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A23588 [The cronycles of Englond]; Chronicles of England. Caxton, William, ca. 1422-1491. 1482 (1482) STC 9992; ESTC S121383 314,856 338

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¶ How the land of Englond was fyrst named Albyon And by what encheson it was so named In the noble land of Sirrie ther was a noble kyng myghty a man of grete renōme that me callid Dioclisian that well worthely hym gouerned ruled thurgh his noble chyualrye so that he cōquerd all the londes about hym so that almost al the kynges of the world to him were entendant Hit befel thus that this dyoclisian spoused a gentil damisel that was wōder fayr that was his emes doughter labana and she loued hym as reson wold so that he gate vpon hir xxxiij doughters of the which the eldest me callid Albyne these damisels whan they come vnto age bicome so fair that it was wōder wherfor that this dyoclisiā anon lete make a somenyng cōmaūded by his lrēs that all the kynges that helden of him shold come at a certayn day as in his lrēs we re conteyned to make a ryal feste At whiche daye thider they comen brought with hem amyrals prynces dukes noble chiualrye The feste was ryally awayed ther they lyued in ioye myrthe ynough that it was wonder to wyt And it befel thus that this dyoclisian thought to marye his doughters amonge alle tho kynges that tho were at that solēpnyte so they spaken and dide that albyne his eldest doughter al hir sustres richely were maried vnto xxxiij kynges that were lordes of grece honour and of power at this solempnyte And whan the solempnite was done euery kynge toke his wyf lad hem in to her owne coūtrey ther made hem quenes And it befel thus afterward that this dame Albyne bycome so stoute so sterne that she told lytel prys of her lord of hym had scorne despyte wold not done hys wyll but she wold haue hir owne wyll in dyuerse maters and all hir other sustres euerychone bere hem so euyl ayenst hir lordes that it was wonder to wytte for as moch as hem thought that hir husbondes were nought of so hye parage comen as hir fader But tho kynges that were hir lordes wold haue chastysed hem with fayr speche behestes and also by yeftes warned hem in fair maner vpon al loue frendship that they shold amende her lither condicions but al was for nought for they dyden her owne wyll in all thynge that hem lyked had of power wherfore tho xxxiij kynges vpon a tyme oftymes beten theyr wynes for they wende that they wolde haue amended her tatches hyr wicked thewes but of suche condicions they were that for fayre speche warnynge they dydden al the wers and for setynges ●…ones moche wers wherfor the kyng that had wedded albyne wrote the tatches and condicions of his wyf albyn and the letter sent to dioclisian her fader And whan the other kynges herd that albynes lord had sent a letter to dyoclisian anone they sente lrēs ensealed with hir seales the condicions the tatches of hir wyues Whan the kyng dyoclisian saw herd so many playntes of his doughters he was soore ashamed byoome wonder angry wroth towarde his doughters thought both nyght day yf he myght tho amende it that they so mysdid anon sent his letters vnto the xxxiij kynges that they sholde come to hym brynge with hem her wyues euerychone at a certayne daye for he wolde ther chastyse them of theyr wyckednes yf he myght in ony maner wyse soo that the kynges comen al at that daye tyme that tho was sette bitwene hem the kyng Dioclisian hem vnderfeng with moche honour and made a solempne fest to al that were vn der his lorship the thyrdde day after this solempnyte the kyng Dioclisian sent after his xxxiij doughters that they shold come speke with hym in his chambre whan they were come he spa●… vnto hem of theyr wykkednesse of her cruelte despitously hem reproued vndernā to them he said yf they wold not be chasty sed they shold his loue lese for euermore whan the ladyes herd all thie they bycomen abasshed gretely ashamed to her fader they said that they wold make al amendes so they departed out from hir faders chambre dame albyn that was the eldest suster lad hem al in to hir chambre tho made wide al that were therin soo that no lyf was amonges hem but she hir sustres y fere Tho said this albyne my fair sistres wel we knowē that the king our fader vs hath reproued shamed despised for enchesen to make vs obedyēt vnto oure husbondes but certes that shal I neuer whiles that I lyue syth that I am come of a more hyer kynges blode than myn husbonde is And whan she had thus sayd alle hir sustres said the same And tho sayd albyne ful wel I wote fair sustres that our husbondes haue pleyned vnto our fader vpon vs wherfor he hath vs thus fowlo reproued despysed wherfor susters my coūseyl is that this nyght when our husbondes ben a bed al we with one assent cutten her throtes than we may ben in pees of hem and better we may do thys thyng vnder our faders power than elles where And anone al the ladyes cōsented and graūted to this counseyl And whan nyght was come the lordes ladyes went to bedde anone as hyr lordes were in slepe they cut al hir husbondes throtes so they slowen hem alle whan that dioclosyan the kyng her fader herd of this thynge he bycome hugely wroth ayenst his doughters anone wolde hem al haue brente but al the barons and lordes of firrie coūseylled not so for to doo suche sternesse to his owne doughters but only shold wide the land of hem for euermore so that they neuer shold come ayene so he dyde And dioclisyan that was her fader anon commaūded hem to goo in to ship and delyuerd to hem vytaylles for half a yere And whan this was done alle the sustren wente in to the ship and sayled forth in the see and bytoke all her frendes to appolyn that was hir god And so long they saylled in the see til atte last they come and arryued in an yle that was al wil dernesse And whanne dame albyne was come to that londe and all hir sustres this albyne went forth oute of the ship and sayd to hir other sustres For as moche quod she as I am the ol 〈◊〉 suster of all this companye and fyrst this lande haue taken and for as moche as my name is Albyne I wyll that this lond be callyd albyon after myne owne name And anone all hir sustres graunted to hyr with a good wyll Tho went out alle the sustres of the ship and token the land albion as hir suster callyd it and ther they went vp and downe and fonde nether man ne woman ne child but wild beestes of dyuerse kyndes whan
kyng of feaunce And he resseyued hir with moche worship and with moche solempnyte hir spoused and made hyr quene of Fraunce How kynge leyr was dryuen out of his lande thurgh his folye and how Cordeyll his yongest doughter halp hym in his nede Capitulo xiij THus it fell afterward that tho ij eldest doughtre●… wolde not abide till leyr hir fadre was deede but werryd vpon hym whiles that he lyued moche sorow and shame hym dyd wherfor they bynome hym holy the royalme bytwene hem ordeyned that one of hem shold haue kyng leyr to foiourne al hys lyf tyme with xl knyghtes and Squyers that he myght worshipfully gone and ryde whyder that he wold in to what countrey that him liked to play and to solace So that managles kyng of Scotlond had kynge leyr with hym in the maner as is aboue sayd and or other half yere were passyd Corneill that was his eldest dough ter and qnone of scotland was so annoyed of hym and of hys people that anon she and hir lorde spake to geder wherfore hys knyghtes half his squyers from hym were gone no ●…o leste but only xxx whan this was doone leyr bygan for to make moche sorow for encheson that his estate was empeyred and men had of hym more scorne despite than euer they had bifore wher for he nyst what for to done and atte last thought that he welde wende in to Cornewayll to Rygan his other doughter and when he was come the erle and his wyf that was leyres doughter hym welcomed with hym made moche ioye ther he duellid with xxx knyghtes and squyers And he ●…ad nought duellid ther scar sely xij monethes that his doughter of hym nas full of his cōpanye hir lord she of him had scorne and despyte so that from xxx knyghtes they broughten vnto x and afterward fyue and so ther left with hym no mo Tho made he sorow ynough sayd sore wepyng Alas that euer he come in to that londe and sayde yet had me better to haue duellyd with my fyrst doughter And anon went thens to his first doughter but anone as she saw him come she swore by god and his holy names and by as 〈◊〉 as she myght that he shold haue no mo with hym but one knyght yf he wold ther abide Tho began leir ageyne to wepe made moch sorow said tho allas now to long haue I liued that this sorow and meschyef is to me now falle for now am I pourer that som tyme was ryche but now haue I no frende ne styn that me wylle do ony good But whan I was ryche al men me honoured and worshipped and now euery man hath of me scorne and despyde And now I wote wel that Cordeyll my yongest doughter sayd trouth whan she sayd as moche as I had so moche shold I be by loued and alle the while that I hadde good tho was I byloued and honoured for my richesse but my two doughters glosed me tho now of me they sette lytel prys and soth tolde me Cordeyll but I wold not byleue it ne vnderstonde therfor I lete hir gone fro me as a thyng that I sette lytel prys of now wo be I neuer what for to done syth my ij doughters haue me thus deceyued that I soo moche loued now mote I nedes sechen hyr that is in another land that lyghtly I lete hir gone fro me with out ony reward or yefors she said that she louid me as moch as she ought to loue hir fader by al manere of reson tho I sholde haue ayed of hir no more and tho that me other wyse behyghte●… thurgh hyr fals speche now me haue deceiued In this maner leir long tyme began to make his mone atte last he shope hym to the see passed ouer in to Fraunce asked aspyed wher the quene myght be founden and men told hym wher she was And whan he come to the cyte that she was in preuelyche he sende his squyer vnto the quene to telle hir that hir fader was comen to hyr for grete nedes whan the squyer was comen to the qnene he tolde hir euery dele of hir sustres from the begynnyng vnto th ende Cordeyl the quene anon toke gold and syluer plente toke it to the squyer in coūceill that he shold gone bere it vuto hir fadre that he shold go in to a certayne Cyte hym arayen laten wasshen than come ageyne to hyr and bringe with hym an honest company of knyghtes xl atte lest with her meyne than he shol de sende to hir lord the kyng sayn that he were come for to speke with his doughter and hym for to seen so he dyd whan the kynge and the quene herde that they comen with moche honour they hym resseyned And the kyng of fraūce tho lete sende thurgh all his royame and cōmaunded that al men shold bee entendant to kynge leyr the quenes fadre in al mauer of thyng as it were to hym self whan kyng leyr had duellyd there a monethe more he tolde to the kynge and to the quene his doughter how his ij eldest doughters had hym serued agampe anon lete ordeyne a grete hoost of fraūce and sent it in to britayne with leyr the que nes fadre for to cōquer his land ageyne his kyngdom cordeil also come with her fader in to Brytayne for to haue the royame after hir faders deth And anone they went to ship passed the see and come in to Britayne foughten with the felons hem scomfyted slewe And tho had he his land ayene after leued iij yere and helde his royalme in pees and afterward deyde and cordeyl his doughter him lete entier with mykel honour at leycetre How morgan and Conedage that were neueus to Cordeyll werred vpon hir and put hir in to prison Ca xiiij WHan that kyng leyr was dede cordeyl his yongest doughter helde and had the land v yere in the mene tyme died hir lord agamp that was kyng of Fraunce after his deth she left wydue tho cam morgan conedage that were Cordeyl sustres sones to hir she had enemyte for as moche as theyr aūte sholde haue the land so that bytwene hem they ordeyued a grete power and vppon hir werryd gretely and neuer they rest tyl they had hyr taken put hir vnto deth and tho morgan and Conedage seised al the land departed it bitwene hem they helde it xij yere And whan tho xij yere were goon ther bygan bytwene hem a gre te debate so that they werryd strongly y fere euery of hem did other moche dysese For morgan wold haue had al the lande fro beyonde humbar that conedage helde But he come ageynst hym with a strong power so that morgan durste not abide but fled awey in to wales
for to chalenge the truage that was woned to be payd to Rome and the kyng ansuerd well and wysely and sayd that he wold paye to Rome all that right reson wold with good will And so they acorded tho with good wyl and without ony contak and both they duellyd to geders in loue The kynge Coyll yaf his doughter Eleyn to Constance for to haue hyr to his spouse that was both fayr wyse and good wel lettred And this Constance spoused hyr ther with moche ho nour And it befell sone afterward that this kyng Coyll dyed in the xere of his regne xiij and lyeth at Colchestre entierd Of kyng Constance that was a Romayne that was chosen kyng after the deth of Coill for as moche that he had spoused Ele yn that was kyng Coyles doughter Ca xlvj AFter this kyng Coyl Constance was made kyng and crou ned for as moche that he had spoused kyng Coiles doughter that was heir of the lande the whiche Constance regned wel and worthely gouerned the lande and he bygate on his wyf Eleyn a sone that was callyd Constantin this kyng bare trewe faith and truly dyd to hem of Rome al his lyfe and whan he had regned xv yere he dyed and lyeth at york How Constantin that was kyng Constances sone and the sone of saynt elyn gouerned and ruled the lande and was Emperour of Rome Ca xlvij AFter kynge Constances deth Constantyn his sone and the sone of saynt eleyn that fonde the holy crosse in the holy lond and how Constantyn bycame emperour of Rome Hit befel so 〈◊〉 that tyme. ther was an Emperour at Rome a Sarasyn a ●…ūte that was called maxence that put to deth al that byleued in god destroyed holy chirche by al his power slough all cristen men that he myght fynde And among al other he lete martre seynt ka terine many other Cristen peple that had drede of deth that fled and come in to this lande to kynge Constantin and told hym of the sorow that maxence did to Crystente wher for Constantin had pite and grete sorow made and assembled a grete boost and a gre te power and went ouer to Rome and toke the Cyte and slewe all that theryn were of mysbyleue that he myght fynde And tho was he made Emperour and was a good man gouerned hym soo wel that al landes to hym were attendaunt for to ben vnder his gouernaylle And this deuyll tirannt maxence that tyme was in the lande of Grece and herde this tydynge he become wode and sodenlych he died and so he ended his lif whan Constantin went fro this land to rome he toke with him his moder eleyne for the moche wysedom that she coude thre other gre te lordes that he most louid that one was callid hoel anothir was called daberne and the thyrdde morhyn and toke all his lande to kepe vnto therle of Cornewayle that was callyd Octauian And anon as this octauian wyst that his lord was dwellynge at rome he seysed all the land in to his hand and ther with dyd al his will among high lowe they helde hym for kyng whan this tydyng come to Constantyn thēperour he was wōder wroth toward the erle Octauian sent taberne wyth xij M men for to destroye the erle for his falsenes and arryued at portesmouth And whan Octauian wyste that he assemblyd a grete power of britons and discomfyted Taberne and Taberne fled thens in to Scotlland and ordeyned ther a grete power come ageyne in to this land another tyme for to yeue bataylle to Octauian Whan Octaiuan herde telle that he assemblyd a grete power come toward Taberne as moche as he myght so that the two hostes metten vpon steynesmore and strongly smote to geder tho was oc taiuan discomfyted and fledde thens in to Norwey and taberne seysed all the land in to his hand Townes castels as moche as they ther had And syth Octauian come ayene fro Norwey with a greete power and seysed ayene all the land in to his hand and drofe out all the Romayns and was tho made kyng and regned How Maximian that was the Emperours Cosyn of rome spoused octauians doughter was made kyng Ca xlviij THis kynge Octauian gouerned the land wel nobly but he had none heyr sauf a doughter that was a yonge chyld that he loued as moche as his lyf for as moche that he waxe syke was in poynt of deth myght no lenger regne he wolde haue made one of his neueus to haue ben kynge the whiche was a noble knyght a strong man that was callyd conan meridock he shold haue kept the kynges doughtir haue maried hir whan tyme had ben but the lordes of the land nold not suffre it but yaf hyr counceyll to be maried to some high man of grete honour and than myght she haue all hir lust And the counceil of themperour acorded therto at this coūseill they acorded chose tho cador of Cornewaile for to wende to the emperour doo this message and he toke the wey and went to Rome and told the Emperour this tydyng wel and wysely the emperour sent in to this land with hym his owne cosyn that was his vncles sonne a noble knyght and a strong that was callid maxymyan and he spoused Octauuians doughter and was crowned kyng of this land How Maxymyan that was the emperours cosyn conquerd the lande of Armorican and yaf it to Conan merydoc Ca xl●…x THis kynge maximian bycome so ryall that he thought to couquere the lande of Armorican for greete riches that he herde telle that was in that londe so that he ne left man that was of worthynes knyght sqnyer ne none other man that he ne toke with hym to grete damage to all the land for he left at home behynd hym no man to kepe the land but toke hem with hym froo this land xxx M. knyghtes that were doughty mennys bodyes and went ouer in to the lande of Armorican and there sl●…w the kyng that was callyd Imbal and conquerd all the lande And whan he had so done he callid Conan sayd For as moche as kyng octauian haue yow made kyng of britayn ▪ and thurgh me ye were lette and distourbled that ye were not kyng I yeue yow all this lond of armorican yow ther of make kyng And for as moche as ye ben a briton and your men also and by come fro britayne I will that this lond haue the same name and no more Armorican but be callyd lytel britayn and the land fro whens ye ben comen shal be callyd moche Brytayne And so shall men knowe that one britayn fro that other Conan Meridok than ked hym hendly and so was he made kyng of lytel britayne And whan al this was done maximian went thens to Rome and was tho made emperour after Constantin Conan Meudock duellyd in lytel britayne with
loue bitwene hem aroos 〈◊〉 from the table all in wrath toke his wyfe callyd to hym his knyghtes went thens al in wrath without takyng leue of the kyng The kyng anon sent after hym that he shold come ageyn go not thens in despite of hym And therle wold not come ayene in noo maner wyse wherfor the kyng was ful wroth and in wrath hym deffyed as his dedely enemy And the erle went thens in to Cornewayle with his wyf in to the castel of Tyntagell And the kyng lete ordeyne a grete hoost come in to Cornewayl for to destroye the erle yf he myght But he had put hym in suche a castel that was strong wel arrayed of Tyntagel wold not yeld hym to the kynge The kyng anon besieged the castel ther duellyd xv dayes that neuer myght spede euer thoughte vpon ygerne and vpon hir layd so moche loue that he no wyse what to done Soo at the last be callyd to hym a knyght that was callyd Mlfyn that was pryue with hym and told hym al his counseyll axed of hym what was best for to done Syr ●…d he doth sende after Merlyn for he can telle yow the best counceylle of ony man lyuyng Merlyn anon was sente after come to the kyng the kyng told hym all his wylle Syr ●…d merlyn I shal done soo moche thurgh crafte that I can that I shal make yow come this nyght in to the castel of Tyntagel and shal haue al your wylle of that lady How Vter bygate on Igerne that was the erles wyf of Cor newayl Arthur kyng Ca lx●… OErlyn thurgh crafte that he coude chaūged the kyng●… figu re in to the lykenesse of therle vlfyn garsoys his chāb●…rlayn and to the figure of Iordan that was therles chamberlayn Soo that eche of hem was transfigured to other lykenes And whan merlyn had so done he sayd to the kyng Syr ●…d be nowe mow ye gone sodenly to the castel of Tyntagel axen 〈◊〉 ●…er haue your wylle the kyng toke priuely all the hoose to gouer ne lede to a knyght that he moche louid ▪ toke his way toward the castel with hym vlfyn his chāberlayn merlyn And whan they come thyder the portier went that it had ben his own lord whan tyme come for to gone to bed The kyng went to 〈◊〉 with Igerne the erles wyf dyd with hir all his wyll bygo te vpon hir a sone that was callyd Arthur ●…pon the morowe the noble myghty kyng toke his leue of the lady went ayene to his hoost ▪ And the same nyght that the kyng laye by Igerne in bedde y fere with therles wyf the kynges men yeuen a strong assaut to the castel the erle and his men manly hem defended But at the last it befell so that at at the same assaut the erle him self was slayne and the castel taken And the kyng anone torned ayene to Tyntagell and spoused ygerne with moche honour and made hyr quent sone after tyme come that she shold be delyuerd bere a child a sone that was cal led Arthur And after he gate on hyr a doughter that was callid Amya And whan she come to age she was nobly maryed to a noble baron that was callyd Aloth that was lord of leons whan Vter long tyme had regned ther come vpon hym a greete sikenes as it were a sorow And in the mene tyme they that had to kepe Otta that was Engystes sone ossa his broder that tho were in prisō men lete hem gone for grete yeftes that they hem yaf went with hem And whan tho two britheren were escaped comen ageyne in to hir owne coūtre they ordeyned hem a greete hoost a grete power bigonne to werre eftsones vpon the kyng How kyng Vter chees aloth to kepe the land of britayne whyles that he was syke for as moche as he myght not for his sekenesse Capitulo septuagesimo secundo ANd for as moche as kyng Vter was seke and myght not helpe him self he ordeined aloth sone of eleyne that tho was chosen to be wardeyn and chyueteyne of all his folk he anone his Britons assembled a grete hooste and yaf bataylle to Otta and to his folk but Otta atte last was discomfited Hit byfelle thus afterward that thise britons had dedygnacion of Aloth and wold not to hym ben attendaunt wherfor the kyng was annoyed wonder sore lete put him in a lytter in the hoost amonges folk And they lad hym to beroloyne that tho was a fair cite ther that seynt Allone was martred after was that cyte destroyed with paynyms thurgh werre thydder they had sente otta ossa hir peple entrid in to the toune lete make fast the yates and ther they helde hem the kynge come hem besieged made a strong assaute but they that were within manlych hem defended The kyng lete ordeyne his gonnes his engyns for to breke the walles ▪ the walles were so stronge that nothynge myght hym mysdoo Otta his peple had grete despyte that a kyng lyggyng in a lyttyer had hem besyeged they token conuceill amonges hem for to stonde vp in the morow come oute yeue batayll to the kyng so they diden ▪ in that bataill were both otta ossa slayn al tho other that escaped alyue fled in to scotland made colegryne hyr chyuetayn the saxons that were alyue escaped fro the bataylle broughten ageyne a grete strengthe amonges hem they sayden that yf kyng vter were deed they shold wel con quere the lād amonges hem they thought enpoysen the kyng ordeyned men for to done this dede yaf hem of yef●…s grete plen te this thynge to done they ordeyned hem thyderward ther that the kyng was duellyng clothed hem in pouer wede the better all for to spede her lyther purpose but netheles for al hir falsenes queyntyse they myght neuer come to nygh the kyng But so at●… last they espyed that the kyng drank none other lycour but only water of a clere welle that was nygh besides and these fals tray tours vpon a day preuelych went to the welle put therm wy sen so that all the water was enpoisened And anon after as the kyng had dronke of that water he bygan to suclle 〈◊〉 sone after he deyd as many as dronken of that water deyde also And anon as this falsenes was aspyed ▪ folk of the toun lete stoppe the wel le for euermore whan the kyng was dede his folk bere hym to stonhenge with grete solempnyte of bisshops of barons that we re there that beryed hym besyde aurylambros his broder after turned ageyne tho euerychone and lete sende after Arthur his so ne ▪ they made hym kyng of the land with moche reuerence after his
And netheles the trewes dur●…d not long that the danes strongly gonne for to werre vpon thenglyssh men and dyd moche sorowe wherfor kyng edward dyde assemble a grete hooste for to fyght with hem And tho this kyng Edward dyed whan god wold This kyng edward regned xxiiij 〈◊〉 and lyeth at wynchestre besydes his fadre Of kyng Athelston and of edmond eldred and of Edewyne his broder Capitulum C x●… AFter this edward regned Athelston his sone And whan be had regned four yere he helde batayll ageynst the danes and drofe kynge gaufred that was kyng of the danes and alle his hooste vnto the see and rested by scotland and toke strongely the conntrey al a yere And after that tho of Cumberlond and the scottes of westmerland bygonne to werre vpon kyng athelston And he hem yaf so strong batayll that he sl●…we so many of hem that noo man coude telle the nombre of hem And aft●…r that he ne regned but thre yere he regned in al xxv and lyeth at mal●…esbury And after this Athelston regned Edmond his brother for as moche as kyng athelstone had no sone And this Edmond was a worthy knyght a doughty man of body a no ble knyght And the thyrd yere after that he was kyng he wente ouer humber in whiche place be fonde two kynges of danee that one was callyd enlaf that other renant this kyng Edmond drofe hem bothe from the land after went toke a grete praye in Cumberlond This Edmond ne regned but senen yere lyeth at glasten burye and after this edmond regned Eldrede his bro ther that auengyd Edward his fader of his enemyes that hym slew afterward he seised northumberlond in to his hand ma de the scottrs bowe meke vnto his will the second yer●… that he had regned come arnalaf guyran that was kyng of denmarst and seased al northumberlond helde that lond two yere after that come kynge Eldred with a grete power drofe hym oute of this land And this kyng eldred was a noble man and a good of whos goodnes saynt dunstan preched and this kyng Eldred regned xj yere lyeth at wynchestre And after this eldred Ed wyne sone of Edmond his broder regned was a lither man to ward god the peple for he hated folk of his owne lande loued honoured straunge men And sette lytel by hooly chirche betoke of holy chirche all the tresour that he myght haue that was grete shame vylonye to hym self peryll to his soule therfor god wold that he shold not regne no lenger than vij yere lyeth at wynchestre Of kyng edgar that regned aboue the kynges of scotland of walys how he was bygyled thurgh takyng of his wyfe Cao. C ●…o. ANd after this Edwyn regned Edgar his broder a man that moche loued god pees holy chirche also was a worthy lord bold myghty mayntened wel this lā●… 〈◊〉 And this edgar was lord kyng aboue al the kynge●… 〈◊〉 scotland of walys from the tyme that Arthur was agone neuer was kynge sythen of his power And this edgare was seynt Ewardes fadre And whan edgares wyfe was dede that was saynt edwardes moder entered he herde speke of the fayrenesse of estrylde that was orgarus doughter a baron of Deuenshyre that was so fayr a woman that al men speken therof he called one of his knyht●…s that he moche louyd trusted vpon told hym So quod he to the noble baron Orgar of deuenshyre see yf his doughter be so fayr as men speken of yf it be soth I wyl haue hir vnto my wyf this knyght that was callid ●…delwold wēt forth his wey come ther that the lady was whan he saw hyr so fayr he thought to haue hir to wif hym self therof spak to Orgar hyr fadre orgar was an old man had no ●…o chyldren but only hyr saw that edelwold was a fayr yong kny●…t worthy ryche and was wel with the kynge thought his doughter shold wel be maryed wel ●…eset vpon hym graunted hym his doughter yf the good lord the kyng wold consen●… therto This edelwold come ayene to the kyng ▪ tolde hym that she was fayre ynow vpon to see but she was wonde lothly Tho an suerd the kyng said that he toke but 〈◊〉 charge Syr quod edel wold she is hir faders heir and I am not ry●… of 〈◊〉 And yf ye wold consente gra●… that I must hyr haue than shold I be ryche ynow In goddes name quod the kyng I con sent therto Edelwold thanked tho moche the kyng went ayent in to Deuenshyre spoused the damisel in that coūtrey he duel lyd And thus it befell vpon a tyme. that he tolde his counseylle al thys thyng vnto his wyf how in what maner he had begifed his lord the kyng that wold haue had hir to wyf anone as she it wyst she louyd hym neuermore afterward as she had done byforne This lady conceyued by hym a sone whan tyme was that the child shold be borne Edelwold come to the kyng prayd hym to heue a sone of his at fontstone the kyng hym graū ted lete calle hym Edgar of his owne name And whan thys was done he thought that he was syker ynowe of the kynge that nold not haue taken his wif for as moch as his lord was a Ioly man an amerous How that kyng edgar wedded estrylde after the 〈◊〉 of Edelwold Ca C 〈◊〉 THus it befell that al men in kyng edgaris court tho 〈◊〉 sayd that edelwold was rychely auaunced thurgh the 〈◊〉 ●…yage of his wyf And yet they sayd he was auaunced an honderd fold more For he had spoused the feyrest woman that euer was seyn And the kyng herde speke so moche of hir beaute He thought that edelwold hadde hym deceyued and begyled and thought pauely in his hert that he wold gone in to deuenshyre as it were for to hunte for the hert for the hynde other wylde be ste●… than he shold see ther the lady or he departed thens And this lady was duellynge at a maner besydes the forest ther that the kyng wold hunte at that maner he was lodged al nygh●… And whan tyme come the kyng shold sope and the sonne shone the kynge asked after his gossyp and after his godsone Edelwold made hyr come byfore the kyng And netheles yf it other myght haue ben she shold not haue comen in his syght by his wit The lady welcomed the kynge and swetely hym kyssed and he toke hir the honde and tho next by hym her set●…e and soo soped they to gedre And tho was a custome vsage in this lond that whan a man dronke vnto another the drynker shold saye wassayll that other shold answere drynk
hym was done in Gascoyne And of the debate that was bytwene the kyng of Aragon and the Prynce of Morrey he cesed ▪ and made hem acorded And whyle the good kyng Edward and the quene Elyen●…e his wyf were in Gascoyne the good Erle of Corne wayle was made wardeyne of Englond till that kyng Edward come ageyne And tho enquered ●…x of his traytours that congetted falsenesse ageynst hym And eche of hem alle ▪ vnderfenge her dome after that they hadde deserued But in the me●…ne tyme. while that the good kyng Edward was beyonde the see to done hem for to make amendes that ageynst hem had trespaced ther was a fals thefe a Traytoure that was callyd Rys a●… Merydock byganne for to make werre ageynste the Kynge Edward And that was for encheson of syr payne tiptot wrongfully greuid diseased that for sayd Ri●… ap merydok And whan kyng Edward herd alle this he sente by his lettres to Ris ap merydok that he shold begynne to make no werre but that he shold be in pees for his loue when that he come ageyne in to englond he wold vndertake the quarell done amende alle that was mysdone The forsayd Rys ap Merydok despysed the kynges commandement spared not for to do al the sorow that he myght to the kynges men of Englond ▪ but a non after he was taken lad to york ther was drawe hon ged for his felon●… Of the redressyng that kyng edward made of his Iusty●…s of his clerkes that they had done for hir falsenesse how he drofe the Iewes out of englond for her vsery misbyleue ca o C 〈◊〉 WHan kyng edward had duellyd thre yere in gascoyne 〈◊〉 le come to hym for to wende ageyne in to Englond ▪ tho he was come ageyne he foūde so many playntes made to hym of his Iustyces and of his clerkes ▪ that had done so many wrōges falsenes that wonder it was to here And for whiche falsenes Syr thomas weylond the kynges Iustyce forswore Englon●… at the tour of london ▪ for falsenesse that men put vpon hym wherof he was atteynt proued fals And anon after whan the kyng had done his wylle of the Iustyces tho lete ●…x 〈◊〉 and aspye how the Iewes desceyued begyled his ●…ple thurgh 〈◊〉 synne of falsenes of vserye lete ordeyne a pryue parlem●…●…mong his lordes they ordeyned among hem that al the Iew●… shold wyde englond for hir mysbyleue And also for hir fals vse rye that they dyd vnto Crysten men And for to spede to make an ende of this thynge al the cōmunyte of englond yaf vnto the kyng the xv peny of al hir goodes m●…able so were the 〈◊〉 dryuen on●… of Englond tho went Iewes in to fraūce there duellyd thurgh loue of kyng phelip that tho was kyng of fraūce How kyng Edward was seased in al the londe of scotland thurgh cōsent graūt of al the lordes of scotlād cao. C 〈◊〉o. HIt was not longe after that alysauder kynge of Scotland was dede And dauid Erle of Huntingdone that was the kynges broder of Scotland a●…ed and claymed the kyngdome of Scotland for encheson that he was right ful ●…yr But many grete lordes of Scotland sayden Nay●… ▪ Wh●…fore gre 〈◊〉 debate aroose bytwene hem ▪ and hyr frendes For as moche that they wold not consente to his coronacion in the mene tyme the forsayd dauyd deyde so it by fell that the same dauid had thre doughters that worthely were maryed the firste doughter was maryed to baillol the second to brus the thyrd to hastynges and the forsayd brus bayllol chalengyd the land of scotland gre te debate stryfe aroos bytwene hem thre for encheson that eche of hem wold haue be kynge whan the lordes of scotland sawe the debate bytwene hem thre they come to kyng Edward of Englond seysed hym in al the land of scotland as hir chyef lord And whan the kyng was seised of the lordes of scotlād the forsa yu baillol brus hastinges come to the kynges court axed of the kyng whiche of hem shold be kyng of scotland kyng Edward that was ful gentil trewe lete enquyre by the cronycles of Scotland of the grete lordes of scotlād whiche of hem was of the eldest blode it was founde that bayllol was eldest And that the kyng of scotland shold hold of the kyng of Englond done hym feaute homage and after this was done bayllol wēt in to scotland ther was crouned kynge of scotland the same tyme was vppon the see strong werre bytwene the englysshmen the normans but vpon a tyme the normans arryued al at douer ther they martred an holy man that was callid thomas of douer And afterward were the normane slayn that ther of hem escaped not one sone after kyng Edward shold lese the duchye of Gascoyne thurgh phelyp kyng of fraūce thurgh fals castynge of the doussepyers of the lād wherfor syr edmond that was kyng Edwardes broder yafe vp his homage vnto the kyng of fraunce And in that tyme the Clerkes of englond graunted to kyng ed ward haluendese of holy chirche goodes in holyyng for to recouer his land ageyne in gascoyne the kyng sente thyder a noble cō panye of his bachyllers hym self wold haue wente to portesmouth But he was let thurgh one maddoke of walys that had seysed the Castel of swandone in to his hand for that encheson the kyng turned ageyn vnto walis at Cristemasse for encheson that the noble lordes of englond that were sent in to gascoyne had no comfort of hir lord the kyng they were take of Syr Charles of fraūce that is to say sir john of britayn Syr Robert Tiptoft Sir Rauf tanny sir hugh bardolf sir adam of cretynges yet at the as●…ion was madok take in walys another that was callyd morgan they were sent to the tour of london ther they were byheded How Syr Iohan bayllol kyng of scotlande withsayd his homage of syr thomas Turbeluylle Ca●… C lxvij●… ANd whan syr Iohn bayllol kyng of scotlād vnderstode that kynge edward was werryd in gascoyne to whome the Royamme of scotlande was delyuerd falsely tho ageynste his othe withsayd his homage thurgh procuryng of his folk and sente to the court of rome thurgh a fals suggestion to be assoylled of that othe that he swore vnto the kyng of Englond so he was by let tres enbulled Tho chosen they of scotland dousepers for to benym me edward his ryght and in that tyme come two Cardynals frō the court of rome from the pope Celestyne for to treate of acord bytwene the kyng of fraūce the kyng of Englond and as tho two Cardynals spoken of acord thomas Turbeluille was take at lyoūs made feaute homage to the wardeyne of parys to
and the soudyours of the toun had a custome to come to chirche leue their staues standyng at chirch dore whiche staues the frensshmen which were arayed like fisshers had purposed so to haue taken theyr wepen wynne the Towne but one of them lay with a comyn woman the nyght to fore and told to hir theyr coūseyll and she on the morn told the lyeutenaūt whiche forthwith commaūded that euery man shold kepe his we pen in his hond sa●…ryng tyme and other And whan they apper●…eyned this that they were myspoynted they saylled strayt to De pe and stale and toke that toun And on newyers euen after they toke harflete And thus englysshmen bygan to lose a lytel and a lytell in Normandye How Caleys and guyues were besyeged by the duk of Bur●… goyne and how they were rescued by the duk of gloucestre Capitulo CC lo. ●…His yere was a grete noyse thurgh al Englond how the du ke of Bourgoyne wold come and besyege Caleys wherfore the Erle of Mortayne with his armye that he hadde for to haue gone with in to fraūce was coūtremaūded charged that he shold go to Caleys whiche was at that tyme wel vitail bed māned for syr Iohn Ratclyf was lyeutenaūt of the kyng in that toune And the baron of dudley lyeutenaūt of the Castell And the ix daye of Iuyn the duk of Burgoyne with alle the power of Flaundres and moche other peple come before Caleys and sette his syege aboute the toune and euery towne of Flaundres had theyr tentes by hem self And this syege endured iij wekes In the mene whyle the duke of gloucestre beyng protectour of Englond toke the moost part of the lordes of Englond wen te ouer the see to Caleys for to rescue the toune or to fyght with y e duke his hoost yf they wold haue abyden This tyme london euery good toune of englond sent ouer see to this rescouse certeyn peple wel arayed of the best and chosen men for the warre and the ij day of August the said duke of gloucestre arryued at Caleys with all his armye and v honderd shippes moo And the duk and alle his hooste that laye in the syege as sone as they espyed the saylles in the see ▪ byfore they approched Caleys hauen sodenly in a mornyng departed fro the syege leuyng behynde them moche stuffe vytaylle fled in to flaūdres and py●…ardye and in lyke wyse dyd the syege that lay to fore guynes where as they of Guynes toke the greete gonne of brasse callyd dygeon many other grete gonnes and serpentynes And thēne whan the duk of gloucestre was arryued with alle his hoost he went in to Flaū dres and was therin xj dayes and dyde but lytell harme except he brente two fayre vyllages Poperynge and Belle and other houses whiche were of no strengthe and so he retorned home ageyne Also this same yere the kynge of Scotland besyeged Rokesburgh with moche peple But Syre Rauf Gray departed fro the castel and ordeygned for rescouse But as sone as the kyng vnderstode his departyng he sodenly brake his siege and went his waye and leuyng moche ordynaunce behynde hym where he gate no worship This same yere the secōd day of Ianyuer quene Katheryn which was the kynges moder and wyf to kyng henry the fyfthe deyde departed oute of this world and was brought ryally thurgh london and so to westmestre and there she lyeth wor shypfully buryed in oure lady chapel And also this same yere the xiiij day of Ianyuer fylle donne the gate with the toure on london bridge toward southwerke with twoo archis alle that stode theron This same yere was a grete trayttye holden bytwene Grauenyng and caleys bytwene the kyng and duk of Burgoyn where for the kyng was the cardynal of englond the duk of Norfolk and many other lordes for the duk was the duchesse hauyng ful power of hir lord as regent and lady of his londes Whe●… was taken by thāuys of bothe partyes an abstynēce of wer 〈◊〉 for a certeyne tyme in the name of the duchesse and not of the ●…uk bycause he had gone from his othe ligeaūce that he had ma ●…e to kyng henry therfor the kyng neuer wold write ne appoynte ne haue to doo with hym after but al in the duchesse name Also this same yere quene Iane dyed the ij day of Iuyll which had ben kyng henry the iiij wyf was caryed fro bermondesey vnto Caūterbury where she lyeth buryed by kyng Henry the ●…ij her husbond This same yere dyed al the lyons in the tour of london the whiche had not be seen many yeres byfore oute of mynde How Owayn a squyer of walys that had wedded quene kate ryn was arestyd and of the scysme bytwene Eugenye and felix Capitulo CC ljo. IN the xvj yere of kyng henry deide Sygismond Emperour of Almayne knyght of the garter whos terment the kyn ge kepte at seynt poules in london ryally where was made a ry al h●…rse the kyng in his astate clad in blewe was at euen at di ●…ge on the morne at masse And after hym was elect chosen Albert duk of Ostryche whiche had wedded Sigismūdus dough ter for to be Emperour This was taken resceyued to be kyng of beme vngarye bycause of his wyf that was sigismūdus dou●…ter whiche lefte after hym none other heyr This Albert was em perour but one yere for he was poysond so deide som saye he d●…d of a flyxe but he was a vertuous mā pyteful so moch that al the peple that knewe hym said that the world was not worthy to haue his presence This same yere one Owayn a squyer of wa●…s a mā of ●…owe byrth which had many a day tofore secretely wedded quene kateryne had by hir iij sones a doughter was taken cōmāded to newgate to prison by my lord of gloucestre protectour of the reame And this yere he brake prison by the mene of a prest that was his chapelayn after he was taken ayene by my ●…ord ●…e mond brought agayn to newgate which afterward was deliue ●…d at large and one of his sones afterward was made erle of ri chemōd another erle of penbroke the iij a mōst of westmestre whiche monke deyde sone after This same yere also on Newyeresday at baynardyscastel fil doun a stacke of wode sodenly at after none slowe thre men meschieuously foule hurt other Also at bedford on a shrireday were xviij men murdred without stroke by fallyng doune of a steyr as they come oute of theyr comyn halle many foule hurt In the xviij yere syr Rychard Beauchamp the good erle of warrewyk deyde at Roan he beyng that tyme lyeutenaūt of the kyng in Normādye from thens his bodye was brought to warrewyk where he lyeth worshipfully in a new cha pel on the southsyde of the quyre
Ca xxvj ANd after this Guentolen regned his sone S●…ysel wel and worthely wel gouerned the land as his fadre had done beforne hym and he regned xv yere and dyed lyeth at newe Troye How kymor r●…gned after seisel his fadre he bygate howan that regued after Ca xxvij ANd after seysel regned his sone kymor wel nobly xiy yere in pees howan his sone x yere and dyed lyeth at Ikaldoune How kyng morwith dyed thurgh meschaunce thurgh a beste for his wickednesse Ca xxviij AFter this Howan regned morwith become wykked so sterne til at the last grete vengeaunce come to hym for as he went vpon a tyme by the see syde he mette a greete beeste that was blak and horryble hydous he went that it had be a whale of the see bent an arblast wold haue slain that best with a 〈◊〉 rell but he myght not smyte hym and whan he had shot al his quarells the beest anon come to hym in a grete hast hym 〈◊〉 ured a lyfe and so he dyed for his wykkednesse thurgh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of god after that he had regned nyne yere Of Grandobodyan that was morwiths sonne that made 〈◊〉 toune of Cambrydge Ca xx●… AFter this morwith was dede the britons crouned grād●…dy an his sone this grandobodyan long tyme regned in g●… nes made temples and townes this grandobodyan made 〈◊〉 toune of cambrydge the toune of granthā was wel ●…oued of riche poure for he honoured the riche ▪ helpe the poure this grandobodyan had iiij sones Arthogayl besidur higam●… 〈◊〉 titur whan he had regned xj yere he dyed lieth at newe 〈◊〉 Of Artogaill that was grandobodyanus sone how he was ●…a de kyng syth put a doune for his wykkednesse Ca 〈◊〉 AFter Grandobodyan regned hi●… sone artogayll v yere and he bycome so wykked and so sterne that the b●…ns wold not suffre hym to be kyng but put hym a doune and made Hesydur his broder kyng he bycome so good mer●…able that men hym callid kyng of pyte And whan he had regned v yere he had so grete pite of his broder artogayll that was kyng byfore anon he forsoke his dignyte and toke his broder the crowne a●…ne made hym kyng ageynst al the briton●… wyl afterward artogayll become so good of condicion that he was wel byloued of all the lo●…de for he become so debonayr free dyd right ●…son to al maner of men he regned vj yere died lyeth at g●…nthā How Hesidur was made kyng after the deth of Artogayll his brother Ca xxxj AFter the deth of Artogayll the britons crouned an other ti me Hesidur ▪ but his two bretheren higamꝰ petitur haddē of hym grete despite and eke scorne ordeyned hem helpe for to werre vpon the kyng hyr broder and so they token hym and put hym in to prison the second yere of his regne and they departed al britayne bitwene hem both but higamꝰ lyued but seuen yere and tho had petitur al the londe and he made the toune of pykeryng How the britons nomen hesydur oute of prison and made hym kyng the thyrd tyme Ca xxxij ANd whan this petitur was dede britons toke anon yet hesy dur and made him kyng the third tyme and tho regned he 〈◊〉 pees xiiij yere and after he dyed and lyeth at Carleyll How xxxiij kynges regned in pees eche after other after the deth of hesydur Ca xxxiij AFter the deth of hesidur regned xxxiij kynges euery after other in pees without ony long wryeng I shal telle hem all and how long eche of h●…m regned as the storye tellith the first kyng of tho xxxiij was callyd gerbodya and he regned xij yere and after hym regned morgā ij yere and after hym regned cighnns vj yere and after hym regned Idwalan viij yere and after hym regned rohugo xj yere and after hym regned wghen xiij yere and after hym regned catil xv yere and after him regned por 〈◊〉 ij yere and after him regned cheryn xvij yere and after him regned coyll xij yere ▪ and after him regned sulgenis xiiij yere and after hym regned 〈◊〉 xx yere and after hym regned andragye xviij yere and after hym regned vrian v yere and after him reg ned e●…ud ij yere and after hym regned eldagan xv yere and af ter hym regned claten xij yere and after hym regned Quyrgūde viij yere and after him regned mortan vj yere and after him reg ned ble●…ch iij yere and after hym regned caph one yere and af ter hym regned Gen ij yere and after hym regned seysel kyng bled xxij yere and kyng tabreth xj yere and archiual xiiij yere and grol xxx yere and Rodingu xxxij yere and hertir v yere and hampir vj yere carpour vij yere and digneyll iij yere and samuel xxiiij yere and ●…de two yere and ely vij ●…monethes and this ely had thre sones lud cassibalan and enemyon How lud was made kyng after the deth of ely his fadre Capitulo xxxiiij AFter the deth of h●…ly regned lud his sone and gouerned wel the lande moch honoured good folk tēpred amēded wikked folk This lud loued more to duelle at troye than in ony other place of the lande ▪ wherfor the name of newe troye was left and tho was the cyte called ludstone but the name is chaūgid thurgh ●…aūce of lrēz now is called london this kyng ma de in the cyte a fayr gate callyd it ludgate after his name and the folke of the Cyte hete it loūdres whan he had regned xj ye re he deyde lyeth at london had two yong sones Andragen Tormace but they coude nether speke ne go for yongth therfor the britons crouned a strong knyght that was callyd cassibelan that was lud des broder and made hym kyng of britayne How the britons graūted to cassibalan that was ludes brother the land in whos tyme In●…us cesar come twyes for to ●…nquere the land Ca xxxv AFter the deth of kyng lud regned his broder cassibalan become a good man moche byloued of his britons so that for his goodnes curtosye they graūted him the royame for euer more to hym to his heyres the kynge of his goodnes 〈◊〉 norissh worthely both sones that were lud his broders after made the eldest sone erle of cornewayle ▪ that other erle of london ▪ and while this kyng cassibalan regned come Inlius cesar that was emperour of rome in to this land with a power of romayns and wolde haue had this land thurgh strength but cassibalā ouercome him in batail thurgh helpe of britons drofe hym out of his land he wēt ayene to rome assembled a grete power another tyme come ayene in to this land for to yeue batayll to cassiba lā but he was scōfited
fled and how the Cristen men were slayne in grete britayne thurgh paynyms and sarazenes he graunted hym Constantin his broder hym for to helpe with power of folke and hem dyde araye hors armure and shippes all thynge that hem neded to that vyage And whan al thynge was redy he called the bisshop and to hym said I take yow here to helpe and socoure Constantin my broder vpon this couenaunt that yf god yeue hym grace the paynyms the sarazenes to shen de and discomfyte that than ye make hym kyng And the Bisshop it graunted with good wyll Constantin and the bisshop toke leue of the kynge Aldroye and betoke hym to god toke her men xij M went to hir shippes sayled toward grete Britayne and arryued at Cotnesse Whan the britons herde the tydynges that to hem come socour they were strongly holpen and ordeyned hem an huge nombre of people and come to hem and vnder feng hem with moch honour Gowan anon as he wist of thise thynges he assembled all the sarazenes come ageynst hem yaf hem batayll and Constantin slowe him with his owne hondes And alle tho other sarasyns were discomfyted and slayne that none escaped but tho that were conuerted vnto god How Constantin that was the kynges broder of litil britayn was crouned kyng of moche Britayne for his worthynes Capitulo quinquagesimo tercio ANone after the bataylle they wente to london and crouned ther Constantin made hym kyng of this lande and the Bisshop Goselyne sette the croune on his hede annoynted hym as fallyth to a kyng for to ben ●…and tho bygan Crystendeme This kyng Constantin whan he was crouned anon after he spou sed his wyf thurgh counceyll of the britons he bygate thre so nes on hir the fyrst was callyd Constance that other Aurilambros and the third ●…ter Constance the elder broder whan he cam to age he made hym a monk at wynchestre Cōstantyn hyr fadre was slayne thurgh treason for it be fel on a tyme that a 〈◊〉 come to hym vpon a day in message as it were said that he wol de speke with the kyng priuely in counceyll The kyng lete wyde his chābre of tho men that were within there abode no mo but the kyng and the pehyte made a contenaūce as though he wold haue spoke with the kyng in his ere and ther he slew hym with a long knyf and after wente queyntely oute of the chambre in to another chambre so at the last no man wyst wher he was bycome Whan the kynges meyne wyst that her lord was so dede they made so moche sorowe they nyst al what to done for as moch as his two sones Aurilambros and ●…ter weren so yong that none of hem myght be kyng the thyrdde broder was monk at wyn chestre as is a fore said But ●…ortiger that was erle of wes●…seye thought priuely in his herte thurgh queyntyse to bee kyng and went to wynchestre there that Constance was monk and to hym said Constance sayd he your fadre is dede your two b●…rtheren that ben with Goselyn the bisshop of london to norissh ben so yong that none of hem may be kyng Wherfor I counceyl yow that ye forsake your abyte and come with me and I shall done soo to the Britons that ye shal be made kyng Of Constance that was kyng Constantines sonne that was monke at wynchestre and how he was made kyng after hyr fadres deth thurgh counseill of ●…ortiger that was erle of westsexe for as moche as Aurilambros and vter his two bretheren w●… but yonge of age And ●…ortiger lete slee hym to be kyng hym self Capitulo liiij THis ●…ortiger counceyled this Constance soo moche till he forsoke his abbot and went with hym And anon after he was crouned and made kyng by assent of the britons This kyng Constance whan he was crouned and made kyng he wist ne knewe but lytel of the world ne coude nothyng what knyghthode axed he made ●…ortiger his chyef mayster counceyl l●…r yafe hym all his power for to do ordeyne to do as moche as to the Royame apperteyned so that hym self no thyng entermelled but only bare the name of kyng whan wrtiger saw that he had al the land in his warde gouernayl at his owne wyll he thought a priue treson and to slee Constance the kyng that he myght hym self ben crouned made kyng and regne and lete sen de after an honderd knyghtes of pehytes the worthyest of alle the land and hem helde with hym to duelle with hym as to ben kep●…rs of his body as he wold wende thurgh the lande to ordeyg ne thynges that apperteyned to a kyng And this vortiger honoured so moche the hond●…rd knyghtes so moche yaf hem of gold and siluer so ryche Iewellys robes hors other thynges plente wherfor they helde hym more lord than they dyd the kyng and vortiger told hem yf he most be kyng ye as it were thurgh treson he wold make hem rychest of the land so at the last thurgh grete yef●…s that he had yeue largely they cryed thurgh the courte that ●…ortiger were better worthy to be kyng than Constance wherfor ●…ortiger made semblaunt as he had ben wroth departed thens fro the court and sayd he must gone elles whyder for thyng that he had to done and so the treytour sayd for encheson that they shol de slee hym that is to say constance whan this vortiger was go ne it be fel sone after that tho honderd knyghtes of pehytes breken the dores of the kynges chambre ther they hym slowe and smyten of his hede and bare it to ●…ortiger ther that he duellyd and whan vortiger sawe that hede he wepte ful tenderly with his eye And netheles he was somdele glad of his deth And anone lete take the honderd knyghtes of ●…ytes and bynde hyr hondes be hynde hem and ledde hem to london and there they were dampned to the deth as fals traitours And anon after al the britons of the lande by comyn assent crouned vortiger and made hym kynge of the lande How the wardeyns that had tho two children to kepe that we re Constantines sones lad hem to lytel Britayne for the treson falsenesse of ●…ortiger Capitulo quinquagesimo quinto THis kyng vortiger whan he was crouned they that had the two children in kepyng Aurylambros vter thurgh ordy naunce of Gosselyne that was bisshop of london at his deth durst not duelle in the lād with the children but lad hem to the kyng of lytel brytayne for as moche as he tho wyst of the treason of ●…ortiger that tho was made kyng thurgh whome Constaūce hir brother was slayne wherfor the honderd knyghtes of pehy●…s were put to deth and beren al the blame as that vortiger hadde not wyst ther of nother ther to consented And soo the kepars of tho two children
●…gned no bly and lyued but fyften yere dyed lyeth at york How kynge eldred come ageyne fro normandye and how knought the danoys regned of the werre bytwene hym 〈◊〉 Edmond Irensyde C●… C 〈◊〉 AFter the deth of sweyne that was a danoys knoght his so ne duellyd in englond wold haue be kyng and tho 〈◊〉 ageyne eldred oute of normandye with moche 〈◊〉 and wit●… a strong meyne that knoght durst not abyde but fled thens in to Denmarke The kyng eldred had ageyne his royame 〈◊〉 sed grete lordship that he bygan to destroye al tho that 〈◊〉 Sweyn that was a danoys ageynste hym And afterward 〈◊〉 ageyne this knoght from denmark with a grete power so 〈◊〉 ●…yng E●… d●…ed durste not with hym fyght but fled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…o lon●…n 〈◊〉 ther helde hym Tho come knought and hym 〈◊〉 ●…o long 〈◊〉 kynge eldred dyed in the cyte of london 〈◊〉 at 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he regned nyne yere Of kyng knoght Ca C 〈◊〉 AFter the deth of this eldryd knought that was 〈◊〉 danoys bygan tho for to regne but Edmond Irensyde that was kyng ●…ldredys sone by his fyrst wyf ordeyned a grete hoost by gan to werre vpon kyng knought so he dyd many tymes and of●… the werre was so strong hard that wonder it was to wy te And the quene Emme that duellyd tho at westmynstre had g●…te drede of hir two sones of the werre alured edward l●…ste they sholde be defoyled mysdone thurgh this werr wherfor she sente hem ouer see in to Normandy to the duk Rychard hir vucle ther they duellyd in saufte pees long tyme This Edmond Irensyde knoght werryd strongly to geders but atte last they were acorded in this maner that they shold departe the Royāme by●…wene hem so they dyden after they bycomen good frendes so wel loued that they bycomen sworne breth●…ren so wel loued to geders as they had ●…e bretheren geten of one body of one moder y borne How kyng Edmond Irensyde traytou●…sly was slayn thurgh a traytonr that was callyd edryth of stratton Ca o C xv●…ijo. ANd after tho regned kyng edmond Irensyde and knought the danoys but thus it befell afterward that in the same ye re that they were acorded so moch loued to geder Wherfor a fal se thefe traytour had enuye vnto the loue that was bytwene hem frendship whos name was Edryst of s●…ratton that was a grete lord that was edmond I●…ensydes man of hym helde al the land that he had nethe●…s he thought his lord to bytraye ma ke knoght kynge of the land in entent rychely to ●…en auaun●…d and with hym wel be byloued wherfor he prayd his lord edm●…d Irensyde vpon a day with hym for to eten and to duelle and the kyng curtoysly hym graunted to hym come at his prayer and at the mete the kyng ryally was seruyd with dyuerse metes and drynkes and whan nyght come that he shold go to bed the kyng toke his owne meyne ▪ and went in to chambre and as he loked aboute he sawe a wonder fayr ymage wel made in sem●…t as it were an archyer with a bowe bent in his hond in the bowe a fyn arow kyng edmond went tho nerre to behold it letter what it myght ben anon the arow hym smote thurgh the body and there slowe the kyng for that engyn was made to slee his owne lord traytoursly And w●…n kynge edmond thus was dede and slayne he nad regned but x yere his peple for hym made moche sorowe and his body they ●…ere vnto glastenbury ther they him entered And this fals traytour Edryth anone went to the quene that was kyng edmonds wyf that wist of hir lordes deth anō he toke from hir twoo sones that were fayre yong that hir lord had vpon hir goten that one was callyd edward that other e●… dewy●… lad hem with hym to lōdon toke hem to kyng knoght that he shold do with hem what his wylle were told hym how queyntely he had slayn kyng edmond for encheson loue of hym so that kyng knoght al englond in his power hooly myght haue O thou fal●… traytour hast thou my tr●…we broder slayn for encheson of me a man that I moost loued in the world Now be myn hede I shal for thy trauaylle the wel reward as thou hast deser ued anone lete hym take bynde honde fe●…te in maner of a traytour lete cast hym in to thamyse an●… in this maner the fals traytour ended his lyfe T●…e kynge toke tho twoo children toke hem to the ab●…ot of westmynstre to ward and to kepe till he wyste what was best wyth hem to done How kyng knoght seynt kyng edmondes sones both in to denmarck for to slee and how they were sauyd Cao. C xix HIt befe●…e sone afterward that kynge knought had alle the lande in his hande spoused the quene emme thurgh the cō sent of his barons for she was a fayr woman that was eldred●…s wyfe the dukes suster of normandye And they lyued to geder with moche loue as reason wolde The kyng axed vpon a day coū●…eyll of the quene what was best to done with the sones that we●…e edmond Irensydes Syre ●…nod she they be the ryght heyres of the lande yf they lyuen they wyl yow doo moche sorowe with werre therf●…r lete sende hem in to a strannge land a ferre to som man that may hem defoyle and destroye The kyng anon lete calle a danoys that was callyd walgar commāded hym that he shol de lede tho two children in to denmarke so do ordeyne for ●…m that neuer they 〈◊〉 ●…o tydyngs of hem syr sayd this 〈◊〉 gladly your commādement shal be done toke tho two children led hem in to denmark for as moche as he saw that the chyldr●… were wonder fair also me●… he had of hem grete pyt●… ●…uth wold not hem sle but led hem to the kyng of ●…ūgary for to n●…yce For this walgar was wel byknowen with the kynge ●…oued Anon the kyng axed whens the children were and walgar told him said that they were the right heire●… of engl●…d therfor men wold hem destroye ther syr to yow they ●…e comen mercy help for to seche forsoth yf they mowe lyuē your men they shal becomen and of yowe they shal holde al hyr land The kynge of hungary hem vnderfenge with moche honour and lete hem worthely to ●…en kepte And thus it fell afterward that edwyne the yonger broder dyed and eward the elder broder lyued a fayr mā a stronge large of body gentil curtoys of condicions so that al men hym loued And this edward in the cronykles is cal led amonges englysshmen edward the outlawe And whan he was made knyght the
yere to geder til at the last they two foughten to geder the kynge of Fraunce was discomfyted vnnethe scaped awey with moche payne the moost part of his men were take the kyng dyd with hem what hym lyked somme of hem lete he go frelych somme lete he putte to the deth but afterward tho two kynges were acorded And whan kynge henry had holych al the lande of Normandy scomfyted his enemyes of Fraūce he torned ayene in to englond with moche honour his two sones william Richard wold come after hir fadre went to the see with a grete cō panye of peple but or that they myght come to lond the shippe come ageynst a roche breke al in to pyeces all were drenchyd that were therm sauf one man that was in the same shippe that escaped this was on saynt kateryns day these were the names of hem that were drenchyd that is to say wylliam the kynges sone richard his broder therle of chestre Otto●…el his brother Geffroy ridelle wal●…er emurcy Godfrey archedeken the kynges doughter the Countesse of perses the kynges nece the countesse of chestre and many other whan kynge henry and other lordes arryued were in englond herd these tydynges they made sorow ynow al hir myrth ioye was torned in to moruyng sorowe How mawde the emperesse come ageyne in to englond And how she was afterward wedded to geffroy the erle of Angeo Capitulo C xxxvij ANd whan that two yere were a gone that the erle had duel led with the kyng the erle went tho from the kyng and bygan to werre vpon hym dyd moche harme in the land of normandye and toke ther a strong castel ther he duellyd alle that yere And tho come to hym tydyng that henry the emperour of almayne that had spoused maude his doughter was dede and that she duellyd noo lenger in almayne and that she wold come ageyne in to normandy hir fadre And whan she was come to hym he toke 〈◊〉 tho to hym and come ageyne in to En glond and made the englysshmen done othe feaute vnto the Em peresse And the fyrste man that made the othe was william the Archebisshop of Caunterbury and that other kyng dauyd of scot land after hym alle the Erles and Bawns of Englond And after the noble man the erle of angeo a worthy knyght sent to the kynge of englonde that he wold graunte hym for to haue his doughter to spouse maude the emperesse And for encheson that hir fadre wyst that he was a noble man the kyng graūted hym consented therto tho toke his doughter lad hyr in to Normandy and come to the noble knyght erle gaufred he spou sed the forsayd maude with moche honour and the erle biga●… vp on hir a sone that was callyd henry themperesse sone And after whan al this was done kyng henry duellyd al that yere in nomādy And after that long tyme a greuous sykenesse toke hym wher thurgh he dyed And this kynge henry regne●… xxxv 〈◊〉 and four monethes after he dyed as byfore is said in norm●…dy and his hert was entered in the grete chirche of our lady in Ro aen And his body was brought with moche honour in to englōd and entered at redyng in the abbaye of the whiche abbay he was begynner and foundour How stephen kyng henryes sustres sone was made kyng of englond Ca●… C xxxviij●… AFter this kyng henry that was the fyrst was made kyng his neuew his sustres sone stephen erle of Boloyne For anone as he herde tydynge of his vncles deth be passed the See and come in to Englond thurgh counseylle and strengthe help of many grete lordes in englond ageynst hyr oth that they had made to maude the emperesse toke the royame lete cronne ste phen kyng of the land And the Archebisshop william of Caūterbury that fyrst made the oth of feaute vnto maude the emperes se sette the croune vpon kyng stephens hede hym ennoynded and bisshop Rogyer of salysbury mayntened the kynges partye in as moche as he myght The fyrst yere that kyng stephen bigan to regne he assembled a grete hoost went hym toward scotland for to haue werrid vpon the kyng of scotland but he come ayēst hym in pees in good maner to hym trusted but he made to hym none homage for as moch as he had made homage to the em peresse maude the fourth yere of his regne maude the emperesse come in to englonde tho bygan debate bytwene kyng stephen maude thē peresse This maude went in to the cyte of nychol the kyng hir besyeged long tyme myght not spede so wel the Cyte was kepte defended tho that were within the cyte queyntely ascaped awey without any maner harme tho toke the kyng the Cyte duellyd therin til candelmesse And tho come the barons that helde with the emperesse that is for to say the erle Randulphe of chestre the Erle Robert of gloucestre hugh bygot Robert of morley and brought with hem a stronge power fought with the kyng yaf him a grete batayl in whiche batayll kyng Stephen was taken sette in pryson in the castel of Brystowe How maude the emperesse went fro wynchestre vnto oxenford And after she escaped to wallyngford and what sorow dysease that she had Capitulo C xxxix WHan the kyng was take brought in to warde in the Castell of Bristow this maude the emperesse anone was ma de lady of englond al men hir helde for lady of the lande But tho of kent helde with the kyng stephens wyf and also william of Pree and his retenue helpe hym and helde warre ageynste maude the emperesse anone after the kyng of scotland come to hem with an huge nombre of peple tho went they y fere vnto wynchestre ther that the emperesse was wold haue take hyr but therbe of gloucestre come with his power fought with hem the emperesse in the mene whyle that the batayll du●…d escaped fro thens went vnto oxenford ther hir helde And in that bataylle was therle of gloucestre discomfyted taken and with hym many other lordes And for his delyueraūce was kyng steuen delyuerd oute of pryson and whan he was de lyuerd out of pryson he went thens to oxenford and besyeged the emperesse that was tho at oxenford and the syege endured fro Mychelmasse vnto seynt andrewstyde And the emperesse lete tho clothe hyr all in whyte lyn●…n cloth for encheson that she wold not be knowe for in the same tyme was moch snowe so she escaped by the thamyse from hem awey that were hir enemyes And fro thens she wente to wallyngford and ther hyr helde the kynge wold haue besyeged hir but he had so moche to done with therle Randulf of chestre with hugh bygot
Symons daye and Iude of Swalo the legate of Rome thurgh counceylle of alle the greete lordes that helde with kynge kyng Iohan his fadre that is to say therle Randolf of Chestre william Erle marchal william erle of penbroke william the Brener Erle of Feryers Serle the maule baron and al other grete lordes of englond helde with lowys the kynges sone of fraū ce And anon after whan kyng henry was crouned Swalo the legate helde his counceyll at Brystow at seynt martyns fest and ther were xj bisshops of Englond and of walys and of other prelates of hooly chirche a grete nombre and erles and barons and many knyghtes of englond al tho that were at that coun ceyll swore feaute vnto henry the kyng that was kyng Iohans sone And anone after the legate enterdyted walys for encheson that they helde with the barons of Englond also al tho that holpen or yaue counceyll to meue werre ageyne the newe kyng henry he acursed hem in the begynnyng he putte in the sentence the kynges sone of fraunce lowys And netheles the same lowys wold not spare for to werre for al that but went anon toke the castel of Barkemsted and eke the castel of herford And from that day afterward the barons dyd so moche harme thurgh oute al englond pryncypally the Frensshmen that were come with kyng lowys wherfor the grete lordes all the commune peple of englond lete hem croyse for to dryue lowys his company out of Englond but somme of the barons eke of the frensshmen were gone to the cyte of nychol token the cyte and helde it to kyng lowys profyt But thyder come kyng henryes men with a grete po wer that is to saye the Erle Randolf of Chestre and wylliam Erle marchal and william the brener erle of Feryers and ma ny other lordes with hem and yeuen batayll vnto Lowys men And ther was slayne the Erle of perches and lowys men were ther foule discomfyted ther was take erle serle of wynchestre and humfrey de boune Erle of herford And Robert the sonne of walter and many other that bygonne werre ageynst the kyng they were taken and lad vnto kyng henry kyng Iohans sonne whan the tydyng of this scomfyture come vnto Lowys the kyn ges sone of Fraunce he remeued thennes and wente vnto Lon don lete shytte fast the yates of the cyte And anon after the kynge sente to the Burgeys of london that they shold yelde hem vnto hym and the cyte also And he wold hem graunte all the fraunchises that euer they were woned for to haue and wolde conferme hym by his greete newe Charter vnder his greete Seal And in the same tyme a grete lord that was callyd Eustace the monk come oute of fraunce with a grete companye of lordes wolde haue come in to Englond for to haue holpe lowys the kynges sone of fraunce but hubert of borugh the v portes with viij shippes tho mette with hem in the high see assaylled hem egrely ouercome hem with strengthe smyten of Eustace the monkes hede token also x grete lordes of fraūce put hem in to pryson slowe almoost al the men that come with hem anon drenched the shippes in the see How lowys torned ageyne in to fraūce of the confyrmacion of kyng Iohans chartre Ca C lvij WHan lowys herde this tydyng he drad sore to be dede loste lete ordeyne speke bytwene the kyng lowys by the le gate Swalo thurgh the archebisshop of Caūterbury thurgh other grete lordes that al the prysonners on that one halfe on that other shold be delyuerd gone quyte lowys hym self shol de haue for his costages a M poūde of syluer sholde gone ou●… of englond come neuer therin ageyne in this maner was the acord made bytwene kyng henry lowys tho was lowys assoylled of the popes legate that was callyd swalo of the sente●…ce that he was in the barons of englond also after this kyng henry Swalo the legate lowys wēt vnto merton ther was the pees confermed bytwene hem ordeyned And afterward lowys went fro thens vnto london toke his leue was brought with moche honour at the see with the archebisshop of Caunterbu ry and with other bisshops and also with erles barons soo went lowys in to fraunce And afterward the kyng and the Archebisshop and erles and barons assembled hem at london at my chelmasse that next come tho sewyng and helde ther a parlement ther were tho renewed all the frūchises that kyng Iohn graunted had at Romnemede kyng henry tho confermed by his chartre the whiche yet ben holden thurgh oute al englond in that time the kyng toke of euery plough lāde two shyllyng hubert of burgh was made tho chyef Iustyce of englōd this was the ●…ij yere of kyng henryes regne And in the same yere was seynt thomas of caūterbury translated the L yere after his martirdome And after it was ordeyned by al the lordes of englond that alle alyens shold gone oute of englond and come no more therin and kynge Henry toke tho alle the castels in to his honde that kynge Iohan his fadre hadd ●…ue taken vnto alyens for to kep●… that held●… with hym But the proude foukes of brent rychely lete a●…y hi●… castel of Bedford whiche he had of the kynges yift Iohn and he helde that castel ayenst kyng henryes wyll with myght strengthe And the kyng come thyder with a strong power besi eged the castel And the archebisshop mayster stephen of langeton with a fayre companye of knyghtes come to the kyng hym for to helpe from the ascencion vnto the assumpcion of our lady laste the syege And tho was the castel wonne take the kyng lete honge al tho that were went in to the castel with hir good wylle for to holde the castel that is for to say lxxx men And tho after ward foukes him self was founde in a chirche of Couentre and ther he forswore all englond with moche shame went tho ayene in to his owne countrey And whiles that kyng henry regned ed mond of abyngdon that was tresorer of salysbury was consacred Archebisshop of Caūterbury And this kyng henry sent ouer the see vnto the erle of prouynce that he shold sende him his doughter in to englond that was callyd Elyenore he wolde wedde hir so she came in to englond after cristemasse in the morowe after seynt hillarye the Archebisshop Edmond spoused hem to gedre at Canterbury And at the vtas of seynt hillarye she was crouned at westmynster with moche solempnyte And ther was a swete syght bytwene hem that is to say Edward that was next kyng after his fadre flour of courtesy of la●…gesse and margarete that was after quene of scotland beatryce that was afterward
drawyng was foryeue hym How Iohan that was william walleys broder was putt to the deth Cao. C lxxxiijo. WHan the grettest maystres of Scotland were thus done to euel deth shended for hir falsenes Iohan that was williā walleys broder was take done to deth as Sir Iohan Erle of a theles was How Robert the brus fledde from scotland to Norwey Capitulo C lxxxiiij ANd at that same daye was Robert the brus moche bated amonge the peple of Scotland so he wyst not what was for to done for to hyde hym he went in to norwey to the kyng that had spoused his suster ther helde hym socour for to haue And Robert the Brus myght not be founde in Scotland kyng Edward tho lete crye his pees thurgh oute al the land his lawes were vsyd his mynystres serued thurgh oute al the land How kyng edward dyed Capitulo C lxxxvo. WHan kynge edward had abated his enemyes ●…e turned ageyne southward a maladye toke hym at burgh vp sand in the marche of Scotland and he wyste wel that his deth was fnl nygh called to hym syre henry the lacy erle of nychol Sir●… Guy erle of warre wyk sire aymer valence erle of penbroke sir robert of clifford baron prayd hem vpon the faith that they him owed that they shold make edward of Carnariuan kyng of englond his sone as rathe as they myght that they shold not suf fre pyers of ganeston come ageyne in to englond for to make his sone to vse ryotte they graunted hym with good wylle the kyng toke the sacrament of holy chirche as a good cristen mā shol de de●…de in veray repentaunce whan he had be kyng xxxv yere he deyd was buryed at westmynstre with moche solempnyte vpon whos soule god haue mercy Amen Of merlyns prophecyes that were declared of kyng Edward that was kyng henryes sone Ca C lxxxvj ANd of this kyng edward profecyed merlyn callyd hym a dragon the second kyng of the vj last kynges that shold be for to regne in englond said that he shold be medled with mer cy also with strength with sternesse that shold kepe englond fro colde he●…e that he shold open his mouth toward walis that he shold sett his one fote in wyke that he shold closen with walles that shold do moch harme to his seed he sayd soth For the good kyng edward was medled with mercy with fiersnes with mercy ayenst his enemyes of walys after of Scotland with fiersnesse whan he put hem to deth for hir falsenes traytrie as they had deserued it wel kept he englond from cold hete sith he kepte it from al maner enemyes that ●…ōne vpon hym to done hym ony wrong wel he opened his mouth toward walys made it quake thurgh the hydour of his mouth when he cōquerd it thurght dynt of swerd for the prince lewelyn dauid his bro der rys morgan were put vnto the deth for hir falsenesse hir folye he sette his one fote in to wyke cōquerd Berwyck at the whiche cōquest were slayn xxv M vij C out take hem that were brente in the reede halle And the walles that he lete make shal be noyous vnto his seed as men shal here after see in the lyf of Syr edward of Carnariuan his sone And yet merlyn sayd that he shold make Ryuers renne in bloode with brayne and that semed wel in his werres ther that he had the maystrye And yet merlyn said that ther shold come a peple out of the north west duryng the regne of the forsayd dragon that shold be ladde by an ylle Grehounde that sholde the dragon croune kynge that afterward sholde flee ouer the see for drede of the Dragon withoute comyng ageyne and that was proued by Syr Iohan bayllol that kynge edward made for to ben kyng of Scotland that falsely aroos ageynste hym after he fledde vnto his owne landes of fraunce neuer come ageyne in to Scotland for drede of kyng edward yet said merlyn that peple that shold lede the forsayd grehond shold be fadreles vntill a certayne tyme he sayd soth For the peple of Scotland gretely were dysesed syth that Syr Iohan bayllol hir kyng fled from scotlād And yet sayd mer lyn that the sonne shold bycome in his tyme as reede as ony blo de in tokenyng of grete mortalyte of peple that was wel knowen whan the Scottes were slayne And syth sayd merlyn that ylke dragon shold norysshe a foxe that shold meue grete werre ageynst hym that shold not in his tyme ben ended and that semed wel by Robert the brus that kyng edward norysshed in his chā bre that sythenes stale aweye meued grete warre ayenst hym whiche werre was not ended in his tyme And afterward Merlyn tolde that this dragon shold ben hold the best body of alle the worlde and he sayd sothe For the good kynge edward was the worthyest knyght of al the world in his tyme And yet said mer lyn that the dragon shold dye in the marche of another land and that his land shold be long withoute ony good kepar that mē shold wepe for his deth from the I le of shepey vn to the I le of marcyl wherfor allas shold be hir comyn songe among peple fadreles in the land wasted that prophecye was knowe oueral ful wel For the good kynge Edward dyed at Burgh vp sande that is vpon the marche of Scotland wherfor the Englysshmen were discomforted sorowed in northumberlond For encheson that kyng edwardys sone sette by the scottes no force for the Riott of pyers of ganaston wherfor allas was the songe th●…rugh oute al Englonde for defaute of a good wardeyn from the I le of shepey vnto the yle of marcyl the peple made moche sorowe for good kynge Edwardys deth For they wende that good kyng edward shold haue gone in to the holy lande for that was hollyche his purpose vpon whos soule god for his hygh grace ha ne mercy Amen Of kyng Edward that was kyng edwardys sone Capitulo C lxxxvij ANd after this kyng Edward regned Edward his sonne that was bore in Carnariuan and this Edward wente in ●…o Fraunce and spoused Isabell the kynges doughter of fraūce the xxv day of Ianyuer at the chirche of our lady at Boloyn In the yere of our lord Ihesu crist a M CCC vij the xx daye of feuerer the next yere that come after he was crouned solempnlych at westmynstre of the archebisshop Robert of wynchelsee and of the●… Archebisshop of Cauntrbury and ther was so grete p●…ce of peple that Syr Iohan bacwel was dede murdred And anon as the good kyng edward was dede Syr Edward his sone kynge of engloud sente after pyers of ganeston in to Gascoyne and so moch loued hym that he called him his broder and
Shirborne in elmede all they made ther an oth for to breke destrouble the doynge by twene the kyng syr hugh the spēcer his sone vpon hir power And they went in to the marche of walys destroyed the land of the forsayd syr hught How Syr hugh the spencer his fadre were exiled oute of en glond Ca C lxxxxiiij WHan kynge edward sawe the grete harme and destructyon that the Barous of Englond dyden to Syre Hugh the Spencers landes and to his Sonnes in euery place that they comen vpon And the kyng tho thurgh his counceyll exyled syre Iohan monbray Syr Rogyer of Clyfford Syr Gosselyn dauyll many other lordes that were to hem consente wherfor the barons diden tho more harme than they dyden byfore And when the kynge sawe that the bawns wold not cese of hir cruelte the kyng was sore adrad lest they wold destroye hym and hie Royame for his mayntenaunce but yf that he assented to hem And so he sente for hem by lettres that they shold come to london to his parlement at a certayne day as in his lettres was contryned they comen with thre batails wel armed at al poyntz euery ba taylle had cote armures of grene clothe therof the right quarter was yelowe with whyte bendes wherfor that parlemēt was callyd the parlement of the whyte bende And in that companye was syr vmfrey de Bohen erle of herford Syr Rogyer of clifford Syr Iohan mombray syr gecelyn dauyll sir Rogyer mortymer vncle of Syre Rogyer mortimer of wigmore sir henry of Trays Syr Iohn giffard sir bartholomew of badelesmore that was the kynges styward that the kyng had sente to shirborne in Elmede to therle of lancastre to al that with hym were for to t●… of acord that hym allyed to the barons come with that cō panye And Syr Rogyer dammorye Syr hugh daudale that had spouced the kynges neces suster Syr Gillebert of Clare erle of gloucestre that was slayne in Scotland as bifore is sayd And tho two lordes had tho two partyes of the erldom of Gloucestre syr hugh the spencer the sonne had the thyrd part in his wyfes the thyrd suster tho two lordes went to the barons with al hir power ageynst syr hugh hyr broder in lawe so ther come with hem Syr Rogyer of Clyfford syr Iohn mombray sir gosseline dauil sir rogyer mortymer of werk sir rogrer mortimer of wigmore his neue●… sir henry trays syr Iohn giffard sir bar tholomewe of badelesmore with al hir companye many other that to hem were cōsent All these grete lordes comen to westmynster to the kynges parlement so they spoken dyd that bothe sir hugh spencer the fadre syr hugh the sone were outlawed of en glond for euermore And syr hugh the fadre went to douer ma de moche sorowe fell doune vpon the grounde by the see bank acros with his armes sore wepyng sayd Now fayre Englond and good englond to almyghty god I the betake and thryes kise the grounde and wende neuer to haue comen ageyne wepynge full sore cursed the tyme that euer he bygate Syr hugh his sonne And sayd for hym he hadde lost al Englond and in presence of hem that were aboute hym he yaf hym his curse wente ouer the see to his landes but sir hugh the sone wold not goo oute of englond but helde hym in the see he his companye robbed twoo dromōdes besyde sand wyche toke bare awey al the good that was in hem the value of xl 〈◊〉 pound How the kyng exyled erle thomas of lancastre al that held with hym how the mortimer come yelde hym to the kynge of the lordes Ca o C. lxxxxvo. HIt was not long after that the kyng ne made Syr Hughe spencer the fadre Syr hughe the sone come ageyne in to en glond ageynste the lordes wylle of the Royame And sone after the kyng with a strong power come besyeged the castel of ledes in the castel was the lady of badelesmere for encheson that she wold not graunte that castel to quene Isabel kynge Edwardys wyf But the pryncipal cause was for encheson that Syr Bartholomewe badelesmere was ageynst the kyng helde with the lordes of englond netheles the kyng by help socour of men of london also of helpe of southerne men the kyng gate the castell maugre hem al that were therin toke with hym al that he my●…t fynde And whan the barons of Englond herd of this thyng sir Rogyer mortimer other many lordes toke the toune of brudgeworth with strength wherfor the kyng was wonder wroth ●…ete outlawe thomas of lancastre vinfrey de Bohoune erle of hert ford all tho that were assentant to the same quarel the kyng assēbled an huge hoost come ayenst the lordes of englond wher for the mortimers put hem to the kynges mercy his grace a non they were sente to the tour of london ther kept in pryson whan the barons herd of this thyng they comen to poūfret there that therle thomas soiourned tolde hym how that mortimers bothe hadde yelde hem to the kyng and put hem in his grace Of the syege of Thykhylle Capitulo C lxxxxvjo. WHan thomas Erle of lancastre herd this they were wonder wroth al that were of his cōpanye gretely they were dis cōfyted ordeyned hir power to geder belyeged the Castell of Thykhyll but tho that were within so manlyche defended hem that the barons myght not gete the castel And whan the kyng herd that hie castel was besyeged be swore by god and by his names that the syege shold be remeued and assembled an huge power of people and went thyder ward to reske we the Castel his power encresed from day to day Whan the Erle of lancastre the Erle of Herford the barons of hir companye herde this thyng they assembled al hir power wente hem to Burton vp Trent and kepte the bridge that the kyng shold not passe ouer But it bifell so on the tenth day of marche in the yere of grace M CCC xxi The kyng the Spencer Sir Aymer Malaūce erle of penbroke and Iohan erle of Arundel and hir power wente ouer the water discomfyted therle thomas and his companye And they fled to the Castel of Tutbery and fro thens they went to pountfret And in that vyage dyed Syr Rogyer Dammorye in the Abbay of Tutbery And in that same tyme the Erle Tho mas had a traytour with hym that was called Robert of holond a knyght that the Erle hadd brought vp of nought and badde norisshed hym in his ●…otelerye had yeuen hym a thousand marc of lande by yere soo moche the Erle loued hym that he myght done in the Erles court al thynge that hym lyked bothe amonge hyghe
is cō●…yned for to treate with youre lyege men as a kynge shold And therfore thurgh al the commune assent of all the lordes of Englond I telle vnto yowe these wordes ye shal vnderstonde sire that the Barons of Englond at one assent wylle that ye be no more king of Englond but vtterlych haue put yow out of your realte for euermore And the bisshop of Ely fayd tho to the kyng Syre Edward here I yelde vp feaute homage for alle the Archebis shoppes and bisshoppes of Englond and for al the Clergie Tho sayd Sir Iohan Erle of Garenne Syr Edward I yelde vp here vnto yowe feaute and homage for me and for alle the E●…les of Englond And Sir Henry percy yafe vp also ther his homa●… for hym and for alle the Barons of Englond And tho sayd Syre wi●…iam Trussel I yelde vp nowe vnto yowe Syre myn homage for me and also for al the knyghtes of Englond and for al them that holden by seriauntrie or by ony other maner thyng of yow Soo that fro this daye afterward ye shal not be claymed kyng nother for kyng be hold But from this tyme afterward ye shal be holde for a synguler man of al the peple so they went thens vnto london ther that the lordes of en glond hem abode and sir Edward abode in prison in good keping And that was the day of conuersion of seynt paule in the xx yere of his regne Profecye of Merlyn declared of kynge Edward the sonne of kyng edward Cao. CC xio. OF this kyng edward prophecyed merlyn sayd that there shold come a gote oute of Carre that shold haue hornes of sil●… a berde as white as snowe a doppe shold come oute of his nosethillers that shold bytoken moche ●…me honger deth of the peple grete losse of his lande and th●… in the begynnyng of his regne shold be haūted moche lecherye He said soth all 's the time for kyng Edward that was kyng edwardes sone was borne at Carnariuan in wa●…s Forsoth he had hornes of silu a berd as snowe whan he was made prince of walys to moche he yaf hym to riotte to folye and soth said merlyn in his propherye that ther shold come out of his nose a doppe for in his tyme was grete hūger amonge the poure people stronge deth am●… the riche that deide in straūge land with moche sorowe in we●…e in Scotland and afterward he loste scotland gascoyne whyles that hym 〈◊〉 was kyng ther was moche lecherye haunted And also Merlyn told said that this gote shold seche the flour of ly●… of deth And he said soth for he spoused Isabel the kynges doughter of brud ges And in his tyme merlyn sayd that ther sholde be made brudges of folk vpon dyches of the see that was wel seyn at bannokkesborn in Scotland when he was dyscomfyted ther of the Scottes And Merlyn told also that stones shold falle frō castel les many townes shold be made pleyn And he sayd sothe for whan kyng edward was discomfyted in Scotland and come tho southward the scottes besyeged tho castels and dyd hem moche harme and brente townes vnto the hard erth And afterward Merlyn t●…ld that an Egle shold come out of Corne wayle that shold haue fethers of gold that of pride shold haue no pyere And he shold despyse lordes of blode and after 〈◊〉 shold dye thurgh a here at gauersiche and that prophecye was 〈◊〉 wel knowe and founde sothe For by the Egle is vnderstonde Syr Pyers of ganastone that tho was erle of Cornewayll that was a wonder proud man that despysed the baronage of Englond but afterward he was byheded at Gauersich thurgh the Erle of lancestre and thurgh the Erle of warre wyke And Merlyn told that in his tyme it shold seme that the here shold brenne that batayll shold be vpon an arme of the see in a felde arayed lyke a shelde where sholde dye many whyte hedes And he said sothe for by the brennyng of the here is bitokened grete drede thurgh cuttyng of swerde at that bataylle ordeyned in a felde as a shelde vpon an arme of the see is bitokened the batail of mytone for ther comen the scottes in maner of a shelde in ma ner of a winge slewe vpon swale men of religyon prestes secu lers wherfor the scottes callyd that batayll in despyte of Englissh men the whyte batayll And after merlyn sayd that the forsayd bere shold done the gote moch harme that shold be vpon the south west and also vpon his blode said also that the gote shold lese moch dele of his lāde til the tyme that shame shold hym oucome and than he shold clothe hym with a lyone skyn shold wynne ayene that he had lost moch more thurgh peple that shold come oute of the northwest that shold make hym ben dradde hym auenge of his enemyes thurgh coūceyle of ij owles that first shol de ben in peryll to be vndone And that tho two owles shold wēde ouer the see in to a straūge land ther they shold duelle til a cer tryne tyme and after they shold come in to Englond ageyne And tho two owles shold do moche harme vnto many one that they shold coūceylle the gote for to meue werre ayenst the forsaid here And that the gote the owles shold come vnto an arme of the see at Barton vp Trent and sholde wende ouer that for drede the here shold flee with a swan in his company vnto bury toward the northe thurgh an vnkynd outepulter and that the swan than shold be slayne with sorow and the here shold be slayn full nyghe his own nest that shold stonde vpon poūtfeete vppon whome the sōne shal shede his bemes and many folk hym shal seche for the moche vertue and he sayd ful soth For the good Erl●… Thomas of lancastre was born in the north west and cosyn to the kyng and sone of his vncle And by lawe he made the kyng lese moche lād the which he had purchaced wilfully til at the last the kyng therof toke shame and hym self fylled with cruelte And after he gate ageyne that he had lost moche more thurgh fel●… that he lete assemble oute of the northweste that made hym to 〈◊〉 adrad and auengyd hym of his Barons thurgh counseylle of Syre hughe the Spencer the fadre and of Syre hugh the sonne that byfore were outlawed oute of Englond for hir wykkednes But afterward come ageyn in to englond sir hugh spencer the fadre out of fraunce and so moche counseylled the kyng that he shol de werre vpon thomas of lancastre soo that the kyng the spen cers the erle of Arundel and hir power mett with thomas of lancastre at burton vp trent and hym ther dyscomfyted and sir Humfrey erle of Herford was in his company And after fled den the
had dispended moche of his tresour wasted in that tyme were seen two mones in the firmamēt that one was clere that other was derk as men myȝt tho seen thurgh out the world a grete debate was that same tyme ayenst pope Iohn the xxij after seynt peter thēperour of almayn tho made hym emperour ayēst the popes will that th●… helde his see at auinion wherfor thēperour made his crye at rome ordeygned another pope that hight nycholas that was a frere menour that was ageynst the right of holy chirche wherfor ●…e was acursid the power of that other pope sone was leid And for encheson that suche merueylles were seen men sayd that the world was nygh at the ende ¶ Of the deth of kyng edward of Carnariuan Ca CC xvo. ANd now gone we ayene to sir edward of Carnariuan that was kyng somtyme of englond and was put doune of his dygnyte ¶ Allas for his tribulacion and sorowe that hym byfelle thurgh false counceille that he leued and truste vpon to moche that afterward were destroyed thurgh hir falsenesse as God wolde ¶ And this Edward of Carnariuan was in the castel of berkeley vnder the kepyng of sir morys of berkeley sire Iohan of mautreuers and to hem he made his compleynt of his sorowe of his dysese oftymes he axed of his wardeyns what he had trespaced ageyst dame Isabel his wyf sire Edward hys sonne that was made newe kynge that they wold nought vysyte hym Tho ansuerd one of his wardeyns My worthy lord dysplese yow not that I shall telle yow the encheson is for it is done hem to vnderstonde that yf my lady your wyf come ony thyng nyght yowe that ye wold hir strangle and slee And also that ye wol de doo to my lord your sonne that same ¶ Tho ansuerd he wyth simple chere Allas allas am I not in prison al at your own will now god it wote I thought it neuer and now I wold that I were dede so wold god that I were for than were al 〈◊〉 sorow passed Hit was not long after that the kyng thurgh co●…yl of mortimer graunted the ward kepyng of sir edward his fadre ●…o sir thomas Toiourney to the forsayd sir Iohn Mautreuers thurgh the kinges letter put out holy the forsaid sir moryce of the warde of the kyng they toke lad the kyng vnto the castel of Corffe the whiche castel the kyng hated as ony deth they kept hym there saufly ●…l it come vn to seynt mathewes day in septem b●… in the yere of gra●… M ccc xxvij that the forsaid sir rogyer mor timer sent the maner of the deth how in what wise he shold be do ne to deth And anone as the forsayd thomas Iohan had seyn the letter cōmaundement they made kyng edward of carnariuā good chere good solas as they myȝt at that soper nothyng the kyng wist of y t trecherye And when tyme was for to go to bed the kyng went vnto his bed lay slept fast as the kyng lay slept the traitour●… fals forsworen ay●…ns hir homage hir feaute comen priuely in to the kynges chambre and hir companye with hem leyden an huge table vpon his wōbe with men presseden helden faste a doune the iiij cornyers of the table vpon his body ●…r with the good man a woke was wōder sore ad●…d to be dede there slayne turned his body tho vpsodoune ¶ Tho toke the fals traytours as wode tirauntes an horne putte it in to his fundament as depe as they myȝt toke a spyte of coper bren nyng put it thurgh the horne in to his body ofte tymes ●…lled ther with his boweles and so they slewe hir lord that no thynge was perceyued and after he was entered at Gloucestre ¶ How kyng edward spoused philip the erles doughter of He naude at york Cao. CC xvjo. aNd after Cristemasse tho next sewyng sir Iohan of henaude a brouȝt with hym philip his broders doughter that was erle of henaude his nece in to englond kynge edward spoused hir at york with moche honour sir Iohan of Bothom bisshop of ely sir william of melton archebisshop of york songen the masse the souday in the eue of conuersion of seynt paule in the yere of grace a M ccc xxvij but for encheson that the kyng was but yōg ten dre of age when he was croūed ful many wrōges were don whi le that his f●…dre lyued for encheson that he trowed the coūceilers that were fals aboute hym that coūceilled hym to d●…ne other wise than reson wold wherfor grete harme was do vnto the Reame to the kyng al mē directed it the kynges dede it was not so al myȝty god wote wherfor it was ordeyned at the kinges croūyng that the kyng for his tendre age shold be gouerned by xij grete lordes of englōd without which no thyng shold be done that is for to saye the archebisshop of caūterbury the archebisshop of yorke The bisshop of wynchestre the bisshop of herford the erle of lan castre the erle marchal the Erle of kent that were the kynges vncles the erle of garenne Syr thomas wake Syre henry of ●…ercy Syr Olyuer of yngham and Iohan of Roos Barons And these were sworen trewely for to coūceylle the kynge And they shold ansuere euery yere in the parlement of y t that shold be done i●… the tyme of that gouernaille but that ordynaūce was sone vnd●…ne that was moche losse harme to al englōd for the king al the lordes that shold gouerne hym were gouerned ruled after the kynges moder dame Isabell by sir Rogyer Mortimer And as they wold al thyng was done both among highe lowe And they toke vnto hem Castels tounes landes rentes in grete harme losse to the croune of the kynges state oute of mesure How the pees was made bytwene the englysshmen the scot tes and also of Iustyfyeng of Troylbastone Cao. CC xvij o THe kyng Edward at wytsontyde the second yere of his reg ne thurgh counceylle of his moder of sire Rogyer mortymer ordeygned a parlement at northampton at the whiche parlement the kyng thurgh hir coūceil none other of the land within age graunted to ben acorded with the scottes in this maner that al the feautes homages that the scottes shold don̄ vnto the croun̄ of englōd foryaf hem vnto the scottes for euer more by his chartre ●…nfeled And ferthermore an endenture was made of the Scottes vnto kyng Edward that was kyng henryes sone whiche endenture they callid it rageman in the which were conteyned al the ho mages and feautes First of the kyng of Scotland and of al the prelatez Erles and barons of the Reame of Scotland with hyr seales sette theron and
me schyef come vnto hym on seynt andrews euen 〈◊〉 the yere of Incarnacion of our lord Ihu crist a thousand CCC xxx How kyng Edward gete ageyne vnto hym gracyously the ho mages feautes of scotlād wherof he was put out thurgh fals counceyll of Isabel his moder and sir Rogyer mortimer that was newe made erle of the marche Cao. CC. xx●…ijo. ●…Owe ye haue herd lordes how sir Iohan of Bayllol in tyme of pees was chosen to ben kyng of Scotlād f●…r ench son that he come of the eldest doughter of the erle Dauyd of Hontyngton that was kyng Alysandres broder of scotland that de●…de without heyr of his body bygoten how this Iohan made frauce homage to kyng edward henryes sone the third for his lādes of stotlād and how he afterward withsayd his homage thurgh coū ceill of the scottes in the yere of our lord M ccc lxxij sent vnto y t pope thurgh a fals suggestion that he made his oth vnto y t fo●…said king edward ouer his astate his wil ▪ of which oth the p●…pe him assoylled thurgh his bulles to hym y sent And anone as kyng Edward wyst therof he ordeyned anon his barons c●…me vnto Berewik conquerd the toune at which cōquest ther were sl●…y ne xxv M vij C And the Baillol that was kyng of scotlād come yelde hym vnto kyng edward And the kyng afterward delyuerd him out of the toure of london and al the gre●…e lordes of scotlād with hym that were take at Berewyk yaf hem saufcō duyt to go in to scotland and the scottes syth thurgh hir falsenes werred vpon kyng edward And whan Syr Iohan Bay●…loll kyng of scotlād saw al this he went put hym ouer the see vnto Dunpier and liued ther vpon his owne landes as welle as he myght tille that the scottes wold amende hem of hyr mysdedes trespace and lad with hym Syr Edward his sonne whe●…fore the Scottes in despyte of hym callyd hym Syr Iohan Turnelabard for cause that he wold not offende ne trespace ayēst kyng edward of Englond And soo he forsoke his Reame of Scotland sette therof but lytell prys And this Syre Iohan longe tyme duellyd in fraunce til that he dyed there and sir edward his sone vnderfeng his heritage did homage vnto the kyng of fraūce for his lādes of dunyyer so it fel afterward that edward y t was Iohan bayllols sone had with hym a squyer of englōd that was b●…re in yorkshyre that was callyd Iohan of barnaby this edward bayllol loued hym moche was nygh hym ful pryue And so this Iohan of barnaby was in debate with a frensshmā in the toune of Dunpyer soo he slewe hym went his waye in al that he myght in to the castel for to haue socoure helpe of his lord And anon come the officers of the toun to take Iohn of bar naby as a felon syr edward his lord halp hym rescued him by nyȝt made hym wende oute of the castel so he went his wey come in to Englond without ony harme And whan the kyng of fraunce saw that sir edward had rescued his felon he beco me wonder wroth ayenst Syr edward anon lete hym be a rest toke in to his hande al his londes Tho duellyd Syr edward in prison vnto the tyme that sir henry of beaumout come in to fraūce the which henry somtyme was erle of angos in scotlād thurgh his wyf was put oute of the forsayd erldom whan the accord was bytwene englond and Scotland thurgh the quene Isabel and sir rogyer the mortimer hir company for the maryage that she made bytwene dauyd that was Robert the brus sone dame Iane of the tour kyng edwardes suster of englond and well vnderstode this that at the ende he shold come to his right but if it we re thurgh sir edward baillol that was right heir of the reame of Scotland And the kynge of frannce lowys loued moche this sir henry and he was with hym ful priue and thought for to make a delyueraunce of Sir edward baillols body yf he myght in ony maner wyse Tho prayd he the kyng that he wold graunte hym of his grace Syr edward bayllols body vnto the next par lement that he myght lyue with his owne rentes in the mene time and that he must stand to be Iugged by his peris at the parlement The kynge graunted hym his prayer and made the forsayd Edward be delyuerd oute of prison in the maner aboue sayd And anon as he was out of prison sir henry toke hym forth with hym and lad hym in to Englond and made hym duelle pri uely at the maner of sandehal vp ouse in yorkshyre with the lady besey and so he ordeyned hym there an huge retenaunce of people of Englisshmen and also of Alyens for to conquere ayene his heri tage And soo he yaf moche siluer vnto Sowdyours and to alyens for to helpe hym And they behight for to helpe him in al that they myght but they faylled hym at his most nede And at that tyme Donald erle of morryf h●…rde telle how that sir Edward was priuely come in to scotlond and come to hym and made with hym grete ioye of his comyng ayene and said to hym behight hym that al the grete lordes of englond shold be to hym en tendaunt shold hym holde for kyng as right heyr of Scotlād so moche they wold done that he shold be crouned kyng of that land and dyden to hym homage feaute Tho come Syr Henry of Beaumont to kynge edward of Englond and prayd hym in wey of charite that he wold graūte of his grace vnto sir edward Baillol that he muste saufly gone by land from sandhall vn to Scotland for to conquere his right herytage in Scotland The kyng ansuerd and sayd vnto hym yf that I suffre the Bayllol wende thurgh my land in to scotland than the peple wold saye that I shold be assentyng vnto the companye Now Syr I pray yow that ye wold graūte hym leue to take vnto hym Soudiours of englisshmen that they myght saufly lede hym thurgh your sād vnto Scotland And Syr vpon this couenaunt that yf it so befall that god it forbede that he be discomfyted in batayl thurgh the Scottes that I and also al the lordes that holden with Baillol ben for euermore put out of our rendes that we haue in En glond And the kynge vpon this couenaunt graunted hir bone as touchyng hym tho that were of the same quarell the whiche claymed for to haue londes or rentes in the Reame of Scotland And these were the names of the lordes that pursueden this ma ter that is to say Syr Edward the Baillol that chalengyd the Reame of Scotland Syr Henry Beaumout erle of Angos sir Dauid of stroboly erle of Atheles Syr Geffroy of Mombray waltier Comyn many other
crouned kyng And that this Iohn had yeue karoll his sone the duchye of guyhenne of the whiche thyng kyng Edward whan he wyst therof had grete indignacion vnto hym and was wonder wrothe and strongly y meuyd And there for afore alle the worthy lordes that ther were assembled at that parlement he called Edward his sone vnto hym ▪ to whome the du chye of guyhenne by right herytage shold longe to yafe ▪ it hym there byddyng and strengthyng hym that he shold ordeyne hym to defende hym and auenge hym vppon his enemyes ▪ and saue mayntene his right and afterward kyng edward hym self his eldest sone edward wenten to dyuerses places sayntes in englōd on pylgremage for to haue the more helpe grace of god of his seyntes the secōd kal of Iuyll when all thyng was redy to that viage batayll al his retenue power assembled his nauye also redy he toke with hym therle of warwyk the erle of suffolk therle of salysbury therle of Oxenford a 〈◊〉 men of armes as many archyers in the natiuyte of our lady toke hir shippes at plymmouth ▪ bygōne to sayle And when he come ▪ was arri ued in guyhenne he was ther worshipfully take resceyued of the most noble men lordes of that coūtre anon after kyng Ed ward toke with hym his ▪ ij ▪ sones that is for to say sir leonel ●…r le of vlton sir Iohan his broder erle of Rychemond sir henry duk of lancastre with many erles lordes men of armes ▪ ▪ 〈◊〉 ▪ 〈◊〉 archyers sayled toward fraūce restyd hym a whyle at cale ys afterward the kyng went with his folke aforsayd with other soudyours of beyond the see that ther aboden the kynges co myng the second day of nouembre and toke his iourney toward kyng Iohn of fraūce ther as he trowed to haue founden hym fast by Odomarum as his lrēs couenaūt made mencion that be w●…l de abyde hym ther with his hoost And when kyng Iohn of fra●… ce herd of the kynges comyng of englond he wēt awey with his men cariage cowardly shamefully fleyng wastyng al vntails for that the englisshmen shold not haue therof ▪ And when kyng edward herd telle that he fledde he pursued hym with 〈◊〉 his hoost til hesdene than he beholdyng the wanting ye scar●… of vitaylles also the cowardyse of the kyng of fraūce ●…e turned ayene wastyng al the coūtray And while al these thynges were a doyng the scottes priuely by nyȝt token the toune of berwyk sleyng hem that withstode hem no man elles but blessyd be god the castel neuerlatter was saued kept by englysshmen that were therin whan the kyng perceyued al this torned ayene in to En glond as wroth as he myȝt be wherfor in parlement at westmestre was graūted to the kyng of euery sa●… of wolle l shillyng du ring the terme of vj yere that he myȝt the myȝtloker fyght defende the roame ayenst the scottes other mysdoers And so when al thynges were redy the kyng hasted hym to the siege war●… How kyng Edward was crouned kyng of Scotland how Prince Edward toke the kyng of fraunce ▪ sir phelip his yonger sone at the batayll of Peyters ▪ Cao. CCo. xxxo. ANd in the xxxi yere of his wgne the xiij day of Ianyuer the kyng in the castel of Berwyk with a fewe men but hauyng ther by fast a grete hoost the toune was yolde to hym withoute ony maner defence or difficulte than y t kyng of scot land that is for to say syr Iohan bayllol consideryng how y t god dyd many merueyles gracio●… thynges for kyng edward at his owne wyl fro day to day he toke yaf vp the reame of scotland the croune of scotland at Rokesburgh in to the kynges hondes of englond vnder his patent lettres ther y made And anon after kyng edward in presence of all the prelates other worthy men lordes that ther were lete croune hym kyng ther of the reame of scotland whan al thynges were done ordeyned in thylk cōtrees at his lust he torned ayene in to englond with an huge wor ship And while this vyage was a doyng in Scotland Sir Edward prince of walys as a man enspyred in god was in gnyhen ne in the Cyte of burdeux tretyng spekyng of the chalengyng of the kynges right of englond that he had of the reame of frā ce that he wold auengid be with strong honde the prelates pe res and myghty men of that countre consented wel to hym Than Sir edward the prince with a grete hoost y gadred to him the vj day of Iuyll went from burdeux goyng and trauaylyng by me ny dyuerse contrees he toke many prisoners more than vj m men of armes by the coūtre as he Iourneyed toke the tonn of remo●…ntyn in saloyne besieged the castel vj dayes at the sixe dayes ende they yolden the castel vnto hym And ther were take the lord of croune sir bursigaud and many other knyghtes and men of armes more than lxxx And fro thens by Corene peten fast by chyneney his noble men that were with hym hadden a strong batail with frensshmen an C of hir men of armes we re slayne And the erle of daunce the styward of frauuce were take with an C men of armes In the whiche yere the xix day of September faste by peyghters the same prince with a m and ix C men of armes and archyers ordeyned a bataille to kynge Iohan of fraunce comyng to the prince ward with vij m cho sen men of armes and other moche peple in an huge passyng nō bre of the whiche there was y slayn the Duk of Burbon the duke of Athenes and many other noble men of the prince men of armes a m and of other after the trewe accompte rekenyng viij honderd And the kyng of fraūce was ther take sir phelip his yonger sone and many dukes noble men worthy knyȝtes men of armes about ij m And so the vyctorye fyll ther to the prince to the peple of englond by the grace of god many that were take prisoners were set at hir raunson vpon hir trouth knyȝthode were charged had leue to go but y e prince tok with hym tho the kyng of fraūce phelyp his sone with al the reuerence that he myȝt wēt ayene to burdeux with a glorious victorye the sōme of the men that were take prisoners of the men that we 〈◊〉 slayn the day of batayll was iiij m iiij C. xl And in the x●…ij yere of kyng edward the v day of may Prince Edward with kynge Iohan of fraūce phelyp his sonne and many other worthy prisoners arryued graciously in the hauē of plymmouth and the
the comune place ther they held alle the se courtes of lawe fro mydsomer that is to say the fest of seynt Io han the baptist vnto the fest of cristemasse next sewyng than y e kyng his coūseyll sawe it not so profitable ther as it was at lō don than anone he remeued it ayene vnto london so to westmes stre for grete ease of his officers auauntage to the kyng al y e comyns of the reame And when the peple of lōdon saw knewe that these courtes were come ayene and the kyng his peple also thenne the mayer the aldermen with the chyef comuners of the Cyte lete gadre a grete some of gold of al the comyns of the cite And ordeyned made grete ryalte ayenst his comyng to london for to haue his grace good lordship also hir lybertees fraū chyses graunted vnto hem ayene as they before tymes had And than by grete Instaunce prayer of the quene Anne of hir lordes ladyes the kyng graunted hem grace this was done at ●…ene in suthereye And than the kyng within ij dayes after come to lon don And the mayre of london shereues aldermen al the worthy men of the Cyte afterward riden ageynst the kyng in good araye vnto the heth on this side the maner of shene submyttyng hem hū bely mekely with al maner obeisaūce vnto hym as they ought to done thus they brought the kynge the quene to london whan the kyng come to the gate of the bridge of london ther they presented hym with a mylk white stede sadled bridled trapped with cloth of gold rede parted to geder the quene a palfrey●… al whyte in the same araye trapped with whyte rede and al the conduytes of london ronnen with wyne both whyte rede for al maner people to drynke of And bytwene seynt poules the crosse in cheepe ther was made a stage a rial stādyng vpon hyghe and therin were many Angels with dyuerse melodyes song And than an Angel come a doune from the stage an highe by a vyse sette a cronue of gold pyght with ryche perle precious stones vpon the kynges hede and another vpon the Quenes he de And soo the Cytezeyns brought the kynge the quene vn to westmynstre in to hyr paleys And than on the morne after the mayer the shereues and the aldermen of london comen vnto the kynge in to his paleys at westmynstre and presented hym with two basyus of syluer oner gylt ful of Coyned gold the sōme of xx honderd pounde prayenge hym of his hyghe mercy and lordship and special grace that they myght haue his good loue with the lybertees and fraunchyses lyke as they haue had before tymes by his lettres patents his chartre confermed And the quene other worthy lordes and ladyes fyll on knees besouȝt the kyng of grace to conferme this Than the kyng toke vp the quene graunted hir al hir askyng than they thanked the kynge the quene wenten home ayene And in the xvj yere of kyng Rychardes regne certeyne lordes of scotland come in to En glond to gete worship as by feet of armes These were the persones the erle of marre he chalengid therle marchal of englond to Iuste with hym certayn poyntes on horsbak with sharp speres and they ryden to geders as ij worthy knyghtes lordes certeyne courses but not the ful chalenge that the scottissh erle made For he was cast both hors man ij of his ribles broke with that fal And so he was borne home oute of smythfeld home in to his yn And within a litel tyme after he was caryed homward in a litter and at yorke ther he deyde And sir william Darel knyght tho the banerer of scotlande made another chalenge with ▪ Syre Piers courteyne knyght the kynges banerer of englond of cer teyne courses yet on horsbak in the same feld And whan he had riden certeyne courses hit assayed he myȝt not haue the letter he yaf it ouer wold no more of his chalenge turned his hors rode home to his owne yn And one Cokkeborne a squyer of scot lād chalengyd Syr Nychol hauberk knyȝt of certeyne courses yet with sharp speres on horsbak riden v courses to geders and at euery course the scot was cast a donne bothe hors man And thus our englissh lordes thanked be god badden the feld And in the xvij yere of kynge Rychardes regne deyde the good gracious quene Anne that was wyf to kyng Richard in the maner of she ne in the shyre of surre vpon wytsonday than was she brouȝt to london so to westmynstre and ther she was beryed worthe ly entered beside saynt Edwardes shrine On whos soule almyȝty god haue pyte mercy Amen How kyng Richard spoused dame Isabel the kynges doughter of fraūce in the toune of caleys brought hir in to englond let hir be crouned quene in the Abbey of seynt peters of westmynstre Capitulo CC xlij IN the xx yere of kyng Richardes regne he went hym ouer the see vnto Caleys with Dukes Erles Lordes and barons and many other worthy Squyers with greete araye and commune people of the Royamme in good arraye as than longed to suche a worthy kyng prince of his nobley and of his own persone to done hym reuerence obseruaūce as ought to be done vnto hir lyege lord so myght a kyng Emperour in hys owne to abyde resceyue there that worthy gracious lady that shold ben his wyf a yong creature of xix yere of age d●…me Isabel the kynges doughter of fraūce and many other worthy lordes of grete name both barons knyghtes with moche other people that comen vnto the toune of Grauenyng two dukes of fraūce that one was the duk of Burgoyne and that other the duke of barry that wold no ferther lasse than they had pledges for hem And than the kyng Rychard delyuerd two pledges for hem to go sauf come sauf his ij worthy vncles the duk of Gloucestre the duk of york And they ij wenten ouer the water of Grauenyng abyden there as for pledges vnto the tyme that the ma riage the fest was done And that these ij dukes of fraunce we re come ayene vnto grauenyng water And thenne these two wor thy dukes come ouer the water at Grauenyng soo to Caleys with this worshipful ladye dame Isabel that was the kynges doughter of fraunce and with hyr come many a worthy lorde eke lady knyghtes squyers in the beste aray that myght be And ther they metten thith our meyny at Caleys the which wel comed hir hyr meynye with the best honour and reuerence that myght be and so brought her in the toune of Caleys And there she was resseyued with al the
sōme maistres of dyuynyte other for treson that they wrought ayene the kyn ge were drawe honged at Tyburne al xij persones ther bygan a grete discencion debate in the coūtre of wa●…s bitwene the lord grey rithen O wen of glendor squyer of walys this owen arered a grete nōbre of walsshmen kept al y t coūtre about right strong dyd moche harme destroyed the kynges tounes lord shippes thurgh out walys robbed slow the kynges peple both englissh walssh thue he endured a xij yere large he toke y e lord grey rythen prisoner kept hym fast in hold til he was raūsond of prisoners of the marche And kept hym long tyme in hold And at●… laste he made hym wedde one of his doughters kepte hym ther stylle with his wyf And sone after he dyed And than the kynge henry knowyng this meschyef destruction treson that this owen had wrought thenne anon he ordeyned a strong power of men of armes of archyers moche other stuffe that lōged to werre for to abate destroye the malice of this fals walsshmē And than the kynge come in to wa●…s with his power for to destroye this Owen other rebelles fals walshmen and anon they fledden in to the moūtayns And ther myght the kyng done he 〈◊〉 no harme in no maner wyse for the moūtayns And so the kyng come in to englond ayene for lesyng of mo of his peple and thus he sped nouȝt ther In this same yere was grete scarcite of whete in Englond for a quarter of whete was at xvj shyllynge there was marchaūdyse of englond sente in pruys for whete and anon they had lade freyght shippes ynowe and come home in saufete blessid be god of al his yeftes And in the iiij yere of kyng henryes regne ther was a sterre seyn in the firmament that shewed hym self thurgh al the world for dyuerse tokenes that shold bifalle so ne after the whiche sterre was named callid by clergye Stella Cometa And on seynt mary magdalene daye next folewyng in the same yere was the batayll of shrowesbury And thydder come Syr henry percy the erles sone of Northumberlond with a grete multitude of men of Armes and Archyers and yafe a bat●…ylle to kyng henry the fourth thurgh fals coūseyll and wykked rede of Syre Thomas percy his vncle Erle of worcestre and there was Syre Henry ●…ercy slayne and the mooste partye of his meyny in the feld And Syr Thomas percy take and kept faste in holde two dayes til the kyng had sette reste amonge his people on both sides And than Syr Thomas percy anon was Iudged to be ded●… drawe honged his heede smyten of for his fals treson at shrowesbury his hede brouȝt to london set on london bridge And the other peple that ther were slayn on both partyes the kyn ge le●…e berye And ther was slayn on the kynges side in that ba tayl therle of stafford sir waltyer bloūte in the kynges cote armure vnder the kynges baner many mo worthy men on whos soules god haue mercy amen And in the fourth yere of kyng hen ryes regne come the emperour of Constantynoble with many gre te lordes knyȝtes moche other peple of his coūtre in to englōd to kyng henry with hym to speke to disporte to see the good goueruaūce cōdicions of our peple to knowe the cōmodytees of englond And our kynge with al his lordes goodly worshipfully hym resceyued welcomed hym al his meyny that comē with hym dyd hym al the reuerence worship that they coude myght And anon the kyng cōmaūded al maner officers that he shold be serued as worthely ryally as it longed vnto suche a worthy lord emperour on his own cost as lōg as thēperour was in englond and al his men that comen with hym And in this sa me yere come dame Iane the duchesse of Brytayne in to englond londed at fallemouth in Cornewayll And from thens she was brought to the Cyte of wynchestre And ther she was wedded vn to kyng henry the fourth in the abbey of saynt swythynes of wyn chestre with al the solempnyte that myght be done made sone after she was brought from thens to london And the mayre and the aldermen the comyns of the cyte of london ryden a●…enst h●… and hir welcomed brought hyr thurgh the Cy●…e of london to westmynstre and there she was crouned Quene of Englond there the kyng made a ryal and a solempne feste for her for al maner of men that thyder wold come And in this same yere dame blaūche the eldest doughter of kyng henry the iiij was y sent ouer the see with the erle of Somersete hir vncle with maister Richard Clifford than bisshop of worcestre with many other wor thy lordes knyghtes and ladyes and worthy squyers as longed to suche a worthy kynges doughter and comen vnto Coleyn And thydder come the dukes sone of Barre with a fayre meyny and resseyued this worthy lady And there the bisshop of worcestre wedded and sacred hem to geder as holy chirche wold And ther was made a ryal feste and a grete Iustes in the reueren 〈◊〉 and worship of hem and of al peple that thyder come And whan this maryage and feste was done the Erle and the bisshop and al hir meyny token hir leue of lord and lady co me home ayene in to englond in saufte thanked be god And in the v yere of kyng henryes regne the lord thomas his sone went ouer see and the erle of kent and many other lordes knyghtes with men of armes and archyers a grete nombre to chastyse the re belles that aforne had done moche harme to oure englysshmen marchaūtes and to many townes and portes in Englond on the see costes And the lord Thomas the kyngis sone come in to flaū dres to fore a toune that is callid the skluse amonges al the ship pes of dyuse na●…ons that were there after ther they ryden with hir shippes amonges hem and wenten a lond sported hem ther twoo dayes comen ayene to hir shippes token the brode see ther they metten with thre carrikkes of Iene that were lade with dyuerse marchaūdyse wel y manned and ther they foughten to geders long tyme but the englisshmen had the victorys broughten the Carrykkys in to the cambre byfore wynchelsee there they can●…d these goodes and one of these Carrykkys was soden ly ther brente and the lordes hir peple torned hem home ayene and went no ferther at that tyme. And in the same tyme Serle yoman of kyng Richard Robes come in to englond oute of Scot land told to dyuerse p●…ple that kyng Rychard was alyue in scotland so moche peple byleuyd in his wordes wherfor a grete
part of the peple of the Reame weren in grete errour grutchyng ayenst the kyng thurgh Informacion of lyes fals l●…syng that this Serle had made for moche peple trusted byleuyd in hys sayeng but at the last he was take in the northcoūtre and by lawe Iudged to be drawe thurgh euery Cyte good Burgh tounes in Englond And soo he was serued and at the last he was brought to london vnto the Gyld halle before the Iustyce and there he was Iuged for to be brought to the toure of london and ther to be leyd on an hurdel and than to be drawe thurgh the cyte of london to Tiborne and there honged and than quartred and his hede smyten of sette on london bridge and his quart●…s to be sente to foure good tounes of Englond ther set vp and thus ended he for his fals treason and dysceyt And in the syxth yere of kyng henryes regne the fourth therle of marre of scotland by sauf conduyt come in to Englond to cha lenge sir Edmond therle of kente of certayne courses of werre on horsebake And soo this chalenge was accepted and graunted And the place taken in Smythfeld at london And this Erl●… of marre the scot come proudely in to the feld as his chalenge as ked And anone come in the erle of kent and ●…ode vnto the scotte manfully rode to geder with sharp speres dyuse courses but the erle of kent had the feld and gate hym moche worship thāk of al maner of men for his manful dedes And in the vij yere of kyng henryes regne the fourth Syr Rychard scrope archebisshop of york y e lord erle marchal of englōd gadred vnto hem a strōg power ageynst kyng henry And the kyng heryng therof in all the haste that he myght come with his power northward met●…e with hem at york and ther we●… these two lordes y take brouȝt to the kyng And anone the Iudges were set and these two lordes brought forth and there they were dampned vnto the deth both hir hedes smyten of there they made hyr ende on whos sou les god for his pyte haue mercy amen And whan this was do ne the kyng come to london ageyn there rested hym anon god of his grete goodnes wrought shewed many greete myracles for this worthy clerke archebisshop of york that thus was done vnto the deth And in the vij yere of kyng henryes regne Dam●… Luce the dukes doughter of mylane come in to Englond so at london and ther was wedded to syr Edmond holand erle of kent in the pryorye of saynt mary ouereyes in southwerke with moche solempnyte and grete worship The kyng was there hym selfe yafe hir at the chirche dore And whan they were y wedded and masse was done the kyng his owne persone brought ladde this worthy lady to the bisshops place of wynchestre and there was a wonder grete feste y holden to al mauer peple that comen In the. same yere syr Robert knolles knyght a worthy werry our dyed at his maner in Norfolke from thens he was brouȝt to london vpon a hors bere with moche torche lyght And so was he brought vnto the whyte freres in fleetstrete there was done and made for hym a solempne feste and a ryal enterement for tho that thyder wold come both po●…re and riche and there ●…e lyeth be ryed by dame Constaūce his wyf in the mydde of the body of the chirche on whos soule god for his pyte haue mercy Amen And thus in this same yere syr Thomas Ramps●…on knyght Constable of the toure of london was dreynte att london bridge as he come from westmynster towardes the toure in a barge and all thurgh lewdenesse And In the same yere dame Phelyp the yonger douȝter of kyn ge henry was lad ouer the see with sir richard the dukes broder of yorke and sir edmond Courteny bisshop of Norwyche and many other lordes knyghtes and squyers ladyes G●…ntilwomen that apperteyned to suche a worthy kynges doughter and come in to Denmark with his lordes resceyued this worthy lady for his wyf welcomed these worthy lordes dyd hem moch reuerence grete worship And they were brought vnto a toune that was callyd london in denmark ther was this lady wedded sacred to the kyng of denmark with moche solempnyte and ther she was crouned quene of denmarke Norwey swythen and ther was made a rial feste And whan this feste and maryage was done ended these lordes ladyes toke hir leue of y e kyng the quene and comen home ayene in to englond in haste thank●…d be Ihesu And in the viij yere of kyng henryes regne ther was a mā that was callyd the walsshe clerk he appelled a knyght that was callid sir perceual sowdone of treason ther they were ioyned to fight vnto vtteraūce within lystes the day place tyme assi gned lymytted to be done ended in smythfeld At the whiche day the ij persones comen in to the feld foughten sore mightely to geders but atte last the knyght ouercome the clerk ma de hym yelde hym creaūt of his fals enpechement that he sayd on hym than was he despoylled of his armure drawe out of y e feld to tiborne ther was he honged the knyght take to gra●… and was a good man And in this same yere Syr henry Erle of northumberlond and the lord Bardolfe come oute of Scotland in preiudyce and destruction of kynge henry wherfor they of the northcoūtre arisen vpon hem and fought with hem and scomfited hem and toke hem and smyten of hir hedes quartred hyr body ●…s and sente the hede of the erle a quarter of the lord bardolfe to london and ther they were set vpon the bridge for fals treason that they had purposed ageynst the kyng And in the ix yere of kyng henryes regne was Syr Edmond holand Erle of kente ma de Admyral of englond for to kepe the see he wente to the See with many ryal shippes that were ful wel arayd and enparelled and enarmed with many a good man of armes archyers of good defence of werre in the kynges name of Englond and soo he londed at the last in the cost of Brytayne in the yle of Bria●… with al his peple and he besyeged the Castel and assauted it and they withstode hym with grete defence strengthe And anone he leyd his ordynaunce and in the leyng of a gonne come a quarell and smote the good Erle Edmond in the hede and there h●… caught deths woūde but yet they left nouȝt till that they had ge te the castell and al that were therin And there this good lord dyed on whos soule god haue mercy Amen And than his mey ny come home ayene in to Englond with the erles body and was beryed amonges his Auncestres
noble ferthyng of gold And the xiiij yere of kyng Henryes regne the fourth he lete make galeys of werre for 〈◊〉 ●…d hoped to haue passed the grete see so forth to Ierusalem 〈◊〉 to haue ended his lyf but god vysyted hym so sone after 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mytees grete sikenes that he myght not wel endure no whyle so fe●…uently he was take broughte in bedde at westmynstre in a fayre chābre And as he lay in his led he asked his chamberlayn what they called that chambre that he lay ynne and he ansuerd said Ihr●…m And than he said that the prophecye said that he shol de make an ende and dye in I●…rlm And than ●…e made hym redy vnto god and dysposed al his wil And sone after he dyed and was caryed by wa●…r from westmynstre in a barge vnto Feuersham And from thens vnto Caūterbury by land with moch torche lyght brennyng in to the abbey of Cri●…hirch ther he was entered and beryed beside seynt Thomas of Caunterbury shryne thus ended the worthy kynge henry aboute mydlent●… sondaye in the yere of our lord a M CCCC xiij on whos soule god hau●… mercy Amen Of kyng henry the fyfthe that was kynge henryes sonne Capitulo CC xliiij o ANd after the deth of kyng henry the fourth regned kynge Henry his sone that was borne at mōmouth in walis that was a worthy kyng and a gracious man and a grete conquerour And in the fyrst yere of his regne for grete loue goodnesse he sent to the freres of langely there as his fadre had done berye kyng Rychard the second and l●…e take his body oute of the erth ayene dyd bringe it to westmynstre in a rial chare couered with blak veluet baners of diuse armes about al the horses drawyng the chare were trapped in blak beten with dyuse armes many a torche brennyng by al the wey til he come to westmynstre ther he lete make for hym a ryal a solempne enterement beryed hym by quene Anne his wyf as his owne desire was on the ferther side of seynt Edwardes shryne in the abbey of seynt pe ters of westmynster on whos soule god haue mercy amen And in this same yere were a certeyn of lollardes taken fals heretikes that had purposed thurgh fals treson to haue slayn our kynge for to haue destroyed al the clergye of the reame they myȝt ha ue had hir fals purpose but our lord wold not soffre it for in has●… our kyng had warnyng therof of al hir fals ordynaūce worchyng come sodenly with his power to seynt Iohans withoute smythfeld And anon they token a certeyn of the lollardes fals heretykes brouȝt hem vnto the kynges presence ther told all hir fals purpose ordynaunce how they wold haue done wrought they myȝt haue regned had hir wyll and ther they ●…ld whiche were hyr cap●…tayns gouernours And than the kyng cōmāded hem to y e tour of lōdon than toke mo of hem both with in the cite without sente hem to newgate to both coūtres than they were brouȝt in examynacyon before the clergye y e kyn ges Iustices ther they were conuycted before the clergye for hir fals heresye dāpned before the Iustyce for hir fals treson this was hir Iugemēt that they shold ●…e drawe frō the tour of lōdon vnto seynt giles feld ther to be honged brent on the gal●…wes also ther was taken syr Rogyer acton knyȝt for heresye eke for treson ayenst the kyng the reame he come afore the clergye was conuicted for his heresye to be brent dampned before the Iu stices to be drawe from the tour of london thurgh the cyte to seynt giles feld to be honged brente and in the second yere of kyng henryes regne the v he helde a counceyll of al the lordes of the re ame at westmestre ther he put to hem this demaūde prayed besought hem of hir goodnes of hir good counseyll good w●…l to she we hym as touchyng the title the right that he had to nor mandye Gascoyne and guyhenne the whiche the kyng of fraūce withhelde wrongfully vnrightfully the whiche his Auncestres before hym hadde be trewe title of conquest right herytage the which Normandy Gascoyn guyhenne the good kyng edward of wyndesore his Aūcestres bofore hym hadden holde al hyr lyues tyme And his lordes yaf hym coūseil to sende ambassatours vnto the kyng of fraūce his counceyll and that he shold yeue 〈◊〉 to hym his right herytage that is to say Normandye Gascoyn Guyhenne the whiche his predecessours hadden holden afore hym or elles he wold it wynne with dynt of swerd in short tyme with the helpe of almyghty god And than the Dolphyn of fraūce an suerd to our ambassatours and sayd in this maner that the kyng was ouer yong to tendre of age to make ony werre as ay●…nst hym was not lyke yet to be no good werryour to do to make suche a conqueste therupon hym And s●… what in scorne despyce he sent to hym a tonne ful of tenys balles by cause he wold haue somwhat for to play with al for hym for his lordes and that be come hym better than to mayntene ony werre And than anone oure lordes that were Ambassatours token hir leue comen in to englond ayene told the kyng his coūseyll of the vngoodly an swer that they had of the Dolphyn and of the presente ●…e whi che he had sente vnto the kyng And whan the kyng had herde hyr wordes ansuere of the Dolphyne he was wonder sore agr●…d right euyll payed to ward the frensshmen and toward the kyng the Dolphyn thought to auenge hym vpon hem as sone as god wolde sende hym grace myght and anone le●… make tenys balles for the dolphyn in al the hast that they myȝt be made and they were grete gonne stones for the Dolphyn to playe with all And than anon the kyng sente for al his lordes held a grete coū ceylle at westmynstre and tolde vnto hem the ansuere that they hadd●… of the Dolphyn and of his worthy presente that he sente to hym and to his lordes to playe with al And there the kyng his lordes weren acorded that they shold be redy in armes with hir power in the best a●… that myght be done And gete men of armes and Archyers that myght be goten al other stuffe that longed to werre to be redy with al hir retenue to mete at 〈◊〉 hampton by lāmasse n●…t se wyng without ony delay Wherfor the kyng ordeyned his nauye of shippes with al maner of stuffe and vytaylle that longed to suche a werryour of al maner ordynaūce in the hauen of southampton in to the nōbre
Also this yere was a grete derth of corn in al Englond for a busshel of whete was worth xl pens in many places of englond yet men myght not haue ynowe Wherfor stephen Broun that tyme maire of lōdon sent in to pul se and brought to london certeyne shippes laden with Rye whiche eased and dide moche good to the people for corne was so skarce in Englond that in somme places of Englond poure peple made hem brede of fern rotes This yere the general counseyl of basyle deposed pope Eugenye And they chese Felix whiche was duke of Sauoye And than bygan the scysme which endured vnto the ye re of our lord Thu crist M CCCC xlviij This felix was a denoute prynce saw the sones of his sones And after lyued a ho ly and deuoute lyf And was chosen pope by the coūseyll of basill Eugenye deposed and so the scysme was long tyme And this fe lix had not moche obedyence by cause of the neutralite for y e most parte and wel nyghe al cristendom obeyed and reputed Eugenye for very pope god knoweth who was the very pope of them both for bothe occupyed durynge the lyf of Eugenye This same yere Syr Rychard wyche vycary of hermettesworth was degrated of his preest hode at poulis and brente at tourhylle as for an heretik on saynt Botulphus day how wel at his deth he deyde a good cri sten man wherfor after his deth moch peple cam to the place whe re he hadde be brent offred made a heepe of stones set vp a crosse of tree helde hym for a saynt til the mayer sherenes by comaundement of the kyng of bisshops destroyed it and made there a donghylle Also this same yere the shereues of london fett out of saynt Martyns the graunt the sayntuarye fyue persones whiche afterward were restored ageyne to the sayntuarye by the kynges Iustyces After Albert the thyrd Frederyk was chosen emperour This frederyk duk of Osteryke was long emperour differred for to be crouned at rome bicause of the scisme but after that vnyon was had he was crouned with Imperyal dya deme with grete glorye tryūphe of pope nycholas the iiij This was a man pesible quyete of synguler pacyence not hatyng the chirche he wedded the kyng of portyngals doughter How the duchesse of gloucestre was arestyd for treson commytted to perpetuel pryson in the yle of man And of the deth of mayster Rogyer Bolyngbroke Cao. CC lij IN this yere Elyanore Cobham duchesse of Gloucestre was arested for certeyne poyntes of treson leyd ageyne hir wher vpon she was examyned in saynt stephens chapel at westmestre before the Archebisshop of Caūterbury and there she was enioy ned to open penaūce for to goo thurgh chepe beryng a taper in her honde and after to perpetuel pryson in the yle of man vnder the kepyng of syr Thomas stanley Also that same tyme was arestid Maister Thomas south wel a chanon of westmynstre mayster Io han hume a chapelayne of the sayd lady mayster Rogyer bolyng broke a clerk vsyng nygromācye and one margery Iurdemayn called the witche of eye beside westmestre these were arestid as for beyng of coūseyll with the sayd duchesse of gloucestre and as for mayster Thomas south wel he deyde in the toure the nyȝt before he shold haue be rayned on the morne for so he sayd hym self that he shold deye in his bed not by Iustyce And in the yere xx maister Iohan hume and mayster Rogyer Bolyngbroke were brouȝt to the guyldhalle in london and ther byfore the mayer the lordes chyef Iustyce of Englond were rayned and dāpned both to be dra wē honged quartred but maister Iohn hume had his chartre 〈◊〉 was pardoned by the kyng but mayster Rogyer was drawen to tiborne where he cōfessid that he deide giltles neuer had trespaced in that he deyd fore Notwithstondyng he was honged srded quartred on whos soule god haue mercy And margery Iurde mayn was brent in smythfeld Also this yere was a grece 〈◊〉 ye in fleetstrete by nyȝtes tyme bitwene men of court men of lō don and dyuerse men slayn sōme hurt And one ba●…l was chyef cause of the mysgouernaunce and affraye Also this yere atte chesyng of the mayre of lōdon the comyns named Robert clop ton Rawlyn holand Taylour And the Aldermen toke Robert clopton and brought hym atte ryght honde of the mayre as the cu stome is And thenne certayne Tayllours and other hond crafty men cryed nay nay not this man but Raulyn holād wherfor the Maire that was padysly sent tho that so cryed to newgate where they abode a grete whyle and were punysshed In this same yere were dyuerse enbassatours sent in to guyan for a mariage for the kyng for therles doughter of Armynack whiche was concluded But by the mene of the erle of Suffolk it was lette and putte a parte And after this the sayd erle of Suffolk wente ouer the see in to fraūce and there he treated the maryage bitwene the kyn ge of Englond and the kynges doughter of Secyle and of Iherusalem And the next yere it was concluded fully that mariage by whiche maryage the kyng shold delyuere to hir fadre the duchye of Angeo therldom of mayne which was the keye of nor mandye Thenne departed therle of Suffolk with his wyf dyuerse lordes and knyghtes in the moost ryal astate that myght be oute of Englond with newe chares and palfrayees which went thurgh chepe and so went ouer the see and resceyued hyr syth brouȝt hyr in the lente after to hampton where she lāded was ryally resceyued And on Cādelmasse euen bifore by a grete tēpest of thonder lyghtnyng at after none Paulus steple was sett a fyre on the myddes of the shaft in the tymbre whiche was quen chid by force of laboure specially by the labour of the morowe masse preest of the bowe in chepe whiche was thought Impossible lauf only the grace of god This yere was therle of stafford ma de and create duk of Bokyngham the erle of warrewyk duk of warrewyk therle of dorset marquys of Dorset the erle of Suf folk was made marquys of Suffolk How kyng Henry wedded quene Margrete and of hir Coro nacyon Cao. CC lijio. IN this yere kyng Henry maryed at Southwyke Quene Margrete and she come to london the xviij day of Maye And by the wey all the lordes of englond resseyued hyr worshipfully in dyuerse places and in especial the duk of gloucestre and on the blakheth the Maire aldermen al the craftis in blewe gounes broudred with the deuyse of his craft y t they myȝt be byknowen met with hir with reed hoodes and brought hyr to london where were dyuerse pagentys contynaunce of dyuerse historyes shewyd in dyuerse places of the cyte Ryally costle ●…o And the xxx daye of maye the forsayd quene was crowned at
ayenst the lūbardes on whiche sat with the mayer that tyme william marowe the duke of Bokyngham many other lordes for to see execucyon done but the comyns of the cyte secretely made them redy did arme them in their houses were in pur pose for to haue rongen the comyn belle which is named lowe belle but they were let by sad men which come to the knowleche of the duk of Bokyngham other lordes And incontynent they arose for they durst no lenger abide For they doubted that the hole 〈◊〉 shold haue arysen ayenst them but yet neuertheles ij 〈◊〉 in of the cyte were Iuged to deth for this robberye were honged at Tyburne Anone after the kyng quene other lordes rode to couen●…re and withdrewe hem from london for these causes And a lytil to fore the duke of yorke was sent fore to grenewyche and there was dischargyd of the protectourship And my lord of Salisbury of his Chauncelership And after this they were sent fore by preuy seal for to come to Conentre where they were almost deceyued and the erle of warrewyk also and shold haue ben destroyed yf they had not seen wel to How the lord Egremond was take by therles of salesbury●… sones And of the robbyng of Sandwiche Cao. CC lvijo. THis yere were taken iiij grete fisshes bytwene Eerethe lo●… don that one was callyd Mors marine the second a swerd fisshe and the other tweyne were whales In this same yere for certeyn affrayes done in the northcoūtre bytwene the lord egremōd the erle of Salysburyes sones the sayd lord Egremōd whome they had taken was condempned in a grete somme of money to the sayd erle of Salysbury and therfor commysed to pryson in new gate in london where whan be had be a certeyne space he brake the pryson and thre prysonners with hym and escaped wente hys way Also this yere the erle of warrewyk and his wyf went to Caleys with a fayre felauship and toke possession of his offyce Aboute this tyme was a grete reformacyon of many monastery es of religyon in diuse parties of the world which were reformed after the fyrst instytucyon contynued in many places Also aboute this tyme the craft of enpryntynge was first foūde in Magūce in Almayne whiche craft is multyplyed thurgh the world in many places bookes ben had grete chepe in grete nombre by cause of the same craft This same yere was a greete bataylle in the marches bytwene hungarye and turkye at a place called septe grade where Innumerable turkes were slayne more by myracle than by mānes hond For only the hond of god smote them seynt Iohn of Capestrane was there present prouoked the cristen pe ple beyng thēne aferd after to pursue the turkes where an infiny te multitude were slayn destroyed The turkes sayd that a grete nōbre of armed men f●…lowed them that they were aferd to turne ageyne they were holy Angels This same yere the prysoners of Newgate in london brake theyr prison wente vpon the leedes fought ayenst them of the cyte kept the gate a long while but atte last the toun gate the prison on them than they were put in feterys yrons were sore punysshed in ensāple of other In this yere also was a grete erthquaue in naples in so moch y t ther perisshed xl M. peple that sanke there in to the erthe Item in the yere xxx vj seynt Osmōd sōtyme bisshop of salysbury was canony sed at Rome by pope Calyste And the xvj day of Iuyl he was translated at Salysbury by the Archebisshop of Caunterbury and many other Bisshoppes And in August after Syre Pyers THe duk of york the erles of warwyk and of Salysbury saw the gouernaūce of the reame stode moost by the Quen●… and hir counceil and how the grete princes of the lond were not called to collceyll but set a parte and not only soo but that it was sayd thurgh the reame y t tho sayd lordes shold be destroyed vtterly as openly was shewed at bloreheth by them y t wold haue slayne therle of salysbury Thenne they for sauaaon of theyr lyues and also for the comyn wele of the reame thouȝt for to remedye these thynges assēbled them to geder with moch pe ple toke a felde in the westcoūtre to whiche therle of warwyk come from Caleys with many of thold soudyours as Andrewe trollop and other in whos wysedom as for the werre he moch 〈◊〉 sted And whan they were thus assembled and made theyr feld The kyng sent oute his commyssions preuy sea●…s vnto alle the lordes of his reame to come and awayte on hym in theyr moost de fensable wyse and so euery man come in suche wyse that the kyng was stronger had moche more peple than the duk of york the erles of warrewyk and Salysbury For it is here to be noted that euery lord in englond at this tyme durst not disobeye the out ne For she rewlyd peasybly al that was done aboute the ky●… whiche was a good symple innocent man And thēne whan the kyng was comē to the place where as they were the duk of york his felauship had made theyr feld in the strengest wyse bad purposed veryly to abyden haue foughten but in the nyght An drewe Trollop all shold soudyours of Caleys with a grete felawship sodenly departed oute of the dukes hooste went st●…yt vnto the kynges feld where they were resceyned ioyoully for ●…y knewe th entent of the other lordes also the maner of their feld And thenne the duk of york with the other lordes seyng them so deceyued toke a counseylle shortly in that same nyght depar●… from the feld leuyng behynd them the most part of their peple to kepe the feld til on the morne Thēne the duk of yorke with his second sone departed thurgh walys toward yrlond leuyng his ol dest sone the erle of the marche with the erles of warrewyk and Salysbnry whiche to geder with iij or iiij persones rood ●…yt in to deuenshyre and there by helpe and ayde of one denham a squyer whiche gate for them a ship whiche cost cc. xx noblis with the same ship sayled fro thens in to garneseye And there refresshyd them and from thens sailed to Caleys where they were receyued in to the castel by the postern ●…r they of the Town knewe of hit And the duk of york toke shippyng in walys and sayled ouer in to yrlond where he was wel receyued How therles of marche warwyk salisbury entred in to Caleys how therle of warrewyk went in to Irlond Capitulo CC lxo. THenne kynge Henry beynge with his hoost in the felde not knowyng of this sodeyn departyng on the morne fonde none in the felde of the sayd lordes sent out in al hast men to folowe pursue after to take hem but they met not with them as
phelyp of valo ys the emes sone of kyng karoll the which duk and al his in the forsayd thynges in al other ther to longyng with al his men goodes kyng edward founde redy vnto hym and maden behoy ghten hym seurte by good feyth and trust after that the kynge hasted hym in to Englond ayene and left ther the quene styll behynde hym in Braban Than in the xiiij yere of his regne whan all the lordes of his ream●… and other that fallen to be at his parle ment were called and assembled to geder in the same parlemēt hol den at london after the fest of seynt hillarye The kynges nedes we re put forth promote as touchyng the kyngdom of Fraunce For whiche nedes to le sped the kyng axed the fifthe part of al the meoble goodes of englond the wulles the ix shefe of eue ry corne And the lordes of euery toun wher suche thyng shold be taxed and gadred shold ansuere to the kyng therof and he had it and helde it at his owne lust and will wherfor yf I thal knowe leche the veray treuth the ynner loue of the peple was torned in to hate the comune prayers in to cursyug for cause that the com mune peple were so strongly greued Also the forsayd phelyp va loys of fraūce had gadred vnto hym a grete hoost destroyed ther in his partyes and kyngdom many of the kynges frendes of En glond with tounes and castels and many other of hir lordshippes and many harmes shames and despytes dyden vnto the Quene wher for kyng edward whan he herde these tydynges was strong ly meuyd ther with on angred and sente dyuerse lettres ouer see to the quene and 〈◊〉 other that were his frendes gladynge hem and certyfyeng hem tho●… he wold be ther hym self in all the hast that he myght And anon after Estre whan he had sped of alle thyng that hym neded and come he went ouer the see ayene Of whos comyug the quene and all his frendes were wonder gladde and made moche Ioye and al that were his enemyes and ageyns●… hym helden made as moche sorowe In the same tyme the kynge thurgh counceyll of his trewe lyeges coūceyll of his lordes that ther were present with hym token the kynges of fraūces name toke medled the kynges armes of fraūce quartled with the armes of englond and commaūded forth with his coygne of gold vnder the descripcion writing of the name of Englond of fraū ce to be made best that myght be that is for to say the floreyne that was callid the noble pris of vj shillynges viij pens of sterlinges the halfe noble of the value of thre shyllynges four pens the ferthyng of value of xx pens How kyng edward come to the seluys and discomfyted alle the power of fraunce in the hauen Ca●… CC●… xxv●… ANd the next yere after that is for to saye the xv yere of his regne he commaunded and lete wryte in his Chartres writtes and other lettres the date of the regne of ●…aunce first And whyle that he was thus doyng trauayllyng in fraū ce thurgh his counceyll he wrote to all the prelates Dukes 〈◊〉 and Barons and the noble lordes of the ' countre ' And also to dy nerse of the comune peple dyuerse lettres maundements ●…rng date at gaunt the viij day of February and anon after with in a lytel tyme he come ayene in to Englond with the quene and her children And in the same yere on mydsomer eue he bygan to sayll toward fraunce ayene and manly and styfly fyll vpon 〈◊〉 lip of valoys the whiche long tyme lay and had gadred to hym a ful houge and boystous meyne of dyuerse nacions in the hauen of seluys And ther they foughten to gedre the kyng of fraunce and he with her hostes fro midday vnto the iij hour in the morne in whi che bataill were slayn xxx 〈◊〉 ●…en of the kynges cōpanye of fraū ce many shippes and cogges were taken and so thurgh goddes helpe he had there the victorye bere thens a glorious chyualrye And in the same yere aboute saynt Iames tide without the yates of saynt omers robert of arthoys will men of englond flaūdres bitterly fought ayenst the duk of burgoyne the frensshmen att whiche batail ther were slayn take of the frensshmen xv barōs lxxx knyghtes shippes Barges were take vnto the nombre of CC and xxx The same yere the kyng makyng and abydynge vpon the siege of Turney the Erle of Henaude with Englyssh archyers maden assaute to the toune of saynt Amand wher they slowe l knyghtes many other and also destroyed the toune And in the sixtenth yere of his regne folewyng in the wynter tyme the same kyng duellyd styll vpon the forsayd siege and sent ofte in to Englond to his tresorer and other purueiours for gold money that shold be sente to hym ther in his nede but his procurutours and messagers cursedly and ful slowly serued hym at his nede hym deceyued on whos defautes laches the kynge toke trewes bytwene hym the kyng of fraunce And the ●…yng ful of wo sorow and shame in his hert withdrowe hym fro the syege and come in to britayne and ther was so grete strif for vytayll that he lost many of his peple And whan he had done ther that he come for he dressid hym ouer see in to Englondward And as he sayled toward Englonde in the highe see the mooste myshappes stormes tempestes thundres lyghtnynges fylle to hym in the see the whiche was sayd that it was done ●…d thurgh euyl spyrites made by sorcery and nygromancye of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fraūce wherfor the kynges hert was ful of sorow and anguisshe weylyng and sighyng and sayd vnto our lady in this wyse O blissed lady seynt marye what is the cause that euermore goyng in to fraunce all thynges and wethers fallen to me Ioyfull and lykyng and gladsum and as I wold haue hem but alwey tornyng in to Englond ward alle thynges fallen vnprofytable and harmeful Neuerlater he scapyng al perils of the see as god wolde come by nyght to the tour of london and the same yere the king helde his cristemasse at meneres sente worde to the Scottes by his messagers that he was redy wold fyght with hem but the Scottes wold not abyde that but fledden ouer the Scottissh see hyd hem as well as they myȝt And in the seuententh yere of his regne about the fest of Conuersion of saynt paul kyng Edward whan he had be in scotland and sawe that the Scottes were fled he come ayene in to Englond And a lytell byfore lent was the turnement at Dunstaple to the whiche tornement come al the yonge bachelery and Chyualrye of Englond with many other Erles and lordes At the whiche turnement kyng Edward hym self was ther present And the
next yere folewyng in the xviij yere of his regne at his parlement holden at westmynstre the quynzeme of Paske the kyng Edward the thyrdde made edward his first bygoten sonne prince of walys And in the xix yere of his regne anon after in Ianyuer by fore lente the same kyng Edward lete make ful noble Iustes grete feestes in the place of his byrthe at wyndesore that ther were neuer none such seen ther a fore At whiche fest ryalte were ij kynges ij quenes the prince of walys the duk of Corne waill x Exles ix coūtesses barons many burgeys the whiche myghten not lyghtly be nō bred And of dyuse londes beyonde the see weren many straūgers And at the same tyme whan the Iustes were done kynge Edward made a grete soper in the whiche he ordeyned fyrst began his roūd table ordeyned stedfasted the day of the forsayd roū de table to be holden ther at wyndesore in the wytson weke eumore yerly And in this tyme Englysshmen so moche haūted cleued to the wodenes folye of the straūgers y t fro the tyme of comyng of the henewyers xviij yere passed they ordeyned chaūged hem euery yere dyuerse shappes disguysyng of clothyng of long large and wyde clothes des●…ytut desert from al old honeste good vsage And another tyme short clothes and streyte wastyd dagged kyt on euery syde slatered botened with sleues tapytes of surcotes hodes ouer long ouer moche hangyng that yf that I the soth shal say they were more lyche to tormentours de uels in hir clothyng and shoyng other araye than to men the women more nysely yet passed the men in aray coriousloker for they were so streyt clothed that they lete hange fox tailles sowed bynethe within hir clothes for to hele hyde her arses the which disgnisynges pride parauenture afterward brouȝt forth encau sed many myshappes meschyef in the reame of englond The 〈◊〉 yere of kyng edward he went ouer in to Batayne gascoyn in whos companye went the erle of warwik the erle of suffolk the Erle of huntyngdone therle of arundel many other lordes comyn peple in a grete multitude with a grete nauye of cc xl shippes anone after mydsomer for to auenge hym of many wronges and harmes to hym done by ●…helyp of valoys kynge of fraunce ageynst the trewes byfore hand graunted The whiche trewes he falsely and vntrewely by cauellacions losed dysquatte How kyng Edward sayled in to Normandye and arryued at hogges with a grete hoost Ca●… CC●… xxvij IN the xxj yere of his regne kyng edward thurgh counceylle of all the grete lordes of the Royame of Englond called and gadred to gedre in his parlemēt at westmestre before estren ordeyned hym for to passe ouer the see ayene for to dis sese destrouble the rebelles of fraūce And when his nauye was come to geder made redy he wēt with an huge hoost the xij day of Iuyll and saylled in to normandy arryued at hogges And whan he had rested hym there vj dayes for by cause of trauaylyng of the see and for to haue oute al his men with al hyr necessaryes out of hir shippes he went toward cadomum brēnyng wastyng and destroyeng al the tounes that he founde in his way And the xxvj day of Iuyll at the bridge of Cadony manly orpedly y strengthed defended with nor●…ās he had ther a stronge batayll and a longe duryng thurgh which a grete multitude of peple were slayn And ther were take prisonners the Erle of ewe the lord of Tankeruylle and an C other knyghtes and men of armes vj C footemen y nombred the toune the subarbes vnto the barre walles of al thyng that myght be bore caryed out was robled despoylled Afterward the kyng passyng forth by the coūtre about the brede of xx myle he wasted al maner thyng y t he fonde whan phelyp of valoys parceyued al this al though he were fast by with a strong hoost he wold not come no nerre but breke all the bridges by yonde the water of seyne fro Rone vnto parys And hym self fledde vnto the same cyte of parys with all the hast that he myght Forsoth the noble kyng edward whan he come to parys bridge and fonde it broken within ij dayes be lete make it ageyne And in the morow after the assumpcion of our lady kyng edward passed ouer the water of seyne goyng toward Crescy and destroyed by the way tounes with the peple duellyng ther in And in the fest of saynt bartholomew he passed ouer the water of somme vnhurt with all his hoost ther as neuer byfore hand was ony maner way ne passage wher ij 〈◊〉 were slayne of hem that letted hir passage ouer therfor the xxvj day of August kyng Edward in a felde fast by crescy hauyng iij batayls of en glisshmen countred and met with philip of valoys hauyng with hym iiij bataylles of whiche the leest passed gretely the nōbre of the englysshe peple And whan these two hostes metten to gedre ther fylle vpon hym the kyng of beme the duke of loreyne And Erles also of flaundres Dalaunson Blois Harecourt Aumar le and neuers and many other erles Barons lordes knyghtes and men of Armes the nombre of a 〈◊〉 v C xlij withoute footemen and other men y armed that were nothyng rekened And for alle this the vngloryous ●…hilippe withdrowe hym with the resydue of his peple wherfor it was sayd in comu ne among his owne peple N●…e 〈◊〉 soy retreyt that is for to say our fayr withdrawith hym Than kyng Edward our Englysshmen thāked god almyghty for suche a vyctorye after hir grete labour token to hem al thynge nedefull to hir sustenannce sauyng of hir lyf for drede of hir enemyes rested hem there and full erly in the mornyng after the Frensshmen with an huge pas sing hoost come ayene for to yeue batayll and fyght with the englysshmen with whome metten coūtreden the erles of warrewyke Northampton norfolk with hir companye and slowen two thousand and token many prisoners of the gentils of hem And the remenaunt of the same hoost fledde thre myle thens And the thyrd day after the batayl the kynge wente to Caleys warde destroyeng al the coūtrey as he rode whydder whan that he was come that is for to say the thyrdde day of septembre he began to besiege the toune with the castel continued his syege fro the forsayd thyrd day of September vnto the thyrd day of auguste the next yere after And in the same yere durynge the siege of Caleys the kynge of Scotland with a full grete multitude of Scottes come in to englond to Neuilles crosse aboute saynt lucas day the euangelyst hopyng and trustyng to haue foūde al the lōd destytute voyde of peple for as moche as the kyng of englōd