The Project Gutenberg eBook of The history of England, from the accession of Henry III. to the death of Edward III. (1216-1377)
Title: The history of England, from the accession of Henry III. to the death of Edward III. (1216-1377)
Author: T. F. Tout
Editor: William Hunt
Reginald Lane Poole
Release date: September 10, 2005 [eBook #16679]
Most recently updated: December 12, 2020
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Lee Dawei, Anurag Garg, Turgut Dincer and the
Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND
FROM THE ACCESSION OF HENRY III.
TO THE DEATH OF EDWARD III.
(1216-1377)
BY
T.F. TOUT, M.A.
PROFESSOR OF MEDIÆVAL AND MODERN HISTORY IN THE
UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER
THE POLITICAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND
IN TWELVE VOLUMES
Seventy-six years have passed since Lingard completed his HISTORY OF ENGLAND, which ends with the Revolution of 1688. During that period historical study has made a great advance. Year after year the mass of materials for a new History of England has increased; new lights have been thrown on events and characters, and old errors have been corrected. Many notable works have been written on various periods of our history; some of them at such length as to appeal almost exclusively to professed historical students. It is believed that the time has come when the advance which has been made in the knowledge of English history as a whole should be laid before the public in a single work of fairly adequate size. Such a book should be founded on independent thought and research, but should at the same time be written with a full knowledge of the works of the best modern historians and with a desire to take advantage of their teaching wherever it appears sound.
The vast number of authorities, printed and in manuscript, on which a History of England should be based, if it is to represent the existing state of knowledge, renders co-operation almost necessary and certainly advisable. The History, of which this volume is an instalment, is an attempt to set forth in a readable form the results at present attained by research. It will consist of twelve volumes by twelve different writers, each of them chosen as being specialty capable of dealing with the period which he undertakes, and the editors, while leaving to each author as free a hand as possible, hope to insure a general similarity in method of treatment, so that the twelve volumes may in their contents, as well as in their outward appearance, form one History.
As its title imports, this History will primarily deal with politics, with the History of England and, after the date of the union with Scotland, Great Britain, as a state or body politic; but as the life of a nation is complex, and its condition at any given time cannot be understood without taking into account the various forces acting upon it, notices of religious matters and of intellectual, social, and economic progress will also find place in these volumes. The footnotes will, so far as is possible, be confined to references to authorities, and references will not be appended to statements which appear to be matters of common knowledge and do not call for support. Each volume will have an Appendix giving some account of the chief authorities, original and secondary, which the author has used. This account will be compiled with a view of helping students rather than of making long lists of books without any notes as to their contents or value. That the History will have faults both of its own and such as will always in some measure attend co-operative work, must be expected, but no pains have been spared to make it, so far as may be, not wholly unworthy of the greatness of its subject.
Each volume, while forming part of a complete History, will also in itself be a separate and complete book, will be sold separately, and will have its own index, and two or more maps.
Vol. I. to 1066. By Thomas Hodgkin, D.C.L., Litt.D., Fellow of University College, London; Fellow of the British Academy.
Vol. II. 1066 to 1216. By George Burton Adams, M.A., Professor of History in Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
Vol. III. 1216 to 1377. By T.F. Tout, M.A., Professor of Medieval and Modern History in the Victoria University of Manchester; formerly Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford.
Vol. IV. 1377 to 1485. By C. Oman, M.A., Fellow of All Souls' College, and Deputy Professor of Modern History in the University of Oxford.
Vol. V. 1485 to 1547. By H.A.L. Fisher, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of New College, Oxford.
Vol. VI. 1547 to 1603. By A.F. Pollard, M.A., Professor of Constitutional History in University College, London.
Vol. VII. 1603 to 1660. By F.C. Montague, M.A., Professor of History in University College, London; formerly Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford.
Vol. VIII. 1660 to 1702. By Richard Lodge, M.A., Professor of History in the University of Edinburgh; formerly Fellow of Brasenose College, Oxford.
Vol. IX. 1702 to 1760. By I.S. Leadam, M.A., formerly Fellow of Brasenose College, Oxford.
Vol. X. 1760 to 1801. By the Rev. William Hunt, M.A., D. Litt, Trinity College, Oxford.
Vol. XI. 1801 to 1837. By the Hon. George C. Brodrick, D.C.L., late Warden of Merton College, Oxford, and J K. Fotheringham, M.A., Magdalen College, Oxford, Lecturer in Classics at King's College, London.
Vol. XII. 1837 to 1901. By Sidney J Low, M.A., Balliol College, Oxford, formerly Lecturer on History at King's College, London.
The Political History of England
IN TWELVE VOLUMES
EDITED BY WILLIAM HUNT, D. LITT., AND
REGINALD L. POOLE, M.A.
III.
THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND
FROM THE ACCESSION OF HENRY III. TO THE
DEATH OF EDWARD III.
1216-1377
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
THE REGENCY OF WILLIAM MARSHAL.
| 19 Oct., 1216. | Death of King John | 1 |
| Position of parties | 1 | |
| The Church on the king's side | 2 | |
| 28 Oct. | Coronation of Henry III. | 3 |
| 11 Nov. | Great council at Bristol. | 4 |
| 12 Nov. | The first charter of Henry III. | 5 |
| 1216-17. | Progress of the war. | 6 |
| 1217. | Rising of Wilkin of the Weald. | 7 |
| Louis' visit to France | 8 | |
| 22 April. | Return of Louis from France. | 9 |
| Sieges of Dover, Farnham, and Mount Sorrel. | 9 | |
| 20 May. | The fair of Lincoln. | 10 |
| 23 Aug. | The sea-fight off Sandwich. | 11 |
| 11 Sept. | Treaty of Lambeth. | 12 |
| 6 Nov. | Reissue of the great charter. | 13 |
| Restoration of order by William Marshal. | 14 | |
| 14 May, 1219. | Death of William Marshal. | 15 |
| His character and career. | 15 |
CHAPTER II.
THE RULE OF HUBERT DE BURGH.
| 1219. | Pandulf the real successor of William Marshal | 17 |
| July, 1221. | Langton procures Pandulf's recall. | 19 |
| Ascendency of Hubert de Burgh. | 20 | |
| Jan.-Feb., 1221. | The rebellion of Albemarle. | 20 |
| July, 1222. | The sedition of Constantine FitzAthulf. | 22 |
| 1221-24. | Marriage alliances. | 23 |
| 1219-23. | War in Wales. | 23 |
| April, 1223. | Henry III. declared by the pope competent to govern. | 24 |
| June, 1224. | Revolt of Falkes de Bréautè. | 25 |
| 20 June-14 Aug. | Siege of Bedford. | 25 |
| Fall of Falkes. | 26 | |
| Papal and royal taxation. | 27 | |
| April, 1227. | End of the minority. | 29 |
| Relations with France during the minority. | 29 | |
| The Lusignans and the Poitevin barons. | 30 | |
| 1224. | Louis VIII.'s conquest of Poitou. | 31 |
| 1225. | Expedition of Richard of Cornwall and William Longsword to Gascony. | 32 |
| Nov., 1226. | Accession of Louis IX. in France. | 34 |
| 1229-30. | Henry III.'s campaign in Brittany and Poitou. | 34 |
| 21-30 July, 1230. | Siege of Mirambeau. | 36 |
| 1228. | The Kerry campaign. | 37 |
| 2 May, 1230. | Death of William of Braose. | 38 |
| 1231. | Henry III.'s second Welsh campaign. | 38 |
| Aug. | Death of Archbishop Richard le Grand. | 39 |
| Gregory IX. and Henry III. | 39 | |
| 1232. | Riots of Robert Twenge | 39 |
| 29 July. | Fall of Hubert de Burgh. | 40 |
| 1231. | Death of William Marshal the Younger. | 41 |
| 1232. | Death of Randolph of Blundeville, Earl of Chester. | 41 |
CHAPTER III.
THE ALIEN INVASION.
| 1232-34. | Rule of Peter des Roches. | 43 |
| Aug., 1233. | Revolt of Richard Marshal | 45 |
| 23 Nov. | Fight near Monmouth. | 47 |
| 1234. | Richard Marshal in Ireland. | 48 |
| 1 April. | Defeat and death of the Earl Marshal near Kildare. | 49 |
| 2 April. | Edmund Rich consecrated Archbishop of Canterbury. | 50 |
| 9 April. | Fall of Peter des Roches. | 51 |
| Beginning of Henry III.'s personal government | 51 | |
| Character of Henry III. | 52 | |
| The alien invasions | 53 | |
| 14 Jan., 1236. | Henry's marriage to Eleanor of Provence. | 54 |
| The Savoyards in England. | 54 | |
| Revival of Poitevin influence. | 55 | |
| 1239. | Simon of Montfort Earl of Leicester. | 56 |
| 1237. | The legation of Cardinal Otto. | 57 |
| 1239. | Quarrel of Gregory IX. and Frederick II. | 58 |
| 1235. | Robert Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln. | 59 |
| 16 Nov., 1240. | Death of Edmund Rich in exile. | 60 |
| Henry III. and Frederick II. | 61 | |
| Attempted reconquest of Poitou. | 62 | |
| May-Sept., 1242. | The campaign of Taillebourg. | 63 |
| 1243. | Truce with France. | 64 |
| The Lusignans in England. | 65 | |
| The baronial opposition. | 66 | |
| Grosseteste's opposition to Henry III., and Innocent IV.. | 66 | |
| 1243. | Relations with Scotland and Wales. | 67 |
| 1240. | Death of Llewelyn ap Iorwerth. | 67 |
| 1246. | Death of David ap Llewelyn. | 68 |
CHAPTER IV.
POLITICAL RETROGRESSION and NATIONAL PROGRESS.
| 1248-58. | Characteristics of the history of these ten years. | 69 |
| Decay of Henry's power in Gascony. | 69 | |
| 1248-52. | Simon de Montfort, seneschal of Gascony. | 70 |
| Aug., 1253. | Henry III. in Gascony. | 72 |
| 1254. | Marriage and establishment of Edward the king's son. | 73 |
| Edward's position in Gascony. | 73 | |
| Edward's position in Cheshire. | 74 | |
| 1254. | Llewelyn ap Griffith sole Prince of North Wales. | 75 |
| Edward in the four cantreds and in West Wales. | 76 | |
| 1257. | Welsh campaign of Henry and Edward. | 76 |
| Revival of the baronial opposition. | 77 | |
| 1255. | Candidature of Edmund, the king's son, for Sicily. | 78 |
| 1257. | Richard of Cornwall elected and crowned King of the Romans. | 80 |
| Leicester as leader of the opposition. | 81 | |
| Progress in the age of Henry III. | 81 | |
| The cosmopolitan and the national ideals. | 82 | |
| French influence. | 83 | |
| The coming of the friars. | 84 | |
| 1221. | Gilbert of Freynet and the first Dominicans in England. | 84 |
| 1224. | Arrival of Agnellus of Pisa and the first Franciscans in England. | 84 |
| Other mendicant orders in England. | 85 | |
| The influence of the friars. | 86 | |
| The universities. | 88 | |
| Prominent English schoolmen. | 89 | |
| Paris and Oxford. | 90 | |
| The mendicants at Oxford. | 91 | |
| Roger Bacon and Duns Scotus. | 92 | |
| Academic influence in public life. | 92 | |
| Beginnings of colleges. | 93 | |
| Intellectual characteristics of thirteenth century. | 93 | |
| Literature in Latin and French. | 94 | |
| Literature in English. | 95 | |
| Art. | 90 | |
| Gothic architecture. | 90 | |
| The towns and trade. | 90 |
CHAPTER V.
THE BARONS' WAR.
| 2 April, 1258. | Parliament at London. | 98 |
| 11 June. | The Mad Parliament | 99 |
| The Provisions of Oxford. | 100 | |
| 22 June. | Flight of the Lusignans. | 102 |
| Appointment of the Fifteen | 103 | |
| Working of the new Constitution | 104 | |
| 4 Dec., 1259. | Treaty of Paris. | 104 |
| Its unpopularity in England and France. | 106 | |
| 1259. | Dissensions among the baronial leaders. | 107 |
| 1259. | Provisions of Westminster. | 108 |
| 1261. | Henry III.'s repudiation of the Provisions. | 109 |
| 1263. | Reconstitution of parties. | 110 |
| The changed policy of the marchers. | 111 | |
| Outbreak of civil war. | 112 | |
| The appeal to Louis IX. | 112 | |
| 23 Jan., 1264. | Mise of Amiens. | 113 |
| Renewal of the struggle. | 113 | |
| 4 April. | Sack of Northampton. | 114 |
| The campaign in Kent and Sussex. | 115 | |
| 14 May. | Battle of Lewes. | 116 |
| Personal triumph of Montfort. | 118 |
CHAPTER VI.
THE RULE OF MONTFORT AND THE ROYALIST RESTORATION.
| 15 May. | Mise of Lewes. | 119 |
| 15 Dec. | Provisions of Worcester. | 121 |
| Jan.-Mar., 1265. | The Parliament of 1265. | 121 |
| Split up of the baronial party. | 123 | |
| Quarrel of Leicester and Gloucester. | 123 | |
| 28 May. | Edward's escape. | 124 |
| 22 June. | Treaty of Pipton. | 125 |
| Small results of the alliance of Llewelyn and the barons. | 125 | |
| The campaign in the Severn valley. | 126 | |
| 4 Aug. | Battle of Evesham. | 127 |
| The royalist restoration. | 128 | |
| 1266. | The revolt of the Disinherited. | 129 |
| 15 May. | Battle of Chesterfield. | 130 |
| 31 Oct. | The Dictum de Kenilworth. | 131 |
| Michaelmas. | The Ely rebellion. | 131 |
| April, 1267. | Gloucester's support of the Disinherited. | 132 |
| July. | End of the rebellion. | 132 |
| 25 Sept. | Treaty of Shrewsbury. | 133 |
| 1267. | Statute of Marlborough. | 134 |
| 1270-72. | Edward's Crusade. | 134 |
| 16 Nov., 1272. | Death of Henry III. | 135 |
CHAPTER VII.
THE EARLY FOREIGN POLICY AND LEGISLATION OF EDWARD I.
| Character of Edward I. | 136 | |
| 1272-74. | Rule of the regency. | 139 |
| Edward's doings in Italy and France. | 139 | |
| Edward's relations with Philip III. | 140 | |
| 1273-74. | Wars of Béarn and Limoges. | 141 |
| Edward I. and Gregory X. | 142 | |
| May-July, 1274. | Council of Lyons. | 142 |
| Relations of Edward I. and Rudolf of Hapsburg. | 143 | |
| 23 May, 1279. | Treaty of Amiens. | 145 |
| 1281. | League of Macon. | 146 |
| 1282. | Sicilian vespers. | 146 |
| 1285. | Deaths of Philip III., Charles of Anjou, Peter of Aragon, and Martin IV. | 146 |
| Bishop Burnell. | 147 | |
| 1275. | Statute of Westminster, the first. | 147 |
| 1278. | Statute of Gloucester. | 148 |
| Hundred Rolls and placita de quo warranto. | 149 | |
| Archbishops Kilwardby and Peckham. | 150 | |
| 1279. | Statute of Mortmain. | 151 |
| 1285. | Circumspecte agatis. | 152 |
| 1285. | Statute of Westminster, the second (De Donis). | 153 |
| 1285. | Statute of Winchester. | 154 |
CHAPTER VIII.
THE CONQUEST OF NORTH WALES.
| Execution of the Treaty of Shrewsbury. | 155 | |
| Llewelyn's refusal of homage. | 156 | |
| 1277. | Edward's first Welsh campaign. | 157 |
| 1277. | Treaty of Aberconway. | 159 |
| Edward's attempts to introduce English law into the ceded districts. | 160 | |
| 1282. | The Welsh revolt. | 161 |
| 1282. | Edward's second Welsh campaign. | 162 |
| Llewelyn's escape to the Upper Wye. | 163 | |
| 11 Dec. | Battle of Orewyn Bridge. | 164 |
| 1283. | Parliaments and financial expedients. | 164 |
| Subjection of Gwynedd completed. | 165 | |
| 3 Oct. | Parliament of Shrewsbury and execution of David. | 165 |
| The Edwardian castles. | 165 | |
| Mid-Lent, 1284. | Statute of Wales. | 166 |
| Effect of the conquest upon the march. | 167 | |
| Peckham and the ecclesiastical settlement of Wales. | 167 | |
| 1287. | Revolt of Rhys ap Meredith. | 168 |
CHAPTER IX.
THE SICILIAN AND THE SCOTTISH ARBITRATIONS.
| Edward I. at the height of his fame. | 169 | |
| April, 1286-Aug, 1289. | Edward's long visit to France. | 170 |
| 1289. | The Sicilian arbitration. | 170 |
| 1287. | Treaty of Oloron. | 171 |
| 1288. | Treaty of Canfranc. | 171 |
| 1291. | Treaty of Tarascon. | 171 |
| Maladministration during Edward's absence. | 172 | |
| Judicial and official scandals. | 172 | |
| 1289. | Special commission for the trial of offenders. | 172 |
| 1290. | Statute of Westminster, the third (Quia emptores). | 173 |
| The feud between Gloucester and Hereford. | 174 | |
| 1291. | The courts at Ystradvellte and Abergavenny. | 174 |
| Humiliation of the marcher earls. | 174 | |
| 1290. | Expulsion of the Jews. | 175 |
| The rise of the Italian bankers. | 176 | |
| 1272-86. | Early relations of Edward to Scotland. | 177 |
| 1286. | Death of Alexander III. of Scotland. | 177 |
| 1286-89. | Regency in the name of the Maid of Norway. | 177 |
| 1289. | Treaty of Salisbury. | 178 |
| 1290. | Treaty of Brigham. | 178 |
| Death of the Maid of Norway. | 179 | |
| The claimants to the Scottish throne. | 179 | |
| May, 1291. | Parliament of Norham. Edward recognised as overlord of Scotland. | 181 |
| 1291-92. | The great suit for Scotland. | 181 |
| 17 Nov., 1292. | John Balliol declared King of Scots. | 183 |
| Edward's conduct in relation to Scotland. | 183 | |
| 1290. | Death of Eleanor of Castile. | 184 |
| Transition to the later years of the reign. | 184 | |
| Edward's later ministers. | 185 |
CHAPTER X.
THE FRENCH AND SCOTTISH WARS AND THE CONFIRMATION OF THE CHARTERS.
| Commercial rivalry of English and French seamen. | 186 | |
| 15 May, 1293. | Battle off Saint-Mahé. | 186 |
| 1294. | Edmund of Lancaster's failure to procure a settlement with Philip IV. | 187 |
| The French occupation of Gascony. | 187 | |
| June, 1294. | War with France. | 188 |
| Preparations for a French campaign. | 188 | |
| 1294. | Revolts of Madog, Maelgwn, and Morgan. | 189 |
| Edward's danger at Aberconway. | 189 | |
| 22 Jan., 1293. | Battle of Maes Madog. | 190 |
| July. | Welsh revolts suppressed. | 190 |
| 1295. | Failure of the Gascon campaign. | 191 |
| Failure of attempted coalition against France. | 191 | |
| Organisation of the English navy. | 192 | |
| Treason of Sir Thomas Turberville. | 192 | |
| The naval attack on England. | 192 | |
| Rupture between Edward and the Scots. | 193 | |
| 5 July. | Alliance between the French and Scots. | 194 |
| Nov. | The "Model Parliament". | 195 |
| 1296. | Gascon expedition and death of Edmund of Lancaster. | 196 |
| Edward's invasion of Scotland. | 196 | |
| 27 April. | Battle of Dunbar. | 197 |
| 10 July. | Submission of John Balliol. | 197 |
| Conquest and administration of Scotland. | 198 | |
| The Ragman Roll. | 198 | |
| Sept., 1294. | Consecration of Archbishop Winchelsea. | 199 |
| 29 Feb., 1296. | Boniface VIII. issues Clericis laicos. | 200 |
| Conflict of Edward and Winchelsea. | 200 | |
| 24 Feb., 1297. | Parliament at Salisbury. | 202 |
| Conflict of Edward with the earls. | 202 | |
| July. | Break up of the clerical opposition. | 203 |
| Increasing moderation of baronial opposition. | 204 | |
| 24 Aug. | Edward's departure for Flanders. | 205 |
| May. | Revolt of the Scots under William Wallace. | 205 |
| 11 Sept. | Battle of Stirling Bridge.. | 207 |
| 12 Oct. | Confirmation of the charters with new clauses. | 208 |
CHAPTER XI.
THE SCOTTISH FAILURE.
| 1297. | Edward's unsuccessful campaign in Flanders. | 210 |
| 31 Jan., 1298. | Truce of Tournai, and end of the French war. | 211 |
| July. | Edward's invasion of Scotland. | 212 |
| 22 July. | Battle of Falkirk. | 213 |
| Slowness of Edward's progress towards the conquest of Scotland. | 215 | |
| >19 June, 1299. | Treaty of Montreuil. | 216 |
| 9 Sept. | Marriage of Edward and Margaret of France. | 217 |
| Mar., 1300. | Articuli super cartas. | 217 |
| July-Aug. | Carlaverock campaign. | 218 |
| 20 Jan.-14 Feb., 1301. | Parliament of Lincoln. | 218 |
| The barons' letter to the pope. | 219 | |
| Edward of Carnarvon, Prince of Wales. | 220 | |
| 1302. | Philip IV.'s troubles with the Flemings and Boniface VIII. | 221 |
| 20 May, 1303. | Peace of Paris between Edward and Philip. | 222 |
| Increasing strength of Edward's position. | 222 | |
| The decay of the earldoms. | 223 | |
| Additions to the royal demesne. | 224 | |
| 1303. | Conquest of Scotland seriously undertaken. | 225 |
| 24 July, 1304. | Capture of Stirling. | 225 |
| Aug., 1305. | Execution of Wallace and completion of the conquest. | 226 |
| The settlement of the government of Scotland. | 227 | |
| 1305. | Disgrace of Winchelsea and Bek. | 228 |
| Edward I. and Clement V.. | 230 | |
| 1307. | Statute of Carlisle. | 230 |
| 1305. | Ordinance of Trailbaston. | 231 |
| 10 Jan., 1306. | Murder of Comyn. | 232 |
| Rising of Robert Bruce. | 233 | |
| 25 Mar. | Bruce crowned King of Scots. | 233 |
| Preparations for a fresh conquest of Scotland. | 234 | |
| 7 July, 1307. | Death of Edward I. | 235 |