The Leading Facts of English History eBook

David Henry Montgomery
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 652 pages of information about The Leading Facts of English History.

The Leading Facts of English History eBook

David Henry Montgomery
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 652 pages of information about The Leading Facts of English History.

The three great objects which the citizens of the towns sought were: 

(1) To get the right of paying their taxes directly to the King. (2) To elect their own magistrates. (3) To administer justice in their own courts in accordance with laws made by themselves.

The only way to gain these privileges was to pay for them.  Many of the towns were rich, and, if the King or lord needed money, they bargained with him for the favors they desired.  When the agreement was made, it was drawn up in Latin and stamped with the King’s seal (S154).  Then the citizens took it home in triumph and locked it up as the safeguard of their liberties, or at least of some part of them.

Thus, the people of Leicester, in the next reign, purchased from the Earl of Leicester, their feudal lord, the right to decide their own disputes.  For this they payed a yearly tax of threepence on every house having a gable on the main street.  These concessions may seem small, but they prepared the way for greater ones.

What was still more important, these charters educated the citizens of the day in a knowledge of self-government.  The tradesmen and shopkeepers of these towns did much to preserve free speech and equal justice.  Richard granted a large number of these town charters, and thus unintentionally made himself a benefactor to the nation.[1]

[1] Rise of Free Towns:  By 1216 the most advanced of the English towns had become to a very considerable extent self-governing.  See W. Stubbs’s “Constitutional History of England.”

184.  Failure of the Third Crusade.

The object of the Third Crusade (S182) was to drive the Mohammedans from Jerusalem.  In this it failed.  Richard got as near Jerusalem as the Mount of Olives.  When he had climbed to the top, he was told that he could have a full view of the place; but he covered his face with his mantle, saying, “Blessed Lord, let me not see thy holy city, since I may not deliver it from the hands of thine enemies!”

185.  Richard taken Prisoner; his Ransom (1194).

On his way home the King fell into the hands of the German Emperor, who held him captive.  His brother John (S177), who had remained in England, plotted with Philip of France to keep Richard in prison while he got possession of the throne.  It is not certainly known how the news of Richard’s captivity reached England.  One account relates that it was carried by Blondel, a minstrel who had accompanied the King to Palestine.  He, it is said, wandered through Germany in search of his master, singing a song, which he and Richard had composed together, at every castle he came to.  One day, as he was thus singing at the foot of a tower, he heard the well-known voice of the King take up the next verse in reply.

Finally, Richard regained his liberty (1194), but to do it he had to raise an enormous ransom.  Every Englishman, it was said, was obliged to give a fourth of his personal property, and the priests were forced to strip the churches of their jewels and silver plate.

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The Leading Facts of English History from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.