Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n arundel_n earl_n john_n 10,620 5 6.0805 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A23591 Here begynnys a schort [and] breue tabull on thes cronicles ...; Saint Albans chronicle. 1485 (1485) STC 9995; ESTC S106502 430,579 577

There are 18 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

maletalent ¶ But whē the good erle Thomas this herd he ansuerd in this maner and said lordis quod he if we gone toward the north the northeren men will say that we go toward the scottis ̄ so we shall be holden traitours for cause of distance that is betwen kyng edward ̄ Robert the brus that made him kīg of scotland and ther fore I sai as touchyng my self that I will not go no ferther in to the north than to myn own castell of Poūfret ¶ And wen sir roger Clifford herd this he arose vp anone in wroth and drew his swerde on high suore by almyghty god and by his holi names but if that he wold go with them he shuld him sle ther. ¶ The nobull and gentill erle Thomas of Lancastre was sore adrad said fair sirs I will gon with you whither so euer ye me bidde ¶ Tho went they to gedres in to the north ̄ with them they had vij C. men of armes and come to Burbrugge ¶ And when sir Andrew of herkela that was in the north cūtre thurgh ordynaunce of the kyng for to kepe the cuntre of scotland herd tell how that Thomas of lancastre wos discomfited and his ꝯpanye at Burton vpon trent he ordyned him a strong pouer and sir Symond ward also that was tho shereue of yorke and met the baronnes at burbrugge and anone they breke the brugge that wos made of tre ¶ And whan sir thomas of Lancastre herde that sir Andrew of herkela had brought with him such a pouer he was sore a drad and sent for sir andrew of herkela and with him spake· and said to him in this maner ¶ Sir andrew quod he ye mow well vnderstond how that our lord the kyng is lad and misgouerned by moch fals councell thurgh sir hugh the Spenser the fadre and sir hugh his son and sir Iohn̄ erle of Arundell and thurgh master Robert Baldoke a fals piled clerke that now is in the kynges court duelling Wherfore I pray yow that ye wold cum with vs with all the pouer that ye haue ordened and help to distro the venym of England and the tratours that bene therin and we will yeue vn to yow all the best parte of .v. erledoms that we haue and holdeth and we will make vn to you an oth that we wil neuer done thyng with out your councell and so ye shall bene eft as well with vs as euer wos Robert of Holand ¶ Tho ansuerd sir Andrew of herkela and said sir Thomas that wolde not I done ne consent ther to for no maner thing ye might me yeffe without the will and commaūdement of our lore the kyng for than shuld I be holden a tratour for euer more ¶ And when that the nobull Erle Thomas of Lancastre saw that he wold not consent vn to him for no maner thing sir Androw he said will ye not consent for to distroye the venym of the reame as we be consent now at one worde sir Androw I tell the that or this yere be gone that ye shall be take and hold for a traitor and more than ony of yow hold vs now and in wors deth ye shall die than euer did any knyght of Englond And vnderstand well that ye did neuer thyng that sorer ye shall you repente and now goth ̄ dothe what you good liketh And I wyll put me in to the mercy of god ¶ And so went the fals traytour tirant and as a fals for sworin maij for thurgh the noble Erle Thomas of Lancastre he vnderfenge the armes of chiualri and thurgh hī he wos made a knyght ¶ Tho myght men see archeris drawe them in that one side and in that other and knyghtes also and foughten tho to gedre wonder sore and also among other sir Humfrey de Boughon Erle of herford a worthy knyght of renoune thurgh all cristyndome stode fought with his enmys vpon the bruge and as the nobull lord stode and faught vpon the brugge a thefe a ribaude skulked vnder the brugge fersly with a spere smote the nobull knyght in to the foūdement so that his bouell is comen out a bout his fete ther. ¶ Alas for sorow for ther was slayn the flour of solace of comforth and also of curtesie ¶ And sir Roger of Clifford a nobull knyght stode euer and faught well worthely him defendid as a nobull baron But at the last he was sore wounded in his hede sir willm of Sullay and sir Roger of bernefeld wer slayn at that bataill ¶ When sir Androw of herkela saw that sir Thomas men of lancastre lassed and slaked anone he and his compani comen vn to the gentill knyght sir Thomas of Lancastre said vn to him in high yelde the tratoure yeld the. ¶ The gentill Erle ansuerid tho and said Nay lordis trators be we none and to you will we neuer vs yeld while that our lyues last but leuer we haue to be slain in our treuth than yeld vs vn to yow ¶ And sir Androw ayen gard vpon sir Thomas componi yollyng as a wode wolfe ̄ saied yelde you tratours takē yeld you And said with an high vois beth war sires that none of yow be so hardy vpon lyfe and limme to mysdone Thomas bodi of Lancastre ¶ And with that word the good Erle Thomas wēt ī to the chapell said kneling vpon his knees ̄ turned his visage towardes the crosse and said Almyghty god to the I me yelde holli I put me vn to thy merci And with that the vileyns and ribaudes leped a boute him on euery syde as tirantis wode turmētours and dispolid him of his armurie and clothed him in a robe of rey that was of his squyers liueira and forth lad him vn to yorke by water ¶ Tho myght men se moch sorow ̄ care for thee gentill knyghtis fled in euery side ̄ the ribaudis ̄ the vileyns egreli them discried and gried an high yeld yow tratours yeld you ¶ And when they wer yolden they wer robbed bounde as thefues Alas the shame and dispite that the gentill ordir of knyghthod ther had at that bataill and the land was tho with out law for holy chirche tho had no more reuerance than it had bene a brodell hous and in that bataill was the fadre ayens the sone and the vncle ayens his nepheu For so moch vnkyn denes was neuer seyn before in Englond as wos that tyme among folke of one nacion ¶ For on kynrad had no more pitte of that other than an hungri wolfe hath of a shepe and it wos no wonder ¶ For the gret lordis of englond wer not all of one nacion but wer medled with other nacions that is for to say some Bretans some Saxōs som Danys some Pehites som Frensshemen some Normans some Spanyardis some Romans some Henaudes some Flemmyng and other diuerse nacions the which nacions
brought a gret a huge multitude of pepull both of knightis squiers ̄ principalli of yemen of Chestershire the wich yomen and archiers the kyng toke to hys own courte ̄ yaf them bowge of court ̄ good wages to be keꝑs of his own body both by nyght ̄ by day aboue al othir ꝑsons ̄ most loued best trust The wich sone afterward turned the kīg to gret losse ̄ shame hyndring ̄ his vtterly vndoyng destruciō as ye shall here after that tyme come sir Henri of Derby with a gret menye of men of armes archiers and the erle of Rutlād come with a stronge pouer of pepull both of men of armes archiers ¶ And the erle of Kent brought a gret pouer of men of armes ̄ archiers The erle Marchall come in the same maner the lorde Spēser in the same maner the erle of northumberland sir Henri Percy his son sir Thomas Percy the erlis broder And all thes worthy lordis brought a fair menye ̄ a strong pouer ech mā in his best aray ̄ the duk of lancastre the duke of yorke comē in the same maner with men of armes and archiers folowyng the kyng ¶ And sir willyam strop tresorer of englond come in the same maner And thus in this aray come all the worthy mē of this land vn to our kyng ̄ all thes pepull com to londō ī on day in so moch that euery stret lane ī londō ī the subarbes were full of them logged x. or xij myle about londō euery way And thees pepull brought the kyng at westmynstre went homi ayen to ther loggyng both hors and man ̄ than on the mōday the xij day of September the ꝑlamēt began at westmīstre the wich was callid the gret ꝑlament ¶ And on the friday next after the erle of arundel̄ wos brought in to the ꝑlament among all the lordis and that wos on sent Matheues day the apostill and euangelist ther he wos for Iugged vn to the deth in this hall that wos made ī the palays at westmynstre And this wos his Iugement he shuld go on fote with his handis bound behynde him from thee place that he wos Iuggid in and so forth thurgh the Cite of londō vn to the toure hill and his hede to be smyten of and so it was do in dede in the same place And vi of thee gret lordis that sat on his Iuggement ridden with him vn to the place ther he wos do vn to thee deth so to see the execucion wer don aftar ther dome ¶ And bi the kynges commaundement with them went on fote of men of armis and archiers a gret multitude of Chestre shire men in strengthyng of thee lordis that brought this Erle to his deth for they dred lest thee Erle shuld be reseued takin frō them whan they com in to london Thus he passed forth thurgh the cite vnto his deth and ther ●e toke it full paciencli on whos soul god haue mercy amen ¶ And than come the freris Austyns and toke vp the body the hede of this good erle ̄ bare it home vn to ther place and beried him in ther quere And in the morow after wos sir Richard erle of werwike brought in to the parlamēt ther as the erle of Arundell wos for iugged and they yaf the erle of Werwike the same Iugement that the forsaid erle had but the lordis had compassion of him be cause he was of more age and relesed him to perpetuall prison and put him in thee I le of man ¶ And than the mōday next after The lord Cobhan of kēt ̄ sir Iohn̄ Cheyn knyghtie wer brought in to the parlament ī to the same hall and ther they wer Iugged to be honged and drawē but thurgh the prayer and gret instance of all the lordis that Iuggement wos foryeuen them and relesed to perpatuall prison ¶ And this same time was Richard Whittyngdon maire of Londoni ̄ Iohn̄ wodecoke willm Askam shereues of london ¶ And they ordeyned at euery yate of londō during this same parlament strong watche of men of armes archiers thurgh out euery ward also ¶ And the kyng made .v. Dukis on Duchisse and a Markeys and .iiij. Erles ̄ thee frist of them wos the Erle of Derby ̄ he wos made duke of Herford thee secund was the Erle of rutland and he wos made Duke of Awe marle and the thrid wos Erle of Kent ̄ wos made thee Duke of Surre and the iiij wos thee erle of Huntingdone ̄ he wos made duke of Excestre ̄ the fifthe wos the erle of Notīgham he wos made thee Duke of Northfolke and the erle of Somerset he wos made the Marquies of Dorset the lord Spenser was made erle of Gloucestre ̄ the lord Neuill of raby wos made erle of westmerland ̄ sir Thomas Percy wos made erle of worcestre ¶ And sir Willm Scrope that was tresorer of englond he wos made erle of wilteshire and sir Iohan Montagu erle of salisburi ¶ And whan the kyng had thus don he held the parlament and riall fest vn to all his lordis and to all maner of pepull that theder wold cū ¶ And this same yere died sir Iohan of gaunte the kinges vncle and duke of Lancastre in the bisshoppis yn in holborne wos brought frō thēs to sent Paules and ther the kyng made and held his enterement well ̄ worthely with all hys lordis in the chirch of sent Paules ī londō ther he wos beried beside Dame blaunch his wife that wos doughter heir to the good Henri that wos duke of Lancastre ¶ And ī the same yere ther fell a discenciō bitwen the duke of Herford duke of Norfolk ī so moche that they waged bataill ̄ casten doune ther gloues and than they wer taken vp and enseled the bataill ioyned the day set the place assigned wher when And this shuld be at Couentre And theder come the kyng with all his lordis at that day wos set in the feld and than thees two worthi lordis comen in to the feld well and cleen armed and well arayed with all ther wapen redy to done ther bataill and weren redy in the place for to fight at vtteraunce ¶ But the kyng bad them cese and toke thee quarell in to his hand ¶ And forth with right ther present exiled the duke of Herford for terme of x. yere the duke of norfolke for euer more ¶ And sir Thomas arundell erchebisshopp of Cantorbury wos exiled the same tyme for euer ̄ depesit out of his see for malice of the kyng and anone thes iij. worthy lordis wer commaunded and defendid the kynges reame And anone they gat them shippis at diuerse hauens went ouer the see in to diuerse
of armes archiers ayenst the duke of Orliaunce And tho went ouer the se the erle of Arundell sir Guillebert vmfreuill Erle of Keme and the lord Cobham Sir Iohan Oldecastell and mony othir good knyghtis and worthy squiers and men of armes and good archiers in to fraunce and come to Paris to the duke of burgoyn ¶ And ther he resaued welcomed thes Englishmen the lordis and all other meny ¶ And than it wos done him to wit that the duke of Orliaūce was comen to semtclowe fast by Paris with a gret nombur of men of armys arbalasters and thidder went our Englishmen fought with them gat the brigge of semtclow ther they slew moch pepull of frenshmē· and arminakis and thee remenaunt fled and wold no longer abide ¶ And than our Englishmen come ayen vn to Paris and ther they token thir leue of the Duke and come home ayen in to Englond in saufte and the Duke yaf them gret yeftes anone folowyng the duke of Orliaūce sent embassatours ī to Englōd to kīg Henri the iiij besechyng hī of his help socour ayens his dedly enmy the duke of burgoyn ¶ And than the kīg made Thomas his son duke of Clarence his othir sone Iohan duke of Bedford ̄ his othir sone Humfrey duke of Gloucestre and sir Thamas Beauford erle of Dorset the duke of awemarle he made duk of yorke tha the kīg ordeyned his son sir Thomas duke of clarence sir Thom̄s Beauford Erle of Dorset and sir Iohn̄ Cornwill with many othir lordis knyghtis and squyers men of armes archiers to go ouer the see in to fraunce in helpyng and strengthyng of the duke of Orliaūce ¶ And thes worthy lordis with ther retenue shippid at Hamptō sailed ouer ī to Normādie ̄ landid at hogges And ther met with them the lord Hambe at ther landyng with vijM. men of armes of frenshmen iij ▪ sergauntis of armes with them and all wer put to flight and takē of them vij C men of armes ̄ iiij hondreth hors with out tho that wer slain ī the feld ¶ And so they riden forch thurgh out fraūce toke castellis ̄ toūes ̄ slew moch pepull of frenshmen that withstode thē ̄ toke mony prisoners as they riden And so they passed forth till they come to Burdeux ̄ ther they restid them a while set the cūtre in pees and restid till the vyntage wer redy to saill And thā the duke with his menye come home in to Englond in saufte thāked be god ¶ And in the same yere wos the kynges coyn changed thurgh out englond by the kyng and his councell that is to say the nobull half nobull ferthyng of gold ¶ And the xiiij yere of kyng Henris regne the .iiij. he let moke Galeys of were for he had hoped to haue passed the gret see so forth to Ierusalē ther to haue endid his liffe but god viseted him so sone after with infirmites and gret sikenesse that he myght not well endure no while so feruently he wos take and brought in bed at westmīster in a fair chambur ¶ And os he lay in his bede he askid his chamberlayn what they called that chamber that he lay in he ansuerid said Ierusalem than he said that the ꝓphecie said that he shuld make an ende and die in Ierasalem And than he made him redy vn to god and disposed all his will And sone after he died ̄ wos caried by water from westmynster in a barge vn to Feuersham And from thens he wos caried to cantorberi by land with moch torche light brinnyng in to the abbey of Crichurch ther he wos entered beried 〈…〉 thus endid the worthy kīg Henri about midlentyn sonday ī the yere of our lord a. M. cccc.xiij on whos sovle god haue merci anen Artī the v. wos 〈◊〉 after Iohn̄ xiiij yere This mā was chosen by thee coūcell of Cōstantinoplī othir wos deposit that streffe and so come pes in the chirch the wich long tyme afore wos desyrid and necessari for thee defence of the faith This was the myghtiest 〈◊〉 that euer wos of riches and a gret Iugge he edefied tounys wallis stretis and he distroyd herises and he did moch good thurgh the nobull prince Sygmunde And he gadred moch monay for the holy land to geten ayen bot deth come oppon him and lettid him and he made a coūcell afore his deth for that mater and ther decessed ugeniꝰ wos 〈◊〉 after Martin xvij yere This Eugeny wos chosen pesablie after the deth of Martin no man dowtid bot he wos 〈◊〉 bot after shortly he wos expulsit from Rome for it wos so that he fled nakid Also he wos cited to the coūncell of Basiliens and deposit bothe chargid not for that ayen began thee striffe the wich stode to his deth ̄ thos that fauoured him said he was worthy moch louyng and the cōtrari said thos that wer ayens him bot what sum euer he wos after hee had takyn the dignite vpō hī a fore he wos of gret abstenēs of good fame ̄ that he did after I leue to thee Iugemēt of god Circa annum domini M.iiijC.xiij. Of kyng Henri thee fifth that wos kyng Henris sone ●Nd after the deth of kyng Henri the iiij regned kyng Henri his sone that was borne at Monmouth in wales that was a worthy kyng and a gracious man and a gret conquerour And in thee frist yere of his regne for gret loue goodnesse he sent to the freris of Langely ther as his fader had do berie kyng Richard the secūd and let take his body out of the erth ●yen did bring it to westmynster ī a riall chare couered with blake veluet and baners of diuerse armes about and all the hors drawyng the chare wer trappid in blake and beten with diuerse armes ̄ many a torche brennyng by all the way till he come to westmīstre and ther he let make for him a riall and a solempne enterement ▪ ̄ beried hī by quene Anne his wife as his own desire was on the ferther side of sent Edwardis shrine in the abbey of seint Petris of westmynstre on whos soule god haue merci ¶ And in this same yere wer a certayn of lollers taken and fals heritikis that had purposed thurgh fals treson for to haue slayn our king ̄ for to haue distroid all the clargie of the reame they myght haue had ther fals purpose ¶ But our lord god wold not suffre it for in hast our kyng had warnyng ther of of all ther false ordynaūce wurchyng come sodēly with his pouer to sent Iohanes without smythfeld anone they toke a certayn of the lollerres fals heritikes brought them vn to the kīges prisence ̄ ther told all ther fals purpose ordynaūce how
to the kynges pauilon ̄ killed ther mony men in ther beddis cried some Naward naward an oder time a Douglos a douglas Wherfor the kyng that wos in his pauilon mech oder folk were wonder sore afraied but blyssid be almyghty god the kyng wos not taken in gret parell was tho the ream of englond ¶ And that nyght the mone shone full clere bright for all the kīgꝭ mē the scottis ascappid harmeles ¶ And ī the morow whā the kyng wist that the scottis wer a scappid ī to ther own cuntre he wos wonder sori ̄ full hertely wepid with his yong eyn ̄ yit wist he nott who had hī done that treson bot that fal̄s tresoun was full well knaw a good while after as the stori telleth ¶ Tho kīg edward come ayen to yorke full sorowfull his host deꝑted and euery man went in to his own cuntre with full heuy chere and mornyng semblant the henaudes toke ther leue ̄ went ī to ther own cuntre the kynge for ther trauell hugeli them rewardid ¶ And for encheson of that viage the kyng had dispendid moch of his tresour wasted ¶ And in that tyme wer seyn ij mones in the firmament that on was clere that other was derke as men might se thurgh out the world and a gret debate wos that same tyme ayens pope Iohan the xxij after sent petre ̄ the Emprour of Almayn tho made him Emprour ayens the popis wyll that tho held his see at Auinion ¶ Wherfor the ēpror made his crie at Rome ordeyned an oder pope that hight Nycholas that wos a frere mynor and that was ayens the right of holy chirch ¶ Wherfor he wos cursed the pouer of that oder pope sone wos leid And for enchesō that suche meruellis wer seyn mē said that the world was nygh at an end ¶ Of the deth of kyng Edward Carnariuan ANd now go we ayen to sir Edward of Carnariuan that was kyng Edward fadre sum tyme kyng of englond put doune of his dyngnite Alas for his tribulacion and sorow that him befell thurgh fals councell that he loued and triftid vpō to moch that afterward wer destroyed thugh ther falsenesse as god wold ¶ And this Edward of Carnariuan wos in the castell of Berkelay vnder the kepyng of Sir Moris of Berkeley sir Iohan of Mautreus and to them he made his complaynt of his sorow and of his disese and oft tyme he axed of his wardens what he had trespased ayens Dame Isabell his wife and Sir edward his son that was made new king that they wold not viset him ¶ And tho ansuerid on of his wardeynes and said my worthy lord displese yow not that I shall tell you the encheson is for it is done them to vnderstond that if my lady your wife come any thing ny you that ye wold hir strangle and kyll and also that ye wold do to my lord your son the same ¶ Tho ansuered he with simple chere Alas alas am I not ī prison and all at your own will now god hit wote I thought it neuer and now I wold that I wer dede so wold god if that I wer for than wer all my sorow passed ¶ Hit was not long tyme after that the kyng thurgh ꝯcell of Roger Mortimer graūtid the ward kepīg of sir edward his fadre vn to sir Thomas Toiourney ̄ to the forsaid sir Iohn̄ Mautreuers thurgh the kynges lettre put out holy the forsaid sir Morice of the ward of the kyng they toke ̄ led the kyng vn to the castell of Corfe the wich castell the kyng hated as any deth they keped hī ther till it come vn to sent Mathewes day ī septēbre in the yere of grace M.ccc.xxvij that the forsaid sir Roger Mortimer sent the maner of the deth how ̄ in what wise he sh̄old be done to deth ¶ And anone as the forsaid Thomas Iohan had seyn the letter ̄ commaundemēt they made kīg Edward Carnariuan good chere good so las as they myght at that soper nothīg the kīg wist of the tratorie ¶ And whē time wos for to go to bedde the kīg went vn to his bed ̄ lay slept fast as the king lay slept the tratourys fals for sworne ayens ther homage ther feaute come priueli in to the kynges chambre ̄ ther company with them and laid an huge tabull vpō his wombe with men pressed held fast doūe the .iiij corners of the tabull vpon his body wherwith the good man awoke ̄ wos wonder sore a drad to be dede ther and slayn and turned his body tho vpsedoune ¶ Tho toke the fals traitours and wode tirantis an horne and put it in to hys fundement as depe as they myght toke a spit of coper brennyng put it thurgh the horne in to his body and oft tymes roulled ther with his bowels and so they kylled ther lord that nothyng wos ꝑsaued ̄ after he was entered at glocestre ¶ How kyng Edward spoused Philip the Erles doughter of Henaud at Yorke ANd after Cristemasse tho next swyng sir Iohn̄ of henaud brought with hī Phelip his brothers doughter that was erle of Henaud his nece in to englond· ̄ kīg edward spoused hir at york with moch honour ¶ And sir Iohn̄ of Bothum bisshop of Ely and sir wyllm of melton Erchebisshop of yorke songen thee masse the sonday in the eue of ꝯuersion of sent Paule In the yere of grace a M.ccc.xxvij but for encheson that the kyng wos bot yong tendre of age when he wos crouned full mony wronges wer done while that his fadre leued for encheson that he trowed the councelers that wer fals a bout him that counceled him to done other wise than reson wold wherfor gret harme was done to the reame to the kyng all mē directid it the kīes dede ̄ it was not so almighty god it wote Wher fore it wos ordeyned at the kynges crouning that the kyng for his tendre age shuld be gouerned by xij of the gretest lordis of englond with out wich no thīg sh̄uld be done that is to sai The erchebisshop of Cantorburi the erchebishop of yorke the bisshop of wynchestre ̄ the bisshop of herthforth the erle of Lancastre the erle marshall the erle of Kent that wer the kīges vnches the erle of Garenne sir Thomas wake sir hēri of Perci sir oliuer of yngham Iohn̄ of Roos barons ¶ All thes wer sworne trewly for to councell the kyng And they shuld ansuer euery yere in the ꝑlament of that that shuld be don in the tyme of that gouernall bot that ordeynance wos sone vndone ̄ that wos moch harme to all englond· ¶ For the kīg all the lordis that shuld gouerne hī wer gouerned ̄ ruled after the kyngꝭ
leue of the kyng ̄ of othir lordis ̄ ladies wenten home ayen in to ther own cuntres with gret loue and moch thanke ¶ And in the xiij yere of kyng Richardis regne ther was a bataill done in the kynges palais at westmīstre bitwen a squyer of Nauerne that wos with the kyng Richard and an othir squier that wos called Iohn̄ walsh for pointee of treson that this Naune put vpon this walshman but this naune wos ouer comen yeld him creaunt to his adusarie ¶ And anone he wos despoled of his armur draw out of the Palays to tiburne ̄ ther wos hanged for his falsenesse ¶ And the xiiij yere of kyng Richardis regne sir Iohn̄ of Gaunte duke of Lanc●stre went ouer the see in to Spayn for to chalenge his right that he had bi his wifes titell vn to the croun of Spayn with a gret host of pepull of men of armes and archiers ¶ And he had with him the Duchisse his wife and his iij· doughters ouer see in to Spayn And ther they wer a gret while at the last the kyng of Spayn began for to tret with the duke of Lancastre they wer accerded to geder thurgh ther both councell in this maner that the kīg of spaī shuld wedde the dukis doughter of lancastre that was the right heir of spayn and he sh̄uld yef vn to the Duke of lancastre gold and seluer that wer cast in to gret wegges ̄ mōy other iewelles as mony as viij charietes myght carie ¶ And euery yere after during the life of the duke of Lancastre of the duch●s his wyf x. M. marke of gold Of wich gold the auenture charges they of spayn shuld au●̄ture bring yerly vn to Bayon to the dukis assignes by surite made ¶ And also the duke maried an oder of his doughters vn to the kyng of Portingale the same tyme. And whan he had done thus he come home ayen in to englond the good lady his wyfe also but mony a worthy man vpon the flix died ¶ And in the xv yere of kyng Richardis regne hee held his cristēmase ī the maner of wodstoke the erle of Penbroke a yong lord tendre of age wold lerne to Iust with a knyght that was called sir Iohn̄ sent Iohn̄ riden to gedre in the parke of wodstoke And ther this worthi erle of penbroke was slayn with that othir knyghtis spere as he kest it from him whan they had coupled and thus this good erle made ther his end and ther for the kyng ̄ the quene made moch sorow for his dethe ¶ And in the xvi yere of kyng Richardis regne Iohn̄ hende beyng that tyme maire of london Iohan walworth Henri ●anner beyng shereues of london that same time a bakers man bare a basket of horsbred in to fletstret toward on hostre ther come a yong man of the bisshoppis of Salisberi that wos called romayn and he toke an hors lofe out of the baskit of the bakers ̄ he askid him why he did so and this romayn turned ayen brak the bakerhede And neghbours come out and wold haue a rested this romayn he brake from them fled to the lordis place the ꝯstabull wold haue had him out but the bisshoppis men shet fast the yates keped the place that no man might entre And than moch more pepull gadred thidder and said that they wold haue hī out or elles they wold brenne vp the place and all that wer therī ¶ And than come the maire and sheriues with other moch pepull cessed the malice of the comunes ̄ made euery man to go hom to ther houses kepe the pees ¶ And this romayns lord ther bisshop of Salisburi master Iohan waltham that at that tyme wos tresorer of englond went to sir Thomas Arundell erchebisshop of yorke chanceler of englōd ̄ ther the bishop made his cōplaint vn to the chanceler vpō the pepull of the cite of london ¶ And than thes ij bisshoppis of gret malace vēgeaūce cō vn to the kyng to wyndesore ̄ made a gret complaīte vpō the maire ̄ sheriues And anon all the cite afterward wer before the kīg his coūcell ̄ they cast vn to the cite a greuous hert and wonder gret malice ¶ And anōe sodēli the kīg sent after the maire of londō for the ij· sheriues ̄ thei come to him vn to the castell of wyndesore And the kyng rebukid the maire sh̄eriues full foule for the offence that they had done ayens him and his officers in his chambur at londō Wherfor he deposit and put out the mare and bothe sheriues ̄ this wos done a xiiij daies afore the feste of sent Iohan baptest ¶ And than the kyng called to him a knyght that wos called sir Edward dalingrigge ̄ made hī wardeyn gaunour of the cite ̄ chambur of londō ̄ ouer all his peple therī ¶ And so he kepid that office but iiij wekis be cause that he wos so gentill and tendir to the citisens of londō Wherfor the kyng deposit him and made sir Baudwyn radyngton knyght that wos courtrouller of the kng housold wardeyn ̄ gouernour of hys chambre and of his pepull therin and chese to him ij worthy men of the cite to be shiriues with him for to gaune and kepe the kyngee lawes in the cite· on was called Gilbert mawefeld and that other Thomas Newenton shereues and than the maire and the ij shereues and all the aldermen with all the worthy craftes of lōdon went on fote vn to the tour and ther come out the Constable of the tour yaf the maire and the sheriues ther oth ̄ charge as they shuld haue take in the Escheker of westmynstre in the kingꝭ court of his Iustices and Barons of the Escheker and than went they home ayen ¶ And than the kyng and his councell for the gret malace and despite that they had to the cite of londō remeued all his courtis from westmynstre vn to the cite of yorke that is to say the Chaunceler the Escheker the kyngꝭ bench and the comune place· ther they held all thes courtes of law fro midsomer that is to say the fest of sent Iohn̄ baptist vn to the fest of cristemase next suyng And than the kyng and his councell saw it not so ꝓfitabull ther as it wos at londō than anōe he remeued it ayen vn to londō so to westminstre for gret ese of his offics a vaūtage to the kyng and all the comunes of the reame ¶ And when the pepull of londō saw ̄ knew that thes courtes wer come ayen ¶ And the kyng his pepull also than the maire ̄ the aldermen with thee chief comunes of the cite let gader a gret somme of gold of all the comunes of the
sone afterward right ther he made his end And thē whan kyng Richard was deposit and had resyned his croūe and his kyndō and was kepid fast ī h●ld thā all the lordis of the reame with the comunes assent and bi accord chosē this worthy lord Sir Henri of Bolingbroke erle of Derbi duke of Herford and duke of Lancastre bi right lyne and heritage for his rightfoll manhode that the pepull fond in him before all other they chose hī made him kīg of Englond amongꝭ them INnocencius the vij wos chosin at Rome and leued bot ij yere then Gregorie the xij wos after him xij yere euer was debate Then wos Alexander chosen in the counsell of Pysan and he wos called frist Petrus de Candia so wos put strife to strife euerychon of thos iij. sayd they wer pope Then was ther a councell at Pysan wher they began to make a ꝯcorde ̄ ther they deposit ij and the thrid stode ̄ so wors diuision was made then before for that they ordant preualid not Robart wos Empraur after Wensolans ix yere This man wos the duke of Banary and the erle of Palatyn a iust man and a good and wos crouned of Boneface the ix This man entred Italy with a gret host of Almayns ayens Iohn̄ the duke of Galias but with an heuy bost he turnid ayen wos had worthy to suffre for his rightwysnesse Iohan the xxiij succedit Alexander iiij· yere and frist he began well for a vnite hee wos in the counsel̄ at Constant and offred him to resine the pope hood and after secretly and vntrewly he fled away bot it profited not him for he wos take and constrened to pees and wos made a Cardinalle beried at Florens Sigismūdus wos emprour after robert xxvij yere And he wos son to Karolus ̄ kīg of vngarie and most cristyn prince he wos so deuoute to god that he deseruied to be cannonysit This man holp the chirch thurgh his meruelus prudens and wit for he sparid no labour ne nothyng that he had till he had made a full pees among the clargie And he had ix batailles ayens the Turke and he euer had the victorie ̄ what more all thyng that euer wos written in louyng to Constantine Theodosio Karolo Otto may trewly be writtyn of him And he was crouned in vngrie decessed a blissid man Circa annum domini M.iiijC. ● ¶ Of sir Henri of Bolinbroke erle of Derby that regned after kīg Richard wich wos the iiij henri after the ꝯquest ANd after kyng richard the ij· wos deposid and out of his kyngdome The lordis and the comunes all with one assent and all othir worthy of the reame chosen sir Henri of Bolingbroke erle of Derby son and heir of Iohn̄ the duke of Lancare for his worthy manhood that oft tyme had be found in him ̄ in dede preued vpō sent Edwardis day the confessor he wos crouned kyng of englond at westmynstre by all the reame assent next after the deposing of kyng Richard ¶ Than he made Henri his heldist son prince of wales and duke of Cornwaill and erle of Chestre ¶ And he made sir Thomas of Arundell erchebisshop of Cantorburi ayen as he wos before ¶ And sir roger Walden that kīg Richard had made Erchebishop of Cantorberi he made hī bisshop of londō for that tyme it stod void And he made the erles son of Arundell that come with him ouer the se from Calais in to englond He made him erle of Arundell as his fadre had bene and put him in possession of all his londis ¶ And he made homage and feaute vn to his liege lord thee kyng as all othir lordis had done ¶ And than anone died kyng rechard in the castell of Poūtfret in the north cuntre For ther he wos enfamed vn to the deth by his keꝑ For he wos kepid ther iiij or v. dais from mete drinke and so he made his ende ī this world yit moch pepull in englond ̄ ī other landis said that he wos on liue mony a yere after his deth But whether he were a liue or dede forth they held thir fals oppynions ̄ beleue that men haddee in moch pepull wich come to gret myschief foull deth as ye shall here afterward ¶ And whan kyng Henri wist and knew veraly that he was dede he let sere him in the bes maner and closed it in a fair chest with diuerse speceries and baumes closed him in a linnen clothe all sauf his visage and that wos left opē that al men myght se his parsoon from all othir men And so he was brought to london with torche light brinnyng to sent Poules chirch and ther he had his masse ̄ his dirige with moch reuerence and solempnite of seruice ¶ And when all this wos don he wos brought from sent paules in to the abbey of westmynstre and therhe had all his hole seruice ayen ¶ And from westmister he wos brought to Langeley and ther he wos beried on whos soule god haue merci ¶ And in the first yere of king Henris regne he held his cristimasse in the castell of wyndesore and on the xij euen come the duke of Awemarle vn to the kyng ̄ told him that he and the duke of Surre ̄ the duke of Excestre and the erle of Salusburi and the erle of Gloucestre and othir mo of ther affinite wer accordid to make a mommyng vn to the kyng on xij day at nyght ̄ ther they purposed for to sle the kyng in thee reueling thus the duke of Awemarle warned the kyng ¶ And than the kīg come that same nyght to londō priueli in all the hast that he myght to get him help socour and comforth coūcell ¶ And anone thes other that wold haue do the king to deth fled in all the hast that they myght for they knew well that ther coūcell wos bewried ¶ And than fled the duke of Surre and the erle of Salisberi with all ther menye vn to the toūe of Cecester ¶ And ther pepull of the toune wold haue arestid thē and they wold not stand to ther arest bot stode at defence ̄ faught manli ¶ But at the last they wer ouer comen and take And ther they smyten of the dukis hede of Surri ̄ the erles hede of salisburi mony othir mo and thar they put the quarters in to s●kkes and ther hedis on poles borne on high and so they wer brought thurgh the cite of londō to london brigge and ther thes hedis wer set vpon high and ther quarters wer senten vn to other good tounes and Cities of englond and set vp ther At Oxford wer take Blounte knyght and Benet Cely knyght and Thomas Wyntersell squyer and thes wer behedid and quartired and the knyghtis hedis wer set vpon polles ̄ brought to london and set vpō the brugge and
with a huge a strong power and anone they yeld and put them all in to the kinges good grace an in his merci ̄ so did moni mo strong tounes and Castellis that wer in tho parties ¶ And from thēs they went to vermill in Perche and anone it wos yolden vn to the king both the toūe the Castill bodis goodis at the kīgꝭ good grace ▪ so the kīg gate conquered all the tounes and Casstellis Pyles strenthes ̄ Abbeys vn to Poūtlarge and from thens vn to the Cite of Rone ¶ And in the fifth yere of kīg Hēries regne the v. sir Iohn̄ Oldcastell that was the lord Cobham wos arestid for heresi and brought vn to the toure of londō and anone after he brake out of the tour ̄ wēt in to wales ̄ there keped him long time ¶ And at the last the lorde powys toke him ▪ bot he stode at gret defence long time ̄ wos sore woūded or he wold be take and so the lord Powys men broght him out of wales to londō in a wherlecole so he wos brought to westmynstre ther was examined of certayn pointes that wer put vpon him he sayd not nay and so he wos conuycte of the clargie for his heresi dampned before the Iuttices vn to the deth for treson ¶ And so he wos lad vn to the toure ayen and ther he was laid on an hurdell and draw thurgh the cite to sent Giles feld and ther wos made a new pair of galowes and a strong chine and a coler of yrē for him and ther he wos hongid and brent on the galowes ̄ all for his lewdnesse ̄ his fals opinions ANd in the vi yere of kyng Henris regne the fifth he sent his vncle sir Thomas Beaufort duke of Excestre wyth a fair menye of men of armes and archiers be for the cite of Rone and ther displayed his baner and sent heroudes vn to the toune and bad them yelde that cite vn to owr kyng ther liege lord and they sayd he toke them none for to kepe ne none he shuld haue ther but if it wer dere bought and meued with ther hondis for othir ansuere wold they none yef but gonnys ¶ And ther the duke toke good auisement of the ground all about And anōe ther issued out of the cite a gret meny of men of armes both on horsebake and on foot and anone owr meni met with them ouer threw an hepe of them and ther wer taken ̄ slain xxx parsons of full right good mennis bodis and the remenaūte fled ayen in to the toune the Duke went vn to Pountlarge vn to the king an told hym all how that he had spede an how he liked the ground· ¶ And anone as he was go they cast doune all ther subarbis about the cite vn to the harde groūd for the king ther no refresshing sh̄uld haue at his comyng And the friday before lāmesda than next folowyng our kyng with his host come before Rone anone he set his sege roūd a bout that Cite and anone let lay to his ordinaunce vn to the toune And the kyng and his lordis wer logged in the chartre house and gret strength about them that was in the est perte of the cite ¶ And the duke of Clarence logged him at the west ende in a wast abbey before the porte Chanx ̄ the Duke of Excestre in the North side before thee Porte Beauuesyn and bitwen the duke of Clarence and thee duke of Excestre wos the Erle Marchall logged with a strong power before the castell gate ¶ And than was the erle of Ormond the lord Harington and the lord Talbot with ther retenu next him ¶ And than sir Iohan Cornwaill and mony oder nobull knyghtis of name with ther retenue lay with the duke of Clarence ¶ And frō the duke of Excestre toward the kīg wer logged the lord Roos the lord of wylluby the lord phehew ̄ sir william Port knight with ther retenue before the port of sent Hillarie ¶ And thā wos the erle of mortayn with his retenue logged in the abbey of sent Katrines ¶ And the erle of sal●sberi with his retenue lay on that othir side of sent Katrins sir Iohn̄ Gray knyght wos logged at the abbey that is called moūt sent michell ¶ And sir Phelip Lech knyght the kīgꝭ tresorer wos logged bitwen the water of Seyn and the abbey kepid the ward vnder the hill the baron of Carow wos logged vnder the water side to kepe the passage And Ienico the squyer lay next him on the water side and thos two squiers kepid manli the water of Seyn and faughte with ther enmys oft tymes ¶ And on that othir side of seyn lay the erle of Hontingdon master Neuill the erles son of westmerland sir Gilbert vmfreuill erle of Keme and sir Richard of arundell and the lord Feriers with ther retenue before Port du pounte and eche of thees lordis had strōg ordinaunce the kyng did make at Pountlarge ouer the water of siyn a stronge and a mygity chyen of Iren and put it thurgh gret Pyles fast pyght in thee grounde and that went ouer the reuer of Seyne that no vessell myght passe that in no kynde And about that cheyne the kyng litt make a brigge ouer thee water of Seyn thatt man and hors and all othir cariage myght go to and fro at all tymes whan nede wer And than come the erle of warwike had gote Dounfront vn to the king Henri of Englond ¶ And anone the kyng sent the Erle of Warwike to Cawdebeke to besege it And whan that he come before the toune he sent his heraudes vn to the capitaine and bad him yeld vp the toune vpon pe in of deth ̄ anone he laid his sege the capitayn besought the Erle that the myght come vn to his presens and it plesed him and speke with him ̄ so the good erle graunted him sor to cum ̄ than he come out ̄ foure othir burgeis come with him· ̄ entreted so with this Erle that this same toune was vnder composicion to done as the cite of Rone did and the Erle graūted and consentid ther to vpon this condicion that the kingꝭ nauy of englōd with his ordinaūce myght passe vp by them in saufte with out any maner of lette or destrubaūce to his composiciō they set to ther seales ¶ And the shippis passed vp by them in saufte come before the cite of rone in to an hondreth shippis and ther they cast ther ankers than this cite wos beseged both by land by watir And whan all this wos done ̄ shippis comen vp thā cume the Erle of Warwik ayen to the kyng ̄ logged him bitwen the abbey of Seint Katerins and the knig till that the abbey entreted
of the stepull in the castell of Douer fell doūe this same yere ¶ How the noble duke of yorke wos slayn and of the feld of wakefeld and of the secund Iourney at sent Albons by the quene and the prince THen for as moch os the quene with the prince hir son was ī the Northcuntre and absent hir from the kyng and wold not obeye such thynges as wos concludid in the parlament it was ordeyned that the duke of Yorke as protectour shuld go Northward for to bring in the quene subdue suche as wold not obeye wyth whom wēt the erle of Salisberi sir Thomas Neuill his sone with moche pepull· And at wakefeld in Cristemasse weke they wer all ouerthrowen and slayn by the lordis of the quenis partie that is to wit the Duke of yorke wos slayn the erle of Rutland sir Thomas Neuill and mony mo and therle of salisburi wos takyn othir as Iohn̄ harow of London Captayn and rewlar of the foot men and hanson of hull wich wer brought to poūfret and ther after behedid and ther hedis senten to yorke ̄ set vpon the yatis ¶ And thus wos that nobull prince slayn the duke of yorke on whos soule and all cristyn soules god haue mercy And this tyme therle of marche beīg ī shrowsberi hering the deth of his fader desired assistence ayde of the toūe to avēge his faders deth ¶ And from thens went to wales wher at Candilmase after he had a bataill at mortimers crosse ayenst therles of Penbroke and of wylshire wher therle of march had the victorie Then the quene wyth tho lordis of the north after they had distress●d and slayn thee Duke of Yo●ke and his felish̄ip com southward with a gret multitude and puissaunce of pepull for to cum to the kīg and defete such conclusions as had ben taken before by the parlament ayens whos commyng the duke of Norfolke the Erle of warwik wyth moch papull and ordinaunce went to sent Albons and sad kyng Henri wyth them And ther encountred to gedre in such wyse and faught so that the duke of Norffolke and the Erle of warwyke wyth mony othir of ther partie fled and lost y● Iourney wher that kyng Henri was taken and with the quene and wyth the prince Edward his son wych two had geten that feld ¶ Then the quene and hir pertie beyng at ther aboue sent anone to london wych wos on askiswedineday the first day of Lente for vitaill for wych the mayre ordined by thauys of the Aldermen that certayn cartis laden with vitaill shuld be sent to Seint Albons vn to them ¶ And when that tho cartis come to Crepylgate the comunes of the cite that keped that gate token the vitaillis from the cartis and wold not suffre it to passe ¶ Then wer th●● certayn Aldermen and comuners appoyntid to go vn to Barnet for to speke wyth the quenes counsell for to entreyt that the Northerin men shuld be sent home in to their cuntre ayen For the cite of London dred sore to be robbed and despoyled yf they had comen ¶ And thus during this trayte tydynges comen that the Erle of Warwike had met wyth thee Erle of the Marche on Cottyswold comyng out of walis wyth a gret menye of walsshmen And that they both wer commyng vn to londonward ¶ Anone as thes tidyngꝭ wer knowē th● tray●te was broken for the kyng quene prince and all thee othir lordis that weren with them departid from Seint Albons northward wyth all the● pepull Yit or they departid from thens they hedid the lord bonuyle sir Thomas Kiriell wich wer taken in the iourney done on shroftewisday ¶ Then the duchis of yorke beyng at london hering of the losse of the feld at s●nt albonis sent ouer se hir two yong sonnys George Richard wich went to vtrecht ¶ And Ph●lip malpas a rich marchant of lōdō Thomas vaghan squier mastir willm hatteclif mony othir fering of the comyng of the quene to londō toke a ship of andwarp for to haue gone in to Zeland· and on that other coost wer taken of on Colompne a franshmā a ship of were ̄ he toke them prisoners brought them in to fraunce wher they paied gret good for their ransum ther wos moch good riches ī that ship ¶ Of the deposiocion of kyng Henri the sext and how kyng Edward the fourth toke possession And of the bataill on palmeson●ay how he wos crouned THen whan the erle of March and the Erle of warwike had mette to gedres on Cotiswold in continente they conclud for to go vn to london And sent word anone vn to the maire to the cite that they shuld cum and anane the cite was glad of their comyng hopyng to be releuyd by them ¶ And so they comen to london whā they wer comyn ̄ had spokī with the lordis estates thē beīg ther ꝯcludid for as moch as kīg Henri was gone with them norward that he had forfited his croune ̄ aught for to be deposed accordyng vn to the actes made and passid in the last parlament ¶ And so by thauys of the lordis spirituall and temperall then beyng at londō the erle of the march Edward by thee grace of god oldest sun of Richard duke of yorke as rightfull heire next enheritour to his fader the iiij day of march the yer of our lord M. cccc lix toke possessiō of the reame of englōd at westmīster ī the gret hall after ī the chirch of the abbey offerd as king with the septre royall to whō all the lordis both spirituall tēꝑall did homage obeyssaūce as to ther soferayn liege lord and kyng And forthwith it wos ꝓclamid thurgh the cite kyng Edward the fourth of that name And anone after the kyng rood ī his rii●ll astate northward with all his lordis to subdue his subiectis that tyme beyng in the north ̄ to avenge his fadres deth ¶ And on Palme sonday after he had a gret bataill in the northcuntre at a place called Towton not fer from yorke wher with the help of god he gat thee feld and had the victorie wher wer slayn of his aduersaries xxx thousand men and mo as it wos said by them that wer ther. ¶ In wich bataill wos slayn the Erle of Northumberland the lord Clifford sir Iohn̄ Neuill the erle of westmerlandis brother Andrew Trollop● mony knyghtis squiers ¶ Then kyng Henri that had bene kyng beyng with the quene the prince at yorke hering the losse of that feld and so moch peple slam ouerthrowen anone forthwith deꝑtid all thre with the duke of sumerset the lord Roos othir toward Scotland ¶ And thee next day kyng Edward with all his armye entrid in to yorke wos ther proclamed kīg obeyed as he ought to be And the mair aldermen and comuns sworen to be his lege men And when
romās for ꝑcialyte of ij bretheren s. Aristobolus and Ercanus bothe of them for enuy of odirkest them to the Romans that they myght regne ¶ This tyme iij sonnes appered in heuyn toward the est parte of the world the wich be lytill and lytyll wer brought in to on body A gret signe it wos that Affrica Asia ̄ Europa shuld be brought in to on Monarch and that the lordship of Anthom the senetour and Lucus Antonij shuld turne in to on lordship Marcus Cicerio Tulyus the most excelent retricion wos consull of Rome this tyme. ¶ How that the Bretons graunted vn to Cassibolan that wos Ludd brother the land In whos tyme iulyus cesar come twyes for to conquere the lond of bretan AFter the deth of kyng Lud regned his brother Cassibolon and become a good man and mych belowed of his bretōs so that for his goodnes and curtesie they graunted hym the reame for euermore to hym and to his ayres And the kyng of his goodnes let norisch worthely bothe the sonnys that wos Ludis his brother and after made the eldest son erle of Cornwaill ̄ the yongest son he made erle of London And while this kyng cassibulon regned come Iulius cesar that wos Emprour of Rome ī to this land with a pouer of romans and wold haue had thys land thurgh strength but Cassibalon ouer come hym ī batell thurgh helpe of the bretons and drofe hym out of this land and he went ayen to rome and assemled a gret pouer an other tyme and come ayene in to this land for to gif batell to Cassibalan bot he wos discomfitied thurgh strenght of the britons and thurgh helpe of the erle of cornwaill and the erle of London his brother and thurgh help of Gudian kyng of scotland and corbond kyng the kyng of north walles and of Bretaill kyng of southwales ̄ in thys batell wos slayn Nennon that wos cassibolams brother wherfor he made moch sorow And so went Iulius cesar out of this land with a few of Romans that were left on lyue And tho Cassibalan went ayene to Londō made a fest vn to all his folke that tho hym had holpen and when that this fest was done ther euery man went in to his own cuntre ¶ Of the debate that wos bitwix cassibolom an the Erle of Londō of the truage that was paied to Rome ANd after it befell thus vpon a day that the gentilmen of the kynges houshold and gentilmē of the Erles houshold of l̄ondon after mete went in fere for to play and thurgh debate that arose emong them Enelyn that wos the erles cosen of London kyiled Irenglas that wos the kynges cosin wherfor the kyng swore that Enelyn shold be honged bot the Erle of London that was Enelyns lord wold not suffre hym wherfor the kyng was gretly vexid and wroth towarde the Erle and thought him to destru preualy the Erle sēt lettres to Iulius cesar that he shold cum ī to this land for to helpe hī hī a venge vpon the kīg ̄ he wold help hym with all his myght And when that the Emprour herd this tidyngꝭ he was full glad ̄ ordeyned a strōg pouer and come a yene the thrid tyme in to this land and the Erle of London helpe hym with vijM. men and at the thrid tyme was Cassibalon ouer comen and discomfited and made pees to the Emprour for iijM. ponde of syluer yeldyng by yere for truage for this land for euer more And then half a yere after passed the Emprour weent vn to rome and the erle of London with hym for he durst not abid in this land and after Cassibolan regned xvij yere in pees tho he died the xvij yere of his regne and lieth at yorke ¶ How that the lordis off the land after the deth of Cassibolan and for encheson that he had no heir made Andragen kyng AFter the deth of Cassibolon for as myche as he had none heir of his lefull body begottyn the lordes of the lond bi the comyns asent crouned Andragen Erle of Cornwaill and made hym kyng and he regned well and worthely and he wos a good man and well gouerned the lond and when he had regned viij yere then he died and lieth at London Circa annū mūdi vM.C.lix Et xp̄i natiuitatē xl IOseph of the lyne of crist abowt this tyme wos borne and after wos husband vn to our lady Antigonus was Bysshope this tyme in the Iuri This Antigonus was son vn to Aristoboly and on euery side he was fals for he obeyed not to the Romans and a gret plage he brouaht vn to the land for to destruy Hircanus his vnkyll that he mygh regne kyng And so Hircanuu was expulsed and Falelus wos kylled· and Herod wos flemyd bot whē Herod come vn te Rome and told to the Senetours all thes thynges The Emprour creatit hī kyng sēdīg with hī an host the wich toke ierusalem And Antigonum the Bysshope taken led to Anthony the senetour the wich made hym sekyr And so wos Herod confirmed in to his kīgdō ̄ he a strang regned on the iues And so the kīgdō of the iues seesyd as Iacob had said Titꝰ liuiꝰ historicꝰ and Ouidius wer this tyme. Incipiūt imꝑatores augusti ●et dictus est Augustus quia augebat populū OCtauian wos Emꝑour of rome lvij yere vi monethes and x. dayes This Octauian Neuew to Iuly wen he wos a yonge man toke the Empire vpon hym His florichyng youth he spend in were .vM. batels he did And chortly after mony batels he brought all the world in to on monarche This mā had no felow And in his dayes pees was ī all the world thurgh the prouision of the veray god that the temporall pees myght glorify the Natiuite of our sauyour crist ihesu This Octauian wos the fayrest man that myght be and hegh in witt the most fortunate in all thynges and he lakked not the vice of his fleshly lust This man made all the world to be mesured and the .lij. yere of his regne wos our lord Ihesu crist borne the sauer of this world the wich granteth eternall pees to his louery ¶ Hic nota secund ieroīmū that Anna and Emeria wer sistirs and of Emeria wos borne Elezabeth mother to Iohn̄ baptiste she wos fy●st wedded to Iochym of whom she toke Mari mother of crist ¶ The secūd housbond wos Cleaphe he gat on hir Maria Cleaphe the wich wos wedded to Alphe of whom procedid Iamys the lesse Symon Cananeus Iudas Taddeus ̄ ioseph the wich is called Barsabas ¶ The thrid tyme anna wos wedded to Salome of whom she toke Mari salome the wich was weddid to Zebedi ̄ of them cō iamis the more and iohn̄ the Euāgelist the first mari wedded ioseph broder to Cleaphe a fore sayd ¶ Thys tyme Sibilla tiburtina ꝓphesied of crist And sayed to the Emꝑour august that he shold not
of ther award ¶ The kyng wold not them gayn say but as moche as they ordeyned he graunted and confermed And so wos thee Erle Godwyne accorded with the kyng and so he had ayen all his land And afterward he bere him so well and so wysely that thee kyng hym loued wonder moch and with him he was full priue And with in a litell tyme thei loued so mache that ther the kyng spoused Godwyns doughter ̄ made hir quene ¶ And neuertheles for tho the kyng had a wife he leued euer more ī chastite ī clēnes of body with out any fleshly dede doyng with his wife and the quene also in hir halfe lad an holy life ij yere and died ¶ And afterward the kīg lyued all his lyfe with out any wife ¶ The kīg yaf the erldon of Oxford to Harold that wos godwī sone made hī herle ¶ And so well they wer beloued both the fadre he so priue with the king both the fadre the son that they might done what thyng they wold by right ¶ For ayens right wold he nothing done for no maner man so good trew he wos of cōscicience therfor our lord Ihū crist gret special loue to hī shewed ¶ How kyng Edward saw Swyne kyng of denmarke drenched ī the se ī the tyme of the sacramēt as he stode ̄ herd masse IT befell vpon whitsonday as kyng Edward herd his masse in the gret chirche of westmynster right at the leuaciō of Ihesu cristis body ̄ as all men were gadred in to the chirche come nere the auter for to se the sacring the kyng his handis lyft vp on high ̄ a gret laughter toke vp wherfor all that abou●e him stod gretly gon wonder And after masse the axed why the kynges laughter was ¶ Fair lordis qd the kīg edward I saw Swyne the yōger that wos kīg of dēmarke cū ī to the see with all his pouer for to haue comē ī to englōd vpō vs to where I saw hī all his folke drenched ī the see ¶ And all this I saw ī the eleuaciō of ihū cristis bodi bitwen the pristis handis ̄ I had therof so gret ioye that i might not my laught̄ withhold ¶ And the erle Leuerich beside him stod at the leuaciō ̄ opēly he saw thee forme of brede turne ī to the liknes of a chyld yōg toke vp his right hond ̄ blissed the kīg afterward the erle the erle anone turned him toward the kyng to make hī se that holy sight ¶ And tho said the kyng Sir erle qd he ī se well that ye se thankid be god that i haue honourd my god my saueour visiblly ihū crist in forme of man whos name be blissed in 〈◊〉 ●orldes AMEN ¶ How the ring that sent edward had yeuen to a poerpilgram for the loue of god ̄ sent iohn̄ euangelist come ayen to kyng edward THis nobull man sent edward regned xiij yere and thus it befell vpon a tyme before er he died that ij men of englond were went in to the holy land and had done ther pylgramage and wer goyng ayene in to ther own cuntre wher they come fro ¶ And as they went in the way they met a pylgrame that courtasly them salued and axed of them in what land and in what cūtre they were borne and they sayd in englond ¶ Tho axid he who was kyng of englond and they ansured and sayd the good kyng Edward Fair frendis tho sayd the pilgram when that ye cum in to your cuntre ayene I pray you that ye wold go vn to kyng Edward and oft tymes him grete in myne name And oft tymes him thanke of his gret curtasi that he come hath done nā●y for the ring that he yaf me when he had herd masse at westmynster for sent Iohn̄ loue Euangelest and toke tho the ring ̄ toke it to the pilgrames and sayd I pray you nou gone and bere this ring and take it vn to kyng Edward and tell him that I send it him and a full riche yeft I wyll him yeue For vpon the xij day he shall cum to me euer more duell in blisse with owt any end ¶ Sir sayd the pilgremes what man be ye and in what cuntre is your duellyng ¶ Fair frendis quod he I am Iohn̄ thee Euangelest and I am duellyng with almyghty god and your kyng Edward is my frende and I loue him in specialy for the encheson that he hath euer more leued in clennesse and is a clene maid And I pray you my message all for done as I haue you saied ¶ When that sent Iohn̄ the Euangelest had them th● charged sodenly he voided out of ther sightes bothe· ¶ The pilgrames tho thankid almyghti god and wente forth in ther way ¶ And whē they had gone ij or iij. myle they began to wax weri set them a doune them for to rest and so they fel on step ¶ And wh● they had slepid well on of thē awoke ̄ lyft vp his hede and lokyd a bout sayed vn to his felaw arise vp and wend we in our way ¶ What sayd that on felow vn to that other wher be we now Certes sayd that other it semeth me that this is not the same contre that we layd vs doune in for to rest and slepe For we wer from Ierusalem but iij. myles ¶ They toke vp ther handis and blissed them went forth in ther way ¶ And as they went in ther way they saw shepeherdes goyng with ther shepe that spekē none other lanage bot english ¶ Leue frendis qd on of the pylgryms what cuntre is this who is lord therof ¶ And on of the shepeherdes ansuerd ̄ said this is the cuntre of kent in englond of the wich the good kīg edward wos lord of ¶ The pylgramys thankid tho almyghty god ̄ sent Iohn̄ euanglist ̄ wēt forth ī ther way come to Cantorburi frō thēs vn to london ̄ ther they fond the kīg told him all frō the begynyng vn to the endyng as moch as sent iohn̄ had thē charged of all thīges how thay had sped by the way ̄ toke the ring to kīg edward 〈◊〉 vnderfenge it thankid almyghti god ̄ sent iohn̄ euangelist tho made hī a redi euery day frō day to day for to wend out of this lyfe when god wold for him send ¶ How sent Edward died on the xij day ANd after it befell thus in cristynmas eue as the holy mā Edward was at goddis seruis matines for to here of that high fest he become full sike and in the morw endured with moch payn the masse for to here and after masse he let him be lad in to his chambre ther for to reste him but in his hall amonges his barons and his knyghtys might he not cum them for to
said masse thurgh out all london ̄ so after thurgh out all englōd ¶ And the next yere after ther began a gret debate bitwene king Iohn̄ ̄ the lordis of englōd for encheson that he wold not graūte the lawes hold the wich sent Edward had ordeyned had be vsed hold vn to that tyme that he had them broken for he wold hold no law bot did all thīg that hī likid desheried mony mē with out ꝯsent of lordis ̄ peris of the land wold desherite the good Erle Randulf of Chestre for enchesō that he vndertoke hī of his wykkidnesse for cause that he did so moch shame ̄ velany to god and holy chirche And also fer he held hauntid his own brothers wife lay also bi mony other womē gret lordis doughtres for he sparid no woman that him liked for to haue wherfore all the lordis of the land wer with him wonder wroth and went to london ̄ toke the cite ¶ And for to cese this debate and sorow the erchebishop and other gret lordis of the land assembled them before the fest of sent Iohan baptist in a medow besides the toune of stanes that is called Romnemede And the kyng made them ther a chertour of fraunches such as they wold axen ̄ ī soch maner they wer accordid and that accordemēt last not full longe for the kyng him selfe sone after did ayens the pointis of the same chartre that he had made wherfor the most parte of the land of lordis assembled them and began to were vpō him ayen and brened his tounes and robbid his folke did all the sorow that they myght ̄ made them as stronge as they myght with all ther pouer thoght to driue him out of englond and make Lowys the kynges son of fraunce kyng of englond ¶ And kyng Iohn̄ sent tho ouer see and ordeyned so moch pepull of Normans ̄ of Piccardes ̄ of Flemmynges So that the land myght not susteyn them but with moch sorow ¶ And among all thes pepull ther was a mā of Normandie that was called Faukis of brent and this Normand his ꝯpany spared nother chirche ne house of religion bot thei brīt robbed it ̄ bare away all that they might take so that the land wos all destroied what on oon side on other ¶ The barons lordis of Englond ordeyned amōg them the best spekers and wysest mē sent them ouer se to kīg Philip of fraunce and prayed him that he wold send lowys his son in to englōd to be kyng of englōd ̄ to vnderfenge the croune ¶ How Lowys the kinges son of fraunce come in to englond with a stronge pouer of pepull to be kīg of englond WHen kyng Ppilip of fraunce herd this tydyng he made certayn aliaunce bitwene them by ther commune eleccion that Lowys kyng Pphilipes sone of fraunce sh̄uld go with them ī to Englond driue out kīg Iohn̄ of the land and all that wer in presence of Lowys made vn to him homage and bicome his men ¶ And the barons of englond held them styll at londō abiden Lowys the kīges son of fraūce this was the next saturday before the Ascencion of our lord that lowys come in to englond with a strong pouer that tyme kyng Iohn̄ had takyn all the castels of englōd in to alyens handis ¶ And tho com Lowys be segid Rouchestres castell toke it with strength the thursday in whitson w●ke lethonge all the aliens that wer therī the thursdai tho next suyng he come to London ther he wos vnderfenge with mech honour of the lordis that a byden him ther all to him made homage ¶ And afterward on the tewysday next after the Trinite sonday he toke the castell of Reigate ̄ in the morow after the castell of Gilford ̄ the friday next after the castell of Farneham ̄ the mōday next after the cite of wynchestre to him was yold ̄ in the morow after sent Iohn̄ day the maner of woluesey and the tewisday after the vtas of sent Petre sent paule they toke the castell of Odiham and the mōday after sent Margaretes day he ordend him toward Bawmore for to sege the castell and ther he duelled xv dais ̄ myght not get the castell ̄ than when the thens ̄ come to london ̄ the toure to him wos yolde ¶ How the pope send in to Englond a legat that wos called Swalo and of the deth of kīg iohn̄ ANd in the same time the pope send in to england a legat that wos called Swalo and he wos prest Cardinall of rome for to maynten kyng Iohans cause ayens the barons of Englond but the barons had so huge part and help thurgh Lowys the kynges son of fraunce that kyng Iohn̄ wist not whidder for to turne ne gone ¶ And so it befell that he wold haue gone to Nycholl and as he wēt thiderward he come by the abbey of Swynes hede ̄ ther he abode ij dais ¶ And as he sat at mete he axed a monke of the house how moch a lofe was worth that wos set befor him vpō the tabull And the mōke said that the lofe was worthe but and halfpeny ¶ O quod the kyng tho here is gret chepe of brede Now quod the kyng I may life soch a lofe shall be worth xx shillyng or half a yere be gone ¶ And whē he had said this word moch he thougt oft he sighed tok ete of the bred said by god the word that I haue spokyn it shall be soth ¶ The mōke that stode before the kyng was for this word full sori in hert thoght rather he wold him self suffre deth and thought if he myght ordeyn ther fore some maner remedie ¶ And anone the mōke went to his abbot ̄ wos shriuen of him ̄ told the abbot all that the kyng had said· and praid his abbot for to assoill him for he wold yef the kīg such a drink that all Englond shuld be glad ther of ioyfull ¶ Tho went the monke in to a gardeyn and foūd a gret to de therin toke hir vp ̄ put hir ī a cup ̄ prikked the tode thurgh with a broche mōy tymes till that the venym comen out of euery side ī the cup. tho toke the cup ̄ fillled it with good ale brought it before the kīg knelīg said sir qd he wassale for neuer the days of your life dranke ye of so good a cup ¶ Begin monke qd the kīg ̄ the monke dranke a gret draught ̄ toke the kyng the cup the kīg also dranke a gret draught set doūe the cup ¶ The monke anone right wēt ī to the farmori ther died anone on wh●● seule god haue merci amen And v. mōkis sing for his
same tyme was vpō the see gret were bitwen the ēglishmē the Normās but vpō a time the normās arriued all at Douer ther they martired an holy man that was called Thomas of Douer And afterward wer the normans kylled that ther ascappid not on of thē ¶ And sone after kīg edward shuld lese the duchie of Gascoyn thurgh kīg Philip of fraunce thurgh his fals castyng of the douseperis of the land wherfor sir Edmond that wos kīg Edwards brother yaf vp his homage vn to the kyng of fraūce ¶ And in that tyme the clerkis off englond graūtid to kyng Edward halfendele of holy chirch gooddis in helpyng to recouer his land ayen in Gascoyn ¶ And the kīg sent thider a nobull company of his bachilers him self wold haue gone to Portesmouth but he wos let thurgh on Maddoc of wales that had seised the castell of Swandō in to his hand ̄ for that enchesō the kīg turned to wales at cristemase And for enchesō that the nobull lordis of englōd that wer sēt ī to gascoyn had no cōforth of ther lord the kīg they wer take of sir Charles of fraūce that is to say sir Iohn̄ of bretā sir robert Tiptot ▪ sir Raufe tāny sir hugh Bardolf ̄ sir Adam of Creting ̄ yit at the ascenciō was Madoke take in wales an other that wos called Morgan they wer sent to the tour of londō ̄ ther they wer heded ¶ How sir Iohn̄ Bailloll kīg of scotlād withsaid his homage ANd when sir Iohn̄ bailloll kyng of scotland vnderstode that kyng Edward wos wered in Gascoyn to whom the reame of Scotland was delyuered Falsely tho ayen his oth with said his homage thurgh procuring of his folke· And sent vn to the court of rome thurgh a fals suggestion to be assoiled of that othe that he swore vn to the kyng of Englōd so he wos by letter enbulled ¶ Tho chosen they of scotland Dousspers for to be nymme edward of his right ¶ And in that tyme come ij cardinales from the court of rome fro the pope Celestine to trete of accorde bitwen the kng of fraūce ̄ the kyng of englond ¶ And as tho two Cardinales speke of accorde Thomas Turbeluill was take at Liouns ̄ made feaute homage to the warden of Paris ̄ to hī put his ij sonys in hostage for that he thought to go ī to englond for till aspie the cuntre ̄ tell them when he come in to englond that he had brokyn the kynges prison of fraūce by nyght said that he wold done that al englisshmē ̄ walsh̄men sh̄old a bow to the king of fraūce ̄ this thyng for to bring to the ende he swore ̄ vpō this couenant dedis wer made betwen thēm and that he sh̄uld haue by yere a M· poūdes worth of lond to bring this thing to an ende ¶ This fals tratour toke his leue ̄ wēt thēs and come in to englond vn to the kyng said that he wos brokyn out of prisō that he had put him in such ꝑill for his loue wherfore the kyng coude him moch thanke and full glad wos of his commyng ¶ And the fals tratour fro that day aspied all the doyng of the kyng ̄ also his coūsell for the kyng loued him wel ̄ was with him full priue But a clerke of englond that wos in the kynges house of fraunce herd of this treson of the falsnes wrot to an other clerke that tho wos duellyng with edward kyng of englond all how Thomas Turbeluill had done his false coniectyng all the councell of englōd wos writte for to haue sent vn to the kyng of fraūce thurgh the foresaid letter that the clerke had sent fro fraūce hit wos foūde vpō him wherfor he wos lad to londō honged draw ther for his tresō and his ij sonys that he had put in fraūce for hostage wer tho beheded ¶ Of the counquest of Berewyke WHen tho two Cardinales wer went ayene in to Fraunce for to trete of the pees at Cambrey the kyng sent thider of his erlis and barouns That is to say sir Edmond his brother erle of Lancastre and of Leycestre sir Henri Lacy erle of Nichol Willm vessy a baron and of other baronettis about xiiij of the best ̄ wisest of englōd ¶ And ī the same tyme the king Edward toke his viage to Scotland for to were vpō Iohn̄ Bailloll kyng of scotland ¶ And sir Robert Roos of Berewyke fled fro the englisshmē went to the scottys And kyng Edward went him toward berewike ̄ beseged the toūe ̄ tho that wer within manly them defendid and set a fire and brint ij of kyng Edwardis shippis and said in dispite and reproue of him ¶ Weneth kyng edward with his long shankis to haue get berewike al our vnthankis Gas pikes him And when he has done Gas dikes him ¶ When kyng Edward herd this scorne anone thurgh his myghtynes he passid ouer the dikes ̄ assailed the toūe come to the yates and gat and conquerid the toūe and thurgh his gracious pouer kylled xxv thousand ̄ vijC scottys And kyng Edward lost no man of renoune saufe sir Richard of Cornewaill and him kylled a Flemmyng out of the reed hall with a quarell as the foresaid Richard did of his helme and commaūdid them for to yeld them and put them to the kynges grace and the scottis wold not wherfor that hall was brent and castyn doune and all tho that wer therin wer brant ¶ And king Edward lost no mo men at that viage of symple estate but xxvij Englisshmen And the wardeyn of the castell yaf vp the keys with out any assaute ¶ And ther wos takyn willm Douglas and Sir Symond Frisell ̄ the erle Patrike yeld them to the pees bot Inghm̄ of Humsremille Robert the Brus that wer with the kyng Edward forsoke kyng edward and held with the scottis and afterward they wer takyn and put in to prison and after that the king for yaf them ther trespasse and deliuerid them out of prison ¶ And tho let kyng edward close in Berwik with wallys with dychis afterward Robert Rous went to Tindale and set wuyebrugge a fire Exham ̄ Lamerstok and kyllid and robbed the folke of that cuntre ¶ And after that he went from thens vn to Dumbarre ¶ And the frist wedenesday of Marche the kyng sent the erle of Garenne Sir hugh Perci and sir hugh Spenser with a fair companye for to besege the castell ¶ But on that wos called sir Richard Syward a traitour and a fals man ymagyned for to begile the englisshnen sent to the englisshmen them for to dissaue And said that he wold yelde vn to them the castell yf they wold graūte them viij· dais of respit that he myght send ̄ tell to sir Iohan Bailoll that wos kyng of
wroth ¶ How sir Roger Mortimer bare him proudly ̄ so hie ANd now shall ye here of sir Roger Mortimer of wygmore that dissired and couyted to be at an high a state so that the kyng graunted him to be called erle of marche thurgh out all his lordship ¶ And he become so proud and so hauteyne that he wold lese forsake the name that his ancestres had euer before ¶ And for that encheson he let him call the erle of marche and none of the comuns of englond durst call him bi name other name for he was called so thurgh the kyngꝭ crie that men shuld call him erle of the marche ¶ And the Mortimer bare him so hauteyne ̄ so proud that wonder it was for to wit also disgised hī with wonder rich clothes out of all maner reson both of shapping of wering Wher of the englisshmen had gret wonder how ̄ in whot maner he myght contreue or find such maner pride and they said amōges them all comenli that his prid sh̄old not long endure ¶ And the same tyme sir Geffrey Mortimer the yong that was the mortimer son let him call kyng of folie so it befell afterward in dede for he wos so full of pride ̄ of writchednesse that he held a roūde tabull in wales to all men that thider come contrefete the doīg ̄ the maner of kyng Arthurs tabull bot openli he failed For the nobull kyng Arthur wos the most worthy lord of renoune that was in all the world in his tyme yit come neuer none such after For al the nobull knyghtis in all cristendome of dede of armes asayed duellid with kyng Arthur ̄ held him for ther lord and soferen ¶ And that wos well sayn for he ꝯquered in bataill a roman that wos called Froll ̄ get of him the reame of fraūce and kylled him with his own handis ¶ And also he faught with a geant that wos called Dinabus kylled him that had rauesshed fair Eleyn that wos kyng Hocles nece kyng of litell bretan ¶ And afterward he kylled in bataill the emprour of Rome that wos called Lucie that had assembled ayens king Arthur for to fight with him so moch pepull of romās Phethis sarisens that no man coud them nōbre ̄ he discomfited them all as the stori telleth ¶ And in the same tyme cōmune loos sprong in englōd thurgh coniecting ordinaūce of the freres prechours that sir Edward of Carnariuan that wos kyng edward fadre of whom the geest telleth said that he was on liue in the castell of Corf wherfor all the cōmyns all most of englond wer in sorow ī dred wherfor that it wer so or not For they wist not how traitoursly the mortimer had him done mordrid ¶ How Edmōd of wodstok that wos erle of kent the kinges brother edward of Carnariuan was heded at wynchestre ANd vpō a tyme it befell so that sir edmond of wodstoke erle of Kent spake vn to the pope Iohan the xxij at Auinion said that almyght good had oft tymes done for Thomas loue of Lancastre mony gret miraclls to mony men and women that wer thurgh diuerse maladies undone as vn to the world and thurgh his praier they wer brought vn to ther hel̄th ¶ And so sir edmond praied the pope herteli that he wold graūte him grace that the forsaid Thomas myght be translatid But the pope said nay that he shuld not be translatid vn to the tyme that he wer better certefied of the clargie of englond seyn by ther obedēce what thyng god had done for the loue of Thomas of lancastre after the suggestion that the forsaid edmōd erle of kent had vn to him made ¶ And whan this edmond saw that he myght not spede of his purpose as tochyng the translacion he praied him of his coūcell as toching sir edward of Carnariuan his broder said that not long a gone he wos kyng of englond what thīg might best be done as toching his deliuerance sith that a comune fame is thurgh englōd that he his on liue hole ̄ sauf ¶ Whan the pope herd hī tell that sir edward was on liue he cōmaūded the erle vpō his benison that he sh̄uld help with all the pouer that he myght that he wer deliuered out of prisun s●ue his body ī all maner that he might for to bring this thīg to an end he assoyled hī his cōpani a pena culpa all tho that holp to his deliuerance ¶ Tho toke edmōd of wodstoke his leue of the pope come ayen ī to englōd And whā sir edmond wos comē sū of the frere precheurs come ̄ said that sir edward his broder yit wos on liue ī the castell of Corf vnder the kepīg of Sir Thomas Gurnay ¶ Tho sped him the forsaid Edmōd as fast os he might till he come to the castell of Corf ̄ a queynted hī ̄ spak so fair with Iohn̄ Dauerell that was ꝯstable of the same castell and yaf him rich yeftes to haue acqueyntance of him and to knaw of his coūcell ¶ And thus it befell that the forsaid sir edmōd praied specially to tell him priuely of his lord his brother sir Edward if that he leued or wer dede and if he wer on liue he praied of him ons to haue a sight ¶ And this sir Iohan Dauerill was an high herted man and full of curage ̄ ansuerid shortely vn to sir Edmond and sad that sir edward his brother was in helth and vnder his kepyng and durst shew him vn to no man sith it was defended him in the kynges half edward that was edwardis son of Carnariuan and also thurgh commaundement of the quene Isabell the kynges modre ̄ of sir Roger Mortimer that he sh̄uld shew his body vn to no maner man of the world sauf only vn to them vpon lesyng life and limme ̄ disherityng of his heiris for euer more ¶ But the fals traitour falsly lied for he was not in his ward but he wos take thens lad vn to the castell of berkeley thurgh sir Thomas Gurnay thurgh ꝯmaūdemēt of the Mortimer til that he wos dede as before is said but sir edmōd of wodstoke wist nothyng that Edward his broder was dede wher vpon he toke a lettre vn to the kīg edward his broder as to his worthi lord ¶ And vnderfeng the letter of him be hight him for to do his message with out any maner faill with that sir edmōd toke leue of the forsaid Iohn̄ wēt ī to his own ꝯtre lordship ī kent that he had ther ¶ And anone as this same iohn̄ wist that sir edmond wos gone ī to kent his own lordship anone he went ī all the hast that he myght fro the castell of Corf comen vn to sir Roger mortimer toke him the letter that sir edmōd of
annoye ī the feld that all the pepull of accord shuld cum nere ̄ here his clamours and his crie and his wyll ¶ And the lordis the maire and the aldermen with the comynalte hauyng indignacion of his couetize and falsenes and his foull presumcion And anone willm walworth that tyme beyng maire drew out his knife and slew Iak straw And anone right ther did smyte of his hede and set it vpon a spere sh̄aft ̄ so it wos bore thurgh london set an high vpō londō brigge ¶ Anon thes risers misgouerned mē wer void clene vanisshed as it had nought be they And than the king of his gret goodnesse by prayer of his lords made ther vi knightis of good worthy men of the Cite of londō That is to say willm walworth that at that tyme wos maire slew Iak strawe And the secund was Nicholas brembre ̄ the iij. Iohn̄ Philipot the iiij Nicholas twif●●d the v Robert laūdes the vi Robert gaytō And thā the kīg with his lordis his knyghtis retourned ayen to the toure of londō ̄ ther he restid hī till this pepull wer better seced set in rest and pees And than by ꝓcesse of tyme as they myght get and toke thes rebelles ̄ risers they hong them vpō the next galois ī euery lordship thurghout the reame of englond by xl ̄ bi xxx bi x. by xij euer as they myght be geten ̄ taken ī ony ꝑties ¶ And in the v. yere of kīg Richardis regne wos the gret erth quake was generall thurgh out the world the wedenesday after witsonday ī the yere of our lord a M. ccc.lxxxxi Wherfor all maner pepull wer sore a gast ̄ dredfull lōg tyme for dred of vēgeaūs that our lord sh̄ewid and did ¶ And in the vi yere of kyng Richard sir Henri spenser bisshop of Norwich went with a Croiserie ouer the see in to the cuntre of Flaunders and ther they gat the toune of Grauenyng and the toune of broburgh Dunkerk Newport and ther thei laded and fraughtid li. shippis with pelage for to haue comē in to englond with thes shyppes and goodis ¶ And the bisshop of Norwich and his coūcell let brenne thes shippis with all the pelage in the same hauen all in to hard asshes and at Dunkerke wos done a gret bataill bitwen the Flemmynges and the Englishhmen And at that bataill wer slayn a gret multitude of thes Flemmynges an huge nombure ¶ And than went thee bisshop with his retenew to Ypers and beseged it a long tyme but it myght not be geten And so lefte that sege and comen ayen in to Englond For our englishmen wer fowly destroyed and mony died on the flix ¶ And in this same yere come the Quene Anne in to englond for to be spoused to kyng Richard And hir fadre wos Emprour of Almayne And kyng of Beme ¶ And with hir come the Duke of Tassi hir vncle and mony other worthy lordis and knyghtis of hir cūtre of beme and of other duche tonges to do hir reuerraūce worship And sir Symond beuerle a worthy knyght of the garter other knyghtis squyers that wer the kynges embassetours brought hir ī to englond so forth to londō And the pele of the cite that is to sey the mare the aldermen and all the comunes riden ayens hir to welcū hir and euery man in good aray and euery craft with his mynstral see in the best maner mette with hir on the blake heth in Kent and so brought hir vn to London thurgh the cite and so forth vn to west mynster vn to the kynges palais And ther she was spoused vn to kyng Richard well and worthely in the abbey of westmynstre ther she wos crouned quene of englond ▪ And all hir frendis that come with hir had gret yeftes and weren well cherid and refreshed as long tyme as they byden ther. ¶ And in this same yere ther was a bataill done in the kynges palays at westmynster for certayn pointes of treson bitwen sir Iohan Ansley knyght defendant And Carton squier the appellaunt But this sir Iohn̄ of Ansley ouer come this Carton and made him to yeld him withī the lystes ¶ And anone wos this Carton dispoiled of hys harnes and draw out of the listes and so forth to Tyburne ̄ ther he wos honged for his falsenese ¶ And ī the viij yer of the regne of kyng Richard sir Edmond of Langley Erle of Cambrige the kynges vncle went in to portyngal̄e with a fair m●ny of men of armes and archiers in strengthing and helpyng of thee kyng of Portingale ayens the kyng of Spayn and his pouer ther the kyng of portingale had the vyctorie of his enmys thurghe help and comforth of our englisshmen· ¶ And whan that iorney wos done the erle of Cambrigge come home ayen with hys pepull in to englond in hast blissid be god and his blissid yeft amē ¶ And this same yere kyng Richa●d held his Cristemasse in the maner of Eltham ¶ And the same tyme the kyng of Ermoyne fled out of his own land and come in to englond for to haue help an socour of our kyng ayens his enmys that had driuē him out of his own reame And so he wos brought vn to the kyng to Eltham ther as the kyng held his riall fest of Cristemase ¶ And ther our kyng welcomed him and did him moch reuerence and worsship and commaundid all his lordis to make him all the chere that they coud And than he besought the kyng of grace and of help and of his comforth in his nede ¶ And that he myght be brought ayen to his kyngdom and land For the Turkes had deuoured and destroid moch parte of his land and for drede how he fled and come hidder for socour and helppe· ¶ And then the kyng hauyng on hī pitte and cōpassiō of his gret mischief and greuous disese anone he toke his councell and asked what wos best to done ¶ And they ansuerd and said yif it liked him to yef him ony good it wer well done And as touchyng his pepull for to trauell so fer ī to out landes it wer a grete iuꝑdie And so the kyng yaf him gold siluer and mony riche yeftes and iewelles and betaught him to god And so he passed ayen out of Englond ¶ And in this same yere kyng Richard with a riall pouer went in to scotland for to were vpon the scottis for the falsenesse and destruccion that the scottis had done vn to englishmen in the marches And than the scottis come doūe vn to the kyng for to tret with him ̄ with his lordis for trews as for certayn yeres ¶ And so our kyng ̄ his coūcell graūt them trews certayn yeres to ther askyng our kīg turned him ayen in to englond And when he wos cumyn
bene withstonde ¶ For the kyng ̄ all the lordis of the ream of Englond wer departed except the lorde Scales that kepid the tour of london ¶ And the fifth day of Iuyll he did done smyte of a mannys hede in southwark and the nyght after the ●naire of london with the aldermen and the communes of the cite concludid to driue a way the capitayn his host sent to the lord scalis to the toure ̄ to mathew gohe a copitayn of Normandie that they wold that nyght asaille the capitayn with them of Kent ¶ And so they did y come to londō brige ī to southwarke or the capitayn had ony knowlege ther of ther they sought with them that keped the brigge And the Kentishmen went to harnes and come to the brigge ̄ shot faught with them gat the brigge made them of londō to fle slow mony of them this endurid all the nyght to ̄ fro to ix of the cloke on the more And at the last they brent the draw brigge wher mony of them of londō wer drowned In wich nyght Sutton an aldermā was slayn Roger heysant and Mathew gohe and mony othir And after this the Chancilar of Englond sent to the Capitayn a pardone generall for him othir for all his menye And then they deꝑted from southwarke euery man home vn to his own hous ¶ And when they wer all deꝑtid and goon· ther wer ꝓclamacions madem Kent southsex and othir places that what man coude take the captayn quike or dede sh̄old haue a M. mark And aftir this on Alixander Iden a squier of Kent toke him in a gardē in southsex ī the takīg the Captā Iohn̄ Cade wos slaī ̄ after behedid his hede set on londō brigge ¶ And anone after then the kyng come in to Kent and did his Iustices sitte at Cauntorberi and enquered who wer causaries chief cause of this Insurreccion ¶ And ther wer viij men Iuged to deth in on day in othir places mo And from thens the kyng wēt in to southsex and in to the westcuntre wher a litell before wos slayn the bisshop of Salisberi ¶ And this same yere wer so mony iugged to deth that xxiij hedes stode vpon londō brigge at on s ¶ Of the feld that the duke of york toke at brentheth ī Kēt and of the burth of prince Edward of the frist bataill at sent Albons wher the duke of Somersete wos slayn IN the xxx yere of the kīg The duke of yorke com out of the march of wales with therle of Deuīshire the lord Cobham gret puissaunce for reformacion of certayn Iniuries and wrōges also to haue Iustice on certayn lordis beyng about the kyng ̄ toke a feld at brontheth beside dertford in Kent wich wos a strōgfeld for wich cause the kyng with all the lordis of the lande went vn to the blake heth with a gret and strong multitude of pepull armed and ordeyned for the were in the best wyse And when they had mustred on the heth Certayn lordis wer tho sent vn to him for to tret and make appointement with him wich were the bisshop of Ely and the bisshop of wynchestre and the erles of Salisberi and of werewyke And they concludid that the duke of Somersete shold be had to ward ̄ to ansuer to such articles as the duke of yorke shold put on him and than the duke of yorke sh̄usd breke his feld and cum to the kyng wich wos all promised by tho kyng ¶ And so the kyng commaundid that the duke of Somersete shold be had in ward And than the duke of york brake vp his feld and come to the kyng and whan he was comen ꝯtrarie to the promisse afore made the duke of somerset was presēt in the feld a waytyng and chief about the kyng made the duke of yorke ride before as a prisoner thurgh londō and after they wold haue put him ī hold But anoyse aroso that the erle of march his son was commyng with x. thousand men to londonward wherfore the kyng and his coūcell ferid and than they concludid that thee duke of yorke shold deꝑte at his own will ¶ About this tym began gret diuision in Spruce bitwen the gret mastir and the knyghtis of the duche ordre wich wer lordis of that cuntre For the comunes and toūes rebellid ayenst the lordis and made so grete were that at the last they called the kyng of Pole to be ther lord the wich kyng come and wos worshipfully resaued and laid sege to the castell of Marienburgh wich was the chief castell of strength of all the land wan it and drofe out the mastir of dansk ̄ all othir places of that land And so they that had ben lordis mony yeres lost all thirseygnorie and possessions in tho landis ¶ And the yere of the Incarnacion of our lord M. cccc liij on sent Edwardis day the quene Margaret wos deliuered of a fair prince wich wos named Edward That same day Iohn̄ Norman wos chosin for to be maire of londō And the day that hee shuld take his oth at westmynsire he went theder by water with all the craftis wher afore tyme the maire aldermen and the craftes rode on horsbake wich wos neuer vsed after For sen that tyme. they haue gone euer by water in barges ¶ Ye haue well vnderstond before how that contrari to the promisse of the kyng and also the ꝯclusiōs taken bitwen the kyng the duke of yorke at brentheth the duke of Somerset went not to ward but abode about the kyng and had gret rule and anone after he wos made capitayn of calais ruled the kyng his reame as he wold wherfore the gret lordis of the reame ̄ also the comunes wer not plesid For wiche cause the duke of yorke the erle of warwyk the erle of salisburi with mony knyghtis and squiers and moch pepull come for to remeue the said duke of somersete othir fro the kyng ¶ And the kīg hering of ther comyng thought by his coūcell for to haue gon westward and not for to haue met with them ̄ had with him the duke of somerset the duke of Bokyngham the erle of stafford the erle of Northūberland the lord Clifford mony othir ¶ And what tyme that the duke of yorke ̄ his feliship vnderstode that the kyng wos deꝑted with thes lordis from london Anone he changed his way and coste the cūtre come to sent Albonys the xxiij day of May ̄ ther met with the kyng to whom the kyng sent certayn lordis desired them to kepe the pees and deꝑte but in conclusion whils they treted on that on side· the erle of warwik with the march men oder entred the toune on that oder side fought ayēst the kyng and his ꝑtie and so began the bataill ̄
yere Rainold pecok bisshop of Cheiester wos fonden an heritike the iij. day of December was abiurid at Lambheth in the presens of the Erchebisshop of cantorbery and mony othir bisshoppis doctours and lordis temperall And his bokys brint at Poules crosse Ye haue hard before how certayn lordis wer slayn at sent albons wherfore wos alway a grutche and wroth had by theyres of them that wer so slaī ayens the duke of yorke the erles of warwik and of salisberi wherfore the kyng by thauys of his councell sent for them vn to london to wich place the duke of yorke come the xxvi day of Ianuer with cccc men ̄ logged at baynardes castell in his own place ¶ And the xv day of Ianuer come the erle of salisburi with v hondred men and was loggid in ther●● his own place ¶ And then come the dukis of Excestre and of somerset with viij hondreth men lay without temple barre ¶ And the erle of northumbarland the lord Egremond and the lord Clifford with xv hondreth mē and loggid without tonne ¶ And the maire that time Gefferey Boleyn kept gret watch with the comunes of the cite and rode aboute the cite by hol borne and flet strete with a v thousand men well arayed and armed for to kepe the pees ¶ And thee xiiij day of Feuerer the erle of warwik come to london frō Calais well be seyn and worsh̄ipfully with vi hondreth men in rede iakkettis brodderd with a ragged stafe be hynd be fore was logged at grafreris ¶ And the xvij day of march thee kyng come to london and the quene and ther wos a concorde ̄ a pees made amonges thes lordis and they wer set in pees ¶ And on our lady day the xv day of Marche in the yere of our lord a M. cccc lviij the kyng the quene and all thes lordis went precessiōn at poules in londō anone after the kīg the lordis deꝑted ¶ And in this yere was a gret affray in fletestrete bitwen men of court and men of the same strete In wich affray the quenys attorney wos slayn ¶ How the kynges housold made afray ayenst the erle of warwike ̄ of the Iourney at bloreheth ALso this same yere as therle of warwike wos at councell at westmynstre All the kynges housold menye gadred them to geder for to haue slayn the said Erle but by the helpe of god and his frendis he recouerid his barge ̄ escapped ther euell enterprise How well the Cokis come runnyg out with spittis pestels ayens him· And the same day he rode toward warwike and sone after he gat him a comission and wenten ouer the see to Calais ¶ Sone after this the erle of Salisberi comyng to london wos encountred at Blureheth with the lord Awdeley and moch othir pepull ordeyned for to distroy him but he hauyng knawlech that he shuld be met with wos accomponied with his two sonnys sir Thomas and sir Iohn̄ Neuill and a gret feliship of good men ¶ And so they faught to gedres wher therle of Salisberi whan the feld and the lord Awdeley wos slayn and mōy gentilmen of Chesshire and moch pepull hurt and therles two sonnys wer hurt and goyng homward afterward they wer taken and had to chestre by the quemes menye ¶ After Calixt Pius wos pope and was chosin this yere a M. cccc ̄ lviij And he wos called be fore Eneas an eloquent man and a poete laureate He was embassatour of the emprours a fore tyme And he wrote in the coūcell of basilie a nobull traittie for the auctorite of the same ¶ Also he canonised sent Katherine of senys This pope ordined gret indulgens and pardon to them that wold go and were ayenst the turke wrote an epistle to the gret turke exorting him to becum cristyn ̄ ī the end he ordined a passage ayenst thee Turke at Ankone to wich moch pepull drew out of all ꝑties of cristyndō of wich pepull he sent mony home ayen because thei suffised not anone after he died at the said place of Ankone the yere of our lord a M. cccc.lxiiij the xiiij day of august ¶ How Andrew Trollop ̄ the soudiours of calais forsoke the duke of yorke ther mastir therle of warwik ī the west cuntre THe duke of yorke the erles of warwike and of Salisbiri saw the gouernaunce of the reame stode most by the quene hir councell how the gret princes of the land wer not callid to councell but set a ꝑte not onli so bot it wos said thurgh the reame that tho said lordis shuld be destroyed vtterli as it openli was shewed at Bloreheth by them that wold haue slayn the erle of salisberi ¶ Than thei for sauacion of ther lyues and also for the comyn well of the reame thoght for to remedie thes thyngꝭ assembled them to gedre with moch pepull and toke a feld in thee west cuntre to wich the erle of warwike come from calais with mony of thold soudgers as Andrew trowlop othir in whos wisedom as for the were he moch trusted ¶ And whan they werē thus assembled and made ther feld The king sent out his comissions and priue seals vn to all the lordis of his reame to cum await on him in ther most best defensable aray and so euery man come in such wise that the kyng wos stronger and had moch more pepull than the duke of yorke ̄ the erles of warwik and salisberi For it is here to be noted that euery lord in englond at this time durst not disobey the quene for she rewled peasibly all that was done about the kyng wich wos a good simple and an Innocent man ¶ And than when the kyng wos comen to the place wher as they wer the duke of yorke ̄ his feliship had made ther felde in the strongest wise ▪ and had purposid verely to haue byden and haue foughten but in the nyght Andrew Trollop ̄ all the old soudiours of Calais with a gret feliship sodenly deꝑted out of the dukis host ̄ went streght vn to the kynges feld ther they wer ressaued ioyously for they knew th entent of the othir lordis also the maner of ther feldis ¶ And than the duke of york with the othir lordis seyng them dissaued toke a coūcell shortely in that same nyght deꝑtid frō thee feld leuyng behynd them the most parti of ther pepull to kepe the feld till on thee morn ¶ Then the duke of yorke with his secund son deꝑtid thurgh wales toward Irland leuyng his eldest son the Erle of the march with the erles of warwik of Salusberi wich rode to geder with iij. or iiij ꝑsons streght in to Deuenshire ther bi help and ayde of on Denham a squier wich gate for them a ship wich cost .cc.xx. nobles with thee same ship sailed from thens
Subandy the wich wos cosin and alied almost to all the princes of cristyndō and euerychon left him Then ī the yere after ther wos a pees made Felix resauid for it plesid our lord his name to be glorified by a obiect of the world as wos that Ianuens· in comꝑison to the duke the pope This Nicholas was a maister in diuinite and actiue man a rich man ī ꝯsaites mōy thyngꝭ that wer fallen he bildid ayen all the wallis of rome he renewed for dred of the Turke And ther was a uerse made of this vnite and publisit in the cite Lux fulsit mūdo cessit felix nicholao And that ī the yere of our lord M.iiijC.xlix The yer of grece with a gret deuocion was ꝯfirmid ̄ innumerabull pepull wēt to the apostill setis ¶ How kyng Henri the vi regned beyng a child not oon yere of age of the bataill of vernaill in Perche AFter kyng Henri the v. regned henri his son but a child and not fulli on yere of age whos regne began the frist day of Septembre in the yere of our lord M. cccc.xxij This king beyng ī his cradell wos moch dowtid and drad by cause of the gret ꝯquest of his fader ̄ also the wysdō guydyng of his vncles the duke of Bedford ̄ the duke of Gloucestre ¶ This yere the xxi day of October dyed Charles the kyng of fraūce lieth beried at sent Denys And than wos the duke of bedford made regent of fraunce And the duke of Gloucestre wos made ꝓtector and defendour of englond ¶ And the frist day of march after wos sir willm Taillour prest degradid of his presthode and on the morow after he wos brint ī smythfeld for herise ¶ Thys yere sir Iames stiward kyng of scottis maried Dame Iane the duches doughter of Clarence of hir frist housband the erle of somerset at sent mari ouays ¶ Also this yere the xvij day of August wos the bataill of vernaill in perche bitwen the duke of bedford regēt of fraūce ̄ the duke of Alaūsone wich was a gret bataill The duke of Bedford had ● on his sid with hī the erle of salusberi Moūtagu the lord Talbot all the pouer that they coud make in Normandie the garysouns kept And also mony Capitayns with moch pepull of the duke of Borgoyns ¶ And on that other side was the duke of Alaunson the duke of Turon that wos therle douglas the erle Boughan with mōy lordis of fraūce ̄ gret cōponie of scottis and Armynakis And than the Erle douglas called the duke of Bedford Iohan with the leden swerd And he sent him word ayen that he sh̄old find that day that his swerde wos of stele ¶ And so the bataill ioyned on both sides and faught long tyme that ther wist no man who sh̄old haue the better a gret while bot at the last as god wold the victori fell vn to the English partie For ther wer slaī the erle douglas wich a litel before wos made duke of Turon the erle of boughan the erle of Almarre the erle of Toūar the erle of vaūtedor and the viscount of Nerbonne wich was on of them that slew duke Iohn̄ of Borgoyn knelyng before the Dolphyn ̄ mony mo vn to the nombre of x. thosand and mo And ther wos taken prisoners thee duke of Alaūson and mony othir lordid and gentillis of fraūce bot scottis that day wer slayn doune right the substance of them all ¶ And the thrid yere of kyng henri the sext the Duke of Gloucestre maried the duchisse of holand wēt ouer the se with hir in to henaude for to take possession of hys wyfes heritance wher he wos honorably receyuid and taken for lord of the land bot sone after he was fayn to returne home ayen tho and left his wyfe ̄ all his tresour that he had broght with him in a toune that is called Mounse in henaud wich promised him for to be trew to him Notwithstondyng they deliuered the lady vn to the duke of borgoyn wich sent hir to Gaunt And from thens she ascapid in a man nys clothyng and come in to Zeland to a toūe of hir own callid Ziorixee And from thens she went to a toune in holand called the Ghowde and ther sh̄e wos strong ynowgh and withstode the said duke of Burgoyn ¶ And sone after the duke of gloucestre sent ouer in to Zeland the lord fitzwater with certayn men of were and archiers for to help and socour the forsaid duchefse of holand wich ●andit at a place in Zeland called brewers hauen wher the lordis of the contre come doūe and faght with him and in conclosion he wos fayn to with draw him and his meny to the see ayen But yit he slew and hurt diuerse lordis and moch pepull of that same cuntre And so retourned home ayen with his meny and preuaylid no thyng ¶ And also this same yere the● Erle of Salusberi the erle of suffolke the lord Wylby and thee lord scalis with ther retenue laid sege to the cite of Manus the wich cite wos yolden to them with mony othir strong toūes and Castellis to the nombre of xxxvi ¶ This tyme all Normādie and a gret part of fraūce vn to Orliaunce wos vnder the obeyssaunce of the kyng of englond And all the remenaūt of fraunce wos in gret tribulacion and mischief ¶ How ther wos a gret fray lyke to haue bene bitwene the cardinall the duke of Gloucestre And of the coronacion of king Henri the sext both in englond in fraūce IN the iiij yere the same nyght that the maire of london Iohan Couentre had takyn his charge was a gret watch in London for a fray that wos betwen the bisshop of wynchestre and the Duke of Gloucestre protectour c ¶ For the maire with the pepull of the cite wold abide bi the duke of gloucestre as ꝓtectour of the reame bot by labour of lordis that went bitwen in speciall by the labour of the prince of Portyngale ther was a pointement taken that ther was no harme done And after the bataill of verneyll in perche thee duke of bedford com ouer in to Englond And on witsonday this same yere at Laycestre he dubbed kyng Henri knyght And forthwith the said kyng Henry dubbed all thes knyghtis whos names folowith that is to wit sir Richard duke of yorke also the son and heir of the duke of Norfolke the erle of Oxford the Erle of westmerland the son and heir of the erle of Northumburland the son ̄ heir of the erle of vrmond the lord Roos sir Iamys buttelar the lord martrauas sir Henry gray of Tankeruile sir willm Neuill lord fawconbrigge sir George Neulll lorde latimer the lord wellis the lord berkle the son and heir of the lord Talbot sir Raufe gray of werk Sir robert veer sir Richad gray sir Edmond hongerford Sir Robert
Wynkfeld sir Iohan bottell̄er Sir Raynold Cobham sir Ioha● passheley sir Thomas Tunstall Sir Iohn̄ Chidiok sir Raufe langford sir wyllm drury sir willm ap Thomas sir Richard Carbonell Sir Richard Wydeuile Sir Iohan shridelew sir Wyllyām Cheyn sir Wyllyam Babyngton sir Iohn̄ Iune sir Gil̄bert Beauchamp ¶ Item in the v. yere the duke of Bedford with the duchese hys wyfe went ouer see to Calays a lytell before went ouer Henri bishop of wīchestre And on our lady day anūciacion ī our lady chyrche at Calais the bishop of wīchestre whan that he had songen masse wos made Cardinall he knelyng before the hygh auter the duke of Bedford set the hat vpon hys hede and ther wer hys bulles red as well of hys charge as the reioyssing of his benefices spirituel and temperill ¶ And thys same yere was gret habundaunce of rayn that the substanse of heye and also of corne was destruyed for it rayned almost eueri other day ¶ And thys same yere the good erle of salusberi sir Thomas Montague layd sege vn to Orlyaunce at wych sege he wos slayn with a gonne that come out of the toune on whos sowle god haue merci for syth that he wos slayn Englishmen neuer gat ni preuayled ī fraūce bot euer after began to lese lytell and lytell till all wos lost ¶ Also this same yere a bretō murdred a good wedow in hir bedde without algate wich wedow fond him for almesse And he bare away all that she bad ¶ And after this he toke the gyrth of holy chirch at sent Georgis in southwark and ther token the crosse and forsuore this lande And os he went it happened that he com by the plase wher he did this cursed dede in the subbarbes of london And the women of the same parissh com out with stonys and canel dung and slew and made an end of him ther. Notwithstandyng the constabules and mony othir men beyng present for to kepe him for ther wer mony women and had no pitte ¶ Also this same yere the Duke of Northfolke with mony gentill men and yemen toke his barge the viij day of Nouembre at sent mari oueyes for to haue go thurgh londō brugge and thurgh misgydyng of the barge it ouerthrew on the pyles and mony men drownyd but the duke him self with ij or iij. leped vpon the piles and so wer sauid with help of men that wer aboue the brugge wich casten doun ropis by the wich roppis they sauyd them self ¶ This same yere on sent Leonardis dai kyng Henri beyng vij yere of age wos crouned at westmynster at whos coronacion wer made xxxvi knightis This yere on sent Georgis day he passid ouer the see to Calays toward fraūce Aboute this tyme and a fore the reame beyng in gret miserie and tribulacion the Dolphyn with his parte began to make were and gate certayn places and made distresses vpon english men by the meyn of his capitayns that is to say la heer poton de seyntraylles and ispeciall a mayd wich they namyd la pucelle de dien This maid rood lyke a man ̄ wos a valiant capitayn among thē and toke vpon hir mony gret enterprises in so moch that they had a beleue for to haue recouerid all ther lossies by hir ¶ Not wtstondyng at the last after mony gret feates by thee helpe and prouiesse of sir Iohan Luxemburgh the wich was a nobull Capitayn of the Dukes of Burgoyn and mony englishmen picardes and Burgoygnous wich weren of our partie before the toune of Compyne the xxiij day of May the forsaid pucelle was taken in the feld armed like a man and mony othir capitayns with hir wer all brought to Roan and ther she wos put in to prison And ther she was Iugged bi the law to be brent and then she said that she wos with child wherby she wos respited a while But in conclusion it was founde that sh̄e wos not with child And then she was brenned in Roan And the oder Capitayns wer put to raunsome and entreated as men of wer bene acustmed c. ¶ And this same yere about Candilmasse Richard hunder a woll̄epacker wos dampned for an heritike and brent at tour hyll And about midlentin sir Thomas Baggeli prest and vicarie of Mauen in Estsex beside Walden wos disgratid and dampned for an heritike and brent in smyth felde ¶ And also in this same yere whiles the kyng wos in fraunce ther wer moni heritikis loulars that had purposid to make a rising cast billis in mony places bot blissid be god almyghty the Capitayn of them wos taken whos name was willm Maundeuill a weuer of Abendon and balif of the same toune wich named him self Iak Sharp of Wigmoresland in wal̄es And afterward he wos be hedid at the forsaid Abendon in the witson weke on the tewisday ¶ This same yere the sext day of December kīg Hēri the sext was crouned kīg of fraunce at Paris ī the chirch of our lady with gret solempnite ther beyng present the Cardinall of Englond the duke of bedford and mony othir lordis of fraunce ̄ of Englond ¶ And after this coronacion ̄ gret fest holdē at Paris the kīg retourned frō thēs to roan ̄ so toward Calais the ix day of Feuerer londed at Douer whom all the comunes of kente met at beramdoū bitwen Cātorberi douer all ī reed hodis so come forth till he come to the blake heth wher he wos met with the Maire Iohan wellis with all the craftis of london clothed all ī white And so they brought hym vn to London the xxi day of the same moneth ¶ And this same yere was a restraīt of the wollis of Calays made by the soudiou●s by cause they wer not payed of ther wages wherfor the Duke of bedford regent of Fraunce beyng then capitayn come to Calais the tewisday in the ester weke And on the morne after mōy soudiours of the toūe wer arestid ̄ put ī ward And in the same weke he rode to Terewyn bi the meyn of the bisshop of Terewyn he weddid the erles doughter of sēt Poule come ayen to Calais ¶ And the xi day of Iune on sent Barnabeis day ther wer iiij soudiours of Calais that wer chief causers of the restreynt hedid that is to wit Iohn̄ Maddeley Iohan Lunday Thomas Palmer ̄ Thomas Talbot an hondreth ̄ x. banysshed the toune that same tyme. before wer banysshed an hondreth xx soudiours And on midsomer euen after com the lord regent ̄ his wife to london ABowt this tyme pope martin died And after him Eugeyne thee fourth wos Pope This man was pesabuly chosin in Rome by the Cardinales and was uery indubytate pope· But shortly after he was put and expulsid out of Rome in such maner that he wos fayn to flee nakid In this same tyme wos the councill of Basilie to wich councell he wos