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A00525 Fabyans cronycle newly prynted, wyth the cronycle, actes, and dedes done in the tyme of the reygne of the moste excellent prynce kynge Henry the vii. father vnto our most drad souerayne lord kynge Henry the .viii. To whom be all honour, reuere[n]ce, and ioyfull contynaunce of his prosperous reygne, to the pleasure of god and weale of this his realme amen; Chronicle Fabyan, Robert, d. 1513. 1533 (1533) STC 10660; ESTC S121369 944,722 854

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that he shuld neuer after clayme any part of the empyre And also for the brekynge of this othe he was after chalengyd or blamed of saynt Martyne byshop of Turon To whom he answered that he was compelled of his knyghtes to take vppon hym as emperour or ellys he shuld of thē haue ben slayne Neuerthelesse the sayde byshoppe shewed vnto hym that for his vntrouth he shuld not longe prospere or reygne After that worde was brought vnto the emperours that Maximianꝰ had wyth harde bataylles thus subdued Gallia and Germania Gracianꝰ wyth a great hoste came down to resyste hym But when he harde of y e marciall dedes of Maximianꝰ he was a drade and fled backe to the citye of Lugdun or Lyōs in Fraūce where after the sayde Gracianꝰ was slayne and his brother Ualentinian was compelled to flee to Constantyne the noble Then Maximianꝰ to haue the more strength to wythstāde his enimyes made his sonne named Uictour felowe of the emperour In this whyle that Maximianꝰ warred thus in Italy Conan Meryadoke to whom as before is sayde Maximianꝰ had gyuen the land of lytell Brytayne for so mych as he his knyghtes had no wyll to mary the doughters of Frenschmen but rather to haue wyues of theyr owne blood therfore this Conan sent messagers vnto Dionotus then duke of Cornewayll and chyfe ruler of Brytayne wyllynge hym to sende his doughter Ursula wyth a certayne nomber of virgyns to be coupled to hym to his knightes in maryage The which soone after prepared accordyng y e request of Conan the foresayd Ursula accōpanyed wyth .xi. thousande vyrgyns and were sent by her sayde father towarde lytell Brytayne as witnesseth the englyshe cronycle Gaufryde and also Policronica But yt shuld appere by the sayeng of Antoninus Iacobꝰ Philippus and other writers that this Ursula with her company shulde not be sent forth of mych Brytayne nor maryed aboute this tyme but in the tyme of Marcianus beynge emperoure the whyche began his empyre after most accorde of wryters in the yere of our lord .iiii. hundred .li. Of the martyrdome of these maydens dyuers authours wryte dyuersly wherfore I remytte them that wyll haue farther vnderstādyng in this mater vnto y e legende of saynts redde yerely in the chyrche where they maye be suffycyenly taught and enformed THE LXXIII CHAPITER ANd as before is shewed Maximianꝰ beynge occupyed in warres in Italy two dukes named Gwanus and Melga the whych as Gaufryde testyfyeth and other were sent from Gracian and Ualentinian emperours to punyshe and subdue the Brytons that fauoured the party of Maximianꝰ warred sore vpon the costes of great Brytayne and occupyed a great parte of Albania wherof when Maximianꝰ had knowlege he sente into great Brytayne a knyght and captayn named Gracianus or Gracyan The whyche wyth two legyons of knyghtes bare hym so knyghtly that in shorte processe he chasyd the sayd .ii. dukes into Irlande helde the lande of Brytayne in good peace to the behalfe of Maximianus In this whyle Maximianꝰ contynuyng his warre agayn the empyre entendynge to be emperour Theodocius named the elder then emperour of the eest parte of the world herynge of the deth of Gracyan chasynge of Ualentynyan wyth a great power spedde hym towarde the sayd Maximianꝰ And shortely after at a citye in Italy named Aquilia toke the sayde Maximianꝰ and hym behedded when knowlege of the deth of Maximianꝰ was comen to Gracyan that then had the rule of mych Brytayn he seasyd the land made hym selfe by strength kynge of Brytayne whē or after that Maximianꝰ had gouerned the same by most accorde of wryters by the space of .viii. yeres THE LXXIIII CHAPITER GRacianus the whych of Gaufryde is called Municeps y t maye be taken for an hyred or waged knyght or for y e keper of gyftes or berynge the chyef rule of a cytye beganne to rule the Brytons in the yere of oure lorde .iii. hundred .lxxx. x. The whych exercysyd all tyranny and exaccyon vppon his subiectes for the which he was had in wonder full hatered amonge the Brytons and amonge them cast and sought many wayes and meanes for hys destruccyon but he by dyuers meanes escapyd theyr daungers and punysshed greuously all suche fautours wherfore lastly as sayth Gaufryde they fyll vpon hym of an hole assent and kylled hym when he had reygned or more verely vsurped by the terme of .iiii. yeres THE LXXV CHAPITER AFter that Gracian was thus slayne of the Brytons the forsayd Gwanus and Melga knowynge the Brytons to be wythout hed or ruler assembled also people and retourned into mych Brytayne wastynge and brennynge on euery syde and destroyed greate plenty of Brytons as wytnessyth Gaufryde and other But Policronica sayth that whan the Romayns knewe of the deth of Gracyan they sent a knyght called Constantyne to haue the rule of Brytayne and other countrees there about But he was after demed an enemye to the empyre for harme and s●athes by hym done in Fraunce wherfore by commaundement of Honorius then emperour a knyght or erle called Constancius was sente agayne the forenamed Constantine and slewe hym at a place or towne called Arelet After thys the Brytōs were agayne vexed by the Pictes other straunge nacyons By reason wherof they were cōstrained to sende agayne to Rome requyrynge them of ayde vppon condycyon that they shuld alway be subiecte vnto Rome The whyche request and promesse thus herde of the senate Honorius aforenamed was sent into Britayne wyth a legyon of knyghtes whyche is .vi. thousande .vi. houndred .lxvi. The which legyon with helpe of the Brytons chasyd y e foresayde Pictes and other enemyes and taughte the Brytōs to make a walle ouerthwart the lande from see to see that ys to meane from the water of Humber to the Scottyshe see and ordeyned thē wardeynes and kepars of the wall and after retourned to Rome Thys wall as testyfyeth Policronica was made of turuys and strechyd from Pemilton̄ or Penulton̄ vnto y e citye of Acliut or Acliud But for thys wall was of small strength the enemyes before named dystroyed certayne partyes of this sayd wall and ouerrode the countre and toke grete prayes dayly dyd as myche harme as they had done before tyme. wherfore the Brytons were constrayned to seke for newe socour to the Romayns Then dyd Foloaynes sende an other legion the whyche agayne chased the sayd Pictes and other enemyes and made than a wall of stone of the thycknesse of .viii. fote and in heyght .xii. fote in the selfe place where before Seuerus had made a dyke and wall of turfes And y t done the Romaynes comforted and exorted the Brytons to be manly and corageous to wythstande theyr enemyes shewyng to them forther that they shuld truste to theyr owne strengthe for so myche as the Romayns beynge so ferre from thē myght not lyghtly come from so ferre wyth an armye of knyghtes also not wythout great coste and trauayle After whyche monycyon and
ryght well the state whan thou by meanes whyche were inordynat Put vnto deth many an innocent man By cruell malyce and well remembred than That of lowe byrth Flaundres thy mother the fledde And taught the a crafte the here well to shaue Lutecia that cytye where thou thy lyfe ledde wytnesseth the a seruaunt therin thy lyuynge to craue And for thy dayes an honest lyfe to haue But whan thou were in Lowys court vp brouht Than had thou no mynde that thou were come of nought But lyke the helle hounde thou waxed full furyous Expressynge thy malyce whan thou to honour styed Thynkynge for so moche as that prynce bounteuous Hys hed and berde to the he nought denyed And wyth all worldly pleasure he also the allyed The before hys prynces makynge hys gouernour Thy selfe thou blyndest wyth wordly vayne honour whyche made the so proude thou sonne of harde Neron That none myght lyue that thou accused of cryme No man was cursed nor none had punyssyon That wolde thy hande wyth golde of gyftes lyme And who that nat hys gyfte offred in tyme Other deth or exyle to hym was soone applyed For as iuge and hangman thou all thynge excercysed Thou reygned longe ynough but now are sprongē newe Sterrys to the worlde and fled is nowe clerely The scelerat flokke wherfore thou barbour yet rewe Thyne odyous actes whyche haue the sodaynly Cast downe from welth in snares vytterly For also Daniell thy moste odyous fere Dampneth the of cryme whyche wyth the dyeth here I knowe nat what of the the vpper bodyes aboue Haue defyned whether by sworde or by gybet Thou shuld ende the lyfe But one thynge I approue The sentence hooly of the people is sette That on a galowe thou shuld paye deth hys dette Inwardly therfore bewayll so thyne offence That by thys deth to god thon mayste make recompence THus execucyon of thys Damman hys felowe ended and fynysshed to the lytell compassion of the people wythin fewe dayes after another of the affeccionat seruaūtes of kyng Lowys named Iohn̄ Doyacon for trespasse and hatered by hys occasyon and deserte vnto the common people was wyth all shame brought vnto y e market place of Parys there beraft of bothe hys erys After whych vylony to hym done he was there ryght banysshed the court for euer And thus two of the moste special and derest beloued seruauntes and counsayllours of kyng Lowys were shortly after hys deth broughte vnto confusyon By reason wherof as affermeth myne auctoure Gaguyne arose a prouerbe among the Frenche men sayeng Principibus obsequi haereditariū non es●e The whyche is to meane the seruyce of princes is nat hereditable Thys tyme thus passed wyth many other matyers whych I ouer passe the season approched that variaunce and ●nny began to moue amōg some nobles of the lāde in so moche that y e duke of Orleaunce dysdayned that Anne syster to the kynge wyth suche as she wolde call to counsayll hadde all the rule about the kyng wherfore he entendyng to haue the sayde rule for so moche as he had maryed that other doughter of Lowys gadered vnto hym strength of knyghtes purposely to remoue from the kyng such as he lyked and to sette aboute hym suche persones as he thought conuenyente But how it was for lacke of wyse orderynge of hys people or other neglygence at a place called saint Albynys he was taken of hys aduersaryes so by the kyng commaunded to pryson to the castel of Byturicēce where he remayned lōge tyme after It was nat longe after that Marymylyan the whych had maryed duke Charles doughter of Burgoyne gathered hys soudyours to haue releued the foresayd duke of Orleaunce out of pryson but he preuayled nat Durynge whyche warre Fraunceys duke of Brytayn dyed whose doughter named Anne enherytour of that duchye Maxymylyan hadde before trouth plyted for hys lawfull wyfe wherfore he herynge of the deth of y e sayd Fraunceys shortely entred the terrytory of Brytayne and seased it for hys But Charles with his Frēchmen wythstode hym by suche force y t he was constrayned to axe helpe of our soueraygne lord kynge Henry y e vii The whyche in moste bounteous maner ayded assysted hym bothe wyth men and money to the kynges excedyng great charge and coste Howe be in the ende the French kyng had his entent than maryed y e said Anne duchesse of Brytayne and refused Margarete y e doughter of Ma●imylyan whyche he before had maryed at Ambasy as before I haue shewed to you in the ende of the story of hys father Lowys After whych vyctory thus opteyned by thys Charles in Brytayn he made clayme and pretence vnto the lande of Scicilia or Scicilie And by the exortacion and styrryng of the pope Alexāder the .vi. he wyth a strong hoste entred y e same bothe by lande and by water To whome was a great ayde the duke of Mylayne by whose meanes he shortly wan a strōge citie or towne named Campania and diuers other townes and in processe Naples the chyef citie that belonged vnto the kyng of Naples In so moche that he constrayned Alphounce that than was kynge of Naples and of Scicile to forsake that countre and so had the dominiō of the more parte of bothe the sayde countrees The whyche when he had set in suche order as he thoughte conuenyent he toke hys iournaye home warde into Fraūce thorough Italy In whyche passage thys Charlys was beset of the Uenecyans other Italyans the whyche entendyd to haue stoppyd hys waye and metyng wyth hym at a place called in latyne Fornouiences gaue vnto hym batayle wherof as sayth myne authour he wan the vyctory to hys greate honour consyderynge his fewe sowdyours agayne theyr multytude and strength But to thys sayenge repugne the Italyans dwellyng in London and say that yf the sayd Charlys had not spedde hym fastly into Fraunce he had not comen there that yere But how so it was he eetourned home in sauete And soone after pope Alexāder foresayd toke such dyspleasure agayne y e sayd Charlys that he styrred almost all crysten prynces of the worlde agayne hym he hadde such hatred to the great honoure of y e Frēche kynge as sayth myne authour Gagwyne y t whyche in all hys werkes extolleth the dedes of Frenchemen forther thā maye be veryfyed in moch of his wrytynge But what so he wryte of the pope it is to be demyd that he wolde not take so great partye agayne this Charlys and exite other prynces to do the same excepte it hadde ben for great and vrgēt causes and not for malyce as he affermeth onely And thus the sayde Gagwyne endeth the story of the sayd Charlys in the yere of our lorde god M.iiii C. xcv and the .xi. yere of the reygne of the same Charlys thanne presently reygnynge and guydyng the realme of Fraunce whyche was the .x. yere of our most redoutyd prynce kynge Henry the .vii. Henry the seuenth HEnry the
vnto you the begynnynge of the reygne of y e kinges of Fraūce and set them in suche a direct order that it shal be apparant to the reder that it shal be certaynly knowē what kyng reygned in Fraūce whan such a kyng reygned in Englande And also I shall somdele touche the actes and dedys of the sayde kynges of Fraunce so y t the cronycles of bothe realmes shall in this worke appere and the names of the prynces which at ones reygned in Englande and in Fraunce Then for the perfourmaūce of the same fyrste is to be noted that after the subuercyon of Troye by the Grekes as in y e begynnyng of this work is shewyd dyuers Troyans beyng vnder the rule of nobles of the same lygnage as Helenus sonne of Pryamus Eneas Anthenorus other serchyd y e worlde landyd in dyuers coūtrees As Helenꝰ in Grece or Grecia Eneas in Italia or Italy so of other amōg The whych nobles one named Turchus an other named Franco cosyn Germayns as Turchus the sonne of Troylus Frāco or Francio the sonne of Ector which sayd two cosyns serchyng theyr aduenture after many dyuers daungers ieopardyes passyd by the see lastly landed in a coūtre called Tracea or Tracia in Grece And there wyth theyr cōpany enhabyted them nere vnto a ryuer called Dion And after they hadde contynued there a season of tyme Turchus departed wyth a certayne of Troyans frō hys sayd cosyn Francio and sayled after into a countre called Faso the lesse where he wyth hys people dwelled longe tyme. whyche Faso shulde be in the countre of Sithia Of thys Turchus dyscendyd as sayth y e Frēche cronycle .iiii. maner of people That is to saye Austrogothis Ipogothis wandalis and Normans And Frācio or Frāco remoued after wyth hys company into a countree named Pannoma whyche countree now shuld seme to be a parte of Hungery or ioynynge nere to it There nere vnto a ryuer called Thanais they buylded them a cytye and named it Sicambria by reason wherof they were longe after called Sicambri They were also named Franci as sayth the Frenche cronycle after thys man Francio Turpinus that wrote the gestes of the greate Charles sayth that whan Charles hadde made the countre of Spayne subiecte and was retourned into Fraunce he made all the bonde mē dwellynge aboute or nere vnto Paris or in all Gallia fre in the wourshyppe of saynte Denis and of saynt Iamys of Galis vppon condycyon that they shulde yerely offre foure pence to thys worke of saynt Denis churche By reason wherof they were named Franci as men freed that to fore were bond Policronica saith they were named Franci of Ualentynyan the emperour as it were for fyersnes But how so euer they came by that name they were called Franci as Frenschemen This sayd peple were also named long tyme Galli were trybutaries to Rome vnder theyr rule tyll the tyme of Ualentinyan emperour aboute the yere of Cryste .iii. hoūdreth .lxvi. Thys Ualentinyan hauynge the rule of the west parte of y e world made warre vppon a people called Aleynys that dwelled nere vnto the forenamed Gallis These Aleynys were egre of fyghte and ouer y t they were so closyd wyth fennys marrys that the Romaynes myghte not wynne to them by force wherof they often rebellyd agayne the empyre wherfore in the ende Ualentinyan consyderynge the fyersnes of y e Gallis wyth theyr nere dwellynge vnto the sayd Aleynys couenaūted with them yf they wolde subdue the sayde people they shulde haue releace of .x. yeres trybute whyche couenaūt well and suffycyently confermed to the Gallis they in shorte whyle after by theyr knyghthode and polycy subdued or vtterly chased the sayd Aleynys For the whyche dede they contynued the foresayde .x. yeres wythout payenge of any trybute whyche .x. yeres ronne and expyred y e Romaynes agayn claymed the former accustomed trybute To whom it was answered y t they had redemed the sayd tribute with the price of theyr blood and ought not any more to be charged with any suche trybute wyth whych answere the Romaynes beynge sore dyscontentyd made newe warre vpon y e sayd Sicābris Of whyche warre the Sicambris or Gallis had the worse and were chasyd from theyr citye of Sicambria Then as wytnessyth Polycronica other they drewe nere vnto the water of Ryne and grewe in shorte processe to suche a multytude of suche strength that they in shorte whyle after by ledynge of theyr .iii. dukes named Marcomirus Somomꝰ or Symon and Genebaur warred vppon the landes of the empyre such as were subiecte vnto y e same wherof Theodosius surnamed the yonger then emperour beynge warned he anone sente .ii. of his dukes wyth a greate hoste for to subdue the sayde Gallis or Sicambris But they defendyd them so knyghtly y t the sayde dukes were chasyd and as wytnessyth mayster Robert Gagwyne a greate nomber of the Romaynes were slayne THE LXXVII CHAPITER AFter this victory thus opteyned by the Sicambris they waxed so stronge that they wan from the Almaynes dyuers townes and stronge holdes wythin Germania And after that they opteyned the famous cytye named Treueris which as wytnessyth the aucthour of Cronica cronicarum was fyrst foundyd in the tyme of the patryarche Abraham before the incarnacyō of Cryst a thousande .ix. houndred .lxv. yeres And so dayly wan vpon the nacyōs adioynynge to them tyll they came to the ryuer of Seyn where they restyd them and buylded the countre all there about In so mych that they than named them selfe Franci as men freed and out of all daunger of the empyre of Rome and theyr land after them they named Fraunce whyche syns that tyme is greatly encreasyd So that at this daye it is a countre of great welth honoure and conteyneth many prouynces lordshyppes as after the affyrmaūs of Policronica is touchyd in y e .xxvii. chapyter of hys fyrste boke where it is shewed that Gallia which now is Fraunce had that name Gallia of whytenesse of people Thys Gallia or Fraunce hath in the North syde Germania in the Eest the ryuer of Ryne in the Southest the Alpis or the hyghe mountaynes and in the west the see Occean whyche is called both Brytannicum and Gallicū whyche is to meane Englyshe see Frenche see For yt departyth Englande and Fraunce in the south see of myddell eerth y t wassheth about by the the prouynce of Narbon In the tyme of Iulius Cesar Gallia was departed in thre but for diuers happes that befell after in that land the countre and land that stretcheth from the Ryne to Seyn̄ is now called Gallia Belgica whyche is very Fraunce And that countre that stretcheth from Seyn̄ to y e ryuer of Leyr is called Gallia Lugdunensis wherof the ouer parte hyght or is named Burgundia that is Burgoyne and the nether parte is Nestria or Normandye And the countre that stretcheth frō the ryuer of Leyr to the ryuer of
of hys moder Brunechyeldis for that he knewe in her so great vntrouthe subtylty and also of Gyllon the bysshoppe the whyche he also sayde he was not to be trusted when he had thus aduertysed hys neuewe they both retourned vnto the place of coūsayll where by them and theyr counsayllys certayn thynges concernyng the comone wele were sette in an order And that done the sayde counsayll was fynyshed and purueyaūce for theyr dyner pronyded the prynces wyth theyr baronye went vnto dyner In the season of whych dyner the sayde Gunthranus sayde vnto y e great nomber of lordes beynge presente ye my lordes and nobles of Fraunce the whych to me haue euer more ben true and dere here is myn neuew the whyche as myne heyre I haue allowed and ordeynyd whome I praye you to honoure and wyth true fayth be vnto hym obedyent as to your kyng For of y e great worthynesse that of hym is to come I am in great hope whyche is allyed wyth myght and vertue And to the augmentacyon of these wordes shortely after restored to hym all such cytyes as Chilpericus by hys lyfe had with holden from hym And soone after eyther from other in moste humble louynge maner departyd Of thys peace betwene these two prynces thus stablysshyd the fame ranne wyde wherfore certayne lordes beyng vppon the partye of Gundoaldus refused hym and went vnto the party of Gunthranus Soone after wyth hys people Gūdoaldus resortyd vnto a cytye ouer the ryuer of Gerounde named Conuena where for the strength therof he thought to abyde hys fortune wherof when Gunthranus was warned he in goodly spede made thyder warde and layd hys people nere vnto the sayde cytye But when he had espyed the strēgth therof and knew well yt was daungerous for to obteyn he thē vsyd gyle where strēgth myghte not preuayle and deuysed or forged certayn letters in the name of Brunechyeldys wherin was fayned that the sayde Brunechyeldys shulde desyre Gundoaldus in all hasty wyse to resorte vnto the cytye of Burdeaux Of whyche fraude Gundoaldus no thynge suspectynge commaundyd hys treasoure wyth other hys stuffe vnder saufe gydynge thyderward to be conueyed wherof the knightes of Gunthranꝰ hauyng knowlege with a stronge cōpany made ouer the fore sayd water of Geroūde layde such watche for them that they encountred the sayde people that caryed the sayde treasure and stuffe and parforce toke it from the knyghtes of Gundoaldus and presentyd it vnto Gunthranus Lyke as before ye haue harde that certeyne lordes of the hoste of Gundoalde fled vnto the hoste of Gunthranus so in thys passe tyme .iiii. capytaynes or rulers of the hoste of Gunthranus fled vnto Gundoalde y t whych myne authour nameth Desiderius Mommolus Bladascus and Sagyttaryus whyche .iiii. after theyr comynge to Gundoalde stode in such fauour that he was by theyr counsayle myche what aduysed and gyded It was not longe after that y e knyghtes of Gunthranus had thus wonne y e foresayd treasoure stuffe that Gundoald was so sore pursued that he was fayne to close hym wyth in a stronge cytye the whyche Lendegylsus mayster of the hoste of Gūthranus assayled by dyuerse feates of warre to wynne But whā he saw hys labour lost than he cautelously fande y ● meane to speke secretly with one of the foresayde .iiii. capytaynes named Mommolus and wyth hym treatyd of the betrayenge of y e cytye The whyche after many and longe exhortacyons wyth the assuraūce of theyr lyues and other graūtyd vnto the sayd treason whereof the maner shulde be thus Thys sayd Mommolus wyth the forenamed Bladascus and other of that affynyte shulde set a fyre an olde temple wythin y t citye And when the people of y e citye were besyed to quenche the fyre the sayde Mommolus wyth hys adherentes to open the gates so to let in Lyndegylsus and hys knyghtes But yet thys treason set a parte Mōmolus goeth to Gōdoalde and sheweth to hym the greate daunger that he standeth in of his enemyes wherfore he counsayled hym that he wyth the other rulers about hym go vnto the tentys of Gunthranus and yelde them all vnto hys grace and mercy And also to the entent that he shuld there shewe and proue that he was the indubytate son of the fyrste Clothayre the whyche to the kynge and all his hoste was very doutfull and the more bycause he so fled from them whan Gundoaldus had at ley soure harde the counsayle of Mommole gyuynge to hym credence for so mych as by hys counsayle before tymes he had fortheryd hys causes and also by comfort that he reportyd to haue by meanes of Lyndegylsus before named he settyng a parte all fere wyth certayne nomber in peasyble wyse issued the cytye And whan he had a lyttell space gone ii erles of Gunthranus hoste named Bole and Boson receyued hym and delyuered hym to the power of Lyndegylsus and Mommole retourned wyth the other of his confederey vnto y e citye and closed faste the gates bytwene y e citye and the pauyllyons of Gūthranus where was a lytell coppyd hyll to the heyght whereof whan Gundoalde was comen the sayd Bosō hym sodeynly threwe downe And as he was rollynge downe the hyll with a great stone he strake him on the hed by vyolēce wherof he was forthwith slayne or dede And Mommole the whych as before is towched was re-entred the citye fyrste dyspoyled the goodes of the sayd Gundoalde and after fell vpon the citesyns and robbed and spoyled them in lyke maner not sparynge prestes nor other and after brente chyrches temples and houses without pytye whyche done he sped hym vnto the tentys of Lyndegylsus But he not beynge sure of the sauegarde of the sayde Mōmole and hys cōpany from the murmoure of hys knyghtes or more veryly for he wolde not be a knowen of the prouyded deth of theym commaunded the sayde Mōmole wyth hys adherentes to tary without not to come in the prese of hys knyghtes tyll he had somedele pacyfyed them whiche was done but not all without strife for some there were that beganne to quarell wyth hym and hys But whē Lyndegylse sawe that this Mōmole and his company were somdele withdrawē frō his pauylyon he made a token to hys knyghtes whereby they knowyng his mynde fell vpon him slewe hym Sagyttarius one of the foresayde .iiii. of that company the whyche myne authour reporteth to be a byshoppe fledde to haue sauegarded hym self but in his flyght he was slayne And whē these enymyes where thus brought out of lyfe Gunthranus commaūded the goodes of the sayde Mommole to be broughte vnto hys tresorye whyche were of great valure and after were egallye deuyded betwene hym and Childebert hys neuewe It was not longe after but certayne tokens fygures appered in the fyrmament the which by astronomers were iuged the fyne of some prynce whyche after a yere shewyd to be true For the sayd
apostles Peter and Poule and also to speke wyth the pope for dyuers maters where he taryed a greate parte of the wynter folowynge and after retorned vnto Papy whych as yet was not delyueryd nor gyuē vp But it was not longe after his retorne that the cytye was wonne wherein was takyn as prysoner the sayde Desyderius wyth hys wyfe and chyldren The whyche to make shorte processe he at length forcyd hym to restore vnto the pope all such possessyons as he before tyme hadde taken from hys chyrche and addyd more there vnto the two cytyes of Spoletys and Beneuent And fynally depryued hym of all kyngely honoure and ladde hym as prysoner into Fraunce and as a prysoner or exyle from hys naturall countreye kepte hym at the cytye of Lyons as wytnessyth Cronica cronicarum Iacobus Philippus and other And after by agremēt the pope gaue that kyngdome vnto Pypynus hys son the whych cōtynued so in the French mens rule and possessyon ouer the terme of two hundred yeres For thys vyctoryous dede thus obteyned by Charlis the forenamed pope graūted vnto hym many great pryuyleges Amonge the nomber whereof one was that no pope durynge the lyfe of Charlys shulde be in no wyse electid or chosyn tyll there came from hym a commaundement to go to that eleccyon And also he graunted vnto hym inuestyture of benefyces spyrytuall whyche grauntes and pryuyleges were confermed and authorysed in a Synode of an hundreth and .liii. bysshoppes kepte in Fraunce by cōmaundement of the foresayd Adryan Of thys Charlys longe and tedyous it were to tell the hole of hys actes and dedes wherfore I entende to towche but a parte of theym and for the other deale I remitte to them y t haue further desyre of knowlege vnto the bokes of Turpyn and Egyueaux chaplayne to the sayde Charlys or ellys to the sayd bysshop Turpyn whyche wrote a longe worke of hys vertuous dedes THE CLV CHAPITER THis Charlys marcyall after his retorne into Fraūce without there lōge taryeng sped hym agayne to the forenamed people called Soysons or Saxons whyche newly rebellyd and warryd sharpely vppon them and fought wyth them sondry batayles Amonge the whyche two ben specyally noted whereof that one was foughten at a place called Onacre and that other at the ryuer of Esam or Hesayre By whyche two batayls the Saxons loste moch of theyr people and were so sore feblysshed that they were fayne shortely after to put them in the mercy of Charlys By reason wherof he bonde them vnto certayne lawes and ordynaunces wherof specyally one as pryncypall of them was that they frō that daye forth shulde renounce and forsake theyr worshyppynge of idollys and fals goddes and beleue in the fayth of Crystes chyrch wyth many other For the performynge of the whyche couenauntes the kyng toke of them good pledgys hostages And more ouer to the ende to mynysshe make lesse theyr strengthe he chase out of them .x. thousande of the moste apte men for the warrys and conueyed them wyth hym into Fraunce And after he hadde clothed them with the mantell of baptyme takynge of thē assuryd othe to be trewe to hym and to hys heyres he after inhabyted them in dyuers places of his realme Of the whyche people as affermeth myne authoure descendyd the Flemmynges and Brabāders And thus endyd the warre of the Saxons or Soysons that hadde contynued by the terme of many yeres passyd And forthwyth by assent and aduyse of hys counceyle he preparyd all abilymentes and ordynaunce of warre to go agayne y e Hunys y t then had wonne great groūd in Spayne And for to bryng this war to y e more effectuall ende he chase .xii. perys which after some wryters are called dozeperys or kynges Of the whiche vi were byshoppes .vi. temporall lordes Of the whyche byshoppes thre were named dukes whych were archbyshops .iii. erlys which were byshoppes Of the temporall lordes thre were dukes and thre erlys that is to saye the duke of Burgoyne the duke of Neustria or Normandy and the duke of Guyan for .iii. erlys the erle of Palantyne y e erle of Tholons and the erle of Champayn Of y t whyche also some writers afferme that y e famouse knyghtes Rowland and Olyuer were .ii as Roulād erle of Palātyne Olyuer erle of Tholous when Charlis had prepared all thynges necessary to this gret iourney he fyrste made his pylgrymage vnto saynte Denys and there offerd ryche great gyftes and after procedyd towarde his iourney and fyrste besyegyd the citye called Pāpilona the whych after .iii. monethes he subdued to his obeysaunce This cytye stode in the entre of Spayne in the montaynes callyd montes Pyreni After the obteynynge of whyche cytye and by myracle of saynt Iamys as sayth Antoninus Charlis commaūded all such as to Crystes fayth wolde be conuertyd shuld be sauyd the other to passe by sentence of the sworde And after he hadde wonne y e fyrste cytye he wanne all the coūtrey adioynynge to the same by reason wherof he caste great fere vnto the myscreantis and wan by his strēgth and by appoyntemēt so that they became his trybutaryes these coūtres and prouynces hereafter ensuynge that is to saye as wytnessyth Uyncēt historyall Antoninus and other y e land of Laudeluffe the land of Pardis the lande of Castyll the lande of Maurys the prouynce of Nauerne the countrey of Portyngall the lāde of Byscaye the lande of Palarge and destroyed in them all idollis and buyldyd in them chyrches and monasteryes and brought the more partye of them to Crystes relygyon And moste specyally the chyrche of saynt Iamys he buylded in Cōpostella wyth sumptuous coste gaue there vnto great possessyons to the maynteynyng of the diuyne seruyce of god and the mynysters of y e same And ouer that with the treasour that he gate in these foresayd countreys he buyldyd many dyuerse chyrches as well in other places as there Longe yt were to tell all the cyrcūstaunce of this vyage and vyctoryes of the same wherfore I passe ouer And when Charlys hadde sped hys nedys he had good wyll to retourne into Fraunce In the whych retorne Carlis castynge no dought nor parell by the treason of Gauelon a knyght or ruler of Gascoyn y e which Gauelon hadde receyuyd of a Paynym kynge named Marsyll great ryche gyftes for to betraye the hoste of Charlis was dysceyuyd as after shewyth Thys Gauelon the better to compasse and brynge to effecte his purpose aduised Charlis wyth a certayne of his people to passe the porte of Cesayre and to leue behynde hym in the rerewarde Rouland Olyuer wyth .xx. thousande of the resydue of his hoste And when the kynge was passyd wyth his hoste he gaue warnynge vnto the forenamed Marsyll and other that they shulde close the sayde Rowlande in the place callyd Rounceuale The whych accordyng to that false counsayll with an hoste of .lx. thousande or mo beclyppyd Rowlande and his people
done by Offa kynge of Mercia for so myche as in his days flowred that famouse clerke Alcumus or Albinus the whych as sayth the frenche cronycle was fyrste foūder of the scole of Parys and of Papya as is before shewyd in y e story of Charlys the great in the thyrd chapyter of the sayde storye when Adeulphus hadde thus sped hys besynes and pylgrymage at Rome he retournyd by Fraunce where at that tyme was kyng of that lande Charlys the Ballyd of whom he was ioyouslye receyued And after he hadde dysportyd hym there a season he spousyd the doughter of the sayde Charlys in the .xx. yere of the reygne of the sayde Adeulphus as testyfyeth Policronica in the .xxx. chapiter of his .v. boke whych shuld be the yere of the reygne of the sayde Charlis the .xi. But of this mariage is nothynge touchyd in the frenche cronycle Then Adeulphus takynge leue of the kynge toke shyppynge and landed in Englande wyth his wyfe Indyth by name And for that he contrary the law made in y e tyme of Brigthricus sette his wyfe in the kynges trowne and magnyfyed her lyke a quene the lordes of his lande arose agayne hym and pullyd from hym a great parte of his domynyon and made his eldeste sonne ruler therof whyche all was done in reproche of Ethelburga whyche slew her lorde Brigthricus as before is shewyd Lastly the mater was appeasyd and he to his kyngly honour restoryd About this tyme Bertulphꝰ kyng of Mercia slewe wyckydly in the holy tyme of Penthecoste saynte wyl stone whose holy bodye was buryed at Repyngedō And in y e place where thys holy wylstone was slayne stode a pyller of lyghte .xxx. dayes after And in the yere folowynge dyed the sayde Bertulphus After whose deth Burdredus was made kynge of Mercia or myddell Englande the whyche before tyme hadde spousyd the doughter of kynge Adeulphus In the later dayes of thys Adeulphus the Danys dyd myche harme in Lyndesey and also in kent and frome thens came to London and robbed and spoyled the cytye wherfore Adeulphus gaderyd his people and lastely mette wyth them in Southerey vppon a downe called Oclea and there dyscomfyted theym not wythoute shedynge of great plente of the Anglis blood and forsyd them to take the see so that after they landed in eest Anglia as after shall appere Then lastely dyed thys good kynge Adeulphus or Ethelwolphꝰ when he hadde ruled hys subictes nobly by accorde of moste wrytes fully .xxii. yere and was buryed at wynchester leuynge after hym four sonnys aforesayde Francia THE CLXIII CHAPITER CHarlys y e yongeste son of Lewys the mylde began hys reygne ouer the chefe part of Fraūce in y e yere of our lorde .ix. hundred .xli and the .ix. yere of Adeulphus then kynge of westsaxons the whyche as before is sayd was surnamed Ballyd Anon as his father was buryed his brother Lothayre to whome the father as ye fore behaue harde had cōmyttyd y e guydynge of this Charlys by the entysynge of his brother Lewys malygned agayn this Charlis and sought many wayes to put hym from such landes as his father had gyuen hym This sayd Lothayr was after the deth of his father emperour and Lewys the yonger brother was duke or knyght of Bayon But for Charlis was yongest and had to his parte the pryncypall porcyon of Fraunce whych was called myddell Fraunce therfore his .ii. bretherne specially Lewys malygned greuously agayne hym wherof this Charlis beynge somdeale infourmed bare hym so wysely so egally to his subiectes that he hadde theyr loues and fauours and trustyd alway by theyr good ayde that he shulde be of power to wythstande theyr vnkynde malyce And lyke as the hydde fyre in processe breketh oute and shewyth great lyght and flammy blase euen so dyd thys couerde malyce at the laste breke oute to great ire and opē wrath For after foure yeres was passyd the sayde two bretherne with oute defyaunce or groundely cause of warre assygned or assembled a great hoste suche lyke before thys daye hadde not ben sene and entryd the lymyttes of kynge Charlys Then Charlis assembled in all y e haste hys lordes and requyred theyr aydes and counsayll to wythstande the malyce of hys bretherne And when he hadde knowelege of theyr good myndes anon theyr knyghtes were gaderyd and all thynge was redy to the fyghte Nowe in thys whyle the two bretherne wyth theyr peple were comen to a place callyd Fountayns or Foūtanet where to Charlis spedde hym And when both hostes were nere eyther partye made prouysyon to subdue his enymye Then were the bataylles on bothe partyes orderyd assygned to theyr standardes and capytaynes and the wynges set to the moste auauntage what shuld I lenger processe of this ordynaunce make fynally the shote of arblasters beganne on both sydes whyche ouer threwe many an horse and man and specyally the fore rydars that putte theym selfe in prese wyth theyr longe and sharpe launcys to wynne the fyrste brunte of the felde Pytye yt was to beholde the goodly bryght armyd knyghtes lyēg and walowynge wyth theyr great stedys in the felde wyth dedly woundes gapynge agayne the son y t were slayne at the fyrst encountre But when the shote was spent and the speres to shateryd then both hostes ranne to gyther wyth Rowlandes songe so that in shorte whyle the grene felde was dyed into a perfyte redde For there was heddes armes legges trunkys of ded mennys bodyes lyenge as thycke as floures growe in tyme of maye in the floryshynge medowys myserable and pyteouse yt was to beholde the persones halfe lyuynge and halfe ded with theyr grysely woundes pyteously gronynge and cryenge wythoute comforte So that there was shewyd all rygoure wythoute mercy and all crueltyes wythout compassyon Thus duryd this mortall fyghte by a longe season that doutefull yt was to knowe whyche partye hadde thauaūtage of other Howbeit Charlys was putte to an afterdeale by .ii. meanes The fyrste was for so mych as Charlis entendyd to haue forborne for the reuerence of the hygh feste as the daye of the ascensyon of oure lorde that daye not to haue foughten And the seconde was that he was farre lesse in nomber whyche two causes of dysauaūtage not with standynge yet in the conclusyon he wanne the honoure of that iourney But not wythoute great losse of hys peple and many of the nobles of his lande where of the frenche boke rehersith the names But for they be to vs vnknowen I passe theym ouer And as yet is testyfyed of many wryters there was slayne that daye mo Frencheman then was slayn at any felde euer before that day wherof the nomber is not expressyd for yt was so great Then Lothayre was forced to take Aquisgrany for his safegard and Lewys ellys where But Charlys wyth a small cōpany that to hym were lefte folowed his Bretherne and cōstrayned Lothayre to forsake y e citye thens to go vnto Lyon a cytye y e standeth at
that lande or prouynce into hys owne handes and putte out his sonne whyche after allyed hym with Constantyne kynge of Scottes and maryed his doughter By whose styrynge and exhortacyon he gatheryd a company of Danys Scottes and other and entred the mouth of Humber wyth a stronge nauy wherof herynge Ethilstane in all goodly haste prepared hys armye and at length met wyth hym and his people at a place called Brymforde where he hadde a great and solemne vyctorye For as yt is shewyd in the foresayde chapyter and boke after the kynge by helpe of god and saynt Adelyne hadde defended the subtyll assaute made vppon hym by nyghte of his enymyes he vppon the morne by helpe of hys brother Edmunde Dodo the archbyshoppe chased his sayde enymyes and slew there Constantyne kynge of Scottes and .v. small or vnder kynges and .xii. dukes wyth the more partye of all the straūge nacyons at y e tyme there gaderyd whyche batayll shuld be done by the meanyng of the sayd Policronicon about y e last yere of his reygn THE CLXXXV CHAPITER IT is also testyfyed of dyuers wryters that Ethylstane after this vyctory thus obteyned of the Danys and Scottes or Scottes Danys he also subdued the Northe Brytons that dwelled at Herforde there about and compelled theym to pay to hym yerely for a tribute .iii. hūdred pounde of syluer xxv hundred hede of nete and .xx. pounde in gold But Guydo sayth that kynge Ethilstane caused to come before hym at Herforde cytye the rulers of all the North Brytayne there had wyth them suche communycacyon that he forced them to graunte vnto hym as a yerely trybute .xx. pounde of gold iii. hundred poūde in syluer of heddes of nete .xxv. hundred wyth dogges haukes to a certayne nomber After whych vyctories he went vnto Exeter and repayred yt the wallys therof suffycyently Dane Iohn̄ Lydgate a munke somtyme of saynt Edmundes bury made a goodly treatyse of this kyng Ethilstane shewynge that he was in so great persecucyon of the Danys y t he was constrayned to call at wynchester a great counsayll of his lordes where after longe debatyng of the mater dyuers ambassades and messages sent about by y e kyng the Danys It was fastly cōcluded that the kynge shuld puruey hym a champyon to fyghte wyth Colibronde or Colbronde a geaunt Dane which the Danys had appoynted for theyr cheuetayne wherfore the kyng enserchyng thorough his landes for such a knyght myght none fynde was in great daunger dystresse heuynesse And for so mych as he well perceuyd y e mannes power fayled he by the aduyse of lordes spyrituall temporall fyll to fastynge prayer and cōtynued therin by a certayn of time wyth perfyte charitable deuocyon In tyme of whyche sayde abstynence a vysyon was shewed vnto Ethilstane cōfortyng hym also cōmaundyng hym y t erely vppon the next mornynge he shuld stand at the North gate of the citye of winchester and there he shuld fynde amonges y e porayll a pylgryme clad in palmers wede whome he shulde chose for his champyon After whyche vysyon thus to hym shewyd he dyd accordyngly and founde a man of goodly stature and somdeale stryken in age and clade as he was monyshed by the vysyon wherof he fyrste gaue vnto god thankynges and after made request to this pylgryme that he wold take vpon hym thys batayll for the defence of the lande whyche layde for hym many reasonable excuses as well for his age as otherwise How be it finally he graūted y e kyng to fullfyll his request and cōmaundement And at the daye before lymytted and assygned met in the feld with the forenamed geaunt called Colbronde wythoute the gate of y e cytye in a medow or pasture called Hydemede where betwene them two was faughten a longe and cruell fyghte so that the kynge was in great fere of hys champyon But fynally by helpe of god the pylgryme wanne the honoure of that fyghte and slew that geaunt that was of excedynge stature and therunto of great and passynge strength whyche vyctorye by the pylgryme thus by grace obteyned the kynge wyth his barony fette hym into the citye of wynchester wyth solemne processyon and cōueyed hym vnto the cathedral chirch of the same where he thanked god wyth great deuocyon offryd there the axe wyth the whych he had slayn the Danys champyon After whych oblacyon with dew reuerence other obseruances by hym and other fynyshed the kynge caused hym to be conueyed vnto hys courte where he taryed that nyght wyth myche daunger And vppon the morne erely he made suche meanes that he wolde nedely departe and y t in the same apparell y t he came thyther when the kynge was aduertysed that his pylgryme wold so hastly departe whom he entendyd to haue holden wyth hym in his courte and to haue endowed with ryche possessyons he cōmaunded hym to be broughte vnto hys presence And when he sawe he coude not cause him to tary he required hym to shewe his name wherof also he besought the kyng to pardon hym wherfore the kyng cōsyderyng hys hasty departynge wyth many other thynges in hym to be consydered was the more desyrous to haue of hym some knowlege And for that he was effectuose in his desyre when the pylgryme perceyuyd that he coude not wyth the kynges pleasure departe wythoute dysclosynge of hys name he sayde he myght not dyscouer hys name wythin the walles of the cytye wythoute the offence of hys conscyence wherfore the kyng graunted to go wyth hym tyll he were in the brode feldes Uppon whyche graunt thus made the kynge commaunded dyuers great gyftes to be to hym presented whyche all he vtterly refused Shortely to cōclude the kyng wyth a certayne of his lordes conueyed this sayd pylgryme vnto the townes ende And when he was thyther cōmen he there requyred of the performaunce of the promyse where thys pylgryme syttynge one his kne besoughte the kynge of his especyall grace that he wolde put a parte his lordes and other so that he myghte shewe vnto hym his name onely whyche done he in moste humble wyse besoughte hym that he wolde kepe hys name secrete for the space of .xxiiii. oures where of by y e kyng affyrmaunce to hym fyrmely made he shewed vnto hym that he was hys naturall lyege man and subiect and that his name was Guy of warwike Of whyche tydynges the kyng was very ioyous and offeryd hym then of newe many ryche rewardes and gyftes But all was in vayne for he wolde nothynge receyue so that the kynge and he lastely departed wyth wepynge eyen And after as affyrmeth my sayde authoure not farre from warwyke in a wyldernesse he purchased by goddes purueyaunce a lodgynge in a heremytage where by the terme of two yeres and more he dwelled kept an harde lyfe And herynge that dame Felyce his owne wyfe fed dayly .xiii. poore men for Cristes sake he went thyther sondry tymes
thy reward and guardon After whyche sentence thus gyuen by the kynge the sayde Hebert was by the executers ladde vnto an hylle wythout the citye of Laon̄ and there most shamefully hanged whych hyll for that cause was named Hebertes hyll longe tyme after About thys tyme the seconde duke of Normandy named wyllyam longa Spata y e son of Rollo or Robert fyrste duke of Normandy was slayne by treason of one Arnolde erle of Flaūdres for encheson that the sayd wyllyam ayded a noble man of Pycardy named Herloyn̄ agayne the sayde Arnolde This wyllyam left after hym a son named Richarde whych at the tyme of his fathers deth was not of suffycient age to rule so gret a dukedome wherfore Lewys kynge of Fraunce desyrous of that prouynce whyche of late dayes belonged to his antecessours and progenitours sought besyly the wayes and meanes to haue this chylde Rycharde vnder his tuycyon gydynge And this to brynge to effecte spedde hym vnto Roan̄ callynge there before hym the lordes and rulers of the countrey hauynge vnto them many plesaunt and fayre wordes in promysyng to them ayde and assystence to reuenge the deth of theyr lorde and duke and in the conclusyon desyred of them y t he myght haue the noryshynge and bryngyng vp of the chylde tyll he came to hys lawfull age whyche thynge thus by the kynge desyred the lordes anon coniectured in theyr myndes y t he desyred the kepyng of theyr yonge lord to y e ende y t he myghte y e more easely obteyne the possession of that dukedome For the whych the lordes and other of the cytye were in great rumour and grudge agayne the kynge wherof he beynge monyshed to appeace the multytude the kynge toke the chylde in his armes and so bare hym into the place of the assemble of the people there shewyd vnto theym wyth affyrmaunce of great othes that hys entent was onely for y e we le of the child and for defence of hys countrey and not to clayme any ryghte or tytle of the duchy excepte onely the homage therof whyche belongeth to hym by iuste tytle By meane of whyche fayre speche the kynge obteyned his purpose and caried the chyld with hym into Fraūce not forgetynge the vnkynde dealynge of the Normans when Arnolde erle of Flaūdres vnderstode that to the kynge of Fraūce the guydynge of y e yonge chyld was commytted ferynge y t he wyth power of the Normans wolde ronne vppon hym reuengynge of the chyldes fathers deth sent vnto the kyng x. pounde weyghte of golde wherof euery pounde cōteyneth .xii. ounces and euery oūce in value of fyne gold xl s so that after this rate his presente shulde be in value to y e summe of .ii. hundred .xl. pounde All be yt mayster Gagwyne sayth he sent vnto hym but .xl. marke besechyng him to be his good and gracyous lorde and not to gyue to hasty credence to hys accusours For he in suche wyse wolde declare hym selfe and delyuer vnto the kynge the murderers of duke wyllyam he meane wherof he shulde certaynly know that he was innocēte of the sayd dukes deth And ouer this he made a frende about the kynge whyche spake good wordes for hym put in the kynges mynde the great hurtes iniuryes that he and his progenytours hadde susteyned of the Danys or Normans By meane whereof this murdour was forgoten more and more the kyng malygned agayne the Normans and to the chylde he bare not so good mynde as some men thoughte that he wolde do Uppon a daye when the kyng was retourned from hys dysporte of huntynge a lyght cōplaynt was brouht to hym of the chylde Rycharde of an offence that he had commytted For the which he rebuked him otherwyse then was syttyng to his honour and called hym opprobryously and thretened hym greuously and after that caused hym to be kept more straytly then he before hadde vsed to be To this chylde Rycharde was assygned a mayster or teacher named Osmunde whyche Osmunde hadde a famylyer named Iuon̄ These two apperceyuynge the kynges indygnacyon that he bare towarde the chyld studyed for his enlargynge and lastly coūsaylyd hym that he shuld fayne hym self syke The whych was done in suche wyse that all suche as awayted vppon hym supposed hym to be very syke by reason wherof his kepers toke the lesse cure of hym wherof Osmunde beynge ware and also beynge sure of the kynge made a great trusse of herbes or grasse wherin he wrapped the chyld and so conueyed hym oute of the cytye of Laon̄ and there receyued hym an horse redy for the iourney so sped hym vnto Cosuy and delyueryd the chylde to the captayne of that town And from thēs he rode all nyght tyll he came vnto Senlys there shewed all hys doynge vnto y e erle of that coūtrey named Bernard which was nere kynnesman vnto y e yonge duke THE CLXXXVII CHAPITER BErnarde hauynge knowlege of the escape of his kynnesmā Rycharde sente in all haste vnto Hugh le graunde erle of Parys for to haue his ayde and assystence The whych without taryeng assēbled his knyghtes and conueyed the chylde from Cousy to Senlys or Saynlys to his neuewe Bernarde where he was receyued wyth mych ioye and honoure when Lewys was ascertayned of the scape of Rycharde and howe he was in the guydynge of Hughe the great or graunde anon he sent vnto hym gyuynge hym in commaundement that he shulde restore the chyld to hym The whyche excused hym and sayde that the chylde was in the kepynge of erle Bernarde and not in hys The kynge seynge how he was deluded sente for Arnolde or Arnulfe erle of Flaundres whyche at his cōmaundement counsayled the kynge to wynne Hugh le graūde with riche behestes or gyftes After whose counsayll worchynge kynge Lewys wylled the sayd Hugh to mete with hym at the crosse of Compeyn̄ where the sayd Hugh shortly after met with the kynge To whome the kynge promysed great parte of the duchy of Normandy wyth that that he wolde refuse the partye of the Normans and take his parte agayne them By meane of which promises this erle Hugh was ouercomē and agreed with the kynge to warre vppon one parte of the countrey whyle he warred vpon that other And forthwyth receyuyd an armye of the kynge and spedde hym to Bayon̄ made cruell warre vppon that countrey And kynge Lewys entryd vppon the prouynce of Caux and wasted and spoyled that Coste in all that he myghte whan Barnarde the Dane and also Barnarde erle of Senlys conceyued y e vntrouth of Hugh le graūt and also the greate hostes that they were beset wyth by theyr counsayles and other they sent vnto the kynge certayne messengers gyuynge them in commaundement to saye that in vayne the kynge hadde entred that countre with his armye for the citye of Roan and all the prouince was at hys commaundement Besechynge hym not to waste nor spoyle the coūtre but to ayde and helpe defende it agayne
fermely bounde to kepe as well by hostages taken as other suertye the kynge retourned into England ioynyng this kyngedome to hys other So that here is rekened the ende of this kyngdome whyche shulde endure as before is shewyd in the C.ix. chapyter of thys worke by the terme of foure hundred .ix. yeres In the same yere that the kynge hadde thus subdued the danys a strong sykenesse toke hym wherfore he sent for holy byshoppe Dunstane to come vnto hym The whych Dunstane in goynge towarde the kynge harde a voyce saye vnto hym now restyth kynge Edredus in peace At tyme of whych voyce thus sayenge the horse of that holy byshop fyll to the grounde and dyed wythout hurtynge of hys mayster Then this holy man continued his iourney and fande the kynge dede at his commynge whome he buryed wyth great reuerence in the monastery or cathedrall chyrche of the cytye of wynchester in the .xxviii. yere of his age and the .x. yere of hys reygne as testyfyeth Guydo and other THE CXC CHAPITER LOtharius the eldest sonne of the v. Lewys began his reygne ouer the Frenchemen in the yere of our lordes incarnacy on .ix. hundred lv and y e .viii. yere of Edredus then kynge of Englande Thys Lothayr by meanes of Thebaude or Theobalde erle of Chartres toke partye agayne Rycharde duke of Normandye And for to haue agayn hym som groūdely cause he sent vnto y e duke monyshynge hym to haue in mynde the fayth and allegyaunce that the dukes of Normandye ought to bere vnto the kynges of Fraūce And for maynteynynge of the same and for other maters that he hadde to speke wyth hym of he wylled hym to come to a place appoynted where all such maters myght haue farther expedicion All whyche commaundement or request was graunted of the duke when the kynge had receyued this answere from the duke wherof he demyd before the contrary he sent for Arnolde erle of Flaundres Godfrey erle of Angewe and Theobalde before named By whose counsaylles after many argumentes made the kynge agreed to call the duke vnto the ryuer of Isayr there to betraye hym At which daye place appoynted y e duke with a cōuenyent cōpany came vnto the sayd ryuersyde there abydyng the cōmyng of Lothayr vppon y e other syde whyche lastly came thyther wyth a great people wherof when the duke was ware he fered treason for the whyche cause he sent espyes to knowe of the kynges entent And they as wyse mē espyed all the purpose of the hoste and shortely retourned and shewed to the duke that he was in great daunger The whyche shortely after apperyd for the Frenchemen began to passe the ryuer in great nomber Then duke Rychard consyderyng that he was of so litell myght to with stande the great power of the Frēche hoste sente a parte of his men to defende the passage wyth the remenaunt retourned vnto the cytye of Roan̄ wherof the kynge beyng ware that the duke was hym escaped called agayne his people wyth great dyspleasure retourned vnto Laon. It was not longe after y t the kyng assembled a great hoste of Burgonyons and Frenchemen entred into Normandye and beseged the cytye of Bayon and lastly wanne it by the treason of one Gylberde a smyth belongynge vnto y e erle Theobald aboue named when the kynge hadde thus wōne y e citye of Bayon he betoke the kepynge therof vnto the sayde erle The whyche puttynge therin a strength of knyghtes yode vnto a castell called Harmauyle besegyd yt wyth a certayn of knyghtes In whyche season the kynge for nedes of his realme retourned into Fraunce when duke Rycharde was ware of the kynges departure he wyth hys people passed the water of Sayn̄ costed the countrey fyll sodaynely vppon erle Theobalde lyenge at the foresayd syege and slewe of his men vi hūdred .xl. persons and put the erle in such a fere that he scaped with great daunger and fledde with smal company tyll he came to his owne citye of Charters Then duke Rycharde consyderyng the great malice of his foon strēgth of them sent vnto the kynge of Denmarke then named Erarde requyryng him of ayde or helpe for to withstande the malyce of his enymyes The whych Erarde receyued gladly that message promysed to them all theyr request shortely after sent to the sayd duke a great army of Danys which sped thē by y e see tyll they came to to the place where the water of Sayn̄ falleth into the see wherof the duke beynge aduertysed in short space drew vnto them wyth his people and so with them entred the coūtrey of y e erle of Chartris in wastyng destroynge it wythout mercy and after entred the landes of Fraunce in pyllynge robbynge brennynge wastynge yt and slew y e people with out mercy and pytye For this mysery tyranny thus exercysed by the Danys y e kyng beyng therwyth confused sente for the bysshoppes of his land to haue theyr aduyce Amonges the which the bishop of Chartris beynge present was by the hole counsayll admitted to go to the duke and knowe the cause why that he beynge a crysten man made suche destruccyon of the crysten people and occupyed the land of crysten men with so manyfolde harmes and seathes and to conclude the trew or trewce for a certayne of tyme. The sayde byshoppe accomplyssynge the kynges pleasure was answered of the duke that this vexacyon that he put the lande of Fraunce to was for the iniurye y t the kyng hadde before tyme done vnto hym yet cōtynued the same in holdynge from hym hys cytye of Bayon the whych he hadde gyuen to his great enymy the erle of Chartris So that in conclusyon a restraynte of warre was graunted vppon condycyon that by a day assygned the kynge wold apoynte a day of communycacyon and in the meane tyme restore vnto hym hys cytye of Bayon when the kynge had receyued y e answere from the duke he made suche meanes that y e duke receyued his city of Bayon with all dyspeasure forgyuen agayn y e forenamed Theobald whych was done by medyacyon of a relygyous munke as affermeth the Frenche boke And after the daye of metynge was appoynted at a place called Gyndolfoss where the duke made ordynaūce for receyuynge of y e kyng and cōmaunded the paynyms and Danis to behaue them reuerently agayne the kynge and his people the whych was obeyed in all due maner And y e kyng there receyued with myche honour hadde vnto the duke many goodly wordes requyrynge hym to forget all his former vnkyndnesse trustynge to shewe vnto hym suche pleasures in tyme to come that shulde recompence all the former displeasures and vnkyndnes by him before commytted wyth whyche fayre speche the duke takynge yt wythout dyssymulacyon was well satysfyed and content so that after assuraunce of amytye and peace betwene theym stablysshed eyther gyuynge vnto other great and ryche gyftes they departed as frendes The whych
peas contynued durynge theyr lyues THE CXCI. CHAPITER LOthayre thus beyng in loue and amytye wyth the Normans caste in his mynde howe he myght wynne from his neuewe Otthon kynge of Germany y e prouynce of Austracy or Lorayn y t in tyme passed was belongynge to his progeny tours And this to brynge to effecte he gaderyd in right secret wyse a chosen host of Frenchemen with them passed the countrey in such wise that he was entred the cytye of Aquisgrani or any great fame or noyse were therof made wherwith Ottho beyng dysmade fledde for that season suffred the sayde Lothayr for that tyme to execute his pleasure so y t the sayd Lothayre spoyled the kynges paleys and other places to the great enrychinge of hym his hoste And when he hadde taryed there a certayne of tyme he retourned wythout batayll wyth great pompe into Fraunce It is shewyd before in the begynnyng of the story of Ethelstane kyng of England that Henry duke of Saxony the whyche is ment for Germany sent vnto the sayde Ethilstane to haue his suster Alunda to mary vnto his sonne Ottho or Otthon ye shall vnderstande this Henry is of some wryters admytted for emperour But his sonne Ottho forenamed was emperour in dede whose sonne this Ottho was abouenamed and called the seconde of that name and emperour after hys father and son of the forenamed Alunda suster to Ethilstane Then this second Ottho emperour kyng of Germany beyng thus as ye haue hard surprised of his neuew Lothayre kyng of west Fraunce gaderyd a stronge hoste and entred the realm of Fraūce And as wytnessyth Gerardus wryter of hystoryes destroyed the coūtrey of Soysons and lastly came vnto Paris and brent y e suburbes of that cytye and hadde a great parte of his wyll of the sayde Lothayre But the frenche cronycle varyeth from this saynge and sayth that Lothayr by the helpe of the duke of burgoyne and of Hugh Capet erle of Paris after y e sayd Otthō had fyred the suburbes of the citye of Parys issued out of the towne faught wyth the emperoure and compelled him to gyue backe and fle whom the kynge pursued tyll he came to the ryuer of Isayr or Sue where eyther hoste encoūtred wyth other faught cruelly But at length the emperour was forced to forsake y e feld mych of his people slayn and droned with in the said ryuer And so grete a nomber as affermeth the frenche storye that the course of the water was stopped and ouerflowed the feldes nere vnto the sayde ryuer But this victory not wythstādyng as wytnessyth mayster Gagwyn the kynge cōtrary the mynde of the duke of Burgoyne and also of Hugh Capet releasyd vnto the emperour the tytle and ryghte of Lorayne The whyche was cause of couetynge of the realme by the sayde Hugh and vsurpynge of the same as affermeth the sayde authoure whyche agrement betwene the two princes stablisshed and ended eyther retourned into his own countrey After the which season no notable dede is put in memory of the sayde Lothayre so that he fynally sykened and dyed in the yere of our lorde .ix hundred .lxxx. vi when he had ruled his pryncypat vygurously by the full terme of .xxx. wynter and was buried in the mynster of saynte Remigius in the cytye of Raynes leuynge after hym a son named Lewys Anglia THE CXCII CHAPITER Edredus or Edwyne the eldeste son of Edmund brother of Ethil stane began his reygne ouer Englande in the yere of our lord .ix. hundred .lvi and the second yere of Lothayre then kynge of Fraunce This Edwyne was crowned kynge at Kyngistone or Kyngestowne besyde London of the archbyshoppe of Caunterbury The whych selfe daye of his ꝓfessyon or coronacion broke sodeynly from his lordes entred a secrete chāber there occupyed him selfe synfully wyth a nother mannes wyfe wherof saynt Dūstane hauyng knowlege rebuked and blamed hym greuously caused the woman to be voyded from his bed and company whose husband as one authour testyfyeth he slew for to haue y e vnlawful vse of her beaute not cōsideryng y e allyaūce of affynyte of kynred betwene them affermeth y e sayde authour Guydo writer of storyes sayth that Edwyn cōtrary y e lawes of y e chyrch held a woman as his cōcubyne wherfore holy Dūstane accused him vnto Oddo archbishop of Caūterbury by whose power the kynge was causyd to refuse forsake the cōpany of that woman For the which dede Edwyn bare great malice vnto the holy man Dunstane at length by his extorte power banyshed hym his lande and forced hym for a season to holde hym in Flaunders And for the malyce y e he bare towarde hym he dyd myche dyspleasure to all blacke munkes of Englande in so myche that at Malmysbury he put oute the mōkes and set in seculer prestes in theyr stede It is rad of hym that he also toke from the chyrch what he myght and specyally from the blacke monkes In so myche that such precyouse iewellys as Ethylstane hadde before receyued from Othon̄ the emperour gyuē vnto wynchester and Malmysbury he toke theym thens and gaue theym vnto alyauntes and straungers And thus was not onely vnkynde to god but also he vsyd suche tyranny and other vnlefull meanes to hys subiectes that lastely they rebelled agayn hym and specyally the inhabytaūtes of the countre of Mercia or myddell Englande and also of Northumbers and put hym clerely from all kyngely honour and dygnytye when he had reygned after most wryters the full terme of .iiii. yeres and was buryed after in y e cathedrall chyrche of wynchester leuynge none heyre of his body wherfore the rule of the lande fyll vnto Edgar his yonger brother Antoninus archebyshop of Florēce in this worke often before mynded amonges many myracles and vertues actes which he in y e .vi. chapiter of y e .xvi. title of his boke called Sm̄ Antonini reherseth of this holy man Dunstan̄ sayth that when he had vnderstandynge of the deth of thys Edwyn̄ by reuelacyon or otherwyse he made hys specyall prayer to god to know what state the soule of Edwyn̄ was in To whome after thys prayer made apperyd to the sayde Dūstane a great company of fēdes turmentynge the soule of the sayde Edwyn and ledynge yt vnto the places of peyne The whyche when this holy man hadde sene he fell to great wepynge and sorowe besechynge god with most deuocyon to haue pytye and compassyon of that soule And whyle he was occupied in his prayer the sayde cōpany of fendes returned wyth yellynge and cryenge shewynge to hym that thorough hys prayer the angelles of god had byrafte from them the soule of Edwyn THE CXCIII CHAPITER EDgar the seconde sonne of Edmunde and brother of Edwyn laste kynge began hys reygne ouer the realme of Englande in the yere of our lorde .ix. hundred and .lx and the .v. yere of Lotharius then kynge of Fraunce The whyche of dyuers wryters is wytnessed to be
towne toke ꝑtye wyth the duke brake out vppon the nyght and fyred the town and brent a great parte therof In this while dyed and was drowned Eustace the sonne of kynge Stephan and was buried at Feuersham in Kent in the abbay that his father before had buylded Thybaude archbyshop of Caunterbury left not to labour conclude y e peace betwene y e kyng the duke endeuored hym selfe therin so dylygently wyth the assystence of other that in the yere folowynge the peace was cōcluded vppon dyurese condycyons wherof one was that y e kyng shulde contynue as kynge durynge his lyfe and immedyatly after y e conclusion of this peace the sayd Henry shuld be proclaymed in all the chefe cytyes and townes of Englande for heyr apparant be kynge after the deth of the sayde Stephan and that the kynge shulde take hym for hys son of adopcyon and ryghtefull heyr vnto the crowne To the whyche couenaūtes iustly to be holden y e kyng was fyrste sworne and after his lordes spyrytuall and temporall and so yode bothe to London where they were royally receyued And when y e kyng had fested the duke and gyuen to hym ryche gyftes he toke leue of the kynge and so returned into Normandye as affyrmeth the sayde authour the Floure of historyes Howe be yt the cronycle of England sayth that the accorde was made vpon dyuysyon of the lande betwene theym that is to meane that both shuld reygne to gyther and eyther of them to enioye halfe the lande But how that dyuysyon was made or whych parte of the lande eueryche of them shulde hold no mēcion therof is made And the former accorde shuld be as abue is sayde concluded .viii. days folowynge the Epyphanye of our lorde in the towne of Oxenford And y e kyng dyed in the moneth of October folowyng when he had reygned .xviii. yeres full and odde monethes and was enterred in theforsayde abbay of Feuyrsham Of dyuers authours as Ranulfe and other yt is recorded that thys Stephan lyued in great vexacyon and trouble all the terme of hys reygne It is sayde also that thys Stephan maryed Molde or Mawde the doughter of Mary the whyche was the doughter of Henry the fyrst and countesse of Boloyne by whome he claymed the tytle to be crowned as by the yonger doughter of Henry the fyrst and Henry shorte mantell claymed by the elder But after most certenty of wryters this Stephan was sonne of Eustace erle of Boloyne and of Mary syster vnto Molde that was maryed vnto Henry the fyrste whych Molde and Mary were doughters of Margarete wife of Malcolyn kyng of Scottes whyche Margaret was syster to Edgare Ethelynge and doughter of Edwarde the outlawe that was the sonne of Edmunde Ironsyde Then the eldest syster Molde bare Molde the empresse by Henry the fyrste And Molde y e empresse doughter of Henry the fyrst hadde by her second husbande Geffrey Plantagenet Henry the seconde And so by Henry shorte mantell or Henry the seconde returneth the bloode of the Saxons to the crowne of Englande and so it dyd by Stephan but moste conuenyently by Henry the fyrst as by the dyssent of his mother By whych reason yt foloweth that the blood of willyam conquerour continued but .lxx. yeres yf it be accompted from y e fyrst yere of wyllyam Conquerour vnto the laste yere of Henry the fyrste Thys kynge Stephan at the request of Molde hys wyfe buylded in the yere of grace .xi. hundred .xl y e abbey of Coggeshale in Essex and set therin whyte mūkes Also about the same tyme he founded the abbay of Feuersham in Kent where he nowe corporally resteth And the thyrde he founded in Furneys in Lancashyre and all he garnyshed wyth munkys of Cysteaux order dyed as before is sayde wythout yssue of his body Francia THE CCXXXIIII CHAPITER LEwys the .viii. of that name son of Lewys y e great began his reygn ouer the Frenche men in y e yere of our lord .xi. hundred .xxxvi y e fyrst yere of Stephan then kyng of Englande This also is called the yonger Lewys in whose begynnynge Iohannes de tēporibus dyed Thys Iohn̄ was somtyme a squyer in the house of Charlys the conquerour the whyche lyued ouer .iii. hundred yeres for whyche cause he was named Iohn̄ of tyme as he y t myght remēber thinges done of longe tyme passed This Lewys at y e tyme of his fathers deth was in the countrey of Guyan for to receyue the dower of his wyfe Elyanour as before in the storye and seconde chapyter of kyng Stephan is touched But when he harde of y e deth of his father he sped hym into Fraūce where after the necessaryes for the weale of his realme ordeyned he maryed his wyues syster named Alys vnto Arnolde erle of Uermendoze After whyche maryage solempnysed tydynges were broughte vnto hym that the crysten people beynge in the holy lande as warryours vppon the Turkes and Sarasyns were dystressed and ouerthrowen and dyuerse stronge holdes from them taken and wonne wherfore by the exhortacyon of that holy mūke Bernarde whych at this day is called saynt Bernard y e sayd Lewys wyth also Conradus the .iii. of that name then emperour of Almayne wyth Alphon then kynge of Spayne wyth dyuerse other nobles of Fraunce other prouynces toke vpon them the crosse and prouyded for the expedycyon of that iourney in the .iiii. yere of hys reygne after some wryters But of the takyng of hys iourney dyuers writers holde diuers oppinyons so that the doute resteth betwene the yere of our lord .xi. hundred .xl and the yere of .xi. hundred and .l. when all thynges were redy for that iourney the kynge the quene wyth the floure of the chyualry of Fraūce set forthwarde vppon that iourney and came in processe of tyme vnto Constantyn the noble where he met wyth Conradus the emperour and Alphons kynge of Spayne whom the prynce Emanuell then emperour of Constantyne the noble receyued ioyusly and made to theym by his outwarde contenaunce louynge and frendely chere and promised vnto theym ayde in that iourney bothe of vitayll and also for guydes for the nexte and surest waye But he contrary to his promyse dyd dysapoynte theym and nothynge ayded theym For he delyueryd vnto theym meale myngeled wyth lyme wherof grewe myche harme to the crysten hoste after And also he assygned vnto them suche guydes as brought them into places and coūtreys of sterylyte and other daunger so that hastely the Frenche kyng wyth great dyffyculte and losse of his men came vnto the citye of Danas and becleped yt with a stronge syege the whych he assauted and enpayred very sore and was lykely to haue wonne yt yf he had assauted y e place styll where he began But by counsayll of some false crysten men the whyche as wytnesseth Peter Dysroye and other had taken mede of the Turkes the kynge by theyr counsayll remoued the ordynaunce from the weker place vnto y
enfourmed and also of the peace bytwene the erle of Thoners and the Frenche kynge he by meanes of one Roberte a legate of Rome sought meanes of treaty and of peace so that in processe by dylygence of the sayde Robert and other a peace was concluded for .v. yeres whyche peace concluded and assured eyther kynge returned into theyr owne prouynces wythin short whyle after y e Frenche kyng was returned into Fraūce he called to mynde the great vyctory had of the Almayns wyth also one other whych Lewys his son about y e same tyme had agayne or of kynge Iohn̄ in the countre of Aungeou at the castell of Moyne or Mayne For the whyche .ii. vyctoryes the kynge edyfyed a monastery besyde the cyty of Sayntles in the honour of saynt Uyctor and endowed it wyth fayre and ryche possessyons and named it the abbey of saynt Uyctor In the .xxxvi. yere of the reygne of thys Phylyppe Lewys hys sonne by procurynge and sturrynge of the lordes of Englande sayled into the sayde prouynces as more playnely shall be shewed in the .xvi. yere of the reygne of kynge Iohn̄ Many mo storyes actes myght I brynge in and set in thys story of thys kynge Phylyppe yf I shulde folowe the Frenche boke For he maketh there a rehersayll that conteyneth .xxxix. greate leuys of parchemyne Of the whyche I haue taken out suche as to me semeth moste conuenyent and haue ouer passed the other for lengthe of the tyme. Than it foloweth thys Phylyp after these dayes drewe hym to more quyet and reste so that after thys peace or trewce cōcluded wyth kyng Iohn̄ of Englande the authour speketh not or myndeth of any noble dede by hym done So that in the yere of our lorde .xii. hundred and .xxii whyche shulde be the yere of hys reygne .xliii the sayd authour begynneth and sayth that in that foresayd yere apered a greate eclypce of the son wherof the lyke hadde not ben seen in many yeres passed And in the yere folowynge dyed thys Phylyppe in the moneth of Iunii whan he hadde reygned vppon xliiii yeres Before whose deth apered a great comete or blasyng starre the whyche the Frenche men wyth also the foresayde eclypce they adiudged for pronostiquys and tokens of the kynges deth the whyche was buryed wyth excellent pompe in the monastery of saynt Denys in the yere of our lorde a thousand two hundred and .xxiii. and of hys age .lviii leuynge after hym the fore named Lewys whyche was enoynted kyng after hym Thys Phylyppe amonges other notable thynges ordeyned in hys testament be sette to the aydynge and wynnynge of the holy cytye of Hierusalem thre hundred thousande pownde of Parys money to the hospytall in Mount forte a hundred thousande pownde and to be dystrybuted amonges the poore comons of hys londe he gaue twenty thousande pownde But here is to be noted there is a great dyuersyte bytwene a pownd of Parys money and a pownde of sterlynge money For a pownde of Parys money is but two shyllynges and .vi. pence sterlynge or nere there about And so it foloweth that a thousande pownde of Parys is but a hundred fyue and twenty pownde sterlynge By whyche accompte it foloweth that thys kynge gaue to the ayde of the holy londe .xxxvii. thousande and fyue hundred pownde sterlynge to the hospytall xii thousande and fyue hundred pownde sterlynge and to the poore people two thousand fyue hundred pownde And thus here I make an ende of thys volume for cause and cōsyderacyon as after is shewed in the begynnynge of the nexte volume more manyfestely ¶ Lenuoye PRece forth rude volume and recōmende me To my derest frende experte in all scyence Praye hym at leysour the to ouerse And where in meter or prose he fyndeth offence Or congrewe englysshe or of perfyte sentence Humbly hym praye that he woll the correcte whyche in all hys faytes is so cyrcumspecte And shewe to hym forther hys meryt to encreace The seconde volume ys redy to hym dyght Praye hym he woll not therfore wyth the sursease Tyll that thy felow he haue by hys insyght And by hys scyence brought in so good plyght That to all readers it maye be delectable And to the herers frutefull and profytable And not to dysdayne my malapert rudenesse That to hys payne I shulde thus boldely sende Or hym to wyll to suche greate besynesse So rude a worke to correcte and amende But shew hym sothely that all that I entende Is for to enhaunce hys prayse and grea●e laude As he shall knowe I truste wythout frawde ¶ The seconde volume of Fabyans cronycle Conteynyng the cronycles of Englande and of Fraunce from the begynnyng of the reygne of king Rycharch the fyrste vntyll the begynnyng of the reyne of our moste redoubted souerayne lord kynge Henry the .viii. ❧ ¶ Prentyd at London By wyllyam Rastell 1533 ❧ CVM PRIVILEGIO THE TABLE THere begynneth the table of the seconde volume whiche denounces and sheweth all the actes done in euery kynges dayes conteyned in the sayde volume and that euery acte folowes by letter and by the noūber of y e lefe as in thys sayd table is expressed and begynneth at the wardes of London at kynge Rycharde the fyrste whose actes more at lēgth in thys sayd volume shal be shewed wyth other kinges ensuyng by letter in this sayd table as fyrste A.B.C. and so forthe ACrys a stronge citye in the holy lād was wonne by the crysten as appereth fo iiii Actes of the great Cane of Tartaris folio xxiii Abbotte of waltham was accorded wyth the citesyns of Lōdon fo xxviii Accorde made betwene kyng Henry the .iii. and hys barons fo xxxviii Actes done in Hethenes by Lowys the Frenche kyng fo xlviii Acris or Acon abouenamed cytye wōne agayn by y ● Turkes fo lxix Accorde or agrement was made bytwene Englād Scotlād fo xc Actes were made for weryng of sylk folio xci Actes in Fraunce done by the duke of Lancastre fo ciii Actes made by Frēchmē for the occupyeng of y e admissiō of y e enherytour of Fraunce folio cxxxvii Accorde made betwene the dukes of Orleaunce and of Burgoyne fo clx Accusacyōs by the duke of Burgoyn agayn the duke of Orleaunce fo clxi Accorde made betwene the sayde dukes folio clxi Acte made for gyuynge of lyuereys folio clxv Actes made agayn straungers se in folio clxxc Actes made for halowynge of the sondaye wythin the cytye of Londō folio cxci●i Abbay of Bury was spoyled fo cxiii Adyme was graunted to kyng Hēry the fyft fo clxxvii A quyndecyme was graūted to king Henry the .iii. fo xxi A letter deuysed by the barōs sente to kyng Henry the .iii. fo xxxvii A letter was sent by Rychard kynge of Romayns to the barōs fo xxxvii A quarter of where was solde for ii s. folio xc A fraye was made in Fletestrete vpō a bakers seruaunt fo cxlv A fray made in Fletestrete by one Her bottell fo cxcii
versys folowynge Christe tui calicis praedo fit praeda caducis re breui reiecis qui tollit aera crucis Viscera Carleolum corpus fons seruat Ebardi Et cor Rothamagū magne Richarde tuum In terra diuiditur vnus quia plus fuit vno Non superest vno gratia tanta viro The which versys may be englysshyd as foloweth Cryste of the these whyche on the ryght hande was And axyd mercy to vs thou made a praye That we lyke wyse shulde for our trespasse Axe of the mercy and shewe no delay Nor for erthly thynges caste our self away For who of thy crosse accompteth lyttell store The meryte of thy passyon he losyth euermore Thys manfull knyghte thys prynce vyctoryouse whyche toke thy crosse on hym wyth great payne He folowed the thefe and axyd mercy thus For hys offence he warred thy foes agayne And shadde theyr blood on hyll and eke on playne And all for loue good lorde he hadde to the. wherfore swyte Iesu on hym thou haue pytye Of whom the bowellys at Carleyll and the trunke At fount Ebrarde full rychely ys dyght The harte at Roan into the erthe ys sunke Of the worthy Rycharde And so in thre is twyght That more than one whylom was in myght In erthe is separate that lyuynge more then one was and of grace founde lyke to hym none IOhn̄ brother of y e aboue named Rycharde yongeste son of Henry the seconde was ordeyned or proclamed kyng of England the tenth day of Apryll in the begynnynge of the yere of our lorde .xi. hundred .lxxx. .xix and the .xx. yere of the seconde Phylyppe then kynge of Fraunce Thys Iohn̄ at the daye of his brothers deth was in Normandy where at Chynon as soon as his brother Rycharde was dyseasyd he possessyd hym of hys brothers treasour and sent Hubert archbyshoppe of Caunterbury into Englande to make prouisyon for his coronacyon And vppon Ester daye folowyng he was gyrde with the sworde of the duchy of Brytayne sayled soon after into Englād where he was crowned kynge at westmynster vppon holy thursday next folowynge of the forenamed Hubert After whyche solemnitye done he ordeyned the same Hubert chaunceller of Englande In thys whyle the Frenche kynge helde a counsayll at Cenomannia in Turon where to the derogacyon of kynge Iohn̄ Arture the son of Geffrey Plantagenet and neuewe to the sayde Iohn̄ was made duke of Brytayne whyche incontynently after wyth a great army entryd the countrey of Angeou and toke possessyon therof And kynge Phylyppe wyth hys people entryd the duchy of Normandy and layde syege to the cytye of Euroux and wanne yt wyth all the stronge holdes there about and stuffyd theym wyth vytayll strengthed them with his owne knyghtes and that done wasted spoyled the the countrey tyll he came to the cytye of Meaus where met wyth hym the forenamed Arture dyd to hym homage for the countrey of Angiers In the moneth of May Elyanour somtyme wyfe of Henry the seconde and mother to kyng Rycharde came into Fraunce and so to the kynge to Meaus foresayde and made to hym homage for the coūtrey of Poytiers as her enherytaunce And soone after the kinge retourned into Fraūce and the duke of Britayne wyth hym whyche as yet was within age Kynge Iohn̄ heryng of this warre in Normandy and losse of the countreys aboue named assembled a coūsayll and axid ayde of his lordes and cōmons to wynne agayne y e foresayd landes had it graunted after some wryters .iii. s. of euery plough land thorough Englande besyde y e subsydy of y e spyrytuall landes And when he hadde made redy for that belonged to hys voyage he about heruest sayled into Normandy where he taryed tyll Octobre folowynge spendynge the tyme to hys losse and dyshonoure Anno domini M.CC.   Anno domini M.CCi.   Arnolde fyz Arnolde   Balliui   Anno primo   Rycharde fyz Darty   AFter Mychelmas in the moneth of October and fyrste yere of the reygne of kynge Iohn̄ a trewce or peace was concluded betwene the two kynges of Englande and of Fraunce from that daye tyll mydsomer nexte folowynge and in lyke wyse betwene the French kyng and Baldwyne erle of Flaundres And thys yere was made a deuorce betwene kynge Iohn̄ and hys wyfe the erle of Glocetyrs doughter because of nerenesse of bloode And after was he maryed vnto Isabell the doughter of the erle of Engolesym in Fraunce and had by her two sonnys Henry and Rychard and .iii. doughters Isabell Elyanoure and Iane. Thys yere dyed at London blessyd Hugh byshop of Lyncoln̄ and was conueyed to his owne chyrch there enterryd For whom god hath shewyd many myracles so that at thys daye he ys authorysed by the chyrche for a saynte At mydlent after kyng Iohn̄ sayled agayne into Normandy And after Ester he mette with kynge Phylyppe betwene Uernon and the yle Audeley where the peace betwene both realmes was stablyshed and cōfermed for terme of theyr two lyues and the landes deuyded betwene the two kynges as eyther of them shuld holde theym contentyd for theyr lyues after And in shorte tyme after Lewys the eldest son of kynge Phylyppe maryed dame Blanch doughter to Alphons kynge of Castylle and neuewe to kynge Iohn̄ To the whyche Lewys kyng Iohn̄ for loue of that woman shewyd to hym great bountye and gaue vnto her many ryche gyftes In the moneth of Iuly folowyng kyng Iohn̄ rode into Fraūce where he was receyued of the Frēche kynge wyth myche honour and so cōueyed into saynte Denys where he was receyued wyth processyon And vppon the morow the Frenche kyng accompanyed hym vnto Parys where he was receyued of the cytezens wyth great reuerēce and presentyd by the prouoste of the towne in name of the hole cytye wyth ryche presentis And there kynge Phylyppe festyd hym in hys owne paleys gaue vnto hym and hys lordes and seruauntes many ryche gyftes and after conueyd hym forth of that citye and toke leue of hym in moste louynge wyse And when kynge Iohn̄ hadde spedde his maters in Normandy he then returned into Englande Anno domini M.CCi.   Anno domini M.CCii   Roger Desert   Balliui   Anno secun   Iamys fyz Barth   IN y e moneth of december and seconde yere of kynge Iohn̄ Ranulphe erle of Chestre by the example afore shewed by kynge Iohn̄ lefte hys owne wyfe named Constaūce and countesse of Brytayne whych before he had maried by counsayll of kynge Henry the seconde wedded one Clemens One cronycle sayth he dyd so because he wolde haue yssue But the sayd authour sayth that after hys opynyon he dyspleased god so greatly that god wolde suffer hym to haue none yssue but the rather for that dede dyed wythout About thys tyme after opynyon of moste wryters the people or nacyon callyd Tartares beganne theyr domynyon These men dwellyd vnder the hyllys of Inde y t belonged to prester Iohn̄
maryed the doughter of Lewelyn prynce of walys as yt were for a fynall accorde betwene the sayde Lewelyne and Ranulphe euer after to be contynued Anno domini M.CC.xxiiii   Anno domini M.CC.xxv   wyllyam Ioynour   Rycharde Reynger   Anno .viii.   Thomas Lamberte   IN thys .viii. yere of kyng Henry a parlyament was holden at where among other thynges the lordes and baronye of the lande graunted vnto the kynge and to his heyres kynges the warde and mariage of theyr heyres which dede was after of lerned men called Initium malorū that is to meane the begynnynge of yllys or of harmes Anno domini M.CC.xxv   Anno domini M.CC.xxvi   Iohn̄ Trauers   Rycharde Renger   Anno .ix.   Andrew Bokerell   IN thys .ix. yere of kynge Henry Frederyke the seconde of that name emperour of Almayne for his contumacy agayn the chyrch of Rome was accursyd of the .ix. Gregory then pope wherfore soon after he toke two cardynallys and dyuers prelatys as they were goynge to a generall counsayle kepte by the sayd pope at a place callyd Spolete a cytye of Italye Anno domini M.CC.xxvi   Anno domini M.CC.xxvii   Roger Duke   Rycharde Renger   Anno .x.   Martyne fyz wyllyam   IN thys .x. yere of the reygne of kynge Henry the plees of the crowne were pletyd in the towre of London In this yere also as wytnessyth the Frenche cronycle dyuerse souldyours whyche as to thys daye kepte certayne castellys in the countye of Poytiers as the castell of Monstruell the castell of Nyort and the townes of Angely and of Rochel were by the Frenche kynge so assautyd that they were constrayned to gyue them ouer to the Frenche kyng then beyng Lewis the nynthe of that name or after some writers the .viii and sonne of Phylyppe the seconde Anno domini M.CC.xxvii   Anno domini M.CC.xxviii   Stephan Bokerell   Roger Duke   Anno .xi.   Henry Cobham   IN thys .xi. yere of thys kynge Henry the shyrywyke of London and of Mydd were lettyne to ferme for the summe of .iii. hundred poūde by yere to the shryues of London And the .xviii. daye of February the same yere was graunted by the kynge that all werys in Thamys shulde by plucked vppe and destroyed for euer And the .xvi. daye of Marche folowynge the kynge graūted by hys charter ensealyd that the cytyzens of London shulde passe toll free thorough all Englande And yf any cytezyns were cōstrayned in any cytye borough or towne in England to paye any toll y t then the shryues of London to attache any man commynge to London of the sayde cytye borough or towne where suche toll was payed and hym and hys goodys to wythholde and kepe tyll the cytesyners of London be restoryd of all suche money payed for the sayde tolle wyth all costes and damagys sustayned for the same And the xviii daye of Auguste folowynge the kyng graūted to y e sayd cytesyns of London wareyn that is to meane that the cytesyns haue free lybertye of huntynge certayne cyrcuyte aboute London And in thys yere the towne of Lymosyn wyth dyuers holdes in Pyerregot and Aluerne in the countye of Guyan were geuen vppe to the forenamed Lewys the Frenche kynge wherfore the kynge sente ouer hys brother Rycharde erle of Cornewayll shortely after whyche landed at Burdeaux wyth .iii. hundred saylles Anno domini M.CC.xxviii   Anno domini M.CC.xxix   Stephan Bokerell   Roger Duke   Anno .xii.   Henry Cobham   IN the begynnyge of thys .xii. yere of kynge Henry mayster Stephan Langton archbyshoppe of Caunterburye dyed and the great deane of Paulys mayster Rycharde wethyrshed was hys successour And in thys tyme the fraunchyse and lybertyes of the citye were by the kyng confyrmyd to eueryche of y e sheryues was graūted to haue .ii. clerkes .ii. officers wythout mo And to the citesyns of Lōdon was also graūted thys yere that they shuld haue vse a common seale And in this yere Rycharde erle of Cornewayll besyeged the town of saynt Machayre in Guyan And whan he hadde wonne yt by strength he then layed hys syege to y e town of Rochell tyll yt was restoryd by the marshall of Fraunce Anno domini M.CC.xxix   Anno domini M.CC.xxx   walter wynchester   Roger Duke   Anno .xiii.   Robert fyz Iohn̄   In this xiii yere of kynge Henry vppon Trynyte sondaye or after an other authour vpon whyt sondaye whyle the byshoppe of London was at the hygh masse in saynte Paulys chyrch of Lōdon fell sodeynly suche thyckenesse of darkenesse of cloudes and therwyth suche stenche and tempeste of thunder and lyghtenynge that the people there assemblyd voyded the chyrche and the vycaryes and chanons forsoke theyr deskys that the byshoppe remayned in great fere alone excepte a fewe of his menyall seruauntys and suche as attendyd vpon hym at the aulter Also in thys yere the fame of that blessyd woman Elyzabeth doughter of the kynge of Hungarye beganne to spredde The whyche before and after the deth of her husbande Langraue duke of Thorynge in Almayne shamyd not for Crystes sake to weshe the sorys and bylys of lazars and of other poore men besyde other manyfolde dedes of charyte By vertue of whyche blessyd and vertuouse lyfe she by her lyfe thoroughe the power of god shewed many and dyuerse myracles Among the whyche by her prayer .xvi. men were from deth to lyfe arreryd and a man borne blynde to syght restoryd wherfore by Gregorye the .ix. of that name and pope of Rome she was amonge the college of the blessed nomber of sayntes ascrybyd and alowed and commaunded her feast to be halowed the .xiii. kalendas of December Anno domini M.CC.xxx   Anno domini M.CC.xxxi   Rycharde fyz wyllyam   Roger Duke   Anno .xiiii.   Iohn̄ wodbourne   IN this .xiiii. yere of the kinge was ordeyned by the mayre and rulers of the cytye of London that no shryue of that cytye shulde cōtynew lenger in offyce then one yere wherof the cause was that dyuerse of theym by contynuaunce of theyr offyce dyd dyuerse extorcyons and toke brybys of vytellers wyth other defautys whyche were founde and prouyd preiudycyall hurtefull to the common weale of the sayde citye Anno domini M.CC.xxxi   Anno domini M.CC.xxxii   Mychaell of saynte Elene   Roger Duke   Anno .v.   walter Denfelde   IN this .xv. yere the kynge had graūted tyll hym a quindecim or fyftene of the temporaltye and a dyme and an halfe of the spyrytualty to recouer hys lādes loste in Normandy Guyan and Poyteau And in this yere Huberte of Burgth y t at this daye was chefe iustyce of Englande hadde greuyd or dyspleased the kynge in suche wyse that he was compellyd to fle the kynges syght But he was so strayghtly pursued y t he was taken in a chapell of Brentwood in Essex and so cast in
holy Lewys or the tenth Lewys vnto Paris Of whom he was honorably receyued and lodged hym in his own paleys by y e space of an hole weke makynge to hym great feast gyuynge to hym and hys ryche many gyftes And from thens kynge Henry rode vnto saynte Denys where of the abbot and conuent he was receyued wyth processyon and taryed there by the space of a moneth In whyche season a maryage was concludyd betwene Iohn̄ duke of Brytayne and one of his doughters And at hys departynge he gaue to the abbot a cuppe of golde a basyn wyth an ewer of syluer And for hys more consolacyon kyng Lewys assygned vnto hym a certayne lordes other noble men of Fraunce to gyue attendaunce vppon hym and to conuey hym and to shewe hym a parte of Fraunce wyth all dysporte and huntynge and haukynge and other many pleasures of the countrey In whych passe tyme the Frenche kyng assembled hys parlyament at Parys where he shewyd vnto hys lordes that hys conscyence was grudgyd wyth y e withholdyng of all such landes as Phylyppe the second wan from kynge Iohn̄ in Normandye vpon y e whych he desyred theyr faythfull and frutefull counsayll where after many reasons and argumentes made yt was concludyd for a fynall concorde to be hadde betwene kynge Henry and hym that yf kyng Henry wyth the agremente of hys lordes wolde resygne into the Frenche kynges handes all suche tytle and ryghte as he hadde in the hole duchye of Normandye of Angeou poyteau and Mayne for hym and for his heyres for euer that then the Frenche kynge of his great bountye and grace shulde gyue vnto the kynge of Englande and to hys heyres kynges the lordshyppe of Guyan Angeou and Mayne and byryghtfull tytle callyd euer after duke of Guyan and ouer that he shulde be admyttyd for a Pere of Fraunce to all whyche condycyons as affyrmyth and wytnessyth the Frenche cronycle kynge Henry at hys retourne from hys dysporte was agreable and wyth consente of hys baronye and in theyr presence wyth also the baronye of Fraunce dyd hys homage vnto the sayde Lewys for the duchye of Guyan and after made hys othe accordynge to the same And after great gyftes receyued on eyther syde kynge Henry retourned vnto Burdeaux Of thys peace and concorde speketh a cronyculer named Guydo or Guy sayth that kyng Henry sayled into Fraunce and asked restytucyon of the forenamed Frenche kyng of all suche landes as hys ayle Phylyppe the seconde had wyth extorte power taken from kynge Iohn̄ hys father But for he fande the Frenche kynge straunge in his answere also had lytle truste in hys lordes for to haue theyr ayde he fell to agrement wyth the Frenche kynge and solde to hym all his tytle that he had in Normandye Gascoyn and Guyan y ● whych extendyd to the yerely value of .xx. thousande pounde takynge for the same tytle .iii. hūdred thousand poūd of small Turon money whereof a pounde is in value after sterlynge money but .ii. s. iii ● or there about so that he shulde after that rate haue for his sayde tytle after the value of sterlynge money .xxxiii. thousand seuen hundred and .l. pounde In the season and tyme that kyng Henry was thus occupyed in Fraunce dyssencyon fell in Englande betwene syr Edwarde the kynges son and syr Rycharde erle of Glouceter For appeasyng wherof a parleamēt whyche is to meane a counsayll of hys lordes was callyd at westmynster whyche contynued by the space of .iii. wekes and more To the whyche counsayll the lordes came wyth greate companyes and specyally the sayde syr Edwarde and the erle of Glouceter the whyche entendyd to haue lodged within the city wherfore the mayre yode vnto the byshop of worceter and syr Hugh Bygotte and syr Phylyppe Basset to whome the kynge wyth the archbyshoppe of Caunterburye had taken the rule of the lande in hys absence the whyche all went vnto the kynge of Almayne to haue hys aduyse in that mater where it was concludyd that nother the sayde Edwarde nor the erle shuld come wythin the cytye then there to be lodgyd nor none that helde vppon eyther of that partyes And forther yt was prouyded that all suche wythin the cytye as were of the age of .xv. yeres and aboue shulde be in harnes to watche and kepe the cytye bothe daye and nyght and that the gates shulde be kept shyt vppon the daye and a certayne men in harneys to kepe euery gate of the cytye And soone after for the sauegarde of the cytye and sure kepynge of the peace wythin the same the kynge of Romaynes wyth the sayde syr Hughe and syr Phylyppe came into the cytye and there were lodged with theyr companyes and suche other as they wolde assygne to strength the cytye yf nede requyred Then aboute the feaste of saynte Marke the kynge came to London from beyonde the see and was lodgyd at the byshoppe of Londons paleys After whose commynge by his assygnement the erle of Glouceter was then lodged wythin the cytye and syr Edwarde hys sonne was lodgyd in hys owne palays at westmynster And soone after the kynge commaunded hym to be lodgyd at saynt Iohn̄s and all the other lordes were lodgyd in other places wythoute the cytye And the kyng of Romayns remoued agayne to westmynster In whych tyme a direccyon was takē betwene the sayd ꝑtyes a new assemble and parlyament assygned to be kept at westmynster in the quindena of saynt Iohn̄ Baptyst And for that then all thynge myght not be sette in an order yt was prorogyd vnto the feast of saynt Edwarde at the which season all thyng was put at reste for a whyle In this yere also fell that happe of the Iewe of Tewkysbury whyche fell into a gonge vppon the saterdaye and wolde not for reuerēce of his sabbot day be plucked out wherof heryng the erle of Glouceter that the Iewe dyd so great reuerence to hys sabbot daye thought he wold do as myche to his holy daye whych was sondaye and so kept hym there tyll monday at which season he was founden dede Anno domini M.CC.lix   Anno domini M.CC.lx.   Adam Brownynge   wyllyam fyz Rycharde   Anno .xliiii.   Rycharde Couentre   IN this .xliiii. yere soone after the feast of Symonde and Iude the kynge kept a royall feaste at westmynster where he made dyuerse knyghtes Amonge the whych Iohn̄ duke of Brytayne whyche had maryed one of the kynges doughters was there made knyght And soone after was syr Hughe spencer made chefe iustyce After y e feast of Cādelmasse y e kyng commaūdyd a folkmoot to be called at Paulys crosse where he in proper persone wyth the kynge of Almayn the archebyshoppe of Caunterbury and many other nobles came where the kynge commaundyd vnto the mayre that euery strypelynge of the age of .xii. yeres and aboue shuld be before his aldermā be sworn the day folowynge to be trew to the kyng to hys
Guyldhall or other places symple and vndyscret persons shuld haue the voyce and the worshypfull mē lytell or nothyng regarded wherof ensuyd dayly myche vnhappynes and sorow as after shall appere The Barons then to obteyne the more fauour of y e cytye wyllyd them to shewe yf they hadde any of theyr libertyes wythdrawē that they myght agayne to theym be restored and also to dyuyse some new to theyr weale and profyte and they wolde laboure to the kynge that they myghte haue theym graunted For the whych comforte of the lordes the mayre called the commons to the Guyldhall and shewed to them the beneuolēce of the sayd lordes willed them that euery of●ycer for hys offyce to deuyse such thynges as myght be benefycyall for the cytye wheruppon they counsaylled to gyther and made a note in paper of dyuers statutes prouysyons and ordynaunces to be graunted whyche myght more properly be named abhomynacyons For they were deuysed to theyr synguler profyte to y e great hurt of all other marchaūtes commynge to the citye and to all other fayres and markettes of Englande and also preiudycyall to the vnyuersall weale of the realme The whyche when they were ouersene by the heddes of the cytye yt was shewyd vnto the sayd cōmons that theyr ordynaunces were not lefull nor charytable orderyd and therfore they knewe well they shulde not be admytted wyllyng thē to deuyse other But all was in vayne By meane wherof both those other that were ryght necessary for the cōmon weale of the cytye were reiected put of Then y e Barons vpon the morowe folowynge saynt Iamys daye departed from London towarde wyndesore to se the gydynge of the castell where at theyr commynge they putte out the foresayde allyauntes before set in by syr Edward the kinges son the whyche assocyat wyth other yode vnto Fulham where the kynge then lay and shewyd to hym that the Barons had spoyled them of suche goodes as they hadde and that wythout cause But the kynge put them of for that season and warned them to sue to hym agayne about Mychelmasse when more of his coūsayll was with hym then they shuld haue iustyce Uppon the second daye folowyng the feaste of saynte Mathew or the xxiii daye of september the kynge the quene with his sonnes and other nobles of thys land toke shyppyng and sayled into Fraunce to be present at the Frenche kynges parlyaament then holden at Bonony And the morow after the octabis of saynt Mychaell he landed agayne at Douer And the frydaye folowynge he came vnto London And vppon the tuesday folowyng passed a queste of .xii. knyghtes of Mydd sworne vpon a iury betwene the abbot of westmynster and the cytye for certayne pryuyleges that the cytesyns of London claymed wythin westmynster where by the sayde iurye it was founden before Gylbert of Prestone then chefe Baron of the kynges excheker that the s●ryues of London at those days myght lawfully enter into the town of westmynster and all other tenemētes that the abbot then hadde wythin Myddelsex vnto the gate of the sayd abbay and there to make summons and dystrayne for lacke of apparaunce all and eueryche tenaunte of the sayde abbot About the quindena of saynt Mychaell the fourmer complaynt of the allyauntes and other whyche as aboue ye haue harde was shewed before the kyng and y e lordes in the parlyament holden at westmynster where lastely yt was sentencyd that the Barons shulde restore all suche goodes as they and theyr companye hadde taken from all suche persons before that daye as well to allyauntes as other both spyrytuall and temporall and also that suche menyall seruauntes as shulde be dayly in the kynges house and about his person shulde be suche as the kynge wolde chose and admyt hym selfe the whyche ii artycles the Barons vtterly denyed wherfore the olde rancoure toke place and dyssencyon kyndled his fyre of malyce agayn betwen the kynge and his lordes feruently Anno domini M.CC.lxii   Anno domini M.CC.lxiii   Robert Moumplere   Thomas fyz Thomas   Anno .xlvii.   Robert de Suff.   IN thys .xlvii. yere by procurement and styrynge of the Barons the commons of the cytye of London chase vnto theyr mayre for that yere Thomas fyz Thomas and wythout counsayll of the aldermen sware at Guyldehall vppon the day of Symon and Iude and made no presentement of hym vppon the morowe folowynge nother to the kyng nor yet to the Barons of the kynges excheker as they of ryght ought to haue done For the whych presumpcyon the kynge was greuously dyscontentyd agayne the cytye Soone after the kynge aduertysynge well y t the citye wolde take the Barons partye and causyd syr Edwarde his son to take the castell of wyndesore by a trayne wherof when he knewe that he was in possessyon the kynge erly in a mornynge a lytell to fore Crystemas departed from westmynster rode vnto the sayde castell whyther shortely after came also many of the lordes that were vppon the kynges partye And as faste the lordes and knyghtes whych helde wyth the erle of Leyceter drew them toward Lonlon so y t on eyther partye was mych people assembled In the whyche passe tyme some well dysposyd laboryd a concorde betwene the kynge hys lordes By whose meanes fynally yt was agreed by bothe partyes that all maters concernynge the fore sayde artycles of statutes and ordynaūces made at Oxenford and after by the .xii. Perys that the Frenche kynge shuld deme and iudge whych shulde be holden and whyche not And as he demyd both partyes promysed assuredly to abyde Upon whiche agrement copyes were made of the sayde statutes and wyth letters shewynge the effecte of the fourmer agrement sent vnto the sayde kynge of Fraunce then beynge saynt Lewys And in the Crystmas weke folowynge the kyng toke shyppynge with syr Edward his son and other of his counsayll and sayled into Fraunce for the foresayde cause And for the partye of the sayd Barons was sent ouer syr Peter de Mountforde and other Then before Lewys kynge of Fraunce those statutes were sore argued vppon both parties How be yt in the ende the Frenche kynge callynge before hym both parties vpon the day before y e conuersyon of saynt Paule or the .xxiiii. daye of Ianuary syttynge in iudgement gaue expresse sentence that all and eueryche of the sayde statutes and ordynaunces shulde be from y e daye foreward vtterly foredone and set at noughte and all suche bandes and promyses that the kyng or any other had made for the mayntenaunce of the same shulde be adnulled cancellyd and the kynge and all other for any mater concernynge those statutes set at lybertye After whyche sentence thus gyuen the kynge retourned into Englande so that he came to London the .xv. daye of Februarye But the Barons beynge sore amoued wyth this sentence notynge greate parcyaltye vnto the Frenche kynge departed from London westwarde so into the marchys of walys
where they drew to them great power and warred vppon the landes and castellys of syr Roger Mortymer threw some of them vnto the grounde and spoyled of hys what they myghte fynde and ouer that brent of hys manours and houses In whose ayde syr Edwarde the kynges sonne commynge hys people were dystressyd and he almoste taken For redresse of whyche maters a newe parlyamēt was appoynted to be holdē at Oxenforde in the quindena of Eester nexte folowynge whyche came neuer to effecte All be yt an other cronicle sayth that from this parlyament then holden at Oxenforde the kynge and his lordes parted all dyscorded Then the barons drewe towarde London the kynge remayned at woodstok And then newe assuraunce by wrytynge endentyd was made betwene the comynaltye of the cytye and the Barons wythoute consent of many of the rulers of the sayde cytye wherfore the commons as men enraged made of theym self two capytaynes whych they named constables of the cytye y t is to say Thomas de Pyweldon Stephan Bukerel At whose commaundement by tollynge of the great belle of Paules all the cytye shulde be redy shortely in harnes to gyue attendaunce vppon theyr sayd capytaynes About the begynnynge of lent the constable of the towre syr Hughe le Spenser came wyth a fayre company of men of armys before hym into the cytye and desyred assystence of the forenamed constables The whyche commaunded the sayd belle to be ●olled By meane wherof the people shyt theyr shoppes and came out in harneys in great multytude The whyche after proclamacyon made that they shulde ●olowe theyr capytaynes wythout knowlege what to do or whyther to go folowed theyr sayde capytaynes and so yode vnto Thystelworth vppon two myles beyonde westmynster there spoyled the manour of the kynge of Romaynes and sette yt after vppon a fyre And that done hys water mylles other commodities that he there had put theym to vtter ruyne And after wyth great noyse and crye returned vnto London This dede as sayth myne authour was cause of the mortall warre folowynge For where before tyme the sayde kynge of Romaynes hadde ben for allyaunce that was betwene hym and the erle of Glouceter a treatye of peace to be hadde betwene the kynge and his Barons after that dede done he was enymy vnto them to the vttermoste of his power The kynge herynge of thys ry●●gaderyd vnto him great power And for he harde that syr Peter de Moūt forde was at Northampton gatherynge of people to strength the Barons partye he spedde hym thyder and wanne the towne vppon hym by force and slewe many of hys men and fynally toke hym syr Symon the son of the erle of Leyceter wyth dyuers other on lyue the which with many burgeyses of that towne that hadde take theyr partyes the kynge sent vnto dyuers prysons and some he closyd wythin the castell of y e same towne In thys passe tyme on Palmesondaye weke all the Iewes in London were spoyled and robbed the nomber of .v. hūdred of them were slayn and dyuers of theyr mansyons brent and destroyed and suche as of them were saued were conueyed for great mede vnto the towre and there kept from the fury of the commons wherof the occasyon was for so myche as a Iewe wolde haue forced a crysten man to haue gyuē to hym more then ii d. for the vsure of .xx. s. for a weke For ye shall vnderstand that at those dayes by lycence graunted vnto the Iewes of the kynge they myght take by vsury of euery man y t of theym wolde borowe money .ii. d. of a poūd for a weke lendyng and so of greter of smaller summes after that rate And soon after the Iewes were thus punyshed many houses of relygyon wythin y e citye and nere there about were serched for goodes of alliaūtis and myche founde wherof a parte was brought vnto the lordis but the more parte was stolen and brybed In whyche season the kynge passed by diuers coūtreys and lastely came into Southsex with a strong power wherof herynge the lordes made preparacyon to go towardes hym In all whyche tyme the wardeyns of the v. portes kepte the see wyth shyppes that no straungers shulde entre the lande to ayde the kynge agayne the Barons Then in the ende of Apryll the Barons wyth a multytude of the cytye whyche they put in vawarde departed from London takyng theyr iourney towarde the kynge And when they were well onwarde vpon they re way worde was brought vnto them that the kynge wyth an huge power was at Lewys wherfore they by an hole assent dyuysed a letter and sent yt in y e name of all the Barons vnto the kynge whose names here vnder folowe but not all Syr Symonde de Mounforde erle of Leyceter and hyghe stewarde of Englande Syr Gylbert de Clare erle of Glouceter Syr Robert Ferres erle of Derby Syr Hugh le Spenser chefe iustice and syr Henry de Mountford son and heyre to the erle of Leyceter Syr Rycharde Gray Syr Henry Hastynges Syr Iohn̄ fyz Iohn̄ Syr Robert de Uenpount Syr Iohn̄ Gyuyle Syr Robert Roos Syr wyllyam Marmyon Baldwyne wake Syr Gylbert Gyfforde Syr Nycholas de Megraue Syr Godfrey de Lucy Syr Iohn̄ de Ueysy Syr wyllyam de Mounthdesey whyche letter sealed wyth the seales of the sayde erle of Leycester and of Glouceter conteyned as foloweth TO the most excellent lord the kynge Henry by the grace of god kynge of Englande lorde of Irlande and duke of Gwyan the Barons other faythfull your seruauntes theyr fydelyte and othe to god and to you coueytynge to kepe sendyng to you due salutyng with all reuerence and honour vnder due obeysaunce Lyketh yt youre hyghnes to vnderstāde that many beyng about you haue before tymes shewyd vnto your lordshyppe of vs many euyll vntrewe reportes and haue founde suggestyons not alonely of vs but also of your selfe to brynge this your realme vnto subuersyon Know your excellency that we entende nothyng but helth and suerty to your person to the vttermoste of our powers and not onely to our enmyes but also to yours and of all this youre realme we entende vtter greuaunce and correccyon Besechynge your grace her after to gyue vnto theym lytell credēce for ye shall fynde vs your trew and faythfull subiectes to the vtter moste of our powers And we erle of Leyceter and erle of Glouceter at the request of other and for our selfe haue put to our seales the .x. day of the moneth of May. The answere vnto this foresayde letter HEnry by y e grace of god kyng of Englande lorde of Irland and duke of Guyan to Symonde de Mountforde Gylbert de Clare theyr cōplyces where as by warre generall ꝑturbaūce in this our realme by you begon contynued wyth also brennynges and other hurtes and enormytyes that euydently apperyth that your fydelyte to vs due ye haue not kept nor y e suerty of our person ye haue
such as pleased hym and receyued into the cytye many of the dysherited persones and gaue to them fre lybertye to passe the brydge by all houres of the daye y e nyghte The mayre of all thys sente worde vnto the kynge whych than was gaderyng of hys power in Northfolke and made hasty spede towarde London In whyche meane tyme the erle with hys company made bulwerkes and barbycanys atwene the toure the cytye and caste dykes trenches in some places of y e cytye fortyfyed it wonderously Then many of y e cytezeyns feryng a newe insurreccyon voyded the cytye as secretly as they myght whose goodes the erle seased to hys owne vse or suffred hys men to spoyle thē at theyr pleasure Than the commōs of the cytye forgat theyr late punysshment and as men without drede of god or of theyr kynge toke certayne of the aldermen caste theym in prysone and sequestred theyr goodes dyspoyled moche therof And thervppon ranne to the Guyldhalle and there chose for theyr mayre or for custos or ruler of the cytye syr Rychard de Culworth knyght and for baylyues Roberte de Lynton and Roger Marshall and dyscharged the olde mayre and sheryffes And that done all suche prysoners as were in Newgate Ludgate and Crepylgate or in any other prysons within the cytie for bycause of the barons warre before passed they were delyuered set at lybertye whan the legate beheld all thys rebelliō and dyscorde he repented hym of hys fourmer counsayll gyuē vnto the mayre And for he sawe he might nat refourme the erle of hys errour he thretened hym wyth the censurs of the chyrch and to accurse hym as the dysheryted were And vpon thys he commaunded the deuyne seruyce to be sayd without note the chyrch dores to be shytte in tyme of the seruice doynge that no belle were ronge vnto the sayde seruyce and all to the entent y t the disheryted whych stode accursed shuld nat entre y e churches to here the deuyne seruyce of god Then vpō .iii. wekes after Easter the kynge came to Ham̄ .iii. myles from London and was lodged hym selfe in the abbaye of whyte monkes of Stratforde whyther came vnto hym the legate soone after and was lodgid also in the same abbay where for streyghtnes of lodgyng his horse and mules were sette wythin the closter of the sayde abbay Then the kynges hoste made dayly assautes vpon the cytye and gunnes and other ordynaunces was shot into the cytye whyche lytell or nothynge hurte the towne yt was so strongly fortyfyed In this season y e legate vpon his partye and the kynge of Romaynes vppon the other partye for allyaūce that was betwene hym and the erle of Glouceter labored so to the kyng that a reformacyon of peace was spoken of Durynge whyche treaty the souldyours lyenge in Southwerke made many robboryes in Southery and other places and rowed ouer to westmynster and spoyled there the kynges paleys and deuoured hys wyne and brake y e glasse of the wyndowes and all other necessaryes to that paleys they destroyed wasted and somtymes came in lyke wyse into Lōdon and robbyd there also Of whyche there was taken .iiii. y t bare the Conysaunce of the erle of Derby the whyche the erle caused theyr handes and legges to be bounden and then put into a sacke and so cast into the Thamys About the feast of saynt Barnabe the peace betwene the kynge and the erle of Glouceter was concludyd After the whyche conclusyon taken the erle remouyd out of the cytye was lodged agayne in South werke And the kyng entryd the citye the sondaye before mydsomer daye And forth wyth the kynges proclamacyons were made through the cytye of the peace betwene the kyng the erle And after was gyuen liberte to y e dysheryted persons y t they shuld haue .xi. dayes respyte to shyft for them selfe that is to meane other to auoyde to suche places where they myght be in some suertye or ellys to agre to the former composycyon made by the legate and to paye the .v. parte of the slynte of theyr landes certayne persones to be exceptyd as before is rehersyd And as touchyng to the erle and suche other as before were not dysheryted wyth also the cytesyns of London to be clerely forgyuen and pardoned And then was restoryd to theyr offyces Aleyn Sowch for mayre and Thomas Basynge and Robert de Cornehyll for shyreffes And the aldermen whych before were deposyd were agayn restored to theyr wardes and offyces Uppon the wednysday folowynge the legate interdyted all the cytye which endured from .vi. of the clocke in the mornyng tyll .iii. of the clocke the next day at after none and then yt dyschargyd vppon the othe of .ii. commons sworne in the name of all the cytye that the cytye shulde stande to the ordynaunce and iudgement of holy chyrche But an other cronycle sayth that this interdyccyon shulde haue contynued longer ne had ben the sterenesse of the Londoners whyche helde the legate so streyght that they enforced hym to wythdraw that sentence vppon the foresayde condycyon Then after this all the bulwerkes and barbycans made by the erle in the cytye were plucked clene vppe and the dyches fyllyd that no parte of theym was sene when the cytesyns shulde haue theyr newe pardon graūted an obstacle was made for so myche as they as yet hadde not recompensyd the kynge of Romaynes for the subuersyon of his manour of Thystylworth For the whyche was axed .vi. thousande marke so that fynally wyth great laboure and frendshyppe thy agreed to gyue vnto hym for amendes a thousande marke to be payed in two yeres It was longe after the kynge acceptyd to his grace syr Iohn̄ Eyuyle syr Nycholas de Segraue syr willyam Marmeryn or Mermyon syr Richarde Gray syr Iohn̄ fyz Iohn̄ and syr Gylbert de Lucy with other And accorde was also made betwene syr Edwarde the kynges sonne and the forenamed erle of Glouceter And then was all fortresses and other defences which before tyme were made in Southwerke and in other places ioynynge to the same pulled vp and destroyed and the erle and all other souldyours clene voyded And after all thynges set in order and reste excepte such as yet kept the yle of Ely the kynge rode to Shrowysburye where he taried a season for to cōmon of maters betwene hym and Lewelyn prynce of walys The kynge thus beyng at Shrowysbury a wrytte was dyrectyd to syr Aleyn Souch mayre of Lōdon viii dayes before Mychelmas from the kynge chargynge hym that the cytesyns shuld not procede to eleccyon of newe shyreffes tyll his commynge to London but to suffer the olde to abyde styll in offyce Anno domini M.CC.lxviii   Anno dn̄i M.CC.lxix   wyllyam de Durham   Aleyn Souch   Anno .liii   walter Henry   IN this .liii. yere in the moneth of Nouember fyll a varyaūce betwene the felyshyppes of goldsmythes and tayllours of London whyche
of theyr pryncys y t is to mene the corps of Lewys and theyr naturall prynce Phylyppe hys son and of the obseruaunces done and great assembles of the lordes spirytuall and temporall to welcome theyr prynce and doynge of theyr duties euery man according to honour But after al these ceremonies in due order fynyshed prouysyon was made for the coronacyon of the kynge The whyche was crowned at the cytye of Raynes vppon the daye of the assumpcyon of our lady in the yere of grace .xii. hundred .lxxi. SHortely after that the solempnyte of this coronacyon was passed kynge Phylyppe for his recreacyon rode into the countrey of Uermendoyse where after he had derestyd hym a season Robert erle of Artoys requyred hym to vysyte hys countrey where he was receyuyd of the burgeysys of Artoys wyth great honour and gladnes and there was feastyd with all disport and gladnes by a certayne of tyme after The whiche expyryd he returned into Fraūce About the thryde yere of his reygne the erle of Foys contrary y e kynges pleasure toke partye agayn Getarde a knyght lorde of the castell of Casseboun or Tasseboun y e which before had slayn y e brother of the erle of Armenac specyall frēd of the sayd erle of Foyz whyche sayde two erles to reuenge the deth of theyr sayd brother pursued the sayde Gerarde so narrowly that for his sauegarde he refused his owne castell and fled vnto a castell of the kynges and there helde hym wyth his wyfe chyldren and substaūce But when the two erles were ware therof they sped them thyder wyth theyr powers and layd syege to the castell and in the ende threwe it downe to the grounde and slewe all the souldyours that they there founde as well the kynges seruauntes as other hopynge to haue founde theyr enymye Gerarde the whyche was escapyd thens secretly when the rumour of this dede came vnto the kynge he dysdayned sore that dede and toke yt ryght grevously In so myche that he called hys lordes and by theyr counsayll assembled hys knyghtes and entred wyth force the prouince of the erle of Foyz The whyche herynge of the kynges great dyspleasure fortyfyed hys castell and there helde hym The which was so besette wyth rokkes of stone that the kynge myght not wynne to yt wyth ease wherfore the kynge cōmaunded the rokkes to be cutte with masons and other worke men made a solempne othe that he wold not depart thens or he hadde the erle and his castell at his pleasure when the erle hadde beholden the great power of his enymyes and the prouysyon of the kyng to wynne his castell wyth other ieopardyes he made meanes to the kynge for grace and fynally putte hym and his into his mercy Then the kynge commaūded hym to be bounde and so to be conueyed to the casrell of Beauquesu where he was imprysoned by an hole yere after And the kyng●●eased all hys landes and set a certayne of hys knyghtes to kepe hys castell and caryed hys wyfe and chyldren wyth hym into Fraunce But after a yere runne the kynge was so laboured to by the frendes of the sayd erle that he was eularged from pryson and vppon suertye suffred to serue in the kynges courte where he bare hym so well y t fynally the kyng made hym knyght restored hym to all his lādes But what fyll of y e erle of Armenac the story sheweth not Aboute the .vi. yere of his reygne kynge Phylyppe maryed Mary the doughter of the erle of Burbon or after some the doughter of Iohan the duke of Braban the whych he loued entyerly wherof Peter de Broshe then beynge lorde chamberlayne hauynge enuy and disdayn sought the wayes and meanes to mynyshe the great loue betwene her lord and her and fonde by his meane that a sonne of y e kynges named Lewys was prysoned the whyche dede he by subtyle secrete meanes as though yt had nothyng comen of hym layde yt to y e charge of the quene For this y e kyng made many maner of inquysycyons as well by sorcery as other But in al his workes he found his quene gyltlesse wherfore he sufferyd the mater to passe tyll he myght haue more assured profe in that mater Aboute thys season Ferdinandus kynge of Castyle that before tyme hadde maryed Blanche doughter of saynt Lewis dyed leuyng after hym two sonnes borne of y e sayd Blanch named Ferdinande and Alphons whych by couenaunt at the mariage made shulde be heyres vnto the kyngdome of Spayne and Castyle But the father of this Ferdinande so beynge dede contrary hys honour and promise wrote vnto the lordes of Castyle amonestynge theym that they shulde admytte for theyr kynge hys seconde son named Sāxyon or Sanxio and swere to hym both feautye homage The whyche was all done accordyng to hys commaundement so that Blanche was dyspoynted of her dower and her chyldern of theyr ryght and enherytaūce For y e which kyng Phylyppe her brother was greuously dyscontētyd and for reforma cyon therof sente vnto the kynge of Spayn his chefe boteler wyth other desyryng hym to perfourme all such couenaūtes as betwene hym and his fader were cōcluded at the maryage of his syster Blanche or at the laste yf that he refusyd y t to do y t he wold sende hys sayde syster wyth her two chyldern sauely into Fraunce In cōclusyon y e mother wyth her two chyldern were brought by the sayde boteler vnto the kynge wythoute other pleasure other in worde or in dede For the whyche he the yere folokyng gaderyd a stronge hoste and passed wyth theym by Poyteau and Gascoyne tyll he came vnto a towne ioynynge to the border of Spayne named Sainterre where the kyng met another party of his hoste There by counsayll of some of his lordes the kynge concluded to retourne into Fraunce for daunger of wynter that was cōmynge and other hyd causes But the rumour in the hoste went y t some of the kynges counsayll hadde receyued rewardes of the kynge of Spayn By meane wherof the kyng loste that iourney and returned into Fraunce to his great dyshonour and damage In tyme of kynge Phylyppes returne into Fraunce tydynges were broughte to hym that Eustace de Beau Marche whom the kyng had appointed to haue the gydyng of the countrey or kyngdome of Nauarye was besyeged in the citye of Pampulyne wherfore y e kyng cōmaunded y e erle of Artoys to spede hym thyder to rescowe the sayde Eustace The whyche behauyd hym so manfully that he rescowed the sayde Eustace and chasyd Garsymerans chefe styrrer of that rebellion and brought the people of that countrey agayne to due subieccyon whyle the erle of Artoys was thus occcupyed in the sayd countrey messangers came to hym from the kynge of Spayne requyrynge hym sene that he was so nere that he was so nere y t he wold come disport him there for a season wher of y e erle of Artoys sent kyng Philip worde hauyng of hym
gathered a stronge power wēt into y t prouince subdued y c sayd Lewelyn And after retourned ordeyned certayne newe lawes for y e welth of y c realme whych are to lōge here to reherce Amōg the whych one was y t bakers makinge brede lackyng the weyghte assygned after the pryce of corne shuld fyrst be punysshed by losse of hys brede and the seconde tyme by prysonemente and the thyrdly by the correccyon of the Pyllory and millers for steling of corne to be chastised by the tūbrell And thys to be put in execucyon he gaue auctorytie to all mayres bayliffes and other offycers thorugh Englande and specyally to the mayre of London Anno domini M.CC.lxxiiii   Anno dn̄i M.CC.lxxv   Lucas Patencourt   Gregory Rokkisle   Anno .iii.   Henry Frowyke   IN the thyrde yere the kyng cōfermed the lybertyes of y c cytie of London and graunted to thē som newe And thys yere he helde hys great court of parlyamente at westmynster and gaue monycyon to Lewelyn prynce of walys to come vnto the same the whyche presūptuously that denyed wherfore the kyng after Easter entred agayue into walys so warred vppon Lewelyne that he was cōstreyned to submyt hym vnto the kynges grace and opteyned it wyth greate difficultye Then kyng Edwarde buylded the castel of Flynt and strenghthyd the castell of Rutlande and other with Englysshe men to kepe the walshemem in due obedyence and toke of theyr prynce a greate summe of money whych of some wryters is named .l. M. ●i and of some .l. M. marke of some other lasse so retourned into Englande In thys yere one water Haruy whych the fyrste yere of thys kynge after longe contrauersie and stryfe y t he had kept with y e aldermen of Lōdon at a folkmote kepte at Poules crosse was made mayre of London and so contynued to the hurte of the cytye that yere thys yere was he accused of dyuers periuries other detestable dedes cōtrary hys othe For the whyche for makynge of assembles of the commons whiche fauoured hym in hys yll dedes he was depryued of hys aldermanshyppe and counsayle of the cytye for euer foūde suertye of twelf honeste persones that he shulde be good of berynge for kepyng of y e kynges peas within the cytye for terme of hys lyfe after Anno domini .xii. C.lxxv   Anno domini M.CC.lxxvi   Iohn̄ Horne   Gregory Rokkysle   Anno .iiii.   Rauffe Blount   IN thys .iiii. yere of kynge Edwarde Michael Tony whych in tyme of warre had wyth the walsh men demeaned hym otherwyse than stode with his trouth and alegeaūce was accused of treason and therof arreygned iuged and dāpned after was drawen hanged quartered And thys yere was the statute of Mortmayne enacted fyrste whyche is to meane that no man shulde gyue into the chyrch any landes or rētes wythout a specyal lycence of y e kyng whyche acte syne that tyme hath ben more strongly enacted and deuysed wyth many addycyons thereunto augmented or annexyd Anno domini .xii. C.lxxvi   Anno domini M.CC.lxxvii   Robert Bracy   Gregory Rokkisle   Anno .v.   Rauffe Fenour   IN this .v. yere of the reygne of kyng Edwarde pope Nycholas the thyrde of that name made doctour Robert kylwarby than beynge archebysshop of Caunterbury a cardynal of Rome and admytted to that see a frere named doctour Iohan Pekham And in thys yere the kyng gaue vnto Dauyd brother to Lewelyne prynce of walys the lordshyppe of Froddesham The whyche Dauyd dwelled in the kynges court and dyd vnto hym plesaunte seruyce to the entent to spye the kynges secret coūsayll And yf any thynge were spoken or done to the hurte of hys brother that he therof myghte gyue to hym warnynge as after by hys dede appered Anno dn̄i M.CC.lxxvii   Anno dn̄i M.CC.lxxviii   Iohan Adryan   Gregory Rokkysle   Anno .vi.   walter Langely   IN thys .vi. yere the kyng commaunded the courtes of his lawes as y e kniges bēche y t chaūcery y c comō place the excheker to be remoued vnto Shrewysbury where Myghelmas terme was holdē kept but agayne Hillary terme y t bokes officers was cōtermaūded agayn to west mynster to be there holdé In whych caryeng of y e recordes to fro they by reason of great plēte of rayne whiche in y t season fyl caught great hurt were fore defaced in so moche y t the bokes were greatly imperysshed y e clerkes had great laboure to brynge them to theyr former state Anno domini .xii. C.lxxviii   Anno dn̄i M.CC.lxxix   Robert Basynge   Gregory Rokkysle   Anno .vii.   wyllyam Mazerer   IN this .vii. yere the kyng held hys parlyament at London whyche was chefely set for the reformacion of the kynges coygne which was clypped in suche wyse that yt was therby wonderfully mynyshed and empayred In the season of this parlyamēt many of the Iewes of Lōdon and other places were taken and put in holde for money clyppyng And in December folowyng certayn enq̄stes were charged in Lōdon to enquyre of the sayd Iewes and other that so hadde blemyshed the kynges coygne By the whyche enquestes the Iewes of the cytye wyth dyuerse goldesmythes that kepte exchange of syluer were indyted And the mondaye folowynge the Purifycacion of our lady the mayre wyth dyuers iustices of the lande sat at London where before them was caste .ii. hundred .lxxx. and .xvii. persones Of the whych but .iii. englysh men and all the other were Iewes and Iewes borne all be yt that many of theym were borne in England and therfore of some wryters they be named Englyshe Iewes the whyche were all at sondry times places put in execucyon In this yere also began the foundacyon of the chyrche of the freer prechour or blacke freres by Ludgate by theyr founder And in this yere the town of Bosten was greatly blemyshed wyth fyre Anno domini M.CC.lxxix   Anno domini M.CC.lxxx   Thomas Box.   Gregory Rokkysle   Anno .viii.   Rauffe More   IN thys .viii. yere the kynge caused in syluer the halfe peny to be coygned where before tyme other coygnes of metall rāne among the people to theyr great noyaunce and losse and farthynges of syluer were also coygned the selfe tyme. And the wynter folowynge aboute the daye of saynte Denys or the .ix. daye of October fell suche plence of snowe that thereof ensued myche harme Anno domini M.CC.lxxx   Anno domini M.CC.lxxxi   wyllyam Faryngdon   Gregory Rokkysle   Anno .ix.   Nycholas wynchester   IN thys .ix. yere of kynge Edwarde Dauid the brother of Lewelyn prynce of walys the whych as ye before haue harde dwelled in the kynges courte to knowe the kyuges counsayll and therof enforme his brother whē he had that he wayted for he secretly gat hym into walys to his brother and hym excyted agayn the kyng
Leycester whych after grewe to the great dysturbaūce of dyuers townes of Englande and specyally of the cytye of London as after some dele shall appere Anno domini M.CC.lxxxiiii   Anno dn̄i M.CC.lxxxv   Stephen Corn̄hyll   Gregory Rokesle   Anno .xiii.   Robert Rokesby   IN thys .xiii. yere vpon the day of the conuersiō of saynt Paule or y e .xxv. day of Ianuarii y e kynge ceased the fraunchese and lybertyes into hys handes and discharged the mayre of London thā beyng Gregory Rokkisle admytted for custos or gardeyn of the cytye Stephā Sādewyche The whyche contynued in that offyce tyll the mōday folowyng the puryfycacyon of our Lady At whyche season the sayd Stephā was dyscharged and syr Iohn̄ Breton̄ knyght charged for the resydue of y e yere The cause of thys dyspleasure that the kyng had vnto the cytye is nat shewed of no certaynte But in an olde panflete it appereth that the sayd Gregory Rokkisley toke certayne brybes of the bakers and suffered them to sell brede lackynge .vi. vnces or .vii. oz in a peny lofe for y e whyche the kynge shuld be sore dyspleased But yet to me it semeth no conuenyent cause to sease the lybertyes of the cytie for the offence of one man wherfore it is to presuppose y t it was for a more greuous cause And in this yere was fully fynisshed and ended the new werke of y e chyrch of westmynster vnto the ende of the quere begonne as before is shewed in the thyrde yere of the .iii. Hēry By whyche reason it shuld apere y t thys chyrche shuld be in edyfyenge vpon lxvi yeres Of the fyrste fundacyon of thys chyrche are dyuers opiniōs For as before is shewed in y e thyrde Chapytre of the story of Carce and v. parte of thys werke thys chyrche was fyrste founded by a cytezeyne of Londō and after reedyfyed by saynt Edwarde and lastly by kynge Hēry the .iii. But in the same abbey of west mynster where of lykelyhode y e most certaynte is to be had it is regystred that thys sayd chyrche was a temple of the Brytons longe or they receyued the fayth of Chryste And in the tyme of theyr crysten kynge Lucius it was hallowed of Augustyne hys felowes And secundaryly it was reedyfyed by Sebertus than kynge of Estsaxons or Essex aboute the tyme whan Ethelbert kyng of Kent buylded saynt Paules chyrch of Londō whyche was after the tyme that Lucyus receyued the fayth of Chryste vppon .iiii. C. yeres Than thyrdly it was buylded by saynt Edwarde the confessoure whiche reygned vpon CCCC and .xl. yeres after the sayde Sebertus And fourthly or lastly by the foresayd Henry y e thyrde whiche began his reygne after the dethe of saynt Edwarde C.l. yeres Anno domini .xii. C.lxxxv   Anno domini M.CC.lxxxvi   walter Blount   Rauffe Sandewyche   Anno .xiiii.   Iohan wade   IN the .xiiii. yere of kynge Edwarde at a parliament holden at westmynster were made y t statutes called Additamenta Gloucestrie whiche is to meane addiciōs of statutes made and put to suche as before tyme were made at y e parlyamēt holdē at Glouceter The which statutes were made to refourme suche ꝑsones as mysused the landes and tenementes commynge to them by reason of y e dower or landes of theyr wyues so that the the chyldren of the seconde husbande putt by y e ryghtfull enherytoures or suche as were nexte alyed vnto the fyrst donours By reason of whiche statutes and addicions now in this parliamēt made suche mysorder was refourmed In this yere or nere there aboute in a towne of Almayne called Traiect many men and women as wytnesseth y e auctour of Cronica cronicarum were daūsyng vpō a brydge whiche lay ouer a ryuer called Moose In whiche tyme of theyr dysporte daūsynge came by a preest berynge the sacramēt towarde a seke man wherof the sayd men and women beynge in reuell toke no regarde vnto the sacrament nor dyd to it any honour reuerence But were it by the wreche of god or otherwyse shortly after the preest was passed ouer the brydge brake by meanes wherof nere vnto the nombre of CC. persones were drowned And aboute this same season in the coūtre called in Englysshe the Swetezers a woman was delyuered of a chylde that from y e nauyll vpwarde had .ii. complete bodyes as iiii armes and two hedes with two bodyes to the wast and downeward but .ii. legges the whiche with y e fore sayd armes be clypped eyther others body And an other woman bare a chylde or a monstre wherof the heed and the face was lyke vnto a man all the body lyke vnto a lyon with tayle and fete and all other fetures accordynge to the same In this yere also a cytezyn of London named Thomas Pywylesdon y t whiche in y e tyme of y e barons warre before in the story of kynge Henry shewed had ben a capytayne and a great styrrer of the commons of the sayd cytie for to maynteyne the barons partie agayne the kynge was newly accused that he with other of euyll dysposycyon shulde make conuentycles and assembles to the newe dystourbaunce of the cytie wherof reporte was made vnto the kynge the whiche remytted the enquery therof vnto syr Rauffe Sandewyche than custos or gardeyne of the cytie Thē the sayde Thomas with other was putte in sure kepynge tyll the mater were duly enquyred of After whiche inquysycyon made and founde reporte was made vnto the kynge Then the kyng sent downe a wrytte and commaunded it to be proclaymed shortly after within the boundes of the cytye wherof the effecte was thus that the sayde Thomas Pywelysdō wylyam de Heywoode Rycharde de Coundris Rycharde le Cofferre Robert de Derby Albyne de Darby wyllyam Mayo Mercer and Iuo Lyng Draper with diuers other to y e nōbre of .l. persones shuld be banysshed out of y t cytye for euer And if any of the sayd .lviii. persones were at that tyme of the proclamaciō voyded y e cytye for fere or otherwyse that they shuld so remayne and nat to retourne vnto the cytie vpō payne of lyfe losynge In thys yere also where as of olde tyme longe before thys season y e marchauntes straūgers commynge with theyr marchaundyse were lodged within cytezeyns of the cytye of London and solde all theyr marchaundyses by the procuryng of hys host for the whyche hys sayd hoost had a certayne of euery .li by meanes of the sayd marchauntes straūgers it was at thys daye brought to passe y t they myght hyre to thē houses for to dwel in and for stowage of theyr wares so that no cytezeyne shulde entermedle hym with the sayd straūgers nor yet theyr wares by meane whereof they vsed many disceytes bothe i vtteraūce of false wares and also by theyr weyghtes whyche they vsed in theyr owne houses to the great hurt of the hole realme of Englande wherfore sodaynly serche was made and
and .iii. and iiii chapyters of the same was sonne vnto Charles brother of saynte Lowys kyng of Scicill And the forenamed kynge of Aragō that hym vppon the abouesayd cōdiciōs thus delyuered was sonne vnto Peter kyng of Aragō whych as before in the storye of y e foresayd thyrd Philip helde warre with hym with y e sayd Charles This prince of Salerne was also named Charles after the name of his father the whych after hys admyssiō of y e pope was crowned kyng of Scicil in y e cytie of Palermo soone after defended the lāde knyghtly agayne the Aragōs with helpe of the Frēche men by the terme of .v. yeres after At whych termes ende Alphōs thā kyng of Aragō dyed Iaques or Iames to whome the foresayd Alphons had be take the rule of Scicill held warre with the forenamed Charles was as brother next heyre vnto the crowne of Aragō admitted kynge of y e regyon After whych admissiō he shortly after cōcluded a peas with y e sayde Charles redelyuered vnto hym all suche hostages pledges as hys brother Alphōs had before tyme of hym receyued for kepyng of the former cōuencions And for a more stablysshemēt of the same peas y e sayd Iames toke to wyfe one of the doughters of the sayde Charles About the .vi. yere of the reygne of this Philip certayne sowdyours of Fraunce to the nombre of .xv. hondreth whyche were sent by the procurement of pope Nycholas the fourth vnto Acrys to fortifye that towne cōtrary the truce betwene the crysten the Sowdan before concluded for y e terme of .ii. yeres brake oute of the towne and castelles adioynant and spoyled and robbed suche Sarazyns as to that towne were dwelling nere and dyd vnto them all the sorowe shame that they myght wherof the Sowdan hauynge knowlege was therwith greatly amoued But yet or he wolde attēpte any warre agayn the crysten he sent vnto the captayne of the cytye of Acone wylled hym to sende vnto hym suche persones as had broken the peace and done that iniurye to hys people And yf he it refused he sente them worde he shulde nat blynne tyll he had dystroyed thē as lately before he had done the inhabytauntes of the cytye of Tryple But they sette hys manace at noughte for so moche as they thoughte them able to withstande hys malyce Upon whyche answere the Sowdan made great prouysyon to besiege the sayd cytye In whyche passe tyme in Fraūce was borne of dame Iohāne or Iane than quene of Fraunce Lowys the kynges eldest sonne that after his father was kyng of Fraunce when the Sowdan had prepared all thyng necessary for that iournay he sped hym wyth an innumerable multytude of Sarazyns towarde y e cytye of Acon or Acris In whyche iournay he was taken with so greuous sykenesse that he knew well he shulde shortly dye wherfore he callynge before hym hys admyralles charged a certayne of theym to kepe forthe theyr iourney towarde Acon whyle the remenaunt retourned into Egypt there to create hys sonne Sowdan After whyche creacyon he charged them that they shulde cause hys sayde sonne to haste hym vnto y e sayd siege soone after dyed Then all thynges was ordeyned as he before had deuysed and y e cytie was besegyd with a stronge hoost of Sarazyns the whyche assauted yt cruelly by the space of .vi. wekes In whyche season the crysten defended it so manfully that the Sarazyns myght therof gette none aduaūtage At the ende of thys .vi. wekes came the yonge Sowdan wyth a fresshe hoost the whyche made such a dynne and noyse wyth theyr tabours hornys and other mynstrelsy that they at those dayes vsed that it was hydous ferefull to here And after they had rested theym .ii. dayes and prepared for the ryggynge of theyr ordenaunce they assauted the cytye xiiii dayes contynually In whyche season moche people was slayne vpō bothe partyes but the more nombre of the cytye For by the vyolence of theyr ordenaunce they ouer threwe moche housynge within the cytye where with moche people were oppressed and slayne aswell mā as woman chylde At the ende of thys .xiiii. dayes when the rulers of the cytye had seen the harme that they had receyued by thys fyers and cruell assaute aswell in losse of theyr sowdyours as of the great enpeyrynge of theyr wallys other defences of theyr cytye they feryd sore for y ● whych they of one assēt cōdyssēded sent soone after by theyr shyppes a great nōbre of olde men womē chyldren vnapt for y e warre with y e reliques treasours of y e cytie into Sicill It was nat lōge after or y e Sarazyns made a newe assaute y ● cōtinued .iiii. days by meane wherof the cytye was sore defaced Then the kyng of Cyprys whych at y ● day was there as one of the chyef rulers in the cytye fayned hym lyke wherfore in y e nyght folowyng desyryng a knyght of the cytye to kepe hys watche he cowardly shamefully with .iiii. M. mē toke shipping sayled thens leuyng the cytye in all daunger Uppon the morowe whan the certaynte of thys was knowē the patryarke of Hierusalem with other there laft to the nōbre of .vii. M. or therupō sent vnto y e Sowdā for a trewce for .ii. moneths But none they myghte purchase therfore they defendyd them in y e best maner they myght But shortly after for lak of defēce vpon the wallys the Sarazyns fylled the dykes so soon after upō the .xxv. day of May ꝑforce entred in the cytye slewe such people therin as they there foūde Than the Sowdan gaue the pray of y e cytie vnto hys knyghtes after spoylyng of the same caused the wallys toures to be rased vnto the groūde the houses aswell churches temples all other were clerely brēt distroyed And thus was y e noble cytie of Acris whych is also called Tholomayda subuerted the whyche was the chyef porte or hauyn towne for crystē mē to lande at when any hoste or power of them shuld entre into the holy lāde had cōtynued for the more partye in the possessiō of cristē mē by the terme of C.lx. yeres and aboue IN the .vii. yere of thys kynge Phylyp the erle of Armenake was accused of certayne poyntes of treason by syr Raymonde Barnade erle of Foyz where vpon a day of batayll betwene these .ii. erles was appoynted to be foughten at Gysours in the kynges presence and of hys barony But after by the great instaūce laboure made by syr Robert erle of Artoys y e batayll was fordone In the .vii. yere of hys reygne he gadered a great talke of his cōmōs And in the yere foresayde at a feaste holden at Cōpeyne he made aboue vi score knyghtes And in the .x. yere y e glorious confessoure saynt Lowys grandfather vnto this Philip was the day folowynge saynt Bartylmew the apostle
assygne begynnynge at Gaunt so to Bruges other places more ouer they shulde yelde vnto Robert theyr erle y e castell of Courtray with all abylemētes of warre other necessaries therūto belongyng Al whych cōdicions to obserue they shuld deliuer vnto y e kyng of Fraūce good hostages But al this came to small effect as after shal appere IN the .xxvii. yere of thys Phylyp Iacob the mayster of y e tēplers with an other greate ruler of y e sayd ordre whych was named Uisytour of the same after longe prysonment were brent at Parys And in the same yere kynge Phylyp arrered a taxe thorugh Fraunce whyche before that dayes was neuer herde nor spoken of Thys was so greuous that al Normādy Picardy Champeygne allied them togyder vtterly denayde the paymēt therof wherof heryng other countrees toke the same opynyon so that a greate rumour murmour was reysed thorugh out y e realme of Fraūce in such wyse that the kyng for pacyfyeng of the people was fayne to repeale the sayd taxe In the .xxviii. yere of the reygne of kyng Philip in y e weke of Easter the iii. wyfes of the .iii. sonnes of kynge Philip that is to say Margarete the wyfe of Lowys hys eldest sonne and kyng of Nauerne Iohanne or Ione the wyf of hys seconde sonne Philip erle of Poytyers and Blaunche the wyfe of hys thyrde sonne Charles erle of Marches were accused of spouse brekyng and sent frō a place of nunnes where they lay and conueyed vnto more streyghter kepyng y e whych .iii. wyfes were al .iii. doughters vnto the duke of Burgoyn Thā vppon strayte examynacyon made Margaret and Iohanne were gyltye of that cryme foūd wherfore they were sent vnto the castell of Gaylard in Normādy there to be kept as prysoners terme of theyr lyues And the forenamed Blanche for so moche as she was foundē gyltles was agayn restored vnto her lorde Charles erle of the Marches And in shorte tyme after the two paramours of the sayd Margaret Iohanne that is to saye Philip Dānoy and Gautyer Dānoy or waltier Dannoy knyghtes men of fame and goodly personage bretherne at the kynges commaundement were fyrst brent in the vysage with hote irēs after drawē to the gybet at Pōtoyse there hanged whyche mysfortune the kynge toke so greuously that he reioysed neuer after About the feast of saynte Peter or the begynnyng of August the kynge herynge of the rebellyon of the Flemynges by Engwerram hys mooste secrete coūsaylour made an assemble of the cytezyns of Parys and by the mouth of the saynd Enguerram desyted a subsydye of the sayd cytezeyns to mayntayne hys warre agayne the Flemynges the whyche by Stephā Barbet in the name of the hole cytye was graunted By precidēce wherof all the great cyties good townes of Fraūce were charged in lyke maner whyche caused greate vnkyndnes grudge of the people towarde y e sayd Enguerram Than prouysyon was made for a newe iourney into Flaunders so that the kynge sent hys twoo sonnes and many other nobles of his lande in the moneth of Septembre folowynge into the sayd countre of Flaūders The whyche made good spede layde fyrste theyr siege to the castel of the I le and wanne it after that entred towarde other strōge holdes But the flemynges put them of and gaue vnto the Frenche hoost so sharpe assautes that in processe they were constrayned to retourne into Fraunce wyth smal honoure wherof the great defaute was layde vpō Enguerram and vpō one of the sonnes of the erle of Flaundres whych lytel tofore by meanes of y e sayd Enguerrā was made erle of Neuers In the moneth of Nouembre folowyng kynge Phylyp beyng at foūtayne Beliaunt in the prouynce of Gastenoys was taken with suche sykenesse and dyed shortly after when he had reygned .xxviii. yeres and more and hys body after caryed vnto saynt Dionise and there buryed leuing after hym y e thre forenamed sonnes Lowys Philyp Charlys a doughter named Isabell whych before tyme was maryed vnto the seconde Edwarde thā kyng of Englande Anglia EDwarde the seconde of y t name sōne of Edwarde the fyrst born at Carnaruan in a towne of walys beganne his reygne ouer Englande in the moneth of Iulii .viii. day of the sayd moneth in the yere of our lord .xiii. C. .vii the .xxi. yere of the .iiii. Phylip than kyng of Frauce The whych was crowned at westmynster the .xiiii. daye of Decembre after the oppiniō of dyuers wryters But Ranulph mōke of Chester in his boke of Policronicon sayth y t he was crowned in the forsayd monastery of the bisshop of wynchester the sonday in quinquagesima whych is the .xiiii. day after the closyng of Alleluya of the bisshoppe of wynchester for so moche as Robert than archebisshope of Caūterbury was than out of Englande Thys Edwarde was fayre of body great of strengthe but vnsted faste of maners vyle in cōdicions For he wolde refuse the company of lordes men of honour haūte hym with vylayns vyle ꝑsones He also gaue hym to great drynkyng lightly he wolde dyscouer thīges of great coūsayl with these many other disalowable condicions he was exercysed whych tourned hym to great dishonour hys lordes to great vnrest as by the sequele of thys hys story shall appere Anone as hys father was buryed and hys exequy scantly fynysshed he forgettynge the hyghe chargeable commaūdement of hys sayd father sent in all haste for hys olde compere Pyers of Gau●stone The whych he receyued wyth all ioy gladnesse auaunced hym to moche honour And thus passed the season of y e olde mayre and shyreffes of London so y t at the feastes of Myghelmas Symon Iude folowyng y e olde mayre and shyreffes that is to meane syr Iohan Blount Symon Bolet Godfrey at the conduyt were dyscharged and the newe as vnder foloweth admytted Iuno domini M.CCC.vii   Anno domini M.CCC.viii   Nycholas Pygotte   Syr Iohn̄ Blount   Anno primo   Myghell Drury   IN thys begynnynge of thys mayres yere and fyrst yere of y e kynge the sayd kynge Edwarde in the moneth of Decembre sayled into Fraūce and the .xv. day of Ianuarii folowynge at Boleyn in Pycardy maryed Isabell the doughter of Philyp le Beaw than kyng of Fraunce soon after retourned with her into Englande so vnto London where of the cytezeyns they were ioyously receyued and so conueyed vnto west mynster where as before is shewed vpon the sonday in quinquagesima they were bothe solemply crowned At whyche coronacyon was so excedynge prease that a knyghte called syr Iohn̄ Bakwell was thrested to deth Than the kynge gaue shortely after vnto Pyers of Gauestone the erledome of Cornewayl and the lord shyp of wallyngford was ruled all by hys wanton counsayll folowed the appetite and pleasure of his body nothynge orderynge by sadnesse nor yet
Anno domini M.CCC.xlv   Edmunde Hempnale   Rychard Lacer   Anno .xx.   Iohn̄ Glouceter   IN thys .xx. yere or later ende of the .xix. yere y t is to wyt aboute saynt Nycholas tyde in the begynnynge of thys mayers yere the foresayd erles of Derby Northampton had won the towne castel of Bergarat in Gascoyne slewe there the erle of Ualētynoys chefe capytayne therof toke there a noble man called y e erle of the Ilys wyth many other ryche prysoners And about Apryll y e sayd erles wanne a strōge towne called the Ryall wherof heryng Philip de Ualoys in all haste sent hys sonn̄ Iohn̄ duke of Normandy to wythstande to gyue batayll vnto y e sayd erles But whan the sayd duke was nere vnto the Englysshemen he had suche tydinges of theyr strength that he retourned vnto hys father agayn For the whych dede hys father wyth hym was greuously discontented in so moche y t by y e occasiō to auoyd his fathers displeasure he retourned īto Gascoyne layed siege vnto y e castel of Aguyllon there remayned tyll y e moneth of August folowing without gettynge of it any aduauntage at whych season he retourned agayn to his father After whose departure the erle of Northāpton with hys cōpany gatte a strōge towne called in french la Roche Darien which is to meane the Roche or Rocke of Aryen In the tyme of whyche warre thus cōtinued in Brytayne Guyan the Frenche kyng made purueyaunce to defende hys lande agayne kyng Edward for whome he awayted dayly And kyng Edwarde as faste gathered money made hys dayly purueyaunce to prepare hym thyderwarde Anno dn̄i xiii C.xlv   Anno dn̄i xiii C.xlvi   Iohn̄ Croydon   Geffrey wychyngham   Anno .xxi.   wyllyam Clopton   IN this .xxi. yere kyng Edward helde hys parlyament at westmynster about the tyme of lent And in the moneth of Iuly folowynge he toke shyppynge and sayled into Normandy landed as wytnesseth the Frēche cronicle at a place in that prouynce named in Frenche la Hougne sent Uast with .xi. C. sayles greate small y e .xii. day of y e foresayd moneth of Iuly And anone as he was lāded he cōmaunded hys people to waste y e countrey before them And by the ledyng of a knyght called syr Godfrey Harcourte he was broughte vnto a towne called Melly and from thens vnto Mountboure where the kynge wythe all hys people rested hym a season In the whyche tyme the sayde syr Godfrey brent spoyled the coūtrey of Cōstantyne there nere adioynyng Than kyng Edward departed frō y e foresayd towne went vnto a strōge towne called Karenten or Karenton the whyche he gate wyth the castell to the same belongynge And so continued his iourney y t vpō the .xx. day of y e sayde moneth of Iule he layed hys syege before the cytye or towne of Caen. wherin were at y e daye chyef capytaynes the bysshop of Bayen y e erle of Ewe the lorde of Turnebu wyth other dyuerse knyghtes men of name Than kyng Edwarde commaunded that the sayd towne shulde be assayled y e whych was done with so great force specyally with suche stronge and cōtynuall shot that the Frenchmē forsoke the wallys drew them towarde the castell And in processe after longe cruell fyght y e Englysshemen entred the towne there toke prysoners Amonge the whyche there was taken y e cōstable of Fraūce the kynges chaūberleyne Than the Englysshemen spoyled and pylled the towne of Caen and bare the pyllage vnto theyr shyppes whyche after was conueyed by them into Englande whan kynge Edwarde had thus spoyled and brent a parte of the towne of Caen forced the bysshope of Bayen the other capytaynes to take the castell for theyr refuge considerynge the strength of the same he departed thens and so sped hym towarde the cytye of Roan chefe princypall cytye of Normandye But the Frenche kynge with a greate power was in thys whyle comē vnto Roan̄ had broken the brydges and stopped the passages in suche wyse that kynge Edwarde was fayne to leue y e way so that he costed toward Parys and came to a stronge towne called Uernon from thens to a towne named Amyrlene at whych townes he was resysted loste some of hys soudyours And the .xii. daye of Auguste he came to a towne named Poysy taryed there .vi. dayes and from thēs yode vnto saynt Germayn And euer syr Godfrey de Harcourt byeng in y e vawarde brent the townes spoyled the coūtrey as he went And lyke as kyng Edwarde with hys hoste thus passed the coūtrey towarde Parys so in lyke maner the Frenche kynge with hys power passed or helde hys way towarde y e sayd cytye beynge so nere sundry tymes that eyther hoste had syght of other But the ryuer of Seyne was euer betwene them so that for it they myght nat ioyne in batayll whan kyng Edwarde was comyn to a towne called saynt Clowe he set fyre therin which was sene vnto Parys whyche put y e cytezeyns in great fere in so moch as wytnesseth the Frēch cronycle that if the Frēch kyng had nat ben there present the cytye shulde haue be yelden vnto kyng Edwarde Thā kyng Edward seynge he myght nat passe the ryuer of Seyn towarde y e citie of Parys occupyed all y e chefe palaysys royall Manours where the Frenche kynges were accustomed for to soiourne and lye at dranke the wyne occupyed suche stuffe necessaryes as he there fande And at hys departyng set fyre vpō them cōsumed the more parte of them As at poyzy one at saynt Germayne an other and at Mount Ioy the thyrde brente the towne of Poyzy reseruyng an house of nunnes whyche was founded by Phylyp le Beawe father vnto kyng Edwardes wyfe Here ye shal vnder stāde that the auctours or wryters fauoureth theyr owne nacyon For the Englysshe wryters say that y e Frēch kyng fledde brake the brydges as he went to the ende that the Englysh hoste shuld nat wynne to the French men to gyue vnto thē batayll And y e Frenche boke sayeth that kynge Edwarde fled wolde nat abyde batayl with the Frenche men wherefore the Frēch kyng brake the brydges to the entent that y e Englyssh mē shuld nat escape hys daūger But howe it was as sayth an other wryter called Iohn̄ Froysarde the commons of Fraūce thought it a greate dyshonoure vnto all the lande that the Englyssh hoste shuld so passe thorough the harte or myddell of Fraunce and to occupye the kynges chief lodgynges nat to be foughten with of all that season whych myght nat be after the opiniō of the sayd common people wythout great treason of suche as were nere about the kyng Thā kyng Edward was so closed by reason of brekynge of brydges y t he was forced to drawe backe and to reedyfye the brydge of Poyzy The
necessyte was compelled to come to the cytye of Burdeaux for to haue aske ayde of prynce Edward Thys Peter was ryghtefull heyre vnto the crowne of of Castyle and Henry hys brother after moste wryters was bastarde But thys Peter was so vyle of condycyons that hys subgectes had to hym but lytell fauoure And so the warre contynued a season betwene hys brother and hym as after shall appere in the whych prynce Edward wyth hys archers toke partye wyth thys Peter and the Frenche kynge wyth hys speres tooke partye wyth Henry And in thys yere at the kynges cōmaundement Adam Bury thanne mayre of London was dyscharged y e xxviii daye of Ianuary and for hym electe and chosen mayre Iohn̄ Loue kyn grocer And as wytnesseth Polycronicon other thys yere was cōmaunded by the kynge that Peter pens shulde no more be gadered in Englande nor payde vnto Rome as they of longe tyme had ben vsed and graūted in the tyme of Iuo or Iewe somtyme kynge of west Saxons as before in hys story is shewed But howe so at that dayes it was than by the kynge forbodē yet neuer thelesse at thys present tyme and season they be gadered in sondry shyres of Englande Anno domini M.CCC.lxv   Anno dn̄i M.CCC.lxvi   Iohn̄ warde   Iohn̄ Louekyn   Anno .xli.   wyllyam Dykman   IN thys .xli. yere was borne the secōde sonn̄ of prynce Edward at Burdeaux named Rychard in the moneth of Apryll and the thyrd daye of the sayd moneth The sayd prynce Edward wyth the kyng of Nauerne and the foresayd Peter kynge of Castyle mette wyth Henry Bastarde vsurper of the sayde kyngdome nere vnto a towne called Domyng wher betwene them was a cruell and long fyght Howe be it in the ende the victorye fyll vnto the Englysshemen Henry and hys men were chased In thys bataylle was taken syr Barthram de Glaycon syr Arnold Dodenhamme thanne Marshall of Fraunce wyth other aswell French as Brytaynes and slayne vppon fyue thousande men vpon the partie of the sayde Henry and vppon .xvi. hondreth vppon prynce Edwardes partye After whyche vyctory the prynce wyth the sayde Peter spedde theym vnto the cytye of Burgys whyche was yolden to thē shortly after theyr commynge and after holpe the sayd Peter to wynne other cytyes and holdes so that he taryed there tyll the moneth of August folowynge At whych season as sayth the cronicle of Fraunce he retourned vnto Burdeaux wythout paymente of wages for hys sowdyours that before was to hym by the sayde Peter promysed In thys season that prynce Edwarde was thus in Spayne Henry Bastarde fledde wyth hys wyfe into Fraunce abode in a place or coūtre called Carcasson But so soone as he was warned that prynce Edwarde was retourned vnto Burdeaux he gadered to hym a new cōpany passed by the moūtaynes of the forestes so entred the sayd lande of Castile the .xxvii. daye of the moneth of Septembre folowynge had the citie called Calahore yolded vnto hym whervnto hym drewe moche people of the countre so that hys strengthe encreased hougely Than frō thens he yode vnto the cytye of Burgys where he was ioyously receyued behaued hym in suche wyse y t in short whyle after he had the hole rule of the lāde of Castyle hys brother was fayne to auoyde the lāde and to seche ayde of the Sarazyns as affermeth y e foresayde cronycle And in thys yere aboute the monethe of Iuny the company before mynded in the .xxxvi. yere of thys kynge entred the duchy of Guyan and there helde them in doyng moch harme to that countre lyke as they before hadde done in dyuers places of Fraunce by all that season of iiii yeres passed And in the moneth of Decembre they departed from thens and yode into the coūtrees of Auerne and Berry And in the moneth of February they passed the ryuer of Loyre and toke the waye towarde Marcyll and after entred the countre of Burgoyne And euer as they passed the countrees they raunsomed men and spoyled many townes as they wente And all be it that the French kyng appoynted dyuers of hys lordes and knyghtes to go agayne them yet at suche seasōs as they drewe nere vnto them they wolde suffre theym to departe wythout batayl For they were so many that they were nombred at lx M. But of theyr capytaynes is none named Howe be it there were Englyshmen Gascoynes Pycardes Frenchemen men of Nauerne and of many other nacyons whych the cronycle reherseth nat contynued in theyr force and strengthe longe after to the greate dammage of the countrees whyche they passed thorough as Normandy Gascoygne Guyan Burgoyne and all the chyef countrees of Fraunce and lyued by rauen and pyllage to the great enpoueryssynge of the sayde countrees and townes which they passed by or lodged in Anno dn̄i xiii C.lxvi   Anno dn̄i xiii C.lxvii   Iohn̄ Torgolde   Iames Andrewe   Anno .xlii.   wyllyam Dykman   IN thys .xlii. yere and moneth of Marche apered Stella cometa that is a blasynge sterre And in the moneth of Apryll next ensuynge that is to saye the syxt day of the sayde moneth Leonell y e sonne of thys kynge Edwarde entred the cytye of Parys where he was of the dukes of Berry and Burgoyne honourably receyued and so by theym cōueyed vnto theyr brother the kyng of Fraunce vnto Louure where he at that seasō was lodged Of whome he was also ioyously receyued logged wythin the kynges palays dyned souped wyth the kynge at hys owne table And vppon the morowe folowynge he dyned wyth the quene at a place of the kynges nere to saint Poule where the quene thā was lodged And whan after dyuer he had a whyle daunsed and passed the tyme wyth other dysportes he than wyth the sayd .ii. dukes was agayne conueyed vnto the kynge souped with hym agayne that nyght And vppon the mornynge beynge tuysdaye the sayd dukes fested the sayde syr Leonell at a place of theyrs in Parys named Artoys And vpō the wednesdaye he dyned souped agayne wyth the quene And vpon the thursday morowe folowynge the sayde syr Leonell toke hys leue of the kyng quene the whyche gaue vnto hym gyftes to suche as were in hys cōpany to y e value of .xx. M. floryns aboue was cōueyed wyth noble men as the erle of Cancaruyle other tyll he was comen to Sens wyth knyghtꝭ tyll he came to the borders of Fraūce where he gaue vnto theym ryche gyftes wyth great thankes And after he contynued hys iourney tyll he came vnto y e cytie of Mylayne where shortly after he maryed the doughter of Galyace duke of the sayde cytye and coūtre had by her greate possessyons by reason that her sayde father dyed shortely after And in the ende of thys yere the erles of Armenak of Bret and of Perygort wyth dyuers other nobles of the duchye of Guyan
also begynnynge of the thyrde yere of kynge Rycharde and so came to Soysons and passed the ryuers of Oyse and of Marne and other so went before Troys and wanne it and after lodged them atwene newe towne and Sens. And euer as they passed the countreys other they toke great fynaunces or elles fyred the townes as they went And all be it that the Frenche kynge hadde sente agayne them an armye of Frenchemen to withstande them they letted them nothinge of theyr purpose but and they had any skyrmysshes with them the Frenchemen were put vnto the wors so that they bette them toke of them dyuers prysoners and raunsomed them at theyr pleasures And thus holdynge theyr iourneye they passed by the countrey of Gastinoys and so into Brytayne where they were ioyously receyued of syr Iohn̄ de Mountforde duke of that prouince than newly comyn thyther Anno domini M.CCC.lxxx   Anno dn̄i M.CCC.lxxxi Fysshemonger walter Doket   wyllyam walworthe   Anno. iiii   wyllyam Knyghthode   IN this Mayres yere and ende of the thyrde yere of kyng Rycharde towarde the somer season in dyuers places of the lande the commons arose sodainly and ordeyned to them rulers and capytaynes and specially in Kent Essex The whiche named their leders Iacke straw wylwawe watte Tyler Iacke Shepeherde Tomme Myller Hobbe Carter These vnruled companye gathered vnto them great multitude of the commons after spedde them towarde the cytie of London and assembled them vpon Blacke hethe in Kent within .iii. myles of Lōdon And vppon corpus Christi daye beynge thanne the .xi. daye of Iune they entred the Towre of London and there the kynge beynge thanne lodged toke frome thens parforce mayster Sudberye than archebysshoppe of Caunterbury syr Robert Halys lorde or pryour of saynte Iohannes and a whyte frere cōfessour vnto the kynge whiche .iii. persones with houge noyse crye they ladde vnto the Hylle of the sayde Towre and smote of theyr heddes And whan they hadde so done they returned into Suthewarke by botes and barges there slewe and robbed all straungers tha they myghte fynde And that done they wente to westmynster toke with them all maner of Seyntwarymen so came vnto y e duke of Lācasters place standing without y e Temple barre called Sauoye spoyled that was therin and after sette it vpon a fyre and brent it And from thens they yode vnto y e hede place of saynt Iohn̄s in Smythefelde dispoiled that place in lyke wyse Than they entred the citye and serched the temple other Innes of courte and spoyled theyr places brent theyr bokes of lawe and slewe as many men of lawe and questmongers as they myght fynde And that done they went to saynte Martyns the Graunde toke with them all sayntwary men and the prisoners of Newgate Ludgate of bothe counters and distroyed theyr registers and bokes and in like maner they dyd with the prysoners of the Marshalsy and kinges benche in Southwerke whan Iacke Strawe had thus done all thyng at his wyll sawe y t no resistence was made agayne him he was smytten with so houge a presumpcion that he thought no man his pere And so beynge enflamed with y t presumpcion pryde he rode vnto the Towre where y e kyng was beynge smally accompanyed of hys lordes caused hym to ryde aboute some parte of the cytie and so conueyed hym into Smythfelde where in the kynges presence he caused a proclamacyon to be made and dyd full small reuerence vnto the kynge which mysordre presūpcyon whan wyllyam walworthe than Mayre of London behelde of very pure dysdayne that he had of his pryde ran to him sodainly with his swerde and wounded hym to dethe forthwith strake of his hede and areryd it vpō a speres poynte and therewith cryed kynge Rycharde kynge Rycharde whan the rebelles behelde theyr capytaynes hede anone they fledde as shepe Howe be it many were taken and many were slayne and the remenaunt chased that the cytie and subbarbes of y e same was clene voyded of them y t nyght whiche was mondaye and the .xv. day of Iune whan the kyng had beholden the great manhode of the Mayre and assystence of his bretherne the Aldermen anone in rewarde of that dede he dubbed the sayde wyllyam walworthe Nycholas Brembre Iohn̄ Philpot Nycholas Twyfforde Robert Laūdre and Roberte Gayton aldermen knyghtes And in this season also called the hurlynge tyme the cōmons of Norfolke and Suffolke came vnto the abbey of Burye there slewe one of the kynges Iustyces called Iohn̄ Caundysshe and the pryour of the place with other and after spoyled bare awaye moche thyng out of that sayd place But after this aswell the one as the other of these rebelles were taken in dyuers and sondry places and put in execucyon by .x. by .xii. by .xv. and .xx. so that one of them accused y e other to the distruction of a great noumbre of them Anno dn̄i M.CCC.lxxxi   Anno dn̄i M.CCC.lxxxii   Iohn̄ Rote   Iohn̄ Northampton   Anno. v.   Iohn̄ Hynde   IN this Mayres yere and moneth of Aprell landed in Kent dame Anne the doughter of Charles the .iiii. late Emperour of Almayne lately dede and syster vnto wensyslaus at that day Emperour the whiche of the Mayre cytezyns of London was honorably met vpō blacke hethe and conueyed with great tryumphe vnto westmynster the .viii. day of the moneth of Maye shortely after there solemply maryed vnto kyng Richarde And about the same season or after some wryters in the later ende of Iune was an erthequaue in Englange that the lyke therof was neuer sene in Englande before that day nor sen. Anno dn̄i M.CCC.lxxxii   Anno dn̄i M.CCC.lxxxiii   Adam Bame   Iohn̄ Northampton   Anno. vi   Iohn̄ Sely.   IN this yere mayster Henrye Spencer bisshope of Norwyche with a great power of spirituall men and other croysed by the commaundement of the pope than Clement the .vii. enduryng the scisme before touched in the laste chapyter of Charles y e .vi. than kynge of Fraūce This sayd pope gaue this auctoryte to the sayd bysshoppe to make warre vpon the kynge of Spayne as some wryters haue for so moche as he contrarye the sayde popes commaundement withhelde certayne possessions belongynge of ryght vnto the duke of Lancastre syr Iohn̄ of Gaunte and specially vnto dame Constaūce his wyfe In perfourmaunce of whiche acte the said bysshoppe entryng the countrey of Flaunders fande there y e flemynges with dyuers myscreauntes suche as the foresaid king of the countrey of Spayne had thyther sent makyng resystence agayne hym wherfore he made to thē sharpe warre and wanne vpon them certayne townes as Grauelyng Burburgth and Dunkyrke and wanne great and ryche pyllage so that he his souldyours stuffed and freight with it as testyfyeth Policronycon xli shyppes But soone after the Flemynges assembled wyth suche strength that
whose requeste the sayd knyght ranne with hym in woodstoke parke certayne courses In the whyche were it wyth stroke or other myshap the sayd erle receyued there hys dethes wounde dyed shortly after In this yere also moneth of Iuny a bakers man berynge a basket full of horsebrede to serue hys maysters customers in Fletestrete whanne he came foreagayn the bysshop of Salysburyes place standynge in Salysbury aley a seruaunt of the bysshoppes starte vnto the basket and toke oute one of the louys And for the baker wolde agayne haue recouered hys horse lofe y e bysshoppes seruaūt wyth hys dagger brake the bakers hed Than came the inhabytauntes of the strete wolde haue broughte the yoman vnto warde for brekynge of the kynges peace But he was rescowed by hys felowes and so hadde vnto the bysshoppes palays whyche that daye stoode treasourer of Englande For this rescous the people beyng in a fury in greate multytude gathered aboute the palays and wolde haue entred parforce to haue set out the yoman Agayn whome the bysshoppes seruaūtes made resistēce so y t y e rumour grewe more and more And the peple of the cytye aswell suche as were of yll dysposycion as other encreased into a greate noumbre Fame of thys doyng thā sprāge to y e mayer which in all haste wyth dyuers aldermen the shyryues sped hym thyther to se the peace kepte dyd that he cowde to withdrawe the people But after y e mayer the offycers of the citie were comyn thyder the cōmons out of all partyes of the cytye drewe thyder in moche more multytude thanne they had before so that y e more they were in noumbre the worse they were to rule In so moche that they wold nat be satysfyed but they myghte haue y e yoman delyuered whose name was walter Romayne And for to brynge about theyr foly they made many assautes at the gates of y e sayd palays the bysshop hym selfe beynge than at wyndesore Lastly after many showtes lyftes at the gates made by dyscresciō of the mayre aldermen with other dyscrete comoners of the cytye the people was mynysshed and sente agayne euery mā to hys dwellynge all was set in quyet reste whan worde of this came vnto the bisshop in moch worse maner thā the thynge was in dede he gyuing light credēce without examinaciō made in the matter assocyat vnto hym mayster Arundell than archebisshop of yorke and chaūceler of Englāde so greuously enfourmed the kyng that he toke agayne the cytye ryght greuouse dyspleasure so that in all hast the mayre was sent for to the kynge At whose commyng was layd vnto his charge great heynous maters that he non otherwyse ruled the cytye but suffered the cytezyns to make suche assautes vppō the kynges hed offycers to the kynges great dyshonour ieopardy of suche great treasoure as he than had of the kynges ī his custody and kepynge And after broughte vnto the kynges presence of whome nat wythstādyng hys reasonable excuse before made he was of the kyng ryght sore blamed greuously sayde vnto Thā was the mayre the sheryues dyscharged of the rule of y e cytie the liberties of the same seased into the kynges hādes a knyghte of the court called syr Edward Dalīgryge a good man and fauourable to y e cytezeyns was made gouernoure of the cytye the .xxi. daye of Iune contynued in that offyce to the fyrste daye of Iuly next ensuyng At whych day beynge in the begynnynge of y e kynges .xvi. yere of hys reygne he was discharged syr Baldewyn Radyngton knyght putte in hys rome so cōtynued tyll the feest of Symōde Iude folowynge And for the more dyspleasure of the cytezyns all plees sutes kept before tyme in westmynster hall were than remoued holdē at yorke to the great noyaunce of all the lande whyche so contynued tyll Crystmas And in thys mayres yere also was a great trāslaciō of bisshoppes Thys dyspleasure thus hāgyng towarde the cytye the cytezyns made contynuall labour vnto the kynges grace by meanes of the quene and of doctour Grauysende than bysshope of London whych ought theyr especiall fauoures vnto the cytye By whose meanes the cytezeyns were restored vnto theyr lybertyes hadde licence to chose of them selfe a mayre two shyryues so that vppon saynt Mathewis daye folowynge they chose for shyryues Gylberte Manyfolde or Manfelde and Thomas Newyngton and vppon saynte Edwardes daye kynge and confessoure they chase for theyr mayre wyllyam Stondon Grocer whyche by the Lyeutenaunte of the towre were at that tyme admytted and sworne But yet the kynges dyspleasure was natte reconcyled nor the cytezeyns admytted vnto hys grace and fauoure Anno dn̄i M.CCC.xcii   Anno dn̄i M.CCC.xciii Grocer Gylbert Manfeylde   wyllyam Stondon   Anno. xvi   Thomas Newynghtyn   IN thys mayres yere and .xvi. yere of kynge Rycharde thys newe mayre wyth the worthyest men of the cytye made assyduat daylye meanes vnto the kynges grace for to haue hys moste bounteouse pardō hys especyall fauoure vnto y e cytye The whych at lengthe by meanes of such frēdes as they purchased about the kyng specyally by laboure of y e good quene Anne and the fornamed bysshop of London they were put in good cōforte vpō theyr demeanour submyssion at the kynges commyng to Londō Upon whyche cōforte the cytyzyns made royall and costyous purueyaūce to receyue the kynge in theyr best maner hauynge monyssyon that the kyng entended to come vnto hys palays of westmynster apparayled them in one lyuerey to y e noumbre of .iiii. C. horsemen well be seen mette wyth hym vpon the heth on thys halfe hys manour of shene where in moste lowlye wyse accordynge to theyr dutyes they submytted them vnto hys grace besechynge hym of hys specyall grace pardon in all suche thynges as they before tymes had offended agayne hys hyghnesse And to y e entent that hys grace myght se the cōformyte of all hys other subiectes the recorder made instaūce to hym that he wolde of hys great bounte take so great peyne vppon hym as to ryde thorough hys chaumber of London The whych request he graciously accepted so helde on hys iournay tyll he came at Londō brydge where he was presēted wyth .ii. fayre stedes trapped in ryche cloth of golde partyd of redde and whyte The whyche present he thākefull receyued after helde on hys way tyll he came at the standarde in chepe the cytezyns of y e cytye stādynge vpō eyther syde of the stretes in theyr lyuereys and cryeng kyng Rycharde kyng Rychard and at theyr backes y e wyndowys wallys hanged wyth all ryche tapettes clothes of arasse in moste goodlye shewyng wyse And at the sayd standarde in chepe was ordeyned a sumptuouse stage in the whych were sette diuers personages in ryche apparel Amonge y t whych an An̄gell was ordeyned whyche set a ryche crowne of
bothe hoostes of bothe prynces or suche cōpanyes as before either of them was appointed to bryng Here if I shuld brynge in the dyuers metynges of y e sayd princes and the curyous seruices that eyther caused other to be fed serued within eyther of theyr tentes or of theyr dalyaunce or pastymes continuynge the season of their metynges and the dyuersyte of the manifolde spices and wynes whiche there was ministred at y e said season with all y e ryche apparell of the sayde pauilyons cupbordes garnysshed with plate rich iewels it wold aske a lōge tracte of tyme. But who y t is desirous to knowe or here of the cyrcumstaūce of all y e premysses let him rede y e worke of maister Iohn̄ Froysarde made in Frenche and there he shall se euery thynge touched in an ordre And here I shall shortly touch the giftes y t were gyuen of eyther of y e princes of their lordes And fyrst king Rychard gaue vnto y e Frenche kynge an hanap or basyn of golde with an ewer to y e same Thā againwarde y e Frēche king gaue vnto him iii. stāding cuppes of golde with couers garnisshed with perle stone a shippe of golde set vpon a bere rychely garnysshed with perle stone Than at theyr seconde meting king Rycharde gaue vnto him an ouche set with so fyne stones y t it was valued at .v. C. marke sterlynge where agayne the Frenche king gaue vnto him .ii. flaggons of golde a tablet of golde and therein an ymage of saint Mychaell rychely garnisshed Also a tablet of gold with a crucifixe therin well and rychely dyght Also a tablet of golde with an ymage of the Trynite rychely set with perle and stone Also a tablet of gold with an ymage of saynt George in likewise set with perle and stone whiche all were valued at the summe of .xv. C. marke Than king Richarde seyng y e boūte of the Frenche kinge gaue to hym a bauderyke or coler of golde set with greate dyamantes rubyes and balessys beyng valued at .v. M. mark the whiche for the preciosyte thereof that it was of such an excellency and fynesse of stuffe the Frenche kynge therfore ware it aboute his necke as often as the king and he mette together Than the Frenche kyng gaue vnto hym an ouche a spyce plate of golde of great weyght and valued at .ii. M. marke Many were the ryche gyftes that were receyued of lordes and ladyes of bothe prynces Amonge the whiche specially are noted .iii. giftes whiche kyng Richarde gaue vnto the duke of Orleaūce for the which he receyued agayne of the duke trebyll the value For where his were valued at a M. marke the dukes were valued at thre thousāde marke Finally whan y e said princes hadde thus eyther solaced with other concluded all maters concernynge the abouesayde maryage the Frenche kyng delyuered vnto kyng Rycharde dame Isabell his doughter sayenge these wordes folowynge Ryght dere beloued sonne I delyuer here to you the creature y t I most loue ī this worlde next my wife my sonne besechynge y e father in heuen that it may be to his pleasure and of the weale of you and youre realme and that the amyte atwene the .ii. realmes in auoydyng of effusyon of chrysten mens blode maye be kepte inuyolet for the terme atwene vs cōcluded whiche terme was .xxx. wynter as expresseth the Frenche Cronycle After whiche wordes with many thankes giuen vpon eyther parties preparacyon was made of deꝑtinge And after kynge Rycharde had conueyed the Frenche kynge towarde Arde he toke his leaue and returned vnto his wyfe The which was immediatlye with great honoure conueyed vnto Caleys and there after to the kyng spoused as before to you I haue shewed After the which solempnisacion with al honour ended the kynge with his yonge wyfe toke shyppyng and so within short whyle landed at Douer and from thens sped hym towarde London wherof the cytezens beynge warned made out certayne horsemen well appointed in one lyuetye of coloure with a conysaunce brodered vpon theyr sleues whereby euery felyshyppe was knowen from other The whyche with the Mayre and hys bretherne clothed in scarlet met the kynge and the quene vpon the Blacke hethe after due salutacyon and reuerente welcomes vnto theim made by the mouthe of the recorder the sayd cytezens conueyed the kynge vpon his wey tyll he came to Newyngton where the kynge commaunded the Mayre with his company to returne to the cytie for he with hys lordes ladyes was appointed that nyght to lye at Kenyngton It was nat longe after but that she was from Kenington brought with great pompe vnto the Towre of London At whyche season was so exceding prece at London brydge that by reason therof certayne persones were thruste to deth amonge the whyche the pryoure of Typtre a place ī Essex was one And vpon the morowe folowynge she was conueyed throughe y e cytie with all honoure that myghte be deuysed vnto westmynster there crowned quene vpon the sonday beynge than the .viii. day of Ianuary In the somer folowynge the kynge by sinistre counsell delyuered vp by a poyntement the towne of Breste in Brytayne to the duke whiche was occasyon of displeasure atwene the kyng and y e duke of Gloucestre hys vncle as in the yere folowyng shal be more clerely shewed Anno domini M. CCC.lxxxxvi   Anno dn̄i M. CCC.lxxxxvii Goldesmythe Thomas wylforde   Adam Bame   Anno. xx   wyllyam Parker   IN this .xx. yere of kynge Rycharde and moneth of February the kinge holdynge a sumptuous feest in westmynster halle many of the soudyours whiche were newely comen from the towne of Brest foresayd presed into the hall and kepte a rome together whiche companye whan the duke of Gloucestre hadde beholden and frayned and knowen what men they were and howe the sayde towne was gyuen vppe contrary his knowlege was therewith in his mynde sore discomforted In so moche that whan the kynge was entred hys chaumbre and fewe nere vnto hym he sayde vnto the kynge Syr haue ye nat sene the felawes y t satte in so great noumbre to daye in your halle at suche a table And the kynge answered yes and axed of the duke what cōpany it was To whom the duke answered saide Sir these ben youre souldyours comen from Breste and as nowe haue nothynge to take to nor knowen at howe to shyfte for theyr lyuynge and the rather for that as I am enfourmed they haue benne before tyme euyll payed Than said y e king it is nat my will but y t they shulde be well payed And if any haue cause to cōplayne let them shewe it vnto our tresourer and they shal be resonably answered In resonynge of this mater farther the duke said vnto the kyng Syr ye ought to put your body to payne for to wynne a strōge holde or towne by feate of warre or ye toke vpon you to sell or delyuer any towne
Huntyngedon the whiche than was created duke of Exeter Also of the erle of Somerset was made a marques of Dorset And for the erles fyrste the lorde of westmerlande named Dane Ra●y Neuyll was made erle of westmerlande the lorde Tresorer syr wyllyā Scrope was made e●le of wylshyre and syr Iohn̄ de Mountague was made erle of Salesbury And whan this busines was fynisshed the parlyament was remoued vnto Shrewysbury vnto Hyllarye terme where it was fynysshed to many mennes dyspleasures dysherytynge of many trewe heyres Anno domini M. CCC.lxxxxvii   Anno dn̄i M. CCC.lxxxxviii Mercer wyllyam Askeham   Rycharde whyttyngton   Anno. xxi   Iohn̄ wodecoke   IN this .xxi. yere of kynge Rycharde the people of the lande murmured and grudged sore againe the kynge his counsell for so moche as the goodes belongynge vnto the crowne were disperblyd gyuen to vnworthy persones by occasyon whereof dyuers charges and exaccyons were put vpon the people Also for that the chefe rulers aboute the prynce were of lowe byrthe and of small reputacyon and the men of honoure were kepte out of fauoure Also for that the duke of Glouceter was secretely murdred without processe of the lawe and many thynges elles mysordered by the laste parlyament whereof the wyte and blame was layed vnto the kynge and other persones after named as well for wrongefull dysherytynge of sondrye persones at the sayde parlyamente suche as were menyall seruauntes of the foresayde duke of Gloceter and of the erles of Arundell and of warwyke contrarye hys owne proclamacyons made concernynge suche maters Also that where dyuers patentes grauntes passyd the kynges great seale as well for pardons and other great maters yet for the kynges singuler auauntage suche fewe persones as bare the rule about hym many of theym were called agayne Also where for sheryffes and other offycers of all shyres of Englande were wonte to be named .iiii. by discrete ꝑsones as iuges other of y e whiche the kyng shulde assygne two for the yere folowynge he of his owne wylle pleasure wolde refuse them chose suche .ii. as hym lyked the which he knewe well wolde lene more to his weale than to the cōmen weale of this lande or of his subiectes Also that where before tymes y e kynges of Englande vsed to sende out commyssyons vnto burgeses of cyties townes to chose of theyr fre lybertie suche knyghtes of the shyre as they thought mooste wealefull for the comen weale of the sayde shyre lande nowe kyng Rycharde wolde appoynte the persones and wylle them for to chose such as than he named wherby his singuler causes were preferred and the commen causes put by Also kinge Rycharde thoroughe euyll counsell commaunded by his letters vnto the sheryffes of all shyres fewe excepted that all persones of honoure within theyr countyes as well spirytuall as temporall shulde make certayne othes in generall wordes and ouer that to wryte and seale certayne bondes for perfourmaunce of the sayde othes and also for blanke chartour which many men of substaunce were constrayned to seale to theyr great charges The people contynually murmured and grudgyd for these iniuryes and many mo whyche at the tyme of his deposynge were artyculed agayne hym in .xxxviii. sondry artycles with also the rumoure that ranne vpon hym that he had letten to ferme the reueneus of y e crowne to Busshey Bogot and Grene whiche caused as well the noble men of the realme to grudge agayn hym as other of the comon people Thus cōtynuynge this mysorder within the lande dyed syr Iohn̄ of Gaunt duke of Lancaster at the bysshoppe of Elyes place in Holborne and from thens was caried vnto saint Pouls and there vppon the north syde of y e quyre honorably buryed At whose enterremente all the chefe lordes of Englande were present For whom after was foūdyd by dame Blaūche hys wyfe an honorable anniuersary as before I haue shewed in y e .xliiii. yere of Edwarde the thyrde whiche of right ought to be set in this place This yere also aboute the feste of saynt Bartholomew fell discencyon discorde bytwene y e duke of Herforde the duke of Norfolke wherfore the duke of Herforde accused y e other that he hadde taken .iiii. thousande marke of the kynges of suche money as he shulde therwith haue waged certeyne sowdyours at Caleys whiche he lefte vndone toke the same money to hys owne vse But an other wryter sayth that as y e sayde two dukes rode vppon a tyme from the parlyament towarde theyr lodgynges y e duke of Norfolke sayd vnto that other Syr se you not how varyable the kyng is in his wordes and how shamefully he putteth his lordes and kynesfolkes to deth and other exileth and holdeth in pryson wherfore full necessary it is to take kepe and not for to truste myche in hys wordes For without dowte in tyme to come he wyll by suche lyke meanes brynge vs vnto lyke deth distruccyon Of whiche wordes the sayde duke of Herforde accused that other vnto the kynge wherfore eyther wagyd batayle with other before the kynge To whom daye of metynge was gyuen to eyther vpon the .xi. daye of September to fyghte within lystes at Couētre where all thynge was ordeyned for At whiche place at y e day assygned thyder came the sayde two dukes and appered in the felde before the kynges presence redy to do theyr batayle But y e kyng anone forbad that fyght and forthwith exyled the duke of Herforde for x. yeres and the duke of Norfolk for euer whiche sentence was shortely after put in execucyon Thanne the duke of Herforde sayled into Fraūce and there taryed a season But for lacke of ayde and comforte he departed thens and came into Brytayne And the duke of Norfolke passed dyuers countreys and lastely came vnto the cytie of Uenyce and there endyd his lyfe And soone after thys was maister Roger walden a chapeleyne of the kynges made archebysshoppe of Caunterbury the whyche was a speciall louer vnto the citie of London and made great labour for them vnto the kynges grace y e greuously with them was of newe dyspleased for so moche as he was enfourmed of them y t they shulde counsell with other sheriffes to withstāde certayne actes made in the laste parlyament for y t which the comynaltie of the cytie was endyted with other sheryffes In redresse wherof by coūsell of the sayd archebysshoppe of maister Robert Braybroke than bisshoppe of Lōdon the cytezens made a lamentable supplicacyon vnto the kinge whiche by ayde fauoure of the sayd two bysshoppes other louers of y e cytie y e kinges yre indignacyon by meane of that lowly supplicacyon was some parte appeased withdrawen But yet to contente a ꝑte of y e kinges mynde many blanke chartours were deuysed broughte into the cytie which many of y e most substancyall men of the same were fayne to seale to theyr payne and charge in conclusyon
y t whiche shortely after was vsed thoroughe all countreys of Englande Anno domini M. CCC.lxxxxviii   Anno dn̄i M. CCC.lxxxxix Goldesmythe Iohn̄ wade   Drewe Barentyne   Anno .xxii.   Iohn̄ warner   IN this .xxii. yere of kynge Rycharde y e cōmon fame ranne y t the kyng had letton to ferme y e realme of Englande vnto sir wyllyam S●ope erle of wylshyre than treasourer of Englāde to sir Iohn̄ Busshey syr Iohn Bagot and syr Henry Grene knightes y e whyche returned shortly after to their great cōfusyōs This yere also Thomas y e son and heyre of y e erle of Arundell lately beheded y e whiche Thomas nat all to his pleasure was kepte in y e house of the duke of Exceter passed y e see by y e meanes of one wyllyā Scot mercer yode vnto his vncle y t archebisshop of Caūterbury so contynued with him in the cytie of Colayne than beynge In this pastyme great purueyaunce was made for y e kynges iourney into Irelāde so y t whan all thinges necessarye to the honoure nede of the kynge his people was redy he set forthwarde vpon his iourney in the moneth of Apryll leauyng for his leutenaunt in Englange sir Edmonde of Langley his vncle duke of yorke and after toke shippyng at Brystowe and sayled with a mighty stronge hoste into Irelande where he had so prosperous spede that in processe of tyme with manhode and good polycie he subdued to him that coūtrey In the whiche voyage were it for acte that he dyd or of y e kynges bounte Henry sone and heyre of the duke of Herforde than exiled was of y e kyng made knyght This Henry was after his father crowned kynge of Englande named Henry the .v. Kynge Richarde thus beynge occupyed in Irelande and receyuynge of the capytaynes of the wylde Irysshe into his subieccyon and orderyng of that countrey to set in an ordre and rule Henry of Bolyngbroke duke of Herforde before exyled with the archebysshoppe of Caunterbury and Thomas of Arundel and other landed with a small company at Rauyns spore in the Northe countrey in the moneth of August and vnder colour of the clayme of his ryghtfull enherytaunce ceysed the people as he wente to whome in short processe great multytude of the people drewe and gatherd Of this landyng king Rycharde beynge warned for hasty spede of returnyng into Englande left in Irelāde behynde hym moche ordenaūce and landed at Mylforde hauen in the begynnyng of Septembre begynnynge also of the .xxiii. yere of his reygne so yode vnto the castell of Flynte in wales and there rested him and his people and entended there to gather vnto hym more strength In the whiche meane tyme the foresayd Henry that than hadde proclaymed him selfe duke of Lancaster in the ryght of Iohn̄ of Gaūte his father was comyn to Brystowe and there without resystence toke sir wyllyam Scrope erle of wylshyre treasourer of Englande syr Iohn̄ Busshey and syr Henry Grene. Also there was taken sir Iohn̄ Bagot but after he escaped and fledde into Irelande Than were the other thre there iuged put in execucyon And kinge Rycharde styll beynge at the castell of Flynte herynge of the great strengthe y t was about y e duke fearyd sore of him selfe And in lyke wyse so dyd all suche as were about hym wherfore syr Thomas Percye erle of worcetyr and than stewarde of the kynges housholde contrarye his allegeaunce brake openly the whyte rodde in the hall commaundyd euery man to shifte for him selfe By reason whereof the people voyded and the kynge lefte without cōforte so that he was shortly after taken and presented vnto the duke The whyche put hym vnder safe kepynge shortly after spedde him toward Lōdon And whā he came nere vnto y e cytie he sente king Rycharde with a secret cōpany vnto y e Towre there to be safely kepte tyll his commyng wherof many euyll disposed persones of the cytie beyng warned assembled them in great noumbre entended to haue mette him without the towne there to haue taken him from such as ladde him so to haue slayne him for the great cruelte that he before tyme had vsed vnto the cytie But as god wolde the mayre rulers of the cytie were enfourmed of theyr malycyous purpose and gathered to theym the worshypfull commoners and sadde men by whose polycyes nat without great diffyculte they were reuoked frome theyr euyll purpose all be it that lastynge that rumoure they yode vnto westmynster and there toke mayster Iohn̄ Slake deane of the kinges chapell and frome thens broughte him vnto Newgate and there caste on hym yrons Shortly after the duke came vnto London there by the consent of kyng Rycharde a ꝑlyament was begone vpon the .xiii. day of y e moneth of Septembre Endurynge whiche ꝑlyament many accusacyons artycles of mysrulynge of the lande were layed vnto the charge of thys noble prince kyng Rycharde whiche be engroced at length in .xxxviii. artycles For the which volūtarely as it shuld seme by y e copy of an instrumēt here after shewed he shulde renounce wylfullye be deposed from all kynglye mageste the monday beynge the xxix day of Septembre and the feest of saynt Myghell the archaungell in the yere of our lordes incarnacyon after the accom●te of the churche of Englande M. lxxxxix and the xxiiii yere of the raygne of the sayde Rycharde The copye of whiche instrumente here vnder ensueth THis present instrumente made the mondaye the .xxix. daye of Septembre and feeste of saynt Mychaell tharchaungell in the yere of our lorde god M.CCC.lxxx and xix and in the .xxiii. yere of kynge Rycharde the seconde wytnesseth that where by the auctoryte of the lordes spirytuall and temporall of this present parlyament and cōmons of the same the ryght honorable and dyscrete ꝑsons here vnder named were by the sayde auctoryte assygned to go vnto the towre of London there to here and testifye suche questyons and answeres as than there shude be by the said honorable and discrete persones harde knowe all men to whome these presente letters shall come that we sir Richarde Scroope archebysshoppe of yorke Iohn̄ bisshoppe of Herforde Henrye erle of Northumberlande Rafe erle of westmerlande Thomas lorde of Barkeley wyllyam abbot of westmynster Iohn̄ pryour of Caunterbury wyllyam Thyrnynge and Hughe Burnell knyghtes Iohn̄ Markeham Iustyce Thomas Stowe Iohn̄ Burbage doctours of the lawe Cyuyle Thomas Feryby and Denys Lopham notaryes publyke the day yere abouesayd atwene the houres of .viii. .ix. of y e clocke before noone were present in the chyefe chaumber of the kynges lodgynge within the sayde place of the towre where was rehersed vnto the kynge by y e mouth of the forsayde erle of Northumberlande that beforetyme at Conwey in Northwalys the kynge beynge there at hys pleasure and lybertye promysed vnto the archebysshop of Caunterbury than Thomas of Arundell and vnto the
of Orleyaunce assembled to hym a cōpany of .vi. thousande knyghtes came agayne towarde Parys where as that tyme the duke of Burgoyne was And he herynge of y e dukes cōmyng made him stronge to receyue hym To whome the cytezens of Parys were fauourable aydynge for the euyll wyll that they before bare vnto the duke of Orleyaunce also for they hoped by hym to be defended from taskes and tallages Thus contynuynge the prouisyon vpon bothe partyes to mete shortely in playne batayle suche polytike meanes was foūde by a noble man called Mountague that a concorde and vnyte was for that tyme by hym sette atwene the sayd dukes And for that newe occasyon shulde nat by presēce kyndle atwene them therfore y e duke of Orleyaunce with hys company was sent into Guyan to warre vpon the englysshemen that other vnto Calays to lay syege vnto that towne The which before had prepared a wonderfull engyne sette vpon whelys by the strength wherof he thoughte to wreke greate dysturbaunce vnto the sayd towne as sayth myne auctour Gagwyne was in great hoope to recouer it agayne to the subieccyon of the house of Fraūce But that hope was soone dyspayred for it was nat longe after or the sayd duke by the kynge was countermaunded and returned And the duke of Orleyaunce after he knewe that rescous were commyng frō Burdeaux he remoued his siege layde by hym to Burgus a towne of Guyan so returned into Fraunce to his cōfusyon as after shall appere IN the .xxvii. yere of this Charles the former malyce and enuye contynuyng in the brestes of the sayd dukes of Orleyaunce and of Burgoyne as the sayd duke of Orleyaunce was goynge towarde hys lodgynge in the nyght of the .x. daye of Decembre fell vpon him certayne knyghtes of the whiche one named Rafe Auctouyle was leder slewe hym nere vnto a gate of the cytie of Parys named Barbet gate After whyche murder fynysshed y e sayde sir Rafe with hys adherentes fledde vnto the place of the erle of Artoys where the duke of Burgoyne vsed accustomably to resorte And y e dede corps was soone after by suche as came to y e exclamacyō with also a seruaūt of his with him slaine borne into y e next houses whan the rumour of this murder was blowen about y e cytie anone Lewys vncle vnto the kynge and than kynge of Scecyle the dukes of Berry and of Burbon with other drewe thyder and there with lamentacyon beholdynge the corps commaunded prouisyon to be made for the buryenge of it within the monastery of Celestynes where vpon the seconde day folowynge he was buryed wyth great pompe whome amōge other lordes folowed to his buryenge the duke of Burgoyne nat without great suspicyon of the sayd murder And that enterrement with due obseruaunce fynysshed auctoryte was gyuen vnto .ii. knyghtes named Roberte Tuyller Peter Orpheuer to make enquery for the murder of this prince wherof the duke of Burgoyne beynge ascertayned voyded the cytie brake the brydge of saynte Maxence after hym that pursute after hym shulde nat be made and so hastely spedde hym that that nyght folowynge he came to Andwarpe whiche is vpon an C. myle from Parys whan Charles the kyng harde of the escape of y e sayd duke feryng leste he wolde accuse hym to be consentyng vnto that euyll dede sent vnto hym comfortable messages so that the sayde duke without warre restyd all that wynter sometyme in Arthoys and an other whyle in Flaunders at his pleasure In the whiche pastyme he sente into dyuers places of Fraunce sondry accusacyons of the duke before slayne that he entēded to depose the kyng and to take vpon hym the rule gouernaunce of the realme and to haue poysoned the sayd kyng as by dyuers tokens by hym affermed for perfourmaūce of the same And also that the said duke of Orleyaūce was cause of fyrynge of y e disguysers garmentes before shewed to the ende to brynge the kyng in more daunger of syckenes or els to be consumed with the same fyre with sondry other distamacyons as leuyenge of taskes and imposicyons of the people to his singuler auauntage and hougely enrychynge wherby he myghte the soner attayn vnto his said purpose Thus contynuyng this great vnkyndenes atwene the duke of Burgoyne and the sonne and other of his blode of y e duke of Orleyaunce the said duke agayne the begynnynge of the yere herynge that the king and the quene were departed from Parys to Charters assēbled to hym a strōge power of Holāders other and came vnto Parys in which cytie he moch trusted to the ende to cause the kynge y e quene and the Doulphyn to whome he hadde maryed hys doughter for to retourne vnto Parys And to strengthe hys partye he broughte with hym wyllyam erle of Hanster which wyllyam was a man of great strengthe and allyaunce and hadde maryed hys syster vnto the duke of Burgoyne foresayde and hys doughter and heyre vnto one of kyng Charles sonnes and was gossyppe vnto the quene For whyche sayde consyderacyons the sayde erle entendynge the weale of that realme of Fraunce laboured suche wayes and meanes that by hym for that tyme a concorde and vnytie was dryuen and made atwene the two dukes of Orleyaunce and Burgoyne wyth assured othes and necessary actes to that concorde belongynge and the king with his retynewe was agayne retourned vnto Parys These dukes thus appeased and the duke of Burgoyne agayne restored to the gouernaunce of the realme assocyate vnto hym the kynge of Nauerne whyche varyed nat from his fathers vnstable condycyons so that by him newe occasyons of stry●e and varyaunce were moued atwene the sayde dukes and theyr allyes For fyrste they soughte occasyon agayne the forenamed Mountague a man of great wysedome and honoure in the kynges courte and especyall frende vnto the duke of Orleyaunce and by theyr malyce and vntrewe surmyses fynally putte to dethe And one named Peter Essayer or Sayer thā prouoste of the cytie of Parys or gouernoure they admytted to the rule of the kynges treasoury and other dyuers offyces suche as were any thynge fauoured of the duke of Orleaūce they clerely dyscharged The whyche for theyr relefe and comfort resorted vnto the sayde duke shewynge to him all y e demeanure of their aduersaryes addynge thervnto y e all suche conuencyons concernynge the amyte atwene hym and the duke of Burgoyne before sworne enacted were clerely adnulled broken with these tydynges the duke beyng fyred with newe malyce accompanyed to hym the dukes of Berry of Burbon and of Alenson the erles of Rychemounte of Alyberte and of Armenake with other nobles nat a fewe by whose counsels he determyned to be auenged vpon the duke of Burgoyne other his fautours wherof the sayde duke beynge monisshed drewe him towarde Parys and strengthed the fortresses as he yode To thys duke of Burgoyne was brother the duke of Brabande named Anthony a man of great polycye and
wysedome the whych forecastynge the great shedynge of chrysten mannes blode with many other inconuenyences lykely to haue ensued of this varyaunce atwene these two dukes made suche affectuous labour that with great diffyculte he pacifyed them agayne for that tyme and brought them to personall communicacyon and lastely to amyable and frendely departynge After whiche concorde and amyte thus agayn concluded the duke of Burgoyne departed into Pycardy leauynge behynde him the fore named Peter Essayr to rule the cytie of Parys The whiche shortely after drewe to hym suche persones as before tyme had vexed and distourbed y e duke of Orleyaunce frendes seruauntes with in that cytie By whose meanes the sayd Peter sought fyrste occasyon agayne a knight named Uenyt Thorney and by false suggestyon smote fyrste of his hede and after dyd hys body to be hanged vpon the cōmon gybet of Parys in dyspyte of y e sayd duke as testifyeth myne Auctoure wherwith y e duke beynge wondersly amoued resembled his knyghtes spedde hym towarde a towne named And for to strengthe another towne named he sente a certayne nombre of his knyghtes chargyng them with the dwellers to withstande the force of his enemies Of this hearynge the duke of Burgoyne anone gathered vnto him the noumbre of .xvi. M. flemynges and Pycardes and sped hym vnto the sayde towne of And so with his instrumentes of warre assayled the gate of the sayde towne whyche leadeth towarde saynt Quintyne y t in shorte space the sayde Flemynges wan the entre of the towne In whyche meane season the dwellers wyth the other soudyours by a backe way or water wherof the maner by thys auctoure is nat expressyd lefte the towne yode vnto the duke of Orleyaunce beynge as yet at the foresayde towne of whan the Flemynges were entered the towne foūde it deserte of people and pillage were it for that they lacked theyr praye or for other cause here nat shewed they toke suche vnkyndenes agayne the duke that for prayer nor yet for manasses they wolde nat with hym any lenger tary but returned them home in all hastely spede towarde theyr owne countrey So that the duke was fayne to withdrawe and for the more suretie to aske ayde and helpe of Englysshemen and so was holpen by the prynces comforte Henrye sonne of Henry the .iiii as after shall be touched in the .xii. yere of the .iiii. Henry IN the .xxxi. yere of thys kynge Charles whiche was the .xii. yere of the .iiii. Henry than kynge of Englande the duke of Orleyaunce seynge his enemye was turned from Parys caused suche Brydges as before by his said enemye were broken to be reedyfyed By the whyche he passed the ryuer tyll he came to saint Denys where as than he fande a capytayne a noble man named syr Iohn̄ Cabylon of the dukes of Burgoyne there lefte by hym to strength the towne The whiche syr Iohn̄ cōsideryng y e wekenes of y e said towne with also his lacke of strēgth yelded him the towne vnto the duke swerynge to him by solempne othe that after y e daye he shulde neuer bere armes agayne hym In this pastyme an other capytayne of the Burgonyons called Gancourt secretely by night wan vpon the frenche men the brydge of saynte Clodalde But nat longe after the duke of Orleaunce sent thyther certayne Brytons the whiche agayne recouered the sayde brydge helde it vnto y e sayd dukes vse In whyche tyme and season the duke of Burgoyne recouerynge hys strength passed the brydge of Melent so came vnto the cytie of Parys and the daye folowynge wyth helpe of the cytesyns recouered the abouesayd brydge of saynt Clodald and dystressed vpon a M. Brytons whyche had the warde of the same Then the duke of Orleaunce made out of saynte Denys ouer Sayne brydge towarde Parys wherof that other duke beynge warned refused the cytye and with the kynge than there beynge present remouyd wyth the Dolphyne to the towne called Stamps and sent y e erle of Marche named Iamys wyth a certeyne knyghtes to a towne named to strength it ageyne the duke of Orleaunce The whyche of the sayde dukes knyghtes was encountred with and taken and so sent to pryson wherof herynge the duke of Burgoyne in shorte processe after retourned vnto Parys wyth the kyng and dolphyne and the duke of Orleaūce yode to a towne called Seyntclowe And in the .xxxii. yere of thys sayd kynge Charles by counceyll of the duke of Berry and other seyng that the sayde cytye of Parys was so let agayne hym wyth also the kynge the dolphine sent a noble man of his hoste named Alberte vnto Henry the iiii yet kynge of Englande to requyre hym of ayde to withstande the tyrannye of the duke of Burgoyne that wyth hys complyces entendyd to subuerte the realme of Fraunce To this requeste kynge Henry gaue good eare and lastely graunted to hys petycyon sent thyder as sayth the Frenche cronycle Thomas hys sonne duke of Clarence also y e duke of yorke wyth Iohn̄ erle of Cornewayle accompanyed wyth .viii. C. knyghtes and sowdyours a thousande archers The whych company when they were landed in Fraunce herde y t the French lordes were in treaty of peace no man to thē gaue wages as they tofore were ꝓmysed fell vpon a towne called and it ryffled therin toke as prysoners the abbot of that monastery wyth other and cōueyed thē to Burdeaux and after into Englande where for theyr fynaunce other money due of olde by the Frenche kynge as affermeth Gagwyne they remayned many yeres after And that the Englysh men were thus departed albeit that in the Englysshe cronycle and .xiii. yere of the forenamed kynge Henry of them is other report made the lordes of Fraunce retourned to theyr olde discēcyon contynued in longe stryfe wherof the cyrcūstaunce were longe and tedyouse to tell to shewe the vnstablynesse of them how some whyle the duke of Orleaunce was fauoured of the kynge and the dolphyne and there agayne the duke of Burgoyne cleyne out of conceyte The which cōtencyō thus enduryng kyng Henry y e iiii dyed and Henry his son y e .v. Henry was admitted for kyng of Englande after hym that shortly after sent his ambassadours vnto the Frenche kynge arynge of him his doughter Katheryne in maryage as affirmeth the frenche boke But dyuers other wryters shewe y t he asked the hoole landes due to him within the realme of Fraūce by reason of the composicion made in tyme passed atwene his progenytour Edwarde the thyrde Iohn̄ than king of Fraunce And for he was dysdeynously answered he therfore made vpō them sharpe warre as in the .iii. yere of y e sayd Hēry after some deale dothe appere By reason of whyche warre the cyuyle batayle or stryfe y e longe whyle had cōtynued amonge the frenche men than dyd aswage For in the .iii. yere of this Henry whiche was the .xxxv. yere of this Charles the said Henry inuaded y e
The whiche he helde so streyght that lastly Gyrande the captayne therof agreed to delyuer it by a certayne day excepte he were rescowed After whiche appoyntment so taken the sayde Gyrande as wytnesseth Gaguinus sent worde to Charles the .viii. of y e name or y e .vii. after dyuers wryters which of his fautoures was than accōpted for kyng of Fraūce And he in all possyble hast sent thyder y e duke of Alanson y e erle of Turon̄ or of Douglas of Bowgham or Boucam of Daumayll y e vicoūt of Nerbon̄ with a strōg power of Armenakkes scottes Frēchemē y e which host or it myght approch to y e sayd towne to make rescouse y e day expired it vnto y e duke deliuered whā y e duke of Alāsō was asserteyned of y e deliuere of y e towne he toke his aduise of y e other capitaynes whether it was better to retourn consyderyng the towne was yolden or to gyue batayll vnto the Englishe men But fynally for no reproche shuld be to them arected as they had fled for fere they kept on theyr iournany pyght theyr felde in a playne nere vnto the sayd town of Uernoyl where they beynge strongely enbataylled vpon the .vii. day of the moneth of August the duke of Bedford wyth hys retynue gaue to thē sharpe and cruell batayll the whyche endured longe wythoute knowlege of vyctory But fynally by goddes ordenaūce and power the vyctyry fyl to the Englysshe partye to the greate losse of theyr enemyes For in the fyghte was slayne as testyfyeth the French Gaguyne the erles of Turon and Boucam of Daumayle wyth the Uycounte of Narbon̄ and dyuers other men of name And of the commons were slayne to the nombree of fyue thousande And there was taken the duke of Alanson the Marshall of Fraunce and other But y e englysshe wryters affermeth .x. M. to be slayne and mo Anno dn̄i M. CCCC.xxiiii   Anno dn̄i M. CCCC.xxv   Symonde Seman   Iohn̄ Mychell   Anno .ix.   Iohn̄ Bywater   THys yere after Easter y e kynge helde hys parlyamente at westmynster the whych began vpō the daye of Etkenwalde or the laste daye of Apryll And .ii. dayes before the kynge wyth the quene his moder came thorugh the cytye from wyndesore And whan he came at the west dore of Poulys the lorde protectour toke him out of the chare and so was ladde vpon hys fete betwene y e sayde lorde Protectour and the duke of Exceter vnto the steppes goyng into y e quyer Fro whēs he was borne vnto the hygh aulter and there kneled in a trauers purueyed for hym And whan he had be there he yode to the rode of y e north dore and there made hys offerynges And thenne was he borne into the churche yerde there set vpon a fayre courser and so conueyed thorugh chepe and the other stretes of the cytye vnto saynt Georges barre and so helde hys iournay to hys Manour of Kenyngton̄ And contynuyng the foresayd parlyamēt the kyng was sondry tymes cōueyed to westmynster and wythin the parlyament chāber kept there his royall astate By auctoryte whereof to hym was graunted a subsidye of .xii. d. in the .li. of all maner marchaundyse cōmyng in or passing out of this realm and .iii. s. of a tunne of wyne for y e terme of .iii. yeres to be holden And ferthermore it was enacted that all marchaunt straungers shuld be set to an Englysshe hoste wythin .xv. dayes of theyr commyng to theyr porte sale to make no sale of any marchaundyse or they were so lodged theym wythin .xl. dayes folowynge to make sale of all that they brought And yf any remayned vnsolde at the sayde xl dayes ende that than all such marchaundyse beyng than vnsolde to be forfayted vnto the kyng Also that all straungers that caryed any wolles out of thys lande shuld pay .xliii. s. iiii d. for a sakke custome where y e Englysshe marchaunte and denyzen payde but .v. nobles wyth many other condycyons and penaltyes as well for Englysh as the other marchauntes whyche wolde are longe leysour to shewe enacted and passed durynge thys sayde parlyamente And the seconde daye of the moneth of Auguste was yolden vnto the erle of Salysbury appoynted wyth other by the regent the cytie of Mans vnder appoyntemente comprysed in .ix. articles wherof one specyall was that yf any persones were founde wythin the cytye whyche had ben consentyng vnto the dukes deth Iohan late duke of Burgoyne that they shulde stande at the grace of the sayde regent Also thys yere the duke of Glouceter lord protectour whiche lately before hadde maryed the duchesse of Holande a woman a greate possesiō for cause of rule wherof to haue domynyō of the same he wyth the sayd duchesse sayled towarde that coūtre and thereof her subgectes was peasybly and wyth honour receyued But fynally he had suche chere y t he was gladde to retourne into Englande leuynge hys wyfe therein a towne of her owne named Mounse But after hys departynge the duke of Burgoyne so demeaned hym to the rulers of that towne were it by batayll or otherwyse that they deliuered her to the sayde duke and he forthwyth sente her vnto Gaunte there to be kepte as prysoner But by the Frenshyppe of one named syr Iaques de la Grayll a Burgonyon knyghte her owne polecy she escaped thens in a mannes clothynge and came to a towne in zelande named zyryxe and frome thens to an other towne in zelande called Ghwode or Ghow-Ghowde where she wythstode the dukes power Than the duke of Glouceter heryng of the escape of his wyfe and of the malyce of the duke foresayde in all haste prouyded a stronge company of soudyours and archers and cōmytted them vnto that rule of y e lord Fitzwater The whych in processe of tyme landed wyth them at a place in zelande called Brewers hauē where of theyr ēnemyes they were encountred and dryuē backe so retourned into Englande wythoute any greate fete doynge leuynge the duchesse behynde them for that season Thys yere about Myghelmasse y e prynce of Portyngale came into Englande was honourable receyued and fested of the kynges vncles and taryed here the tyme of thys mayres yere This yere also began a grudge to kyndle betwene the lorde protectour and hys halfe brother the bysshoppe of wynchester the whyche after grewe to a greate dystourbaunce of the cytie of London as in the next mayres yere shal be shewed And in the ende of thys yere were many honeste men of the cytye apeched of treason by a false and malycyous persone belongynge vnto the sayde bysshoppe and putte theym vnto greate vexacyon and trouble whych was done by the procurement of the sayde bysshoppe as the comon fame than wente And nat alonely men of the cytie were thus vexed but also other burgeyses of dyuers good townes as Leyceter Caūterbury Northampton and other Anno dn̄i M. CCCC.xxv   Anno dn̄i M.
And fynally by the prouydent counsayle of the lorde regent al the sayd artycles and matiers of varyaunce atwene the sayd two lordes hangynge were put to the examynacyon and iudgmente with the assystence of y e lordes of the parliamēt of Henry the archebysshop of Caunterbury of Thomas duke of Exceter of Iohn̄ duke of Northfolk Thomas bysshop of Durhm̄ of Phylype bysshop of worceter or Iohn̄ bysshop of Bathe of Humfrey thā erle of Stafforde of Rauffe lorde Cornewell of mayster wyllyam Alnewyke than keper of the preuy seale The whych lordes wyth assystence of the other lordes of the parlyament made a decre and a warde so that eyther party toke other by the hande wyth frēdly louyng wordes none hauyng amēdes of other except the bysshope had wordes of submyssyō vnto the duke in requyryng hym of hys fauoure good lordshyp And y e accorde thus fynysshed the parlyament was adiourned tyll after Easter Uppon whytsondaye folowynge was a solempne feest holden at Leyceter forsayde where the regente dubbyd kynge Henry knyghte And than forthwyth the kynge dubbyd Rycharde duke of yorke that after was father to kynge Edwarde Also he dubbyd knyghtes the sonne and heyre of the duke Iohan duke of Northfolke and the erles of Oxenforde and westmerlande wyth other lordes and gentylmen to the noumbre of .xxxiiii. And after that feeste wyth all honour was endyd the kynge wyth the regente and other of hys lordes drew towarde London And so the regente contynued wyth the kynge in Englande by the full terme of thys mayres yere Anno. dn̄i M.iiii C.vi   Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.vii.   Iohn̄ Arnolde   Iohn̄ Raywell Fysshmonger   Anno .v.   Iohn̄ Hyghthm̄   IN thys .v. yere and moneth of February the regent with hys wyfe housholde meyny passed the see vnto Calays and so thorugh Pycardy into Fraunce But or he departed thens that is to meane vpon the daye of annuncyacion of our Lady the bysshop of wynchester within the churche of our Lady of Calays was created cardynall by auctoryte of y e bulles of pope Martyne the .v. of y e name And after that solēpnyte don the regente toke hym on hys ryghte hande so conueyed hym vnto hys lodgynge Thys yere was vnresonable of wederyng for it reyned moste part contynually frome Easter to Myghelmasse where thorugh hay and corne was greatly hyndered And in thys yere the duke of Alēson that before was taken prysoner at the batayll of Uernell in Perche was delyuered for a raunson of .ii. C M. scutes of golde as testyfyeth Gaguinus whyche is fyfty M. marke sterlyng money In thys yere also the erle of Salysbury whych of dyuers wryters is named the good erle accompanyed wyth the erle of Suffolke the lorde Talbot and other layde a stronge syege vnto the cytye of Orleaunce helde the cytezyns very streyght and maugre the duke of Orleaunce and the Marshal of Fraunce thanne named Boussaak the Englysshemen wanne from theym dyuers stronge holdes adioynynge to the cytye and forced them to brenne a greate parte of the subbarbes of the cytye But sorowe it is to tell and doolfull to wryte whyle one day the sayd good erle syr Thomas Mountagu rested hym at a bay wyndow and be helde the compas of the cytie and talked with his familiers a gonne was leueyled out of the cytie from a place vnknowen whiche brake the tymbre or stone of the wyndowe with suche vyolence that the pecys therof all to quasshed the face of the noble erle in suche wyse that he dyed within thre dayes folowyng Upon whose soule all crysten Ihesu haue mercy Amē This after dyuers wryters was initium malorum For after this myshappe the Englysshmen loste rather ther than wanne so that lytell and lytell they loste all theyr possessyon in Fraūce And all be it that somewhat they gate after yet for one that they wanne they loste thre as after shall appere Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.xxvii   Anno dn̄i M. iiii.xxviii   Henry Frowyk   Iohan Gedney draper   Anno .vi.   Robert Otley   IN this .vi. yere begynnynge of the same the kyng helde his parlyament at westmynster By auctoryte wherof was graunted to hym a subsydye in maner as foloweth Fyrst of euery tonne of wyne y t came into this lande from y e feest of saynt Ambrose or the fourth day of Apryll tyll the ende of that yere the kynge shulde haue .iii. s. belongynge to a denyzyn or the kynges lyege man Also of all marchaundyse passynge or cōmynge into this lāde shypped by denyzon the kynge to haue of euery xx s. .xii. d. excepte woll fell clothe Also to hym was graunted that of all parysshens thorughout his realme beynge the benefyce of the valewe of .x. marke that .x. of the sayde parysshons shulde paye of theyr mouables syxe shyllynges eyght pēs after y e rate of eyght pens euery mā And of all benefyces that were of .x. li. x parysshons to paye .xiii. s. and iiii d. all cytyes and borowes to be excepted And so rate rate lyke from the lowest benefyce to the hyghest And for the inhabytauntes of cyties boroughes it was enacted that eueman beynge it valewe of .xx. s. aboue his stuffe of houshold his apparayl and his wyfes shulne paye iiii.d so after the rate vnto the rychest In this yere also and day of saynt Gyles or the fyrste day of Septēbre the cardynall of wynchester was met by the mayre and his bretherne and certayne cytezyns on horse backe without the cytie and so broughte vnto his palays in southwerke Aboute the same tyme a Bryton that a good wydow and honeste woman hadde cherysshed and brought vp of almes dwellynge in whyte chapell paresshe without Algate murdred the sayde woman in a nyght slepynge in her bedde and after conueyed suche iewelles and stuffe as he myght carye But he was so pursued vpon y e for fere he toke a churche in Estsex there forsware y e kynges lande And y e constables caused hym be brought to London and so entended to haue cōueyed hym westward But so soone as he was commen in to the parysshe where before he had commytted the murther the wyfes caste vpon hym so moche fylthe and ordure of the strete not withstandynge the resystence made by the cōstables they slewe hym there out of hande Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.xxviii   Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.xxix   Thomas Dushous   Henry Barton skynner   Anno .vii.   Raffe Holande   THis yere vpon the .viii. daye of Nouembre the duke of Norffolke accompanyed with many gentylmen toke his barge at saynt mary Ouereys entendynge to haue passed thoroughe the brydge and so vnto Grenewytche But by the mysgydynge of the sterysman he was set vpon the pyles of the brydge and y e barge whelmed so y t all were drowned excepte the duke and a fewe persones that lepte vpon the pyles whiche after were drawen vp with ropes and so
CCCC.xxxv   Thomas B●rnwell   Robertr O●lay grocer   Anno .xiii.   Symonde Eyre   IN this .xiii. yere and euen of saint Katheryne began a frost that endured vnto the feast of saynt Scolastica or the .x. daye of February the whiche frase the Thamys so feruently that shyp nor bote myght come with vytayle to London wherfore suche shyppes as came this yere to Thamys mouthe from Burdeux were dyscharged there and the wyne and other marchaundyse by theym brought caryed by lāde to the cytie And in the latter ende of Decembre this yere ended the parlyamente holden at westmynster begon at Myghelmas terme before passed This yere also by meanes of the pope than Eugeny the .iiii at Aras in Pycardy was holden a great coūsayle for to conclude an vnyon and peas atwene the two realmes of Englande and Fraunce To the whiche coūsayle by the sayd popes cōmaūdment came as a persone indyfferent Nicholas cardynall of y e holy crosse with syxe Romayne bysshoppes to hym assygned And for the kynge of Englandes partye was there assygned the cardynall of wynchester the archebysshop of yorke the erles of Huntyngdon̄ and of Suffolke with dyuers other And for the Frenche kynge was there the duke of Burbon̄ the erle of Rychemount y e archebysshop of Raynys chaunceler than of Fraūce the deane of Patys with many other whiche I passe ouer There were also as fortherers of the matyer the cardynal of Cyprys And for the duke of Burgoyn̄ was there the bysshop of Cambray and Nycholas Raulyn the sayd dukes chaunceler with dyuers erles and barons of that duchy And for the duke of Brytayne were ther the erles of Alenson and of Barre with other ouer and aboue dyuers oratoures appoynted for the countye of Flaundres At whiche assemble and counsayll thus holden as testifieth dyuers wryters many great offers by meane of y e aboue named cardynal of holy crosse or ●aī● crosse to the Englysshe lordes were offered But as sayth Gaguinus the Englysshemē were so obstinately set on warre y e reason myght not cōtēt By reason of whiche obstinaci y e coūsayll was deferred tyll an other day At whiche day the Englysshemen entendynge the cōtinuaunce of warre absentyd theym selfe wherwith the sayd cardynall beynge dyscontented made meanes of an entreaty of peas atwene Charles that toke vpon hym as Frenche kynge and Phylyp duke of Burgoyn wherof the sayd Charles was so fayne y e for stablysshynge of the peas and to satysfye hym for y e murther of his father he gaue vnto hym all the vtter boundes of Champeyn̄ marching vpon Burgoin with dyuers cyties as seynt Quyntyne Corbie Peron̄ Abbeuyle and other with the countie of Poytyaw lordshyp of Macon̄ And as wytnesseth y e foresayde Gagwyne many mo thynges were vnto the duke by the sayde Charles ꝓmysed whiche after theyr bothe dethes were broken and stode for nought After whiche peas thus atwene them confermed and proclaymed the sayd duke became vtter enemye to the kynge of Englande as after shall appere And soone after the sayd duke began his ordre of the lyle and the golden flese and ordeyned certayne knyghtes of that ordre and made therunto many statutes and ordenaunces wherof dyuers were lyke vnto the statutes of the garter And in the ende of this yere and .xiiii. day of Septembre at Roan̄ in Normandye died the noble prynce Iohn̄ duke of Bedforde and regent of Fraunce and was after with great solempnytie buryed within the churche of notir Dame of the same cytie where for hym are founded wonderfull thynges after some mēnes reporte But for I fynde therof in wrytynge nothynge I passe it ouer Anno. dn̄i M.iiii C.xxxv.   Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.xxxvi   Thomas Catworth   Henry Frowyk mercer   Anno .xiiii.   Robert Clopton̄   IN the .xiiii. yere begynnynge of the same the duke of Barre accompanyed with Burgonyōs and Frenchemen wanne y e towne of Harflewe with dyuers other vyllages And in Apryll folowynge the sayde duke accompanyed with y e lorde Teruan and the mayster of the kynges chyualry toke the towne of saynt Denys and slewe therin aboue .iiii. C. Englysshemen toke prysoner Thomas Beleamounde theyr capytayne with many other And than y e Frēche men assawted a towre therby called Ueuen and toke it by appoyntment Thā one named Notyce a knyght of Orleaūce with a strēgth of Knyghtes drewe hym nere the cytie of Parys and there at a house of relygyon of y e charterhouse ordre lodged hym beyonde saynt Denys ouer the water of Sayn̄ and cōfedered with certayne cytezen of the cytie named Michaell Laylery Iohan Frountayne Thomas Pygacen Iohan de saynt Benoit Nicholas Lorueyn̄ and Iaques Bergery for to betraye the cytie to brynge it out of y e Englysshe possessyon The whiche persones beynge hedes of the cytie cōueyed theyr purpose in suche wyse that they turned the cōmons of the cytie vpon the Englysshe men and sodeynly arose agayne them and by force slewe of them a great nombre and there they dyd take many prysoners And as the Englysshe men fledde or faughte by the stretes the women and other feble persones cast vpon them stones and ho●e lycoures to theyr great confusyon so y t the Englysshe men were in passynge mysery and desolacyon In this tyme of persecucion the bysshop of Mor●● whiche than was named chaunceler of Englysshe men in those partyes with other hardly escaped and toke the towre of saynt Denys whiche as yet rested in the Englysshe possessyon Than the other hoste of Frenchemen herynge of this rumour in the cytie anone drewe nere entred by saynt Iames gate without moche resystence and so enioyed the cytye at theyr pleasure Than the Englysshemen beynge in the towre of saynt Denys feryng that they myght not longe holde the sayd place agayne theyr enemies fyl to a treaty and cōdyscended to passe fre with theyr lyues The which whā they shuld passe vpon theyr iournay were di●ided and scorned of y e Frēchenacyon out of all mesure And whan the cytye of Parys was thus subdued to the Frenche dominion anone y e Englyssh people that there abode vnder fyne and raunsom were sworne to Charles the seuenth than takynge vpon hym as Frenche kynge And anone after were wonne from y e Englyssh power the holdes named Creoll and saynt Germayne In whiche passe tyme and season for to strēgthe and haue the gydynge of Normādy the duke of yorke encompaned with the erle of Salysbury and the lorde of Fawcoūbrydg sailed into Fraūce And the erle of Morteyn̄ beynge thā at Calays made a vyage into Flaundres and skyrmysshed with them y e bordred vpon Pycardy and slewe of them ouer CCCC and gate a great droue of beestes and brought them vnto Calays And for that certaynte was had that Phylyp duke of Burgoyn entēded to lay his syege aboute Calays therfore London and all the good townes of Englāde were charged to sende thyder certayne men wel and suffycyently
Theodalde Guyllyam Rychauyll knyghtes The whyche rescous nat wythstandynge the sayde lorde Talbot well māfully cōtynued hys syege assawted the towne in ryght cruell maner so that they were fayne to call for more ayde whereof the lord Talbot beyng ware thynkynge that shortly the Frenchmen shuld be constrayned to gyue ouer the towne left the gydyng of the syege vnto syr wyllyam Poyton syr Iohn̄ Ryppelād or Tryppelande knyght after departyd After whose departyng with in short whyle y e Dolphyn of Uyēne Lowys by name and sonne vnto the forenamed Charles Frenche kynge accompanyed wyth the erle of saynte Paule other to the nombre of .xvi. C. knyghtes came vnto the rescous of the sayd towne And after he had a day rested hym and hys sowdiours he sente the forenamed Theodalde wyth a strength of .iiii. C. men for to assayle the forsayde towre of tymbre but lytell hurt dyd they therunto Than the sayd Dolphyn sente an other strength of .vi. C. men to assayle it but the Englyshemen quyt theym so manfully that they slew .viii. score Frenchmen woūnded ouer .iii. C. wherwyth the Dolphyn beynge greuously amoued assembled the vttermost strength he myght make aswel of the towne and other and set vpon the Englysshe men whiche were ●ore brused with dayly fyght and fewe in nombre and fynally scomfited them and slewe of theym vpon CCC and toke y e rest prysoners Amonge y t whiche the foresayd two Englysshe capitaynes were taken and a kynnesmā of the lorde Talbottes or more veryly one of his baste sones And thus was Depe rescowed the Englysshmen dyscomfyted after they had māfully maynteyned that syege by the space of .ix. wekes and odde dayes Also this yere in y e moneth of August was a great affray ī Fletestrete atwene the getters of the ynnes of courte and the inhabytauntes of the same strete whiche affray began in y e nyght and so contynued with assawtes and small by kerynges tyll y e next day In whiche season moche people of the cytie thyder was gadered and dyuers men of bothe partyes were slayne and many hurte But lastly by the presence dyscrecyon of y e mayer and shyreffes this affraye was appesed Of the whiche was chyfe occasyoner a man of Clyfforde ynne named Herbotell In this yere also by certayne ambassadoures y t were sente out of Englād into Guyon a maryage was cōcluded in the begynnynge of the yere folowynge atwene the kynge and y e erles doughter of Armenak whiche conclusion was after dysalowed and put by by the meanes of the erle of Suffolke whiche kyndled a newe brande of brunynge enuy atwene y e lorde protectour and hym and toke fyre in suche wyse that it lefte not tyll bothe partyes with many other were consumed and slayne wherof ensued moche myschefe within the realme and losse of all Normandy as after to you shall appere Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.xlii.   Anno dn̄i M.iiii C. xlili   Thomas Beaumount   Ion̄ Athyrley Irenmonger   Anno .xxi.   Rycharde Nordon   IN thys .xxi. yere the foresayde erle of Suffolke whych as before is touched had fordon the cōclusyon of the maryage takē by the ambassadours betwene the kyng and y e erle of Armenakes doughter wente ouer hym selfe wyth other vnto hym assygned there in Fraūce concluded a mariage betwene the kyng and dame Margarete the kynges doughter of Cecyle and of Hierusalem as sayth the Englyshe cronycle And for that mariage to brynge about to the sayd kyng of Cecyle was deliuered y e duchye of Angeou and erledome of Mayne whych are called the keyes of Normandy But the Frēche wryter Gaguyne sayth in hys latyne cronycle y t about thys tyme the erle of Suffolke came vnto Charles the Frenche kyng to a towne in Lorayn named Naunce or Naūt axed of hym his doughter to be quene of England but he gyueth to her no name The whyche request of the sayd Charles to the sayde erle was graūted Also he affermeth lytel tofore that season a peace betwene bothe realmes was concluded for the terme of .xxii. moneths whych peace endured but a whyle after And thys yere vpon Candelmas euyn the steple of sait Poules church in Londō was set on fyre by tempest of lyghtnynge and lastly quēched by greate dylygence and laboure of many persones But of all that there laboured the morowe masse preeste of Bowe church in chepe was moste commended and noted Anno dn̄i M. CCCC.xliii   Anno dn̄i M. CCCC.xliiii   Nycholas wyfforde   Thomas Catworthe Grocer   Anno .xxii.   Iohn̄ Norman   THys .xxii. yere y e erle of Stafforde was made or created duke of Bukkyngham the erle of warwyke duke of warwyke the erle of Dorset marques of Dorset and the erle of Suffolke marquys of Suffolke The whyche marquys of Suffolke soone after wyth hys wyfe and other honourable personages aswell of men as of women with great apparayl of chayres and other costyous ordenaunce for to conuey the forenamed lady Margarete into England sayled into Fraūce where they were honourably receyued and so taryed there all thys mayres yere In thys yere was also an acte made by auctoryte of the common coūsayll of London that vppon the sondaye shuld no maner of thynge with in the fraunchyse of y e citie be bought or solde nother vytayll nor other thynge nor none artyfycer shulde brynge hys ware to any man to be worne or occupyed that daye as tayllours garmentes or cordewayners shoys and so in lykewyse of all other occupacyons The whyche ordenaunce helde but a whyle Anno dn̄i M.CCC.xliiii   Anno dn̄i M. CCCC.xlv   Stephyn Foster   Henry Frowyke Mercer   Anno .xxiii.   Hughe wyche   THys .xxiii. yere and moneth of the foresayd lady Margarete came ouer into Englād and in the moneth folowynge she was maryed vnto kyng Hēry at a towne called Sowthwyke in the countre of Hamshyre And frō thens she was honourably conueyed by the lordes and estates of thys lād whyche mette wyth her in sondry places wyth greate retynewe of men in sondry lyueryes wyth theyr sleuys browdered and som betyn wyth gold smythes werkes in moste costly maner And specyally the duke of Glouceter mette wyth her wyth fyue hundreth men in one lyuerey And so she was conueyed vnto Blacke heth where vppon the .xviii. day of May she was mette with the mayre aldermen and sheryfes of the cytye and the craftes of the same in brown blewe wyth brawderyd sleuys That is to meane euery mystery or crafte wyth conysaunce of hys mystery and red hoodes vppon eyther of theyr heddes and so the same daye broughte her vnto London where for her were ordeyned sumptuous and costly pagētes and resemblaūce of dyuerse olde hystoryes to y e great comforte of her and suche as came wyth her y e maner whereof I passe ouer for lengthynge of the tyme. And so wyth great tryūphe she was broughte vnto westmynster where vppon the
.xxx. daye of the moneth of Maye that was the sondaye after Trynyte sondaye she was solemply crowned After whyche feeste iustes were there holden by thre dayes continual within the seyntwary before y e abbey Of thys maryage are of dyuers wryters lefte dyuers remembraunces sayenge that thys maryage was vnprofytable for the realme dyuerse wayes For fyrste was gyuen vp for her oute of the kynges possession the duchye of Angeou and the erledome of Mayne And for the costes of her conueynge into thys lande was axed in playne parlyamente a fyftene and an halfe by the marquys of Suffolke By reason whereof he grewe in such hatered of the people that fynally it coste hym hys lyfe And ouer that it appered that god was nat pleased wyth that mariage For after thys day the fortune of the worlde beganne to fal from y e kyng so that he loste hys frendes in Englande and hys reuenewes in Fraūce For shortly after all was ruled by the quene and her counsayl to the great dysprofyte of the kyng hys realme and to the greate maugre and obloquy of the quene The whych as syn that tyme hath ben well prouyd had many a wrong and false reporte made of her whych were to longe to reherse All whyche mysery fyll for brekynge of the promyse made by the kyng vnto the erle of Armenakkys doughter as before in the .xx. yere of the kyng is touched as agreeth moste wryters whyche mysery in thys story shall somdeale appere as fyrst by the losyng of Normandy the deuisiō of the lordes within thys realme the rebelliō of y e cominaltye agayne theyr prynce soueraygne fynally the kynge deposed and the quene wyth the prynce fayne to fle the lande loste the rule thereof for euer Anno. dn̄i M.iiii C.xlvi   Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.xlvii   Robert Horne   Iohn̄ Olney Mercer   Anno .xxv.   Godfrey Boloyne   THys .xxv. yere was a parlyament holdē at saynt Edmondes Bury in Suffolke To y e whiche towne all the cōmons of that coūtre were warned to come in theyr moste defēcyble aray to gyue attendaunce vpō the kyng And so soone as thys parlyamēt was begō and the lordes assembled syr Hūfrey duke of Glouceter and vncle vnto y e kyng shortly after was arrested by the vycounte Beawmōde thā hygh cōstable of Englande whome accompanied y e duke of Bukkynghm̄ other And after this arest was executed all his owne seruaūtes were put from him .xxxii of the pryncypall of theym were also put vnder arest sente vnto dyuers prysons whereof arose a great murmour amonge the people Than thus cōtynuyng thys parlyament wythin .vi. dayes after the duke was arrested he was founde dede in hys bedde beynge the .xxiiii. daye of February Of whose murdre dyuers reportes at made whyche I passe ouer Than hys corps was layd opyn y t all mē myght se hym but no wonde was founde on hym Of the honourable fame of thys man a longe style I myght make of y e good rule that he kepte thys lande in durynge the none age of the kynge and of hys honourable housholde libertye which passed all other before hys tyme and trewe of hys allegeaunce that no mā coude with ryght accuse hī but malycyous persones whych hys glorious honour fame lafte nat to maligne agayne hym tyll he were put frome all wordly rule and specyally for it was thought that durynge hys lyfe he wolde withstāde the delyuery of Angeou Mayne before promysed Thys for hys honourable and lyberall demeanure was surnamed the good duke of Glouceter Than after he had lyen opyn a season y t all men myghte be assured of hys dethe the corps was honourably prouided for and so cōueyed vnto saynt Albonys there buryed nere vnto the shryne of saynt Albone to whose soule god be mercyfull Amen And whan this noble prynce was thus enteryd fyue persones of hys housholde that is to saye syr Roger Chamberlayne knyght Myddelton Herbarde Arthur esquyers one Rycharde Nedā yeman were sente vnto Londō there arayned and iuged to be drawē hāged and quartered Of the whych sentēce drawynge hāgynge were put in execuciō But whā they were cut downe to be quartered y e Marquys of Suffolke there beyng presēt shewed y e kynges chartour for thē so were deliuered to the great reioysyng of y e multytude of y e people there beyng present But for thys the grudge murmour of y e people ceased nat agayne the Marquys of Suffolke for the deth of the good duke of Glouceter of whose murdre he was specyally suspected Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.xlvii   Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.xlviii   Wyllyam Abraham   Iohn̄ Gedney Draper   Anno .xxvi.   Thomas Scot.   IN thys .xxvi. yere after concordaūce of moste wryters or nere there about y e .xxiii. scisme of y e church ceased that before had cōtynued betwene Eugeny the .iiii. Felix the .v. vpon .xvi. yeres Thys scisme as before is touched began by reason of the deposycyō of the sayde Eugeny at the coūsayll of Basile for that that he wolde nat obserue the decrees before made in the coūsayll of Cōstaūce other causes to hym layde But yet that deposyng natwythstandynge perforce he cōtynued pope by the terme of .xiiii. yeres after And the sayde Felix at the sayd coūsayll admitted in lyke maner cōtynued as pope by all that sayde season lyke as before to you I haue shewed in the .xvii. yere of thys kynge And as now by exortacyon of crysten prynces as the kynge of England whose messangers in y e behalfe were the bysshoppe of Norwyche and the lord of saint Iohn̄s other princes the sayd pope Felix to sette a perfyte vnyon in the churche in thys yere of hys owne volūte resigned hys auctorytie of papacy and submytted hym vnto the obediēce of Nicholas the .v. of that name nat wythstandynge that the sayde Felix was a man of great byrthe allied to the more partye of all crysten prynces And thys Nycholas a mā of lowe byrthe of vnknowē kynred wythin the cytie of Ieane Than was Felix made legate of Fraunce cardynal of Sauoye and lyued after a blessed holy lyfe so ended And as some wryters testifye god for hym hath shewed dyuers miracles syns he dyed And for thys scysme thus gracyously was ended a vercyfyer made thys verse folowynge ¶ Lux fussit mundo cessit Felix Nicholao The whych verse is thus to meane in Englyshe ¶ Lyght into the worlde now dothe sprynge and shyne ¶ For Felix vnto Nicholas all frely doth resyne Also as testifieth Gaguyne also some englyshe wryters y t trewys betwene Englād Fraūce cōtynuyng a knyght of y e Englysh partie named syr Fraūceys Arrogonoyse toke a town vpō the borders of Normādy belōgyng vnto y e duke of Brytayne For y t which he cōplayned hym vnto Charles the Frēch kyng he at the sayd dukes request sent
nere vnto y e cytie So that vpon the fyrste day of Iuly he entred the bourgh of Southwarke beynge than wednesday lodged hym there that nyght for he myght not be suffered to entre the cytie And vpon the same day the commōs of Essex in great nombre pyght theym a felde vpon the playne at myles ende And vpon the seconde daye of the sayd moneth the mayre called a common counsayle at the Gyldhall for to puruey the withstandynge of these rebelles and other matyers In whiche assemble were dyuers opinions so that some thought good that the sayde rebelles shulde be receyued into the cytie and some otherwyse Amonge the whiche Roberte Horne stok fysshmonger than beynge an alderman spake sore agayne them that wolde haue them entre For y ● whiche sayenges the cōmons were so amoued agayn hym that they ceased not tyll they had hym cōmytte to warde And the same afternoone aboute v. of the clok the capytayne with his people entred by y e brydge And whā he came vpon the drawe brydge he hewe the ropes y t drewe the brydge in sondre with his swerde and so passed into y e cytie and made in sondry places therof proclamacyons in the kynges name that no man in peyne of dethe shulde robbe or take ony thyng parforce without payeng therfore By reason wherof he wanne many hertes of the cōmons of the cytie but all was done to begyle with the people as after shall euydently appere For he rode thorough dyuers stretes of the cytie and as he came by London stone he strake it with his swerde and sayd now is Mortymer lorde of this cytie And whan he had thus shewed hymselfe in dyuers places of the cytie shewed his mynde to y e mayre for y e ordrynge of his people he returned into Southwarke and there abode as he before hadde done his people cōmynge goynge at lawfull houres whan they wolde Than vpon the morne beynge the thyrde daye of Iuly and frydaye the sayd capytayne entred agayne the cytie and caused the lorde Sey to be fet frome the tower and ladde vnto the Guyldhall where he was areygned before the mayre other of y e kynges iustyce In whiche passe tyme he entended to haue brought before y e sayd iustyces the foresayd Robert Horne But his wyfe and frendes made to hym suche instaūt labour that fynally for .v. C. marke he was set at his lybertye Than the lorde Sey beynge as before is sayde at Guyldhall desyred y t he myght be iudged by his peers wherof herynge the capytayne sent a company of his vnto the hall the whiche parforce toke hym from the offycers and so brought hym vnto the standarde in the Chepe where or he were halfe shryuen they strake of his hed y t done pyght it on a lōg pole so bare it aboute with them In this tyme and season had the capytayne caused a gentylman to be taken named Cromer whiche before had ben shyreffe of Kent and vsed as they sayde some extorcyons For which cause or for he had fauoured the lorde Sey by reason that he had maried his doughter he was haryed to Myles ende and there in y e capitaynes presence byheded And y e same tyme was ther also byheded a man called Baylly y e cause of whose dethe was this as I haue herd some men reporte This Baylly was of y e famylyer and olde acqueyntaunce of Iak Cade wherfore so soone as he espyed hym cōmynge to hym warde he cast in his mynde that he wolde dyscouer his lyuyng olde maners and shewe of his vyle kynne and lynage wherfore knowynge y t the sayd Baylly vsed to vere scrowes and prophecyes aboute hym shewyng to his cōpany y t he was an enchaunter and of yll dysposycion and y t they shulde well knowe by such bokes as he bare vpon hym and bad them serche and yf they founde not as he sayde y t thā they shuld put hym to dethe whiche all was doone accordynge to his cōmaundment whan they had thus be heded these .ii. men they toke the hede of Croumer pyght it vpon a pole and so entred the cytie with the hedes of the lorde Sey and of Croumer And as they passed the stretes they ioyned the poles togyder caused eyther deed mouthe to kysse other dyuers and many tymes And the capytayne the selfe same daye wente vnto the house of Phylyppe Malpas draper and and alderman and robbeb and spoyled his house and toke thens a great substaunce But he was before warned and therby conueyed moche of his money and plate or elles he had ben vndone At whiche spoylynge were present many poore men of the cytie whiche at suche tymes ben euer redy in all places to do harme where suche ryottes ben doone Thā towarde nyght he returned into Southwarke vpon y e morne reentred y e cytie and dyned that daye at a place ī saynt Margaret Patyns parysshe called Gherstys hous And whan he had dyned lyke an vncurteyse gest he robbed hym as the daye before he had Malpas For which .ii. robberyes all be it that the porayll nedy people drewe vnto hym were partyners of that yll the honest and thryfty comoners cast in theyr myndes the sequele of this matyer and fered leste they shulde be delte with in lyke maner by meane wherof he lost the peoples fauour and hertes For it was to be thought yf he had not executed that robbery he myghte haue gone ferre and brought his purpose to good effecte yf he hadde entended well But it is to deme and presuppose that the entent of hym was not good wherfore it myght not come to ony good conclusyon Than y e mayre and aldermen with assystence of the worshypfull comeners seynge this mysdeanour of y e capytayne in sauegardynge of themselfe and of the cytye toke theyr counsayles how they myght dryue the capytayne and his adherētes from y e cytie wherin theyr feare was the more for so moche as the kynge and his lordes with theyr powers were farre from theym But yet in aduoydynge of apparēt peryl they condyscended that they wolde withstande his any more entre into the cytie For the performaūce wher of y e mayre sent vnto the lorde Scales and Mathewe Gowgth than hauynge the tower in gydynge had of them assent to perfourme y e same Than vpon the .v. day of Iuly y e capytayne beynge in Southwarke caused a mā to be heded for cause of his dyspleasure to hym doone as the fame went so kepte hym in Southwarke all y e day How be it he myght haue entred the cytie yf he had wold And whan nyght was comynge the mayre and cytezyns with Mathewe Gowth lyke to theyr former appoynmtent kepte the passage of y e brydge beynge sonday and defended the Kentysshe mē whiche made great force to reenter the cytie Than the capytayne seynge this bykerynge begon yode to harneys and called his people aboute hym and set so
fyersly vpon the cytezyns that he draue thē backe from y e stulpes ī Southwarke or brydge fote vnto y e drawe brydge In defendynge wherof many a man was drowned and slayne Amonge y t whiche of men of name was Iohan Sutton aldermā Mathewe Gouth gentylman and Roger Heysande cytezyn And thus contynued this skyrmysshe all nyght tyll .ix. of the clocke vpon the morne so that somtyme the cytezyns had the better thus soone the Kentysmen were vpon the better syde But euer they kepte them vpon the brydge so that the cytezyns passed neuer moche the bulwarke at the byrdge fote nor y e Kentysshmē moche ferther thā the drawe brydge Thus cōtynuyng the cruel fyght to the dystruccyon of moche people on bothe sydes lastly after the Kentysshmen were put to the worse a trewe was agreed for certayne houres Duryng the whiche trewe the archebysshop of Cantorbury than chaunceler of Englande sent a generall pardon to the capytayne for hymselfe and an other of hys peple By reason wherof he hys company departed the same nyght out of Southwarke so retourned euery man to hys owne But it was nat longe after that the capytayne wyth hys cōpany was thus departed that proclamacyons were made in dyuers places of Kent of Southsex and Sowtherey that who myghte take the foresayde Iak Cade other on lyue or dede shulde haue a M. marke for hys trauayle After whych proclamacion thus publisshed a gētylmā of Kēt named Alexander Iden̄ awayted so hys tyme that he toke hym in a gardyn in Sussex where in the takyng of hym the sayd Iak was slayne so beynge dede was brought into Southwarke the daye of the moneth of there left in the kynges benche for that nyght And vpon y ● morowe the dede corps was drawen thorugh the hyghe stretes of the cytye vnto New gate there heded and quartered whose hede was than sent to Londō brydge his .iiii. quarters were sent to .iiii sondry townes of Kent And thys done the kyng sent hys commissions into Kent rode after hym selfe and caused enquery to be made of thys riot in Caunterbury where for the same .viii. men were iuged put to deth And in other good townes of Kent Southsex dyuers other were put in execucyon for the same ryot In thys yere also in the west coūtree was slayne the bisshop of Salysbury by the commons of that coūtre wherfore after the kyng had sped his besynesse in Kent Sussex he rode thyder to se also those malefactours punysshed Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.l.   Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.li.   Iohn̄ Myddylton   Nycholas wyfforde Grocer   Anno .xxix.   wyllyam Dere   IN thys .xxix. yere vpō sait Leonardes daye or the .vi. daye of Nouembre began the parlyamente at westmynster And the fyrste day of Decēbre folowyng the duke of Somerset whyche newly was commyn out of Normandy was putte vnder arest and his goodes by the cōmons were fowly dyspoyled borne a waye out of the blak fryers For at this season was moche people in the cytie by reason of the parlyament specially of lordes seruauntes whyche were awaytynge vppon theyr lordes and maysters in great multytude For ye shall vnderstande y e temporall lordꝭ in those dayes kepte other maner of housholdes other maner of reteyndour of housholde seruauntes and other nombre ferre excedynge that the lordes at these dayes done wherefore at parlyament tymes and other great counsayles the cytyes or townes where they assembled were hougely stuffed wyth people Than after thys ryot thys commytted vpon the morowe folowynge proclamacyon was made thorugh the cytye that no man shulde spoyle or robbe vppon payne of dethe And the same day at the stādarde in Chepe was a mā beheded for brekyng of the sayd proclamaciō And thus begō rumour malyce to spryng betwene y e lordꝭ of the lāde And specially y e duke of Somerset other of y e quenes coūsayll were had ī great hatered for y e losīg of Normādy wherof y e chief citie of Roā was lost or gyue vp by apointemēt y e yere precedyng as witnesseth Gaguynus vpon cōdycyon that the duke of Somerset with his wyfe and Englyssh sowyours shulde with suche goodes as they myghte cary departe frely from y e cytie For whiche fre passage he shulde pay vnto y e Frenche kynge lvi M. scutes which amoūte to .xiiii. M. marke sterlyng And also he was bounde to delyuer into the Frenche kynges possession all townes and castelles that at that daye were in the possessyon of Englysshemen within the duchy of Normandy For performaunce of whiche couenauntes the lorde Talbot was set for one of the pledges and so by one Floquet before named all the sayd townes and castelles were by hym to the Frenche kynges vse receyued Harflete onely excepted wherof y e capytayne named Cyrson or Curson denyed the delyuery with assystence of one named syr Thomas Auryngham The whiche in despyte of all the Frenche kynges power layde bothe by see and lande helde it from the begynnynge of Decembre tyll the moneth of Ianuary and than for lacke of rescouse gaue it vp by appoynment in y e begynnynge of this mayres yere For this yeldynge vp of Normandy moche dyspleasure grewe vnto the quene and her counceyll in so moche y t the duke of yorke father vnto kyng Edwarde the .iiii. with many lordes with hym allyed toke partye agayne hyr and her counsayll so that mortall warre therof ensued as here after in this story wall appere Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.li.   Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.lii   Mathewe Phylyp   wyllyam Gregory skynner   Anno .xxx.   Chrystofer warton   IN thys .xxx. yere .xvi. daye of February the kynge beyng accompanied with the duke of Somersette and many other lordes toke theyr iournay towarde the marchys of walys for so moche as he was credibly assertayned y t the duke of york assysted with dyuers other lordes mē of name had in those partyes gathered great strengthe of people and with them was entrynge the lande and so helde on his iourney towarde hym But whan y e duke had wytyng of the kynges great power he swaued the way from the kynges hoste and toke the way towarde London And for he had receyued knowlege from the cytie y t he myght not there be receyued to refresshe hym and his people he therwith went ouer Kyngstone brydge and so into Kente and there vpon an hethe called Brente heth he pyght his felde wherof the kynge houynge knowlege sped hym after and lastly came vnto Blacke hethe there pyght his felde where bothe hostes beynge thus enbatayled meidaciō was made of peace by twene both hostes For furtheraunce wherof to the duke were sente y e bysshoppes of wynchester and of Ely with the erles of Salysbury and of warwyke To whome it was answered by the sayd duke y t he nor none of the company entended none hurte vnto the kynges persone
of theyr wardes and toke the ledys of the towre and it defendyd a longe whyle agayne the sheryffes all theyr offycers in so myche that they were forced to call more ayde of the cytesyns of the cytye by whose ayde they lastly subdued them and put y e sayd prysoners in more streyghter kepyng Cronica cronicarū sayth that about thys tyme was suche an erthquake in y e prouynce of Naples that byforce therof there were perysshed ouer .xl. M. crysten soulys Of the abouesayde spoylynge of Sandwyche speketh Polycronycon and sayeth that syr Pyers de Bresy senes shall of Normandy wyth the capytayne of Depe and many other capytaynes of Fraunce came wyth a greate stronge nauy into the Downys by nyght and vpon the morowe came certeyne of them vnto Sandwych and there spoyled and robbed the towne and toke with them great prayes and many ryche prysoners wherby or by whych sayenge appereth some dyuersyte bytwene the Englysshe wryters and the Frenche Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.lvii   Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.lviii Mercer wyllyam Edwarde   Godfrey Boleyn   Anno .xxxvi.   Thomas Reyner   IN thys yere the thyrde daye of December Reynolde Pecoke than beynge bysshoppe of Chychester at Lambyth by the archebysshop and by a Cot of diuyns was abiured for an heretyke and hys bokes after brent at Poulys crosse hym selfe kepte in mewe euer whyle he lyued after And soone after for to appease thys rancoure and malyce bytwene the quene and the tother lorder a daye of metynge was appoynted by the kyng at London whyther the duke of yorke wyth the other lordes were commaunded to come by a certayne daye In obeynge of which commaundement the duke of yorke came vnto London the .xxvi. daye of Ianuary and was lodged at Baynardes castell And before hym the xv day of Ianuary came the erle of Salysbury to Londō was lodged at hys place called the Erber And soone after came vnto Lōdon the dukes of Somerset of Exetyr were lodged bothe without temple Barre And in lykewyse the erle of Northūberlande the lorde Egremonde the yōge lorde Clyfforde came vnto the cytye and were lodged in the subbarbes of the same And the .xiiii. daye of February came the erle of warwyke from Calays wyth a great bande of men all arayed in rede iakettes with whyte ragged staues vpon theym was lodged at y e gray freres And lastly that is to saye the .xvii. daye of Marche the kyng the quene wyth a great retynewe came vnto Londō and were lodged in the bysshoppe of Londōs palays And ye shall vnderstāde that wyth these foresayd lordes came greate companyes of mē in so moche that som had .vi. C. some .v. C the leest .iiii. C. wherfore the mayre for so longe as the kyng the lordes lay thus in the citie had dayly in harnesse .v. M. cytesyns and rode dayly about the citie subbarbes of y e same to se the kynges peace were kept And nyghtly prouyded for .ii. M. mē in harnesse to gyue attendaūce vpon iii. aldermen and they to kepe the nyghte watche tyll .vii. of the clocke vppon the morowe tyll the day watche were assembled By reason whereof good ordre and rule was kepte and no man so hardy ones to attempte the brekynge of the kynges peace Durynge thys watche a great counsayl was holdē by y e kyng and hys lordes By reason wherof a dyssymuled vnyte and concorde betwene them was concluded In token and for ioy wherof the king the quene and all y e sayd lordes vpon out Lady day annuciacion in lent at Poulys wente solemply in processyon and soone after euery lorde departed where hys pleasure was And in the moneth of folowynge was a greate fray in flete strete betwene the mē of courte and the inhabytauntes of the sayd strete in whyche fray a gentylman beyng y e quenes attourney was slayne Vpon the thursdaye in whytsonweke the duke of Somerset with Antony Ryuers and other .iiii kepte iustes of peace before the quene within the towre of London agayne thre esquyers of the quenes and in lyke maner at Grenewych the sonday folowynge And vpon Trynyty sonday or the monday folowynge certayne shyppes apperteynyng vnto the erle of warwyke mette wyth a floote of Spanyardes and after long cruel fyghte toke .vi. of theym laden wyth iron and other marchaundyse and drowned and chased to the noumber of .xxvi nat without shedyng of blod on bothe partyes for of the Englyshmen were slayne an C. and many mo wounded and sore hurt In thys yere after some auctours a marchaunte of Brystowe named Sturmyn whyche wyth hys shyppe had trauayled in dyuers partyes of Leuaunte and other partyes of the Gest for so moche as the same ranne vpon hym that he had gotten grene pepyr and other specys to haue sette and sowen in Englande as the fame wente therefore the Ianuayes wayted hym vppon the see and spoylyd hys shyppe and other But this is full lyke to be vntrew that the Ianuayes shulde spoyle hym for any suche cause for there is no nacyon in Englande that delyth so lytle wyth spycys But were it for thys cause or other trouth it is that by that nacyō an of fēce was done for the whyche all the marchauntes Ianuayes in London were arested and cōmytted to y e flete tyll they had found en suffycyent suer tye to answere to the premysses And fynally for the harmys whyche theyr nacyon had done to the sayde Sturmyn to thys realme vi M. marke was sette to theyr payne to paye But howe it was payed no mencyon I fynde In thys yere also was made an ordynaunce by auctorytie of y e kynge and hys counsayll for the orderynge of the seyntwary men wythin saynte Martyns the graunde whereof the artycles are at length sette oute in y e boke of K. wythin the chaumbre of guylde hall in the leefe CC.xcix wherof the execucyon of obseruynge were necessary to be vsed but more pyte it is fewe poyntes of it ben exercysed Anno. dn̄i M.iiii C.lviii   Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.lix Draper Rafe Iosselyn   Thomas Scotte   Anno .xxxvii.   Rycharde Nedeham   THys yere aboute the feeste of Candelmasse the forsayd dissymulyd loueday hāgyng by a small threde betwene the quene and y t fore named lordes expressed in the precedynge yere the kynge and many lordes thanne beynge at westmynster a stray happened to fall betwene a seruaunt of the kynges a seruaunt of the erles of warwyke the which hurt the kynges seruaunt after escaped wherefore the kynges other meynial seruauntes seynge they myghte nat be auenged vpō the partye that thus had hurt theyr felowe as the sayde erle of warwyke was commynge frō the coūsayll was goynge towarde hys barge the kynges seruaūtes came vnwarely vppon hym so rabbysshely that the cookys with theyr spyttys other offycers wyth other wepyns came runnyng as madde men entendynge to haue slayne hym so y t he escaped wyth
kyng Hēry shuld cōtynue reygne as kynge durynge hys naturall lyfe after hys deth hys sonne prynce Edwarde to be sette a parte the duke of yorke hys heyres to be kynges incontynentely the duke to be admytted as protectour and regēt of the lāde And yf at any tyme after the kynge of hys owne free wyll and mynde were dysposed to resygne gyue vp the rule of the lāde that thā he shulde resigne vnto the duke yf he than lyued and to none other to hys heyres after hys dayes wyth many other maters and cōuencyōs whyche were tedious to wryte All whyche conclusyons as than by mannes wytte myght be assuryd for the parfourmaunce of theym whanne tyme requyred parfyghted the kynge wyth the duke many other lordes thā there present came that nyght to Poulys there harde euynsong vppon the morow came thyther agayn to masse where the kyng yode in procession crowned wyth great royalte so lay styll in y e bysshoppes palays a season after And vppon the saterdaye folowynge beyng the .ix. daye of Nouember the duke was proclaymed throughe the cytye heyre paraunt vnto the crowne of Englāde all hys progeny after hym Than for as moche as quene Margarete accompanyed with price Edwarde hyr sonn̄ the dukes of Somerset of Excetyr and diuers other lordes helde hyr in the northe as aboue is sayd and wolde nat come at the kynges sendyng for therefore it was agreed by the lordes thā at London presence that the duke of yorke shulde take wyth hym the erle of Salysbury wyth a certayne people to fetche in the sayde quene lordes abouesayde The whyche duke erle departed from Londō with theyr people vpon the secōde daye of December so spedde theym northwarde wherof the quene with hyr lordes beynge ware and hauyng wyth theym a greate strength of Northernemen mette wyth the duke of yorke vppon the .xxx. daye of December nere vnto a towne in the northe called wakelfeld were betwene them was foughten a sharpe fyght In the whych the duke of yorke was slayne wyth hys sonne called erle of Rutlande and syr Thomas Neuyll sonne vnto the erle of Salysbury wyth many other and the erle of Salysbury was there taken on lyue wyth dyuerse other whanne the lordes vppon the quenes partye had gotten thys vyctory anone they sente theyr prysoners vnto Pountfreyte the whyche were after there behedyd that is to meane the erle of Salysbury a man of London named Iohn̄ Narowe and an other capytayne named Hāson whose heddes were sente vnto yorke and there sette vppon the gates And whan the quene hadde opteynyd thys vyctory she wyth her retynewe drewe toward London where at that tyme duryng this troublous season greate watchys were kepte dayely and nyghtelye and dyuerse opynions were amonge the citesyns For the mayre and many of the chefe comoners helde vppon the quenes partye but the comynaltie was with the duke of yorke hys affynyte whanne tydynges were broughte vnto the cytye of the commynge of the quene wyth so greate an hoste of Northernemen anone suche as were of the contrary partye broughte vp a noyse thoroughe the cytye that she brought those Northernemen to the entente to ryfle and spoyle the citye where thoroughe she was encreasyd of enemyes But what so hyr entente was she wyth hyr people helde on hyr waye tyll she came to saynte Albons In the whyche meane tyme the erle of warwyke and the duke of Northfolke whyche by the duke of yorke were assygned to gyue attendaunce vppon the kynge by consent of the kynge gathered vnto theym strengthe of knyghtes and mette wyth the quenes hoste at saynt Albons foresayde where betwene them a strōge fyght was foughten vppon shroue tuysday in the mornyng At y t whych the duke of Northfolke the sayd erle in the endewere chased and kyng Henry takē efte vpō the felde brought vnto the quene And y e same after noone after some wryters he made his sonn̄ price Edward knyght whych than was of the age of .viii. yeres wyth other to the noubre of .xxx. persones whan quene Margaret was thus commen agayne to hyr aboue anon she sente vnto the mayre of London wyllyng commaundynge hym in y e kynges name that he shuld in all spedy wyse sende to saynt Albonys certayne cartes wyth lentyn stuffe for y e vytaylyng of her hoste whyche commaundement the mayre obeyed and wyth great dylygence made prouysyon for the sayd vytayll and sent it in cartys towarde Crepylgate for to haue passed to the quene where whā it was cōmyn the commons many there beynge whych had harde other tydynges of the erle of Marche as after shal be shewed of one mynde with stode the passage of the sayd cartes sayde it was nat behouefull to fede theyr enemyes whyche entended the robbyng of the cytye And nat wythstandynge that the mayre wyth hys bretherne exorted the people in theyr best maner shewyng to theym many great daungers whyche was lyke to ensue to the cytye yf the sayd dytayll went nat forthe yet myghte he nat tourne them from theyr obstynat errour but for a cōclusyon was fayne to apoynt the recorder wyth hym a certayne of aldermē to ryde vnto the kynges coūsayll to Barnet and to make requeste vnto theym that the Northē mē myght be retorned home for fere of robbynge of the cytye and ouerthys other secrete frendes were made vnto the quenes grace to be good gracyouse vnto the cytye Duryng whych treaty dyuers cytesyns auoyded the cytye and lande Amōge the whych Phylip Malpas whych as before is shewed in the .xx. and .viii. yere of thys kynge was robbed of Iacke Cade whyche Malpas other was mette vpō the see wyth a Frēchman named Columpne and of hym takē prysoner after payed .iiii M. marke for hys raunsome Thus passyng the tyme y e tydynges which before were secrete now were blowē abrode and openly was tolde that y e erles of Marche of warwyke were mette at Cottyswolde and had gathered vnto thē great strength of Marchemen were wel spedde vpō theyr waye to warde London For knowelege whereof the kynge and y e quene wyth theyr hoste were retourned Northwarde But or they departyd from saint Albonis there was beheded the lord Bonuyle syr Thomas Teryll knyghet whyche were taken in the forenamed felde Thā the duchesse of yorke beyng at Lōdon herynge the losse of thys felde sent hyr two yonger sonnes that is to meane George whyche after was duke of Clarēce and Rychard that after was duke of Glouceter into Utrych in Almayne where they remayned a whyle Thā the foresayd erles of March and of warwyke sped them towarde Londō in suche wyse that they came thydervpon the thursday in the fyrst weke of lent To whome resorted all the gētylmen for the more partye of the south eest partye of Englād And in thys whyle that they thus rested at London a great coūsayl was called
and his company quyt them so manfully that he bare ouer that parte of the feeld whyche he sette vppon so ferforthly y e tydynges came to London that kynge Edwarde had loste the felde And yf hys men had kepte theyr araye not fallen to ryfflyng lykely it hadde bene as it was after tolde that the vyctory hadde fallen to that partye But after longe and cruell fyght in conclusyon kyng Edwarde optayned the vpper hande slewe of hys ennemyes the marques Mountagu and the erle of warwyk hys brother wyth many other And vppon the kynges party was slayne the lorde Barnes And of the comōs vppon bothe partyes were slayne vpon .xv. C. men and mo Of the mystes and other impedymentes whyche fyll vpon the lordes party by reason of the incantacyons wrought by fryer Būgey as y e fame wēt me lyst not to wryte But trouth it is that after thys vyctory thus wonne by kynge Edwarde he sente the dede corps of the sayd Marquys and erle of warwyke vnto Poulys chyrche where they laye two dayes after naked in .ii. coffyns that euery man myghte beholde and se theym And the same after none came kyng Edwarde agayn vnto London and offered at y e roode of the North dore at Poulys and after rode vnto westmynster and there lodgyd hym And soone after that the kynge was thus passed tho ▪ ough the cyty was kyng Henry brought rydynge in a longe gowne of blewe veluet and so conueyed thoroughe Chepe vnto westmynster and frome thens vnto the Towre where he remayned as prysoner all hys lyues tyme after The repossessyon of Edwarde the .iiii. EDward the .iiii. before named began agayne his domynyon ouer the realme of England the .xiiii. daye of Apryll in y e begynnyng of the yere of our lord M.iiii C.lxxi the .xii. yere of Lewys the Frenche kynge and reposseded all thynges as he before hadde done And when the sayde two corps hadde lyen in Poules openly from the Sondaye tyll the Tuysdaye they were hadde from thens buryed where y e kynge wolde assygne them The kynge then beynge in authoryte made prouysyon for the defence of the landynge of quene Margaret and hyr sonne the whyche all thys whyle laye at the see syde taryenge the wynde and so lastely landed at and came with a strength of Frenchmē other as farre within thē lande as to a vyllage in called Tewkysbury where the kyng mette wyth her and hyr dystressyd chasyd her company and slewe many of them In the whyche batayle she was taken syr Edward her sonne and so brought vnto the kynge But after the kynge had questyoned with the sayd syr Edwarde and he hadde answered vnto hym cōtrary his pleasure he thenne strake hym wyth hys gauntelet vpon the face After whiche stroke so by hym receyued he was by the kynges seruauntes incōtynently slayne vpon the .iiii. daye of the moneth of May. whan kynge Edwarde had thus subdued hys enemyes anone he sent quene Margarete vnto London where she restyd a season and fynally she was sent home into her countre And the goodes of syr Thomas Cook were agayne ceasyd and hys wyfe put forth and commaunded to be kepte at the mayers Uppon the .xiiii. daye of May folowynge the bastarde of Fawconbrydge that vnto hym had gaderyd a ryottous and euyll dysposyd companye of shypmen and other wyth also the assystence of y e comons both of Essex and of Kent came in greate multytude vnto the cyty of London And after that the sayd cōpany was denyed passage thorough the cytye they set vpō dyuers partyes therof as Bysshoppes gate Algate Londō brydge and alonge the waters syde and shotte gonnes and arowes and fyred the gates wyth cruell malyce as Bysshops gate and Algate and faught so fyersly that they wanne y e bulwerkes at Algate and entred a certayne wythin the gate But the cytesyus wyth comfort and ayde of Robert Baset alderman assygned to the gate wythstode the sayd rebelles so manfully that they slewe all such as entred the gate and compellyd y e other to drawe a backe and forsoke the gate Uppon whom the cytesyns pursued and chased theym vnto the forther Stratforde and slewe toke many of them prysoners wherof herynge the other whyche assayled the other partes of the cytie fledde in lyke wyse whom the other cytesyns pursued as farre as Depforde in sleynge and takyng of them prysoners in great nomber and after them raunsomed as they hadde ben Frenchemen And the bastarde with hys shypmē were chasyd vnto theyr shyppes lyenge at Blackwall and there in the chase many slayne And the sayde bastarde the nyghte folowynge stale out hys shyppes out of y e ryuer and so departed and escaped for the tyme. Than vpon Assencyon euyn next ensuynge the corps of Henry the .vi. late kynge was brought vnreuerently from the tower thorough the high stretes of the cyty vnto Poulys chyrche and there lefte that nyght and vppon the morowe conueyed wyth gleyuys and other wepens as he before thyder was brought vnto Chertyssey and there was buryed Of the deth of this prince dyuers tales were tolde But the moste comon fame went that he was stycked wyth a dagger by the handes of the duke of Glouceter whyche after Edwarde the .iiii. vsurped the crowne and was kyng as after shall appere Than kyng Edwarde after thys victory thus hadde at Tewkesbury retourned vnto London and vpon the mondaye folowynge Assencyon daye he toke hys iournay into Kent hauyng with hym a strength of people and there sette hys iustyces and made inquysycyons of the ryot before done by the bastarde and hys accessaryes For the whyche at Caunterbury and other good townes in Kent dyuers were put in execucyon Of whom the hedes were sent vnto London and set vpon the brydge And in lyke maner inquysyciōs were made in Essex and some also of them put in execucyon Of whyche a capytayne named Spysynge was hanged and hys hede set vpon Algate And many of the ryche commons of Kent were set at greuous fynes both for them selfe and for theyr seruauntes And when the kyng hadde thus spedde his iournaye he retourned came to Londō vpon whytson euyn And that done soone after was bysshop Neuyll archebysshop of yorke sent vnto Guynes and there kepte as prysoner longe after Thys was brother to the lorde marquys Moūtagu and to the erle of warwycke Also in the ende of thys mayers yere was the forenamed bastarde of Fawconbrydge taken about Southamton and there put to execucyō whose hed was sent to London and pyght vpon London brydge among other Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.lxxi   Anno dn̄i M.iiii C.lxxii   Iohn̄ Aleyn   wyllyam Edwarde Grocer   Anno .xi.   Iohn̄ Chelley   IN thys yere the erle of Oxenforde whych syn the season of Barnet felde hadde holden saynte Myghellys mounte was by an appoyntement taken thens and shortely after sente to the castell of Guynes where he remayned prysoner tyl the last yere of Rycharde
and fette there his aimes hys sayde wyfe then lyenge at the castell of warwyke not knowynge of any man what he was tyll lastely he was visited with so sore sykenes that he knew well that he shuld dye wherefore he sente hys weddynge rynge vnto hys wyfe requyrynge her in all haste to come and speke wyth hym whych she obeyed in humble wyse and sped her vnto the sayd Heremytage wyth all womanly dylygence and fande hym deed at her commynge whom she besprent with many a salt tere And as she was enfourmed of the messenger as he dyed she buryed hym ryghte there And more ouer as saith my sayd authour he monyshed her by the sayd messenger that she shulde prouyde for her selfe for she shuld also alter her mortall lyfe the .xv. day folowyng which also she obeyed and made suche prouisyon that she was in that place buryed by hym All whyche mater the sayde Dane Iohn̄ Lydgate affyrmeth that he toke out of the boke of Gerarde Cambres̄ whyche wrote mych of the dedes and storyes of the prynces of Englande as Policronica and other authour testyfyen and as the sayde Lydgate in the ende of his sayde treatyse wytnessyth as by the mater folowynge appereth For more authorite as of this mater This translacyon such as in sentēce Out of laten made by the cronycler Called of old Gerardus Cambrēce whyche wrote the dedes wyth great dylygence Of them that were in weste Saxon crowned kynges Greatly cōmendyd for theyr knyghtly excellence Guy of warwyke in hys famouse wrytynges AL whyche sayde treatyse is shewyd at length in meter of viii stauys after the maner of the precedentes by the dylygent labour of the sayde Dane Iohn̄ Lydgate The whyche I haue here sette in for so mych as yt concernyth mater that was done in the tyme of the reygne of thys Ethylstane The whyche after the accorde of moste wryters ▪ broughte thys lande agayne to one monarchye and reygned as kynge therof by the full terme of .xvi. yeres and was buryed at the monastery of Malmysbury leuynge after hym no chylde wherfore the rule of the land fyll vnto Edmunde his brother Francia THE CLXXXVI CHAPITER LEwys the sonne of Charlis y e symple beganne hys reygne ouer the Frenchmen in y e yere of our lorde ix hundred and xxxiiii and the .ix yere of Ethelstane then kynge of Englande ye haue harde before in the ende of the storye of Charlys y e symple how Elgina the quene wyth Lewys her yonger sonne was fledde into England to her father Edward the elder wherfore y e lordes of Fraūce not knowynge where she with the Chylde was gone chose the forenamed Rauf for theyr kynge After whose deth the said lordes of Fraūce beynge ascertayned of the beynge of the sayd Lewys in England sent vnto hym the archbyshop of Senys Hughe surnamed le graunde desyrynge hym to restore into Fraunce and take therof possessyon Then Elgina herynge the message of the lordes and trustyng vnto thē by counsayll of her frendes made her redy wyth her son sayled shortly after into Fraunce where she was receyued wyth myche honour shortly after crowned her sonne Lewys kynge at the cytye of Laon̄ This Lewys is named y e .v. Lewys In the thyrde yere of whose reygne fyll a scarcytye of corne vytayll by reason wherof ensued a great famyn in so myche that people voyded the realme many dyed for defaut For as wytnesseth the frenche cronycle a quarter of whete was then worth .xx. poūde of y e money which is of value after sterlynge money .l. s. or there about This kyng beryng in mynd the murder and treason done agayn his father by Hebert as before in the storye of Charlis the symple is declared cast and ymagined in his mynde how he myght wythout shedynge of blood reuenge the deth of his fader and after many ymagynacyons and thought is reuolued in his mynde he lastely dyuysed a letter the whych he charged a seruaunt of his to brynge to hys presence when he was sette amonge his lordes in counsayll when kynge Lewys hadde compassed this in hys mynde he for nedes of hys realme called a great coūsayll of his barony at Laon̄ whyther amonges the other the sayde Heberte erle of Uermendoys was warned to come And when the kynge was ascertayned of theyr commynges he apoynted a secrete cōpanye in harnes to be in a secrete chamber nere vnto the place of the sayde counsayll and at conuenient tyme after yode vnto the same and all his lordes wyth hym And when he hadde a season commoned wyth hys lordes of suche maters as hym lyked sodeynly came one to hym and sayd that a man was cōmen wyth a letter dyrected to hys grace oute of Englande the whych he commaunded to be broughte vnto hys syghte when the kyng hadde vnfolde the letter and radde a parte therof he smyled whereof the lordes beynge ware purposed the kynge to haue receyued some iewyllys or ioyous nouellys oute of Englande whyle the kynge was aboute to delyuer this letter to his scribe or secretory one of hys lordes sayde vnto hym Syr we truste ye haue some iocande mery tydynges oute of Englāde that ye haue cause of smilyng I shall shewe the cause to you sayde the kyng There is dwellyngin England a kynnesman of myne named Harman the whych is a man of gret myghte and myne especyall frende He shewyth me by this letter that an husbandeman or a vyleyne badde or requyred hys lorde vnto his howse to dyner and vnder the coloure therof he slewe hys sayde lorde And for the sayde Harman thynketh the law of that lande to fauourable for such an haynous dede hetherfore writeth to me to haue myne aduyse in thys mater wherfore sens ye be all present I praye you shewe to me your opynyons in this mater whych with one voyce sayde y t the murderer was worthy to suffer the moste shamefull and cruell deth to be hanged and strangled in a rope But for y e kynge wolde be certaynely enfourmed of the consentes of theym all he began at the hygest and so pursued theym tyll he came to Hebert erle of Uermēdoys the whych alowed the sentēce as the other hadde done Then the kynge made a token to y e walshemen betwene hym them before appoynted so y e anon they were present sette sure hold vppon the sayde Hebert To whom the kynge sayd Hebert thou art the husbondman or vilayne y t I haue spoken of whych slew his lord vnder colour of byddynge or gestynge hym in hys house For traytoursly thou dydeste requyre my lorde and father vnder thyne house or castell of Peron̄ and there not remembrynge the kyndnes to the by hym before dayes shewyd nor thyne allegyauntes and trouthe that toward hym thou shuldest haue borne kept hym lyke a prysoner and lastely murderyd hym to the greate daunger agayne god to the world shame wherfore accordynge to thy desert and after thyne own sentence and iudgemēt take now