BBC History Magazine

“Rebels behaved as though they were at war – brandishin­g weapons and employing them with lethal force”

- BY ADRIAN R BELL, ANNE CURRY, HERBERT EIDEN, HELEN KILLICK, HELEN LACEY, ANDREW PRESCOTT, JASON SADLER AND IAN WALDOCK

Far from being an ill-discipline­d explosion of rage, the popular uprising of 1381 was organised with near military precision. And one of the reasons for that, a new research project has revealed, was the participat­ion of hundreds of soldiers just returned from the battlefiel­ds of France

“When Adam delved and Eve span, who was then the gentleman?” This radical challenge to the social order was delivered by the priest John Ball as he preached to rebel leader Wat Tyler and his companions at Blackheath in June 1381 – and it has resonated ever since. What gave lords their rights to power and land, the insurgents asked. To hammer home the point, crowds of them marched on London.

“Commoners” from Essex, Kent and Hertfordsh­ire rushed through the city gates on 13 June with support not only from the lower classes of Londoners – craftsmen, journeymen, labourers, servants and lower clergy – but also from richer citizens. Public order collapsed. The houses of ecclesiast­ical and secular dignitarie­s were broken into and plundered.

Amid the chaos, the young king, Richard II, and his advisers sheltered in the Tower of London. Just outside, on Tower Hill, an unbelievab­le drama unfolded as the rebels beheaded five men – among them Simon Sudbury, chancellor of England and archbishop of Canterbury, and Robert Hales, prior of the Knights Hospitalle­r and Treasurer of England – before displaying their heads on poles.

Coordinate­d violence was breaking out across the country: at Lakenheath in Suffolk, 80 miles north-east of the capital, the rebels hunted down and beheaded the highest judge of the land, Sir John Cavendish. Large parts of England, from Somerset to Kent, Essex, Cambridges­hire, Norfolk and parts of Yorkshire were in turmoil. Tensions that had been smoulderin­g under the surface in a society already disrupted by the Black Death and inconclusi­ve wars with France had finally erupted into unpreceden­ted levels of rioting. It was a perfect storm: “the hurling time”, as it was afterwards to be remembered.

A plan of action

But who were the rebels plunging the country into chaos? The events of the summer of 1381 have traditiona­lly been called the Peasants’ Revolt, implying that the insurgents were rural labourers, who had been pushed into rebellion by the overbearin­g demands of their lords.

However, our major new project, “The People of 1381”, is revealing that the picture was far more complex than that. A team of historians and computer scientists has analysed a vast database of legal, government­al and manorial records relating to the revolt, among them indictment­s produced by jurors summoned to appear before royal justices. Our research has revealed that the rebel bands weren’t exclusivel­y manned by rural peasants, but were instead made up of several distinct groups. And of all these cohorts, one in particular stands out. It consisted of veteran soldiers – men who had served in England’s wars with France – and they brought to the rebellion levels of planning and strategy typical of campaignin­g armies in the field. Their presence helped transform what otherwise may have been a chaotic explosion of public rage into a discipline­d and – for a few weeks, at least – effective insurgency.

The legal records indicate that the degree of organisati­on in the revolt was astonishin­g; we could even say that the actions were implemente­d with military efficiency. How else was it possible for insurgents from different areas to coordinate their attacks on landlords and royal officials in their localities? How else could hundreds of men from around the country advance on London together, arriving at exactly the right place, and at the right time?

VETERAN SOLDIERS BROUGHT TO THE PEASANTS’ REVOLT LEVELS OF PLANNING TYPICAL OF CAMPAIGNIN­G ARMIES

So what drew so many former soldiers to the rebellion? In many cases, it appears to have been a combinatio­n of anger at a raft of new taxes levied to cover the escalating cost of the French wars, and fading faith in the state. The imposition of a poll tax – which tripled between 1377 and 1380 – caused enormous resentment.

It was bad enough having to pay this heavy tax, but even worse when the government’s military policies had failed. The English were losing the war. And now the French were sufficient­ly emboldened to launch raids on the ports and villages of southern England. With rebels in Kent feeling that they had little choice but to take the defence of the coast into their own hands, their faith in their government ebbed further still.

Stirring up trouble

One distinctiv­e role of those with military experience in what we now call the Peasants’ Revolt appears to have been in actively encouragin­g others to join the insurgency.

Indictment­s against the rebels give prominence to charges against those who rode from place to place spreading word of the rising.

An indictment against the rebels in Cambridges­hire states that John Peper of Linton – who had fought in France under Thomas of Woodstock, Richard II’s uncle – rode with one of the main rebel groups in Cambridges­hire “carrying a lance with a pennant”.

Another man, John Quenyld of Edenbridge in Kent, had received letters of protection for military service in France in 1380 but was in the King’s Bench prison in Southwark at the time of the rising. As they passed through Southwark to cross London Bridge into the city, the rebels opened the prisons, a clear statement of their lack of confidence in royal government and justice. Quenyld escaped. He had connection­s in Surrey and first headed in that direction. We find him triggering major disturbanc­es in Guildford. Quenyld also joined in the attack on the city authoritie­s in Winchester, bursting into the merchants’ hall and burning the records.

This was far from an isolated incident.

Across the country the rebels sought out and destroyed documents (both manorial records and government archives), symbolisin­g both their rejection of authority and criticism of how the country was being run at a local and a national level. Often the rebels were accused of acting “in warlike manner”. In other words, they behaved as though they were at war: raising banners (seen in this period as a declaratio­n of war), brandishin­g weapons commonly used in conflict – and employing these weapons with lethal force.

They also used their specialist military skills. We can see from the legal records that rebels were deliberate­ly arming themselves in preparatio­n for their collective action. Robert Glover of Strood and Drerlyng Ceode, a barber, seized from the house of William Topcliff (a senior official of the archbishop of Canterbury) “a hauberk [shirt of mail], a target, a lance, a bow and two sheaves of arrows”. Other rebels plundered armour and protective jackets.

Once in London the rebels made a beeline for the Great Wardrobe stores in the Tower of London. The list of items they stole – which included everything from mail shirts and helmets to axes and arrows – suggests that they knew what they were looking for.

Crushing revenge

Thanks to talents they had acquired on campaign, some rebels were capable of wreaking substantia­l damage to even the sturdiest of fortified houses – as William Topcliff discovered to his cost. Topcliff had been involved in heavy-handed judicial sessions at Dartford, provoking the residents and making him a target for the rebels. On 7 June 1381, they took their revenge.

THE REBELS MAY HAVE USED A LARGE SLING OR TREBUCHET TO LAUNCH BOULDERS AT WILLIAM TOP CLIFF’S HOUSE

Thomas Crowe of Snodland “dragged large boulders onto the house causing it to be crushed”. The term used for Crowe’s action in dragging the boulders is “trectum”, suggesting that he might have used a large sling or trebuchet to launch the boulders that smashed Topcliff’s house to bits. Crowe was an ex-soldier with garrison experience at Calais, where he would have learned how to use a trebuchet.

A number of Kent rebels were masons, and it is likely that some had been engaged in military service. Gilbert Stork and Lawrence Rockacre were accused of participat­ing in one of the most notorious incidents of the entire revolt: the attack on the Savoy Palace, London residence of Richard II’s uncle John of Gaunt. The “expertise” these masons had gained in military service may help explain why the palace was so badly damaged that it was never rebuilt.

Some of the rebels were army deserters, who had been lying low in Maidstone and Rochester after taking wages for a campaign to France but then absconding. One such was Thomas Wootton, who had been engaged to go on campaign to Brittany in the spring of 1381.

Intriguing­ly, Wootton was named as one of the leaders of the revolt by another rebel, Robert Bennett of Barford St John in Oxfordshir­e, who later “turned king’s evidence” and informed on his former friends.

Bennett was in prison in Southwark when the revolt erupted. He claimed that Wootton had led a band of rebels that burst into the prison and freed those inside. Bennett also claimed that, in the panic, the wife of the keeper of the prison gave him six silver spoons to keep out of rebel hands. Bennett insisted that Wootton had forced him to hand over the spoons.

As a result of the allegation­s, all Wootton’s possession­s were held until £30 had been levied in compensati­on for the wages he had been paid to serve with the army.

The truth of Bennett’s allegation­s was tested through trial by battle at Newgate gaol. Bennett vanquished Wootton, who was duly executed. But this was not enough to save Bennett’s skin. For his role in the revolt, he, too, was put to death.

Sea-going insurgents

The rebellion didn’t just attract veterans of England’s land campaigns in France; mariners, it seems, played a role, too. In Kent, John Ellis, master of a balinger (a small sea-going vessel used to counter French raids), was said to have risen with others in the Isle of Sheppey on 11 June and to have seized land and livestock belonging to the unpopular Kentish royal official Nicholas Herring.

John Ailrugge, shipman, is named in actions relating to disturbanc­es in Bridgwater. He had served under John of Gaunt in Aquitaine in 1378. Another future rebel served on the same expedition. This was William Paynot of Weeley in Essex, who – along with an accomplice with a suggestive name, Woodgrave Mariner – was accused of inciting a rising in Essex on 27 June 1381 following the execution of the rebel John Preston of Hadleigh.

Some rebels were described as “travelling­men”, representi­ng a rootless, wayfaring way of life. One of these was John Young of Hereford, who was involved in the wool and cloth trade between Wales and England. He was engaged in 1383 to participat­e in a military “crusade” in Flanders under the bishop of Norwich, Henry le Despenser.

Young wasn’t alone among Despenser’s future troops to have been embroiled in the revolt. The authoritie­s attempted to prosecute Richard Crisping of Catfield for his part in the destructio­n of the archives of the abbey of St Benet of Holme in Norfolk in 1381. Yet the case had to be dismissed because Richard was serving in Despenser’s campaign in Flanders.

By the end of June, the king and his advisors had recovered their equilibriu­m, the rebel leader Wat Tyler was dead, and the insurgency’s initial successes were quickly being reversed. Ironically, Henry le Despenser was heavily involved in the suppressio­n of the revolt, leading the army that would deliver it a fatal blow at the battle of North Walsham on 25 or 26 June. But, as the case of Richard Crisping proves, that didn’t stop him recruiting a number of former rebels for his army – these were, after all, useful men to have with him on the battlefiel­d.

For generation­s, English soldiers – men like Crisping – had been acquiring military expertise in the many wars the nation had waged against the Scots, the Welsh, the Irish and, of course, the French. In 1381, they employed these martial skills to devastatin­g effect once again – against the very state they fought for.

Adrian R Bell, Anne Curry, Herbert Eiden, Helen Killick, Helen Lacey, Andrew Prescott, Jason Sadler and Ian Waldock are the team behind The People of 1381, a research project producing a comprehens­ive new interpreta­tion of the Peasants’ Revolt. Find out more at 1381.online

LISTEN

To listen to Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the Peasants’ Revolt on an episode of Radio 4’s In Our Time, go to bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/p0038x8s

IN 1381, MEN EMPLOYED THEIR MARTIAL SKILLS TO DEVASTATIN­G EFFECT – AGAINST THE VERY STATE THEY HAD ONCE FOUGHT FOR

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This 15th-century miniature depicting the Peasants’ Revolt shows: (left) rebels killing the veteran military commander
Sir Robert Salle at Norwich; (right) insurgents entering London; and (top) the death of rebel leader Wat Tyler. A new research project is challengin­g the idea that the rebellion consisted mainly of rural labourers
Kill and be killed This 15th-century miniature depicting the Peasants’ Revolt shows: (left) rebels killing the veteran military commander Sir Robert Salle at Norwich; (right) insurgents entering London; and (top) the death of rebel leader Wat Tyler. A new research project is challengin­g the idea that the rebellion consisted mainly of rural labourers
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 ??  ?? Holy blood Rebels behead Simon Sudbury, archbishop of Canterbury, on Tower Hill, as shown in a contempora­ry manuscript. By now, coordinate­d violence was erupting across England
Holy blood Rebels behead Simon Sudbury, archbishop of Canterbury, on Tower Hill, as shown in a contempora­ry manuscript. By now, coordinate­d violence was erupting across England
 ??  ?? War weary English troops arrive in Normandy, as shown in a late 14th-century manuscript. Soldiers’ anger at the failures of the war with France, and the military skills they brought home with them, proved a potent mix in 1381
War weary English troops arrive in Normandy, as shown in a late 14th-century manuscript. Soldiers’ anger at the failures of the war with France, and the military skills they brought home with them, proved a potent mix in 1381
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 ??  ?? Stealing a march When rebels raided an ecclesiast­ical official’s home, they stole military equipment including a lance, a bow and a hauberk, like the one shown above
Stealing a march When rebels raided an ecclesiast­ical official’s home, they stole military equipment including a lance, a bow and a hauberk, like the one shown above
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