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A00007 The Cronycles of Englonde with the dedes of popes and emperours, and also the descripcyon of Englonde; Saint Albans chronicle. Higden, Ranulf, d. 1364. Polycronicon. 1528 (1528) STC 10002; ESTC S108645 466,261 386

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all that they had slewe of them al that he myght take came yelded hym to the kynge Whan the good erle Thomas wyst that he was so betrayed he was sore abasshed sayd to hȳselfe O almighty god how myght Robert Holand fynde in his herte me to betraye syth I loued hym so moche O god well may now a man se by hȳ that no man may deceyue an other rather than he that he trusteth moost vpon he hath full euyll yelded me the goodnes the worshyp that I haue done to hym through my kyndnes haue auaūced him made hym hye where that he was lowe and he maketh me go from hygh vnto lowe but yet shall he dye an euyll deth ¶ Of the discomfyture of Burbrygge ●He good erle syr Thomas of Lancastre Vmfrey de Bohoune erle of Herford the barons that were with them toke coūseyle bytwene them at the freres prechours in Poūfret Thomas of Lancastre than thought vpon the treason of Robert Holand sayd in reprefe Alas Robert Holand hath me betrayed aye is the reed of some euyll shreed And by the comyn assent they shold go to the castell of Dunstanburgh the whiche apperteined to the erledom of Lancastre that they shold abyde there tyll that the kyng had forgyuen them his maletalēt But whan the good erle Thomas herde this he answered in this maner sayd Lordes said he yf we go toward the north the northeren men wyll saye that we go towarde the Scottes and so we shall be holden traytours for cause of distaūce that is bytwene kyng Edward Robert the Brus that made him kyng of Scotlond therfore I saye as touchynge my selfe I wyll not go no ferther in to the north than to myn owne castell of Pountfret And whan syr Roger Clifford herd this he arose vp anone in wrath drewe his swerde on hygh swore by almyghty god by his holy names but yf that he wolde go with them he shold there slee hȳ The noble gentyll erle Thomas was sore adrad sayd Fayre syrs I wyll go with you whether so euer ye me bydde Than went they togider in to the north with them they had vij C. men of armes came to Burbrygge Whan syr Andrewe of Herkela that was in the north coūtree through ordynaūce of the kynge for to kepe the coūtree of Scotlonde herde tell how the Thomas of Lancastre was dyscomfyted his company at Burton vpon Trent he ordeyned hym a stronge power syr Symond Ward also that than was shyref of yorke and me●te the barons at Burbrygge and anone they brake the brydge that was made of tree And whan the erle Thomas of Lancastre herde that syr Andrewe of Herk●●a had brought with hym suche a power he was sore adrad and sente for syr Andrewe of Herkela and with hym spake sayd to hym in this maner Syr Andrewe sayd he ye may well vnderstande how that out lorde the kynge is ladde and mysgouerned by moche false coūsey●e through syr Hugh Spenser the fader and syr Hugh his sone syr Iohn erle of Arundell through mayster Robert Baldok a false pylled clerke that now is dwellyng in the kynges courte Wherfore I praye you that ye wyll come with vs with all the power that ye haue ordeyned helpe to destroye the venym of Englonde and the traytours that ben therin and we wyll gyue vnto you all the best parte of .v. 〈…〉 domes that we haue holde we wyll make vnto you an othe that we wyll neuer do thynge without your counseyle so ye shall be eft as well with vs as euer was Robert Holand Than answered syr Andrewe of Herkela sayd Syr Thomas that wold I not do no consent therto for no maner thȳge ye myght me gyue wtout the wyll cōmaūdement of our lord the kynge for than sholde I be holden a traytour for euermore And whan that the noble erle Thomas of Lancastre sawe that he wolde not consent to hym for no maner thynge he sayd Syr Andrew wyll ye not consent to destroye the ve 〈…〉 of the realme as we be consent at one worde syr Andrewe I tell the that or this yere be passed that ye shall be taken holden for a traytour and more than ony of you holde vs now of a worse deth ye shall dye than euer dyd knyght in Englōde vnderstāde well that ye dyd neuer thynge that sorer shal repēt you now go do what you good lyketh I wyll put me in to the mercy of god And so wente the fals traytour tyraūt and as a fals forsworne man For through the noble erle Thomas of Lancastre he receyued the armes of chyualry of hym was made knyght Than myght men searchers drawe thē on that one syde on that other knightes also thā fought togyder wonders sore And also amonge all other syr Humfrey de Boughon erle of Herforde a worthy knyght of renome through all chrystendom stode fought with his enemyes vpon the brydge as the noble lorde stode fought vpon the brydge a thefe rybaud skulked vnder the brydge fyersly with a spere smote the noble knyght in to the foūdament so the his bowelles fell about his feet Alas for sorowe for there was slayne the floure of solace cōforte also of curteysy And syr Roger of Clifford a noble knyght stode euer fought well worthely hym defended but at the last he was sore wounded in his heed syr Willyam of S●llay syr Roger of Bernefelde were slayue at that batayle Whan syr Andrewe of Herkela sawe that syr Thomas men of Lancastre lessed slaked anone he his company came vnto the gentyll ●ayght sayd vnto hym with an hye voyce Yelde the traitour yelde the. The gentyll erle Thomas than answered sayd Nay lordes traitours be we none to you we wyll vs neuer yelde whyle that our lyues lasteth but rather wyll we dye●● our treuth than yelde vs vnto you And syr Andrewe agayne behelde syr Thomas his company yellynge cryenge as a wood wolfe sayd Yelde you traytours taken yelde you sayenge with an hye voyce beware syrs that none of you be so hardy vpon lyfe ly●● 〈…〉 e to mis●o Thomas body of Lancastre And with that worde the good erle Thomas went into the cha●e●● and sayd k●elyng vpon his knees and turned his vysage towarde the crosse and sayd Almyghty god vnto the I yelde me holly I put me vnto thy mercy And with that the vylayns rybaudes lepte aboute hym on euery syde as tyrauntes wood turmentours and despoyled hym of his ar mure and clothed hym in a robe of raye that was of his squyers lyuerey forth ladde hym vnto Yorke by water Than myght men se moche sorowe care For the gentyll knyghtes fled on euery syde and the rybaudes vylayns egerly them descryed and cryed on hygh
Cambrydge came home agayn with his people in to Englonde in haste blyssed be god his blyssed gyftes Amen ¶ And this same yere kynge Rycharde helde his Chrystmasse in the manoyr of Eltham ¶ And the same yere y● kyng of Armony fledde out of his owne londe came in to Englonde for to haue helpe socour of our king agaynst his enemyes that had dryuen hym out of his realme And so he was brought vnto the kynge to Eltham there as the kynge helde his ryall feest of Christmasse And there our kyng welcomed hym dyd hym moche reuerence worshyp and cōmaūded all his lordes to make hym all y● chere that they coude And than he besought the kynge of his grace of helpe and of his cōforte in his nede that he myght be brought agayn to his kyngdom londe for the Turkes had destroyed the moost parte of his londe and how he fledde for drede and came hyder for socour helpe And than the kyng hauynge on hȳ pyte and compassyon of his grete myschefe greuous dysease anone he toke his coūseyle asked what was best to do And they answered sayd yf it lyked hym to gyue hym ony good it were well done and as touchynge his people for to trauayle so ferre in to out loudes it were a grete Ieopardy And so the kynge gaue hym golde syluer many other ryche gyftes iewels betaught hym to god and so he passed agayn out of Englonde ¶ And this same yere kyng Rychard with a royall power went in to Scotlonde for to warre vpon the Scottes for the falsnes destruccyon that the Scottes had done to the Englysshmen in y● marches And than the Scottes came downe to y● kyng for to treate with hym with his lordes for trewse as for certayne yeres And so our kyng his coūseyle graūted them trewse for certayne yeres and our kyng turned hym agayn in to Englōde And whā he was comen to Yorke there he abode and rested hym And there syr John Holand the erle of Kentes broder slewe the erles sone of Stafford and his heyre with a dagger in the cite of Yorke wherfore the kynge was sore anoyed greued and remeued thens and came to London And the Mayre with the alder men the comyns with all y● solempnite that might be done rode agaynst y● kyng and brought him royally through y● cite and so forth to westmynster to his owne palays ¶ And in the .ix. yere of kynge Rychardes regne he helde a parliament at Westmynster and there he made two dukes and a markeys and .v. erles The fyrst that was made duke was the kynges vncle sir Edmond of Langley erle of Cambrydge and hym he made duke of yorke And his other vncle syr Thomas of wodstok that was erle of Bokȳgham hym he made duke of Glocestre And syr Leonner that was erle of Oxforde hym he made markeys of Deuelyn And Henry of Balynbroke the dukes sone of Lancastre hym he made erle of Derby And syr Edward y● dukes sone of Yorke hym he made erle of Rutlonde And syr John Holand y● was the erle of Kentes broder hym he made erle of Huntyngdon And syr Thomas Mombray hym he made erle of Notyngham and erle Marshall of Englonde And syr Mychell de la pole knyght hym he made erle of Suffolk chaunceler of Englonde And the erle of the Marche at y● same parlyament holden at Westmynster in playne parlyament amonge all the lordes and comyns was ꝓclaymed erle of the Marche and heyre parent to the crowne of Englonde after kynge Rychard the whiche erle of the Marche went ouer the sce in to Irlonde vnto his lordshyps and londes for the erle of Marche is erle of Vlster in Irlonde and by ryght lygne and herytage And there at the castell of his he lay that tyme there came vpon hȳ a grete multytude in busshmentes of wylde Iryssh men for to take destroye hym And he came out fyersly of his castell with his people manly fought with them there he was take hewen all to peces so he dyed vpon whose soule god haue mercy ¶ And in the .x. yere of kyng Richardes regne the erle of Arundell went to the see with a grete nauy of shyppes enarmed with mē of armes good archers And whā they came in y● brode see they mette with the hole flete y● came with wyne laden frō Rochell the whiche wyne were enemyes goodes there our nauy set vpon them toke them all and brought them to dyuers portes hauens of Englonde and some to London there ye myght haue had a toune of Rochell wyne of the best for .xx. shyllynges sterlynge and so we had grete chepe of wyne in Englōde that tyme thanked be god almyghty ¶ How the fyue lordes arose at Ratcote brydge ANd in y● regne of kyng Richarde the .xj. yere the fyue lordes arose at Ratcote brydge in the destruccion of y● rebelles y● were y● tyme in all the realme The fyrst of y● fyue lordes was syr Thomas of wodstok the kȳges vncle duke of Blocestre The seconde was syr Rychard erle of Arundell The thyrde was syr Richard erle of warwik The fourth was syr Henry Bolynbroke erle of Derby The fyfth was syr Thomas Mombray erle of Notyngham And these .v. lordes sawe the myschefe mysgouernaūce the falsnes of y● kynges coūseyle wherfore they that were y● tyme chefe of the kynges coūseyle fled out of this lōde ouer y● see that is to saye syr Alysaūder Neuell the archebysshop of Yorke syr Roberte Lewer markeys of Deuelyn erle of Oxford syr Mychell de la Pole erle of Suffolke and chaunceler of Englonde And these thre lordes went ouer y● see neuer came agayne for there they dyed And than these fyue lordes aboue sayd made a parliamēt at Westmynster And there they toke syr Robert Tresiliā the Iustyce and syr Nycholl Brembre knyght citezyn of London syr Iohn Salysbury a knyght of y● kynges housholde Vske sergeaunt of armes many moo of other people were taken and iudged to deth by the counseyle of these fyue lordes in that parlyament at Westmynster for the treason y● they put vpon them to be drawen from y● toute of London throughout the Cite and so forth to Tyburne there they shold be hanged and theyr throtes to be cutte and thus they were serued dyed And after that in this same parliamēt at Westmynster was syr Symond Beuerley that was a knyght of the garter syr Iohn Beauchamp knyght that was steward of the kinges houshold syr Iames Berners were foriudged to deth thā they were ledde on fote to the toure hyll and there were theyr hedes smytten of and many other moo by these .v. lordes ¶ In this same parlyament and in the. 〈◊〉 yere of kynge Rychardes regne he let trye ordeyne a generall Iustes that is called a turneymēt of lordes
gyuen at this foresayd parlyament And for to come to this parlyament the kyng sent his wrytes to euery lorde baron knyght s●uyer in euery shyre throughout Englonde that euery lorde sholde gadre brynge his retynue with hym in as shorte tyme in the best araye that they myght ge●e in mayntey●yage strengthinge of the kyng agaynst them that were his enemyes that this were done in all the haste come to hym 〈◊〉 payne of deth And the kyng hymself sent into Cl 〈…〉 shyre to che●taines of the 〈…〉 tree they gadred brought a grete and an huge multytude of people bothe of knyghtes ●●uyers pryncypally of yemen of Chestershyre whiche ye●ten archers the kyng toke to his own courte and gaue them bowge of courte good wages to be kepers of his owne body bothe by nyght by daye aboue al other persones moost loued best trust the whiche soone afterward turned the kyng to grete losse shame hyndrynge his vtter vndoynge destruccion as ye shall here afterwarde And that tyme came sir Henry of Derby with a grete meyny of men of armes archers And the erle of Rutlonde came with a stronge power of people bothe of men of armes archers The erle of Kent brought a grete power of men of armes archers the erle Mar shall came in the same maner the lord● Spenser in the same maner The erle of Northumberlonde and sir Henry Pe 〈…〉 his sone syr Thomas Pet●y the erles broder all the worthy lordes brought a fayre meyny a strōge power and eche man in his best aray the duke of Lancastre the duke of yorke came in the same maner with men of armes archers folowyng the kyng syr Willyam S●rope tresourer of Englonde came in the same maner And thus in this araye came all the worthy men of this londe vnto our kyng all this people came to London in one daye in so moche that euery 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lane in London in the subbarbes were full of them lodged and .x. or x●● myle about London euery waye And this peo ple brought the kyng to Westmynster 〈◊〉 went home agayne to theyr lodgyng●s bothe hors man than on the monday● the .xii. daye of September the pa 〈…〉 began at Westmynster whiche was cal led that grete parlyamēt And on that frydaye next after the erle of A●●dell was brought in to the parlyamēt amonge all the lordes and that was on saynt Mathewes day the apostle and euangelist there he was for iudged vnto the deth in this hall that was made in the palays at Westmynster And this was his iudgement He shold go on fote with his handes boūde behynde hym from the place that he was iudged in so forth through the cite of London vnto the toure hyll his heed to be smytten of so it was done in dede in the same place And vl of the gretest lordes that sate on his iudgement rode with hym vnto the place there he was done to dethe so to se that the execucyon were done after the dome by the kynges cōmaundement with them wente on fote men of armes archers a grete multytude of Chestre shyre men in strengthynge of the lordes that brought this erle to his dethe for they were in drede leest the erle sholde be rescowed taken from them whan they came in to London Thus he passed forth through the Cite vnto his deth there he toke it full pacyently on whose soule god haue mercy Amen And than came the Austyn freres toke vp the body the heed of this good erle bare it home to theyr place buryed him in theyr quere And on that morow after was syr Rychard erle of warwik brought in to the parlya ment there as the erle of Arundell was for iudged they gaue the erle of warwyk the same iudgemēt that the foresayd erle had but the lordes had compassyon on hym bycause he was of more greter age and released hym to perpetuall pry son put hym in the yle of Man And than on the mondaye nexte after the lorde Cobham of Kent and syr Iohn Cheyn knyght were brought also in to the parlyament in to the same hall there they were iudged to be hanged and drawen but through the prayers and grete instaunce of all the lordes that iudgement was forgyuen them and released to per petuall pryson ¶ And this same tyme was Rychard Whyttyngdon Mayre of London and Iohn Wodecocke Wyllyam Askam sheryues of London And they ordeyned at euery gate of London durynge this same parlyament stronge watche of men of armes archers and through out euery warde also And the kynge made .v. dukes one Markeys foure erles the fyrst of them was the erle of Derby and he was made duke of Herford and the seconde was the erle of Rutlonde he was made duke of Awemarle the thyrde was the erle of Kent and he was made duke of Surry the fourth was the erle of Huntȳgdon he was made duke of Excestre the fyfth was the erle of Notyngham he was made duke of Northfolk And the erle of Somerset was made Markeys of Dor set the lorde Spenser was made erle of Glocestre the lorde Neuyll of Raby was made erle of Westmerlonde syr Thomas Percy was made erle of Worcestre syr Willyam Scrope that was tresourer of Englonde was made erle of Wylshyre syr Iohn Montagu erle of Salisbury And whan the king had thus done he helde the parlyamēt ryall feest vnto all his lordes to all maner of people that thyder wolde come ¶ And this same yere dyed syr Iohn of Gaūt the kynges vncle duke of Lancastre in the bysshops Inne in Holborne was brought fro thens to saynt Paule there the kyng made helde his enteremēt well worthely with al his lordes in the chirche of saynt Paule in London there he was buryed besyde dame Blaūche his wyfe that was doughter heyre vnto the good Henry that was duke of L 〈…〉 te ¶ In the same yere there fell a 〈…〉 cyon bytwene the duke of Herford the duke of Norfolke in so moche y● they waged batayle cast down theyr gloues than they were ta ken vp ensealed the batayle ioyned the daye set the place assygned where and whan this sholde be at Couentre And thyder came the kyng with all his lor des at that day was set in the felde than these two worthy lordes came into the felde well clene armed well arayed with all theyr wepen redy to do theyr batayle were redy in the place to fyght at vtteraūce But the kyng had them cesse toke the quarell in to his handes And forth with ryght there present exiled the duke of Herford for terme of .x. yere the duke of
Pounfret in the North countre to be kepte in prison ryght soone after there he made his ende And than whan kyng Rychard was deposed had ●●sygued his crowne his kyngdom was kepte fast in holde Than al the lordes of the realme with the romyns assent by accorde chose this worthy lorde syr Henry of Bolyngbroke erle of Derby duke of Herford duke of Lancastre by ryght lyne herytage and for his ryghtfull manhode that the people foūde in him before all other they chose hym made hȳ kynge of Englonde amonge them INnocen●● the .vij. chosen pope at two yere And than Gr●gory the .xij. was after hȳ xij yere ●euet was debate Than was Alexander chosen in the coūsoyle of ●ysan he was called syr P●trus de Canadia so was put ryferd s●ryfe euery cho●e of those thre sayd he was pope Than was there a counseyle at ●ys●n where they began to make a cōcorde and there they deposed the two the thyrde stode so was worse diuisyon made than before For that they ordeyned preuayled not ¶ Robert was emperour after Wenselans .ix. yere This mā was duke of Bauary erle of Palatyn a iust man and a good was crowned of Bonifate the. ix This man entred ytaly with a grete hoost of Almayns agaynst Iohn the duke of Galias but he returned with a grete woūde was a thynge iust that he suffred by iustyce diuyne ¶ Iohn the .xxiij. succeded Alexander .iiij. yere fyrst he began well for an vnite he was in the coūsey●e ●● Constance offred hȳ to resigne the poperyche after secretly vntruly he fledde awaye but it ꝓfyted hym not for he was taken cōstrayned to peas was made a cardynall buryed at Florens ¶ Sigismundus was emperour after Robert .xxvij. yere he was sone to Ka●olus kynge of Vngary moost chrysten prynce and he was so deuoute to god that he deserued to be canonysed This man holpe the chirche through his meruaylous prudence and wytte for he spared no labour ne no thynge that he had tyll he had made a full peas amonge the clergy And he had ●x batayles agaynst the Turke euer he had ye●●●●ry And what more all thynge that euer was wryten in ●ouynge to Constantyne Theodosio Kat●lo ●tto may truly be wryten of hym And he was crowned in Vngary and decessed a blyssed man ¶ Circa annū dn̄i M CCCC ¶ Of syr Henry of Bolyng broke erle of Derby that regned after kyng Rycharde whiche was the fourth Henry after the conquest ANd after kynge Rychard the seconde was deposed out of his kingdom the lordes the comyns al●● one assent all other worthy men of the realme chose syr Henry of Bolyng broke erle of Derby sone heyre of Iohn ●uke of Lancastre for his worthy manhode that often tymes had ben founde in hym in dedes preued vpon saȳt Edwardes day the confessour he was crowned kynge of Englōde at Westmynster by assent of all the realme nexte after the depo●●nge of kyng Richard Thā he made Henry his eldest sone prȳce of Wales duke of Cornewayle erle of Chestre And he ma●● syr Thomas of Arūdell archbysshop of Caūterbury agayne as he was before And syr Roger Walden the kyng Rychard had made archebysshop of Caūterbury he made bysshop of London for ye●yme it stode voyde And he made the erles sone of Arundell that came with hym ouer the see frō Calays in to Englonde erle of Arundell as his fader had ben put hym in possessyon of all his londes And he made homage feaute vnto his lyege lorde the kynge as all other lordes had done And than anone dyed kynge Rychard in the castell of Pounfret in the north countree for there he was famysshed to deth by his keper for he was kept there .iiij. or .v. dayes from meet drynke so he made his ende in this world Yet moche people in Englonde and in other londes sayd that he was on lyue many a yere after his deth But whether he were alyue or deed the people helde theyr fals opinyon byleue that many had moche people came to grete myschefe foule dethe as ye shal here afterward And whan kyng Henry wyst knewe that he was deed he let ●ere hym in the best maner closed it in a fayre chest with dyuers spyceryes and ba●o●es closed hym in a lynnen cloth all saue his visage that was left open that all men myght se his persone from all other men And so he was brought to London with torche light brennynge to saint Paules chirche there he had his masse his Dirige with moche reuerēce solempnite of seruyce And whā all this was done he was brought from saynt Paules in to the abbey of Westmynster there he had al his hole seruyce agayn And from Westmȳster he was brought to Langley and there he was buryed on whose soule god haue mercy Amen ¶ And in the fyrst yere of kynge Henryes regue he helde his Chrystmasse in the castell of Wyndsore And on .xij. euen came the duke of Awemarle vnto the kynge colde hym that he the duke of Surrey the duke of Excestre the erle of Salisbury the erle of Glocestre other moo of theyr affynite were accorded to make a mommynge vnto the kynge on .xij. daye at nyght there they purposed to slee the kyng in the reuelyng And thus the duke of Awemarle warned the kyng And than the kyng came to London pryuely in all the haste that he myght to gete hym helpe socour cōforte and coūseyle And anone these other that wolde haue put the kynge to deth fledde in all the haste that they myght for they knewe well that theyr coūseyle was bewrayed And than fledde the duke of Surrey the erle of Salysbury with all theyr meyny vnto the towne of Chichestre And there the people of the towne wold haue arested them and they tolde not stande to theyr arestyng but stode at defence fought manly But at the last they were ouercomen takē And there they smote of the dukes heed of Surrey the erles heed of Salysbury many other moo there they put theyr quarters in to sackes theyr heedes on poles borne on hye so they were brought through the cite of London to London brydge there these heedes were set vpon hygh theyr quarters were sent to other good townes and cytees of Englonde and set vp there ¶ At Oxford was takē Bloūt knyght Benet Cely knyght and Thomas Wyntersell squyer and there were byheded quartred and the knyghtes hedes were set vpon poles brought to London set vpon the brydge the quarters sent forth vnto other good townes ¶ And in the same yere at Prittelwell in a myll in Essex there syr Iohn Holand the duke of Excestre was taken with the comyns of
In this same yere syr Henry erle of Northumberlōde the lorde Bardolf came out of Scotlonde in preiudyce destruceyon of kynge Henry wherfore they of the Northcoūtre arose vpon them fought with them discōfited them toke them smo●e of their hedes quartred theyr bodyes sent the heed of the erle a quarter of the lorde Bardolf to Londō and there they were set vpon Loudō brydge for fals treason that they had purposed agaynst the kyng ¶ And in the .ix. yere of kyng Henryes regne was syr Edmond Holland erle of Kent made Amyrall of Englonde for to kepe the see he went to the see with many ryal shyppes that were ful well arayed apparayled and enarmed with many a good man of armes archers and of good defence of warre in the kynges name of Englonde and so he londed at the last in the coste of Brytayn in the yle of Briak with al his folke he besyeged the castell assauted it they withstode hym with grete defence strength And anone he layd his ordynaunce in the layenge of a gonne there came a quarell and smote the good erle Edmond in the heed there caught he his deth Woūde but yet they left not tyll that they had goten the castell all that were therin there this good lord dyed vpon whose soule god haue mercy amen And than his meyny came home agayne in to Englonde with the erles body and was buryed amonge his aūcestres right worthely ¶ And in the same yere was a grete frost in Englōde that ●ured xv wekes ¶ And in the .x. yere of kyng henryes regne the fourth came the Se●esshall of Henaud with other meyny in to Englonde to seke auentures to gete them worshyp in dedes of armes bothe on horsbacke on fote at all maner poyntes of warre And the Senesshall chalenged the erle of Somerset the erle delyue red hȳ full manfully of al his chalenges and put his aduersary to the worst in al poyntes wan there grete worship the degre of the felde And on the nexte day after came in to the felde an other man of armes of the Senesshals party agaynst him came syr Rychard of Arundel knyght the Henaud had the better of hym on fote in one poynt for he brought hym on his knee And on the thyrde daye came in an other man of armes in to the felde and agaynst hym there came syr Iohn Corne wayle a knyght manly knyghtly he quytte hȳ in all maner poyntes agaynst his aduersary had the better in the felde And on the fourth daye came an other man of armes of Henaud in to the felde agaynst him came syr Iohn Chaynes sone manly quytte hym agaynst his aduersary for he cast hors man in to the felde And the kynge for his manhode at that tyme dubbed hym knyght And on the fyfth daye there came an other man of armes of the Henaudes party in to the felde to hym came syr Iohn stewarde knight manfully he quytte him there in all maner poyntes had the better And on the syxth daye after came an other Henaud to hym came Willyam Porter squyer manfully he quytte hym had the better in the felde And the kynge dubbed hym knyght the same tyme. And on the seuenth daye after came an other man of armes of Henaud in to the felde to him came Iohn Standisshe squyer and manfully he quytte hym on his aduersary had the better of hym in the felde and the kynge dubbed hym knyght the same daye And on the same day came an other man of armes of Henaud and to hym came a squyer of Gascoyne and proudly and māly he quytte hym on his aduersary had the better of hym and anone the kynge dubbed hym knyght And on the .viij. day came in to the felde two men of armes of Henaud to them came two sowdyours of Calays whiche were bretherne that were called Burghes and well manly quytte them on theyr aduersaryes had the better in the felde And thus ended the chalenges with many grete worshyppes And the kynge at the reuerence of these worthy strafigers made a grete feest and gaue them many riche gyftes And thā they toke theyr leue and went home agayne in to theyr owne countree ¶ And in the. x● yere of kynge Henryes regne the fourth there was a grete batayle done in smyth felde bytwene two squyers that one was called Glocestre that was appellaunt and Arthur was the defendaūt and well manly they fought togyder longe tyme And the kynge for theyr manfulnes and of his grace toke theyr quarell in to his handes and made them to go out of the felde at ones so they were deuyded of theyr batayle and the kyng gaue them grace ¶ And the .xij. yere of kyng Henryes regne the fourth ●ysdie a squyer of Wales that was a rebell a ryser supporter to Owen of Glendre whiche dyd moche destruccyon to the people of Wales was taken brought to London there he came before the Iustyees and was dampned for his treason than he was layde on an hurdell and so drawen to Tyburne through the cite there he was hanged let downe agayne his heed smytten of and the body quartred and sent to foure townes his heed set vpon London brydge ¶ And in the. xiij yere of kynge Henryes regne tho dyed syr Iohn Beauford the erle of Somerset that was capytayne of Calays was buryed at the abbey of the Toure hyll on whose soule god haue mercy Amen ¶ And in the same yere the lorde Thomas kyng Henryes sone wedded the coūtesse of Somerset ¶ And in this same yere came the embassadours of Fraunce in to Englonde fro the duke of Burgoyn vnto the prynce of Englonde kyng Henryes sone heyre for to haue helpe and socour of mē of armes archers against the duke of Orlyaunce And than went ouer see the erle of Arundel syr Gylbert Vmfreuyll erle of Kent the lorde Cobham syr Iohn Oldcastell many other good knyghtes worthy squyers men of armes good archers in to Fraūce came to Parys to the duke of Burgoyn there he receyued welcomed these englysshe lordes all the other meyny And than it was done hȳ to wyte that the duke of Orlyaūce was comen to saynt Clowe fast by Parys with a grete nombre of men or armes arbalastres thyder went our Englysshmen fought with them gate y● brydge of saynt Clowe there they slewe many Frensshmen and arbalastres the remenaūt fledde wold no longer abyde And thā our englysshmen came agayn to Parys there they toke theyr leue of the duke came safe agayne in to Englonde and the duke gaue them grete gyftes And anone after the duke of Orlyaūce sent embassadours in to Englonde to kyng
tymes tyl that the venym came out on euery syde in the cuppe and than toke the cuppe fylled it with good ale brought it before the kynge and knelynge sayd Syr quod he wassayle for neuer the dayes of your lyf dranke ye of so good a cuppe Begyn monke quod the kynge And the monke dranke a grete draught after toke the kynge the cuppe and the kyng also dranke a grete draught set downe the cup. The monke anone ryght went in to the farmery and there dyed anone on whose soule god haue mercy Amen And .v. monkes synge for his soule specyally and shall whyles the abbey standeth The kyng arose vp anone full euyl at ease and commaūded to remeue the table and asked after the monke And men tolde hym that he was deed and that his wombe was broken in sonder Whan the kynge herde this he cōmaūded to trusse but it was all for nought for his bely began to swell of the drynke that he had dronken and within two dayes he dyed on the morowe after saynt Lukes daye And this kynge Iohn had many fayre chyldren of his body begoten that is to saye Henry his sone that was kynge after his fader Rycharde that was erle of Cornewayle Isabel that was empresse of Rome Elenour that was quene of Scotlonde And this kynge Iohn whan he had regned .xvij. yere and .v. monethes and .v. dayes he dyed in the castell of Newarke and his body was buryed at Worcetter ¶ Anno domini M CC. FRedericus the seconde was emperoure .xxxiij. yere This man was crowned of Honorius the pope agaynst Otto bycause y● he sholde fyght with hym the whiche he dyd expulsed hym And fyrst he nourysshed the chirche and after he spoyled it as a stepmoder Wherfore Honorius cursed hym all that were contrary to his opynyon the pope assoyled And the same sentence Gregorye the .ix. renewed And this same man put Henry his owne sone in prison and there murdred hym Wherfore whā this emperour another season was seke by another sone of his owne he was murdred in the tyme of Innocent the fourth ¶ Honorius the thyrde was pope after Innocent .x. yere confermed the ordre of freres prechours minours made certayne de●r●●alles ¶ Of kynge Henry the thyrde that was crowned at Glocestre ANd after this kynge Iohn regned his sone Henry was crowned at Glocestre whan he was .ix. yere olde on saynt Symons daye Iude of Swalo y● legate of Rome through coūseyle of all the grete lordes y● helde with kyng Iohn his fader that is to say the erle Radulfe of Chestre Wyllyam erle Marshall erle of Penbroke Willyam y● Brener erle of Feriers Serle y● manly baron and all the other grete lordes of Englonde helde with Lowys the kynges sone of Fraūce ¶ And anone after whā kyng Henry was crowned Swalo the legate helde his coūseyle at Brystow at saynt Martyns feest there were .xj. bysshops of Englonde of Wales and of other prelates of holy chirche a grete nombre and erles barons and many knyghtes of Englonde all those that were at that coūseyle sware feaute vnto Henry the kyng that was kyng Iohns sone ¶ And anone after y● legate enterdyted Wales bycause they helde with the brons of Englonde also all those that holpe or gaue counseyle to meue warre agaynst y● newe kyng he accursed them And at y● begȳnyng he put in y● sentence the kynges sone of Fraūce Lowys And neuertheles y● same Lowys wolde not spare for all that but went and toke the castell of Barcamstede also the castell of Herford And from y● day afterward y● barōs dyd there moche harme through out all Englōde pryncypally y● frensh men that were with Lowys wherfore the grete lordes all y● comyn people of Englond let dresse them for to dryue out of Englonde Lowys and his company But some of the barons of the frensshe men were gone to the cite of Nycholl toke y● towne helde it to kynge Lowys profyte But thyder came kynge Henryes men with a grete power that is to saye the erle Radulfe of Chestre and Wylliam erle Marshall and Wyllyam the brener erle of Feriers many other lordes with them gaue batayle vnto Lowys men And there was slayne the erle of Perches and Lowys men were there foule discomfyted And there was taken Serle erle of Wynchestre Vmfrey de Bowne erle of Herford Robert the sone of walter and many other that began warre agaynst the kynge there they were taken ladde vnto kyng Henry y● was kyng Iohns sone And whan the tydynges came to Lowys of y● discō fyture y● was the kynges sone of fraūce he remeued from thens and went vnto London and let shette fast the gates of the cyte And anone after kynge Henry sent to the burgeyses of London y● they sholde yelde them to hym the cite also and he wolde graunte to them all theyr fraunchyses that euer they were wont to haue before wold cōferme them by his grete newe chartre vnder his brode seale ¶ And in the same tyme a grete lorde that was called Eustace y● monke came out of Fraunce with a grete company of lordes wolde haue comen in to Englonde for to haue holpen Lowys the kynges sone of Fraūce But Hubert of Burgh and the .v. portes with .viii. shyppes tho mette with them in y● high see and assayled them egerly and ouercame them with strength and smote of the heed of Eustace the monke and toke also .x. grete lordes of fraūce put them in prison and slewe almoost all the men that came with them anone drowned the shyppes in the see ¶ How Lowys returned agayne in to Fraunce and of the confyrmacyon of kynge Iohans chartre WHan Lowys herde these tydyn ges he drad sore to be deed lost and let ordeyn speke bytwene the kyng Lowys by y● legate Swalo And through y● archebysshop of Caūterbury other grete lordes all y● prisoners on that one part on that other shold be delyuered go quyte Lowys hȳselfe sholde haue for his costes a. M. poūde of syluer sholde go out of Englonde and neuer come agayne therin And in this maner was the accorde made bytwene kynge Henry Lowys And than was Lowys assoyled of y● popes legate that was called Swalo of y● sentence that he was in the barons of Englonde also And after this kyng Henry Swalo y● legate Lowys went to Merton and there was y● peas cōfermed bytwene them ordeyned And after Lowys went fro thens to London toke his leue was brought with moche honour to y● see with y● archebysshop of Caunterbury with other bisshops erles barons so went Lowys in to Fraūce ¶ And afterwarde the kynge the archebysshop erles barōs assembled them at London at Mighelmas nexte folowynge helde there a grete parlyament there were
Wales syr Hugh spenser the sone on the other syde of the same ●yll the false pylled clerke mayster Robert Baldok there fast besydes them they were brought agayn in to Englonde as almyghty god wolde And the kyng hym selfe was put in safe kepyng in the castell of Kelynworth hym kepte syr Henry that was saynt Thomas broder of Lancastre And syr Hugh the fader came put hym in the quenes grace syr Edwarde her sone duke of Guy 〈…〉 But syr Hugh Spenser after the tyme y● he was taken he wolde neyther ete nor drynke for he wyst well he shold haue no mercy saue onely to be deed And the quene her coū seyle had ordeyned that he sholde haue ben done to deth at London but he was so feble for his moche fastynge y● he was nygh deed therfore it was ordeyned y● he shold haue his iudgement at Herford And at a place of y● toure his hode was taken frō his heed also frō Robert Bal dok that fals pylled clerke y● kynges chaū celer mē set vpō theyr hedes chaplets of sharpe nettyls two squyers blewe in theyr ere 's with two grete bugles hornes vpon the two prisouers that one myght here theyr blowynge more than a myle And one Symond of Redyng y● kynges marshall bare before them vpon a spere theyr armes reuersed in token that they sholde be vndone for euermore And on y● morowe was syr Hugh Spenser y● sone dampned to deth was drawen hanged heded his bowelles taken out of his body brent after that he was quartred his .iiij. quarters were sent to iiij townes of Englonde his heed sente to London brydge And this Symond for cause that he despysed quene Isabell he was drawen hanged on a stage made amyddes y● foresaid syr Hughs galowes And y● same daye a lytell frō thens was syr Iohn of Arundell byheded bycause he was one of syr Hugh Spenses counseylers And anone after was syr Hugh Spenser y● fader drawen hanged heded at Brystowe after hanged agayn by the armes with two stronge ropes the fourth day after he was hewen all to pe ces hoūdes ete hym And bycause the kyng had gyuen hym y● erledom of wyn chestre his heed was put vpon a spere sente thyder And the fals Baldok was sent to London there he dyed in prison amōge theues for men dyd hȳ no more reuerence than they wold do to a dogge And so dyed y● traytours of Englōd blissed be god And it was no wonder for through theyr coūseyle y● good erle Tho mas of Lācastre was done to deth all that helde with Thomas of Lancastre through the traytours were vndone all theyr heyres disheryted ¶ How kyng Edward was put downe and his dignite taken from hym ANd anone after as all this was done quene Isabell Edwarde her sone duke of Guyenne all the grete lordes of Englonde at one assent sente to kyng Edward to y● castell of Kenilworth where as he was in kepynge vnder the warde of syr Iohn Hachim that was y● bysihop of Ely of syr Iohn of Percy a baron for bycause that he sholde ordeyn his parlyament at a certayne place in Englond for to redresse and amende the estate of the realme And kyng Edward them answered sayd Lordes sayd he ye se full well how it is lo haue here my seale and I gyue you all my power for to ordeyne a parlyament where that ye wyll And than they toke theyr leue of hym came agayn to y● barons of Englonde And whan they had the kynges patent of this thynge they shewed it to the lordes And than was ordeyned that the parliament shold be at westmynster at the vtas of saynt Hylary And all the grete lordes of Englonde let ordeyne for them there agaynst that tyme that the parlyament sholde be At whiche daye that y● parlyament was the kyng wolde not come there for no maner thynge as he had set hymselfe assygned And neuerthelesse the barons sent vnto hym one tyme other And he swore by goddes soule that he wolde not come there one fote Wherfore it was ordeyned by all the grete Lordes of Englonde that he sholde no longer be kyng but be depo sed sayd they wolde crowne Edward his sone y● elder that was duke of Guyenne And sent tydynges vnto the kyng there as he was in warde vnder syr Iohn erle of Garen syr Iohn of Bothun that was bysshop of Ely syr Henry Percy a baron syr Willyam Trussell a knyght y● was with y● erle Thomas of Lancastre for to yeld vp theyr homages vnto hym for all them of Englonde And syr Wyllyam Trussell sayd these wordes Syr Edward bycause that ye haue betrayed your people of Englond haue vndone many grete lordes or Englond without ony cause ye shall be deposed now ye be withstande thanked be god And also bycause that ye wold not come to y● parliament as ye ordeyned at Westmynster as in your owne lettre patent is conteyned for to treate with your lyege men as a kyng sholde And therfore through all y● comyns assent of all the lordes of Englonde I tell vnto you these wordes Ye shall vnderstande syr that the barons of Englond at one assent wyll that ye be no more king of Englond but vtterly haue put you out of your ryalte for euermore And the bysshop of Ely than sayd to the kynge Syr Edwarde here I yelde vp feaute homage for all y● archebisshops bysshops of Englond for all y● clergy Than sayd syr Iohn erle of Garen Syr Edward I yelde vp here vnto you feau te and homage for me for all y● erles of Englōde And syr Henry Percy gaue vp also there his homage for him for all y● barons of Englonde And than sayd syr William Trussell I yelde vp now vnto you syr myn homage for me for all the knyghtes of Englonde for all them y● holde by sergeaūtry or by ony other maner thynge of you so y● from this day af terward ye shall not be claymed kynge nor for kynge be holden But from this tyme afterwarde ye shall be holden for a singuler man of all y● people And so they went thens to London where y● lordes of Englonde abode them syr Edward abode in prison i good kepyng And this was on the daye of y● cōuersyon of saynt Paule in the .xx. yere of his regne ¶ Of the prophery of Merlyn declared of kynge Edwarde the sone of kynge Edward the fyrst OF this kyng Edward prophecyed Merlin sayd y● there sholde come a gote out of Carre that shold haue hornes of syluer a berde as whyte as snowe and a droppe shold come out of his nosethrylles that sholde betoken moche harme honger dethe of people grece losse of his londe And that in y● begynnynge of his regne sholde be haūted
to them he made his cōplaynt of his sorowe of his disease And ofte tymes asked of his wardeyns what he hadde trespaced agaynst dame Isabell his wyfe syr Edward his sone y● was made newe kyng that they wold not visyte hym And thā answered one of his wardeyns sayd My worthy lorde dysplease you not y● I shall tell you the cause is for it is done them to vnderstande y● yf my lady your wyfe come ony thynge nye you that ye wolde her strangle slee also that ye wolde do to my lorde your sone y● same Than answered he with a symple chere Alas alas am not I in prison and all at your owne wyll now god it wote I neuer thought it now I wolde y● I were deed so wolde to god y● I were for than were all my sorowe passed It was not longe after y● the kyng through coūseyle of Roger Mortymer graūted y● warde kepynge of syr Edward his fader to syr Thomas Toiourney to y● foresayd syr Iohn Mautreuers through the kinges lettre put out holly y● foresayd syr Moryce of the warde of the kyng And they toke lad the kyng to y● castell of Corf ▪ y● whiche castel y● kyng hated as ony deth And they kept hym there tyll it came vn to saynt Mathewes day in September in the yere of grace M CCC .xxvii. that the foresayd syr Roger Mortimer sent y● maner of y● deth how in what wyse he shold be put to deth And anone as y● foresayd Thomas Iohn had seen y● 〈◊〉 cōmaūdement they made kynge Edwarde of Carnaruan good chere good solace as they might at y● souper and no thynge the kyng wyst of y● treason And whan tyme was for to go to bedde the kynge wente vnto his bedde laye and slepte fast And as the kyng laye slepte the traytoures false for sworne agaynst theyr homage feaute came pryuely in to y● kynges chambre theyr company with them layde an huge table vpon his wombe with men pressed helde fast down the foure corners of y● table on his body wherwith y● good man awoke and was wonders sore adrad to be deed there slayne turned his body tho vp so downe Than toke y● fals traytours tyraūtes an horne put it in to his foundement as depe as they myght toke a spyt of coper brēnynge put it through the horne in to his body and ofte tymes therwith thyrled his bowelles so they slewe theyr lord that nothynge was perceyued was buryed at Glocestre ¶ How kynge Edward spoused Philip the erles doughter of Henaud at Yorke ANd after Chrystmasse than next folowynge syr Iohn of Henaud brought with hym Philip his broders doughter that was erle of Henaud his nece in to Englond kyng Edward spoused her at Yorke with moche honour And syr Iohn of Bothum bisshop of Ely and syr William of Melton archebysshop of yorke sange the masse the sonday on the euen of the cōuersion of saint Paule in the yere of grace M CCC .xxvij. But bycause that the kynge was yonge and tender of age whan he was crowned full many wronges were done whyle that his fader lyued bycause that he byleued the coūseylers that were fals aboute hym to do otherwyse than reason wolde wherfore grete harme was done to the realme to the kyng all men directed it to the kynges dede it was not so almyghty god it knoweth Wherfore it was ordeyned at the kynges crownyng that the kyng for his tender age sholde be gouerned by .xij. of the gretest lordes of Englonde without whome no thynge shold be done that is to saye the archebysshop of Caūterbury the archebisshop of yorke the bisshop of wynchestre the bysshop of Herford the erle of Lancastre the erle Marshall the erle of Kent that were the kynges vncles the erle of Garen syr Thomas wake syr Henry Percy syr Olyuer of yngham Iohn of Roos barons All these were sworne truly for to coūseyle the kyng they shold answere euery yere in the parlyamēt of that that sholde be done in the tyme of theyr gouernall But the ordynaūce was soone vndone that was moche harme to all Englōde For the kyng all the lordes the shold gouerne hym were gouerned and ruled after the kȳges moder dame Isabell by syr Roger Mortimer And as they wolde all thynge was done bothe amonge hye lowe And they toke vnto them castels townes londes rentes in grete harme losse to the crowne of the kynges estate out of mesure ¶ How the peas was made bytwene the Englisshmen the Scottes and also of iustyfyenge of Troylebaston BYnge Edwarde at whytsontyde in the seconde yere of his regne through the coūseyle of his moder syr Roger Mortimer ordeyned a parlyamēt at Northamton And at that parlyamēt the kyng through theyr coūseyle none other of the londe within age graunted to be accorded with the Scottes in this maner That all the feautees and homages that the Scottes sholde do vnto the crowne of Englonde forgaue them for euer more by his chartre ensealed And forthermore an endenture was made of the Scottes vnto kynge Edwarde that was kyng Henryes sone whiche endenture they called ragman in the whiche were cōteyned al the homages feautees Fyrst of the kynge of Scotlonde of all the prelates erles barons of the realme of Scotlonde with theyr seales set theron and other chartres remembraunces that kynge Edwarde and his barons had of theyr right in the foresayd realme of Scotlond it was forgyuen them agaynst holy chirche And also with the blacke crosse of Scotlonde the whiche the good kynge Edwarde conquered in Scotlonde and brought it out of the abbey of Scone that is a full precyous relyke And also forthermore he relesed forgaue all the londes that the barons of Englonde had in Scotlonde by olde conquest ¶ And this peas for to be hold and last the Scottes were bounde vnto the kyng in .xxx. M. poūde of syluer to be payed within thre yere that is euery yere .x. M. poūde by euen porcyons And forthermore aboue all this they spake bytwene the partyes aboue sayd that Dauyd Dritonautier that was kynge Robert the Brus sone the fals tyraunt fals forsworne agaynst his othe that arose agaynst his lyege lorde the noble and good kyng Edward and falsly made him kyng of Scotlōde that was of the age of .v. yere And so through this cursed counseyle Dauid spoused at Barwyk dame Ione of the toure that was kynge Edwardes syster as the gest telleth vpon Mary Magdaleyns daye in the yere of grace M CCC and .xxviij. to grete harme empayrynge of all the kynges blode wherof that gentyll lady came alas the tyme for wonders moche was that fayre damoysell desparaged syth that she was maryed agaynst all the comyns assent of Englonde And fro the tyme that Brute had conquered
frende and your helpe for to take Mortimer all thynge left vpon peryll of lyfe lymme Than sayd Moūtagu syr my lord graūt mercy Than went forth the foresayd Moūtagu and came to the constable of the castell and told hym the kynges wyll And he answered sayd the kynges wyll shold be done in as moche as he myght and that he wolde not spare for no maner deth and so he swore and made his othe Than sayd syr Willyam of Mountagu to the constable in herynge of all them that were helpyng vnto the same quarell Now certes dere frende vs behoueth to werke and do by your aduyse for to take Mortymer syth that ye be keper of the castell haue the keys in your warde Syr sayd the constable ye shall vnderstande that the gates of the castell ben locked with the lockes that dame Isabell sente hyther and by nyght she hath the keys therof layeth them vnder the leuesell of the bedde tyll on the morowe and so ye may not come in to the castell by the gates in no maner of wyse but I knowe an aley that stretcheth out of the warde vnder the erth in to the foresayd castel that goth in to the west whiche aley dame Isabell the quene ne none of her men nor Mortymer ne none of his cōpany knoweth it not And so I shall lede you through the aley and so ye shall come in to the castel wtout espyenge of ony men that be your enemyes And the same nyght syr William Moūtagu all the lordes of his quarell the same constable also wente to hors them made semblaūt as it were for to go out of Mortimers syght But anone as Mortimer herde these tydynges he wende that they wold haue gone ouer see for fere of hym And anone he his company toke a coūseyle amonge them for to lette theyr passage sent lettres anone to the portes so that none of the grete lordes sholde go home to theyr own coūtrees but yf they were arested taken And amōge other thynges Willyam Eland constable of the foresayd castell priuely lad syr William of Moūtagu his company by the foresayd waye vnder the erth tyl they came in to the castel went vp in to the toure where as Mortymer was in But syr Hugh of Trompyngton theym escryed hydously sayd A traytours it is all for nought that ye be comē in to this castell ye shall dye yet an euyl deth euerychone And anone one of them that was in Mountagues cōpany by with a mace smote the same Hugh vpon the heed that the brayn brast out fell on the groūde so dyed he an euyll dethe Than toke they Mortymer as he armed hym at the toures dore whan he herde the noyse of them for drede And whan quene Isabell sawe the Mortymer was taken she made moche sotowe in hert and these wordes to them sayd Now fayr syrs I pray you that ye do no harme to his body a worthy knyght our welbeloued frende our dere cosyn Thā went they thens came brought Mortimer presented hym vnto kynge Edward And he cōmaunded to brynge hym in safe warde But anone as they that were consentyng vnto Mortimers doynge herde tell that he was taken they went and hydde them and p●●urly by nyght wente out of the towne eueryche in to his countree with an heuy herte mournyng chere and lyued vpon theyr londes as well as they myght And so that same yere that Mortymer was taken he had at his retynue .ix. score knyghtes without squyers and sergeauntes of armes and fote men And than was Mortymer ladde to London syr Symond of Bedford was ladde with hym and was taken to the constable of the toure to kepe But afterwarde was Mortymers lyf examyned at Westmynster before the kynge before all the grete lordes of Englonde for peryll that myght fall to the realme to enquyre also whiche were consentynge to syr Edwardes deth the kynges fader and also through whome the Scottes escaped fro Scanhope in to Scotlonde without the wyll of kyng Edward And also how that charter of Ragman was delyuered vnto the Scottes wherin the homages frautees of the lordes of Scotlonde were conteyned that the Scottes sholde do euer more vnto the Englysshe kynge for the realme of Scotlōde wherfore in his absence he was dampned to be draw●● hanged for his treason And this myschefe came to hym on saynt Andrewes euen in the yere of the incarnacyon of our lorde Iesu Chryst M CCC and rxx ¶ Now kyng Edward gate agayn vnto hym gracyously the homages f●au●●es of Scotlonde wherof he was put out through false coūseyle of quene Isabell his moder syr Roger Mortymer that was newly made erle of March● NOw haue ye herd how syr Iohn Bayloll in the tyme of peas was chosen to be kyng of Scotlonde bycause that he came of the eldest doughter of the erle Dauid of Huntyngton that was kyng Alysaunders broder of Scotlond that dyed without heyre of his body begoten And how this Iohn made his feaute and homage to kyng Edward Henryes sone the thyrde for his londes of Scotlonde And how he afterwarde wtsayd his homage through coūseyle of the Scottes in the yere of our lorde M CC .lxxiiij. and sent vnto the pope through a fals suggestion that he made his othe vnto the foresayd kyng Edward ouer his estate his wyl of the whiche othe the pope hym assoyled through his bulles to hȳ sent And anone as kyng Edward wyst therof he ordeyned anone his barons came to Barwyk conquered the towne at whiche conquest there were slayne .xxv. M. and vij C. and Bayloll that was kyng of Scotlonde came yelded hym to good kynge Edward the kyng afterward delyuered him out of the toure of London all the grete lordes with hym that tho were taken at Barwyk gaue them saufconduyte to go in to Scotlonde And the Scottes ●ith through theyr falsnes warred vpon the good kyng Edward And whan syr Iohn Bayloll kyng of Scotlonde sawe all this he went ouer see vnto Dunpier and lyued there vpon his londes as wel as he myght tyll that the Scottes wold amēde them of theyr mysoedes trespace ●ad with hȳ syr Edward his sone wherfore the Scottes in despyte of hym called hym syr Iohn Turnlabaerd for bycause that he wolde not offende ne trespace agaynst the good kyng Edward of Englonde And so he forsoke his realme of Scotlonde and set therof but lytel pryce And this syr Iohan dwelled longe tyme in Fraūce tyll that he dyed there And syr Edward his sone receyued his herytage dyd homage to the kyng of Fraūce for his londes of Dunpier And so it befell afterward that Edward that was Iohn Baylols sone had with hym a squyer of englōde that was borne in yorkshyre that was called Iohn of Barnaby this Edwarde Bayloll loued hym moche was nygh hym and full
was bytwene the two kynges the realme of Englonde And that tyme abode the Scottes on the other syde bycause that the Englysshmen sholde haue ben drowned ¶ This was the araye of the scottes how that they came in batayle agaynst the two kynges of Englōde of Scotlōde In the vaūt ward of Scotlonde were these lordes THe erle of Moryf Iames Frisell Symond Fryfel Walter stewarde Reynold Cheyn Patrik of Graham Iohn le graūt Iames of Cardoyll Patrik Parkeis Robert Caldecottes Philip of Melledrū Thomas Gilbert Rafe wyseman Adam Gurdon Iames Gramat Robert Boid Hugh Parke with xl knightes newe dubbed .vii. C. men of armes .iij. M. of comyns ¶ In the fyrst parte of the halfe batayle were these lordes the steward of Scotlonde the erle of Morye Iames his vncle Willyam Douglas Dauid of Lyndesey Mancolyn Flemyng Willyā of kethe Dūken Cāboke with .xxx. bachelers newe dubbed ¶ In the second parte of the batayle were these lordes Iames Steward of Colden Aleyn Steward Willyam Abbrehyn Willyā Moryce Iohn fitz Willyā Adam le mose Walter fitz Gilbert Iohn of Cerlton Robert walham with vij C. men of armes .xvij. M. comyns ¶ In the thyrde parte of the batayle of Scotlonde were these lordes the erle of Marrethe erle of Rof the erle of Straherne the erle of sotherlond William of Kyrkeley Iohn Cambron Gylbert of Hay Willyam of Rainsey Williā Prendegest Kyrstyn Harde Wyllyam Gurdon Arnold Garde Thomas Dolphyn with .xl. knyghtes new dubbed .ix. C. men of armes and .xv. M. of comyns ¶ In the fourth warde of the batayle of Scotlond were these lordes Archebald Douglas the erle of Leneuax Alysaunder le Brus the erle of Fif Iohn Cambell erle of Atheles Robert Lawether Willyam of Vipount Willyam of Lonstone Iohn de Labels Groos de Sherenlaw Iohn de Lyndesey Alysaūder de Gray Ingram de Vinfreuille Patrik de Pollesworth Dauyd de Wymes Mychell Scotte Willyam Landy Thomas de Boys Roger the Mortymer with .xx. bachelers newe dubbed .ix. C. men of armes and .xviij. M. iiij C. of comyns The erle of Dunbar keper of the castell of Barwik holpe the Scottes with .l. men of armes And syr Alysaunder of Seten keper of the foresayd towne of Barwyk with an C. men of armes also the comyns of the towne with iiij C. men of armes with them viij C. fote men ¶ The somme of the erles lordes aboue sayd amoūteth .lxvj. The somme of the bachelers newe dubbed amoūteth to C. .xl. The somme of men of armes amoūteth to .iij. M C. The somme of the comyns amoūteth to .liij. M. ij C. The somme totall of the people aboue sayd amounteth lvj M. vij C .xlv. And these .lxvj. grete lordes lad all the other grete lordes aboue sayd in .iiij. batayles as it is told before all on fote And kynge Edward of Englonde Edward Baylloll kyng of Scotlonde had wel apparayled theyr folke in iiij batayles for to fyght on fote agaynst the Scottes theyr enemyes And the Englysshe mynstrels blewe theyr trūpets theyr claryons hidously escryed the scottes And tho had euery englyssh batayle two wynges of pryce archers the whiche at the batayl shotte arowes so fast so sore that the Scottes myght not helpe them selfe they smote the scottes thousandes to the groūde they began for to flee fro the englysshmē to saue theyr lyues And whan y● scottysshe knaues sawe y● discōfyture the scottes fall fast to y● grounde they fast prycked theyr maysters horses with the spurres for to kepe them fro peryl set theyr maysters at no force And whan y● Englisshmen sawe y● they lepte on theyr horses fast pursued y● scottes and all y● abode they slewe downe ryght There men might se y● doughtynes of y● noble kyng Edward of his men how manly they pursued y● Scottes y● fled for drede And there men myght se many a scottisshman cast down to y● groūde deed theyr baners displayed hacked in to peces many a good habergeon of stele in the blode bath And many a tyme y● scottes were gadred in to companyes But euermore they were discōfited And so it befell as god wolde y● the Scottes had y● daye no more foyson ne myght agaynst the Englysshmen than .xx. shepe sholde haue agaynst .v. wolues And so were y● Scottes discōfited yet y● Scottes had well .v. men agaynst one Englysshman y● batayle was done on Ha●ydownhyll besyde y● towne of Barwyk at y● whiche batayle were slayne of y● Scottes .xxxv. M. vij C. and .xij. And of Englysshmen but onely .xiiij. and those were fotemen And this victory befell to y● Englisshmen on saynt Margaretes euen in y● yere of the incarnacyon of our lord Iesu Chryst M CCC .xxxij. And whyle this doynge lasted y● Englisshe pages toke the pylfre of the Scottes y● were slayn euery man myght take without ony chalengynge of ony man And so after this gracyous victory the kyng returned agayn vnto y● same syege of Barwik And whā they y● were besyeged sawe herde how kyng Edward had sped they yelded to hym y● towne with the castell on the morowe nexte after saynt Margaretes day And than the kynge ordeyned syr Edward Baylloll with other noble worthy men to be kepers and gouernours of Scotlonde in his absence and hymselfe returned agayne and came in to Englonde after this vyctory with moche ioye and worshyp ¶ And in the nexte yere folowyng that is for to saye in the yere of the incarnacyon of our lorde Iesu Chryst M CCC and .xxxiij. and of kynge Edwardes regne .vij. he went agayn in to Scotlonde in wynter tyme at whiche ●●age the castell of K 〈…〉 brygge in Scotlond for hym for his men that were with hym he recouered and had agaynst the Scottes all at his owne wyll ¶ And in that same yere syr Edwarde Baylloll kynge of Scotlonde helde his parlyament in Scotlonde with many noble lordes of Englonde that were at that same parlyament bycause of theyr londes and also lordshyppes that they had in the realme of Scotlonde and helde all of the same Edwarde Baylloll ¶ And in the viij yere of kynge Edwardes regne about the feest of saynt Iohn Baptyst 〈◊〉 Edward Baylloll the very true kyng of Scotlonde as by herytage and right lyne made his homage and feaute vnto kynge Edwarde of Englonde for the realme of Scotlōd at Newe castell vpon Tyne in the presence of many worthy lordes and also of the comyns bothe of the realme of Englōde and also of Scotlonde And anone after in the same yere kyng Edward of Englonde retryued of the duke of Britayn his homage for the erledome and lordshyp of ●ychemond ¶ And so folowyng in the. 〈◊〉 yere of his regne after Mighe●mas rode in to Scotlonde and there was fast by sayne Iohannes towne almoost all the wynter tyme so he helde his Chrystmasse at y● castell of Rokesburgh And in the same yere through out
kynges cōpany of Fraūce and many shyppes cogges were taken And so through goddes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he had there y● victory bare theus a gloryous ●heualry And in y● same yere about saynt Iames tyme wold y● gates of saynt Diners Roberte of A●theys 〈◊〉 men of ing●●de fla 〈…〉 egerly fought agaynst y● duke of Blitgoyn y● frensshe men at whiche batayle were slayne taken of the Frensshmen .xv. barons .lxxx. knyghtes shyppes barkes were takē vnto y● nōbre of CC. .xxx. The same yere y● kyng makyng abydyng vpon y● syege of Turney the erle of Henaud with englisshe archers made assaut vnto the towne of saynt Amand where as they slewe .l. knightes many other also destroyed the towne ¶ And in the .xvj. yere of his regne folowynge in y● wynter tyme the king dwelled styll vpon y● foresayd syege sent ofte tyme in to Englonde vnto his tresourer other purueyours for gold money that shold be sent to hym in his nede but his proctours messengers cursedly full slowly serued hym at his nede deceyued him on whose defaut laches the king toke trewse bytwene hym the kyng of Fraūce And thā kyng Edward full of sorowe shame in his hert withdrewe hym fro y● syege came in to Bry tayn there was so grete stryfe for vytayle that he lost many of his men whan he had done there that he came fore he dressed hym ouer see in to Englonde And as he sayled toward Englōde in y● hygh se● the most myshappes stormes tēpestes thonder lyghtnynge fell to hym in the see the whiche was sayd that it was done reysed through euyl spirytes made by sorcery nygromancy of them of fraūte Wherfore y● kynges hert was full of soro we anguysshe wellyng syghynge sayd vnto our lady ī this wyse O blyssed lady saynt Mary what is y● cause y● euer more goynge in to Fraūce all thynges wethers fall to me ioyful lyking as I wolde haue them but alway turnynge in to Englōde all thynges fall vn profitable very harmeful neuertheles he stopyng an 〈◊〉 of the s 〈…〉 worde came to thē 〈…〉 of 〈…〉 styght ¶ And the same yere y● kyng wolde his Chryst 〈…〉 e at M 〈…〉 s 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 word to y● Scottes 〈…〉 that he was tidy wold fyght with 〈◊〉 but the Scottes wold not ●hyde but fledde ouer y● scottysshe 〈…〉 them as 〈◊〉 as they myght And ●●che .xvij. yere of his regne about y● fe●● of y● cōue●syon of saynt Pauleking Edward whā he has ben in Scotlonde sawe that the Scottes were fled 〈◊〉 came agayn in to Englonde And a●ytel before ●ent was y● whiche tur neyment came al the yonge bachelary cheualty of Englonde ●●many other ●rles 〈◊〉 at the 〈◊〉 turneyment kyng Edward hymselfe was there present ¶ And in y● .xviij. yere of his regne at his parlyamīt holdē at Westmynster the auy●zeme of ●ester Edward y● thyrd made Edward his fyrst sone prynce of Wales ¶ And in y● .xix. yere of his regne and●● afterī Ia 〈…〉 y before lent king Edward let make ful noble Iustes grete feestes in the place of his byrth at Wyndsore that these was neuer none suche seen there afore At whiche feest royalte were two kinges two quenes the prynce of Wales the duke of Eornewayle .x. erles .ix. coūtesses barous and many burgeyses the whiche might not lyghtly be nombred and of dyuers londes beyonde the see were many straungers And at the same tyme whan the Iustes were done kyng Edward made a grete souyer in the whiche he ordeyned began his roūde table ordeyned and stedfasted the daye of the rounde cable to be holden there at wyndsore in the whytsonweke euer more yerely And in this tyme Englysshnten so moche haunted and cleued to the woodnes foly of the straūgers that frō tyme of comynge of y● Hen 〈…〉 es .xviij. yere passed they ordeyned chaūged them euery yere dyuers shappes disguisynges of clothȳg oflonge large wyde clothes destitute deserte frō all olde honeste good vsage And an othertyme short clothes strayt wasted iagged kyt on euery syde slatered botoned with sleues tapytes of surcotes hodes ouer longe ouer moche hangyng that yf I the sothe shall saye they were more lyke to turmētours de uyls in theyr clothing shoynge other araye than to men And y● women more nycely yet passed the men in araye curiouslyer for they were so strayt clothed that they let hange foxe tayles sewed by uethe wtin theyr clothes for to hele hide theyr arses the whiche disguisynges pryde perauenture afterwarde brought forth raused many myshappes myschefe in y● realme of Englōde ¶ The .xx. yere of kyng Edward he went ouer in to Brytayn Gascoyn in whose company went y● erle of warwyk the erle of Suffolk the erle of Huntyngton the erle of Arundell many other lordes comyn people in a grete multytude with a grete nauy of CC. and .xl. shyppes anone after mydsomer for to auenge hȳ of many wronges harmes to hym done by Phylyp of Valoys kynge of Fraunce agaynst y● trewse before hande graunted the whiche trewse he falsly and vntruly by cauellacyons losed disquatte ¶ How kynge Edwarde sayled in to Normādy arryued at Hogges with a grete hoost IN the .xxi. yere of his regne kyng Edward through coūseyle of all y● grete lordes of Englonde called gadred togyder in his parlyamēt at Westmynster before eester ordeyned hȳ for to passe ouer y● see agayn for to disease destrouble the rebelles of Fraūce And whā his nauy was come togyder made redy he went with a grete hoost the .xij. daye of Iuly sailed in to Normandy arryued at Hogges And whan he had rested hym there .vj. days for bycause of trauayling of the see for to haue out all his men with al theyr necessaries out of theyr shyppes he went towarde Cadomū brennynge wastynge destroyenge all y● townes that he foūde in his waye And the .xxvj. day of Iuly at y● brydge of Cadony manly nobly strengthed defended with Normans he had there a stronge batayle a longe durynge through whiche a grete multytude of people were slayne And there were taken of prisoners the erle of Ewe the lord Tankeruyll and an C. of other knightes men of armes vj C. fote men nōbred the towne that subbarbes vnto y● bare wall of all thynge that they myght bere cary out was robbed despoyled After y● king passed forth by the coūtre about the brede of .xx. myle be wasted all maner thynge that he foūde Whan Philip of Valois perceyued this all though he were fast by hym with a stronge hoost yet he wold not come nye hym but brake all the brydges beyonde the water of Seyn fro Roen to Parys
from the moneth of Marche to the moneth of July there fel no rayne on the erth wherfore all fruytes sedes herbes for y● moost part were lost in defaute wherfore came so grete dysease of men beestes derth of vitayles in englonde so y● this londe y● euer afore had bē plenteous had nede y● tyme to seke vitayles refresshyng at other out yles coūtrees ¶ And in y● .xxix. yere of kyng Edward it was accorded graūted sworne bytwene the kyng of Fraūce kyng Edward of Englōde y● he shold haue agayn all his lōdes lordshyps y● longed to the duchy of Guyen of olde tyme y● whiche had ben wtdrawen and wrong fully occupyed by diuers kynges of Fraūce before hand to haue to holde to kȳg Edward to his heyres successours for euermo re frely peasybly in good qu●ete vpon this couenaūt that the kyng of Englōde sholde leue of relese all his ryght day me that he had claymed of y● kingdom of Fraunce of the tytell y● he toke therof vpon whiche speche and couenaūtes is was sent to the courte of Rome on bothesydes of y● kynges that y● foresayd couenaūt sholde be embulled but god erdeyned better for y● kynges worshyp of Englonde for what through fraude deceyt of y● frensshmē what through lettyng of y● pope of y● court of Rome y● foresayd couenaūtes were disquat lefte of And in the same yere y● kynge reuoked by his wyse and dyscrete coūseyle the staple of wolles out of Flaūdres in to Englōde with al y● libertees fraūchises free customes that longed therto ordeyned it in Englōde in dyuers places that is to saye at Westminster Caūterbury Chichestre Brystow Lyncolne Null With all the foresayd thynges y● longe therto And y● this thȳge y● shold thus be done y● kyng swore hȳselfe therto prynce Edward his sone with other many grete witnesses y● there were p̄sent ¶ And y● .xxx. yete of his regne anone after whytsontyde in y● parlyament ordeyned at Westmynster it was tolde certifyed to y● kyng y● Philip that helde the kyngdom of Fraūce was deed that John his sone was crowned king that this John had gyuē karoll his sone y● duchy of Guyen of y● whiche thȳge whan kyng Edward wyst therof he had grete indignacion to hym was wonders wroth strongly meued And therfore afore al y● worthy lordes y● were there assembled at y● parliamēt he called Edward his sone vnto hym to whom y● duchy of Guyen by right herytage shold longe to gaue it hȳ there byddynge strengthyng hym y● he sholde ordeyn hȳ for to defend hym auenge hym on his enemyes saue maynteyn his ryght And afterward kyng Edward hymselfe his eldest sone Edward went to diuers places sayntes in Englond on pylgrymage for to haue y● more helpe grace of god of his sayntes And y● seconde kae of July whan all thynge was redy to y● viage batayl al his retynue power assembled his nauy also redy he toke with hym y● erle of Warwyk the erle of Suffolk the erle of Salysbury y● erle of Oxford and a. M. men of armes as many archers on y● Natiuite of our lady toke theyr shyppes at Plommouth began to sayle And whan he was arry ued in Guyen he was there worshypfully receyued of the moost noble men lordes of y● coūtre And anone after kyng Edward toke with him his two sones y● is to saye syr Leonell erle of Vlton and syr John his broder erle of Rychemonde syr Henry duke of Lancastre with many erles lordes men of armes two M. archers sayled towarde Fraūce rested hym a whyle at Calays afterwarde the kyng went with his folke afore said with other soudyours of beyonde the see that there abode y● kynges comynge the seconde day of Nouember toke his iourney toward kynge John of Fraūce there as he had trowed to haue founde hym fast by Ddomarū as his lettres couenaūt made mencyon that he wolde abyde hym there with his hoost And whākyng John of Fraūce herd tell of the comynge of y● kyng of Englonde he went away with his men caryage cowardly shamefully fleynge wastynge all vytayles y● englysshmē shold not haue ther of Whan kynge Edward herde tell y● he fled he pursued hym with all his hoost tyll Hedyn than he beholdynge y● scarsete wantynge of vitayles also y● cowardyse of the kynge of Fraūce he returned agayn wastynge all the coūtree ¶ And whyle all these thynges were a doynge the Scottes pryucly by night toke the towne of Barwyck sleynge them that with stode them no man els but blyssed be god the castell was saued kepte by englysshmen y● were therin Whan y● kyng wyst of al this he returned agayn in to Englōd as wroth as he myght be wherfore in y● parlyament at Westmynster was graūted to the kynge of euery sacke of wolle .l. shyllynges durynge the terme of .vi. yere y● he myght y● myghte lyer fyght defende the realme agaynst the Scottes other mysdoers And so whan all thynges were redy the kynge hasted hym towarde the syege ¶ How kynge Edwarde was crowned kyng of Scotlōde how prȳce Edward toke y● kynge of Fraūce syr Philyp his yonger sone at the batayle of Poytiers ANd in the .xxxi. yere of his regne the .xiii. daye Janyuer the king beynge in the castell of Barwyk with a fewe men but he hauynge there fast by a grete hoost and a goodly the towne was yelden vnto hym without ony maner defence of 〈…〉 an the kyng of Scotlande y● is to say syr Iohn Ba● loll cosydecynge how y● go● dyd many me●uayles gracyous thynges for kyng Edward at his own wyll fro day to day he toke gaue vp y● realme of Scotlond at kilburgh in the kynges handes of Englond vnder his paten● lettres there madt And anone after king Edward in presence of all y● prelates worthy men y● were there letcrowne by kyng of Scotlond Whan all thyges were done ordeyned mȳ coūire at his wyll he returned agayn in to Englonde with a grete worshyp And whyle this v●age was a doynge in Scottonde syr Edward prȳce of wales as a man enspiced of god was in Guyen in y● cite of Burdeux tretyng speking of y● chalenge of y● kynges right of Englōde y● he had to y● realme of Fraūce that he wold be auestged with stronge hande y● prelates peres mighty men of y● coūtree cōsented well to hym Than syr Edward y● prynce with a grete h 〈…〉 gadred to hȳ the .vj. daye of Jui y● went from Burdeux goynge trauaylyng by many dyuers coūtrees he ●oke many prysoners moo than .vj. thosande men of armes by y● coūtre as he went toke the towne of Remorant in Saloygne and desyeged the castell vj dayes at
knightes squyers And these Iustes and turneyment were holden at Londō in smyth●elde of all maner of straūgers of what londe or ceūtre that euer they were thyder they were ryght welcome to them to all other was holden open housholde grete feest also grete gyftes were gyuen to al maner of straungers And of y● kynges syde were al of one sute theyr co●●s theyr armure sheldes hors trappures and all was whyte hertes with crownes aboute theyr neckes chaynes of gold hāgyng thervpon the crowne hangynge lowe before the hartes body the whiche hart was y● kynges lyueray y● he gaue to lordes ladyes knyghtes squyers for to knowe his housholde from other people And in this feest came to y● Iustes .xxiiij. ladyes ledde .xxiiij. lordes of the garter with chaynes of gold all y● same sutes of hartes as it is before sayd frō y● toure on horsbacke through the cite of London in to smythfelde where as y● iustes shold be holdē And this feest iustes was holden generally for all those y● wolde come thyder of what lōde or nacyon that euer they were And this was holdē duryng xxiiij dayes of y● kynges costes these xxiiij lordes to answere al maner people that wolde come thyder And thyder came the erle of saynt Paule of Fraunce many other worthy knightes with hym of dyuerse partyes full worthely arayed And out of Hollande Henaud came the lorde Ostreuaunt y● was the dukes sone of Holland many other worthy knightes with hym of Holland full well arayed And whā this feest iusting was ended the kynge thanked these straūgers and gaue them many ryche gyftes And thā they toke theyr leue of y● kyng of other lordes ladyes went home agayn in to theyr owne coūtrees with grete loue moche thanke ¶ And in y● .xiij. yere of kyng Rychardes regne there was a batayle done in y● kynges palays at westmȳstre bytwene a squyer of Nauerne y● was with kyng Rychard another squyer y● was called Iohn walshe for poyntes of treason y● this Nauerne put vpō this walsh man But this Nauerne was ouercomē yelded hym creaunt to his aduersary anone he was despoyled of his armure drawen out of the palays to Tyburne and there was hanged for his falsnes ¶ And in y● .xiiij. yere of kyng Richardes regne syr Iohn of Gaunt duke of Lancastre went ouer see into Spayne for to chalenge his ryght y● he had by his wyues tytell vnto y● crowne of Spayne with a grete hoost of people he had with hym y● duchesse his wyfe his thre doughters in to Spayne there they were a grete whyle And at y● last y● kyng of Spayne began for to treate with y● duke of Lancastre and they were accorded togyder through bothe theyr counseyles in this maner that the kyng of Spayne sholde wedde the dukes doughter that was y● ryght heyre of Spayne he shold gyue vnto the duke golde syluer y● were cast in to grete wedges many other iewels as moche as .viij. charyottes myght cary And euery yere after during y● dukes lyf the duchesse his wyfe .x. M. marke of golde of whiche golde the auenture charges sholde be to them of Spayne yerely brynge to Bayon to the dukes assygnes by surete made And also y● duke maryed another of his doughters to the kynge of Portyngale y● same tyme. And whan he had done thus he came home agayn into Englonde y● good lady his wyfe also but many worthy men dyed of the flix ¶ In the .xv. yere of kyng Rychardes regne he helde his Christmasse in y● manoyr of wodstok there y● erle of Penbroke a yonge lorde tender of age wolde lerne to Iust with a knyght y● was called syr Iohn of saynt Iohn rode to gyder in y● parke of wodstok And there this worthy erle of Pēbroke was slayne with y● other knyghtes spere as he cast it from hym whan they had coupled thus this good erle made there his ende and therfore the kyng the quene made moche sorowe for his deth ¶ And in the xvj yere of king Richardes regne Iohn Hende beynge y● tyme Mayre of Londō and Iohn Walworth Henry Vanner beynge sheryues of London that same tyme a bakers mā bare a basket of horsbrede into Fletestrete towarde an hostry and there came a yonge man of the bysshops of Salysbury that was called Romayn he toke a hors lofe out of y● basket of y● bakers he asked hym why he dyd so And this Romayn turned agayn brake the bakers heed neyghbours came out wolde haue arested this Romayn he brake from them fledde to his lordes place and the cōstable wolde haue had hym out but y● bysshops men shette fast the gates kepte the place y● no man myght entre And than moche more people gadred thyder sayd that they wold haue hȳ out or els they wold brenne vp y● place all that were therin And thā came the Mayre sheryues with moche other people cessed y● malice of y● comyns made euery man to go home to theyr houses kepe y● peas And this Romayns lorde y● bysshop of Salysbury mayster Iohn Waltham that at y● tyme was tresourer of Englonde went to syr Thomas Arundel archebysshop of Caūterbury chaūceler of Englond there the bysshop made his cōplaynt vnto the chaunceler vpon the people of the cite of Londō And than these two bysshops of grete malice vengeaūce came vnto the kynge at Wyndsore made a grete complaynt vpō the Mayre sheryues And anone all y● cite afterward came before y● kyng his coūseyle they cast vnto the cite a greuous hert wonders grete malyce And anone sodeynly the kynge sent for y● Mayre of Londō the sheryues they came to hȳ in y● castell of Wyndsore And the kyng rebuked the Mayre sheryues ful foule for the offence y● they had done agaynst hym his offycers in his chambre at Londō wherfore he deposed put out the Mayre bothe sheriues this was done .xiiij. dayes before y● feest of saynt Iohn baptyst And than y● kyng called to hym a knyght that was called syr Edward Dalingrigge made hym wardeyn gouernour of y● cite chambre of London ouer all his people therin And so he kepte that offyce but foure wekes bycause that he was so gentyll tendre to the citezyns of London wherfore the kynge deposed hym made syr Bawdewyn Radyngton knyght y● was Controller of the kynges houshold wardeyn gouernour of his chambre and of his people therin and chose to hym two worthy men of the cite to be sheryues with hym to gouerne kepe y● kynges lawes in the cite that one was called Gylbert Mawfelde y● other Thomas Newenton sheryues And than the Mar 〈…〉 two sheryues all y● aldermen wall 〈◊〉 worthy
Wyllyam Porter knyght with all theyr retynue before the port of say●● Hyl●ry And than was the erle of Mor●●●n with all his retynue l●dged in the abbey of saynt ●ather●●s And the ●rle of ●alys●●ry with his retynue laye on that other syde of saynt ●atherynes And syr Iohn Gray knyght was lodged at the abbey that is called le mo●n● d● saynt My●h●l And syr Philip 〈◊〉 knyght the kynges tresourer was lodged bytwene the water of ●eyn● and the abbey and kepte the warde vnder the hyll And the baron of Carowe was lodged vnder the wat●r syde for to kepe the passage And Ien●●● the squyer laye nexte hym on the water syde and these two squyers kepte ma●ly the water of ●●yne and often tymes fought with theyr enemyes And on that other syde of ●●yne laye the ●rle of Huntyngdon 〈◊〉 mayster 〈◊〉 the erles ●●ne of West 〈…〉 erlonde syr Gylbert 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Kent syr Rychard erle of Arundell the lorde Feryers with theyr retynue before the porte du pount eche of these lordes had stronge ordynaunce and the kynge dyd make at Poūt de larche ouer the water of Seyne a stronge a myghty chayne of yren put it through grete pyles fast pyght in the grounde that went ouer the ryuer of Seyne that no vessell myght passe in no wyse about that cheyne the kyng let make a brydge ouer the water of Seyne that men and hors all other catyage myght go to fro at all tymes whan nede were And than came y● erle of warwik had goten Dounfrout to kyng Henry of Englonde And anone y● kynge sent the erle of War wyk to Cawdebecke to besyeg●it And whan he came before the towne he sent his herawdes to the capytayne hadde hym yelde vp the towne vpon payne of deth and anone he layde his syege And the capytayne besought the erle that he myght come to his presence and it pleased hym and speke with hym And so y● good erle graūted hym for to come And than he came out foure other burgeyses came with hym entreated so with this erle that this same towne was vnder composicyon to do as y● e●te of Boen dyd And the erle graunted consented therto vpon this condicyon that y● kynges nauy of Englonde with his ordynaūce myght passe vp by them in safet● without ony maner of lette or dysturbaunce and to his composicyon they set to theyr seales and the shyppes passed vp by them in safete and came before the cite of Boen vnto an hondred shyppes there they cast theyr ankers and than this cite was vesyeged bothe by londe 〈◊〉 by water And whan all this was done and the shyppes comen vp than came y● 〈◊〉 of warwyk agayne to the kynge 〈◊〉 hym ●y●●ene the abbey of saynt Kathet y●s the kyng tyll that the abbey entreated so was the kyng And than he 〈…〉 lodged hym before the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 uylle than was the erle of 〈…〉 ry rōma●ded by the kyng 〈…〉 redy to ryde but there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tydynges made hym to abyde so he returned agayne lodged hym besyde the erle of Huntyngdon tyll that the syege was ended ▪ And than came the duke of Glocestre the kynges brother from the syege of Shyr●ou●gh y● whiche he had wonne goten and stuffed agayn to the kynges beh 〈…〉 profyte vnto y● 〈◊〉 of Englonde And whan he was comen to the kynge before 〈◊〉 ▪ as one he lodged with grete ordynaūce before y● porte saynt Hylary 〈◊〉 the towne and his enemyes than our other lay● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈…〉 es of lengthe within 〈◊〉 of quarell with hym laye y● 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 the lorde of 〈◊〉 with all theyr retynue strange ordy 〈…〉 〈◊〉 proudly 〈…〉 theyr enemyes euer 〈◊〉 they yssued out of the ●ite And than came the pryour of Kylmayn of 〈◊〉 the see to y● kyng with a fayre ●●yny of men of armes af ter theyr own 〈◊〉 guyse to y● no●br● of ▪ xv C. 〈…〉 y● kyng welcomed them made them good chere ¶ And than 〈…〉 the kynge that 〈…〉 the Dolphyn 〈…〉 of 〈…〉 yn wolde come 〈…〉 with a stronge 〈…〉 cyons 〈…〉 entre on y● 〈◊〉 syde of y● 〈◊〉 bycause that there 〈◊〉 y● 〈…〉 〈◊〉 playn 〈◊〉 therfore y● kyng assigned the pryour of Kylmay● with his 〈◊〉 lodged hym on y● north syde of y● hoost for to stop theyr passage was 〈◊〉 y● foreth of Lyons of this ordinaūce they were 〈…〉 go to y● see y● 〈…〉 his ●●uy ne 〈◊〉 his londe 〈◊〉 party for 〈…〉 his vsage 〈…〉 y● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his 〈…〉 to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 y● see 〈◊〉 y● see co 〈…〉 y● no mane● of enemy 〈◊〉 route vpon y● see And anone y● kyng 〈◊〉 his 〈◊〉 to y● 〈◊〉 pytayn of 〈◊〉 charged hym to delyuer hym his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his towne or 〈◊〉 he wolde neyther leue 〈◊〉 thylde alyue And anone y● capytay● 〈…〉 burgeyses of the towne brought y●●●ys vnto the kyng besought 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And the kynge delyuered the 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 Iohn Kekeley made hym capytayn 〈…〉 ded hym to put out all y● Fren 〈…〉 men bothe of the castell of ●he towne 〈◊〉 there besyde was the castell of Lo 〈◊〉 ●hyder the kyng sent y● 〈◊〉 ma● 〈◊〉 with a f●yre company 〈◊〉 y● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was 〈…〉 brought 〈…〉 them to the kyng 〈◊〉 the kyng 〈…〉 agayn 〈…〉 y● 〈◊〉 of Louers of all y● longe 〈…〉 〈◊〉 ged hym to 〈◊〉 all the F 〈…〉 men And than y● kynge helde 〈◊〉 his waye to Cane that was a stronge downe an● a ●●yre 〈…〉 he sent his 〈◊〉 to y● capytayn 〈◊〉 ged hym 〈…〉 y● 〈…〉 his 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 he wolde gete th 〈…〉 strength of hande And they 〈…〉 〈…〉 hym ▪ 〈…〉 counseyle 〈◊〉 the to 〈◊〉 all about And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 duke of 〈◊〉 was entred in to the towne slewe downe ryght 〈◊〉 he came to y● kyng spared neyther man ne chylde euer they cryed a Clatente a Clatence and saynt George And there was d●●d on the walles on y● kynges syde a worthy man that was called Springes the whiche y● kyng 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be butyed in y● abbey of Cane fast William cōquerour on whose soule god haue mercy amē And than y● kyng came in to the towne with his broder the duke of Clarete and many other worthy lordes with moche solempuite myrthe And than the kyng cōmaūded y● capytayn to delyuer h● his castell And he besought the kyng to gyue hym .xiiij. dayes of 〈◊〉 spyte yf ony restowe wolde come 〈◊〉 yf none wold come to delyuer hym y● keys the castell at his cōmaundement And vnder this compo 〈…〉 was y● towne the castell of Baycus with other townes fortresses villages vnto the nombre of ●iiij Vpon y●●yll before y● castell of Cane our kynge ●yght all his 〈◊〉 y● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●owne as
he sayd rather the cōtrary sholde be done than so as they d●●r●ed Wherfore there arose a grete altercacyon in the mater For some sayd one waye some another coude not accorde vnto this daye for that one partye sayd the the concyle was aboue the pope an other partye sayd the cōtrary the the pope was aboue the concyle but they lefte it vndetermyned therfore god must dyspose for the best ¶ Albert was emperour after Sygysmonde one yere This Albert was duke of Austre neuewe to Sygysmonde therfore he was kynge of ●●em and of Vngry for his doughter for other heyre he left none This man was emperour of Almayne but anone he was poysoned dyed and he was in all thynges a vertuous man that all men said he was a president to all kynges ¶ Fredericus y● thyrde was emperour after hym This Frederyk was duke of Osteryke chosen Emperour of Almayne but it was longe or he was crowned of the pope for diuision At the last there was made an vnite he was crowned with grete honour of the pope in the cite was a peasy ble man a quyete of synguler pit● he hated not the clergye he wedded the kȳges doughter of Portyngale in his tyme whyles that he regned he made a grete cōuocacyon of prynces in Ra●sp●na for the incours of the Turkes shewed vnto them that now within this .xx. yere chrystēdome was made lesse ij C. myle he warned them that they sholde be redy to resyst hym And the imperyall cite of Cōstantynople was taken the same tyme of y● mis●yleuynge Turkes betrayed by a Ianuens whome for his labour the Turke made a kyng as he ꝓmysed b● the fourth day he called hym dyd d● hange hȳ for his deceyt to his mayster And there was grete sorowe wepyng amonge the chrysten people for the losse of that noble cite for many a christen man was slayne innumerable were sold the emperour was slayne for enuy the Turke caused his heed to be smytten of whā he was deed almoost al the fayth in the lōde of greke fayled ¶ Nycolas the .v. a Ia nuens was pope after Felix .viij. yere This Nycolas was chosen at Rome in the place of Eugeny yet y● strife henge styll a lytell a lytel they obeyed hym And al men meruayled that a man of so poore a nacyon shold obtayne agaynst y● duke of Sauoye the whiche was cosyn alyed almoost to all the prynces of chry●●endome euerychdue left hym Than in the yere after there was a peas made Felix resygned for it pleased our lorde his name to be gloryfyed by an obiect of the worlde as was y● Ianuens in comparyson to the duke the pope This Nycolas was a mayster in diuinite and an actyfe man a ryche man in conceytes and many thynges that were fallen he buylded agayn all y● walles of Rome he renewed for drede of the Turke And there was a verse made of this vnite publysshed in the cite ●ux fud sit mun dot cessit Felix Nicolao And that in the yere of our lorde M CCCC .xlix. The yere of grace with a grete deuocyō was confermed innumerable people went to the apostles setes ¶ How kynge Henry the syxth regned beynge a chylde not one yere of age and of the batayle of Vernoyle in Perche AFter king Henry y● fyfth regned Henry his sone but a childe and not fully one yere of age whose regne began the fyrst daye of September in y● yere of our lord M cccc .xxij. This kyng beynge in his cradell was moche doubted drad bycause of the grete conquest of his fader also the wysdome guydyng of his vncles the duke of Bedford and the duke of Glocestre ¶ This yere the .xxi. daye of October dyed Charles the kynge of Fraūce lyeth buryed at saynt Denys And than was y● duke of Bedford made regent of Fraūce And y● duke of Glocestre was made protectour defendour of Englonde ¶ And y● fyrst daye of Marche after was syr William Tayllour preest degraded of his preesthode on y● morowe after he was brent in smythfelde for heresye ¶ This yere syr Iames Stewarde kynge of scottes maryed dame Iane the duchesse dough te● of Clayence whiche 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by he● fyrst hus 〈…〉 the erle 〈…〉 a● saynt Mary 〈…〉 yere the .xvij. da●e 〈…〉 of ●●rnoyle 〈…〉 of Bedford regent of 〈◊〉 the duke of ●Alaunson whiche was a grete batayle The duke of 〈…〉 his ▪ syde the erle of 〈…〉 the lorde Talbot all the power y● they coude ma 〈…〉 kepte And also many 〈…〉 with moche people of th 〈…〉 duke 〈…〉 yns And on th 〈…〉 was the duke of Alaūson the duke of 〈…〉 the erle of Douglas 〈…〉 ha● with many lordes of Fraūce a grete company of scottes armynackes And than y● erle Douglas called y● duke of Bedforde in scorne Iohn with the leden swerde And he sente hym worde agayne y● he sholde fynde y● daye y● his swerde was of style And so y●●●yned on bothe sydes fought 〈…〉 me y● no man wyst who sholde haue y● better a grete whyle but at y● last as god wold y● victory fell vnto y● englysshe party for there were slayne the erle Douglas whiche a lyteil before was made duke of Turō y● erle of Bou ghā y● erle of Almarre y● erle of Tounar the erle of Vaūtedor y● vycoūte of Ner bonne whiche was one of them y● slewe duke Iohn of Burgoyn knelyng before the Dolphyn many m●● vnto y● nombre of .x. M. moo And there was takē prysoners y● duke of Alaūson and many other lordes gentylle● of Fraūce but scottes y● daye were slayne downe right the substaūce of them all ¶ The thyrde yere of kynge Henry the syxth the duke of Glocestre maryed the duchesse of Hollande and went ouer see with her in to Henaud for to take possessyon of his wy ues enherytaūce where he was honou rably receyued and taken for lord of the londe But soone after he was fayne to returne home agayne in to Englonde lefte his wyfe all his tresour y● he had brought with hym in a town that is called Mouns in Henaud whiche promysed for to be true to hym Notwithstādyng they delyuered the lady vnto y● duke of Burgoyn whiche sent her to Gaunt from thens she escaped in a mānes clothȳge came in to zelande to a towne of her owne called Sirixze frō thens she wente to a towne in Hollande called the Gowe there she was stronge ynough and withstode y● foresayd duke of Burgoyne ¶ And soone after y● duke of Glocestre sent ouer see in to zelande the lord Fitz water with certayn men of warre and archers for to helpe socour y● foresayd duchesse of Hollāde whiche londed at a place in zelande called Brewers hauen where the lordes of y● coūtree
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●or des were 〈◊〉 at saynt 〈◊〉 wh 〈…〉 fore was alway a grutchy●ge ●r●th had by the heyres of them that wh 〈…〉 slayn agaynst the duke of yorke the r●●e of Warwycke and the 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 ry wherfore the kynge by the 〈◊〉 of his coūseyle sente for them to London to whiche place the duke of Yorke came the .xxvj. daye of Ianuary with .iiii. C. men lodged hȳ at Baynardes castell in his owne place And the .xv. daye of Ianuary came the erle of Salisbury with v C. men was lodged in therber his owne place And than came the duke of Excestre of Somerset wt. viij C. men laye wtout temple barre And the erle of Northumberlond the lorde Egremond and the lorde Clifford with .xv. C. men and lodged wtout the towne ¶ And the Mayre that tyme Geffray Boloyne kepte grete watche with the comyns of the cite rode aboute the cite by Holborne Flete strete with .v. M. men well arayed armed for to kepe the peas ¶ And the .xiiij. daye of February the erle of Warwyk came to London frō Calays well beseen worshypfully with vj C. men in reed Iackettes broddred with a ragged staffe behynde before and was lodged at the gray freres ¶ And the .xvij. daye of Marche the kyng the quene came to London And there was a cōcorde a peas made amonge these lordes they were set in peas And on our ladyes day in Marche in the yere of our lorde M cccc .lviij. the kyng the quene all these lordes went on processyon at Paules in London and anone after the kyng the lordes departed ¶ And ī this yere was a grete fraye in Flete strete bytwene men of courte men of the same strete In whiche fraye the quenes atturney was slayne ¶ How the kynges housholde made a fraye agaynst the erle of Warwyk and of the iourney at Bloreheth ALso this same yere as the erle of Warwyck was at counseyle at Westmynster all the kynges housholde meyny gadred them togyder for to haue slayne the erle but by the helpe of god his frendes he recouered his barge and escaped theyr euyll enterpryse how well the cokes came rennynge out with spyttes and pestels agaynst hym And the same daye he rode toward Warwyk soone after he gate hym a cōmyssyon wente ouer see to Calays ¶ Soone after this the erle of Salysbury comynge to London was encoūtred at Blor●heth with the lord Awdley moche other people ord●y ned for to destroye hym But he hauyn● knowlege that he sholde be mette with 〈◊〉 was accompanyed with his two sones syr Thomas syr Iohn Neuyll a grete 〈◊〉 shyp of good men And so they fought to gyder where the erle of Salysbury wa● the felde the lorde Awdley was 〈◊〉 many gentylmen of Chessh 〈…〉 〈◊〉 moche people hu●te And the erles two sones were hurte goynge homeward afterward they were taken had to Ch 〈…〉 by the quenes meyny ¶ After 〈◊〉 Pius was pope was chosen this yere M cccc .lviij. and he was called before Eneas an eloquent man and a poete 〈◊〉 reate He was embassadour of the empe rours afore tyme. And he wrote in the 〈◊〉 seyle of Basyle a noble treaty for the 〈◊〉 rite of the same Also he canonysed 〈◊〉 Katheryne of Senys This pope ordey ned grete indulgence pardon to them the wolde go warre agaynst the Turke 〈◊〉 wrote an epystle to the grete Turke 〈◊〉 hortynge hȳ to become chrysten And in the ende he ordeyned a passage agaynst the Turke at Ankone to whiche moche people drewe out of all partyes of chrystendome of whiche people he sent many home agayne bycause they suffysed not And anone after he dyed at the sayd place of Ankone the yere of our lord M cccc .lxiiij. the .xiiij. daye of August ¶ How Andrewe Trollop and the sow●youres of Calays forsoke the duke of Yorke and theyr mayster the erle of war wyk in the west countree THe duke of Yorke the erles of warwyk of Salysbury sawe the gouernaūce of the realme stode moost by the quene her coūseyle how the grete prynces of the londe were not called to coūseyle but set aparte not onely so but it was sayd through the realme that those said lordes sholde be destroyed vtterly as it opēly was shewed at Bloreheth by them that wolde haue slayne the erle of Salysbury Than they for saluacyon of theyr lyues also for the comyn wele of the realme thought to remedy these thynges assembled them togider with moche people toke a felde in the west coūtre to whiche the erle of Warwyk came fro Calays with many of the olde sowdyours as Andrewe Trollop other in whose wysdome as for the warre he moche trusted And whā they were thus assembled made theyr felde the kyng sent out his cōmyssyons preuy seales vnto all the lordes of his realme to come wayte on hym in theyr moost best defensable aray And so euery man came in suche wise that the kyng was stronger had more people than the duke of yorke the erles of warwyk of Salysbury For it is here to be noted that euery lorde in Englonde durst not disobey the quene for she ruled peasybly all that was done about the kyng whiche was a good a well disposed man And thā whan the kyng was comen to the place where as they were the duke of yorke his felaw shyp made theyr felde in the strōgest wyse purposed verily to haue bydē fought but in the nyght Andrewe Trollop all the olde sowdyours of Calays with a grete felawshyp sodeynly departed out of the dukes hoost wente streyght to the kynges feld where they were ioyously receyued for they knewe the entent of the other lordes also the maner of theyr felde And than the duke of yorke with the other lordes seynge them deceyued toke a coūseyle shortly in the same nyght departed from the felde leuynge behynde them the moost party of theyr people to kepe the felde tyll on the morowe Than the duke of Yorke with his second sone departed through wales toward Irlonde leuynge his eldest sone that erle of Marche with the erles of warwik of Salysbury whiche rode togyder with thre or foure persones streyght in to Deuenshyre there by helpe ayde of one Denham a squyer gate for thē a shyppe which cost .xj. score nobles with the same shyppe sayled frō thens ī to Garnesey there refresshed them fro thens sayled to Calais where they were receyued in to the castell by that posterne or they of the towne wyst of it And the duke of Yorke toke shyppynge in Wales sayled ouer in to Irlonde where he was well receyued ¶ How the erles of Marche Warwyk Salysbury entred in to Calays how the erle of warwyk went in to Irlonde THan kynge Henry
that is to wyte y● duke of Yorke was slayne the erle of Rutlond syr Thomas Neuyll many moo y● erle of Salisbury was taken other as Iohn Harowe of London capitayn ruler of y● fotemen Hanson of Hull Whiche were brought to Poūfret there after biheded theyr hedes sent to Yorke set vpon the gates And thus was y● noble prynce y● duke of Yorke slayne on whose soule god haue mercy And this tyme y● erle of Marche beynge in shrowesbury heryng of y● deth of his fader desyred ayde of the towne to auēge his faders deth fro thens went to wales at Cādelmas after he had a batayle at Mortymers crosse agaynst y● erle of Penbroke of wylshyre where y● erle of Marche had y● victory Than the quene with those lordes of the north after that they had dystressed slayne the duke of Yorke his felawshyp came southward with a grete multytude of people for to come to y● kynge vndo suche conclusyons as had ben takē before by y● parliament Agaynst whose comynge y● duke of Nor folke the erle of warwyk with moche people ordynaūce went to saynt Albons lad kyng Henry with them there encoūtred togider in suche wyse fought so y● the duke of Norfolke y● erle of warwik with many other of theyr party ●ledde lost y● iourney where y● king Henry was taken by y● quene prynce Edwarde his sone whiche two had goten that felde Than y● quene her party beynge at her aboue sent anone to Londō which was on asshewednesdaye y● fyrst daye of lent for vytayle for whiche y● Mayre ordeyned by y● aduyse of y● aldermen y● certayn cartes laden with vytayle sholde be sent to saynt Albons to them And whan y● cartes came to crepylgate the comyns of y● cite y● kepte the gate toke y● bytayle fro y● cartes wold not suffre it to passe Thā were there certayn aldermen comyns appoynted to go to Bernet to speke with the quenes coūseyle for to entreate y● the northeren men sholde be sent home in to theyr coūtre agayn for y● cite of London drad fore to be despoyled yf they had comen ¶ And duryng this treaty tydynges came that the erle of Warwyk had mette with y● erle of Marche on Cotteswolde comynge out of Wales with a grete meyny of walsshmen that they bothe were comynge to London ware Anone as these tydynges were knowen y● treaty was broke tor y● kyng quene prynce all y● other lordes y● were with them departed fro saynt Albons no●thwarde with all theyr people yet or they departed thens they dyheded y● lord Bo●●yle syr Thomas 〈◊〉 whiche 〈◊〉 take in y● iourney done on 〈…〉 ¶ Than y● duch 〈…〉 of Yorke beynge at London deryng of y● losse of y● felde of saynt Albons 〈…〉 whiche went to 〈…〉 ght ¶ And philip malpas 〈…〉 che marchaūt of London Thomas Vaghan squyer 〈…〉 many other 〈…〉 of y● comynge of y● quene to London toke a shyppe of Andwerpe to haue gone in to ●●land 〈◊〉 on y● other co●st were taken of one Colompne a Frenssheman a shyppe of warre he toke them prysoners and brought them in to Fraūce where they payed grete good for theyr raunsom there was moche good and rychesse in that shyppe ¶ Of the deposynge of kyng Henry the syxth how kynge Edward the fourth toke possessyon of y● batayle on Palme sondaye and how he was crowned THan whan y● erle of Marche y● erle of warwyk had mette togyder on Cotteswolde incōtynent they cōcluded to go to London and sent worde anone to y● Mayre to the cite that they wolde come And anone y● cite was glad of theyr comynge hopyng to be releued by them so they came to London And whan they were comen had spoken with the lordes estates beynge there cōcluded for as moche as kynge Henry was gone with them northwarde y● he had forfeyted his crowne ought to be deposed accordyng vnto the actes made passed in the last parlyament And so by the aduyse of the lordes spirytuall temporall than beynge at Londō the erle of Marche Edward by y● grace of god eldest sone of Rycharde duke of Yorke as ryghtfull heyre and nexte enherytour to his fader the fourth daye of Marche the yere of out lord god M CCCC .lix. toke possessyon of the realme at Westmerlonde in y● grete hall after in y● chirche of y● abbey offred as kyng with the c●ptre royall To whome all y● lordes spirytuall tēporall dyd homage as to theyr souerayn lord kyng And forthwith it was ꝓclaymed through y● cite kyng Edward the fourth of y● name And anone after y● kynge rode in his ryall estate northwarde with all his lordes to subdue his subgectes y● tyme beynge in the north for to auenge his 〈◊〉 deth And on Palmesondaye after he had a grete batayle in y● north coūtree at a place called Cowton not ferre from Yorke where with y● helpe of god he gate y● felde had the victory where were slayne of his aduersaryes .xxx. M. men and moo as it was sayd by them that were there In the whiche batayle were slayne y● erle of Northumberlonde the lorde Clifford syr Iohn Neuyll the erle of Westmerlondes broder Andrewe Trollop and many knightes squyers ¶ Than kyng Henry that had bē kyng beynge with y● quene and the prynce at Yorke heryng the losse of that felde and so moche people slayne ouerthrowen anone forth with departed all thre with the duke of Somerset the lorde Roos other towarde Scotlōde And the nexte daye after kynge Edward with all his army entred in to Yorke and was there proclaymed kyng obeyed as he ought to be And y● Mayre aldermen comyns swore to be his iyege men And whā he had taryed a whyle in the north that all y● northcoūtree had turned to hym he returned southwarde leuynge behynde hym the erle of Warwyk in those partyes to gouerne and rule that countree ¶ And aboute mydsomer after the yere of our lorde M cccc .lx. and the fyrst yere of his regne he was crowned at Westmynster anoynted kyng of Englonde hauynge possessyon of all the realme CAixtus the thyrde was pope after Nycolas thre yere and .v. monethes This Calixte was an olde man whan he was chosen pope was cōtynually seke ne he myght not fulfyll his desyre whiche he entēded to do agaynst the Turkes for dethe came vpon hym He was chosen pope in y● yere of our lord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 .lv. And he dyed the syxth day af 〈◊〉 he had i●stytued the trāsfiguracyon of our lorde god He also c●nonysed saynt Vincent a frere precher And there was a grete reformacyon of many monasteryes in dyuers partyes of the worlde these reformacions were made many ty mes but almoost none abode but they returned agayne as they were afore by successyon of tyme after y●
make hym se that holy syght And than sayd the kynge Syr erle I so well that ye se thanked be god that I haue honoured my god and sauyour vysybly Iesu Chryst in forme of man whose na me be blyssed in all worldes Amen ¶ How the rynge that saynt Edwarde had gyuen to a poore pylgrym for the loue of god and saynt Iohn the euangelyst came agayne to kynge Edwarde THis noble man saynt Edwarde regned .xiii. yere And thus it be fell vpon a tyme or he dyed the two men of Englond were gone in to the holy londe and had done theyr pilgrymage were goynge agayne in to theyr owne coūtree where they came fro And as they went in the waye they mette a pilgrym that curteysly salewed them asked of them in what londe and in what coūtree they were borne And they sayd in Englonde Than asked he who was kyng of Englonde And they answered and sayd the good king Edward Fayre frendes sayd the pylgrym whan that ye come in to your coūtree agayne I praye you that ye wyll go vnto kyng Edwarde greet hym oftentymes in my name oftenty mes him thanke of his grete curteysy that he to me hath done namely for the ryng that he gaue me whan he had herde masse at Westmynster for saynt Iohns loue the euāgelyst And than toke the rynge toke it to the pylgryms sayd I praye you go bere this ryng take it vnto kyng Edward tell hym that I sende it hym and a full ryche gyfte I wyll gyue hym For vpō the .xij. daye he shal come to me euermore dwell in blysse wtouten ende Syr sayd the pilgryms what man be ye and in what coūtree is your dwellynge Fayre frendes sayd he I am Iohn the euangelyst I am dwellynge with almyghty god your kynge Edward is my frende I loue hym in specyall for bycause that he hath euermore lyued in clennes is a clene mayd I praye you my message to fulfyll as I haue sayd Whan saȳt Iohn the euāgelyst had thus charged them sodeynly he voyded out of bothe theyr sightes Than thanked the pylgryms almyghty god went forth theyr waye And whan they had gone two or thre myle they begā to ware wery set them down for to rest them so they fell on slepe And whan they had well slepte one of them awoke lyft vp his heed loked aboute sayd to his felowe Aryse vp and go we in our waye What sayd that our felowe to that other where be we now Certes sayd the other it semeth me that this is not the same coūtre that we layde vs ●owne in for to rest slepe For we were from Ierusalem but thre myles They toke vp theyr handes and blyssed them went forth on theyr waye as they went they sawe shepes herdes goyng with theyr shepe that spake none other lāguage but englisshe Good frendes sayd one of the pylgryms what coūtre is this who is lord therof And anone the shepeherdes answered sayd This is the coūtree of Kent in Englond of the whiche the good kynge Edward is lorde of Than the pilgryms thanked almyghty god saynt Iohn the euangelyst went forth on theyr waye came to Caunterbury from thens to London there they foūde the kynge And tolde hym all from the begynnynge to the endynge as moche as saynt Iohn had charged them of all thȳges how they had spēdde by the waye toke the rynge to kyng Edward he receyued it thanked almyghty god saynt Iohn the euan gelyst And than made hym redy euery daye from daye to daye to departe out of this lyfe whan god wold send for hym ¶ How saynt Edwarde dyed on the .xij. daye ANd after it befel thus on Chryst masse euen as the holy man Edward was at goddes seruyce for to here matyns of the hygh feest he became full seke on the morowe endured with moche payne for to here the masse after masse he let hym to be ladde in to his chambre there for to rest hym But in his hall amonge his barons knyghtes myght he not come for to comforte them and solace as he was wont to do at that worthy feest Wherfore all theyr myrth and cōforte amonge all that were in the hall was turned in to care sorowe bycause they drad to lese theyr good lorde the kyng And vpon saynt Iohns daye the euangelyst that came nexte the kynge receyued his ryghtes of holy chirche as it befalleth to euery chrysten man abode the mercy the wyll of god And the two pylgryms he let come before hym gaue them ryche gyftes betoke them to god And also the abbot of Westmynster he let come before hym toke hym that ryng in the honour of god saynt Mary of saynt Iohn the euangelyst And the abbot toke put it amonge other relykes so that it is at Westmynster euer shall be And so laye the kynge seke tyll the .xij. euen and than dyed the good kyng Edward at Westmynster there he lyeth For whose loue god hath shewed many a fayre myracle And this was in the yere of the incarnacyon of our lorde Chryst Iesu M .lxv. And after he was translated and put in to the shryne by the noble martyr saynt Thomas of Caunterbury ●Ictor the seconde was pope after Leo lytell of hȳ is wryten ¶ Henry the seconde was emperour after the first Henry .xvij. yere This man was cosyn to Conrade he was borne in a wode and twyes taken to be slayne whā he was a childe but god defended hȳ euermore Whan he was made emperour he made a monastery in the same place in the wode where he was borne This man was a vicyous man and he entred in to Ytaly there he toke Pandulphus the prynce of Campany ¶ Ste phanꝰ the .ix. was pope after Victor .ix. monethes ¶ Benedictus was after hȳ he toke the dignite of the pope Stephen by strengthe kepte it .ix. monethes than decessed ¶ Henry the thyrde was emperour after Henry the second This Henry was an vnquyete man many tymes troubled the holy man Gregory the .vij. And fyrst he asked forgyuenes was assoyled but he perseuered not but brought in an other pope agaynst hym and sayd he was an heretyke And Gregory cursed hym And the chosers of the emperour chose the duke of Saxon for to be emperour whome this Henry in batayle ouercame And than he came to Rome with his pope and pursued pope Gregory the cardynals also And than anone Robert the kynge of Naples droue hym thens delyuered the pope his cardynals Neuerthelesse yet he was a man of grete almes and .xij. tymes he fought in batayle And at the last he dyed wretchedly For he was put downe by his owne sone For so as he dyd to other men so was he done to
those two realmes of the popes handes And sholde euery yere paye ferme vnto the courte of Rome a thousande marke of syluer And than toke the kynge the crowne of his heed set hȳ on his knees and these wordes he sayd in herynge of all the grete lordes of englonde Here I resygne vp the crowne the realme of englonde in to the handes of pope Inno cent the thyrde put me hooly in to his mercy in his ordinaūce Pandulf than receyued y● crowne of kyng Iohn kept it .v. dayes as for a seasynge takynge of two realmes of Englonde and Irlonde And confermed all maner thynges by his chartre that foloweth after ¶ Of the lettre oblygatory that kynge Iohn made vnto the courte of Rome wherfore the Peter pens ben gadered through out all Englonde TO all christē people throu●h out all the worlde dwellynge Iohn by the grace of god kynge of Englonde gretynge to your vniuersite And be it knowen that for as moche as we haue greued offended god our moder chirche of Rome And for as moche as we haue nede vnto the mercy of our lorde Iesu Chryst also we may no thynge so worthy offre as competent sa 〈…〉 to make to god to holy chirche but 〈◊〉 it were our owne body as with ●ur realmes of Englonde of Irlonde Than by the grace of god we desyre to meke vs for the loue of hym y● meked hym to the deth vpon the crosse through counseyle of the noble erles barons we offre and frely graūte to god to y● apostles saynt Peter saynt Paule and to our moder chirche of Rome to our holy fader the pope Innocent the thyrde to all y● popes y● come after hym all the realmes patronages of chirches of Englōde of Irlonde with theyr appertenaūtes for remyssyon of our synnes for helpe helth of our kynne soules all chrysten soules So y● from this daye afterward we wyl receyue and holde of our moder thirche of Rome as fee farme doynge feaute to our holy fader pope Innocent the thyrde so to all the popes that cometh after hym in y● same maner aboue sayd And in y● presence of the wyse man Pandulf the popes subdeken we make lyege homage as it were in the popes presence before hym were and shal do all maner thynges aboue sayd therto we bynde vs all that cometh after vs our heyres for euermore without ony gaynsayenge to the pope eke y● warde of chirche vacaūtes And in tokē of this thynge euermore for to last we wyl con ferme ordeyn that our specyall rentes of y● foresayd realme sauynge saynt Peters pens in all thynge to y● moder chirche of Rome payenge by yere a thousan de marke of syluer at two termes of the yere for all maner customes y● we sholde do for y● foresayd realmes that is to saye at Myghelmasse and at Eester that is to saye vij C. marke for Englonde and thre hondred marke for Irlond sauyng to vs to our heyres our Iustyces and our other fraunchyses other ryaltees that perteyneth vnto the crowne And these thynges that before ben sayd we wyl that it be ferme and stable without ende And to that oblygacyon we our successours and our heyres in this maner be bounde that yf we or ony of our heyres through ony presumpcyon fall in ony poynt agaynst ony of these thynges aboue sayd and he be warned and wyll not ryght amende hym he shall than lose the foresayd realmes for euermore And that this chartre of oblygacyon and our warraūt for euermore be ferme and stable without ony gaynsay enge we shall fro this daye afterwarde be true to god and to the moder chirche of Rome and to the pope Innocent the thyrde and to all them that cometh after hym and the realmes of Englonde and of Irlonde we shall trewly mayntayne in all maner poyntes agaynst all maner men by our power through goddes helpe ¶ How the clerkes that were outlawed of Englonde came agayn how kynge Iohn was assoyled WHan this chartre was made ensealed the kynge receyued agayne his crowne of Pandulfs hande sente anone vnto the archebysshop Stephen to all his other clerkes and lewd men that he had exyled out of this londe that they sholde come agayn in to Englonde haue agayn theyr londes also theyr rentes that he wolde make restytucyon of the goodes that he had taken of theyrs agaynst theyr wyll The kyng hymselfe than Pandulf the erles barons went to wynchestre agaynst y● archebysshop Stephen And whan he was comen the kynge wente agaynst hym fell downe to his feet thus to hym sayd Fayre syr ye be welcome I crye you mercy bycause that I haue trespaced agaynst you The archebysshop toke hȳ vp tho in his armes kyssed hym curteysly oftētymes after ladde hym to the dore of saynt Swythynes chirche by the hande assoyled hym of y● sentence and hym recōcyled to god to holy chirche And that was on saynt Margaretes daye And the arche bysshop anone went for to synge masse And y● kyng offred at the masse a marke of golde And whan y● masse was done all they went to receyue al theyr londes without ony maner gaynsayenge And that daye they made all myrth and ioye ynough But yet was not y● enterdytynge releaced bycause y● pope had set that the enterdytynge sholde not be done tyll the kyng had made full restitucyon of y● goodes that he had take of holy chirche And y● hymselfe sholde do homage to the pope by a tertayne legate that he sholde sende into englonde And thā toke Pandulf his leue of y● kynge the archebysshop went agayne to Rome And the archebysshop anone let come before him prelates of holy chirche at Redynge for to treate coūseyle how moche what they sholde aske of y● kynge for to make restytucyon of y● goodes y● he had taken of them And they ordeyned sayd that the kyng sholde gyue to y● archebysshop thre thousande marke for the wronge y● the kynge had done vnto hym And also by porcions to other clerkes .xv. M. marke ¶ And this same tyme Nicolas bysshop of Tuscan cardynall penytencer of Rome came in to Englonde through the popes cōmaūdement the .v. kalende of October came to London y● .v. nonas of October for bycause that kyng Iohn all the kynges y● came after hym shold euermore holde y● realme of Englonde of Irlonde of god of the pope payenge to the pope by yere as is aboue sayd ¶ How y● enterdytynge was vndone in englonde of y● debate y● was bytwene kyng Iohn the barons of the realme WHan kynge Iohn had done his homage to y● legate y● shewed hȳ the popes lettre y● he shold paye to Iulyan and yelde agayne that was kynge Rychardes wyfe y● thyrde parte of the londe of Englonde
of Irlonde y● he had with holden syth that kyng Rycharde dyed Whan kynge Iohn herde this he was wonders wroth For vtterly y● enterditynge myght not be vndone tyll that he had made gree resticucyon to the foresayd Iulyan of that she asked The legate than went agayn to y● pope after Chrystmasse And the kynge than sent messengers outr see to Iulian that was kyng Rychard wyfe for to haue a relese of y● she axed of hym ¶ And so it befell y● Iulyan dyed anone after ●●ster And in so moche the kyng was quyte of that thynge that she asked But than at the feest of saynt Iohn that came nexte after through the popes cōmaūdemēt y● enterdityng was fyrst released through out all Englonde the .vij. daye of Iuly And .vij. yere was the londe enterdited And on the morow men ronge and sayd masse through out all London so after through out all Englonde ¶ And y● next yere after there began a grete debate bytwene kyng Iohn the lordes of Englonde for bycause he wolde not graunte the lawes and holde the whiche saynt Edwarde had ordeyned had ben v●ed and holden vnto that tyme that he had them brokē For he wolde holde no lawe but dyd all thynge that hym lyked and dysheryted many men without consent of lordes peres of the londe And wold dysheryte y● good erle Radulf of hestre for bycause that he vndertoke hȳ of his wyckednes and for cause that he dyd so moche shame vylany to god to holy chirche And also for he helde haunred his owne broders wyfe and lay also by maner other womē grete lordes doughters for he spared no woman that hym lyked for to haue Wherfore all y● fordes of the londe were wroth toke the cyte of London To cease this debate the archebysshop lordes of the londe assembled before the feest of saynt Iohn baptyst in a medow besyde y● towne of Stanes that is called Romney mede And the kynge made them there a chartre of fraunchyse suche as they wolde aske and in suche maner they were accorded And that accordement lasted not longe For the kynge hymselfe soone after dyd agaynst the poynces of y● same chartre that he had made Wherfore the moost part of the lordes of the londe assembled them began to warre vyon hȳ agayn and brent his townes robbed his folke and dyd all thesorowe that they myght and made themselfe as stronge as they myght with all theyr power thought to dryue hym out of Englonde make Lowys y● kynges sone of Fraūce kynge of Englonde And than kyng Iohn sent ouer see and ordeyned so moche people or normans of pyecardes and of flemmynges soo that the londe myght not susteyne them but with moche sorowe And amonge all this people there was a man of Normandye that was called Faukes of Brent this Norman his cōpany spared neyther chirche ne hous of religyon but they brent and robbed it bare awaye all that they myght take so that y● londe was all destroyed what on one syde what on another The barons and lordes of Englonde ordeyned amonge them the best spekers and wysest men and sent them ouer the see vnto kynge Philyp of Fraūce and prayed hym y● he wolde sende Lowys his sone in to Englonde to be kynge of Englonde and to receyue the crowne ¶ How Lowys y● kynges sone of fraūce came in to Englonde with a stronge power of people to be kynge of Englonde WHan kyng Philip of Fraūce herd these tydynges he made certayn aliaunce bytwene them by theyr comyn eleccyon y● Lowys kynge Philyps sone of Fraūce shold go with them in to Eng londe and dryue out kynge Iohn of the londe And all that were in the presence of Lowys made vnto him homage and became his men And the barons of eng londe helde them styll at London and abode Lowys y● kynges sone of fraūce And this was the nexte batardaye brfore the Astention of our lorde y● Lowys came into Englonde with a stronge power And that tyme kynge Iohn had taken all the castelles of Englonde in to alyens handes And than came Lowys and besyeged ●ochesters castell toke it with streugthe And the thursdaye in whytson weke let hange all the alyens that were therin And the thursdaye after he came to London there he was receyued with moche honour of the lordes that abode hym there all to hym made homage And afterwarde on the tewesdaye nexte after Trynite sondaye he toke the castell of Reigate and on the morowe after the castell of Gylforde the frydaye next after the castell of Farneham And the mondaye nexte after the cyte of wynchestre vnto hym was yolden And on the morowe after saynt Iohans daye the manoyre of woluesey to hym was yolden And the tewesdaye after the vtas of saynt Peter and saynt Paule they toke the castell of Odiham And the mondaye after saynt Margaretes daye he ordeyned hym towarde Bawmore for to syege the castell and there he dwelled .xv. dayes and myght not gete the castell and than wente he thens and came to London the toure to hym was yolden ¶ How the pope sent in to Englonde a legate that was called Swalo and of the deth of kynge Iohn ANd in y● same tyme y● pope sente in to englōde a legate y● was called Swalo he was preest Cardynall of Rome for to mayntayn kynge Iohns cause agaynst the barons of Englonde But the barons had so huge party and helpe through Lowys y● kynges sone of Fraūce that kyng Iohn wyst not wheder to turne ne go And so it befell that he wolde haue gone to Nycholl as he went thyderwarde he came by the abbey of Swynestede there he abode two dayes And as he sate at meet he asked a monke of the hous how moche a lofe was worth that was set before hym vpon the table And the monke sayd that the lofe was worth but an halfpeny O said the kyng tho here is grete chepe of brede Now quod the kynge I may lyue suche a lofe shall be worth .xx. shyllȳges or halfe a yere be gone And whā he had sayd these wordes moche he thought oft he syghed toke and ete of the breed and sayd by god the wordes that I haue spoken it shall be soth The monke that stode before the kynge was for these wordes full sory in his herte thought rather he wolde hymselfe suffre deth and thought how he myght ordeyn therfore some maner remedy And the monke anone went to his abbot was shryuen of hym and tolde the abbot all that the kynge had sayd and prayed his abbot for to assoyle hym for he wold gyue the kynge suche a drynke that all Englonde sholde be glad therof and ioyfull Than went the monke in to a gardeyn foūde a grete tode therin and toke her vp and put her in a cuppe and prycked the tode through with a broche many
than renewed all the fraūchyses that kynge Iohn had graūted at Romney mede kyng Henry than cōfermed by his chartre the whiche yet ben holden through out all Englonde And in y● tyme y● kyng toke of euery plough londe two shyllynges And Hubert of Burgh was than made chefe iustyce of englōde And this was in y● fourth yere of kynge Henryes regne And in y● same yere was saynt Thomas of Caūterbury translated the .l. yere after his martyrdome ¶ And after it was ordeyned by all the lordes of Englonde y● all alyens shold go out of Englonde come no more therin And kyng Henry toke than all y● castels in to his handes y● kyng Iohn his fader had gyuen taken to alyens for to kepe that held with hym But y● proude Faukes of Brent rychely let araye his castell of Bedford whiche he had of king Iohns gyfte and he helde that castell agaynst kyng Henryes wyl with might strength And the kyng came thyder with a stronge power and besyeged the castell And the archebysshop mayster Stephen of lang ton with a fayre company of knyghtes came to the kyng for to helpe hym And from the Ascencyon of our lord vnto the Assumpcyon of our lady lasted y● syege and than was the castell wonne and taken And the kynge let hange all those that were gone in to y● castel wich the● good wyll for to hold the castell agaynst hym that is to say .lxxx. men And than afterwarde Faukes hymselfe was foūde in a chirche of Couentre and there i● forsware all Englonde with moche shame and than wente agayne in to his owne coūtree ¶ And whyles that kyng Henry regned Edmonde of Abyndon that was tresourer of Salysbury was consecrate archebysshop of Caunterbury ¶ And this kynge Henry sente ouer see vnto the erle of Prouance that he sholde sende him his doughter in to Englende that was called El●nore and he wolde spouse her And so she came in to Englonde after Chrystmas and on the morowe after saynt Hylaryes daye the archebysshop Edmonde spoused them togyder at Westmynster with grete solempnite And there was a fayre syght bytwene them that is for to saye Edwarde that was nexte kynge after his fader floure of curteysy and of largesse and Margarete that was afterwarde quene of Scotlonde and Beatryne that was afterwarde duchesse of Brytayne And Katheryne that dyed a mayde in relygyon ¶ Of the quinzeme of goodes that were graūted for the newe chartre and of the purucyaunce of Oxford ANd thus it befell y● the lordes of Englonde wold haue some addicyons moo in the chartre of fraūchyse y● they had of the kynge spake thus bytwene them And y● kyng graūted them all theyr askynge made to them two chartres y● one is called y● grete chartre of fraūchyses that other is called the chartre of forest And for y● graūt of these two chartres prelates erles barons all the comyns of Englonde gaue to y● kynge a. M. marke of syluer ¶ Whan kynge Henry had ben kynge .xiiij. yere the same yere he his lordes erles barons of the realme went to Oxford and ordeyned a lawe in amendement of y● realme And fyrst sware y● kyng hymselfe and afterwarde all the lordes of y● londe that they wolde holde y● statute for euer more who that them brake sholde be deed But the seconde yere after that ordynaūce the kynge through coūseyle of syr Edwarde his sone of Rychard his broder that was erle of Cornewayle also of other repented hym of that othe that he had made for to holde that lawe ordynaūce sente to y● courte of Rome to be assoyled of that othe ¶ And in the yere nexte comynge after was the grete derth of corne in englonde for a quarter of whete was worth .xxiiij. shyllynges And the poore people ete nettyls other wedes for grete honger many a. M. dyed for defaute of meet ¶ And in the xlviij yere of kyng Henryes regne begā warre debate bytwene hym and his lordes for bycause that he had broken y● couenaūtes y● were made bytwene them at Oxford ¶ And in the same yere was the towne of Northamton taken folke slayne that were within for bycause y● they had made and ordeyned wylde fyre for to brenne the cite of London ¶ And in the moneth of Maye that came nexte after vpon saynt Pancras daye was y● batayle of Lewes whiche was y● wednesdaye before saynt Dunstans daye there was taken kyng Henry hymselfe syr Edwarde his sone Rychard his broder erle of Cornewayl many other lordes ¶ And in the same yere nexte folowynge syr Edwarde the kynges sone brake out of the warde of syr Symon of Moūtford erle of Leycestre at Herford and went vnto the barons of y● Marche and they receyued hym with moche honour ¶ And the same tyme Gylbert of Clarence erle of Glocestre that was in y● ward also of y● foresayd Symō through the cōmaūdement of kynge Henry that went from hym with a grete herte for bycause he sayd y● the foresayd Gylbert was a fole in his coūseyle wherfore he ordeyned hȳ afterward so helde hȳ with kyng Henry And on y● saterdaye next after y● myddes of August syr Edwarde y● kynges sone discomfited syr Symon of Moūtford at Kelinworth but the grete lordes y● were there with hȳ were taken y● is to saye Baldewyn wake Williā de Moūchensie many other grete lordes And y● tewesdaye nexte after was y● batayle done at Eusham there was slayne syr Symon of Moūtford Hugh spenser Moūtford that was Rafe Bassets fader of Draiton and many other grete lordes And whā this batayle was done all y● gentylmen that had ben with the erle Symon were disheryted they ordeyned togyder dyd moche harme to all y● lond For they destroyed theyr enemyes in all that they myght ¶ Of the syege of Kelynworth how the gentylmen were disherited through counseyle of the lordes of the realme of Englonde and how they came agayne and had theyr ●●●des ANd the nexte yere comynge in Maye the fourth daye before y● teest of saynt Dunstan was the batayle dyscomfyture at Chest erfelde of them that were disheryted there was many of them slayne And Robert erle of Fe riers there was takē also Baldewyn and Iohn de la hay with moche sorowe escaped thens And on saynt Iohn baptystes eue than nexte folowynge began the syege of the castell of Kenilworth the syege lasted to sayne Thomas eue y● apostle on whiche daye syr Hugh Hastynge had y● castell for to kepe that yelded vp the castel vnto the kynge in this maner that hymself the other y● were within the castell sholde haue theyr lyues lȳmes all that they had therin bothe hors harneys foure dayes of respyte for to delyuer clenely y● castell of themself of all other maner thynge as they had within the castell And so
they went from the castell And syr Symon de Moūtford y● yonger the coūtesse his moder were fledde ouer seem to Fraūce there helde them as people that were exiled out of Englond for euermore And soone after it was ordeyned by y● legate Dctobone by other grete lordes y● wysest of Englond that all those y● had ben agaynst the kynge and were disheryted sholde haue agayne theyr londes by greuous raūsons after y● it was ordeyned And thus they were accorded with the kynge peas was cryed through out Englonde thus y● warre was ended And whan this was done y● legate toke his leue of y● kynge of the quene of all the grete lordes of englonde tho went to Rome the .lv. yere of kynge Henryes regne And Edwarde kyng Iohns sone of Brytayne Iohn Vesst Thomas of clare Roger of Clifford Othes of graūston Robert le Brus Iohn of verdon many other lordes of Englonde of beyonde the see toke theyr waye towarde the holy londe And kyng Henry dyed y● same tyme at Westminster whā he had ben kyng .lv. yere .xix. wekes on saint Edmondes daye y● archebysshop of Caūterbury And he was buryed at Westmynster on saynt Edmōdes day y● kyng in the yere of our lorde M CC .lxxij. ¶ Prophecy of Merlyn of kynge Henry the fyrst expowned that was kynge Iohns sone ANd of this Hēry ꝓphecyed Merlyn sayd that a ●a●●be sholde come out of Wynchestre in y● yere of our lord M CC. and .xvj. with true lyppes holynes wryten in his herte And he sayd soth for y● good Henry y● kyng was borne ī wynchestre in y● yere aboue sayd he spake good wordes swete was an holy man of good conscyence And Merlyn sayd y● this Henry sholde make the fayrest place of y● worlde y● in his tyme shold not be fully ended And he sayd soth For he made y● newe werke of y● abbey of saȳt Peters chirche at Westmynster y● is fayrer of syght than ony other place y● ony man knoweth through out all chrystendom But kyng Henry dyed or y● werke was fully at an ende that was grete harme And yet said Merlyn that this lambe shold haue peas y● most parte of his regne And he said soch For he was neuer noyed through warre ne dyseased in no maner wyse tyll a lytell before his deth And Merlyn said in his prophecy more y● in the ende of y● regne of y● foresayd lambe a wolfe of a straūge lōde sholde do hȳ moche harme through his war y● he shold at y● last be maister through helpe of a reed fore that sholde come out of the Northwest shold outr come hym that he sholde dryue hym out of the water And that ꝓphecy full well was knowen For within a lytell tyme or the kynge dyed Symonde of Mountforde erle of Leycestre that was borne in Fraunce began stronge warre agaynst hym through whiche doynge many a good bacheler was destroyed And whan kynge Henry had y● vyctory at Eusham Symon y● erle was slayne through helpe of Gylberte of Clare erle of Glocestre that was in kepyng of the foresayd Symon through ordynaunce of kynge Henry whiche went agayne to the kynge with moche power Wherfore the soresayd Symō was destroyed and that was grete harme to y● comyns of Englonde that so noble a man was slayne for the trouth dyed in charite for the comyn profyte of the same folke And therfore almyghty god for hȳ hath sythen shewed many a fayre myracle to dyuers men women seke for his loue ¶ And Merlyn also tolde sayd in his prophecy that after that tyme y● lambe sholde lyue no whyle and than his seed sholde be in straūge londe without ony pasture And he sayd sothe For kynge Henry lyued no whyle after whan that Symon Moūtford was deed but dyed anone after hym And in y● meane tyme syr Edwarde his sone that was the best kynge of y● worlde of honour was than in y● holy londe gate there Acres And in y● coūtree he begate on dame Elenour his wyfe Ihone of Acres his doughter that afterwarde was countesse of Glocestre And made suche a vyage in y● holy londe that all the worlde spake of his knyghthode euery man dradde hym hye and lowe through out all chrystendome as the story of hym telleth as afterward ye shall here more openly And from the tyme y● kynge Henry dyed tyll that syr G●warde was crowned kynge all the grete lordes of englonde were as faderles chyldren without ony socoure that them myght mayntayne gouerne and defende agaynst theyr enemyes GRegorye the .ix. was pope after Honory This mā canonysed many sayntes and defended myghtely the chirche agaynst Frederyc therfore toke he many prelates and two cardynalles the whiche wente to counseyle agaynst hym This pope was besyeged in y● cyte of Rome by the emperour he sawe the Romayns were corrupte by the money of the emperour Than he toke in his hande the hedes of the apostles Peter and Paule and wente with processyon fro the chirche of saynt Iohn Latranēce to saynt Peters chirche And so gate he the hertes of y● Romayns And than the emperour went awaye fro the cite This pope made frere Iaymonde to compyle the fyue bokes of the decretals of many pystles decrees And after with many tribulacyons of this tyraūt other he decessed went to heuen ¶ Celestinus y● fourth was pope after Gregory almoost a moneth he was in his lyfe in his connnynge laudable he was an olde man a feble decessed there was no pope after hym almoost a .xij. moneth ¶ Innocentius y● fourth was pope after hȳ .xj. yere .vj. monethes This man canonysed many sayntes he deposed y● emperour Frederye cursed as an enemy to god y● chirche in y● thyrde yere y● he was made pope he was holpen by the Ianuens ¶ And than was Henry y● syxth chosen Wylliam by y● popes cōmaūdement agaynst Frederye one after an other But they preuayled not to ouercome his tyranny for he was ouer myghty ne these were not crowned for they decessed anone ¶ Thomas de aquino Albertꝰ magnꝰ Eustacius Bonauēture were this tyme holy men whiche destroyed moche heresy infected by y● emperour ¶ Alexāder was pope after Innocent .vij. yere lytel of hȳ is wryten ¶ Vrbanꝰ was pope after hym .iij. yere .iij. monethes This man droue away an hoost of sara zyns by men marked with the crosse that Maufred had sent agaynst the chirche The pope gaue y● kyngdom of Cicyle to the kynges broder of fraūce y● he sholde fyght with Maufred than decessed And Maufred after lost his lyf his kyngdō by Karolꝰ ¶ Alphonsus kyng of Castil Rychard broder to y● kyng of englonde were chosen emperours but Rycharde dyed Alphonsus renoūced his tytle of the empyre before Gregory the .ix. for he was a wytty mā
that were defectyue And after he sent to al the lordes of Wales by his lettres patentes that they sholde come all to his parlyamēt And whan they were comen the kynge sayd to them full curteysly Lordes ye be welcome me behoueth your coūseyle your helpe for to go in to Gascoyn for to amende the trespace that to me was done whan I was there for to entreate of peas bytwene the kynge of Aragon the prȳce of Morrey And all the kynges liege men erles barons consented graūted therto And than kynge Edwarde made hym redy went in to Gascoyn let amende all the trespaces that was done hȳ in Gascoyn And of the debate that was bytwene the kyng of Aragon the prynce of Morrey he cessed accorded them And whyle kynge Edward quene Elenore his wyfe were in Gascoyn the good erle of Cornewayle was made wardeyn of Englonde tyll that kyng Edward came agayn And thā enquyred he of his tray tours that coniected falsnes agaynst hym And eche of thē all receyued theyr dome after that they had deserued But in the meane tyme whyle that kyng Edward was beyonde that see to do them for to make amendes that had trespaced agaynst hȳ there was a fals traytour that was called ●isap Meridoc began to make warre agaynst kynge Edward that was for cause of syr Payne Tiptot the wrongfully greued diseased the foresayd Bisap Meridoc And whan kynge Edward herde all this he sente by his lettres to Bisap Meridoc that he sholde make no warre but that he sholde be in peas for his loue whan he came agayne in to Englonde he wolde vndertake the quarell amende all that was mysdone This foresayd Risap Meridoc despysed the kynges cōmaundement spared not to do all the sorowe that he myght to the kynges men of Englond But anone after he was taken ladde to yorke and there he was drawen hanged for his felony ¶ Of the redressyng that king Edward made of his Iustices and of his clerkes that they had done for theyr falsnes and how he droue the Iewes out of Englonde for theyr vsury and mysbyieue WHan kynge Edward had dwelled thre yere in Gascoyn a desyre came to hȳ for to go in to Englonde agayn And whan he was comen agayn there were so many cōplayntes made to hym of his Iustices of his clerkes that had done so many wronges falsnes that wonder it was to here For whiche falsnes syr Thomas weylonde the kynges Iustyce forswore Englonde at the Toure of Londō for falsnes that men put vpon hym wherof he was atteynt proued fals And anone after whan the kynge had done his wyll of the Iustices than let he enquyre espye how the Iewes deceyued begyled his people through theyr synne of falsnes of vsury and let ordeyn a preuy parliament amonge his lordes And they ordeyned amōge them that all the Iewes shold voyde out of Eng lōde for theyr misbyleue also for theyr false vsury that they dyd vnto chrysten men And for to spede make an ende of this thynge all the comynalte of Englonde gaue vnto the kynge the .xv. peny of al theyr goodes mouable And so were the iewes dryuen out of Englonde And than went the iewes in to Fraūce there they dwelled through leue of kyng Philyp that than was kynge of Fraūce ¶ How kynge Edwarde was seased in all the londe of Scotlonde through cōsent and graūte of all the lordes of Scotlonde IT was not longe after the Alexander kyng of Scotlonde was deed and Dauid the erle of Huntingdon that was the kynges broder of Scotlond asked claymed the kingdom of Scotlonde after that his broder was deed bycause that he was rightfull heyre But many grete lordes sayd naye wherfore grete debate arose bytwene them theyr fren des for as moche as they wolde not con sent to his crownacyon And the meane tyme the foresayd Dauid dyed And so it befell that the sayd Dauid had thre dough ters that worthely were maryed The fyrst doughter was maryed to Bayloll the seconde to Brus the thyrde to Hastynges The foresayd Bayloll Brus chalenged the londe of Scotlonde grete debate stryfe arose bytwene them thre bycause eche of them wolde haue ben kyng And whan the lordes of Scotlonde sawe the debate bytwene them they came to kyng Edward of Englonde seased hym in all the londe of Scotlonde as chefe lord And whan the kyng was seased of the foresayd lordes of Scotlonde the foresayd Bayloll Brus Hastynges came to the kynges courte asked of the kynge whiche of them sholde be kyng of Scotlonde And kyng Edward that was full gentyll true let enquyre by the cronycles of Scotlonde of the gretest lordes of Scotlonde whiche of them was of the eldest blode And it was foūde that Bayloll was the eldest that the kyng of Scotlonde shold holde of the kyng of Englonde and do hym feaute homage And after this was done Bayloll went in to Scotlonde and there was crowned kynge of Scotlond And the same tyme was vpon the see grete warre bytwene the englyssh men the Normans But vpon a tyme the Normās arryued at Douer there they martyred an holy man that was called Thomas of Douer And afterward were the Normans slayne that there escaped not one of them ¶ And soone after kynge Edward sholde lese the duchy of Gascoyn through kyng Philip of Fraūce through his fals castyng of the Dou●e peres of the lond wherfore syr Edmond that was kyng Edwardes broder gaue vp his homage vnto the kyng of Fraūce ¶ And in that tyme the clerkes of Englonde graūted to kynge Edward halfe dele of holy chirche goodes in helpynge to recouer his londe agayn in Gascoyn And the kynge sent thyder a noble company of his bachelers And hymselfe wolde haue gone to Portesinouth but he was letted through one Maddok of Wales that had seased the castell of Swandon in to his handes for that cause the kyng turned to Wales at Chrystmasse And bycause that the noble lordes of Englond that were sent in to Gascoyn had no cōfort of theyr lorde the kyng they were taken of syr Charles of Fraūce that is to say syr Iohn of Brytayne syr Robert Typtot syr Raufe Tanny syr Hugh Bardulf syr Adam of Cretynge And yet at the Ascencyon was Maddok taken in Wales another whiche was called Morgan and they were sent to the toure of London and there they were byheded ¶ How syr Iohn Bailoll kyng of Scotlonde withsayd his homage ANd whā syr Iohn Bailoll kyng of Scotlonde vnderstode that kyng Edwarde was warred in Gascoyne to whome the realme of Scotlonde was delyuered falsly than agaynst his othe wtsayd his homage through procuryng of his folke sent vnto the courte of Rome through a fals suggestion to be assoyled of the othe that he swore vnto the kynge of Englonde And so
forgaue them all his yll wyll And there were all the grete lordes of scotlonde sworne to kynge Edward that they sholde come to London to euery parlyament sholde stande to his ordynaunce How Troylebaston was fyrst ordeyned BYng Edward went thens to London wende for to haue had rest peas of his warre in that whiche warre he was occupyed .xx. yere that is to say in Wales in Gastoyn in Scotlonde thought how he myght recouer his tresour that he had spended about his warre And let enquyre through the realme of all the tyme that he had ben out of his realme that men called Troylebaston ordeyned therto Iustices And in this maner he recouered tresour wtout nombre And his purpose was for to haue gone in to the holy londe for to haue warred vpon goddes enemyes bycause he was crossed longe tyme before And neuertheles the lawe that he had ordeyned dyd moche good through out all Englonde to them that were mysbode For those that trespaced were well chastysed afterwarde were moche more meker better the poore comyns were in rest peas And the same tyme king Edward prisoned his owne sone Edwarde bycause the bysshop of Chestre the kynges tresourer had complayned on hȳ sayeng that he through coūseyle of one Pyers of Ganaston a squyer of Gascoyn had broken his parkes And this Pyers coūseyled ladde this same Edward And for this cause kynge Edward exiled this Pyers out of Englōde ¶ Of the deth of Willyam Waleys the fals traytour ANd whan this kynge Edward had ouercomen his enemyes in Wales Gascoyn Scotlonde had destroyed all his traytours saue onely the rybaud Willyā Waleys the neuer wolde yelde hym to the kyng at the last he was taken in the towne of saynt Dominyk the .xxxiij. yere of king Edwardes regne was presented to kyng Edward But the kyng wolde not se hym sent hym to London to receyue his iudgement vpō saynt Barthylmewes euen he was hanged drawen his heed smytten of and his bowelles taken out of his body and brent his body quartred sent to foure of the best townes of Scotlonde his heed put vpon a spere set vpō London brydge in ensample that the Scottes sholde haue in mynde for to do amysse agaynst theyr lyege lorde agayne ¶ How the Scottes came to kyng Edward for to amende theyr trespace that they had done agaynst hym ANd at Michelmas next comyng kyng Edward helde his parlyament at Westmynster thyder came the Scottes that is to saye the bysshop of saynt Andrewes Robert the Brus erle of Carik Symond the Frisell Iohn the erle of Athell And they were accorded with the kyng bounde by othe swore that yf ony of them afterward mysbare them agaynst the kynge they sholde be disheryted for euermore And whā theyr peas was thus made they toke theyr leue went home vnto theyr coūtree ¶ How Robert the Brus chalenged Scotlonde ANd after this Robert the Brus erle of ●aryk sent by his lettres vnto the erles and barons of Scotlonde that they shold come to hym to Sconne on the morowe after the Coucepcyon of our lady for the grete nedes of the londe And the lordes came at the daye assygned And the same daye syr Robert the Brus sayd Fayre lordes full well ye knowe that in my persone dwelleth the ryght of the realme of Scotlonde as ye well wote I am ryghtfull heyre syth that syr Iohn Baylon that was our kynge hath forsaken vs left his londe And though it so be that kyng Edward of Englond with wrongfull power hath made me assent to hym agaynst my wyll yf that ye wyll graunt that I may be kynge of Scotlonde I shall kepe you agaynst king Edward of Englonde agaynst all maner men And with that worde the abbot of Sconne arose vp before them all sayd that it was reason for to helpe hym defende the londe sayd he wolde gyue hym a. M. poūde for to maynteyn the londe And all the other graūted hym the londe and with theyr power hym for to helpe defyed kynge Edwarde of Englonde sayd that Robert the Brus sholde be kyng of Scotlonde ¶ How syr Iohn of Comyn gaynsayd the crownynge of syr Robert the Brus. ¶ Ordynges sayd syr Iohn of Comyn thynke on the trouth othe that ye made to kyng Edward of englōd as touchyng my selfe I wyll not breke myn othe for no man so he went from them wherfore Robert the Brus all tho that cōsented to hym were yll content with syr Iohn of Comyn Thā ordeyned they another coūseyle at Domfris to which came the foresayd syr John of Comyn for he dwelled but two myle from Domfris there he was wont to soiourne abyde ¶ How syr John of Comyn was traytoursly slayne ANd whā Robert the Brus wyst that all the grete lordes of Scot lōde were come to Scōne saue syr Iohn of Comyn that than abode nygh Scōne he sent specially for the sayd syr Iohn of Comyn to come speke with hym And vpon that he came spake with him at the gray freres in Domfris that was the thursday after Candelmasse daye syr Iohn graūted to go with hym And whan he had herde masse he toke a soppe and dranke afterward he bestrode his pa● frey rode to Domfris Whan Robert the Brus sawe hym come at a wynow as he was in his chambre he made toye ynough came agaynst hym colled hym about the necke and made to hym good semblaūt And whan all the erles and barons of Scotlond were there present Robert the Brus sayn syrs ye wote well the cause of this comynge wher fore it is yf ye wyll graūte that I may be kyng of Scotlonde as ryght heyre of the londe And all the lordes that were there sayd with one voyce that he sholde be crowned kyng of Scotlond that they wolde helpe hȳ maynteyn agaynst all men lyuyng dye for hym yfnede were The gentyl knyght Iohn of Comyn answered Cet tes neuer for me ne for to haue as moche helpe of me as the value of a button for the othe that I haue made to kyng Edward of Englond I shall holde whyle that my lyfe lasteth And with the word be went from the cōpany wolde haue lepte vpon his plafrey And Robert the Brus pursued hym with a drawen swerde and perced hym through the body syr Iohn Comyn fell downe to the erth But whan Roger that was syr Iohn Comyns broder saw the falsues he stert to Robert the Brus smote hym with a knyfe but the traytour was armed vnder so that the stroke might do hym no harme so moche helpe came aboute Robert the Brus that Roger Comyn was there slayne hewen to peces And Robert the Brus turned agayn where as syr Iohn Comyu the noble baron laye wounded and drewe towarde his deth
of his mouth whan he conquered it through dynt of swerde For the prynce Lewlyn Dauyd his broder Rys Morgan were put to deth through theyr falsnes theyr foly And he set his fote in wike conquered Barwyke at the whiche conquest were slayn .xxv. M. and. vij C. out take them that were brent in the reed hall And the walles that he let make shall be noyous vnto his sede as men shall here after se in the lyfe of syr Edward of Carnaruan his sone And yet sayd Merlyn that he sholde make ryuers ren in blode with brayn that semed well in his warres where as he had the maystry And yet Merlin sayd that there shold come a people out of the north west durynge the regne of the foresayd dragon that sholde be ladde by an yll greyhoūde that the dragon sholde crowne kyng that afterward sholde flee ouer the see for drede of the dragon without comynge agayn that was proued by syr Iohn Bayloll the kyng Edward made to be kynge of Scotlonde that falsly arose agaynst him after he fled to his owne londes of Fraūce neuer came agayne in to Scotlonde for drede of kynge Edward And yet sayd Meriyn the people that sholde lede the foresayd greyhoūde shold be faderles vnto a certayn tyme he sayd sothe for the people of Scotlonde gretely were dyseased syth that syr Iohn Bayloll theyr kung was fledde And yet layd Merlin that the sonne shold become in his tyme as reed as blode in tokenynge of grete mortalite of people that was well knowē whan the scottes were ●ay● And Merlyn sayd that same dragon sholde nourysshe a foxe that sholde meue grete warre agaynst hym that shold in his tyme be ended that semed well by Robert the Brus that kyng Edward noursshed in his chambre that sythen stale aware meued grete warre agaynst hym wh● the warre was not ended in his tyme. And afterward Merlyn tolde that this dra gon shold be holden the best body of all the worlde he sayd sothe for the good kyng Edward was the worthyest knyght of all the worlde in his tyme. And yet said mer lyn that the dragon sholde dye in the marche of an other londe that his londe sholde be longe wtout a good keper that men sholde wepe for his deth from the yle of Shepey vnto the yle of Mercill wherfore alas shal be theyr songe amonge ye●●myn people faderles in the londe wasted And the p●h● cy was knowen ouer all full well For the good king Edward dyed at Burgh vpō sandes that is in the marche of Scotlonde wherfore the englysshmē were discōf●ed sorowed in Northumberiend bycause the king Edwardes sone set by the Scottes no force for the tyot of Pyers of Ganaston wherfore alas was the song through out all Englonde for defaute of theyr good wardeyn from the yle of Shepey vnto the yle of Mareyll the people made moche sorowe for good king Edwardes deth For they wende that kyng Edward shold haue gone in to the holy lond for that was holly his purpose Vpon whose soule god for his hygh grace haue mercy ¶ Anno d●●i M CC. lxxxiii● CElestinus was pope after Nicolas .v. monethes and no thynge noble of hym is wryten but that he was a vertuous man ¶ Bonifacius the. vii● was pope after hȳ .viij. yere This Boniface was a man in those thynges that apperteyneth to courte for he was very e●pert in suche maters And bycause he had no pere he put no mesure to his prudence toke so grete pryde vpon hym that he sayd he was lord of all the worlde And many thȳges he dyd with his myght that fayled wretchedly in the ende He gaue an ensample to all prelates that they shold not be proude but vnder the forme of a very shepeherde of god they sholde more study to be loued of theyr subiectes than to be drad This man is he of whome it is sayd that he entred as a fox he lyued as a lyon dyed as a dogge ¶ This tyme the yere of grace was ordeyned from an C. yere to an C. yere the fyrst Jubile was in the yere of our lord god M CCC ¶ Benedictꝰ the .xj. was pope after Boniface .xi. monethes This man was an holy man of the ordre of the frere prechours lytell whyle lyued but decessed anone ¶ Adulphus was Emperour .vj. yere This man was the erle of Anoxone and was not crowned by the pope for he was slayne in batayle ¶ Albertus was emperour after hȳ .x. yere This man was the duke of Austrie fyrst was repreued of the pope after was confermed by the same pope for the malyce of the kyng of Fraūce whiche was an enemy vnto the chirche And to that Albert the same pope gaue the kyngdom of fraūce as he dyd other kyngdomes but it ꝓfyted not for at the last he was slayne of his neuewe ¶ Clemēs was pope after Benedictus almoost .ix. yere This man was a grete buylder of castels other thynges And he dampned the ordre of Templers And he ordeyned the .vij. boke of decretalles the whiche be called y● questyons of Clementyns And anone after in a coūseyle the whiche he helde at Vienna he reuoked that same boke the whiche his successour Iohn called agayn incorpored it publysshed it This Clement fyrst of al popes translated the popes seet from Rome to Aumyon And whyder it was done by the mocyon of god or by the boldnes of man dyuerse men meruaylleth ¶ Iohn the .xxij. was pope after hym xviij yere This man was all gloryous as for those thȳges that were to be vsed through the actyfe lyfe And he publysshed the Constytucyons of the Clementynes sent them to all the vniuersitees And many sayntes he canonysed And the fatte bysshopryches he deuyded And he ordeyned many thynges agaynst the plu ralite of benefices and many heretykes he dampned but whyder he was saued or not our lorde god wolde not shewe to those that he loued very well ¶ Henry the .vij. was emperour after Albert .v. yere This Henry was a noble man in warre and he coueyted to haue peas by londe water He was a gloryous man in batayle was neuer ouercome with enemyes And at the last he was poysoned of a frere whan that he houseled hym by receyuynge of the sacrament ¶ Of kynge Edwarde that was kynge Edwardes sone ANd after this kynge Edwarde regned Edwarde his sone that was borne at Carnaruan And this Edward went in to Fraūce there he spoused Isabell the kynges doughter of Fraūce the .xxv. daye of Ianuary at the chirche of our lady at Boloyn in the yere of our lorde Iesu Chryst a. M CCC .vij. And the .xx. daye of Feueryer the nexte yere y● came after he was crowned solemply at Westmynster of the archebysshop of Caūterbury of the archebisshop of winchelse And there was so grete prees of people that syr Iohn
Bakwel was deed murdred And anone as the good kynge Edward was deed syr Edward his sone kyng of Englonde sent after Pyers of Ganaston into Gascoyn so moche he loued him that he called him broder And anone after he gaue hym the lordshyp of Walyngford after that he gaue him the erledom of Cornewayle agaynst all the lordes wyll of Englonde And thā brought he syr Walter of Langton bysshop of Chestre to the tour of London in prison with two knaues al onely to serue hym For the kyng was wroth with hȳ bycause that syr Walter made cōplaynt on hȳ to his fader wherfore he was put in prison in the tyme of Troile baston And the fore said Piers of Ganaston made so grete maystryes that he went in to the kynges tresoury in the abbey of westmynster toke y● table of golde with the trestyls of the same many other ryche iewels that somtyme were kyng Arthurs toke them to a marchaūt that was called Aymery of 〈…〉 and for he shold bere them ouersee in to Gascoyne so he went thens neuer came agayn after whiche was a grete losse to this londe And whan this Pyers was so rychely auaūced he beca me wōders proude wherfore al the grete lordes of the realme had hȳ in despyte for his grete berynge wherfore syr Henry La●y 〈◊〉 of Nichol and syr Guy erle of wa 〈…〉 the whiche good lordes the good king Edward syr Edwardes fader king of Englonde charged y● Pyers of Ganaston sholde not come in to Englond for to brynge his sone Edward in to ryot And all y● lordes of Englonde assembled them on a certayn daye at y●●●eres prechours at London there they spake of the dishonour that kynge Edward dyd to his realme to his crowne And so they assented all bothe erles barons all the comyns that the foresaid Pyers of Ganaston sholde be exiled out of Englonde for euer more And so it was done for he forswore Englond went in to Irlonde there the kyng made hym chefetayn gouernour of the londe by his cōmyssion And there this Pyers was chefetayn of all the londe and dyd there all that hym lyked had power to do what he wolde And that tyme were the temple●s exiled through all th●● stendom bycause the men put vpon them that they shold do thynges agaynst the fayth good byl 〈…〉 Kynge Edward loued Piers of Ganaston so moche that he myght not forbere his company and so moche the kyng gaue behyght the people of Englonde that the er●lyng of the foresayd Pyers sholde be reuoked at Stamford through them that had e●●led hym Wherfore Pyers of Ganaston came agayne in to Englonde And whan he was come● agayn in to this lond he despysed the gretest lordes of this londe called syr ●●bert of Clare erle of Glocester 〈◊〉 and the erle of Nycholl syr Henry La●y b●rstenbely syr Guy erle of warwyk the blacke hoūde of Arderne and also be called the noble erle Thomas of Lancastre churle many other scornes shames them sayd many other grete lordes of Englonde ▪ wherfore they were toward hym full angry wro●● a●d tyght ●ore anoyed And in the same tyme dyed the erle of Nycholl but he charged or that he dyed Thomas erle of Lācastre that was his sone 〈…〉 e that he sholde maynteyne his quarell agaynst this same Pyers of Ganaston vpon his blessynge And so it befel through helpe of the erle Thomas of Lancastre also of the erle of Warwyk that the foresayd Pyers was heded at Gauersythe besyde Warwyk the .xix. daye of Iune in the yere of grace a. M .ccc .xij. Wherfore the kynge was sore anoyed prayed god that he myght se the day to be auenged vpon the deth of the foresayd Pyers And so it befell afterward as ye shall here Alas the tyme for the foresayd erle of Lancastre many other grete ba rons were put to pyteous deth marty red bycause of the foresayd quarell The kynge was than at London and helde a parliament ordeyned the lawes of syr Symond Mounford wherfore the erle of Lancastre the other erles all the clergye of Englonde made made an othe through counseyle of Robert of Wynchelse for to maynteyn tho ordinaūces for euermore ¶ How Robert the Brus came agayn in to Scotlonde gadred a grete power of men for to warre vpon kynge Edward ANd whan syr Robert the Brus that made hȳ kyng of Scotlond that before was fledde in to Norway for drede of deth of the good kyng Edward also he herd of the debate that than was in Englonde bytwene the kynge his lordes he ordeyned an hoost came in to Englonde in to Northumberlond clene destroyed the coūtree And whan kyng Edward herde these tydynges he let assemble his hoost mette the Scottes at Estre uelyn on the daye of the Natiuite of saynt Iohn Baptyst in the thyrde yere of his regne in the yere of grace M.ccc.xiiij Alas the sorowe losse that there was done For there was slayne the noble erle Gylbert of Clare syr Robert Clifford baron there kyng Edward was discōfited Edmond of Maule the kynges steward for drede went drowned hymselfe in a fresshe ryuer that is called Bannokesborne Wherfore they sayd in reprofe of kynge Edward for as moche as he loued to go by water also for he was discomfyted at Bannokesborne therfore the maydens made a songe therof in the coūtree of kyng Edwarde in this maner they songe Maidens of englond sore may ye morne for tyȝt haue lost your lemmans at Bannokesborne with heuelogh what weneth the kyng of Englōd to haue goten Scotlonde with rombilogh ¶ Whan kyng Edward was discomfited wonders fast he fled with his folke that were lefte alyue went to Barwyk there helde hȳ And after he toke hostages that is to saye two chyldren of the rychest of the towne the kyng went to London toke coūseyle of thȳges that were nedefull vnto the realme of Englonde ¶ In this tyme it befell that than was in Englonde a rybaud that was called Iohn Tanner he said that he was the good kyng Edwardes sone let call hym Edward of Carnaruan therfore he was taken at Oxford there he chalenged the frere Carmes chirche the kyng Edwarde had gyuen them the whiche chirche somtyme was the kynges hall And afterward was this Iohn ladde to Northamton drawen hāged for his falsnes or that he was deed he cōfessed said before al those that were there that the deuyll behyght hym that he shold be kynge of Englonde and that he had serued the deuyll thre yere ¶ How the towne of Barwyk was taken through treason how two cardynals were robbed in Englonde ON mydlent sondaye in the yere of our lord Iesu Chryst M .ccc .xvj. Barwyk was lost through fals treason of one Pyers of
Englonde WHan kyng Edward sawe the grete harme destruccyon that the barons of Englond dyd to syr Hugh Spen sers londe to his sones in euery place that they came vpon the king than through his coūseyle exiled syr Iohn Mombray syr Roger Clifford syr Gosselin Dauil many other lordes that were cōsentynge to them wherfore the barons dyd than more harme than they dyd before And whan the kyng sawe the the barons wolde not cease of theyr cruelte the kyng was sore adrad lest they wold destroye hym his realme for his mayntenaūce but yf he assented to them so he sent for them by lettres that they sholde come to London to his parliament at a certayne daye as in his lettres were conteyned And they came with thre batayles well armed at all poyntes and euery batayle had cote armures of grene cloth therof the ryght quarter was yelowe with whyte bendes wherfore that parliament was called the parlyament of the whyte bende And in that company was syr Vmfrey of Bohoune erle of Herford syr Roger Clifford syr Iohn Mombray syr Gosselyn Dauyll syr Roger Mortimer of Wygmore syr Henry of Trais syr Iohn Gif fard syr Barthilme we of Badelsmore that was the kynges steward that the kyng had sent to Shyrbur●ein Elmede to the erle of Lancastre to all that were with hym for to treate of accorde that hym alyed to the barons came with that company And syr Roger Dammorie syr Hugh Dandale the had spoused the kynges neces syster syr Gylbert of Clare erle of Glocestre that was slayne in Scotlonde as before is sayd And those two lordes had than two partyes of the erledome of Glocestre syr Hugh Spenser the sone had the thyrde parte in his wyues halfe the thyrd syster those two lordes wēt to the barons with all theyr power agaynst syr Hugh theyr broder 〈◊〉 lawe so there came with them syr Roger Clifford syr Iohn Mombray syr Gosselyn Dauyll syr Roger Mortymer of Wygmore his neuew syr Henry Trais syr Iohn Giffard syr Barthylmewe of Badelsmore with all theyr company many other y● to them were consentyng All the grete lordes came to Westmynster to the kynges parliament so they spake dyd the bothe syr Hugh Spenser the fader also the sone were outlawed of Englonde for euermore And so syr Hugh the fader went to Douer made moche sorow fell downe vpon y● groūde by the see banke acrosse with his armes sore wepyng sayd Now fayre Englonde good Eng londe to almyghty god I the betake thryes kyssed the groūde wende neuer to haue comen agayn wepyng cursed the tyme that euer he begate syr Hugh his sone sayd for hȳ he had lost all englōde in presence of all gaue him his curse went ouer the see to his londes But 〈◊〉 Hugh the sone wolde not go out of Englonde but helde hym on the see he his cōpany robbed two Dromondes besyde Sandwyche toke bare awaye all the was in them the value of .xl. M. poūde ¶ How the kyng exiled the erle Thomas of Lancastre all that helde with hym and how Mortimer came yelded hym to the kynge and of the lordes IT was not longe after the the kyng ne made syr Hugh Spenser th●●a der syr Hugh the sone come agayne in to Englonde agaynst the lordes wyll of the realme And soone after the kyng with a stronge power came and besyeged the castell of Ledes in the castell was the lady of Badelsmore bycause the she wold not graūte that castell to the quene I sabell kyng Edwardes wyfe But the princypall cause was bycause the syr Barthilmewe was agaynst the kyng helde with the lordes of Englonde neuerthelesse the kynge by helpe and socour of men of London and also of helpe of southeren men gate the castell maugre of them all that were within toke with them all that they myght fynde And whan the barons of Englonde herde these tydynges syr Roger Mor●●mer many other lordes toke the towne of Burgworth with strength wherfore the kyng was wonders wrothe let outlawe Thomas of Lācastre Vmfrey de Bohoune erle of Herford all those that were assentyng to the same quarell And the kyng assembled an huge hoost came agaynst the lordes of Englonde wherfore the Mortimers put them in the kynges mercy grace And anone they were sente to the toure of London there kepte in prison And whan the barons herde this thynge they came to Poūtfret castell where as the erle Thomas soiourned told hym how that the Mortimers both had yelded them to the kyng put them i his grace ¶ Of the syege of Tykhyll WHan Thomas erle of Lancastre herd this he was wōders wroth and all that were of his company gretly they were discōforted ordeyned theyr power togyder besyeged the castell of Tykhyll But those that were within manly defended them that the barons coude not gete the castell And whan the kynge herde that his castell was besyeged he swore by god by his names that the syege sholde be remeued assembled an huge power of people and went thyderward to rescowe the castell his power encreased from daye to daye Whan the erle of Lancastre the erle of Herford the barons of theyr cōpany herde of this thynge they assembled all theyr power went to Burton vpon Trent kepte the brydge that the kyng sholde not passe ouer But it befell so on the .x. daye of Marche in the yere of grace M .ccc .xxj. the kyng the Spensers syr Aymer of Valaūce erle of Penbroke Ioh●erle of Arūdell and theyr power we●t ouer the water discom●yted the erle Thomas his com pany And they fled to the castell of Tutbery from thens to Poūtfret And in the vyage dyed syr Roget Danmore in the abbey of Tuthery And that same tyme the erle Thomas had a traytour with him that was called Robert Holand a knight that the erle had brought vp of nought had nourysshed hym in his buttry and had gyuen hym a. M. marke of londe by yere so moche the erle loued hym that he myght do in the erles courte all that hym lyked with hye lowe so craftely the thefe bare hym that his lorde trusted hym more than ony man on lyue And the erle had ordeyned hym by his lettres for to go in to the erledom of Lācastre to make men aryse to helpe hym in that viage that is to saye .v. C. men of armes But the false traytour came not there no maner men for to warne ne reyse to helpe his lorde And whan the fals traytour herde tell that his lord was discōfited at Burton vpon Trent as a fals traytour thefe stale awaye robbed in Rauensdele his lordes men that came from the discōfyture toke of them hors harneys
yelde you traytours yelde you And whan they were yolden they were robbed boūde as theues Alas the shame and despyte that the gentyll ordre of knyghthode had there at that batayle And the lond was than without lawe for holy chirche had than no more reuerence thā yf it had ben a brodell hous And in that batayle was the fader against the sone and the vncle agaynst the neuewe For so moche vnkyndnes there was neuer seen before in Englonde as was that tyme amonge folkes of one nacyon For one kynrede had no more ●yte on that other than an ho 〈…〉 gry wolfe hath of a shepe it was no wonder For the grete lordes of Englonde were not all borne of o●●●a●yon but were 〈…〉 edled with other na 〈…〉 s that is for to saye some were Brytons some Sa●o●s some ●●nes some Pehytes some Fren 〈…〉 some Normās Spanya●des Romayns Heno●ers 〈◊〉 F●em●●ges with m●●y other ●●oyons the whiche nacyons ac 〈…〉 ed not to the kynde blode of Englond And yf so gret● lordes ha● bē onely ●●dded ●o ●nglysshe people than sholde rest and pe●s haue ben a 〈…〉 ge them without o●y en●●y And at the batayle were taken prysoners syr Roger E 〈…〉 ord syr Iohn M 〈…〉 bray syr Wyllyam Tuchit syr Willyam ●itz Willyam many other worthy knygh tes there were takē at that batayle And syr Hugh Dandell the nexte daye after was taken put in to prison and sholde haue bē done to deth yf he had not spoused the kynges nece that was erle Gylbertes syster of Glocestre And anone after was syr Barth●●mew of Badelsmere taken at Stowe parke a manoyr of the bysshop of Lyncolnes that was his neuewe many other barons baronets wherfore was made moche sorowe ¶ How syr Thomas of Lancastre was byheded at Pountfret and .v. barons a knyght drawen hanged there NOw I shall tell you of the noble erle syr Thomas of Lancastre Whan he was taken brought to yorke many of the cyte were full glad vpon hym cryed with an hygh voyce O syr traytour ye be welcome blyssed be god for now ye shall haue the rewarde that longe tyme ye haue deserued And cast vpon hym many snowe balles many other reproues they dyd hym But the gentyll erle suffred all and sayd not one worde agayne And at the same tyme the kynge herde of this discōfyture was full glad and in haste came to Poūtfret and syr Hugh Spenser syr Hugh his sone syr Iohn erle of Arundel and syr Edmond of wodstok the kynges broder erle of Kent syr Aymer of Valaūce erle of Penbroke mayster Robert Baldok a fals pylled clerke that was preuy and dwelled in the kynges courte all came thyder with the kynge And the kynge entred in to the castell And syr Andrewe of Herkela a fals tyraūt through the kynges cōmaundement toke with hym the gentyll erle Thomas to Pountfret and there he was prysoned in his owne castell that he had newe made that stode agaynst the abbey of kynge Edwarde And syr Hugh Spenser the fader his sone cast in theyr thoughtes how and in what maner the good erle Thomas of Lancastre shold be put to deth without ony iudgemēt of his peres Wherfore it was ordeyned through the kynges Iustices that the kynge shold put vpon hym poyntes of treason And so it befell that he was ledde to barre before the kynges Iustices bare heded as a thefe in a fayre hall in his own castell where as he had made many a grete feest to riche poore And these were his Iustices syr Hugh Spenser the fader Aymer of ●a●a●●e erle of Penbroke syr Edmōd of wodstok erle of Kent syr Iohn of Brytayn erle of Rychmond syr Robert Mal●m 〈…〉 Iustice this syr Robert him acou●ped in this maner Thomas at the first our lorde the kyng this courte excludeth y●u of all maner answere Thomas our l●●d the kyng putteth vpon you that ye haue 〈◊〉 his lōd ryden with baner displayed against his peas as a traytour And with that worde that gentyll erle Thomas with an 〈◊〉 voyce sayd Nay lordes forsoth by ●a●● Thomas I was neuer traytour The Iustyce sayd agayn Thomas our lord the kyng putteth vpō you that ye haue robbed his folke murdred his people as a thefe Thomas also the kyng putteth 〈◊〉 you that he discōfyted you your people with his folke in his owne realme wherfore ye went ●●ed to the wode as an 〈◊〉 And Thomas as a traitour ye ought to be hanged by reason but the kyng hath forgyuen you that Iudgement for ●●ue of quene Isabell And Thomas reason wolde that ye sholde be hanged but the kynge hath forgyuen you yt●udgement for loue of your lygnage But Thomas for as moche as ye were taken fleynge as an ou●lawe the kyng wyll that your heed be smytten of as ye haue well deserued Anoue haue hym out of pr●es brynge hym to his iudgement Whan the gentyll knyght Thomas had herd al these wor des with an hye voyce he cryed sore wepyng sayd Alas saint Thomas fayre fader alas shall I be deed thus Graūt me now blissedfull god answere But all auayled hym ●o thynge For the cursed Gascoyns put hym hyder thyder on hym cryed with an hye voyce O kyng Arthur moost terryble and dredefull well knowen is now thyn open traytory an euyll deth shalt thou anone dye as thou hast well deserued it And than they set vpon his heed in scorne an olde chapelet that was all to rent that was not worth an halfpeny And after that they set hȳ vpon a l●ne whyte palfrey full vnsemely also all bare with an olde brydell and with an horryble noyse they droue hym out of the castell toward his deth and they cast vpon hym many balles of snowe in despyte And as the traytours ladde hym out of the castel he sayd these pyteous wordes holdynge vp his handes towarde heuen Now the kynge of heuen gyue vs mercy for the erthly kyng hath vs forsaken And a frere prechour went with hym out of the castell tyll he came to the place that he ended his lyfe vnto whom he shroue hȳ of all his lyfe And the gentyll erle helde the frere wonders fast by the clothes sayd to hym Fayre fader abyde with vs tyll that I be deed for my flesshe quaketh for drede of deth And the sothe to saye the gentyl erle set hym vpon his knees and turned hym towarde the eest But a rybaud that was called Higone of Moston set hande vpon the gentyl erle sayd in despyte of hym Syr traytour turne the toward the Scottes thy foule dethe to receyue and turned hym toward the north The noble erle Thomas answered than with a mylde voyce sayd Now fayre lordes I shall do your wyll And with the worde the frere went from hym sore wepynge And anone a rybaud wente to hym and
grace y● the foresayd Thomas might be translated But y● pope sayd nay that he shold not be translated vnto the tyme he were better certyfyed of the clergy of Englonde and seen by theyr obedyence what thynge god had done for y● loue of saynt Thomas of Lancastre after y● suggestyon that y● foresayd erle of Kent had made to hym And whan this Edmond saw y● he might not spede of his purpose as touchyng the translacyon he prayed hȳ of coūseyle as touchyng syr Edward of Carnaruan his broder sayd not longe ago he was king of Englonde what thynge myght best be done as touching his deliueraūce syth y● a comyn fame is through Englonde y● he is alyue safe Whan the pope herde hym tell y● syr Edward was alyue he cōmaūded the erle vpon his benyson y● he sholde helpe with all the power y● he myght y● he were delyuered out of prison saue his body in all y● he myght to brynge this thynge to an ende he assoyled hym his cōpany a pe na et culpa al tho y● holpe to his deliueraunce Than toke Edmond of wodstok his leue of the pope came agayne in to Englonde And whan syr Edmond was comen some of y● frere prechers came sayd y● syr Edwarde his broder yet was alyue in y● castell of Corf vnder y● keping of syr Thomas Gurney Tho sped hym the foresayd Edmōd as fast as he might tyll he came to y● castel of Corf aqueynted hym and spake so fayre with Iohn Daueryll that was constable of y● same castell gaue him ryche gyftes to haue acqueyntaunce of hym to knowe of his coūseyle And thus it befel y● the foresayd syr Edmond prayed specially to tell hym pryuely of his lorde his broder syr Edward yf y● he lyued or were deed yf he were alyue he prayed hȳ ones to haue a syght of hym And this syr Iohn Daueryll was a hye herted man full of courage answered shortly to syr Edmond sayd that syr Edward his broder was in helth vnder his kepyng durst not shewe hym to no man syth it was defended hȳ in y● kynges half Edward y● was Edwardes sone of Carnaruan also by the cōmaūdemēt of quene Isabell y● kynges moder of syr Roger Mortymer y● he shold shewe his body to no man of the world saue onely to them vpō lyf lȳme disheryting of his heyres for euermore But the fals traytour falsly lyed for he was not in his warde but he was takē thens lad to y● castell of Berkeley by syr Thomas Gurney by cōmaūdement of Mortimer tyll he was deed as before is sayd but syr Edmōd of wodstok wyst no thynge y● syr Edwarde his broder was deed whervpon he toke a lettre to kyng Edward his broder as to his worthy lorde And receyued y● lettre of hȳ behight hym to do his message wtout ony fayle And with y● syr Edmond toke leue of the foresayd Iohn went in to his own coūtre lordshyp ī Kent y● he had there And anone as this same Iohn wyst y● syr Edmond was gone in to Kent his own lordship he went in all the haste y● be might fro the castel of Corf came to syr Roger Mortimer toke hym y● lettre y● syr Edmond of wodstok erle of Kent had taken hym closed ensealed with his owne seale And whan syr Roger Mortimer had receyued the lettre he vnclosed it sawe what was conteyned therin began to rede it wherof y● begȳnynge was this ¶ Worshyps reuerence with broders legeaunce and subie●cyon Syr knyght worshipful dere broder yf it please you I praye you hertely y● ye be in good com forte for I shall so ordeyne for you that ye shall come out of prison be deliuered of that disease that ye be in And vnderstande of your grete lordshyp y● I haue to myne assentyng almoost all the grete lordes of Englonde with all theyr apparayle y● is to saye with armure with tresour without nombre for to maynteyne your quarell so ferforth that ye shall be kynge agayn as ye were before that they haue sworne to me vpō a boke as well prelates as erles barons Whan syr Roger Mortimer sawe vnderstode the myght the strengthe of the lettre anone his herte for wrath began to boll euyll hert bare toward syr Edmond of wodstok y● was erle of Kent with all the haste that he might he went vnto dame Isabell y● quene y● was y● kynges moder shewed her syr Edmondes lettre his wyll his purpose how that he had coniected ordeyned to put downe kyng Edward of wyndsore her sone of his ryalte of his kyngdom Now certes syr Roger sayd she hath syr Edmōd done so now by my faders soule sayd she I wyll be therof auenged yf that god graūt me lyfe that in a shorte tyme. And with y● the quene Isabel went to king Edward her sone there as he was at the parlyament at Wynchestre for to amende the wronges the trespaces that were done amonge the people of his realme she toke and shewed hym the lettre that syr Edmond of wodstock had made and ensealed with his owne seale and badde hym vpon her blessynge that he sholde be auenged vpon syr Edmonde as vpon his deedly enemy Than was the quene sore wroth towarde syr Edmonde erle of Kent and cessed neuer to praye vnto her sone tyll that he had sent in all the haste after hym And vpon that the kyng sent by his lettres after syr Edmond of wodstok that he sholde come speke with hym at Wynchestre all maner thynges lefte And whan syr Edmond sawe y● the king sent after hym with his lettres ensealed he hasted hym in all that he myght tyll that he came to wynchestre But whan the quene wyst that syr Edmonde was comen to wynchestre anone she went prayed so fast vnto kynge Edwarde her sone that y● good erle was arested anone and ladde vnto y● barre before Robert of Hamond y● was Crowner of the kynges housholde he assocyed to hym syr Roger Mortimer And than spake the fore sayd Robert said Syr Edmond erle of Kent ye shall vnderstāde that it is done vs to wyte prȳcypally vnto our lyege lorde the kynge Edwarde of Englonde almyghty god hym saue kepe that ye be his deedly enemy a traytour also a comyn enemy vnto the realme that ye haue ben aboute many a daye for to make preuy delyueraūce of syr Edward somtyme king of Englonde your broder the whiche somtyme was put downe of his royalte by y● comyn assent of y● lordes of Englonde in appeasynge of our lorde the kynges estate also of his realme Than answered the good man sayd Forsothe syr vnderstande well y● I was neuer traytour to my kyng ne to the realme that I do me on god on all the
worlde therfore by my kynges leue I shall it preue defende as a man ought to do Than sayd Mortymer Syr Edmonde it is so ferforth knowen y● it may not be well gaynsayd that in presence of all that be here it shall be well proued Now had this fals Mortimer the same lettre that syr Edmond had taken to syr Iohn Daueryll in the castell of Corf for to take to kyng Edward his broder that syr Edmonde wyst not of ne supposed nothynge y● syr Iohn Daueryll had ben so fals to deliuer his lettre in suche wyse to Mortimer thought no maner thynge of the lettre Than Mortimer sayd to syr Edmonde shewed y● lettre sealed asked him yf that he knewe that lettre the seale This syr Edmōd loked theron auysed hym longe tyme on y● print of y● seale for he myght not se y● lettre wtin wyst well y● it was his seale thought that it had bē some lettre y● had borne no grete charge thought nothynge on y● other lettre sayd openly in herynge of them all Ye forsothe this is my seale I wyll it not forsake Loo sayd Mortymer syrs ye here all what he hath sayd that he knowlegeth y● this is his lettre his seale now ye shall here what is conteyned therin And than this Mortimer opened y● lettre y● he had folden a fore togyder red it openly worde by worde in hering of them all And whan y● lettre was red he sayd loo syrs ye haue herde all that here is wryten that he hath knowleged y● this is his lettre his seale he may not go therfro And than they cryed gaue dome that he sholde be hanged drawen his heed smyttē of in maner of a traytour he his heyres dysheryted for euermore so he was ladde forth put in to pryson And whan this was done y● quene wyst that he was dampned by waye of y● lawe bothe of lyf and lymme his heyres dysheryted for euer more through open knowlegynge in playn court wherfore them thought that it were good y● the foresayd syr Edmond were hastely slayne without wytynge of y● kyng or els the kynge wolde lyghtly forgyue hym his deth than it sholde turne them to moche sorowe so as he was empeched And anone the quene through counseyle of Mortimer wtout ony other counseyle sente in haste to the baylyfe of wynchestre y● he sholde sinyte of syr Edmondes heed of wod 〈…〉 ok erle of Kent without ony maner abydynge or respyte vpon payne of lyfe lymme that he shold haue none other execucyon bycause of taryenge not withstandyng the iudgement Than toke y● baylyfe syr Edmond out of pryson ladde hym besyde y● castel of wynchestre there they made a gongfermer to smyte of his dyed for none other durst do it And so he dyed there alas y● whyle y● is to say y● 〈◊〉 day of October the thyrde yere of kyng Edwardes regne And whan y● kyng wyst therof he was wonders sory let bury hym at the frere Minours at winchestre ¶ Of the deth of syr Roger Mortymer erle of Marche ANd so it befell at y● tyme that syr Roger Mortimer erle of marche was so proude so hawteyne y● he helde no lord of the realme his pere And than became he so couetous that he folowed dame Isabell the quenes courte y● was kyng Edwardes moder beset his penyworthes with the offycers of the quenes houshold in y● same maner y● the kynges officers dyd And so he made his takyng as touchynge vytayles also of caryages all he dyd for bycause of e●penses and to gadre tresour so he dyd without nombre in all that he myght Than made he hym wonders preuy with the quene Isabell and so moche lordshyp retynue he had that all the grete lordes of Englonde of hym were adrad Wherfore the kynge his coūseyle towardes hym were agreued ordeyned amonge them to vndo hym through pure reason and lawe bycause that kynge Edward that was the kynges fader tray●oursly through hym was murdred in y● castell of Corf as before is sayd more playnly in the same parte of this boke of his deth And some that were of the kynges counseyle loued Mortimer tolde hym in preuite how that the kyng his counseyle were aboute frō daye to daye hym for to destroye vndo Wherfore Mortimer was sore anoyed and angry as the deuyll agaynst them that were of the kynges coūseyle sayd he wolde of them be auenged how so euer he toke on It was not longe afterward that king Edward and dame Philip his wyfe dame Isabell the kynges moder syr Roger Mortymer ne went vnto Notyngham there for to soiourne And so it befel that quene Isabell through counseyle of Mortimer toke to her the keys of the gates of the castel of Notyngham so that no man myght come in nor out by nyght but through cōmaūdement of Mortimer ne the kynge nor none of his coūseyle And that tyme it befell so that Mortimer as a deuyll for wrath boyled also for wrath the he had agaynst the kynges men pryncypally agaynst them that had accused hym to the kyng of the deth of syr Edward his fader And pryuely a counseyle was taken bytwene quene Isabell Mortymer the bysshop of Lyncolne and syr Symond of Bedford syr Hugh of Trompyngton other preuy of theyr coūseyle for to vndo them al the had accused Mortimer vnto the kynge of his faders deth of treason of felony Wherfore all those that were of the kynges coūseyle whā they wyst of Mortimers castynge pryuely came to kyng Edwarde sayd that Mortimer wolde destroye them bycause they had accused hym of kyng Edwardes deth his fader and prayed hym that he wolde maynteyne them in theyr right And these were the lordes that pursued this quarell syr Williā of Mountagu syr Vmfrey de Boghun syr Williā his broder syr Rauf of Stafford syr Robert of Herford syr Willyam of Clynton syr Iohn Neuyll of Nornby and many other of theyr consent and all these swore vpon a boke to maynteyne the quarell in as moche as they myght And it befell so after that syr Wyllyam of Mountagu ne none of the kynges frendes must not be herborowed in the castel for Mortimer but went and toke theyr herborowe in dyuers places of the towne of Notyngham And tho were they sore adrad lest that Mortimer shold destroye them and in haste came vnto kyng Edward syr Willyam of Moūtagu that than was in the castell and pryuely tolde hym that he nor none of his company sholde not take Mortimer without counseyle helpe of Wyllyam of Eland constable of the same castell Now truly sayd the king I loue you well therfore I counseyle you that ye go to the foresayd constable and cōmaunde hym in my name that he be your
preuy And so this Iohn of Barnaby was in debate with a frensshe man in the towne of Dūpier so he slewe hym went his waye in all the haste that he myght in to the castell for to haue helpe of his lord And anone came the officers of the towne to take Iohn of Barnaby as a felon syr Edward his lord holpe hym rescowed hym by night made him go out of the castell so he went his waye came in to Englonde wtout ony harme And whan the kyng of Fraūce sawe that syr Edward had rescowed his felon he became wonders wrothe agaynst syr Edward anone let arest hym toke in to his hādes all his londes Than dwelled syr Edward in pryson vnto the tyme that syr Henry of Beaumont came in to Fraūce the whiche Henry was somtyme erle of Angos in Scotlonde through his wyfe was put out therof whā the accordemēt was bytwene Englonde and Scotlond through quene Isabell Roger Mortimer theyr cōpany for the maryage that she made bytwene Dauyd that was Robert the Brus sone dame Ione of the toure kyng Edwardes syster of Englōde well vnderstode this that at the ende he shold come to his ryght but yf it were syr Edwarde Bayloll that was ryght heyre of the realme of Scotlonde And the kyng of Fraunce Lowys loued moche this syr Henry he was with hym ful preuy thought for to make a delyueraūce of syr Edwarde Bayloll yf he myght in ony maner of wyse Tho prayed he the kyng the it wolde please his noble grace to graūt hym syr Edward Baylols body vnto the next parlyament that he myght lyue with his own tentes in the meane tyme that he myght stande to be iudged with his peres at the parlyament And the kyng graūted hym his prayer made the foresayd Edward to be delyuered out of pryson in the maner aboue said And anone as he was out of prison syr Henry toke hym forth with hym ladde hym in to Englōde made hym dwell pryuely at the maner of Sandhall vpon Ouse in Yorkeshyre with the lady Vescy And so he ordeyned him there an huge retynue of Englysshemen also of alyens for to conquere agayne his herytage And so he gaue moche siluer to the sowdyours to alyens for to helpe hym And they behyght for to helpe hym in that they myght but they fayled hym at his moost nede And at that tyme Donald erle of Moryf herde tell how that syr Edwarde Baylol was priuely come in to Englōde came to hym made grete ioye of his comynge agayn and sayd to hym behyght hym that all the grete lordes of Scotlonde shold be to hym attendaūt shold holde hym for kynge as ryght heyre of Scotlōde dyd to hȳ homage feaute Than came syr Henry of Beaumont to kynge Edwarde of Englonde prayed hym in the waye of charite that he wolde graūt of his grace to syr Edward Bayloll that he myght safely go by londe frō Sandhal vnto Scotlōde to cōquere his ryght herytaunce in Scotlonde The kynge answered sayd Yf that I suffre Bayloll go through my londe in to Scotlonde the people wold saye that I shold be assentyng vnto the company Now syr I praye you that ye wolde gyue hym leue to take with hym sowdyours of Englysshe mē that they myght safely lede hȳ through your londe in to Scotlōde And syr vpon this couenaunt that yf it so befall as god it forbydde he be dyscomfyted in batayle through the Scottes that I also all the lordes that holde with Bayloll ben for euer more out of your rentes that we haue in Englonde And there the kyng vpon this couenaunt graunted theyr bone as touchynge hym those that were of the same quarell the whiche claymed for to haue londes rentes in the realme of Scotlōde And these were the names of those lordes that pursued this foresayd quarell that is to saye syr Edward Bayloll the whiche chalenged the realme of Scotlonde syr Henry Beaumōt erle of Angos syr Dauid of Stroboly erle of Atheles syr 〈◊〉 frey of Mombray Walter Comyn and many other that were put out of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rytage in Scotlonde whan the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 made bytwene Englonde S 〈…〉 〈◊〉 before is sayd And ye shall 〈◊〉 that these lordes toke with them .v. C. 〈◊〉 of armes and .ij. M. archers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tho wente in to shyppe at 〈◊〉 and sayled by the see tyll that they 〈◊〉 vnto Scotlonde came to londe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 kehorne .xij. myle from sayn● Ioh 〈…〉 towne And anone sente out theyr 〈◊〉 pes agayne for that they sholde no● 〈◊〉 hurt ne empayred neyther that no man sholde go in to the shyppes agayn though that they had nede but abyde all 〈◊〉 and not ●●ee but stande rather 〈◊〉 deth thā flee for to mayn 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quarell Whan the erle of Fi 〈…〉 a 〈◊〉 man a sterne herde that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 comen for to take the londe of Scotlonde he came in haste to kynkehorne with xij M. scottes for to destroye hym that he sholde not come to londe But syr Edwarde Bayloll his company dyscomfyted hym there at the whiche discomfyture syr Alysaūder of Seron was there slayne many other The erle of Fyffe was tho sore full yll ashamed that so lytell a company had dyscomfy●●d hym and shamefully put hym all his company that were alyue for to flee Than came syr Edward Bayloll toke the coun tre all aboute hym tyll he came vnto the abbey of Dunfermelin there he foūde vytayles for hym for his folke and amonge all thȳges he foūde in a chambre aboute .v. C. of grete staues of fyne oke with longe pykes of yren of stele he toke them deliuered them to the moost strongest men of his cōpany And anone after he went from thens lodged hym in a felde two myle fro saynt Iohannes towne And whan the burgeyses of the towne herde how the erle of Fiffe was dyscōfyted through Bayloll they were fore adrad brake theyr brydges that they had made ouer the water of Erne so that Baylol myght not go ouer wherfore he lodged hym there all that nyght but lytell hede he toke of rest sayd vnto his people Now dere lordes ye knowe full well that we be now lodged bytwene our enemyes yf they may vs hampre there is no bote but deth wherfore yf we abyde styll here all this nyght I wene it shall turne vs to moche harme For the power of Scotlonde may euer wexe encreace and we may not so do we be but lytell people agaynst them wherfore I praye you for the loue of almighty god make we vs bolde hardy that we may myghtely take the Scottes this night and boldly warre vpon them let vs pursue them this nyght yf they be through vs trauayled se our hardynes other scottes
he was .ij. yere And in y● vj kal. of Iuly lastyng y● same parlyament dyed prynce Edward kyng Edwardes fyrst sone y● is to saye on trinite sondaye in worship of whiche feest he was wont euery yere where y● euer he were in the worlde to hold make y● moost solēpnite that he myght whose name fortune of knyghthode but yf it had bē of another Hector all men bothe chrysten hethen whyle y● he lyued was in good poynt wondred moche drad hȳ wonders sore whose body is worshypfully buryed in Chrystchirche at Caūterbury ¶ And in this same yere y● men y● erles tenaūtes of warwik arose malycyously agaynst y● abbot couēt of Euesham theyr tenaūces destroyed y● abbey y● town woūded bet theyr mē slewe many of them went to theyr maner places dyd moche harme brake downe theyr parkes closes slewe theyr wyld beestes chaced them brekyng theyr fyssh pondes he des let y● water of theyr pōdes stewes ryuers ren out toke y● fysshe bare it with them dyd them all y● sorowe y● they myght so ferforth y● they had destroyed perpetually y● abbey with al theyrmēbres appertenaūces but yf the kyng y● sooner had not holp●● it taken hede therte therfore y● kyng sent his lettres to y● erle of warwik chatgyng cōmaūdyng hȳ y● he sholde siynt redresse amende those euyl boers brekers of his peas so by meanes oflordes other frendes y● peas was made bytwene them for this hur lyng as it was sayd y● kyng wold not be gouerned at y● time by his lordes y● there were in y● parliamēt but he toke made his sone the duke of Lācastre his gouernour of y● realme the which stode so styll as gouernour tyll y● tyme that he dyed ¶ The same yere after Candelmas or y● parlyament was done the kyng asked a subsydy of y● clergy of y● lay le it was graūted hym y● is to say y● he shold haue of euery persone of y● lay le bothe man woman that passed .xiiij. yere of age iiij pens out take poore beggers that were knowen openly for nedy poore beggers And that he shold haue of euery man of holy thirche y● was benefyced or promoted .xij. pens all other y● were not proted iiij pens out take the .iiij. ordres of the freres beggers ¶ This same yere after Mighelmasse Rychard prynce Edwardes sone was made prȳce of Wales to whome y● king gaue also the duchy of Cornewayle with the erledome of Chestre And aboute this tyme the Cardynall of Englonde the fourth daye before Mary Mawdeleyns daye after dyner sodeinly was stryken with a palsey lost his speche and on Mary Mawdeleyns daye dyed ¶ Of the deth of kyng Edward how syr Iohn Monsterwarth knyght was drawen and hanged for his falsnes BYght anone after ī the .lij. yere of kyng Edward in the begȳnynge of October pōpe Gregory y● .xj. brought and remeued his courte with hym from Auinyon to Rome ¶ And the .xij. day of Apryll Iohn Monsterwarth knyght at London was drawen hanged than quartred sent to foure chefe townes of Englōde his heed smittē of set vpon Londō brydge For this Iohn was full vntrue to y● kyng to the realme couetous vnstable for he toke oftentymes grete sōmes of money of the kyng his counseyle for men of armes wages that he sholde haue payed them toke it to his owne vse he drad that at y● last he shold be shent accused for y● same cause fledde pryuely to y● kynge of Fraūce was sworne to hym became his man and behyght hym a grete nauy out of Spayne to cōfusyon and destroyenge of Englōde But y● ryghtfull god to whom no preuite is vnknowen suffred hȳ first to be shent spylte or y● he so traytoursly falsly betrayed his lyege lord y● king of Englonde his people in his realme in the which groūde this same Iohn was borne wyckedly through batayle destroyed or he brought aboute his cursed purpose ¶ In y● feest of saynt Gregory nexte after kynge Edward gaue to Rycharde of Burdeux his heyre that was prynce Edwardes sone at Wyndsore the ordre of knyghthode made hȳ knyght the whiche kyng Edward whan he had regned .lj. yere more y● .xj. kal. of Iune he dyed at Shene is buryed worshyp fully at westmȳster on whose soule god haue mercy This kyng Edward was forsothe of a passyng goodnes full gracyous among all the worthy men of the world for he passed shone by vertue of grace gyuē to hym frō god aboue all his p̄decessours y● were noble men worthy he was a well herted man an hardy for he drad neuer no myshappes ne barmes ne euyl fortune y● myght fall a noble warryour a fortunate for both on lōde see in al batayles assembles with a passing glory ioy he had y● victory he was meke benigne homely sobre soft to al men as wel to strangers as to his owne subiectes to other y● were vnder his gouernaūce he was deuout holy both to god holy chirche for he worshipped holpe maynteyned holy chirch theyr mynistres with al maner reuerēce he was tre table well auysed in rēporall worldly nedes wyse ī coūseyle discrece meke to speke with ī his dedes maners gētyl well taught hauȳg pite on them y● were in disease plenteous in gyuyng e● benefaytes almes besy curyous in buylding lyghtly he bare suffred wrōges harmes whan he was gyuē to ony occupacyō he left all other thynges for y● tyme tended therto semely of body a mene stature hauyng alway to hygh to lowe a good chere And there sprōge shone so moche grace of hym y● what mā had behold his face or had dremed of hȳ he hoped y● daye y● al thynge shold hap to hym ioyfull lykyng And he gouerned his kingdom gloriously vnto his age he was large in gyuyng wyse in expēces he was fulfylled with al honeste of good maners vertues vnder whom to lyue it was as for to regne wherfore his fame his loos spronge so ferre y● it came in to hethynnesse Barbary shewynge tellynge his worthynes manhode in all londes y● no londe vnder heuen had brought forth so noble a kyng so gentyll so blissed or might reyse suche another whā he was deed Neuertheles lechery meuynge of his flesshe haūted hym in his age wherfore the rather as it is to suppose for vumesurable fulfyllynge of his lust his lyfe shorted the sooner And hereof take good hede lyke as his dedes bereth wytnes for as in his begȳnyng all thynges were Ioyfull and lykyng to hym to all people And in his myddle age he passed all people in hygh Ioye worshyp
Christi daye after they came downe in to South werke brake vp the prison hous that is to saye the kynges benche the Marchalsee delyuered out all the prysoners And so the same daye they came in to London there they robbed the people and slewe all the alyens that they myght fynde in the cite aboute the cite and despoyled all theyr goodes made hauoke And on the frydaye nexte folowynge that was in the mornynge they came to the toure of London and the kyng beynge therin they fette out of the toure the archebisshop of Caunterbury syr Edmond Sudbery and syr Robert Halys hospitaler pryour and mayster of saynt Iohns hous and a whyte frere that was confessour vnto kynge Rychard brought them to the toure hyll and there they smote of theyr heedes and came agayne to Londō and slewe moche people of the cite And than they went vnto the dukes place of Lancastre beyonde saynt Mary of the stronde that was called the Sauoy and there they deuoured destroyed al the goodes that they myght fynde therin and bare them awaye than brent vp the place And than afterward they went to saynt Iohns without Smythfelde and there they destroyed all the goodes and brent vp that hous And after they wente to Westmynster and to saint Martyns the graūde and made them to go out of the sentwary all that were within for ony maner of gylt And than they came vnto the temple and to all the other Innes of men of lawe despoyled them robbed them of theyr goodes also toke theyr bokes of lawe And than they came to London brake vp the pryson of Newgate droue out all y● prisoners felons other and of bothe Counters all y● people that were within them destroyed all the bokes of the Counters And thus they cōtynued bothe saterday sondaye vnto the monday nexte after in all theyr malyce wyckednes And than on mon daye kynge Rychard with his lordes that were with hym that tyme with the Mayre of London Wyllyam Walworth that was that tyme came with the aldermen the comyns of the Cite and they came in to South werke to here to knowe the intencion of these rebelles mysgouerned people And this Iacke strawe than made a crye in the felde that all the people of accorde sholde come nere here his clamours and his crye his wyll And the lordes the Mayre the aldermen with the comynalte hauynge indignacyon of his couetyse falsnes and his foule presumpcyon Anone Willyam Walworth that tyme beynge Mayre drewe out his knyfe slewe Iacke strawe and anone ryght there smote of his heed and set it vpon a spere so it was borne through Londō set vpon Londō brydge Anone these rysers mysgouerned men were clene vanysshed as it had not ben they And than the kyng of his grete goodnes by prayer of his lordes made there .vj. knyghtes of good worthy men of the cite of London that is to saye Wyllyam Walwoorth at y● tyme Mayre slewe Iacke strawe y● second was Nicolas Brembre and the thyrde Iohn Philipot and the fourth Nicolas Twyford and the fyfth Robert Laundes and the sy●th Robert Gayton And than the kynge with his lordes knyghtes returned agayne to the toure of London there he rested hym tyll this people were better seced set in rest peas And than by ꝓcesse of tyme as they might take gete these rebelles rysers they henge them vpon the next galous through out euery lordshyp in y● realme of Englond by .xl. by .xxx. by .x. by .xij. euer as they myght be goten takē in ony partyes ¶ And in y● .v. yere of kynge Rychardes regne was y● grete erth quake was generall throughout the worlde the wednesdaye after whytsondaye in the yere of our lorde M CCC lxxxxj wherfore all maner people were sore agast aferde longe tyme for drede of vengeaunce that our lorde shewed dyd ¶ And in the .vi. yere of kynge Rychard syr Henry Spēser bysshop of Norwiche went with a Croiserie ouer the see in to Flaundres there they gate y● towne of Grauenyng the towne of Burburgh Dūkerk Newport there they laded fraughted .lj. shyppes with pyllage for to haue comen in to Englōde with these shyppes goodes And the bysshop of Norwyche his coūseyle let bren these shyppes with all the pyllage in the same hauen in to harde asshes And at Dūkerk was done a batayle bytwene the Flemynges the Englisshmen And at that batayle were salyne a grete multytude of Flemynges And than went the bysshop with his retynue to ypers and besyeged it a longe tyme but it myght not be goten and so lefte that syege came agayn in to Englonde For our Englysshmen were fouly destroyed many dyed of y● flyx ¶ And in this same yere came quene Anne in to Englonde for to be spoused to kynge Rycharde And her fader was emperour of Almayn kyng of Beme And with her came y● duke of Tassy her vncle many other worthy lordes knyghtes of her coūtre of Beme of other duche tōgues to do her reuerence worshyp And syr Symond Beuerle a worthy knight of y● garter other knyghtes squyers that were y● kynges embassadours brought her in to Englonde so forth to London And the people of the cite that is to saye the Mayre y● aldermen all y● comyns rode agaynst her to welcome her euery man in good araye euery crafte with his mynstralsy in the best maner mette with her on the blacke heth in Kent so brought her vnto London through y● cite and so forth to Westmynster vnto the kȳges palays And there she was spoused vnto kyng Rychard well worthely in the abbey of Westmynster and there she was crowned quene of Englōd And all her frendes that came with her had grete gyftes were wel cherysshed and refresshed as longe tyme as they abode there ¶ And in y● same yere there was a batayle done in the kynges pala●s at Westmȳster for certayn poyntes of 〈◊〉 son of sir Iohn Ansley knight defendaūt and Carton squyer the appellaunt But this sir Iohn Ansley ouercame this Car ton made hym to yelde hym within y● lyste And anone was this Carton despoyled of his harneys drawen out of y● lystes so forth to Tyburne there he was hanged for his falsnes ¶ And in y● viij yere of the regne of kynge Rychard syr Edmonde of Langley erle of Cambrydge y● kynges vncle went in to Portyngale with a fayre company of men of armes and archers in strengthynge and helpynge the kynge of Portyngale agaynst the kynge of Spayne and his power there the kynge of Portyngale had the victory of his enemyes through helpe and conforte of our Englysshmen And whan the iourney was done y● erle of
Norfolke for euermore And syr Thomas Arundell archebisshop of Caū terbury was exiled that same tyme for euer deposed out of his see for malyce of the kyng And anone these thre worthy lordes were cōmaunded defended the kynges realme And anone they gate them shyppes at dyuers hauens went ouer the see in to dyuers lōdes eche his waye And the duke of Norfolke went to Venise there he died on whose soule god haue mercy Amen And than kynge Rychard made a clerke of his syr Roger Walden arche bysshop of Caūterbury ¶ And in the .xxij. yere of kynge Richardes regne by fals coūseyle ymaginacyon of couetous men that were aboute hym were made ordeyned blancke chartres and made them to be ensealed of al maner ry the men throughout the realme in so moche that they compelled diuers people to set theyr seales therto And this was done for grete couetyse wherfore al good hertes of the realme were clene turned away fro the kyng for euer after And that was vtter destruccyon ende to hym that was so hygh so excellent a prynce kyng through couetous fals coūseyle falsely betrayed Alas for pyte the suche a kynge myght not se And than kynge Rychard set his kyngdome and his ryall londe of Englonde to ferme vnto foure persones whiche were these syr Wyllyā Scrope erle of Wylshyre tresourer of Englond syr Iohn Busshe Henry Grene syr Iohn Bagot knyghtes whiche turned them to myschefe deth within a lytell tyme as ye shall fynde here afterwarde wryten ¶ And than kyng Rychard ma de grete ordynaūce went hymself ouer see into Irlonde many grete lordes with hym with grete hoostes for to strength theyr kynge with men of armes archers moche grete stuffe ryght good ordynaūce as longed vnto warre And or he passed ouer the see he ordeyned made 〈◊〉 Edmond of Langley his vncle the duke of Yorke his lewtenaū● of Englonde in his absence with the gouernaūce coūsey●e of these .iiij. knyghtes that had taken Englonde to ferme of the kyng And than he passed the see came in to Irlonde and there he was well worth●ly receyued And these rebelles that ben called 〈◊〉 Irysshmen came downe to the kynge yelded them to him bothe body go●des all at his owne wyll swore vnto 〈◊〉 to be his lyege men there dyd to hym homage feaute good seruyce thus he cōquered the moost parte of Irlende in a lytell tyme. And whyle that kyng 〈◊〉 chard was thus in Irlonde syr Henry of Bolyngbroke erle of Derby that the kyng had made before duke of Herford y● 〈◊〉 che duke the kyng had exiled out of this londe was comen agayn in to Englonde for to chalenge the dukedom of Lancast●● as for his right true herytage And he came downe out of Fraūce vnto ●alays And there mette hȳ syr Thomas Arundell that was archebysshop of 〈◊〉 that was exiled out of Englond wi●● hym came the erle of Arundel his so●● heyre the whiche was in kepynge of syr Iohn shelley knight somtyme wt●he erle of Huntyngdon with the duke of Excestre the whiche was tho in the castell of 〈◊〉 gate in Sussex there he stale awaye came to Calays there he was well worthely kepte tyll these other two lordes were comē to Calays And thā this worthy duke the archebysshop of Caūterbury Arundell shypped in the hauen of Calais drewe theyr course northward arryued in Yorkshyre at Rauensporne fast by Wydelyngton there he came entred fyrst the londe two lordes with hym and theyr meyny And than moche people of the realme that herde of his comynge knewe where that he was anone they drewe vnto hym welcomed these lordes so couraged them in all maner thynge and passed forth in to the londe and gadred moche people to them And whan kyng Rychard herde wyst that these two lordes were comen agayne in to Englonde and were londed Than the kynge lefte his ordynaūce in Irlonde came in to Englondward in all the haste that he myght and came to the castell of ●lyut and there he abode for to take his counseyle what myght be done but to hym came none And whā syr Thomas Percy erle of Worcestre that was the kynges steward wyst and knewe this anone he came in to the hall amonge all the people and he brake the yerde of the ryall kynges housholde anone euery man was disperpied went his waye forsoke theyr mayster souerayn lorde and lefte hym alone And thus was kynge Rycharde brought downe destroyed stode hym selfe alone without comforte or socour or ony good counseyle of ony man alas for pite of this ryall kyng And anone came tydȳges that syr Henry of Boling broke was vp with a stronge power of people and that all the squyers of Englonde reysed vp the shyres in strengthyng of hym agaynst kyng Rychard And thus soone he was comen out of the North coūtree to Brystowe there he mette with syr Wyllyam Scrope erle of Wylshyre and tresourer of Englonde with syr Iohn Busshe and syr Henry Grene and Iohn Bagot but he escaped frō them went ouer the see in to Irlonde And these thre knyghtes were taken and theyr herdes smytten of And thus they died for theyr fals couetyse And than was kynge Rychard taken and brought vnto the duke And anone the duke put hȳ in fast warde and stronge holde vnto his comynge to London And than was there a rumour in London a stronge noyse that kynge Rychard came to Westmynster and the people of London ranne thyder wolde haue done moche harme hurte in theyr woodnes had not the Mayre aldermen and other worthy men cessed them with fayre wordes and turned them home agayne to London ¶ And there was syr Iohn Slake dene of the kynges chapell of Westmynster taken brought to London put in pryson in Ludgate And after that Iohn Bagot was taken in Irlonde brought to London put in prison in Newgate there to be kepte and abyde his answere ¶ And soone after the duke brought kynge Rycharde pryuely to London put him in the toure vnder sure kepynge as a prysoner And than came the lordes of the realme with al theyr coūseyle vnto the toure to kynge Rychard sayd to hym of his mysgouernaunce extorcion that he had done made ordeyned to oppresse all the comyn people also to all the realme Wherfore all the comyn people of the realme wolde haue hym deposed of his kyngdome And so he was deposed at that tyme in the toure of London by all his lordes counseyle comyn assent of all the realme And than he was put from the toure vnto the castell of Ledes in Kent there he was kepte a whyle and than he was had from thens vnto the castell of
Henry the .iiij. besechinge him of his helpe and socour agaynst his deedly enemy the duke of Burgoyne And than the kynge made Thomas his sone duke of Clarence his other sone Iohn duke of Bedforde his other sone Vmfrey duke of Glocestre and syr Thomas Beauford erle of Dorset and the duke of Awemarle he made duke of Yorke And than the kyng ordeyned his sone syr Thomas duke of Clarēce sir Thomas beauford erle of Dorset syr Iohn Cornwyll with many other lordes knyghtes and squyers men of armes archers for to go ouet see in to Fraūce in helpynge and strengthynge of the duke of Orlyaunce And these worthy lordes with theyr retynue shypped at Hamton sayled ouer y● see in to Normādy londed at Hogges And there mette with them y● lorde Hambe at theyr londynge with .vij. M. men of armes Frensshmen thre sergeaūtes of armes with them all were put to flyght of them were takē vij C. men of armes iiij C. horses without those that were slayne in the felde And so they rode forth through out all Fraūce toke castles townes slewe many Frensshemen that withstode them and toke many prysoners as they rode and so they passed forth tyll they came to Burdeux and there they rested them a whyle and set the countree in peas rested tyll the vyntage were redy to sayle And than the duke with his meyny came home in to Englond in safete thāked be god ¶ And in the same yere was the kynges coyne chaunged throughout Englonde by the kynge his coūseyle that is to saye the noble halfe noble ferthynge of golde ¶ And in the .xiiij. yere of kyng Hērpes regne the fourth he let make galays of warre for he hoped to haue passed the grete see so forth to Ierusalem there to haue ended his lyfe but god vysyted hym soone after with infirmite grete sekenes that he myght not well endure no whyle so seruently he was taken and brought in bed at Westmȳster in a fayre chambre And as he lay in his bed he asked his chamberlayne what he called the chambre that he lay in And he answered sayd Ierusalem And than he sayd that the prophecy sayd that he shold make an ende dye in Ierusalē And than he made hym redy vnto god and dysposed all his wyll And soone after he died was caried by water frō Westmynster in a barge vnto Feuersham frō thens he was caryed to Caūterbury by londe with moche torche lyght brennynge in to the abbey of Chrystchirche there he was entered buryed besyde saint Thomas of Caūterburyes shryne And thus ended the worthy kyng Henry about mydlent sondaye in the yere of our lorde a. M CCCC and .xiij. vpon whose soule god haue mercy Amen MArtyn y● .v. was pope after Iohn xiiij yere This mā was chosen by the concyle of Constance the other were deposed y● stroue so came peas in the chirche the whiche longe tyme afore was desyred necessary for y● defence of the fayth This was y● myghtyest pope that euer was of ryches a grete iudge He edifyed townes walles stretes he destroyed heresyes he did moche good through the noble prynce Sygysmund And he gadred moche money for to gete y● holy londe agayn but deth came vpon hym letted hym he made a coūseyle afore his deth for that mater there he decessed ¶ Eugenius was pope after Martyn .xvii. yere This Eugeny was chosen peasybly after the deth of Martyn no man doubted but he was pope But shortly after he was expulsed from Rome for it was so that he fledde naked Also he was cited to the concyle of Basilieus deposed but he charged hym not And for that began the stryfe agayne the whiche stode to his deth those that fauoured him sayd he was worthy moche louynge the contrary sayd those that were agaynst hym but what someuer he was after he had taken the dignite vpon hym afore he was of grete abstynence of good fame that he dyd after that I leue to the iudgement of god ¶ Circa annū dn̄i M CCCC .xiij. ¶ Of kynge Henry the fyfth that was kynge Henryes sone ANd after the deth of king Henry the fourth regned kynge Henry his sone that was borne at Monmouth in Wales that was a worthy kyng a gracyous man and a grete conquerour And in the fyrst yere of his regne for grete loue and goodnes he sent to the f●●res of Langley there as his fader had do bury kynge Rychard the seconde and let take his body out of the erth agayn dyd do brȳge it to Westmynster in a ryall chare couered with blacke veluet and baners of dyuers armes about all the horses drawing y● chare were trapped in blacke and beten with dyuers armes many a torche brennynge by all the waye tyll he came to Westmynster there he let make for hym a ryall and a solempne enterement buryed hym by quene Anne his wyfe as his owne desyre was on y● ferther syde of saynt Edwardes 〈…〉 yne in y● abbey of saynt Peters of Westmynster vpon whose soule god haue mercy ¶ And in this same yere were certayne lollers taken fals heretykes that had purposed through false treason for to haue slayne our kyng for to haue destroyed all the clergy of y● realme they myght haue had theyr false purpose But our lorde god wolde not suffre it for in haste our kynge had warnynge therof of all theyr fals ordinaūce werkyng came sodeynly with his power to saȳt Iohns without sinythfelde anone they toke a certayn of the lollers fals heretykes brought them to the kynges presence and there they tolde all theyr fals purpose ordynaūce how they wolde haue done wrought yf they myght haue regned had theyr wyl there they told whiche were theyr capytayns gouernours than the king cōmaūded them to the toure of Londō than toke moo of them bothe win the cite wtout sent thē to Newgate to bothe Co●ters And than they were brought in examinacion afore the clergy the kynges Iustyces there they were cōuicte for theyr fals heresy dampned before y● Iustyee for theyr fals treason this was theyr iudgemet that they sholde be drawen frō the toure of London to saint Giles felde there to be hanged brent on the galowes Also there was taken syr Roger Acton knyght for heresy eke for treason agaynst the kyng the realme he came afore y● clergy was cōuict for his heresy to be brent dampned before the Iustyces to be drawen from the toure of London through the cite to saynt Giles felde to be hanged brent ¶ And in the seconde yere of kynge Henryes regne he held a coūseyle of all the lordes of the realme at Westmȳster there
Westmynster than the Mayre toke his leue of y● kyng rode home agayne ¶ And in y● thyrde yere of kyng Hēryes regne y● fyfth came the emperour of Almayn kyng of Rome of Hungry in to Englonde so to y●●●●e of London And the Mayre the aldermen with the sheryues worthy craftes of London by the kynges cōmaundement mette with hym on the blacke heth 〈◊〉 y● best aray that they coude on horsbacke And there they welcomed hym brought hȳ to London with m●●he honoure grete reuerence And at saynt Thomas of w●terynge there mette with hym the kyng with all his lordes in good araye And there was a worthy metyng bytwene y● emperour kyng Henry y● fyfth there they ky●●ed togyder embraced eche other than y● king toke y● emperour by y● hande so they came rydyng through y●●●te of Londō vnto saynt Paules there they ●●yghted offred all y● bysshops stode re●ested with sensers in theyr handes sensynge to them And than they toke theyr horses rode to Westmynster And the kynge lodged the emperour in his owne palays and there he rested hym a grete whyle all at y● kynges cost And soone after came y● duke of Holland in to Englonde to come se y● emperour speke with hym with our kyng Henry of Englonde he was worthely receyued lodged in the bysshops Inne of Ely all at y● kynges cost And whan the emperour had well rested him seen y● londe in dyuers partyes knewe the cōmodytees than by processe of tyme he toke his leue of the kynge but or he wente he was made a knyght of the garter receyued ware the lyuerey And thā he thanked y● kyng all his lordes And than the kyng he went ouer y● see to Calays abode there longe tyme to haue an answere of the frensshe kynge at the last it came and pleased hȳ ryght nought And so y● emperour toke his leue of y● kynge passed forth in goddes name our kyng came ouer agayn in to Englonde in all y● haste that he myght y● was on saynt Lukes euen that he came to Lambeth on the mondaye nexte after he came in to y● parlyament at Westmynster ¶ In y● same yere was a grete derth of corne in englonde but thāked be god it lasted not longe ANd in the fourth yere of kynge Henryes regne y● fyfthe he helde his parlyament at Westmynster in y● be gynnynge of October lasted to the puryficacyon of our lady than nexte after And there was graunted vnto hym to maynteyn his warres bothe of y● spirytualte of the temporalte an hole taxe 〈◊〉 dieme And than anone y● kyng prayed all his lordes to make them redy for to strength hȳ in his ryght And anone he ●et make a newe retynue charged all 〈◊〉 men to be redy at Hamton in whyt 〈…〉 weke nexte after without ony delay And there the kyng made y● duke of Bedford protectour defender of his realme of Englonde in his absence charged hym to kepe his lawes and maynteyne bothe spirituall temporall And whan the kyng had thus done set all thynge in his kynde on saynt Markes daye he toke his hors at Westmynster came rydyng to Paules there he offred toke his leue so rode forth through y●●ite takyng his leue of all maner of people as well of poore as of riche prayenge them all in generall to praye for hȳ And so he rode forth to saynt Georges there offred toke his leue of the Mayre chargynge hym to kepe well his chambre And so he rode forth to Hamton there abode tyll his retynue were redy comē for there was all his nauy shyppes with his ordynaūce gadred togyder and well stuffed as longed to suche a ryall kynge with all maner of vytayles for suche a ryall cōpany as wel for hors as for man as longed for suche a warryour that is to say gōnes tripgites engynes sowes bastyles brydges of lether scalyng ladders malles spades shouelles pykes paueys bowes arowes bowstringes tonnes chestes pypes full of arowes as neded for suche a worthy warryour that no thynge was to seche whā tyme came thyder came to hȳ shyppes laden with gonnes gonpowdre And whan this was redy his retynue came the kyng all his lordes with all his ryal hoost went to shyppe toke y● see sayled in to Normādy londed at ●ouke vpo● Lāmasse daye than nexte after there he made .xlviij. knyghtes at his londing than y● kynge heryng of many enemyes vpon the see that is to saye .ix. grete Carakes hulkes galeys shyppes y● were comyng to destroy his nauy And anone he cōmaūded y● erle of marche to be che●e chefetayne many other worthy lordes 〈◊〉 to dethe for treason And so he was 〈◊〉 to the Cour● agayn and there he 〈◊〉 layd● vpon an hurde● and drawen through the Cite to saynt ●yles felde there was made a newe payre of ga●●●●s and a stronge ●heyn● and a coller of yren for 〈◊〉 there he was hange● and bre●t o●● the galow 〈…〉 ●n● all for his 〈…〉 es and his fals opynyons ANd in the .vi. ye●● of kyng Henryes ●ogne the fyfth he sent his 〈…〉 Bea●ford du●● of ●x 〈◊〉 with a ●ayre cōpany of men of ar●es archers before the 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 there displayed his 〈◊〉 and sent his h 〈…〉 des vnto the tow●● hadde them 〈◊〉 that cite vnto our king theyr lyege lorde And they sayd he toke them no●● for ●o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he sholde haue the●● but yf it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bought and proued with theyr handes for other answere wolde they 〈◊〉 〈…〉 And there 〈◊〉 du 〈…〉 good 〈…〉 of the groside all 〈…〉 there 〈◊〉 out of 〈…〉 o● 〈◊〉 o● a●mes bothe on hor 〈…〉 on 〈…〉 〈◊〉 out 〈…〉 with them and 〈…〉 there 〈◊〉 taken and ●●y●● 〈◊〉 ▪ ●●●sones o● 〈◊〉 good 〈…〉 ●nd 〈◊〉 to the towne And the kyng with his lordes were lodged in the Charterhous and grete strength about them that was in the ●est parte of y●●●te And the duke of Clarence lodged hym at the west ende of the 〈◊〉 in a waste abbey before the porte Caux And the duke of Excestre with his meyny on the north syde before the porte Beauuoysyn And bytwene the duke of Clarence and the duke of Excestre was y● erle Marshall lodged with moche solke a stronge power before the castell gate And than was y● erle of Ormonde the lorde Haryngton and also the lorde 〈◊〉 with theyr retynue and company nexte to hym And than 〈◊〉 Iohn Cor●e wayle with many other noble knyghtes and squyers of name with all theyr retynue saye with the noble duke of Clarē●● And from the duke of Excestre towardes the kynge were lodged the lorde ●oos and the lorde Wyllybe with the lorde Phehew● and syr
came downe fought with hym in conclusyon he was fayne to withdrawe hym his company to y● see agayne But yet he slewe hurte dyuers lordes moche people of the same coūtree so returned home agayn in to Englonde with his company preuayled no thynge ¶ And also this same yere y● erle of Salesbury y● erle of Suffolke y● lorde Wyllybe the lorde Scales with theyr retynue layde syege to the cyte of Mauns the whiche cyte was yolden to them with many other stronge townes castels to y● nombre of xxxvj ¶ This tyme all Normandy a grete parte of Fraunce vnto Drlyaunce was vnder the obeyssaūce of y● kynge of Englonde all the remenaūt of Fraūce was in grete trybulacyon myschefe ¶ How there was lyke to haue ben a grete fraye bytwene the cardynal and the duke of Glocestre And of the coronacyon of kyng Henry the syxth bothe in Englonde and in Fraunce IN the fourth yere y● same nyght y● the mayre of Londō Iohn Couentre had taken his charge was a grete watche in London for a fraye that was bytwene y● bysshop of Wynchestre the duke of Glocestre protectour c. For the mayre with the people of y● cite wold abyde by the duke of Glocestre as protectour defendour of y● realme But by labour of lordes that went bytwene in especyal by the labour of y● prynce of Portyngale there was a poyntement taken y● there was no harme done ¶ And after y● batayle of Vernoyle in Perche the duke of Bedford came ouer in to Englonde And on whytsonday this same yere at Leycestre he dubbed kynge Henry knyght And forth with y● sayd kyng Henry dubbed all these knyghtes whose names foloweth y● is to wyte syr Rycharde duke of Yorke also y● sone heyre of y● duke of Norfolke the erle of Oxford the erle of westmerlonde the sone heyre of y● erle of Northumberlond y● sone heyre of y● erle of Vrmond y● lord Roos syr Iames butteler the lord Matrauas syr Henry gray of Tankeruile syr Williā Neuyl lord Fawconbrygge syr George Neuyl lorde Latymer the lorde welles y● lorde Berkle y● sone heyre of y● lord Talbot syr Rafe gray of werk syr Robert ●eer syr Rychard gray syr Edmond Honger ford syr Robert winkfeld syr Iohn but ler syr Raynold Cobhā syr Iohn pashley syr Thomas Tunstal syr Iohn chi diok syr Rafe langford syr williā drury syr william ap Thomas syr Rycharde Carbonell syr Rycharde wydeuyle syr Iohn shridelow syr William cheyn syr William babyngton syr Iohn tune syr Gylbert Beauchamp ¶ Also in the .v. yere the duke of Bedford with the duchesse his wyfe wente ouer see to Calays a lytel before went ouer Henry bysshop of wynchestre And on our lady daye Annūciacion in our lady chirche at Calays the bysshop of Wynchestre whan y● he had songen masse was made Cardinall and he knelynge before the hygh awter the duke of Bedford set y● hatte vpon his heed there were his bulles redde as well of his charge as of the reioycynge of his benefyces spirytuall temporall ¶ And this same yere was grete haboū daūce of rayne that the substaūce of hey also of corne was destroyed for it rayned almost euery other day ¶ And this same yere y● good erle of Salysbury syr Thomas Montague layde syege vnto Orlyaūce at whiche syege he was slay ne with a gonne y● came out of y● towne on whose soule god haue mercy for syth that he was slayne englisshe men neuer gate ne preuayled in Fraunce but euer after began to lese lytell lytell tyll all was lost ¶ Also this same yere a Bryton murdred a good wydowe in her bed without Algate whiche wydowe foūde hym for almes he bare awaye all that she had And after this he toke the gyrth of holy chirche at saynt Georges in south warke there toke the crosse forsware this londe And as he went it happened y● he came by the place where he dyd this cursed dede in y● subbarbes of London the women of the same parysshe came out with staues and canell dung slewe made an ende of hȳ there Notwithstandynge y● constables many other men beynge present for to kepe hym for there were many women and had no pyte ¶ Also this same yere the duke of Norfolke with many gentylmen yemen toke his barge the .viij. daye of Nouember at saynt Mary auerays for to haue gone through London brydge through mysguydyng of the barge it ouerthrewe on y● pyles and many men were drowned but y● duke hȳself with two or thre lept vpon y● piles so were saued with helpe of men that were aboue the brydge with castynge downe ropes by the whiche ropes they saued themselfe ¶ This same yere on saynt Leonardes daye kyng Henry beynge .vij. yere olde was crowned at westminster at whose crownacyō were made .xxxvj. knyghtes This yere on saynt Georges day he passed ouer y● see to Calays toward Fraūce ¶ Aboute this tyme afore the realme beynge in grete mysery trybulacyon the Dolphyn with his party began to make warre gate certayn places made distresses vpon englyshmen by y● meane of his capytayns y● is to saye la Heer Poton de seyntraylles in especyall a mayde whiche they named la pucelle de dieu This mayde rode lyke a man and was a valyaūt capitayn amonge them toke vpon her many grete enterprises in so moche y● they had a byleue for to haue recouered all theyr losses by her Notwithstādyng at y● last after many grete feates by y● helpe prowesse of syr Iohn Luxemburgh whiche was a noble capytayn of y● duke of Burgoyns many englysshe men pycardes burgonyons whiche were of our party before y● towne of Compyne the .xxiij. daye of Maye the foresayd pucelle was takē in y● felde armed lyke a man many other capytayns with her were all brought to Roen there she was put i pryson there she was iudged by y● lawe to be brent And than she sayd y● she was with childe wher by she was respyted a whyle But in cō clusyō it was foūde y● she was not with chylde than she was brent in Roen the other capitayns were put to raūson entreated as men of warre ben acustomed ¶ And this same yere about Candelmasse Richard hunder a woll packer was dampned for an heretike brent at Toure hyll ¶ And aboute mydlent syr Thomas Baggeley preest vycarye of Mauen in Essex besyde walden was disgraded dāpned for an heretyke brent in smythfelde ¶ And also in y● same yere whyles the kynge was in Fraūce there were many heretykes loulars y● had purposed to make a risyng cast bylles in many places But blyssed be god the capytayne of them was taken whose name was Williā Maūdeuyll a weuer of Abyndon baylyf of the same towne whiche named himselfe Iacke Sharp
Rome bycause of the scysme but after the vnite was had he was crowned with the imperyall dyademe with grete glory triūphe of pope Nicolas the fourth This was a peasyble mā quyete of singuler pacience not hatyng the chirche he wedded the kynge of Portyngales doughter ¶ How the duchesse of Glocestre was arested for treason cōmytted to perpetuall pryson in the yle of Man of the deth of mayster Roger Bolyngbroke IN this yere Elenore Cobham duchesse of Glocestre was arested for certayn poyntes of treason layd agaynst her where vpon she was examyned in saint Stephens chapel at westmynster before the archebysshop of Caūterbury there she was enioyned to open penaūce for to go through chepe berynge a taper in her hande after to perpetual prison in the yle of Man vnder the kepynge of syr Thomas stanley Also that same tyme was arested mayster Thomas Southwell a chanon of westmynster mayster Iohn Hume a chapelayn of the sayd lady mayster Roger Bolyngbroke a clarke vsyng nygromancy one Margery iourdemayn called the wytche of Eye besyde westmynster These were arested as for beynge of coūseyle with the sayd duchesse of Glocestre And as for mayster Thomas southwell he dyed in the Toure the nyght before he sholde haue ben reyned on the morow For he hymselfe sayd that he sholde dye in his bedde not by iustyces And in the .xx. yere mayster Iohn Hume and mayster Roger Bolingbroke were brought to the gylde hall in London there before the Mayre the lordes the●e Iustyces of Englonde were reyned and dampned bothe to be drawen hanged quartred but mayster Iohn Hume had his chartre was pardoned by the kyng but mayster Roger was drawen to Tyburne where he cōfessed that he dyed gyltles and neuer had trespaced in that he dyed for Notwithstādyng he was hanged heded and quartred on whose soule god haue mercy And Margery iourdemayn was brent in smythfelde ¶ Also this yere was a grete fraye in London in Flete strete by nyght tyme bytwene men of courte men of London and dyuers men slayne some hurt one Herbotell was chefe causer of the mysgouernaunce fraye ¶ Also this yere at chosynge of the Mayre of Londō the comyns named Roberte Clopton Raulyn Hollande tayllour And the aldermen toke Robert Clopton brought hym at the ryght hande of the Mayre as the custome is And than certayne tayllours other hande crafty men cryed nay nay not this man but Raulyn Hollād wherfore y● Mayre that was Padysly sent them that so tryed to Newgate where they abode a grete whyle and were punysshed ¶ In this same yere were dyuers embassadours sente in to Guyan for a maryage for the kynge for the erles doughter of Armyna● the whiche was concluded but by the meanes of the erle of Suffolk it was let put aparte And after this the sayd erle of Suffolk went ouer see in to Fraunce there he treated the mariage bytwene the kynge of Englōde the kynges doughter of Cecyle of Iherusalem And the neere yere that mariage was fully concluded by whiche maryage the kyng sholde delyuer to her fader the duchy of Ang●o the erledom of Mayne whiche was the key of Normādy Than departed the erle of Suffolke with his wyfe diuers lordes and knyghtes in the moost ryall estate that myght be out of Englonde with newe shares palfreys whiche wēt through Chepe and so went ouer the see and receyued her sythen brought her in the lent after vnto Hampton where she londed there was ryally receyued ¶ And on Candelmasse euen before by a grete tempest of thondre lyghtnynge at after none Paules steple was set on fyre in the myddes of y● shafte in the tymbre whiche was quenched by force of labour specyally by y● morowmasse preest of y● Bowe in chepe whiche was thought impossyble saue onely the grace of god ¶ This yere was y● erle of Stafford made create duke of Buckyngham y● erle of warwyk duke of warwyk the erle of dorset markys of dorset the erle of Suffolke was made markys of Suffolke ¶ How kynge Henry wedded quene Margarete of her crownacyon THis yere kyng Henry maryed at South wyk quene Margarete and she came to London the .xviij. daye of Maye by the waye all the lordes of Englonde receyued her worshipfully in dyuers places in especyal the duke of Glocestre on the blacke heth the mayre with the aldermen and all the craftes in blewe gownes browdred with the deuyse of theyr crafte that they might be knowen mette with her with reed hodes brought her to London where were dyuers pagentes countenaūces of dyuers hystoryes shewed in dyuers places of the cyte ryally and costly ¶ And the .xxx. day of Maye the foresayd quene was crowned at westmynster And there was Justes thre dayes durynge within the sentwary before the abbey ¶ This yere the pryour of Kylmayn appeled the erle of Vrmond of treason whiche had a daye assygned to them for to fyght in smythfelde the lystes were made and the felde dressed But whan it came to poynt the kynge cōmaunded that they sholde not fyght but toke the quarell in to his hande And this was done at the instaūce labour of certayne prechours doctours of London as mayster Gylbert worthyngton persone of saynt Andrewes in holborne and other ¶ Also this yere came a grete em bassadour in to Englonde out of Fraūce for to haue concluded a perpetuall peas but in cōclusyon it turned vnto a trewse of a yere ¶ About this tyme dyed saynt Barnardyn a gray frere whiche began the newe reformacyon of y● ordre in many places in so moche that they that were reformed ben called Obseruantes whiche Obseruātes ben gretly encreaced in ytalye in Almayne This Bernardyn was canonysed by pope Nicolas the .v. in the yere of our lorde M cccc .l. Ioh̄es de Capistrano was his dyseyple whiche ꝓfyted moche to the reformacyon of y● ordre for whome god hath shewed many a fayre myracle ¶ Also here is to be noted y● from this tyme forwarde kyng Henry neuer profyted ne went forward but fortune began to turne from him on all sydes as well in Fraūce Normādy Guyen as in Englond Some men holde opynyon that kynge Henry gaue cōmyssyon plenarly to syr Edwarde Hull syr Robert Roos dene of saynt Seuerynes other to conclude a maryage for hym with y● erle of Armynakes syster whiche was ꝓmysed as it was sayd cōcluded but afterward it was broken he wedded quene Margarete as afore is sayd whiche was a dere maryage for the realme of Englonde For it was knowē veryly that for to haue her was delyuered the duchy of Angeo the erle dom of Mayne whiche was the key of Normandy for the frensshmen to entre And about this y● sayd Markys of Suffolke asked in playne parlament a .xv. an halfe to fetche her
his swerde vpon Londō stone in Canmyk strete And he beynge in the rite sent to the toure for to haue the lorde Saye so they fette hym brought hȳ to the Gyldhall before the Mayre the aldermen where y● he was examyned And he sayd he wolde ought to be iudged by his peres And y● comyns of Kent toke hym by force fro the Mayre offycers y● kepte hym toke hym to a preest to shryue hym or he myght be halfe shryuen they brought hym to the standard in Chep● there smote of his heed on whose soule god haue mercy Amen And thus dyed the lord Saye tresourer of Englōde After this they set his heed vpon a spere bare it all about the cite And y● same day about myle ende 〈◊〉 mer was vyheded And the daye before at after none the capytayne with a certayne of his men went to Philyp Malpas hous robbed hym toke awaye moche good And from thens he went to saynt Margarete patyns to one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈…〉 whiche 〈…〉 of theyr 〈…〉 were 〈…〉 with 〈…〉 her 〈◊〉 〈…〉 man 〈…〉 wyse 〈…〉 London ●●myn 〈…〉 ●●myghty god 〈…〉 is to 〈◊〉 yf he had not robbed 〈◊〉 myght 〈…〉 ferre or he 〈…〉 kynge all the lordes of y● realme of Englonde were ●●parted excepte the lorde Seales that 〈◊〉 the ●oure of London ¶ And the 〈…〉 of a 〈…〉 South werke And the 〈◊〉 after the May●● of London with the ●lderme● 〈◊〉 comyns of y● 〈◊〉 cōcluded to 〈…〉 the capytayn his ●oost sent to the lorde Scales to the Coure 〈…〉 a capytayne of Nor 〈◊〉 that they walde y● nyght assayle the captayne 〈…〉 them of kent And so they dyd came to Londō brydge or the capytayne had any knowlege therof there they fought with them that kepte the bryoge And the 〈…〉 men went to h 〈…〉 came to the bridge shotte and fought with them gate the bridge ●●de them of Londō to 〈◊〉 slewe many of them this 〈◊〉 all the nyght 〈◊〉 fro 〈…〉 the clocke on y● moro we 〈…〉 last they brent y●●awe brydge 〈◊〉 many of 〈◊〉 of London were 〈◊〉 In whiche 〈◊〉 Sutton an 〈◊〉 ●as slayne Roger Neys●nt 〈◊〉 ●ogh many other And after 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 of Englonde sene to the capytayne a par●on generall for hym for all his m●yuy And than they departed from South 〈…〉 euery man 〈◊〉 his owne hous 〈…〉 they were all departed gone there were proclamacyons made in ●ent Southsex and other places that what man coude take the capitayn quycke or deed shelde haue a thousande marke And after this one Alexander Iden a squyer of kent toke hym in a garden in Southsex And in y● takynge Iohn Cade the capytayn was slayne and after byh●ded his heed set on London brydge And than anone after the kynge came in to kent dyd do syt his Iustyees at Caunterbury inquyred who were chefe causers of this in s 〈…〉 And there were 〈◊〉 men iudged to deth in one daye in other places ●oo And fro thens the kynge went in to Southsex in to the west 〈◊〉 where alytell before was 〈◊〉 y● bysshop of Salysbury And this same yere were so many iudged to deth that 〈◊〉 hedes stode vpon Londō bridge at ones ¶ Of the felde that y● duke of yorke toke at Brentheth in Kent And of the byrth of prynce Edwarde And of the 〈…〉 st batayle at saynt Alvons where 〈◊〉 duke of Somerset was slayne IN the .xxx. ●ere of y● kynge y● duke of yorke came out of the marche of Wales with the erle of D 〈…〉 shyre and the lorde Cobham and a gr●te puyssaunce for reformacyon of certayne 〈◊〉 tyes wronges also to haue Iustr●e vpon certayne lordes beynge aboute the kynge and toke a feide at Brentheth besyde Dartforde in Kent whiche was a stronge felde for whiche cause the kyng with all the lordes of y●●onde went vnto the blacke heth with a grete a stronge multytude of people armed ordeyn●● for the warre in y● best wyse And whan they had mustred on the beth certayne lordes were tho sent to hym for 〈◊〉 make apoyntment with him 〈◊〉 were the bysshop of Ely the bysshop of W 〈…〉 the erles of Salysbury 〈◊〉 And they concluded that the duke of Somerset shold be had to warde and to answere to suche artycles as the duke of yorke sholde put on hym than the duke of yorke sholde breke his felde come to the kynge whiche was all promysed by the kynge And so the kyng cō maūded y● the duke of Somerfet sholde be had into warde And than y● duke of yorke brake vp his felde and came to the kyng And whan he was come cōtrary to the promyse afore made the duke of Somerset was present in y● filde awaytynge and chefe aboute the kynge and made the duke of yorke tyde before as a prysoner through London after they wolde haue put hȳ in holde But a noyse arose y● the 〈…〉 of Marche his sone was comynge with .x. M. men toward London wherfore the kyng his counseyle feted And than they concluded that the duke of yorke shold departe at his owne wyll ¶ Aboute this tyme began grete dyuysyon in Spruce bytwene the grete mayster the knyghtes of the duche ordre whiche were lordes of y● coūtree for the comyns townes rebelled agaynst the lordes made so grete warre that at the last they called y● kynge of Pole to be theyr lorde the whiche kynge came was worshypfully receyued and layde syege to y● castell of Marienburgh whiche was y● chefe castell of strength of all the lorde wanne it and droue out the mayster of D●nske all other places of that londe And so they y● had ben lordes many yeres lost all theyr seygnourye possessyons in those londes ¶ And in y● yere of the incarnacyon of our lorde M. 〈◊〉 ●iij on saynt Edwardes daye y● quene Marg 〈…〉 was delyuered of a fayre 〈◊〉 whiche was named Edwarde ¶ That same daye Iohn Norman was 〈◊〉 to be Mayre of London And the daye that 〈…〉 the 〈…〉 whiche 〈…〉 that tyme they 〈…〉 ●er in 〈…〉 ¶ 〈…〉 vnderstande 〈…〉 to the promyse of the 〈◊〉 also the conclusyons taken 〈◊〉 y● kyng the duke of yorke at B 〈…〉 th the duke of Somerset went 〈…〉 but abod● aboute y● kynge had grete rule anone after he was made capytayn of Calays and ruled the kynge his ●●alme as he wolde wherfore y● grete lordes of th 〈…〉 alme also y● comyns were not 〈◊〉 For whiche cause y● duke of 〈…〉 of Warwyk y● 〈◊〉 of Salysbury 〈◊〉 many knyghtes squyers and moche other people came to remeue y● said duke of Somerset other fro y● kynge And 〈◊〉 kyng heryng of theyr comyng thought by his coūseyle to haue gone westwarde not for to haue mette with them had with hym the
beynge with his hoost in the felde not knowynge of this sodeyn departynge on the morowe foūde none in the felde of the said lordes sent out in all the haste men for to folowe pursue after to take them but they met not with them as god wolde And than the kyng went to Ludlowe despoyled the castell the towne sent the duchesse of yorke her children to the duchesse of Bokyngham her syster where as she was kepte longe tyme after And forth with the kyng ordeyned the duke of Somerset to be capytayn of Calays And these other lordes so departed as afore is sayd were proclaymed rebelles grete traytours Than the duke of Somerset toke to hym all the sowdyours that departed from the felde and made hym redy in all the haste to go to Calays take possessyon of his offyce And whan he came there he foūde the erle of warwik therin as capitayn the erles of Marche of Salysbury also than he londed by Scales went to Guynes and there he was receyued And it fortuned that some of tho shyppes that came ouer with hȳ came in to Calays hauen by theyr free wyll for the shypmen ought more fauour to the erle of warwik than to the duke of Somerset in whiche shyppes were taken dyuers men as Ienyn Finkhyl Iohn felow Kaylles Purser whiche were byheded soone after in Calays ¶ And after this came men dayly ouer the see to these lordes to Calays began to wexe stronger stronger and they borowed moche good of the staple And on that other syde the duke of Somerset beynge in Guynes gate people to hym whiche came out scarmysshed with them of Calays they of Calays with them whiche endured many dayes Duryng this scarmysshynge moche people came ouer dayly vnto these lordes Than on a tyme by the aduyse counseyle of the lordes of Calays sente ouer mayster Denham with a grete felawshyp to Sandwyche whiche toke the towne therin the lorde Ryuers the lord Scales his sone toke many shyppes in the hauen brought them all to Calays with whiche shyppes many maryners of theyr free wyl came to Calays to serue the erle of Warwyk And after this the erle of warwyk by the aduyse of the lordes toke al his shyppes māned them well sayled hȳselfe in to Irlonde for to speke with the duke of Yorke to take his aduise how they shold entre in to Englonde And whan he had ben there done his crandes he returned agayn toward Calays brought with hym his moder the coūtesse of Salisbury And comynge in the west countre vpon the see the duke of Excestre admyral of englōde beynge in the grace of dieu accōpanyed with many shippes of warre mette with the erle of warwyk his flete but they fought not for the substaūce of the people beynge with the duke of Excestre ought better wyll fauour to the erle of warwik than to hym they departed came safe to Calays ¶ Than the kȳges coūseyle seynge that these lordes had gotē those shyppes fro Sand wyche taken the lord Ryuers his sone ordeyned a garnyson at Sandwyche to kepe the towne made one Moūford cap● tayn of the towne that no mā ne v 〈…〉 marchaūt that shold go to Flaūdres 〈◊〉 go to Calais Thā they of Calais 〈◊〉 this made out mayster Denham many other to go to Sandwyche so the● dyd assayled the towne by water by londe gate it brought the capytayn ouer see smote of his heed yet dayly men came ouer to them fro all partyes ¶ How the erles of Marche of warwyk and of Salisbury entred in to Englonde And of the felde of Northamton where dyuers lordes were slayne ANd after this the foresayd erles of Marche warwyk Salisbury came ouer to Douer with moche people there lōded to whom al the coūtre drewe came to Londō all armed for to let the lordes of the kȳges coūseyle knowe theyr treuth also theyr entent assembled thē tolde them that they entēded no harme ●o the kynges ꝑsone saue that they wolde put from hym suche ꝑsones as were aboute hym And so departed frō London with a grete puyssaūce toward Northamton where the kyng was accōpanyed with many lordes had made a stronge felde without the towne And there bothe partyes me● was fought a grete batayle In whiche batayle were slayne the duke of Bokyngham y● erle of Shrewesbury the vycoūt Beamond y● lord Egremond many knightes squyers other also the kynge hymselfe was taken in the felde afterwarde brought to London And anone after was a parlyament at Westmynster durynge whiche parlyament the duke of Yorke came out of Irlonde with the erle of Rutlonde rydyng with a grete felawshyp in to the palays at westmynster toke y● kynges palays And came in to y● parlyamēt chambre there toke y● kynges place claimed the crowne as his ꝓpre enherytaūce right cast forth in wrytyng his tytell also how he was ryghtfull heyre wherfore was moche to do but in cōclusion it was appoynted cōcluded that kyng Henry sholde regne be kyng duryng his naturall lyfe for as moche as he had bē kyng so longe was possessed after his deth the duke of Yorke sholde be kynge his heyres kynges after hym forth with sholde be proclaymed heyre apparaūt sholde also be ꝓtectour regent of Englonde duryng the kynges lyfe with many other thynges ordeyned in y● same parlyament yf kynge Henry durynge his lyfe went from his appoyntment or ony artycle cōcluded in y● sayd parliamēt he shold be deposed the duke shold take y● crowne be kynge All whiche thynges were enacted by y● auctorite of the same at whiche parlyament y● comyn hous comonyuge treatyng vpon y● tytel of y● sayd duke of Yorke sodeynly fell downe the crowne whiche henge than in y● myd des of y● sayd hous whiche is y● frayter of the abbaye of Westmynster whiche was taken for a prodyge or token that y● regne of kynge Henry was ended And also y● crowne whiche stode on y● hyghest toure of the steple in the castell of Douer fell downe this same yere ¶ Now y● duke of Yorke was slayn of y● felde of Wakefelde of y● second iourney at saynt Albons by y● quene the prince THan for as moche as y● quene with y● prynce her sone was in y● north absent her fro y● kyng obeyed not suche thynges as were cōcluded in y● parlyament it was ordeyned y● the duke of Yorke as protectout shold go northward to brynge in y● quene subdue suche as wolde not obey with whom went y● erle of Salysbury syr Thomas Neuyl his sone with moche people And at wakefeld in Chrystmasse weke they were all ouerthrowen slayne by lordes of the quenes party