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DECLINE OF EMPIRE AND PAPACYCHAPTER XIV.ENGLAND: EDWARD I AND EDWARD II
“The tomb
had not even been closed when we all who were there present, with a multitude
of your lieges, took an oath of fealty to yourself as lord and king, and did
all that was fitting for your lordship and honour, as far as was possible in
your absence.”
When
Edward, son of Henry III, read these words in the letter, sealed by sixteen of
the greatest English magnates, which brought to him at Trapani in Sicily the
news of his father’s death, they must have surprised and gratified him. This
was the first time that full legal recognition had been given to an heir before
coronation, and Edward may have seen in the confidence thus displayed the
reward for those long, patient, difficult years of youth and manhood in which
he had done his full duty as a son to a father whose defects in some directions
were as conspicuous as his merits in others, and yet had shown a spirit of
reasonableness, an appreciation of other people’s position, a readiness to
profit by experience, which had won him golden opinions. It was not all loss
that Edward had had to live through a civil war, had added to the normal round
of a king’s son experiences so unusual as confinement as a hostage and
appointment as a sheriff, and had watched men and theories at a time when
feeling and expression were at their most intense. He himself had for years
been facing problems of his own, for from early youth he had been ruler of wide
lands, not in England only, but in the Channel Islands, Ireland, and Wales, and
above all in Gascony, where conditions were peculiarly difficult. His latest
adventure had been on traditional lines, for the call to kingship reached him
when on his way home from crusade. The double note, of conservatism and
experiment, which was to sound throughout his reign, seemed already struck
before he began it.
It was not
till 19 August 1274 that Edward was crowned, and various matters, notably the
need to do homage to Philip of France for his lands overseas and to establish
order within them, kept him abroad till a few weeks before that date. When he
did return, he was given a great welcome. The populace liked his kingly looks,
his straight back and tall stature; the ring of great magnates, lay and
clerical, found him congenial and sufficiently conventional; while those who
had had business to do with him knew that he had qualities rarer among monarchs
of his age, a power of application and an appreciation of the expert.
For the
first twenty years of his reign Edward was in the main occupied with works of
peace, with the exception of the war in Wales. He had not been in England more
than three months, and his friend Robert Burnell had been chancellor for only
three weeks, when an important step was taken. Commissioners armed with a list
of some forty questions sought from juries in every county answers which filled
the bulky documents which came to be called the Hundred Rolls. Many of these
questions aimed at an exact definition of royal possessions—the number of the
king’s domain manors, the value of the farms of hundreds and cities, and so on.
Others concerned encroachments on royal rights. What lands and tenements have
been given or sold to religious or others, to the king’s prejudice? What
liberties “hinder common justice and subvert the royal power?” Others, again,
searched into the carelessness or cheating of officials, “even servants of the
king himself”—sheriffs who “for prayer, price, or favour” concealed felonies or
neglected their duties, escheators too harsh or too complacent in consideration
of a bribe, jacks-in-office of all sorts who made themselves a nuisance to
others or put public money to private uses.
Now such
questions were not very novel. Some of them had been gradually accumulating,
from Henry Il’s time on, in the lists which itinerant justices took with them
when they went on a general eyre. Others had
precedents in special inquests or reforming legislation such as that due to the
crises of Henry III’s reign. What was unprecedented was the persistence which
Edward shewed in attacking these problems, and the lasting body of law he built
up in his effort to find remedies. Masterful but not tyrannical, his general
policy was to respect all rights and overthrow all usurpations.
A long list
of great statutes stands to Edward’s credit. From his first parliament, in
April 1275, there emerged the First Statute of Westminster. Many of its
chapters dealt with the administrative abuses revealed by the recent
commission, which had completed its work about a month before parliament met.
Edward’s mistrust of the “franchises” which formed exceptions to administrative
uniformity was shewn in the ninth chapter, which threatened the lords of these
with confiscation if they or their bailiffs were negligent in the pursuit of
offenders against the king’s peace. In 1278 the Statute of Gloucester went
farther, ordering that the justices when next on eyre should enquire by writs of quo warranto, a process already in use in Henry
III’s time, into the grounds upon which the magnates claimed such franchises.
“We must find out what is ours, and is due to us, and others what is theirs,
and due to them.” Edward’s aim, it is clear, was from the first not abolition
but definition. Chartered privileges remained untouched, prescriptive right was
accepted as warranty if it ran far enough back, the date being fixed in 1190
at the coronation of Richard I, and even unwarranted liberties were generally
restored and secured by charter if an adequate fine was offered. The main
usefulness of the enquiry was to remind the great feudalist that he had duties
as well as rights, the more so if the possession of a franchise transferred to
his agents work which would normally have been done by royal officers. In 1285
the Statute of Winchester attacked local disorder. “Robberies, homicides, and
murders grow daily more numerous than they used to be,” said its preamble, and
therefore stringent penalties were laid down for any persons concealing felons,
the towns were ordered to shut their gates at night and keep watch on
strangers, while every man, armed in proportion to his means, was to be ready
to help when needed in pursuing offenders. In the same year was issued the
Second Statute of Westminster, usually known as De Donis Conditionalibus. This was intended to protect the
donors of “tenements which are often given away on some condition,” and did so
by restraining the right of the donee to alienate.
The interpretation of the statute at first was difficult, but by Edward II’s
reign it was already considered that the donee’s heirs, as well as himself, were bound. Fees tail, or strictly limited estates,
became common, and every capital lord, especially the king as the greatest of
such, had something to gain from the increased chances of reversion opened by
the limitation imposed. Another measure to the common interest of all
landowners was the Third Statute of Westminster, or Quia Emptores, issued in 1290. This dealt with land held
not upon condition but in fee simple, and while it preserved the right of
alienation for all who held such estates, it stipulated that in future the
buyer must hold his purchase from the lord of the seller by the same services
and customs as were attached to it before the sale. It thus prevented
“prejudice to magnates and others” caused by changes in the services due from
their vassals, but was most of all to the king’s advantage because it increased
the number of tenants who held in chief direct from himself, and by
stereotyping feudal relations robbed them of some of their vitality.
Enacted law
of the sort just analysed was only one of many means used by Edward in the
pursuit of his ideal of efficiency. Side by side with it must be put his
personal contact with his subjects by that incessant travelling for which he
was praised in the Commendatio Lamentabilis, his encouragement of groups outside the
central feudal ring, such as the burghers of towns which he founded or
favoured, and the lesser magnates of the type who had helped him to secure the
Provisions of Westminster; and above all his reliance upon expert professional
help instead of upon the amateurish assistance of great feudalists staggering
under the weight of their own dignity. By Edward’s time, the days were coming
to an end when a member of the king’s court, in close attendance on the king’s
person, could be a governmental man-of-all-work. Three great engines of
administration were in action. One was the Exchequer, the board of finance
which stored in its treasury revenue received, and, more important still,
checked and superintended the accounts of the official world. This board had “gone
out of court” into offices of its own at Westminster as early as the reign of
Henry II, when master and disciple held the famous Dialogue concerning the
Exchequer in “an oriel window close to the river Thames.” Less separate as yet,
but no longer always in the king’s company, was the Chancery, a general
secretariat which wrote and drafted innumerable royal charters, writs, and
letters, authenticated them by the king’s great seal, and kept in a series of
rolls registers of their contents. Finally, there was the Wardrobe, the staff
of clerks attached to the evermoving royal household, who combined financial
and secretarial functions, and might include in their purview anything and
everything from a pennyworth of pepper bought by the king’s cook up to a continental
war.
Now during
Edward’s reign there was little friction between these departments, and few
signs that outside critics thought any one of them less suitable than any other
for dealing with matters of public importance. “The whole state and realm of
England were the appurtenances of the king’s household,” and as the king was
neither weak nor wicked no harm came of that. Experience gained in one office
qualified for promotion in another. A typical civil servant of the time was
Edward’s first chancellor, Robert Burnell, Bishop of Bath and Wells—a man of
easy morals, careless of his episcopal duties, but an industrious chief
minister for eighteen years (1274-92). An Exchequer official, Walter Langton
the treasurer (1295-1307), succeeded to the first place in Edward’s confidence,
and resembled Burnell both in his preparation for office by long service in the
royal household and in his view of his bishopric rather as a reward for his
administrative skill than as an ecclesiastical obligation. The Wardrobe
trained many capable men, among them the clerk John of Benstead, who became the
keeper of Edward’s personal or privy seal.
Edward’s
standard of efficiency, however, was too high for some of his servants, and
when in 1289 he returned from a stay of three years abroad, he found that there
had been a breakdown in every rank of official life, from the pettiest bailiffs
up to great justices and heads of departments. Instantly he proceeded to
enquiry and punishment. An anonymous contemporary satirist was able to make a
good mock Scriptural story of the scandal. “The king... said to his servants,
‘Go through the land and walk round about it, and hear the voice of my people
which is in Egypt. For the comfortless troubles’ sake of the needy, and because
of the deep sighing of the poor, I will up, I will render vengeance to mine
enemies, and will reward them that hate me.’” Some guilty consciences had
already taken alarm. “The king...entered into a ship, and passed over, and came
into his own land. Now the children of Israel were walking on dry land by the
sea; and some of them adored with gifts, but some doubted.” Thomas of Weyland, chief justice of common pleas, a “Didymus who was
not with them when the lord came,” fled “to the fount of Babylon, and was there
in garments of sheepskin for fear of the judges.” In other words, he took
refuge in Babwell, a house of friars minor, called to
mind that long ago, before he was married, he had been a subdeacon, and put on
the friars’ habit, only to be starved out ignominiously. The peccant Exchequer
official, Adam of Stratton, once before disgraced, now met a second
retribution. “The king...entered his paradise that he might seek the man he had
created, and said, ‘Adam, Adam, where art thou?.. .Render an account of thy stewardship.’
Adam answered, ‘I cannot dig, to beg I am ashamed.’ And when he was accused of
many things he answered not a word. But at length came two false witnesses and
said, ‘This fellow said, ‘I am able to destroy your house in three days, and
never to build it up again.” He spoke and it was done, he commanded and it was
undone’. Then said the ruler unto him, ‘Hearest thou
not how many things they witness against thee?’ And he answered him never a
word, but went out and wept bitterly.” The satirist represents it as Edward’s
chief anxiety to “gather up the fragments that remain, that nothing be lost,”
and it is true that, since the supply of trained lawyers and men of business
was not unlimited, Edward was content in many cases with the exaction of enormous
fines, reinstating the culprit not very long afterwards. The lesson, perhaps,
would none the less linger in their memories with salutary effects.
Secular
matters were far from being Edward’s only preoccupation during these first
twenty years. He had to make up his mind about his relation to the Church, a
problem which confronted every king of the ages of faith, but which was acute
for him because his father had allowed the Church to assume undue political
influence. Edward, with a livelier sense than Henry of what was due to Caesar,
was equally anxious to pay his dues to God. Circumstances, however, forced him
on more than one occasion into an attitude of protest.
One almost
inevitable source of friction was the question of the appointment of bishops.
Ecclesiastical preferment was so natural a reward for good service, and a great
bishop so important a factor in politics, that even the most high-minded of
kings and Popes were tempted to ignore the injunction of the canons that a
bishop should be elected by the free choice of his cathedral chapter, to bring
influence to bear oil the electors, to utilise every chance of interference
given by their disagreements or mistakes, and sometimes to over-ride their
choice. During these years several elections were annulled to make room for
papal nominees, while twice in succession Popes rejected the choice made by
the chapter of Canterbury, and gave England two Mendicant Archbishops of their
own nomination—Robert Kilwardby the Dominican
(1272-78) and John Pecham the Franciscan (1278-92).
Edward accepted both with what Pecham himself called
“benignity,” and forbore in Pecham’s case to take
advantage of the fact that the clerk who wrote to announce the appointment had
forgotten to ask him to restore the temporalities of the see. He protested,
however, against this “assumption of the power of providing” to Canterbury. “It
seems to the king and his council that in this respect there may be prejudice
to himself and to the Church of which he is the patron and defender, especially
if the example is followed with regard to other churches in England”. His
disapproval was sharpened by personal disappointment, since the Canterbury
chapter in 1278 had selected his minister Robert Burnell, whom neither
persuasion nor threats could induce them to choose at the previous vacancy. In
1282 the Winchester chapter was similarly obliging, but again in vain.
No bold
advance of ecclesiastical claims seems to have been made during Kilwardby’s primacy, and it may have been for that reason
that in 1278 he was removed by the most courteous method possible, being
promoted to a cardinalate and thus recalled to Rome. His successor Pecham, however, netted himself round with activities of
every possible kind, made many enemies, and left written records of his work so
abundant that they have not yet been fully explored. When they are fully
examined, it is likely that we shall have to revise our traditional conception
of Pecham as the fussy prelate without a sense of
proportion, and do more justice to the courage, high principle, and zeal with
which he pursued his ends.
Pecham’s first
provincial council was held at Reading within six weeks of his arrival in
England (July 1279), and from it issued a large body of constitutions. The
archbishop was mainly concerned with purely spiritual matters, though the abuse
which angered him most, pluralities, touched politics closely, since kings were
accustomed to use benefices, in such numbers as might be convenient, to
supplement the salaries due to their servants. Edward, however, seems to have
made no protest over this, but took alarm at a section entitled “Concerning the
public announcement of sentences of excommunication,” which distinguished
eleven categories of persons liable to such sentences. The first group
comprised all who “maliciously deprived the Church of her right” by getting
royal writs of prohibition to stop cases in progress in ecclesiastical courts,
while the last included all who violated Magna Carta. “We order,” said Pecham, “that a copy of the charter of the lord king with
regard to the liberties of the Church and kingdom granted by him, well and
clearly written, shall be publicly posted in every cathedral and collegiate
church, in a place where it can be seen by all who enter, and that at the end
of a year, on the vigil of Easter or Pentecost, it shall be renewed, the old
one being removed and replaced by another, well and freshly written.” To this
Edward objected strongly, and when parliament met in the autumn, Pecham had to appear in person, declare “annulled and as
though never issued” the clause about writs of prohibition, withdraw three
other articles, and remove the copies of the charter from the churches. The
king supplemented this protest by a counter-offensive in the shape of the Statute
of Mortmain. Twenty years before, one of the Provisions of Westminster had
forbidden religious persons, in the technical sense of those who had taken
monastic vows, to acquire fiefs without the licence of the chief lord. This,
said the new statute, had been disregarded. In future, every buyer and seller
of land, whether a religious or not, must have licence before alienating it in
such a way that it would fall “into mortmain,” that is to say, into the dead
hand of a corporation whose grip would not be relaxed by the changes and
chances of this mortal life. The clergy declared indignantly that this violated
the opening promise of Magna Carta that “the English Church shall be free, and
have her rights entire and her liberties uninjured.” The king’s answer was that
all the statute had done was to compel men to seek a licence, which would not
be withheld unreasonably. A glance through the Chancery enrolments of the next
few years, indeed, shews plainly how little the pious founder was hampered by
the new law.
Archbishop Pecham had swallowed, but not digested, the rebuke of 1279,
and when in 1281 he summoned another provincial council, this time to Lambeth,
Edward suspected that there would be fresh trouble. Accordingly, before the
council met, he issued writs to all its members, forbidding them “to hold
counsel concerning matters which appertain to our crown or touch our person,
our state, or the state of our council,” reminding them that they were bound by
oath to defend the rights of king and kingdom, and warning them to do nothing
to the prejudice of either on pain of losing their temporalities. It has been
generally assumed, as the contemporary historian Thomas Wykes assumed, though
he ought to have known better, that hereupon “the archbishop in terror entirely
withdrew from his presumption”. Quite the contrary. Pecham reinserted, in the legislation at Lambeth, almost verbatim, the eleven articles
of Reading; prefaced them with an even more explicit assertion of
ecclesiastical liberty; and ended, though without renewing the order for the
publication of the charter, with instructions to the archdeacons to see that
their clergy kept their flocks well informed as to the significance of the
eleven clauses, including, of course, the article directed against violators of
the charter.
A month
later, Pecham followed this up by a remarkable letter
to the king. “By no human constitution,” he wrote, “not even by an oath, can we
be bound to ignore laws which rest undoubtedly on divine authority.” He went on
to trace the “bitter dissension” which had often prevailed between clerics and
kings, quoted Constantine, Canute, Edward the Confessor, and William I as
examples of good conduct, and ascribed the beginning of oppression to Henry I
and Henry II. “We are driven by conscience to write these things to you, most
excellent lord, as we wish to answer at the dreadful day of judgment. We humbly
pray you, incline your ear to our exhortations, for you are bound by oath to
root out all evil customs from your realm.” “A fine letter,” commented an
admiring clerk when he copied it out into Pecham’s register. Taken in conjunction with the Council of Lambeth’s defiance, however,
it might well have provoked a crisis comparable in magnitude with the Becket
controversy. Actually, Edward seems to have quietly accepted or ignored the
fait accompli. Royal writs of prohibition, however, continued to be freely
issued, the sheriff’s officers kept a jealous eye upon the proceedings n Church
courts, and many of the provisions of the Second Statute of Westminster (1285)
provoked loud criticism in clerical circles. In 1286 Edward went some distance
in concession, for the writ Circumspecte agatis issued in that year to itinerant justices in
Norfolk, where protest had been particularly vehement, recognised as within the
purview of the ecclesiastical courts not only cases concerned with wills and
marriages, but also cases of defamation, of spiritual correction, of violence
done to clerks, and of disputes about certain tithes. Yet this was the grant of
only part of the Church’s whole demand, and the dispute outlived both Pecham and Edward.
Very soon
Edward’s attention was distracted from internal affairs to other matters. The
Welsh war and its results occupied him from 1282 to 1285; delicate points about
the Scottish succession were under discussion long before Alexander Ill’s death
in 1286, and no long pause was possible in their consideration till John
Balliol had been chosen king in 1292; and continental problems became so
pressing that in 1286 Edward went abroad and did not come back to England for
three years. Wales and Scotland are dealt with elsewhere in this volume, but
foreign policy must now be considered.
When Edward
I became King of England, the throne of France was occupied by his cousin Philip
III (1270-85) and the official relations of the two countries rested on the
Treaty of Paris of 1259, which had been intended to put an end to the
uncertainties due to King John’s losses in northern France, but which in fact
inaugurated a new set of problems. The situation as Edward confronted it on his
accession was this. As “a peer of France with the title of Duke of Aquitaine,”
he owed liege homage to each successive French king. He was in possession
already of the main block of southern lands to which the treaty entitled him,
namely “ Bordeaux, Bayonne, Gascony, and the islands,” but he had not secured
the promised cession of the French king’s rights in the three dioceses of
Limoges, Cahors, and Perigueux, nor had the
“privileged” vassals in those districts been bribed or persuaded to transfer
their allegiance from France to England. Further, though in 1271 Alphonse of
Poitiers’ lands had escheated to the French Crown on his death without heirs,
Philip had not handed over those portions, notably the Agenais and Saintonge
south of the Charente, which were in such an event to go to England because
Alphonse had acquired them through his wife Joan, a great-grand-daughter of
Henry II of England. Edward’s double duty, then, was to fulfil his obligations
and exact his rights, and he expressed this neatly in the formula he used when
he duly did homage at Paris in 1273: “My lord king, I do you homage for all the
lands that I ought to hold of you.” Though some chroniclers thought at the time
that this referred to the lost northern lands, expansions of the same phrase
used later seem definitely to connect it with the treaty. “I become your man
for the lands which I hold of you on this side of the sea,” said Edward to
Philip IV in 1286, “according to the form of the peace which was made between
our ancestors.” A formula proposed for the homage that was never done by Edward
II to Louis X combined this with the earlier wording: “I become your man for
the lands which I hold and ought to hold on this side of the sea according to
the form of the peace made between our ancestors.”
For some
time relations remained amicable. In 1279, by the Treaty of Amiens, Philip
agreed to hand over the Agenais, and did so, while making promises, which,
however, remained unfulfilled, to enquire as to certain other English claims.
On the same day he also recognised the succession of Edward’s queen, Eleanor of
Castile, who had inherited from her mother the county of Ponthieu, a little
fief all sand, salt-marsh, and forest, round the estuary of the Somme. Again in
the same year, Edward was chosen to mediate, in a conference to be held at
Bayonne, between the Kings of Castile and France. This friendly attitude might
well have continued had not French politics become entangled in the struggle
between the Papacy and the Hohenstaufen. Philip Ill’s uncle Charles, Count of
Anjou and now, thanks to the Pope, established on the dismembered Hohenstaufen
lands as King of Sicily, began to gain increasing ascendancy over his nephew,
with the result that a breach gradually widened between France and England.
Charles won the alliance of the King of the Romans, Rudolf of Habsburg, who
thereupon threw over a project, much cherished by the English King, of a
marriage between his son and Edward’s daughter. Little spurts of temper
revealed Philip’s waning cordiality. He objected to Gascon charters being dated
“regnante Edwardo rege Anglie,” instead of “regnante Philippo rege Francie,” though he
consented as a compromise to the cumbrous formula “regnante Philippo rege Francie,
Edwardo rege Anglie tenente ducatum Aquitanie.” Cumulative friction might even have brought
about war, had not French attention been diverted when in 1282 the Sicilians
suddenly drove out the Angevins and offered their throne to Peter III, King of
Aragon. Pope Martin IV then declared Peter’s own throne forfeit, and offered it
to Philip’s second son Charles, afterwards Count of Valois. In the struggle
which followed to recover Sicily and conquer Aragon Philip fought, lost, and
died alone, for both Charles of Anjou and the Pope predeceased him.
By 1285,
therefore, the outlook for England seemed brighter. It was a great thing to
have the influence of Charles of Anjou removed, and the new French King, Philip
IV, seemed ready to be friendly. Edward did homage to him in June 1286, and in
August concluded a treaty at Paris, by which France at last resigned Saintonge
south of the Charente. Also, Philip welcomed Edward’s efforts, not very
successful, to bring the Anjou- Aragon contest to a peaceful end. It was
therefore without much fear of French interference that Edward now applied
himself to the internal problems of his duchy of Aquitaine, which occupied him
till 1289.
Neither
Ponthieu, with its strong French traditions, nor Guienne,
with the proverbial Gascon pride, fed, as a seventeenth-century author would
have it, by their diet of “garlic, onions, radishes, and the headiest of
wines,” were easy lands to rule. In the South, great nobles, fortifying
themselves in their castles, terrorised the countryside, defied royal orders,
plunged light-heartedly into anybody’s quarrel. The king-duke’s natural allies
against such touchy lordlings would be found in the towns, whether the great
ports of Bordeaux and Bayonne or the little walled settlements up the river-valleys.
Most of these lived by the wine trade, most had therefore reason to value the
English market, and all had an interest in maintaining peace as against war.
Edward tried to encourage urban life both by a conciliatory policy to existing,
and often exacting, towns, and by foundations of those artificial, privileged
towns which in the South were known as bastides. All up and down the lands once
English, there sleep in the sun to this day quiet villages, with their gates
and walls, their arcaded central square, their straight streets, which are the
remnants of such bastides. One, which Edward founded in the outskirts of
Bordeaux during his long stay, was to keep green by its name of Bath the memory
of his friend Burnell and Burnell’s English see. Edward carried to Gascony,
too, his love of orderliness, trying to stimulate his officials as well as to
insist on the obedience of his subjects. When domestic affairs recalled him to
England, he had done much, but not enough to secure a peaceful future. By 1292 France
felt that the time was ripe for fresh measures against a king-duke whose very
presence within her borders, quite apart from his personal merits or defects,
offended her pride.
New
perplexities, therefore, opened with Edward’s twenty-first regnal year, and in
meeting them he could no longer shew his former resilience and vitality. “Never
was that king sad at heart,” wrote a contemporary, “save on the death of those
dear to him.” But by this time Edward had often had cause for such sorrow.
Three little sons had died, though in a fourth, his namesake, he now had a
sturdy heir. The wife, whose gracious comradeship had meant so much to him, lay
in Westminster Abbey, and not twelve months after her death Edward lost his
mother also. Burnell died in October 1292, while two months later the death of Pecham removed an equally familiar, if less congenial,
figure. This series of losses combined with external circumstances to make the
years 1290 to 1292 a real dividing point in the reign. Alone, Edward had to
turn to breast a sea of troubles.
Mutual
irritation between France and England was now rapidly increasing. However
little the details of the tale-telling on both sides can be trusted, there was
certainly abundant excuse at any moment for either country to take offence.
Disputes at sea or in the ports often developed de verbis ad verbera, and while
peace still nominally reigned, in 1293 a great fight took place off Saint-Mahé (Saint-Matthieu) near Brest, between Norman and Gascon
sailors and their respective supporters. In the autumn Philip summoned Edward
to appear in January 1294, to answer before the Parlement of Paris for his subjects’ misdeeds. Edward did not go in person, but tried to
arrive at an understanding through his brother Edmund, Earl of Lancaster, who
was thought likely to be congenial because he was the step-father of the
French queen and had for years shared with her mother the rule of the county of
Champagne. The subsequent negotiations delayed but did not avert the outbreak
of war, for though the English agreed to make a formal temporary surrender of
six Gascon castles, in recognition of Philip’s rights as overlord, the Parlement of Paris declared Edward contumacious and his
duchy forfeit. Whether Philip had or had not intended this from the first, at
any rate he now approached the execution of the court’s sentence with the
advantage that he was already in possession of the strongest places in Gascony.
The war
which now began lasted in theory till 1303, but there was no fighting after
October 1297, and even before that date there were lengthy intervals of truce
or inactivity. Edward himself was long detained in England, and derived little
good from expeditions dispatched to Gascony. For five years the French could
not be dislodged from Bordeaux, and English occupations of towns higher up the
Garonne, such as Rions (1294), Langon and Saint-Macaire (1297), proved to be only
temporary. Bayonne opened its gates in the very first campaign, but little
progress was made from this base, and in 1297 the English suffered a
considerable defeat not far away, near Bonnegarde.
Systematic efforts were made to organise English shipping, yet the French were
active in the Channel and once raided Dover. In 1297 Edward, who had allied
himself with the Count of Flanders and some of his neighbours, went over in
person to lead an attack on France from the north, but found his allies
quarrelsome and the enemy strong, and was glad to make a truce within two
months. Philip, however, was busied with troubles of his own, and could not
press his advantage. Successive truces culminated in the Treaty of Montreuil
(1299), by which Edward was to many Margaret, Philip’s sister, while his heir
Edward was to be betrothed to Isabella, Philip’s daughter. These marriage
connexions, intended to increase cordiality, were practically the only
satisfaction Edward got out of the war, which ended officially in 1303, when
another Treaty of Paris restored the status quo ante. On domestic affairs the
effect of the war was all to the bad, for it was an irritant, an expense, and a
distraction, and it was used by English malcontents as a weapon of offence.
Edward had
begun by explaining the whole ground of quarrel to a parliament of magnates at
London in June 1294. “He sought their advice and their help,” says the
chronicler Hemingburgh, “and he swore that, had he no
better following than one boy and one horse, he would pursue his right even to
death and avenge his injuries; but they all with one accord answered him and
said that they would follow him to life or death.” Liberal aids were promised,
the feudal army was to meet at Portsmouth on 1 September, available ships were
organised into three groups under three leaders, envoys were sent abroad to
make alliances with Adolf of Nassau, King of the Romans, and others, and
criminals were offered pardons if they would serve in Gascony. But the war
fever began to cool as the seriousness of the task in hand became clearer.
Officials went round to take inventories of the treasures and coin of the
religious houses, commandeering what they found for the use of the king
whenever he should signify his need of it. The sheriffs were ordered to seize
all wool, wool-fells, and leather—England’s great exports—even within
liberties, and to permit merchants to regain their property only upon the
payment of a customs duty of 40#. on the sack instead of the half mark (6s.
8d.) which had been granted by Edward’s first parliament in 1275. Indignant
public opinion, which at the time had recognised a novelty in the custom of 1275,
now began to label it, in contrast, the “ancient” custom, while the fresh
demand was a “maletolt” hard to endure. In September
came the turn of the clergy, who were ordered to contribute one-half of their
revenues. “This they granted liberally and graciously,” say the royal letters
patent, but as a matter of fact the demand excited great indignation, and the
dean of St Paul’s, trying to voice his colleagues’ protests in the king’s own
terrifying presence, fell down in a fit and died. In November, with the
consent of a parliament to which county members were summoned as well as the
magnates, and after consultation of the towns by royal officials, a tax was
granted on the personal property of all persons whose moveables amounted in value to ten shillings or over, at the rate of one-tenth in the
counties and one-sixth in the cities and boroughs. This grant was the fourth
and highest of its sort made during the reign. As the collection of the taxes
proceeded, feeling became sourer, and was further embittered as bad news came
from abroad, French invasion seemed likely, and alarmist rumour mingled with
disloyal talk.
One
hindrance after another came in Edward’s way. At Michaelmas 1294 he was called
away from Portsmouth, with the bulk of the forces assembled there, to put down
revolts in Wales. When these were suppressed, by July 1295, he returned to find
that Scotland had made an alliance with France, cemented by the betrothal of
Edward Balliol, heir to the throne, to the daughter of that Charles of Valois whose
invasion of Gascony in the spring had been so disastrous for the English.
Edward took this as a disloyal action, and summoned King John to account for
his conduct at Berwick in 1296. On his refusal to appear, war began, and though
in five months’ campaigning Edward reduced Scotland, deposed John, and annexed
his kingdom, the position could not be maintained, and for the rest of the
reign war with Scotland was generally either smouldering or flaring.
The year
1295 was thus one of anxiety in several directions, and Edward determined to
explain his difficulties to an assembly summoned to Westminster for 13
November. His desire to make a telling and extensive appeal is shown not only
by the fact that in the writs to the prelates his Chancery clerks felt that
this was an appropriate occasion on which to quote the tag from the Codex of
Justinian, “What touches all should be approved by all,” while the archbishops
and bishops were told to secure the presence of their archdeacons, the prior of
each cathedral chapter, one proctor of that chapter and two of the diocesan
clergy; not only by the stress laid in the writs to the lay magnates upon the
“dangers which at this time threaten the whole of our realm”; but also by the
instructions given to the sheriff’s to cause two knights from each county, with
two citizens or burgesses from each city or borough within it, to be elected
and empowered to act on behalf of those they represented at the same assembly.
What Edward could never have foreseen was that after many centuries had gone
their way, and England had developed a constitution in which a representative
parliament with wide powers was a central feature, historians and politicians
would go back to this assembly of November 1295 and see in it, as Stubbs saw,
“a pattern to all future assemblies of the nation.” That idea, the use of the
term “the Model Parliament,” and concentration upon the presence of
representatives as the outstanding interest, has taken a surprisingly firm hold
upon historical teaching and writing, so that even scholars who rightly
challenge much that used to be said about Edward I’s parliaments themselves
unconsciously take a tone which implies that, even to the thirteenth century,
“parliamentary origins” were of vital interest. It seems desirable, therefore,
to pause at this date, and to set forth three considerations which seem worth
attention.
The first
concerns the actual word “parliament”. This, like many other hard-worked
medieval words, served a variety of uses, linked together by a common idea,
which in this case was that of a parley, a conversation. Such a parliamentum might take place between envoys of
different countries, or the clergy in convocation, or the king’s councillors
met in smaller or greater numbers, or monks whom their superiors thought too
talkative. Gradually, however, and quite naturally, the parliamentum which took place in a solemn court or assembly became more conspicuous and
oftener on men’s lips than the others, and the term was transferred from the
talk itself to the assembly in which the talk occurred. Plenty of instances
occur in chroniclers of the thirteenth century. Official documents were slower
about adopting the usage, and the phrase most common in Chancery writs
summoning men to what we and the chroniclers should call a parliament is colloquium
et tractatus. In judicial connexions, however,
by 1290 at any rate, the law had come to recognise a special peace which
protected men durante parliamento.
Mr H. G. Richardson, to whose work, alone or in collaboration with Mr G.
Sayles, on parliamentary antiquities medievalists owe much, infers from this
that the judicial aspect of parliament’s activities outweighed all others. “We
would, however, assert that parliaments are of one kind only and that, when we
have stripped every non-essential away, the essence of them is the dispensing
of justice by the king, or by someone who in a very special sense represents
the king.”
Is it
necessary, however, to draw this inference? Fads of office custom are often
quite enough to account for the difference of phraseology used by clerks
drawing up different records, and the lawyers would naturally stress that
aspect of parliamentary activity which specially concerned them. From what can
be seen of the working of the medieval mind in other fields, it seems
exceedingly unlikely that in this one the thirteenth century had already worked
out a water-tight division of functions. This modem criticism, however, has
been of great value in warning us that it is misleading and dangerous to limit
our definition of Edwardian parliaments by so naming them only when some great
piece of legislation is in the wind, or taxation in progress. Still less, of
course, should we nowadays be prepared to confine the term to assemblies in
which a representative element was included. We shall think most sanely and
most historically about Edward’s parliaments if we so name an assembly whether
it is legislating, advising, granting taxes, or dealing with judicial business,
and whether it does or does not contain representatives. There is no advantage,
but rather actual danger, in seeking to introduce precise definition into an
age that had not yet defined.
In the
second place, however, we must admit that even if the thirteenth century itself
did not feel that there was anything epoch-making about the addition to
parliament of something besides the old magnate element, that addition
undoubtedly has an interest for later ages in view of subsequent developments.
Even granting that, we must remove the parliament of 1295 from its pedestal.
The fortunate discovery in our own time of original writs addressed to four
sheriffs, as well as fragments of returns from several counties, placed beyond
doubt the fact that at the first parliament Edward ever met, in April 1275,
there were arrangements for representation not unlike, though not identical
with, those made in 1295. If Edward made a model at all, then, he made it
twenty years earlier. But in fact there was no model. To Edward’s second
parliament, in the autumn of 1275, he invited knights but no burgesses. Later
on, sometimes representatives were summoned, sometimes they were not, and
whether they were or were not present, chroniclers at any rate, if not
officials, were ready to call the assembly a parliament. The inclusion of
clerical representatives did not persist. All that can be said with certainty
is that by the end of Edward I’s reign the custom of afforcing the magnate nucleus
with representatives was less of a novelty than it had been in his father’s
time. It is dangerous to try to reduce thirteenth-century doings to too rigid a
system; to look for theoretical or deliberate constitutional ideas; to feel it
necessary to explain action as due to imitation of similar action in other
countries. Opportunism and the king’s initiative decided who should be summoned
to any given parliament. And incidentally a warning may be added that the
“model” is almost as unreal when applied to the magnate element as to the
representative. Edward summoned his officials and his great men; he would have
been surprised if anyone had told him that in so doing he was initiating
anything like that “hereditary peerage” which later on served the aristocratic
opposition so well as a weapon against royal aggression.
The third
and last point worthy of notice is that one contemporary, at any rate, when
enumerating Edward’s merits as king, drew attention to his parliamentary
policy. This was John of London, author of the Commendatio Lamentabilis, who placed the allusion in the mouth of
Edward’s widow Margaret. “Call on the Lord,” she cries to Mary and Martha, “if
perchance He may rouse him from sleep. For had He been here, he had not died,
my lord and my king, yea, a king terrible to all the sons of pride, but gentle
to the meek of the earth. To the peace of the flock committed to his charge he
gave every thought, every word, every deed. Well know we that for the peace of
his people he assembled parliaments, made treaties, allied himself with
strangers, threatened battle, struck terror into the hearts of princes.” The
exact significance of such praise is hard to gauge. Possibly the writer had in
mind Edward’s effort, frustrated by circumstance in the later part of his
reign, to hold two parliaments a year with regularity, a practice which would
have obvious advantages from the point of view of suitors and petitioners.
Perhaps, on the other hand, the allusion has no legal flavour whatever, and
merely approves Edward’s willingness to explain to his assembled subjects what
he was about when demanding their help. At any rate, it is interesting to find
that parliament was thought worthy of mention.
Opposition
to the Crown, 1296-97
We must
return, however, to the main thread of our story. Edward found his parliament
of November 1295 very unresponsive. The laymen reluctantly granted a tax on
personal property at the rate of one-seventh in the cities and boroughs and
one-eleventh elsewhere, while the clergy were even slower about agreeing to pay
a tenth for one year, or for a second if the war should last so long. Their
reluctance was shared and supported by the new primate, Robert of Winchelsea,
whose consecration had been delayed by a vacancy in the Papacy till September
1294, though he had been elected two years earlier. Scrupulous and obstinate,
Winchelsea found his position very difficult, and doubly so when in February
1296 Pope Boniface VIII by the bull Clericis laicos forbade rulers to exact, or clerics to pay,
extraordinary taxes without papal authorisation. When in the autumn of 1296
parliament met at Bury St Edmunds, Winchelsea pointed out to the clergy that
their promise of a subsidy clashed with this prohibition, and after
considerable delay they decided that they were “unable to discover for the
present any sure way of giving help by means of a contribution or tax.”
There
followed the worst dispute the reign had yet seen. The king outlawed the clergy
and declared their lay fiefs forfeit; the archbishop and his agents retaliated
by repeated publication of the excommunication of any who should disobey the
papal decree. However, both sides gradually cooled. Before Easter 1296,
Winchelsea agreed not to penalise any clergy whose consciences would allow them
to ransom their possessions by a contribution of one-fifth, and in July he
himself was publicly reconciled with Edward. Meanwhile the Pope had receded
step by step, till in July, by the bull Etsi de statu, he surrendered completely. This news,
with a victory of William Wallace followed by a raid so thorough that “the
praise of God ceased in every church and monastery from Newcastle-on-Tyne to
Carlisle,” brought the clergy to a more accommodating attitude, and in October
they granted one-tenth in the southern province and one-fifth in the northern.
The following year, however, opposition arose in a new quarter. In February
1297 Edward proposed to the earls and barons assembled at Salisbury that some
of them should go to Gascony, while he himself was campaigning in Flanders.
“Everybody began to make excuses.” Humphrey de Bohun,
Earl of Hereford, the constable, and Roger Bigod,
Earl of Norfolk, the marshal, declared that their hereditary functions could
only be exercised in the king’s company. After sulking apart through the
spring, they came with the rest when the army assembled at London in July, only
to put their protest in a fresh form, which the king himself made public in
letters patent issued before he sailed. The two officials, he said, refused to
perform their duties on the pretext that to do so would be to admit an
obligation, whereas they had come at request only. When he appointed
substitutes they withdrew in anger refused repeated overtures, and spread a
report to the effect that the king had refused to consider “certain articles
for the common profit of the realm, whereas they had never placed any such
before him. “Among the said articles, so it is said, there is mention of
oppressive action which the king has taken in his realm, as well he knows, such
as the aids which he has often demanded from his people; but to this he was
forced by reason of the wars which broke out in Gascony, Wales, Scotland, and
elsewhere.... It vexes him greatly that he has aggrieved and troubled his
people so much, and he begs them to hold him excused, as one who did not do
these things in order to buy land, or tenements, or goods, or towns, but to
defend himself and themselves, and on behalf of the whole nation.”
The fact
was that Edward’s views were longer than those of most of his subjects, and
that until now he had shown little patience in explaining them. To carry out
ends which roused no lasting general enthusiasm, he was using means which
excited general alarm. Measures which to himself appeared regrettable but
temporary expedients seemed to others to be dangerous precedents which might
harden into custom. It was now three years since the first French expedition
had been summoned, the first war subsidy imposed, the first maletolt exacted. Yet military demands were as insistent as ever, subsidies constantly
required, and the maletolt had just been taken again
at the same rate as in 1294. Recent assurances that the extraordinary taxes
should not be made precedents, the offer of pay to those who would serve in
Flanders as a matter of grace instead of obligation, satisfaction made in
tallies to all whose wool was seized, and proclamations in mildly apologetic
tone like the one quoted above came too late. The leaders of public opinion
proceeded, as soon as Edward had left the country, to a decisive protest.
It had
become the habit of the thirteenth century to put such protests into the shape
of a demand for the confirmation of those two charters, the charter of
liberties and the charter of the forest, which were the final version of the
charter extorted from John. The magnates now made the usual request, and also
drafted six additional articles. No tallage or aid
was to be imposed in future except with the consent of spiritual and temporal
magnates, knights, burgesses, and other freemen; corn, wool, and the like must
not be seized against the will of their owners; clergy and laity of the realm
must recover their ancient liberties; the two earls and any who agreed with
them must suffer no penalty for their refusal to go to Gascony; the prelates
must read aloud the present charter in their cathedrals, and cause to be
proclaimed in every parish church, twice a year, the excommunication of all who
should neglect it. Armed with this ultimatum, and in more than metaphorical
readiness for battle, the magnates arrived in London for parliament, at which
the absent king was represented by his heir Edward of Carnarvon, a boy of
thirteen. The result was inevitable. On 10 October, under the great seal which
remained in England, the charters were confirmed, and on 5 November, at Ghent,
under the privy seal, the king ratified this confirmation, together with
additional articles. The document he thus issued, written in French, summarised
the demands which the magnates had drafted in Latin, but did not adopt the same
order or translate the exact words, and added clauses which reserved to the
Crown “the ancient aids and prises due and customary” and “the custom on wool,
skins, and leather already granted by the commonalty of the realm.”
Both Edward
and his subjects attached enormous importance to this concession, and for four
years longer the king was suspected, probably with justice, of trying to
withdraw, if not from his obligations, at any rate from these definite pledges.
He failed to do so. The magnates lost no chance of giving publicity to his
promises before assembled parliaments or armies, and pressed him steadily
towards their execution. In 1298 a bishop and three earls had to swear on his
behalf that he would give further security as soon as opportunity served; in
1299 a clause “saving the rights of our crown,” appended in Lent to a further
confirmation, had to be withdrawn at Easter; in 1300 twenty Articuli super
Cartas were issued; and on 14 February 1301 the king was driven at last, by the
arguments and menaces of a parliament at Lincoln, to grant a new confirmation
of charters and articles, thus giving solemn and final shape to the concession
first made on foreign soil. Rather more than five years later Pope Clement V
absolved the king from his oath to the charters and annulled the additional
articles, but the only advantage Edward took of his release was to revoke
certain disafforestments which had been made.
It was a
curious fate which thus extorted from the well-intentioned Edward I constitutional
securities comparable in solemnity with that first great charter wrung from
King John, and it was the more exasperating to the king because his critics had
applied logically principles he himself had commended to their notice. “It is
abundantly clear,” Edward had said before the parliament of 1295, “that common
dangers should be met by remedies devised in common.” In his own headlong
pursuit of his military ambitions, flinging aside conventions, precedents, and
safeguards, the magnates had discerned just such a common danger, and in the
remedy devised for it they had defined explicitly common action as the consent
“of archbishops, bishops, and other prelates, earls, barons, knights,
burgesses, and other free men.” Further, they had clung to their demands so
perseveringly for years after the first outbreak, that Edward could not sweep
them away as war clamour to be forgotten when better times came. So the Crown
was once again committed solemnly and publicly to the principles of Magna
Carta, viewed from a standpoint more than narrowly feudal. The concession was
all the more valuable because remedies of actual recent abuses had been added
to the nucleus consisting of the original charters. This was a real
constitutional triumph.
In the last
years of his life Edward became a lonely and wrathful old man. He had had much
to disappoint him. His French efforts led only to an unremunerative peace; the
Scottish war was a Penelope’s web where, as one chronicler said, every winter
undid every summer’s work; there were terrible bills to pay, and the charter
struggle had left a sting behind it. A new generation stood about the old king,
and there were few magnates of age and dignity sufficient to oppose or
adequately to advise him. Queen Margaret was young enough to be his daughter,
and was sometimes, indeed, ally and spokeswoman of her step-children in their
quarrels with their father. His heir Edward, created Earl of Chester and Prince
of Wales in 1301, knighted and made Duke of Aquitaine in 1306, fell in 1305 into
complete disgrace for months on account of his impudence to his father’s chief
minister, Walter Langton. The earldom of Cornwall escheated to the Crown in
1300, and that of Norfolk in 1306, at a convenient time for its lands to be
used to make provision for the king’s little sons by his second marriage,
Thomas of Brotherton and Edmund of Woodstock. Twice Edward quarrelled with
Anthony Bek, Bishop of Durham, and in revenge annexed
the temporalities of that great see.
Windfalls
of this kind, combined with the utmost ingenuity in securing all ordinary
sources of revenue, and a great deal of borrowing besides, were insufficient to
meet Edward’s increasing financial needs in these closing years. The political
effect was bad, for Edward was sometimes led by a money lure into compromising
with his usual desire for thoroughness, and at other times into pushing his
legal rights in a way that was resented. In 1303 he made a bargain with the
foreign merchants in the Carta mercatoria,
which granted alien traders wide privileges in England in return for their
promise to pay, on all goods exported or imported, additional duties beyond
“the ancient customs due and accustomed.” This was much disliked, and English
merchants firmly refused to follow suit. It is to Edward’s credit that in the
spring parliament of 1305, when he imagined that his Scottish campaigns were
over, he undertook work of his old kind for the improvement of public order by
starting an enquiry into the misdeeds of “trailbastons,”
or clubmen, who were terrorising the countryside. As war was renewed in 1306,
however, there was little hope of further action of the same sort.
With the
Church, Edward’s relations varied in these later years. Boniface VIII regarded
him, at any rate in the language of written compliment, as an obedient son of
the Holy See, and bent his energies, not as Pope but as a private person, to
the settlement of the French quarrel. On the other hand, in 1299 he claimed
Scotland as a papal fief, and assured Edward that “it was not, and is not, a
feudal possession of either your ancestors or yourself.” In 1301, after
consultation with his magnates at the parliament of Lincoln, Edward replied
that a contrary belief had been inscribed upon the tablets of his memory by the
pen of the Most High. After the fall of Boniface in 1303, and the short pontificate
of Benedict XI, the election of a Gascon archbishop as Clement V gave Edward a
friend in the papal chair, who not only released him from his oath to the
charters, but also, out of respect for his accusations, suspended Archbishop
Winchelsea and called him to account in the Curia. Winchelsea had continued to
side with the opposition after the reconciliation of 1297, and had offended
Edward further by a personal attack on his treasurer Langton. He remained in
exile for the rest of the reign, while the temporalities of his see were
administered by the papal agent, William de Testa.
Testa’s
name is memorable because it was the centre of a protest made against papal
oppression by “earls, barons, magnates, and commonalty” assembled at Carlisle
in January 1307. The points brought forward were just such as those which were
the basis of anti-Roman legislation half a century later—the preferment of
foreigners by papal provision, the exaction of first-fruits, the introduction
of innovations in the collection of Peter’s Pence, and so on. It was alleged
that papal business was growing so much that the Pope intended in future to
keep four agents in England instead of one. Little came of the protest except
that the matter was taken up with Cardinal Peter of Spain, the papal legate who
now arrived to proclaim the peace with France and to make final arrangements
for the marriage of Isabella with Edward, Prince of Wales.
All the
king’s thoughts were now bent upon the invasion and subjugation of Scotland.
He had replied to Robert Bruce’s defiance in 1306 with terrible threats, and
had sworn before the crowds in Westminster Abbey on the day on which his son
was knighted that, “dead or alive, he would march into Scotland to avenge the
injury of Holy Church and the death of John Comyn and
the perjured faith of the Scots.” A man of sixty-eight has no time to spare,
and Edward was impatient for his opportunity. Even as it was, he was too late.
He was still south of Solway, on the marshes of Burgh-by-Sands, when he died on
7 July 1307.
The
Articles of Stamford
Edward I’s
death may not have seemed to contemporaries an unmixed evil. It led to a
welcome pause in campaigning, and brought home some exiled victims of the old
king’s wrath, such as Archbishop Winchelsea, Bishop Bek,
and above all Peter of Gavaston. The son of a Gascon
gentleman who had served Edward I well, Peter had been brought up with the heir
to the throne, but had developed into such an empty-headed, extravagant,
dragon-fly of a man that the old king had come to dread his influence, and in
1307 had banished him. He could not prevent his son from establishing the exile
in idle comfort at Crecy, in his own county of Ponthieu, and now the new king
at once recalled Peter, gave him the great earldom of Cornwall, and married him
to Margaret, niece of the king and sister to the Earl of Gloucester.
Among the
great families the king had many relatives and some staunch friends. The aged
Earl of Lincoln, and the rising baron Hugh Despenser the elder, had both
interceded for him when estranged from his father. The warmest partisan of all,
his sister Joan, was now dead, but her son Gilbert, Earl of Gloucester, kept up
his mother’s tradition. Aymer de Valence, Earl of
Pembroke, had royal blood in his veins, and it was to Aymer’s sister Agnes that Edward in his youth had written, “You are and wish to be our
good mother....Command us as your son.” John of Brittany, Earl of Richmond, had
been brought up with Edward’s elder brothers; Humphrey, Earl of Hereford, had
married his sister Elizabeth; Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, Leicester, and Derby,
was his first cousin.
In
personality, Edward had much to commend him to his subjects. Though of a
delicate family, he was unusually strong, a fine, upstanding young man. He was
generous if prodigal, frank if indiscreet. He liked display and fine clothes,
and found amusement in gambling, in practical jokes, and in the shows of
actors1 and buffoons. Contemporaries thought it rather shocking that he was
fond of bathing and swimming, and of the company of people who taught him to
ditch and drive and thatch and work at a blacksmith’s forge. Probably they were
not equally scandalised at his scanty education and inability to read Latin,
for in 1312 the greatest of the magnates chose on one occasion to boast rather
than confess that they “had no knowledge of letters, but were learned in
knighthood and the use of arms.” In religion, Edward added to the conventional
devotions and benefactions demanded by his position some personal tastes,
especially a great affection for the Dominicans. Within four months of becoming
king he gave a site in the park at King’s Langley in Hertfordshire, the home of
his youth, for the erection of a Dominican priory.
Public
opinion noted with rising disapproval Edward’s entire absorption in his friend
Earl Peter. When he went over to France to be married in January 1308, he left
Peter as custos of the realm during his absence. When he was crowned, in
February, the order of the procession made his preferences scandalously plain.
If to the Earls of Hereford, Lincoln, and Warwick, to the Marshal, Chancellor,
and Treasurer, there were allotted honourable places and significant emblems;
if Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, bore that sword Curtana which Matthew Paris had
declared to be symbolic of the right of its bearer to coerce even a king; it
was Peter who, flaunting in purple and pearls instead of the conventional cloth
of gold, immediately preceded the king himself, bearing the most sacred of all
the regalia, St Edward’s crown. The indignation excited by this and similar marks
of special favour grew hotter when it was found that anyone who ventured a
remonstrance became the butt of venomous witticisms on the part of Peter,
received by Edward with delighted appreciation.
The
situation soon became intolerable. In May 1308 Edward had to agree to Gavaston being exiled for a second time, though he gilded
the pill by appointing him his lieutenant in Ireland, and within a year
wheedled the magnates into permitting his return. However, Peter soon gave
offence again, and when in 1310 a committee of magnates, who came to be called
the Lords Ordainers from the work they had to do,
drew up Ordinances for the reform of the realm, they were agreed that the condition
precedent of such reform was to get rid of Peter. Accordingly, the twentieth
Ordinance was devoted to his sins and their penalties, and he was sentenced to
be for ever exiled not only from England, but from Ireland, Wales, Scotland,
and the king’s lands on both sides of the sea. Edward and his protégé were
quite blind to the seriousness and finality of this pronouncement. After a few
weeks’ absence Peter again returned, and at York Edward reversed the magnates’
decision. The Chancery clerks were ordered to affix the great seal to letters
they found already drafted for them on their arrival, announcing that Peter’s
exile was “contrary to law and custom,” and that he had returned at the king’s
bidding. Edward superintended the clerks in person, and “as soon as the writs
had been sealed in his presence, took them in his hand and put them on his
bed.” Two days later, writs for the restoration of Peter’s lands were “made in
the king’s presence, by his order, under threat of grievous forfeiture.”
The
magnates’ reply was to take up arms, and Edward and Peter found themselves
hurrying from one place to another to avoid a rigorous pursuit. At Newcastle
they were so nearly caught that they had to leave their arms, horses, and
treasure behind them to fall into the hands of the Earl of Lancaster. Finally, Gavaston shut himself up in Scarborough Castle. That huge
pile, strong as its position and defences were, needed more men and victuals
than he could get, and after three weeks he surrendered on condition that his
life should be safe, and that if negotiations between the Ordainers and himself came to nothing he should be replaced in the castle to begin the
struggle afresh. Such terms sound strange to modem ears, and although the
besiegers had confirmed them in all honesty with a solemn oath, angry human
nature was too much for them. The Earl of Pembroke escorted Peter safely as far
south as Deddington in Oxfordshire, but there, during his temporary absence,
Guy of Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, succeeded in seizing his captive, and, on 19
June 1312, Peter was executed on Blacklow Hill near
Warwick.
This lynch
law, in disregard of a solemn safe-conduct, was as outrageous as anything of
which Edward or Gavaston themselves had been guilty.
The four earls chiefly responsible, Lancaster, Warwick, Hereford, and Arundel,
found themselves criticised even by their own circle, and Pembroke and Warenne broke off relations with those who had forced them
into the betrayal of their oath. The king alternated between heart-broken
lamentations over his friend’s brutal end and violent threats of vengeance
against those responsible for it. For six months at least it seemed as though
the outcome would be actual civil war, both sides opposing obstinacy and abuse
to the efforts of would-be mediators. By the end of December 1312, however, the
adversaries came stiffly and unwillingly to an agreement, in which the king
promised to take no action against those concerned in Gavaston’s death, while the magnates agreed to support the king’s demand for an aid to be
used for a war with Scotland, to give up their recent habit of appearing at
parliament in arms, and to make a solemn profession of loyalty in the great
hall of Westminster. Deprived of the satisfaction of honouring Gavaston’s memory by revenge, Edward fell back upon the
consolation of surrounding it with reverence and splendour. The body, which had
been carried to Oxford after the execution, was in January 1315 transferred
for burial to the new church of the Dominican priory at King’s Langley, close
to the manor-house where Edward and his “dear Perot” had been boys together.
Since the first grant of a site in 1307, Edward had three times increased the
endowment of the community, which by this time numbered no less than a hundred
friars, and as long as he lived he continued his favours. He never forgot Gavaston. As late as 1326, when in pursuance of a giant of
his father he gave an advowson to Leeds priory for the maintenance of four
canons and a clerk to say mass daily in the chapel in Leeds Castle for the soul
of Queen Eleanor, he added a proviso that a fifth canon should celebrate in
memory of Peter. The friendship, mixed up with all kinds of youthful memories,
was probably much more innocent than scandalous tongues of the time alleged,
and its cruel end remained for Edward one of the most vivid and outstanding
things in his life.
To the
magnates, on the other hand, Peter’s fate, though gratifying, was only part of
a wider movement, which took written shape in three documents—the Articles of
Stamford of 1309; the Ordinances, accepted in August, published in September
1311; and the second Ordinances, which Professor Tout recently assigned from
internal evidence to a date between 25 and 30 November 1311.
The
Articles of Stamford represent the bargain struck between the king and the
magnates in order to secure Gavaston’s return from
his second exile. The remedies sought in them were for time-honoured
grievances, such as the encroaching jurisdiction of the royal household, or the
collection of extra customs from foreign merchants. When next the magnates
voiced their views, however, in the parliament of 1310, which met after Gavaston’s return and renewed offences, they spoke less
generally. Edward, they said, had been reduced to disgrace and poverty by the
advice of evil counsellors, had dismembered the inheritance received intact
from his father, and had wasted the grants made for war with Scotland. On 16
March 1310 the king agreed that the magnates should choose a committee to sit
till Michaelmas 1312, “to ordain and establish the state of our realm and our
household.” So came into being the Lords Ordainers.
They included seven bishops, with the Archbishop of Canterbury at their head,
eight earls—Gloucester, Lancaster, Lincoln, Pembroke, Hereford, Warwick,
Richmond, and Arundel—and six barons. They produced six preliminary Ordinances
at once, and announced that while doing their further work they would sit in
London so as to have records and legal advice close at hand. And there, indeed,
most of them remained busy for many months, though Gloucester went off to the
Scottish war in the autumn, and Lincoln died early in 1311. By August 1311 they
had their draft ready to submit to king and parliament, “since,” as they
remarked with an echo that may have been irritating, “what touches all should
be approved by all.” Under coercion, and unwillingly, Edward confirmed their
work. On 27 September some forty Ordinances, including the six of 1310, were
published in London, and as quickly as possible copies under the great seal
were sent out all over England.
The
contents of the Ordinances were comprehensive and well-intentioned. The old
formulae were repeated. Holy Church must have her liberties, the king’s peace
must be kept, the Great Charter must be observed. Some clauses had a rather
old-fashioned flavour, and suggested that complex problems created by new
conditions could be solved by simple means based upon a return to past custom.
Take, for example, the undoubted fact of the inadequacy of the royal revenue to
royal needs. If no grants of offices or other profits were made till the king’s
debts had been paid (Ordinance 7); if natives instead of aliens managed the
customs, and saw to it that all issues went direct to the Exchequer (4 and 8);
if foreign merchants who had been battening on the revenues were arrested and
forced to account (5); then surely the king would once more be able to “live of
his own” without making novel and excessive exactions. Or consider the follies
and extravagances of the king, his advisers, and the executive which carried
out their will. Was not the obvious remedy to restore the baronage to their
place as the native and natural counsellors of the king? Let him never leave
his country, or go to war, until the baronage, “and that in parliament,” had
consented, and had arranged for the custody of the realm during his absence
(9). Let all bad counsellors be removed, and better ones be substituted (13).
Let all the great offices of State, not in England only, but also in Gascony,
Ireland, and Scotland, as well as all posts of authority in the ports and on
the sea-coast, be filled by the advice of the baronage in parliament, or, in
emergency, at least by the help of the “good council” present with the king
(14, 15, 16). Let sheriffs be substantial men, appointed by the Chancellor,
Treasurer, and others of the king’s council (17). Many of the remaining
ordinances reiterated prohibitions against encroaching jurisdictions, abuses in
local government, and other evils of a kind repeatedly execrated, and never
cured, in earlier times. One new safeguard, indeed, was provided. In future
parliaments a bishop, two earls, and two barons were to hear complaints against
delinquent officials (40). Moreover, while adopting the common device of
exacting an oath to the scheme of reform from all the chief royal officials,
the Ordainers struck a new note by including in that
category the two leading domestic officials, namely the steward of the king’s
household and the keeper of his wardrobe.
The king
disliked this programme, and was disloyal to it from the first. Within two
months of the expiration of their commission, the Ordainers found it needful to issue the so-called Second Ordinances, which are little
more than a recital of the various points, numbering more than thirty in all,
in which the stipulations made in the first Ordinances had not been fulfilled.
In particular, enormous numbers of proscribed persons, varying in importance
from Gavaston’s relatives down to the humblest of
carters and porters, had not been ejected. The dissatisfaction felt over this
naturally redoubled when Gavaston himself returned,
and the personal fight which ended in his death was thus a fight not only for
revenge but for the maintenance of the scheme of reform.
It might
therefore be expected that the years immediately following the reconciliation
of 1312 would be marked by a vigorous enforcement of the Ordinances, with a
corresponding improvement in the general well-being. Not at all. It is true
that in 1313 there was issued the famous “ Ordinance of the Staple,” which for
the first time made it compulsory for all merchants, whether native or alien,
to export their wool to a single foreign port, St Omer being chosen as the site
of this “fixed staple.” As “the merchants of this realm” had the task of
enforcing and executing the Ordinance, it worked to their advantage rather than
to that of the foreigners, and was meant also to lead to greater efficiency and
better organisation. However the innovation was by no means universally
popular, either abroad or at home, and in any case could not bring in its
results all at once. Meanwhile other circumstances persisted which were far
from beneficial to trade. Bruce steadily extended his power in Scotland, while
his brother Edward between 1315 and 1318 nearly succeeded in making himself
king of Ireland. Not the northern counties only, but even far distant shires to
which the huge death-roll of Bannockburn brought home the fact of the Scottish
peril, began to live in a state of perpetual expectant depression. There was a
general infection of misery, a general loosening of discipline. Conspicuous
among many similar examples was the case of Bristol, where, not for two years
only, as the chroniclers say, but for nearly four, as the records shew, trade,
law, and order were paralysed while the townsfolk set at defiance both the king’s
constable and their own governing oligarchy. It happened, too, that six
successive bad seasons diminished supplies, spread disease among men and
beasts, and caused general despondency. Parliament in 1315 tried to mend
matters by fixing statutory prices for essential food-stuffs, but sellers
thereupon ceased to bring their wares to market, and in 1316 the legislation
was repealed. Vague popular thinking blamed the powers that were, not only for
their mistakes and hesitations, but also for troubles for which no human agency
could justly be held responsible.
Circumstances
forced the Ordainers to choose as their leader a man
calculated to do their cause more harm than good. After the death of Henry
Lacy, Earl of Lincoln and Salisbury, in 1311, his two earldoms passed to his
son-in-law Thomas of Lancaster, already lord of three, and made him, so far as
landed power went, incomparably the greatest of the king’s subjects. When to
this is added the fact of his royal blood, it is hard to see how, at this
stage, his claims to leadership could have been disregarded. Earl Thomas’
personality, however, by no means corresponded with his dignities. He was both
touchy and sulky—a deadly combination; he was unforgiving and revengeful; and
he was as unwilling as the king himself to make the sacrifices demanded by a
position of responsibility. After the defeat at Bannockburn had put the king at
the Ordainers’ mercy, and Lancaster’s advice was
required at every turn, he could rarely be induced to give it in person, but
expected business to wait till there had been time for a deputy to report to
him, or for letters to be exchanged.
Meanwhile,
the king for his part was being as irritating as he dared. His response to the
demand for dismissals in his household and elsewhere was partial, grudging, and
temporary. In 1313 he said that he could not attend parliament because he was
ill, an excuse which no one would accept from a monarch whose rude health was
proverbial. In April of the same year he went off to France, ignoring Ordinance
9, which required him to ask the permission of parliament before leaving the
country, and to seek the common consent to the appointment of a custos in his
absence. He did not return at the date at which he was expected, and the
magnates, after waiting for him a fortnight, went away indignant. He deeply
resented the prominence of Lancaster, and by 1317 the domestic! of earl and
king were at each other’s throats, while Edward was trying, but failing, to get
the Pope to release him from his oath to the Ordinances, and Lancaster was
protesting that it was as much as his life was worth to come near the king.
Edward gave some colour to this assertion when in October, travelling south
from York, he put his train into battle array as soon as he drew near
Lancaster’s castle at Pontefract. It seemed as if civil war alone could decide
between the rivals.
That this
disaster was avoided was due to the efforts of a new “middle party” which had
been built up during 1317, largely by the efforts of Aymer de Valence, Earl of Pembroke, out of courtiers and moderates united by a common
dislike of Lancaster. Its leaders actually succeeded, in August 1318, at Leake near Loughborough, in getting Lancaster to set his
seal to one half of an indenture of agreement, to the other half of which were
affixed the seals of two archbishops, eight bishops, eight earls, and twelve
barons. Soon afterwards the king and the earl exchanged a kiss of
reconciliation at Hathem, and writs were issued for a
parliament to confirm and complete the settlement.
This
parliament of York, which met on 20 October 1318, was in some ways the most
notable of the whole reign, though there hangs about it the tragedy of work
accomplished only to be undone. It remained in session for seven weeks, and
addressed itself to its task in a spirit of greater energy and hopefulness than
had been known for years. As had now become usual on solemn occasions,
representatives were summoned, though by no means all of them attended, and
those present played quite a subordinate part as compared with the prelates,
earls, and barons, who, indeed, were definitely instructed to “treat apart” on
various important matters.
Parliament’s
first care was to fulfil the promises made at Leake.
The indenture was read aloud and confirmed, and the king was induced to accept
as permanent the arrangement which had been in provisional use since August, by
which, “in all weighty matters which can or ought to be transacted without
parliament”, he was to be advised by a standing council of two bishops, an
earl, a baron, and a baron or banneret from the household of the Earl of
Lancaster. To ease the burden to the magnate back, each group was to act for
three months at a time only, and nine more names were added to the existing
panel to make the turns come round at wider intervals. Charters of pardon were
issued to Lancaster and his adherents, and the king made public announcement of
his loyalty to the Ordinances. The whole matter was solemnly enrolled in the
records of the Chancery, the Exchequer, the two Benches, and Parliament.
As a
preliminary to the next business, both Magna Carta and the Ordinances were read
aloud to the assembled company, and real vigour was shewn in following the
example thus suggested. Household reform was entrusted to a committee of five,
conferring with three prelates named by the king, and a few days before
parliament dispersed the results of their work were embodied in the Household
Ordinance of York. A revising survey of the king’s grants was undertaken,
resulting in some cases in considerable reductions. Enquiry was made into the
competence of every Crown official, high or low, central or local. Some were
retained, some were dismissed, some were promoted. When, on the steward of the
household being made seneschal of Gascony, Bartholomew of Badlesmere was appointed in his stead, Lancaster set up a very characteristic protest,
losing sight of any question of general benefit in the alleged injury to his
own right, as Steward of England, to appoint the steward of the household. His
claim was treated courteously, but nothing was done to meet it, either then or
when in 1319 he renewed it. Parliament attacked the old trouble of abuses in
local government and delays in legal procedure, and issued the Statute of York,
which contained many wise provisions, such as that which forbade any official
in charge of the assize of wine to sell wine himself, or that which directed
the bailiff of a franchise to return a writ to the sheriff in indenture form,
so as to minimise the risk of falsification. Important debates were held with
regard to the advisability of fixing staples in England instead of abroad,
though in the midst of parliament’s great press of business no actual economic
legislation resulted from the discussion. A vast number of petitions were dealt
with, some of them of general interest. It was decided to summon the army to
make a fresh effort against Scotland in June 1319, and to hold another
parliament at York or Lincoln within a month of Easter (8 April).
Parliament’s
activity, and the reconciliation of Leake, made the
year 1318 a real turning-point. All the forces dangerous to moderation had been
silenced. Future prospects seemed bright, and there must have been many other
contemporaries who, like the author of the Vita Edwardi,
believed that the king’s twelfth regnal year was to herald a period of peace
and success.
From the
summer of 1318 to the winter of 1320 the trend of events did undoubtedly, on
the whole, bear out the prophets of good fortune. The famine ended, and wheat
came down from 3«. 4d. to 6d. the bushel. Although no successes were won by the
Scottish campaign, at any rate in December 1319 a truce was secured, and for
two years England was able to draw breath. Advantage was taken of this to
tackle the question of Anglo-French relations, which for some years had been
menacing. Philip IV had died in 1314, and, during the reign of his successor
Louis X (1314-16), Edward had never found time or opportunity to go to do the
homage incumbent upon him, as Duke of Aquitaine and Count of Ponthieu, whenever
a new king came to rule in France. After the accession of Philip V, Edward continued
to postpone this duty, and intrigued against the French King as much as he
dared. Philip had retaliated in kind, much acrimonious correspondence had been
exchanged, and, without formal warfare, there had been constant friction on the
narrow seas and wherever English lands touched French. Meanwhile, neither in
Ponthieu nor in Gascony was English administration any more efficient than
usual, and Philip as overlord lent a ready ear to complaints. France seized
Ponthieu in 1317 or 1318; the Pope rebuked Edward for leaving Gascony sine lege et sine rege; and
finally, when Bayonne broke a treaty arranged between its own sailors and those
of Normandy, the Parlement of Paris sentenced Edward,
as duke, to a fine. In this connexion, therefore, the pacification of England
in 1318, followed by the truce with Scotland in 1319, gave a welcome
opportunity for readjustment. Edward did homage to Philip by proxy in June
1319, and in June 1320 performed the same ceremony in person at Amiens. Though
his stay in France was only for about six weeks, the good will established
lasted for the rest of Philip’s reign. Ponthieu was restored to English rule,
by no means to its entire satisfaction. Gascon troubles had meanwhile received
attention, when in February a new seneschal was appointed and Hugh Despenser
the elder and Bartholomew of Badlesmere were
commissioned to enquire into the state of the duchy and the conduct of its
officials. Their report led to the issue in August of a drastic ordinance for
reform, which, for a time at any rate, acted as a deterrent and made many a
petty tyrant conscious of observation. Abroad as at home, therefore, the period
1318-20 was marked by pacification and improved administration.
How was it
that the hopes raised by this situation were so quickly disappointed? Before
Christmas 1320 there were clear signs of coming trouble; in 1321 the middle
party was broken up by armed conflict between the extremists on both sides; and
a brief Lancastrian triumph in that year was succeeded in the following spring
by a royalist victory, which found symbolic expression in the repeal of the
Ordinances in May 1322. Thenceforward, till his deposition in 1327, Edward II
remained master of his own actions.
The
responsibility for the breakdown in 1320 must be divided. Something no doubt
was due to the instability of Edward, something to the indecision of Pembroke,
something to the jealousy among the magnates which prevented lengthy
co-operation. The chief onus, however, must lie upon the man who gradually
succeeded Gavaston in the king’s affections. This was
Hugh Despenser, husband of Eleanor de Clare, one of the three heiresses among
whom, in 1317, were divided the estates of Gilbert, Earl of Gloucester, slain
at Bannockburn. That inheritance, the first spur to Hugh’s ambitions, provoked
him to a policy which in the end ruined both himself and the king.
Hugh
Despenser the younger, as he was often called to distinguish him from his
father and namesake, was a man of much more weight than Gavaston,
both by birth and in personality. His family had been pushing its fortunes ever
since Henry Ill’s day, when his grandfather was one of the baronial nominees on
the committee which drew up the Provisions of Oxford, and afterwards twice
acted as justiciar. His father, Hugh the elder, had thrown in his lot with the
revived fortunes of the monarchy under Edward I, and under Edward II had been
marked down for censure by the Ordainers and
Lancaster. The younger Hugh’s intimacy with the king dated at least from the
time when Edward was Prince of Wales. He had been knighted on the same day with
him, and at the date we have reached held in the royal household the office of
chamberlain, which ranked third in the domestic hierarchy and involved a
specially close relation with the household’s head. Yet Hugh’s attitude, court
official though he might be, had been hitherto one of such cool detachment that
nobody feared his influence or his ambition. In 1318 the York parliament prayed
the king to continue him in office, and confirmed, though with some
redistribution, the grant to him of lands of the value of 600 marks yearly to
meet the expenses of his residence at court. He was regarded as a safe man,
treading his prudent course midway between extremes, whether of royalism or
reform.
Once more,
however, as so often in medieval England, central politics were deflected by
causes originating in the March of Wales. When in 1317 an agreement was arrived
at for the division of the great Clare inheritance between three co-heiresses,
Despenser, as the husband of one, secured the marcher lordship of Glamorgan,
prized not only for its size, but for its tradition of unusual dignity and
independence. Lords of Glamorgan had had their own sheriff, denied any right of
appeal from their court to the king of England, and welcomed such kings when
they visited South Wales rather as fellow potentates than as superiors. Hugh
felt that the cream of the inheritance had fallen to his lot, so that by an
energetic use of his opportunities he might become the greatest of the magnates
and secure an earl’s title. Even before the partition, he had tried to seize
the great Clare castle of Tonbridge in Kent; after it, he sought to undermine
the position of his brother-in-law Hugh of Audley, to whose share Newport had
fallen. In both attempts, and in breaches of the peace along the borders of
Glamorgan and Gower, he found himself checked by royal orders. He became
convinced that his ambitions could be realised only by close co-operation with
the king, and by 1320 he was leading Edward “like a cat after a straw,” as one annalist said, in pursuit of his own ambitions. There was
something more revolting in calculating self-interest of this sort than in the
haphazard irresponsibility of a Gavaston. To
contemporaries, Hugh was a rival and a renegade. At the bar of history, he must
stand convicted of upsetting for personal reasons a political equilibrium
hardly won and much to the public advantage.
The course
of events can here be traced only in the barest outline. The storm centre was the
peninsula of Gower, coveted by Despenser because it lay between his Glamorgan
lands and Cantref Mawr in Carmarthen, which had been
granted to him for life. The lord of Gower, William de Braiose,
having no son to succeed him, had been offering his lands for sale to various
marcher neighbours, including the Mortimers, the Earl
of Hereford, and his own son-in-law John of Mowbray. After William’s death in
1320, Mowbray entered into possession, but Despenser egged on the king to take
Gower into his own hands, on the ground that since Braiose was a tenant-in-chief, he had no right to give his land, or Mowbray to take it,
without the licence of his lord the king. It was typical of Despenser’s
cleverness that he chose an argument apparently so much in keeping with the
laudable efforts of Edward I himself to establish uniform authority inside as
well as outside privileged areas. Every marcher lord, however, resented the
claim as a breach of “the custom of the March,” and the sub-escheator sent to
take possession of Gower found himself prevented by armed force. Commissions of
enquiry, written expostulations, and a personal visit made by the king to the
Welsh border in March 1321, could not quench the flame thus lighted. During May
a league of marchers overran Hugh’s manors in South Wales, burnt his muniments,
damaged what they could not carry away, and slew or put to ransom the few
subjects who remained faithful to him. The infection of disorder spread far
beyond Wales, and gave Lancaster his first chance since 1318. On 24 May all the
chief magnates of the north met at his invitation in the chapter-house of
Pontefract priory to make a league of mutual defence. A month later he brought
together in the parish church of Sherbum-in-Elmet a
much bigger assembly, which included not only lay magnates both from south and
north, but abbots, priors, bishops, and the Archbishop of York himself, to
consider a long list of grievances drawn up at Lancaster’s direction. Public
opinion having thus been well drilled beforehand, it is not surprising that
when, in July 1321, the king met a general parliament, including
representatives of the counties, towns, and lower clergy, he found it set upon
ruining the Despensers. Both father and son must be
dismissed as “false and most evil counsellors, disinheritors of the crown and destroyers of the people.” In vain the Despensers challenged technical errors in the charges made, appealed to Magna Carta and
the Ordinances, and offered to meet complaints in a legal way. Resistance and
quibbles were bludgeoned down by the magnates’ determination, backed by the
sight of the large armed forces they had brought to London. The Despensers left the country, the Chancery clerks were set
to work on the drafting of innumerable pardons to those who for a great right
had done a little wrong, and the magnates dispersed well satisfied.
As a matter
of fact, they had done more harm than good. The temporary unity was broken up;
the king was again enraged; the old devices of private warfare and armed
parliaments had restored the old atmosphere of disorder and suspicion; and even
the alliance of northern and marcher lords did not long outlive their victory.
Pembroke could not hope to rebuild his middle party until both sides had
forgotten renewed grievances, and before that could happen the king seized a
chance to revive hostilities.
His
perfectly respectable pretext was an insult offered to his queen. Isabella,
travelling through Kent about Michaelmas 1321, was refused admission for the
night to Leeds Castle by the wife of Bartholomew de Badlesmere.
Now Badlesmere, still in name steward of the king’s
household, had not actually visited it since the middle of June, though he had
received a pardon in August like others who had joined the league against the Despensers. Fxlward was delighted
to make the wife’s offence a pretext for summoning an army to punish the
husband’s “disobedience and contempt.” To many correct feudal minds her breach
of feudal etiquette seemed so gross that they willingly responded, while Badlesmere, on the other hand, found that he could secure
little help. Lancaster hated him as the living evidence of the defeat of his
own claim to appoint the steward of the household, and made no effort to rouse
the northern baronage. Some of the Welsh marchers, indeed, hurried to the
rescue, but when they got as far as Kingston-on-Thames they heard so much of
the king’s strength that they dared advance no farther, and left Leeds Castle
to its fate. By the end of October it was in the king’s hands, and its occupants
were sentenced to death or imprisonment.
The matter
was not to rest there. Badlesmere himself was still
at large, and Edward was in a mood of concentrated obstinacy not uncommon in a
weak man enraged. He followed the retreating marchers westward, recalled the Despensers under safe-conduct in December, kept Christmas
on the Welsh border, and prepared to advance early in 1322. So firm was his
attitude that before January was ended the Mortimers and many of the other marchers had submitted without striking a blow. A few
stalwarts, however, notably those whose interests in South Wales clashed with
Despenser ambitions, such as Humphrey, Earl of Hereford, Roger of Amory, and
John of Mowbray, made good their escape to the north, and convinced Lancaster
that the time had come to speak or for ever hold his peace. In February and
March, accordingly, the quarrel put on wider aspects. It became a duel to the
death between the royal cousins, and a conflict of principle between monarchy
under control and monarchy free and independent.
The
question was soon settled. Step by step the “contrariants”
retired as Edward advanced. They abandoned the siege of Tickhill; they failed
to hold the passage of the Trent at Burton; they moved north again after a
temporary stand at Pontefract; and on 16 March 1322, at Borough bridge on the Ure, finding their way barred by forces brought down from
the border under Andrew Harclay, they fought to a
finish and lost. By Lady Day the more notable rebels had already paid the
penalty. The Earl of Hereford had died fighting at Boroughbridge. Lancaster was
beheaded on 22 March within sight of his own castle of Pontefract, though the
more degrading accompaniments of a sentence for treason were remitted in
deference to his royal birth. Many others had to drink the cup to the very
dregs, and all over England there were hangings, drawings, and quarterings. Badlesmere himself was hanged at Canterbury. In some other
cases, such as that of the Mortimers, sentence of
death was commuted to lifelong imprisonment because they had surrendered early.
It remained for the victors to distribute the spoils of conquest, and provide,
if they would or could, for a better future. With 1322, therefore, there opens
the last well-marked period of the reign. Lancaster was dead, Pembroke died in
1324, the Despensers, though authoritative, had not
the same overwhelming influence which Gavaston had
exerted. It followed that onlookers identified the policy of these years with
the king in person, and that when in 1327 revolution overturned his ministers,
he shared their fate.
On 14
March, two days before Boroughbridge, while the issue was still in suspense,
writs had been issued for a full parliament, which in due course met, on 2 May,
at York. Prelates and religious attended in their usual numbers, but the ranks
of the lay magnates were thinned by recent events. The commons, on the other
hand, were more numerous than usual, for besides proctors of the beneficed
clergy, borough members, and knights from the counties, there were also
present, for the first time in history, forty-eight representatives of Wales.
The commons continued to be invited regularly to parliament as long as the Despensers held power, though as the expense of paid
members soon mounted up, it was never thought desirable to keep them long in
session. On this occasion, as we know from an interesting memorandum recently
discovered and printed1, the king asked his council to discuss and formulate
proposed legislation beforehand, “in order that the people who come to
parliament may be the sooner set free.” Presumably they managed well, for the
commons went home after eighteen days, though the magnates continued in session
for another nine weeks.
“Let the
council bear in mind the following things: first, the statute on the repeal of
the Ordinances; second, the putting of the good points of the Ordinances into a
statute.” These words, which opened the above memorandum, suggest one marked
feature of the victorious party’s policy. It combined the assertion of liberty
of royal action with the offer of orderly government. Such an aim could have
been stated theoretically in terms which would have beseemed Edward I at his
best. Its failure in practice must be explained, not by insincerity, only
partly by incompetence, mainly by the facts that Edward II had not his father’s
power either of terrifying enemies or attracting friends, that the Despensers were even more isolated and unpopular than he
was, and that circumstances had changed so much that even an Edward I would
have found himself hard put to it.
The form of
the statute which repealed the Ordinances, and which was probably drafted by
the council, shewed at once the trend of the new policy. A clause declaring
void any ordinances or provisions made against the estate of the king or his
crown was followed by a more famous reminder that “matters which are to be
established for the estate of our lord the king and of his heirs, and for the
estate of the realm and of the people, shall be treated, accorded, and
established, in parliaments, by our lord the king, and by the assent of the
prelates, earls, barons, and commonalty of the realm.” Mr Lapsley has
suggested, and Prof. Tout has accepted, the view that this principle was to
apply not to any and all legislation, but only to fundamental constitutional
change. Dr Conway Davies would have it, on the contrary, that the statute drew
a careful distinction between matters concerning the estate of the crown and
the royal power, which are indeed questions of fundamental law, as against
general legislation and administration, with which parliament, both magnates
and commons, might rightly concern themselves. It is just possible that both
interpretations are a little too subtle, and that all that the Despensers meant to do was to follow up a clause in which
they asserted the royal right with another in which they gave assurance that
the Crown intended to act in consultation with parliament.
To
destruction succeeded construction. A statute embodying remedies for many
standing grievances utilised for this purpose parts of the Articuli super
Cartas of 1300 and the Ordinance concerning the forests of 1306; revived the
Statute of Lincoln of 1316 with regard to the appointment of sheriffs, which
was itself the amended form of Ordinance 17; and incorporated the very words of
Ordinances 33, 35, and 36, which dealt with complaints against the Statute erf
Merchants, the grievances of persons outlawed through malicious appeals of
felony in counties where they had no land, and the encouragement of robbery and
murder by the too easy abatement of appeals in the king’s court. All this shews
that the desire of those now come to power was rather to remould than to
destroy what they had shattered.
Enunciation
of sound doctrine was to be backed if possible by efficiency in the routine of
government. Processes of administrative reform, some of which had by fits and
starts already begun, went on more rapidly during these years, partly by the
efforts of officials in their departments, partly by the help of ordinances
issued by the king and his council. The changes were particularly striking in
the Exchequer. Three ordinances (1323, 1324, 1326) were directed to the
clarifying of its records, the improvement of its accounting system, and the
organisation of its staff. Already, as early as 1317, its central record, the
Great Annual or Pipe Roll, had begun to shew signs of efforts to investigate
and diminish the bad debts which had accumulated; now the process went forward
steadily, and by the end of the reign a substantial clearance had been made.
Such reforms came from men of varied political views. Two of the Exchequer
ordinances were issued during the second treasurership (1322-25) of Walter of Stapledon, a moderate
politician of the Pembroke type; the third belonged to the treasurership (1325-26) of William of Melton, a courtier all his life. Another curialist, Robert of Baldock, became Chancellor (1323-26)
under the new government. Previously, combining the post of Keeper of the Privy
Seal with that of Controller of the Wardrobe, he had been a living
contradiction of the Ordainers’ principle that the
Privy Seal office should be emancipated from the Wardrobe and be subjected to
public control. Now, however, by sending three Chancery clerks in succession to
act as Keepers, he tried to subordinate that office to his own after a fashion
quite in tune with the Ordainers’ wishes.
One of the
most remarkable and personal expressions of the Despenser triumph is to be
found in the prominence and widening activities of the Chamber, of which the
younger Hugh as Chamberlain was official head. The quiet rebuilding of that
fortress, concealed from view by the commanding structures of the Wardrobe and
Exchequer, had indeed begun earlier in the reign; and it is also true that in
the early summer of 1322 the king gave up, very likely under pressure from Stapledon, a grandiose scheme by which so magnificent a
bulk of “contrariants”’ lands were to be assigned to
the Chamber that it would have become a state within the State, practically
exempt from the ordinary national administrative and judicial system.
Nevertheless, it is in these last years of Edward II’s reign that the power of
the Chamber is openly displayed, and that by a deliberate policy, personal to
Despenser and the king.
The
weakness of Edward’s general position, politically, was shown by his relations
with the Papacy. The Popes were not hostile to England, but their increasing
demands, coupled with a gradual change for the worse in Anglo-French relations,
soon created a very serious situation. Two notable events during the
pontificate of Clement V affected England—the suppression of the Order of the
Temple (1312), and the imposition (1306) of annates, i.e. of payments
equivalent to a year’s revenue of a bishopric or benefice due to the Pope from
each fresh holder. The former brought some gain to the king and to many private
persons, besides the Hospitallers who were officially the Templars’ heirs. The
latter, though described in the Statute of Carlisle (1307) as taxation of a
kind “hitherto unheard-of,” became gradually an accustomed and therefore not an
unbearable burden. On the whole Clement V and Edward got on very well, despite
the intermittent exchanges of complaints and the laments of chroniclers which
give a contrary impression. At Stamford in 1309 the forty-seven lay magnates
addressed to the Pope ail almost hysterical appeal for that “widowed lady,” the
English Church, destroyed by papal exactions and provisions; yet four out of
the six episcopal vacancies which occurred between the king’s accession and Clement’s death were filled by the canonical choice of the
electors, and only two by papal provision. Clement himself in 1310 made
counter-complaints that payments due were in arrears, clerks and religious
injured by laymen, and encroachments made on ecclesiastical jurisdiction. Yet
in some ways Clement shewed himself very friendly. If he would not release
Edward from his oath to the Ordinances, he was always ready in his official
capacity to rebuke his enemies, and in a private capacity lent him £25,000.
Meanwhile the see of Canterbury was occupied first by Winchelsea, returned
older and wiser from exile, and next by Walter Reynolds, who had been for many
years a trusted official in Edward’s household.
With the
accession of Pope John XXII, however, the situation changed, and appointment by
papal provision, hitherto exceptional, became almost invariable. Edward
acquiesced as long as a reasonable proportion of the appointments made
coincided with his wishes, but found the Pope as time went on less and less
ready to humour him. So far as merits or learning went, there was rarely much
to choose between royal and papal nominees. When Edward secured the promotion
of Louis de Beaumont to the see of Durham (1317), the bull of provision
described him as not only of royal stock and suitable age, but also as skilled
in letters, commendable in conduct, wise in spiritual matters, circumspect in
temporal. Perhaps the cardinals present at his consecration stopped their ears
while this lettered prelate fought and lost his fight with the word “metropolitice”. “Take it as said”, was his counsel of
despair. In 1321 Edward pressed the Pope to make an English cardinal, but
without success. Sometimes he had to swallow very nauseous doses, as in 1317,
when he told the Pope that his honour could not endure that Adam of Orleton should be made Bishop of Hereford—and had to accept
him within two months. How meaningless were the praises bestowed by the jobber
on the jobbed is illustrated by the case of Badlesmere’s nephew, Henry Burghersh. In 1319 Edward belauded him as a candidate for the see of Winchester, and
in 1320 secured Lincoln for him. A year later, after the Badlesmere outbreak, Edward informed the Pope that his conscience was troubling him
because of Henry’s “manifold unsuitability,” and begged that he might be rooted
out. All this bargaining, which affected every sort of preferment, must have
disgusted zealots, while it raised up many enemies among disappointed rivals,
angry patrons, and offended chapters.
No triumph
of Edward over his private enemies was notable enough to enable him to rally
the country to a firm stand against Scotland. In March 1323 Andrew Harclay, who had been rewarded for his services at
Boroughbridge with the title of Earl of Carlisle, was executed as a traitor for
going to Bruce to suggest a peace on the basis of England’s recognition of
“King Robert.” In June the government itself made a thirteen years’ truce,
which could not become a peace because touchy stupidity forbade it to recognise
accomplished facts by admitting the royal title. Still, so long a pause was
welcome indeed, and it may well have been that some of Edward’s advisers felt
in the summer of 1323 that the time had come for reconstruction undisturbed by
storm abroad or at home. They were sadly deceived. In that very year there
arose a little cloud like a man’s hand, which was destined before long to
blacken all the heavens, and finally to sweep away the king and his friends in
a great rain of revolution.
In January
1322 Philip V of France had been succeeded by Charles IV, who forbore for many
months to trouble his English brother-in-law to do homage, in view of the “grantz empeschementz” which
detained him in England. The truce with Scotland, however, seemed to remove the
last reasonable excuse, and Charles accordingly required Edward to come to do
homage at Amiens by 1 July 1324. Edward, while replying politely, began at once
those delays which were the stock device for such occasions. Like a tenant who
tries to get repairs out of his landlord before he renews a lease, so the
Gascon Duke made his renewal of homage an opportunity for protest on all the
time-worn grievances—the French officials who “put their reaping-hooks into our
harvest,” the encouragement of appeals to the suzerain over the head of the
duke, the vexations inflicted upon French subjects over-loyal to England. This
time, however, the ordinary diplomatic game could not be played with the usual
calm, for there had already occurred that “affair of Saint-Sardos”
which was to embitter the relations between the two countries to a point that
could only end in war.
Saint-Sardos stands on the top of a little hill in the Agenais,
in the pleasant rolling country immediately east of the confluence of the Lot
and the Garonne. To this day a Romanesque doorway and some splendid fragments
of early capitals in its little church recall the twelfth century, when the
land already belonged to the abbey of Sarlat in Perigord. Now the abbey of Sarlat was one of those “privileged” tenants in the three dioceses of Limoges, Cahors,
and Perigueux whom Louis IX had excepted, when by the
Treaty of Paris of 1259 he surrendered royal rights in those dioceses. In 1279,
by the Treaty of Amiens, Philip had handed over the Agenais, and Edward I had
agreed that no further effort should be made to induce privileged tenants in
the three dioceses to transfer their allegiance from France to England. Did
this, however, apply to lands which the privileged held elsewhere? “Certainly,”
said the French. “Not at all,” said the English; and when in 1289 the Abbot of Sarlat effected a pariage of his
land at Saint-Sardos with the King of France, who
proposed to construct a bastide there, Edward’s view was that a subject in his
land of the Agenais was acting with undue independence. He had obvious reasons
for disliking the idea of a centre of French influence established in the heart
of a district so recently ceded to England. Again and again he appealed on the
legal point to the Parlement of Paris. One decision was
given in his favour, but this was soon challenged and reversed, and in 1323
French officials entered Saint-Sardos to begin
building. Before fresh diplomatic protests had had time to take their course, a
host of English sympathisers, led by Ralph Basset, seneschal of Gascony, swept
down upon the little place, murdered, burnt, and ravaged, hanged the French
official to the post on which he had displayed the royal arms, and made off to
the neighbouring castle of Montpezat, whose lord,
Raymond Bertrand, had been prominent in the attack. The French King cited the
culprits before the Parlement of Toulouse. Some forty
submitted, the rest shut themselves up in their strongholds, and were condemned
in absence to banishment and the confiscation of their possessions. When, in
execution of this decree, a French representative arrived to seize Montpezat, he was captured and put to ransom. Outraged at
this second insult to authority, Charles prepared to send armed forces to
avenge it and to enforce the sentence. During the first six months of 1324,
though Edward disavowed the action of his officials to an extent for which he
almost apologised to them in subsequent letters, and though embassy after
embassy exhausted all the resources of diplomacy in efforts to stave off reprisals,
Charles quietly continued to make ready to defend his dignity. The last of the
English envoys, making for the coast with all speed in July lest they should
get caught in the campaigning, wrote to Edward that they heard it commonly said
that Charles was tired of “words and parchment.” Meanwhile 1 July, the date
fixed for the reception of Edward’s homage, had passed by without any attempt
on his part to appear, and so sure had Charles made of his default that even
before that date, so said the envoys, he had declared Gascony and Ponthieu
forfeit.
In the
actual fighting which followed in August and September 1324, the French had
much the best of it. Here and there, at Penne, at Saint-Sever, at Puymirol, strongholds resisted, but when Charles of Valois
invaded the Agenais, Agen soon surrendered, and
though the king’s brother Edmund, Earl of Kent, with such loyalists as could
reach him, stood a five weeks’ siege behind the walls of La Réole,
on 22 September they gave in, and made a truce to last till April 1325.
Meanwhile in England Edward had been fuming ineffectively, and with gross misjudgment had included among his war-time precautions the
seizure of the lands of Queen Isabella. She put down the measure to Despenser
spite, and bided her time. By and by papal envoys, seeking a bridge between
French and English demands, suggested that the queen might be sent over to
France to intercede with her brother. She reached Poissy on 21 March, secured a new truce to last till June (later prolonged to July),
and obtained the consent of both kings to a treaty by which Charles was to take
formal possession of Gascony, but, as soon as Edward had done homage, surrender
all except his recent conquests, as to which there was to be a judicial
enquiry. Even when, in August, Edward once more failed to keep his appointment,
on the ground or the pretext of illness, Charles was still sufficiently
complacent to agree that if his young son Edward were invested with Ponthieu
and Guienne he might act in his father’s stead. On 14
September, accordingly, the boy performed this duty, and by November the French
were ready to hand over everything except their recent conquests. But quite
suddenly, Edward flared up at the idea of this retention, committed to it
though he was by treaty. The war cloud gathered again.
As so often
in this reign, a personal reason was directing political action. Scandalous
stories reached Edward concerning his wife and Roger Mortimer, who had been in
France since he escaped from the Tower in 1323. The king’s one idea was to undo
all that Isabella had done, recall her, and remove her son from her influence.
The queen, however, ignored all orders to return, and Edward struggled in vain.
He resumed responsibility for the overseas lands by taking the title of “governor
and administrator” for the young duke. He set a watch on the coasts, and sent
Mortimer’s mother to a nunnery for addressing meetings of disaffected persons.
In May he made a bid for the support of the merchants by the Ordinance of
Kenilworth, which abolished the foreign staple and set up eight places in
England, three in Ireland, and three in Wales, as staples for wool, wool-fells,
and leather. Isabella was now in open defiance, and had been dismissed from her
brother’s court. She found a new refuge in Hainault, betrothed her son to the
daughter of its count, used the marriageportion to equip troops, and invaded
England in September. General hatred of the Despensers,
and pleasure at her declaration of affection for the Ordinances, brought her
many adherents, including her brother-inlaw Thomas, Earl of Norfolk, and
Henry, Earl of Leicester, to whom had been granted many of his brother
Lancaster’s forfeited lands. With her had come Roger Mortimer, Edmund, Earl of
Kent, the Bishops of Winchester and Norwich, who had been envoys to Paris, and
many others.
The modem
historian will not want to linger over the grim details of the final conflict,
dear as they were to the contemporary chroniclers. The most brutal concerned
the murder of Edward’s loyal treasurer, Bishop Stapledon,
outside St Paul’s. Other scenes took place in Wales or the March. The elder
Despenser was hanged at Gloucester in October. Edward himself, and the younger
Hugh and Baldock the chancellor, were captured as they tried to make their way
in a great storm of rain and wind from Neath Abbey to Llantrissant Castle. Hugh was hanged at Hereford, while Edward was put into the care of his
cousin Henry of Leicester at Kenilworth.
Careful of
appearances, the victors called a full parliament to seal their triumph. It met
at Westminster on 7 January 1327, and contained representatives of the commons
of England and Wales as well as the magnates. The magnates present swore to
uphold the queen and her son, and Orleton, Bishop of
Hereford, after haranguing the assembly on the queen’s wrongs, gave it a day to
consider whether Edward or his son should reign in future. William of Melton,
Archbishop of York, with four other prelates, protested on Edward’s behalf, but
the rest, and all the laymen, accepted the substitution of son for father. Six
crimes were laid to the disgraced king’s charge. He had followed evil
counsellors, despising the advice of the great and wise; he had neglected
public business for his own amusements; he had lost Scotland, Ireland, and
Gascony by bad government; he had injured the Church; he had put many great men
to death; he had broken his coronation oath. On 20 January 1327, at Kenilworth,
Edward accepted his own fate and his son’s elevation. For a little longer he
lived in captivity, and even for a brief space was rescued from it by old friends,
whose sympathy became doubly eager when in April he was transferred from the
care of Henry of Leicester to harsher custody in Berkeley Castle. He was
recaptured, and in September 1327 either died a natural death, as the
government took pains to make all men believe, or, more probably, was murdered
to save them the anxiety of the plots which would continue as long as he was
known to be alive. A persistent tradition asserted that the body buried was not
that of Edward at all, and that the king made good his escape to Ireland,
France, and finally Italy, where he lived out his days in seclusion. The chief
documentary evidence for such a belief is a strange letter written to Edward
III by a Genoese priest, who said that his information came from what he had
heard in confession. A man might have many motives, however, for telling such a
story to the late king’s supplanter, and on the whole it is probable that the
crowds who flocked on pilgrimage to the tomb of the “martyred” king in St
Peter’s Abbey at Gloucester were right in believing that it contained the bones
of Edward II.
Modern
research, which has been very busy of recent years with the period reviewed in
this chapter, has not so far altered traditional values as to make Edward I a
small man or Edward II a great one. It has, however, demonstrated unmistakably
that the two reigns are far more closely connected than used to be supposed.
Contemporaries, many of whom had a tale to adorn or a moral to point,
exaggerated surface contrasts, and moralisers of later generations found the
opportunities opened by such treatment too tempting to be abandoned; as late as
1640 a pamphleteer of the Fronde was using Gavaston’s fate as an awful warning to Mazarin. Yet the records and literature of the
period, when studied impartially, make it clear that Edward I could on
occasion be as violent, as overbearing, as unscrupulous as his son; that before
he died he was already faced with a growing opposition which made the execution
of his policy increasingly difficult; and that this, combined with the general
drift of historical development and the huge expenses entailed by his manifold
activities, created problems which had to be met by Edward II.
With the
exception of the conquest of Wales, every great problem of the period is common
to both reigns. The independence of Scotland was already foreshadowed when
Edward I died, and it is unlikely that the prolongation of his own life, or a
more desperate energy on the part of his son, could long have delayed its
establishment. The miserable treaty which, shortly after Edward II’s
deposition, reduced the English lands in France to a mere shadow of their
former greatness, was the outcome of a situation which dated from the Treaty of
Paris of 1259, which amid a rising sense of nationality became increasingly
impossible, and which could only temporarily be readjusted even by such later
victories as those of the more glorious periods of the Hundred Years’ War.
Turning from political to constitutional matters, it is clear that both reigns
were marked by experiment, friction, and misunderstandings, while to both
Edward I’s enthusiasms and Edward II’s follies the baronial party opposed
suspicion and narrowness as well as legitimate criticism. As to the widening
of the parliamentary circle, begun by Edward I’s experiments and continued as a
growing habit in his son’s time, it was due to Edward I’s needs rather than to
his ideals, and its full consequences were not to be felt till long afterwards.
Meanwhile, in the daily routine of government it might almost be said that
Edward IIs indifference proved more beneficial than Edward I’s energy, for
whereas the father found great difficulty in securing trustworthy and efficient
helpers, under his son the efforts of inventive and intelligent officials made
the reign a great turning-point in administrative history. In general social
conditions there is little to choose between the two reigns; while in economic
matters, whereas for the expelled Jews Edward I had substituted the Italians,
Edward II’s reign saw the ruin of the Frescobaldi, competition between other
Italian firms and a rising class of English capitalists, considerable municipal
growth, and a start made with some devices which were to be fully developed
under Edward III. As to ecclesiastical affairs, though it is true that in the
later years of Edward II England became more and more a vineyard with a broken
hedge, whose grapes could be plucked by every passer-by, her exploitation was
not due to the king, but to general conditions in the Church after the
establishment of the Avignon Papacy. On the whole, therefore, a prudent
historian will refuse to stress the personal aspects of the two reigns, or to
exaggerate the contrast between them, and will prefer to treat the two together
as a single episode in the story of the medieval world during one of the most
vital periods of its development.
CHAPTER XVENGLAND: EDWARD III AND RICHARD II
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