And so long as Louis VII. lived, the bishop did refrain
from attacking the liberties of the burghers of Laon;
but at the king’s death, in 1180, he applied
to his successor, Philip Augustus, and offered to
cede to him the lordship of Fere-sur-Oise, of which
he was the possessor, provided that Philip by charter
abolished the commune of Laon. Philip yielded
to the temptation, and in 1190 published an ordinance
to the following purport: “Desiring to
avoid for our soul every sort of danger, we do entirely
quash the commune established in the town of Laon
as being contrary to the rights and liberties of the
metropolitan church of St. Mary, in regard for justice
and for the sake of a happy issue to the pilgrimage
which we be bound to make to Jerusalem.”
But next year, upon entreaty and offers from the
burghers of Laon, Philip changed his mind, and without
giving back the lordship of Fere-sur-Oise to the bishop,
guaranteed and confirmed in perpetuity the peace-establishment
granted in 1128 to the town of Laon, “on the
condition that every year at the feast of All Saints
they shall pay to us and our successors two hundred
livres of Paris.” For a century all strife
of any consequence ceased between the burghers of Laon
and their bishop; there was no real accord or good
under-standing between them, but the public peace
was not troubled, and neither the Kings of France
nor the great lords of the neighborhood interfered
in its affairs. In 1294 some knights and clergy
of the metropolitan chapter of Laon took to quarrelling
with some burghers; and on both sides they came to
deeds of violence, which caused sanguinary struggles
in the streets of the town and even in the precincts
of the episcopal palace. The bishop and his
chapter applied to the pope, Boniface VIII., who applied
to the king, Philip the Handsome, to put an end to
these scandalous disturbances. Philip the Handsome,
in his turn, applied to the Parliament of Paris, which,
after inquiry, “deprived the town of Laon of
every right of commune and college, under whatsoever
name.” The king did not like to execute
this decree in all its rigor. He granted the
burghers of Laon a charter which maintained them provisionally
in the enjoyment of their political rights, but with
this destructive clause: “Said commune and
said shrievalty shall be in force only so far as it
shall be our pleasure.” For nearly thirty
years, from Philip the Handsome to Philip of Valois,
the bishops and burghers of Laon were in litigation
before the crown of France, the former for the maintenance
of the commune of Laon in its precarious condition
and at the king’s good pleasure, the latter for
the recovery of its independent and durable character.
At last, in 1331, Philip of Valois, “considering
that the olden commune of Laon, by reason of certain
misdeeds and excesses, notorious, enormous, and detestable,
had been removed and put down forever by decree of
the court of our most clear lord and uncle, King Philip
the Handsome, confirmed and approved by our most dear