Revolution in the air

Wat Tyler, the leader of the Peasants' Revolt, being killed by the Mayor of London William Walworth

By Dan Jones
Author, Summer of Blood
http://news.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_8061000/8061725.stm

The anger in the air is palpable. The ordinary people hold the political class in contempt.

The government is failing, as war and economic catastrophe are dealt with in increasingly unconvincing fashion by second-rate public servants. There is, for the first time in a generation, a sense of revolution brewing.

This is not today's Britain. It is England in 1381, the year that witnessed one of the greatest popular risings in our history: the Peasants' Revolt.

Lessons of the Peasants' revolt

Between May and November that year, England was seized by spasms of popular rebellion, provoked by poll taxes and a disastrous war, and underpinned by the common belief that the government was a pack of scoundrels.

Towns and villages from Somerset to Scarborough rose against their rulers, beating and sometimes killing MPs, lawyers, landowners and politicians, tearing down their homes and vandalizing their land.

Bloody revenge

At the heart of the rising was a march on London on Corpus Christi weekend (Thursday 13 to Saturday 15 June).

Traditionally this was a time of mystery plays and festive processions. In 1381, the main procession consisted of villagers from the Thames estuary marching along the pilgrim road between Canterbury and London, burning houses and taking political prisoners as they protested against their venal, incompetent masters.

Wat Tyler's mob burning St John's Monastery near Smithfield, London
The peasant's revolt ransacked London before it was put down

When the protesters, led by their general Wat Tyler and the maverick preacher John Ball, reached London, they found they had significant common cause with the townsmen.

The London populace bore long-held grudges towards their own ruling elites - which included the oligarchic, super-rich merchant traders in the City as well as the hapless courtiers who governed in the name of 14-year old King Richard.

Common fury with the state of lordship bound rural and urban rebels in a compact to clean up government.

So the town mice opened their gates to the country mice, and together they all set about the cats.

At first there were organized protests, attacks on specific, symbolic landmarks: the Savoy Palace, home of the powerful and unpopular duke of Lancaster, was burned to the ground; the Temple, home of the legal profession, was sacked. Prisons were broken open and the Tower of London, where the government had holed up, was besieged.

Demonstrations became riots. A chopping block was set up at Cheapside, where the street ran sticky with the blood of the condemned.

Portrait of Richard II
Kind Richard II was only 14 years old when faced with the rebellion

The Archbishop of Canterbury had his head hacked off on Tower Hill. The Treasurer was murdered, as - in Suffolk - was a Chief Justice.

Some 140 Flemish merchants and their families were butchered on the banks of the Thames, in a shocking xenophobic massacre.

But for the luck of the young king, Richard II, and the fortitude of a few good men around him led by Mayor of London, William Walworth, the City would have been burned to the ground.

Tyler and his mob were eventually defeated at Smithfield, but it took nearly six months to calm the rest of the country.

Political revolt

The summer of discontent left a profound mark on the English political consciousness.

A few lines written, prior to the rebellion, by the Kentish poet John Gower, were suddenly recognised as an important tenet of government.

"There are three things of such a sort that they produce merciless destruction when they get the upper hand," he wrote.

"One is a flood of water, another is a raging fire and the third is the lesser people, the common multitude; for they will not be stopped by either reason or by discipline."

I have thought many times during the past months that our politicians would benefit from revisiting the events of the Peasants' Revolt.

In many ways it is a tale of mutual misunderstanding: the ordinary folk thought the worst of their politicians, and politicians saw their people as an economic resource, to be taxed and tormented as the necessities of government demanded.

Skeleton from the Great Plague discovered in Spitalfields Market
The Black Death was a major factor in fermenting anti-government feeling

This government, like the government in 1381, has been caught out by a global crisis of unprecedented severity.

In the fourteenth century it was the Black Death, which killed 40% of Europe's population.

The government's reaction - to impose labour laws that stifled economic recovery but preserved the social hierarchy, was vastly unpopular, for it prevented ordinary people from improving their lives.

Now, it is the collapse in global credit which has brought a different sort of misery to millions.

No doubt there are many differences between 1381 and 2009. They were medieval, we are modern. And history never repeats itself as exactly as historians sometimes wish.

But if I were an MP today, I would make it my business to learn the course and the lessons of 1381 by heart. Then I would give thanks that there are no longer any chopping blocks at Cheapside.

Dan Jones is the author of Summer of Blood.

Views: 52

Comment

You need to be a member of 12160 Social Network to add comments!

Join 12160 Social Network

"Destroying the New World Order"

TOP CONTENT THIS WEEK

THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING THE SITE!

mobile page

12160.info/m

12160 Administrators

 

Latest Activity

Doc Vega posted a blog post

Regrets That Cling to Me

Talking with my shadow in the nightI know it sounds contriteA vacuum without the lightThe silence…See More
28 minutes ago
tjdavis posted a photo
20 hours ago
Doc Vega posted a blog post

Reality Is now Becoming Unhinged

 Let’s take a trip down the modern-day rabbit hole we call everyday news and events, but on a more…See More
yesterday
cheeki kea commented on Sandy's video
Thumbnail

Ghislaine Maxwell & The Secret "Shadow" 9/11 Commission? | John Kiriakou

"You tuber Sabby Sabs sums up and joins dots. Don't miss this one."
yesterday
Doc Vega posted a blog post
Thursday
Burbia commented on TommyD's group The Chuckle Hut
"The Warriors is one of my favorite movies. I couldn't help but laugh at this spoof."
Thursday
Doc Vega posted a photo
Wednesday
Doc Vega commented on Doc Vega's blog post Are the End Times Drawing Near?
"cheeki kea, You might want to see predictions made by Robert Welch in 1957 and 1974 stating that…"
Wednesday
Doc Vega commented on Doc Vega's blog post Are the End Times Drawing Near?
"cheeki kea, good points. We have a world full of twisted allied agendas that seem contradictory,…"
Wednesday
Sandy posted a video

Ghislaine Maxwell & The Secret "Shadow" 9/11 Commission? | John Kiriakou

In this gripping excerpt from the Julien Dorey podcast, former CIA officer and whistleblower John Kiriakou reacts to a leaked email from 2003. The document r...
Mar 3
cheeki kea left a comment for Holyroller
"Greetings to you Holyroller very awesome you've joined up with us all. I know you'll find…"
Mar 3
cheeki kea commented on Doc Vega's blog post Are the End Times Drawing Near?
"Yes it's a sad and sorry situation we see evolving here. On one front and it's a large…"
Mar 3
Doc Vega commented on tjdavis's video
Thumbnail

When the Communists Take Over America!...Famous 1957 Anti-Communist Movie

"I remember this when I was a little seeing it on TV years after it was filmed and it scared me even…"
Mar 3
tjdavis posted a video

When the Communists Take Over America!...Famous 1957 Anti-Communist Movie

Starring Jack Webb and Robert Conrad, this 1957 movie by the United States Armed Forces Information Agency is perhaps the best known anti-communist movie eve...
Mar 2
Doc Vega posted a blog post

Are the End Times Drawing Near?

Are we seeing the gradual fulfillment of the Battle of Armageddon? Think of it. The US and Israel…See More
Mar 2
Holyroller is now a member of 12160 Social Network
Mar 2
tjdavis posted a blog post
Mar 1
Sandy posted photos
Mar 1
Burbia posted a video

Catherine Fitts: Epstein, CIA Black Budget, the Control Grid, and the Banks’ Role in War

Programmable digital currency is the final piece of the global control grid that’s finally snapping into place. Catherine Austin Fitts on how to defeat it. C...
Feb 27
Евеліна posted a status
"цікаво, воно цитатами виділяє, як моє особливе "я""
Feb 27

© 2026   Created by truth.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

content and site copyright 12160.info 2007-2019 - all rights reserved. unless otherwise noted