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1272.

CHAP. often plundered by bands of robbers, though no XII. civil wars at that time prevailed in the kingdom. In 1249, some years before the insurrection of the barons, two merchants of Brabant came to the king at Winchester, and told him that they had been spoiled of all their goods by certain robbers, whom they knew, because they saw their faces every day in his court; that like practices prevailed all over England, and travellers were continually exposed to the danger of being robbed, bound, wounded, and murdered; that these crimes escaped with impunity, because the ministers of justice themselves were in a confederacy with the robbers; and that they, for their part, instead of bringing matters to a fruitless trial by law, were willing, though merchants, to decide their cause with the robbers by arms and a duel. The king, provoked at these abuses, ordered a jury to be inclosed, and to try the robbers: The jury, though consisting of twelve men of property in Hampshire, were found to be also in a confederacy with the felons, and acquitted them. Henry, in a rage, committed the jury to prison, threatened them with severe punishment, and ordered a new jury to be inclosed, who, dreading the fate of their fellows, at last found a verdict against the criminals. Many of the king's own household were discovered to have participated in the guilt; and they said, for their excuse, that they received no wages from him, and were obliged to rob for a maintenance. Knights and esquires, says the dictum of Kenilworth, who were robbers, if they have no land, shall pay the half of their goods, and find sufficient security to keep henceforth the peace of the kingdom. Such were the manners of the times!

ONE can the less repine, during the prevalence of such manners, at the frauds and forgeries of the clergy; as it gives less disturbance to society, to

y M. Paris, p. 509.

take

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take men's money from them with their own con- CHA P. sent, though by deceits and lies, than to ravish it by open force and violence. During this reign the papal power was at its summit, and was even beginning insensibly to decline, by reason of the immeasurable avarice and extortions of the court of Rome, which disgusted the clergy as well as laity, in every kingdom of Europe. England itself, though sunk in the deepest abyss of ignorance and superstition, had seriously entertained thoughts of shaking off the papal yoke; and the Roman pontiff was obliged to think of new expedients for rivetting it faster upon the Christian world. For this purpose Gregory IX. published his decretals;" which are a collection of forgeries, favourable to the court of Rome, and consist of the supposed decrees of popes in the first centuries. But these forgeries are so gross, and confound so palpably all language, history, chronology, and antiquities; matters more stubborn than any speculative truths whatsoever; that even that church, which is not startled at the most monstrous contradictions and absurdities, has been obliged to abandon them to the critics. But in the dark period of the thirteenth century they passed for undisputed and authentic ; and men, entangled in the mazes of this false literature, joined to the philosophy, equally false, of the times, had nothing wherewithal to defend themselves, but some small remains of common sense, which passed for profaneness and impiety, and the indelible regard to self-interest, which, as it was the sole motive in the priests for framing these impostures, served also in some degree, to protect the laity against them.

ANOTHER expedient, devised by the church of Rome, in this period, for securing her power, was the institution of new religious orders, chiefly the Dominicans and Franciscans, who proceeded with

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CHA P. all the zeal and success that attend novelties; were better qualified to gain the populace than the old orders, now become rich and indolent; maintained a perpetual rivalship with each other in promoting their gainful superstitions; and acquired a great dominion over the minds, and consequently over the purses of men, by pretending_a, desire of poverty and a contempt for riches. The quarrels which arose between these orders, lying still under the control of the sovereign pontiff, never disturbed the peace of the church, and served only as a spur to their industry in promoting the common cause; and though the Dominicans lost some popularity by their denial of the immaculate conception, a point in which they unwarily engaged too far to be able to recede with honour, they counterbalanced this disadvantage by acquiring more solid establishments, by gaining the confidence of kings and princes, and by exercising the jurisdiction assigned them, of ultimate judges and punishers of heresy. Thus, the several orders of monks became a kind of regular troops or garrisons of the Romish church; and though the temporal interests of society, still more the cause of true piety, were hurt, by their various devices to captivate the populace, they proved the chief supports of that mighty fabric of superstition, and, till the revival of true learning, secured it from any dangerous invasion.

THE trial by ordeal was abolished in this reign by order of council: A faint mark of improvement in the age.b

HENRY granted a charter to the town of Newcastle, in which he gave the inhabitants a licence to dig coal. This is the first mention of coal in England.

C

WE learn from Madox, that this king gave at one time 100 shillings to master Henry, his

poet:

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poet: Also the same year he orders this poet ten C HA P. pounds. It appears from Selden, that in the 47th of this IT reign, a hundred and fifty temporal, and fifty spiritual barons were summoned to perform the service due by their tenures. In the 35th of the subsequent reign, eighty-six temporal barons, twenty bishops, and forty-eight abbots, were summoned to a parliament convened at Carlisle.

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CHAP.
XIII.

1272.

CHAP. XIII.

EDWARD I.

Civil administration of the king-Conquest of Wales -Affairs of Scotland-Competitors for the crown of Scotland-Reference to Edward-Homage of Scotland-Award of Edward in favour of Baliol -War with France-Digression concerning the constitution of parliament-War with Scotland

-Scotland subdued-War with France-Dissensions with the clergy—Arbitrary measures-Peace with France-Revolt of Scotland-That kingdom again subdued-again revolts-is again subduedRobert Bruce-Third revolt of Scotland-Death and character of the king-Miscellaneous transactions of this reign.

THE
HE English were as yet so little enured to
obedience under a regular government, that
the death of almost every king, since the Conquest,
had been attended with disorders; and the coun-
cil reflecting on the recent civil wars, and on the
animosities which naturally remain after these
great convulsions, had reason to apprehend dan-
gerous consequences from the absence of the son
and successor of Henry. They therefore hastened
to proclaim prince Edward, to swear allegiance to
him, and to summon the states of the kingdom, in
order to provide for the public peace in this im-
portant conjuncture. Walter Gifford archbishop

Rymer, vol. ii. p. 1. Walsing, p. 43. Trivet, p. 239.

of

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