised reluctance. It was worse with the towns, where
+national sentiment was stronger. La Rochelle held out for months, and,
+when its notables at last submitted, they declared: "We will accept the
+English with our lips but never with our hearts". Much patriotic
+feeling was manifested in Quercy. The consuls of Cahors made their
+submission, weeping and groaning. "Alas!" they declared, "how odious it
+is to lose our natural lord, and to pass over to a master we know not.
+But it is not we who abandon the King of France. It is he who, against
+our wishes, hands us over, like orphans, to the hands of the stranger."
+It was not until two years after the signing of the treaty that Edward
+entered into possession of the bulk of the lands granted to him. Even
+then there were districts in Poitou, notably Belleville, which never
+became English at all. One of the last districts to yield was Rouergue,
+whose count, John of Armagnac, only made his submission under the
+compulsion of irresistible necessity.
+
+It was even more difficult to get the English out of the lands which
+the treaty had assigned to the French. These districts were largely
+held by companies of mercenaries, little under Edward's control and
+indisposed to yield up the conquests won by their own hands because
+their nominal lord had thought fit to make a treaty with the French
+king. Despite the orders of Edward, the English garrisons in the north
+and centre of France flatly refused to surrender their strongholds. In
+Maine, Hugh Calveley took Bertrand du Guesclin prisoner when he sought
+to receive the submission of his castles, and only released him on
+payment of a heavy ransom. In Normandy, Du Guesclin had to buy off
+James Pipe, who dominated all the central district from the fortified
+abbey of Cormeilles, and to crush John Jowel in a pitched battle near
+Lisieux. Even when the castles were surrendered, the garrisons joined
+with each other to establish societies of warriors that now inflicted
+terrible woes on France. The exploits of these free companies hardly
+belong to English history, though many of their leaders and a large
+proportion of the rank and file were Englishmen. Cruel, fierce, and
+uncouth, they still preserved in all military dealings the strict
+discipline which had taught the English armies the way to victory. The
+combination of the order of a settled host with the rapacity of a gang
+of freebooters made them as irresistible as they were destructive.
+Though Edward formally repudiated them, it was more than suspected that
+they were secretly playing his game.
+
+Before long, this guerilla warfare became consolidated into military
+operations on a large scale. Charles of Navarre once more profited by
+the disorder of France to bring himself to the front. In 1361 John had
+availed himself of the death of Philip of Rouvres to treat the duchy of
+Burgundy as a lapsed fief, and conferred it on his youngest son, Philip
+the Bold. Charles then claimed to be the heir of Burgundy, and while he
+personally directed the forces of disorder in the south, his agents
+united with the English _condottieri_ in Normandy. John Jowel still
+held tight to his Norman conquests, and was, by Edward's direction,
+fighting openly for Charles of Navarre. The Captal de Buch, the hero of
+Poitiers, hurried from Gascony to protect the Navarrese lands from the
+invasion of Bertrand du Guesclin. On May 16, 1364, the little armies of
+the Captal and the Breton partisan met at Cocherel on the Eure, where
+Du Guesclin cleverly won the first important victory gained by the
+French in the open field during the whole course of the war. The Captal
+was taken prisoner, and the establishment of Du Guesclin in some of
+Charles of Navarre's Norman fiefs deprived the intriguer of his
+opportunities to do mischief in the north. Charles of Navarre's career
+was not yet over; but henceforth his chief field was his southern
+kingdom.
+
+The victorious Du Guesclin turned his attention to his native Brittany,
+where the war of Blois and Montfort still went on, for Joan of
+Penthievre insisted so strongly upon her rights that the efforts of
+Edward and John to end the contest had been without result. In 1362
+John de Montfort was at last entrusted with the government of Brittany,
+and Du Guesclin quitted the service of France for that of Charles of
+Blois, that the treaty of 1360 might remain unbroken. But as in the
+early wars, the army of Blois was mainly French, and the host of
+Montfort was commanded by the Englishman, John Chandos, and largely
+consisted of English men-at-arms and archers. Calveley, Knowles, and
+the Breton Oliver de Clisson were among the captains of Duke John's
+forces.
+
+The decisive engagement took place on September 29, 1364, on the
+plateau, north of Auray, which is still marked by the church of St.
+Michael, erected as a thank-offering by the victor. It was another
+Poitiers on a small scale. The Anglo-Breton army held a good defensive
+position, facing northwards, with its back on the town of Auray. The
+troops of Charles of Blois and Du Guesclin advanced to attack them with
+more ardour than discipline or skill. Both sides fought on foot. The
+French knights had at last learnt to meet the storm of English arrows
+by strengthening their armour and by protecting themselves by large
+shields. Thus, as at Poitiers, they had little difficulty in making
+their way up to the enemy's ranks. But their order was confused, and
+they thought of nothing but the fierce delights of the _melee_. The
+Montfort party showed more intelligence, and Chandos, like the captal
+at Poitiers, fell suddenly upon the flank of one of the enemy's
+divisions. This settled the fight; Charles of Blois was slain, Du
+Guesclin taken prisoner, and their army utterly scattered. Auray ended
+the war of the Breton succession. Even Joan of Penthievre was at last
+willing to treat. In 1365 the treaty of Guerande was signed, by which.
+Montfort was recognised as John IV. of Brittany, and did homage to the
+French crown. Joan was consoled by remaining in possession of the
+county of Penthievre and the viscounty of Limoges. Practically her
+defeat was an English victory, and Montfort remained in his duchy so
+long only as English influence prevailed. A second step towards the
+pacification of the north was made when the troubles in Brittany were
+ended within a few months of the destruction of the power of Charles
+the Bad in Normandy.
+
+The free companies lost their chief hunting-grounds; and a further
+relief came when some of them, like the White Company, found a better
+market for their swords in Italy. With all their faults, the companies
+opened out a career to talent such as had seldom been found before. John
+Hawkwood, the leader of the White Company, was an Essex man of the
+smaller landed class. He had played but a subordinate figure beside
+Knowles, Calveley, Pipe, and Jowel; but in Italy he won for himself the
+name of the greatest strategist of his age. Thus, though at the cost of
+murder and pillage, the English made themselves talked about all over
+the western world. "In my youth," wrote Petrarch, "the Britons, whom we
+call Angles or English, had the reputation of being the most timid of
+the barbarians. Now they are the most warlike of peoples. They have
+overturned the ancient military glory of the French by a series of
+victories so numerous and unexpected that those, who were not long since
+inferior to the wretched Scots, have so crushed by fire and sword the
+whole realm that, on a recent journey, I could hardly persuade myself
+that it was the France that I had seen in former years."[1]
+
+ [1] _Epistolae Familiares_, iii., Ep. 14, p. 162, ed.
+ Fracassetti.
+
+It was to little purpose that King John laboured to redeem his plighted
+word and make France what it had been before the war. Though in
+November, 1361, neither he nor Edward sent commissioners to Bruges,
+where, according to the treaty of Calais, the charters of renunciation
+were to be exchanged, John offered in 1362 to carry out his promise.
+Edward, however, for reasons of his own, made no response to his
+advances. The result was that the renunciations were never made, and so
+the essential condition of the original settlement remained
+unfulfilled. The matter passed almost unnoticed at the time as a mere
+formality, but in later years Edward's lack of faith brought its own
+punishment in giving the French king a plausible excuse for still
+claiming suzerainty over the ceded provinces. Perhaps Edward still
+cherished the ambition of resuscitating his pretensions to the French
+crown. He found it as hard to give up a claim as ever his grandfather
+had done.
+
+John's good faith was conspicuously evinced by the efforts he made to
+raise the instalments of his ransom. His payments were in arrears: some
+of the hostages left in free custody by Edward's generosity broke their
+parole and escaped; and among them was his own son, Louis, Duke of
+Anjou. The father felt it his duty to step into the place thus left
+vacant. In 1363 he returned to his English prison, where he died in
+1364, surrounded with every courtesy and attention that Edward could
+lavish upon him. During the last months of his life, England received
+visits from two other kings, David of Scotland and the Lusignan lord of
+Cyprus, who still called himself King of Jerusalem, and was wandering
+through the courts of Europe to stir up interest in the projected
+crusade.
+
+Charles of Normandy then became Charles V. He was no knight-errant like
+his father, and his diplomatic gifts, tact, and patience made him much
+better fitted than John for outwitting his English enemies and for
+restoring order to France. Slowly but surely he grappled with the
+companies, and at last an opening was found for their skill in the
+civil war which broke out in Castile. Peter the Cruel, since 1350 King
+of Castile, had made himself odious to many of his subjects. At last
+his bastard brother, Henry of Trastamara, rose in revolt against him.
+Peter, however, was capable and energetic, and not without support from
+certain sections of the Castilians. Moreover, he was friendly with
+Charles of Navarre, and allied with Edward III. On the other hand Henry
+found powerful backing from the King of Aragon, and made an appeal to
+the King of France. This gave Charles V. the chance he wanted. He hated
+Peter, who was reputed to have murdered his own wife, Blanche of
+Bourbon sister of the Queen of France, and in 1365 he agreed to give
+Henry assistance. Du Guesclin welded the scattered companies into an
+army and led them against the Spanish king. The pope fell in with the
+scheme as an indirect way of realising his crusading ambition. When
+Henry had become King of Castile, the companies would go on to attack
+the Moors of Granada. English and French mercenaries flocked gladly
+together under Du Guesclin's banner. Edward in vain ordered his
+subjects not to take part in an invasion of the lands of his friend and
+cousin, Peter of Castile. Though Chandos declined at the last moment to
+follow Du Guesclin into the peninsula, Sir Hugh Calveley would not
+desist from the quest of fresh adventure, even at the orders of his
+lord. Professional and knightly feeling bound Calveley to Du Guesclin
+more closely than their difference of nationality separated them, so
+that Calveley took his part in the Castilian campaign with perfect
+loyally to his ancient enemy. In December, 1365, Du Guesclin and his
+followers made their way through Roussillon and Aragon into Castile.
+The spring of 1366 saw Peter a fugitive in Aquitaine, and Henry of
+Trastamara crowned Henry II. of Castile. Most of the companies then
+went home, though Du Guesclin and Calveley remained to support the new
+king's throne.
+
+The deposed tyrant went to Bordeaux, where since 1363 the Black Prince
+had been resident as Prince of Aquitaine; for in 1362 Edward had erected
+his new possessions into a principality and conferred it on his eldest
+son, in the hope of conciliating the Gascons by some pretence of
+restoring their independence. At Bordeaux Peter persuaded the prince to
+restore him to his throne by force. Edward also agreed to support Peter,
+and sent his third son, John of Gaunt, to march through Brittany and
+Poitou with a powerful English reinforcement to his brother's resources,
+while the lord of Aquitaine assembled the whole, strength of his new
+principality for the expedition. At the bidding of his lord, Calveley
+cheerfully abandoned Du Guesclin, and thenceforth fought as courageously
+on the one side as he had previously done on the other. Charles of
+Navarre professed great desire to help forward the invaders, and his
+offers of friendship opened up to the prince the easiest way into Spain
+by way of the pass of Roncesvalles from Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port to
+Pamplona, the capital of Navarre. In February, 1367, the prince's army
+made its way in frost and snow through the valleys famous in romance.
+From Pamplona two roads diverged to Burgos, the ancient Castilian
+capital. The easier way ran south-westwards through Navarrese territory
+to the Ebro at Logrono, where beyond the river lay the Castilian
+frontier. The more difficult route went westwards through rugged
+mountains and high valleys by way of Salvatierra and Vitoria to a
+passage over the upper Ebro at Miranda. The Black Prince chose the
+latter route, and reached Vitoria in safely. Beyond the town King
+Henry's army held a position so strong that Edward found it impossible
+to dislodge him.
+
+The winter weather still held the upland valleys in its grip when March
+was far advanced. Men and horses suffered terribly from cold and
+hunger, and the prince, seeing that he could not long maintain his
+position, boldly resolved to transfer himself to the southern route. A
+flank march over snow-clad sierras brought him to the vale of the Ebro,
+and, crossing the stream at Logrono, he took up his position a few
+miles south-west of that town, near the Castilian village of Navarrete.
+On the prince's change of front King Henry also moved southward,
+crossing the Ebro a few miles above Logrono, and then advanced to
+Najera, a village about six miles west of Navarrete, where he once more
+blocked the English path. The prince, however, had the advantage of
+position and could afford to wait until the Castilians attacked. On
+April 3 Henry advanced over the little river Najarilla against the
+enemy. The Spanish host fought after a different fashion from that
+practised by both sides in the French wars. Only Du Guesclin and the
+small remnant of the companies which still abode in Spain dismounted.
+The mass of the Castilians remained on their horses. Their cavalry was
+of two sorts: besides a large number of men-at-arms bestriding armoured
+steeds, there were swarms of light horsemen, unencumbered by heavy
+armour and called _genitours_, from being mounted on the fleet Spanish
+steeds called jennets. The desperate valour of Du Guesclin and his
+followers could not prevent utter disaster. Henry fled in panic from
+the scene; Du Guesclin was again a prisoner, and the Najarilla was
+reddened by the blood of the thousands of fugitive Spaniards, for,
+caught as in a trap at the narrow bridge which offered the _sole_ means
+of retreat, they were massacred without difficulty by the prince's
+troops. The victors marched on to Burgos, and, Don Henry having fled to
+France, Peter was restored with little further trouble to the Castilian
+throne.
+
+The Black Prince remained in Castile all through the summer, waiting
+for the rewards which Don Peter had promised him. His army melted away
+through fever and dysentery, and the prince himself contracted the
+beginnings of a mortal disorder. Thus the crowning victory of his
+career was the last of his triumphs. Like many other leaders of
+chivalry, he had not understood the limitations of his resources, and
+had dissipated on this bootless Spanish campaign means scarcely
+sufficient to grapple with the spirit of disaffection already
+undermining his power in Aquitaine. With shattered health and the mere
+skeleton of his gallant army, he made his way back over the Pyrenees.
+Henceforth misfortune dogged every step of his career.
+
+Since 1363 the constant residence of the Black Prince and his wife, Joan
+of Kent, in Gascony, had been broken only by his Castilian expedition.
+It was a wise policy to send the prince to hold a permanent court in
+Aquitaine, such as the land had never seen since Richard Coeur de Lion.
+All that affability, magnificence, and chivalry could do to make his
+domination attractive might be confidently anticipated from so brilliant
+and high-minded a knight as the prince of Aquitaine. The court of
+Bordeaux was as brilliant as the court of Windsor. "Never," boasted the
+Chandos Herald,[1] "was such good entertainment as his; for every day at
+his table he had more than four-score knights and four times as many
+squires. There was found all nobleness, merriment, freedom, and honour.
+His subjects loved him, for he did them much good." The sulky magnates
+of the south-west, such as John of Armagnac and Gaston Phoebus of Foix,
+found their bitterness tempered by the prince's courtesy, while the
+boastful knights of Gascony looked forward to a career of honourable
+service under the descendant of their ancient dukes. Feastings and
+tournaments were not enough to win all his subjects' hearts; and the
+Black Prince strove with some energy to show that he was a ruler of men
+as well as the centre of a court. It is to his credit that he cleared
+his inheritance from the free companies, so that Poitou and Limousin
+enjoyed far more prosperity and tranquillity than in the days of French
+ascendency. Such new taxation as Gascon custom allowed was only levied
+after grants from the three estates. Great pains were taken to improve
+the administration, the judicial system, and the coinage. Edward saw
+that his best policy was to rely upon the people of Gascony, and to look
+with suspicion on the great lords. But he did not understand how limited
+was the authority which tradition gave to the dukes of Aquitaine, and he
+was too stiff, too pedantic, too insular, to get on really cordial terms
+with his subjects. He never, like Gaston Phoebus or Richard Coeur de
+Lion, threw himself into the local life, language, and traditions of the
+country.
+
+ [1] _Le Prince Noir, poeme du heraut d'Armes Chandos_, pp.
+ 107-108, ed. F. Michel.
+
+The Black Prince's greatest successes were with the towns, and
+especially with those which had been continuously subject to English
+rule. The citizens of Bordeaux, who had feared lest Edward's claim to
+the French crown should involve them in more complete subjection, were
+appeased by promises that they should in any case remain subject to the
+English monarchy. Their liberties were increased and their wine trade
+was fostered, even to the loss of English merchants. The other towns
+were equally contented. Edward relied upon them as a counterpoise to
+the feudal lords, and their liberties exempted them from the
+extraordinary taxes by which he strove to restore the equilibrium of
+his finances. The half-independent magnates were soon convinced that
+their chivalrous lord was no friend of aristocratic privilege. Edward,
+even when using their services in war, carefully excluded them from the
+administration. They saw with disgust the chief offices monopolised by
+Englishmen. An English bishop, John Harewell of Bath, was Edward's
+chancellor and confidential adviser. An English knight, Thomas Felton,
+was seneschal of Aquitaine and head of the administration. The
+constableship was assigned to Chandos. The seneschalships of the
+several provinces were mainly in English hands. With English notions of
+the rights of the supreme power, the prince paid little attention to
+the franchises of either lord or prelate. He mortally offended John of
+Armagnac by requiring a direct oath of fealty from the Bishop of Rodez,
+who held all his lands of Armagnac as Count of Rouergue. Clerks of
+lesser degree were outraged by the prince's attempts to hinder students
+from attending the university of Toulouse.
+
+The Spanish expedition immensely increased the Black Prince's
+difficulties. He exhausted his finances to equip his army, and both on
+their coming and going his soldiers cruelly pillaged the country.
+Edward now dismissed most of his troops and urged them to betake
+themselves to France. In January, 1368, he obtained from the estates of
+Aquitaine a new hearth tax of ten _sous_ a hearth for five years. The
+tax was freely voted and collected from the great majority of the
+payers without trouble. The towns were mainly exempt from it by reason
+of their liberties; and the lesser lords were as yet not averse from
+English rule. But the greater feudatories saw in the new hearth-tax a
+pretext for revolt. They had no special zeal for the French monarchy,
+but the house of Valois was weak and far removed from their
+territories. Their great concern was the preservation of their
+independence, which seemed more threatened by a resident prince than by
+a distant overlord at Paris. Even before the imposition of the
+hearth-tax, the Count of Armagnac entered into a secret treaty with
+Charles V., who promised to increase his territories and respect his
+franchises, if he would return to the French allegiance. The lord of
+Albret married a sister of the French queen and followed Armagnac's
+lead. A little later the Counts of Perigord and Comminges and other
+lords associated themselves with this policy. Thus the rule of the
+Black Prince in Aquitaine, acquiesced in by the mass of the people, was
+threatened by a feudal revolt. Armagnac appealed to the parliament of
+Paris against the hearth-tax. Charles V. accepted the appeal on the
+ground of the non-exchange of the renunciations which should have
+followed the treaty of Calais. Cited before the parliament in January,
+1369, the Black Prince replied that he would go to Paris with helmet on
+head and with sixty thousand men at his back. His father once more
+assumed the title of King of France, and war broke out again.
+
+The relative positions of France and England were different from what
+they had been nine years before. Edward III. was sinking into an
+unhonoured old age, and the Prince of Aquitaine suffered from dropsy,
+and was incapable of taking the field. Of their former comrades some,
+like Walter Manny, were dead, and others too old for much more
+fighting. On the other side was Charles V., who had tamed Navarre and
+the feudal lords, had cleared the realm of the companies, had put down
+faction and disorder, and had made himself the head of a strong
+national party, resolved to effect the expulsion of the foreigner. His
+chief military counsellors were Du Guesclin, and Du Guesclin's old
+adversary in the Breton wars, Oliver de Clisson, now the zealous
+servant of the king. A wonderful outburst of French patriotism
+facilitated the reconquest of the lands that had passed to English rule
+nine years before. Even the tradition of military superiority availed
+little against commanders who were learning by their defeats how to
+meet their once invincible enemies.
+
+There was a like modification in the foreign alliances of the two
+kingdoms. Dynastic changes in the Netherlands had robbed Edward of
+supporters who, though costly and ineffective, had been imposing in
+outward appearance. Even after the dissolution of the alliances of the
+early years of the war, the temporising policy of Louis de Male at
+least neutralised the influence of Flanders. During the peace both
+Edward and Charles did their best to win the goodwill of the Flemish
+count. Louis' relation to the two rivals was the more important since
+his only child was a daughter named Margaret. In 1356, this lady, to
+Edward's great disgust, was promised in marriage to Philip de Rouvre,
+Duke and Count of Burgundy, and Count of Artois. The death of Philip in
+1361 saved Edward from the danger of a great state with one arm in the
+Burgundies and the other in Flanders and Artois; and the irritation of
+Louis de Male at Charles V.'s grant of the Burgundian duchy to his
+youngest son, Philip the Bold, gave the English king a new chance of
+winning his favour. At last, in 1364, Edward concluded a treaty with
+Flanders according to his dearest wishes. Edmund of Langley, Earl of
+Cambridge, his youngest son, was betrothed to the widowed Margaret,
+with Ponthieu, Guines, and Calais as their appanage. Great as were
+Edward's sacrifices, they were worth making if a permanent union could
+be established between England and Flanders, equally threatening to
+France and to the lords of the Netherlands. Charles persuaded Urban V.
+to refuse the necessary dispensations for the marriage. Edward and
+Louis, irritated at the success of this countermove, waited patiently
+and renewed their alliance.
+
+No sooner was his understanding with Armagnac completed than Charles
+strove to secure the support of northern as well as of southern
+feudalism against Edward. He offered his brother, Philip of Burgundy,
+to Margaret, along with the restoration of the districts of French
+Flanders, which he still held. In June, 1369, the marriage took place.
+Edmund of Cambridge lost his last chance of the great heiress, and
+Charles V. bought off the enmity of the Count of Flanders at the price
+of that union of Burgundy and Flanders which, in the next century, was
+to make the descendants of Philip and Margaret the most formidable
+opponents of the French monarchy. For the moment, however, Charles
+gained little. Flemish ships, indeed, fought against the English at
+sea, notably in Bourgneuf Bay in 1371, but next year Louis made peace
+with them. Despite his daughter's marriage, the Count of Flanders still
+showed that his sympathies were with England. The other princes of the
+Netherlands were much more decidedly on the French side than the Count
+of Flanders. Margaret of Hainault, Queen Philippa's sister, had, after
+the death of her husband the Emperor Louis of Bavaria, in 1347 fought
+with her son William for the possession of her three counties of
+Hainault, Holland, and Zealand, to which Philippa also had pretensions,
+naturally upheld by her husband. William obtained such advantages over
+his mother that Margaret was obliged to invoke the assistance of her
+brother-in-law. Eager to regain his influence in the Netherlands,
+Edward willingly agreed to be arbiter between Margaret and her son, and
+at his suggestion the disputed lands were divided between them. William
+was married to Maud of Lancaster, Duke Henry's elder daughter, and thus
+secured to the English alliance. On Margaret's death William inherited
+all the three counties: but Maud died, and William became insane,
+whereupon his brother and heir invoked the support of the Emperor
+Charles IV., and was duly established in his fiefs. The claims of
+Philippa were ignored, and the Lancaster marriage with the lord of
+Holland, like the projected union of Edmund with the heiress of
+Flanders, failed to fulfil Edward's hopes.
+
+Meanwhile Edward had to face the constant hostility of the emperor.
+Wenceslaus of Luxemburg, brother of Charles IV., had married the
+daughter and heiress of John III of Brabant, with the result of solidly
+establishing the house of Luxemburg in the strongest of the duchies of
+the Low Countries. With the Luxemburger as with the Bavarian, Edward's
+relations were unfriendly. Two only of the Low German lords, the dukes
+of Gelderland and Juelich, were willing to take his pay. Early in the
+war they were assailed by the Luxemburgers, and the contest occupied
+all their energies. Thus Edward re-entered the struggle against France
+with no help save that of his own subjects. Urban V. died at Avignon in
+1370, and his successor, Gregory XI., was as little friendly to English
+claims in France as his predecessors had been. Pope, emperor, and the
+Netherlandish princes, were all either French or neutral. And in 1369
+Peter of Castile lost his throne, and soon afterwards perished at his
+brother's hands. Henry of Trastamara, henceforth King of Castile,
+became the firm ally of the French, who had already the support of
+Aragon. Even Charles the Bad thought it prudent to declare for France.
+
+At each stage of the war the French took the initiative. The appeal of
+the southern nobles was the beginning of a national movement which,
+before March, 1369, was supported by more than 900 towns, castles, and
+fortified places in Edward's allegiance. In April the French invaded
+Ponthieu and were welcomed as deliverers at Abbeville and the other
+towns of the county. John of Gaunt led an army during the summer from
+Calais southwards. He marched through Ponthieu, crossed the Somme at
+Blanchetaque, and ravaged the country up to the Seine. Then he retired
+exhausted, having gained no real advantage by this mere foray. Charles
+announced that, as Edward had supported the free companies, he fell
+under the excommunication threatened by the pope against the abettors
+of these pests of society, and that the vassals of the English crown
+were therefore relieved from allegiance to him. Soon afterwards he
+declared that Edward had forfeited all his possessions in France.
+
+Quercy and Rouergue, which had submitted last, were the first districts
+of Aquitaine to revolt. Cahors declared for France as soon as the Black
+Prince was cited to Paris. By the end of 1369 all Quercy had
+acknowledged Charles V., and John of Armagnac ruled Rouergue as his
+vassal. It was the same in the Garonne valley, where towns which had no
+quarrel with English rule, were swept away by the strong tide of
+national feeling that surged round their walls. A systematic attack was
+made upon the English power in Aquitaine. Charles V. fitted out new
+armies in which the townsmen and the country-folk fought side by side
+with the nobility. Two of his brothers, John, Duke of Berri, and Louis,
+Duke of Anjou, prepared to assail the intruders, Berri in the central
+uplands, Anjou in the Garonne valley. It was not enough to recover what
+was lost. Aggression must be met by aggression, and the Duke of
+Burgundy, Charles' third brother, equipped a fleet in Norman ports,
+either to invade England or at least to cut off the Black Prince from
+his base. Portsmouth was burnt, before England had made any effort to
+defend her shores.
+
+The English were strangely inactive. The Black Prince lay sick at
+Cognac, and of his subordinates Chandos, now seneschal of Poitou, alone
+showed vigour. Chandos, finding the lords of Poitou much more loyal to
+the English connexion than those of the south, was able to take the
+aggressive by invading Anjou. He was, however, soon recalled to protect
+Poitou, and on January 1, 1370, was mortally wounded at the bridge of
+Lussac. James Audley had already died of disease in another Poitevin
+town. While England was losing her best soldiers, Du Guesclin began a
+fresh series of raids in the Garonne valley. Soon the banner of the
+lilies waved within a few leagues of Bordeaux, and ancient towns of the
+English obedience, like Bazas and Bergerac, fell into the enemy's
+hands. With the capture of Perigueux, the Limousin was isolated from
+Gascon succour. In August the Duke of Berri appeared before the walls
+of the _cite,_ or episcopal quarter, of Limoges, and the bishop
+promptly handed it over to him.
+
+Disasters at last stirred up the English to action. In 1370 John of
+Gaunt was sent with one army to Gascony and Sir Robert Knowles with
+another to Calais. The Black Prince, though unable to ride, was eager
+to command. It was arranged that while Lancaster led one force from
+Bordeaux to Limoges, Edward should accompany another that marched from
+Cognac towards the same destination. To resist this combination Du
+Guesclin strove to combine the separate armies of the Dukes of Anjou
+and Berri. However, he failed to prevent the junction of Lancaster and
+Edward, and their advance to Limoges. On September 19, the anniversary
+of Poitiers, the city of Limoges opened its gates after a five days'
+siege. The English took a terrible revenge. Not a house in the _cite_
+was spared, and the cathedral rose over a mass of ruins. The whole
+population was put to the sword, the Black Prince in his litter
+watching grimly the execution of his orders. A few gentlemen alone were
+saved for the sake of their ransoms. Among them was the brother of Pope
+Gregory XI., who not unnaturally became a warm friend of the patriotic
+party. The sack of Limoges was the last exploit of the Black Prince.
+Early in 1371, he returned to England, partly because of his state of
+health, and partly because he had no money to pay his soldiers. It is
+not unlikely that he was already on bad terms with John of Gaunt, who
+had necessarily taken the chief share in the campaign and was nominated
+his successor. Too late, efforts were made to conciliate the Gascons;
+in 1370 a supreme court was set up at Saintes to save the necessity of
+appeals to London which had become as onerous as the ancient frequency
+of resort to the parliament of Paris; and the hearth-tax, the
+ostensible cause of the rising, was formally renounced.
+
+Sir Robert Knowles's expedition of 1370 was as futile as that of
+Lancaster. He advanced from Calais into the heart of northern France.
+Taught by long experience the danger of joining battle, the French
+allowed him to wander where he would, plundering and ravaging the
+country. Roughly following the line of march of Edward III. in 1360,
+the English advanced through Artois and Vermandois to Laon and Reims,
+and thence southwards through Champagne. Then striking northwards from
+the Burgundian border, they appeared, at the end of September, before
+the southern suburbs of Paris. To dissipate the alarm felt at the
+presence of the English, Du Guesclin was summoned from the south and
+made constable of France. Before his arrival Knowles had moved on
+westwards 'towards the Beauce, intending to reach his own estates in
+Brittany for winter quarters. But his young captains got out of
+control. Led by a Gloucestershire knight, Sir John Minsterworth, "ready
+in hand but deceitful and perverse in mind," a considerable section of
+the troops refused to follow the old "tomb-robber" to Brittany, and
+determined to spend the winter where they were, under Minsterworth's
+leadership. Knowles would not give place to his subordinate, and made
+his way to Brittany with the part of his army which was still faithful
+to him. No sooner was he well started than Du Guesclin, after a march
+of ninety miles in three days, fell upon his rearguard at Pontvallain
+in southern Maine and overwhelmed it on December 4, 1370. Knowles
+managed to reach Brittany with the bulk of his forces, and
+Minsterworth, the real cause of the disaster, ventured to go to England
+and denounce his leader as a traitor. He was forced to flee to France,
+where he openly joined the enemy. Seven years later he was captured and
+executed.
+
+Minsterworth was not the only traitor. In the earlier part of the war,
+there had fought on the English side a grand-nephew of the last
+independent Prince of Wales, Sir Owen ap Thomas ap Rhodri,[1] whose
+grandfather, Rhodri or Roderick, the youngest brother of the princes
+Llewelyn and David, had after the ruin of his house lived obscurely as
+a small Cheshire and Gloucestershire landlord. In 1365 Owen was in
+France, engaged, no doubt, in one of the free companies, and on his
+father's death he returned to defend his inheritance from the claims of
+the Charltons of Powys. Having succeeded in this, he returned to
+France, and nothing more is heard of him until after the renewal of the
+war. In 1370 he appeared as a strenuous partisan of the French. Mindful
+of his ancestry he posed as the lawful Prince of Wales, and established
+communications with his countrymen, both in France and in Wales.
+Anxious to stir up discord in Edward's realm, the French king gladly
+upheld his claims. A gallant knight and an impulsive, energetic
+partisan, Sir Owen of Wales soon won a place of his own in the history
+of his time. In Gwynedd he was celebrated as Owain _Lawgoch,_ Owen of
+the Red Hand. Conspiracies in his favour were ruthlessly stamped out,
+and a halo of legend and poetry soon encircled his name. In France
+Charles entrusted him and another Welshman, named John Wynn, with the
+equipment of a fleet at Rouen with which the champion was to descend on
+the principality and excite arising. Bad weather caused the complete
+destruction of the expedition of the Welsh pretender. Two years later,
+however, another fleet was fitted out on his behalf, and in June, 1372,
+Owen took possession of Guernsey.
+
+ [1] The place of Owen of Wales in history was for the first
+ time clearly shown by Mr. Edward Owen in _Y Cymmrodor,_
+ 1899-1900, pp. 1-105.
+
+At that time the fortune of war was strongly in favour of France,
+though the initial successes of Charles V. were damped by the doubtful
+results of the petty struggles which filled the year 1371. During that
+year Du Guesclin, the soul of the French attack, ejected the English
+from many places in Normandy and Poitou. On the other hand, the English
+won the hard fought battle over a Flemish fleet in Bourgneuf Bay, which
+has already been mentioned. They also showed some power of recovery in
+Aquitaine, where their recapture of Figeac in upper Quercy gave them a
+base for renewing their attacks on Rouergue. On the whole then, the
+year left matters much as they had been.
+
+The occupation of Guernsey by Owen of Wales was the beginning of a new
+series of French victories. Up to that time the northern coastlands of
+Aquitaine, lower Poitou, Saintonge, and Angoumois had remained almost
+entirely under their English lords. In the hope of resisting attack,
+the English projected the invasion of France both from Calais and from
+Guienne. To carry out the latter plan John Hastings, Earl of Pembroke,
+was despatched with a fleet and army from England, with a commission to
+succeed John of Gaunt as the king's lieutenant in Aquitaine. The
+Franco-Spanish alliance then began to bear its fruits. Henry of
+Trastamara equipped a strong Spanish fleet to meet the invaders in the
+Bay of Biscay. On June 23, 1372, the two fleets fought an action off La
+Rochelle. The light Spanish galleys out-manoeuvred the heavy English
+ships, laden deep in the water with stores and filled with troops and
+horses. The Spaniards set on fire some of the English transports, which
+became unmanageable owing to the fright of the horses embarked upon
+them. The English fought valiantly, and night fell before the battle
+was decided. Next day, the Spaniards attacked again, and won a complete
+victory. The English fleet was destroyed, and Pembroke was taken a
+prisoner to Santander.
+
+The news of Pembroke's defeat encouraged the French to attempt the
+conquest of Poitou. Du Guesclin invaded the county from the north in
+co-operation with the Spaniards at sea, Owen of Wales abandoned the
+siege of Cornet castle, in Guernsey, which still held out against him,
+and hurried to join the Spaniards. At Santander he met the captive
+Pembroke, and bitterly reproached the marcher earl with the part his
+house had taken in driving the Welsh from their lands. In August Owen
+and the Spaniards were lying off La Rochelle. Sir Thomas Percy,
+seneschal of Poitou, and the Captal de Buch were with a considerable
+force at Soubise, near the mouth of the Charente. Owen ascended the
+river and fell unexpectedly on the English at night. The English were
+utterly defeated and both leaders were taken prisoners, Thomas Percy,
+the future ally of Owen Glendower, being captured by one of Sir Owen's
+Welsh followers. Meanwhile, Du Guesclin, after receiving the surrender
+of Poitiers on August 7, pressed forward to the coast and was soon in
+touch with Owen and the Spaniards. On the same September day Angouleme
+and La Rochelle opened their gates to the French. In the course of the
+same month all the other towns of the district declared for the winning
+side. The nobles of Poitou were still to some extent English in
+sympathy, and a considerable band of them and their followers took
+refuge in Thouars. On December 1 this last stronghold of Poitevin
+feudalism surrendered. The tidings of disaster roused the old English
+king to his final martial effort. A fleet was raised and sailed from
+Sandwich, having on board the king, the Prince of Wales, the Duke of
+Lancaster, and many other magnates. Contrary winds kept the vessels
+near the English coast, and the vast sums lavished on the equipment of
+the expedition were wasted. In despair the Black Prince surrendered to
+his father his principality of Aquitaine. When the king begged the
+commons for a further war subsidy, he was told that the navy had been
+ruined by his harsh impressment of seamen, and his refusal to give them
+pay when detained in port waiting for orders. When the command of the
+sea passed to the French and their Spanish allies, all hope of
+retaining Aquitaine was lost.
+
+The final stages in the ruin of the English power in France need not
+detain us long. Despite his successes, Du Guesclin persevered in his
+policy of wearing down the English by delays and by avoiding pitched
+battles. He turned his attention to Brittany, where Duke John, in
+difficulties with his subjects, had invoked the aid of an English army.
+Thereupon the Breton barons called the French king to take possession
+of the duchy, whose lord was betraying it to the foreigner. The old
+party struggle was at an end: Celtic Brittany joined hands with French
+Brittany. Before the end of 1373, Duke John was a fugitive, and only a
+few castles with English garrisons upheld his cause. Of these Brest was
+the most important, and despite the Spaniards and Owen of Wales, the
+English were still strong enough at sea to retain possession of the
+place.
+
+In July, 1373, John of Gaunt marched out of Calais with one of the
+strongest armies with which an English invader had ever entered France.
+Pursuing a general south-easterly direction, the English pitilessly
+devastated Artois, Picardy, and Champagne. Du Guesclin hastened back
+from Brittany to command the army engaged in watching Lancaster. He
+still continued his defensive tactics, but gave the enemy little rest.
+Lancaster was no match for so able a general as the Breton constable.
+At the end of September he moved from Troyes to Sens, and thence pushed
+into Burgundy. Then he turned westwards through the Nivernais and the
+Bourbonnais, and led his army through the uplands of Auvergne. By the
+end of the year he had traversed the Limousin, and made his way to
+Bordeaux. Half his army had perished of hunger, cold, and in petty
+warfare. The horses had suffered worse than the men, and the baggage
+train was almost destroyed. Without fighting a battle Du Guesclin had
+put the enemy out of action. Experience now showed how useless were the
+prolonged plundering raids which ten years before had filled all France
+with terror.
+
+Even in Gascony Lancaster could not hold his own. After declining
+battle with the Duke of Anjou, he returned to England, leaving Sir
+Thomas Felton as seneschal. The enemy had penetrated to the very heart
+of the old English district. La Reole opened its gates to them;
+Saint-Sever, the seat of the Gascon high court, followed its example,
+By 1374 the English duchy was reduced to the coast lands around Bayonne
+and Bordeaux. That year the French laid siege to Chandos's castle of
+Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte. The siege was as long and as elaborately
+organised as the great siege of Calais. A ring of _bastilles_ was
+erected round the doomed town, and cannon discharged huge balls of
+stone against its ramparts. After nearly a year's siege the garrison
+agreed to surrender on condition of a heavy payment. With the fall of
+the old home of the Harcourts the English power in Normandy perished.
+There was still, it is true, the influence of Charles of Navarre; but
+that desperate intriguer had compromised himself so much with both
+parties that no confidence could be placed in him.
+
+The misfortunes of the English inclined them to listen to proposals of
+peace. Though the papacy was more frankly on the French side than ever,
+it had not lost its ancient solicitude to put an end to the war. With
+that object Gregory XI, though eager to return to Rome, tarried in the
+Rhone valley. Two of his legates appeared in Champagne at the time of
+John of Gaunt's abortive expedition. From that moment offers of peace
+were constantly pressed on both sides. Lancaster was at Calais, and
+Anjou was not far off at Saint-Omer, when definite proposals were
+exchanged. Before long it was found more convenient that the envoys
+should meet face to face, and for this reason the two dukes accepted
+the hospitality of Louis de Male, and held personal interviews at
+Bruges. More than once the negotiations broke down altogether. At no
+time was there much hope of a permanent peace. The English insisted on
+the terms of 1360, and the French demanded the cession of Calais and
+the release of the unpaid ransom of King John. However, on June 27,
+1375, a truce for a year was signed at Bruges, which was further
+extended until June, 1377, just long enough to allow the old king to
+end his days in peace. France had once more to wrestle with the
+companies set free by the truce, so that England could still enjoy
+possession of Calais, Bordeaux, Bayonne, Brest, and the other scanty
+remnants of the cessions of the treaty of Calais. Satisfied at putting
+an end to the war, Gregory XI betook himself to Rome. Thus the truce
+outlasted the Babylonish captivity of the papacy as well as the life of
+Edward III.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+ENGLAND DURING THE LATTER YEARS OF EDWARD III.
+
+
+Never was Edward's glory so high as in the years immediately succeeding
+the treaty of Calais. The unspeakable misery of France heightened his
+magnificence by the strength of the contrast. At eight-and-forty he
+retained the vigour and energy of his younger days, though surrounded
+by a band of grown-up sons. In 1362 the king celebrated his jubilee, or
+his fiftieth birthday, amidst feasts of unexampled splendour. Not less
+magnificent were the festivities that attended the visits of the three
+kings, of France, Cyprus, and Scotland, in 1364.
+
+Of the glories of these years we have detailed accounts from an
+eye-witness a writer competent, above all other men of his time, to set
+down in courtly and happy phrase the wonders that delighted his eyes.
+In 1361, John Froissart, an adventurous young clerk from Valenciennes,
+sought out a career for himself in the household of his countrywoman,
+Queen Philippa, bearing with him as his credentials a draft of a verse
+chronicle which was his first attempt at historical composition. He
+came to England at the right moment. The older generation of historians
+had laid down their pens towards the conclusion of the great war, and
+had left no worthy successors. The new-comer was soon to surpass them,
+not in precision and sobriety, but in wealth of detail, in literary
+charm, and in genial appreciation of the externals of his age. He
+recorded with an eye-witness's precision of colour, though with utter
+indifference to exactness, the tournaments and fetes, the banquets and
+the _largesses_ of the noble lords and ladies of the most brilliant
+court in Christendom. He celebrated the courtesy of the knightly class,
+their devotion to their word of honour, the liberality with which
+captive foreigners was allowed to share in their sports and pleasures,
+and the implicit loyalty with which nearly all the many captive knights
+repaid the trust placed on their word. To him Edward was the most
+glorious of kings, and Philippa, his patroness, the most beautiful,
+liberal, pious, and charitable of queens. For nine years he enjoyed the
+queen's bounty, and described with loyal partiality the exploits of
+English knights. With the death of his patroness and the beginning of
+England's misfortunes, the light-minded adventurer sought another
+master in the French-loving Wenceslaus of Brabant. The first edition of
+his chronicle, compiled when under the spell of the English court,
+contrasts strongly with the second version written at Brussels at the
+instigation of the Luxemburg duke of Brabant.
+
+Even Froissart saw that all was not well in England. The common people
+seemed to him proud, cruel, disloyal, and suspicious. Their delight was
+in battle and slaughter, and they hated the foreigner with a fierce
+hatred which had no counterpart in the cosmopolitan knightly class.
+They were the terror of their lords and delighted in keeping their
+kings under restraint. The Londoners were the most mighty of the
+English and could do more than all the rest of England. Other writers
+tell the same tale. The same fierce patriotism that Froissart notes
+glows through the rude battle songs in which Lawrence Minot sang the
+early victories of Edward from Halidon Hill to the taking of Guines,
+and inspired Geoffrey le Baker to repeat with absolute confidence every
+malicious story which gossip told to the discredit of the French king
+and his people. It was under the influence of this spirit that the
+steps were taken, which we have already recorded, to extend the use of
+English, notably in the law courts. Yet the old bilingual habit clave
+long to the English. Despite the statute of 1362, the lawyers continued
+to employ the French tongue, until it crystallised into the jargon of
+the later _Year Books_ or of Littleton's _Tenures_. Under Edward III,
+however, French remained the living speech of many Englishmen. John
+Gower wrote in French the earliest of his long poems. But he is a
+thorough Englishman for all that. He writes in French, but, as he says,
+he writes for England.[1]
+
+ [1] "O gentile Engleterre, a toi j'escrits," _Mirour de
+ l'Omme,_ in John Gower's _Works,_ i., 378, ed. G.C. MaCaulay,
+ to whom belongs the credit of recovering this long lost work.
+
+It was characteristic of the patriotic movement of the reign of Edward
+III, that a new courtly literature in the English language rivalled the
+French vernacular literature which as yet had by no means ceased to
+produce fruit. The new type begins with the anonymous poems, "Sir
+Gawain and the Green Knight," and the "Pearl". While Froissart was the
+chief literary figure at the English court during the ten years after
+the treaty of Calais, his place was occupied in the concluding decade
+of the reign by Geoffrey Chaucer, the first great poet of the English
+literary revival. The son of a substantial London vintner, Chaucer
+spent his youth as a page in the household of Lionel of Antwerp, from
+which he was transferred to the service of Edward himself. He took part
+in more than one of Edward's French campaigns, and served in diplomatic
+missions to Italy, Flanders, and elsewhere. His early poems reflect the
+modes and metres of the current French tradition in an English dress,
+and only reach sustained importance in his lament on the death of the
+Duchess Blanche of Lancaster, written about 1370. It is significant
+that the favourite poet of the king's declining years was no clerk but
+a layman, and that the Tuscan mission of 1373, which perhaps first
+introduced him to the treasures of Italian poetry, was undertaken in
+the king's service. Thorough Englishman as Chaucer was, he had his eyes
+open to every movement of European culture. His higher and later style
+begins with his study of Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio. Though he
+wrote for Englishmen in their own tongue, his fame was celebrated by
+the French poet, Eustace Deschamps, as the "great translator" who had
+sown the flowers of French poesy in the realm of Aeneas and Brut the
+Trojan. His broad geniality stood in strong contrast to the savage
+patriotism of Minot. In becoming national, English vernacular art did
+not become insular. Chaucer wrote in the tongue of the southern
+midlands, the region wherein were situated his native London, the two
+universities, the habitual residences of the court, the chief seats of
+parliaments and councils, and the most frequented marts of commerce.
+For the first time a standard English language came into being, largely
+displacing for literary purposes the local dialects which had hitherto
+been the natural vehicles of writing in their respective districts. The
+Yorkshireman, Wycliffe, the westcountryman, Langland, adopted before
+the end of the reign the tongue of the capital for their literary
+language in preference to the speech of their native shires. The
+language of the extreme south, the descendant of the tongue of the West
+Saxon court, became the dialect of peasants and artisans. That a
+continuous life was reserved for the idiom of the north country, was
+due to its becoming the speech of a free Scotland, the language in
+which Barbour, Archdeacon of Aberdeen, commemorated for the court of
+the first Stewart king the exploits of Robert Bruce and the Scottish
+war of independence. The unity of England thus found another notable
+expression in the oneness of the popular speech. And the evolution of
+the northern dialect into the "Scottish" of a separate kingdom showed
+that, if England were united, English-speaking Britain remained
+divided.
+
+Other arts indicate the same tendency. Even in the thirteenth century
+English Gothic architecture differentiated itself pretty completely from
+its models in the Isle de France. The early fourteenth century, the age
+of the so-called "decorated style," suggests in some ways a falling back
+to the French types, though the prosperity of England and the desolation
+of France make the English examples of fourteenth century building the
+more numerous and splendid. The occasional tendency of the later
+"flowing" decorated towards "flamboyant" forms, to be seen in some of
+the churches of Northamptonshire, marks the culminating point of this
+fresh approximation of French and English architecture. But the division
+between the two countries brought about by war was illustrated before
+the end of the reign in the growth of the most local of our medieval
+architectural types, that "perpendicular" style which is so strikingly
+different from the "flamboyant" art of the neighbouring kingdom. This
+specially English style begins early in the reign of Edward III, when
+the cult of the murdered Edward of Carnarvon gave to the monks of St.
+Peter's, Gloucester, the means to recast the massive columns and gloomy
+arcades of the eastern portions of their romanesque abbey church after
+the lighter and brighter patterns in which Gloucester set the fashion to
+all southern Britain. In the buildings of the later years of Edward's
+reign the old "flowing decorated" and the newer and stiffer
+"perpendicular" grew up side by side. If the two seem almost combined in
+the church of Edington, in Wiltshire, the foundation dedicated in 1361
+for his native village by Edward's chancellor, Bishop Edington of
+Winchester, the triumph of the perpendicular is assured in the new choir
+which Archbishop Thoresby began for York Minster, and in the
+reconstruction of the Norman cathedral of Winchester begun by Bishop
+Edington, and completed when his greater successor, William of Wykeham,
+carried out in a more drastic way the device already adopted at
+Gloucester of recasing the ancient structure so as to suit modern
+tastes. The full triumph of the new style is apparent in Wykeham's twin
+foundations at Winchester and Oxford. The separation of feeling between
+England and Scotland is now seen in architecture as well as in language.
+When the perpendicular fashion was carrying all before it in the
+southern realm, the Scottish builders erected their churches after the
+flamboyant type of their French allies. Thus while the twelfth and
+thirteenth century structures of the northern and southern kingdoms are
+practically indistinguishable, the differences between the two nations,
+which had arisen from the Edwardian policy of conquest, expressed
+themselves ultimately in the striking contrast between the flamboyant of
+Melrose or St. Giles' and the perpendicular of Winchester or Windsor.
+
+English patriotism, which had asserted itself in the literature and art
+of the people long before it dominated courtly circles, continued to
+express itself in more popular forms than even those of the poems of
+Chaucer. The older fashions of instructing the people were still in
+vogue in the early part of Edward's reign. Richard Rolle, the hermit of
+Hampole, whose _Prick_ of _Conscience_ and vernacular paraphrases of
+the Bible illustrate the older didactic literature, was carried off in
+his Yorkshire cell in the year of the Black Death. The cycles of
+miracle plays, which edified and amused the townsfolk of Chester and
+York, crystallised into a permanent shape early in this reign, and were
+set forth with ever-increasing elaborateness by an age bent on
+pageantry and amusement. The vernacular sermons and popular manuals of
+devotion increased in numbers and copiousness. In this the time of the
+Black Death is, as in other aspects of our story, a deep dividing line.
+
+The note of increasing strain and stress is fully expressed in the
+earlier forms of _The Vision of Piers Plowman,_ which were composed
+before the death of Edward III. Its author, William Langland, a clerk in
+minor orders, debarred by marriage from a clerical career, came from the
+Mortimer estates in the march of Wales: but his life was mainly spent in
+London, and he wrote in the tongue of the city of his adoption. The
+first form of the poem is dated 1362, the year of the second visitation
+of the Black Death, while the troubles of the end of the reign perhaps
+inspired the fuller edition which saw the light in 1377. It is a
+commonplace to contrast the gloomy pictures drawn by Langland with the
+highly coloured pictures of contemporary society for which Chaucer was
+gathering his materials. Yet this contrast may be pressed too far.
+Though Langland had a keen eye to those miseries of the poor which are
+always with us, the impression of the time gathered from his writings is
+not so much one of material suffering, as of social unrest and
+discontent. The poor ploughman, who cannot get meat, still has his
+cheese, curds, and cream, his loaf of beans and bran, his leeks and
+cabbage, his cow, calf, and cart mare.[1] The very beggar demanded
+"bread of clean wheat" and "beer of the best and brownest," while the
+landless labourer despised "night-old cabbage," "penny-ale," and bacon,
+and asked for fresh meat and fish freshly fried.[2] There is plenty of
+rough comfort and coarse enjoyment in the England through which "Long
+Will" stalked moodily, idle, hopeless, and in himself exemplifying many
+of the evils which he condemned. The England of Langland is bitter,
+discontented, and sullen. It is the popular answer to the class
+prejudice and reckless greed of the lords and gentry. Langland's own
+attitude towards the more comfortable classes is much that of the
+self-assertive and mutinous Londoner whom Froissart looked upon with
+such bitter prejudice. He boasts that he was loath to do reverence to
+lords and ladies, or to those clad in furs with pendants of silver, and
+refuses to greet "sergeants" with a "God save you". Every class of
+society is flagellated in his scathing criticisms. He is no
+revolutionist with a new gospel of reform, but, though content to accept
+the old traditions, he is the ruthless denouncer of abuses, and is
+thoroughly filled with the spirit which, four years after the second
+recension of his book, found expression in the Peasants Revolt of 1381.
+With all the archaism of his diction and metre, Langland, even more than
+Chaucer, reflects the modernity of his age.
+
+ [1] _Vision of Piers Plowman,_ i.,220, ed. Skeat.
+
+ [2] _Ibid.,_ i., 222.
+
+Even the universities were growing more national, for the war prevented
+Oxford students from seeking, after their English graduation, a wider
+career at Paris. William of Ockham, the last of the great English
+schoolmen that won fame in the European rather than in the English
+world, died about 1349 in the service of the Bavarian emperor. In the
+same year the plague swept away Thomas Bradwardine, the "profound
+doctor," at the moment of his elevation to the throne of Canterbury.
+Bradwardine, though a scholar of universal reputation, won his fame at
+Oxford without the supplementary course at Paris, and lived all his
+career in his native land. As an English university career became more
+self-sufficient, Oxford became the school of the politician and the man
+of affairs as much as of the pure student. The new tendency is
+illustrated by the careers of the brothers Stratford, both Oxford
+scholars, yet famous not for their writings but for lives devoted to the
+service of the State, though rewarded by the highest offices of the
+Church. His conspicuous position as a teacher of scholastic philosophy
+first brought John Wycliffe into academic prominence. But he soon won a
+wider fame as a preacher in London, an adviser of the court, an opponent
+of the "possessioner" monks, and of the forsworn friars, who, deserting
+apostolic poverty, vied with the monks in covetousness. His attacks on
+practical abuses in the Church marked him out as a politician as well as
+a philosopher. His earlier career ended in 1374, the year in which he
+first became the king's ambassador, not long after proceeding to the
+degree of doctor of divinity.[1] His later struggles must be considered
+in the light of the political history of the concluding episodes of
+Edward's reign. In a few years we shall find the Oxford champion
+abandoning the Latin language of universal culture, and appealing to the
+people in homely English. With Wycliffe's entry upon his wider career,
+it is hardly too much to say that Oxford ceased to be merely a part of
+the cosmopolitan training ground of the schoolmen, and became in some
+fashion a national institution. Cambridge, too young and obscure in
+earlier ages to have rivalled Oxford, first began to enjoy an increasing
+reputation.
+
+ [1] This was before Dec. 26, 1373. See Twemlow in _Engl. Hist.
+ Review_, xv, (1900), 529-530.
+
+Hitherto culture had been not only cosmopolitan but clerical. Every
+university student and nearly every professional man was a clerk. But
+education was becoming possible for laymen, and there were already lay
+professions outside the clerical caste. The wide cultivation and the
+vigorous literary output of laymen of letters like Chaucer and Cower
+are sufficient evidence of this. But the best proof is the complete
+differentiation of the common lawyers from the clergy. The inns of
+court of London became virtually a legal university, where highly
+trained men studied a juristic system, which was not the less purely
+English in spirit because its practitioners used the French tongue as
+their technical instrument. There were no longer lawyers in England
+who, like Bracton, strove to base the law of the land on the forms and
+methods of Roman jurisprudence. There were no longer kings, like Edward
+I., with Italian trained civilians at their court ready to translate
+the law of England into imperialist forms. The canonist still studied
+at Oxford or Cambridge, but his career was increasingly clerical, and
+the Church, unlike the State, was unable to nationalise itself, though
+the whole career of Wycliffe and the strenuous efforts of the kings and
+statesmen who passed the statutes of Provisors and Praemunire, showed
+that some of the English clergy, and many of the English laity, were
+willing to make the effort. English law, in divorcing itself from the
+universities and the clergy, became national as well as lay. There were
+no longer any Weylands who concealed their clerical beginnings, and hid
+away the subdeacon under the married knight and justice, the founder of
+a landowning family. The lawyers of Edward's reign were frankly laymen,
+marrying and giving in marriage, establishing new families that became
+as noble as any of the decaying baronial houses, and yet cherishing a
+corporate ideal and common spirit as lively and real as those of any
+monastery or clerical association.
+
+In enumerating the many convergent tendencies which worked together in
+strengthening the national life, we must not forget the growing
+importance of commerce. Merchant princes like the Poles could rival the
+financial operations of Lombard or Tuscan, and climb into the baronial
+class. The proud and mutinous temper of the Londoners was largely due
+to their ever-increasing wealth. We are on the threshold of the careers
+of commercial magnates, like the Philpots and the Whittingtons. Even
+when Edward III. was still on the throne, a London mayor of no special
+note, John Pyel, could set up in his native Northamptonshire village of
+Irthlingborough a college and church of remarkable stateliness and
+dignity. The growth of the wool trade, and its gradual transfer to
+English hands, the development of the staple system, the rise of an
+English seaman class that knew all the havens of Europe, the beginnings
+of the English cloth manufacture, all indicate that English commerce
+was not only becoming more extensive, but was gradually emancipating
+itself from dependence on the foreigner. Thus before the end of
+Edward's reign England was an intensely national state, proudly
+conscious of itself, and haughtily contemptuous of the foreigner, with
+its own language, literature, style in art, law, universities, and even
+the beginnings of a movement towards the nationalisation of the Church.
+The cosmopolitanism of the earlier Middle Ages was everywhere on the
+wane. A modern nation had arisen out of the old world-state and
+world-spirit. In the England of Edward III., Chaucer, and Wycliffe, we
+have reached the consummation of the movement whose first beginnings we
+have traced in the early storms of the reign of Henry III. It is in the
+development of this tendency that the period from 1216 to 1377
+possesses such unity as it has.
+
+During the years of peace after the treaty of Calais, Edward III.
+completed the scheme for the establishment of his family begun with the
+grant of Aquitaine to the Black Prince. The state of the king's
+finances made it impossible for him to provide for numerous sons and
+daughters from the royal exchequer, and the system of appanages had
+seldom been popular or successful in England. Edward found an easier
+way of endowing his offspring by politic marriages that transferred to
+his sons the endowments and dignities of the great houses, which, in
+spite of lavish creations of new earldoms, were steadily dying out in
+the male line. Some of his daughters in the same way were married into
+baronial families whose attachment to the throne would, it was
+believed, be strengthened by intermarriage with the king's kin; while
+others, wedded to foreign princes, helped to widen the circle of
+continental alliances on which he never ceased to build large hopes.
+Collateral branches of the royal family were pressed into the same
+system, which was so systematically ordered that it has passed for a
+new departure in English history. This is, however, hardly the case.
+Many previous kings, notably Edward I., carried out a policy based upon
+similar lines, and only less conspicuous by reason of the smaller
+number of children that they had to provide for. The descendants of
+Henry III. and Edward I. in no wise kept true to the monarchical
+tradition, but rather gave distinction to the baronial opposition by
+ennobling it with royal alliances. But the martial and vigorous policy
+of Edward III. had at least the effect of reducing to inactivity the
+tradition of constitutional opposition which had been the common
+characteristic of successive generations of the royal house of
+Lancaster, the chief collateral branch of the royal family. Subsequent
+history will show that the Edwardian family settlement was as
+unsuccessful as that of his grandfather. The alliances which Edward
+built up brought neither solidarity to the royal house, nor strength to
+the crown, nor union to the baronage. But the working out of this, as
+of so many of the new developments of the later part of Edward's reign,
+can only be seen after his death.
+
+Edward's eldest son became, as we have seen, Duke of Cornwall, Prince
+of Wales, and Earl of Chester even before he received Aquitaine. He was
+the first of the continuous line of English princes of Wales, for
+Edward III. never bore that title. The Black Prince's marriage with his
+cousin, Joan of Kent, was a love-match, and the estates of his bride
+were scarcely an important consideration to the lord of Wales and
+Cheshire. Yet the only child of the unlucky Edmund of Woodstock was no
+mean heiress, bringing with her the estates of her father's earldom of
+Kent, besides the inheritance of her mother's family, the Wakes of
+Liddell and Lincolnshire. The estates and earldom afterwards passed to
+Joan's son by a former husband, and the Holland earls of Kent formed a
+minor family connexion which closely supported the throne of Richard of
+Bordeaux. Though their paternal inheritance was that of Lancashire
+squires, the Hollands won a leading place in the history of the next
+generation.
+
+Edward III.'s second son, William of Hatfield, died in infancy. For his
+third son, Lionel of Antwerp, when still in his childhood, Edward found
+the greatest heiress of her time, Elizabeth, the only daughter of
+William de Burgh, the sixth lord of Connaught and third Earl of Ulster,
+the representative of one of the chief Anglo-Norman houses in Ireland.
+Even before his marriage, Lionel was made Earl of Ulster, a title sunk
+after 1362 in the novel dignity of the duchy of Clarence. This title was
+chosen because Elizabeth de Burgh was a grand-daughter of Elizabeth of
+Clare, the sister of the last Clare Earl of Gloucester, and a share of
+the Gloucester inheritance passed through her to the young duke. His
+marriage gave Lionel a special relation to Ireland, where, however, his
+two lordships of Ulster and Connaught were largely in the hands of the
+native septs, and where the royal authority had never won back the
+ground lost during the vigorous onslaught of Edward Bruce on the English
+power. In 1342 the estates of Ireland forwarded to Edward a long
+statement of the shortcomings of the English administration of the
+island.[1] No effective steps were taken to remedy those evils until, in
+1361, Edward III. sent Lionel as governor to Ireland, declaring "that
+our Irish dominions have been reduced to such utter devastation and ruin
+that they may be totally lost, if our subjects there are not immediately
+succoured". Lionel's most famous achievement was the statute of
+Kilkenny. This law prohibited the intermixture of the Anglo-Normans in
+Ireland with the native Irish, which was rapidly undermining the basis
+of English rule and confounding Celts and Normans in a nation, ever
+divided indeed against itself, but united against the English. Lionel
+wearied of a task beyond his strength. His wife's early death lessened
+the ties which bound him to her land, and he went back to England
+declaring that he would never return to Ireland if he could help it. His
+succession as governor by a Fitzgerald showed that the plan of ruling
+Ireland through England was abandoned by Edward III. in favour of the
+cheaper but fatal policy of concealing the weakness of the English power
+by combining it with the strength of the strongest of the Anglo-Norman
+houses. Under this faulty system, the statute of Kilkenny became
+inoperative almost from its enactment.
+
+ [1] Cal. of Close, Rolls, 1341-43, pp. 508-16.
+
+The widowed Duke of Clarence made a second great marriage. The
+Visconti, tyrants of Milan, were willing to pay heavily for the
+privilege of intermarriage with the great reigning families of Europe,
+and neither Edward III. nor the French king could resist the temptation
+of alliance with a family that was able to endow its daughters so
+richly. Accordingly, the Duke of Clarence became in 1368 the husband of
+Violante Visconti, the daughter of Galeazzo, lord of Pavia, and the
+niece of Bernabo, signor of Milan, the bitter foe of the Avignon
+papacy. Five months later, Lionel was carried away by a sudden
+sickness, and thus the Visconti marriage brought little fruit to
+England. Lionel's only child, Philippa, the offspring of his first
+marriage, was married, just before her father's death, to Edmund
+Mortimer, Earl of March, great-grandson of the traitor earl beheaded in
+1330. Lionel's death added to the vast inheritance of the Mortimers and
+Joinvilles the lands and claims of Ulster and Clarence, and so Edward
+III.'s magnanimity in reviving the earldom of March after the disgrace
+of 1330 was rewarded by the devolution of its estates to his
+grand-daughter's child. The Earl of March was invested with a new
+political importance, for his wife was the nearest representative of
+Edward III, save for the dying Black Prince and his sickly son. The
+fierce blood and broad estates of the great marcher family continued to
+give importance to Philippa's descendants; and finally the house of
+Mortimer mounted the throne in the person of Edward IV.
+
+The estates of Lancaster were annexed to the reigning branch of the
+royal house by the marriage in 1359 of John of Gaunt, Edward's third
+surviving son, with Blanche of Lancaster, the heiress of Duke Henry,
+who became, after her sister Maud's death, the sole inheritor of the
+duchy of Lancaster. In 1362 John, who had hitherto been Earl of
+Richmond, yielded up this dignity to the younger John of Montfort, its
+rightful heir, and was created Duke of Lancaster at the same time that
+Lionel was made Duke of Clarence. Ten years after her marriage Blanche
+died, leaving John a son, Henry of Derby, the future Henry IV., whose
+wedding, after his grandfather's death, to one of the Bohun
+co-heiresses brought part of the estates of another great house within
+the grasp of Edward III.'s descendants. Moreover, the other Bohun
+co-heiress became in 1376 the wife of Thomas of Woodstock, the youngest
+of Edward's sons, the Gloucester of the next reign. The three Bohun
+earldoms of Hereford, Essex, and Northampton were thus absorbed by the
+old king's children and grandchildren. John of Gaunt, like Lionel, lost
+his wife early and sought a second bride abroad. In 1372 he married
+Constance of Castile, a natural daughter of the deceased Peter the
+Cruel. Henceforth he was summoned to parliament as King of Castile and
+Leon as well as Duke of Lancaster, though it was not until the next
+reign that he took any actual steps to assert his claim.
+
+John's next younger brother, Edmund of Langley, Earl of Cambridge in
+136% [1368?] married Isabella, Constance of Castile's younger sister.
+He was the future Duke of York, and as the only one of Edward III.'s
+sons who did not marry an English heiress, was the most scantily
+endowed of them all. The union of his descendants with those of Lionel
+of Clarence gave the house of York a territorial importance which was,
+as we have seen, mainly derived from the Mortimer inheritance. Thus the
+two lines of descendants of Edward III. which had most future
+significance were those which represented through heiresses the rival
+houses of Lancaster and March. The history of the next century shows
+that the rivalry was only made more formidable by the connexion of both
+these lines with the royal family. In this, the most striking triumph
+of the Edwardian policy, is also the most signal indication of its
+failure. From it arose the factions of York and Lancaster.
+
+The legislation of the years of peace, from 1360 to 1369, is largely
+anti-papal and economic, and is so intimately connected with the laws
+of the preceding period that it has been dealt with in an earlier
+chapter. But however anti-papal, and therefore anti-clerical, some of
+Edward's laws were, his government was still mainly controlled by great
+ecclesiastical statesmen. Simon Langham, though a Benedictine monk, had
+as chancellor demanded in 1366 the opinion of the estates as to the
+unlawfulness of the Roman tribute, and the clerical estate, if it did
+not help forward the anti-Roman legislation, was content to stand
+aside, and let it take effect without protest. Shortly after taking
+part in the movement against papal tribute, Langham was removed from
+the see of Ely to that of Canterbury in succession to Islip. His
+conversion into a purely monastic college of his predecessor's mixed
+foundation for seculars and regulars in Canterbury Hall, Oxford, showed
+a bias which might have been expected in a former abbot of Westminster,
+while his willingness to follow in the footsteps of Kilwardby, and
+exchange his archbishopric for the dignity of a cardinal and residence
+at Avignon showed that he was a papalist as well as an English patriot.
+His successor as primate, appointed in 1369 by papal provision, was
+William Whittlesea, a nephew of Archbishop Islip, whose weak health and
+colourless character made of little account his five years' tenure of
+the metropolitical dignity. With Canterbury in such feeble hands, the
+leadership in the Church and primacy in the councils of the crown
+passed to stronger men: such as John Thoresby, Archbishop of York till
+1373; Thomas Brantingham, treasurer from 1369 to 1371, and Bishop of
+Exeter from 1370 to 1394; and above all to Edward's old servant,
+William of Wykeham, chancellor from 1367 to 1371, and Bishop of
+Winchester, in succession to Edington, from 1367 until 1404. Wykeham
+was a strenuous and hard-working servant of the crown, a vigorous and
+careful ruler of his diocese, a mighty pluralist, a magnificent
+builder, and the most bountiful and original of all the pious founders
+of his age. "Everything," says Froissart, "was done through him and
+without him nothing was done."[1]
+
+ [1] Froissart, _Chroniques_, ed. Luce, viii., 101.
+
+The year of the breach of the treaty of Calais was also marked by the
+third great visitation of the Black Death, and the death of Queen
+Philippa. Parliament cordially welcomed the resumption by Edward of the
+title of King of France, and made liberal subsidies for the prosecution
+of the campaign. Disappointment was all the more bitter when each
+campaign ended in disaster, and in the parliament of February, 1371, the
+storm burst. The circumstances of the ministerial crisis of 1341 were
+almost exactly renewed. As on the previous occasion, the state was in
+the hands of great ecclesiastics, whose conservative methods were
+thought inadequate for circumstances so perilous. John Hastings, second
+Earl of Pembroke of his house, a gallant young warrior and the intended
+son-in-law of the king, made himself the spokesman of the anti-clerical
+courtiers, probably with the good-will of the king. At Pembroke's
+instigation the earls, barons, and commons drew up a petition that,
+"inasmuch as the government of the realm has long been in the hands of
+the men of Holy Church, who in no case can be brought to account for
+their acts, whereby great mischief has happened in times past and may
+happen in times to come, may it therefore please the king that laymen of
+his own realm be elected to replace them, and that none but laymen
+henceforth be chancellor, treasurer, barons of the exchequer, clerk of
+privy seal, or other great officers of the realm ".[1] Edward fell in
+with this request. Wykeham quitted the chancery, and Brantingham the
+treasury. Of their lay successors the new chancellor, Sir Robert Thorpe,
+chief-justice of the court of common pleas, was a close friend of the
+Earl of Pembroke, while the new treasurer, Sir Richard le Scrope of
+Bolton, a Yorkshire warrior, represented the interests of John of Gaunt,
+whose long absences abroad did not prevent his ultimately becoming a
+strong supporter of the lay policy. A subsidy of L50,000 and a statute
+that no new tax should be laid on wool without parliamentary assent
+concluded the work of this parliament.
+
+ [1] _Rot. Pad._, ii., 304.
+
+The lay ministers did not prove as efficient as their clerical
+predecessors. Want of acquaintance with administrative routine led them
+to assess the parliamentary grant so badly that an irregular
+reassembling of part of the estates was necessary, when it was found
+that the ministers had ludicrously over-estimated the number of
+parishes in England among which the grant of L50,000 had been equally
+divided. Meanwhile the French war was proceeding worse than before.
+Thorpe died in 1372, and another lay chief-justice, Sir John Knyvett,
+succeeded him in the chancery. Pembroke, as we have seen, was taken
+prisoner to Santander within a few weeks of Thorpe's death. Fresh
+taxation was made necessary by every fresh defeat, and the clergy, who
+looked upon the misfortunes of the anti-clerical earl as God's
+punishment for his enmity to Holy Church, had their revenge against
+their lawyer supplanters, for the parliament of 1372 petitioned that
+lawyers, who used their position in parliament to advance their
+clients' affairs, should not be eligible for election as knights of the
+shire. Next year, the discontent of the estates came to a head after
+the failure of John of Gaunt's march from Calais to Bordeaux. The
+commons, by that time definitely organised as an independent house,
+answered the demand for fresh supplies by requesting the lords to
+appoint a committee of their number to confer with them on the state of
+the realm. The composition of the committee was not one that favoured
+the existing administration, and, guided by men like William of
+Wykeham, it made only a limited and conditional grant, which was
+strictly appropriated to the payment of the expenses of the war. The
+anti-clerical party was still strong enough to send up denunciations of
+papal assumptions, and the anxiety to adjust the relations between the
+papacy and the crown led to some abortive negotiations with the legates
+of Gregory XI at Bruges in 1374, which were mainly memorable for the
+appearance of John Wycliffe as one of the royal commissioners. Disgust
+at the attitude of the commons may well have postponed the next
+parliament for nearly three years. But the truce of Bruges made
+frequent parliaments less necessary.
+
+The truce brought John of Gaunt back to England, and the rivalry
+between him and his elder brother, which had begun during their last
+joint campaigns in France, crystallised into definite parties the
+discordant tendencies that had been well marked since the crisis of
+1371. The old king was a mere pawn in the game. His health had been
+broken by the debauchery and frivolity to which he had abandoned
+himself after the death of Queen Philippa. He was now entirely under
+the influence of Alice Perrers, a Hertfordshire squire's daughter,
+whose venality, greed, and shamelessness made her the fit tool for the
+self-seeking ring of courtiers. John of Gaunt sought her support as the
+best means of withdrawing the old king from the influence of the Prince
+of Wales, and the lay ministers were glad to maintain themselves in
+their tottering power by means of such powerful allies. Prominent among
+their party were courtier nobles--such as the chamberlain, Lord
+Latimer, and the steward of the household, Lord Neville of Raby,--and
+rich London financiers, chief among whom was Richard Lyons, men who
+made exorbitant profits out of the necessities of the administration.
+Faction sought to appear more respectable by professions of zeal for
+reform. The cry against papal encroachments was extended to a
+denunciation of the wealth and power of the clergy. John Wycliffe was
+called from his Oxford classrooms to expound the close connexion
+between dominion and grace, and to teach from London pulpits that the
+ungodly bishop or priest has no right to the temporal possessions given
+him on trust for the discharge of his high mission.[1]
+
+ [1] Until recently all historians have dated the beginning of
+ Wycliffe's political career from 1366, but J. Loserth has
+ proved that 1374, the date of the last demand for the Roman
+ tribute, to be the right year. See his _Studien zur
+ Kirchen-politik Englands im 14ten Jahrhundert_, in
+ _Sitzungsberichte der Academie der Wissenschaften in Wien_,
+ philos. histor. classe, cxxxvi., 1897, and, more briefly, in
+ _Engl. Hist. Review, xi._ (1896), 319-328.
+
+A vigorous opposition to the dominant faction was formed. At its head
+was the Black Prince. Hardly less important and much more active than
+the dying hero of Poitiers was Edmund Mortimer, Earl of March, the
+husband of Philippa of Clarence, and the father of the little Roger
+Mortimer whom nothing but the uncertain lives of the Prince of Wales
+and the sickly Richard of Bordeaux separated from the English throne.
+Hereditary antagonism accentuated incompatibility of personal
+interests. The ancient feuds of the houses of Mortimer and Lancaster
+still lived on in the hostility of their representatives. The
+understanding between the Prince of Wales and the Earl of March seems
+to have been complete. They had as their most powerful supporters the
+outraged dignitaries of the Church, who saw themselves kept out of
+office and threatened in their temporalities by the dominant faction.
+William of Wykeham, who had been the guardian of the Earl of March
+during his long minority, was the most experienced and wary of the
+clerical opposition to the lawyers and courtiers of the Lancaster
+faction. He had an eager and enthusiastic backer in the young and
+high-born Bishop of London, William Courtenay, the son of the Earl of
+Devon, and through his mother, Margaret Bohun, a great-grandson of
+Edward I. Office and descent combined to make Bishop Courtenay the
+custodian of the constitutional tradition, which was equally strong
+among the great baronial houses of ancient descent and such highly
+placed ecclesiastics as were zealous for the nation as well as for
+their order. His support was the more necessary since Simon of Sudbury,
+who in 1375 succeeded Whittlesea on the throne of St. Augustine, was a
+weak and time-serving politician.
+
+The storm, which had long been brewing, burst at last in the parliament
+of April, 1376. Of the acts of this memorable assembly, famous as the
+Good Parliament, and of the other concluding troubles of the reign we
+are fortunate in possessing not only copious official records, but a
+minute and highly dramatic account from the pen of a St. Alban's monk,
+who, alone of the monastic chroniclers of his age, represented the
+spirit which, in the days of Matthew Paris, made the great
+Hertfordshire abbey so famous a school of historiography.[1]
+
+ [1] _Chron. Angliae_, 1328-88, ed. E.M. Thompson (Rolls Ser.).
+ Compare Mr. S. Armitage-Smith's _John of Gaunt_ for an
+ unfavourable estimate of its value.
+
+The Good Parliament showed from the beginning a strong animosity
+against the courtiers. The time was not yet come when the commons could
+take the initiative, or supply leaders from its own ranks, and even
+among the commons capacity was unequally divided. Authority and
+influence were exclusively with the knights of the shire, and the
+citizens and burgesses were content to allow the country gentry to
+speak and act in their name. The knights of the shire demanded that, in
+accordance with the precedent of 1373, a committee of magnates should
+be associated with them in determining the policy to be adopted. The
+lords spiritual and temporal were as eager as the knights to attack the
+government, and a committee, of which the leading spirits included the
+Earl of March and the Bishop of London, supplied the element of
+direction and initiation in which the commons were lacking. The
+resolution which prevailed was shown by the estates agreeing to make no
+grant until grievances had been redressed, and by the choice of Sir
+Peter de la Mare as spokesman of the commons before the king. Sir Peter
+was elected, we are told, because he possessed abundant wisdom and
+eloquence, and enough boldness to say what was in his mind, regardless
+of the good-will of the great. Perhaps a further and more weighty
+reason was that he was steward of the Earl of March. He was the first
+person to hold an office indistinguishable in all essentials from that
+of the later Speaker. Under his guidance the commons worked out an
+elaborate policy of revenge and reform. The contempt with which John of
+Gaunt and the courtiers had at first regarded their action, gave place
+to fear. The duke found it prudent to stand aside, while a clean sweep
+of the administration was made.
+
+Charges were brought against the leading ministers of state, after a
+fashion in which the constitutional historian sees the beginnings of
+the process of the removal of great offenders by impeachment. Lord
+Latimer was the first victim. He had appropriated the king's money to
+his own uses; he had shown remissness and treachery during the last
+campaign in Brittany; he had taken bribes; he was, in a word, "useless
+to king and kingdom". His fate was promptly shared by Lyons, the London
+merchant, the accomplice of his frauds, who had availed himself of his
+court influence to make a "corner" in nearly all imported articles, to
+the impoverishment of the common people and the disorganisation of
+trade. Lord Neville, whose eager partisanship of Latimer had led him to
+insult Sir Peter de la Mare, was threatened with similar proceedings.
+Even Alice Perrers was attacked, though, says the chronicler, the
+natural affection of Englishmen for their king was so great that they
+were slow to molest the lady whom the king loved. However, Alice's
+unblushing interference with the course of justice, her appearance in
+the courts at Westminster, sitting on the judges' bench, clamouring for
+the condemnation of her enemies and the acquittal of her friends,
+roused the knights of the shire to action. An ordinance against women
+being allowed to practise in the law courts was made the pretext for
+her removal from court, and Alice, fearful that worse might happen,
+took oath that she would have no further dealings with the king.
+Meantime Latimer and Lyons were condemned to forfeiture and
+imprisonment.
+
+In the midst of these proceedings the knights lost their strongest
+support by the death of the Black Prince on June 8. John of Gaunt at
+once went down to the house of commons, and boldly suggested that the
+English should follow the example of the French and allow no woman to
+become heiress of the kingdom. This was a direct assertion of his own
+claims to stand next to the throne after Richard of Bordeaux, and
+before Roger Mortimer. Alarmed at the blow thus levelled against their
+chief remaining champion, the knights courageously held to their
+position. "The king," said they, "though old is still healthy, and may
+outlive us all. Moreover he has an heir in the ten-year-old prince
+Richard. While these are alive there is no need to discuss the question
+of the succession." They completed the drawing up of the long list of
+petitions, whose grudging and partial acceptance by the crown made the
+roll of the parliament of 1376 memorable as asserting principles, if
+not as vindicating practical ends. They forced Lancaster to agree to a
+council of twelve peers nominated in parliament to act as a standing
+committee of advisers, without which the king might do nothing of any
+importance. After this revival of the methods of the Mad Parliament and
+the lords ordainers, the Good Parliament separated on July 6. It had
+sat longer than any previous parliament of which there is record. It
+had persevered to the end in the teeth of discouragements of all kinds,
+and, even after his brother's death, Duke John dared not lift up his
+hand against it so long as the session continued.
+
+When the estates separated Lancaster threw off the mask. The king, sunk
+in extreme dotage, was entirely in the hands of his unscrupulous son.
+The old man was kept quiet by the return of Alice Perrers to court. She
+had sworn on the rood never to see the king again, but the prelates
+were "like dumb dogs unable to bark" against her; and no effort was
+made to prosecute her for perjury. Latimer and Lyons returned from
+their luxurious imprisonment in the Tower to their places at court. The
+duke roundly declared that the late parliament was no parliament at
+all. No statute was based upon its petitions, the council of twelve was
+rudely dissolved, and Sir Peter de la Mare was imprisoned in Nottingham
+castle. William of Wykeham was deprived of his temporalities, and the
+rumour spread that his disgrace was due to his possession of a state
+secret, revealed to him by the dying queen Philippa, that John of Gaunt
+was no true son of the royal pair but a changeling. So timid was the
+disgraced bishop that he vied with the weak primate in his subserviency
+to Alice. The Earl of March, who was marshal of England, was ordered to
+inspect the fortresses beyond sea, whereupon, fearing a plot to
+assassinate him, he resigned his office, "preferring," says a friend,
+"to lose his marshal's staff rather than his life". The powerful
+north-country lord, Henry Percy, who had hitherto acted with the
+opposition, was bribed by the office of marshal to join the Lancastrian
+party.
+
+Grave difficulties still beset the government, and in January, 1377,
+John of Gaunt had to face another parliament. Every precaution was taken
+to pack the commons with his partisans. Of the knights of the shire of
+the Good Parliament only eight were members of its successor,[1] while
+in the place of the imprisoned De la Mare, Sir Thomas Hungerford,
+steward of the Duke of Lancaster, was chosen Speaker, on this occasion
+by that very name. A packed committee of lords was assigned to advise
+the commons. In these circumstances it was not difficult to procure the
+reversal of the acts against Alice Perrers and Latimer, and the grant of
+a poll tax of a groat a head. The only measure of conciliation was a
+general pardon, a pretext for which was found in the jubilee of the
+king's accession. From this William of Wykeham was expressly excepted.
+
+ [1] _Return of Members of Parliament_, pt. i., 193-97; _Chron.
+ Angliae_, p. 112, understates the case.
+
+The convocation of Canterbury proved less accommodating than the
+parliament. Under the able leadership of Bishop Courtenay, it took up
+the cause of the Bishop of Winchester, refused to join in a grant of
+money until he had taken his place in convocation, and, triumphing at
+last over the time-serving of Sudbury and the hesitation of Wykeham
+himself, persuaded the bishop to join their deliberations. Lancaster met
+the opposition of convocation by calling to his aid the Oxford doctor
+whom the clergy had already begun to look upon as the enemy of the
+privileges of their order. Wycliffe was not as yet under suspicion of
+direct dogmatic heresy. He had not yet clothed himself in the armour of
+his Balliol predecessor, Fitzralph, to wage war against the mendicant
+orders. But he had already formulated his theory that dominion was
+founded on grace, had declared that the pope had no right to
+excommunicate any one, or if he had that any simple priest could absolve
+the culprit from his sentence, and he had shown a hatred so bitter of
+clerical worldliness and clerical property that he was looked upon as
+the special enemy of the great land-holding prelates and of the
+"possessioner" monks, whose lands, he maintained, could be resumed by
+the representatives of the donors at their will. The strenuous advocate
+for reducing the clergy to apostolic poverty was not likely to find
+favour among the prelates. Wycliffe's only clerical supporters at this
+stage were the mendicant friars, from whose characteristic opinions as
+regards "evangelical poverty" he never at any time swerved.[1] He was,
+however, eloquent and zealous, and he had a following. Fear either of
+Wycliffe or of his mendicant allies forced the bishops to take decisive
+action. Even Sudbury awoke, "as from deep sleep".[2] The duke's
+dangerous supporter was summoned to answer before the bishops at St.
+Paul's.
+
+ [1] Shirley (preface to _Fasciculi Zizaniorum,_ Rolls Ser., p.
+ xxvi.) thought that Wycliffe was "the sworn foe of the
+ mendicants" in 1377, and E.M. Thompson's emphatic words
+ repudiating the contrary statement of the St. Alban's writer,
+ _Chron. Anglice,_ p. liii., illustrate the view prevalent in
+ England in 1874. Lechler's _Wiclif und die Vorgeschichte der
+ Reformation,_ published in 1873 proves that it was not until
+ Wycliffe denied the doctrine of transubstantiation in 1379 or
+ 1380 that the friars deserted him.
+
+ [2] _Chron. Anglice_, p. 117.
+
+On February 19, Wycliffe appeared in Courtenay's cathedral. Four
+mendicant doctors of divinity, chosen by Lancaster, came with him to
+defend him against the "possessioners," while the Duke of Lancaster
+himself, and Henry Percy, the new marshal, also accompanied him to
+overawe the bishops by their authority. The court was to be held in the
+lady chapel at the east end of the cathedral, and Wycliffe and his
+friends found some difficulty in making their way through the dense
+crowd that filled the spacious nave and aisles. Percy, irritated at the
+pressure of the throng, began to force it back in virtue of his office.
+Courtenay ordered that the marshal should exercise no authority in his
+cathedral. Thereupon Percy in a rage declared that he would act as
+marshal in the church, whether the bishop liked it or not. When the
+lady chapel was reached, there was further disputing as to whether
+Wycliffe should sit or stand, and Lancaster taunted Courtenay for
+trusting overmuch to the greatness of his family. When the bishop
+replied with equal spirit, John muttered: "I would liefer drag him out
+of his church by the hair of his head than put up with such insolence".
+The words were overheard, and the Londoners, who hated the duke, broke
+into open riot at this insult to their bishop. It was rumoured that the
+duke had come to St. Paul's, hot from an attack on the liberties of the
+city that very morning in parliament. The court broke up in wild
+confusion, and the riot spread from church to city. Next day Percy's
+house was pillaged, and John's palace of the Savoy attacked. The duke
+and the marshal were forced to seek the protection of their opponent,
+the Princess of Wales, at Kennington. The followers of Lancaster could
+only escape rough treatment by hiding away their lord's badges. The
+citizens cried that the Bishop of Winchester and Peter de la Mare
+should have a fair trial. At last the personal authority of Bishop
+Courtenay restored his unruly flock to order. The old king performed
+his last public act by soothing the spokesmen of the citizens with the
+pleasant words and easy grace of which he still was master. The
+Princess of Wales used her influence for peace, and matters were
+smoothed over.
+
+At some risk of personal humiliation, Lancaster secured a substantial
+triumph. Convocation followed the lead of parliament and gave an ample
+subsidy. William of Wykeham purchased the restoration of his
+temporalities by an unworthy deference to Alice Perrers. Wycliffe
+remained powerful, flattered, and consulted, though his enemies had
+already drawn up secret articles against him, which they had forwarded
+to the papal _curia_. Perhaps in the rapidly declining health of the
+king all parties saw that their real interest lay in the postponement
+of a crisis.
+
+In June Edward lay on his deathbed at Sheen. To the last his talk was
+all of hawking and hunting, and his mistress carefully kept from him
+all knowledge of his desperate condition. When he sank into his last
+lethargy, his courtiers deserted him, and Alice Perrers took to flight
+after robbing him of the very rings on his fingers. A simple priest,
+brought to the bedside by pity, performed for the half-conscious king
+the last offices of religion. Edward was just able to kiss the cross
+and murmur "Jesus have mercy". On June 21, 1377, he breathed his last.
+
+With Edward's death we break off a narrative whose course is but half
+run. John of Gaunt's rule was not over; Wycliffe was advancing from
+discontent to revolt; Chaucer was yet to rise for a higher flight;
+Langland had not yet put his complaint into its permanent form; the
+French war was renewed almost on the day of Edward's death; popular
+irritation against bad government, and social and economic repression
+were still preparing for the revolt of 1381. With all its defects the
+age of Edward is preeminently a strong age. Greedy, self-seeking,
+rough, and violent it may be; its passions and rivalries combined to
+make futile the exercise of its strength; it sounded the revolutionary
+note of all abrupt ages of transition, and it ends in disaster and
+demoralisation at home and abroad. But government is not everything,
+and least of all in the Middle Ages when what was then thought vigorous
+government appears miserably weak to modern notions. The strong rule
+decayed with the failure of the king's personal vigour. The ministers
+of Edward's dotage could not hold France nor even keep England quiet.
+England had grown impatient of the rule of a despot, though she was not
+yet able to govern herself after a constitutional fashion. It is in the
+incompatibility of the political ideals of royal authority and
+constitutional control, not less than in the want of purpose of her
+ruler and in the factions of her nobles that the explanation of the
+period must be sought. The age of Edward III. has been alternatively
+decried and exalted. Both verdicts are true, but neither contains the
+whole truth. The explanation of both is to be found in the annals of a
+later age.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+ON AUTHORITIES.
+
+(1216-1377.)
+
+Our two main sources of knowledge for medieval history are records and
+chronicles. Chronicles are more accessible, easier to study, more
+continuous, readable, and coloured than records can generally be. Yet
+the record far excels the chronicle in scope, authority, and
+objectivity, and a prime characteristic of modern research is the
+increasing reliance on the record rather than the chronicle as the
+sounder basis of historical investigation. The medieval archives of
+England, now mainly collected in the Public Record Office, are
+unrivalled by those of any other country. From the accession of Henry
+III. several of the more important classes of records have become
+copious and continuous, while in the course of the reign nearly all the
+chief groups of documents have made a beginning. The whole of the
+period 1216 to 1377 can therefore be well studied in them.
+
+A large proportion of our archives is taken up with common forms,
+technicalities, and petty detail. It will never be either possible or
+desirable to print the mass of them _in extenso_, and most of the
+efforts made to render them accessible have taken the form of
+calendars, catalogues, and inventories. Such attempts began with the
+costly and unsatisfactory labours of the Record Commission (dissolved
+in 1836); and in recent years the work has again been taken up and
+pursued on better lines. The folio volumes of the Record Commission
+only remain so far of value as they have not been superseded by the
+more scholarly octavo calendars which are now being issued under the
+direction of the deputy-keeper of the records. These latter are all
+accompanied by copious indices which, though not always to be trusted
+implicitly, immensely facilitate the use of them. The records were
+preserved by the various royal courts. Of special importance for the
+political historian are the records of the Chancery and Exchequer.
+
+Prominent among the Chancery records are the PATENT ROLLS, strips of
+parchment sewn together continuously for each regnal year, whereon are
+inscribed copies of the letters patent of the sovereign, so called
+because they were sent out open, with the great seal pendent. Beginning
+in 1200, they present a continuous series throughout all our period,
+except for 23 and 24 Henry III. The publication of the complete Latin
+text of the _Patent Rolls of Henry III._ is now in progress, and two
+volumes have been issued, including respectively the years 1216-1225
+and 1225-1232. From the accession of Edward I. onwards the bulk of the
+rolls renders the method of a calendar in English more desirable. The
+_Calendars of the Patent Rolls_ are now complete from 1272 to 1324 and
+from 1327 to 1348 (Edward I., 4 vols.; Edward II., 4 vols.; Edward
+III., 7 vols.). For the years not thus yet dealt with the
+unsatisfactory _Calendarium Rotulorum Patentium_ (1802, fol.) may still
+sometimes be of service.
+
+The letters close, or sealed letters addressed to individuals, usually
+of inferior public interest to the letters patent are preserved in the
+CLOSE ROLLS, compiled in the same fashion as the Patent Rolls. The
+whole extant rolls from 1204 to 1227 are printed in _Rotuli Literarum
+Clausarum_ (2 vols. fol., 1833 and 1844, Rec. corn.), and it is
+proposed to continue the integral publication of the text for the rest
+of Henry III.'s reign on the same plan as that of the Patent Rolls. One
+volume of this continuation, 1227-1231 (8vo, 1902), has been issued.
+For the subsequent periods a calendar in English is being prepared
+similar in type to the _Calendar of Patent Rolls_. The periods at
+present covered by the _Calendar of Close Rolls_ (1892-1905) are,
+Edward I., 1272-1296 (3 vols.): Edward II., the whole of the reign (4
+vols.), and Edward III., 1327-1349 (8 vols.).
+
+A third series of records preserved by the Chancery officials is the
+ROLLS OF PARLIAMENT, including the petitions, pleas, and other
+parliamentary proceedings. None of these are extant before 1278, and
+the series for the succeeding century is often interrupted. Many of
+them are printed in the first two folios (vol. i., Edward I. and II.;
+vol. ii., Edward III.) of _Rotuli Parliamentorum_ (1767-1777). A
+copious index volume was issued in 1832. A specimen of what may still
+be looked for is to be found in Professor Maitland's edition of one of
+the earliest rolls of parliament in _Memoranda de Parliamento_ (1305)
+(Rolls series, 1893) with an admirable introduction. For the reigns of
+Edward I. and II. the deficiencies of the published rolls are
+supplemented by SIR F. PALGRAVE'S _Parliamentary Writs and Writs of
+Military Service_ (vol. i., 1827, Edward I.; vol. ii., 1834, Edward
+II., fol., Rec. Corn.) with alphabetical digests and indices.
+
+Formal grants under the great seal called _Charters_, characterised by
+a "salutation" clause, the names of attesting witnesses, and, under
+Henry III. after 1227, by the final formula _data per manum nostram
+apud_, etc., and implying normally the presence of the king, are
+contained in the CHARTER ROLLS, extant from the reign of John onwards.
+They are roughly analysed in the _Calendarium Rotulorum Chartarum_
+(1803, Rec. Com.); and the _Rotuli Chartarum_ (fol., 1837, Rec. Corn.)
+contains the rolls _in extenso_ up to 1216, Vol. i., 1226-1257, of an
+English _Calendar of Charter Rolls_, printing some of the documents in
+full, was published in 1903.
+
+The documents formerly known as ESCHEAT ROLLS, or INQUISITIONES POST
+MORTEM, are concerned with the inquiries made by the Crown on the death
+of every landholder as to the extent and character of his holding. Some
+of the information contained in these inquests was made accessible in
+the _Calendarium Inquisitionum sive Eschaetarum_ (vol. i., Henry III.,
+Edward I. and II., 1806; vol. ii., Edward III., 1808, fol., Rec.
+Corn.). The errors and omissions of these volumes were partially
+remedied for the reigns of Henry III. and Edward I. by C. ROBERTS'S
+_Calendarium Genealogicum_ (2 vols. 8vo, 1865). A scholarly guide to
+all this class of documents has been begun in the new _Calendar of
+Inquisitions Post Mortem and other Analogous Documents_, of which vol.
+i. (Henry III.) was issued in 1904. The first volume of a separate list
+of the analogous inquisitions _Ad pod damnum_ is also announced.
+
+Of the FINE ROLLS containing the records of fines[1] made with the Crown
+for licence to alienate, exemption from service, wardships, pardons,
+etc., those of Henry III. have been made accessible in C. ROBERTS'S
+_Excerpta e Rotulis Finium_, 1216-1272 (1835-36, 8vo). Other rolls such
+as the LIBERATE ROLLS have not yet been published for the reigns here
+treated.
+
+ [1] A _fine_ in this technical sense is an agreement arrived at
+ by a money transaction.
+
+Of special or local rolls, preserved in the Chancery, the most
+important for our period are the GASCON ROLLS. The earlier documents
+called by this name are not exclusively concerned with the affairs of
+Gascony; they are miscellaneous documents enrolled for convenience in
+common parchments by reason of the presence of the king in his
+Aquitanian dominions. Of these are F. MICHEL'S _Roles Gascons_, vol.
+i., published in the French government series of _Documents Inedits sur
+l'Histoire de France_ (1885), including a "fragmentum rotuli
+Vasconiae," 1242-1243, and "patentes littere facte in Wasconia,"
+1253-1254, years in which Henry III. was actually in Gascony. This
+publication was resumed in 1896 by M. CHARLES BEMONT'S _Supplement_ to
+Michel's imperfect volume, containing innumerable corrections, an
+index, introduction, and some additional rolls of 1254 and 1259-1260.
+The later of these, the roll of Edward's delegated administration, is
+the first exclusively devoted to the concerns of Gascony. "Gascon
+Rolls" in this later sense begin with Edward I.'s accession, and M.
+Bemont has undertaken their publication for the whole of Edward's reign
+from photographs of the records supplied by the English to the French
+government. In 1900 vol. ii. of the _Roles Gascons,_ containing the
+years 1273-1290, was issued. Other classes of Chancery Rolls accessible
+in print are _Rotuli Scotiae,_ 1291-1516 (2 vols., 1814-1819, Rec.
+Corn.), and _Rotuli Walliae_, 5-9 Edward I., privately printed by Sir
+Thomas Phillipps (1865). Among isolated Chancery records the _Rotuli
+Hundredorum_ (Rec. Corn., 2 vols. fol., 1812-1818), containing the very
+important inquests made by Edward I.'s commissioners into the
+franchises of the barons, may specially be noticed here.
+
+Of not less importance than the Chancery records are those handed down
+from the Court of Exchequer. The most famous of these, the PIPE ROLLS,
+which, unlike the Chancery Enrolments, were "filed" or sewn skin by
+skin, are decreasingly important from the thirteenth century onwards as
+compared with their value for the twelfth. For this reason the Pipe
+Roll Society, founded in 1883, only undertook their publication up to
+1200. Fragments of Pipe Rolls for our period can be seen in print in
+various local histories and transactions, as e.g., "Pipe Rolls of
+Northumberland" up to 1272 in HODGSON-HINDE'S History of
+Northumberland, pt. iii., vol. iii., and 1273-1284, ed. Dickson
+(Newcastle, 1854-60), and of Notts and Derby (translated extracts) in
+YEATMAN's _History of Derby_ (1886). The only gap in our series is for
+Henry III. Of other Exchequer records we may mention: (i) the
+ORIGINALIA ROLLS, containing the estreats or documents from the
+Chancery informing the Exchequer of moneys due to it, beginning in 20
+Henry III., a summary of which is published in _Rotulorum Originalium_
+in Curia _Scaccarii Abbreviatio,_ 20 Henry III,-51 Edward III (2 vols.
+fol., Rec. Corn., 1805-1810); (2) the MEMORANDA ROLLS, containing
+records of charges upon the Exchequer, etc., are complete for this
+period. They were kept by the king's and the treasurer's remembrancer,
+and are illustrated in print by extracts from the Memoranda Rolls,
+1297, in _Transactions of the Royal Hist. Soc.,_ new series, iii.,
+281-291(1886), and by the roll of 3 Henry III. in COOPER'S _Proceedings
+of the Record Commissioners_ (1833); (3) MINISTERS ACCOUNTS, i.e.,
+accounts of royal bailiffs, etc., for royal manors, etc., not included
+in the sheriffs' accounts, beginning with Edward I., of which a list is
+given in the _P.R.O. Lists and Indexes_, Nos. v. and viii.; (4) of the
+PELL RECORDS, recording issues and payments, samples given in DEVON'S
+_Issues of the Exchequer_ (Rec. Corn., 8vo, 1837), DEVON'S _Issue Roll
+of Thomas of Brantingham in_ 1370 (Rec. Corn., 8vo, 1835). The pells of
+receipt were entered on the (5) RECEIPT ROLLS, specimens of which,
+along with the corresponding issues, are to be found in SIR JAMES
+RAMSAY'S abstracts of issue and receipt rolls for certain years of
+Edward III. in the _Antiquary_(1880-1888); (6) SUBSIDY ROLLS of various
+types, illustrated by _Nonarum Inquisitiones tempore Edwardi ZZZ._
+(Rec. Corn., 1807), the record of a subsidy of a ninth collected by
+Edward III. in 1340-1341; (7) WARDROBE and HOUSEHOLD ACCOUNTS
+containing for the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries information on
+national as well as private royal finance; specimens in print include
+the important _Liber Quotidianus Contra-rotulatoris Garderobae_, 28
+_Ed. I._(1299-1300), (1787, Soc. Antiq.).
+
+From the Exchequer records come also the following: (1) _Testa de
+Neville sive Liber Feodorum temp. Hen. ZZZ. et Edw. I._ (Rec. Corn.,
+fol., 1807), a miscellaneous and ill-digested but valuable collection of
+thirteenth century inquisitions; (2) _Nomina Villarum, g_ Ed. II.,
+published in PALGRAVE'S _Parl. Writs_, ii., iii., 301-416; (3)
+_Kirkby's Quest, a_ survey made by Bishop Kirkby, the treasurer, in
+1284-85, of which the Yorkshire portion has been printed by the Surtees
+Soc., ea. Skaife (1867), and other portions elsewhere; (4) _Taxatio
+Ecclesiastica Angliae et Walliae_, 1291 (Rec. Corn., 1802), the
+taxation of benefices by Nicholas IV. by which assessments of papal and
+ecclesiastical taxes were long made. A very useful compilation,
+recently undertaken under the direction of the deputy-keeper, is
+_Inquisitions and Assessments relating to Feudal Aids_, 1284-1431, of
+which three volumes, dealing in alphabetical order with the shires from
+Bedford to Norfolk, are published Cheshire and Durham are entirely
+omitted and Lancashire very scantily dealt with as exceptional
+jurisdictions. The work is based upon the various lay records
+enumerated above and other analogous inquests. Ancient compilations of
+miscellaneous documents by officials of the Exchequer are exemplified
+in _Liber Niger Scaccarii_ (ed. Hearne, 2 vols., 1774), and in the _Red
+Book of the Exchequer_ (ed. H. Hall, 3 vols., Rolls ser., 1896).
+
+The records of the common law courts, the King's Bench and the Court of
+Common Pleas, are of less direct historical value than those of the
+Chancery and the Exchequer. Extraordinarily bulky, they require a good
+deal of sifting to sort the wheat from the chaff. As yet a very small
+proportion of them has been printed, and few have even been calendared.
+A brief index of them has been compiled in the useful _List of Plea
+Rolls_ (1894, _P.R.O. Lists and Indexes_, No. iv.). Of the various
+types of these records the FEET OF FINES have been largely used by the
+topographer and genealogist, and the feet of fines for many counties
+during this period have been calendared, summarised, excerpted, and
+printed, wholly or in part, by local archaeological societies, as for
+example, W. FARRER'S _Lancashire Final Concords till 1307_ (Rec. Soc.
+for Lancashire and Cheshire, 1899), and many others. The PLEA ROLLS are
+of wider importance. For the days of Henry III. _Placita Coram Rege_
+(_i.e._, of the King's Bench) and the _Placita de Banco_ (_i.e._, of
+the Common Pleas in later phrase) are classified as _Rotuli Curiae
+Regis_, while the rolls of the local eyres for the same period are
+called _Assize Rolls_. Separate series for each court begin with Edward
+I. Specimens of most of these types have been printed. _Placitorum
+Abbreviatio Ric. I.--Edw. II._ (Rec. Com., fol., 1811) is a careless
+seventeenth century abstract. _Placita de Quo Warranto_, Edward I. to
+Edward III. (Rec. Com., fol., 1818), is a record of local eyres of
+particular importance for the reign of Edward I. as the corollary of
+the Hundred Rolls and the attack on the local franchises. HUNTER'S
+_Rotuli Selecti_ (Rec. Com., 1834) contains pleas of the reign of Henry
+III. A typical year's pleadings of the King's Bench for 1297 is given
+in full in PHILLIMORE's _Placita coram rege_, 25 Edward I. (1898,
+British Rec. Soc.). Selections from the proceedings of the commission
+appointed by Edward I. in 1289 to hear complaints against judges and
+officials will shortly be published by Miss Hilda Johnstone and myself
+for the Royal Historical Society. Of special importance are the plea
+rolls issued by the Selden Society, which include for our period F.W.
+MAITLAND'S _Select Pleas of the Crown_, 1200-1225; BAILDON'S _Select
+Chancery Pleas_, 1364-1471; J.M. RIGG'S _Select Pleas of the Jewish
+Exchequer_; and G.J. TURNER'S _Select Pleas of the Forest_; all have
+translations and introductions, of which those of Professor Maitland
+are of exceptional value.
+
+To these types must be added the records of the local courts, now
+largely also in the Public Record Office, though vast numbers of court
+rolls and manorial documents are still in private hands, and among the
+archives of ecclesiastical and secular corporations. The Selden Society
+has done excellent work in publishing such muniments; as in particular,
+MAITLAND'S _Select Pleas in Manorial Courts_, vol. i., Henry III. and
+Edward I., illustrating the social and legal life of a medieval
+village; MAITLAND and BAILDON'S _Court Baron_; HUNTER' s _Leet
+Jurisdiction of Norwich_; C. GROSS's _Select Cases from the Coroners'
+Rolls_, 1265-1413. The records of the Bishopric of Durham, the County
+Palatine of Chester, the Principality of Wales, and the Duchy of
+Lancaster are deposited in the Public Record Office, and calendars and
+lists scattered over the _Deputy-Keeper of the Records' Reports_ throw
+some light on their contents. Unluckily these records of franchise are
+incompletely preserved and often in bad condition. The best preserved
+for our period are the Durham records, described in LAPSLEY'S County
+_Palatine of Durham_, pp. 327-337 (Harvard Historical Studies); some of
+the most important are printed in _Registrum Palatinum Dunelmense_, ed.
+Hardy (Rolls Series, 4 vols.), which is also an Episcopal register.
+Welsh records may be illustrated by the _Record of Carnarvon_ (Rec.
+Corn., fol., 1838). Academic records are illustrated by the Oxford
+_Munimenta Academica_ (ed. Anstey), Rolls Series. Municipal records are
+very numerous and important; full particulars as to them can be found
+in C. Gross's _Bibliography of British Municipal History_ (Harvard
+Hist. Studies). Admirably edited examples of our wealth of municipal
+records for this period are to be found in _Records of the Borough of
+Nottingham_ (ed. W.H. Stevenson), vol. i. (1882); _Records of the
+Borough of Leicester_ (ed. Mary Bateson), vols. i. and ii. (1899 and
+1901); and _Munimenta Gildhallae Londoniensis_ (ed. H.T. Riley), Rolls
+Series. The _Reports of the Historical Manuscripts Commission_ afford
+much information as to every type of document in private or local
+custody. Ireland and Scotland have archives of their own; but there are
+no systematic records in the Register House at Edinburgh before the War
+of Independence. Among the enterprises now abandoned of the Public
+Record Office were _Calendars of Documents relating to Scotland and
+Ireland_. The Scottish series covers all this period (vols. i.-iv.),
+the Irish was stopped at 1307. They are derived, by a rather arbitrary
+selection, from various classes of English records, but contain much
+valuable material. JOSEPH STEVENSON'S _Documents illustrating the
+History of Scotland_ (1286-1306) (Scot. Rec. Publications, 1870), and
+PALGRAVE'S Documents _and Records illustrating the History of Scotland_
+(Rec. Corn., 1837), are useful for the reign of Edward I. as are for
+limited periods of it the _Wallace Papers_ (Maitland Club, 1841) and
+_Scotland in 1298_ (ed. Gough, 1888).
+
+A new class of records begins in the thirteenth century with BISHOPS'
+REGISTERS. These, so far as they survive, are preserved in the diocesan
+registries. Of printed registers for this period the most important is
+MARTIN'S _Registrum Epistolarum J. Peckham_ (3 vols., Rolls Series,
+1882-1886), the earliest surviving Canterbury register. Other registers
+printed or calendared are HINGESTON-RANDOLPH'S _Exeter Registers_,
+1257-1291, 1307-1326, and 1327-1369 (5 vols., 1889, etc.); excerpts,
+particularly from the York registers, in RAINE'S _Letters from the
+Northern Registers,_ Rolls Series; the two oldest York _Registers_ of
+ARCHBISHOPS WALTER GREY (1215-1255) and WALTER GIFFARD (1266-1279),
+both in Surtees Society; the Wells _Registers_ of BPS. DROKENSFORD,
+1309-1329, and RALPH OF SHREWSBURY, 1329-1363 (Somerset Record
+Society); the Worcester _Register_ of BP. GIFFARD, 1268-1302 (Worcester
+Historical Society); the Winchester _Registers_ of BISHOPS SANDALE and
+RIGAUD, 1316-1323, and WYKEHAM, 1366-1404 (Hampshire Record Society). A
+society called the Canterbury and York Society has recently been
+started to set forth episcopal registers systematically in print. It
+has begun to publish the earliest Lincoln _Register_ extant, that of
+Hugh of Wells, bishop of Lincoln, 1209-1235, whose _Liber Antiquus de
+Ordinatione Vicariorum_ was printed in 1888. Analogous documents are
+LUARD'S _Rob. Grosseteste Epistola_ (Roll Series, 1861), and the like.
+
+Monastic CARTULARIES are less important for general history in this
+than in previous periods; large masses of monastic records of this age
+have survived, not a tithe of which is to be found in DUGDALE'S
+_Monasticon_. Some monastic records illustrate the domestic economy or
+religious life of the house as KIRK'S _Accounts of the Obedientiaries
+of Abingdon,_ 1322-1479 (Camden Soc.); J.W. CLARK's _Observances in use
+at Barnwell Priory,_ 1295-1296(1897), and the like.
+
+For this period by far the most important series of foreign records is
+the magnificent collections of the papacy. A summary of many of these
+is to be found in BLISS, JOHNSON, and TWEMLOW's _Calendars of Papal
+Registers illustrating the History of Great Britain and Ireland; Papal
+Letters_ (vols. i.-iv., 1198-1404), and _Petitions to the Pope_ (vol.
+i., 1342-1419), of special importance for the fourteenth century. These
+useful calendars, however, do not always dispense us from consulting
+the grand series of papal records published or analysed under the care
+of the French School of Rome, which has not yet sufficiently been
+studied in this country. This enterprise is divided into two sections.
+In the first the _Registers from Gregory IX. to Benedict XI._ are in
+course of publication; in the second the letters of the Avignon popes
+relating to France are printed or analysed. Portions of the letters of
+John XXII, Benedict XII, and Clement VI, are already issued. PRESSUTI
+has published one volume of the _Registers of Honorius III_ (1888).
+From the Vatican archives also comes THEINER'S _Vetera Monumenta Hib.
+et Scot. Historiam illustrantia_ (1864), beginning in 1216.
+
+Extracts from various archives are found in such collections as RYMER's
+_Foedera_ of which the Record Commission's edition in folio reaches
+just beyond the end of this period; WILKINS'S _Concilia_ (1737),
+containing many extracts from episcopal registers and canons of
+councils; HADDAN and STUBBS'S _Councils_, vol. i. (for the thirteenth
+century Welsh Church); CHAMPOLLION-FIGEAC'S _Lettres des Rois et des
+Reines d'Angleterre_ (2 vols., 1847, _Doc. Inedits_); STUBBS'S _Select
+Charters_ (Henry III. and Edward I.), and BEMONT'S excellent _Chartes
+des Libertes anglaises_ in the _Collection de Textes pour l'Etude et
+l'Enseignement de l'Histoire_. Equally useful is COSNEAU'S _Grands
+Traites de la Guerre de Cent Ans_ also in the same _Collection de
+Textes_. The _Statutes of the Realm_ (vol. i., fol., 1810) contains the
+text of the laws and of the great charters of this period.
+
+Chronicles, with all their deficiencies, must ever be largely used as
+sources of continuous historical narrative. For the thirteenth century
+our chief reliance must still be placed upon the annals drawn up in
+various monasteries, some based upon little more than gossip or
+hearsay, others showing real efforts to acquire authentic information.
+The greatest centre of historical composition in thirteenth-century
+England was the Abbey of St. Alban's, whose chronicles form so
+important a series that they may appropriately be considered as a
+whole, before the other chroniclers are dealt with in approximately
+chronological order. The fame of St. Alban's as a school of history had
+its origin in the order of Abbot Simon (d. 1183) that the house should
+always appoint a special historiographer. The first of these whose work
+is now extant is ROGER OF WENDOVER (d. 1236), whose _Flores
+Historiarum_ (ed. H.O. Coxe, Engl. Hist. Soc., 1842, or ed. Hewlett,
+Rolls Series, 1886-89--this latter edition is unscholarly) becomes
+original in 1216 and remains a chief source, copious and interesting,
+if not always precise, until 1235. On Wendover's death, MATTHEW PARIS,
+who took the monastic habit in 1217, became the official St. Alban's
+chronicler. His great work, the _Chronica Majora_, is, up to 1235,
+little more than an expansion and embellishment of Wendover. He
+re-edited Wendover's work with a patriotic and anti-curialist bias
+quite alien to the spirit of the earlier writer, whose version should
+preferably be followed. Paris's book is a first-hand source from 1235
+to 1259. The narrative of the years 1254-1259 is considerably later in
+composition to the history of the period 1235-1253, since on reaching
+1253 Paris devoted himself to an abridgment of what he had already
+written, called the _Historia Minor_. On completing this he resumed his
+earlier book, and carried it on to the eve of his death in 1259, though
+he did not live to complete its final revision; that was the work of
+another monk who added a picture of his death-bed. The _Chronica
+Majora_ has been excellently edited by Dr. H.R. Luard in seven volumes
+for the Rolls Series, with elaborate introductions tracing the literary
+history of the work and a magnificent index. The _Historia Minor_ has
+been published in three volumes by Sir F. Madden in the Rolls Series.
+Paris also wrote the lives of the abbots of his house up to 1255, a
+work not now extant, and the basis of the later _Gesta Abbatum S.
+Albani_, compiled by Thomas Walsingham (d. 1422?) and likewise issued
+in the Rolls Series. The thirteenth century biographies have some
+original value. Paris's _Life_ of _Stephen Langton_ is printed in
+LIEBERMANN'S _Ungedruckte Anglo-Normannische Geschichtsquellen_ (1870).
+
+Paris, perhaps the greatest historian of the Middle Ages, has literary
+skill, a vivid though prolix style, a keen eye for the picturesque,
+bold and independent judgment, wonderful breadth and range, and an
+insatiable curiosity. He was a man of the world, a courtier and a
+scholar; he took immense pains to collect his facts from documents and
+eye-witnesses, and had great advantages in this respect through the
+intimate relations between his house and the court. Henry III himself
+contributed many items of information to him. His details are
+extraordinarily full, and he tells us almost as much about continental
+affairs as about those of his own country. He wrote with too flowing a
+pen to be careful about precision, and had too much love of the
+picturesque to resist the temptation of embellishing a good story. His
+narrative of continental transactions is in particular extremely
+inexact. But the chief cause of his offending also gives special value
+to his work; he was a man of strong views and his sympathies and
+prejudices colour every line he wrote. His standpoint is that of a
+patriotic Englishman, indignant at the alien invasions, at the
+misgovernment of the king, the greed of the curialists and the
+Poitevins, and with a professional bias against the mendicants. His
+writings make his age live.
+
+The falling off in the St. Alban's work of the next generation is
+characteristic of the decay of colour and detail which makes the
+chroniclers of the age of Edward I. inferior to those of his father's
+reign. The years after 1259 were briefly chronicled by uninspired
+continuators of Matthew Paris, and the reputation of St. Alban's as a
+school of history led to the frequent transference of their annals to
+other religious houses, where they were written up by local pens. This
+led to the dissemination of the series of jejune compilations which in
+the ages of Edward I. and II. were widely spread under the name of
+_Flores Historiarum_. Dr. Luard has published a critical edition of
+these _Flores_ in three volumes of the Rolls Series, which range from
+the creation to 1326, with an introduction determining their
+complicated relations to each other. They are of no real value before
+1259, and for the next sixty-seven years are only important by reason
+of the defects of our other sources. No unity or colour can be expected
+in books handed from house to house and kept up to date by jottings by
+different hands. The ascription of these _Flores_ to a conjectural
+Matthew of Westminster by earlier editors is groundless. Dr. C.
+Horstmann, _Nova Legenda Anglie_, i., pp. xlix. _seq._(1901), maintains
+that John of Tynemouth's _Historia Aurea_, still in manuscript, is the
+official St. Alban's history from 1327 to 1377.
+
+In the reign of Edward I. the credit of the school of St. Alban's was
+revived to some extent by WILLIAM RISHANGER, who made his profession in
+1271 and died early in the reign of Edward II. To him is assigned a
+chronicle ranging from 1259 to 1306 published by H.T. Riley in the
+volume _Willelmi Rishanger et Anonymorum Chronica et Annales_ (Rolls
+Series). Rishanger's authorship of the portion 1259-1272 is more
+probable than that of the section 1272-1306, which, not compiled before
+1327, is almost certainly by another hand, and the attribution of even
+the earlier section to Rishanger is doubted by so competent an
+authority as M. Bemont. The compilation is frigid and unequal. Of the
+miscellaneous contents of Mr. Riley's volume, the short _Gesta Edwardi
+I._ (pp. 411-423), of no great value, is clearly Rishanger's work. We
+may also ascribe to Rishanger the _Narratio de Bellis apud Lewes et
+Evesham_ (ed. Halliwell, Camden Soc., 1840), which tells the story of
+the Barons' Wars with vigour, detail, and insight. Written by a true
+inheritor of the prejudices of Matthew Paris, this chronicle is a
+eulogy of Montfort. It was put together not before 1312.
+
+Another volume of _Chroniclers of St. Alban's_ was edited by Mr. Riley
+for the Rolls Series in 1860. Three of its chronicles concern our
+period. These are: (1) _Opus Chronicorum_, 1259-1296, a source of
+"Rishanger's" chronicle; (2) J. DE TROKELOWE'S _Annales_, 1307-1322;
+(3) H. DE BLANEFORDE'S _Chronica_ (1323). These last two are important
+for Edward II.'s reign. After these works, historical writing further
+declined at St. Alban's. At the end of our period, however, another
+true disciple of Matthew Paris was found in the St. Alban's monk who
+added to a jejune compilation for the years 1328 to 1370 a vivid and
+personal narrative of the years 1376-1388, our chief source for the
+history of the last year of Edward III.'s reign. In his bitter
+prejudice against John of Gaunt and his clerical allies, such as
+Wychffe and the mendicants, the monk is so outspoken that his book was
+suppressed, and most manuscripts leave out the more offensive passages.
+It has been edited by Sir E. Maunde Thompson as _Chronicon Angliae_,
+1328-1388 (Rolls Series). Before that its contents, like that of other
+St. Alban's annals, were partially known through the fifteenth century
+compilation under the name of a St. Alban's monk, THOMAS OF WALSINGHAM,
+whose _Historia Anglicana_ (2 vols., Rolls Series, ed. Riley) is not an
+authority for our period.
+
+For the early years of Henry III. we have besides Wendover's _Flores_:
+(i) The CANON OF BARNWELL'S continuation of Howden published in
+STUBBS'S _Memoriale Fratris Walteri de Coventria_ (Rolls Series),
+written in 1227 and copious for the years 1216-1225. (2) RALPH OF
+COGGESHALL's _Chronicon Anglicanum_ (ed. Stevenson, Rolls Series),
+ending at 1227 and important for its last twelve years. (3) The
+_Histoire des Ducs de Normandie et des Rois d'Angleterre_, which,
+published by F. Michel in 1840 (Soc. de l'histoire de France), was
+first appreciated at its full value by M. Petit-Dutaillis in the _Revue
+Historique_. tome 2 (1892). (4) The _Chronique de l'Anonyme de Bethune_
+printed in 1904 in vol. xxiv. of the _Recueil des Historiens de la
+France_. (5) A French rhyming chronicle, the _Histoire de Guillaume le
+Marechal_, discovered and edited by P. Meyer for the Soc. de l'histoire
+de France. Written by a minstrel of the younger Marshal from materials
+supplied by the regent's favourite squire, it is, though poetry and
+panegyric, an important source for Marshal's regency.
+
+St. Alban's was not the only religious house that concerned itself with
+the production of chronicles. Other _Annales Monastici_ have been
+edited in five volumes (Rolls Series, vol. v. is the index) by Dr.
+Luard. They are of special importance for the reign of Henry III. In
+vol. i. the meagre annals of the Glamorganshire abbey of Margam only
+extend to 1232. The _Annals of Tewkesbury_ are useful from 1200 to
+1263, and specially for the history of the Clares, the patrons of that
+house. The Annals of Burton-upon-Trent illustrate the years 1211 to
+1261 with somewhat intermittent light, and are of unique value for the
+period of the Provisions of Oxford, containing many official documents.
+Vol. ii. includes the _Annals_ of _Winchester_ and _Waverley_. The
+former, extending to 1277, though mainly concerned with local affairs
+are useful for certain parts of the reign of Henry III., and
+particularly for the years 1267-1277. The annals of the Cistercian
+house of Waverley, near Farnham, go down to 1291. From 1259 to 1266 the
+narrative is contemporary and valuable; from 1266 to 1275, and partly
+from 1275 to 1277 it is borrowed from the Winchester Annals; from 1277
+to its abrupt end it is again of importance. The _Annals of Bermondsey_
+in vol. iii. are a fifteenth century compilation. The _Annals_ of the
+Austin canons of _Dunstable_ are of great value, especially from the
+year 1201, when they become original, down to 1242. This section is
+written by RICHARD DE MORINS, prior of Dunstable from 1202 to 1242.
+After his death the annals become more local, though they give a clear
+narrative of the puzzling period 1258-1267. They stop in 1297. The
+chief contents of vol. iv, are the parallel _Annals of Oseney_ and the
+_Chronicle_ of THOMAS WYKES, a canon of that house, who took the
+religious habit in 1282. To 1258 the two histories are very similar,
+that of Wykes being slightly fuller. They then remain distinct until
+1278, and again from 1280 to 1284 and 1285-1289. In the latter year
+Wykes stops, while Oseney goes on with independent value until 1293,
+and as a useless compilation till 1346. Wykes is of unique interest for
+the Barons' Wars, as he is the only competent chronicler who takes the
+royalist side. The Oseney writer, much less full and interesting,
+represents the ordinary baronial standpoint. Wykes is occasionally
+useful for the first years of Edward I.; after 1288 his importance
+becomes small. The _Annals of Worcester_ are largely a compilation from
+the Winchester Annals and the _Flores_; the local insertions have some
+value for the period 1216-1258, and more for the latter part of the
+reign of Edward I., at whose death they end.
+
+Other monastic chronicles of the thirteenth century, of small
+importance, enumerated by Dr. Luard (_Ann. Mon._, iv., liii.) are not
+yet printed in full. Extracts from many are given in PERTZ'S _Monumenta
+Germaniae Hist. Scriptores_, vols. xxvii. and xxviii. The _Annales
+Cestrienses_ (to 1297) have been edited by R.C. Christie (Record Soc.
+of Lancashire and Cheshire); EDMUND OF HADENHAM'S _Chronicle_ (down to
+1307) is given in part in WHARTON'S _Anglia Sacra_, and M. Bemont
+publishes in an appendix to his _Simon de Montfort_ (pp. 373-380) a
+valuable fragment of a _Chronicle_ of _Battle Abbey_ on the Barons'
+Wars, 1258-1265. For the latter part of that period we have some useful
+notices in HENRY OF SILEGRAVE's brief _Chronicle_ (ed. Hook, Caxton
+Soc., 1849), whose close relationship to the _Battle Chronicle_ M.
+Bemont has first indicated. To these may be added the _Annals of
+Stanley Abbey_ (1202-1271) in vol. ii. of _Chronicles of Stephen, Henry
+II. and Richard I._ (ed. Hewlett, Rolls Series, 1885), and the
+_Chronicle_ of the Bury monk, JOHN OF TAXSTER or TAYSTER, which becomes
+copious from the middle of the thirteenth century and ends in 1265; it
+was partly printed in 1849 by Benjamin Thorpe as a continuation of
+Florence of Worcester (English Historical Society), and the years
+1258-1262 are best read in Luard's edition of Bartholomew Cotton (Rolls
+Series). Taxster's work became the basis of several later compilations
+of the eastern counties, including: (i) JOHN OF EVERSDEN, another Bury
+monk, independent from 1265 to 1301, also printed without his name by
+Thorpe, up to 1295, as a further continuation of Florence. (2) JOHN OF
+OXNEAD, a monk of St. Benet's, Hulme, a reputed continuator of Taxster
+and Eversden up to 1280, who adds a good deal of his own for the years
+1280-1293, edited somewhat carelessly by Sir Henry Ellis as _Chronica
+J. de Oxenedes_ (Rolls Series). (3) BARTHOLOMEW COTTON, a monk of
+Norwich, whose _Historia Anglicana_, original from 1291 to 1298, and
+specially important from 1285 to 1291, is edited by Luard (Rolls
+Series). Some thirteenth and early fourteenth century Bury chronicles
+are also in _Memorials_ of _St. Edmund's Abbey_, ed. T. Arnold (vols.
+ii. and iii., Rolls Series). The _Chronicon de Mailros_ (Bannatyne
+Club), from the Cistercian abbey of Melrose, goes to 1270; though
+utterly untrustworthy, it may be noticed as almost the only Scottish
+chronicle before the war of independence, and as containing a curious
+record of the miracles of Simon de Montfort.
+
+Among the historians of Edward I.'s reign is WALTER OF HEMINGBURGH,
+Canon of Guisborough in Cleveland (ed. H.C. Hamilton, 2 vols., Engl.
+Hist. Soc.). His account of Henry III.'s reign is worthless, but from
+1272 to 1312 his work is of great value, though never precise and full
+of gaps. It contains many documents and is remarkable for its stirring
+battle pictures. Hemingburgh probably laid down his pen when the
+narrative ceases early in the reign of Edward II. Another writer,
+identified by Horstmann with John of Tynemouth, carries the story from
+1326 to 1346.
+
+In striking contrast to the flowing periods of Hemingburgh is the
+well-written and chronologically digested _Annals_ of the Dominican
+friar NICHOLAS TREVET or TRIVET, the son of a judge of Henry III.'s
+reign (ed. Hog, Engl. Hist. Soc.). Beginning in 1138, his work assumes
+independent value for the latter years of Henry III. and is of
+first-rate importance for the reign of Edward I., at whose death it
+concludes, though Trevet was certainly alive in 1324. It was largely
+used by the later St. Alban's chroniclers.
+
+Franciscan historiography begins earlier than Dominican with the
+remarkable tract of THOMAS OF ECCLESTON, written about 1260, _De
+Adventu Fratrum Minorum in Anglia_, published with other Minorite
+documents (including Adam Marsh's letters) in BREWER'S _Monumenta
+Franciscana_ (Rolls Series, continued in a second volume by R.
+Hewlett). The first important Franciscan chronicle, called the
+_Chronicon de Lanercost_ (ed. J. Stevenson, Bannatyne Club, 2 vols.),
+really comes from the Minorite convent of Carlisle. It covers the years
+1201 to 1346. The early part is derived from the valueless chronicle of
+Melrose, and its incoherent cult of the memory of Montfort does not
+save it from the grossest errors in dealing with his history. It
+becomes important for northern affairs from Edward I. onwards, giving
+full details with a strong anti-Scottish bias. Another north-country
+chronicle is Sir T. GREY'S _Scalacronica_ (ed. Stevenson, Maitland
+Club, 1836), useful for the Scottish wars and for Edward III.'s reign
+up to 1362.
+
+A sign of the times is the beginning of civic chronicles. The London
+series alone is important for English history. It begins with the
+_Liber de Antiquis Legibus_, or _Chronica Majorum et Vicecomitum
+Londoniarum_ (1188-1274, ed. T. Stapleton, Camden Soc.). The work of
+ARNOLD FITZTHEDMAR, alderman of the German merchants in London, it is
+copious for the years 1236 to 1274, and is, with Wykes, the only
+chronicle of the Barons' Wars written with a royalist bias. Fourteenth
+century civic chronicles, based upon _Flores Historiarum_, and
+continued independently, form the main contents of the two volumes of
+_Chronicles of the Reigns of Edward I. and II._ (ed. by Dr. Stubbs for
+the Rolls Series). These are: (1) _Annales Londonienses_, perhaps
+written by ANDREW HORN, chamberlain of London, and compiler of the
+_Liber Horn_; they have much general value for the period 1301 to 1316,
+and deal more narrowly with London history from 1316 to 1330, when they
+conclude. (2) _Annales Paulini_, 1307-1341, compiled by one of the
+clergy of St. Paul's, but not by Adam Murimuth. These take up Dr.
+Stubbs's first volume. The second contains: (1) JOHN OF LONDON'S
+_Commendatio Lamentabilis in Transitu magni Regis Edwardi quarti_, a
+funeral eulogy containing the most elaborate contemporary analysis of
+Edward's character. (2) The CANON OF BRIDLINGTON'S _Gesta Edwardi de
+Carnarvon_, with a continuation down to the death of Edward III., of
+little value after 1339. It has frequent reference to the vaticinations
+of the local prophet, John of Bridlington, and was not put in its
+present shape before 1377. Its first part is based on earlier sources,
+and it is, for lack of better, a prime authority for north-country
+history and Anglo-Scottish relations; the continuation contains the
+best account of Edward Balliol's attempts on the Scottish throne. (3)
+_Vita Edwardi II._, from 1307 to 1325, attributed by Hearne on slight
+grounds to a MONK OF MALMESBURY, with many notices of the history of
+Gloucestershire and Bristol, of which the famous rising is described at
+length. The writer is the most human of the annalists of the reign,
+prolix, self-conscious, moralising, and somewhat incoherent. He is the
+most outspoken of all the fourteenth century critics of the Roman
+curia, and has more insight than most of his contemporaries.
+
+The following are of primary importance for the early years of Edward
+III.; it is significant that they are nearly all secular, not monastic,
+in origin. (1) _Continuatio Chronicorum_, 1303-1347, by ADAM MURIMUTH,
+a canon of St. Paul's much employed by Edward III. (ed. E.M. Thompson
+in Rolls Series), a mere continuation of the _Flores_ until 1325,
+thence enlarged from personal sources, but still meagre until 1337,
+when it becomes a first-rate authority to 1346. Murimuth's adoption of
+Michaelmas day as the beginning of the year has often confused those
+who have imitated him. Chief among these is (2) GEOFFREY LE BAKER of
+Swinbrooke, an Oxfordshire man, and like Murimuth, a secular clerk,
+whose _Chronicon_ (ed. E.M. Thompson), beginning in 1303 on the basis
+of Murimuth, has independent value after 1324, and is noteworthy for
+its touching details of Edward II.'s fall and death. It ends in 1356
+with an excellent account of the battle of Poitiers. The early part of
+Baker's chronicle, widely circulated as _Vita et Mors Edwardi II._, was
+previously assigned to Sir Thomas de la Moor, and was so edited by
+Stubbs, but Sir E.M. Thompson showed clearly that this Oxfordshire
+knight was Baker's patron and not the writer of a chronicle. With many
+defects, Baker can tell a story picturesquely. (3) ROBERT OF AVESBURY,
+a canon lawyer, wrote _De mirabilibus Gestis Edwardi III._, of special
+importance for the war from 1339 to 1356, and containing many state
+documents. It is edited by E.M. Thompson in the same volume as
+Murimuth. (4) HENRY KNIGHTON, Canon of Leicester, wrote a _Chronicle_
+about 1366 which is valuable for the period 1336-1366 and includes the
+best contemporary account of the Black Death. The latest edition by
+Lumby in the Rolls Series is not a scholarly work. (5) _Eulogium
+Historiarum_ (ed. Haydon, Rolls Series) is contemporary and valuable
+for 1356-1366 only. There is a great dearth of English chronicles for
+the latter years of Edward III. The signal exception is the important
+St. Alban's _Chronicon Angliae_ already mentioned.
+
+In the age of Edward III. the _Flores Historiarum_ were superseded by
+the _Polychronicon_ (often called the "Brute" after WACE'S _Brut
+d'Angleterre_), the voluminous compilation (to 1352) of RANDOLPH
+HIGDEN, a monk of Chester (edited by Babington and Lumby, Rolls
+Series). ROBERT OF GLOUCESTER, PETER LANGTOFT, and ROBERT MANNYNG have
+been referred to elsewhere. The first is of some original value for the
+Barons' Wars and Edward I., while Langtoft, a Yorkshire canon specially
+interested in the Scottish wars, is a contemporary for all Edward I.'s
+reign. Among rhyming chronicles, French in tongue but English in
+origin, may be mentioned _Le Siege de Carlaverock_, 1300 (ed. Nicolas,
+1828), of value for heraldry, and CHANDOS HERALD'S _Prince Noir_ (ed.
+H.O. Coxe, whose edition was pillaged by F. Michel for his more
+accessible version of 1883). _L'Histoire de Foulques Fitz Warin_ (d.
+1260?), a picturesque marcher hero, a prose romance of the end of the
+thirteenth century, can be read in Stevenson's edition of COGGESHALL
+(Rolls Series), or Englished by A. Kemp-Welch (1904).
+
+No contemporary Scottish chronicles of importance deal with the War of
+Independence, though fairly full Scottish versions of it exist in later
+books. The earliest of these is the _Bruce_ of JOHN BARBOUR, Archdeacon
+of Aberdeen. Written in 1375 at the instigation of Robert II.,
+Barbour's spirited verses are inspired by patriotic rather than
+historic motives. His details are minute, but impossible to control by
+other sources, and he is more valuable as the epic poet of Scottish
+liberty than as an historical authority. He is edited by Skeat (Early
+English Text Soc.), Jamieson, and Innes. The earliest prose Scottish
+chronicle, that of JOHN FORDUN, who died about 1384 (ed. Skene, in
+_Historians of Scotland_), is of value for the fourteenth century.
+ANDREW WYNTONN'S _Originale_, a metrical history written in the
+fifteenth century, has next to no authority until the end of this
+period (ed. Laing, in _Historians of Scotland_), BLIND HARRY'S
+_Wallace_, written in 1488, is romance not history.
+
+Wales is more fortunate than Scotland in preserving contemporary
+thirteenth century annals, of which a Latin chronicle, _Annales
+Cambriae_, extending to 1288, and a Welsh one, _Brut y Tywysogion_
+(i.e., _Chronicle of the Princes_), down to 1278, are edited by J.
+Williams in the Rolls Series, the latter with an English translation. A
+more critical version of the Welsh text of the _Brut_ is that of J.
+RHYS and J.G. EVANS' _Red Book of Hergest_, vol. ii. (1890).
+
+The close relations between England and France for the whole of this
+period render the French chronicles by far the most important of
+foreign sources for English history. They are enumerated in detail by
+Auguste Molinier in vols. iii. (up to 1328) and iv. (after 1328) of the
+first part of _Les Sources de l'Histoire de France (Manuels de
+Bibliographie historique_). The chief French chronicles of the period
+1226-1328 are collected in vols. xx.-xxiv. of the _Recueil des
+Historiens de la France_ begun by Dom Bouquet. Some of them are of
+special importance for English history. For Anglo-Netherlandish
+relations under Edward I. see _Annales Gandenses_ (1296-1310), "la
+chronique la plus remarquable de la fin du xiiie siecle," the French
+_Chronique Artesienne_ (1295-1304), and the _Chronique Tournaisienne_
+(1296-1314), all edited by F. Funck-Brentano in the already mentioned
+_Collection de Textes_. For the Hundred Years' War the French
+chroniclers are indispensable, especially for military history. The
+most famous of these writers, JEAN FROISSART, has been characterised in
+my text (p. 419). He can best be studied in Luce and Raynouart's
+excellent edition for the Soc. de l'Histoire de France (tomes i.-viii.,
+1869-1888) which completes the story up to Edward III.'s death. Luce's
+careful "sommaire et commentaire critique" often affords means of
+checking Froissart by other sources. The magnificent volumes of indexes
+of Kervyn de Lettenhove's complete edition (vols. XX.-XXV.) are still
+of immense use, though his text and comments are inferior to those of
+Luce, Froissart's spirit may well be caught in Lord Berners's racy
+English translation (Tudor Translations), or in G.C. Macaulay's useful
+abridgment. The three redactions of Froissart's first book (from 1327
+to 1373-1377), which is all that concerns our period, have been clearly
+distinguished by Luce. (1) The first edition, written about 1373, at
+the request of Count Robert of Namur, is inspired by an English bias.
+Up to 1360 it is largely derived from the chronicle of JEAN LE BEL,
+Canon of St. Lambert of Liege; after that date it is original. (2) The
+second edition, only represented by two MSS., of which one is
+incomplete, is a modification of the first with a French bias. The
+earlier part is more independent of Jean le Bel. (3) The third edition,
+preserved in a single MS., ends with the death of Philip VI in 1350,
+and, written after 1400, is even more hostile to England than the
+second. The best edition of Jean le Bel is by Polain for the Academie
+royale de Belgique.
+
+A few of the more important French chronicles after 1328 may be
+mentioned shortly. (1) _Grands Chroniques de France_ (ed. Paulin
+Paris). Original from 1350 to 1377, a work of first-rate importance,
+where, if truth is altered, it is altered deliberately from political
+motives. (2) JEAN DE VENETTE, 1340-1368, written with a popular bias,
+and partly favourable to Charles of Navarre (edited as a supplement to
+Geraud's edition of Guillaume de Nangis, ii., 178-378, Soc. de l'Hist.
+de France). (3) _Chronique Normande du xiv'e siecle_, 1337-1372 (ed.
+Molinier, Soc. de l'Hist. de France, 1882), exact and very important
+for the wars 1337 to 1372. (4) _Chronique des quatre premiers Valois_
+(Soc. de l'Hist. de France). (5) CUVELIER'S poetical _Vie de Bertrand
+du Guesclin_ (2 vols., _Doc. inedits_). Further details can be found in
+Molinier's bibliography. Netherlandish sources for the Hundred Years'
+War are summarised in PIRENNE'S _Bibliographie de l'Histoire de
+Belgique_ (1895). Of special importance is JAN VAN KLERK'S _Van den
+Derden Edewaert Rym Kronyk_. (1840), useful for 1337-1341, and written
+with an English bias.
+
+The unofficial legal literature of the thirteenth and fourteenth
+centuries is of exceptional variety and value. Many lawyers' treatises
+throw light on matters far beyond legal technicalities. HENRY OF
+BRACTON or BRATTON'S _De Legibus et Consuetudinibus Angliae_
+illustrates the union of English and Roman juridical ideas
+characteristic of the age of Henry III. It has been edited badly by Sir
+T. Twiss in six volumes (Rolls Series), and some portions well by
+Professor Maitland in his _Select passages from Bracton and Azo_
+(Selden Soc.). Maitland's _Bracton's Note Book_ includes extracts from
+plea rolls seemingly made by Bracton. Bracton's book on the laws was
+translated, condensed, and rearranged by a writer of the next
+generation called Britton. It may be studied in a modern edition in
+NICHOLLS'S _Britton on the laws of England_, while _Fleta_, an almost
+contemporary Latin law book, must be read in Selden's seventeenth
+century edition. Another thirteenth century law-book, _Le Mirroir des
+Justices_, has been edited by Maitland and W.J. Whittaker for the
+Selden Society. From Edward I.'s time onwards unofficial reports of
+trials called YEAR BOOKS, written in French, become valuable for their
+vividness and detail, and for the light which they throw on the more
+technical records of the plea rolls. Many of them are printed in
+unsatisfactory seventeenth century editions, but the Year Books of five
+of Edward I.'s regnal years, between 1292 to 1307, together with the
+Year Book of 11-12 Edward III., are accessible in A.J. Horwood's
+editions in the Rolls Series. L.O. Pike has also edited in the Rolls
+Series the _Year books of Edward III._ from 1338 to 1345, and
+Maitland's _Year books of Edward II._ for the Selden Society are the
+first two instalments of a scheme for publishing the Year Books of the
+reign. Besides their legal value, the Year Books are an almost unworked
+mine for social and economic, and often even political and
+ecclesiastical, history.
+
+Of literary aids to history T. WRIGHT'S _Political Songs_ (Camden Soc.)
+illustrate this period to the reign of Edward II. One of Wright's
+pieces has been more elaborately edited in C.L. KINGSFORD'S Song of
+_Lewes_ (1890), and C. Hardwick published a _Poem on the Times OF
+Edward II._ for the Percy Soc. (1849). With Edward III. such literature
+becomes copious. Of special importance are T. Wright's _Political POEMS
+and SONGS FROM the accession of Edward III._, vol. i. (Rolls Series,
+1859), J. Hall's _Poems of_ LAURENCE MINOT, Skeat's editions of CHAUCER
+and LANGLAND, and G.C. Macaulay's edition of GOWER. The Latin works of
+Wycliffe, published by the Wycliffe Society, mainly belong to the
+succeeding period, but _De Dominio Divino_ and _De Civili Dominio_, as
+well as some tracts printed in the appendix to LEWIS'S _Life of Wiclif_
+and in Shirley's edition of _Fasciculi Zizanioram_ (Rolls Series), were
+written before 1377.
+
+Of modern works treating of this period, many monographs, dealing with
+particular points, have been mentioned in notes in the course of the
+narrative. Of general guides to the period the best by far are Stubbs
+and Pauli. STUBBS'S _Constitutional History_ (vol. ii.) is as valuable
+for the chapters summarising the political history as for the more
+strictly constitutional matter. R. PAULI'S _Geschichte von England_,
+iii., 489-896, and iv., 1-505, 716-741, remains, after half a century,
+the fullest and most satisfactory working up in detail of these reigns,
+though the great additions to our material make parts of it a somewhat
+unsafe guide. It can be supplemented for particular aspects of history
+by the following: For legal history, POLLOCK and MAITLAND'S _History of
+English Law before the time of Edward I._, especially vol. i., book i.
+(chapters iv.-vi.), and book ii.; and most of vol. ii.; to which should
+be added the prefaces by Prof. Maitland and others to the volumes of
+the Selden Society. MAITLAND'S _Roman Canon Law in the Church of
+England_ (1898) is also of great importance. For economic history, W.J.
+ASHLEY'S _Economic History_, parts i. and ii.; W. CUNNINGHAM's _Growth
+of English Industry and Commerce, Early and Middle Ages_; VINOGRADOFF'S
+_Villainage in England_, S. DOWELL'S _History of Taxation_ (2nd
+edition), H. HALL'S _Customs Revenue of England_, and, as a collection
+of materials, J.E. THOROLD ROGERS' _History of Agriculture and Prices_,
+vols. i. and ii. For ecclesiastical history, W.R.W. STEPHENS'S _History
+of the English Church, 1066-1272_; W.W. CAPES'S _History of the English
+Church in the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries_, and F. MAKOWER'S
+_The Constitutional History and Constitution of the Church of England_
+(translated from the German). For academic history, DENIFLE'S
+_Entstehung der Universitaeten des Mittelalters bis 1400_, especially
+pp. 1-40, 237-251 (Oxford) and pp. 367-376 (Cambridge), HAUREAU'S
+_Histoire de la Philosophie scholastique_ and RASHDALL'S _Universities
+of the Middle Ages_, i., 1-74, and ii., part ii. (Oxford and
+Cambridge). For military history, KOeHLER'S _Entwickelung des
+Kriegswesens in der Ritterzeit_, OMAN'S _History of the Art of War in
+the Middle Ages_, CLARK'S _Mediaeval Military Architecture_, and (above
+all) J.E. MORRIS'S _Welsh Wars of Edward I_. For naval history,
+NICOLAS'S _History of the Royal Navy_, and C. DE LA RONCIERE'S
+_Histoire de la Marine Francaise_. For particular reigns the following
+may be found useful: For Henry III., PETIT-DUTAILLIS'S _Etude sur Louis
+VIII._, GASQUET'S _Henry III. and the Church_ (1905), BEMONT'S _Simon
+de Montfort_, PROTHERO'S _Simon de Montfort_, and BLAAUW'S _Barons'
+Wars_ (2nd ed., 1871). For the reign of Edward I., SEELEY's _Life and
+Reign of Edward I._ (1872), my _Edward I._; GOUGH'S _Itinerary of
+Edward I._, MAXWELL'S _Robert the Bruce_ (Heroes of the Nations), and
+MORRIS'S above-mentioned _Welsh Wars of Edward I._ For some aspects of
+Edward II.'s reign, STUBBS'S prefaces to _Chronicles of Edward I. and
+Edward II._ are of special value. For Edward III.'s reign, BARNES's
+_History of Edward III._ (1688) is not quite superseded by LONGMAN'S
+_Life and Times of Edward III._ (2 vols., 1869), and MACKINNON'S
+_History of Edward III._ (1900). For the Hundred Years' War, E.
+DEPREZ'S _Preliminaires de la Guerre de Cent Ans_ (1328-1342) (Bibl. de
+l'Ecole francaise de Rome, 1902) for diplomatic history, and DENIFLE's
+_Desolation des Eglises et Monasteres de la France pendant la Guerre de
+Cent Ans_ (ii., part i., 1899) for the best general survey of the war
+to 1380. See also LUCE'S _La Jeunesse de Bertrand de Guesclin and La
+France pendant la Guerre de Cent Ans_, and (for Brittany) A. DE LA
+BORDERIE'S _Histoire de Bretagne_ (1899). The end of Edward III.'s
+reign is illustrated by S. ARMITAGE SMITH'S _John of Gaunt_ (1904), J.
+LECHLER'S _Wiclif und die Vorgeschichte der Reformation_ (2 vols.,
+1873), also translated, not very adequately, _Wycliffe and His English
+Precursors_ (1878 and 1881), F.D. MATTHEW'S introduction to _Wyclif's
+English Works_ (Early English Text Society), and R.L. POOLE'S
+_Illustrations of the History of Mediaeval Thought_ (1884), and
+_Wycliffe_ (1889). G.M. TREVELYAN's _England in the Age of Wycliffe_
+(1899) is interesting but not always very scholarly.
+
+Some account of the general foreign history of the period can be found
+in LAVISSE and RAMBAUD'S _Histoire generale_ (tomes ii. and iii.),
+LOSERTH'S _Geschichte des spaeteren Mittelalters_ (good bibliographies),
+and, briefly, in my _Papacy and Empire_ (up to 1273), and LODGE'S
+_Close of the Middle Ages_ (after 1273). For French history of the
+period LAVISSE'S _Histoire de France_ (iii., pt. i., 1137-1226, by A.
+LUCHAIRE; iii., pt. ii., 1226-1328, by C.V. LANGLOIS, and iv., pt. i.,
+1328-1422, by A. COVILLE) cover the whole of the period. More detailed
+works are, PETIT-DUTAILLIS'S _Louis VIII._, E. BERGER'S _Blanche de
+Castile_, WALLON'S _Louis IX._, BOUTARIC'S _Saint Louis et Alfonse de
+Poitiers_, C.V. LANGLOIS'S _Philippe le Hardi_, BOUTARIC'S _France sous
+Philippe le Bel_, LEHUGEUR'S _Philippe le Long_, PETIT'S _Charles de
+Valois_, FOURNIER'S _Royaume d'Arles et de Vienne_, L. DELISLE'S _Hist.
+de Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte_, and (for the south) the new edition of DE
+VIC and VAISSETE's _Hist. generale de Languedoc_. Much recent work has
+been done by French scholars towards the reconstruction of the external
+history of England during the whole of our period. For the Low
+Countries, PIRENNE'S _Hist. de Belgique_, ii., ASHLEY'S _James and
+Philip van Artevelde_, and VANDER KINDERE'S _Le Siecle des Arteveldt_.
+PAULI is good for the relations of England and Germany.
+
+Maps illustrating the period are to be found in POOLE'S _Oxford
+Historical Atlas_, LONGNON'S _Atlas historique de la France_, and
+SPRUNER-MENKE'S _Historischer Hand-Atlas_; special maps of Edward I.'s
+Scottish expeditions in GOUGH'S _Itinerary of Edward I._, of Edward
+III.'s and the Black Prince's campaigns in THOMPSON'S _Chronicon
+Galfridi le Baker_, and KERVYN'S _Froissart_, of John of Gaunt's in
+ARMITAGE-SMITH's _John of Gaunt_, and of Wales in the thirteenth
+century in _Owens College Historical Essays_. VIDAL DE LA BLACHE'S
+_Tableau de la Geographie de la France_ (LAVISSE, _Hist. de France_,
+i., pt. i.) is instructive for the physical features of the campaigns
+of the Hundred Years' War.
+
+Further details as to English authorities, ancient and modern, can be
+found in GROSS'S excellent Sources _and Literature of English History_
+(1900). The _Monumenta Germaniae Historica_, _Scriptores_, vols.
+xxvii., xxviii., consist of excerpts from English writers of the
+twelfth and thirteenth centuries; the introductions (in Latin) by Pauli
+and Liebermann contain noteworthy estimates of the works from which the
+extracts are taken.
+
+NOTE TO PAGES 390-92.
+
+My reasons for my account of the battle of Poitiers demand longer
+explanation than can be given in a footnote. Like most modern writers,
+I have based my narrative on the _Chronicle_ of Geoffrey le Baker as
+expounded by Sir E.M. Thompson, though I agree with Professor Oman in
+holding that Baker's "ampla profundaque vallis et mariscus, torrente
+quodam irriguus," must be the valley of the Miausson. I also, however,
+agree with Father Denifle in not setting great store on Chandos Herald,
+though I would not reject him altogether, as all prudent writers must
+reject Froissart. My conjectural account of the movements of the armies
+is an attempt to combine Baker with what may be true in the Herald. I
+hope elsewhere to be able to justify my narrative at length.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+Aachen.
+Abbeville.
+Aberconway Abbey.
+Aberdeen.
+Aberdeen, John Barbout, Archdeacon of. See Barbour, John.
+Abergavenny, town, castle and lordship.
+Abergavenny, Lords of. See Hastings.
+Aberystwyth.
+Abingdon.
+Abingdon, Edmund of. See Rich, Edmund.
+Acre.
+Acre, Joan of. See Joan.
+Acton Burnell.
+Adolf of Nassau, King of the Romans.
+Adour, the river.
+Agen.
+Agenais, the.
+Agnelius of Pisa.
+Aigueblanche, Peter of, Bishop of Hereford.
+Aiguillon.
+Albemarle, William of Fors, Earl of.
+Albemarle and Devon, Isabella of Fors, Countess of.
+Albigenses, the.
+Albert the Great.
+Albret, Lord of.
+Aldgate.
+Alencon, Count of.
+Alexander II., King-of Scots.
+Alexander III., King of Scots.
+Alexander, son of Alexander III of Scotland.
+Alexander IV., Pope.
+Alexander of Hales. See Hales.
+Alfonso X., King of Castile.
+Alfonse of France, Count of Poitiers.
+Alice, Countess of Lancaster.
+Alice of Lusignan.
+Aliens.
+Almaine, Henry of. See Henry of Almaine.
+"Almaines, The."
+Almond, the river.
+Alnwick Castle.
+Alton Castle.
+Amadeus III., Count of Savoy.
+Amesbury.
+Amice, mother of the elder Simon de Montfort.
+Amiens,
+ cathedral;
+ mise of;
+ treaty of.
+Amory, Roger of.
+Anagni.
+Andrew, St.
+Anne of Brittany.
+Angers.
+Anglesey.
+Anglia, East.
+Angouleme.
+Angouleme, Isabella, Countess of. See Isabella, Queen of England.
+Angoumois.
+Anjou.
+Anjou, Charles of. See Charles.
+Anjou, Louis, Duke of. See Louis.
+Annandale.
+Antrim.
+Antwerp.
+Apulia.
+Aquinas, St. Thomas.
+Aquitaine, See also Gascony.
+Aquitaine, Dukes of. See under the Kings of England.
+Aquitaine, Edward, Prince of. See Edward the Black Prince.
+Aquitaine, Eleanor of.
+Aragon.
+Aragon, James, King of. See James.
+Aragon, Peter, King of. See Peter.
+Archers,
+ English;
+ Welsh;
+ Scottish.
+Architecture,
+ gothic;
+ ecclesiastical;
+ domestic;
+ military;
+ "decorated" style, "flamboyant";
+ "perpendicular";
+ Norman;
+ French.
+Arden, forest of.
+Argenton.
+Aristotle.
+Armagh, Archbishop of. See Fitzralph, Richard.
+Armagnac, Counts of.
+Armagnac, John, Count of.
+Arnold, T., his edition of _Memorials of St. Edmund's Abbey_.
+Art. _See_ also Architecture.
+Artevelde, James van.
+Arthur I., Count of Brittany.
+Arthur II., Duke of Brittany.
+Arthur, King.
+Arthurian Legend, the _Articuli super cartas_.
+Artois.
+Artois, Blanche of. See Blanche.
+Artois, Maud, Countess of. See Maud.
+Artois, Robert of. See Robert.
+Arundel, the Countess of.
+Arundel, Edmund Fitzalan, Earl of.
+Arundel, Richard Fitzalan, Earl of.
+Arvon.
+Ashley, W.J.,
+ his _Economic History_;
+ his _James and Philip van Artevelde_.
+Assisi.
+Athenry, battle of.
+Athis, treaty of.
+Athol, David of Strathbolgie, Earl of.
+Auberoche, battle of.
+Aubigny, Philip of.
+Aude, the river.
+Audley, Hugh of.
+Audley, Earl of Gloucester. See Gloucester.
+Audley, James (1258).
+Audley, James (d. 1369).
+Audleys of Shropshire.
+Audrehem, Marshal.
+Aumale, Counts of, See also Albemarle.
+Auray;
+ battle of;
+ Church of St. Michael.
+_Ausculta, Fili_, bull.
+Austin Canons of Lanercost.
+Austin Friars.
+Austria.
+Austria, Duke of.
+Auvergne.
+Auvergne, Counts of.
+Auvezere, the river.
+Avalon, Hugh of. See Hugh, St.
+Avesbury, Robert of, chronicler.
+Avesnes;
+ house of.
+Avesnes, William of. See William,
+Count of Hainault.
+Avignon,
+ the papal court at;
+ records of Popes of.
+Avon, the river.
+Axholme.
+Ayermine, William, Bishop of Norwich.
+Aymer of Valence, Bishop of Winchester.
+Aymer of Valence, Earl of Pembroke. See Pembroke.
+Ayr.
+
+"Babylonish Captivity, the."
+Bacon, Roger.
+Bacon, Robert.
+Badenoch, John Comyn, lord of, See Comyn.
+Badlesmere, Bartholomew, Lord.
+Badlesmere, Lady.
+Baker, Geoffrey le, _Chronicle_ of.
+"Balance of Power," the.
+Baldock (town).
+Baldock, Ralph, chancellor and bishop of London.
+Baldock, Robert, chancellor.
+Baldwin, Count of Flanders, Latin Emperor of the East.
+Ball, John,
+Balliol, Edward, eldest son of King John of Scotland.
+Balliol, John (d. 1269).
+Balliol, John, lord of Barnard Castle, and of Galloway, son of the above,
+ See also John, King of Scots.
+Balsham, Hugh, Bishop of Ely.
+Barnburgh Castle.
+Bampton in the Bush.
+Banaster, Adam.
+Banbury.
+Banff.
+Bankers,
+ foreign;
+ Jewish;
+ Italian.
+Bannatyne club, publications of the.
+Bannock, the river.
+Bannockburn, battle of.
+Bar, Joan of. See Joan.
+Bar, Count of.
+Barbavera.
+Barbezieux.
+Barbour, John, _Bruce_.
+Bardi, the.
+Bardolf, William.
+Barfleur.
+Bar-gate, the, Lincoln.
+Barnard Castle.
+Barnes's _History of Edward III_.
+Barnwell.
+Barnwell, Canon of.
+Barons' war, the.
+Barres, William des.
+Basset, Gilbert.
+_Bastides_.
+_Bastilles_.
+Bath.
+Bath and Wells, Bishop of. See Burnell, Robert; Drokensford;
+ Shrewsbury, Ralph of, and Harewell, John.
+Battle Abbey, chronicle of.
+Battles of ----
+ Athenry.
+ Auberoche.
+ Auray.
+ Ayr.
+ Bannockburn.
+ Boroughbridge.
+ Bourgneuf Bay.
+ Cassel.
+ Chalon.
+ Chesterfield.
+ Cocherel.
+ Corte Nuova.
+ Courtrai.
+ Crecy.
+ Dupplin Moor.
+ Dunbar.
+ Dundalk.
+ Evesham.
+ Falkirk.
+ Halidon Hill.
+ La Rochelle.
+ Lewes.
+ Lincoln.
+ Lisieux.
+ Madog's Field.
+ Maes Madog.
+ Mauron.
+ Methven.
+ Morgarten.
+ Morlaix.
+ Myton.
+ Najera.
+ Neville's Cross.
+ Orewyn Bridge.
+ Poitiers.
+ Pontvallain.
+ Sandwich.
+ Sluys.
+ Stirling Bridge.
+ The Thirty.
+ Winchelsea.
+Bayonne.
+Bazas.
+Bearn.
+Bearn, Gaston, Viscount of. See Gaston.
+Beatrice, daughter of Henry III. and wife of John II. of Brittany.
+Beatrice, sister of Amadeus III., Count of Savoy, wife of Raymond
+ Berengar IV., Count of Provence.
+Beaucaire.
+Beauce, the.
+Beauchamp, Thomas. See Warwick, Earl of.
+Beauchamp, William. See Warwick, Earl of.
+Beauchamps of Warwick, the.
+Beaumanoir, commandant at Josselin.
+Beaumaris Castle.
+Beaumont, Henry de.
+Beaumont, Louis de, Bishop of Durham.
+Beaumont, Robert of, Earl of Leicester. See Leicester.
+Beaumonts, the.
+Beauvais.
+Becket, Archbishop, St. Thomas.
+Bedale, 182.
+Bedford, Castle of;
+ scutage of.
+Bedfordshire.
+Begard, Abbey of.
+Beghards, the.
+Beguines, the.
+Behuchet, Nicholas.
+Bek, Anthony, Bishop of Durham.
+Bek, Thomas, Bishop of St. David's.
+Belleville.
+Bembro, Robert.
+Bemont, Charles;
+ his _Roles Gascons_;
+ his _Chartes des libertes anglaises_;
+ his Simon _de Montfort_.
+Benauge.
+Bene, Amaury of.
+Benedict XI.
+Benedict XII.
+Bengeworth, near Evesham.
+Bentley, Sir Walter.
+Bere Castle.
+Bereford, Sir Simon.
+Berg, Count of.
+Berger's _Blanche de Castile_.
+Bergerac.
+Berkeley Castle.
+Berkeleys, the.
+Berkhampstead, siege of.
+Berkshire.
+Berkstead, Stephen, Bishop of Chichester.
+Bermingham, John of. See Louth, Earl of.
+Bernabo, Visconti, Lord of Milan.
+Berners, Lord, translator of Froissart.
+Berri, John, Duke of.
+Bertrand, Cardinal. See Montfavence.
+Berwick.
+Bethune,
+ _Chronique de l'Anonyme de_.
+Bibliographies, historical
+Bidassoa, the.
+Bigod, the house of.
+Bigod, Hugh, justiciar.
+Bigod, Roger, earl marshal and Earl of Norfolk. See Norfolk, Earl of.
+Bigorre, county of.
+Biscay, Bay of.
+Blaauw's _Barons' Wars_.
+Black Prince, the. See Edward, Prince of Wales and Aquitaine.
+Black death, the.
+Blacklow Hill.
+Blanche of Artois, Queen of Navarre.
+Blanche of Bourbon, wife of Peter the Great of Castile.
+Blanche of Castile, Queen of Louis VIII. and regent of France.
+Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster.
+Blanche taque, the, in estuary of Somme.
+Blaneforde's _Chronicle_
+Blankenberghe.
+Blavet, the river.
+Blaye.
+Bliss' _Calendars of Papal Registers_.
+Blois.
+Blois, Charles of. See Charles.
+Blois, Theobald, Count of.
+Blount, Sir Thos.,
+Blundeville, Randolph of, Earl of Chester. See Chester, Randolph, Earl of.
+Boccaccio.
+Bohemia.
+Bohemia, Ottocar, King of.
+Bohun, Humphrey, Earl of Hereford. See Hereford.
+Bohun, Humphrey of Brecon, son of the Earl of Hereford.
+Bohun, Margaret.
+Bohun, William, Earl of Northampton. See Northampton.
+Bohuns, the.
+Bollers, house of.
+Bologna.
+Bolton.
+Bonhommes, order of.
+Boniface VIII., Pope.
+Boniface of Savoy, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Bordeaux;
+ truce of.
+Bordeaux, Bertrand de Goth, Archbishop of. See Clement V.
+Bordelais, the.
+Borderie's _Histoire de Bretagne_.
+Boroughbridge; battle of.
+Boroughs; growth of; representation of.
+Bothwell Castle.
+Boulogne.
+Bouquet, Dom, his _Recueil des Historiens de la France_.
+Bourbon, Blanche of. See Blanche.
+Bourbonnais.
+Bourchier, Sir Robert.
+_Bourg_, of Limoges, the.
+Bourg.
+Bourgneuf, Bay of.
+Bourne.
+Boutaric's _St. Louis et Alfonse de Poitiers_;
+ his _France sous Philippe le Bel_
+Bouvines, battle of.
+Brabant.
+Brabant, Dukes of. See John II., John III., and Wenceslaus.
+Brabant, Mary of. See Mary, Queen of France.
+Brabazon, Roger de, chief justice after 1295.
+Bracton, Henry of,
+ his book _De Legibus_;
+ his Note Book.
+Bradwardine, Thomas, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Brandenburg.
+Brandenburg, Elector of.
+Brantingham, Thomas, treasurer, Bishop of Exeter.
+Brantome.
+Braose, house of.
+Braose, William de,
+ his daughter.
+Bratton, Henry. See Bracton.
+Braybrook, Henry de.
+Breaute, Falkes de.
+Brechin.
+Brecon.
+Bren, Llewelyn. See Llewelyn.
+Brentwood.
+Bremen.
+Brest.
+_Bretagne bretonnante, La_.
+Bretigni, treaty of, See also Calais, treaty of.
+Bretons. See Brittany.
+Brewer's _Monumenta Franciscana_.
+Bridgnorth.
+Bridlington.
+Bridlington, Canon of, his _Gesta Edwardi de Carnarvon_.
+Bridlington, John of.
+Brie.
+Brigham, treaty of.
+Bristol,
+ council meets at;
+ confirmation of the Great Charter at;
+ castle of;
+ channel;
+ disturbances at.
+Brittany,
+ Celtic;
+ French.
+Brittany, Counts, afterwards Dukes, of. See Arthur I., Arthur II.,
+ John II., John III., John IV., John V., Peter Mauclerc.
+Brittany, Constance of, wife of Randolph of Chester.
+ See Constance of Brittany.
+Brittany, John of, Earl of Richmond. See John of Brittany, Earl of
+ Richmond.
+Britton, lawyer,
+ his treatise _On the Laws of England_.
+Bromfield.
+Brotherton, Thomas of, Earl of Norfolk. See Thomas of Brotherton.
+Bruce, David. See David II., King of Scots.
+Bruce, Edward, "King of Ireland."
+Bruce, Elizabeth, Queen of Scots. See Elizabeth.
+Bruce, Joan, Queen of Scots. See Joan.
+Bruce, Robert, Lord of Annandale,
+ claimant to the Scots throne (d.1295).
+Bruce, Robert, Earl of Carrick, son of the above (d. 1304).
+Bruce, Robert, Earl of Carrick, son of the above.
+ See also Robert, King of Scots.
+_Bruce_, John Barbour's.
+Bruges,
+ the Matins of.
+ truce of (1375).
+Brussels.
+Brut, the Trojan.
+_Brut d'Angleterre_, Wace's.
+_Brut y Tywysogion_.
+Buch, Captal de.
+Buchan, Comyn, John, Earl of.
+Buchan, Henry de Beaumont, Earl of,
+ See also Beaumont, Henry de.
+Builth, town and castle.
+Buironfosse.
+Bulgaria.
+Burgh, the family of.
+Burgh, Elizabeth de, wife of Robert, King of Scots.
+ See Elizabeth, Queen of Scots.
+Burgh, Elizabeth de, wife of Lionel of Clarence.
+Burgh, Hubert de, Earl of Kent.
+Burgh, Richard de, Earl of Ulster. See Ulster.
+Burgh, Richard de, Lord of Connaught.
+Burgh, William de, Lord of Connaught and Earl of Ulster,
+ See Ulster.
+Burgh-on-Sands.
+Burghersh, Bartholomew, Bishop of Lincoln.
+Burgos.
+Burgundy.
+Burgundy, Duke of. See Philip the Bold and Philip de Rouvres.
+Burnell, Robert, Chancellor, and Bishop of Bath and Wells.
+Burton-on-Trent.
+Bury, Richard of, Bishop of Durham.
+Bury St. Edmunds.
+Busses, Spanish.
+Butler, Edmund.
+Butler of Ireland, James, the.
+Byland Abbey.
+Bytham Castle.
+
+Cader Idris.
+Cadzand, island of.
+Caen;
+ abbeys of;
+ church of St. Peter at.
+Caerlaverock. See Carlaverock.
+Caerleon, Morgan of.
+Caerphilly Castle.
+Cahors;
+ bishopric of,
+ See Quercy.
+Calais;
+ treaty of,
+ See also Bretigni.
+_Calendar of Close Rolls_.
+_Calendar of Charter Rolls_.
+Calendars of _Documents relating to Scotland and Ireland_.
+_Calendar of Inquisitions Post-mortem and other analogous
+documents_.
+_Calendars of Papal Registers_.
+_Calendar of the Patent Rolls_.
+_Calendarium Genealogicum_, C. Roberts'.
+_Calendarium Inquisitionum sive Eschaetarum_.
+_Calendarium Rotulorum Cartarum_.
+Calveley, Sir Hugh.
+Cambrai.
+Cambresis, the.
+Cambridge;
+ university of.
+Cambridge, Edmund of Langley, Earl of. See Edmund.
+Camville, Nichola de.
+"Candlemas, The Burnt,".
+Canfranc, treaty of.
+Canons, Austin, annals by.
+Canterbury;
+ cathedral;
+ hall, Oxford;
+ register.
+Canterbury, Archbishops of.
+ See Langton, Stephen;
+ Grand, Richard le;
+ Neville, Ralph, and Blunt, John (archbishops elect);
+ Rich, Edmund;
+ Boniface of Savoy;
+ Kilwardby, Robert;
+ Peckham, John;
+ Winchelsea, Robert;
+ Cobham, Thomas (archbishop elect);
+ Reynolds, Walter;
+ Meopham, Simon;
+ Stratford, John;
+ Bradwardine, Thomas;
+ Islip, Simon;
+ Langham, Simon;
+ Whittlesea, William, and Sudbury, Simon.
+Cantilupe, St. Thomas of, chancellor and Bishop of Hereford.
+Cantilupe, Walter of, Bishop of Worcester.
+Cantilupes, the.
+Cantreds, the four. See also Perveddwlad.
+Caours, Raoul de.
+Capes's, W.W., _History of the English Church_.
+Capetians, the.
+Captal de Buch, the. See Buch.
+Captivity, the Babylonish, of the Papacy.
+Carcassonne.
+Cardiff Castle.
+Cardigan and Cardiganshire.
+Cardinerie, La.
+Carlaverock, castle;
+ chronicle of the siege of.
+Carentan.
+Carhaix.
+Carlisle, town and castle;
+ parliament of 1307 at;
+ Statute of.
+Carlisle, Andrew Harclay, Earl of.
+Carmarthen, town and castle, and Carmarthenshire;
+ justice of.
+Carmelites, the.
+Carnarvon, town and castle.
+Carnarvon, Edward of. See Edward.
+Carnarvonshire.
+Carrick, Earl of. See Bruce, Robert.
+Carrickfergus.
+_Carta menatoria_.
+Cartmel.
+Cartularies.
+Cassel, battle of.
+Cassingham (Kensham), William of.
+Castile.
+Castile, Alfonso, King of. See Alfonso.
+Castile, Blanche of. See Blanche.
+Castile, Constance of. See Constance.
+Castile, Eleanor of. See Eleanor.
+Castile, Ferdinand the Saint, King of. See Ferdinand.
+Castile, Henry of Trastamara, King of. See Henry.
+Castile, Isabella of. See Isabella.
+Castile, Peter the Cruel, King Of. See Peter.
+Castile, John, King of Leon and Duke Lancaster. See John of Gaunt.
+Castle of
+ Aberconway or Conway.
+ Abergavenny.
+ Aberyswyth.
+ Alnwick.
+ Alton.
+ Bamburgh.
+ Barnard.
+ Beaumaris.
+ Bedford.
+ Bere.
+ Berkeley.
+ Berwick.
+ Bothwell.
+ Bristol.
+ Builth.
+ Bytham.
+ Caen.
+ Caerphilly.
+ Cardiff.
+ Carlaverocc.
+ Carmarthen.
+ Carnarvon.
+ Castleton, Liddesdale.
+ Chepstow.
+ Christchurch.
+ Clare.
+ Colchester.
+ Conway. See Aberconway.
+ Conisborough.
+ Corfe.
+ Cornet.
+ Criccieth.
+ Deganwy.
+ Devises.
+ Diserth.
+ Dolwyddelen.
+ Dover.
+ Drysllwyn.
+ Dublin.
+ Dumfries.
+ Dunbar.
+ Dynevor.
+ Edinburgh.
+ Flint.
+ Fotheringhay.
+ Gloucester.
+ Grosmont.
+ Harlech.
+ Hawarden.
+ Hedingham.
+ Josselin.
+ Kenilworth.
+ Kilkenny.
+ Kidwelly.
+ Knaresborough.
+ Leeds (Kent).
+ Limoges.
+ Lincoln.
+ London. See Tower of London, the.
+ Maud's.
+ Monmouth.
+ Montgomery.
+ Mount Sorrel.
+ Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
+ Norham.
+ Norwich.
+ Nottingham.
+ Orford.
+ Peebles.
+ Pevensey.
+ Pontefract.
+ Powys.
+ Rhuddlan.
+ Rising.
+ Rochester.
+ Rockingham.
+ Romorantin.
+ Rose.
+ Roxburgh.
+ Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte.
+ Scarborough.
+ Skelton.
+ Skenfrith.
+ Stirling.
+ Swansea.
+ Tickhill.
+ Tintagel.
+ Tunbridge.
+ Tutbury.
+ Usk.
+ Wallingford.
+ Wark,
+ Warwick.
+ Whitecastle.
+ Wigmore.
+ Windsor.
+ Wolvesey (Winchester).
+Castles;
+ royal;
+ adulterine;
+ Welsh;
+ of South Wales;
+ Edward I.'s;
+ concentric;
+ Scottish.
+Castleton Castle, Liddesdale.
+Castor, Church of St., Coblenz.
+Castorplatz, the, Coblenz.
+Caversham.
+Celestine V., Pope.
+Celts, Irish.
+Celts of Scotland, the.
+Chaboterie, la.
+Chalon, little battle of.
+Champagne, Blanche of Artois, Queen of Navarre and Countess of. See
+Blanche.
+Champagne, Edmund, Count of. See also Edmund of Lancaster.
+Champagne, Henry, Count of. See Henry.
+Champagne, Joan of. See Joan.
+Champagne, Theobald IV., Count of. See Theobald.
+Champagne.
+Champollion-Figeac's _Lettres des rots d'Angleterre_.
+Chancellor, office of.
+Chancery courts, for Wales;
+ records.
+Chandos, Sir John.
+Chandos Herald.
+Channel, the Bristol;
+ the English.
+Channel Islands, the.
+Charente, the river.
+Charing.
+Charles IV., the Emperor.
+Charles IV., the Fair, King of France.
+Charles V., King of France.
+Charles of Anjou, younger brother of Louis IX., Count of Provence and
+Charles I., King of Sicily.
+Charles the Bad, Count of Evreux and King of Navarre.
+Charles of Blois, claimant to Duchy of Brittany.
+Charles of La Cerda.
+Charles of Moravia, King of the Romans.
+ See Charles IV., the Emperor.
+Charles, Duke of Normandy.
+ See also Charles V., King of France.
+Charles of Salerno, afterwards Charles II. of Sicily.
+Charles, Count of Valois.
+Charlemagne.
+Charlton, Tohn, lord of Powys.
+Charltons of Powys, the.
+Charter, the Great;
+ the forest;
+ Rolls, the, See Rolls.
+Charterhouse, the London.
+Charters, confirmations of the;
+ of London;
+ _Carta Mercatoria_;
+ as sources for history.
+Chartley.
+Chartres.
+Chateauneuf.
+Chateauroux.
+Chatelherault.
+Chaucer, Geoffrey.
+Chauvigny.
+Chaworth, Payne of.
+Cheapside.
+Chepstow.
+Cher, the river.
+Cherbourg.
+Cheshire;
+ palatine earldom of;
+ palatine courts of;
+ records of county palatine of.
+Chester.
+Chester, Edward, Earl of. See Edward I., Edward II. and Edward III.
+Chester, John de Lacy, Constable of. See Lacy.
+Chester, John the Scot, Earl of. See also Huntingdon.
+Chester, Simon de Montfort, Earl of. See Leicester.
+Chester, Randolph Blundeville, Earl of.
+Chesterfield, battle of.
+Chichester.
+Chichester, Bishops of. See Berkstead, Stephen; Neville, Ralth, and
+Stratford, Robert.
+Chilham, barony of, Kent.
+Chilterns, the.
+Chinon.
+Chirk.
+Chirk, Roger Mortimer of. See Mortimer, Roger, of Chirk.
+Christchurch Castle.
+_Christopher, The_.
+Chroniclers, the.
+Chronicles as sources of history.
+Cinque Ports, the.
+Cirencester.
+Cistercian, nuns of Eastminster;
+ monks of Whalley.
+Cistercians, the.
+Clare Castle;
+ the house of.
+Clare, Eleanor de. See Despenser, Eleanor de.
+Clare, Elizabeth of.
+Clare, Gilbert of, Earl of Gloucester. See Gloucester.
+Clare, Margaret of.
+Clare, Richard of, Earl of Gloucester. See Gloucester.
+Clarence, Duchy of. See Lionel of Antwerp.
+Clarendon.
+Clares, the poor.
+Clark's, G.T., _Mediaeval Military Architecture_.
+Clark's, J.W., _Observances in use at Barnwell Priory_.
+Clement IV., Pope.
+Clement V., Pope.
+Clement VI., Pope.
+Clergy, taxation of the.
+_Clericis laicos_, the bull.
+Clerkenwell.
+Clermont, Marshal.
+Cleves, Count of.
+Clifford, Robert.
+Clifford, Roger.
+Cliffords, the.
+Clinton, Earl of Huntingdon. See Huntingdon.
+Clisson, Oliver de.
+Cloth, manufacture of English.
+Clydesdale.
+Clwyd, the river.
+Clun.
+Cobham, Thomas of, Archbishop elect of Canterbury.
+Coblenz.
+Cocherel, battle of.
+Cog Thomas, the.
+Coggeshall's _Chronicle_.
+Cognac.
+Coinage.
+Colchester, Castle of.
+Coldstream.
+Colleges, growth of.
+Cologne.
+Cologne, Archbishop of.
+Colons, faction of the.
+Commerce under Edward III.
+Comminges, Counts of.
+Commons, house of.
+Companies, the free.
+Company, the White.
+Compiegne.
+Compostella.
+Comyn, John, the elder, lord of Badenoch.
+Comyn, John, of Badenoch, the younger, or the Red, regent of Scotland.
+Comyn, John, of Buchan. See Buchan, Earl of.
+Confirmation of the charters. See Charters.
+Conisborough Castle.
+Connaught.
+Connaught, Phelim O'Connor, King of,
+Connaught, King of.
+Conrad, son of Frederick II.
+Conservators of the Peace.
+_Consilium ordinarium_, the.
+Constable, office of.
+Constance of Brittany.
+Constance of Castile, daughter of Peter the Cruel, wife of John, Duke
+of Lancaster.
+Convocation.
+Conway, the river.
+Corfe Castle.
+Cormeilles, Abbey of.
+Cornet Castle,
+Cornouailles.
+Cornwall;
+ earldom of.
+Cornwall, Dunstanville, Earls of. See Dunstanville.
+Cornwall, Edmund, Earl of. See Edmund.
+Cornwall, Edward, Duke of. See Edward, the Black Prince.
+Cornwall, John of Eltham, Earl of. See John.
+Cornwall, Peter Gaveston, Earl of. See Gaveston.
+Cornwall, Richard, Earl of. See Richard.
+Corte Nuova, battle of.
+Cosneau's _Grands Traites de la Guerre de Cent Ans_.
+Cotentin, the.
+Cotton, Bartholomew's _Historia Anglicana_.
+Coucy, Enguerrand de.
+Councils, General, at Lyons.
+Court of King's Bench, records of.
+Court of Common Pleas, records of.
+Court of the County.
+Courts of Chancery and Exchequer in Wales.
+Courtenay, House of, Earls of Devon.
+Courtenay, William, Bishop of London.
+Courtrai;
+ battle of.
+Coventry, Roger Northburgh, Bishops of. See Northburgh, Roger.
+Coville's _Histoire de France_.
+Craven.
+Crecy, battle of.
+Crecy-en-Ponthieu.
+Cree, the river.
+Cressingham, Hugh.
+Creuse, the river.
+Criccieth Castle.
+Crockart.
+Crossbowmen, Genoese.
+Crotoy, Le.
+Crusades, the.
+Crutched friars, the.
+Cumberland.
+Cunningham's, W., _Growth of English Industry_.
+Curzon, Robert.
+Customs.
+"Custom, the Great and Ancient,"; "the New and Small,".
+Cuvelier's _Vie de Bertrand de Guesclin_.
+Cymry, the. See also Wales.
+Cyprus.
+Cyprus, Lusignan kings of.
+
+Dagworth, Sir Thomas.
+Damietta, Crusade of.
+Damietta, Archbishop of. See Roches, Peter des.
+Damme.
+Dampierre, Guy, Count of Flanders. See Guy.
+Dancaster, John.
+Dante.
+Darlington, John of, Archbishop of Dublin.
+David I., King of Scots.
+David II., son of Robert Bruce, King of Scots.
+David I., an Llewelyn, Prince of Wales.
+David II., ap Griffith, Prince of Wales.
+David, Earl of Huntingdon. See Huntingdon.
+David of Strathbolgie, Earl of Athol. See Athol.
+Dax.
+Dean, Forest of.
+"Decorated" style of architecture.
+Deddington.
+Deganwy, Castle of.
+Delisle's _Histoire de Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte_.
+Denbigh, town, lordship and castle of.
+Denifle's _Desolation des Eglises de France_, etc.;
+ his _Entstehung der Universitaeten_.
+Deprez's _Preliminaires de la Guerre de Cent Ans_.
+Derby, Henry of Grosmont, Earl of. See also Lancaster.
+Derby, Robert Ferrars, Earl of.
+Derby, Thomas, Earl of Lancaster and. See Lancaster.
+Derby, William of Ferrars, Earl of.
+Deschamps, Eustace.
+Despenser, Eleanor de, wife of Hugh le Despenser, the younger.
+Despenser, Hugh, justiciar.
+Despenser, Hugh, the elder, Earl of Winchester, son of the justiciar.
+Despenser, Hugh, the younger, Lord of Glamorgan, son of the foregoing.
+Devizes, Castle of.
+Devon, earldom of, Falkes de Breaute as warden of.
+Devon, Courtenays, earls of.
+_Dictum de Kenilworth_, the.
+Dinan.
+Disafforestments.
+Diserth, Castle of.
+Disinherited, the (after Evesham);
+ the, Scotch.
+_Disseisin_, novel.
+Dolwyddelen Castle.
+Dominic, St.
+Dominicans.
+Don, the river.
+Donaldbane, brother of Malcolm Canmore.
+Dordogne, the river.
+Dordrecht.
+Dorking.
+Dorsetshire.
+Douai.
+Douglas, Sir Archibald.
+Douglas, Sir James.
+Douglas, Sir William.
+Douglas, Sir William (at Poitiers).
+Dover, town and castle;
+ straits of.
+Dovey the river.
+Dowell's, S., _History of Taxation_.
+Downs, the north;
+ the south.
+Drokensford, Bishop of Bath and Wells.
+Dublin, Castle of.
+Dublin, Archbishop of. See Hotham, William of, Archbishop of.
+Dubois, Peter.
+Dugdale's _Monasticon_.
+Dumfries.
+Dunbar, battle of.
+Dunfermline.
+Dunkeld, Bishop of.
+Duns Scotus.
+Dunstable.
+Dunstanville, house of.
+Dupplin Moor, battle of.
+Durham;
+ bishopric of;
+ records of.
+Durham, Bishops of.
+ See Bek, Anthony;
+ Beaumont, Louis de;
+ and Bury, Richard of.
+Dynevor Castle.
+
+Earn, the river.
+Eastminster, the, London.
+Eastry, Henry of, prior of Christ Church, Canterbury.
+Ebro, the river.
+Eccleston, William of, his _De adventu fratrum minorun_.
+Edinburgh, town and castle.
+Edington, church of.
+Edington, William of, Bishop of Winchester.
+Edmund of Almaine, Earl of Cornwall, son of Richard of Cornwall.
+Edmund, Earl of Lancaster, Leicester and Derby, some time titular King
+of Sicily, son of Henry III.
+Edmund of Langley, son of Edward III., Earl of Cambridge, afterward
+Duke of York.
+Edmund of Woodstock, son of Edward I., Earl of Kent.
+Edmund (Rich). St. See Rich, Edmund.
+Edmund, St., of East Anglia.
+Edward the Confessor, saint and king; translation of.
+Edward I.;
+ authorities for reign of.
+Edward II.;
+ sources for the reign of.
+Edward III.;
+ sources for the reign of.
+Edward, son of Henry III. See also Edward I.
+Edward of Carnarvon, Prince of Wales. See also Edward II.
+Edward of Windsor, Duke of Aquitaine.
+Edward, Prince of Wales and of Aquitaine, called the Black Prince.
+Education;
+ of clergy.
+Elbeuf.
+Egypt.
+Elderslie.
+Eleanor of Aquitaine, Queen of Henry II.
+Eleanor of Castile, Queen of Edward I.
+Eleanor, second daughter of Raymond Berenger IV., Count of Provence,
+Queen of Henry III.
+Eleanor, younger sister of Henry III., married (1) William Marshal,
+(2) Simon de Montfort.
+Elgin.
+Elizabeth, daughter of Edward I., Countess of Holland, afterwards of
+Hereford.
+Elizabeth de Burgh, queen of Robert (Bruce), King of Scots.
+Ellis, Sir Henry, ed. of _Chronica I. De Oxenedes_.
+Eland, William.
+Ely, bishopric of, isle of.
+Ely, Bishops of.
+ See Marsh, Adam;
+ Balsham, Hugh;
+ Langham, Simon;
+ Hotham, John.
+Eltham.
+Eltham, John of. See John.
+Englefield.
+English language;
+ in law courts.
+Eric, King of Norway.
+Escheats.
+Esplechin, treaty of.
+Essex; earldom of.
+Essex, Countess of. See Isabella of Gloucester.
+Estates, the three.
+_Etsi de statu_, bull.
+Etaples.
+Ettrick forest.
+Eu, Count of, constable of France.
+Eure, the river.
+_Eulogium Historiarum_.
+Eustace the Monk.
+Evans, J.G., his edition of the _Red Book of Hergest_.
+Eversden, John of.
+Evesham, battle of;
+ Abbey.
+Evreux.
+Evreux, Counts of.
+ See Charles the Bad, King of Navarre;
+ Philip the Bold.
+Evreux, Louis, Count of. See Louis.
+Exchequer courts for Wales.
+Exchequer records.
+Exeter, Bishops of.
+ See Brantingham, Thomas;
+ Stapledon, Walter.
+Exeter College, Oxford.
+Exports.
+Eynsham, Walter of.
+Eyville, John d'.
+
+Fair of Lincoln, the. See Lincoln, battle of.
+Falkirk;
+ battle of.
+Famine, of 1316, the;
+ of wool, in Flanders.
+Farnham.
+Farrer's, W., _Lancashire Final Concords_.
+Faucigny.
+Fecamp.
+Fecamp, Peter Roger, Abbot of. See Clement VI.
+_Feet of Fines_.
+Felton, Sir Thomas, Seneschal of Aquitaine.
+Ferdinand of Portugal, Count of Flanders.
+Ferdinand III. the Saint, King of Cast& [Castile].
+Ferrars, house of.
+Ferrars, Robert of, Earl of Derby. See Derby.
+Ferrars, William of, Earl of Derby. See Derby.
+Fife.
+Fife, Earl of.
+Fifteen, the Council of.
+Figeac.
+Firstfruits.
+Fitzalan, Edmund, and Richard, Earls of Arundel. See Arundel.
+Fitzalan of Bedale, Brian.
+Fitzalans, the.
+FitzAthulf, Constantine, sheriff of London.
+FitzGeoffrey, John.
+Fitzgerald, governor of Ireland.
+Fitzgerald, Maurice, justiciar of Ireland.
+Fitzgeralds, the.
+Fitzralph, Richard, Archbishop of Armagh.
+Fitzthedmar, Arnold.
+FitzWalter, Robert.
+Flemings, the. See Flanders.
+_Fleta_, law-book.
+Fletching.
+Flint, county of;
+ town and castle of.
+Flodden, battle of.
+Florence.
+Florence, count of Holland.
+Florence of Worcester, Continuators of the _Chronicle_ of.
+_Flores Historiarum_, Roger of Wendover's.
+_Flores Historiarum_ (fourteenth century).
+Flagellants, the.
+Flamangrie, La.
+Flanders, county of.
+Flanders, counts of.
+ See Ferdinand of Portugal,
+ Guy of Dampierre,
+ Louis of Male,
+ Louis of Nevers,
+ Robert of Bethune
+ and Thomas of Savoy.
+Flanders, Joan, Countess of. See Joan.
+Flanders, Margaret of. See Margaret.
+_Foedera_, Rymer's.
+Foix.
+Foix, Count of.
+Foix, Gaston Phoebus, Count of.
+Fontenelles, Cistercian Abbey of.
+Fontevraud.
+Fordun, John, his _Chronicle_.
+Forests, charter of the;
+ perambulation of the;
+ enlargement of the.
+Fors, William of, Earl of Albemarle. See Albemarle.
+Fors, Isabella of. See Albemarle, Countess of.
+Forth, the.
+Fotheringhay, Castle of.
+Foulquois, Guy, Cardinal-bishop of Sabina. See Clement IV.
+Fountains Abbey.
+Fournier, James. See Benedict XII.
+Fournier's _Royaume d'Arles_.
+France;
+ records of;
+ chronicles of.
+France, King of, Edward III. takes title of.
+France, Kings of.
+ See Philip Augustus,
+ Louis VIII.,
+ Louis IX.,
+ Philip III.,
+ Philip IV.,
+ Louis X.,
+ Philip V.,
+ Charles IV.,
+ Philip VI.,
+ John and
+ Charles V.
+Francis, St., of Assisi.
+Franciscans, the;
+ the spiritual.
+Franks, the Salian.
+Frankton, Stephen of.
+Frascati.
+Fraser, William, Bishop of St. Andrews.
+Frederick II., the emperor.
+French language, the.
+Frescobaldi, the.
+Freynet, Gilbert of. See Gilbert.
+Friars, the;
+ the four orders of;
+ See Austin or hermits of order of St. Augustine;
+ Bonhommes;
+ Carmelite or White;
+ Crutched;
+ Dominicans;
+ Francisans;
+ ---- of the Penance of Jesus Christ or
+ ---- of the Sack;
+ Trinitarians or Maturins.
+Froissart, John.
+Froissart, _Chroniques_, ed. Luce;
+ ed. Kervyn.
+Fronsac, Viscount of.
+Funck-Brentano's, F., editions of the _Chronique Artesienne_ and
+_Annales Gandenses_.
+Furness.
+
+Gabaston.
+Gaetano, Benedict. See Boniface VIII.
+Galeazzo Visconti, Lord of Pavia.
+Galloway.
+Garonne, the river.
+Garter, Order of the.
+Gascony, See also Aquitaine.
+Gaston, Viscount of Bearn.
+Gaveston, Peter, Earl of Cornwall.
+Gelderland, Duke of.
+_Genitours_.
+Genoa.
+Genoese, the;
+ crossbowmen.
+Geraldines of Leinster, the.
+Germany.
+Ghent.
+Ghent, Gilbert of. See Lincoln, Earls of.
+Giffard, Walter, Archbishop of York;
+ his register.
+Giffords, the.
+Gilbert of Freynet.
+Gilsland.
+Gironde, the river.
+Glamorgan, lordship of.
+Glamorgan, Lords of. See Gloucester, Earls of.
+Glasgow, Robert Wishart, Bishop of. See Wishart.
+Glendower, Owen.
+Gloucester;
+ St. Peter's Church;
+ statute of;
+ earldom of.
+Gloucester, Richard of Clare, Earl of.
+Gloucester, Earl of, Gilbert of Clare, son of the above.
+Gloucester, Earl of, Gilbert of Clare, son of the above.
+Gloucester, Ralph of Monthermer, Earl of.
+Gloucester, Audley, Earl of.
+Gloucester, Thomas of Woodstock, Earl of. See Thomas.
+Gloucester, Isabella, Countess of. See Isabella, Queen of King John.
+Gloucester, Robert of.
+Gloucestershire.
+Gomez, Peter, Cardinal.
+Gordon, Adam.
+Gothic architecture. See Architecture.
+Gough's _Itinerary of Edward I_.
+Gower,
+Gower, John;
+ his works.
+Grampians, the.
+Granada.
+Grand, Richard le, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Grandisons, the.
+Greek, study of.
+Greenfield, William, Archbishop of York.
+Gregory IX., Pope.
+Gregory X., Pope.
+Gregory XI, Pope.
+Grey, Reginald.
+Grey, Richard of.
+Grey's Sir T., _Scalachronica_.
+Grey, Walter, Archbishop of York;
+ his register.
+Griffith ap Gwenwynwyn.
+Griffith ap Llewelyn.
+Griffith of Welshpool.
+Grosmont, castle of.
+Grosmont, Henry of, Earl of Derby. See Derby and Lancaster.
+Gross's, C., _Select Cases from the Coroners' Rolls_;
+ his _Bibliography of British Municipal History_;
+ his _Sources of English History_.
+Grosseteste, Robert, Bishop of Lincoln.
+ his _Epistoae_.
+Gualo the legate.
+Guerande, treaty of.
+Guernsey. See also Channel Islands.
+Guesclin, Bertrand du.
+Guienne. See also Aquitaine and Gascony.
+Guillon, treaty of.
+Guines.
+Guines, Baldwin of.
+Guines, Count of.
+Gurney, Thomas.
+Guy of Brittany, Count of Penthievre.
+Guy of Dampierre, Count of Flanders.
+Guy of Lusignan, Lord of Cognac.
+Gwent.
+Gwenwynwyn, house of.
+Gwynedd. See also Wales, North.
+Gwynedd, house of.
+
+Haddan and Stubbs' _Councils_.
+Haddington.
+Hadenham's, Edmund of, _Chronicle_.
+Haggerston.
+Hainault.
+Hainault, Counts of. See John and William.
+Hainault, Countess of, Abbess of Fontenelles.
+Hainault, Philippa of. See Philippa Queen.
+Hales, Alexander of.
+Halidon Hill, battle of.
+Halifax, John of.
+Hall's, H., _Customs Revenue_.
+Hall's, J, ed. of Minot's _Poems_.
+Hamilton, H.C., ed. of Walter of Hemingburgh.
+Hampole.
+Hampshire.
+Hapsburg, house of.
+Hapsburg, Rudolf of. See Rudolf.
+Harby.
+Harclay, Andrew, governor of Carlisle. See Carlisle, Earl of.
+Harcourt, Geoffrey of.
+Harcourts, the.
+Hardy, _Registrum Palatinum Dunelmense_.
+Harewell, John, Bishop of Bath.
+Harlech Castle.
+Harry's, Blind, _Wallace_.
+Hastings, battle of.
+Hastings, John, first Earl of Pembroke. See Pembroke.
+Hastings, John, second Earl of Pembroke. See Pembroke.
+Hastingses of Abergavenny, the.
+Hathern.
+Haureau's _Histoire de la philosophie scholastique_.
+Haverfordwest.
+Hawarden.
+Hawkwood, John.
+Hay.
+Haydon's ed. of _Eulogium Historiarum_.
+Hearne.
+Hebrew, study of.
+Hebrews. See also Jews.
+Hedingham Castle.
+Hengham, Justice.
+Henley, Walter of.
+Hemingburgh, Walter of.
+Hennebont.
+Henry I., King of England.
+Henry II..
+Henry III.;
+ chroniclers for the reign of.
+Henry VIII.
+Henry, King of the Romans, son of Frederick II.
+Henry II. of Navarre.
+Henry II. of Trastarnara, King of Castile.
+Henry, Earl of Derby, afterwards King Henry IV.
+Henry of Lancaster, younger son of Earl Edmund;
+ Earl of Leicester;
+ Earl of Lancaster.
+Henry of Grosmont, Earl of Derby, then Earl afterwards Duke of
+Lancaster.
+Hereford;
+ earldom of.
+Hereford, Bishops of.
+ See Aigueblanche, Peter of;
+ Cantilupe, St. Thomas of;
+ Orleton, Adam.
+Hereford, Humphrey Bohun, Earl of.
+Hereford, Humphrey Bohun, grandson of above, Earl of.
+Hereford, Humphrey Bohun, son of above, Earl of.
+Herefordshire.
+Heretics, Albigensian.
+Hertford.
+Hesdin.
+Hewlett's editions of _Chronicles_.
+Hexham.
+Hexhamshire.
+Higden's, Randolph, _Polychronicon_.
+Highlands, the.
+Hingeston-Randelph's _Exeter Registers_.
+History, study of.
+Hohenstaufen, the.
+Holderness, ruled by Counts of Aumale.
+Holland.
+Holland, Florence, Count of.
+Hollands, Earls of Kent.
+Holy Land, the. See Palestine and Crusades.
+Holywood, John of. See also Halifax.
+Honorius III, Pope.
+Honorius IV., Pope.
+Hood, Robin.
+Horn, Andrew.
+Horstmann, Dr., his _Legenda Anglie_.
+Horwood's, A.L., editions of _Year Books_.
+Hospitallers, the.
+Hotham, John, Bishop of Ely.
+Hotham, William of, Archbishop of Dublin.
+Hougue, La.
+Hoveden, or Howden, Roger of;
+ his continuator.
+Howlett's ed. of _Monumenta Franciscana_.
+Howel the Good.
+Huelgas, las, monastery of.
+Hugh, Choir of St., at Lincoln.
+Hugh of Avalon, Bishop of Lincoln, St., Little St. Hugh of Lincoln.
+Hugh X., of Lusignan. See also Lusignan.
+Hugh XI. of Lusignan. See also Lusignan.
+Hull.
+Hulme, St. Benet's.
+Humanism.
+Humber, the.
+_Hundred Rolls_, the.
+Hungary, Primate of, visits Canterbury.
+Hungerford, Sir Thomas.
+Hunter's _Leet Jurisdiction of Norwich_;
+ _Rotuli Selecti_.
+Huntingdon, David, Earl of.
+Huntingdon, Honour of.
+Huntingdon, Earl of, John the Scot.
+Huntingdon, Clinton, Earl of.
+Husbandry, Walter of Henley's treatise on.
+
+_Imperium_, the.
+Immunities, baronial.
+Indre, the river.
+Ingham, Sir Oliver.
+Infantry, English;
+ French;
+ Irish;
+ Scotch;
+ Welsh.
+Innocent III., Pope.
+Innocent IV., Pope.
+Innocent VI., Pope.
+Inquisition, the, in England;
+ in the Netherlands.
+Interregnum, the Great.
+Inverness.
+Iolande, daughter of Peter Mauclerc, Count of Brittany.
+Ireland.
+Ireland, the Butler of, made Earl of Ormonde. See Ormonde.
+Irthlingborough, Northamptonshire.
+Irvine.
+Isabella of Castile, daughter of Peter the Cruel, wife of Edmund, Earl
+of Cambridge.
+Isabella Marshal, wife of Richard of Cornwall. See Marshal.
+Isabella of Angouleme, Queen of John, and wife of Hugh of Lusignan.
+Isabella of France, Queen of Edward II..
+Isabella of Gloucester, divorced wife of John, wife of Hubert de
+Burgh.
+Isabella, sister of Henry III., queen of Frederick II.
+Isabella, younger sister of Alexander II., wife of Roger Bigod, Earl
+of Norfolk.
+Islands, the Channel. See Channel Islands, the.
+Isleworth.
+Isle, the river.
+Isle de France, the.
+Isle Saint-Jean, Caen.
+Islip, Simon, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Italy.
+
+James, King of Sicily, son of Peter of Aragon; afterwards James II. of
+Aragon.
+Jaudy, the river.
+Jedburgh.
+Jerusalem, Latin kingdom of.
+Jerusalem, Patriarch of. See Bek, Antony.
+Jews, in England, the;
+ expulsion of the.
+Joan of Champagne, Queen of Philip the Fair.
+Joan of Ponthieu, Queen of Ferdinand the Saint.
+Joan of the Tower, sister of Edward III., Queen of David Bruce.
+Joan, sister of Henry III., Queen of Alexander II. of Scotland.
+Joan, Countess of Flanders, wife of Thomas of Savoy.
+Joan, Countess of Kent, Princess of Wales, wife of Edward the Black
+Prince.
+Joan, daughter of Edward III.
+Joan, eldest daughter of Charles of Valois.
+Joan of Acre, daughter of Edward I. and Countess of Gloucester.
+Joan of Bar, grand-daughter of Edward I.
+Joan of Flanders, Countess of Penthievre, wife of Charles of Blois.
+Joan of Toulouse, daughter of Raymond of Toulouse, wife of Alfonso of
+Poitiers.
+Joan, Princess of North Wales, wife of Llewelyn ap Iorwerth.
+Joan, sister of Richard I., grandmother of Joan of Poitiers.
+John, King.
+John, King of Bohemia.
+John, King of France.
+John (Balliol), King of Scots.
+John XXII., Pope.
+John, Duke of Berri.
+John II., Duke of Brabant.
+John III., Duke of Brabant.
+John II., Duke of Brittany.
+John III., Duke of Brittany.
+John IV., Duke of Brittany (Montfort).
+John V., Duke of Brittany (Montfort).
+John, Duke of Normandy.
+ See also John, King of France.
+John of Avesnes, Count of Hainault.
+John of Brittany, Earl of Richmond, son of John II., Duke of Brittany,
+and nephew of Edward I.
+John of Eltham, son of Edward II., Earl of Cornwall.
+John of Gaunt, son of Edward III., Duke of Lancaster.
+John of Hainault, brother of William II. of Hainault.
+John of Montfort, Earl of Richmond.
+ See John V., Duke of Brittany.
+John of Montfort, half-brother of John III. of Brittany.
+ See John IV., Duke of Brittany.
+John the Scot, Earl of Chester. See Chester.
+Joinville, Joan of.
+Joinvilles, the.
+Joinville's _History of St. Louis_.
+Josselin Castle.
+Jowel, John.
+Judges, the.
+Juelich, Dukes of.
+Jurisprudence, Anglo-Norman;
+ Roman.
+Justiciar, office of.
+Justiciars.
+ See Burgh, Hubert de;
+ Marshal, William;
+ Roches, Peter des;
+ Segrave, Stephen.
+Justiciars of Ireland.
+ See Marsh, Geoffrey,
+ and Fitzgerald, Maurice.
+Justiciars of Scotland.
+ See Ormesby, William.
+
+Keighley, Henry of, knight of the shire for Lancashire.
+Kelso.
+_Kenilworth, Dictum de_.
+Kenilworth Castle.
+Kennington.
+Kensham.
+Kent;
+ earldom of.
+Kent, Earl of, Hubert de Burgh. See Burgh.
+Kent, Edmund of Woodstock, Earl of. See Edmund.
+Kerry (Wales);
+ Vale of;
+ scutage of.
+Kervyn de Lettenhove's edition of _Froissart_.
+Kesteven, South.
+Kidwelly, castle and lordship.
+Kildare, Curragh of.
+Kildare, Earl of.
+Kilkenny, Castle;
+ statute of.
+Kilwardby, Robert, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Kinghorn.
+Kingsford's, C.L., Song of _Lewes_.
+Kingston-on-Thames.
+Kinloss.
+Kintyre.
+Kirk's _Accounts of the Obedientiaries of Abingdon_.
+Kirkby, John, treasurer of Edward I and Bishop of Ely.
+Kirkby's _Quest_.
+Kirkcudbright, stewartry of.
+Kirkliston, 213.
+Klerk, Jan van, his _Chronicle_.
+Knaresborough, castle and town.
+Knighton's, Henry, _Chronicle_.
+Knights, of the Shire;
+ Templars;
+ of St. John;
+ of the Garter;
+ of the Star.
+Knowles, Sir Robert.
+Knyvett, Sir John.
+Koehler's _Entwickelung des Kriegswesens in der Ritterzeit_.
+
+Labourers, Statute of.
+Lacy, Alice, Countess of Lancaster.
+Lacy, Henry, Earl of Lincoln. See Lincoln.
+Lacy, Hugh de, Earl of Ulster. See Ulster.
+Lacy, John de, Constable of Chester.
+ See also Lincoln, Earls of.
+Lacy, the house of;
+ the house of, in Meath.
+Lagny, Abbot of.
+Lalinde.
+Lamberton, Bishop of St. Andrews.
+Lambeth, treaty of.
+Lancashire.
+Lancaster, Alice, Countess of. See Alice.
+Lancaster, Blanche, Duchess of. See Blanche.
+Lancaster, Edmund, Earl of. See Edmund.
+Lancaster, Henry, Earl of. See Henry.
+Lancaster, Henry of Grosmont, Earl and Duke of. See Henry.
+Lancaster, honour of;
+ town;
+ house of;
+ records of Duchy of.
+Lancaster, John of Gaunt, Duke of. See John.
+Lanercost;
+ chronicle of.
+Langham, Simon, Chancellor and Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Langland, William.
+Langley.
+Langley, Geoffrey of.
+Langlois, Charles V., his _Philippe le Hardi_;
+ his _Histoire de France_.
+Langon.
+Langtoft's, Peter, _Chronicle_.
+Langton, John, Bishop of Chichester.
+Langton, Simon, Archdeacon of Canterbury.
+Langton, Stephen, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Langton, Walter, Bishop of Lichfield.
+Language, English;
+ French;
+ German;
+ Latin;
+ Scottish.
+Languedoc.
+Laon.
+Laon, Robert Lecoq, Bishop of.
+Laonnais, the.
+Lapsley's County _Palatine of Durham_.
+Latimer, Lord, Chamberlain.
+Latin-language.
+Lavisse and Rambaud's _Histoire Generale_.
+Lavisse's _Histoire de France_.
+Law, study of English;
+ literature of;
+ the Salic;
+ English.
+Laws, Celtic, of Highlanders and Strathclyde Welsh.
+Lawyers, Italian;
+ English.
+Layamon's English version of Wace's _Brut_.
+Lechler's _Wycliffe_.
+Lecoq, Robert, Bishop of Laon.
+Leeds Castle (Kent).
+Leek, treaty of.
+Lehugeur's _Philippe le Long_.
+Leicester;
+ earldom of.
+Leicester, Abbot of.
+Leicester, Countess of. See Eleanor.
+Leicester, Henry, Earl of. See Henry, Earl of Lancaster.
+Leicester, Robert Beaumont, Earl of.
+Leicester, Simon de Montfort, Earl of.
+Leicester, Simon de Montfort, the elder, Count of Toulouse and titular
+Earl of.
+Leicester, Thomas, Earl of. See Thomas, Earl of Lancaster.
+Leicestershire.
+Leinster.
+Leon.
+Leon.
+L'Estrange, Roger.
+Levant, the.
+Lewes;
+ battle of;
+ mise of.
+Lewis' _Life of Wiclif_.
+_Libellus Famosus_, Edward III.'s.
+Libourne.
+Lichfield, Bishops of.
+ See Langton, Walter;
+ Northburgh, Roger.
+Liddesdale. See also Liddell.
+Liddell.
+Liebermann, Dr., works by.
+Liege, William, Bishop of. See William.
+Liege.
+Lille.
+Limburg.
+Limerick.
+Limoges;
+ sack of.
+Limousin.
+Lincoln;
+ Castle;
+ battle of;
+ Cathedral;
+ parliament of (1301);
+ parliament at (1316).
+Lincoln, Bishops of.
+ See Wells, Hugh of;
+ Hugh, St., of Avalon;
+ Grosse-teste, Robert;
+ Burghersh, Henry.
+Lincoln, Richard le Grand, Chancellor of. See Canterbury.
+Lincoln, Gilbert of Ghent, Earl of.
+Lincoln, Henry Lacy, Earl of.
+Lincoln, John de Lacy, Earl of, 45, 47.
+Lincoln, Randolph de Blundeville, Earl of. See also Chester.
+Lincoln, Thomas of Lancaster, Earl of. See Thomas, Earl of Lancaster.
+Lincolnshire.
+Linlithgow.
+Lionel of Antwerp, son of Edward III., Duke of Clarence and Earl of
+Ulster.
+Lisieux;
+ battle near.
+Literature in the thirteenth century;
+ French;
+ English.
+Literature in the fourteenth century;
+ English;
+ French.
+Littleton's _Tenures_.
+Llandaff, Bishop of.
+Llandilo.
+Llewelyn ap Griffith, Prince of Wales.
+Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, Prince of North Wales.
+Llewelyn Bren.
+Lleyn.
+Lloughor.
+Lochmaben Castle.
+Lodge's _Close of the Middle Ages_.
+Logrono.
+Loire, the river.
+Lombards.
+Lombardy,
+ cities of.
+London.
+London, Bishops of.
+ See Sainte-Mere-Eglise, William of;
+ Basset, Fulk;
+ Baldock, Ralph;
+ Courtenay, William.
+London, Mayors of.
+ See Serlo;
+ Waleys, Henry le,
+ and Pyel, John.
+London, Sheriffs of.
+ See FitzAthulf, Constantine.
+London, treaty of.
+Longjumeau.
+Longman's _Life and Times of Edward III._.
+Longnon's _Atlas historique de la France_.
+Longsword, William, Earl of Salisbury. See Salisbury.
+Lorraine.
+Loserth's _Geschichte des spaeteren Mittelalters_.
+Lot, the river.
+Lothians, the.
+Loughborough.
+Louis, Count of Evreux.
+Louis, Duke of Anjou, brother of Charles V. of France.
+Louis of Bavaria, the Emperor.
+Louis of France, afterwards Louis VIII.
+Louis IX. (St. Louis), King of France.
+Louis X., King of France.
+Louis of Male, Count of Flanders.
+Louis of Nevers, Count of Flanders.
+Louth;
+ Earldom of.
+Louth, John of Bermingham, Earl of.
+Louvain.
+Luard, Dr. H.R., his _Roberti Grosse-teste Epistolae_;
+ his editions of _Annales Monastici_;
+ B. Cotton, and _Flores Historiarum_,
+ and Matthew Paris' _Chronica Majora_.
+Luce's _Jeunesse de Betrand du Guesclin_;
+ _La France pendant la Guerre de Cent An_.
+Luce and Raynouart's edition of Froissart's _Chronicle_.
+_Lucy_, Anthony.
+Ludlow.
+Lundy Island.
+Lusignan, Alice of.
+Lusignan, Aymer of. See Valence, Aymer de.
+Lusignan, Guy of.
+Lusignan, House of.
+Lusignan, Hugh X. of.
+Lusignan, Hugh XI. of.
+Lusignan (town).
+Lusignan, William of. See Valence, William of.
+Lussac, bridge of.
+Luxemburg, house of.
+Lyons, Richard.
+Lyons.
+Lyons, Council at (1245).
+Lyons, Council at (1274).
+Lyrics, English.
+Lys, the river.
+
+Macaulay's, G.C., edition of Gower's _Works_.
+Mackinnon's _History of Edward III._
+Macon, league of.
+Madden's, Sir F., edition of Matthew Paris' _Historia Minor_.
+Madog ap Llewelyn.
+Maelgwn.
+Maenan.
+Maes Madog, battle of.
+Maidstone.
+Maine.
+Mains. Elector of.
+Maitland's, F.W., _Memoranda de Parliamento_;
+ _Select Pleas of the Crown_;
+ _Bracton's Note Book_;
+ _Le Mirroir des Justices_;
+ _Select Passages from Bracton,_ etc.;
+ _Year Books of Edward II._
+ and _Canon Law_.
+Maitland, F.W., and Pollock, Sir F., _History of English Law_.
+
+Makower's, F., _Constitutional History of the Church of England_.
+Malestroit, truce of.
+Malmesbury, the Monk of.
+Malmesbury, William of.
+Malton.
+Maltravers, John.
+Mandeville, Geoffrey de.
+Manfred, King of Sicily.
+Mangonels.
+Manny, Sir Walter.
+Mannyng, Robert.
+Mansel, John.
+Mansura.
+Maps for period.
+Mar, Donald, Earl of.
+Marcel, Stephen.
+March of Calais.
+March (of Scotland), Patrick, Earl of.
+March of Wales, the.
+March of Wales, Earl of the.
+ See also Mortimer, Edmund, and Mortimer, Roger.
+March, Edmund Mortimer, Earl of (d. 1381).
+March, Roger Mortimer, first Earl of (d. 1330).
+ See also Mortimer, Roger, of Wigmore (d. 1330).
+Marche, Counts of La.
+Marche, La.
+Mare, Sir Peter de la.
+Margam, annals of abbey of.
+Margaret of England, Queen of Alexander III. of Scotland.
+Margaret of Flanders.
+Margaret of France, sister of Philip the Fair, and second Queen of
+Edward I.
+Margaret of Hainault, sister of Queen Philippa, Empress of Louis of
+Bavaria.
+Margaret of Provence, Queen of Louis IX. of France.
+Margaret, Queen of Eric, King of Norway, and mother of Margaret, Queen
+of Scots.
+Margaret, Queen of Scots, the Maid of Norway, daughter of Margaret and
+Eric of Norway.
+Margaret, sister of Alexander II. of Scotland, wife of Hubert de Burgh.
+Margaret, sister of David of Scotland.
+Margaret, Viscountess of Limoges.
+Margaret, wife of Philip of Burgundy.
+Mark, Count of.
+Marlborough, statute of.
+Marseilles.
+Marsh, Adam;
+ _Letters of_.
+Marsh, Geoffrey, justiciar of Ireland.
+Marshal, office of.
+Marshal, house of.
+Marshal, the Earls.
+ See Pembroke, Earl of;
+ Thomas of Brotherton, Earl;
+ March, Mortimer, Edmund, Earl of March;
+ and Percy, Henry.
+Marshal, Gilbert. See Pembroke, Gilbert Marshal, Earl of.
+Marshal, Isabella, wife of Richard of Cornwall.
+Marshal, Richard. See Pembroke, Richard Marshal, Earl of.
+Marshal, William. See Pembroke, William Marshal, the elder, Earl of,
+regent of England.
+Marshal, William, the younger. See Pembroke, William Marshal, the
+younger, Earl of.
+Martin IV., Pope.
+Martin, papal envoy.
+Martin's, C. Trice, _Registrum Epistolarum J. Peckham_.
+Mary of Brabant, Queen of France.
+Maturins, the.
+Mauclerc, Peter, Count of Brittany. See Peter.
+Maud, daughter of Henry, Duke of Lancaster.
+Maud of Artois, wife of Otto, Count of Burgundy.
+Maud's Castle.
+Mauleon, Savary de.
+Mauley, Peter de.
+Mauleys, the family of.
+Maupertuis.
+Mauron, battle of.
+Maxwell's _Robert the Bruce_.
+Maye, the river.
+Meath.
+Meaux, treaty of.
+Mechlin.
+Mediterranean, the.
+Melton, William, Archbishop of York.
+Melrose Abbey.
+Melrose, chronicle of.
+Menai Straits, the.
+Mendicants, the See also Friars.
+Meopham, Simon, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Mercenaries.
+Merchants,
+ statute of;
+ foreign;
+ English.
+Meredith ap Owen.
+Merioneth.
+Merionethshire.
+Merlin.
+Merton.
+"Merton, Rule of,".
+Merton, Walter of.
+Messina, Archbishop of.
+Methven, battle of.
+Metingham, John of.
+Meyer, Paul, his edition of the _Histoire de Guillaume le
+Marechal_.
+Miausson, the river.
+Michel, Francisque.
+Milan.
+_Ministers' Accounts_.
+Minorites, the,
+ See also Franciscans.
+Minot, Lawrence.
+Minsterworth, Sir John.
+Miracle plays.
+Mirambeau.
+Miranda.
+_Mirroir des Justices, Le_.
+Mise of Amiens, the.
+Mise of Lewes, the.
+Model Parliament, the.
+ See Parliament.
+Mohammedans, the.
+Molinier, Auguste, Sources _de l'histoire de France_.
+Monasteries.
+_Monasticon_, Dugdale's.
+Monmouth, castle and town of.
+Monnow, the river.
+Mont Cenis, the.
+Montague, Sir William.
+ See also Salisbury, Earls of.
+Montague;
+ the house of.
+Montfavence, Bertrand of, Cardinal.
+Montfichet, Richard of.
+Montfort l'Amaury.
+Montfort, county of.
+Montfort, Amaury of.
+Montfort, the house of (Dukes of Brittany).
+ See also John IV. and John V., Dukes of Brittany.
+Montfort, the house of (Earls of Leicester).
+Montfort, Henry of.
+Montfort, John of, the elder. See Brittany, John, Duke of.
+Montfort, John of, the younger. See Brittany, John, Duke of.
+Montfort, Peter of.
+Montfort, Simon of, Count of Toulouse.
+ See also Leicester.
+Montfort Simon of, Earl of Leicester. See Lester.
+Montfort, Simon of, the younger, son of Simon, Earl of Leicester.
+Montgomery, castle and town of.
+Monthermer, Ralph of.
+Monthermer, Thomas of, _Montjoie_.
+Montmorenci, Matthew of.
+Montpellier, University of.
+Montpezat, lord of.
+Montreuil-sur-mer.
+ treaty of.
+Montrose.
+Mont-Saint-Martin, Monastery of.
+_Monumenta Franciscana_, Brewer's.
+_Monumenta Hist. Germanicae, Scriptores_, Pertz'.
+Moors of Granada.
+Moor, Sir Thomas de la.
+Moray.
+Moray, Randolph, Earl of.
+Moray, Sir Andrew.
+Morbihan.
+Morgan of Caerleon.
+Morgan, leader of Glamorganshire rebels.
+Morgarten, battle of.
+Morlaix.
+ battle of.
+Morley, Robert.
+Mortimer, Edmund (d. 1303).
+Mortimer, Edmund (d. 1381). See March, Edmund Mortimer, Earl of.
+Mortimer, Roger, of Chirk.
+Mortimer, Roger, of Wigmore (d. 1282).
+Mortimer, Roger, of Wigmore (d. 1330).
+ See also March, Roger Mortimer, first Earl of.
+Mortimer, Roger, grandson of Roger Mortimer, first Earl of March.
+Mortimer, Roger, son of Edmund, Earl of March.
+Mortimer, the house of.
+_Mortmain_, Statute of.
+Moselle, the river.
+Mountchensi, Joan of.
+Mount Sorrel.
+Mowbray, John of (of Scotland).
+Mowbray, John of.
+Murimuth, Adam.
+Myton, battle of.
+
+Najarilla, the river.
+Najera, battle of.
+Nantes.
+Naples.
+Narbonne.
+Nassau, Adolf of. King of the Romans. See Adolf, King of the Romans.
+Navarre, Blanche of Artois, Queen of. See Blanche.
+Navarre, Henry III., King of. See Henry.
+Navarre, King of, Charles the Bad. See Charles.
+Navarre, Philip of. See Philip.
+Navarre, Theobald IV., King of. See Theobald.
+Navarre.
+Navarete,
+Navy, the English;
+ the French;
+ the Norman.
+Neath Abbey.
+Netherlands, the.
+Neufbourg, house of.
+Neufbourg, Henry of, Earl of Warwick. See Warwick.
+Nevers, Louis of. See Louis of Nevers, Count of Flanders.
+Nevers, the Count of.
+Neville of Raby, Lord.
+Neville, Ralph, Bishop of Chichester and Chancellor.
+Nevilles, the.
+Neville's Cross, battle of.
+Newark.
+Newcastle-on-Tyne.
+Newport-on-Usk.
+Nicholas IV., Pope.
+Nicolas's _History of the Royal Navy_.
+Nine, Council of.
+Niort.
+Nivernais, the.
+Norfolk;
+ earldom of.
+Norfolk, Roger Bigod, Earl of.
+Norfolk, Roger Bigod, Earl of, nephew of above.
+Norfolk, Thomas of Brotherton, Earl of See Thomas.
+Norham Castle.
+Norman architecture.
+Normandy.
+Normandy, Charles, Duke of. See Charles.
+Normandy, John, Duke of. See John, King of France.
+Normans, the;
+ in Ireland, the.
+Norsemen in Scotland, the.
+Northallerton.
+Northampton;
+ parliaments at;
+ treaty of Brigham confirmed at;
+ treaty of;
+ earldom of.
+Northampton, William Bohun, Earl of.
+Northamptonshire.
+Northburgh, Roger, Bishop of Lichfield or Coventry and treasurer.
+Northumberland.
+Norway, Eric, King of. See Eric.
+Norway, Margaret, the Maid of, Queen of Scotland. See Margaret.
+Norwich.
+Norwich, Bishops of. See Ayermine, William, and Pandulf.
+Nottingham.
+Nouaille.
+
+Ochils, the.
+Ockham, William of.
+O'Connor, Phelim, King of Connaught. See Connaught.
+Odiham.
+O'Donnells, the.
+Oleron, Isle of.
+Oliver, illegitimate son of King John.
+Oloron, treaty of.
+Oman's _History of the Art of War in the Middle Ages_.
+O'Neils, the.
+Oise, the river.
+Ordainers, the Lords.
+Order of the Garter, the.
+Order of the Star, the.
+Orders, the Religious.
+Orders of Friars.
+Orewyn Bridge, battle of.
+_Originalia_ Rolls, the.
+Orkneys, the.
+Orleans, Duke of.
+Orleton, Adam, Bishop of Hereford.
+Ormonde, the Butler of Ireland, made Earl of.
+Ormesby, William, justiciar.
+Orne, the river.
+Orvieto.
+Orwell, port and river.
+Oseney Abbey;
+ _Annals_ of.
+Oswestry.
+O'Tooles, the.
+Otto, nuncio to England;
+ legate.
+Otto, Count of Burgundy.
+Ottobon, Cardinal, legate.
+Ottocar, King of Bohemia.
+Ouistreham.
+Ouse, the river.
+Owain _Lawgoch. See_ Owen of Wales.
+Owen of Wales, Sir Owen ap Thomas ap Rhodri.
+Owen the Red, son of Griffith ap Llewelyn.
+Owens College _Historical Essays_.
+Oxford,
+ University of,
+ Balliol College,
+ Merton College,
+ the Provisions of,
+ parliament at,
+ Exeter College.
+Oxfordshire.
+Oxnead, John of.
+
+Painting in Westminster Abbey.
+Palatine, the Elector.
+Palermo.
+Palestine.
+Palestrina, Cardinal-bishop of.
+Palgrave's, Sir F.T., _Parliamentary Writs and Writs of Military
+Service_.
+ his _Documents illustrating the History of Scotland_.
+Pamplona.
+Pandulf, Papal Legate and Bishop of Norwich.
+Pantheism.
+Papacy, the,
+ See also under Popes.
+Paris,
+ University of,
+ College of the Sorbonne in,
+ Cathedral of,
+ parliament of,
+ treaty of (1259),
+ treaty of (1303),
+ treaty of (1327).
+Paris, Matthew.
+Parliament, of,
+ the mad (1258),
+ of Oxford,
+ growth Of,
+ at Oxford (1264),
+ at Northampton (1267),
+ at Bury (1267),
+ of 1273,
+ at Westminster (1275),
+ of 1283,
+ at Shrewsbury (1284),
+ at Acton Burnell (1284),
+ of 1289,
+ at London (1294),
+ the model(1295),
+ of the perambulation (1300),
+ at Lincoln (1301),
+ at Westminster (1305),
+ of Carlisle (1307),
+ of 1308,
+ at Westminster (1309),
+ at Stamford (1309),
+ of London (1310),
+ at London (1315),
+ at Lincoln (1316),
+ the Irish,
+ at York (1318),
+ at York (1319),
+ in London (July, 1320),
+ at York (May, 1322),
+ at Westminster (January, 1327),
+ at Salisbury (October, 1328),
+ at Northampton (1329),
+ at Winchester (March, 1330),
+ prorogued to Westminster (November, 1330),
+ of April 23, 1341,
+ of April, 1343,
+ of 1347,
+ of 1371,
+ of 1372,
+ the Good (April, 1376),
+ of 1377,
+ of Paris, see Paris, parliament of.
+Parthenai.
+Passelewe, Robert.
+_Pastaureaux_, the.
+Patrick, Earl of March,
+ See also March (Scotland), Earl of.
+Pauli's, R., _Geschichte von England_.
+Pavia, Galeazzo Visconti, Lord of.
+Paynel, Fulk.
+_Pearl_, the, poem of.
+Peasants' revolt, the.
+Peasants, revolts of French.
+Peckham, John, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Peebles.
+_Pell Records_, the.
+Pembroke, earldom of.
+Pembroke, Gilbert Marshal, Earl of.
+Pembroke, Richard Marshal. Earl of.
+Pembroke, William Marshal, the elder, Regent and Earl of,
+ _History of_.
+Pembroke, William Marshal, the younger, Earl of.
+Pembroke, Aymer of Valence, Earl of.
+Pembroke. John Hastings, second Earl of that house.
+Pembroke. William of. See William of Valence.
+Pembrokeshire, palatine county of.
+Penance of Jesus Christ, Friars of the.
+Penne.
+Penrith.
+Penthievre, county of.
+Penthievre-Treguier, county of.
+Perche, Count of.
+Percy, Henry, grandson of Earl Warenne.
+Percy, Henry, marshal of England.
+Percy, Sir Thomas, seneschal of Poitou.
+Percy, the family of.
+Perigord.
+Perigord, Count of.
+Perigueux,
+ bishopric of.
+Peronne.
+Perpendicular style in architecture.
+Perrers, Alice.
+Perth.
+Pertz's _Monumenta_.
+Peruzzi, the.
+Perveddwlad.
+Peter, Cardinal. See Gomez, Peter.
+Peter III., King of Aragon.
+Peter Mauclerc, Count of Brittany.
+Peter of Aigueblanche, Bishop of Hereford,
+ See Aigueblanche.
+Peter of Gaveston. See Gaveston.
+Peter of Savoy, Earl of Richmond.
+Peter of Spain, Cardinal.
+Peter Roger, Archbishop of Rouen. See Roger, Peter, and Clement VI.
+Peter the Chamberlain.
+Peter the Cruel, King of Castile.
+Peterhouse, Cambridge.
+Peter's Pence.
+Petit's _Charles de Valois_.
+Petit-Dutaillis, M.,
+ his _Etude sur Louis VIII._
+Petrarch, Francis.
+_Petrariae_.
+Pevensey Castle.
+Philip II., Augustus, King of France.
+Philip III., the Bold, King of France.
+Philip IV., the Fair, King of France.
+Philip V., the Long, King of France.
+Philip VI. of Valois, King of France.
+Philip, Count of Savoy.
+Philip, Count of Valois, See also Philip VI., King of France.
+Philip of Navarre.
+Philip of Rouvres, Duke of Burgundy.
+Philip the Bold, Count of Evreux.
+Philip the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, son of John, King of France.
+Philippa, daughter of Lionel, Duke of Clarence, Countess of March.
+Philippa of Hainault, Queen of Edward III.
+Philippine, daughter of Guy of Dampierre, Count of Flanders.
+Philpots, the.
+_Philobiblon,_ the, of Richard of Bury.
+Philosophy.
+Picardy.
+Pike, L.O., his editions of the _Year Books_.
+Pipe, James.
+Pipe Rolls.
+Pipton, treaty o.
+Pirenne's _Bibliographie de l'histoire de Belgique_.
+ _Histoire de Belgique_.
+Pisa, Agnellus of. See Agnellus.
+Plague, the. See Black Death.
+Plays, miracle.
+Plessis, John du, Earl of Warwick.
+ See Warwick.
+Ploermel.
+Plympton.
+Poissy.
+Poitevins.
+Poitiers,
+ battle of,
+ sources for.
+Poitiers, Alfonse of. See Alfonse.
+Poitou,
+ scutage of.
+Poitou, Count of, Richard, son of King John, Count of. See Richard.
+Polain's edition of _Jean le Bel,_
+Pole, the house of
+Pole, William de la.
+Pollock, Sir P., and Maitland's _History of English Law,_
+_Polychronicon,_ Higden's.
+Pons.
+Pont-Sainte-Maxence.
+Pontefract,
+ Castle.
+Ponthieu.
+Pontigny.
+Pontoise.
+Pontvallain, battle of.
+Poole's, R.L., _Mediaeval Thought,_
+ his _Wycliffe_,
+ his _Oxford Historical Atlas_.
+Popes.
+ See under Innocent III.,
+ Honorius III.,
+ Gregory IX.,
+ Innocent IV.,
+ Alexander IV.,
+ Urban IV.,
+ Clement IV.,
+ Gregory X.,
+ Nicholas III.,
+ Martin IV.,
+ Honorius IV.,
+ Nicholas IV.,
+ Celestine V.,
+ Boniface VIII.,
+ Benedict XL,
+ Clement V.,
+ John XXII.,
+ Benedict XII.,
+ Clement VI.,
+ Urban V.,
+ Gregory XL.
+Port Blanc.
+Ports, the Cinque.
+Portsmouth.
+Portugal, Ferdinand of.
+Powys;
+ Castle.
+Powys, Charltons of. See Charltons.
+_Praemunire_ statute of.
+Preachers, Order of. See Dominicans.
+Pressuti's Registers of _Honorius III._
+Preston.
+Prices, rise in, after the Black Death.
+Principality of Wales, the.
+Priories, the alien.
+Proclamation in English, French and Latin.
+Prothero's _Simon de Montfort_.
+Provencals.
+Provence.
+Provence, Raymond Berengar IV., Count of,
+ See Raymond Berengar.
+Proving.
+Provisions, papal;
+ of Oxford, the;
+ of Westminster, the;
+ of Worcester.
+Provisors, statute of.
+Public Record Office, the.
+Purveyance.
+Puymirol.
+Pyel, John, mayor of London.
+Pyrenees, the.
+
+Quercy
+_Quia Emptores_ statute.
+Quieret, Hugh.
+Quincy, Saer de, Earl of Winchester. See Winchester.
+
+Rageman, statute of.
+Ragman. Roll, the.
+Ranee, the river.
+Randolph, Sir Thomas, Earl of Moray.
+Rashdall's _Universities of the Middle Ages_.
+Rathlin Island.
+Rationalism.
+Ravenspur.
+Raymond Berengar IV., Count of Provence.
+Raymond VII., Count of Toulouse.
+Record of Carnarvon, the.
+Record Commission, the.
+Records, as sources for history;
+ of Court of Chancery;
+ of Court of Exchequer;
+ of Common Law Courts;
+ of King's Bench and Court of Common Pleas;
+ of Scotland;
+ Welsh;
+ Papal.
+_Recueil des historiens de la France_, begun by Dom Bouquet.
+Red Hills, the.
+Redesdale.
+Redesdale, Gilbert of Umfraville, Lord of. See Umfraville.
+Regalis Devotionis, Bull.
+Reginald, Count of Gelderland.
+Registers, Bishops;
+ Papal Calendars of.
+Reims.
+Reims, Archbishop of.
+Renaissance of the twelfth century, the.
+Rennes.
+Reole, La.
+_Reports of Deputy-keeper of the Records_;
+ _of Historical Manuscripts Commission_.
+Revolt, the peasants'.
+Reynolds, Walter, Treasurer of England and Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Rhine, the.
+Rhine, Count Palatine of the.
+Rhineland, the.
+Rhos, Cantred of.
+Rhone Valley, the.
+Rhuddlan Castle.
+Rhunoviog, Cantred of.
+Rhys ap Howel.
+Rhys ap Meredith.
+Rhys, J., and J.G. Evans' _Red Book of Hergest_.
+Rich, St. Edmund, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Richard I.
+Richard of Bordeaux, son of the Black Prince.
+Richard, son of King John, titular Count of Poitou, Earl of Cornwall
+and King of the Romans.
+Richmond, John, Earl of. See John of Gaunt.
+Richmond, John of Brittany, Earl of. See John of Brittany.
+Richmond, Peter Mauclerc, Earl of.
+ See Peter, Count or Duke of Brittany.
+Richmond, Peter of Savoy, Earl of. See Peter of Savoy.
+Richmond (place).
+Richmond, Simon de Montfort, made Earl of. See Leicester, Earl of
+Rievaux.
+Rigaud, Bishop of Winchester
+Rigaud, Eudes, Archbishop of Rouen.
+Rigg's, J.M., _Select Pleas of the Jewish Exchequer_.
+Riley's, H.T., his edition of _Rishanger_, etc.
+Rioms.
+Ripon.
+Rishanger, William.
+Rivaux, Peter of, treasurer.
+Robert I, Bruce, King of Scots. See also Bruce, Robert.
+Robert II, Steward of Scotland, afterwards King Robert II.
+Robert, Steward of Scotland.
+Robert, Count of Artois.
+Robert of Artois, enemy of Philip VI.
+Robert, Count of Namur.
+Roberts' _Calendarium Genealogicum_.
+Roche Derien, La, battle of.
+Rochelle, La.
+Rochelle, battle of La.
+Roches, Peter des, Bishop of Winchester.
+Rochester, Castle and city.
+Rockingham Castle.
+Rodez, Bishop of.
+Roger, Peter. See also Clement VI Pope.
+Rogers, J.E. Thorold, _History of Agriculture and Prices_.
+Roles Gascons. See Rolls
+Roll, the Ragman.
+Rolle, Richard
+Rolls;
+ the hundred;
+ patent;
+ the close;
+ of parliament;
+ series, the;
+ of Court of Chancery;
+ Charter;
+ _Escheat_ or _Inquisitiones post mortem_;
+ fine;
+ _Excerpt a e Rotulis Finium_ (C. Roberts');
+ exchequer;
+ Assize;
+ Coroners;
+_Romana Mater_, bull.
+Romances.
+Romanesque architecture.
+Romans, Adolf of Nassau, King of the, see Adolf of Nassau;
+ Charles of Moravia, King of the, see Charles IV;
+ Henry, King of the, see Henry;
+ Rudolf of Hapsburg, King of the, see Rudolf;
+ William of Holland, King of the, see William of Holland.
+Rome.
+Romney.
+Romont.
+Romorantin Castle.
+Roncesvalles, Pass of.
+Ronciere, de la, _Histoire de la Marine Francaise_.
+Rose Castle.
+Roslin.
+Rostein, the family of.
+Rotuli. See Rolls.
+Round Table at Windsor.
+Rouen,
+ Archbishops of. See Rigaud, Eudes, Roger, Peter.
+Rouergue,
+ Counts of. See Armagnac, Count of.
+Roussillon.
+Roxburgh, town and castle;
+ treaty of.
+Royan.
+Rudel, Elie, lord of Bergerac.
+Rudolf of Hapsburg, King of the Romans.
+Runnymede.
+Ruthin.
+Rye.
+Rymer's _Foedera_.
+
+Sabina, Guy Foulquois, Cardinal-bishop of, papal legate.
+ See Clement IV.
+Sacerdotium, the.
+Sack, Friars of the.
+Sailors, English.
+Saints, English, honour paid to.
+St. Albans;
+ abbey;
+ chroniclers of abbey of;
+St Albans, Abbot Simon of.
+St Andrews;
+ Bishops of. See Fraser and Lamberton.
+Saint-Bavon, abbey of.
+St. Davids, Bishop of. See Bek, Thomas.
+Saint-Denis.
+Saint-Emilion.
+Saint-Germain-en-Laye.
+St. Giles, John of.
+Saint-James-de-Beuvron.
+Saint-Jean-d'Angely.
+Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port.
+St. John, John of.
+Saint-Lo.
+Saint-Macaire.
+Saint-Mahe.
+Saint-Malo.
+Saint-Omer.
+Saint-Pol-de-Leon.
+St. Paul's, London;
+ canons of;
+ dean of;
+ annalist of;
+ See also London.
+Saint-Quentin.
+Saint-Sardos.
+Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte.
+Saint-Sever.
+Saint-Vaast-de-la-Hougue.
+Saint-Valery.
+Sainte-Mere-Eglise, William of, Bishop of London.
+Saints, English.
+Saintes.
+Saintonge.
+Salerno, Charles, Prince of.
+Salic Law, the.
+Salisbury;
+ cathedral;
+ treaty of;
+ parliaments at.
+Salisbury, Henry, of Lacy, Earl of. See Lincoln.
+Salisbury, Thomas of Lancaster, Earl of. See Thomas.
+Salisbury, William Longsword, Earl of.
+Salisbury, William Montague, Earl of.
+ See also Montague, William.
+Salisbury, William Montague, Earl of (son of the above).
+Salvatierra.
+Sambre, the river.
+Sanchia of Provence, second wife of Richard of Cornwall.
+Sandal Castle.
+Sandale, Bishop of Winchester.
+Sandwich.
+Santander.
+Satires, English.
+Savoy;
+ palace of the.
+Savoy, Amadeus III., Count of Savoy. See Amadeus.
+Savoy, Boniface of. See Boniface.
+Savoy, Peter of. See Peter.
+Savoy, Philip of. See Philip.
+Savoy, Thomas of. See Thomas.
+Savoyards, the.
+Saxony.
+_Scalachronica_, Sir T. Grey's.
+Scarborough Castle.
+Scheldt, the river.
+Schiltron of pikemen.
+Schism between eastern and western Churches.
+Scholasticism.
+Science.
+_Scimus Fili_, papal letter.
+Scone.
+Scotland.
+Scrope, Sir Richard le, treasurer.
+Sculpture.
+Scutage of Bedford, the;
+ of Kerry;
+ of Poitou.
+Seeley's _Life and Reign of Edward I._
+Segrave, John.
+Segrave, Stephen.
+Seine, the river.
+Selby, William.
+Selden Society, the.
+Selkirk;
+ forest of;
+ See Ettrick.
+Sens.
+Sens, William of.
+Septs, the Irish.
+Serlo, Mayor of London.
+Severn, the river.
+Sheen.
+Sherburn-in-Elmet.
+Sheriffs;
+ for Scotland.
+Shire, system in Wales;
+ courts;
+ knights of the.
+Shrewsbury;
+ Castle of;
+ treaty of;
+ parliament at.
+Shrewsbury, Ralph of, Bishop of Bath and Wells.
+Shropshire.
+Sicilian Vespers, the.
+Sicily.
+Silegrave's Henry of, _Chronicle_.
+Simony.
+Siward, Richard.
+Skeat's editions of Chaucer and Langland.
+Skelton Castle.
+Skenfrith, Castle of.
+Skicsea Castle.
+Sluys.
+Smith's, S. Armitage, _John of Gaunt_.
+Smithfield.
+Snowdon.
+Soissonais, the.
+Soisy.
+Sellers, Rostand de, seneschal of Gascony.
+Sologne, the.
+Solway, the.
+Somme, the river.
+Sorbon, Robert of.
+Soubise.
+Southampton.
+Southwark.
+Spalding, Peter of.
+Spain. See also Aragon and Castile.
+Spain, Peter of, Cardinal. See Peter.
+Speaker, office of.
+Spruner-Menke's _Historischer Hand-Atlas_.
+Staffordshire.
+Stammoor.
+Stamford;
+ parliaments at;
+ statute of.
+Stanley Abbey, Chronicle of.
+Staple, ordinance of the;
+ system the.
+Stapledon, Walter, Bishop of Exeter.
+Statute of ----
+ Acton Burnell.
+ Carlisle (1307).
+ _De Donis_.
+ Gloucester.
+ Kilkenny.
+ Marlborough.
+ Merchants.
+ Mortmain.
+ _Praemunire_.
+ Provisors.
+ _Quia Emptores_.
+ Rageman.
+ Stamford.
+ Treasons (1352).
+ Wales.
+ Westminster, the first;
+ the second;
+ the third.
+ 1341 as to election of auditors of royal officers.
+_Statutum de Tallagio won concedendo_
+Stephen, papal collector.
+Stephen, King.
+Stephens, W. R W., his _History of the English Church_.
+Stevenson's, J., _Documents of Scotland_;
+ _Chronicon de Lanenost_;
+ edition of _Coggeshall's Chronicon Anglicanum_.
+Stevenson's, W.H., _Records of Nottingham_.
+Steward, of England, Simon de Montfort;
+ of Scotland, the.
+Stewart Kings of Scotland.
+Stirling Bridge, battle of.
+Stirling, castle and town.
+Stone, use of, in building houses.
+Stratford.
+Stratford, John, chancellor, Bishop of Winchester and Archbishop of
+Canterbury.
+Stratford, Robert, Bishop of Chichester, chancellor.
+Strathearn.
+Strathspey.
+Stratton, Adam of.
+Strongbow.
+Stubbs' _Select Charters_;
+ Councils;
+ edition of Walter of Coventry;
+ _Chronicles of Edward I and Edward II._;
+ _Constitutional History_.
+_Studium_, the.
+_Studium Generale_. See University.
+Subinfeudation.
+_Subsidy Rolls_.
+Sudbury, Simon of, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Suffolk.
+Suffolk, Ufford, Earl of.
+Surrey.
+Sussex.
+Swale, the river.
+Swaledale.
+Swansea, castle and town.
+Swinbrooke.
+Syria.
+
+Taillebourg, battle of.
+_Tallagio non concedendo, Statutum de_.
+Talleyrand, the Cardinal.
+Tancarville, Lord of, Chamberlain of France.
+Tany, Luke de, seneschal of Gascony.
+Tarascon, Treaty of.
+_Taxatio Ecclesiastica Angliae et Walliae_.
+Taxation;
+ papal;
+ of clergy.
+Taxes, on exports;
+ on land.
+Taxster, John de, Chronicle of.
+Tayster. See Taxster.
+Teivi, the river.
+Templars, Order of the;
+ suppression of the.
+Temple, Church of the;
+ the New.
+Temple, Knights of the. See Templars.
+Tertiaries.
+_Testa de Neville_, the.
+Thames, the.
+Theiner's _Vetera Monumenta Hib. et Scot. Historiam Illustrantia_.
+Theobald IV, Count of Champagne and King of Navarre.
+Theology.
+Therouanne.
+Thierache, the.
+Thirty, battle of the.
+Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, Leicester and Derby.
+Thomas of Brotherton, Earl of Norfolk, son of Edward I.
+Thomas of Savoy, uncle of Eleanor of Provence.
+Thomas of Woodstock, Earl of Gloucester.
+Thomas, St. Aquinas See Aquinas, St. Thomas.
+Thomas, St., of Canterbury;
+ translation of relics of. See also Becket.
+Thomas, St., of Cantilupe. See Cantilupe.
+Thomist teaching. See Aquinas, St. Thomas.
+Thompson's, Sir E. Maunde, _Chronicon Angliae_;
+ _Chronicon Galfridi le Baker_.
+Thoresby, John, Archbishop of York.
+Thorpe, Benjamin, his _Florence of Worcester_.
+Thorpe, Sir Robert, Chancellor and Chief Justice.
+Thouars,
+ house of.
+Thouars, the Viscount of.
+Tintagel Castle.
+Tickhill Castle.
+Torksey.
+Torture.
+Toulouse.
+Toulouse, Joan, Countess of. See Joan.
+Toulouse, Raymond VII., Count of. See Raymond VII.
+Touraine.
+Tournai.
+Tournaments.
+Tours.
+Tout's _Edward I._;
+ _Papacy and Empire_.
+Tower, of London, the;
+ the Round, Windsor.
+Tower Hill.
+Towns, growth of;
+ Gascon;
+ Welsh;
+ "Staple".
+Towy, the river.
+Trade.
+Trailbaston, Ordinance of.
+Translations into English.
+Treasons, Statute of.
+Treasurer, office of.
+Treaty of ----
+ Aberconway.
+ Amiens.
+ Athis.
+ Berwick.
+ Bordeaux.
+ Bretigni.
+ Brigham.
+ Bruges.
+ Calais (1347);
+ (1360).
+ Canfranc.
+ Coblenz.
+ Esplechin.
+ Guerande.
+ Guillond.
+ Lambeth.
+ Leek.
+ London.
+ Malestroit.
+ Meaux.
+ Montreuil.
+ Newcastle.
+ Northampton.
+ Oloron.
+ Paris (1259);
+ (1303);
+ (1327).
+ Pipton.
+ Roxburgh.
+ Saint-Germain.
+ Salisbury.
+ Shrewsbury.
+ Tarascon.
+ Valenciennes.
+ Vincennes.
+_Trebuchet_, the.
+Treguier;
+ County of Penthievre-Treguier.
+Trent, the river.
+Trevelyan's, G.M., _England in the Age of Wycliffe_.
+Trevet. See Trivet.
+Trier.
+Trim.
+Trinitarian Friars, the.
+Trivet, Nicholas, Dominican chronicler.
+Trokelowe, J. de, _Annales_.
+Troyes.
+Trussell, Sir William.
+Tunbridge.
+Tunis.
+Turner's, G.J., _Pleas of the Forest_;
+ _Select Pleas of the Forest_;
+ _Minority of Henry III., 1_.
+Turberville, Payne of.
+Turberville, Sir Thomas.
+Turks, the.
+Tuscans.
+Tuscany.
+Tutbury Castle.
+Tweed, the river.
+Tweeddale.
+Twemlow's _Calendars of Papal Registers_.
+Twenge, Sir Robert.
+"Twenty-Four," the.
+Twiss, Sir T.'s edition of Bracton.
+Tyburn Elms.
+Tynedale.
+Tynemouth.
+Tyre, Archbishop of.
+
+Ufford, Earl of Suffolk. See Suffolk.
+Ughtred, Sir Thomas.
+Ulster.
+Ulster, Hugh de Lacy, Earl of.
+Ulster, Lionel of Clarence, Earl of. See also Lionel.
+Ulster, Richard de Burgh, Earl of.
+Umfravilles, the.
+Umfraville, Gilbert of, Lord of Redesdale.
+_Unam Sanctam_ Bull.
+Union, treaty of, between England and Scotland.
+Universities, the. See also Cambridge, Montpellier, Oxford, Paris.
+Urban IV, Pope.
+Urban V, Pope.
+Ure, the river.
+Usk Castle and town.
+Usk, River;
+ Valley, the.
+Usury.
+
+Vaissete's _Histoire de Languedoc_.
+Vallee aux Clercs, near Crecy.
+Valois, house of.
+Valois, Charles of. See Charles.
+Valence, Aymer of. See Pembroke, Aymer, Earl of, and Aymer, Bishop of
+Winchester.
+Valence, William of, Lord of Pembroke.
+Valence, William of Savoy, Bishop-elect of.
+Valenciennes.
+Vander Kindere's _Siecle des Artevelde_.
+Vannes.
+Venice.
+Vercelli, Church of St. Andrew at.
+Vermandois, the.
+Verneuil.
+Vescy, John de, 131
+Vescy, Lady, 248
+Vespers, the Sicilian, 146
+Vic, De, his _Histoire de Languedoc_, 462.
+Vidal de la Blache's _Tableau de la Geographie de la France_.
+Vienne, the river;
+ Council of.
+Vierzon.
+Villeins, the.
+Vincennes, Convention of the Wood of.
+Vinogradoff's _Villainage in England_.
+Visconti, Bernabo.
+Visconti, Galeazzo.
+Visconti of Milan, the.
+Visconti, Violante, daughter of Galeazzo, of Pavia.
+_Vision of Piers Plowman_, Langland's.
+Viterbo.
+Vitoria,
+Vyve-Saint-Bavon, truce of.
+
+Wadicourt.
+Wace's _Brut_.
+Wages affected by Black Death.
+Wake, Lord.
+Wakes, the, of Liddell and Lincolnshire.
+Waleis, Henry le, Mayor of London.
+Wales;
+ statute of;
+ records of;
+ annals of.
+Wallace, Sir William, of Eldershe.
+Wallon's _Louis IX._
+Wallingford Castle and town.
+Walsingham, Thomas, _Gesta. Abbatum S. Albani_;
+ _Historia Anglicana of_.
+Walton.
+Wardrobe accounts.
+Ware.
+Warenne, William, Earl (d 1240).
+Warenne, John, Earl (d 1304), son of above.
+Warenne, John, Earl (d 1347), grandson of above.
+Wark, the Lord of.
+Warwick Castle.
+Warwick, Beauchamps of. See Beauchamps;
+ Neufbourg, Earls of.
+Warwick, Guy of Beauchamp, Earl of.
+Warwick, Henry of Neufbourg, Earl of.
+Warwick, John du Plessis, Earl of.
+Warwick, Thomas of Beauchamp, Earl of.
+Warwick, William Beauchamp, Earl of.
+Waverley, Annals of Abbey of.
+Weald, the.
+Wear, the river.
+Wells, Hugh of, Bishop of Lincoln.
+Wells, Bishops of Bath and,
+ See Burnell;
+ Robert;
+ Drokensford;
+ Sandale.
+Wenceslaus of Luxemburg, Duke of Brabant, brother of the Emperor,
+Charles IV.
+Wendover, Roger of;
+ his _Flores Historiarum_.
+Westminster;
+ Abbey;
+ the Provisions of;
+ the first statute of;
+ second statute of;
+ third statute of;
+ Hall;
+ St. Stephen's Chapel.
+Westminster, Abbot of. See also Lansham, Simon.
+Westminster, Matthew of, imaginary chronicler.
+Westmoreland.
+Weyland, Sir Thomas, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas.
+Weymouth.
+Whalley Abbey.
+Wharton's _Anglia Sacra_.
+Whitecastle.
+White Friars, the.
+Whittaker, W.J., his edition of _Le Mirroir des Justices_.
+Whittingtons, the.
+Whittlesea, William, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Wicklow.
+Wigford.
+Wight, Isle of.
+Wigmore, Castle;
+ house of.
+Wigmore, Roger Mortimer of. See Mortimer, Roger.
+Wilkin of the Weald.
+Wilkins' _Concilia_.
+William I. of Avesnes, Count of Hainault, Holland and Zealand.
+William II. of Avesnes, Count of Hainault, Holland and Zealand. Son of
+the above.
+William of Bavaria, Count of Hainault, Holland and Zealand.
+William of Hatfield, son of Edward III.
+William of Holland, King of the Romans.
+William of Norwich, St.
+William of Savoy, Bishop-elect of Valence and Winchester.
+William of Valence, Lord of Pembroke.
+William I. the Conqueror.
+William the Lion, King of Scots.
+Wiltshire.
+Winchelsea;
+ naval battle off.
+Winchelsea, Robert, Archbishop of Canterbury.
+Winchester;
+ bishopric of;
+ Cathedral of;
+ parliament of March 1330, at;
+ Annals of.
+Winchester, Bishops of.
+ See Edington, William;
+ Roches, Peter des;
+ Stratford, John;
+ Aymer of Valence;
+ Woodlock, Henry;
+ William of Savoy;
+ Wykeham, William of.
+Winchester, Hugh Despenser, the elder, Earl of. See Despenser.
+Winchester, Saer de Quincy, Earl of.
+Windsor, town and castle;
+ Round Table at;
+ Chapel, St. George's at.
+Wingham, Henry.
+Wishart, Robert, Bishop of Glasgow.
+Wither, William.
+Wolvesey Castle, Winchester.
+Women in the law courts;
+ French law of succession of.
+Woodlock, Henry, Bishop of Winchester.
+Woodstock.
+Wool trade.
+Worcester;
+ Bishops of, see Cantilupe, Walter; Reynolds, Walter.
+Worcester, Provisions of;
+ _Annals of_.
+Wright's, T., _Political Songs_;
+ _Political Songs and Poems_.
+_Writs, Parliamentary_, edited by Sir F. Palgrave.
+Wycliffe, John;
+ his writings.
+Wye, the river.
+Wykeham, William of, Bishop of Winchester;
+ his _Register_.
+Wykes, Thomas, _Chronicle of_.
+Wynn, John.
+Wyntoun, Andrew, _Originale_ by.
+
+Yale.
+Yarmouth.
+_Year Books_, the.
+York;
+ parliaments at;
+ house of.
+York, Archbishops of.
+ See Giffard, Walter;
+ Greenfield, William;
+ Grey, Walter;
+ Melton, William;
+ Thoresby, John;
+ Zouch, William de la.
+York, Edmund of Langley, Earl of Cambridge, Duke of. See Edmund.
+Yorkshire.
+Ypres.
+Yrvon, the river.
+Ystradvellte.
+
+Zealand, county of.
+Zouch, William de la, Archbishop of York.
+Zwyn, the river;
+ harbour.
+
+
+CORRIGENDA
+
+Chapter II, Paragraph 5, for Roger Bigod read Hugh Bigod.
+
+Chapter X, Paragraph 4, for Earl of Cornwall read Earl of Lancaster.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The History of England, by T.F. Tout
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