Medieval LEGO Page 4
   Famine.
   —Professor John Arnold
   ROBERT THE BRUCE LOOKS OVER THE
   TREATY OF EDINBURGH-NORTHAMPTON
   77
   Treaty of
   Edinburgh-Northampton
   A
   lthough English kings had claimed
   overlordship of Scotland since
   before the Norman Conquest,
   the two countries were at peace in the
   13th century. But peace ended with
   the Scottish succession debate (the
   Great Cause) following the death of
   King Alexander III in 1286.
   1328
   78
   Initially, King Edward I of England
   managed to impose English rule
   on Scotland. But in 1306, Robert
   the Bruce rebelled and claimed the
   Scottish crown, setting off another
   stage in the Wars of Independence
   that began in 1296.
   After Edward I’s death in 1307,
   Bruce enjoyed 20 years of military
   success against the new English
   king, Edward II. Bruce is especially
   well-known for his victory at
   Bannockburn in 1314.
   By 1327, Edward II had been forced to
   give up his crown due to a rebellion
   led by his wife, Queen Isabella, and a
   majority of the nobles, who had long
   disliked his weak rule.
   Queen Isabella and the English
   Parliament were prepared to make
   peace on Bruce’s terms. In return, the
   79
   Scottish would pay war reparations of
   £20,000, a vast amount at that time.
   Bruce would finally be recognized by
   the English as king of an independent
   Scotland.
   The promises were all laid out
   in a treaty, which was ratified in
   Edinburgh in March 1328 and
   by the English Parliament at
   Northampton in May. The treaty
   was sealed by the marriage of Joan,
   the sister of Edward III, to Bruce’s
   heir, David.
   Known in England as the “Shameful
   Peace” because it surrendered long-
   claimed English rights, the treaty
   did not last long. In 1333, Edward III
   invaded Scotland, and the Wars of
   Independence began again, lasting
   off and on for nearly 300 years.
   —Professor Christopher Given-Wilson
   Part III: 1346–1485
   83
   Battle of Crécy
   D
   uring the 14th and 15th centuries,
   England was not only at war with
   Scotland but also engaged in a long
   dispute with France.
   This lengthy on-again off-again conflict
   between England and France is called
   the Hundred Years’ War (1337–1453).
   King Edward III began the war in 1337,
   just four years after breaking peace with
   Scotland.
   1346
   84
   Edward’s goals were to maintain his
   control over English-held territories
   in France, defend and expand English
   economic interests on the Continent,
   and press a claim to the French
   throne.
   In the summer of 1346, he led an
   invasion force across northern
   France to harass and pillage enemy
   territories and capture important
   towns. Although his expedition
   had much success, its progress
   was halted in late August near the
   village of Crécy by a much larger
   French army.
   The resulting Battle of Crécy, fought
   on August 26, was one of the most
   famous of the war. Though greatly
   outnumbered, Edward demonstrated
   tactical and technological superiority
   over his opponents. Having chosen
   the high ground, he carefully
   85
   organized his soldiers into defensive
   formations and prepared a system of
   ditches, pits, and obstacles for the
   enemy cavalry.
   Perhaps overconfident in their
   greater numbers, the French army
   hastily and foolishly launched
   several advances of crossbowmen
   and cavalry. Edward’s extensive
   use of the longbow devastated the
   attacking French units, which were
   unable to break the disciplined
   English line. The English won a
   decisive victory with minor loss of
   life on their side.
   Edward’s unexpected victory at Crécy
   threw the French into disarray. This
   battle set the tone for a long period
   of English military success during the
   1350s and 1360s.
   —Dr. Gilbert Bogner
   THE CANTERBURY TALES
   87
   Geoffrey Chaucer
   G
   eoffrey Chaucer, the father of English
   literature, came from a family of
   rich wine merchants. As a teenager
   he joined King Edward III’s army. He was
   captured during an invasion of France
   but was soon freed, thanks to the king.
   By 1367, he had entered royal service
   under the patronage of the king’s son
   John of Gaunt. Later he would even
   become a member of Parliament.
   1343-1400
   Although he held many jobs during
   his life, Chaucer is best remembered
   for his poetry.
   The Book of the Duchess
   ,
   his first major poem, was written in
   memory of John of Gaunt’s first wife,
   Blanche of Lancaster.
   Chaucer’s most famous poem is
   The
   Canterbury Tales
   . This work follows
   the journey of a group of fictional
   pilgrims traveling from Southwark
   to Canterbury. Its characters include
   a friar, a knight, and a cook. Their
   stories are told vividly, giving us a
   real insight into the lives of medieval
   people, both rich and poor.
   —Harriet Howes
   89
   The Black Death
   T
   he Black Death was the greatest
   natural disaster in European
   history, killing 50 percent or more
   of the continent’s population in just
   three years. The disease was probably
   bubonic plague (the bacillus
   Yersinia
   pestis
   ), spread by the flea
   Xenopsylla
   cheopsis
   carried by black rats.
   1348-1350
   THE BLACK DEATH
   91
   The Black Death reached Europe
   from Asia in late 1347. The plague
   spread northward through France
   and Germany, and it arrived on
   the south coast of England in the
   summer of 1348 (although in
   many parts of England, the most
   devastation occurred in 1349).
   English manorial and church records
   provide details of the impact of the
   disease. From these records, historians
   know that many towns and villages lost
   half or more of their population—and
   some were wiped out entirely.
   By 1350, the disease had moved on
   t
o other parts of Europe, but the
   legacy of the catastrophe lasted for
   centuries. Before 1347, Europe had
   a labor surplus, resulting in high
   rents and prices and low wages.
   But the Black Death reversed these
   trends. Those who survived enjoyed
   a period of better living standards
   called the “Golden Age of the
   Peasantry.”
   But the disease would appear again.
   Regular outbreaks devastated the
   populace throughout the 15th and
   16th centuries.
   Not until about 1750 did England’s
   population recover to its 1347 level of
   six or seven million.
   —Professor Christopher Given-Wilson
   93
   Anne of Bohemia
   A
   nne of Bohemia, the daughter of a
   Holy Roman Emperor, became the
   Queen Consort of England as the
   wife of King Richard II.
   Their marriage was controversial. One
   mean-spirited English chronicler even
   called Anne a “tiny scrap of humanity”
   because he thought Richard should have
   married a more prestigious woman with a
   larger dowry. Yet Richard and Anne, both
   only 15 years old when they married,
   truly loved each other.
   1366-1394
   94
   She was a peacemaker, softening her
   husband’s heart toward wrongdoers
   and enemies. Londoners were so
   grateful to her for mending a quarrel
   between them and the king that they
   gave her a live pelican, a rare bird and
   a symbol of Anne’s piety.
   Due to her kind nature and her reform
   Christian upbringing, she’s also
   said to have protected John Wycliffe
   and the Lollards who followed him.
   Wycliffe translated the Bible from
   Latin into English and challenged the
   authority of religious leaders.
   She was also an inspiration to
   Chaucer, who based a character
   on her and wrote a book at her
   request.
   Yet she and Richard failed at the
   most important task of any royal
   couple, to produce heirs (preferably
   male ones, at that).
   When Anne died of the plague 12
   years after their marriage, Richard
   was so miserable that he demolished
   the palace at Sheen where she had
   breathed her last breath. Anne of
   Bohemia has been long remembered
   by the English as their own beloved
   Good Queen Anne.
   —Greyson Beights
   95
   Margery Kempe
   M
   argery Kempe wrote the first
   autobiography in the English
   language. She was born in 1373
   to a prosperous family in the port of
   Lynn, where her father was mayor.
   When Margery grew up, she married
   John Kempe, and they had 14 children.
   Although she worked as a brewer and a
   miller, both businesses failed. This was
   an ordinary life for a woman around 1400,
   but other parts of Margery’s life were
   truly extraordinary.
   1373-1438
   97
   Margery was a Christian mystic and
   believed that Jesus spoke to her
   directly. As a sign of her holiness,
   she wanted to wear white clothes,
   and the archbishop of Canterbury
   gave her permission to do so. She
   also tried to convince everyone—
   husband, neighbors, priests,
   bishops—that she could perform
   miracles.
   Sometimes Margery succeeded in
   persuading them, but other times she
   didn’t. Some thought she was a fraud.
   Because she screamed and cried loudly
   whenever she had a vision, even her
   supporters sometimes found her
   tiresome.
   Margery was an enthusiastic pilgrim.
   She traveled to holy places like Rome,
   Jerusalem, Santiago de Compostela,
   and many other shrines. Although
   Margery could not read, she had an
   exceptional memory and could recite
   passages from books that had been
   read to her. Just before she died, she
   dictated her life story to a scribe.
   Now known as
   The Book of Margery
   Kempe
   , her autobiography tells
   a fascinating story about urban
   life, pilgrimage, and faith in late
   medieval England.
   —Greyson Beights
   99
   Peasants’ Revolt
   T
   he Peasants’ Revolt of 1381 is the
   most famous uprising of the Middle
   Ages in England. The Black Death
   had turned a labor surplus into a labor
   shortage, driving wages up and rents
   down. Landowners, who dominated
   Parliament, reacted by passing labor
   laws to force wages down, which greatly
   upset the peasants.
   1381
   100
   The 1370s also saw English military
   failure, political scandal, and high
   taxation.
   A poll tax was the spark that ignited
   the rebellion, causing riots in Kent
   and Essex against tax collectors.
   This poll tax, or head tax, had to
   be paid to the king by every adult
   except the very poorest, at the rate
   of 12 pence per person.
   Led by Wat Tyler and the priest John
   Ball, the rebels marched on London
   and occupied the city for three days
   (June 13 through June 15). They
   burned, looted, and killed hundreds
   of lawyers, foreigners, and royal
   officials, including the chancellor and
   the treasurer. Meanwhile, the young
   King Richard II hid in the Tower of
   London.
   The rebels met twice with the king,
   who promised to free them from
   serfdom and reform the government.
   But after the rebels left London,
   these promises were broken and
   hundreds were tried and executed.
   Unrest had also broken out in many
   other parts of the country. Conflict
   continued until late July, by which
   time the government had recovered
   101
   its nerve. Although it seemed as if
   the revolt achieved little, serfdom
   rapidly disappeared from England
   after 1381. The government, wary of
   inciting another revolt, did away with
   the hated poll taxes.
   —Professor Christopher Given-Wilson
   FIGHTING IN THE STREETS
   THE MARRIAGE OF KING JOHN I AND PHILIPPA
   103
   Treaty of Windsor
   A
   lthough the Hundred Years’ War
   (1337–1453) was fought between
   England and France, several other
   kingdoms were drawn into the conflict.
   These smaller kingdoms included Castile,
   a kingdom in Spain that allied with
   France, and Portugal, which allied with
   England.
   1386
   104
   The Treaty of Windsor was made
   between England and Portugal on
   May 9, 1386. It was sealed by the
   marriage of King John I of Portugal
   to Philippa, the daughter of John of
   Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster.
   John of Gaunt claimed the throne of
   Castile through his wife and hoped
   that the Portuguese king would help
   him secure it. But instead, Gaunt
   gave up his claim to Castile in 1387
   in return for a large cash settlement.
   The English-Portuguese treaty has
   remained in force ever since and is
   the oldest diplomatic alliance in the
   world. It has been sorely tested at
   times, especially during the 17th-
   century Dutch-Portuguese War and
   the 19th-century colonial wars of
   conquest in Africa.
   The marriage between King John I
   and Philippa was also a great
   success. Their children, known in
   Portuguese history as the Illustrious
   Generation, included Henry the
   Navigator, a great explorer.
   —Professor Christopher Given-Wilson
   105
   Battle of Agincourt
   F
   ollowing a decades-long period of
   truce, the Hundred Years’ War was
   renewed in 1415 by King Henry V of
   England.
   Reviving demands for lands in France,
   he also reasserted a claim to the French
   throne made by his great-grandfather
   Edward III at the beginning of the war.
   Henry brought an army across the
   English Channel in August 1415.
   1415
   106
   After losing many of his men to
   disease during the long siege of
   Harfleur on the north coast of
   France, the king led his army across
   Normandy.
   Weakened, ill, and exhausted, the
   army was blocked by a much greater
   French force near the village of
   Agincourt. The result was one of
   the most celebrated battles in
   English history. On the morning of
   October 25, Henry positioned his
   army on a strip of land between two
   wooded areas, hoping to reduce the
   effectiveness of the superior French
   numbers. Then, taking a bold risk,
   Henry advanced his army to a second