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English Pages 698 [349] Year 2005
Shaping the Nation ENGLAND 1360-1461
GERALD HARRISS
CLARENDON PRESS · OXFORD
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Great Clarendon Street, Oxford ox2 oDP Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's ohjcctive of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide in Oxford NewYork Auckland Bangkok Buenos Aires Cape Town Chennai Dar es Salaam Delhi Hong Kong Istanbul Karachi Kolkata Kuala Lumpur Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Mumbai Nairobi Sao Paulo Shanghai Taipei Tokyo Toronto Oxford is a registered trade mark of Oxford University Press in the UK and in certain other countries Published in the United States by Oxford University Press Inc., New York r!)
Gerald Harriss 200 5
The moral rights of the author have been asserted Database right Oxford University Press (maker) First published 2005 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of Oxford University Press, or as expressly permitted by law, or under terms agreed with the appropriate reprographics rights organization. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside the scope of the above should be sent to the Rights Department, Oxford University Press, at the address above You must not circulate this book in any other binding or cover and you must impose this same condition on any acquirer British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Data available Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Data available ISBN 0-19-822816-3 Typeset in Ehrhardt l'vIT by Jayvee, Trivandrum, India Printed in Great Britain on acid-free paper by Clays Ltd, St Ives pie
TO ANNE AND OUR FAMILY
General Editor's Preface
The first volume of Sir George Clark's Oxford History of Etz'{).and was published in 1934. Undertaking the General Editorship of a New Oxford History of Em;)and forlJl-five years later it was hard not to feel overshadowed by its powerful influence and well-deserved status. Some of Clark's volumes (his own among them) were brilliant individual achievements, hard to rival and impossible to match. Of course, he and his readers shared a broad sense of the purpose and direction of such books. His successor can no longer be sure of doing that. The buildingblocks of the story, its reasonable and meaningful demarcations and divisions, the continuities and discontinuities, the priorities of different varieties of history, the place of narrative-all these things are now much harder to agree upon. We now know much more about many things, and think about what we know in different ways. It is not surprising that historians now sometimes seem unsure about the audience to which their scholarship and writing are addressed. In the end, authors should be left to write their own books. None the less, the New Oxford History of En'{).and is intended to be more than a collection of discrete or idiosyncratic histories in chronological order. Its aim is to give an account of the development of our country in time. It is hard to treat that development as just the history which unfolds within the precise boundaries of England, and a mistake to suggest that this implies a neglect of the histories of the Scots, Irish, and Welsh. Yet the institutional core of the story which runs from Anglo-Saxon times to our own is the story of a state-structure built round the English monarchy and its effective successor, the Crown in Parliament, and that provides the only continuous articulation of the history of peoples we today call British. It follows that there must be uneven and sometimes discontinuous treatment of much of the history of those peoples. The state story remains, nevertheless, an intelligible thread and to me appears still to justi(v the title both of this series and that of its predecessor. If the attention given to the other kingdoms and the principali~y of Wales must reflect in this series their changing relationship to that central theme, this is not the only way in which the emphasis of individual volumes will be different. Each author has been asked to bring forward what he or she sees as the most important topics explaining the histoi:y under study, taking account of the present state of historical knowledge, drawing attention to areas of dispute and to matters on which final judgement is at present difficult (or, perhaps, impossible) and not merely recapitulating what has recently been the fashionable centre of professional debate. But each volume, allowing for its special approach and
Vlll
GENERAL EDITOR 's PREFACE
proportions, must also provide a comprehensive account, in which politics is always likely to be prominent. Volumes have to be demarcated chronologically but continuities must not be obscured; vestigially or not, copyhold survived into the 1920s and the Anglo-Saxon shires until the 1970s (some of which were to be resurrected in the 1990s, too). Any single volume should be an entry-point to the understanding of processes on~y slowly unfolding, sometimes across centuries. My hope is that in the end we shall have, as the outcome, a set of standard and authoritative histories, embodying the scholarship of a generation, and not mere compendia in which the determinants are lost to sight among the detail. J. M.
ROBERTS
Preface
The period treated in this volume has been the subject of half a century of scholar~y revision and debate. From being seen as one of disorder and decline, it has emerged as one of crucial transformation, in which English society and government acquired the shape it was to retain until the Civil War. I have tried, first, to reflect the research that has produced this reassessment; secondly, to provide a serviceable guide for the study of the period at university level; and thirdly, to convey my own understanding of it. I have summarized that in the Conclusion, which can also serve as an Introduction. Reading and writing history is always so enjoyable that this book has never seemed a burden, but had it been so I would have been sustained by the encouragement and helpfulness of many friends and colleagues. To the community of learning at Magdalen College, with which I have been connected at varying levels for over sixty years, I am deeply indebted in too many ways to speci(y here; but above all I wish to recall the inspiration of Bruce McFarlane, my teacher and friend for the first part of that time. I have profited, too, from the fresh intelligence which my own pupils, both undergraduate and postgraduate, have brought to the problems of medieval history. I recall in particular how Simon Walker's innovative thesis repeatedly yielded new insights, and my frequent citation of his work indicates how greatly he illuminated the study of late medieval England and how impoverished we are by his untimely death. I owe a specific debt to some colleagues for reading, and commenting critically on, particular chapters about which I felt unsure. In this respect Christine Carpenter, Jeremy Catto, Ian Doyle, and Simon Payling have all been most generous with their time and knowledge. Many others have unstintingly answered my appeals from deepest Dorset for factual and bibliographical references. Academic commitments while in post meant that most of the book had to be written in retirement, and I have constantly marvelled at the unreproachful patience with which the Oxford University Press has waited for it, matched by the unwavering encouragement and assistance of my General Editor, John Roberts, to whom I would dear~J' have wished to deliver the final typescript. Above all I am grateful for the support and understanding of my wife, Anne, in my continuing preoccupation with matters historical. GERALD HARRISS
Contents
xv
Li&t of Plates
List of Figures, Maps, Tables List of Abbreviations
xvi XVlll
PART I POLITICAL SOCIETY I. CONCEPTS OF GOVERNANCE
Theories of Authori~y
I.
2. The Literary Model of Governance 2.
THE KING AND THE COURT
3 3 6 14
The Court as the King's Domestic Environment
14
2. The Court as a Centre of Patronage and Service 3. The Court as a Religious and Cultural Centre
22 31
I.
3·
CENTRAL GOVERNMENT I.
The Secretariat
2. Law and Justice 3· State Fin an ce 4- Parliament
4·
47 58 66
5. Council 6. Diplomacy
74 81
7· Defence
85
THE NOBILITY I.
The Peerage
2. The Inheritance 3. Domestic Culture 4. Religion 5. Chivali:v and War 5.
41 41
THE GENTRY 1.
Status, Economy, and Inheritance
93 94 98 107 II9 125 136 136
6.
PART III MEN AND EVENTS
2. Domestic Culture and Religion
149
3. Magistracy 4. War and Chivahy
163 175
I.
THE LOCAL POLITY
187
2. Losing the War, 1369-1389
411
187
3. The Search for a Settlement, 1374-1396 4. Schism, Secession, and Crusade
424
5. Enemies and Allies, 1399-1413
426
I.
Coun~y Communi~y or Magnate Affini~)'?
2. The Affinity in the Local Community
195
3. Dispute and Disorder in Gentry Society 4. Central Politics and the Local Polity
197 202
II. ENGLAND, FRANCE, AND CHRISTENDOM,
12.
PART II WORK AND WORSHIP 7. AGRARIAN SOCIETY I.
RULING ENGLAND,
209
1360-1413
Peace and Plenty, 1360-1369
405 405 419
433 433
2. The Court and the Commons, 1369-1377
437
3. Uneasy Consensus, 1377-1383 4. The Assertion of Regality, 1384-1386
444
5. The Magnate Backlash, 1387-1389 6. Uneasy Equilibrium, 1389-1396
461 477
451
2. Agrarian Structures before the Black Death
214
3. Population Decline and Economic Change 4. Lords and Peasants, 1360-1381
218
5. A New Agrarian Order, 1381-1461 6. The Village Community and Culture
234
7· King Richard's Rule, 1397-1399 8. Legitimation and Consent, 1399-1406
242
9. The King and the Prince, 1407-1413
501
TRADE, INDUSTRY, AND TOWNS
256
ENGLAND AND HER NEIGHBOURS
507
225
13.
468 491
508
Ireland
256
I.
2. Internal Trade and Indust1y
271
2. Wales
517
3. Urban Society
281
3· The Anglo-Scottish Border
528
THE INSTITUTIONAL CHURCH
310
I.
9·
The Agricultural Framework
209
1360-1413
Losing the Peace, 1360-1369
I.
8.
:nu
CONTENTS
CONTENTS
Xll
Overseas Trade
14· THE ENGLISH IN FRANCE, 1413-1453 I. The Lancastrian Conquest in France, 1413-1429
The Bishops in Church and State
311
2. Cathedrals and Religious Houses
326
2. Lancastrian Rule in France, 1417-1435
3· Perpendicular Rebuilding, 1360-1461 4. The Universities
340
3. The Defence of Normandy, 1435-1444 4. The Loss of Normandy, 1445-1450
I.
344 15.
RULING ENGLAND,
1413-1461
IO. RELIGION, DEVOTION, AND DISSENT
352
Parochial Structures and Religion
353 362
2. The Minority of Henry VI, 1422-1435
3. Private Devotion 4· Wyclif and Wvcliffism
368
3. King and Council, 1435-1443 4. Suffolk's Rule, 1444-1449
5. The Persecution of Lollardy
395
I.
2. Public Worship
376
I.
Henry V, the Model King
5. Rebellion, Popular and Political, 1449-1453
540 540 554 568 577 588 588 595 604 6II 617
CONTENTS
XIV
6. The Rule of York, 1453-1456
Plates
7. Queen Margaret's Rule, 1456-1459
8. York versus Lancaster, 1459-1461 16.
CONCLUSION
Genealogical table: The royal house of PlantagenetLancaster, 1360-1461
Chronology Bibliography Index
I.
Court of King's Bench, c. 1460 Inner Temple Library, Inner Temple Misc. MS 188 By permission ofThe Masters of the Bench of the Inner Temple
2. Warkworth Castle, Northumberland 3. Nunney Castle, Somerset 4. Silver collar of esses from first half of the fifteenth century Museum of London By permission of the Museum of London
5. Effigy of Robert, Lord Hungerford, Salisbm:)' Cathedral Courtesy and permission of Stephen Friar
6. John, duke of Bedford before St George British Library, Add. MS. 18850 (The Bedford Hours) By permission of the British Library
7. Portrait of a Cardinal (presumed to be Henry Beaufort) by Jan Van Eyck Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna By permission ofKunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna
8. Font, Blickling church, Norfolk 9. The Erpingham Gateway, Norwich Etching, J. Le Keux, in Britton, Picturesque Antiquities of English Cities ( r 830) By permission of Norfolk County Council Library and Information Services IO.
'John Wyclif': initial at opening of De Veritate Sacre Scripture Prague National Library, MS VIII C.3 fo. 2 recto. By courtesy of A. Hudson and permission of Prague National Library
11. New College, Oxford, c.1461 New Coll. MS. 288 fo. 3 verso. By permission of the Warden and Fellows of New College, Oxford
12. Sherborne Abbey, choir Lithograph 1843 By courtesy and permission of Canon E. Wood, Sherborne Abbey
Figures, Maps, Tables
FIGURES, MAPS, AND TABLES
xvu
7.1 Changes in the proportion of arable and pasture in the West Midlands, 1345-1520
223
By permission of Cambridge University Press
8. l Towns with recorded taxpaying population of over l ,ooo, 1377 FIGURES
3. l Plan of the Palace of Westminster
49
By permission of HMSO
4. l (a) Plan of Kenilworth Castle By permission of A. Emery and Cambridge University Press
(b) Plan of Old Wardour Castle :£;) English Heritage
8.1 Exports of English wool and cloth, 1350-1450
257
MAPS
7. l Distribution of rural population per square mile, 1377
210
7 .2 Distribution of lay wealth, 1334
211
8. l English overseas trade l l. l
Lands ceded to Edward III by the Treaty of Brerigny, 1360
13.1 Ireland: the Anglo-Irish and Gaelic lordships, c.1390
512
13.2 Wales: the principality and marcher lordships, c.1390
520
By permission of R. R. Davies and Oxford University Press
13.3 Estates of the Neville and Percy families in the north of England (a) Neville of Middleham estates
536
(b) Percy estates
537
By permission of A.J. Pollard and Oxford University Press
14.1 Northern France, 1415-1450
547
By permission ofC. T. Allmand and Oxford University Press
TABLES
5. l The gentry in 1436: social grade, number, and income 5.2 Distribution of landholding by income grade, 1412 By permission of Cambridge University Press
274
ABBREVIATIONS
Complete Peerage
Abbreviations
AHR Anon. Chron. Arch. J nl. Bekynton, Correspondence
Benet'sChron.
BIRR BJR/U]L BL BRUO
Brut CCR CFR
CHB
Cffl.vIEL Chron. Angliae
Chron. Lond. Chron. Rev.
Agricultural History Review E. Miller (ed.), The Agrarian History of England and Wales, iii: 1348-1500 (Cambridge, 1991) American Historical Review The Anonimalle Chronicle, l 333-138 l, ed. V. H. Galbraith (Manchester, 1927) Archaeological} ournal The Official Correspondence of ThomasBe~ynton, ed. G. Williams, 2 vols., Rolls ser. (London, 1872) John Benet's Chronicle, ed. G. L. Harriss and M. A. Harriss, in Camden Miscellany, XXIV, Camden Society, 4th ser. 9 (London, 1972) Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research Bulletin of John Rylands [University] Library British Librai:y A. B. Emden (ed.), Biographical Register of the Universi~y of Oxford to 1500, 3 vols. (Oxford, 1957) The Brut, or, Chronicles of England, pt. 2, ed. F. W Brie, 2 vols. EETS, old ser., 136 (1908) Calendar of the Close Rolls Calendar of the Fine Rolls L. Hellinga and J. B. Trapp (eds.), The Cambridge Hi&tory of the Book, iii (Cambridge, 1997) D. Wallace (ed.), The Cambridge History of Medieval EnglishLitera ture(Cambridge, 1999) Chronicon Angliae, ed. E. M. Thompson, Rolls ser., 64 (1874) C. L. Kingsford (ed.), Chronicles of London (Oxford, 1905) Chronicles of the Revolution, 1397-1400, ed. C. Given-Wilson (Manchester, 1993)
G. E. Cokayne, The Complete Peerage, ed.
V. Gibbs etal., 13 vols. (London, 1910-59) CPR CUR
Agr. Hist. Rev. AHEW
.\'ix
Davies (ed.), Eng. Chron. Davis (ed.), Paston Letters
Econ. HR EETS
EHD EHR Eulog. Hist.
Gairdner (ed.), Paston Letters Gesta Gregory, Chron.
Hardyng, Chronicle Hist. J 111. Hist. Res. House of Corrnnons
]BAA ]EH J nl. Brit. Stud. Jnl. Hist. Soc J nl. Legal Hist. J nl. Med. Hist. J nl. Relig. Hist. Kail (ed.), Political Poems Knighton, Chron.
Calendar of the Pa tent Rolls D. Palliser (ed.), The Cambridge Urban History ofBritain, i (Cambridge, 2000) An English Chronicle, ed. J. S. Davies, Camden Society, 64 (1855) N. Davis (ed.), Paston Letters and Papers of the Fifteenth Century, 2 vols. (Oxford, 1971, 1976) Economic Hist01:y Review Ear~}' English Text Socie~v A. R. Myers (ed.), English Historical Documents, 1327-1485 (London, 1969) English Historical Review Eulogium Historiarum sive Temporis, ed. F. S. Haydon, 3 vols., Rolls ser., 9, vol. iii (London, 1863) J. Gairdner (ed.), The Paston Letters (Gloucester, 1986) Gesta Henrici Quinti, ed. F. Taylor and J. S. Roskell (Oxford, 1975) Gregory's Chronicle, ed. J. Gairdner, Camden Society, new ser., 17 (1876) John Hardyng, Chronicle, ed. H. Ellis (London, 1812) Historical Journal Historical Research J. S. Roskell, L. Clark, and C. Rawcliffe (eds.), The History of Parliament: The House of Corrnnons, 1386-1421, 4 vols. (Stroud, 1992) Journal of the British Archite