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A23592 Tabula; Chronicles of England. Higden, Ranulf, d. 1364. Polycronicon. English. Selections.; Trevisa, Johncd. 1402. 1502 (1502) STC 9997; ESTC S121402 469,099 377

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sayd Merlyn y● people that sholde lede the sayd greyhoūde sholde be faderles vnto a certayne tyme soth he sayd For the people of Scotlonde gretly were dysesyd after syr Iohn̄ bayllol was fled And Merlyn sayd the sone sholde become in his tyme as redde as ony blood in tokenynge of grete morta lyte of people And that was knowe wel whan the Scottes were slayne And syth sayd Merlyn y● same dragon shold nourysshe a Fox that sholde meue grete w●re ayenste hym that sholde not in his tyme be ended that semed well by Robert the Brus. that kynge Edwarde nourysshed in his chambre that sythen stale away meued grete werre ayenst hym whiche werre was nott ended in his tyme And yet sayd Merlyn that the dragon shold dep in the marche of an other londe that his londe sholde be longe withoute a goo●● keper And y● men sholde wepe for his de the from the yle of Shephey vnto y● I le of Mercyll wherfore alas shall be theyr songeamonge the comyn people fader les in the lond wastyd And that prophecye was knowe ouer all full well For y● good kynge Edwarde deyed at Burgh vp sandys that is vpon the Marche of Scotlonde where the Englysshmen were dyscomforted and sorowed in Northūberlonde For cause that kynge Edwardes sone set by the Scottes no force for the ryot of Peers of Ganaston wherfore alas was the songe thrughe oute all Englonde for defawte of theyr goode wardeyne from y● I le of Shephey vnto the yle of Marcill the people mad mo the sorowe for good kynge Edwardes dethe ¶ For they wend that gode kyng Edwarde sholde haue gone into the holy londe For y● was hooly his purpoos ¶ Vpon whoo 's soule god for his hygh Ingynyte grace haue mercy ¶ Anno dm̄ M. C.C.lxxxii.ij CElestnꝰ was pope after Nicholas fyue monthes and nothynge noble of hym is writen but that he was a vertuous man ¶ Bonefaciꝰ y● eyghte was pope after hym .viii. yere This bo nifacius was a man in those thynges y● whiche perteyneth to court For he was very experte in suche materes And bycause he had no pere he put noo mesure to his prudence And toke so grete pryde vpon hym y● he sayd he was lord of al y● worlde many thynges he dyd with his myght power y● which fayled wret chydly in y● ende He yaue an ensample to all prelatys that they sholde not be hault ne proude but vnder y● fourme of a very shepeherde of god they sholde more study for to be louyd of ther subgectes than dradde This man is he of whome it is sayd y● he entred as a fox he lyued as a lyon deyed as a dogge ¶ This tyme the yere of grace was ordeyned from an hūdred yere to an hoūdred yere And the fyrst Iubyle was in the yere of our lorde Ihū 〈◊〉 a thousand thre hundred ¶ Benedictus the enleuenth was after Bonefacius enleuēth monthes this mā was an holy man of the ordre of the fre re prechers lytyll whyle lyued b●t dyssessyd anone ADulphus was Emperoure .vi. yeres This man was y● erle of Anorone And this Adulphus was not crowned by the pope for he was slayne in batayll Albertus was Emperoure after hym .x. yere This man was the Duke of Astrye and fyrst was repreued of the pope and after was confermed bi the same pope for the malyces of the kȳke of Fraunce the whiche was an enmy vnto the chirche And to that Alberte the same pope yaue the kyngdome of Fraūce as he dyd other kyngdoms but it proffyted not for at the laste he was slayne of his neuewe ¶ Clemens was pope after Benedictus almooste .ix. yere and he was a grete buylder of castels and other thynges And he dampnyd the ordre of Templaryes he ordeyned the .vii. boke of y● Decretales the whiche be callyd y● questyons of Clementyns And anone after in a counseyll the whiche he helde at Vyenna he reuokyd the same boke y● whiche his successary Iohn̄ callyd ayen in incorporyd it publysshyd it This Clement fyrste of all popes translatyd the popes sete fro Rome to Auinion whether it was doon by the mocion of god or by the boldenes of man dyuers men meruaylle ¶ Iohn̄ the .xxii. was pope after hym .viii. yere This man was all glorious as for those thynges y● were to be vsyd thrughe y● actyf lyfe And he publyshid the Constitucions of y● clementynes sent them to all y● vnyersi tees And many sayntes he canonysed thyse fatte bysshopryches he deuydyd he ordeyned many thynges ayenst y● pluralyte of benefyces many herytykes he dampned but whether he was saued or not our lorde wolde not shewe to those he louyd very well ¶ Henry the .vii. was emperour after Albert .v. yere this Henry was a noble man in werre and he coueytyd too haue peas by londe and water He was a glorious man in batayll And neuer ouercome with enmyes And atte the laste he was poysened of a frere whan that he houselyd hym by receyuynge of the sacrament ¶ Of kynge Edwarde that was kynge Edwardes sone ANd after this kynge Edwarde regned Edwarde his sone that was borne at Carnariuan and this Edwarde wente hym into Fraunce and there he spousyd Isabell the kynges doughter of Fraunce the .xxv. daye of Ianuari atte the chirche of oure Lady atte Boloyne in y● yere of oure lorde Ihū Cryste M.CCC.vii And the .xx. daye of Feuerer the next y●ere that came after he was crownyd solemply at westmestre of the Archebysshop of Caunterbury And the re was so grete presse of people that syr Iohn̄ Bakwell was slayne murdred And anone as the good kynge Edwarde was deed syr Edwarde his sone kȳge of Englonde sent after pers Ganaston into Gascoyne and somoche louyd hym that he callyd hym brother And anone after he yaue vnto hym y● lordshyp of walyngforde it was not longe after y● be ne yaue hym therldom of Cornewayll ayenst all the lordes wyll of Englonde ¶ And tho brought syr walter of lāgeton bysshop of Chestre into pryson duraūce in the toure of London with two knaues alonely hym to serue For y● kynge was wrothe with hym for bycause that syr water made complaynt on hym too his fader wherfore he was put in pryiō in the tyme of Troylebaston y● forsayd Pers of Ganaston made so grete mays tryes y● he went into y● kynges tresory in y● abbay of westmestre toke y● table of golde with y● trestyls of y● same many other ryche Iewels y● sōtyme were y● no gode kynge Arthurs toke them too a marchaūt y● was callyd ameri of Fris cōhande for he sholde bere them ouer y● set into Gascoyne and so he went thēs and they came neuer ayen after wherfore it was a grete losse to this londe And whan this Peers was so rychely auaun syd he became so proude and so stowte wherfore all the greate lordes of
the ●ea me haddthym in dyspyte for his grete berynge wherfore syr Henry Lacy erle of Nicholl syr Guy erle of warwyk the whiche grete lordes the good kynge Edwarde syr Edwardes fader kyng of Englonde chargyd that Peers of Ganaston sholde not come into Englonde for to brynge his sone Edwarde intory of And all the lordes of Englonde assēble● he in a certayn day at the free●pre chers at London And there they spake of the dyshonour that kynge Edwarde dyd to his reame and to his crowne and so they assentyd all bothe erles and barons and all the comyne that the forsa yd Peers of Ganaston sholde be exyled oute of Englonde for euer more and so it was doon For he forswore Englond and went into Irlonde and there the kȳge made hym cheyfteyne and gouernoure of the londe by his commyscion And there this Peers was cheyfteyne of alle the londe And dyd there all that hym likyd and had power what he wolde and that tyme were the templers erylyd thru all cristiantee for bycause that men put vpon theym that they shold do thynges ayenst the fayth and good byleue Kyng Edwarde louyd Peers of Ganaston so moche that he myght not forbere his cōpany And somoche the kynge yaue and behyghte too the people of Englonde y● the exylynge of the forsayd Peers sholde be reuokyd at Stamforde thrugh them that hym had exyled wherfore Peers of Ganaston came ayen into Englonde And whan he was come ayen into his lōde he dyspysed the grettest lordes of this londe And callyd syr Robert Clare Et le of Glouce●re horesone And the Erle of Nicholl syr Henry Lacy brustenbely and syr Guy Erle of Warwyk the blacke hounde of Arderne And also he callyd the noble Erle Thomas of Lancastre churle and many other scornes and shamys them sayd and many other grete lordes of Englonde wherfore they were towarde hym full angry and wrothe and ryghtsore anoyed And in the same tyme deyed the Erle of Nychall But he chargyd or that he was deed Thomas of Lancastre Erle that was his sone in law that he sholde mayntene his quarel ayenste this same Peers of Ganaston vpon his blessynge ¶ And soo it befell thoroughe helpe of the erle Thomas of Lancastre and also of the Erle of Warwyk y● the forsayd syr Peers was herdes at gauersich beside warwyk in y● xix day of Iune in the were of grace M.CCC and .xii. wherfore the kynge was sore anoyed and prayed god that he myght se that day to be auenged vpon the deth of of the forsayd Peers ¶ And so it befell afterwarde as ye shall here Alas the tyme for the forsayd erle of Lancastre many other grete barons were putte to pyteuous deth and martred for cause of the forsayd quarell The kynge was tho at London helde a parlement ordeyned y● lawes of Symonde Moūforde wherfore y● erle of Lancastre the erles all clergye of Englonde made an oth thrugh coūseyle of Robert of wynchelse for to mayntene y● ordynaūces for euer ¶ How Roberte Brus came ayen intoo Scotlonde gadryd a grete power of men for werre vpon kynge Edwarde ANd whan syr Robert the Brus that made hym kynge of Scotlonde that before was fledde into Norway for drede of dethe of the good kynge Edwarde And also he herde of y● debate that tho was in Englonde bytwene the kynge and his lordys he ordeyned an hoste and came into Englonde in to Northumberlonde and cleue dystroyed the countre ¶ And whan kynge Edwarde herde this tydynges he lete assemble his hoste met y● Scottes at Edstreuelyn in y● day of y● Natiuite of saynt Iohn̄ Baptist in y● thirde yere of his regne in y● yere of our lorde M.CCC .xiiij. Alas y● sorowe losse that there was doon For there was slayne y● noble erle Gylbert of clare syr Robert Clyfforde barō the kynge Edwarde was scomfytyd Edmond of maule y● kyngꝭ Steward for drede went drowned hymself in a fresshe ryuer y● is callyd Bānokysborne wherfore they sayd in represys of kynge Edwarde for asmoche as he louyd to go by water also for he was dyscomfyted at Bānokysborne therfore the maydēs made a songe therof in y● coūtree of kȳge Edwarde in this manere they sōge Maydens of Englond sore may ye morne for tyzt haue lost your lēmans at bānokysborne with heuelogh what wenyth y● kynge of Englond to haue gote Scot londe with rombylogh AS kynge Edwarde was dyscoz fyted wonder sore fast he fled with his folke y● were left alyue went vnto Berwyk there helde hym after he toke hostages two chyldren of the rychesse of y● towne And y● kynge went to London toke coūseyll of thynges y● were nedefull to y● reame of Englonde ¶ And in the same tyme it befell y● tho was in Englonde a rybande y● was callyd Iohn̄ Tanner And he yede sayd y● he was y● good kynge Edwardes sone lete hym call Edward of Carnartuā And therfore he was take at Oxforde And there he chalenged frere Carmes chirche y● kynge Edwarde had yeue thē whiche was y● kynges halle And afterwarde was this Iohn̄ lad to Northamp ton drawen hangyd for his falsnesse or y● he was deed he cōfessyd sayd before all tho that were there y● y● deuyll behyght hym that he sholde be kynge of Englōde that he had serued y● deuyll thre yere ¶ How y● towne of Berewyk was take thrugh treason how two Cardynales were robbyd in Englonde ANd on myddyll lent sondaye in the yere of our lorde M.ccc.xvi Berwyk was loste thrugh false treson of one Pers of Spaldynge y● whiche Pe ers y● kynge had put there for to kepe y● same towne with many burgeyses of y● same towne wherfor y● childrē y● were put in hostage thrugh y● burgeyses of Berewyk folowed y● kyngꝭ marchalse mani dayes fettred in strōge yrens And after that tyme came two Cardynalles int●● Englonde as the pope had theym sente for to make peas bytwene Englonde Scotlonde And as they wente towarde Durhā for to haue sacred mayster Low ys of Beamont bysshoppe of Durham they were take robbyd vpon the moore of wynglesdom Of whiche robbery syr Gylbert of mytton was atteynt take and hangyd drawen at London his heed smytte of put vpon a spere set vpon newe gate the foure quarters sēte to foure cytes of Englonde y● same tyme befell many myscheues in Englō de for the pore people deyed in Englonde for hungre and somoche and so faste deyed that vnethe men myght bury thē For a quarter of whese was at .xl. shelynges and two yeres and an halfe a quarter of whete was worth .x. mark and ofttyme the poore people stole chyldren and ete them and ete also the houndes that they myght take and also hors cattes And after there fell a greate murreyne a monge bestes in dyuers coūtres of
kynges steward y● the kynge had sente to Shirborne in Elmede to y● erle of Lancastre to all y● with hym were for to trete of accorde y● hym alyed to y● barons came with y● company syre Roger Dammory syr Hugh Dandale y● had spousyd the kynges neres lyster syr Gylbert of clare erle of Gloucetre y● was slayne in Scotlonde as before is sayd And tho two lordes hadde tho two partyes of y● erldom of Gloucetre syr Hugh Spenser had y● thyrde party in his wyues halfe the tyyrde syster and thoo two lordes wente to the barons with al theyr power ayenst syr Hugh theyr brothere in lawe And soo there came with them syr Robert Clyfforde syr Iohn̄ mōbray syr Goselyn Da●yll syre Rogere Mortymer of werk syr Rogere Mortymer of wykmore his neuewe syr Henry Trals syr Iohn̄ Gyffarde syr Barthil mewe of Bardesmore with all theyr cōpany and many other that to them were consente all y● grete lordes came vnto westmestre to y● kynges parlement And so they spake dyde y● bothe syr Hughe Spenser y● fader also y● sone were out lawed of Englonde for euermore And so syr Hugh y● fader went vnto Douere made moche sorowe fell downe vppon the grounde by y● see banke a crosse with his armes and sore w●pynge sayd Now fayr Englonde good Englond to almyghty god I the betake And ther● es kyssed y● ground venyd neuer to haue come ayen wepynge cursyd y● tyme y● euer he begate syr Hugh his sone and sayd for hym he had lost all Englonde And tho in presence of them all ● were abowte hym yaue hym his curse went ouer see to his londes But Hugh y● sone wolde not go out of Englonde but hel de hym in y●●ee he his company robbyd two drome dores besyde Sand 〈◊〉 toke bare away all y● godes y● was in them to the value of .lx. M.li. ¶ How y● kynge exyled erle Thomas of Lancastre all y● helde with hym how the Mortimer came yelded hym to the kynge and of all the lordes IT was not longe after y● the kȳge ne made syr Hugh Spenser the fader syr Hugh y● sone come ●yen in to Englonde ayenst y● lordes wy●l of the reame And sone after the kynge with a stronge power came and beseged the castell of Ledis and in the castell was y● lady of Bladelesmore for cause the she wolde notte graunte that castell to the quene Isabell kynge Edwardes wyfe but the pryncypall cause was for syrr Berthylme we was ayenste y● kynge and helde with y● lordes of Englond neuertheles the kynge by helpe s●coure of men of London and also of helpe of southeren men gate the castell maugre of thez all that were within and toke with thē all that they myght fynde And whan y● barons of Englonde herde thyse tydynges syr Roger Mortimer many other lordes toke the towne of Burggeworth with strenth wherfore y● kynge was wōder wrothe and lete outlawe Thomas of Lancastre Vmfroy de Bohoun●erle of Herford all tho that were assentȳge to the same quarell And y● kynge assembled an huge hoste came ayenst the lordes of Englonde wherfor y● Mortmers put them in the kynges grace And anone they were sente to y● toure of London there kept in pryson And whan y● barons herde this thyng they came to poūtfret there that the erle Thomas soiourned tolde hym how y● Mortimers both had yelde them to y● kynge put them in his grace ¶ Of the syege of Tykhyll SO whan Thomas erle of Lancastre herde this he was wonder wrothe all that were of ther company greatly they were dyscomfyted and ordeyned ther power togyder besyegyd that castell of Tykhyll but tho that were within manly defended them that the barons myghte not gete the castell whan the kynge herd that his castell was besegyd he swore by god by his names that the sege shold be remeued assembled an huge power of people went thederward to rescowe the castell his power encresyd fro day to day whan the erle of Lancastre the Erle of Herforde the barons of ther cōpany herd of this thynge they assēbled all theyr power went thē too Burtō vpon trent kepte the brydge that the kynge sholde not passe ouer but it befell so on the tenthe daye of Marche in the yere of grace M.CCC.xxi the kȳg and the Spen●er● syr Aymer Valaunce erle of Penbroke Iohn̄ erle of Arun dell theyr power went ouer the water and dyscomfyted therle Thomas and his company And they fled to the castel of Tetbury from thens they went to Pountfret and in that vyage deyed sire Roger Daumore in thabbay of Tetbury And in y● same tyme the erle thomas had a traytour with hym that was callyd Robert Holonde a knyght that the erle had brought vp of nought had nourysshed hym in his butrye had yeue hȳ athousand marke of londe by yere And somoche the erle louyd hym that he myghte do in the erles courte all that hym lyked bothe amonge them hyghe and lowe so craftly the theyf bare hym ayenst his lorde that he trustyd more vpon hym than ony man on lyue and the erle had ordeyned by his letters for to go into the erledome of Lancastre to make men aryse to helpe hym in that vyage That is to saye .v. hundred men of arm ys But the fals traytour came not there noo manere men for to warne ne for to make aryse to helpe his lorde And whan that the fals traytour herde tell that hys lorde was dyscomfyted at Burton vppon Trent as a fals traytour theyf stele away and robbyd in Rauensdele his lordes men y● came fro the scōfyture And toke of thezhors and harneys and all that they had and slewe of them all that they myght take and came and yeldyd hym to the kynge ¶ whan the good erle Thomas wyst that he was so bytrayed he was so abasshed sayd to hymself O almyghty god how myght robert Holonde fȳde in his hert me to betray syth y● I louyd hym so moche O god well maye now a man se by hym that no man may dysceyue a nother rather thā he that he trustyth moost vpō he hath full euyll yeldyd me mi goodnes the worshyp y● I haue to hym done thrugh my kyndnesse haue hym auauncyd and made hym hyghe where that he was low And he makyth me go from hyghe vnto lowe but yett shall he deye an euyll dethe ¶ Of the scomfyture of Brurbrygge THe good erle Thomas of Lancastre Hūfroy de Bohoune erle of Herford the barons that with theym were toke coūsell bytwene thē at y● frere prechers in Poūtfret tho thought Thomas vpon y● traytour Robert Holonde sayd in repreyf Alas Robert Holond hathe me betrayed aye is y● red of some euyll shred And by y● comyn assent
they sholde all go to y● castell of Dunstanbrughe y● whiche perteyned to therldo●● of Lancastre that they shold abyde ther tyl that the kynge had foryeue them his male talent ¶ But whan y● good erle Thomas this herde he answerd in this manere sayd Lordes sayd he yf we go towarde y● North y● Northen men woll saye that we go towarde the Scottes so we shall be holden traytours for cause of dystaūce that is bytwene kyng Edwarde and Robert the Brus that made him kynge of Scotlonde And therfore I say as touchynge myselfe that I wylle not go no ferder into the North than to mȳ owne castell at Poūtfret ¶ And whan syr Roger Clyfford herde this he arose vp anone in wrathe drewe his swerde on hygh swore by god almyghty and by his holy names but yf that he wolde go with them he sholde hym slee there the noble gentyll erle Thomas of Lācastre was sore aferde sayd Fayr syres I wyll goo with you whether some euere ye me bydde Tho went they togyder in to the north and with them they hadde vii C. mē of armys came to Burbrig And whan syr Andrew of Herkela that was in the north coūtree thrugh ordynaūce of y● kynge for to kepe y● countree of Scotlonde herde tell howe that Thomas of Lancastre was scōfyted and his company at Burton vpon trent be ordened hym a stronge power and sy● symonde warde also that was tho the shyref of Yorke and met the barons at burbrugge anone they brake the brydge that was made of tree ¶ And whan syr Thomas of Lancastre herde y● syr Andrewe of Herkela had broughte with hym suche a power he was sore adrad sent for syr Andrewe of Herkela with hȳ spake sayd to hym in this manere syr Andrewe sayd he ye may well vnderstōde that our lorde that kynge is ladde mysgouerned by moche fals coūsell thrugh syr Hugh Spenser y● fader syr Hugh his sone syr Iohn̄ erle of Arūdell thrugh mayster Roberte Baldok a fals pyllyd clerke that now is in y● kynges come dwellynge wherfore I praye you that ye wylle come with vs with all your power that ye haue ordeyned and helpe to dystroye the venym of Englond the traytours that ben therin we wyll yeue vnto you all the best parte of fyue Erldoms that we haue holde we wyll make vnto you an othe that we wyll neuer do thynge with out your counsell so ye shall be eft as well with vs as euer was Robert Holonde Tho answerd syr Andrew of Herkela sayd syr Thomas that wolde not I do ne consent therto for no manere thynge with out the wyll cōmaūdemēt of our lorde y● kynge for thē shold I be holden a tratour for euer more And whan that y● noble erle Thomas of Lācastre saw y● he wolde not consent to hȳ for no maner thȳg syr Andrew he sayd wyll ye not cōsente to dystroye the venymme of the reame as we be consente atte one worde Syr Andrewe I tell the that are this yere begoon that ye shall be take and holde for a traytour more than ony of you holde vs nowe and in worse dethe ye shall deye than e●er dyd ony knyghte of Englonde And vnderstonde welle that ye dyde neuer thynge That sorer ye shall you repente And now go and doo what you good lykyth and I wyll put me into the mercy of god And so went y● fals traytour tyraūt as a fals forsworn man For thrugh the noble Erle Thomas of Lancastre he receyued y● armys of chyualrye thrughe hym he was made a knyghte Tho myghte men see archers draw them in y● one syde in that other knyghtes also and fought tho togyder wonder sore And also amonge al other Humfroy de Boughon erle of Herforde a worthy knyght of renoune thrugh out all cristendome stode fought with his enmyes vppon y● brydge and as the noble lorde stode fought vpon the brydge a theyf rybaude sculkyd vnder y● brydge and fyersly with a spere smote the noble knyght into y●●ūdement so that his bowellys came out aboute his fete ther. Alas for sorow pyte For there was slayne the floure of solace of comforth also of curteysye ¶ And syr Roger Clyfforde a noble a worthy knyghte stode euer fought well and worthyly hym defended as a noble baron But atte the laste he was sore woundyd in his heed And syr wyllyam of Sullayande syr Roger of Benefelde were slayne at that batayll whan syr Andrewe of Herkela saw that syr Thomas men of Lancastre lassed and slakyd anone he and his company came vnto the gentyll knyght syr Thomas layd vnto hym in an hygh voyce Yelde the traytour yelde the. The gentyll erle Thomas of Lancastre answerd thenne and sayd Nay lordes traitours we ben none and to you we wyll neuer vs yelde whyle that our lyues last But leuer we hadde to be slayne in our truth than yelde vs vnto you And syre Andrewe ayen gardyd vppon syr Thomas and his company yellynge and crienge lyke a wode wulf yelde you traytours taken yelde you and sayd with an hyghe voys Beware syres that none of you be so hardy vppon lyfe and lymme tomysdo Thomas body of Lancastre And with that worde the good erle thomas yede into the castell and sayd knelynge vpon his knees and torned his vysage towarde the crosse sayd almyghty god to the I yelde holy I putte me vnto thy mercy and with that the vylaines and rybaudes lept abowte hym on euery syde as tyraūtes and wood tormētours dyspoyled hym of his armoure and clothed hym in a robe of ray that was of his squyres lyueray and forthe ladde hym vnto Yorke by water Tho myght men see moche sorowe and care For the gentyll knyghtes fledde on euery syde the rybaudes and the vyllayns egerlye th●● dyscryed cryed on hygh yeld you traytours yelde you whan they were yelden they were robbyd and boūden as theuys Alas the shame and dyspyte that the gentyll ordre of knyghthode had there at that batayll And the lōde was tho without lawe For holy chirche had tho nomore ereuerence than it had be a burdell hous And in that batayll was the fader ayenst the sone● and the vncle ayēst the neuewe For somoche vnkyndnesse was neuer seen before in Englonde as was that tyme amonge folkes of one nacyon For one kynred had no more pyte of that other than an hungry wulf hath of a shepe And it was no wonder For the greate lordes of Englonde were not all of one nacyon but were medlyd with othere nacyons That is for to saye some Brytons some Saxons some Danys some Pehypes some Frensshemen some Normans some Spanyerdes some Romayns some Henaude soom Flemynges and othere dyuers nacyons the whyche nacyons accordyd notte too the kynde bloodeof Englonde And yf so greate lordes
had be ●only weddyd to Englysshe people Thenne sholde peas haue ben and reste amonge theym without ony enuye And at that batayll was roger Clyfforde take syr Iohn̄ Monbrey syr wyllyam Tuc● it syr wyllyam fitz wyllyam and many other worthy knyghtes there were take at that batayll syr Hugh Dandell nexte daye after was taken and put into pryson sholde haue be doon to dethe yf he had not spousyd the kynges nece that was erle Gylbertes systre of Gloucestre anone after was syr Berthylmewe of Badelesmore takē at Stow parke a maneyr of y● bysshop of Lyncoln that was his neuewe many other barons baronettes wherfor was made noche sorowe ¶ How Thomas of Lancastre was hee dyd at Pountfret .v. barons hangyd and drawen there ANd now I shall telle you of the noble erle Thomas of Lancastre whan he was take brought to yorke many of y● cyte were full gladde and vpon hym cryed with an hygh voys O syre traytoure ye be welcome blessyd be god for now ye shall haue y● rewarde y● longe ye haue deserued And cast vpon hym many snowe balles many other repreues they dyd hym But the gentyll erle al suffred sayd nother o word nor other ¶ And at the same tyme the kynge herde of this scomfyture was ful glad Ioyous in grete haste came to Poūtfret syr Hughe Spenser syr Hughe his sone and syr Iohn̄ erle of Arundell and syr Edmonde of wodestoke the kȳges brother erle of Kent syr Aymer of Valaunce erle of Penbroke and mayster Robert Baldoke a fals pyllyd clerke that was pryue and dwelled in the kynges court all came theder with the kynge And the kynge entryd into the castell syr andrew of Herkela a fals tyraunte thrugh the kynges cōmaundement toke with hym the gentyll erle Thomas too Pountfret and ther he was prysoned in his owne castell that he had newe made that stode ayenst the abbaye of kynge edwarde ¶ And syr Hugh Spenser y● fader and the sone caste and thought howe in what manere the good erle Thomas of Lancastre sholde be deed without Iu gement of his perys wherfore it was ordeyned thrugh the kynges Iusticys that the kynge sholde put vpon hym poyntes of treason And so it befell that he was ledde to barre before the kynges Iustices bareheed as a theyf in a fayre halle in his owne castell that he hadd made therin many a fayre feste bothe to ryche too poore ¶ And these were his Iustices syr Hughe Spenser the fader Aymer of Valaunce erle of Penbroke syr Edmonde of wodstok erle of Kent syr Iohn̄ of Brytayne erle of Rychemonde syr ●obert Malemethrop Iustyce syr Robert hym acouspyd in this manere ¶ Tho●mas court excludeth you of all manere answer Thomas our lorde the kynge puttyth vpon you that ye haue in his lond ryden with baner dysplayed ayenst hys peas as a traytour ¶ And with y● word the gentyll erle Thomas with an hygh voyce sayd Nay lordes forsoth by ●aynt Thomas I was neuer traytoure ¶ The Iustice sayd ayen tho Thomas our lorde the kynge puttythe vpon you that ye haue robbyd his folke and murdred his people as a theyf Thomas also the kynge puttythe vpon you that he dyscomfyted you and your people with his folke in his owne reame● wherfore ye went and fledde to the woode as annutlaw and Thomas as a traytoure ye shall be hangyd by reason but the kynge hath foryeuen you y● Iugemente● for loue of quene Isabell. And Thomas reson wolde that ye sholde be hangyd but y● kynge hath foryeue you y● Iugemēt for by cause and loue of your lygnage But for asmoche Thomas as ye were taken fleenge and as an outlawe the kynge woll that your heed shall be smyten of Anone haue hym out of pre●s brynge hym to hys Iugement ¶ whan thelgen tyll knyght Thomas had herde all thyse wordes with an hygh voyce he cryed sore wepynge and sayd alas saynt Thomas fayr fader alas shall I be deed thꝰ Graunte me nowe blessydfull god answere But all auayled hym no thynge For y● cursyd Gascoyns put hym hyther thyther on hym cryed with an hyghe voys O kynge Arthur moost terryble dredefull well knowen shewed nowe is thyne open traytour And an euyll dethe shalt thou ryghte anone deye ▪ Haste thou not ryghte well deserued it ¶ And thenne thyse cruell folke sette vpon the gode knyght Thomas for very scorne an olde chaplet that was all to rent that was not worth an halfe peny And after that they sette hym vpon a white palfroy ful vnsemely and also all bara with an olde brydell And with an horryble noyse they draue hym out of the castell towarde his dethe and they caste vppon hym many balles of snow in dyspyte and as the traytours lad hym out of the castell tho sayd he these pyteous wordes hys hondes helde vp on hygh towarde heuē Now the kynge of heuen yeue vs merci for the erthly kynge hath vs forsaken a frere precher went with hym out of y● castell tyll he came to the place that he ended his lyfe vnto whome he shroue hym all his lyfe And the gentyll erle helde y● frere wonder faste by the clothes sayd to hym Fayr fader abyde with vs tyll that I be deed for my flesshe quakyth for drede of dethe ¶ And the sothe for to saye The gentyll erle set hym vpon his knees and torned hym towarde the eest but a rybaude that was called Hygone of mostoon sette honde vpon the gentyll Erle sayd in dyspyte of hym Syr traytour torne the towarde the Scottes thy fowle dethe to receyue torned towarde the North. The noble erle Thomas answered tho with a mylde voys sayd nowe fayr lordes I shall do your wyll with that worde the frere went from hym sore wepynge And anone a rybaude went to hym smote of his heed the .xi. Kalendas of Auerell in the yere of grace M.CCC.xxi ¶ Alas that euer suche a gentyll blood sholde be don to deth withouten cause and reason And traytoursly the kynge was coūseylled whan he thrugh the fals counseylle of the Spensers suffred syr Thomas his vncles sone to be put to suche a dethe and so be beheeded ayenst all manere of reason And greate pyte it was also that suche a noble kynge sholde be dysceyued and mysgouerned thrugh counseyll of the fals Spensers the whiche tho he mayntened thrughe loselry ayenst his honour and alsoo his proffyte For afterwarde ther fell grete vengaunce in Englonde for bycause of the forsayd Thomas deth ¶ Whane the gentyll erle of his lyfe was passyd y● pryour and the monkys of Pounfret gate the body of syr Thomas of the kyng buryed it before the hyghe awter on y● ryght syde ¶ That same day that thys gentyll knyght was dede were hangyd drawen for the same quarell at Poūtfret syr wyllyam Tuchet syr
doon to deth at London But he was so feble for his moche fastynge that he was nyghe deed therfore it was ordeyned that he sholde haue his Iugement at Herforde at a place of the toure his heed was take frome his body alsoo fro Roberte Baldok that was a fals pylled clerk y● kynges chaūceler And men sette vpon theyr heedys chaplettys of sharpe nettles two squyres blewe in therecrys with two greate bugle hornes vpon the two prysoners that me● myght here ther. blowen oute with homes more than a myrle one Symōd of Rydynge y● kyngꝭ Marshall bare be fore them vpon a spere ther armys reuersyd in token y● they sholde be vndon foreuermore And vpon y● morowe was syr Hugh Spēser y● sone dampned to dethe was drawen hangyd heedyd hys bowels taken out of his body brent after that he was quartred his foure quarters were sente to the foure townes of Englonde his heed sente to London brydge And this Symond for cause y● he dyspysed quene Ysabell he was drawen and hangyd in a stage made a myddes y● forsayd syr Hughes galowes And y● same daye a lytyll frō thens was syr Iohn̄ of Arundell behcedyd bycause he was one of syr Hugh Spensers coūselers And anone after was syr Hughe Spenser fader hangyd and drawen hedyd at Brystow after hangyd ayeby the armys with two stronge ropes the fourth daye after he was hewen all to pecys houndes ete hym And bycause y● the kynge had yeuen hym y● erldom of wynchestre his heed was sent thether put vpon a spere And y● fals Baldok was sente to London ther he deyed in pryson amonge theues for men dyd hȳ 〈…〉 than they wolde 〈◊〉 vnto an hounde And so deyed the traytours of Englonde blessyd be almyghti god And it was no wonder for thrughe ther coūsell y● good erle Thomas of Lacastre was doon vnto dethe all y● held with Thomas of Lancastre thrugh the tratours were vndone all theyr heyres dysheryted ¶ Howe kynge Edwarde was put downe his dygnyte take from hym ANd andne after as all this was doon the quene Ysabell and Edwarde her sone all the grete lordes of Englonde at one assente sent to kynge Edwarde to the castell of Kenylworthe there as he was in kepynge vnder y● warde of syr Iohn̄ Hachin that was the bysshop of Ely and of syr Iohn̄ of Pereye a baron for bycause that he sholde ordeine his parlement at a certayne place in Englonde for to redresse and amende y● state of the reame And kynge Edwarde them answerde and sayd Lordes said he ye se full well how it is Loo here my seale and I gyue to you all my power for to calle ordeyne a parlement where that ye wylle ¶ And thenne they tooke theyr leue of hym and came ayen to the barons of Englonde And whanne thei hadde the kynges Patent of this thynge they shewed it to the lordes And the was ordeyned that the parlement shold be at westmestre at y● Vtas of saynt Hylari And all the grete lordes of Englonde lete ordeyned theym there ayenst that tyme that the parlement sholde be And atte whiche daye she parlement was the kynge wolde not come there for no m●nere of thynge as he had set hymself assygned And netheles the barons se●● vnto hymoo tyme other And he ●were by goddyss oute y● he wolde not come ther do fote wherfor it was ordey●ed by all the greate lordes of Englonde that he sholde no lenger be kyng but be dep● 〈◊〉 And sayd y● they wolde crowne Edwarde his sone y● elder y● was the duke of Guyhenne And sente tydynges v● to the kynge there y● he wa in warde vnder syr Iohn̄ erle of Garen syr Iohn̄ of B●thu● y● was bysshop of Ely and syr henry Percy a baron syr wyllyam Trussell a knyghte y● was with y● Erle syr Thomas of Lancastre for too yelde vp ther homages vnto hym for all thez of Englonde ¶ And syr wyllyā Trussell sayd thyte wordes ¶ Syr Edward for cause y● ye haue trayed youre people of Englonde haue vndone many grete lordes of Englonde withoute ony cause ye shall be deposyd now ye be withstand thankyd be god And also for cause y● ye wold not come to the parlement asye ordeyned at westmestre as in your letter patent ●●is conteyned for to treate with youre owne lyege men as a kynge sholde And therfor thrughall the comȳs ass●●●e all the lordes of Englonde I tell vnto you these wordes Ye shall vnderstande syr y● the barons of Englond at one assente wylle that ye be no more kynge oh Englond but vtterly haue put you o ute of your cryalte foreuer more And the bysshop of Ely sayd tho to the kyng Syr Edwade Iyelde vp feaute homage for all y● archebysshops bysshops of Englōd for all y● clergy Tho sayd syr Iohn̄ erle of Garenne● Syr Edwarde Iyelde vp here vnto you feaute homage for me and for all the erles of Englonde ¶ And syre Henry Percy yaue vp also his homage for hym for all y● barons of Englond And tho sayd syr wyllyam Trussell Iyelde vp nowe vnto you myn homage for me also for all the knyghtes of Englonde for all them that holde by seryauntre or by on● other thynge of you so y● from this day after ye shall not be clamyd kynge nother for hynge be holde but from this tyme afterwarde ye shall be holde for a sȳ guler man of all the people ¶ And soo they wente ●●ens too London ther● that the lordes of Englonde them abode syr Edwarde abode in pryson in goode kepynge And this was on the daye of y● Conuers●an of saynt Poule in the .xx. yere of his regne ¶ Of the prophecye of Merlyndedare ● uf kynge Edwarde the sone of kynge Edwarde the fyrste OF this kynge Edwarde prophecy ed Merlyn● sayd y● there sholde come a gote out of Carre y● sholde haue hornes of syluer a berde as where as snowe And a drope sholde come out of his nosethrylles that shold betoken mo the harme Hungre and dethe of people grete losse of his londe And 〈…〉 gynnynge of his regne sholde be haū●●d moche lechery And he sayd sothe alas y● tyme For kynge Edwarde y● was 〈◊〉 Edwardes sone was boine at Ca●naryuaun in walys forsothe he had homes of syluer and a berde as wh●●e as ●n we Whan he was made prynce of walys to moche he yaue hym to tyot and too toly And sothe sayd Merlyn in his prophery that there sholde come out of his ●ose a deope For in his tyme was grete hunger amonge the poo●e people strongr dethe amonge the ryche y● deyed in strannge londe with moche sorow in werre in Scotlonde And after he lost Scotlond and Gascoyne whyle that hymselfe was kynge there was moche lechery 〈◊〉 tyd ¶ And also Merlyn tolde and sayd that
Englond y● was borne in Yorke shyre that was callyd Iohn̄ of Barnaby this edwarde Bayllol louyd hym moche and was nyghe hȳ full preuy And so this Iohn̄ of Barnaby was in debate with a Frenche man in the towne of Dūpier so he slewe hym went his way in all the haste y● he myght into the castell for too haue socoure helpe of his lorde And a none came the offycers of the towne to take Iohn̄ of Barnaby as a felon and syr Edwarde his lorde holpe hym and rescowed hym by nyght made hym go out of the castell so he went his waye and came into Englonde withoute ony harme ¶ And whan y● kynge of Fraūce sawe y● syr Edwarde had rescowed hys felon he became wonder wrothe ayenstetyr Edwarde anone lete hym arestyd toke into his hondes all his londes Tho dwellyd syr Edwarde in pryson vnto y● tyme y● syr Henry of Beaumont came into Fraūce y● whiche Henry somtyme waserle of Anguysshe in Scotlon de and was put out therof whan thacordement was bytwene Englonde scotlonde thrugh y● quene Isabell syr Roger Mortimer their cōpany for y● mariage y● she made bytwene Dauyd that was Roberte Brussone dame Iohan of Tour kynge Edwards syster of Englonde well vnderstode this that at y● ende he sholde come to his ryght butyf it were syr Edwarde Bayllol that was ryghte htyre of the reame of Scotlonde ¶ And the kynge of Fraunce Lowyslsuyd moche this syr Henry And he was with hy● full preuy and thought for to make a delyuer a●mie of syre Edwarde Bayllof yf he myght in ony manere of wyse ¶ Tho prayed he the kynge that he wolde of his grac● graunte hym sy●● Edwarde Bayllols body vnto the next parlement y● he myght lyue with his owne rentes in y● meane tyme y● he myght stonde to be Iugyd with his perys at the parlement And y● kynge graūtyd hym his prayer made y● forsayd Edwarde to be delyuered out of pryson in y● manere aboue sayd anone as he was out of pryson syr Henry toke hym forth with hym ladde hym into Englonde made hym dwelle pryuely at the maneer of Sandhall vpon Ouse in yorke shyre with the lady Vescy And so he ordeyned hun there an huge retenew of Englysshmen and also of alyauntes for too conquere ayen his herytage and so he yaue moche syluer vnto y● souldyours and alyauntes for to helpe hym And they behyght for to helpe hym in y● they myghte but they faylled hym at his moost nede ¶ And at y● tyme Dauyd erle of Moryf herde telle how that syr Edwarde Bayllol was priuely come in to Englonde And came to hym and made with hym greate Ioy of his comynge sayd vnto hym behyght hym that all y● greate lordes of Englonde sholde be to hym entendaūte shold hym holde for kynge as ryght heyre of Scotlonde and dyd to hym feaute ¶ Tho came syr Henry of Beaumōte to kynge Edward of Englonde and prayed hym in y● way of charytee that he wolde graūt of his grace vnto syred warde Bayllol y● he myghte saufly goo by londe from Sandhall vnto● Scotlōde to conquere his ryght herytannce in scotlonde ¶ The kynge answerde and sayd yf that I suffre Bayllol go thrughe my londe into Scotlonde then the people wolde saye y● I sholde be assentȳge vnto y● company ¶ Now syr I praie you y● ye wolde yeue hym leue to take with hym souldyours of Englysshmen that they myght saufly lede hym thrugh your londe to Scotlonde And syr vpon thys couenaunt y● yf it so befall as god it forbydde that he be dyscomfyted in batayll thrugh the Scottes that I and also all the lordes that holde with Bayllol ben for euer more out of our rentes y● we haue in Englonde And there the kynge vppon this couenaunt grauntyd theyr bone as towchynge hym tho that were of the same quarell the whiche claymed for to haue londes and rentes in the reame of Englonde And thyse were y● names of those lordes that pursued this forsayd matere and quarell ¶ That is to saye Syre Edwarde Bayllol the whiche chalengyd the reame of Scotlonde ▪ syr Henry Beaumont erle of Ang●●●she syr Dauyd of Stroboly erle of atheles syr Geffray of Mombraye walter Comyn and many other that were put out of theyr herytage in scotlonde whan the peas was made bytwene Englonde and Scotlonde as before is sayd And ye shall vnderstonde that thyse sordes toke with theym fyue hundred men of armes and two thousande artbers and of fote men and tho went into shyppe atte Raue●spore sayled by the see tyl that they came vnto Scotlond came to lōde at Kynkehorne .xii. myle fro saynt Iobannes towne And anone sent out the●shyppes agayne for that they sholde not be hurte ne empeyred neyther that noo man sholde go in to the shyppes agayn though that they had nede but abyde alperylles not flee but stonde rather suffre dethe than flee for too mayntene theyr true quarell whan y● erle of Fysse a fyers man a sterne herde y● Bayllol was come for to take y● londe of scotlōde he came in hast to Kynkeborne with xii thousande Scottes for to dyshoye hym that he sholde not come to londe But syr Edwarde Bayllol and his cōpany there hym dyscomfyted at the whiche dyscomfyture syr Alysander Scton was there slayne and many other The erle of Fyffe was tho sore and full ruyl ashamyd that so lytyll a company bad hym dyscomfyted and shamefully putt hym all his company that were alyue for too flee ¶ Tho came syr Edwarde Bailloll toke the countree all aboute hym tyll he came vnto the abbay of Dūfermlin there he founde vitaylles for hym and for his folke and amonge all other thyng he fonde in a chambre aboute fyue hūdred of grete staues of fyue oke with longe pryckes of yren and of stele And he toke them and delyuerd them to y● moste strongest men of his companye And anone after he yede fro thens and lodged hym in a felde .ii. myles from saynt Iohannes towne And whan the burgeys of the towne herde how the erle of Fyffe was dyscomfyted thrughe Baylloll brake the brydges that they had made ouer the water of Erne so that Bailloll myght not go ouer wherfore he lodged hym there all that nyght but lytyllhede he toke of reste and sayde vnto his people Nowe dere lordes ye knowe full well y● we ben now lodged bytwene our enmyes and they may vs hampre there is no bote but deth wherfore yf we abyde styll all this nyght I wene it shal torne vs to moche harme For the power of Scotlonde may euery wexe and encre●e and we may not so do And we ben but lytyll people as ayenst theym Wherfore I pray you for the loue of almyghty god make we vs bolde and hardy and that we may myghtely take the Scottes this nyghte and boldly
the reame of Englonde And y● tyme abode the scottꝭ in y● other syde for cause y● the Englysshmen shold haue be drowned ¶ This was the araye of the Scottes how that they came in batayll ayenst y● two kynges of Englonde and of Scotlonde In the vaunt warde of Scotlonde were thyse lordes THerle of Moryf Iamys Frysell Symond Frysell walter Stewarde Reynolde Cheyn Patryk of Greham Iohn̄ le graūt Iamys of Cordoll Patryk Parkeys Robert Caldecottes Philyp of Melledrū Thom̄s Gylbert Rauf wyseman Adam gurdon Iamis Gramat Robert Bo●d Hugh Park with xl knyghts new dubbyd vi Cmē of atmes .iii. M. of comyns In y● fyrst parte of ●halfe batayll were thyse lordes y● Steward of Scotlonde y● erle of Mory Iamys his vncle wyllyā Douglas Dauyd of Lyndesey Marcolyn Flemynge wyllyam of Keth Dn̄ken Canbok with xxx bachelers newe dubbyd ¶ In the seconde parte of y● batayll were thyse lordes Iamis Stewarde of Corden Alem Stewarde wyllyam Abbrehin wyllyā Morys Iamys Fytzwyllyam Adam lemose walter Fytz. Gylbert Iohn̄ of cerleton Robert wallam with .vii. C men of armes .xvii. M. comyns ¶ In y● third parte of y● batayll of Scotlonde were thise lordes The erle of Moref the erle of Ruf therle of Strahern y● erle of Soth erlond wyllyam of Kyrkkelay Iohn̄ cā●●● Gylbert of Hey Wyllyam ramsey wyllyam Prendrgest Kyrston Harde Wyllyam Gurde Arnolde Garde Thomas Dolphyn with .xl. knyghtes newe bubbyd .ix. C. men of armys .xvM. of comyns ¶ In the fourth warde of y● batayll of Scotlonde were thyse lordꝭ Archbalde Douglas y● erle of Leneuax Alysander le Brus. y● erle of Fyff Iohn̄ Canbell erle of Atheles Roberte Lawether wyllyam of Vypount wyllyam of Constō Iohn̄ de Labels Groos de She renlaw Ihon̄ de Lyndesey Alysander de Gray Ingram de Vmfteuille Patryk●de Pole●worthe Dauyd de wymes Mychell Scot. wyllyam Landy Thomas de Boys Roger Mortimer with .xx. bachlers newe dubbyd .ix. C men of armys xviii M. iiii C. of comyns The Erle of Dunbar keper of y● castell of Berewyk halpe the Scottes with .l. men of armys ¶ And syr Alysander of Ceton keper of y● forsayd towne of Berewyk with an C. men of armys And also the comyns of the towne with .iiii. C men of armys and with .viii. C of fote men ¶ The sōme of therles lordes aboue sayd amounteth .lxvi. ¶ The sōme of bachlers newe dubbyd amounteth to an C.lx. ¶ The sōme of men of armys amounteth .iii. M.C. ¶ The sōme of the comyns amounteth liii M. .iii. C The sōme totalle of the people abouesayd a mounteth .lxv. M.vii C.xlv And thyse lx .vi. greate lordes ladde all the other greate lordes abouesayd in foure bataylles as it is tolde beforen all on fore and kynge Edwarde of Englonde and Edwarde Baylloll kynge of Scotlonde hadde well appareylled they re folke in foure bataylles for too fyght on fote ayenst the Scottes theyr enmyes ¶ And the Englysshe mystrels blewe theyr trūpets and theyr claryons and hydously ascryed the Scottes And tho had euery Englysshe batayll two wynges of price archers The which at that batayll shot arowes so fast so sore that y● Scottes myght not helpe themself And the● 〈◊〉 the Scottes thousandes vnto he groūde And they began for to flee fro the englysshmen for too saue theyr lyues And whane the Scottes knaues saw y● scomfyture the Scottes fall faste to y● groūde they pryckyd fast theyr maysters horse with y● sporys for to kepe theym from peryll sette theyr maysters at no force And whan thenglysshmen sawe y● they lept on theyr horses faste pursued the scottes all that abode they slewe downe ryghte ¶ There men myghte see the doughtynesse of y● noble kynge Edwarde of his men how manly they pursewed y● Scottes y● flow for drede And the remen myght see many a Scottysshmā caste downe vnto y● groūde the baners dysplayed hackyd into peces many agode haberyoyne of stele in y● blode bath And many a tyme y● Scottes were gadred into companyes but euer more thei were dyscomfyted ¶ And so it befell as god almyghty wolde that the Scottes had that daye nomore foyson ne myght ayenst the Englysshmen than .xx. shepe amonge .v. vulues And so were y● scottes dyscōfyted yet the scottes was wel v. men ayenst one Englysshman And y● batayll was done on Halidoune hyll be syde y● towne of Berwyk atte y● whiche batayll were slayne of the Scottes .xxxv tousande .vii. hundred and .xii. And of y● Englysshmen but only .xiii. And thys vyctory befell too the Englysshmen on saynt Margaretes euen y● holy vyrgyn martyr in the yere of oure lorde Ihe●n Crist M.CCC.xxxii ¶ And while this doynge lastyd the Englyssh pages toke the pylfre of the Scottes that were slayne euery man that he myght take without ony chalengynge of ony man And so after this gracyous vyctory the kyng tornyd hym agayne vnto the same syege of Berewyk ¶ And whanne they be syeged sawe and herde howe kynge Edwarde hadde spedde they yelded to him the towne with the castell on y● morow after saynt Margaretes daye ¶ And thenne the kynge dydde ordeyne syr Edwarde Bayllol with othere noble and worshypfull men too be kepets and gouernoures of all Scotlonde in his absence And hymselfe torned ayen and came into Englonde after this vyctorye with moche Ioy and also worshyp and in the nexte yere folowynge after that is for to saye in the yere of the Inca●acyon of oure lorde Ihesu Cryst M.CCC xxxiii And of kynge Edward .vii he wente ayen into Scotlonde in wynter tyme Atte the whiche vyage the castell of kylbrygge in Scotlonde for hym and for hys men that were with hym he recouered and hadde ayenste the Scottes 〈◊〉 atte his owne luste ¶ And in that same yere syre Edwarde Baylloll kynge of Scotlonde helde his parlement in 〈◊〉 londe with many noble lordes of Englonde that were atte that same parlement bycause of theyr londes and also lordshyps that they had in the reame of Scotlonde And helde alle of the same Bayllol ¶ And in the .viii. yere of hysregne abowte the feest of saynt Iohan Baptist syr Edwarde Bayllol the ver 〈◊〉 and true kynge of Scotlonde as by herytage ryghte lyne made his homage feaute vnto kynge Edwarde of Englonde for y● reame of Scotlond at new castell vpon Tyne in y● presence of many a worthy man and alsoo of comyns bothe of the reame of Englonde and also of Scotlonde ¶ And anone after in the same yere kynge Edwarde of Englonde receyued of the duke of Brytayne his homage for the erldom and lordshyp of Rychmonde And so folowynge in the .ix. yere of his regne after Myghelmas rode into Scotlond and there was faste by saynt Iohannes towne almoste all the wynter tyme And soo be helde hys Crysteman atte the castell of Rokesbourgh ¶ And in the same yere thrughe out all Englond abowte saynt Clementys tyde in wynter ¶ There arose suche
the fyue lordes arosen at Rattecote brydge ANd in the regne of kyng Richarde the .xi. yere thenne fyue lordes arosen at Rattecote brydge in y● destruccyon of the rebelles y● were that tyme in all the reame ¶ The fyrste of these fyue lordes was syr Thomas of wodstok the kynges vncle duke of Gloucestre and the seconde was syr Rycharde erle of Arundell and the thyrde was syr Rycharde erle of warwyk the fourth was syr Henry Balynbrok erle of Derby y● fyfte was syr Thomas Mombray erle of Notyngham And these .v. lordes saw the myschyef mysgouernaūce and the falsnes of y● kynges counseyll wherfore they y● were that tyme cheyf of y● kynges counseyll fledde out of this londe ouer se that is to saye syr Alysander Neuell the Archebysshop of yorke and syr Roberte Lewe marqueyes of Deuelyne and erle of Oxforde and syr Mychell de la pole erle of South folk Chaūceler of Englonde And these thre lordes went ouer see and came neuer ayen for there they deyed ¶ And than these fyue lordes aboue sayd made a parlemente at westmynster and there they toke syr Robert Tresaly am the Iustyce and syr Nicholl Brembre knyght and cytezeyn of London and syr Iohn̄ Salesbury a knyghte of y● kȳges housholde vske sergeaūt of armes and many moo of other people were taken and Iuged vnto the dethe by y● counseyll of these .v. lordes in that parlement at westmynster for y● treason y● they putt vpon theym to be drawen frome y● toure of London thrugh out the cyte so forth vnto Tyburne there they sholde be haged and theyr throtes to be cutte thus they were serued deyed And after that in this same parlement at westmynster was syr Symond Beuerle y● was a knyght of the garter and syre Iohn̄ Beauchamp knyght that was stewarde of y● kynges housholde syr Iamys Berners were for Iuged vnto the dethe and than they were ledde on fote to the toure hylle there were theyr hedes smyten of and many other moo by these .v. lordes ¶ In this same parlement and in y● 〈◊〉 yere of kynge Rychardꝭ regne he lete 〈◊〉 ordeyne a generall Iustes y● is called a turnement of lordes and knyghtes And this Iustes turnement were holden at London in smythfelde of all manere of straūgers of what londe or coūtre y● euer they were thyder they were ryght welcome to thē to all other was holden open housholde grete festes also grete gyftes were gyuen too all manere of straungers And of the kynges syde were all of one sute their cotes ther armure sheldes hors trappure and all was white hertes with crownes about theyr neckes and chaynes of golde hangynge ther vppon and the crowne hangyng lowe before the hertes body the whiche herte was the kynges leueraye that he gaaf to lordes and ladyes knyghtes and squyres for to knowe his housholde frome other peple And in this feest camen to y● Iustes xxiiii ladyes and ledde .xxiiii. lordes of y● garter with chaynes of golde and all y● same sutes of hertes as it is before sayd frome the toure on horsbacke thrughe the cyte of London in to smyth felde there y● the Iustes sholde be holden And this feest and Iustes was holden generalle for all tho that wolde come theder of what londe nacyon y● euer they were And this was holden durynge .xxiiii. dayes of the kynges costes and these .xxiiii. lordes to answere all manere people that wold come thyder And theder came the erle of saynt Poule of Fraūce and many other worthy knyghtes with hym of dyuerse partyes full worthely arayed And out of Holande Henaude came the lorde Ostreuaūt y● was the dukes sone of Holand and many other worthy knyghtes with hym of Holland full well arayed And whan this feest Iustynge was ended y● kynge thanked this straūgers and gaaf them many ryche gyftes And soo they token theyr leue of y● kynge and of other lordes ladyes wente home ayē into theyr owne coūtrees with grete loue moche thanke ¶ And in y● .xiii. yere of kynge Rychardes regne there was a batayll done in the kynges palays at westmynster kytwene a squyer of Nauerne y● was with kynge Rycharde an othere squyre y● was called Iohn̄ walssh for poȳtes of treason y● this Nauerne put vpon this walssheman but this Nauerne was ouercomen yelde hym recreaunt to his aduersary And anone he was dyspoyled of his armure drawen on t of the palays to Tyburne there was hanged for his falsnes ¶ And the .xiiii. yere of kynge Rychardes regne syr Iohn̄ of Gaūt duke of Lancastre wente ouer see in too Spayne for to chalenge his ryght that he had by his wyfes tytle vnto the crowne of Spayne with a greate host of peple and men of armes and archers and he had with hym the duchesse his wyfe his thre doughters ouer see into Spayne there they were a greate whyle at the laste the kynge of Spayne began to treate with y● duke of Lancastre they were accorded togyder thrugh theyr both coūseyll in this manere y● the kynge of Spayne sholde wedde y● dukes doughter of Lancastre that was the ryght heyre of Spayne and he sholde gyue vnto y● duke of Lancastre golde and syluer y● were cast into greate wegges and many other Iewels as moche as .viii. charyetes myght carye And euery yere after durynge the dukes lyfe of Lancastre and of y● duches his wyf .x. thousāde marke of gold Of whyche golde the auenture chargꝭ sholde be to theym of Spayne yerely brynge vnto Bayon to the dukes assygnes by surete made And also y● duke maryed an other of his doughters vnto the kynge of Portyngale the same tyme whan he had done so he come home ayen in to Englonde and his goode lady his wyfe also but many worthy men deyed vpon the flyx ¶ In the .xv. yere of kynge Rychardꝭ regne he helde his cryst masse in the maner of wodstok and there the erle of Penbroke ayong lorde and tendre of aege wolde lerne to Iuste with a knyght that was called syre Iohn̄ of saynt Iohn̄ and roden togyder in y● parke of wodstoke and there this worthy erle of Penbroke was slayne with that other knyghtes spere as he cast it frome hym whan y● they had coupled and thus the good erle made there his ende and therfore y● kynge the quene made moche sorowe for his dethe ¶ And in the .xvi yere of kynge Rychardes regne Iohn̄ hēde beynge that tyme mayer of London and Iohn̄ walworth Henry vanner beynge shreues of London that same tyme a bakers man bare a basket of hors brede in too Fletstrete towarde an hostre and there came a yonge man of the bysshop of Salysbury that was called Romayn and he toke a hors lofe out of the basket of y● bakers he asked hym why he dyd so and this Romayn torned ayē and brake the bakers heed
commaundement of Englonde Ad that tyme therle Marchall was Capytayne of Calays And anone after by commaundemente of the kynge and by hys fals counseyll commaūded the capytayne to put hym to the dethe Add anone certayne yomen that had the good duke in kepynge toke theyr coūseyll how that they sholde put hym vnto dethe And this was theyr appoyntement that they sholde come vpon hym whanne he were in his bedde and a slepe on a fetheren bedde and anone they bounde hym honde and fote charged hym to lye styll And whan that they hadde done thus they token two smale towelles and made on theym two rydȳge knottes and caste the towelles about his necke than they toke y● 〈…〉 y● laye vnder hym cast it aboue hym than they drewe theyr to welles eche ●●yes and some laye vpon the fetheren 〈◊〉 vpon hym vnto the tyme that he 〈◊〉 bycause that he sholde make no 〈◊〉 and thus they strangled thys worthy duke vnto the dethe vpon whosoule 〈◊〉 for hys hyghe pyte haue mercy Amen ¶ And whan the kynge had rested thus this worthy duke and his vnde sente hym to Calays he came ayen to London in all the hast with a wonder greate people And as sone as he was comen he sēte for the erle of Arundell and for the gode erle of warwyk And anone as they came he arested theym hymselfe and syr Iohan Cobham and syr Iohn̄ Cheyne knyghtes he arested theym in the same maner tyll he made his parlemente and anone they were putte into holde but y● erle of Arundell wente at large vnto the parlemente tyme for he foūde suffycient surete to a abyde the lawe to answere to all manere poyntes that the kynge his counseyll wolde putte vppon hym ¶ And the .xxi. yere of kynge Rychardes regne he ordeyned hym a parlement at westmynster the whiche was called the greate parleamente And thys parleament was made for to Iuge thys three worthy lordes and other moo as they lyst at that tyme And for that Iugemente the kynge lete make in all the haste a lōge hous and a large of tymbre the whyche was called an halle couered with tiles ouer it was open all about on both sydes at y● endes that all maner of men myght se thrugh oute and there the dome was holden vpon these forsayd lordꝭ and Iugement gyuen at this forsayd parlement And for to come vnto this parlement the kynge sente his wryttes to euery lorde baron knyghte euery squyre in euery shyre thrugh out Englond y● euery lorde shold gadre brynge his retenue with hym in as shorte in the best araye that they myght gete in mayntenynge in the strengthynge of the kynge ayenste theym that were his enemyes and that this were done in all the haste and come to hym in payne of dethe And the kyngge hȳself sent into Chestreshyre to cheyf●ayns of y● coūtree and they gadred and brought a greate an huge company of people both of knyghtes squyres and 〈◊〉 of yomen of Chestreshyre y● whiche yomen and archers the kynge toke to his owne court and gaf them bowge of court and good wages to be kepers of his owne body both by nyght and by daye aboue all other persones and moste loued and beste truste the whiche sone afterwarde torned the kynge to grete losse and shame hyndrynge and his vtterlye vndoynge destruccyon as ye shall here afterwarde And that tyme came sir Hēry of Derby with a greate menye of mē of armes and archers and the Erle of Rutlonde come with a stronge power of peple bothe of men of armes and archers And the erle of Kente brought a greate power of men of armes and archers the erle Marchall came in the same manere And the lorde Spenser in this same manere The erle of Northumberlonde and syr Henry Percy his sone and syr Thomas Percy the erles broder And all these worthy lordes brought a fayr meny a stronge power eche man in his beste araye And the duke of Lancastre the duke of yorke came in y● same maner with men of armes and archers folowynge y● kynge And syr William shop 〈◊〉 of Englonde came in the same manere And thus in this araye came all 〈◊〉 thy men of this londe vnto ou● 〈◊〉 all these people came to London 〈◊〉 daye in soo moche that euery there and lane in London and in the subarbes were full of theym lodged and. 〈…〉 myle abowte London on euery waye And these people brought the kynge to westmynster went borne ayen to theyr lodgynge both hors and man and than on the mondaye the .xii. daye of Septembre the parlement began at westmynster the whiche was called the grete parlement ¶ And on the frydaye nexte afte the Erle of Arundell was broughte in too the parleament amonge all the lordes and y● was on saynt Mathewes daye the appostle euangelyst there he was for Iuged vnto y● dethe in this balle y● was made in the palays atte westmynster And this was his Iugement he sholde go on foot with his hondes boūde behynde hȳ frome the place that he was Iuged in so forth thrugh the cyte of London vnto the Towre hylle and his heed to be smiten of and soo it was done in dede in the same place And .vi. of the grettest lordes that sate on his Iugemente roden with hym vnto the place there he was done to the dethe and so to se that the execucyon were done after the dome And by y● kinges cōmaundement with them went on foot men of armes and archers a greate multytude of Chestreshyre men in strengethynge of the lordes that brought this erle to his dethe for they dredde leest the erle sholde be rescowed and taken from theym whanne they come into London Thus he passed forth thrugh the cyte vnto his dethe and there he toke it full pacyently on whos soule god haue mercye Amen And than come the frere Austins and toke vp the body and the heede of this good erle and bare it home to theyr place and buryed hym in theyr quyre in the morne after was syr Rycharde erle of warwyk brought into the parlemēte there as the erle of Arundell was for Iuged and they gaaf the erle of warwik the same Iugemente that the forsayd erle had but the lordes had compassyon of hym bycause he was of more gretter aege and released hym into perpetuall pryson put hym into the ylonde of Man And thenne on the mondaye nexte after the lorde Iohanne Cobham of Kente syr Iohan Cheyn knyghtes were alsoo brought into the same parlement in the same halle and there they were for Iuged for too be hanged and drawen but thrugh the prayers and greate Instaunce of all the lordes that Iugement was foryeuen to them and released into perpetuall pryson ¶ And in this same yere was Rycharde Wyttyngdon mayer of London and Iohn̄ wedecoke wyllyā Askam shreues
of London ¶ And they ordeyned at euery yate of London durȳge this same parlement stronge watche of men of armes and archers and thrughe out euery warde also And the kyng made .v. dukes and one markeys four erles and the fyrste of them was the erle of Derby he was made duke of Herforde And the seconde also was the erle of Rutlonde and he was made duke of Awemarle And the thyrde was the erle of Kent and he was made duke of Surre And the fourth was the erle of Huntyngdon and he was made duke of Excestre And the fyfte was the erle of Notyngham a he was made duke of Northfolke And the erle of Somersete he was made markeys of Dorset And the lord Spenser was made Erle of Goucestre And the lorde Neuyll of raby was made erle of westmerlonde And syr Thomas percy was made erle of worcestre And syr wyllyam scrope that was tresourere of Englonde was made erle of wylteshyre And syr Iohn̄ mōtagu erle of Salesbury And whan the kynge had thus done he helde the parlemente and ryalle fest vnto all his lordes and to all maner people that thyder wolde come ¶ And this same yere deyed syr Iohn̄ of Gaūt the kynges vncle and duke of Lancastre in y● bysshops inne in Holdorne and was brought fro thens to saynt Poule there the kynge made and helde this enterement well and worthely with all his lordes in the chirche of saynt Poule in London and there he was buryed besyde dame Blaūce his wyfe y● was doughter heyre vnto the good Henry that was duke of Lancastre In the same yere there fell a dyscencyon bytwere y● duke of Herforde and the duke of Norfolk in so moche y● they waged batayll and ●asten downe theyr gloues than they were taken vp ensealed y● batyyll Ioyne● the day set y● place assygned 〈…〉 and this sholde be at Cou●tre ¶ And thyder come the kynge wyth all hys 〈◊〉 at that daye and was set in the felde and than these two worthy lordes came into y● felde well and clene armed wel arayed with all theyr wepen redy too done theyr batayll were redy in the place for to fyght at vtteraūce But y● kyng had them cesse toke y● quarell into his honde And forth with ryght there presēte exyled y● duke of Herforde forterme of x. yere the duke of Norfolke for euere more And syr Thomas of Arūdell Archebysshop of Caūterbury was exyled y● same tyme for euer deposed out of his see for malyce of the kynge anone these thre worthy lordes were cōmaūded defēded y● kyngꝭ reame And anone they gate theym shyppes at dyuerse hauens and went ouer see into dyuerse londes eche his waye And the duke of Norfolke wente too Venece and there he deyed on whos soule god haue mercy Amen and than kynge Rycharde made a clerke of his syr Roger walden Archebysshop of Caunterbury ¶ And in the .xxii. yere of kynge Rychardes regne by fals coūseyll ymagynacyon of coueytous men y● were about hym were made ordeyned blanke chertres and made theym to be enseled of all maner ryche men thrugh oute the reame In so moche that they compelled dyuerle people to sette theyr seales therto And this was done for greate couetyse wherfore all gode hertes of the reame were clene torned awaye fro the kinge for euer after And that was vtterly his dystruccyon and ende to hym y● was soo hyghe and soo excellente prynce and kynge and thrugh couetous fals counseyll falsly betrayed Alas for pyte that suche a kynge myght not se ¶ And thā kynge Rycharde sette his kyngdome hys ryall londe of Englonde too ferme vnto four persones the whiche were the se Syr wyllyam strop erle of wyleshyre and tresourer of Englonde and syr Iohan Busshe and Henry grene and syr Iohan Bagot knyghtes that whyche torned theym too myscheyf and dethe with in a lytell tyme as ye shall fynde here afterwarde wryten ¶ And than kyng Rycharde made greate ordynaūce ●nte hymself ouer see in to I●londe many grete lordes with hym 〈◊〉 a grete hoste for to strenth theyr kynge with men of armes archers and moche greate stuff ryghte good ordynaūce as longed vnto warre And or he passed ouer see he ordeyned made syr Edmonde of Langley his vncle y● duke of yorke his 〈◊〉 of Englonde in his absence with she gouernaūce coūseyll of the●e 〈…〉 that had taken Englonde to ●●●me of the kynge And than he 〈…〉 see and came into Irlonde and 〈◊〉 was well worthely receyued And 〈◊〉 rebelles that ben called wolde 〈◊〉 came downe to the kynge yolde them to hym both body goodes all at his 〈◊〉 wyll and swore vnto hym to be 〈◊〉 lyege men and there dyd to hym 〈◊〉 and feaute and good seruyse thus he conquered the moost parte of Irlonde in a lytell tyme. ¶ And whyse that kyng Rycharde was thus in Irlonde syr Henry of Bolyngbroke erle of 〈◊〉 the kynge had made before duke of ●●●forde the whiche duke the kynge had ●●led out of this lond was comen 〈◊〉 to Englende for to chalenge the duke●● me of Lancastre as for his ryght new herytage he came downe out of Fraūce by londe vnto Calays And t●ere ●e● hym syr Thomas of Arūdell y● was Archebysshop of Caūterbury y● 〈◊〉 e●yled out of Englonde with hym came the erle of Arūdell his sone 〈◊〉 y● which was in kepȳg of syr Iohn̄ shelley knight sōtyme with the erle of 〈◊〉 with the duke of E●ces●● y● which was tho in y● castell of Reygate in southsex there he stale hym awaye came too Calays and there he was keped well worthely tyll these other two lordes were comen to Calays ¶ And than this worthy duke and syr Thomas of Arundell Archebysshop of Caūterbury shypped in y● hauen of Calays drewe theyr cours nor warde and aryued in yorke shyre at Rauensporne faste by wydelyngton there he came entred fyrste the londe two lordes with hym and theyr nauye And soo thanne moche people of the reame that whan they herde of his comynge knewen where that he was and anone they drewen vnto hym and welcomed these lordes and soo gaaf theym courage in all manere thynge and soo passed forth into the londe and gadred moche people to them ¶ And whan kynge Rycharde herde and wyste that these twoo lordes were comen ayen in to Englonde and also were londed Than the kynge lefte his ordynaunce in Irlonde and come in to Englonde warde in all the has●e that he myghte and come to the castell of Flynte and there he abode to take his counseyll and what myght he done but too hym come none And thanne syr Thomas Percy erle of worcestre y● was the kynges stewarde wyst and knewe all this anone he came into the hall amonges althe people he brake y● yerde of y● ryall kynges housholde
in a lynnyn clothe all sauf his vysage and that was left open that all men myght se his persone frome all other men And so he was brought to London with torche lyght brennynge to saynt Poules chirche there he had his masse dyrynge with moch reuerence solempnyte of seruyce And whanne all this was done than he was brought frome saynt Poule in to the abbare of westmynster there he had hys hole seruyce ayen And fro westmynster he was brought to Langley and there he was buryed vpon whos soule god haue mercy Amen ¶ And in the fyrst yere of kynge Henryes regne he helde his Cristmasse in the castel of wyndesore And on the .xii euen came the duke of Awemarle vnto the kynge tolde hym that he the duke of Surrey the duke of Excestre and the erle of Salesbury the erle of Gloucestre and other moo of theyraff ynyte were accorded to make a mommynge vnto the kynge on .xii. daye atte nyght there they purposed to sle y● kinge in the reuelynge thus he y● duke of Awemarle warned y● kynge And than the kynge came the same nyght to London pryuely in all y● hast that he myght to gete hym helpe socoure and comforth counseyll And anone these other that wolde haue put the kynge too dethe fled in all the hast that they myght for they knewe well that theyr coūseyll was bewrayed And than fled the duke of Surrey the erle of Salesbury with al ther menye vnto the towne of Cycestre And there the people of the towne wolde haue arested them and they wolde not stande to theyr arestynge but stode at defence faught manly But at the laste they were ouercomen and taken And there they smote of the dukes heed of Surrey and the erles heed of Salesbury and many other moo and there they put theyr quarters in to sackes theyr hedes on pooles borne on hyghe so they were brought thrugh the cyte of London too London brydge and there these hedes were sette vpon hyghe theyr quarters were sent vnto other good townes and Cytees of Englonde and sette vp there ¶ At Oxforde was taken Blounte knyghte and Benet Cely knyght and Thomas wȳtersell squyre and there byheded quartred the knyghtes hedes were set vpon pooles and brought to London and sett vpon London brydge and the quarters sent forth to other good townes ¶ And in the same yere at Pryttelwell in a mylle in Estsex there syr Iohn̄ Holande y● duke of Excestre was taken with the comynes of the coūtre they brought hym frome y● mylle to y● Plasshe to y● same place that kynge Rycharde had rested sir Thomas of wodstok y● duke of Gloucestre ryght there in y● same place they smote of the dukes heed of Excestre and brought it vnto London vpon a poole and it was sette vpon London brydge ¶ And in the same yere at Brystowe was taken the lorde Spenser that kynge Rycharde had made erle of Gloucestre y● comyns of y● towne of Brystowe toke hȳ and brought hym into the market place of the towne and there they smote of his heed and sent it vnto London and there it was set vpon London brydge ¶ And in this same yere was syr Bernarde brokey● knyght taken and arested and put in the Toure of London syr Iohn̄ shelly knyght and syre Iohan Mawdelyn and syre wyllyam Ferybe persones of kynge Rychardes and they were arested and putte in to the Toure of London And thyder came the kynges Iustices l●tte vpon theym in the Toure of London and there they were dampned all foure vnto the dethe and the dome was gyuen vnto syr Bernard Brokeys that he sholde goo on foote frome the Toure thrugh the cyte of London vnto Tybur 〈◊〉 and there to be hanged and after his heed smyten of syr Iohan Shelly knyght syr Iohn̄ Mawdelyn and syr wyllyam Ferybe persones were drawen thrughe oute the cyte of London to Tyburne there they were hanged theyr hedes smyten of seton London brydge in this same yere kynge Henry sente quene Isabell home ayen into Fraūce y● whyche was kynge Rychardes wyfe gaaf hir golde syluer many other Iewels and soo she was dyscharged of all hyr power and sent oute of Englonde And in y● seconde yere of kynge Henry y● fourthe was syr Roger Claryngton knyght and two of his men and the pryoure of Launde and .viii. freres mynors and some maysters of dyuynyte and other for treason that they wrought ayenst y● kynge were drawen hanged at Tyburne all .xii. persones And there began a greate dyscencyon and debate in the countre of wales bytwene the lorde Grey rythen Owen of Glendere squyre of wales this Owen arered a grete nombre of walsshmen kept all that coūtre abowt ryghte strongly dyd moche harme and destroyed the kynges to w●●es and lordeshyppes thrughe oute all wales and robbed and slewe the kynges people bothe Englysshe walesshe and thus he endured a .xii. yere largely And he toke y● lorde Grey tythen prysoner and kepte him fast in holde tyll he was raunsomed of prysoners of the marche and kepte hym longe tyme in holde And at the laste he made hym wedde one of his doughters and kepte hym there styll with his wyfe sone after he deyed ¶ And than kynge Henry knowynge this myschyef destruccyon treason that this Owen had wrought anone he ordeyned a stronge power of men of armes archers moche other stuff y● longed to warre for to abate destroye that malyce of this fals walsshe man And than that kynge came in to wales with his power for to destroy this Owen other rebelles fals walshmen and anone they fledde in to y● montayns and there myght the kynge do the no harme in no maner wyse for y● montayns so the kynge came ayen in to Englonde for lesynge of moche of his peple thus he spedde not there ¶ In this same yere was grete scarsyte of whete in Englōde for a quarter of whete was at .xvi. shel●●ge there was marchaundyse of Englō de sente in to Pruce for whete anone they hadde lade fraught shyppes ●●oughe came home in saufte thanked be god of all his gyftes ¶ And in y● 〈…〉 of kynge Henryes regne there was a sterre seen in the fyrmamente y● shewed hȳself thrugh all y● world for dyuerse tokens y● shold befall sone after the whyche sterre was named by clergye S●tellacometa on saynt Mary Mawde●●ne● daye nexte folowynge in the same yere was the batayll of Shrowesbury And thyder came syr Henry Perry the Erles sone of Northumberlonde with a grete multytude of men of armes and archers and gaaf a batayll to kynge Henry the fourth thrughe the fals and wicked coūseyll of syre Thomas Percy hys 〈◊〉 erle of worcestre and there was syr henry Percy slayne y● moste parte of his peple in y●
ended these chalenges with many greate worshyppes And thenne y● kynge at the reuerence of these worthy straūgers made a greate feeste and gaaf vnto theym many greate and ryche gyftes and thenne they token theyr leue and wente home ayen into theyr owne countrer ¶ And in the .xi. yere of kynge Henryes regne the fourthe there was a 〈◊〉 batayll doo in smythfelde bytwene two squyres that one was called Gloucest●e that was the appellaunte and A●thur was the defendaunte and well and ●●●ly they foughten togyder longe tyme and the kynge for theyr manfulnesse ● of his grace toke theyr quarellinto 〈◊〉 honde and made theym too goo oute of the felde atte ones and soo they were duyded of the batayll and the kynge gaf them grace ¶ And in the .xii. yere of 〈◊〉 Henryes regne y● fourth Rysd●e a squire of wales that was a rybelle a ryse●● supporter to Owen of Glendre y● dyd moche destruccōn to y● people of wales was taken brought to Londō there he came afore y● Iustic● was dampned for his treson than he was layd on an hurdell so drawen to Tyburne thrughe y● cyte there he was hanged lete downe ayen his heed smyten of y● body quartred sent vnto four townes his bede set on Londō brydge ¶ And in y● .xiii. yere of kinge Henryes regne t●o deyed syr Iohan Beauforde erle of Somersette that was Captaynt of Calays was buryed atte y● abbaye of y● Tour byll on whos soule god haue mercy amen And in the same yere the lorde Thomas kinge Henry●s sone wedded the Countesse of Somerset ¶ And in this same yere came the enbassat●urs of Fraūce into Englonde frome the duke of Burgoyne vntoo the prynce of Englonde kynge Henryes sone and heyre for to haue helpe socour of men of armes and archers ayenste the duke of Orlyaunce And tho went oner see y● erle of Arūdell si● Gylberte Vmfreuyll erle of Keme the lorde Cobham syr Iohn̄ Oldecastell many other good knyghtes worthy squyres men of armes good archers into Fraūce and came to Parys to y● duke of Burgoyn And there he receyued welcomed these Englysshmen the lordes all other meny And thann it was done hym to mete that the duke of Orlyaūce was comen into Semtclowe faste by Parys with a greate nombre of armes and arbalastres thyder went our Englysshmen and fought with them gate y● brydge of Semtclowe there they slew moche people of Frensshmen arbalastres the remenaūt fledde wolde not lenger abyde And than oure Englysshe men came ayen to Parys there they toke theyr leue of the duke came ayen in to Englonde in saufte the duke gaaf theym grete gyftes anone folowynge the duke of Orlyaūce sent enbassatours in Englonde to kynge Henry the fourth besechynge hym of his helpe socoure ayenst his dedely enemye y● duke of Burgoyn And than the kynge made Thomas his sone duke of Clarence and his other sone Iohn̄ duke of Bedforde and his other sone Humfrey duke of Gloucestre syr Thomas Beauford erle of Dorset the duke of Awemarle he made duke of yorke And than the kyng or deyned his sone syr Thomas the duke of Clarence Thomas Beauford erle of Dorset syr Iohn̄ Cornwyll with many other lordes knyghtes squyres and men of armes archers for to go ouer se in to Fraunce in helpynge and strengethynge of the duke of Orlyaunce And these worthy lordes with they re retenue shypped at Hampton and saylled ouere the see in to Normandye and londed at Hogges And there mette with theym y● sorde Hamble at theyr lōdynge with .vii thousande men of armes of Frensshmen thre Sergeauntes of armes with thē and all were put to flyght and taken of theym .vii. hondred men of armes and iiii hondred horses with out tho that were slayne in the felde And soo they rode forth thrugh out all Fraunce and token castels and townes and slewe moche peple of Frensshmen that withstode them and toke many prysoners as they roden And so they passed forth tylle they come to Burdeux there they rested theym a whyle set the coūtre in peas rested tyl the wynde was redy for to sayll ¶ And than y● duke with his menye come home in to Englonde in saufte thanked be god And in the same yere was y● byngꝭ coyn chaunged thrugh oute Englonde by the kynge his coūseyll that is to saye the noble half noble and ferthynge of golde ¶ And the .xiiii. yere of kynge Henryes regne the fourthe he lete make Galays of warre for he had hoped to haue passed the greate see so forth to Iherusalem there to haue ended his lyfe but god visyted hym so sone after with Infyrmitees grete sekenesse that he myght not well endure no while so feruently he was takē brought in bedde at westmynster in a fayr chambre And as he laye in his bed he asked his chamberlayn what they called that chambre that he laye in and he answered sayd Iherusalem And than he sayd that the prophecye sayd that he sholde make an ende deye in Iherusalem And thā he made hym redy vnto god dysposed all his wyll And soon after he deyed was caryed by water frome westmynster in a barge vnto Feuersham and frome thens he was caryed to Caūterbury by londe with moche torche lyght brennȳge in too the abbaye of Crychyrche and there he was entered and buryed besyde saynt Thomas of Caūterburyes shryne thus ended y● worthy kynge Henry aboute mydlenten sondaye in the yere of oure lorde a M. CCCC and .xxi. vpon whos soule god haue mercy Amen MArtyn the .v. was pope after Iohan xiii yere this man was chosen by the coūseyll of Constantynoble the other was deposed that stroff and so came peas in the chirche the whiche longe tyme afore was desyred necessarye for y● defence of the fayth This was the myghtyest pope that euer was of rychesse a greate Iuge he edefyed townes walles stretes he destroyed heresyes he dyd moche good thrugh the noble prynce Sygysmonde And he gadred moche moneye for to geten y● holy londe ayen but dethe came vpon hym letted hym he made a coūseyll afore his dethe for that mater there he decessyd ¶ Eugenius was pope after Martyn .xvii. yere this Eugenius was chosen peasyble aft the dethe of Martyn no man doubted but he was pope but soon after he was expulsed frome Rome for it was soo that he fled naked also he was cyted to y● coūseyll of Basylyens deposed but he dyscharged hym not for that began the stryffe ayen y● whiche stood to his dethe those that fauoured hym sayd he was worth moche louynge the contrary sayd those that were ayenste hym but what someuer he was after he had taken the dygnyte vpon hym afore he was of grete
obstynaūce of gode fame what he dyd after that Ileue to the Iugement of god ¶ Circa Annū dm̄ M. CCCC.xxi ¶ Of kynge Henry the fyfte that was kynge Henryes sone ANd after the deth of kynge Henry the fourth regned kynge Henry his sone that was borne at Monmouthe in wales that was a worthy kynge a gracyous man and a grete conquerour ¶ And in the fyrste yere of his regne for grete loue goodnesse he sent to the freres of Langley there as his fader had do burye kynge Rycharde the seconde lete take his body out of the erthe ayen and dyd brynge it to westmynster in a ryall chare couered with blacke veluet baners of dyuerse armes abowte all the hors drawyng the chare were trapped in blacke beten with dyuerse armes many a torche brennȳge by all the waye 〈◊〉 he came to westmynster there he lett make for hym a ryall solempne enteremēte and buryed hym by quene Anne hys wyfe as his owne desyre was on ●●●ther syde of saynt Edwardes 〈…〉 the abbaye of saynt Peters in westminster on whos soule god haue mer●● 〈◊〉 ¶ And in this same yere were 〈◊〉 of lollers taken and fals heretykes that had purposed thrughe fals ●●eason 〈◊〉 to haue slayne oure kynge and 〈◊〉 destroyed all the clergye of the reame and they myght haue had ther● fals purpose But our lorde god wold not 〈◊〉 for in hast oure kynge had warnynge therof of all their fals ordynaū 〈◊〉 werkynge came sodeynly with his power to saynt Iohn̄s with out smythfelde and ne they toke a certayn of that lollers ● fals herytykes brought the too the kynges presence there they tolde all the● fals purpose and ordynaūce how they wolde haue do and wrought y● they myght naue regned and had theyr wyll and there they tolde whiche were theyr capytayns gouernours than the kynge cōmaūded theym to the tour of London th● toke mo too theym both within y● cyte with out sent them to Newgate to bothe coūters than they were brought in examycō● before the clergye the kingꝭ Iustices there they were conuyeted for theyr fals heresye dampned before the Iustice for theyr fals treason And thys was theyr iugemē● that they shold be drawen frome y● tour of London to saynt Gylys felde and there to be hanged brente on y● galowes Also there was taken syr Roger Acton knyght for heresye and el●● for treason ayenst the kynge and the reame he came afore y● clergye was cōuycte for his heresye dampned before y● Iustyce to be drawen frome the toure of London thrugh the cyte to laynt Gylys and to be hanged brent ¶ And in the seconde yere of kynge Henryes regne the fyft he helde a counseyll of all the lordꝭ of the reame at westmyster and there he put hym this demaūde and prayed and besought them of theyr goodnesse and of theyr gode coūseyll gode wyll to shew hym as touchynge the tytle of the ryght that he had to Normandye Gascoyne Guyhen the whiche the kynge of Fraūce withelde wrongfully vnryghtfully the whiche his aūcestres before hym had by trewe tytle of conquest ryght herytage the whiche Normandye Gascoyn Guyhen the good kynge Edwarde of wyndesore his aūcestres before hȳ had holden all theyr lyues tyme. And his lordes gaaf hym coūseyll to sende enbassatours vnto the kynge of Fraunce hys counseyll that he sholde gyue vp vnto hȳ his ryght herytage that is to saye Normā dye Gascoyne Guyhen the which his predecessours had holden afore hym or els he wolde it wynne with strengthe of swerde in shorte tyme with the helpe of almyghty god ¶ And than y● Dolphyn of Fraūce answered to our enbassatours and sayd in this maner that the kynge was ouer yonge too tendre of aege for to make ony warre as ayenste hym and was not lyke yet to be a good warryour to do and make suche a conqueste there vpon hym And somwhat in scorne and despyte he sente too hym a toune full of tenes balles bycause he wolde haue somwhat for to playe with all for hym and for his lordes for that wolde become hym better than for to mayntene ony warre ¶ And than anone oure lordes that were enbassatours toke theyr leue and came in to Englonde ayen tolde the kinge his counseyll of y● vngoodly answere that they had of the Dolphyn and of the present y● whiche he had sent too oure kynge ¶ And whan the kynge had herde theyr wordes and the answere of the Dolphyn he was wonder sore agreued ryght euyll apayed towarde the Frensshmen towarde the kynge and the Dolphyn thought to auenge hym on them as sone as god wolde sende hym gace myght and anone lete make tenes ●alles for the Dolphyn in all the hast that myght be and they were greate gon stones for the Dolphyn to playe with all And than anone the kynge sent for all his lordes and helde a greate counseyll at westmynster and tolde vnto them the an swere y● they had of y● Dosphyn and of his worthy present that he sent to hym and to his lordes to playe with all And ther the kynge and his lordes were accorded that they shold be redy in armes with ther power in y● best araye that myght be done and gete men of armes archers that myght be goten all other stuff that longed to warre and to be redy with all theyr retenue to mete at Southampon by Lammasse next folowyng without ony delay wherfore the kynge ordeyned his nauye of shyppes with all maner stuffe vytayll that longed to suche a wartyoure of all maner ordeynaunce in the hauen of Southampton in to the nombre of CC C. and .xx. saylles And than felle ther a greate dysease and a foule mychef for there were thre lordes whiche y● the kyng trusted moche on thrugh fals couetyse they had purposed and ymagyned y● kȳges dethe thought to haue slayne him all his bretherne or he had taken y● see the whiche thre lordes were named th●●slir Rychard erle of Cambrydg b●det to y● duke of yorke the seconde was the lorde Scrop tresourer of Englonde the thyrde was syr Thomas Gray knyghte of the North countree And these thre lordes afore sayd for lucre of money hadde made a promesse vnto the Frensshe men for to haue slayne kynge Henry the fyft all his brethern by a fals trayne sodaynly or they hadde be ware But god almyghty helde his holy honde ouer them and saued them frome these peryllous menye And for too haue done this they receyued of the Frensshmen a Myllyon of golde and that was there openly knowen and for theyr fals treason they were all thre Iuged vnto the dethe and this was the Iugement y● they sholde be ladde thrugh Hampton withoute North gate there to be heded thus they
longe way also for lac of vytaylle as they wente ¶ In this yere Reynolde Pecok bysshop of Chestre was foūde an heretyke and the thyrde daye of Decembre was adiured at Lambeth in presence of the Archebysshop of Caunterbury many other bysshoppes doctours lordes temporall and his bokes brent at Poules crosse ¶ And ye haue herde before howe certayne lordes were slayne atte saynt Albons wherfore was alwaye a grutchynge and wrathe hadde by y● heyres of thē that so were slayne ayenste the duke of yorke the erles of werwyk and of Salysbury wherfore the kynge by the aduys of hys counseyll sente for theym vnto London to whiche place the duke of Yorke came the .xxvi. daye of Ianueri with four hundred men and lodged hym at Baynerdes castell in his owne place ¶ And the .xv. daye of Ianuer came the erle of Salysbury with .v. hundred men was lodged in therber his owne place ¶ And then came the duke of Excetre of Somerset with .viii. C. men laye withoute temple barre ¶ And the erle of Northūberlonde and the lorde Egremonde the lorde Clyfforde with .xv. hundred men lodged without the towne ¶ And the Mayre that tyme Geffraye Boloyne kepte greate watche with the comyns of the cyte and rode abowte the cytce by Holborne and Fletestrete with a .v. thou sande men well arayed and armyd for to kepe the peas ¶ And the .xiii. day of Feuerer y● erle of warwyk came to London fro Calays well beseen worshypfully with .v. hundred men in redde Iakectes broudred with a ragged staff behynde and before and was lodged at y● gray freres ¶ And the .xv. daye of Marche the kynge came to London the quene And there was accorde peas made among y● lordes they were set in peas And on our lady daye y● .xv. day of Marche in y● yere of our lorde M. cccc.lviii the kynge the quene all y● lordes went on processyon at Poules in London anone after y● kynge the lordes departed in this yere was a grete fraye in Flete strete bytwene men of courte men of y● same strete In whiche fraye the quenes Attourney was slayne ¶ How the kynges housholde made a fraye ayenst the erle of werwyk of the Iourneye at bloreheth ALso this same yere as the erle of werwyk was at coūseyll at west mynster all the kynges housholde meny gadred them togyder for to haue slayne the sayd erle But by the helpe of god his frendes he recouerde his barge and escapyd theyr euyll enterpryse how well the cokes came rennynge out with spyttes and pestels ayenst hym And the same daye he rode towardes warwyk and sone after he gate hym a commyssyon and went ouer the see towarde Calays ¶ Sone after this therle of Salysbury comynge to London was encoūtred att Bloreheth with the lorde Audley 〈◊〉 other people ordeyned to dystroy 〈◊〉 But he hauynge knowlege y● he sholde be mette with was accompanyed with his two sones syr Thomas and 〈◊〉 Iohan Neuell a grete felyshyp 〈…〉 men And so they faught togeter 〈◊〉 theerle of Salysbury 〈…〉 And the lorde Audley was 〈…〉 many gentylmen of 〈…〉 people hurte the erles two 〈…〉 hurte goynge homewarde 〈…〉 they were taken had to 〈…〉 quenes menye ¶ After Calixt Pius was pope 〈◊〉 chose this yere M. cccc 〈…〉 was callyd before Eneas an 〈…〉 man and a poete 〈…〉 embassatour of y● Emperour before 〈◊〉 And he wrote in the 〈…〉 a noble treatyse for 〈…〉 me Also he canoursed 〈…〉 of Senys This pope ordeyned 〈…〉 dulgence and pard●●● 〈…〉 de go werre ayenst the 〈…〉 te a pystle to y● greate Turke 〈…〉 hym to become crysten And in 〈◊〉 ordeyned a passage ayenstre y● 〈◊〉 Ankon to whiche mo●ke people drewe out of all partyes of 〈…〉 whiche people he sence many home 〈◊〉 by cause they suff●●● not anone after he dyed at y● sayd Ankon y● yere of oure lorde M. cccc.lxiii the .xiiii. daye of August ¶ How Andrewe Trollop and the soul dyours of Calays forsoke the duke of yorke theyr mayster therle of warwyk in the weste countre THe duke of yorke y● erles of warwyk and of Salysbury sawe the gouernaunce of the reame stode mooste by the quene and hir counseyll and how the greate prynces of the londe were not callyd to coūseyll but sett a parte not oonly so but it was sayd thrugh the reame y● tho sayd lordes shold be dystroyed as it openly was shewed at Blorehethe by them y● wolde haue slayne the erle of Salysbury Then for sauacōn of theyr lyues also for y● comyn we le of y● reame thought for to remedy thyse thyngꝭ assembled them togyder with moche peple and toke a felde in the west countre to whiche therle of warwyk came fro calars with many of the olde souldyours as Andrewe Trollop and other in whose wysdome as for the werre he trustyd moche vpon And whan they were thus assembled made theyr felde y● kyng sent out his cōmyssyons preuy seales vnto all y● lordes of his reame to come wayte on hym in theyr moost beste defensable araye And so euery man came in suche wyse y● the kynge was stronger and had more people than the duke of yorke therles of werwyk of Salisbury for it is here to be notyd the euery lorde in Englonde at this tyme durst not dysobeye the quene so she rulyd peasybly all that was done abowt the kynge whiche was a good and a well dyspoysed man And then whan the kynge was come too the place where they were the duke of yorke his felyshyp made theyr feld in y● strongest wyse purposyd veryly to abyde haue fouzte But in the nyght Andrwe Trollop all the olde souldyours of Calays with a greate felyshyppe sodeynly departyd out of the dukes hoost wente strayte vnto the kynges felde where they were receyued Ioyously for they knewe th entent of thother lordꝭ also the maner of theyr felde And then the duke of yorke with y● other lordes seynge thez dysceyued toke a counseyll shortly in the same nyght and departed frome the felde leuynge behynde them the moste partye of theyr people to kepe the felde tylle on the morowe Then the duke of york with his seconde sone departyd thrughe walys towarde Irlonde leuynge his eldest sone therle of Marche with the erles of werwyk of Salysbury whiche rode togyder with thre or four persones strayght in to Deuenshyre there by helpe ayde of one Denham gate a shyp whyche coste a .xi. score nobles with the same shyp sayled fro thens in to Gernescy there refresshed theym frome thens sayled to Calays where they were recey ued in to y● castell by the postern̄ or they of the towne wyst of it And the duke of yorke toke shyppynge in walys and sayled ouere in too Irlonde where he was well receyued ¶ How the
erles of Marche werwik and Salysbury entred in too Calays how the erle of werwyke wente in to Irlonde THen kynge Henry with his host in the felde notte knowynge of this sodeyne departynge on the morow foūde none in the felde of the sayd lordes sent out in all the hast men for to folowe pursue after to take them but they met not with them as god wolde And then the kynge went to Ludlowe dyspoyled the castell the towne And sent the duchesse of yorke her chyldren to the duchesse of Bokyngham her syster where she was kept longe tyme after And forth with the kynge ordeyed the duke of Somerset to be Capytayne of Calays and thyse other lordes so departed as afore is sayd were proclamyd rebels and greate traytours Then the duke of Somerset toke to hym all the souldyours y● departyd fro the felde and made hym redy in all the hast for to go too Calays and take possessyon of his offyce And whanne he came he fonde therle of werwyk therin as Capytayne the erles of Marche of Salysbury also then he londed by Scalys went to Gynes there he was receyued And it fortuned that some of thoo shyppes y● came ouer with hym came in to Calays hauen by ther fre wyll for y● shypmen ought more fauour to therle of werwyk than to y● duke of Somerset in whiche shyppes were take dyuerse men as Ienyn Fynkyl Iohan felowe Kaylles and Purser whiche were beheded sone after in Calays and after this came men dayly ouer these to thyse lordes too Calays and began for to wexe stronger and stronger and they borowed moche goode of the Staple on that other syde the duke of Somerset beynge in Gynes gate people too hym whiche came out and scarmysshed wyth theym of Calays and they of Calays with them whiche endured many dayes Durynge this skermysshynge moche peple came ouer dayly vnto thyse lordes ¶ Then on a tyme by thaduys counseyll of the lordes at Calays sente ouer mayster Denham with a grete felyshyp to Sandwytche whiche toke the towne therin the lorde Ryuers the lorde Scalys his sone toke many shyppes in the hauen brought them all to Calays with whiche shyppes many maryners of ther fre wyll came to Calays to serue therle of werwyk And after this the Erle of werwyk by the aduys of the lordes toke all his shyppes and manned theym wel and sayled hymself in too Irlonde for too speke with the duke of yorke and to ke hys aduys how they sholde entre into Englond And whan that he had be there and done his erandes he retorned ayē towardes Calays and broughte with hym his moder the countesse of Salysbury And comynge in the weste countre on the see y● duke of Excetre Admirall of Englonde beynge in y● grace of du●c cōpanyed with many shyppꝭ of werre met with the erle of werwyk his flete but they faught not for y● substaūce of y● peple beynge with the duke of Excetre ought better wyll fauoure to the erle of werwyk than to hym they departed came too Calays in sauftee ¶ Then the the kynges coūseyll seynge y● thyse lordꝭ had goten those shyppes fro Sandwhtche taken the lorde Ryuers his s●ue ordeyned a garyson at Sandwytche 〈◊〉 abyde kepe y● towne made one 〈◊〉 forde capytayne of y● towne ye●●●vytaylle ne marchaust y● shold ge to 〈◊〉 unders sholde go to calays Thithes of Calays seynge this made D●●ham many other to go to Sandwytche as sayled y● towne by londe by water 〈◊〉 it brought y● capytayne ouer se and smote of his heed yet dayly men came ouer to theym fro all partyes ¶ How therle of Marche and of W●●wyk and of Salysbur● catred in to E●tglonde of y● felde of Northapton w●ere dyuerse lordes were llayne ANd after this y● forsayd erles of Marche warwyk Salysbur● came ouer to Douer with moche people there londed to whome all y● count●e drewe came to London all armyd for to lete the lordes of y● kynges coūsell knowe theyr truth also they entente● assembled theym and tolde theym that they entended no harme to y● kyngꝭ persone sauf y● they wolde put frome hym suche persones as were about hym And so departed frome London wyth a grete puyssaunce towarde Northampton where the kynge was accompanyed with many lordes and made a stronge felde withoute the towne And there both partyes met was fought a greate batayll In whyche batayll were llayne the duke of Bokyngham and therle of Shrewesbury the vycount Beamonde y● lorde Egremonde and many other knyghtes and squyres and other also and the kȳge hymself was taken in the felde and afterwarde brought to London And a none after was a parlement at westmȳster durynge whiche parlement the duke of Yorke came out of Irlonde with the erle of Rutlonde rydynge with a greate felyshyp into the palays atte westmynster and toke the kynges palays came in to the parlement chambre there toke the kynges place claymyd the crowne as his propre enherytauūce ryghte caste forth in wrytynge his tytle also how he was ryghtfull heyre wherfor was moche to doo but in conclusyon it was appoynted cōcluded the kyng Henry sholde regne be kynge durynge his naturall lyfe for as moche as he hadde be kynge so longe was possessyd after his dethe the duke of Yorke shold be kynge his heyres kynges after hym forth with sholde be proclamyd heyre apparaūt shold also be protectour regete of Englonde durynge y● kyngꝭ lyf with many other thyngꝭ ordened in the same parlement yf kynge Henry durynge his lyf went frome this apoyntmente or ony artycle cōcludyd in y● sayd parlemēt he sholde be deposyd the duke sholde take the crowne be kynge all whyche thynges were enacted by thauctoryte of y● same at whiche parlement the comyns of the reame beynge assembled in the comyn hous comynyng and treatyng vppon the tytle of the for sayd duke of yorke sodeynly fell downe the crowne whiche henge thenne in the myddes of the sayd hous whiche is the frayter of the abbaye of westmynster whiche was taken for a prodyce or token y● the regne of kȳge Henry was endyd also the crowne whiche stode on the hyghest toure of the stleple in the castell of Douer fell downe this same yere ¶ How the 〈◊〉 of Yorke was slayne and of the felde of wakefelde and of the seconde Iourneye at saynt Albons by the quene and the prynce BIcause the quene with the prynce her sone was in the northe and absent her fro the kynge and obeyed not suche thynges cōcluded in the parlemente was ordeyned y● the duke of yorke as protector sholde go northwarde to bryn in y● quene subdue suche as wolde not obey with whome went the erle of Salysbury syr Thomas Neuyll his sone with moche people And at wakefelde in Cristmas weke they were ouerthrowe and slayne by lordes of the quenes parti that is to wyte the duke of yorke was slayne the erle of Rotlonde Syr Thomas Neuyl
moche herde of the goodnesse of kynge Edwarde that he was so full of mercy of pyte He thoughte that he wolde go ayen in to Englonde for to seke to haue grace of the good kynge Edwarde that so mercyfull was that he myght haue ayen his londe in peas And arayed hym as moche as he myght put hȳ towarde the see came in to Englonde to London there that the kyng was that tyme all the lordes of Englonde and helde a parlyament Godewin sente to hym that were his frendes were the moost grettest lordes of the londe pray to them to beseche the kynges grace for hym that he wolde his peas his londe graunte hym The lordes ledde hym before the kynge to seke his grace And anone as the kyng hym sawe he apeled hym of treason of the deth of Alured his brother and these wordes vnto hym sayd Traytour Godewin sayd the kynge I the appele that thou hast betrayed slayne my brother Alured Certes syr sayd Godewin sauynge your grace and your peas your lordshyp I hym neuer betrayed ne yet hym slewe And therfore I put me in rewarde of the courte Now fayr lordes sayd the kynge Ye that ben my lyeges erles and barons of the londe that here be assembled full well ye herde myn appele and the answere also of Godewin and therfore I woll that ye awarde dooth ryght The erles barons tho gadred them all togyder for to do this awarde by themself and so they spake dyuersely amonge them For some sayd there was neuer alyaūce by homage seriment seruyce ne by lordshypp bytwene Godewin and Alured for which thynge they myght hym drawe And a●● the laste they deuysed and demed that he sholde put hym in the kynges mercy all togyder Tho spake the erle Leuerik of Couentree a good man to god and to all the worlde and tolde his reason in this maner sayd The erle Godewin is the best frended man of Englonde after the kynge well it myght not be agayne sayd that without coūsell of Godewin Alured was neuer putt to dethe Wherfore I awarde as towchynge my parte that hymself his sone euery of vs .xij. erles that ben his frendes go before the kynge charged with as moche golde syluer as we may bere betwixt our hondes prayenge the kynge to forgeue his euyll wyll to the erle Godewin receyue his homage his londe yelde ayen And they accorded vnto that a warde and came in this maner as is aboue sayd euery of them with golde syluer as moche as they myghte bere bytwene her hondes before the kynge there sayde the fourme the maner of theyr acorde of theyr awarde The kyng wolde not theym agaynsaye but as moche as they ordeyned he graūted confermed And so was the erle Godewin accorded with the kynge so he had ayen all his londe And afterwarde he bare hym soo well soo wysely that the kynge loued hym worder moche with hym he was ful preuy And within a lytell tyme they loued soo moche that there the kynge spowsed Godewins doughter made her quene And neuerthelesse though the kynge had a wyfe yet he lyued euer in chastyte clennesse of body without ony flesshly dede doynge with his wyf And the quene also in her halfe ladde an holy lyf two yere deyed And afterwarde the kynge lyued all his lyfe withoute ony wyf ¶ The kyng yaue the erledom of Oxenforde to Harolde that was Godewins sone made hym erle And soo well they were beloued bothe the fader he and so pryue with the kynge both the fader the sone that they myght do by ryght what thynge that they wolde For ayenst ryght wolde he no thynge do for no maner man so good and true he was of conscyence And therfore our lorde Ihesu Cryste grete specyll loue vnto hym shewed ¶ How kynge Edwarde sawe Swyne kynge of Denmark drowned in the see in the tyme of the Sacrament as he stode herde masse IT befelle vppon Wytsondaye as kynge Edwarde herde his masse in the grete chirche of Westmestre ryght at the leuacyon of Ihesu Crystys body as all men were gadred in to the chirche and came nygh the awter for to see the sacrynge the kynge his hondes lyft vp on hyghe and a grete laughter toke vp Wherfore all that aboute hym stode gretely ganne wonder And after masse they axed why the kynges laughter was Fayre lorde sayd kynge Edwarde I sawe Swyne the yonger that was kynge of Denmark come in to the see with all his power for to haue come in to Englonde vpon vs for to warre And I sawe hym all his folke drowned in the see and alle this I sawe in the leuacyon of Crystis body bytwene the preestes bonde and I had therfore so grete Ioye that I myghte not my laughter withholde ¶ And the erle Leueryk besyde hym stode at the leuacyon and openly sawe the fourme of brede torne in the lyknesse of a yonge childe toke vp his ryght honde and blessyd the kynge after the erle and the erle anone tomed hym towarde the kynge for to make hym see that holy syght And tho sayd the kynge ¶ Sy●● Erle sayd he I see well that ye see thanked be god that I haue honoured my god my sauyour visybly Ihesu Cryst in four me of man Whoo 's name be blessyd in all worldes AMEN ¶ How the rynge that sayne Edwarde bod gyuen to a poore pylgryme for the loue of god sayne Iohan Euangelyst came ayen to kynge Edwarde THis noble man sayne Edwarde regned .xiij. yere And thus it befell vpon a tyme are he deyed that two men of Englonde were gone in to holy londe had done theyr pylgrymage were goynge ayen in to theyr owne coūtree where they came fro And as they wente in the waye they mette a pylgryme that curteysly them saluwed axed of them in what londe in what coūtree they were borne And they sayd in Englonde Tho axed he who was kynge of Englonde And they answered sayd the good kynge Edwarde ¶ Fayre frendes sayd tho the pylgryme whan that ye come in to your coūtree ayen I praye you that ye wyll go vnto kynge Edwarde oftentymes grete hym in myn name and oftentymes hym thanke of his grete curteysye that he to me hath done namely for the rynge that he yaue me whan he had herde masse at Westmestre for saynt Iohans loue Euangelyst And toke the rynge toke it to the pylgrymes sayd I praye you go and bere this rynge take it vnto kyng Edwarde telle hym that I sende if hym a full ryche yefte I wyll hym yeue For vpon the .xij. daye he shall come vnto me euer more dwelle in blysse without ony ende ¶ Syr sayd the pylgrymes what man be ye and in what coūtree is your dwellynge ¶ Fayre frendes sayd he I
knyghtes of Englonde And all tho that were at that coūseyll swore feawte vnto Henry the kynge that was kynge Iohns sone ¶ And anone after the Legate enterdyted Walys for cause that they helde with the barons of Englonde Also all tho that holpe or yaue ony coūseyll to meue warre ayenst the newe kynge Henry he accursyd them And at the begynnynge he put in the sentence the kyngꝭ sone of Fraunce Lowys And neuertheles the same Lowys wolde not spare for all that But wente toke the castell of Barcamstede and also the castell of Hertforde And from that daye afterwarde the barons dyde there somo che harme thrughout all Englonde and pryncypalle the Frensshe men that were with kynge Lowys Wherfore the grete lordes and all the comyn people of Englonde lete them dresse for to dryue Lowys his company out of Englonde but some of the barons Frensshe men were gone to the cyte of Nicholl toke the towne helde it to kyng Lowys profyte But chyther came kynge Henryes men with a grete power that is to saye the erle Radulf of Chestre Wyllyam erle Marshall Wyllyam the Brener erle of Feriers many other lordes with them yaue batayll vnto Lowys men And there was slayne the erle of Perchees and Lowys men were fowle dyscomfyted And there was taken Serle erle of Wynchestre and Humfroy de Boune erle of Hertforde Robert the sone of Walter many other that began warre ayenst the kynge there they were taken ledde vnto kynge Henry that was kynge Iohans sone ¶ And whan the tydynges came to Lowys of the dyscomfyture y● was the kynges sone of Fraūce He remeued fro thens wente vnto London and lete shytte the yates fast of the cyte And anone after the kynge sent to the Burgeys of London that they sholde yelde them vnto hym the cyte also And he wolde theym graunte all theyr fraunchyses that euer they were wonte to haue before And wolde conferme them by his greate newe chartre vnder his brode seale ¶ And in the same tyme a greate lorde that wat called Eustace the monke came out of Fraunce with a grete company of Lordes and wolde haue come in to Englonde for to haue holpen Lowys the kynges sone of Fraunce But Hubert of Brugh the fyue portes with .viij. shyppes tho mette with them in the hyghe see assaylled theym egrely and ouercame them with strength smote of Eustace the monkes heed And toke also .x. grete lordes of Fraunce put theym in to pryson And slewe almoost all the men that came with theym and anone drowned the shyppes in the see ¶ How Lowys torned ayen in to Fraūce and of the confermacyon of kynge Iohans chartre SO whan Lowys herde these tydynages he dradde sore to be deed lost And let ordeyne speke bytwene y● kynge Lowys by the Legate Swalo And thorugh the Archebysshopp of Caūterbury thrugh other grete lordes that all the prysoners on that one halfe that other sholde be delyuerd go quyte And Lowys hymself sholde haue for his costes a thousande pounde of syluer sholde go out of Englonde and come neuer more therin agayne And in this maner was the accorde made bytwene kynge Henry and Lowys And tho was Lowys assoylled of y● popes Legate that was called Swalo of the sentence that he was in the Barons of Englonde also And after this kyng Henry Swalo the Legate Lowys went to Merton there was y● peas confermed bytwene them ordeyned And after Lowys wente from thens vnto London tooke his leue was brought with moche honour vnto the see with the Archebysshopp of Caunterbury and with other bysshops also with erles barons and so wente in to Fraunce ¶ And afterwarde the kynge the Archebysshop and also erles and barons assembled them came to the cyte of London atte Myghelmas that next came tho sewynge and helde there a grete parlyament atte London And there were tho renewed all the fraūchyse that kynge Iohn had graunted atte Romney mede and kynge Henry tho confermed by his chartre the whiche yet ben holden thrugh out all Englonde ¶ And in that tyme the kynge toke of euery plough londe .ij. shelynges And Hubert of Brugh was made tho cheyf Iustyce of Englond And this was in the fourth yere of kynge Henryes regne ¶ And in the same yere was Saynt Thomas of Caūterbury translated the .l. yere after his martyrdom And after it was ordeyned by all the lordes of Englonde that all Alyens sholde go out of Englonde come nomore therin And kynge Henry toke tho all the castelles in to his honde that kynge Iohan his fader had yeue take to Alyens for to kepe that helde with hym ¶ But the proude Fawkis of Brytayne rychely lete araye his castell of Bedforde which he had of kynge Iohns yefte helde that castell ayenst kynge Henryes wyll with myght and strength And the kynge came thyder with a stronge power and be syeged the castell And the Archebysshop mayster Stephen of Langton with a fayre company of knyghtes came to the kynge hym for to helpe And from the Ascensyon of our lorde vnto y● Assumpcyon of our lady lasted the syege And tho was the castell wonne and take And the kynge lete hange all tho that wente in to the castell with theyr good wyll for to holde the castell That is for to saye .lxxx. men ¶ And tho afterwarde Fawkis hymself was founde and had in a chirche att Couentree and there he forswore all Englonde with moche shame and wente agayne in to his owne countree ¶ And whyles that kyng Henry regned Edmonde of Abyndon that was tresorer of Salysbury was consecrated Archchysshopp of Caunterburye And this kyng Henry sente ouer the see vnto the Erle of prouynce y● he sholde sende hȳ his doughter in to Englonde that was called Ellenore and be wolde spowse her And sho she came in to Englonde after Crystmas And on the morowe after saynt Hylaryes daye the Archebysshop Edmonde spowsed them togyder at Westmestre with grete solempnyte And there was a swere syght bytwene them That is to saye Edwarde that was nexte kynge after his fader floure of curteysy of largenesse and Margarete y● was after quene of Scotlonde Beau●●●e that was after countesse of Brytayne and Kachetyne that deyed mayde in relygyon ¶ Of the quinzeme of goodes that wete graunted for the newe chartre and of the purueaunce of Oxforde ANd thus it befell that the lordes of Englonde wolde haue some addicyons moo in the chartre of fraūchyse that they had of the kynge spake thus bytwene them And the kyng graūted them all theyr axynge And made to them two chartres that one is called the grete chartre of fraūchyses that other is called y● chartre of forest And for the graunte of these two chartres prelates erles barons all the comyns of Englonde
yaue to the kynge a thousande marke of syluer ¶ Whan kynge Henry had be kynne .xliij. yere the same yere he his lordes erles barons of the reame wente to Oxforde and ordeyned a lawe in amendement of the reame And fyrst swore the kynge hymlself afterwarde alle the lordes of the londe that they wolde holde that statute for euermore and who that them brake sholde be deed But the seconde yere after that that ordynaūce the kynge thrugh counseyll of Edwarde his sone of Rycharde his brother that was erle of Cornewaylle also of other repented hym of that othe that he had made for to holde that lawe ordynaūce And sente to the courte of Rome to be assoylled of that othe And in the yere next comynge after was the grete darth of come in Englonde For a qurter of whete was worth .xxiiij. shelynges And the poore people ete netles and other wedes for hungre And deyed many a thousande for defawte of mete ¶ And in the .xlviij. yere of kynge Henryes regne began warre and debate bytwene hym and his lordes for by cause that he had broken the couenauntes that were made bytwone them at Oxforde ¶ And the same yere was y● towne of Northampton taken and folke slayne that were within for by cause that they had ordeyned wylde fyre for to brenne the cyte of London ¶ And in the moneth of Maye that came next after vpon saynt Pancras daye was the batayll of Lewes that is to saye the Wenesdaye before Saynt Dunstans daye And there was taken kynge Henry hym self syr Edwarde his sone Rychar de his broder erle of Corne wayll many other lordes And in the same yere nexte sewynge syr Edwarde the kynges sone brake out of the warde of syr Symonde of Moūtforth erle of Leycetre at Hert forde wente vnto the barons of the Marche they receyued hym with moche honour ¶ And the same tyme Gilbert of Claraūce erle of Glocetre that was in the warde also of y● forsayd Symonde thorugh the cōmaundement of kynge Henry that wente fro hym with a grete herte for cause that he sayd that the forsayd Gilbert was a foole wherfore he ordeyned hym afterwarde so helde hym with kyng Henry ¶ And on the Saterdaye next after the myddes of August syre Edwarde the kynges sone dyscomfyted syr Symonde de Mountforth at Kelyngworth but the grete lordes that were there with hym were taken that is to saye Baldewyne Wake Willyam de Moūchensye many other grete lordes And the Tewysdaye next after was y● batayll done at Eushā And there was slayne syr Symonde de Moūtforth Hugh the Spenser Moūt forth that was Rauf Bassettes fader of Draiton and other many grete lordes And whan this bataylle was done alle the gentylmen that had ben with the erle Symonde were dysheryted ordeyned togyder dyde moche harme to all the londe For they destroyed theyr enmyes in all that they myght ¶ Of the syege of Kenylworth how the gentylmen were dysheryted thorugh counseyll of the lordes of the reame of Englonde and how they came agayne and had theyr londes ANd the nexte yere comynge in May the fourth daye before the frest of saynt Dunstane was the batayle scomfyture at Chestrefelde of them that were dysheryted there was many of theym slayne ¶ And Robert Erle of Feriers there was taken also Baldewyne Wake Iohn oclahay with moche sorowe escaped thens And on saynt Iohans cue the Baptyst tho sewynge began y● syege of the castell Kenilworth the syege lasted to saynt Thomas eue y● apostle in whiche daye syr Hugh Hastynge had the castel for to kepe that yelded vp the castell vnto the kyng in this manere that hymself the other that were within the castell sholde haue theyr lyues lȳme as moche thynge as they had therin both hors harneys four dayes of respyte for to delyuer clenly the castell of themself of all other maner thynge as they had within the castell so they went fro the castell And syr Symonde Moūtforth the yonger the coūtesse his moder were gone ouer the see in to Fraunce there helde them as people that were exyled out of Englonde for euer ¶ And soone after it was ordeyned by the Legate Octobone by other greate lordes the wysest of Englonde that all tho that had be ayenst the kyng and were dysheryted sholde haue ayen theyt londes by greuous raūsons after that it was ordeyned And thus they were accorded with the kyng peas cryed th●●ughout all Englonde and thus the warre was ended And whan it was done the Legate toke his leue of the kyng of the quene of the g●rate lordes of Englonde went tho to Rome the .lv. yere of kynge Henryes regne and Edwarde kynge Iohns sone of Brytayne Iohan Vessi Thomas of Clare Rogere at Cly●●orde Othes of 〈◊〉 Robert le Bru● Iohan of Verdon and many other lordes of Englonde of be yonde the see tooke they waye towarde y● hooly londe And y● kyng Henry deyed in the same tyme att Westmestre what he had regned .lv. yere .xix. wekes on saynt Edmonds daye the Archebysshop of Caslterbury And he was enteryd on saynt Edmondes daye the kyng in the yere of the Incarnacyon of our lorde Iesu Cryste M.CC.lxxij ¶ Prophecye of Merlyn of the kynge Henry the fyrste erpowned that was kynge Iohans sone ANd of this Henry prophecyed Merlyn and sayd that a lamb● sholde come out of Wynchestre in y● 〈◊〉 re of the Incarnacyon of our lorde Ihesu Cryste M.CC. and .xvi. with true lyppes holynesse wryten in his herte● And he sayd so the for y● good Henry the kynge was borne in Wynchestre in the yere abouesayd he spake good wordes swete was an holy man of good conseyence And Merlyn sayd that this Henry sholde make the fayrest place of the worlde that in his tyme sholde not be fully ended he sayd soth For he made the newe werke of y● abbaye of saynt Peters chirche att Westmestre that is fayrer of syght than ony other place y● ony man knoweth thorugh out all ●ystendom But kynge Henry deyed are that werke were fully at an ende that was grete harme ¶ And yet sayd Merlyn that this lambe sholde haue peas the moost parte of his regne And he sayde full soth for he was neuer noyed thorugh warre neyther dyseased in no manere wyse tyll a lytell afore his dethe Merlyn sayd in his prophecye more in the regne ende of the fursayd la●● be a wulf of a straunge londe shall do● hym moche har●●● tho●●gh his 〈◊〉 And that he sholde at y● laste be mayste● thorugh helpe of a reed foxe that sholde come forth of the Northwest sholde hȳ ouercome And that he sholde dryue hȳ out of the water y● prophecye full well was knowen For within a lytell tyme or the kynge deyed Symonde of
Moūtforde erle of Leycetre that was borne in Fraūce began ayenst hym stronge warre thrugh whiche doynge many a good bacheler destroyed was deyed dyshe ryted ¶ And whan kynge Henry had the byctory at Eusham Symond the erle was slayne thorugh helpe myght of Gilbert of Clare erle of Glocetre that was in kepynge warde of the forsayd Symonde thrugh ordynaunce of kyng Henry that wente ayen vnto the kynge with moche power Wherfor the forsayd Symonde was destroyed and that was grete harme to the comyns of Englonde that soo good a man was slayne for the trouth deyed in charyte for the comyn profyte of the same folke therfore almyghty god for hym hath syns shewed many a fayre myracle to dyuers men wȳmen of the spkenesse dysease that they haue had for the loue of hym ¶ And Merlyn also sayd in his prophecye that after that tyme the lambe sholde lyue no whyle thenne his seed sholde be in straunge londe without ony pasture and he sayd soth for kynge Henry lyued no whyle after y● Symonde Moūt forde was slayne that kynge Henry ne deyed anone after hym And in the meane tyme syr Edwarde his sone that was the best kynge of the worlde of honour was tho in the holy londe gate there Acres And in that coūtree he begate there vpon dame Elenore his wyf Iohan of Acres his doughter that afterwarde was countesse of Glocetre made suche a vyage in the holy londe that alle the worlde spake of his knyghthode euery man dradde hym hye lowe thorugh out alle crystendome as the s●orye of hym telleth as after warde ye shall here more openly ¶ And from the tyme that kyng Henry deyed tyll that syr Edwarde was crowned kyng all the grete lordes of Englond were as faderles childern withoute ony socoure that theym myght mayntene gouerne and defende ayenst theyr deedly enmyes ORegorius the .ix. was pope after Honorius this man canonysed many sayntes defended myghtely the chirche ayenst Frederyk therfore he toke many prelates two Cardynalles the whiche wente to coūseyll ayenst hym This pope was segyd in the cyte of Rome by the Emperour he sawe the Romayns were corrupte by the moneye of the Emperour Thenne he toke in his honde the heedes of the appostles Peter Poule went with processyon fro the chirche of saynt Iohan Latranence to saynt Peters chirche ¶ And so he gate the hertꝭ of the Romayns the Emperour went fayr awaye fro y● cyte This pope made frere Ianond to compyle the fyue bolres of Decretales of many pystles decrees And after with many trybulacyons of this tyraunt other he decessyd and wente to heuen ¶ Celestinus the fourth was pope after Gregoriꝰ almoost a moneth he was in his lyfe in his connynge laudable And he was an olde man a feble decessyd there was no pope after hym almoost a .xij. month ¶ Innocenciꝰ the fourth was pope after hym almoost .xi. yere .vi. monethes this man canonysed many sayntes Frederyk the Emperour he deposyd cursyd as enmye vnto god in the thyrde yere that he was made pope he was holpe by the Ianuencꝭ ¶ Thenne was Henry the sixt chosen Wyllyam by the popes commaundement ayenst Frederyk that one after an other but chey preuayled not to ouercome his tyrāny for he was ouermyghty ne these were not crowned for they dece●●yd anone ¶ Thomas de Aquine an holy doctour Albertus magnus the bysshop of Ratisponens Eustacius Bonauenture a deuoute doctour were this tyme the whiche destroyed moche heresye enfected by the Emperour ¶ Alexander was pope after Innocencius .viij. yere lytell of hym is wryten ¶ Vrbanꝰ was after hȳ thre yere thre monethes this man dro ue awaye the hoste of the Sarrasyns by men marked with the crosse the whiche Maufred had sente ayenst the chirche And the pope toke the kyngdom of Cecyle to the kynges brother of Fraunce that he sholde fyght with Maufrede thenne he decessyd And Maufrede after lost his lyf his kyngdom by Karolus ¶ Alphonsus the kynge of Castell Rychardes brother to the kynge of Englonde erle of Cornewayle were chosen Emperours after the longe vacacyon of the Empyre for the chesers of the Emperour were dyuyded in sondre there was grete stryfe many yere At the laste decessyd Rycharde Alphonsus came amye afore Gregoriꝰ the .ix. by the sygne of peas vtterly renounced all his tytle of the Empyre and he had ony for he was a very wytty man a noble astronomer and his tables ben very famous the whiche he made for they be compendyous ¶ Clemens the fourth was pope after Vrbanꝰ .iij. yere .ix. monethes this Clemens was an holy man sayd thrugh the spyryte of prophecy that the enmyes of the chirche sholde perysshe as the smoke And it is to be byleued y● god sessyd the trybulacyons of the chirche thorugh his merytes This man afore had a wyf and childern and whan he was preest after bysshop he was sente in to Englond Legate and he no thynge knowynge was chosen pope and after decessyd bledssydly for his vertuous lyuynge ¶ Gregoriꝰ the .x. was 〈◊〉 after hym foure yere after he was made 〈◊〉 for the desyre that he had to the holy londe the whiche he entended to vysyte personally at Lodun̄ in Fraūce he made a solempne counseyll in the whiche the coūseyll of the Grekes the Tartars were there the Grekꝭ promysed to be refout med by the vnyte of the chirche And the Tartars were but a lytell afore baptysed promysed the same And there were gadred .vi. C. bysshops M. prelates therfore a certayne man sayd Gregorius gadred togrder all kynde of people And there was decreed that all persans vycaryes sholde be called preest no prelates that no man sholde assygne his tythes to what chirche he wolde as they dyde afore But they sholde be payde to his moder chirche And he dampned the pluralyte of benefyces deyed a blessyd man ¶ Innocenciꝰ the .v. was after hym .v. monethes lytell he dyde ¶ Adrianꝰ was after hym 00 moneth dyde lesse ¶ Iohs the .xxi. was after hȳ viij monethes he was in dyuers scyences a famous man but in maners a fole decessyd anone ¶ Nicholaus the thyrde was pope after Iohn 00 yere This man was in his dayes in buyldyng a noble man well gouerned the cyte all his dayes y● seconde yere he decessyd ¶ Radulphꝰ was Emperour .xviij. yere this man was erle of Hanebrugh a wyse mā in armes noble victoryous was chosen at Basyle And he toke the crosse on hȳ for the holy londe Thimperya● blessynge he had not but the pope alowed the eleceyon for fauour of the holy londe ¶ Anno dm̄ M.CC.lxxiiij MArtinus the .iiij. was 〈◊〉 after Nicholaꝰ iiij yere this man was a grete louer of relygyous men
in the yere of kynge Edward regne .xxxiii. y● fals traytour was take presentyd to the kynge But the kynge wolde not see hym but sent hym to London to receyue his Iugement and vpon saynt Barthylme●s eue was he hangyd and drawe his hedesmyte of his bowelles take oute of his body and brent his body quarteres and sent vnto foure of the best townes of Scotlonde his heed put vpon a spere and sette vpon London brydge 〈◊〉 ensample that the Scottes sholde haue in mynde for to do a mysse ayenst ther lyege lorde eftsones ¶ How the Scottes came to kynge Edwarde for too amende theyr 〈◊〉 they had done ayenst hym ANd at Mygkelmas tho next comynge kynge Edwarde helde his parlemēt at westmester thy●●● came y● scottes y● is to saye y● bysshop of saynt andrewes Robert y● Brus erle of caryk Symonde Frysell Iohn̄ y● erle of Athell they were accorded with y● kynge boūde by othe swore y● they afterwarde yf ony of them mysbare them ayenst kynge Edwarde y● they sholde he dysheryted for euermore And whan theyr peas was thus made they toke theyr leue pryuely went horne into Scotlonde ¶ Howe Robert Brus chalenged Scotlonde SO after this Roberte the Brus Erle of Caryk sente by hys letters to the Erles and barons of Scotlonde that they sholde come too hym to Scone in the morowe after the Concepcion of our lady for grete ●edis of y● lōde And the lordes came at the day assygned And the same day syr Robert the Brus sayd Fayre lordes full well ye knowe yts in my persone dwellyd the ryght of the reame of Scotlonde as ye wote well I am ryghtfull heyre syth y● syr Iohn̄ baylol that was oure kynge vs hath forsake lefte his londe and though it so be that kynge Edwarde of Englonde with wronfull power hath made me too hym assent ayenst my wyll yf that ye wyl graūte y● I may be kynge of Scotlōde I shal kepe you ayenst kynge Edwarde of enlonde ayenste all manere men w e that worde y● abbot of Scon arose vp before them all sayde y● it was reason for to helpe hȳ the londe to kepe defende And tho sayd in presence of them al y● he wolde geue hym a thousand poūde for to mayntene the londe all the othere graūted y● londe to hym with ther power hym for to helpe defyed kynge Edwarde of Englonde sayd that Robert Brus sholde be kynge of Englonde ¶ How syr Iohn̄ of Comyn ayenst sayd the crownynge of syr Robert Brus. LOrdynges sayd syr Iohn̄ of comyn thynke on y● truth othe ye made to kynge Edwarde of Englonde touchynge myselfe I wyll nott breke myn othe for no man so he wente frō y● company at the tyme. wherfore Roberte y● Brus all tho y● to hym consented were wrothe menaced syr Iohn̄ of comȳ Tho ordened they another counsell att Dumfris too whiche came y● forsayd syr Iohn̄ of Comyn for he dwelled but two myle fro Dumfris ther he was wont to soiourne and abyde ¶ How syr Iohn̄ was traytonrsly slayn SO whan Robert the Brus wyst that all the greate lordes were come of Scotlonde to Scone saufe Syr Iohn̄ Comyn y● soiourned thonygh scon he sent specyally after the sayd syr Iohn̄ to come and speke with hym And vpō that he came spake with hym at y● gray freres in Dumfris that was the thursday after Candelmasse day syr Iohn̄ graunted to go with hym And whanne he had herde masse he toke a soppe and dranke afterwarde he bestrode his palfroy rode to Dumfris whan Robert the Brus fawe hym come at a wyndow as he was in his chambre made Ioy inough came ayenst hym collyd hym aboute the necke made with hym gode semblaūt And whan all the erles barons of Scotlonde were there present Robert the Brus sayd syrs ye wote wel the cause of this comynge wherfore it is yf ye wyll graunt y● I be kynge of scotlonde as ryght heyre of the londe And all the lordes that were there sayd with on voys that he sholde be crowned kȳg of Scotlond y● they wolde hym helpe mayntene ayenst all maner men on liue for hym yf it were nede to deye y● gentyll knyght tho Iohn̄ of Comyn answerd Certes neuer for me ne for to haue of me asmoche helpe as the value of a boton For that othe that I haue made vnto kynge Edwarde of Englonde I shall holde while my lyfe woll laste And with that worde he went from y● cō pany wolde alyght vpon his palfroy Robert Brus pursewed hym with a drawen swerde bare hym thrugh y● body syr Iohn̄ Comyn fell downe vnto the erthe But whan Roger y● was syr Iohn̄ Comyns broder saw y● falinesse he stert to syr Robert the Brus smote hym with a knyfe but the fals traytour was armyd vnder so that y● stroke myght do hym no harme and somoche helpe came about syr Robert y● Brꝰ so that to bert Comyn was ther slaȳ all to heren in to peces Robert y● Brus torned ayen there that syr Iohan Comyn the noble baron lay wounded and pyued towarde his dethe besyde the hygh awter in the chyrche of the gray freres and sayd vnto syr Iohn̄ Comyn O traytoure thou shalt be dede and neuer after lette myn auauncement and shoke his swerde at the hygh awter and smote hym on his heed that the brayne felle downe vppon the grounde and the blood sterte on hygh vpon the walles and yet vnto this daye is that blood seen there that no water may wasshe it awaye And so deyed that noble knyght in holy chirche ANd whan this traytour Robert the Brus sawe that no man wolde lette his coronacyon he cōmaunded all them that were of power sholde come vnto his crownynge to saynt Iohans towne in Scotlonde And so it befell vpon our lady daye the Annūctacōn the bysshopp of Glaston the bysshop of saynt Andrewes crowned for ther kynge this Robert y● Brus in saynt Iohans towne made hym kynge And anone after he droue all thenglysshmen out of Scotlonde And they fled came compleyned them vnto kynge Edwarde how y● Robert the Brus had dryue them out of y● londe and dysheryted theym ¶ Howe that kynge Edwarde dubbyd at westmestre .xxiiij. score knyghtes ANd whan kynge Edwarde herde of this myscheyf he swore y● he sholde be auenged therof and sayde That all the traytours of Scotlonde sholde be hangyd and drawen and that they sholde neuer be raunsonned ¶ And kynge Edward thought vpon this falsnesse that the Scottes hadde to hym done And sente after alle the bachelers of Englonde that theye sholde come vnto London at wytsontyde he dubbyd at westmestre .xxiiij. score knyghtes ¶ Thō ordened y● noble kynge Edwarde for to go into scotlōde to werre vpon Robert y● Brus And sent
before hym into Scotlonde syr Aymer the valaūce erle of Penbroge syr Henry Percy baron with a fayre company y● pursewed the Scottes brente townes castels and afterwarde came the kynge hymself with erles and barons a fayre company ¶ How Robert Brus was dyscōfyted in bataylle howe Symonde Fryselle was slayne THe Fryday next before the Ass●s̄cyon of our lady kynge Edwar de mette Robert Brus besyde saynt Iohans towne in Scotlonde with his cō pany of the whiche company kyng Edwarde slewe .vij. thousande whan Robert Brus sawe this myscheyf he begā to flee hydde hym that no man myghte hym fynde But syr Symonde Frysell pursewed hym sore so y● he torned aren aboode bataylle for he was a worthy knyghte and a bolde of body And then glysshmen pursewed euer sore in euerye syde slewe the stede that syr Symonde rode vpon they toke hym lad hym vnto the hoste And syr Symonde begā for to flatre speke fayre and sayd lordes I shall yeue you four thousand marke of syluer myn hors harneys and all myn armoure become a begger Tho answerd Theobaude of Peuenes y● was the kynges archere Now so god me helpe it is for noughte y● thou spekeste For all the golde in Englonde I wolde not lete y● go with oute cōmaūdement of kyng Edwarde tho was he had vnto kynge Edward the kynge wolde not se hym but cōmaūded to lede hym away to haue his dome atte London on our ladies eue Natiuite he was hanged drawe his heed smyte of hangyd ayen with chey●es of yren vpon the galowes And his heede was set vpon London brydge vpon a sperr● ayenst Crystemasse the bodye was brente bycause that the men that kepte y● body by nyght they saw so many deuyls rampynge with grete yrē hokes rennȳge vpon y● galowes horrible tormēted y● body many y● thē sawe anone after they deyed for drede some wexed mad or sore syknes they had and in that batayll was take the bysshop of Baston the bysshop of saynt Andrewes and the abbot of Sconne all armyd with yren as men of armes as fals traytours and fals prelates ayenste theyr othe And they were brought to the kyng and the kynge sente them vnto the pope of Rome that he sholde do with theym what his wyll were ¶ How Iohn̄ therle of Alethes was taken and put to dethe ANd at that bataylle fled syr Iohan erle of Alethes wente to a chyrche and there hydde hym for drede but he myght haue there noo refute for cause that the chirche was enterdyted thrugh a generall sentence and in y● same chirche he was taken And this sir Iohn̄ went well too haue scaped fro the dethe for cause that he claymed kynred of kynge Edwarde And the kynge wolde no lēger be bytrayed of his traytours but sent hym to london in haste there was hangyd and his heed smyt of and his body brent all to asshes But at the prayer of the quene Margarete for cause that he claymed of kynge Edwarde kynrede his drawynge was foryeue hȳ ¶ How Iohn̄ that was wyllyam waleys brother was put to dethe AS the gretteste maysters of scotlonde were thus doon to euyll dethe and destroyed for theyr falsnesse Iohan that was wyllyam waleys brother was take and doon vnto deth as syr Iohan erle of Alehes was ¶ How Robert the Brus fled from scotlonde to Northway ANd at that same tyme was Robert y● Brus moche hated amonge the people of Scotlonde soo that he wyste not what he was beste to do and for to hyde hym he went to Norway to the kynge that had spousyd his syster there helde hym socour for to haue and Robert the Brus myght not be founde in Scotlonde So kynge Edwarde tho lete crye his peas thrugh out all the londe and his lawes were vsyd his mynystrys serued thrugh out all the londe ¶ Howe kynge Edwarde deyed SO as kynge Edwarde had abatyd his enemyes turned southwarde and sykned at Burgh vpon sande in the marche of scotlonde and callyd too hym Henry Lacy erle of Nichol. syrguy erle of warwyk syr Aylmer erle of Penbroke and syr Robert of Clyfforde baron and prayed theym vpon the fayth y● they hym ought that they sholde make Edwarde of Carnaruan kynge of Englonde assone as they myghte And that they sholde not suffre Peers of Ganaston come agayne into Englonde for to make his sone to ryot and they graunted hym with good wyll And the kynge toke his sacrament of holy chirche as a good Crysten man sholde and deyed in repentaunce and whan he had ben kynge .xxxv. yere he deyed and was buryed at westmestre with moche solempnyte Vpon whose soule god haue mercy ¶ Of Merlyns prophecyes that were declared of kynge Edwarde that was kyng Henryes sone OF this kynge Edwarde prophecyed Merlyn and called hym a dragon the seconde of y● .vi. kynges y● sholde regne in Englonde and sayde that he sholde be medled with mercy and also with strenth and sternesse that sholde kepe Englonde from colde and hete And that he sholde opene his mouthe toward walys and that he sholde sette his foote in wyk that he sholde close with walwes that sholde do moche harme to his sede And he sayd sothe for the good kȳge Edwarde was medled with mercye and with fyersnesse with mercy ayenste his enmyes of walys after of Scotlōde w●th fyernesse whan he put them to dethe for ther falsnesse traytoursly as they had deserued And well keped he englonde from colde heet syth he kept it from all maner of enmyes that ran vppon hym to do hym ony wronge ¶ And well he opened his mouth towarde walys made it quake thrughe hydour of his mouthe whan he conqueryd it thrughe dynt of swerd For the prynce Lewelyn Dauyd his brother Ris and Morgan were put to deth thrugh theyr falsnesse and theyr foly And he sette his fote into wyk conquerd Berwyk at the whiche conquest were slayne .xxv. thousande .vii hondred out take suche as were brent in the redde halle ¶ And the walles that he lete make shall be noyous vnto his sede as men shall here after in y● lyf of syr Edward of Carnaruan his sone And yet sayd merlyn that he shold make ryuers ren in blood with brayne y● semyd well in his werres ther as he had y● maystry And yet Merlyn sayd y● ther sholde come a people out of y● northwest durynge y● regne of y● forsayd dragon y● shold be lad by an yll greyhoūde that shold the dragon crowne kynge that afterward shold fle ouer y● se for drede of the dragō without comynge ayen y● was proued by syr Iohn̄ Baylol that kynge Edwarde made to be kynge of Scotlōde y● falsly arose ayenst hym after he fled to his owne londꝭ of Fraūce neuer he came ayen in to Scotlonde for drede of kyng Edwarde And yet
Englonde durynge kynge Edwarde lyues tyme. ¶ How the Scottes robbyd Northumberlonde ANd in the same tyme came the Scottes ayen into Englonde dystroyed Northumberlonde and brent that londe and robbyd it and slew men wymmen and chyldren that laye in ther cradyls and brent also holy chirche and dystroyed cristendome and toke and bare Engl●●● mēnys godes as they had ben sara●●● 〈◊〉 or paynems And of y● wickydne●●● 〈◊〉 they dydde all the worlde spake 〈◊〉 ¶ How the Scottes wolde not amende theyr trespasse and therfore Scotlonde was enterdyted SO pope Iohn̄ y● .xxii. after saynt Petyr herde of the grete sorowe and myscheyf that y● Scottes wrought he was wonder sorye that crystendome was so dystroyed thrugh the Scottes namely they dystroyed so holy chirches wherfore the pope sente a generall sentence vnder his bulles of leed vnto y● archebysshop of Caūterbury to tharche● bysshopp of Yorke y● yf Robert y● Brus of Scotlonde wolde not be Iustifyed make amēdes vnto y● kynge of Englōde Edwarde theyr lorde make amendes of his losse of his harmes y● they had doon in Englonde also to restore y● goodes y● they had taken of holy ch●● che y● the sentence sholde be pronouncyd through out all Englonde And whan y● Scottes herde this they wolde not leue theyr malyce for y● popys cōmaūdemēt wherfore Robert y● Beus Iamys Douglas Thomas Radulf erle of Moref all tho y● with them comyned or them helpe in worde ordede were accursyd in euery chirche thrugh oute all Englonde euery day at masse thre tymes noo masse shold be sōge in holy chirche thrughe out all Scotlonde but yf the Scottes wold make restitueyō of the harmes that they hadd made vnto holy chirche wherfore many agoode preste and holy men therfore were slayne thrugh the reame of Scotlōde bycause they wolde not synge masse ayenst the po●ys commaūdement and ayenste his wyll to do fulfyll the tyrauntes wyll ¶ How syre Hughe Spensers sone was made the kynges chamberlayne and of the batayle of Mitone ANd it was not longe afterwarde that the kynge ne ordeyned a parlement at Borke And there was syre Spensers sone made Chambrelayne And the meane tyme while the werre lasted the kyng went ayen into Scotlonde that it was wonder for to wytte besegyd the towne of Berwyk but y● scottes wente ouer y● water at Sole wath y● was thre myle from y● kynges hoste and pryuely they stele away by nyght came into Englōde robbyd dystroyed all y● they myghte spared no manere thynge tyll y● they came vnto Yorke whan y● Englysshmen that were left at home herde thyse tydynges all tho that myght traueyll as well monkꝭ preestes freres chanons seculers came mett with the Scottes at Myton vp swale y● xii day of Octobre Alas for sorowe for the Englysshe husbonde men that coude nothynge of the werre y● there were kyllyd drowned in an arme of y● see And y● cheyfteynes syr wyllyam of Melton Archebysshop of Yorbe the abbot of selby with ther stedes fledde came to yorke and that was their owne foly that they had that myschaunce For they passed y● water of Swale the Scottes sette a fire the stackes of hey the smoke therof was so huge y● the Englysshmen myght not se the Scottes And whann the Englysshmen were goon ouer y● water tho came the Scottes with theyr wynge in maner of a shelde and came towarde y● Englysshmen in araye And the Englisshemen fled for vneth they had ony mē of armys For y● kynge had them almoost lost at the syege of Berwyk and the Scottes hobylers wente bytwene y● bridge and thenglyssmen And whan y● grete host them mette the Englysshe men fled bytwene the hobilers and the grete host And the Englysshmen almoost were there slayne and he that myght go ouer the water were saued but many were drowned Alas for there were slayne many men of relygyon seculers preestes and clerkes with moche sorowe tharche bysshop escaped and therfore the Scottes callyd that batayll the white batayl ¶ How kynge Edwarde dyd all manere thynge that syr Hughe Spenser wolde NOwe as kynge Edwarde herde this tydynges he remeued his sege trom Berwyk came agayn into englonde But syr Hugh Spenser y● was the kynges Chamberlayne kepte so the kynges chamber y● no man myzte speke with y● kynge But he had made with hȳ a fret for to do all his nedet that ouer me sure And this Hugh bare hym so stewte that all men had of hym scorne dyspyte the kynge hymselfe wolde not be gouerned ne rulyd by no manere of man but oonly by his fader by hym And if on● knyghte of Englonde had wodes maneyrs or londes y● they wolde coueyte ano ne y● kynge must yeue it them or elles y● man y● ought it sholde be falsly endyted of forfeyt or felony And thrughe suche doynge they dysheryted many a bachelere and somoche londe he gate that it was grete wonder And whā the lordes of Englonde sawe the greate couetyse falsnesse of syr Hugh Spenser the fader and of syr Hugh the sone they came to the gentyll Erle of Lancastre and axyd hym of counseyll of the dysese that was in the reame though syr Hugh Spenser his sone in hast by one assente they made a pryne assemble at Shirburne in Elmede they made there an othe for to brebe dystrouble y● daynge bytwene the kynge syr Hugh Spenser his sone vpon theyr power And they wente in to the marche of walys dystroyed the londe of the forsayd syr Hughes ¶ Howe syr Hugh Spenser and his fader were exyled out of Englonde SO whan kynge Edwarde sawe the grete harme distruction y● y● barons of Englond dyd vnto syr Hugh Spensers londe too his sone in euery place that they came vpon y● kyng tho thrugh his counseyll exyled syre Monbraye syr Roger Clyfforde and syr Gosselyn Dauyll many other lordes y● were to theym consente wherfore y● barons dyd tho more harme than they dyde before whan y● kynge saw y● the barons wolde not sesse of theyr cruelte y● kynge was so re adradde lest they wolde dystroye hym his reame for his mayntenaūce but if he assented to them And so he sente for them by his letters y● they shold come to London to his parlement at a certayne daye as in his letters were conteyned they came with thre bataylles well armyd at all poyntes euery batayll had cotarmours of grene clothe therof the ryghte quarter was yelowe with whyte bendes wherfore y● parlement was callyd y● parlemente of the whyte bende in y● company was syre Humfrey de bo houne erle of Herford syr Roger Cliftorde syr Iohn̄ Monbray syr Gosselyn Dauyll syr Roger Mortmer vn●●e of syr Roger Mortemer of wygmore syre Henry of Trays syr Iohn̄ Gyffarde syr Barthilmew of Badelest emore that was y●
wyllyam Fitz wyllam syr werreyn of Isell Syr Henry Bradborn syr wyllyam Cheyne barons all Iohn̄ page esquyer and sone after at Yorke were drawen hangyd syr Roger Clyfforde syre Iohn̄ of Mambray barons syr Goseline Deuyll knyght ¶ And at Brystowe were drawen and hangyd syr Henry of wemyngton syr Henry Mountforde barons ¶ And at Gloucetre were drawen and hangyd syr Iohn̄ Gaffarde and syr wyllyam of Elmebrugge barons at London were gangyd drawen Syr Henry Tyes baron ¶ And at wynchel se sye Thomas Clepepyr knyght And ferthermore to tell of this cruell occyon at wyndsore was drawe hangyd Syr Frauncys waldenham baron at Caūterbury was drawen and hangyd Syre 〈◊〉 Badeles more and syr barthyl●ew of Asshe 〈◊〉 barons at Cardyf in walys syr wyllyam Flemmynge baron ▪ ¶ How kynge Edwarde went into scotlonde with an hundred thousande men of armys myght not spede SO● whanne kynge Edwarde of Englonde had brought the floure of cheualry vnto theyr dethe thrughe sounsell consent of syr Hugh Spenser the fader syr Hugh y● sone he became as woode ● as ony lyon and what soo euer y● Spensers wolde haue it was done so well y● kynge louyd theym y● they myght do with hym all thynge that them lyked wherfore the kynge gaaf vnto sir Hugh Spenser the fader y● erldom of wȳchestre vnto syr Andrewe of Herkela theerldom of Cardoill● in preiudyce and in harmynge of his crowne And kynge Edwarde tho thrugh coūsell of y● Spēsers dysheryted all them that had be ayenst hym in ony quarell with Thomas of Lācastre And many other were dysheryted also bycause that the Spensers coueyted for to haue theyr lōdes And so they had all that they wolde desyre with wrōge ayenste all reason Tho made the kȳg Robert Baldok a false pylled clerke Chaunceler of Englond thrugh coūsell of the forsayd Spensers ¶ And he was a false rybaude And a coueytouse And so they counseylled the kynge moche that the kyng lete take to his owne warde all the goodes of the lordes that were put wronfully to the dethe into his owne honde And aswell they toke the godes that were within holy chirche as y● godes that were without lete theym be put into his tresoury in London lete them calle his forfeytes And by ther coūsell y● kynge wroughte for euer more he dys heryted them y● the godes oughte thrugh ther counsell lete ●●er a t●legge of all the goodes of Englonde wherfore he was the rychest kynge y● euer was in Englonde after wyllyam Bastarde that cuonquered Englonde And yet thrughe coūsell of them hym semyd that he had notte ynough But made yet euery toune of Englonde for to fynde a man of armys vpon theyr owne costes for to go werre vpon y● Scottes that were hys enmyes wherfore the kynge wente into Scotlonde with an h●ūdred thousande men of armys at wytsontyde in the yere of oure lorde Ihesu Criste M.CCC.xxii But the Scottes wente hyd them in moūteyns and in wodes and taryed the Englysshmen fro day to day that y● kynge myght for no manere thynge fȳde them in playne felde wherfore ma●● Englysshmen that had lytyll vytaylles deyed there for hungre wonder faste and sodenly in goynge and comynge and namely tho that had ben ayenst Thomas of Lancastre robbyd his men vpon 〈◊〉 londes whan kynge Edwarde saw that vytaylles fayled hym he was wonder sore dyscomfited bycause also that his men deyed for he myght not ●pede of his enmyes So at the laste he came ayen into Englonde anone after came Iames Douglas and also Thomas Rudulph with an huge hooste into Englonde in to Northumberlonde with them the Englysshmen that were dryuen oute of Englonde and came and robbyd y● coūtree and slewe the people and also bree● the towne that was callyd Northallerton many other townes to Yorke And wha● the kynge herde this tydynges be lete so mone all manere men that myght traueyller And so y● Englysshmen mette y● Scottes at the abbay of Beyg●elande the .xv. daye after Myghelmas in the same yere aboue sayd and the Englysshe men were there dyscomfyted And atte that scomfyture 〈◊〉 take Syr Iohan of Brytayne Erle of Rychmonde that helde the countre and the erldom of Lancastre and after he payed an huge raunsome and was lete god And after that he wente into Fraunce came neuer after agayne ¶ How syr Andrew of Herkelay was take put to deth●y t was erle of Cardoil THen at y● tyme was syr Andrew of Herkela that new was made erle of Cardoil for cause that he had taken y● good Erle Thomas of Lancastre ¶ He had ordeyned thrugh y● kynges cōmaūdement of Englonde for to brynge hȳ all the power that he myght for to helpe ayenst y● Scottes at y● abbaye of Beyghlande And whan the fals traytour had gadred all the people that he myght and sholde haue come to the kynge vnto the abbaye of Beyghelande the fals traytour ladde them by a nother coūtre thrughe Copelonde thrughe therldome of Lancastre wente thrugh ●he countre robbyd slew the folke all that he myghte And ferthermore the fals traytour had take a grete so●●●e of golde sylue● of syr Iamys Douglas for to be ayenste y● kynge of Englonde to be helpynge holdynge with the Scottes thrugh whose treason the kynge of Englonde was scomfyted at Beyghlande or y● he came f●yder wherfore the kynge was toward hym wonder wrothe lete pryuely enquere by y● coūtre abowte how that it was And some men enquered aspyed so at the laste y● trough was foūde soughte And he atteynte take as a fals traytour as y● gode erle Thomas of lancastre hym tolde or that he was put vnto deth at his takynge at Burbrugge to him sayd Or y● yere were doon he sholde be take holde a traytour And so it was as the holy man sayd ¶ wherfore y● kȳge sente pryuely too syr Anthoyn of Lucy a knyghte of the countre of Cardoil that he shold take syr Andrewe of Herkela put hym vnto the dethe And to brȳge this thynge vnto the ende the kynge sente his Commyssyon so that this same Andrewe was take at Cordoil ladde vnto the barre in y● manere of an erle worthyly arayed with a swerde gyrde about hym hosyd and sporyd ¶ Tho spake syr Authoyn in this maner syr Andrew sayd he the kynge puttyth vpon the for asmoche as thou hast be orpyd in thy de dys he dyd to the moche honoure made the erle of Cardoil● thou as a traytour to thy lorde laddest the peple of his countre that sholde haue holpe hym att the bataylle of Beyghelande and thou laddest them away by the countre of copelonde and thrugh the erldom of Lancastre wherfor our lorde the kynge was discomfy●d there of the Scottes thrugh thy treason falsnesse and yf y● haddest come bi
vpon all that ye shall mowe for fayte ayen vs. y● yf y● sayd Spenser oure enmye come within your power y● ye do hym hastely to be take and saufly kepte vntyll ye haue ordeyned of hym our wil and y● ye leue it notte in no manere wyse as ye desyre honoure profyte of vs all and of al the reame Vnderstondynge ye ryght well that yf ye do this our prayer and streyghte cōmaundement we thynke vs somoche y● more beholdynge vnto you And also ye shall gete you worshyp also profyte yf ye sende vs hastely answer of all youre wyll ayen at Baldok the syxte daye of Octobre whiche letter in the dawnynge of y● daye of saynt Denys was tachyd vpon the newe crosse in Chepe and many copyes of y● same letter were tackyd vpon wyndowes dores and vpon other places in she cyte of london that all men passynge by the waye myght them rede and se And in the same tyme kynge Edwarde was at London in the toure at his mete And a messager came into the hall and sayde that the quene Isabell was come to loude at Here wiche and hath broughte in her cōpany syr Iohn̄ of 〈◊〉 with him men of armes without nombre And with that worde syr Hugh Spenser the fader spake thus vnto the kynge sayd My moost worshypfull lorde kynger of Englonde now make good chere for certenly they been all oures The kynge sawe this worde comfortable yet he was full sorowfull pensyf in his herte And the kynge had not fully eten but there came into the halle a nother messager sayd that the quene Isabell was arryued atte Herewich besyde ypswytche in Southfolke syr Hugh Spenser y● fader spake to the messager sayd Tell soche in gode fayth my fayr frende is she come with a grete strenth Now certes y● soche for too saye syr sayd the messagere she ne hathe in her companye but .vii. houndred men of armys And with y● wordesyt Hughe Spenser the fader cryed with an hyghe voyce sayd Alas alas we ben all betrayed for certes with soo lytyll powere she had neuer come to loude but yf folke of this londe were vnto her consce●te therfor after ther mete they to be counsell went towarde wallys for to arere the walsshmen ayenst the quene Isabell Edwarde her sone all for to fyghte so they were in purpose euerychone ¶ How mayster water Stapylton bysshop of Excetre y● was the kynges tres●ter was heedyd at London ANd in y● same tyme kynge Edwarde was sore adredde leest y● men of London wolde yelde theym vnto the quene Isabell And too her sone Edwarde wherfore he set mayster 〈◊〉 ter Stapylton his cresorer for to be 〈◊〉 deyne and keper of the Cytre of London with the Mayrt And so came too the Gylde halle of London and axyd y● keyes of the yates of the Cyte● thr●ghe 〈◊〉 and strenth of his 〈◊〉 wolde haue had the kepynge of the cyte And the 〈◊〉 answerd sayd that they wolde kepe the cyte to the honoure of kynge Edwarde of Isabell the quene of the duke the kynges sone wythoute ony more The bysshop tho was so as 〈◊〉 swore othe● y● they all shold abye it anone as the kynge Edward were come oute of walys ¶ And the comuners all anone of y● cyte toke the bysshop lad hym anone amyddes of y● Chepe there they smote of his heed sethys heed in his ryghte honde forth with y● same comyns of the cytee of London by hedyd two of his squyres that helde with y● bysshop one of them was called wyllyam of wayle y● was y● bysshops neuew And y● other was callyd Iohn̄ of Pady●ton And also they toke a burgeys of Lōdon y● was callyd Iohn̄ Mershall y● was syr Hugh Spenser espye y● fader sinote of his heed also And in y● same tyme y● bysshop had in London a fayt tour in makynge in his close vpon y● tyuer Tese y● was without temple barte and he fayled stone to make therof an ende and he cōmaunded his men to go to y● frere Carmes ther they toke stone to make therwith y● toure moche sonde morter olde robous y● was lefte And for y● dyspyte y● the bysshop had done vnto holy chirch he his two squyres were buryed in that sonde as thoughe they had ben houndes there they laye .xi. wekes tyll that the quene Isabell sente her letters to the comuners prayed them that they wolde suffre graunt that the bysshop myght be take out of that place be buryed at Excetre at his owne chirch And so he was his two squyres were buryed at saynt Clementes chirche withoute temple barre And it was no wonder though that bysshop deyed an euyll deth● For he was a courytous man and had with hym no mercye euyll counseyled y● kynge And sone after was Arnold of Spayne take that assemyd too lede y● .v. M.li. of syluer in fyue batelles fetyers vnto the douzepers of Fraunce for to helpe hast y● quene Isabell to her dethe Edwarde her sone also thys Arnold was put to dethe with out y● cytr ¶ How kynge Edwarde and syr Hughe Spenser and the erle of Arundell were taken AS kynge Edwarde hadde sent mayster walter Stapylton his tresorer into London for to kepe the cyte vnto hym ayenst the quene Isabell ●● wyf ayenst Edwarde his sone anone hymself toke with hym syr Hugh Spenler the sone syr Iohn̄ of Arundell and mayster Robert Baldok his Chaunceler a fals pylled clerke toke the● waye towarde Brystow And there the kyng abode a lytyll tyme and made syr Hugh Spenser y● fader as Conestable keper of the castell And the kynge and that other Spenser went to shyppe and saylled towarde walys and toke no leue of the kynges Stewarde ne of none of the kyngys housholde and went ouer into walys for to ar●re the walsshmen apenste dame Isabell the quene and the duke her sone And the erle of Kent and syre Iohn̄ of Henaude And they wente and pursued after them And ther power encreacyd euery daye Soo at the laste the kynge was taken vppon an bylle in walys and Syr Hughe Spenser the sone in that othere syde of the same hylle the false pylled clerke mayster Roberte Baldok there faste besyde theym And were bronghte ayen in to Englonde as almyghty god wolde And the kynge hȳselfe was put in sauf kepynge in y● castel of Kenylworth hym kept syr Henry y● was saynt Thom●s brother of ●ancas tre and syr Nugh the fader came put hym in the quenes grace and Edwarde her sone duke of Gupon But syr Hugh Spenser after the tyme that he was take● wolde neuer ete no manere meete ●e drynke no manere drynke for he wyste to haue no mercye sauf only too be deed ¶ And the quene her coūsell had ordeyned that he sholde haue be
this gore sholde seke the floure of lyt of deth he sayd sothe For he spousyd Isabell the kyngꝭ syster of Fraunce And in his tyme Merlyn sayd that there sholde be made brydge● of folke vppon dyches of the see and that was wel seen att Bannockes home in Scotlonde whan be wa●● dys cōfyted thereof y● scortes And Merlyn tolde also that stones sholde fall from castels and many toune● sholde be made playne And he sayd sothe For whan kynge Edwarde was dyscomfyted in Slotlonde came thoe south warde the Scottes besegyd tho castels dyd them moche barme brente townes into the herd erthe ¶ And after warde Merlin tolde that an Egle shold come out of Cornewayle that shold haue feders of golde y● of pryde shold haue no pere and he sholde dispyse lordes of blood after he sholde dey thrugh a beer at Gauersich that prophecy was full wel knowe funde soth for by the egle vnderstonde syr Pers of Ganaston that tho was erle of Cornewayle that was a wonder proude man that dyspysed the baronage of Englonde but afterwarde he was heeded at Gauersych thrugh the erle of Lancastre thrugh therle of war wyh y● And Merlyn tolde that in his tyme it sholde seme that the beer shold brē ne and that bataylle sholde be vpon an arme of the s●e in a felde arayed lyke a sheld where sholde deye many white he des And he sayd sothe For by the bryunynge of the beer it betokenyd grete drede thrughe hyttynge of swerdes at y● bataple of Miton for there came the Scottes in manere of a slelde in manere of a wynge and slewe men of relegyon pr●st●s and seculers wherfore the Scottes callyd that batayll in dyspyte of the Englysshmen the white batayll And after Merlyn sayd the forsayd beer sholde do the gote moche harme y● sholde be vppon the southweste also vpon his blode And sayd also that the gote sholde lese moche deale of his londe tyll the tyme that shame sholde hym ouercome thē he sholde clothe hym in a lyons skynne and sholde wynne ayen that he had lost and more thrughe people that sholde come out of the Northwest that sholde make hym to be a ferde hym auenge vppon his enmyes thrugh counsell of two ●●les that fyrst sholde be in paryll too be vndon And that tho two o●●kes shelde go 〈◊〉 see 〈◊〉 stranngs londe● and there they sholde dwell vnto a certayne tyme. and then they sholde come unto englonde ayen And tho two owles sholde do moche harme vnto many one that they sholde coūsell the gote to 〈◊〉 ●erre aycust the forsayd beer And the gote and che owles sholde come to as arme of the set at Burton vpon tre●●t y● sholde goouer that for drede the beer sholde flee with a swanne in his companye to Bury towarde the North. thrugh an vnkynde outpulter that the swanne thenne shall be slayne with sorowe and the beer sholde be slayne full nyghe hys owne nest that sholde stonde vpon poūtftet vpon whome the sonne shall shede his beemes And many folke hym shall seke for vertue And he sayd sothe For y● good Erle Thomas of Lancastre was borne in the Northwest and cosyn to the kynge his vncles sone And by law he made the kynge lese moche londe y● whiche he had pu● chacyd wylfully tyll at y● last the kynge toke therof shame himselfe slew with ●●uelte And after he ga te ayen that he had lost and moche more thrugh folke that he lete assemble out of the north west that made hym too be adradde And auengyd hym on his barons thrugh counsell ofsyt Hugh spenser the fader and of syt Hughe the sone that before were outlawed for they● wye kydnesse But afterwarde they came a yen into Englonde syr Hugh Spenser the fader cameout of Fraūce somoche counseled the hynge that he sholde werre vpon Thomas of Lancastre So that the kynge and the Spensers and the erle of Arundell and theyr power mette with Thomas of Lancastre a● Burton vpō trente and hym there dyscomfyted and lyr Vmtroy erle of Herforde was in his company And after fledde the forsayd Thomas and Humf●oy with theye ●●pany to 〈◊〉 metynge with 〈◊〉 Andrew of Herkela that is callyd y● vnkynde outpulter also syre Symonde warde erle of Yorke came mette with Thomas of Lancastre with an huge power them dyscomfyted in y● scomfyture the erle of Herforde was slayne vppon the brydge cowardly with a spere ī the fūdement the erle Thomas was take lad vnto Poūtfiet tho was he dyd besyde his owne castell But afterwarde many hym sought for miracles y● god dyd for hym ¶ And in y● tyme merlyn sayd for sorow harme sholde deye a people of his londe wherfore many lōdes sholde be vpon hym y● more bolder he sayd sothe for bycause of his barōs y● were doon to dethe for saynt thomas quarell of Lancastre people of many lōdes became y● bolder for to meue werre vpon y● kynge for their blood was torned to many nacyons ¶ And afterwarde Merlyn tolde sayd y● y● forsaydowles sholde do moche harme vnto y● flour of lyf deth they sholde brynge her to moche dysese so y● she sholde go ouer see in to Fraūce for to make peas to y● floure delyce there sholde abyde tyll a tyme her sede sholde come fetche her tho they sholde abyde bothe tyll y● tyme y● they sholde clothe them with grace tho two owles she sholde seke put thē to pyteuous dethe y● prophecy was ful well know was full sothe for syr hughe Spenser y● fader syr Hughe the sone dyde moche sorow persecucōn vnto y● quene Isabell thrugh theyr procurement to her lorde y● kynge so they ordeined amonge them y● she was put vntoo her wagys That is to saye .xx shelyngꝭ in the daye wherfore y● kynge of Fraunce her brother was sore anoyed sent in englonde by his letters vnto kyng Edwarde to come vnto his parlement to Parys in Fraunce But kynge Edwarde was sore adrad to come there for he wend to haue be arestyd tyll that he had made amendes for y● trespase y● syr Hugh Spenser the fader and the sone had done and for the harme that they had done vnto quene Isabell his syster wherfore thrughe his ordynaunce and consent of the. Spensers the quene Isabell went ouer see into Fraunce for to make accorde be twene kynge Edwarde and the kynge of Fraunce her brother ▪ And there dwellyd she in Fraunce tyll Edwarde her eldest sone came her for too seke and so they dwellyd there both tyll that alyaū●ce was made bytwene them and the gētyll erle of Henaude that yf they wyth ther vertue myght dystroye and ouercome the venym and the falsnesse of the● Spensers that spr Edward shold spowsedame Phylip the worshypfull lad●● the erles doughter of Henauds wherfore the quene
Isabell and Edwarde her sone and syr Edward of wodstok the ●●ges brother of Englonde and syre Io han of Henaude and syre Rog●●e Motymer of wygmore and syre Thomas Rocelyn and syre Iohn̄ of C●omwelle and syr wyllyam Trussell and man●● other of the alyaunce of the gentyll erle Thomas of Lancastre that were e●yled out of Englonde for his quarell and were dyshertted of theyr londes orderned them a grete power and arryued at H●rewich in Sonthfolke And sone aft●● they pursewed y● Spensers tyll y● then were taken put to piteous deth as before is sayd ther cōpany also for y● grrate falsnes y● they dyd to kynge Edward to his peple And Merly sayd also more y● the gote shold be put in grete dystresse in grete anguyssh in grete sorow he sholde lede his lyfe And he sayd sothe For after the tyme that kynge Edwarde was take he was put into warde tyll y● the Spensers were put to dethe and also bycause that he wolde not come vnto his parlemente at London as he hadde ordeyned and assygned hymself vnto his baronage and also wold not gouer●● ●● rule his people●ne his trame as a kynge sholde doo wherfore some of the barons of Englonde came yelde vp ther homages vnto hym for theym all the other of y● reame in the daye of y● conuersyon of saynt Poule in y● yere of his regne .xx. And they put hym out of his ryaltee for euermore And euer lyued afterwarde in moche sorowe anguysshe LOdowicus was emperour after Henry foure yere this Lodewye was duke of Banare he dyspysed the corouacōn of the pope wherfor the pope deposyd hym and moche labour many perylles he had after And he trowbled gretly the vnyte of holy chirche And thē was chosyn ayenst hym Frederyk the duke of Ostryche he ouercame the duke and abode arebelyon to his ende and in grete peryll to his soule And at the last Rarolus was chosen ayenst hym y● whiche preuaylled and sodenly Lodewic fel downe of his hors and dyscessyd ¶ Iohn̄ Mandeuyll a douctour of physyh a knyght borne was in Englonde abowte this tyme. And he made a merueylous pylg●ymage for he went almoost abowte all the world he wrote his dedys in thre langages decessyd was buried at saynt Albons ¶ Benedictus the .xxii. was pope after Iohn̄ .vii. yeres more this man wos a monke in all his yongthe he was of good cōuersacyon a doctour of diuinite And whan he was made pope he refourmed thordre of saynt Benet in that thynge y● was nescessary he was a harde man to graunte benifyces lest he had graūtyd it to an vncunnynge man he made a deretall y● whiche began Benedictus deꝰ in donis suis And he was very cruell in his fayth for that of sōmen lytyll louyd He was so stoute a mā that almoost he wolde not know his owne cosyns ¶ Anno dn̄t M.CCC.xxii ¶ Of kynge Edwarde the chyrde after the Conqueste ANd after this kynge Edwarde Carnariuan regned syr Edwarde of wyndsore his sone y● whiche was crowned kynge anoynted at westmestre thrugh coūsell consent of all y● grete lordes of y● reame y● Sondaye in Candelmasse eue in y● yere of grace M. CCC.xxvi y● was of aege at that tyme but xv yere And for cause y● his fader was in warde in y● castell of Kenilworth and also was put downe of his ryaltee the reame of Englonde was without kyng from y● feest of saynt Katheryn frome y● yere aboue sayd to the feest of Candelmasse And tho were all maner ple●● of the kynges bynche astente And tho was cōmaunded to all y● Shy●efs of Englōde thrughe wrytte to warne the partyes to defendaūtys thrugh somnynge ayen And also ferthermore that al prysoners that were in the kynges gayolles that were attachid thrughe Shyrefs sholde be lete goo quyte ¶ The kynge Edwarde after his coronacōn at the prayer besechynge of his lyege of the reame grauntyd them a chartre of stedfast peas to all them that wolde it axe And syr Iohan of Henaude and his company toke his leue of the kynge and of the lordes of the reame and tor●yd home to they re owne coūtre ayen And eche of them had full ryche yeftes euery man as he was of value estate ¶ And tho was Englonde in rest peas grete loue bytwene y● kynge and his lordes And comyuly Euglysshmen sayd amonges them that the deuyll was dede ●ut the innumerable iresoure of the kynge his fader and the tresour of the Spensers bothe of the ●ader and of the sone and of the erle of Arundell of mayster Robert Baldok y● was y● kyngꝭ chaūceler was departyd after y● quene Isabelles ordynaūce sir Rogere Mortymers of wygmore soo that the kynge had no thynge there of but at her wyll and her delyueraūce 〈◊〉 of their londes as after warde ye shall here ¶ How kynge Edwarde went vnto stāthop for to mete the Scottes ANd yet in the same tyme was y● kynge in y● castell of kenylworth vnder the kepynge of syr Henri that was erle Thomas of Lancasters broder that tho was erle of Lcycetre And the kynge graūtyd hym y● erldome of Lancastre that the kyng his fader had seasyd into his hō de put out Thomas of Lancastres broder soo was he erle of Lancastre of Lcycetre also Stywarde of Englōde as his broder was in his tyme. But syr Edwarde that was kynge Edwardes fader made sorowe withoute ende bycause he myght not speke with his wyf ne wyth his sone wherfore he was in moche mischeyf For though it was so y● he was led de and rulyd by fals coūsell yet he was kynge Edwards sone callyd Edwarde with y● longe shankys came out of the worthyest blood of the worlde they to whome he was wonte to yeue grete yeftys large were moost preuy with y● kȳge his owne sone And they wre his enmyes bothe by nyght by daye procured to make debate contake bytwene hym and his sone and Isabell his wyf But the frere prechers were to hym gode frendes euer more cast both by nyght and by day how they myght brynge hym oute of pryson And amonge theyr company that the freres had prpurly brought there was a frere that was callyd Dunhened and he had ordeyned gadryd a grete cōpany of folke to kepe at y● nebe but the frere was taken put in the castell of pountfret there be deyed in pryson syr henry erle of Lancastre y● had y● kynges fader in kepynge thrugh cōmandement of the kynge delyuerd Edwarde the kynges fader by endenture to syr Thomas of Berkelay And soo syr Iohn̄ Matreuas they lad hym frō the castell of kenylworth to y● castell of Ber kelay kept hym there saufly ¶ And at Ester next after his coronacōn y● kynordeyned a grete huge hoste for to fyght ayenst y●
Scottes And syr Iohn̄ y● erles brother of Henaude came from beyonde the see for to helpe kynge Edwarde brought with hym .vij. C. men of armys arryued at Douer they had leue for to go forth tyll they came to Yorke they y● kynge them abode y● scottes came the der to y● kyng for to make peas accorde but y● accordement lasted not bytwene thē but a lytyll tyme And at that tyme the Englysshmen were clothed all 〈◊〉 cotes hodes paynted with letters with floures full semely with longe berdes and therfor y● scottes made a byll y● was fastnyd vpon y● chirche dores of laynt Pen●to warde stangate thus sayd y● sarp●● re in dyspyte of Englysshemen Longe berdes hertles payntyd hodes wrotles g●●ye cotes graceles makyth Englōd thriftelees SO in y● Triny●● daye nerte after began y● contak in y● cyte of Yoke bytwene y● Englysshmen y● Henandes in y● debate were slayne of y● erldō of Nicholl murdred .lxxx. men after they were buryed in saynt clemētis chirche in Fosgate for cause y● y● Henaudes came to helpe y● kynge ther peas was cried vpon payne of lyf lȳme in y● other half it was foūde by an enquest of y● e●te y● the Englysshmen began y● debate ¶ Howe the Englysshmen stoppyd the Scottes in the parke of Stanope how they torned ayen into Scotlonde THis tyme the Scottes hadde assembled all theyr power came into Englonde and slewe robbyd all that they myght take and also brente dystroyed all the north countre thrughe oute tyll y● they came vnto the the parke of Stanhope in weridale there y● Scottes helde theym in a busshment but whā the kynge had herde thrugh spyes where y● scottes were anone ryght with his hoste besegyd them within y● forsayd parke so y● the scottes wist not where to go oute but oonly vnto ther harmes And they abode in the parke xv dayes vytaylles faylled them in euery syde so y● they were greatly peyred of bodyes syth that Brute came fyste into Brytayne vnto this tyme there was neuer seen so fayre an host what of Englysshmen of alyūtes of men of fote y● whiche ordeined theym for to fyght with y● Scottes thrughe eggynge of syr Henry of Lancastre of syr Iohn̄ Henaude y● wold haue gone ouer y● water of wyth for to haue fou ght with y● scottes But syr Roger Mortuner consentyd not therto for he hadd p●yuely taken mede of y● scottes them to helpe y● they myght go awaye into their owne coūtre●● ¶ And this same Mortymer coūseylled somoch Thomas of brotherton y● erle Marshall ●hat was kynge Edwardes vncle y● y● forsayd Thomas sholde not assemble at that tyme vnto y● Scottes And he assentyd but he wyste not the doynge bytwene y● Scottes the forsayd Mort●mer And bycause that he was Marshall of Englonde as to hyzperteyned euer y● vaūtwarde he sent hastely to y● erle of Lancastre to syr Iohn̄ of Henaude y● they sholde not fyght with the Scottes in preiudyce harmyng of hym his fee yf they dyd y● thei shold stonde to theyr owne paryll And the forsayd erle Marschall was all arayed with his batayll at y● reredoos of the erle of Lancastre for to haue fought with him with his folke yf he had go to fyghte with the scottes in this manere he was dysceyued wist no thynge of y● treason And thus was y● kynge pryncypally disceyued And whan it was nyght Mortymer y● had the watche for to hepe of the host y● nyght dystrobled y● watche y● noo thynge myght be doon And in y● meane while y● Scottes stele by nyght towarde theyr owne coūtre as fast as they myght ¶ And so was the kyng falsly betrayed y● wenyd y● all the traytours of his londe had ben broughte to an ende as it was sayd before ¶ Now here you lordes how traytoursly kynge Edwarde was dysceiued howe meruayllously boldly the Scottes dyd of werre For Iamys douglas with two hundred men of armys rode thrugh out all y● host of kynge Edwarde y● same nyght y● Scottes escaped towarde theyr owne coūtree as is aboue sayd tyll y● they came to y● kyngis pauilyon slewe there many men in they re beddes and cryed Naward naward a nother tyme a Douglas a Douglas wherfore y● kynge y● was in his pauylyō moche other folke were wonder sore afrayed But blyssyd be almyghty god y● kynge was not taken and in greate peryll was tho the reame of Englonde that nyght the moone shone full clere and bryght And for all the kynges men the Scottes scapyd harmeles ¶ And on the morowe whan the kynge wyste that the Scottes were escapyd into theyr owne countrey he was wonder sory fulle hertely wepte with his yonge eyen and yet wyst he notte who hadde hym done that treason But that fals treason was full welle I knowen a good while after as the storye makyth mencyon ¶ Tho kynge Edward came ayen vnto Yorke full sorowfull And his host departyd euery man went into his owne countre with full heuy chere and mornynge semblaunt And the Henaundes toke theyr leue and went into theyr owne countree And the kynge for theyr trauaylle hugely rewarded thē ¶ And for bycause of y● vyage y● kynge had dyspended moche of his tresoure and wastyd And in that tyme were seen two moones in y● fyrmament y● one was clere that other was 〈◊〉 as men myght see thrugh y● worlde ¶ And a grete debate was y● same tyme agaynst pope Iohn̄ y● .xxii. after saȳe petyr y● emperour of Almayn tho made hym emperoure ayenst y● popys wyll y● tho helde his see at Auinion wherfore the ●mperoure made his crye at Rome ordeyned another pope y● hyght Nicholas y● was a frere Minor that was a yenste y● ryght of holy chirche wherfore he was cursyd the power of y● othere pope soon layed And for cause that such merueylles were seen men sayd that the worlde was nygh at an ende ¶ Of the dethe of kynge Edwarde of Carnariuan ANd now go we ayen to syr Edwarde of Carnariuan that was kynge Edwards fader somtyme kynge of Englonde put downe of his dygnyte Alas for his trybulacōn sorow that hym befell thrugh fals coūsell y● he louid trustyd vpon tomoche y● afterward were dystroyed thrugh ther falsnesse as god wolde ¶ And this Edwarde of Carnariuan was in y● castell of Berkelay vnder y● warde kepynge of syr Moryce of ●erkelay also of syr Iohn̄ Matreues and to them he made his complaynte of his sorowe and of his disese And ofte● tymes axyd of his wardeyns what he had trespassed ayenst dame Isabell his wyfe and syr Edwarde his sone that was made newe kynge that they wolde not visite hym ¶ And tho answerde one of his ●●rdeyns sayd My worthy lorde dyspleyse you not that I shall telle you the cause is
that he were better certifyed of the clergye of Englonde seen by ther obedyence what thynge god had doon for the loue of saynt Thomas of Lancastre after the suggestion y● the forsayd erle of Kent had vnto hym made And whan this Edmond saw y● he myght not spede of his purpos as towchynge the traunsla cōn he prayed hym of coūsell as touchȳge syr Edwarde of Carnariuan his brother sayd y● not longe agon he was kȳge of Englonde what thynge myghte best be doon as touchynge his delyueraūce sythe that a comune fame was thrughe Englōd that he is alyue hole sauf whan y● pope herd hym tell y● syr Edward was alyue he cōmaūded y● erle vpon his blissynge that he sholde helpe with all y● power y● he myght that he were delyuerde out of pryson saue his body in all manere y● he myght And to brynge this thynge to a● ende he assoyled hym his company a pena culpa● all that halpe to his delyueraunce Tho toke Edmond of wodstok his leue of the pope came ayen into Englond whan syr Edmond was come some of the frere prechers came sayd that syr Edwarde his broder yette was alyue in y● castell of Corf vnder the kepynge of syr Thomas Gurnay tho sped hym y● forsayd Edmond as fast as he myghte tyll he came to the castell of Corf acquaȳted hym spake so fair to Iohn̄ Daueryll y● was conestable of the same castell yaue hym ryche yefꝭ for to haue acqueyntaūce of hym and to knowe of his counsell And thus it befel that the forsayd Edmonde prayed specially to tell hym pryuely of his lorde hys brother syr Edwarde yf y● he lyued or were deed yf he were alyue he prayed hȳ ones to haue a syght of hȳ And this syr Iohn̄ Daueryll was a hyghe herted mā full of courage answerde shortly to syr Enmond sayd y● syr Edward 〈◊〉 brother was in helthe vnder his 〈◊〉 ge durst not shewe hym vnto no man syth it was defended hym in y● kyng ●●●fe Edwarde y● was Edwardes sone of Carna●●an also by the cō naū●●●●●te of quene Isabell y● kynges moder 〈◊〉 of syr roger Mortymer y● he sholde shew his body to no man of y● worlde saufonly to them vponlyf lȳme 〈◊〉 tynge of his heyres for euer mor● But the fals traytour falsly lyed for he was not in his warde but was take thens● lad to y● castell of Berkley by 〈◊〉 Thoma● of Gurney by the cōm●●nde●●te of Mortymer tyll he was dede as 〈◊〉 is sayd But syr Edmonde of wodsto● wyst no thynge y● syr Edwarde his brother was deed wherupon he toke a letter vnto kynge Edwarde his brother as to his worthy lorde● receyued y● letter of hym behyght hym ryght faythfull to do his message without fayll And with that syr Edmonde toke leue of y● 〈◊〉 Ihon̄ and yede into his owne countre lordshyp in Kent that he had there Anone as this same Iohn̄ wyst that syr Edmonde was gone into Kent his owne lo● deshyp anone he went in all the ●aste y● he myghte fro the Castell of Corf and came vnto syre Rogere Mortymer and toke hym the letter that syre Edmonde of wodstok erle of Kent had taken hym closed and e●sealed with his owne seale And whan syre Roger Mortymer hadd receyued the letter ●e vncloysed it and sawe y● was ●●reyned the●●● began it to rede wherof the beg●●nynge was thy● ¶ Worshyppes and reuerence with brother alyegaunce subiec●yon syr knyz● worshypfull and dere broder yf it youe please I praye you hertely that ye be in gode comforth for I shall so ordeyn for you that ye shall come out of pryson be delyuerd of that dysese that ye been in And vnderstondyth of your grete lorde shyp that I haue to myn assentynge almoost all the grete lordes of Englonde with all theyr appareyll that is to saye with armoure with tresour without nōbre for to mayntene your quarell so fer forth that ye shall be kynge agayn as ye were before and that they haue sworne to me vpon a boke and as well prelates as erles and barons ¶ whanne syre Roger Mortymer saw and vnderstode the myghte and the strenth of the letter anone his herte for wrathe began to boll and euyll herte bare toward syr Edmōde of wodstok that was erle of Kent with all the hast that he myght he wente vnto dame Isabell y● quene that was the kynges moder and shewed her syre Edmonds letter his wyll and his purpose and how that he hadde coniected ordeyned to put downe kynge Edwarde of wyndsore her sone of his ryalte of his kyngdom Now certes syr Roger sayd she hath syr Edmōd done so nowe by my faders soule sayd she I wyll be therof auenged yf that god graūt melyfe and that in a short tyme. And wyth that quene Isabell went vnto kyng Edwarde her sone there he was at the parlement at wynchestre too haue amende the wrongys and the trespasses that were done amonge the people of his reame And thoo she toke and shewed hym the letter that syr Edmond of wodstok had made and ensealed with his owne seale and had hym vpon her blessynge that he sholde be auengyd vpon syr Edmonde as vpon his dedely enmye Tho was the quene sore wrothe towarde syr Edmonde erle of Kent and sessyd neuer to praye vntyll her sone tyll that he had sente in all the hast after hym And vpon that y● kyng sent by his letters after syr Edmōde of wodstok that he sholde come and speke with hym at wynchestre all manere thynge left And whan syr Edmond saw that the kynge sent after hym with his letters ensealed he hasted hym in al that he myght tyll that he came to wynchestre ¶ But whan the quene wyst that syr Edmonde was come to wynchestre tho anone she prayed and so fast wende vnto kynge Edwarde her sone that the good erle was arested anone and ladde vnto the barre before Robert of Hamōde that was Coroner of y● kynges hous holde And he associed vnto hym syr Roger Mortimer And tho spake y● forsaid Roger and sayd syre Edmonde erle of Kente ye shall vnderstonde that it is done vs to wyte and pryncypally vnto our lyege lorde the kynge Edwarde of Englonde almyghty god hym saue and kepe that ye be his deedly enmye and a tray toure and also a comune enmye too the reame and that ye haue ben aboute many a day for to make pryue delyueraūce of syr Edwarde somtyme kynge of Englonde your broder the which somtyme was put downe of his ryalte by the comyn assent of the lordes of Englonde in peasynge of our lorde the kynges estate also of his reame ¶ Tho ansuerd the good man and sayd Forsoth syr vnderstonde well that I was neuer traytour● to my kynge ne to the reame and that I doo me on god and on all y● worlde therfore by
my kynges leue I shal it preue defende as a man ought ▪ for to do ¶ Tho sayd Mortymer syr Edmonde it is so ferforth knowe that it maye not be well gaynsayd and that in prys●●e of all y● here been it shall be well proued Now had this fals Moltimer thesame letter that syr Edmond had take to syr Iohn̄ Daueryll in the castell of Cors for to take to kyng Edward his brother y● syr Edmonde wyst not of ne supposed no thynge that syr Iohn̄ Daueryll had be so fals to delyuer his letter in such wise vnto Mortimer thought no mane●● of thynge of y● letter Then Mortimer sayd to syr Edmonde shewed a letter sealed axid hym yf y● he knewe y● let● and the seale This syr Edmond lokyd theron auysed hym longe tyme on the prynte of y● seale for he myght not see y● letter within and wyst well y● it was his seale thoughte y● it had be sōme letter that had bore no greate charge thought no thynge of y● other letter And sayd openly in herynge of them all ye forsothe this is my seale I wyll it not forsake ¶ Lo sayd the Mortymer syres ye here all what he hath sayd y● he know legyth hym y● this is his letter his seale And now ye shall here what is conteined therin And then this Mortimer openyd the letter y● he had folde tofore togyder redde it openly worde by worde inherynge of theym all whan the letter was redde he sayd Loo syres ye haue herde all y● herin is wryten that he hath knowlegyd y● this is hys letter his seale he maye not go therfro And thenn they cryed yaue dome y● he sholde be hangyd drawen his heed smyten of i● a manere of a traytour he his heyres dysheryted foreuer more so he was ladde forth and put into pryson whan this was done the quene wyst that he was dampned by way of lawe bothe of lyf and of lȳme his heyres dysheritedted for euermore thrugh open knowlegynge in playn court where them thought that it were good that the forsayd syr Edmond were hast●ly slayne wythoute wyttynge of y● kynge or elles the kynge ●olde lyghtly foryeue hym his dethe then it sholde forme theym to moche sorowe so as he was emp●chis And anone the quene thrugh counseyll of y● Mortimer and without ony other counseyll sent in hast to the Baylyf of wynche●re that they shold smyte of syr Edmonds heed ●rle of Kent without ony manere abydynge or respyte vpo● payne of lyf lymme● And that he he sholde haue no ne other execusyon by cause of tatyeng notwithstondynge the Iugement Tho toke the baylyfs syr Edmond out of p●ison and sadde hym besyde the castell of wynchestre and there they made a gonfermer smyte of his heed for none other durst it do and soo he deyed there alas the while That is to say the tenthe day of Octobre the thyrde yere of kyng Edwards regne ¶ And whan y● kyng wist therof he was wonder sory and lete entyere hym at the frere Mynors at wynchestre ¶ Of the dethe of syr Roger Mort●mer erle of Marche ANd so it befell at that tyme that syr Roger Mortimer erle of the Marche was so prowde and so haute●● that he helde noo lorde of the reame his pere And tho became he so coueytous y● he folowed dame Isabell the quenes court that was kynge Edwardes mode● and beset his peny worth with the offycers of the quenes householde ●n the same manere that the kynges offycers dyd And so he made his takynge as touchynge of vytayle and also of caryages and all he dyd for bycause of expencys and too gadre tresoure And so he dyd without nombre in all that he myght ¶ T●●oo hadde he made hym wonder preuy with the quene ●sabell And so moche lorde shyppe and ●etenewe had y● all the greate lordes of Englond of hȳ were adrad wherfore the kynge and his counseylle towarde hym were agreued and ordeyned amonge them to vndo hym thoroughe pure reason lawe for cause y● king Edwarde y● was the kynges fader tray tourly thrugh hym was murdred in the castell of Corf as before is sayd moore playnly in some parte of this booke of his dethe ¶ And some that were of the kynges counseyll louyd Mortymer and tolde hym in preuyte how y● the kyng his counseylle were abowte frome daye to daye hym for to dystroye and vndoo wherfore mortymer was sore anoyed angry as the deuyll ayenst them of the kynges counseyll sayd he wolde of thē be auenged how so euer he toke on ¶ It was not longe afterwarde y● kynge Edwarde dame Phylyp his wyf dame Isabell y● kynges moder syre Rogere Mortimer ne went vnto Notyngham there for to sotourne And so it befell y● quene Isabell thrughe coūseyll of Mortymer toke to her y● keyes of y● yates of the castell of Notyngham so y● no man myghte come nother in ne out but thrughe cōmaūdement of Mortimer ne the kynge●ne none of his coūseyll ¶ And that tyme it fell that the Mortimer as a deuyll for wrath bolled also for wrathe that he had ayenst y● kynges men Edwarde pryncypally ayenst theym that had hym accusyd to y● kynge of y● dethe of sir Edwarde his fader ¶ And pryuely a counseyll was take bytwene quene Isabell the Mortymer the bysshop of Lyncoln syr Symonde of Bedford syr Hyghe of Trompyngton other preuy of theyr counseyll for to vndoo theym al y● the Mortimer hadde accusyd vnto y● kȳge of his faders dethe of treason and off felonye ¶ wherfore all tho that were of the kynges counseyll whan they wist of the Mortimers castynge pryuely came to kynge Edwarde sayd that Mortymer wolde theym dystroye bycause that they hadde hym accusyd of kynge Edwardes dethe his fader And prayed hȳ that he woldmayntene them in theyr ryght ¶ And thyse were the lordes that pursued this quarell Syr wyllyam of Mountagu syr wyllyam de Bohum syr wullyam his broder syr Rauf Stafforde syre Robert of Herforde syr wyllyam of Clynton syr Iohn̄ Neuell of Hornbyand many other of theyr consent And all thyse swore vpon a book to mayntene y● quarelle in as moche as they myght And if befell so after y● syr wyllyam Moūtagu ne none of the kyngꝭ frēdes muste not be herberowed in y● castell for y● Mortimer but went toke they re herberowe in dyuerfe place of y● towne of Notyngham And tho were they sore aferde leest y● Mortimer sholde theym dystroye And in hast they came vnto kyng Edwarde syr wyllyam of Moūtagu other that were in y● castell And pryuely hȳtolde that he ne none of his company sholde not take y● Mortymer without counseyll helpe of wyllyam of Elande cōstable of y● same castell ¶ Now truelye sayd the kynge I loue you well therfore I coūseyll
you y● ye go to the forsayd conestable and commaunde hym in my name that he be your frende and youre helpe for to take the Mortimer all thynge yleft vpon peryll of lyf and lymme ¶ Tho sayd Mountagu Syremy lorde graunt mercy ¶ Tho went forth y● for sayd Mountagu and came to the Constable of the castell tolde hym y● kyngꝭ wyll ¶ And he answerde sayd the kȳges wyll sholde be done in as moche as he myghte and that he wolde notte spare for no manere of dethe And that he swore and made his othe ¶ Tho sayde syr wyllyam of Mountagu to the Constable in herynge of them all that were helpynge to the same quarell Now certes dere frende vs behouyth to werke doby your aduys for to take the Mortymer syth that ye be keper of the castell hath the keyes in your warde ¶ Syre sayd the Conestable wyll ye vnderstonde that the castell yates ben lockyd with y● keyes that dame Isabell sente hyther by nyght she hath the keyes therof and layeth them vnder y● luesell of the bedde vnto y● morowe so ye maye not come into the castell by the yates by no manere of wyse But I knowe an aleye that stretchyth out of the warde vnder the ●● the into the forsayd castell that gothe into the west whiche aleye dame Isabell the quene ne none of her men ne y● mortimer ne none of his company knowith it not And so I shall lede you thrugh y● aley so ye shall come into y● castell with out aspyenge of ony man y● are your enmyes ¶ And y● same nyght syr wyllyaz Mountagu all the lordes of his quarell the same Conestable also wente theym to hors made semblaunt as it were for to go oute of Mortimers syght But anone as Mortimer herd thys tydynges he wende y● they wolde haue go ue ouer see for fere of hym ¶ And anone ryght he his company toke a counseyll amonge theym for to lete theyr passage sent letters anone to the porters soo y● none of the greate lordes shold go home to theyr owne coūtrees but yf thei were arested take And amonge other thynges wyllyam Eland Conestable of the forsayd castell pryuely ladde syr wil lyam of Moūtagu his company by y● forsayd waye vnder the trthe tylle they came into the castell went vp into the toure there y● Mortimer was in But sir Hugh of Trompynton theym ascryed hydously sayd a traytours it is all for nought y● ye ben comyn into this castell ye shall deye yet an euyll dethe euerichone And anone one of theym that was in Mountagues companye vp with a mare and smote the same Hughe vpon the heed that the brayne braste out and fel on the grounde and soo was he deed of an euyll dethe ¶ Tho toke they Mortymer as he armyd hym at the toures dore whan he herde the noyse of theym for drede ¶ And whanne the quene Isabel sa●e that the Mortimer was taken she made moche sorowe in herte and thyse wordes vnto theym she sayd Nowe fayre 〈◊〉 I praye you that ye do no harme 〈◊〉 his body a worthy knyghte oure 〈◊〉 f●●de and oure 〈◊〉 cosyn ¶ Tho went they thens and came and brought Mortimer presentyd hym vnto kynge Edwarde he cōmaunded to brynge hym in sauewarde ¶ But anone as they y● were consentynge vnto mortimers doynge herde tell y● he was takē they went hydde theym pryuely by nyghte went out of y● towne ethe one his way with heuy herte morninge chere liued vpon theyr londes as well as thei myghte ¶ And y● same yere that Mo●●mer was take he hadde ir score 〈◊〉 tes without squyers sergaun●es of armys fote men And thenne was Motimer ladde to London syr Edmonde of Bedforde was ladde with hym and was taken to the conestable of y● four to kepe ¶ But after warde was y● Mortymers lyf examined at westmestre before the kynge before all the greate lordes of Englonde for peryll that myght fal to the reame And to enquere also which were consentynge to sir Edwardes dethe the kynges fader and also thrugh who me the Scottes escaped fro Stanhope in Scotlonde without leue of kyng Edwarde ¶ And also how y● chartre of ●●●man was delyuered vntoo the Scottes therin the homages and feauters of the lordes of Scotlonde were conteyned y● the Scottes sholde do euer more too the Engysshe kynge for the reame of Scotlond wherfore he was Iugyd to be drawen and hangyd for his treason And this myscheyf came vnto hym on saynt Andrewes euen In the yere of the Incarcyon of our lorde Ihesu crist M.CCC.xxx ¶ How kynge Edwarde gate ayen vnto hym gracyously the homages and frautres of Scotlonde wherof he was putte oute thrughe false counseylle of y● quene Ysabell his moder and syre Roger Mortymer that was newely made erle of Marche NOw haue ye herde how Iohane Bayllol in the tyme of peas was chosen to be kynge of Scotlonde for cause that he came of the eldest doughter of the Erle Dauyd of Huntyngton that was kynge Alysanders broder of Scotlonde that deyed without heyre of hys body begoten And how this Iohn̄ made his feauete homage to kynge Edwarde Henryes sone y● thyrde for his londes of Scotlonde And how he afterwarde withsayd his homage thrughe coūseyll of the Scottes in the yere of oure lorde M.CC.lxxiiii sent vnto y● pope thrughe a fals suggestyon y● he made his oth vnto y● forsayd kynge Edward ouer his astate his wyll of y● whiche o the y● pope hym assoyled thrugh his bullys to hȳysent ¶ And anone as kynge Edward wyst therof he ordeyne anone his barōs came vnto Berewyk conquered the towne at the whiche conquest there wereslayne .xxv. thosand .vii. hundred Bayllol that was kynge of Scotlond came and yeldyd hym to gode kynge Edwarde the kynge delyuerd hym out of the tour of London and all y● grete lordes with hym y● tho were taken at Barwyk yaue theym saufconduyte to go into Scotlonde And the Scottes sythe thrugh theyr falsnesse werred vpon the good kynge Edwarde And whan syre Iohn̄ Bayllol kynge of Scotland saw all this he went ouer see vnto Dimp●er lyued there vpon his londes as well as he myght tyll that the Scottes wolde amende theym of theyr mysdedys trespaas and ladde with hym syr Edward his sone wherfore the Scottes in dyspyte of hym callyd hym syr Iohn̄ Turnlabard for bycause that he wolde notte offende ne trespaas ayenste the good kȳge Edwarde of Englond And so he forsoke his reame of Scotlonde and sette therof but lytyll pryce And this syr Iohanne dwelled longe tyme in Fraunce tyll y● he deyed there syr Edwarde his fo●● receyued his 〈◊〉 rytage and 〈◊〉 mage to y● kynge of Fraūce for his londes of Dunpie● And so it befell afterwarde y● Edwarde y● was Iohn̄ Bayllols sone had● of hym a squyre of
y● is to saye y● pe●y y● grote value of iiii pens the half grote of .ii. pens but it was of lesse weyght than y● olde 〈…〉 be .v. shellynge in y● pounde ¶ And in y● .xxvii. yere of his regne was the greate derth of vytayls y● which was called y● 〈…〉 And the .xxviii. yere of his 〈◊〉 in y● parlement holden atte 〈◊〉 after 〈◊〉 syr Henry erle of Lancastre was made duke of Lancastre in this yere 〈◊〉 so greate a drought y● frome the 〈…〉 to y● Monethe of Iuyll there fell no rayn o●● ther the wherfore all fruytes sedes herbes for the moost parte were loste in defaut wherfore come so greate dysease of men beestes derthe of vytayls in Englonde y● this londe y● euer afore had ben plēteuous had nede y● tyme to fe●e vytayls and refresshynge at other out 〈◊〉 coūtres And the .xxix. yere of kynge Edwarde it was accorded graūted and sworne bytwene y● kynge of Fraūce kyng Edwarde of Englonde y● he sholde haue a yen all his lond● lordshyppes y● longed to y● duchye of Guyhen of olde tyme y● whiche had ben with drawen wrongfully occupyed by dyuerse kyngꝭ of Fraūce before honde to haue to holde to kyng Edwarde to his heyres successours for euer more frely peasybly in goode quyete vpon this couenaūt y● the kyng of Englonde sholde leue of releasen all his ryght clayme that he had claymed of y● kyngdom of Fraūce of y● 〈◊〉 he toke therof vpon whiche 〈◊〉 couenaūtes it was sent to y● 〈…〉 Rome on bothe sydes of y● kynges 〈…〉 forsayd couenaūt shold be 〈…〉 god ordeyned better for the kynges ●●●shyp of Englōde for what thrugh fra●de dysceyte of the Frensshmen what thrughe lettynge of the pope and of the courte of Rome the forsayd couenauntes were dysquate and left of ¶ And in the same yere the kynge reuoked by his w● se and dyscrete counseylle the staple of wulles out of Flaundres into Englond wyth all the lybertees fraunches and fre customes that longed therto and ●deyned it in Englonde in dyuerse places y● is for to saye at westmystre Caunterbury Chychestre Brystowe Lyncoln and Hulle with all the forsayd thynges that longen therto And y●●hys thynge that sholde thus be done the kynge swo●● hȳself therto prynce Edwarde his sone with other many grete wyenesses y● ther● were presente ¶ And the .xxx. yere of his regne anone after wytsontyde in the parleamente ordeyned at westmenstre it was tolde certefyed to y● kynge y● Phylyg y● helde y● kyngdome of Fraūce was deed and y● Ioh●̄ his sone was crowned kynge and y● this Iohn̄ had gyuen Karoll his sone y● duchye of Guyhen of y● whiche thynge kynge Edward whan he wyst therof he had greate Indygnacōn vnto hym was wonder wrothe strōg ly meued And therfore afore all y● worthy lordes y● there were assembled at that parlement callyd Edwarde his sone vnto hym to whome y● duchye of Guyhen by ryght herytage sholde longe to gat it hym there byddynge and strenthyng hym y● he sholde ordeyne hym for to defende hym auenge hȳ vpon his enemyes saue mayntene his ryght And afterwarde kynge Edwarde hymselfe his eldest sone Edwarde went to dyuers places sayntes in Englonde on pilgrimage for too haue y● more helpe grace of god and of his sayntes And .ii. kal of Iuyll whan all thynge was redy to that vyage batayll all his retenue power assembled his nauye also redy he toke with hym y● erle of warwyk y● erle of Suffolk y● erle of Salesbury the erle of Oxford a thousande men of armes as many archers and in the Natyuyte of our lady toke theyr shyppes at plūmouthe began to sayll And whan he come was arryued in Guyon he was there worshypfully aken receyued of y● moost noblest men lordes of that countree ¶ And anone afer kynge Edwarde toke with hym his two sones that is to saye syr Lyonell erle of Vlton and sir Iohn̄ his brother erle of Rychemonde syr Henry duke of Lancastre with many erles and lordes and men of armes two thousande archers saylled towarde Fraū●e rested hym a whyle at Calays after y● kynge went with his host aforsayd with other souldyours of be yonde y● see y● there abode y● kyngꝭ comȳge the seconde daye of Nofuembre toke his Iourney toward kynge Iohn̄ of fraunce there as he trowed too haue founde hym fast by Odomarum as his letters and couenaūt made mencyon y● he wolde a byde hym there with his host And whā kynge Iohn̄ Fraūce herde telle of the kynges comynge of Englonde he went awaye with his men caryage cowardly shamfully fleynge wastynge all vytayls y● Englysshmen sholde not haue therof ¶ And whan kynge Edwarde herde telle y● he fledde he pursued hym with all his hoste tyll Henede than he beholdynge y● scarsyte and wantynge of vytayls also y● cowardyse of y● kynge of Fraūce he torned ayen wastynge all the coūtree ¶ And whyle all thyse thynges were a doynge y● Scottꝭ pryuely and bynyghte toke y● towne of Berwyksleyng theym y● withstode theym no manels but blessyd be god y● castell was saued kept by Englysshmen that were therin whan the kynge perceyued all this he torned ayen into Englonde as wroche as he myghte be wherfore in the parleament at westmynster was grauntyd to the kynge of euery sacke of wulle .l. shillyng● durynge the terme of .vi. yere that he myghte myghtlyer fyght and defend the reame ayenst the Scottes and other mysdoers And so whan all thynges were redy the kynge hasted hym towarde the syege ¶ How kynge Edwarde was crowned kynge of Scotlonde and howe prynce Edwarde toke the kynge of Fraunce syr Philyp his yonger sone at y● batayll of Peyters ANd in the .xxxi. yere of his regne the .xiii. daye of Iany●●re the kynge beynge in the castell of Berwyke with a fewe men but he hauy●ge there faste by a grete hoost The towne was yolden vnto hym without ony maner defence or dyffyculte Than the kinge of Scotlonde that is for to saye sir Iohanne Bayloll considerynge how that god dyd many meruaylles gracyous thynges for kynge Edwarde at his owne wyll fro daye to daye he toke gaaf vp y● reame of Scotlonde y● crowne of Scotlonde at Rokesburgh in y● kynges hondes of Englōde vnder his patent letter there made ¶ And anone after kynge Edwarde in presence of all y● prelat● other worthy men lordes y● were there lette hym crowne kynge of Scotlond And whan all thynges were done ordeyned in y● coūtrees at his wyll he torned ayen into Englonde with a grete worshyp ¶ And whyle this vyage was in doynge in scotlonde syr Edwarde prynce of wales as a man enspyred in god was in Guyhen in y● cyte of Burdeux treatȳ ge spekynge of the chalenge
of the comynalte of the reame ¶ About this tyme at kynge Edwardes cōmaundement of Englonde whan all the castels and townes were yolden too hym y● longe were holden in Fraūce by a greate cōpany assembled to gyder syre Bartram Claykyn a nobled knyght and a good warryour went and purposed hym to put out Pers kynge of Spayne out of his kyngdom with helpe of the moost partye of the forsayd grete company trnstynge also vpon helpe fauour of y● pope for as moche as it come to his ceres y● the same Pers sholde lede vse a synfull lyfe y● whiche Pers smyten with drede of this tydynge fled into Gascoyne to prȳce Edward for to haue socoure of hym And whan he was fled out of Spayne Henry his broder y● was a bastarde by assent of y● moost party of Spayne thrugh help of that ferefull cōpany y● I spake of fyrst was crowned kȳge of spayne y● nōbre of that same cōpani was rekened set at the nōbre of .xl. M. fyghtynge men ¶ This same yere in y● moneth of Iune there come a grete cōpany a nauye of y● Danes gadred them togyder in the North see purposyng thē to come into Englonde to reue and too robbe and also to sle with whome they coūtred mette in the se. maryners and other gode fyghtynge men of y● countre dysperpled theym And they ashamyd went home ayen in too theyr owne coūtree But amonge the other there was a boystous vessell and a stronge of their nauye that was ouer saylled by the Englysshmen was perysshed drenched In the whiche y● Stewarde other worthy greate men of Denmarke were ta taken prysoners the kynge of Englōde his coūseyll prysoned them y● whiche lordes y● Danes afterwarde sought them all about for to haue had thē ayen with theyr goodes y● they had loste and they not well apayed ne pleased of the answer y● they had they torned homewardes ayen leuȳge behynde thē in ther Innes pryuely wryten in scrowes on walles yet shall Danes wast the wanes Thenne happed there an Englyssh writer wrote ayenst y● Dane in this manere here shall Danes fette theyr banys ¶ And in this tyme Pers the kynge of Spayne with other kynges that is too saye the kynge of Nauerne and the kynge of Malogre beynge meanes wenten bytwene and prayed coūseyll and helpe of syr Edwarde the prynce whos counseyll whan he had vnderstandynge ther artycles and desyre that he was requyred of of tho kynges loth he was ashamed to saye nay contrary to thē But netheles he was agast lest it sholde be oni preiudice ayenst y● pope longe tyme taryed thē or that he wolde graūt or consente therto tyll he had better coūseyll auysement with good delyberatyon of kyng Edwarde his fader But whan they were with hym euery daye contynually be sechynge of many noble men requyred spoken to with many prayers sente made bytwene thē than prynce Edwarde sent to his fader both vy cōplaynyng letters also by confortable conteynȳge all theyr suggestyous causes with all y● other kyngꝭ epystles letters for to haue conforte helpe of y● wronges not only done to y● kynge of Spayn but also for suche thyngꝭ as myght fall to other kyngꝭ Also yf it were not y● soner holpē amended thrughe y● dome helpe of knyghthode to them y● it asked desired ¶ The whiche letter whan the kynge his wyse coūseyll had seen suche a kyng spoylynge robbynge with moche merueyll And sent ayen comfortable letters to prynce Edwarde his sone to y● other kyngꝭ warned them for to arme them ordeyne theym ayenst that mysdoer to withstande them by y● helpe of god y● were suche enmyes to kynges whan this noble prynce had receyued this letters hymself with that other kynges before sayd all theyr coūseyll called 〈◊〉 he wolde vndertake the quard he boūd knytte sore y● kynge y● was deposed 〈◊〉 a greate o the that is to saye y● besholde euer after mayntene y● 〈…〉 and fayth of holy chirche and also with all theyr mynystreo ryghtes 〈…〉 defende frome all theyr cum 〈…〉 And all y● were ther● ayenst ●●●ly to punysshe destroble 〈…〉 lybertees preuyleges of holy 〈…〉 creace mayntene 〈…〉 y● were wrongfully taken with 〈◊〉 boren a waye by hym or by ou● other by cause of hym hastely to 〈…〉 dryue and put out saras● 〈…〉 mysbyleued people our o● his 〈◊〉 with all his strēgth and his po●er and suffre ne admitte none suche for no manere thynge ne cause too dwelle 〈◊〉 And that whan he had taken a 〈◊〉 woman he sholde neuer come in to non● other womans bedde ne none other m●nes wyfe too defoyle ¶ All thyse fo● sayd thynges trewely for to● kepe con tynue fulfyll as all his lyfe c●me be was boūdē by other afore notar●●s in presence wytnesse of tho kynges with other prynces ¶ And thanne that gra●●ous prynces Edwarde vndertoke the cause the quarell of the kynge that was deposed and behyght hym with the grace of almyghty god to restoe hȳ ayen to bys kyngdom lete ordeyne gadre ●●gyd forthwith in all haste his many with mē of armes for to warre and fyght in hys forsayd cause ¶ And in this same yere vpon the sande of y● Scottes see y● many a man sawe it thre dayes togyder there were seen two Egles of y● which y● one come out of y● southe y● other out of the north cruelly strongly they foughte togyder wrastled togyder y● southe Egle fyrst ouercome y● north egle all to rente hym with his bylle his clawes that he sholde not reste ne take no brethe and after y● south egle fleyth home to his owne costes ¶ And anone after there folowed was leen in y● morne after y● son rysynge after in y● last daye of Octobre sauynge one many sterres gadred togyder on an hepe felle downe to y● erthe le uynge behynde thē fyre bemes in maner of lyghtnynge whos flāmes brent cō sumed mens clothes mens heer walkȳge on y● erth as it was sene y● knowen of many a man ¶ And yet y● northern wȳde y● is euer redy destyrnate to all ylle fro saynt Katherynes eue thre dayes after lost greate good withoute nombre ¶ And in this same dayes there felle come also such lyghtnyng thondre snow ●●yll y● if wasted destroyed men bestes houses trees ¶ Of the batayll of Spayne besyde the water of Nazers that was bytwene prynce Edward syr Henry bastard of Spaȳ IN y● yere of our lord a M.CCC lxvii and of kynge Edwarde .xlii the thyrde daye of Aprylle there was a stronge batayll and a greate in a large felde called Pryazers fast by the water of Nazers in spayne bytwene syre Edwarde the prynce syr Henry y● bastarde of Spayne but the vyctory
fell to prynce Edwarde by the grace of god ¶ And this same prynce Edwarde had with hym syr Iohn̄ duke of Lancastre his broder other worthy men of armes about y● nō bre of .xxx. thousande ¶ And the kynge of Spayne had on his syde men of dynero nacyons to the nombre of an hondred thousande mo wherfore y● shar penesse and fyersnesse of his aduersary with his full boystous greate strenthe made and dryue the ryghtfulle partye a backe a greate waye but thrugh the grace of almyghty god passynge ony mannes strenthe that greate hooste was dysparpled myghtfully by the noble duke of Lancastre and his hoost or that prynce Edward came nyghe hym And whā Henry bastarde sawe that he torned with his men in so greate hast and strenthe for to flee that a greate company of thē in the forsayd floode and of the brydge therof fellen downe and perysshed And also there were taken the erle of Dene syr Bartram Cleykyn y● was cheyf maker causer of the warre also cheyftayne of the vaūtwarde of y● batayll with many other greate lordes and kuyghtes to the nombre of two thousande of whom two hondred were of Fraūce many al so of scotlonde and there were felled in the felde on our enmyes syde of lordes knyghtes with other meyn people to the nombre of .vi. thousande and moo and of Englysshmen but a fewe And after this the noble prynce Edwarde restored the same Peers to his kyngdom ayen y● whiche Peers afterwarde thrugh trechery and falsenes of the forsayd basterd of Spayne as he satte at his mete he was strangled and deyed But after this vyctorye many noble men of Englonde also hardy in Spayne thrughe the flyx and dyuers other sekenesses toke theyr dethe ¶ And also in the same yere in y● Marche was seen stella Cometa bytwene the north costes y● west whos bemes stretched towarde Fraūce ¶ And in the next yere folowynge of kynge Edwardꝭ regne .xliii. in Apryll syre Lyonell kynge Edwardes sone that was duke of Cla rence wente towarde Melayne wyth a chosen meyne of the gentyls of Englonde for to wedde Galoys doughter haue hyr to his wyf by whome he sholde haue halfe y● lordshyp of Melayne but after y● they were solēply wedded about y● Natyuyte of our lady y● same duke of Melai ne deyed And in y● same yere y● Frensshe men brake y● peas y● trewes rydyng on y● kyngꝭ groūde lordshyp of Englōde in y● shyre coūtre of Poūtyfe tokē helde castell townes bere y● Englyssh men on honde falsly subtyll y● they were cause of brekȳge of trewes and in this same yere deyed y● duches of Lancastre is buryed worshypfully in saynt Poules chirche ¶ The .xliiii. yere of kynge Edwardes regne was y● grettest pestylēce of men of grete bestes by y● grete fallynge of waters that felle at that tyme there fell grete hyndrynge destroyenge of corne in so moche that the next yere after a busshell of whete was solde for .xl. pens And in this same yere about y● last ende of Maykyng Edwarde helde tho his parlement at westmyster in which parlement was treated spoken of y● o the trewes that was borken bytwene hym the kyng of Fraūce how he myght best be auenged vpon his wronge ¶ In this same yere in y● Assūpcyon of our lady deyed quene Philyp of Englonde a full noble gode lady at westmyster full worshypfully is buryed entered And about mydsomer y● duke of Lancastre the erle of Herforde with a grete cōpany of knyghtes went into Fraūce where as they gate them but lytell worshyp name for there was a greate hooste of y● Frensshmen vpon Calkhull brydge an other hoste of Englysshmen fast by y● same brydge y● longe tyme had lyued there And maniworthy greate men of Englond ordei ned yaf coūseyll for to fyght yaf batayll to y● Frensshmen but y● forsayd lordes wolde not consent therto for no maner thynge ¶ And anone after it happe ned y● the erle of warwyk come thyderwarde for to warre whan y● Frensshe men herde of his comynge or y● he came fully to londe they left theyr senses pauylyons with all theyr vytayls sled wēt awaye pryuely And whan y● erle was comen to londe with his men he went in all hast towarde Normandye deshored y● I le of Caur with strenth of swerde thrughe fyre But alas in his reformynge to Englonde warde home ayen at Calays he was taken with sykenes of pestylence deyed not leuynge behynde hȳ after hys dayes so noble a knyght of armes ¶ In which tyme regned warted y● noble knyght syr Iohn̄●●●wkewod y● was an Englysshman borne hauynge 〈…〉 at his gouernaūce y● whyte cōpany 〈…〉 forsayd y● whiche o tyme ayenst 〈◊〉 ●●●che an other tyme ayenst lord 〈◊〉 ordeyned grete batayls there in 〈◊〉 me coūtree he dydde many merueylleu● thynges ¶ And about y● 〈…〉 of saynt Poule y● kyng whan he had ended done y● entrynge crequyes with ●●●te costes ryaltees aboute y● scpule●●e buryenge of quence Phylip his wife 〈◊〉 helde a parlement at westmyster 〈◊〉 ●●●che parlem̄t was ared of y● clergre 〈◊〉 yeres dyme that is for to saye a greedy me to be payed thre yere durynge And the clargye put it of and wolde not 〈◊〉 it vnto Ester next comynge 〈◊〉 they graunted well that in thre 〈…〉 certayne termes y● dyme sholde be 〈◊〉 also of the lay fee was a thre yere 〈◊〉 graunted to the kynge ¶ How sir Robert Knolles with other certayne lordes of y● teame went ouer sent to Fraūce of theyr gouernaūce ANd in the .xlv. yere of kynge Edwarde in y● begyunynge kynge Edwarde with vnwyse coūseyll and vndyscrete borowed a greate sōme of golde of y● prelaces marchaūtes other tyche men of his reame saynge y● it sholde be spended in defendynge of holy chirche of his reame Netheles it profyted nothȳge wherfore aboute mydsomer after he made a grete host of y● worthyest men of his reame Amonges whome weresome lordꝭ that is for to say y● lorde Fytzwater y● lorde graūson other worthy knightꝭ of which knyghꝭ y● kygne ordeyned syr Robert Knolles a proued knyzt a well assayd in dedes of armes for to be gouernour y● thrugh his coūseyl gouernaunce all thȳge sholde be gouerned dressed And whan they come into Fraūce as longe as they dwelled helde them hole togyder y● Frensshmen durst not fall vppon thē And at the laste about the begȳ nynge of wynter for enuye couetyse y● was amonge them also dyscorde they sondred parted thē into dyuerse cōpanyes vnwysely folely But syr Robert Knolles his men went keped theym sauf within a castell in Brytayne And whan y● Frensshmen sawe that ouer men felaushyp were deuyded into dyuerse
a certayne tyme vpon y● see costes abydynge after a good wynde for them yet come it not So at y● last he come thens with his mē to lond warde ayen anone as he was a londe y● wynde began for to torne was in an other cost than he was afore ¶ How y● duke of Lancastre with a grete hoost went into Flaūdres passed by Parys thrugh Burgon thrugh all fraunce tyll he come vnto Burdeux SOane after in the .xlviii. yere of the regne of kynge Edwarde the duke of Lancastre with a greate power went into Flaūdres passed by Parys thrugh Burgon thrugh all Fraūce til he come vnto Burdeux without ony maner withstandynge of y● Frensshmen he dyd them but lytell harme sauf he toke ra●●oned many places townes many men lette theym go after frely The same yere y● kynge set certayne ambassatours to y● pope prayenge hym y● he sholde leue of medle not in his court of the kepynge reseruacyons of benefycꝭ in Englonde that tho y● were thosē to bysshoppꝭ sees dygnetees frely with ful myght Ioy haue be confermed to y● same of theyr metropolytans Archbysshops as they were wonte to be of olde tyme Of these poyntes of other touchȳge the kynge and his reame whan they had theyr answer of y● pope the pope enioyned them y● they sholde certefy hym a yen by theyr letter of the kynges wyll of his reame or they determyned oughte of the forsayd artycles ¶ In this same yere deyed Iohn̄ the Archebysshop of yorke Iohn̄ bysshop of Ely wyllyam bysshop of worcestre In whos stedes folowed were made bysshops by auctoryte of y● pope mayster Alexander Neuyll to y● Archbysshopryche of yorke Thomas of Arūdell to the bysshopryche of Ely and syr Henry wakfelde to the bysshopriche of worcestre In the whiche tyme it was ordeyned in the parlement y● all Cathedrall chirches sholde Ioy haue theyr eleccōns hole that the kynge fro y● tyme afterwarde sholde not wrytte ayenst them y● were chosen but rather helpe them by his letters to theyr confirmacōn thys statute dyd moche profyte ¶ And in this parlemēt was graūted to the kyng a dyme of the clergye a .xv. of lay fee. ¶ In the .xlix. of y● regue of kynge Edwarde deyed mayster wyllyam wytlesey Archebysshop of Caūterbury the monkes of the same chirche asked desyred a Cardynall of Englōde to be Archbysshop therfore y● kynge was agreued ment purposed to haue exyled y● monkes of y● same And they spended moche good or they myghte haue the kynges grace ayen and his loue but yet wolde y● kynge not consente ne graunte to theyr eleccyon of the Cardynalle ne of the pope alsoo ne hys Cardynales ¶ And atte the begynnynge of Auguste it was treated and spoken atte Bruges of certayne poyntes and artycles hangynge bytwene the pope and the kynge of Englonde and this treates lasted almooste tho yere And at the laste it was accorded bytwene theym that the pope fro that tyme forth sholde not vse ne dele with the reseruacōns of benefyces in Englonde and that the kynge sholde not graūe ne lette no benefytꝭ by his wrytte that is called Quare impedit But as touchynge the eleccyon aboue sayd there was no thynge touched ne done And that was wyted and putte vpon certayne clerkes the whiche rather supposed and hoped to be auaūced and promoted to bysshopryches whiche they desyred and coueyted by the court of Rome rather than by ony other eleccyons ¶ This same yere about Candelmasse there mette togyde atte Bruges many noble worthy men of bothe sydes and reames to trete of peas bytwene tho two kynges And this tretꝭ lasted two yere with grete tostes large expenses of both partyes And at the last they went departed thens without ony accorde or effecte The next yere after y● .l. yere of kyng edward y● .iiii. Non̄ of May beyng yet voyde vacaūt that Archbysshopryche of Caūterbury mayster Symonde sudbery bysshop of Londō was made Archbysshop mayster wyllyam courteney y● was bysshop of Herford was thā made bysshop of London y● bysshop of Bangor was made bysshop of Herforde ¶ And thys same tyme in a certayne treates spekȳge of peas trewes was takē bytwene thē of Fraūce Englonde fro mydsomer to mydsomer come ayen an hole yere about y● begȳnynge of Apryll y● duke of Brytayne with many erles barons and worthy lordes men of Englond went ouer see into Brytayne where he hathe had all his luste desyre puropse ne had the forsayd trewes bt so sone taken the whiche letted thē ¶ This same tyme y● I le of Constantyne where y● the castel of saynt Saueour is in y● longe tyme was foughten at besyeged of y● Frensshmē than yelde to y● Frensshmen with all the apportenaūces into grete harme hyndrȳge of y● reame of Englonde And this same yere there were so grete so passynge hetes therwith all a greate pestylence in Englonde in other dyuerse partyes of y● worlde y● it destroyed slewe vyolently strongly both men wymen without nōbre This same yere deyed sir Edwarde y● lorde spencer a worthy knyght abolde in y● mynster of Teukesbury worshipfully is buryed And lastynge this pestilence y● pope at y● instaūce and prayer of an Englysshe Cardynale graunted to all people y● deyed in Englond y● weresory repentaūte for theyr synnes and also shryuen full remyssyon by two bulles vnder lede .vi. monethes than next to laste ¶ In this same yere the erle of Penbroke was taken and cas●●oned by Bartram Claykyn bytwene Patys Calays as he come towarde Englōde vpon saynt Atheldredes daye y● whiche saynt as it was sayd y● erle oftentymes had offended within a lytyll while after he deyed ¶ And in Nouembre nexte after there mette at Bruges the duke of Lancastre and the duke of Angoy with many other lordes and prelates of bothe reames for to treate of peas ¶ Of the dethe of prynce Edward and of the lorde Latymer and dame ●●●●peres thrugh whome and hyr maynte ners the reame many a daye was 〈◊〉 gouerned ' NOt longe after the .li. yere of ●●●ge Edward regne he 〈…〉 ne holde at westmyster y● greetest ●●●ment y● was seen many 〈…〉 y● whiche parlement he asked of ●●●●naite of y● reame as he had done 〈◊〉 fendynge of hym of his reame 〈◊〉 comunes answerd y● they were so oft 〈◊〉 by daye greued charged with so many talages subsydyes y● they myght no●●ger suffre no suche bu●chons charges that they knewe and wyst wel ynough y● the kynge had ynoughe for sauynge of hym and of his reame of the reame were well and truely gouerned but that it had be so longe euyll gouerned by ylle of fycers that the reame myght nother he plenteuous of chaffre marchaūdyse ne also with rychesse And in these thynges they profred
aege And in the seconde yere of his regne for the debate that was bytwene the lorde Latymer and syr Rauf Feryers knyghte that was ayenst Hawell and Shakell squyres for y● prysoner that was take in spayne by these two squyres the whiche prysoner the lord Latymer and syr Ra●fe Feryers wolde haue hadde the whyche prysoner was the Erle of Dene that they toke in y● batayll of Spayne wherfore these two lordes come into the chirche at westmyster and they founde this one squyre too herynge his masse besyde saynt Edwardes shryne and there they slew hym the whiche was called Hawell ¶ And Skakell was arested put in to the Towre of London And there he was longe tyme for he wolde not del●●uer the Erle of Dene his prysoner vnto these two lordes by syr Aleyn Burbyll conestable of the Tower and by Synt Raufe Feryers one of his aduersaryes tylle the kynge had graunted hym grace ¶ In the thyrde yere of kynge Rycharde came the Galays of Fraūce into Englonde vnto dyuerse portes and brente and robbed and slewe moche people of Englonde that is to saye atte wynchelsee Rye and Hastynge Portysmouthe and. Hampton Stormore and Granes ende and they dydde moche harme and wente home ayen ¶ And in this same yere was a parleamente holden at westmynster And atte that same parleament was ordeyned y● euery man womā chylde that were at y● aege of .xiiii. yere and aboue thrughe out all the reame pore folke and other sholde paye to the talage foure pens wherfore came and be felle afterwarde greate myscheyf moche dysease to all the comynalte of there me ¶ And in the .iiii. yere of kynge Rychardes regne the comynes arose vp in dyuerse partyes of the reame and dyden moche harme the whiche tyme they called y● hurlynge tyme. ¶ And they of Kente and of Estsex made them two cheyf tayns for to rule and for to gouerne the company of Kente and of Estsex That one was called Iacke strawe and that other Watte Tyler and they come and assembled theym vppon blacke heth in Kent And on Corpꝰ christi daye after they camen downe into Southwerke and braken vp the pryson hous that is to saye the kynges bynche and the marchelsee and delyuerde out all the prysoners And so the same daye they came in to London and there they robbed the peple and slewe all the alyens that they myght fynde in the cyte and about the cyte and dyspoyled all theyr godes and made auowe And on the frydaye nexte folowenge after that was on the morowe and than they came to the Toure of Lōdon and the kynge beynge therin they fette out of the Toure the Archebysshop of Caunterbury syr Symonde Sudbery and ser Robert halys hospyteler pryoure and mayster of syant Iohans house●● a whyte frere that was confessoure vnto kynge Rycharde and brought theꝭ vnto the Towre hylle and there they smote of theyr heedes and came agayne into London and slewe moche people of the Cyte ¶ And thenne they wente vntoo the dukes place of Lancastre beyonde saynt Mary of the stronde that was called the Sauoy and there they deuoured and destroyed all the goodes that they therin myght fynde bare them awaye and than they brente vp the place And than afterward they went to saynt Iohn̄ with out smythfelde destroyed the godes there and brent vp that hous to the harde grounde and wente too westmynster and saynt Martyns the graunte made theym go out of the senewary all that were within for ony manere of gylthe And than come vnto the Temple and to all other Innes of men of lawe and dyspoyle them and robbe theym of theyr godes and also toke theyr bokes of lawe thenne they came to London and brake vp the pryson of Newgate drofe oute all the prysoners felons and other and of bothe countrees and all the people y● were within theym and destroyed all the bokes of the counters And thus they cōtynued both saterdaye and sondaye vnto the mondaye next after in all theyr malyce and wyckydnes ¶ And than on mōdaye kynge Rycharde with his lordes that were with hym that tyme and with the mayer of London wyllyam walworth y● that was that tyme come with the aldermen and the comunes of the cyte they come into Southwerke too here and too knowe the entencyon of these rebelles mysgouerned people And this Iacke strawe made thanne a crye in the felde that all the people of accorde tholde come nerer and here his claymours his crye and his wyl And the lordes and the mayer and the aldermen with the comynaltee hauynge in dygnacōn of his couetyse falsnes his foule presumpcyon Anone wyllyam walworth that tyme beȳge mayer drewe out his knyfe slew iacke straw anone ryght smote of his hede set it vpon a spere so it was borne thrugh Lendon set vpon Londō brydge Anone these rysers mysgouerned pewere vanysshed as it had not be they then y● kynge of his grete godenesse by prayer of his lordes made there .vi knyghtꝭ of good worthy men of y● cyte of London that is to saye wyllyam walworthe that at tyme mayer slew iacke straw and the seconde was Nycholas ●rembre and the thyrde Iohn̄ Phylip●t the fourth Nycholas twyforde and y● fifte Roberte laundes and the syxte Roberte 〈…〉 y● kynge with his 〈…〉 aye● too the 〈…〉 there be tested by 〈…〉 and set ● 〈…〉 And ●han by process of 〈◊〉 as they myght to be 〈◊〉 these rebelles 〈◊〉 they 〈◊〉 vpon the next 〈◊〉 throgh out euery lord shyn in y● 〈◊〉 of Englōde by .xi. by xxx by .x. ● by xii euer as they myght be go●●● taken in any partes ¶ And in the v. yere of kynge Rychardes regne was y● grete erthe make was generall thrughe oute the worlde the wenesdaye after wy●●ondaye in the yere of oure lorde M. CCC.lxxxxi wherfore all maner peple were sore agast and aferde longe tyme for drede of vengraunge that our lorde shewed and dyd ¶ And in the .vi. yere of kynge Rycharde thenn syr Henrye spenser bysshop of Norwiche went with a greate company ouer se into Flaūdres and there they gete the towne of Graueuynge the towne of burbrughe Dunberk Newport and there they laded fraughted .li. shyppes with pelage for to haue comen in to Englonde with these shyppes and goodes And the bysshop of Norwyche and his counseyll lete brenne these shyppes with all the pelage in the same hauen all into harde asshes and at Dunkerk was done a greate batayl bytwene the Flemyngꝭ the Englysshmen And at y● batayll were slayne a grete and tyt●ge of the Flemynges a greate nombre And than wente the bysshop with his reteme to y●ers besyeged it a longe tyme 〈◊〉 it myght not be gotten so left that syege and come ayen into Englonde too our Englysshmen were souly destroyed many deyed on
y● flyr and in the yere come euerie Anne into Englōde 〈◊〉 to be spoused to kynge Rycharde hir ●●der was Emperour of Almaynt kynge of 〈◊〉 with hir 〈…〉 be of 〈…〉 and many other worthy 〈◊〉 knyghtes of hys 〈◊〉 of Beme and of other duche tonges to do hyr reuerence worshyp And syr Symonde veuerle a worthy knyght of y● garter and other knyghtes and squyres that were the kynges embassatoure● brought hyr in to Englonde and so forth to London And the people of y● cyte that is to saye the mayer the aldermen and all comynes roden ayenste hyr to welcome hyr and euery man in goode araye and euery craft with his mynstralsye in the best maner wyse and mette with hyr on the blacke hethe in Kent and so brought hyr vnto London thrugh the cyte and so forth vnto westmynster vnto the kynges palays And there she was spoused vnto kynge Rycharde well and worthely in the abbaye of westmynster and there she was crowned quene of Englonde And all hyr frendes that came with hyr had den grete gyftes were well cherysshed refresshed as longe tyme as they abode there ¶ And in this same yere ther was a batayll done in the kynges palays at westmynster for certayn poyntes of treason bytwene syr Iohn̄ Ansley knyght defendaunt and Carton squyre the appellaunt But this syr Iohn̄ of Ansley ouer came this Carton and made hym to yelde hym within y● lystes And anone was this Carton dyspoyled of his harneys drawen out of the lystes and so forth vnto Tyburne and there he was hanged for his falsnesse ¶ And in the .viii. yere of the regne of kynge Rycharde the seconde syre Edmonde of Langley the. Erle of Cambrydge kynge Rychardes vncler wente in too Portyngale wyth a fayr companye of men of armes and archers in strengthynge and helpynge the kynge of Portyngale ayenst y● kynge of spayne his power and there the kynge of Portyngale had the vyctory of his enemyes thrughe helpe and comforthe of oure Englysshmen And. whan that Iourney was done y● erle of Cambrydge come home ayen with his people into Englande in hast blessed be god and his blessyd gyftes Amen ¶ And this same yere kyng Rychard helde his Crystmas in the maner of Eltham ¶ And the same yere and tyme the kynge of Armony fledde out of his owne londe and come in to Englonde for to haue helpe and so coure of oure kynge ayenst his enmyes that hadde dryuen hym out of his owne reame And so he was brought vnto the kynge to Elcham there as the kynge helde his ryall feest of Crystmasse ¶ And there our kynge welcomed hym and did hym moche reuerence worshyp commaunded all his lordes to make hym al the chere that euer they coude And than he besought the kynge of his grace and of helpe of his comforth in his nede y● he myght be brought ayen to his kingdome and londe For the Turkes hadde deuoured and bestroyed the moost parte of his londe how he fledde for drede and come hyder for socout helpe And thenne the kynge hauynge on hym pyte and compassyon of his greate myscheif and greuous dysease anone he toke hys coūseyll and asked what was beste to do And they answered and sayd yf it lyked hym to gyue hym ony good it were weldone And as touchynge his people for to trauell so ferre into out londes it were a greate Ieoperdye And soo the kynge gaaf hym golde and syluer and many ryche gyftes and Iewels and betaughte hym to god and so he passed ayen oute of Englonde ¶ And in this same yere kynge Rycharde with a ryall power wē te into Scotlonde for to warre vpon the Scottes for the falsnes and destruccyon that the Scottes had done vnto Englysshmen in the Marches And thanne the Scottes come downe too the kynge for to treate with hym and with his lordes for trewes as for certayne yeres And so our kynge his coūseyll graūted theym trewes for certayne yeres and our kyng torned hym ayen into Englonde And whan he was comen vnto yorke there he abode and rested hy●● there And there syr Iohn̄ Holonde the erle of Kentes broder slewe the erles sone of Scafforde his heyre with a dagger in y● cyte of yorke wherfore the kynge was sore anoyed greued remeued thens came to Lōdon And the mayer with y● aldermen the comyns with all the solempnyte that myght be done ryden ayenste y● kynge brought hym ryally thrugh the cyte and soo forth vnto westmynster to his owne palays ¶ And in the .ix. yere of kynge Rychardes regne he helde a parlement at westmynster there he made two dukes a marqueys fyue erles The fyrst that was made duke was the kynges vncle syr Edmonde of Langle erle of Cambrydge hym he made duke of yorke his other vncle syr Thomas of wodstok that was erle of Bukyngham hym he made duke of Gloucestre And syr Lyonuer y● was erle of Oxforde hym he made marqueys of Deuelyne And Hernry of Balyngbrok the dukes sone of Lancastre hym he made erle of Derby And sir Edwarde y● dukes sone of yorke hym he made erle of Ruttelonde And syre Iohan Holonde that was the Erle of Kentes broder and hym he dyd make erle of Huntyngdon ¶ And Syre Thomas Mombraye hym he made Erle of Notyngham and the Erle Marshalle of Englōde And sir Mychelde lapole knyght hȳ he made erle of South folk and Chaūceler of Englōde And y● erle of y● Marche at y● same parlelemēt holden at westmynster in playne parlemēt amonges all the lordes comyns was proclamed erle of the Marche and heyre Parente to the crowne of Englonde aftere kynge Rycharde the whiche erle of the Marche wente ouer see in to Irlonde vnto his lordshyppes and londes for the erle of Marche is erle of Vlster in Irlonde and by ryght lyue and herytage And there atte the castell of hys he laye that tyme and there came vpon hym a grete multytude in busshmētes of wylde Irysshmen for to take hym and destroye hȳ And he come out fyersly of his castell with his people and manly faught with thē and there he was taken hewen all too pyeces and so he deyed vpon whos soule god haue mercy ¶ And in the .x. yere of kynge Rychardes regne the erle of Arūdell went to the see with a greate nauye of shyppes armed with men of armes good archers And whan they come in the brode see they mette with the hole flete that come with wyne lade from Rochell the whiche wyne were enemyes goodes And there our nauye sette vpon theym toke theym all and brought theym vnto dyuerse portes and hauens of Englonde some to London and there ye myghte haue had a tonne of Rochell wyne of y● heste for xx shellynge sterlynge and soo we had greate chepe of wyne in Englonde y● tyme thanked be god almyghty ¶ How
on horsbacke in the same felde and whanne he hadde ryden certayne courses assayed he myght not haue the better he gaaf it ouer and wolde nomore of his chalenge with syr Pers courtayne knyght y● kyngꝭ banerere of Englonde and torned his hors and rode home vnto his owne Inn And one Cockeborne a squyre of Scotlonde chalenged syr Nycholl Hawberke a knyghte of certayne courses yet wyth sharpe speres and roden fyue courses togyder and at euery course the Scot was caste downe bothe hors and man and thus oure Englysshe lordes thanked be god had the felde ¶ And in the .xvii. yer● of kynge Rycha●●● regne deyed the good 〈…〉 to kynge Rycharde in the manere of Shene in the shyre of Surrey vpon witsondaye and than was she broughte to London and so to westmynster and there was she buryed and worthely entered besyde saynt Edwardes shiyne on whose soule almyghty god haue pyte and in his mercy Amen ¶ How kynge Rycharde spoused dame Isabell the kynges doughter of Fraunce in the towne of Calays and brought hir into Englonde and lette hir be crowned quene in the abbaye of saynt Peters of westmynstre IN the .xx. yere of kynge Rychardꝭ regne he wente hymselfe ouer see vnto Calays with dukes erles lordes barons and many other worthy squyres with greate araye and comune people of the reame in good araye as longed to suche a kynge and prynce of his nobley of his owne persone to do hym reuerence obseruaūce as ought to be done too theyr lyege lorde so myghty a kynge Emperoure in his owne to abyde receyue ther y● worthy gracyous lady y● sholde be his wyfe a yonge creature of .xix. yere of aege dame Isabell the kynges doughter of Fraūce other worthy lordes of greate name both barons knyghtes with moche other people y● camen to the towne of Grauenynge two dukes of Fraunce y● one was the duke of Burgoyn and y● other the duke of Barre that wolde no further lesse than they had pledges And than kynge Rychard delyuerd two pledges for them for to go sauf come sauf his two worthy 〈◊〉 the duke of Gloucestre y● duke of york these two went ouer y● 〈◊〉 of graue ny●ge abode there as for pledgꝭ to the tyme y● the maryage was done and that these two dukes of Fraunce were come ayen vnto Grauenynge water And thā these two worthy dukes came ouer y● water at Grauenynge so to Calays with this worshypfull lady dame Isabell y● was the kynges doughter of Fraunce with hir came many a worthy lorde and eke lady knyghtes squyres in y● best araye y● myght be so brought hyr into the towne of Calays And there she was receyued with all the solempnyte worshyp that myghte be done vnto suche a lady And than they broughte hyr vnto the kynge and the kynge toke hir welcomed hir and all hir fayre company made there all the solempnyte y● myght be done ¶ And than the kynge his coūseyll asked of the Frensshe lordes wh●ther all the couenaūtes forwardes with the composycyon that were ordeyned made on bothe partyes sholde be truely kepte and holde bytwene theym And they sayd ye and there they swore and toke theyr charge vpon a boke and made theyr othe well and truly it to hold in all maner of poynts and cou●nauntes withoute contradyccyon or delay in ony maner wyse And than was she brought to saynt Nicholas chirche in Calays and there she was worthely wedded with the moost solempnyte y● ony kynge or quene myght be with Archebysshops bysshops all the mynystres of holy chirche and than they were brought to y● castell ●ete to mete And were serued with all delycasye of ryall metes drynkes plenteuously to all maner of straūgers all other no creature warned y● feest but al were welcome for there were greate halles tentes set vpon the grene without y● castell to receyue all manere of people and euery offyce redy for to serue theym all And thus this worthy maryage was solemply done ended with all ●yalte and thanne these two worthy dukes of Fraunce with theyr people token theyr leue of the kynge and of the quene and went ayen vnto Grauenynge water And there the Frensshe lordes that is to say the two dukes and all theyr menys 〈◊〉 comen ouer the water to Gra●●nynge they mette with our two dukes and euerychone toke leue at other and so they departed and our lordes camen ayen vnto Calays and the Frensshe lordes wenten ouer the water and so home into Fraunce ayen ¶ And anone after the kynge made hym redy with the quene and all his lordes and ladyes and all theyr people with theym and came ouer the se in to Englonde and so vnto London And the mayer and the shreues with all the aldermen and worthy comunes roden ayenst them vnto the blacke hethe in too Kente and there they mette with y● kinge and the quene and welcomed theym and that in good araye and euery man in the clothynge of his craft and they re mynstrels before them And so they brought theym vnto saynt Georges barre in Southwarke there they token theyr leue And the kynge and the quene roden to Kenyngton and than y● people of Lōdon torned home ayen And in tornyng ayen to London brydge there was soo greate presse of people both on hors on foote that there were deed on y● brydge xi persones of men women children on whos soules almyghty god haue mercy pyte amen ¶ And than afterwarde the quene was brought to the towre of London there she was all nyght on the morne she was brought thrugh the cyte of London and so forth vnto westminster and there she was crowned quene of Englonde and than she was broughte ayen vnto the kynges palays and there was holden open and a ryall feest at hir coronacyon of all maner people that the der come this was done the sondaye nexte after the feest of saynt Clemente in the .xx. yere of kynge Rychardes regne And than the .xxv. daye of Auguste next after by euyll excytacyon and fals coūseyll for grete 〈…〉 kynge had of 〈…〉 good duke of Glouerstre and to the erle n● Arūdell and too the erle of warwyk Anone the kyng by his euyll excytacyon and his euyll coūseyll malyce late in y● euenynge on the same daye aboue sayd made hym redy with his strēgthe rode into Estsex vnto the towne of Chelmesforde and so come to Plasshe sodenly the re syr Thomas of wodstok the good duke of Gloucestre laye and the good duke came to welcome the kynge anone the kynge arested the good duke hymselfe with his owne body so he was ladde downe to the water and anone put into a shyp and anone had to Calays brought into the Capytayns warde to be kepte in holde by the kynges
and anone euery man was dysparpled and wente hys waye forsoke theyr mayster and souerayne lorde left hym allone And thus was kynge Rycharde brought downe destroyed and stode hymself allone with out comforth or socoure or of ony goode coun●eylle of ony man alas for pyte of this ryall kynge And anone came worde that syr Henry of Bolyngbroke was vp with a stronge power of people and that all the squyres of Englonde reysen vp the shyres in strengthynge of hym a yenste kynge Rycharde ¶ And thus sone he was come oute of the North countre to Brystowe and the re he met wyth sir wyllyam Scrope erle of wyltshyre tresourer of Englonde with sir Iohn̄ Busshe and syr Henry greue and Iohn̄ Bagot but he escaped frome theym and went ouer see into Irlonde these thre knyghtes were taken theyr hedes smyten of thus they deyed for theyr fals couetyse ¶ And than was kynge Rycharde taken brought vnto the duke and a none the duke put hym in faste warde stronge holde vnto his comynge to London And than was there a rumore in Lōdon a stronge noyse that kynge Rycharde came to westmynster the people of London ranne thyder and wolde haue done moche harme hurte in ther woodnesse had notte the mayer and aldermen and othere worthy men cessed theym with fayre wordes and tornede theym home agayne vnto London And ther was syr Iohn̄ Slake dene of y● kinges chapell of westmynster taken brought to London put in pryson in Ludgate And Iohan Bagot was taken in Irlonde and so brought to London and put in pryson in Newgate there to be kepte abyde his answere ¶ And soon after the duke brought kynge Rychard pryuely vnto London put hym in the tour vnder sure kepynge as a prysoner And than came the lordes of the ream● wyth all theyr coūseyll vnto the Tour to kynge Rycharde sayd to hym of hys mysgouernaūce extorcyon y● he hadde done made ordeyned to oppresse all the comyne people also to all y● reame Wherfore all the comyne people of y● reame wolde hym haue deposed of his kyngdome And so he was deposed at y● tyme in the Toure of London by all his lordes coūsayll comune assent of all the reameAnd than he was put frome the Tour vnto the castell of Ledes in Kent there he was kept a whyle And thā he was had frome thens vnto the castell of Poūfret in the North coūtre to be kept in prison and ryght sone after there he made his ende ¶ And than whan kynge Rycharde was deposed and had resygned his crowne his kyngdome was kept fast in holde than all the lordes of the reame with the comyns assente by accorde chosen this worthy lorde syr Henry of Bolyngbroke erle of Derby duke of Herford duke of Lancastre by ryght lyne and herytage and for his ryghtfull manhode that the people founde in hym before all other they chose hym and made hym kynge of Englonde amonges theym INnocencyus the .vii. was chosen at Rome and lyued but two yere and than Gregory .xii. was after hym xii yere euer was debate Than was Alexander chosen in y● coūseyll of Pysā he was called fyrste Petrus de Candyda so was put stryf to stryf euerychone of those thre sayd he was pope than was there a coūseyll at Pysan where they began to make a concorde there they deposed y● two the thyrde stode so was worse deuysyon made than before for y● they ordeyned preuayled not ¶ Roberte was Emperour after wenselaus .ix. yere this man was duke of Bauary erle of Palatyn a Iust man and a good was crowned of Boneface the .ix. This man entred ytaly with a greate hoost of Almayns ayenst Iohn̄ the duke of Galyas but with an heuy hoost he torned ayē was had worthy to suffre for his ryght wysnes ¶ Iohan the .xxiii. succeded Alexander .iiii. yere fyrste he began well for an vnyte and he was in the coūseyll at Constantis offred hym to resygne the popehode after secretly vntruly he fledde awaye but it profyted him not for he was taken constreyned to peas and was made a Cardynall and buryed at Florens ¶ Sygysmundus was Emperoure after Robert .xxvii. yere and he was sone to Karolus and kynge of Vngarye and moost crysten prynce and he was so deuoute to god that he deserued too be canonysed This man holpe the chirche thrugh his merueylous prudence and wytte for he spared no labour ne no thynge y● he had tyll he had made a full peas amonge the clergye And he had .ix batayls ayenst y● Turke euer he had y● vyctorye what more all thynge y● euer was wryten in louynge to Constantyne Theodosio Karolo Otto may truly be wryten of him And he was crowned in Vngary decessed a blessed man ¶ Circa Annū dm̄ M. CCCC.vii ¶ Of syr Henry of Bolyngbroke Erle of Derby that regned after kynge Rycharde whiche was the fourth Henry after the Conquest ANd after kynge Rycharde the seconde was deposed and oute of his kyngdome the lordes and the com●nes all with one assent all other wo● thy of the reame chosen Henry of Bolȳgebroke erle of Derby sone and hey● of Iohn̄ the duke of Lancastre for his wor thy manhode that oft tyme had be fo●●de in hym and in dedes preued vpon 〈◊〉 Edwardes daye y● cofessour he was crowned kynge of Englond at westm●●ster by assent of all the reame next af●● y● deposynge of kynge Rycharde Than he made Henry his eldest sone pryn●● of wales duke of Cornewayle Erle of Chestre And he made syr Thomas of Arūdell Archebysshop of Caunterbury● ayen as he was before And syr Rogere walden that kynge Rycharde had made Archebysshop of caūterbury he made bysshopp of London for y● tyme it stode voyde And he made the Erles sone of Arundell that came with hym ouer these frome Calays into Englonde he made hym erle of Arūdell as his fader had ben put hym in possessyon of all his lōdes And he made homage f●aute vnto his lyege lorde the kynge as all other lordes hadde done ¶ And than anon● dyed kynge Rycharde in the castell of Poūfret in the North coūtre for there he was enfamed vnto deth by his keper For he was kept there .iiii. o● .v. dayes frome mete or drynke and soo he made his ende in this worlde yet mothe people in Englonde and in other londes sayd he was alyue many a yere after his dethe But whether he was alyue or dede the people helde theyr fals opynyon and byleue that many had moche people cam to grete myscheyf foule dethe as ye shall here afterwarde ¶ And whan kynge Henry wyst and knewe verely that he was de de he lete sere hym in the best manere closed it in a fayr chest with dyuerse spyces bawmes and closed hym
felde and syre Thomas Percy taken and kept fast in holde two dayes tyll the kynge hadde sette in rest his people on both sydes And thā syr Thomas Percy was Iuged to y● dethe to be drawen hanged and his heed smyten of for his fals treason at Shrowesbury hys heed brought to London and set on Lōdon brydge And the other people that there was slayne on bothe partyes the kynge leete bury And there was slayne on the kynges syde in that batayll the erle of Stafforde syr walter Blunte in the kynges cote armure vnder the kyngꝭ baner and many mo worthy men vpon whos soule god haue mercy Amen ¶ And in y● fourth yere of kynge Henryes regne came the Emperoure of Constantynople with many greate solaes and knyghtes and moche other people of his countre into Englonde to kynge Henry with hym to speke to dyspoite and to se y● good gouernaūce condycyons of our people too knowe y● cōmodytees of Englonde and our kynge with all his lordes goodly worshypfully receyued welcomed him all his menye that came with hym dyd hym all the worshyp that they coude myght And anone the kynge ●mmaūded all maner offycers that he sholde be serued as worthely and ryally as it longed to suche a worthy lorde Emperour on his owne cost as longe as the Emperour was in Englonde and all his men that came with hym ¶ And in this same yere came dame Iane the duches of Bryt ayne into Englonde and londed at fallemouthe in Cornewayle frome thens she was brought to y● cyte of wynchestre there she was wedded vnto kynge Hēry the fourth in the abbaye of sayntswythynes of wynchestre with all the solempnite that myght be done made And sone afterwarde she was brought frome thens to London And the mayer the aldermen with the comunes of the cyte of London rode ayenst hyr welcomed hir brought hir thrugh y● cyte of London to westmȳster there she was crowned quene of Englonde there the kynge made a ryall and solempne feest for hyr for all maner of men that thyder wold com ¶ And in this same yere dame Blaūch the eldest daughter of kynge Henry the fourth was sent ouer see with the erle of Somerset hir vncle with mayster Rycharde Clyfforde than bysshop of worcestre with many other lordes knyghtes ladyes worthy squyres as longed to suche a kynges doughter and came in too Colayne And thyder came the dukes sone of Barre with a fayr menye receyued this worthy lady and y● bysshop of worcestre wedded sacred theym togyder as holy chyrche it wolde And there was made a ryall feest a grete Iustin ge in the reuerence and worshyp of them all people that thyder came And whanne this maryage fest was done the erle the bysshop all theyr menye toke theyr leue of the lorde the lady came home ayen into Englonde in saufte thanked be god ¶ And in the .v. yere of kyng Hēryes regne the lorde Thomas his sone went ouer see y● erle of Kent and many other lordes and kuyghtes with men of armes archers a greate nombre to chastyse the rebelles that afore had done moche harme to our Englysshmen and marchauntes to many townes portes in Englonde on y● see costes And the lorde Thomas the kynges sone came in to Flaūdres before a towne that is called Scluse amonge all y● shyppes of dyuers nacyons that were there after there they roden with theyr shyppes amonge them went on londe sported thē there two dayes came ayen to theyr shyppes toke the brode see there they mette with thre Carackes of Iene that were ladē with dyuerse marchaūdyse well manned they foughte togyder longe tyme but the Englysshmen had the vyctory brought the Carackes into the Cambre before wynchelse and there they canted these goodes and one of these Carackes was sodaynly brent there And the lordes and theyr people torned theym home ayen wente noo further at that tyme. ¶ And the same tyme Serle yoman of kyng Rychardes robbes came in too Englonde out of Scotlonde and tolde too dyuerse people that kynge Rycharde was on lyue in Scotlonde so moche people byleued in his wordes wherfore a grete parte of the people of the reame were in grete errour grutchynge ayenst the kynge thrugh informacyon of lyes fals les ȳges that this Serle had made For moche people trusted byleued in his sayēge But at the last he was taken in the North coūtre therby lawe Iuged to be drawen thrugh euery cyte good burgh townes in Englonde so he was serued at the last he was brought to London vnto y● gylde halle before y● Iustyce and there he was Iuged for to be brought to the Tour of London there to be layd on an hurdell than to be drawen thrughe y● cyte of London to Tyburne and there to be hanged than quartred and his heed smyten of seton London bridge his quarters to be sent to foure gode townes of Englonde there sette vp thus ended he for his fals treason and decessed ¶ And in the .vi. yere of kynge Henryes regne y● fourth the erle of Marre of Scotlonde by saufe conduyt come into Englonde to chalenge syr Edmonde erle of Kente too certayne courses of warre on horsback And soo this chalenge was accepted graūted the place taken in smythfelde at London this erle of Marre y● Scott came proudly in to y● felde as his chalenge asked And anone came the erle of Kent rode vnto y● scot manly rode togyder with sharpe speres dyuerse courses but y● erle of Kente had the felde and gate hym moche worshyp and thanke of all manere men for hys manfull dedes ¶ And in the .vii. yere of kynge Henryes regne the fourth syr Rycharde Scrop Archebysshop of yorke the erle Marchall of Englonde gadred vnto theym a stronge power ayenst kinge Henry And the kynge herynge therof in all the haste that he myght came with his power Northwarde and mette with them at yorke and there were these two lordes taken and brought to the kynge And anone the Iuges were sette these two lordes brought forth and there they were dampned vnto dethe bothe their heedes smyten of there they made an ende on whos soules god for his pyte haue mercy Amen ¶ And whan this was done the kynge came too London ayen and there rested hym Anone god of his g●eate goodnesse wroughte and shewed many greate myracles for this worthy clerke Archebysshop of yorke that thus was done to dethe ¶ And in the .vii. yere of kynge Henryes regne dame Lu●e the dukes syster of Melayne came in to Englonde so too London there was wedded to syr Edmonde erle of 〈◊〉 in the pryory of saynt Marye oueres in southwarke with moche
solempnyte greate worshyp The kynge was there hymselfe gaf hir at y● chirche do●e and whan that they were wedded masse was done y● kynge his owne persone brought ladde this worthy lady into y● bysshoops place of wynchestre there was a wonder greate feest holden to all mane●e of people that wolde come And the same yere sir Robert Knolles knyzt a worth● warryour deyed at his maner in Northfolk frome thens he was brought to Londō on a hors bere with moche torche lyghte so he was brought vnto the white freres in Fletstrete there was do made for hym a solempne feest a ryall enterement for tho that thyder wolde come● both ryche pore there lyeth buryed by dame Constance his wyfe 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 Rampston knyght Constable of the Toure of London was drenched at London brydge as he came fro westmȳster Inwardes to the Toure in a barge and all thrugh lewdenesse And in the same yere dame Phylip the yonger doughter of kynge Henry was ladde ouer se with syr Rycharde the dukes brother of yorke and syr Edmonde Courteney bys shop of Norwiche many other lordes knyghtes squyres ladyes gentylwomen that apperteyned to suche a kynges doughter came in to Denmarke and the kynge receyued this worthy lady for his wyfe welcomed these worthy lordꝭ and dyd vnto theym moche worshyp they were brought vnto a towne y● was called London in Denmarke and there was thys lady wedded and sacred to the kynge of Denmarke Norway and Swithen there was crowned quene of Dēmarke with moche solempnyte and there was made a ryall fest And whan this feest and maryage was done and ended these lordes and ladyes toke theyr leue of the kynge and the quene and came ayen in to Englonde in s aufte thanked be god ¶ And in the .viii yere of kyng Henryes regne there was a man that was called your walsshe clerke he apelyd a knyghte that was called syr Percyuale Snowdone of treason there they were Ioyned to fyght vnto the vtteraūce within Lystes the daye and place tyme assygned and lymytted to be done ended in smythfelde atte the whiche daye tho two persones camen into the felde and foughten sore myghtely togyder but at the laste the knyght ouercome y● clerke made hym yelde hym as recreaūt of his fals enpechement y● he had sayd on hȳ thā was he dyspoyled of his armure drawen out of y● felde to Tyburne there he was hanged y● knyght taken to grace was a goode man ¶ And in y● same yere the erle of Northumberlond and the Lorde Bardolfe camen out● of Scotlonde in preiudyce and destruccyon of kynge Henry wherfore they of y● Northe countree arosen vpon theym foughren with them scomfyted them and toke theym and smoten of they● hedes quartred theyr bodyes and sent the hede of the erle a quarter of the lorde Bardolf to London and there they were set vpon London brydge for fals treason that they hadde purposed ayenst the kynge ¶ And in the .ix. yere of kynge Henryes regne was syr Edmonde Holonde Erle of Kent made Amerall of Englonde for to kepe the see and he wente too the see with many ryall shyppes that were full welle arayed and enparelled and enarmed with many a goode man of armes and archers and of good defence of warre in the kynges name of Englonde so he londed at the last in y● coste of Brytayne in y● I le of Bryak with all his folke he besyeged y● castell assauted it they withstode hym with grete defence thengthe And anone he layd his ordinaunce in the lyenge of a gonne there come a quarell smote the good erle Edmonde in the heed there he caught his deed wounde but yet they lefte not tyll that they hadde goten the castell and al that were therin And there this goode lorde deyed on whos sonle god haue mercy Amen And than this menye came home ayen in to Englonde with the erles body was buryed amonges his aūcest res ryght worthely ¶ And in y● same ye re was a greate frost in Englonde y● du●ed xv wekes longe● ¶ And in y● .x. yere of kynge Henryes regne the fourthe came y● Seneschall of Henaude with other menye in Englonde too seke auentures and to gete hym worshyp in dedes of armes bothe on horsback and on foote a● all maner poyntes of warre And the seneschall chalenged the erle of Somerset the erle delyuered hym fulle manfully of all his chalenges and put his aduersary vnto the worst in all poyntes 〈◊〉 ne hym there grete worshyp and y● 〈◊〉 of the felde And on the next daye after came in to the felde an other man of armes of y● Seneschals partye And ayenst hym came syre Rycharde of Arundell knyghte and the Henaude had the better of hym on foot in one poynte for he brought hym on his knee And on y● thyrde daye come in an other man of armes in too the felde and ayenste hym there came syr Iohn̄ Cornewayll knyght and manly and knyghtly he quyte hym in all maner poyntes ayenste his aduersary had y● better in the felde And on y● fourthe daye come a nother man of armes of Henaude in too the felde and ayenste hym came syr Iohn̄ Chaynes sone and manly quyte hym ayenst his aduersary For he caste hors and man into the felde and the kynge for his manhode atte that tyme dubbed hym knyghte And on the fyfte daye there came an other mauof armes of the Henaudes partye in too the felde and to hym came in syr Iohan stewarde knyght and manfully he quyte hym in all maner poyntes had the better And on the syxthe daye after came an other Henaude and to hym came wyllyam porter squyre manfullye he quyte hym and hadde the better in y● felde and the kynge dubbed hym knyghte that same tyme And on the seuen the daye after came an other man of armes of Henaude in too y● felde and too hym came Iohan standysshe squyre and manfully he quyte hym on his aduersarye and had the better of hym in the felde and there the kynge dubbed hym kuyght that same daye And on the same daye came an other man of armes of Henau de and to hym came a squyre of Gascoyne and proudely and manly he quyte hym of his aduersary and had the better of hym in y● felde anone y● kynge dubbed hym knyght And on y● .viii. day came in to the felde two other men of armes of Henaude and with them mette two souldyours of Calays the which were two bretheren y● were called Burghes they well and manly quyte them selfe vppon theyr aduersaryes and hadden the better of theym in y● felde and thus
all y● coūtre about he broughte them thrughe a quyckesande and so into an yle they toke many prysoners by the waye to warde the kynge in theyr Iourney so they camen vnto Cane And there the kynge welcomed hym toke his Iourney atte Argentun anone tho it was yolden to the kynge and they had theyr lyues and wente theyr waye And than our kynge remeued vnto a stronge towne that tho was called Cese and there was alfayre mynster they yelde it vp anone vnto y● kynge And than the kynge wente from thens to alaunsome wan the towne the brydge and the kynge sente y● erle of Warwyk to a towne that was called Belesme with a grete stronge power and anone they yelde it put them all to the kynges grace in his mercy soo dyde mauy stronge townes castels that were in tho parties And from thens they wente to Veruyll in Perche anone it was yolden vnto the kynge bothe the towne and the castell and bodyes and goodes to the kynges good grace and soo the kynge gate conquered all the townes castelles pyles strengthes and abbays vnto the cyte of rone ¶ And in y● fyfth yere of kynge Henryes regne y● fyfth syr Iohn̄ Oldcastell y● was the lorde cobham was arested for heresye and broughte vnto y● Toure of london anone after he brake the Tour and went in to wales and there he kepte hym longe tyme. And at the laste the lorde powys toke hym but he stode at grete defence longe tyme and was sore woūded or he wolde be takē so the lorde Powys men broughte hym oute of Wales vnto London agayne in a whyrlcole and so he was broughte to Westmynster and ther●was examyned of certayne poyntes that were put vpon hym he sayde not naye soo he was conuycte of the clargye for his heresye and dampned before the Iustyces vntoo the dethe for treaosn And tha●● he was ladde to the Toure ayen and there he was layde on an hurdell and drawen thrugh the cyte too saynt Gyles felde there was made a newe payre of galo●es and a stronge chayne and a coler of yren for hym and there he was hanged and brente on the galowes and all for his lewdenesse and his fals opynyons ANd in the .vi. yere of kynge Henryes y● fyfth he sent his vncle sir Thomas Beauforde duke of Excester with a fayre menye of men of armes archers beforethe cyte of Rone and there dyspleyed his baner sent herodes vnto the towne and badde them yelde that cyte vnto our kynge theyr lyege lorde● they sayde he toke them none to kepe ne none he sholde haue there but yf it were dere boughte meued with theyr hondes for other answere wolde they none giue but gonnes And there the duke toke gode auysemente of the grounde all about And anone there yssued out of the cyte a grette menye of men of armes bothe on horsback and on fote and anone our menye met with them ouerthrewe a grete hepe of them there were taken slayne xxx persones of full ryght good mennes bodyes the remenaunt fledde ayen in too the towne the duke wente vnto Pountlarge vntoo the kynge and tolde hym all howe that he hadde spedde and howe that he lyked the grounde ¶ And anone as the duke was gone they cate downe all the subarbes aboute the Cytee vntoo the harde grounde for by cause the kynge sholde there noo refresshynge haue at his comynge And vpon the frydaye before lammasdaye than nexte folowynge o●re kynge with his hooste came before Roone and anone he sette his syege rounde aboute that Cyte and anone he lete laye his ordynaunce vnto the towne And the kynge with his lordes were lodged within t●e Chartre house and grete strengthe al oute theym and y● was in the Eest party of the Cyte and than the duke of Cla●ence lodged hym with al his strengthe and power atte the Weste ende in a waste ●bba●e before the po●te Chanx And the ●uke of E●cester with his menye in the Northe syde before the porte Beauuesy● And bytwen● y● duke of Clarence and t●e duke of Er●estre was the Erle Mar●hal lodged with moche people and a strange power before the castell gate And thanne the erle of Ormonde with the ●nde Haryngton and alsoo the Lorde T●lb●t with the●re Retenue and compa●tye ne●te hym And thanne syr Iohan Cornewayle with many other noble kyng●tes and 〈◊〉 of name with all theyr ●tenue laye with the noble duke of Clare●ce And than●● frome the duke of Erce●●●r towardes y● kynge were lodged the lorde Roos and the lorde Wylleby with the Lorde Phehewe and syr Wyllyam ●orter knyghte with ther reter●●e before the porte of saynt Hyllary And than was ●he erle of Motayne with his reter●●e lo●ged in the ●●baye of saynt Katherynes And the erle of Salesbury with his 〈◊〉 saye o● that other syde of saynt Katherynes syr Iohan Gray knyghte was lodged atte the abbaye that is called mounte du saynt Mychell And ●yre Phylip Leche knyghte the kynges tresou●er was lodged bytwene the water of Sern and the abbaye and kepte the warde vnder the hylle And the baron of Caro●● was lodged vnder the water syde for too kepe the passage And Ieny●● the squyre laye nexte hym on the water syde and these two squyres kepte manly the water of Seyn and fought with ther enmyes oft tymes And on y● other syde of ▪ Seyn laye the erle of Hontyngdon mayster Neuyll the erles sone of westmer●onde and syre Gylbert Vmfreuyll erle of Keme and syr Rycharde erle of Arundell the lorde Feryers with theyr retenue before porte du Poūte eche of these lordes had stronge ordynaūce and y● kynge dyd make at Poūtlarge ouer the water of Seyn a stronge and a myghty chayn of Iron put it thrugh grete pylꝭ fast pyght in the grounde that went ouer y● Ryuer of Seyn that no vessell myght passe that in no kynde And about that chayn y● kynge lete make a brydge ouer the water of Seyn that man hors and all other caryage myght go too and fro at all tymes whan nede were And than came the erle of warwyk and had goten Doūfronte vnto kynge Henry of Englonde And anone the kynge sente the erle of warwyk to Cawdebeke for to be seyge it And whan he came before the towne he sent his heraudes vnto the Capytayne and hadde hym yelde vp y● towne vpon payne of dethe and anone he layde his seyge and y● Capytayn besought the erle that he myght come vnto his presence and it pleased hym and speke with hym and so the good erle graūted hym for to come And than he came out and four other burgeys came with hym and entreated so with this erle that this same towne was vnder composycyon too be done as the Cyte of Rone dyd and y● erle graunted and consented therto vppon this condycyon that
and heyre of the erle of Northumberlonde the sone heyre of the erle of Vrmonde y● lord Roos syr Iamys bottelat y● lord Martrauas sir Henry gray of Tankeruyle syr wyllyam Neuyll lorde Fawconbredge syr George Neuyll lorde Latymer y● lorde wellys y● lorde Barkle the sone heyre too the lorde Talbot syre Raufe gray of werke syre Robert veer syr Rycharde gray syr Edmonde hongerforde syr Iohan bottelar syr Raynolde Cobham syr Iohan passheley syr Thomas ●●stall Iohn̄ Chydyok sir Rauflange ford sir william drury syr willyam thomas Rycharde Carbonell sir Rychard wydewyle sir Iohn̄ shrydelowe sir wyllyam Chayn sir william Bauyngton syr Iohn̄ Iune and sir Gylbert Beauchampe ¶ Item in the fyfthe yere the duke of Bedford with the duchesse hys wyfe wente ouer see to Calays a lytell before went ouer see Henry bysshop of wynchestre And on our ladyes day● 〈…〉 chirche atte Calays the bysshop of wynchester as he had songen masse was made Cardynal and he knelynge before the hyghe awter the duke of Bedforde set the hat vpon his heed and there were his bullys redde as well of his charge as of the reioysynge of his benefyces spyrytuall and temporall ¶ And this same yere was grete habundaunce of rayne that the substaūce of heye and also of corne was dystroyed for it rayned almost euery other daye ¶ And this same yere the good Erle of Salesbury syr Thomas of Mountagu layde syege vnto Orlyaunce atte the whiche syege he was slayne with a gonne that come out of the towne on whoo 's soule god haue mercy amen For sythe that he was slayne Englysshmen neuer gate ne preuayled in Fraunce but euer after beganne to lese lytyll lytyll tyll all was loste ¶ Also this same yere a Bryton murthred a good wedowe in her bed withoute Algate whiche wedowe found hym for almesse and he bare awaye all that she hadde And after this he toke y● gyrthe of holy chirche at saynt George in Southwarke there he toke y● crosse and forswore this lond And as he went it happened y● he came by the place where he dyd this cursyd dede in the subarbes of London And the women of the same parysshe came oute with staues canell doūge and slewe made an ende of hym there Notwithstandynge y● constables many other men beyng present for to kepe hym for there were so many women had no pyte ¶ Also this same yere the duke of Northfolk with many gentylmen and yomen toke hys barge the .viii. daye of Nouembre atte saynt Marye oueres for too haue gone thrugh London brydge and thrughe mysgydynge of the barge it ouerthrewe on y● pyles and many men drowned but the duke hymselfe with two or thre leped vpon pyles and so were saued with helpe of men that 〈…〉 the brydge with cas●ynge downe ropes by y● whiche ropes they saued themselfe ¶ This same yere on saynt Leonardes daye kynge Henry beynge .vii. 〈◊〉 of aege was crowned atte westmynster at whos caronacyon were made .xxxvi. knyghtes ¶ This yere on saynt Georges daye he passed ouer set● Calays towarde Fraunce ¶ About this tyme and afore the reame beynge in grete mysery and trybulacyon y● Dolphyn with his partye began to made warre gate certayne places made dystresses vpon the Englysshmen by the meane of his Capytayns that is to saye la heer poton desayntraylles and in especyall a mayde the whiche they named la purelle de dicu This mayde rode lyke a man and was a valyaunt Capytayne amonge them and toke vpon hir many grete enterpryses in so moche y● they had a byleue for to haue recoueryd all they re losses by hir Notwithstandynge atte the laste after many grete feates by the helpe prudence of syr Iohn̄ Luxemburgh the whiche was a noble Capytayne of the duke of Burgon many Englyssh men Pycardes and Burgoynons which were of our partye before the towne of Compyne the .xxiii. daye of Maye the forsayd pucelle was taken in the felde armed lyke a man many other Captaynes with hir were all brought to Rone there she was put in to pryson And there she was Iuged by y● lawe to be brent And thanne she sayd that she was with chyld wherby she was a whyle respyted But in conclusyon it was founden that she was not with chylde and thanne she was brent in Rone and the other Capytayns were put to raūsome entreted as men of warre ben acustomed ¶ And this same yere about Candelmasse Rycharde hunder a wulle packer was damned for an herytyke and brent at Tourhylle ¶ And about mydlenten syr Thomas Baggrly preest and 〈◊〉 of y● Mauen in Estsex besyde waldē was dys graded and dampned for an heretyke brent in smyth felde ¶ And also in this same yere whyles the kyng was in Fraūce there were many heret●●●s and solardes that hadde purposed to make a rysynge and caste bylles in dyuerte places but blessed be almyghty god the Capytayne of theym was taken whos name was wyllyam Maundeuyll a weuer of Abendon and balyf of the same towne whiche named hymself Iacke Sharpe of Wygmoreslonde in wales And after warde he was beheded atte the forsayd Abendon in the wytson weke on y● tewes daye ¶ This same yere the .vi. daye of Decembre kynge Henry the syxth was crowned kynge of Fraunce at Parys in the chirche of our lady with grete solempnyte there beynge presente the Cardynall of Englonde the duke of Bedforde and many other lordes of Fraunce and of Englonde And after this coronacyon and greate feest holden at Parys the kynge retorned frome thens to Rone and so towarde Calays and the .ix. day of Feuerer londed at Douer whome all the comunes of Kent mette at Beramdon bytwene Caunterbury and Douer all in reed hodes and so come forth tyll he came to y● blacke hethe where he was mette with y● mayer Iohn̄ wellys with all the craftes of London clothed all in whyte and soo they broughte hym vnto London the .xxi. daye of the same mothe ¶ And this same yere was a restraynte of the wulles of Calays made by the soudyours bycause they were not payed of theyr wages wherfore y● duke of Bedforde regent of Fraūce beynge than Capytayne came to Calays the tewesdaye in the esterweke And than on the morne after many soudyours of the towne were arested and put in warde And in the same weke he rode to Terewyn and by the meane of the bysshop of Terwyn he wedded the Erles doughter of saynt Poule came ayen to Calays than the .xi. daye of Iune on saynt Bernabeys daye there were four soudyours of Calays that were the chyef causers of the restraynt of the wulles byhe●ded that is to wyte Iohan Maddelcy Iohn̄ Launday Thomas Palmer and Thomas Talbot an hondred .x. bannysshed oute of the towne that same tyme and before were banysshed an hondred and .xx. soudyours And on mydsome● enen after came the lorde regente hys wyf too
saye fro the forsayde Egbartus tyme vnto saynt Edwardes tyme and made the fyfte manere of people in the ylonde But they fayled afterwarde Atter laste come Normans vnto duke wyllyam and subdued Englysshmen yet kepe theye the londe and they made the syxth peple in the Ylonde But in the fyrste Kynge Henryes tyme come many flemynges receyued a dwellynge place for a tyme besyde Maylros in the west syde of Englōde and made the seuenth people in the ylonde Netheles by commaūdement of y● same kynge they were put thens and dryuen to Hauerfordes syde in the west syde of wales ¶ R. And so nowe in Brytayn Danes and Pyctes fayllen all oute and fyue nacyons dwellen therin that beene Scottes in Albania that is Scotlonde Brytayne in Chambria that is Wales but that flemynges dwelle in that is weste wales And Normans and Englysshmē ben medled in all the ylond for it is now doubte in storyes how and in what manere they were putte awaye and dystroyed out of Brytayne Nowe it is too declare how the Pyctes were dystroyed fayled ¶ Gir p̄ ca vii Brytayne was somtyme occupyed with Saxons peas was made and stablysshed with the Pyctes thenne the Scottes that came with the Pyctes sawe that the Pyctes were nobler of dedes and better men of armes though they were lasse in nombre than the Scottes Thenne the Scottes hauynge therof enuye torned to theyr naturall treason y● they haue ofte vsed for in treason they passe other men and ben traytours as it were by kynde for they prayed all y● Pyctes and specyally the grete of them to a feest and wayted her tyme whan the Pyctes were mery and had well dronke they drewe vp nayles that helde vp holowe bēches vnder the Pyctes and the Pyctes vnware sodaynly fyll in ouer the hammes into a wonderfull pytfalle Thenne the Scottes fell on the Pyctes and slew thē and lefte none alyue And so of two manere people the better warryours were holy destroyed But the other that been the Scottes which ben traytours all vnlyke to the Pyctes toke prouffyte by that fals treason for they toke all that londe and holde it yet vnto thys tyme and calle it Scotlonde after hir owne name In kȳg Edgarus tyme Rynadius Alpinus sone was duke and leder of the Scottes and warred in Pycte londe and destroyed the Pyctes he warred syx sythes in Saxon toke all the londe that is bytwene Twede and the Scottysshe see withe wronge and with strengthe ¶ Of the langages of maners and vsage of the people of that londe ca .xv. AS it is knowen how many maner of people ben in this Ylonde there ben also so many langages and tonges Netheles walsshe and Scottes that ben not medled with other nacyons kepe yet theyr langage speche but yet y● scottes y● were sōtyme confederate dwelled with pyctes draw sōwhat after ther speche But the flemynges that dwell in y● west syde of wales haue lefte her straunge speche and speken lyke to Saxons also Englysshmen though they had fro y● begynnynge thre maner of speches sontherne Northern myddell speche in the 〈◊〉 of the londe as they come of thee manner of people Germania Ne●eles by commixion and medlynge fyrst with Danes and afterwarde with Normans in many thynges the countre langage in appared for some vse straung wlaff 〈…〉 terynge harrynge garrynge gry●●ytynge This apparinge of y● langage cometh of two thynges one bycause y● chylorene that gone to scole lerne to speke fyrst Englysshe and than ben compelled to constrewe her lessons in Frensshe that haue ben vsed syn the Normans come into Englonde Also gentylmens chyldren be lerned and taught from theyr youth too speke frensshe and vp londesshmen wyll counterfete and lyken hymselfe to gentyl men and are besy to speke frensshe for to be more sette by wherfore it is sayd by a comyn prouerbe Iack wolde be a gentyl man yf he coude speke frensshe ¶ Treuisa This was moche vsed to for the grete deth but syth it is somdele chaunged for syr Ioan Corne wayle a mayster of gramer chaungede the techynge of gramer scole and construccion of frensshe in too Englysshe And other scole maysters vse the same waye now in the yere of our lorde a M.CCC.lxxxv the ix yere of kyng Rycharde the seconde leue all frenssh in scoles vse all constructyon in englysshe wherin they haue auaūtage one way that is that they lerne the soner theyr gramer and in another dysauauntage for nowe they l erne no frensshe nor can no ne whiche is hurt for them that shal passe the see And also gentylmen haue moche lefte to teche they re chyldren to speke frensshe ¶ R. It semeth a grete wonder y● Englysshmen haue so grete dyuersyte in theyr owne langage in sown in spekynge of it whiche is all in one ylonde And the langage of Normandye is comē out of an other londe and hath one manere sowne amonge all them that speke it in Englonde for a man of ●ence southern western Northern mē speken frenshe all syke in sowne and speche but they can not speke theyr Englysshe so ¶ Treuisa Netheles ther ben as many dyuerse maner of frensshe in the reame of fraū●e as dyuerse Englysshe in the reame of Englonde ¶ R. Also of the forsayd touge whiche is departed in thre is grete wōder formen of y● eest with men of y●●est accorde better in sownynge of the●● speche than men of y● north with men of the south Therfore it is y● men of mer●● y● 〈◊〉 of myddell Englōde as it were part●●ers with y● endes vnderstond better y● 〈◊〉 ●●●gages northern southern thā northern southern vnderstōde eyther other 〈…〉 helde pō li.iii All y● lāgage of y● North●●bres specyall at york● is so sharpe shyttynge frottynge and vnshappe that 〈◊〉 southern men may vnneth vnderstonde that langage I suppose the cause but 〈◊〉 they be nyghe to the alyens that speke straungely And also by cause the kynges of Englonde abyde and dwellt more 〈◊〉 the south countre than in the north 〈…〉 tree The cause why they abide more in the south countree than in the north 〈…〉 tree is by cause that there is better 〈◊〉 londe more people 〈◊〉 noble 〈…〉 profytable hauens in the south 〈◊〉 than in the north countree ¶ De gentis huius mo●●●bus Gir. in itinere FOr the maners doynge of walsshmen and of Scottes ben tofore somwhat declared Nowe I purpose to telle and declare the condycions of the medled people of Englonde But the flemynges that been in the weste syde of Wales bē now all torned as they were Englyshe men by cause they companye with Englysshmen And they be myghty and strōge to fyght and ben the moost enemyes that walsshmen haue and vse marchaūdyse and clothynge and ben full redy too putte themself in auentures and to peryl in thesee londe bycause of grete wynnynge ben redy somtyme
he was meke benygne homely 〈◊〉 soft to all men as well to straūgers as 〈◊〉 his owne subgettes to other were vnder his gouernaūce He was deud oute●●●ly both to god holy chirche for he worshypped holpe mayntened holy 〈◊〉 theyr mynystres with all maner 〈…〉 he was treatable well auyled ●●●porall worldly nedes wyse in coūse●ll dyscrete and meke to speke with 〈◊〉 dedes and maners gentyll and wel ●●●●ght hauynge pyte of them that were in dysease plenteuous in geuynge 〈◊〉 benefaytes almoses besy curyous in burldynge lyghtly he bare suffred w●enges and harmes and whan be was gruō to ony occupacyon he lefte all other thȳge for the tyme and tended therto semely of bodye and a meyne stature hauyn ge alwaye to hyghe and to lowe a goode chere And there sprōge shone so moch grace of hȳ y● what man had behold his face or had dremed of hȳ he hoped y● day y● all thynge sholde hap to hym Ioyfull and lykynge And he gouerned his kȳgedome gloryously vnto his aege he was large in geuyng and wyse in spences he was fulfylled with all honeste of goode maners and vertues vnder whome to lyue it was as for to regne wherfore his fader and his loos spronge so ferre that it came into hethenes Barbary shewynge and tellynge his worthynes mā hode in all londes and that no londe vnder heuen had brought forth soo noble a kynge so gentyll so blessyd or myghte reyse suche an other whan he was dede Neuertheles lechery and meuynge of his flesshe hauntyd hym in his aege wherfore the rather as it is to suppose for vnmesurable fulfyllynge of his luste his lyfe shorted the soner ¶ And here of take good hede lyke as his dedys bereth wytnesse for as in his begynnynge all thynges were Ioyfull lykynge to hym to all people And in his myddell aege he passed all people in hygh Ioy worshyp and blessydnes Ryght so whan he drew into age drawynge donwarde thrugh le chery and other synnes lytell and lytell all tho Ioyfull and blessyd thynges and prosperyte decreased mysshapped and vnfortunate thynges and vnprofytable harmes with many euyls began for to sprynge and the more harme is it contynued longe tyme after CLemens that .vi. was pope after Benedict .x. yere this man in name and dede was vertuous and many thȳges that Benedict was rygous in he made easy and certayn that he depryued he restored and y● rygousenes of the fayth of Benedict was laudable But moche more laudable was y● mekenesse of Clement This man was a noble prechour and many sermons he gadred and lete no man passe frome hym but he gaaf hȳ good coūseyll dessessyd a blessyd man ¶ Karolus the .iiii. was Emperour after Lodewyk .xxxi. yere This man was kynge of Beme a wyse man and a myghty And this man was chosen Emperour by the commaundement of Clemēs Lodewyk beynge a lyue in his contemacy and bycause he asked mekely the popes blessyng and to be crowned of hym as other goode kynges dyde therfore he was protected of god and preueyled ouer all his enmyes And many fauourable lawes he made to spyrytuall men y● whiche yet are called Karolma at the last he decessed a ryche man in vertu goodes ¶ Innocentiꝰ the .vi. was pope after clement .x. yere and he was a grete louer of relygyous men and he founded a monestery in Fraunce of the ordre of Cartusyens and was a greate canonyst ¶ Vrbanus the .v. was pope after Innocent this man was abbot of Myssolens of the ordre of saynt Benet a doctour and is taken for a saynt he made the crosse to be preched ayenst the Turkes and he made a passage to the Turkes And to hȳ saynt Brygyt was sent frome Crist for the confyrmacyon of theyr rule than̄e he was poysened and decessyd ¶ Gregory the .ix. was pope after hym .viii. yere This Gregory dyd lytell And after hȳ folowed the trybulacyon the which our lorde shewed to saynt Brygyt for y● sinne of the clargye ¶ Venselaus sone too Kacolus aforsayd was Emperour .xiiii yere And he was a chylde and was chosen whan his fader was on lyue but he toke no kepe of th empyre and whan he was warned many tymes for to take hede vnto it and wolde not he was deposed For he gaaf all his delyte and luste to lechery and his ende was without honoure for he went gretely frome the maners and the vertues of his noble fader And he was crowned with themperyall dyademe and the wysdome of his fader passed into Sygysmonde his brother as after it shall appyrel ¶ Vrbanus was pope after Gregorye .vi. yere this Vrba ne was chosen in the cyte of Rome by y● strenth of the Romayns but the Cardynals dyd that for drede and not wyllȳgly wherfore they fledde vnto the Cyte of F●ndo●● And they sayd that he was not pope and chose in his place syre Robert of Gebennys the same yere the whiche was called Clement y● .vii. ¶ Nota. And here began the .xii. stryfe in the chirche And it was more worse than euer was ony other before for it was so subtyll y● the wysest men that were and the best of conscyence coude not deserne with who me it was best to saye and to holde And this stryfe dured .xl. yere with a greate sclaūdre vnto all the clergye and greate peryll vnto mennys soules for heresyes and other euyll thynges y● whiche were brought in than In so moch y● ther was no doctryne in y● chirche for mysdoynge And therfore frome this Vrbant the .vi vnto Martyne I knowe not whoo was pope ¶ The fest of y● vysytacyon of our lady was ordeyned by Vrbane y● .vi. aft the fourme of y● sacramente of y● awter for a peas an vnyte to be had amonge them thrugh the merytees of our blessyd lady ¶ Bonefactus the .ix. was pope after Vrbane .xv. yere ¶ This Boneface was chosen at Rome in y● stede of Vrbane the stryfe contynued For Benedictus was chosen in Auynyon in the place of Clement was called Petrus de luna he dured to the coūseyll of Constantynus then he wolde not obaye but euer abode obstynate And at y● last he decessed in y● kyngdome of Aragon And he cōmaūded his Cardynals to chese an other pope y● whiche they dyd anone And they sette vp an ydoll named hym Clement but they profyted not ¶ Circa annū dm̄ M.CCClxxx ¶ And after kynge Edwarde the thyrd that was borne in Wyndesore regned Rycharde of Burdeux that was pryme Edwardes some of wales y● whiche part Edwarde was kynge Edwarde sone ANd after the gode kynge Edwarde the thyrde that was borne at wyndesore regned Rycharde the seconde that was the good syr Edwardes sone prynce of wales the whiche kynge Rycharde was borne in y● cyte of Burdeux in Gascoyne and was crowned at westmynster in the .xi. yere of his
solde and y● Emperoure was slayne forenuye the Turke caused his heed to be smyten of whan he was deed And al moost all the fayth in the londe of Greke fayled ¶ Nicholaus the .v. a Ianuens was pope after Felyx .viii. yere This Nicholas was chosen at Rome in the place of Eugenye and yet the stryf henge styll and a lytyll a lytyll they obeyed hym all men merueyled y● a man of so pore a nacyon shold obteyne ayenst y● duke of Sauoy the whyche was cosyn and alyed al moost to all the prynces of crystendome and euerychone left hym Than in y● yere after there was a peas made Felix resygned for it pleased our lorde his name to be glorifyed by an obiect of y● worlde as that Ianuens was in comparysō of the duke the pope This Nicholas was a mayster in dyuynyte and an actiue man a ryche man in conseytes many thynges that were fallen he buyldyd ayen all the walles of Rome he renewed for drede of the Turke And there was a verse made of this vnyte publysshed in the cyte ¶ Lux fulsie mūdo cessit felix Nicholao And that in the yere of our lorde M. CCCC.xlix The yere of grace with a greate deuocyon was confermed and Innumerable people wēte to the appostles setes ¶ How kynge Henry the syxte regned beynge a chylde not one yere of aege and of the batayll of Vernayll in Perche AFter kynge Henry the fyfth regned Henry his sone but a chylde not fully one yere of age whos regne began y● fyrste daye of Septembre in the yere of our lord M. CCCC.xxii This kynge beynge in his cradell was moche doubted dradde bycause of the greate conquest of his fader and also y● wysdome guydynge of his vncles y● duke of Bedforde and the duke of Gloucestre ¶ This yere the .xxi. daye of Octobre deyed Charles the kynge of Fraūce lyeth buryed at saynt Denys And than y● duke of Bedford was made regent of Fraunce the duke of Gloucestre was made protectour defendour of Englonde ¶ And the fyrste daye of Marche after was syr wyllyam Taylour preest degraded of his preesthode on the morne after he was bryute in smythfelde for here syr ¶ This yere syr Iames Stewarde kynge of Scottes maryed dame Iane the duchesse doughter of Clarence y● whiche she had by hir fyrste husbonde y● erle of Somerset at saynt Mary ouerys ¶ Also this yere the .xvii. day of August was the batayll of Vernayll in Perche bytwene the duke of Bedforde regente of Fraunce the duke of Alaūsome whiche was a full grete batayll The duke of Bedford had on his syde y● erle of Salesbury Moūtagu the lorde Talbot all the power that they coude make in Normandye the garysons kept and also many Copycayns with moche peple of the duke of Burgoyns And on that other syde was the duke of Alaunsome the duke of Turon that was the erle of Douglas and the erle Boughan wyth many lordes of Fraūce a greate company of Scottes and Armynakys And than y● erle Douglas called the duke of Bedforde in scorne Iohn̄ with the leden swerde And he sent hym worde ayen y● he sholde fynde that daye that his swerde was of stele And the batayll Ioyned on bothe sydes and faught longe tyme. that there wyst no man who sholde haue the better a greate whyle but atte y● last as god wolde the vyctory felle vnto the Englysshe partye for there were slayne the erle Douglas whiche a lytell before was made duke of Turon the erle Boughan the erle Almarre y● erle of Tonuar the erle of Vaūtedor the vyscoūte of Nerbon whiche was one of them y● slew the duke Iohan of Burgoyn knelynge before the Dolphyn and many mo vnto the nombre of .x. thousand mo And there was taken prysoners the duke of Alaunsome and many nther lordes and gentylles of Fraunce but Scottes that daye were slayne downe ryghte the snbstaunce of them all ¶ And the thyrde yere of kynge Henry the syxth the duke of Gloucestre maryed the duchesse of Hollande went ouer see with hir in to Henaude for to take possessyon of his wyues enherytaunce where he was honors by receyued and taken for lorde of that londe 〈◊〉 sone after he was 〈…〉 torne home ayen to Englonde and lete his wyfe all his tresoure that he 〈◊〉 broughte with hym in a towne y● is called Mounse in Henaude whiche promysed hym to be trew to hym Notwithstādynge they delyuered the lady to the duke of Burgoyne whiche sent hir to Gaunte And frome thens she escaped in a mannes clothynge and came into zelan de to a towne of hir owne called Syrixe And frome thens she went to a towne in Hollonde called the Gowde aud there she was stronge ynoughe and withstode the forsayd duke of Burgoyne ¶ And sone after the duke of Gloucestre sente ouer see in to zelonde the lorde Fytzwater with certayne men of armes and archers for to helpe and socoure y● forsayd duchesse of Hollande whiche londed at a place in zelande called Brewers hauen where the lordes of the coūtee came downe and faughte with hym and in conclusyon he was feyne to withdraw hym and his menye to the see ayen But yet he slewe and kylde hurte dyuerse lordes and moche people of that same coūtre so retorned home ayen into Englōde with his menye preuayled no thynge ¶ And also this same yere the erle of Salesbury the erle of Suffolk the lorde wylleby y● lorde Scales with theyr retenue layd syege to y● cyte of Manus y● whiche cyte was yolden to theym wyth many other stronge townes and castels to y● nombre of .xxxvi. ¶ This tyme all Normandye and a greate parte of Fraūce vnto Orlyaunce was vnder the obeyssaūce of the kynge of Englonde and al the 〈◊〉 of Fraunce was in grete 〈◊〉 and myschyef ¶ How there was lyke to haue ben a grete fraye bytwene the Cardynall and the duke of Gloucestre And of the coronacyon of kynge Henry the syxte bothe in Englonde in Fraunce IN 〈…〉 greate w●●che in 〈◊〉 for a fraye y● was bytwene the bysshop of wynchestre the duke of Gloucestre protectour c. For the mayer with the people of the cyte wolde abyde by y● duke of Gloucestre as protectour defendour of the reame but by laboure of lordes that went bitwene and in especyall by the labour of the prynce of Portyngale there was a poyntemente taken that there was no harme done ¶ And after y● batayll of Vernayl in Perche the duke of Bedforde came ouer into Englonde And on wytsonday this same yere atte Leycestre he dubbed kynge Henry knyghte And forth wyth the sayd kynge Henry dubbed all these knyghtes w●os names folowen that is to wyte syr Rycharde duke of yorke also the sone and heyre of the Duke of North folke the erle of Orforde the erle of westmerlonde the sone