Book Read Free

Magna Carta

Page 16

by Dan Jones


  coins and coinage 14, 16, 44, 46, 47

  Coke, Sir Edward 108, 109, 110, 111

  Constitution of United States: 11–12; Fifth Amendment 112; Sixth Amendment 112

  Continental Congress (1774) 111

  Corfe Castle 55, 172

  Cornhill, William de, Bishop of Coventry 119, 150

  crusades 36;

  Fourth 31; Third 23–7

  Cumberland 96

  D

  Declaration of Independence, US 128, 129

  Dialogue of the Exchequer, The 15

  Dickinson, John 112, 113

  Domesday Book 30

  Dover 98, 156; Battle of (1217) 95

  E

  Edward I, King 106–7, 112

  Edward II, King 107

  Edward the Confessor, King 71, 95, 105

  Eleanor of Aquitaine 11, 21, 23, 27–8, 37, 38–9

  Exchequer, the 15–16, 19, 26n, 52, 55, 82

  F

  Falaise, Treaty of (1174) 56

  feudalism 15n

  FitzAlan, William 64, 82

  FitzGerald, Warin 119, 155

  FitzHerbert, Matthew 119, 156

  FitzHerbert, Peter 119, 155

  FitzHugh, John 119, 159

  FitzNigel (FitzNeal), Richard

  FitzRobert, John 15, 16

  FitzWalter, Robert 60–1, 73, 164, 166; seal of 61, 62–3

  Forz, William de, Count of Aumale 161–2

  Fotheringay 98

  Frederick I (Barbarossa), Emperor 23

  G

  Gaillard, Château 28, 29, 30, 37

  Gascony 36, 37, 107

  General Eyre (circuit judges) 17

  Gerald of Wales 8, 35

  Gervase of Canterbury 35–6

  Gloucester Abbey 101

  Gray, John de, Bishop of Norwich 49

  Gray, Walter de, Bishop of Worcester 119, 149

  Great Seal (of John) 74, 77, 79, 90

  Great War (1173–4) 20

  Guala Bicchieri 98, 101

  Gwenwynwyn ap Owain, Prince of Powys 56

  H

  Habeas Corpus 85

  Henry I 12, 71, 96n; charter of liberties 70–1, 74

  Henry II, King 11–21, 34; accession 12; character and reputation 11–12, 20–1; conflict with Thomas Becket, 12, 13, 19–20; cruelty of 20; financial regime 15–16; imposition of authority 12–14, 20; legal regime 16–17, 19

  Henry III, King 34, 99, 170; minority 101, 103; and reissues of Magna Carta 104–6; and Simon de Montfort 106

  Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor 27, 30

  Henry of London, Archbishop of Dublin 119, 148

  Holy Land / Outremer 11, 23, 27

  Hood, Robin 54, 55

  Hugh of Wells, Bishop of Lincoln 119, 149

  Human Rights Act, European 114

  Huntingfield, William de 171–2

  I

  Innocent III, Pope 8, 30, 51, 98; annulment of Magna Carta 94, 95; excommunication of John 52; Interdict on England 49–50, 52; rapprochement with John 61, 69

  Interdict (on England) 49–50, 52; raising of 61

  Ireland 11; John in 35, 49, 55, 56; see also Henry of London

  Isabel of Gloucester 36, 53, 162

  Isabella of Angoulême 36, 37, 38–9, 53

  J

  Jaffa 27, 156

  James I, King 108

  James II, King 111

  Jerusalem 23, 27

  Jews 52; debts to 74–5, 84, 103

  Jocelin of Wells, Bishop of Bath and Glastonbury 119, 149

  John, King 7–8, 34; assassination plot against 60–1; and baronial discontent 69–77; before king 29, 35; character and reputation 33; and civil war 95–8; death 99; effigy 100; failed invasion of France 64–7; financial impositions of 44, 47, 50, 52–3; loss of Normandy 37, 43; marriages 36; oppression of barons 53–6; peripatetic court 44; silver penny 46, 47; subjugation of British Isles 56–7; takes the cross 69; see also Arthur; Innocent III; Interdict; Magna Carta; Philip II

  John of Salisbury 49, 91

  K

  King John (play) 108

  L

  La Rochelle 66

  Lacy, John de, Constable of Chester 64, 168–9

  Lambeth, Treaty of (1217) 103, 154

  Langton, Stephen, Archbishop of Canterbury 49–50, 55, 61, 95, 147, 149, 150;

  and Magna Carta 73, 74, 75, 80–1, 83, 119

  Lanvallei, William de 168

  Laud, (Archbishop) William 110

  Le Goulet, Treaty of (1200) 35–6

  Leopold of Austria, Duke 27

  Limoges 30

  Limousin 31

  Lincoln, Battle of (1217) 101, 173

  Lincoln Cathedral Magna Carta 79

  Llywelyn ap Iorwerth (Llywelyn the Great) 56, 59, 96

  London, City of 73, 84, 95, 96, 98, 101, 168

  Longspée, William, Earl of Salisbury 66, 67, 98, 119, 151–2, 164

  Louis VII, King of France 14

  Louis ‘the Lion’, Prince (of France) 94, 95–6, 98, 101, 103

  Lusignan, Hugh de 36

  Luttrell Psalter 23, 24–5

  M

  Madison, James 112, 183

  Magna Carta 19, 20, 31, 43, 74–91, 86–7; annulment (1215) 93, 95; clauses analysed 80–9; and democracy 88, 115; four surviving copies (1215) 79; given by John 77; influence in USA 111–12; legacy and fame of 7–8, 101–17; monument to 112, 70, 71; naming of 103; negotiations for 72–7; printing 108; reissues (1216–1300) 101–7, 123, 137; sealing of 79; text in Latin and English 119–45; see also Articles of the Barons; Unknown Charter

  Magna Carta for the Web 116

  Magna Carta Holy Grail (Jay-Z album) 116

  Maine 37, 41

  Malet, William 169, 171

  Mandela, Nelson 115

  Mandeville, Geoffrey de, Earl of Essex and Gloucester 53, 64, 162

  Map, Walter 11

  Marshal, John 119, 158–9

  Marshal, William, 1st Earl of Pembroke 30, 42, 55, 73, 95, 101, 119, 151, 152–3

  Marshal, William, the Younger, 2nd Earl of Pembroke 148, 162, 165–7

  Matilda (daughter of Henry I) 12, 19

  Matilda (sister of John) 59

  Medway, River 7, 75, 84, 133

  Mirebeau, Battle of (1202) 37

  Montbegon, Roger de 73, 171

  Montfichet, Richard de 169, 172

  Montfort, Simon de, Earl of Leicester 102, 103, 106

  mort d’ancestor, writ of 19, 127

  Mowbray, William de 73, 167

  N

  Neville, Hugh de 119, 156

  Newark 99

  Newcastle 44

  Niger, Ralph 20

  Norham, Treaty of (1209) 56

  Norman Conquest (1066) 17, 21

  Normandy 11, 23, 29, 30, 60, 71, 106; French invasion (1199) 35–40; John’s loss of 8, 37, 41–3; reconquest attempted 64–5

  Northampton, Assize of (1176) 17

  North, the (of England) 44, 60, 64, 66, 69, 73, 93, 96, 98

  Northumberland 96

  novel disseizin, writ of 17, 127

  O

  Otto IV, Holy Roman Emperor 59, 66–7

  Outremer see Holy Land

  Oxford 23, 98

  P

  Pandulf Verraccio, Bishop of Norwich 61, 73, 119, 144, 150

  Paris 66

  Paris, Matthew 75; Chronica Majora 94, 95, 161, 173; Historia Anglorum 156, 157;

  map of Britain 42, 43

  Percy, Richard de 73, 169

  Petition of Right (1628) 110, 115

  Philip II ‘Augustus’, King of France 21, 23, 29, 30, 47, 61; conquest of Plantagenet Empire 36–7; dealings with John (1190s) 35–6; continental power of 41–2, 59; invasion attempt (1213) 61–2; war with John’s allies (1213–14)64–7, 69

  pipe rolls 26, 30

  Plantagenet, Geoffrey 21, 36

  Plantagenet, Henry (‘the Young King’) 21

  Plantagenet Empire 11, 14, 26, 31, 37, 42; John’s loss of 37, 41–3; reconquest attempted 64–7

 
; Poitiers 37

  Poitou 30, 37, 66

  Q

  Quincy, Saer de, Earl of Winchester 73, 162, 164, 166

  R

  Ralph of Coggeshall 8, 33, 69, 99n

  Red Book of the Exchequer, The 52

  Richard I (‘the Lionheart’), King 23–31, 24–5, 34; accession 21; capture and ransom 27–8; military prowess 23, 27, 29; revenue raising 26; and Third Crusade 27, 30; war with France 29–31

  Richard II, King 107

  right, writ of 19

  Roches, Peter des, Bishop of Winchester 119, 148–9, 156

  Rochester Castle 95, 172

  Roger of Howden 23, 26

  Roger of Wendover 52, 96, 99n, 101, 165

  Roppel, Robert de 119, 158

  Ros, Robert de 168

  Rotulus de valore terrarium Normannorum 42

  Rouen 23, 29, 37, 53, 59

  Runnymede 7, 70, 71; negotiations at 74–7, 77

  Runnymede (play) 54, 55

  S

  St Maur, (Brother) Aymeric de, Master of Knights Templar 119, 151

  Sainte-Mère-Église, William de, Bishop of London 119, 148

  Saladin 23, 24–5, 27

  Saladin Tithe 26

  Salisbury Cathedral Magna Carta 79

  Sandwich, Battle of (1217) 103

  Say, Geoffrey de 171

  Scotland 11, 49, 56, 96, 98, 106

  scutage 15, 16, 30, 44, 60, 64, 71, 74, 82, 125, 126

  Seine, River 29, 30, 37, 43

  Serlo the Mercer, Mayor of London 167–8

  Staines 71, 74, 145

  Stephen, King 12, 14

  Strafford, Earl of 110

  Swineshead Abbey 99

  T

  tally sticks 18, 19

  Templar, Knights 69

  Thames, River 7, 71, 74, 75, 132

  thirteenth (tax) 52

  Touraine 37, 41

  Trifels Castle 27

  U

  Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) 114

  Unknown Charter (c.1214/15) 70–2, 74, 75

  V

  Vere, Robert de, Earl of Oxford 73, 165

  Vermandois 41

  Vesci, Eustace de 60–1, 73, 98, 167

  Vexin 30

  W

  Wales 49, 53, 56, 59–60, 88, 96, 106, 140–1

  Wallingford 64, 135

  Walter, Hubert, Archbishop of Canterbury 27, 49

  Walter of Coventry 49, 96

  Warenne, William, Earl 73, 119, 154

  Wash, the 98–9, 99n

  Westminster Abbey 21, 29, 36, 105

  William I, King (the Conqueror) 12, 41, 96

  William I ‘the Lion’, King of Scots 56

  William of Newburgh 12, 20, 33

  Winchester, Treaty of (1153) 12

  Windsor 71, 73, 74, 145

  Worcester Cathedral 96, 97, 101

  Y

  York 44

  Z

  Zwin, River 61, 64

  Picture Credits

  Page: 13 British Library Cotton Claudius D. II, f. 73; 18 SSPL / Getty Images; 24–5 British Museum / Art Archive; 28 Manuel Cohen / Art Archive; 34 British Library Royal 14 C. VII, f. 9; 38–39 DeA Picture Library / Art Archive; 42, 45 British Library MS Royal 14C VII, f. 5v / Topfoto; 46 Neil Holmes/ Bridgeman Images; 51 DeA Picture Library / G. Nimatallah/ Art Archive; 54 Library of Congress;62–3 British Museum / Ealdgyth Wikimedia Commons; 65 Bibliothèque Municipale Castres / Gianni Dagli Orti / Art Archive; 70 Jarrold Publishing / Art Archive; 76 British Library Additional MS 4838 / Art Archive; 83 Granger Collection / Topfoto; 86–7 British Library Cotton MS Augustus ii. 106 / Wikipedia; 90 British Library / Art Archive; 94 MS 16, f. 50v (detail) Parker Library / Corpus Christi College Cambridge; 97 Topfoto; 102 NotFromUtrecht / Wikimedia Commons; 109 Corporation of London /HIP/ Tofoto; 113 Library of Congress; 123 JJ Harrison / Wikimedia Commons; 128 The National Archives and Records Administration; 137 Alex Wong/Getty Images; 152–3 Temple Church, London / Bridgeman Images; 157 British Library Royal 14 C. VII, f. 119 /AKG; 163 The Print Collector/ Getty Images; 170 British Library Cotton Vitellius A.XIII, f6; 173 MS 16, f. 55v (detail) Parker Library / Corpus Christi College Cambridge; 177 British Library Royal 16 G VI f. 362v; 183 Library of Congress.

  Acknowledgements

  The first essay I ever wrote about England’s medieval history was on the subject of King John and Magna Carta, and it has been both enjoyable and refreshing to return to the subject exactly a decade and a half later. My supervisor at Cambridge in 1999 was Dr Helen Castor – and Helen was kind enough to revisit old ground by reading the manuscript of this book. Now, as then, she offered many perceptive comments on my work. I am incredibly lucky to call her a colleague and a friend.

  The staff at The National Archives, The British Library, the London Library, Lincoln Cathedral and Salisbury Cathedral were all very helpful while I wrote this book. Professor Louise Wilkinson of Canterbury Christ Church University generously offered her thoughts on this book during its writing as did Dr Suzannah Lipscomb of New College of the Humanities. Julian Harrison at The British Library was kind enough to set me in the right direction in thinking about Magna Carta’s international legacy. Dr Nick Barratt at The National Archives gave me his advice on several matters of early Plantagenet history. Conversations with Professor David Carpenter of King’s College, London, and Dr Julie Barrau of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, changed the way I thought about particular aspects of this story. Marta Musso helped with several elements of the research. It should be obvious that none of these brilliant people are responsible for any errors of fact or judgement to be found here.

  I am grateful to everyone at Head of Zeus, especially to Anthony Cheetham for suggesting in the first place that this book might be written. Richard Milbank and Mark Hawkins-Dady brought the manuscript to publication with exceptional diligence and skill.

  Special thanks, as ever, to Walter Donohue, to my peerless agent, Georgina Capel, and to my girls: Jo, Violet and Ivy Jones. All of them, in their different ways, keep me going.

  Dan Jones, October 2014

  About this Book

  ON A SUMMER’S DAY IN 1215 a beleaguered English monarch met a group of disgruntled barons in a meadow by the river Thames named Runnymede. Beset by foreign crisis and domestic rebellion, King John was fast running out of options. On 15 June he reluctantly agreed to fix his regal seal to a document that would change the world.

  A milestone in the development of constitutional politics and the rule of law, the ‘Great Charter’ established an Englishman’s right to Habeas Corpus and set limits to the exercise of royal power. For the first time a group of subjects had forced an English king to agree to a document that limited his powers by law and protected their rights.

  Dan Jones’s elegant and authoritative narrative of the making and legacy of Magna Carta is amplified by profiles of the barons who secured it and a full text of the charter in both Latin and English.

  Reviews

  MAGNA CARTA

  ‘This beautifully illustrated book makes the eight centuries that now separate us from the Magna Carta slip away, and brings us into direct contact with the most important document in the history of human liberty.

  By putting the Magna Carta in its proper historical context, the brilliant young historian Dan Jones triumphantly answers the questions he poses in his Introduction, about how it came to be granted, what it meant at the time, and what it should mean to us today.’

  Andrew Roberts

  THE PLANTAGENETS

  ‘Stonking narrative history told with pace, wit and scholarship.’

  Observer

  ‘Dan Jones expertly weaves an enormous medieval tapestry.’

  Daily Telegraph

  ‘Colourful and engaging.’

  Sunday Times

  About the Author

  DAN JONES is a historian and journalist and a pioneer of the resurgence of interest in medieval history. He is the bestselling author of The Plantagenets and The Hollow Crown. He has p
resented television programmes for the BBC and Channel 5, including Britain’s Bloodiest Dynasty: The Plantagenets (2014) and Great British Castles (2015). He lives in London with his wife and children.

  You can find Dan on Twitter: @dgjones

  Also by this Author

  1215

  England in 1215. This was not just the year of Magna Carta and King John’s war with his barons, but a year of crusading and church reform, of foreign wars and dramatic sieges, of trade and treachery; a year in which London would be stormed by angry barons; England would be invaded by a French army; and a supposedly impregnable castle would be brought down with burning pig fat.

  But this was also a year in which life, for most people, just went on. Thus 1215 opens a window onto everyday life in the thirteenth century: home and church, love and marriage, education and agriculture, outlawry and adventure. It offers a vivid and authoritative portrait – from royal court to peasant wedding – of medieval life in the round, as well as an exhilarating and revelatory exploration of the big themes of politics, warfare, religion, feudalism, mercantilism, travel and the law in a transformative year in English history.

  1215 will be released in Summer 2015

  A Letter from the Publisher

  We hope you enjoyed this book. We are an independent publisher dedicated to discovering brilliant books, new authors and great storytelling. Please join us at www.headofzeus.com and become part of our community of book-lovers.

  We will keep you up to date with our latest books, author blogs, special previews, tempting offers, chances to win signed editions and much more.

  If you have any questions, feedback or just want to say hi, please drop us a line on hello@headofzeus.com

  @HoZ_Books

  HeadofZeusBooks

  The story starts here.

  First published in 2014 by Head of Zeus Ltd

  Copyright © Dan Jones 2014

  Author photograph: Greg Funnell

  Jacket illustration: Amber Anderson

  Background image of Magna Carta © The British Library Board, Cotton Augustus II.106

  The moral right of Dan Jones to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act of 1988.

  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, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

 

‹ Prev