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History of the English People, 
Volume II 
 
The Project Gutenberg eBook, History of the English People, Volume 
II (of 
8), by John Richard Green 
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Title: History of the English People, Volume II (of 8) The Charter, 
1216-1307; The Parliament, 1307-1400 
Author: John Richard Green 
 
Release Date: November 10, 2005 [eBook #17038] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
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HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH PEOPLE, VOLUME II 
by 
JOHN RICHARD GREEN, M.A. Honorary Fellow of Jesus College, 
Oxford 
THE CHARTER, 1216-1307 THE PARLIAMENT, 1307-1400 
 
_First Edition, Demy 8vo, November_ 1877; Reprinted December 1877, 
1881, 1885, 1890. _Eversley Edition,_ 1895. London MacMillan and 
Co. and New York 1895 
 
CONTENTS 
Volume II 
Book III--The Charter--1216-1307
Chapter II 
--Henry the Third--1216-1232 
Chapter III 
--The Barons' War--1232-1272 
Chapter IV 
--Edward the First--1272-1307 
Book IV--The Parliament--1307-1461 
Authorities for Book IV 
Chapter I 
--Edward II--1307-1327 
Chapter II 
--Edward the Third--1327-1347 
Chapter III 
--The Peasant Revolt--1347-1381 
Chapter IV 
--Richard the Second--1381-1400 
LIST OF MAPS 
Scotland in 1290 (v2-map-1.jpg) 
France at the Treaty of Bretigny (v2-map-2.jpg)
VOLUME II 
BOOK III THE CHARTER 1216-1307 
CHAPTER II 
HENRY THE THIRD 1216-1232 
 
[Sidenote: William Marshal] 
The death of John changed the whole face of English affairs. His son, 
Henry of Winchester, was but nine years old, and the pity which was 
stirred by the child's helplessness was aided by a sense of injustice in 
burthening him with the iniquity of his father. At his death John had 
driven from his side even the most loyal of his barons; but William 
Marshal had clung to him to the last, and with him was Gualo, the 
Legate of Innocent's successor, Honorius the Third. The position of 
Gualo as representative of the Papal overlord of the realm was of the 
highest importance, and his action showed the real attitude of Rome 
towards English freedom. The boy-king was hardly crowned at 
Gloucester when Legate and Earl issued in his name the very Charter 
against which his father had died fighting. Only the clauses which 
regulated taxation and the summoning of parliament were as yet 
declared to be suspended. The choice of William Marshal as "governor 
of King and kingdom" gave weight to this step; and its effect was seen 
when the contest was renewed in 1217. Lewis was at first successful in 
the eastern counties, but the political reaction was aided by jealousies 
which broke out between the English and French nobles in his force, 
and the first drew gradually away from him. So general was the 
defection that at the opening of summer William Marshal felt himself 
strong enough for a blow at his foes. Lewis himself was investing 
Dover, and a joint army of French and English barons under the Count 
of Perche and Robert Fitz-Walter was besieging Lincoln, when 
gathering troops rapidly from the royal castles the regent marched to 
the relief of the latter town. Cooped up in its narrow streets and
attacked at once by the Earl and the garrison, the barons fled in utter 
rout; the Count of Perche fell on the field, Robert Fitz-Walter was 
taken prisoner. Lewis at once retreated on London and called for aid 
from France. But a more terrible defeat crushed his remaining hopes. A 
small English fleet which set sail from Dover under Hubert de Burgh 
fell boldly on the reinforcements which were crossing under escort of 
Eustace the Monk, a well-known freebooter of the Channel. Some 
incidents of the fight light up for us the naval warfare of the time. From 
the decks of the English vessels bowmen poured their arrows into the 
crowded transports, others hurled quicklime into their enemies' faces, 
while the more active vessels crashed with their armed prows into the 
sides of the French ships. The skill of the mariners of the Cinque Ports 
turned the day against the larger forces of their opponents, and the fleet 
of Eustace was utterly destroyed. The    
    
		
	
	
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