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| Reading Hall The Doors of Wisdom | 
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| HISTORY OF ENGLAND, A.D. 1189-1377.
       
         King Richard
        
        I was the spoilt child of his mother Eleanor. Brought up in the civil wars of
        
        south-west France, he was a stranger to his own country, and spent less  than
        
        a year in it as king. He knew nothing of statesmanship and constitutional
        
        legislation, but only cared for the excitements of war, the sports of chivalry,
        
        and the songs of the troubadours. Crowned in Westminster Abbey on September 3,
        
        1189, he set to work to plunder and persecute the Jews, from whom he exacted
        
        money for the crusade. For the same purpose he sold offices, civil and
        
        ecclesiastical, in a reckless manner. His bastard brother Geoffrey obtained for
        
        £3000 the archbishopric of York, as Henry II had desired, and Bishop Hugh of
        
        Durham paid £10,000 for the county of Northumberland. Richard said himself that
        
        he would have sold London if he could have found a purchaser. He sold the
        
        suzerainty of Scotland for ten thousand marks, and threw the castles of Roxburgh and Berwick into the bargain. In this way he
        
        amassed an enormous treasure, which he proceeded to squander. He gave as
        
        recklessly as he acquired, and his brother, John, and his mother, Eleanor, were
        
        recipients of his inconsiderate bounty. Having appointed William Longchamp, bishop of Ely, chancellor and justiciar of the kingdom, and made peace with King Philip
        
        of France, be left for the third crusade in June 1190, joining Philip at
        
        Messina. In Cyprus, he married Berengaria of Navarre.
         William
        
        of Ely, a Norman of humble birth, exercised his office with great severity, and
        
        was opposed by John, who hoped to receive the crown in case Richard should not
        
        return, which was very likely, whereas William favored the claims of Arthur of
        
        Brittany, son of Geoffrey, who was certainly the rightful heir. With the help
        
        of Geoffrey of York, Hugh of Durham, and the citizens of London, William was
        
        driven from his position and forced into France, where he appealed to the pope.
        
        His place was taken by Walter of Coûtances, archbishop
        
        of Rouen. The events of the third crusade have been already narrated, the
        
        capture of Acre and the return of Philip to France, the conquest of Jaffa and Ascalon, the march on Jerusalem, and the truce with Saladin
        
        for three years, during which the Christians were to have free access to the
        
        Holy Sepulchre. On his return, Richard was captured
        
        by the duke of Austria and imprisoned by the Emperor Henry VI, in 1193.
         When the
        
        news of this event reached England, John endeavored to secure the kingdom with
        
        the help of Philip of France. Eleanor kept England true to Richard, but Philip
        
        took advantage of Richard’s imprisonment to gain Gisors by treachery, and to get into his hands Aumale, the Vexin, and, indeed, the whole country as far as Dieppe. At
        
        length, Richard was set free by the payment of a large sum of money, and by the
        
        influence of his mother, and of Hubert Walter, who was now justiciar,
        
        came back to England. Walter was an excellent ruler, who laid the foundations
        
        of a future Parliament, by making the juries the representatives of the
        
        counties and giving them certain political powers.
         Richard
        
        returned to his country in March 1194, and was received with joy by the people.
        
        John went to France, in order to secure the French possessions of the crown,
        
        with the help of Philip. Richard prepared for war. William of Ely was recalled
        
        from exile. John, frightened at Richard’s power, threw himself at his brother's
        
        feet and received pardon. Bertrand de Born, the troubadour poet, says :
         
         “The
        
        merry time is back again,
         When
        
        motley tents bedeck the plain;
         When
        
        walls are stormed by warriors bold,
         And
        
        captives languish in the hold;
         When
        
        lance and banner fill the field,
         The
        
        horse, the helmet, and the shield."
         
         War raged
        
        from the Seine to the Garonne. The death of Henry VI directed Richard’s
        
        attention to Germany, as he was anxious to gain the imperial crown for his
        
        nephew Otto. The pope made peace between the two kings. But in January 1199,
        
        Richard was wounded at Chaluz, in a quarrel with Guidomar of Limoges. He died a few days later at Limoges,
        
        at the age of 42, and was buried there, leaving John as his heir, for he had no
        
        children. He was every inch a knight, tall and well made, with fair hair, very
        
        strong and courageous, deserving the name of “Lion Heart”, fond of art, music, and
        
        poetry. Chateau Gaillard (“the saucy castle”), which he built for the defence
        
        of Normandy, remains his characteristic monument. He was renowned for his
        
        generosity. His reign gave opportunity for the growth of liberty in the towns,
        
        especially in the city of London.
         John,
        
        supported by the last will of Richard and the influence of Eleanor, was crowned
        
        in Westminster Abbey on May 29, 1199. but the rightful heir to the throne was his
        
        nephew, Arthur of Brittany, the son of his elder brother Geoffrey. Philip
        
        Augustus, king of France, supported his claims; and the two kings were also
        
        divided on German questions, John supporting his nephew Otto, Philip the Hohenstauffens. Peace was, however, made between them in
        
        May 1200, when Blanche of Castile was betrothed to Philip’s son Louis, and
        
        Arthur was compelled to do homage to his uncle for the possession of Brittany.
        
        At the close of the same year, John divorced his wife Hadwisa of Gloucester and married Isabella of Angouleme. Arthur still continued to
        
        assert his rights, and, in 1203, besieged the castle of Mirebeau,
        
        where Queen Eleanor was lying ill. But he was captured, and afterwards murdered
        
        by John's contrivance. His murder gave Philip a handle against John. He was
        
        summoned to be tried by his peers at Paris, and, when he did not come, was
        
        condemned to lose his French possessions by contumacy. Chateau Gaillard was
        
        taken, and Caen, Coûtances, Bayeux, Lisieux, and Avranches were
        
        compelled to submit. Rouen held out longer, but finally surrendered.
         Thus Normandy
        
        came back to France three hundred years after it had been conquered by Rollo. The
        
        Plantagenet possessions soon followed. In the summer of 1205, Hubert de Burgh
        
        surrendered Chinon, and soon all the country between
        
        the Loire and the Garonne —Anjou, Maine, and Touraine came into the hands of
        
        Philip. 
           John was
        
        a man without character, for whom it was impossible to feel respect. His Norman
        
        nobles had deserted him, and it was difficult for his English vassals to remain
        
        faithful to him. He was soon to find a more with the formidable antagonist in
        
        Pope Innocent III. The dispute arose about the appointment to the see of
        
        Canterbury, which had become vacant by the death of Hubert Walter. On the death
        
        of Hubert, the younger monks elected Reginald, their sub-prior, as archbishop,
        
        whereas the king nominated John de Grey, bishop of Norwich, who was elected by
        
        the senior monks. The bishops of the province also put forward their claims to
        
        elect their metropolitan, and the decision of the question came to Pope
        
        Innocent III. The pope hesitated for a long time, and at length determined that
        
        the right of appointment belonged to the monks, and not to the suffragan
        
        bishops or the king. But he said that the sub-prior, Reginald, had been elected
        
        irregularly, and ordered the chapter to choose Stephen Langton, a man of
        
        excellent character and profound learning. The king became very angry, and
        
        refused to acknowledge Langton; but the pope consecrated him at Viterbo and
        
        gave him the pallium on June 17, 1207.
         When John
        
        heard of what had happened at Viterbo, he was beside himself with rage. He
        
        drove the monks of Canterbury out of their cells, and confiscated their
        
        property. Seventy monks and one hundred lay brothers sought refuge in Flanders
        
        at St. Bertin and other monasteries. The bishops of London,
        
        Ely, and Worcester thereupon received orders to rebuke the king, and, if this
        
        produced no effect, to place the country under an interdict. John swore by the
        
        teeth of God that he would drive the bishops and all the clergy out of his
        
        kingdom and confiscate their property, and, if the pope sent messengers to
        
        England, he would send them back without eyes or noses. On March 28, 1208, the
        
        three bishops issued the interdict, and then fled the kingdom. The churches
        
        were closed, no bells rang, no masses were celebrated, no children were
        
        baptized, no dying were anointed, no dead were buried in consecrated earth.
        
        Many bishops and other ecclesiastics left the kingdom, and their property was
        
        confiscated, only those of Norwich, Durham, and Winchester remaining faithful
        
        to the king. In the following year, the pope issued a ban against the king
        
        himself.
         Shunned
        
        in his own country, John betook himself to Scotland, Ireland, the Isle of Man, and
        
        Wales. He also renewed relations with his nephew, the Emperor Otto IV. In the
        
        meantime, he treated England with the utmost severity. The bishops of London
        
        and Ely went to Rome, and stirred the pope to action. He looked about for
        
        assistance. No one was so fit to execute his purpose as Philip Augustus of
        
        France. The danger was not great. Wales was in rebellion. England ready for
        
        revolt.
         Frederic
        
        II had crossed the Alps to wrest the imperial crown from Otto. Raymond of
        
        Toulouse, John's brother-in-law, was nearing his fall. So Innocent III declared
        
        John deposed from his throne and all his subjects absolved from their
        
        allegiance, and offered the crown of England and Ireland to Philip, as a reward
        
        for his fidelity. On April 8, 1213, the French king summoned a meeting of
        
        notables at Soissons, and received from them general support. Only Ferrand of Portugal, count of Flanders, dissented, and with Rainald, count of Boulogne, and other princes of the
        
        Netherlands, allied with John and Otto IV. At Easter, 1213, all Europe was in
        
        movement. But, before John marched in defence of the Welfs,
        
        he thought it prudent to become reconciled with the pope, and on May 13, 1213,
        
        he swore on the gospels submission to the pope. He promised to receive Langton
        
        as archbishop of Canterbury, and on May 15 he placed the crowns of England and
        
        Ireland in John the hands of Pandulf, the pope’s
        
        nuncio, and received them back as the pope’s vassal, promising to pay a yearly
        
        tribute of a thousand marks into the pope’s coffers. John was absolved from
        
        excommunication, and Philip was told that he must stop his warlike operations.
        
        John was now able to send a fleet to Flanders under his bastard brother William Longsword, who destroyed most of the French fleet at Damme.
         We now
        
        approach the period of the Great Charter. On August 4, 1213, a council was held
        
        at St. Alban's by Geoffrey FitzPeter and Peter des Roches, at which proclamation was made of the restoration
        
        of good and the abolition of bad laws, and, on August 25, at a council held at
        
        St. Paul's, Stephen Langton read the charter of Henry I to the assembled
        
        barons. At this time, Geoffrey FitzPeter died, and
        
        Peter des Roches, bishop of Winchester, became justiciar. Although John was reconciled with the pope, this
        
        did not prevent him from taking part with Raimond of
        
        Toulouse and Otto IV, who were both excommunicated. He himself sailed to La
        
        Rochelle, while William Longsword joined Otto, Ferrand, and Rainald in the
        
        Netherlands. The great battle of Bouvines, which we
        
        have before described as one of the decisive battles of the world, took place
        
        on July 27, 1214, and the French cavalry gained a victory over the forces of
        
        the allied nations of Germany, England, and the Netherlands. John had to
        
        surrender, in the treaty of Chinon, his western
        
        territory in France from the Seine to the Garonne, and retained only Aquitaine
        
        and the harbour of La Rochelle.
         John was
        
        now entirely at the mercy of the barons. He attempted to form a party for
        
        himself by promising freedom of election of the bishops to the church, taking the
        
        vow of a crusade, and appealing to the pope.
         But the
        
        barons collected an army and forced him to sign the Great Charter at Runnymede,
        
        a large meadow by the side of the Thames, near Staines,
        
        with an island in the stream, where the king is supposed to have pitched his
        
        tent. Magna Charta (the Great Charter), as it was called, was signed at Rurnrnymede on June 15, 1215. It was a statement of the
        
        rights of the English barons. The king was expected to keep the law, and the
        
        charter stated what the law was, but it was entirely feudal in character. It
        
        was a statement to which Englishmen could appeal in their struggle for liberty
        
        against the king. Its principal provisions were as follows :—The church was
        
        promised freedom, especially with regard to the election of bishops. Feudal abuses,
        
        as to reliefs, wardships, marriages, and collection
        
        of debts, were remedied. No aids or scutages were to
        
        be collected unless by consent of the common council of the realm, except in
        
        certain cases. The common council was to consist of the archbishops, bishops,
        
        abbots, and greater barons, summoned individually, and of the lesser barons
        
        summoned through the sheriffs. For justice, the court of common pleas was to
        
        sit in some fixed place; judges were to ride the circuit four times a year;
        
        justice was not to be refused or sold; no freeman was to be punished without
        
        trial by his peers, or against the law of the land. In commerce, merchants were
        
        to go and come freely, weights and measures to be uniform, and all rivers to be
        
        open to navigation. London and all other towns were to have their ancient
        
        liberties and customs. Besides these provisions, the forest laws were to be
        
        reformed, the exactions of the crown with regard to purveyance limited, the
        
        foreign mercenaries dismissed, and a body of twenty-five barons, including the
        
        mayor of London, was to see that the charter was observed.
         The king
        
        returned to Windsor in great disgust, brooding over plans of vengeance. He
        
        tried to collect a new army, and had recourse to the pope. The nobles met at
        
        Oxford and Northampton, and sought assistance from France. They offered to
        
        acknowledge Philip’s son Louis, who had married John's niece, Blanche of
        
        Castile, as king of England. But the barons were defeated at Rochester, and Innocent
        
        used all the artillery of the church to assist John. In January 1216, the king
        
        marched northwards, to put down the rebellion. Fire and desolation marked his
        
        advance. William Longsword did the same for the
        
        south, and Savary de Mauleon for the east. By March, nearly all England, except London, was in the king’s hands.
        
        But Louis landed in England on May 21,1216, and entered London on June 2. Then,
        
        on July 16, Innocent III died, and John followed him to the grave on October
        
        19, at the age of 49. John was small, ugly, corpulent, and immoral. He murdered
        
        his nephew and lost his possessions in France. He justified in his career the
        
        nickname, early given to him, of Lackland. He was
        
        one of the worst of the English kings. It is not to his credit that his career
        
        incidentally assisted commerce both at home and abroad, and that his
        
        intolerable tyranny favored the development of law and order.
         HENRY III
         Dante,
        
        when he introduces us to Henry III of England, in Purgatory, calls him the king
        
        of the simple life, and gives us a pleasant
          
          idea of him. This is a contrast to the English historians, who represent him as vain,
            
            extravagant, and false, hated and despised. The probability is that Dante was
              
              right, that Henry was greater than his contemporaries believed him to be, and
              
              that Englishmen regarded him too much from their own point of view. He is
              
              admitted, even by them, to have been pious and personally courageous. He
              
              reigned for fifty-six years, one of the longest reigns in English history, from
              
              1216 to 1272, covering nearly the whole of the thirteenth century, which is regarded
              
              by some historians as the most brilliant period of modern times. His reign
              
              falls naturally into four divisions—the first of eleven years (1216-1227),
              
              before he came of age; the second of thirty-one years (1227-1258), called the
              
              period of his misgovernment; the third of seven years (1258-1265), the period
              
              of revolution and civil war; and the fourth of seven years (1265-1272), ending
              
              with his death.
               A few
        
        days after King John had been buried in the cathedral of Worcester, Henry, then
        
        nine years of age, was proclaimed king in the abbey church of Gloucester, and
        
        was crowned by the papal legate, Cardinal Gualo,
        
        after he had taken the oath and acknowledged the pope as suzerain. His
        
        ministers were William Marshall, earl of Pembroke, who was regent and represented
        
        the English party; Gualo, the papal legate; Peter des Roches, who favored the foreign party; and Hubert de
        
        Burgh, who was justiciar. The Great Charter was
        
        reissued, omitting, among others, the clauses which made the consent of the
        
        great council necessary for taxation, and established a council of twenty-five.
        
        A foreign prince was in England, acknowledged as king by many of the barons,
        
        but, now that the hated John was dead, the strength of the king's party grew
        
        every day. On May 20, 1217, Louis was defeated in the battle of Lincoln, and
        
        three hundred of his adherents were made prisoners. Shortly afterwards followed
        
        the battle of Sandwich, in which Eustace the Monk, with sixty ships, was
        
        defeated by Hubert de Burgh with forty. By the treaty of Lambeth,
        
        Louis received 10,000 marks and returned to France.
         On May
        
        17, 1220, Henry, now a boy of thirteen, was crowned again at Westminster by
        
        Stephen Langton, archbishop of Canterbury. Langton had been sent back to
        
        England by Pope Honorius III, and before that took place William Marshall had died and been succeededas regent by Hubert de Burgh, the justiciar, and Gualo had made way
          
          himself for Pandulf, a more tyrannical and overbearing
          
          character, while Peter des Roches was the king’s guardian. Also the foundation-stone had been laid of a
            
            new abbey at Westminster, and the bones of Becket
              
              had been placed in a gorgeous shrine, so that a new
                
                epoch seemed to be opening
                  
                  for England. Discontent and dissension still continued, but Langton and de Burgh worked hard for order and good government. Langton obtained a promise from the
                    
                    pope that, during his life, no foreign legate
                      
                      should reside in England, and Pandulf left the country. And, in 1224, Fulke de Breauté, the leader of John’s foreign mercenaries, who had
                        
                        acquired for himself great wealth and position, was
                          
                          defeated by de Burgh and driven
                            
                            from the kingdom. In the same year Louis VIII became king of France, and war
                            
                            between him and the English naturally broke out, lasting two years, but leaving Henry in possession of Gascony.
                               In 1227,
        
        at the age of twenty, Henry became of age. The government was wisely
        
        administered by Hubert de Burgh, the great justiciar.
        
        Peter des Roches went on a crusade for four years,
        
        and even the death of Stephen Langton in 1228 did not produce much mischief,
        
        except that, in the year following, a demand of a tax of one tenth on all
        
        personal property was made by the pope and was consented to by the clergy. But
        
        in 1232 des Roches returned from the crusade,
        
        persuaded Henry to dismiss de Burgh as being too powerful, took his place, and
        
        proceeded to fill the offices of state with foreigners from his own country of
        
        Poitou.
         A new
        
        leader was required for the English and constitutional party, and this was
        
        found in the person of Richard, earl of Pembroke, the son of the famous
        
        Dismissal of William. Henry was weak enough to attack him Hubert de with
        
        Flemish and Poitevin mercenaries, and a civil Burgh.
        
        war broke out, in which the feelings of the English were entirely against the
        
        king. But Richard, with the help of the Welsh, defeated the king’s troops; and
        
        in 1234, Edward Rich, archbishop of Canterbury, persuaded the king to dismiss
        
        des Roches, and his nephew Peter of Rivaulx. They went to Italy, and served the pope, but in
        
        1239 des Roches returned to Winchester, and died
        
        there. Richard was killed by the treachery of a doctor in 1234, and Henry
        
        mourned bitterly at his death. But his brother, Gilbert Marshall, took his
        
        place; Hubert de Burgh regained his power, and was assisted by Sir Philip
        
        Basset, and the great Grosseteste, bishop of Lincoln,
        
        the friend of Simon de Montfort, and of the Franciscan and Dominican Friars. In
        
        1236, Henry married Eleanor, the second daughter of Raimund Berengar of Provence, sister of the queen of France; and
        
        the Emperor Frederic II married Henry’s lovely sister, Isabella.
         The fatal
        
        effects of the submission of John to the pope now began to appear. Pope Gregory
        
        IX, the successor of Honorius III, whose conduct towards Frederick II we have
        
        already described, began to treat England with similar severity. He filled the sees and benefices with foreigners, and appropriated the
        
        church revenues, so that his representatives in England were ill-treated and
        
        even killed, and his bulls trodden under foot. The needy brothers and friends
        
        of Queen Eleanor regarded England in a similar way, and our island was exposed
        
        to the ravages of foreigners. Among them were the four sons of the Count de la
        
        Marche, who had married the widowed Queen Mother, Isabella; and Richard, earl
        
        of Cornwall, the king’s brother, who had married the queen’s sister, Sancha, after his return from the crusades, and the great
        
        Simon de Montfort, the distinguished patriot, who had married Eleanor, the
        
        king’s sister, the widow of William Marshall, at this time seemed to side with
        
        the foreign and papal party. Matters became worse under Pope Innocent IV. In
        
        1241, Boniface of Savoy, uncle of the queen, though utterly unfit for the post,
        
        was made archbishop of Canterbury. In 1242, Henry undertook an expedition to
        
        Poitou in alliance with his step-father. The French and English armies met at Taillebourg, but little fighting took place, as the English
        
        de- camped in the night. Henry returned to England with a number of Poitevins, but Poitou was lost. At the council of Lyons in
        
        1245, the English nobles and people made a solemn complaint against papal
        
        exactions, and Grosseteste repeated it at Rome in
        
        1250, the year of the death of the great Emperor Frederick II, the wonder of
        
        the world.
         The
        
        necessities of the crown proved to be the beginnings of popular government. In
        
        1254, the knights from each shire were summoned to meet for the purpose of
        
        levying and aid. As we have before seen, Henry accepted the crown of Sicily
        
        from the pope for his son Edmund, which led to great expense, and Richard of
        
        Cornwall was elected king of the Romans, which caused more. In 1257, Henry,
        
        already deeply in debt, demanded an aid for the conquest of Sicily, and this
        
        led to the revolution of which Simon de Montfort made himself the head, earning
        
        an undying name in the history of England.
         In 1258,
        
        Henry consented to the summoning of a Parliament at Oxford, and to the
        
        appointment of twenty-four commissioners, barons and bishops, twelve
        
        chosen by himself and twelve by the barons, to inquire into the grievances of
        
        the kingdom. The Parliament which met at Oxford was called the Mad Parliament,
        
        and by it resolutions called the Provisions of Oxford were passed. They were
        
        six in number. The first established the commission of twenty-four, which has
        
        just been mentioned, the second appointed another commission of twenty-four to
        
        treat with the king, the third required a council of fifteen to be elected by
        
        four barons out of the first twenty-four to give the king advice, and the fourth
        
        established a body of twelve men to meet the council of fifteen at least three
        
        times a year, and this was to constitute a Parliament. The two last provisions
        
        determined that the castles of the king should be placed in the hands of
        
        Englishmen, and that the chief justice, the treasurer, the chancellor, and the
        
        sheriffs should hold office for one year only, and then give an account of
        
        themselves. In the following year, the provisions of Westminster were passed,
        
        to remedy the special grievances of the barons, the bad administration of
        
        justice in feudal as well as royal courts, and the excessive power of the
        
        sheriffs.
         Henry was
        
        obliged to consent to the Provisions of Oxford, but turned for assistance to
        
        the king of France, Louis IX, and to the pope. He surrendered to Louis his
        
        empty claims to Normandy, Anjou, Maine, Touraine, and Poitou, and did homage
        
        for what he possessed of Aquitaine. By the leave of the barons, he went to
        
        France, and spent six months in the Louvre and St. Denis. In April 1261, Pope
        
        Alexander IV issued a bull which condemned the Provisions of Oxford and
        
        released Henry from his of oath to preserve them, and this was confirmed by the
        
        next pope, Urban IV. In 1263, war broke out between the king and the barons
        
        under the leadership of Simon de Montfort, who was supported by the citizens of
        
        London. Matters were not improved by the fact that Louis, called in to
        
        arbitrate, by a decision called the Mise of Amiens,
        
        declared all the Provisions illegal, and that the pope countenanced this by a
        
        fresh bull. A battle took place at Lewes on May 14, 1264, in which the king was
        
        entirely defeated. The result of this was an arrangement called the Mise of Lewes, by which the matters in dispute were to be
        
        settled by fresh arbitration. The king was bound to confine himself to native councillors, and Prince Edward, the eldest son of the king,
        
        and his cousin Henry of Almaine, son of Richard, king
        
        of the Romans, were kept by the barons as hostages.
         A
        
        Parliament was now summoned, which was composed of four knights from each
        
        shire, and a new constitution was drawn up. Three electors appointed a council
        
        of nine, The without whose advice the king could not act, and Parliament who
        
        should appoint the ministers of state. In 1265, the first regular Parliament
        
        met, which was composed of barons, bishops, and abbots, two knights from each
        
        shire, and two barons from certain towns, this being the first time that
        
        representatives of the shires and counties had sat together.
         Simon de
        
        Montfort, earl of Leicester, was now regent and protector of England. Queen
        
        Eleanor did her best to find adherents for the disgraced king in France, and mercenaries were hired in Flanders, but the popular party forbade
          
          the pope’s legate, Cardinal Guido of Sabina, to land in England, and he was forced to
            
            return to Rome, where he
              
              became pope under the name of Clement IV. But the royal party received a powerful ally in Gilbert of
                
                Clare, earl of Gloucester, whose father had been a bitter
                  
                  enemy of Simon, and he was soon
                    
                    joined by others. The result was the battle of Evesham, fought on August 4,
                      
                      1265, in which Simon was defeated and killed. Simon deserves the reputation which he has always had in the
                        
                        history of England. He was very religious, a friend of
                          
                          the friars, but a persecutor of the Jews. After his death he was
                            
                            reverenced by the people as a saint, and was regarded as “Simon the Righteous”,
                            
                            who, by his death, made England free. His great achievements were that he
                            
                            placed the administration of England in the hands of Englishmen, and that he
                            
                            conceived and executed the idea of a Parliament representing all classes and
                            
                            interests of the people.
                             The
        
        battle of Evesham was ruin to Montfort’s party. The
        
        city of London had to submit, and the countess of Leicester had to retire to
        
        France. Queen Eleanor returned in triumph to Windsor. The remaining adherents
        
        of Simon took refuge in the Castle of Kenilworth, but a civil war raged until,
        
        at last, by the influence of the legate and the earl of Gloucester, peace was
        
        arranged on terms which bear the name of the “Dictum de Kenilworth”, by which
        
        Henry was restored to his authority. An Royal amnesty was proclaimed to
        
        the rebels on payment  of a fine, the Provisions were annulled, but the authority
        
        of Magna Charta and the charter of the forest was established, and in the
        
        following year, 1267, the Statute of Marlborough re-enacted almost all the
        
        Provisions of Westminster.
         In June
        
        1268, Prince Edward and his brother, together with a hundred and fifty knights,
        
        took the cross from the hands of the papal legate. Henry III died on November
        
        20, 1272. He was a pious, God-fearing man, who supported the clergy and led a
        
        pure life, but he was deficient in the qualities of a statesman, and was much
        
        influenced by those around him, so that he became uncertain in his policy and
        
        extravagant in his way of living, and often found himself in pecuniary difficulties.
        
        The simplicity of life attributed to him by Dante must refer rather to his
        
        personal character than to his public actions.
         Prince
        
        Edward heard of his father’s death whilst he was staying with Prince Charles of
        
        Anjou in Sicily, on his return from the crusade. He did not hasten his return,
        
        but Edward passed through Italy and France, visiting Pope Gregory X, the
        
        learned doctors of Padua, and the rich merchants of Milan, and defeating the
        
        count of Châlons in a tournament in Burgundy. Indeed, he was not crowned at
        
        Westminster till August 1274. He is, perhaps, the greatest of our English
        
        kings. He knew that England required good laws and a strong administrator, but
        
        he knew that a powerful government could not exist without the cooperation of
        
        the whole country, and he carefully refrained from increasing his own power,
        
        which he might easily have done, at the expense of popular government. He
        
        adopted the position of a national king, that is, of a leader of the nation,
        
        depending on national support, but in Scotland he maintained the position of a
        
        feudal lord. Like Victor Emmanuel of Italy, the “Re Galantuomo”,
        
        he made “keep troth!” his guiding maxim. He was unselfish and truthful,
        
        hardworking, religious, and affectionate. His life was frugal and simple; he
        
        loved field sports, but at the same time was a patron of art and was fond of
        
        literature. His chief advisers were his chancellor, Robert Burnell,
        
        and Accursi, the Italian jurist of Bologna. In
        
        appearance he was tall and well made, and his long legs earned for him the
        
        appellation of “Long-shanks”.
         Until the
        
        year 1290, he was chiefly engaged in conquering Wales, and passing some
        
        important legislation, the chief object of which was to remedy the abuses of feudalism.
        
        The Statute of Wales was passed in 1284. It introduced English laws, reformed
        
        the administration, and divided the territory of Llewellyn into counties,
        
        whilst it provided for the maintenance of some Welsh customs. It favored the
        
        building of castles and the settlement of English in many large towns.
         Edward’s
        
        son was made Prince of Wales in 1301.
         The
        
        legislation, although it had definite ends in view, was spread over the whole
        
        period. In 1275, the principle of customs was confirmed by a statute giving the
        
        crown half a mark on every sack of wool and a mark on each last of hides
        
        exported. The king also raised money by compelling persons holding land of
        
        twenty pounds a year and upwards to become knights and to pay the fees. In 1278
        
        commissioners inquired by what title landowners held property or jurisdiction
        
        once belonging to the crown, and in this way many royal rights were recovered.
        
        In 1279, the important Statute of Mortmain forbade the grant of lands to
        
        corporations. In 1285, a second Statute of Westminster was passed, which was
        
        really a code of existing English law, a first statute having been passed in
        
        1275. Besides, it added some important improvements, established and regulated
        
        the practice of entailing property, improved the system of itinerant judges,
        
        and ordered that people dwelling in the country should be answerable for
        
        robberies done in their district. The gates of towns were to be shut from
        
        sunset to sunrise, and other precautions taken against robbers and highwaymen;
        
        the Assize of Arms was revived, by which every man between the ages of fifteen
        
        and sixty was to have armour according to his rank,
        
        reviewed twice a year. In 1290 the important statute called Quia Emptores put an end to the splitting up of property
        
        by subinfeudation. In the same year, Edward banished the Jews from the kingdom,
        
        chiefly because of their practice of usury and their habit of clipping the
        
        coinage.
         The
        
        second half of Edward’s reign, from 1290 to 1307, was taken up with trouble in
        
        Scotland, Wales, and France, and the perfecting of the English constitution.
        
        Scotland was at this time divided into Lothian, which was part of the old
        
        kingdom of Northumberland, and was settled mainly by Normans; Strathclyde,
        
        inhabited by British; and Greater Scotland in the north. In 1290, after the
        
        deaths of Alexander III and his little granddaughter, “The Maid of Norway”,
        
        there were three serious claimants to the Scottish crown—John Balliol, Robert
        
        Bruce, and John Hastings, all descended from David, earl of Huntingdon, who was
        
        the brother of William the Lion. Edward decided for John Balliol, but his
        
        insistence on his feudal rights as Balliol’s overlord produced constant
        
        friction, and when war broke out between Edward and Philip IV of  France, owing to the French occupation of
        
        Gascony, an alliance was formed between Scotland and France, and Balliol
        
        repudiated his allegiance. The troubles with Scotland and France made it
        
        necessary for the king to raise money, and for that purpose a model Parliament
        
        was summoned in 1295, consisting of spiritual lords, lay peers, representatives
        
        of the lower clergy, two knights elected from each county, and two representatives
        
        from each borough and from each city.
         To return
        
        to the affairs of Scotland. At Easter, 1296, an army was collected at Newcastle,
        
        consisting of 4000 horse and 30,000 foot
          
          soldiers, while a considerable fleet sailed to the Gironde under Edmund of Lancaster and Hugh of Lincoln. On April 27, the Scotch were entirely defeated at Dunbar. The coronation stone
            
            was carried off from Scone to Westminster. Balliol
              
              was deposed, and imprisoned in the Tower of London, and
                
                Earl Warenne was made governor of Scotland. But in Gascony, the English
                  
                  were entirely beaten, many nobles were taken
                    
                    prisoners, and a large part of the country was recovered by the crown of France. This was accompanied by troubles at home. The new
                      
                      pope, Boniface VIII, had issued, before the Scottish
                        
                        expedition, a bull, known as Clericis Laicos, forbidding the
                          
                          king to levy taxes on the
                            
                            clergy, or the clergy to pay them. Hence, in 1297, Archbishop Winchelsey refused to pay taxes. Edward replied by
                              
                              declaring the clergy outlaws, and Boniface, finding Philip IV also resolute,
                              
                              had to explain away his bull. But Edward had offended not only the clergy by
                              
                              his taxation, but also the barons by his popular reforms, Cand the merchants by his seizure of their wool. The constable of England, Bohun, earl of Hereford, and the marshal, Bigod, earl of Norfolk, refused to go to Gascony. Edward,
                              
                              ostensibly reconciled to the clergy, exacted an aid, and went to Flanders to
                              
                              gain assistance against the French. But Bohun and Bigod opposed the collection of the aid, and, supported by
                              
                              Archbishop Winchelsey, demanded a confirmation of the
                              
                              Great Charter and of the Forest Charter, and the addition of articles
                              
                              forbidding the exaction of taxes without the consent of Parliament.
                               The
        
        Scotch were encouraged by the ill success of Edward in Gascony and by the
        
        revolt of the English nobles, and they found a leader in William Wallace, who,
        
        from being the son of a humble gentleman, rose to become a national William
        
        hero. He was assisted by William Douglas, and Robert Bruce, the grandson of the
        
        pretender. In September 1297, Warenne was
        
        entirely defeated at Cambuskenneth. The news reached
        
        Edward in Flanders, so that he determined to make peace with Philip IV, and
        
        devote himself to the reduction of Scotland. He also satisfied his discontented
        
        nobles by issuing a document at Ghent, which is called the “Confirmation of the
        
        Charters”, that no of the “aids, tasks, or prises”,
        
        except those which were customary, should be exacted without the consent of
        
        Parliament. This is a great landmark in English history. Peace at home being
        
        thus secured, William Wallace was defeated at Falkirk in 1298. But the
        
        intervention of Philip IV and Boniface VIII hindered Edward’s advance. Philip's
        
        quarrel with Boniface, however, enabled Edward to flout the Pope’s pretensions
        
        to be lord of Scotland. He also strengthened his position by marrying Margaret,
        
        Philip’s sister, and betrothing his son, Edward, to Philip’s daughter,
        
        Isabella. Returning to Scotland, he forced Comyn and
        
        the chiefs of the national party to submit, but Wallace still held out. A
        
        price was set upon his head, and, in August 1305, he was betrayed and brought
        
        to England. He was tried, condemned for high treason, dragged to Smithfield at
        
        the tail of a horse, and executed. His head was cut off and exhibited on London
        
        Bridge, while various parts of his body were exposed at Newcastle, Berwick,
        
        Perth, and Aberdeen. The task of defending Scotland now fell to the charge of
        
        Robert Bruce. Betrayed by John Comyn, he murdered him
        
        in the Franciscan church at Dumfries on January 29, 1306, and was crowned king
        
        of Scotland at Scone in March. But before Edward could reach the Scottish
        
        frontier Bruce was defeated on June 26, 1306, at Methven,
        
        by Aymer de Valence, earl of Pembroke, and had to fly
        
        for his life. Edward was preparing for a fourth expedition when he died at
        
        Burgh-on-Sands, near Carlisle, on July 7, 1307. He was the great lawgiver of
        
        the English nation; he called the English Parliament into existence, and gave
        
        it the control of taxation. He won for England a great position on the
        
        continent, but he secured the undying hatred of Scotland, which was not
        
        appeased for many years.
         EDWARD II
         His son,
        
        Edward II, who reigned for twenty years (1307-1327) was a man of very different
        
        character. He was idle, fond of pleasure, extravagant, and obstinate. He had
        
        some refined and cultivated tastes, but he did not possess his father’s
        
        manliness of character or strength of intellect.
         He was
        
        under the influence of unworthy favorites, the first of whom was Piers Gaveston, a Gascon knight, who
        
        had been banished by Edward I, but was recalled to the court on his death. In
        
        1310, Parliament was obliged to appoint The Lords  Ordainers,
        
        the chief of whom was Archbishop Winchelsey, to
        
        regulate the royal household and the government. Ordinances were published in
        
        1311 by which the government was transferred from the king to the barons, who
        
        had the nomination of the great officers of state, and power over war and
        
        peace. Parliament was to be summoned every year. Edward recalled Gaveston, who had been banished under the Ordinances, but
        
        he was attacked by the barons, excommunicated by Winchelsey,
        
        besieged in Scarborough Castle, and executed on Blacklow Hill. The government of the barons was not a success. Bruce acquired great
        
        power in Scotland, and, in 1314, at the battle of Bannockburn, the English were
        
        entirely defeated, which led to the practical independence of Scotland, and to
        
        risings in Wales and Ireland against English rule. More powerful than the king,
        
        at this time, was Thomas of Lancaster, the largest landed proprietor in
        
        England, related to the royal houses of both England and France. He was the son
        
        of Edmund, brother of Edward I, who once had the opportunity of becoming king
        
        of Sicily, and of Blanche of Artois, granddaughter of Louis VIII. He had
        
        received from his father the earldoms of Lancaster, Leicester, and Derby, and,
        
        owing to his marriage with a member of the family de Lacy, claimed the
        
        reversion of those of Lincoln and Salisbury. In 1316 he became president of the
        
        royal council, but the other barons would not submit to him, and civil war
        
        broke out.
         In 1317 Robert
        
        Bruce was defeated, and his brother slain at Dundalk,
        
        and English rule was established in Ireland; but in 1318 he captured
        
        Berwick.
         The place
        
        of Gaveston was now taken by the two Hugh Dispensers,
        
        father and son, who became favorites of the king. The English nobles took up
        
        arms against them,  and they were banished, but divisions among the barons
        
        gave the king his opportunity, and in 1322 they were recalled. Lancaster and
        
        his supporters, Clifford and Hereford, were defeated at Boroughbridge,
        
        and Lancaster, the possessor of five earldoms, was beheaded at Pomfret. He was not a better man than Edward, but he was
        
        regarded as a martyr by the people, and was reverenced as a saint. Edward had
        
        the good sense to throw himself upon the support of Parliament, and to declare
        
        that what concerned the whole nation should be treated of by a Parliament fully representative of the nation. During the remaining four
        
        years of his reign, however, England was ruled by the Dispensers.
         A truce
        
        was made with Scotland, and, in 1324, Charles IV, the new king of France, summoned
        
        Edward to do homage to him under pain of the forfeiture of his estates. Queen
        
        Isabella went to France instead, and Prince Edward did homage in the place of
        
        his father, the King. But Isabella and her lover Mortimer formed a conspiracy
        
        against the king, and returned to England in September 1326. In January 1327,
        
        Edward was deposed, and his son was proclaimed king in his place. Edward,
        
        rejected by his wife and son, was carried about from castle to castle, and was,
        
        at last, killed in a barbarous manner at Berkeley Castle, on September 27,
        
        1327. He was not a bad man, but he was weak, and he did not succeed in securing
        
        the support of either barons, clergy, or people, and thus he fell.
         EDWARD
        
        III
         His son,
        
        Edward III, reigned for fifty years (1327-1377). He was not a very great king,
        
        and was far inferior to his grandfather; but by his bravery, self-assertion,
        
        and magnificence he gained a distinguished name in English history, and has probably
        
        a greater reputation than he deserved. He was responsible for the war with
        
        France, which was unjust in its origin, and did the country much harm. But he
        
        took care to be on good terms with his Parliaments, and assisted the
        
        constitutional development of his country. He fostered English commerce and
        
        manufactures, and attempted to establish a powerful commercial union, which was
        
        to include the south of France, England, and the Netherlands. His long reign
        
        may be divided into four parts—first, the regency, which lasted three years
        
        (1327-1330); then the troubles with Scotland, from 1331 to 1336 ; then the war
        
        with France, from 1337 to 1360; and lastly, the constitutional struggle, which
        
        darkened the last seventeen years of his reign, from 1361 to 1377.
         The first
        
        act of Edward’s reign was to put an end to the war with Scotland, by
        
        acknowledging its independence under King Robert Bruce. This was effected by
        
        the treaty of Northampton, which was concluded in March 1328. Bruce died in the
        
        following year, and was buried in the abbey church of Dunfermline.
        
        His heart was to be taken by James Douglas to Jerusalem, but on the way Douglas
        
        was killed by the Moors at Granada : the heart, however, was saved and buried
        
        in Melrose Abbey. Bruce was succeeded by his son, David, a child of eight years
        
        old, who was crowned and anointed in Scone. Mortimer and Isabella meanwhile
        
        misgoverned England, but in 1330, Edward, who was already the father of a son
        
        by his Dutch wife, determined to take the government into his own hands.
        
        Mortimer was hanged at Tyburn, and Queen Isabella was
        
        confined for the rest of her life at Castle Rising. Peace reigned in England,
        
        but, in 1332, Edward Balliol rose against Bruce, defeated his troops, and was
        
        crowned in Perth as a vassal of the English crown. The Scotch did not approve
        
        of this, and asserted their independence, but they were defeated on Battle
        
        of July 18, 1333, at the battle of Halidon Hill,
        
        in  which Bamockbum was avenged. The flower of the
        
        Scottish chivalry, the Regent Douglas, the earls of Ross, Lennox, Carrick, and
        
        Sutherland, were among the slain, which are said to have numbered 30,000.
        
        Berwick was taken; David Bruce, and his wife Johanna, Edward's sister, fled to
        
        Holland; Balliol was recognized as king. But Balliol had soon to retire to
        
        Berwick, whilst the heads of the national party, Moray and William Douglas of Liddesdale, made an alliance with France. This led to
        
        a border war between Scotland and England, which lasted for a long time.
         Parliamentary
        
        government now received a further development by the division of Parliament
        
        into two houses. The knights of the shire first deliberated apart from the
        
        lords and then with the burgesses, so that, by 1341, the division into two
        
        houses was complete. The division of the House of Parliament into two houses,
        
        instead of three, as in France, was favorable to the unity of the
        
        realm. The knights of the shire were connected by birth with the nobles,
        
        but their interests lay with the people, and by sitting in the lower house they
        
        prevented the severance of classes, and the union of the clergy and the nobles
        
        against the people.
         What is
        
        called the Hundred Years’ War, between France and England, broke out in 1337.
        
        It arose from the help given by the French king to Bruce against Balliol, from
        
        his seizure of certain English lands in Guienne, and
        
        d from his interference in the wool trade between England and Flanders. Edward
        
        had, as allies, Robert of Artois, a vassal of Philip, who had been banished
        
        from France; the famous James von Arteveld, the
        
        brewer of Ghent; the Emperor Louis IV, the Bavarian, who was at enmity with the
        
        pope, and the princes of the empire in Brabant, Guelders, Juliers, and Cologne. Philip was assisted by the
        
        count of Flanders and the Scots. In 1340, Edward took the title of king of
        
        France, to which he had no right whatever. It was based upon the principle
        
        that, although the Salic Law forbade a woman to reign in France, it did not
        
        prevent a woman from passing on her claim to her son, provided such a son was
        
        born in the lifetime of his grandfather. Thus, Edward HI. was the grandson of
        
        Philip IV, the elder son of Philip III, while Philip VI was the son of Charles
        
        of Valois, who was the younger son. In this year was fought the battle of Sluys, in which the English obtained command of the Battles
        
        of sea, after which a truce was made between the Sluys and two countries. The next great event of the war was the battle of Crecy in
        
        1346, in which the victory was due to the efficiency of the English archers and
        
        the great good discipline of the English soldiers, as compared to the feudal
        
        levies of Philip—in other words, to the steadfastness and tenacity of the
        
        English, compared with the lighter and less solid character of the French. When
        
        Napoleon saw that he was defeated at Waterloo, he said, with a sigh, “It has
        
        always been the same since Crecy”. In the same year, the Scotch were defeated
        
        at Neville's Cross, and David Bruce was taken prisoner. When Calais was taken
        
        in August 1347, Edward III stood at the height of his power. In this year he
        
        founded the Order of the Garter, the first order of chivalry in the world,
        
        whose only rival was the Golden Fleece—its rival no longer. But just at this
        
        time occurred the terrible calamity of the Black Death, which killed a large
        
        part of the population of England and produced important economic results.
        
        Owing to the scarcity of laborers, and to the large profits to be derived from
        
        the trade in wool, sheep farming was introduced on a large scale, and the
        
        system of leasehold farming began. Landowners could not afford to pay laborers
        
        to work their estates, and therefore broke them up into holdings, which they
        
        stocked and let out to tenants for rent.
         Meanwhile
        
        a war of succession was raging in Brittany, which was decided in favor of the
        
        English; Count Charles of Blois, Philip's nephew, was defeated and imprisoned
        
        in the Tower. A Spanish fleet, which took advantage of the war between France
        
        and England to attempt piratical excesses, was defeated at Winchelsea in the summer of 1350.
         During
        
        these years, several important statutes were passed. The Statute of Laborers
        
        (1351) forbade laborers to receive higher wages than had been paid them before
        
        the Black Death. The Statute of Provisors protected the patrons of livings
        
        against the encroachments of the pope. The Statute of Treasons (1352) defined
        
        the crime of treason, the heavy penalties of which had hitherto been inflicted
        
        with excessive frequency. Henceforward some act designed against the king or
        
        his heir, or their wives, or the king’s eldest daughter, or one of certain
        
        specified minor offences had to be proved. The first Statute of Praemunire
        
        (1353) forbade the prosecution of suits in foreign courts, such as the pope’s.
        
        In the same year the Act of the Staples settled the number and site of the
        
        staple towns to which the wool export was restricted, and confirmed the
        
        privileges of the merchants.
         In 1355
        
        the war with France was renewed. The Black Prince wasted the south of France
        
        from Bordeaux to Narbonne, but, on the other hand, the Scotch, who were allies
        
        of the French, captured Berwick. This was avenged in the following year by the
        
        “Burnt Candlemas”, a name given to the devastation of
        
        the country round that border city by Edward III, and by the great battle of
        
        Poitiers, in which King John of France was taken prisoner.
         In 1357, peace
        
        was made with Scotland, and King David was released from prison, and in 1360
        
        the peace of Bretigny put an end, for a time, to the
        
        war with France. In this treaty the king of England renounced all claims to the
        
        throne of France and to the Plantagenet possessions north of the Loire,
        
        comprising Anjou, Maine, Touraine, and Normandy. The French king ceded to
        
        Edward the duchy of Aquitaine, Ponthieu, and Calais
        
        in full sovereignty, and was released on promising to pay a heavy ransom, which
        
        was of great service to the exhausted coffers of the English crown.
         After the
        
        peace of Bretigny, the war with France slumbered for
        
        nine years, but the time was occupied with important events, both foreign and
        
        domestic. In 1361, Edward the Black Prince, the hero of Poitiers and the
        
        darling of the English people, was married to Johanna of Kent. In 1362,
        
        Parliament enacted that no subsidy should be granted by merchants on the
        
        exportation of wool without the consent of Parliament, and the exportation of
        
        manufactured wool, as well as of butter and cheese and similar commodities, was
        
        forbidden. It was also ordered that the English language should take the place
        
        of Norman-French in the law courts.
         In 1366,
        
        Parliament repudiated the papal claims to tribute admitted by John in 1213. In
        
        Ireland the Statute of Kilkenny forbade English
        
        colonists in Ireland to intermarry with the Irish or to act as foster parents
        
        or sponsors to Irish children, or to adopt the Irish language, dress, or laws.
        
        All these provisions showed the growing strength of the national consciousness
        
        and confirmed the principle of “England for the English”. The Black Prince
        
        reigned in Gascony, and, in 1267, undertook an expedition to help Pedro the
        
        Cruel, king of Castile, against Henry of Trastamare,
        
        who was helped by the French. He won an important victory in the battle of Navaretta, and Pedro was restored to the throne. But war
        
        cannot be conducted without expense, and the Gascons complained at having to pay for an enterprise in which they had no concern. In
        
        1369, they appealed to the king of France, and the Hundred Years' War broke out
        
        again. The Constable du Guesclin now became the hero of France, and the English
        
        had to give way. In 1375, a truce was made which left only Calais, Cherbourg,
        
        Brest, Bayonne, and Bordeaux in English hands.
         The year
        
        1376 is memorable in the history of our country for both good and ill. The
        
        Black Prince, a worthy successor of Edward I, was in favor of popular
        
        government and opposed to the autocratic spirit of his uncle, John of Gaunt. By
        
        his influence, the Good Parliament, as it is called, established the principle
        
        of impeachment, by which Parliament for centuries controlled the king’s
        
        ministers. The ministers of the king and others who are accused of high treason
        
        are accused by the Commons and tried before the Lords. In this manner, Lyons
        
        and Lord Latimer and Alice Ferrers were found guilty
        
        and were punished. But, just at the moment when the Black Prince had set this
        
        seal to his reputation, he died, after a lingering illness, from the fever
        
        which he had contracted in the south of France. He died on June 8, 1376, and
        
        was followed to the grave, on June 21, 1377, by his father, Edward III, who was
        
        succeeded by his grandson, Richard II, a child ten years old. This year was
        
        also made memorable by the return of the pope from Avignon to Rome, and by the
        
        trial of the reformer John Wycliffe at Saint Paul's before Archbishop Sudbury.
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