Lions Led By Donkeys Podcast - Episode 374 - The English Peasants' Revolt: Part 1

Episode Date: August 4, 2025

LIVESHOW TICKETS FOR OCT 4TH IN GLASGOW AVAILABLE HERE: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/lions-led-by-donkeys-podcast-live-in-glasgow-4th-october-2025-tickets-1501072671769 LIVESTREAM TICKETS FOR OCT ...4TH HERE: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/livestream-lions-led-by-donkeys-podcast-live-in-glasgow-4th-october-2025-tickets-1532091008449 Part 1/3 Peasants in Essex and Kent rise up after multiple tax hikes and one too many laws are written regulating their hats, shoes, and diets. Soon, London would burn. Sources: Dan Jones. Summer of Blood: Peasants' Revolt Of 1381 Alastair Dunn. The Peasants' Revolt: England's Failed Revolution of 1381 Andrew Prescott. The Hand of God: The Suppression of the Peasants' Revolt John Hatcher. Plague, Population, and the English Economy, 1348-1530

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey everyone, we're doing another live show this time We are gonna be live October 4th at the Flying Duck in Glasgow, Scotland our first time in Scotland come get your tickets now. The links are gonna be in the show notes We hope to see you there like always there's gonna be show specific merch You probably won't be able to get anywhere else There's going to be show specific merch. You probably won't be able to get anywhere else. Possibly some stickers, maybe some patches, maybe some hats. Who knows?
Starting point is 00:00:30 Get some tickets. Come and find out. We'll see you there. Hey everyone, it's Joe. If you like what we do here on the show, consider supporting us on Patreon. Just $5 a month gets you access to our entire bonus episode catalog, as well as every regular episode one full week early. Access to all of our side series that are currently ongoing and our back catalog of
Starting point is 00:00:51 those as well. Gets you ebooks, audiobooks, first dibs on live show tickets and merchandise when they're available. And also gets you access to our Discord, which has turned into a lovely little community. So go to patreon.com slash lions led by donkeys and join the Legion Led by Donkeys podcast. I'm Joe and with me is Tom. We're peasants in the small Essex village of Pupton-upon-Dick. And we've spent our long days toiling in the fields of our lords, farming the things that Essex is most known for. Giant veneers, wildly overpriced cancer-causing sunbeds, and skinny jeans.
Starting point is 00:01:50 However, unfortunately, we cannot partake in the bounties of our labor. We're crushed with ever-increasing taxes so our lords and ladies can travel to the faraway land of Turkey to receive hair transplants and cut-rate plastic surgery. We yearn for freedom, equality, and a Mercedes on 20% interest of our own. How you doin buddy? What's happening girl, you alright? You see the badge on my stone aisle in Tunic? It is fucking class innit? Like, I got the kettle on, you ain't got a real fucking sundial on your wrist, mine's pure stone.
Starting point is 00:02:20 Something about this, like I understand I don't really fully conceptualise the United Kingdom or England. Yeah. How does watch end up as kettle I don't really know it is cockney Ryan it rhyming slang so I'm not really sure how it is but like all my friends who are like from Essex or Kent like all either like call it a kettle or like our big like stone island get the badge in people. I really like the idea is like have you seen my kettle and it's literally a tiny tea kettle. I can make tea wherever I go. Yeah it's a we're going to dive so deep into the pure English genome here. Like it's a the reason
Starting point is 00:03:01 why the diggers revolt in 1641 failed is because the Lords didn't want them to democratize the growth of a hair transplants and Turkey teeth on the land. Just a field of tiny veneers sticking out of the dirt. It ain't much but it's a living. Oh yeah. Since we are recording in the lovely UK together in person, I want to give you an update on a classic type of guy in the UK. We talked, uh, might've been last year, whoever someone will remember. And please like message on the discord of when we talked
Starting point is 00:03:39 about it. But do you remember the Somerset Gimp? I do. I vividly remember the Somerset Gimp. I feel like this is a Lines Lit by Robot story. Yes, 100%. So the Somerset Gimp, for those who don't listen to Lines Lit by Robots, is- And you should, support the show on Patreon. You can listen to our robot shenanigans. Yeah, you can listen to us talk about Neon Genesis Evangelion and the gym. Two great, rewarding pastimes. Exactly. But, uh, yeah, the Somerset was a
Starting point is 00:04:06 guy who got arrested and I think he got held on remand and charged. Um, he was wearing a game suit and like running around fields and Somerset and like slithering on the ground towards people. And it like, it, it, I think he got charged with like public menacing or something like that. Is it a menacing slither? Yes. Like it was a threatening slither? Yeah. And literally like part of the stipulation of the charge was that like for X amount of years he can't wear all black and slither on the ground, which I think is a violation
Starting point is 00:04:39 of his fundamental rights. You know, as a British person, you know, like I should be allowed to slither on the ground and all black. This is essentially, someone's going to accuse me of like Tom's turning into a reform party voter because they've taken away our right to slither on the ground. We support the reform slither party. They're even smaller. It's just him. But we have a new British cryptid, the we're all cat man. Okay. Just going off of the name, I'm going to say, is it like a cat woman suit for a man or are we talking full furry from the photos? It looks just like a kind of another game suit situation photos, like the big foot
Starting point is 00:05:19 picture where I'll show you like there is a high quality photo and, but this guy seems like way more way more dangerous because he's been trying to break into people's cars while they're in them and running around. Yeah, that doesn't seem good. But my favourite part aside from the fact that Britain doesn't have any cryptids, they just have costumed perverts, is that this guy is from the Wirral and all the British people know what I'm about to do, but the Wirral is on the other is from the we're all and like all the British people are gonna know what I'm about to do. But the world is on the other side of the Mersey from Liverpool. Okay. So the guy definitely talks like this. Why can't I slither on the ground dressed
Starting point is 00:05:55 as a cat? It's my full right. Britain hates scouses. I'm pretty sure it's written in the magnet card that he's allowed to do that. Yeah. I, you know, I saw the signing of the Magna Carta. I've seen the eye of horror and it, it, it enshrines my right to dress like a costumed pervert. Exactly. There's no freedoms in this country except dressing like a, I mean, the king dresses like one of the time. Big old sausage fingers. It was like, yeah, it was so, it was such a whiplash. The other day, I can't remember what it was, but like someone like mentioned the king and like King Charles is like so ineffectual and like such a nothing person that like no one even really cares that he is the king. I've noticed that nothing has been changed away from like queen Elizabeth on all the signage and everything. Like all the
Starting point is 00:06:45 signs will say like her majesty and stuff like that. So like even the States like either a we can't afford it or B we don't care. Yeah. It's like when they had to like put them on the bank notes and all this sort of stuff. I did a convention last weekend in Bristol, well at the time of recording and someone handed me a 50 pound note and I was like, who the fuck is on the £50 note? And then the person that was beside me was like, it's Alan Turing. And I'm like, what? They put Alan Turing on the money? Isn't that a motherfucker? Like the state that like drove you to death is now putting
Starting point is 00:07:17 you on the currency. The state who chemically castrated him to the point he was just like suicidal. Yeah. Well done, UK. Speaking of the UK. Speaking of being castrated by the state. Actually yes, but we'll get there. Today is the first part in a three part series, and the reason why we started off talking
Starting point is 00:07:39 about Essex and Kent is because we're talking about the English Peasants Revolt of 1381. Are you familiar with that at all? I am. I'm not familiar with the details of it. I do know kind of the surrounding stuff. So it's like 1341, the Black Death is spreading throughout Europe. So everyone once again, a common theme in these episodes is boobo maxing. Yeah, we're definitely boobo maxing for next three episodes.
Starting point is 00:08:06 This is, oh, is it in the middle or at the end of the hundred years war as well? It's kind of smack dab in the middle. Oh, yeah. Fair. And it's also one of those things, kind of like the Taiping rebellion, kind of like the boxer rebellion that gets kind of shoehorned in. People talk about like pseudo Marxist uprisings. Yes. I feel like this is the closest one to I will actually agree with that is the case. Because I remember when we talked about this before, I strongly disagree with that because you know, the other ones were very mystical and religious in nature.
Starting point is 00:08:37 And this one has a lot of religion involved as well, but it certainly has a lot more of like, equality being one of the number one complaints. Yeah. This is going to be like really in my wheelhouse of the fundamental, uh, I suppose cancer at the heart of British society is Protestantism. Is that like, we need to make Britain Catholic again? I mean, this is, this is the 1300s. So it's still Catholic. Yeah. You know, everything was great before Henry the eighth. Everybody knows the Catholics have wrote anything. No, we haven't. No, everything was great before Henry the eighth. Everybody knows the Catholics have wrote anything. No, we haven't. No, no. This is once again,
Starting point is 00:09:10 in my belief that Britain cannot be ran by the British. They cannot be trusted. So they should give Britain to Ireland. Really big Ireland. Yeah. Big Ireland. But in order to talk about the English peasants revolt, we have to talk about kind of the problems at the base of it, and to do that, we have to talk about the Black Death in England. Now, obviously it goes without saying that this is not an exhaustive history of the plague, rather only what you need to understand in the context of our story, so it all kind of makes sense.
Starting point is 00:09:40 So between 1348 and 1350, roughly one third of Europe's population got connected to God's Wi-Fi via blood and pus-filled boobos during the world's most cursed white boy summer. In some areas it was much, much worse than others, and it was considered pretty much an apocalyptic event in parts of England. And parts of Spain, for example, in the Mediterranean, the death toll is closer to like 80% of the population in some areas, where in England they lost like 70% of their strategic baz supply. Yeah, I hate when a series of plague-infected rats take out all my flat-nose geezers, all
Starting point is 00:10:20 my flat-n nose farmers. Just like a fucking massive guy with like three signet rings with a hoe turning potatoes in the field. Like, every anniversary there's a day where we have to toll the bell for all the bin men that were killed by the rats. Listen, Britain was such a poor country culturally before the invention of Stella Artois. Hey, as someone who likes Stella, you know, it's true. I'm fine with Stella. I have no strong hatred or love of it, though I did date a woman for a while who had this visceral hatred for it and she can never quite
Starting point is 00:10:57 place why, but at the same time I didn't debate it with her. Like I I get it. It's fine. She greatly hates the Belgian. Who doesn't? Who doesn't? Stella is Belgian as far as I can remember. Also comes in 660 mil cans, which is good. The Black Death knew no class or caste system. Everyone died. But of course, due to the ungodly squalor of your regular peasant's living situation, lice, which actually did cause the plague, rats, filth and waste being a normal part of everyday's life at the best of times meant that they were ripe to be taken out by the plague. As every nation or state as much as they existed back then is propped up by the people that do labor, this caused massive secondary effects down the line. Soon after waves of disease killed people who were working
Starting point is 00:11:45 the land, famine struck. But mostly thanks to crops still growing but not being harvested. Because the work force was dead. Yeah, I hate when you're in a country where there is a mass amount of crops being grown but for some reason you can't eat them. Never will happen again. Nope. Can't think of anything. I mean I mean, what, what else could you compare ice to other than the plague? Yes. Yes. They are rats. Um, they, they do hurt, uh, overwhelmingly laborers that prop up the States. They live in ice is a boo boo on society. That is true. We are not boo boo. Maxing that boo boo. No, no, no. Not all boo boos are the same though.
Starting point is 00:12:24 It should be lanced. This caused a rolling mess of economic collapses made worse by ongoing war, bad governance. And, uh, you know, this wasn't just in England. This is pretty much the world at large. And this left everything is little more of like a rotting whole of corpses by the time the whole thing passed. And this is just one wave of the plague really. And this is a couple of hundred years before Count Orlok would land in the UK. By the end of the plague, a lot of what you consider things thought to be set in stone, things, ideas and beliefs that society was based around were pretty much destroyed. Even if a lot of them would eventually be rebuilt over time. For starters, the relationship between landholders and people who were effectively
Starting point is 00:13:10 serfs. Because the serf is not normally a term used in England, though they were serfs. Fundamentally they were serfs. They worked seasonal jobs tilling the land for a certain section of the year for the local Lord and landowners. Yeah. Yeah. They're not allowed to not work. They're not allowed to negotiate prices. They, they reserves. It's kind of like working on this podcast. That's right. Don't you fucking forget it. Before the plague, there was more than enough peasants to go around. If someone didn't want to work for shit wages and get spit on by some inbred freak with a deformed jaw, there wasn't any choice in the matter for your average peasant. Not working was a crime.
Starting point is 00:13:53 Mm-hmm. And they were more than happy to prosecute you for said crime and simply bring in someone else. Do not become addicted to leisure time. This will become a problem later. And since the government was run by those same landholders, they obviously were not going to step in and help your regular blue collar Joe shit shoveler. I mean being a blue collar Joe shit shoveler has been throughout the vast majority of history a pretty raw deal, but particularly right now, because you're fucking
Starting point is 00:14:25 covered in boobos, everyone is starving, and there's just fields of wheat. Yeah, like, hey, you know, if you paid us like an extra three pig's teeth or whatever, I would more than willingly harvest this wheat as you vomit pus across his desk and he says, no thank you, get back and work in the fields like I said, he also vomits pus across the desk and he says, no thank you, get back and work in the fields. Like I said, he also pummits pus across the desk. Yeah, like it's really interesting. There's accounts of the spread of the Black Death across Europe that are contemporaneous from the time. There's not a huge amount of them because it is the medieval ages. And obviously the term the dark ages is not because it was particularly dark. It was because there's a lack of sources on the time.
Starting point is 00:15:05 No, the sun just never came out. Yeah. It was just like Netherlands in January. But like the descriptions of like the spread of black deaths throughout Europe are like horrifying. Like it is insane. Like thank God they didn't have Twitter like then because you would have had some like Lord saying like, Oh, the Chinese created the black death and escaped a lab in Wuhan. To be fair, they explained the Jews. Yes. True. Yeah. And the other Lords
Starting point is 00:15:30 would be wanting to go to Sturgis in like North Dakota and see Smash Mouth play. Why can't I go on my holiday to Marbella? I don't have it. No one I know has had the boo-boos. He's just like massive second head growing out of his neck. It's like I've always been that way. If you don't like it, fuck off. If you don't like it, there's the door. If you don't like my boobos, there's the door. You're prejudiced against boobos.
Starting point is 00:15:55 I'm starting a new freedom party for people who have boobos. It only has like a life cycle of four weeks. Yeah. Now, everyone involved in these previously established norms are mostly dead. Suddenly, there's a massive labor shortage. life cycle of four weeks. Now everyone involved in these previously established norms are mostly dead. Suddenly there's a massive labor shortage. Stories of the post-black death years in England make it sound like quite legitimately the end of humanity. Farms are abandoned, fields lay open and untended, livestock are just meandering about because everyone
Starting point is 00:16:21 involved in the labor of keeping them is dead. The previous system that kept labour in place and what amounted to be serfdom, people bound to the land, also broke under the pressure. Too many people were dead, too much land was left unattended and something had to give. And it did, at least for a little bit. Okay, so not to turn into anamorph into Karl Marx for a second, but there is a really good theory about how ecological structure affecting the relationship of labour and the economy, in that there are fundamentally unstoppable forces that exist outside of the power of the government or the state or labour's relationship to it, like natural disasters essentially like something like the black death or even like COVID that fundamentally
Starting point is 00:17:10 there is a before period and an after period and how that massively changes like the relationship of labor to produce and to the employer. And it's like at this time, like William Morris wrote a lot about it. It is like insane how much there is a before period and an after period in terms of like how the Black Death fundamentally changed the structure of like all of Europe. And that includes the British Isles. Yeah, like the English definitely put in a lot of work putting that cat back in the bag, so to speak, but not all the way. Yeah. so to speak, but not all the way. Yeah. As soon peasants were able to move around and realizing for the first time in their
Starting point is 00:17:47 lives that, you know, maybe we could collectively get together and do this thing called bargaining. I don't like the idea of collectivism or bargaining. You take the price I give you and you pay me or you fuck off and die. Like forming local peasants 681 Union out of Essex, you know Peasants began to demand higher wages because there was no one to replace them now These same peasants were also suddenly gifted the possibility of social Momentum for the first time for the same reason they could leave the life of Menial labor work in a different line of work, because the class of people who once
Starting point is 00:18:25 did those were wiped out. Yeah. So the social norms in place beforehand had to bend and in some cases broke. Hell, some people could just elect not to work, which was a freedom they never had before. And I should point out here, it's
Starting point is 00:18:40 still technically against the law, but the laws are becoming unenforceable. You know, as peasants learn for the first time, if they were on the good. But the laws are becoming unenforceable, you know, as peasants learn for the first time that they were on the good side of the concept of supply and demand. They demanded more money for their
Starting point is 00:18:51 work, leading other peasants to do the same thing. And suddenly, the labor costs in England, which had previously been, you know, free, began to cost more than they ever had before. Let me tell you about this theory.
Starting point is 00:19:02 It's called supply and demand. One graph goes up, the other goes down. It would be a real shame if that had before. Now because there were fewer people, all of whom had more money, and virtually the same number of livestock were still around, that also meant that meat and dairy entered a peasant's everyday diet for the first time. It was affordable and suddenly available to them all at the same time. Yeah. Also as well, because if you have like fundamental restructuring of the labor force, there's less people not only to tend to the crops and to the livestock, there's like
Starting point is 00:19:44 less people to slaughter them, less people to process them. And suddenly you are left with like an excess of produce that you can't necessarily have processed for sale outside of like local areas. They weren't doing much trade outside of local. Well, they were, but not a huge amount. So suddenly it's like, Oh, I'm eating rib eye for the first time in my life. I'm about to jizz in my pants. Imagine how crazy those first shits would have been. Pure milk and dairy. And you have fucking ye olde fucking Mike Israel saying, well, actually the beef is full of amino acids. It makes you better at working on the farm.
Starting point is 00:20:20 Yeah, that's right. Everybody's now jacked. Never mind people who are like, you know, anarcho primitives or fucking like paleo people like, no, we need to go back to this specific time. Just chugging whole milk and eating prime rib around the clock. That's just the liver king. Oh no, they've all been arrested in Austin, Texas. I mean, he does look like he is a giant boobos. He's got that healthy red colour to his skin. The Black Death middle class blossomed, and they bought new clothes, they ate new food,
Starting point is 00:20:53 and began to rebuild the world from the ashes or the pus that was left behind. Obviously, the upper classes and the nobility could not sit back and let this happen. They began to pass what was known as consumption laws, or laws regulating what a person of a specific class could eat or wear. This regulated everything to how pointy a peasant's shoes could be, who could wear fur, and who would be allowed to eat meat and dairy. And guess what, it ain't you. It's a small meat and dairy club and you're not in it.
Starting point is 00:21:21 Yeah, they would be astonished at how pointy Mexicans boots would become in like 100, 800 years. They would take one look at the pointy curved boots and be like, my lord, we must pass the law against this. It's like the, um, the law, uh, based on like your taxation on your house was based on how many windows you had. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Or there's a's, famously, Cairo has like, you only get a property tax if your building is complete. Okay. So people just stop building it right before it's done. Which is masterful.
Starting point is 00:21:54 I love how, you know, one continuous thing through history is just like, how do I pay the least amount of tax? Oh, we're gonna get there, don't worry. Okay, okay. What amounted to be the first real English labor law in 1349, called the Ordnance of Labor, was quickly passed. This froze any pay raise to peasants and set the acceptable pay level to what it had been prior to the plague.
Starting point is 00:22:18 It also made offering peasants more money to move farms and properties illegal. It fixed prices, reinforced the concept of not working being illegal, and gave a stern talking to the landholders who were willing to work around these laws for the benefit of their properties. I love living under the dominion of fucking King Tom Skinner. That's a joke that's completely lost on you, but every I hate Tom Skinner so much he is going to run for the reform party. Oh well, I mean, nice to know who's probably going to win the next election.
Starting point is 00:22:52 Ate the peasants, love labour, love grain, enough said, BUSH. The laws are met with a giant wet fart. For starters, it was a massive, all-encompassing law in a place that in general did not have a, all-encompassing law and a place that, in general, did not have a massive, all-encompassing administration to enforce it. And the peasants still held all of the cards and could, honestly, just ignore the law. If landholders or nobility didn't want their businesses and holdings to collapse, they would have no choice but to pay what people were asking. And if the Lord didn't pay what they're asking,
Starting point is 00:23:25 they would strike. They would just refuse to work for them. And for the ones who did refuse, the landholders, nobility, gentry, the peasants refused to work their lands, the result of which was a mass crashing out of landholder rent. Because remember, these people live on the land, so they have to pay them rent. If everybody refuses to live on work on their land, suddenly it's like an American mall that's been left behind. It's like, we guess we got to turn into a fucking skate park or something.
Starting point is 00:23:53 There's just loads of peasants wearing like, seosin tunics. You don't understand mom, I don't want to work on the farm. I heard there's this thing called a seven string lute. I'm gonna create ye olde jent. 12th century metal core. You know what's interesting is like people say like the big like New York City blackout is what helped cause like the expansion of hip hop. I wonder what would cause like, like
Starting point is 00:24:24 you know, everybody's striking and leaving these properties hip hop. I wonder what would cause like, like, you know, everybody's striking and, and leaving these properties to collapse. I wonder what like sick loot bands could have been formed if people took all of the lutes or I assume drums also existed. They would have just, Oh no, they would have just invented Mumford and sons. No, I was going to say they would have invented dragon force, loot dragon. Dragon Force? Loot Dragon Force?
Starting point is 00:24:42 To the fire of flames, we will steal all the grain. It's Dragon Force but they actually legitimately believe in dragons. I mean, no. Between the royal court and the manor courts, those being what amounted to be private courts of the law held in manors of the nobility on the same land people were working, nearly 70% of all criminal cases suddenly involved labor disputes as the upper class of England tried desperately to claw back their levers of control and power. All of this from taking their pointy shoes to seemingly and rapidly taping together
Starting point is 00:25:16 serfdom 2.0 set the English peasantry into a rage. They began to organize. They still refused to work, as the laws demanded, and they did everything they could to get one over on the king and the asshole lords that worked for him. In the House of Commons, which at the time was largely made up of wealthy gentry, thankfully that has changed. Right? Right? Fuck. They warned that peasants were arming themselves and threatening to kill people, who in effect became scabs and went to work for the Lords who refused to raise their wages. Which is remember, this is all against the law. And it's not like England had cops back then.
Starting point is 00:25:54 Not really. They had the local sheriff and the bailiffs, but there'd be like a handful of dudes. If a whole village said fuck you, there was literally nothing they could do. Bring it back. Bring it back. Abolish the police. Bring back barons and Lords. We already have fucking. We're in the UK. That's already a thing. And they're doing a pretty good job of abolishing
Starting point is 00:26:12 the police just because they hate them. That is like the thing that I find so insane about like British, like British right-wing politics because like the polity in like most other countries, like the right wing politics. The polity in most other countries, the right wing venerates the army, venerates the state, venerates the military. But here they just hate it. They want to replace the entire British security state with one guy who works for G4S. Yeah, the G4S army. I mean, we're probably closer than that than we think, but British people hate the army because they think it kind of is a waste of money. They also hate the police because the police are both simultaneously woke, but also a waste of money. It's like
Starting point is 00:26:58 literally yesterday, a second class post is not going to be delivered on a Saturday anymore. And I'm like, this is just a thing that has existed since, you know, basically the foundation of like Royal Mail and now it's just like, Oh, this is ridiculous and too expensive. British people are just the tightest cunts on the planet. I'm sorry. The one guy who works for G4S can't deliver your mail on Saturday anymore. It's the one guy from G4S is doing all of the civil service jobs. I mean, that's essentially what they were doing then. The local bailiff who also has a G4S vest on.
Starting point is 00:27:31 Then hilariously came a wave of lawsuits. Now technically peasants had been given a fair amount of rights in comparison to what they had been before. As a result of the Magna Carta, this was reinforced by what I can only be described as the 1300s version of an ambulance-chasing lawyer mixed with quite possibly the world's first sovereign citizens. Okay. Lawyers would go to an area, villages, towns, whatever, that would be up against the Lord, somewhat striking, whatever, and they would tell them, according to the Doomsday Book, which is it actually name we'll get into in a bit. It was a survey done by William the conqueror about a 300 or so years before and according to that this village and all the lands around it did not belong to any lord therefore it's permanently free and most importantly so are you. Hell fucking yeah brother. Listen to
Starting point is 00:28:24 your brother land you're living on is free and you are free! Cut as much grain as you want, brother! This is the exact same thing that's happening in motel rooms across Idaho. I believe that the people on the land in 1341 should be free and that the lords are being run by ye old wind energy Jew." And that's probably not too far from what they actually believe. And this is mostly a thing in sovereign citizenship in the United States, it's probably dripping in the can at this point because we contaminate everything we touch, but it's mostly based around custody battles, y'know?
Starting point is 00:29:04 Back then it had to do with farms. I am being oppressed by family court. Yes. Yes. I must pay my tithe to the family court. The family court night coming in to slaughter the single fathers. There's the sheriff of Nottingham coming to catch you and you're like, no, I am redistributing all this wealth to all of the local strippers in my area. They need it more than my child. Who's to argue with that? My dad did the same thing. Stealing from the bridge your ex-wife and child and giving to the poor these wonderful, wonderful exotic dancers.
Starting point is 00:29:43 The day shift strippers down the street. Yeah. Small side note here, the Doomsday book was real, and it wasn't named the Doomsday book because it was thought to contain like the end times. In middle English, and just generally, it meant a final judgment of a thing. Yeah. With doom meaning, in essence, a law or a judgment instead of, you know, doom. The different kind of doom. Yeah. The boring law doom. I'm not going to say this doesn't rule English sovereign
Starting point is 00:30:10 citizenship in the 1300s, but the lawyers were absolutely fucking these people over. Yeah. So what would happen is the lawyers could read and write. Most of the peasants, of course, could not write. So they would come in, they would be like, look, this is all going to happen. You just have to pay me. And now they have money. Right. Because they're getting some sick extra fucking pence or whatever. So they pay the lawyer. He files the paperwork with the crown and then promptly fucks off before the crown gets back to like kicking these peasants in the face for wasting their time. Now, the one of the reasons why the crown hated these guys is obviously
Starting point is 00:30:45 nobody was printing anything back then, legal documents all had to be handwritten. So the lawsuits would always include a request for a written copy of the entire Doomsday book. And if you would like to get a written copy of a document from the Crown Court, why don't you come see us live in Glasgow on the 3rd of October in the Flying Duck where we will probably end up being a prescribed group, much like Palestine Action and an e-cap. Tickets are in the description of this episode. Really good organic plug there. Nailed it.
Starting point is 00:31:18 We're so good. This is why advertisers are kicking down our door. Now, after the Doomsday book would be handwritten, it would need to be sealed by the King officially to be considered a legal document and to evaluate the claims made by William the Conqueror. Virtually none of these requests and these lawyers made dozens, if not hundreds of them across England, were filled because the government had no idea how to fulfill all of them because they've never had to do this before. Yeah. But it did kind of start to scare the shit out of them because the way the ruling class is looking at it, the nobility, the gentry, whatever, like they're learning how to navigate law and politics. These people aren't meant to read. Exactly. Let alone know about the law. You're supposed to be digging up like the veneer seeds that we planted. You're
Starting point is 00:32:09 not supposed to be requesting paperwork. Shut the fuck up. Listen, there are lords in Kent and Essex who need new teeth. They cannot effectively eat turkey legs anymore. And just taking one bite of a turkey leg with your new turkey teeth and your whole mouth comes out. Your face collapses like a neutron star. So with the economy shitting itself and dying, and people just getting over literally shitting themselves and dying, people were kind of falling for the English peasantry's version of sovereign citizenship. There was also one more thing about the land that was going to send everyone over the deep
Starting point is 00:32:41 end. A tax increase. Because we have to talk about the Hundred Years War. Ah yes, this is something that Britain loves to do, is fight an unwinnable war and incur massive amounts of tax debt. Something that they won't repeat for hundreds and hundreds of years and probably are going to try and do very very soon. In the defence of the English Crown back then, it was at least closer. It was in France.
Starting point is 00:33:07 Luckily, I am one, not a British citizen, two, too old, and three, neurodivergent enough that I cannot be conscripted. That's what you think, motherfucker. Yeah, I mean, look, you know, you want someone who has autism in some sort of engineering department to invent the gun that kills better? I mean that is just the entire employee base of Raytheon and Lockheed Martin. It's gonna be a mass conscription of G4S guys, that's all it's gonna be. Starting in 1336, England and France, eventually others, would be stuck in a 116 year long
Starting point is 00:33:42 war that would, it wasn't 116 years straight on again and off again, you know, it's like Ross and Rachel. Exactly. And in the end, uh, they both died like Ross and Rachel. Most people don't know this is Ross and Rachel actually died in nine 11. Yeah. It was, it was all just actually a dream that was happening in Joey's head. Yeah. What there was actually a TV show. I can't remember what the name of it is where it's like it ran for seasons and seasons. And then at the very end of it was like, Oh, this was all imagined inside the kid's head. I know what you're thinking of, but I can't remember the name either. And everybody listening right now is so mad at us. I don't care. Look
Starting point is 00:34:16 at it. It's like this is like last, you know, JJ Abrams has a lot to answer for. I mean, this is, um, this is also way, this show we were talking about way before Lost. Look, don't even get me fucking started, because I'm worried. Have you seen Severance? I've seen season 1. Severance is 100% going the way Lost did. They don't know what the fuck they're getting at anymore. That's my take on that fucking show because I'm sure that's what you turned in for. Listen they tune in for the riffs, the history is ancillary. In the very beginning, King Edward III of England was a young man and his mind had yet
Starting point is 00:34:50 to be turned to gravy by advancing age. During that time shit was going great for England and the war. This was the era of the Black Prince, which we've talked about before, had the funniest and most painful death of dysentery I think we've ever covered. England won victory after victory and soon their land holdings began to spread further into what is considered France. Not that I recognize that. It's right France, that's right. By the 1360s, France was muscled into a treaty, the French king was captured and things were still going pretty great for England. Obviously the monetary cause of the war was insanely high, deploying men that far from home, supplying them, paying them, all that stuff. But the cost was handled
Starting point is 00:35:29 somewhat by the constant stream of sweet sweet booty making it into royal coffers. Unfortunately the king they captured, John, died while in English captivity, opening the throne to Charles V, who was actually very good at his job. The war turned against England, the booty dried up, shame. The cost of the war increased and as a result so did taxes on the English to make up for their shortfalls in the war financing. If only you know, buy no pay later had exist. Well, it kind of did exist then, but like not in the form of like clarna or after pay. Clarnaing my entire war. I mean look, we are two years away from the British
Starting point is 00:36:07 and America just doing that so they can nuke Iran. I do look forward to like fighter jets selling sponsor space like like an English football jersey. Yeah. Or like a European hockey jerseys where they're just like covered in sponsorships. And somehow every company is still funded by the Saudis. Yeah, exactly. This airstrike brought to you by the Saudi Sovereign Wealth Fund? I mean that is just Yemen. Thank you so much, Marseille au Cichon. The first rounds of taxation fell on the gentry and the nobility, which makes sense.
Starting point is 00:36:38 They are the ones with money in the first place, and they should be the ones that are paying. This'll be the last time any sentence I say makes sense. But after years of this, they got sick of paying. In 1377, the House of Commons proposed something called a poll tax, which in America means something very different. In American history, a poll tax is paying to vote and was used to disenfranchise black voters. In this case, a poll tax is a flat tax. Four pence flat across the board for everyone over the age of 14.
Starting point is 00:37:05 Famously will not cause any riots about like fucking 20 years ago. Obviously a flat tax is sometimes championed by various different political ideologies as being more fair, but this overwhelmingly hurts those with less money, as 4 pence is a lot more to people who only have say 10 than those with thousands. Fucking obviously that is how math works. I can't believe people still think this is a good idea in the year 2025 where we're sitting. I mean, look, also to correct myself to poll tax rise where in 1990 Margaret Thatcher famously the descendants of Margaret Thatcher's ideology are trying to maybe do it again. So fun.
Starting point is 00:37:46 So we have medieval lords essentially doing like a paleo thatcherism. Oh God. Weirdly, they also hated Argentina. Yeah. I love that Margaret Thatcher's in hell just like roasting and being crushed into being like a neoliberal conservative ammonite. This was the first time taxation in England would have been universal and most importantly it was insanely high for your average English
Starting point is 00:38:14 person. Four pence was roughly equivalent to three days of work at the current rate locked in at the labor laws. Remember they can't make any more than the law says they can, so the four pence price is really kicking them in the dick. Obviously, this is all wins for the gentry and above. The main weight of the tax would be spread out amongst the poorest of the country, while they in comparison paid far, far less than they had in the past. Which is what a flat tax is, in case people listening do not know. The law passed without any hurdles, and then a few months after the law went to the books, King Edward, long senile and half dead, finally died an infant on the throne and just follow it. Follow its cries and squeals like it's the god emperor of 40 K the king god boy says we only just shit ourselves and take a nap. I mean I can get behind it. It's better
Starting point is 00:39:13 than any other option we currently have. I mean like at this time people were shitting themselves and taking a permanent nap quite regularly. Damn that must be very restful. Now the government was largely controlled by a council of uncles. Oh yes! We're going Unc Mode? It's Uncocracy. Oh, that's an episode name. We got random Unc shooting poison?
Starting point is 00:39:36 It's great. All while the government burned through the Poltacks, and then as a result was forced to pawn off royal treasures to afford the ongoing war, which is very funny to think about. While the government was bankrupted, the English coast was under attack, and soon parliament was spending most of its time screaming at one another and fighting. They passed more and more taxes and it just didn't matter. They were still broke as shit and the war was going worse and worse. The main uncle, John of Gaunt, the Duke of Lancaster, and
Starting point is 00:40:04 the Regent, who had been mostly running the government, became a universally hated figure. He pissed off the London City gentry through mismanagement, he pissed off the peasants through well, everything, and he pissed off the clergy via his support for John Wycliffe, not Wycliffe Jean. A music reference, I did it. I mean, they didn't even know Haiti existed I did it. I mean- I did it! They didn't even know Haiti existed at this stage.
Starting point is 00:40:28 Thank God for that. Yeah. A man who advocated for church reform in a way that like the concept of the church could be a landlord and accumulate wealth, and he thought that was heretical. And John of Gond thought that was a great idea. And mostly because he just hated the wealth of the church and he wanted it for the crown. He didn't actually have any theocratic debates. in sliding off my bones taxing me softly of my coin come see us live in Scotland Wyclef surprise surprise was thought to be a dangerous heretic that needed to be suppressed in a time when England was Catholic and the laws against heresy
Starting point is 00:41:20 were very solidly on the books and And 1377, when he caught charges in London, John of Gaunt personally got involved. However, this turned into a popular issue at large due to the fact that, since everyone hated Gaunt, the bishop in charge of the trial came out as being on the side of the people at large in a mob form that chased John of Gaunt out of his own home in London. And mind you, this is a palace that is almost as big as where the king lives. And there's a reason why the palace doesn't exist anymore in London, but we'll get there. Yeah, they sent in a couple of crackheads, they like stripped all the... Well actually...
Starting point is 00:41:55 Actually, yes, but hold that thought. Oh, for fuck's sake. Remember, this guy is still in charge of the government. Things didn't get much better when a short time later, a knight murdered two people in the middle of a church service, and John of Gaunt came to his defense arguing largely that those two motherfuckers deserved it. They weren't singing from the same hymn sheet you know and at that time it was a punishable by death. Yeah you were supposed to be a falsetto you fucked it up you gotta die
Starting point is 00:42:21 now. This can be simply chalked up to the Duke really wanting to get in a pissing match with the church for really over anything and using his personal authority as the regent. And he managed to strike out virtually every time which is truly incredible for a guy with this much power. He was just posting L after L after L and somehow remaining in power, though again chased out of his own home. And each time ending with more and more people hating him than ever before. Just as another example, Gantt was so obsessed with trying to force his authority on people to the detriment of his own continued governance that he fired London's head grocer, which was a very important position in London at the time, and he had the fishmongers guild, who was also
Starting point is 00:42:59 the war treasurer, both of whom were personally bankrolling elements of the war in France, independent of the tax stream, freeing up government-owned resources. So if a course is a fuck you to gaunt, they stop paying out of their pockets, leading to a cratering of money available for the war. So angered by the accumulated wealth and power of the London gentry that he began to tell ambassadors to London that they would need to move their trading houses to a different town. Yeah. All of the like super wealthy, like London, like aristocracy and elite was like, raw. That's crazy. My dad's a farmer in Surrey. It was like, no, your dad owns the
Starting point is 00:43:38 farm in Surrey. He owns all the people. We have a rural property. Yeah. And on it is part three BMWs and you have a servant. He told everyone that they would have to move their trading houses to Southampton, just to spite the Londoners who hated him. Which again, he's just shooting his own capital in the knees to piss off the people that he hates. When the ambassador of Genoa agreed to this, he got stabbed to death on his own front doorstep. This is like, oh, is it a fucking Lori Lightfoot is the mayor of Chicago?
Starting point is 00:44:10 I think she still is. Yeah, and she's just like universally hated. Yeah. Worried about what would happen next, instead of trying to solve the crime of an ambassador being stabbed to death, Gaunt framed two poor fuckers that he had tortured in a basement until they blamed his two political opponents, the fishmonger union and the grocers union and paid them to do it. Look on critical sport for the, uh, the fishmonger union and grocers union, we used to be a proper country, proper jobs, had proper unions.
Starting point is 00:44:40 I really liked the idea that the ambassador to Genoa got got by a fishmonger and you could tell because he had been just scaled. Yeah. It's like people used to be fishmongers. Now people are like, Oh, I'm like making up an Instagram post on Canva. It's like, no, we need fishmongers. We need more fishmongers. Yes. People are getting stupider because we're not getting enough omega three. This is due to a lack of fishmongers. Yep, that's right. Universal basic mongers. When I get elected for the Reform Party, it is going to be on a platform of we need more
Starting point is 00:45:12 fishmongers and we need more grocers. That's right. We need diversity in the boss man in the corner shop. Unionise the off-license guys. I mean, look, the most important person in any community in London is the boss man who runs the corner shop because they see you at your best, at your worst. My local one sells me single cigarettes when I'm drunk at night coming home from the pub. My experience with the off-license guy is no matter how bad I look stumbling in there no matter what hour of the day, he always gives me the same dead glass-eyed stare. And that's fine. I'm not being judged. I know he doesn't give
Starting point is 00:45:47 a fuck. I could drop down on the floor. He would just kick me outside. I actually, a couple of weeks ago, it was really funny. I was like going on a night out and I stopped in the corner shop cause I just wanted to get a bottle of water for the train cause it was fucking really hot. And I hadn't seen the, the boss man who was the boss of boss man or boss men of my local shop for like maybe two weeks. And he had just gotten like a fresh hair transplant. And I was just like talking to him about it and I was like, oh, when she gets on, he's
Starting point is 00:46:14 like, oh, I got done two weeks ago. He had like the bandage around his head and everything. It was like chatting. And then things maybe like six or seven hours later, I get back blasted drunk and he was like, oh goodnight and I was like, yeah man it was really fun and he was like, do you want another bottle of water? And I was like, that's actually a good idea. Hell yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:34 I could go on about John of Gaunt, he's a fucking idiot who really only guards on personal grievance which thankfully is not a thing that happens anymore. So in 1380 Parliament convenes once again, though this time in North Hampton instead of London due to God probably worried about getting lynched. At the forefront of the meeting is they needed to come up with another tax, this time due to bad loans, increasing costs of soldiers and even worse war reality. The amount they would need to tax is eight times higher than it had been the year before. So again, they fell back on the idea of a poll tax, but obviously since they needed 8 times
Starting point is 00:47:07 more money, they couldn't simply ask for 4 pence. The currency used back then was known as a groat, which sounds like somehow monetizing the area between your asshole and ballsack. That's what I'm going to call the tokens on my Twitch livestream. It's like, Oh, thank you for the growth. Yeah. Obviously the growth. God damn donated a hundred growths. Thank you. Do you want to see us live in Scotland? Pay your growths.
Starting point is 00:47:34 It will only cost you 20 growths. That's right. That one growth was roughly four pence. This time the poll tax would be five growths, which if you, if you're keeping trick at home, it's a lot of groats. Yeah, and it was really weird that at this time they called like a coin purse a scrow. So I was like, let me get my groats out of my scrow.
Starting point is 00:47:53 It's roughly a week's worth of wages per adult per household. Yes. There's a little argument over this new tax and it's quickly passed. Soon afterwards, a small army of tax collectors are sent across the country to take the taxes owed by each community, which was normal for the day. It would have been collected by the local governments first and kept, you know, they keep a running
Starting point is 00:48:13 tally of who paid and who hadn't, at which point they submit to the Crown. Yeah. To direct all this, Gaunt appointed Sir Robert Hales. Hales did a quick audit of the tax receipts. He found, with each poll tax, the taxable population had a sudden and dramatic drop off. For example, in Essex, between the last tax and the new one,81, South East England had seemingly lost half of its population. Now, this would have made sense during the era of the Black Death, because that did legitimately happen.
Starting point is 00:49:10 But that era is over. So he came to the conclusion this could only be massive, wide scale industrial tax fraud and that a single barber shop had been opened. Fokken hell yeah. Uncritical support for tax fraud. Oh yeah, I don't think the peasants are wrong at all in doing this. I will say the way they came to do this is kind of fucked up but they worked on the system that they were given. The peasants had outsmarted the tax system with one simple trick. They simply would not report having any unmarried women in the homes over the age of 14. This was easy to do as they are not
Starting point is 00:49:42 kept on any official role until they turned a taxable age so they simply never report them as existing unless they got married because Then they were someone else's problem. Yeah, if a woman got widowed they would fall off the rules again The reasoning for this was both deeply fucked and simultaneously making perfect sense Mm-hmm These women were not paid for work that they normally did because their work normally centered on domestic duties Thanks to social norms, but the household would still have to pay tax on them So they would just stop reporting them. Okay, they technically faked all of them die
Starting point is 00:50:20 This happened all across England and virtually every village in every town. So this isn't like a collaborative effort. They all came to the same conclusion at the same time. I must have been so hard to be a wife guy at this time. It's like your all your growths are gone. All your wives are gone. You got to pay for your wife existing in your home. Yeah. This meant when Hale did collect taxes, there was a massive shortfall, which is not a good thing when you happen to be the treasurer of a bankrupt country. So, Hales, with permission from Gaunt, launched a royal inquisition to figure out just how many people had been tax-frauded out of existence.
Starting point is 00:50:54 Royal commissions are made and dispatched onto the countryside with a mission to uncover the depth of the fraud and, most importantly, force people to pay back what they'd been skipping out on, on the spot, with either cash, them groats, or shit they had laying around the house. Hey boy, let me see them groats. Run them groats, motherfucker. The commissions had the power to imprison anyone who got in their way or were found to be committing fraud.
Starting point is 00:51:19 As you can imagine, they use these powers very, very freely. To make all of this easier, each government commission was also sent nights in case anybody wanted to get a little bit froggy about them grotes being taken away These commissions pissed people off immediately they went to people's homes to count people and There are rumors that in a lot of ways if they found a woman who looked like she was under 14 They would make them strip naked to prove she was under 14 and therefore untaxable. So they were like the nonce patrol. Yeah. It's just weird guys on Twitter just saying like, oh, it's okay. She's over 14.
Starting point is 00:51:50 It's a completely different thing. Yeah. Oh God. And you can imagine like because of social norms back then, how that's even more fucked up because of like decency and whatever. I mean, this is always fucked up, but like to, to someone have this happen to their family back up, that's like a blood feud. Yep. There's Albanians in the mountains who would start a generational war for less. The second an Englishman's daughter gets inspected by the local knight, he just like a black
Starting point is 00:52:17 eagle appears behind him. He hates Serbs. On top of being the Royal Non's commission, they were also just stealing from people because as one of their stated goals is to make up for a taxation shortfall, no single commission wanted to be the one that didn't bring anything back. So they just kind of treated the entire English countryside as one giant loot drop. And most importantly, these commissioners had to be paid, right? Yes.
Starting point is 00:52:43 Well, they were paid by if they brought back a surplus of money that covered the shortfall. So they just turned into like locusts on the countryside. And the people that were doing this were all known people in the area in which they were operating. And since the main place we're gonna be talking about in the beginning here is Essex, there the dickheads in charge of the royal commission
Starting point is 00:53:03 were three people that had to be the most hated men in the area before this even happened. That's Sir John de Gildesborough, Sir John de Brampton, and the Sheriff of Essex, Sir John Sewell. For people who maybe don't know, a sheriff in this context was technically in charge of keeping the peace, but most of his job was collecting taxes and mustering men for the military as well. Yeah. At this time, like a sheriff is a combination of like several different roles of essentially
Starting point is 00:53:31 civil administration. So it's like taxation collection, administering of the law, recruitment for what is essentially conscription into the army, but also acting as a kind of public official on behalf of the government. So it's kind of like, you know, you're wearing many hats, probably actually a lot of them were physically wearing many hats. Yeah. He's the G4S guy of his day. He's just too much. Get the stone all in tunic in. I'm older from the blue. Okay. Later. Look at my D squared a buckle hat is the squared brand that they would like? That makes sense because I see it and I think it looks terrible.
Starting point is 00:54:09 Yeah, it's D squared has kind of fallen off. I remember like six years ago it was like super popular with like the sort of people that we're joking about. But it's kind of fall now they're just wearing like D squared t-shirts rather than the D squared hat, which was the thing because people bought the hat because it was the cheapest thing to buy from d-squared. Sure. Your average person of the day already had a brutally hard life and depending on how old they were they had just survived what amounted to be an extinction level event. Then after all of that after a lifetime of government largely not existing to them it kept popping up to tell them they
Starting point is 00:54:41 couldn't make a certain amount of money where they kind of pointed shoes shoes that they wanted, and came around year after year after year to steal their money. Then, when they all but kicked open the door to their waddle and drop shithole and robbed them for back taxes they may or may not have owed, the authorities in the area did that thing that authorities all eventually do. They overplayed their hand. Once upon a time, the peasants feared these men and rightfully so. Even stepping out of line a little bit left them and their families liable to be punished in horrible, horrible ways. But now that fear had turned to pure undying hatred. And soon members of the landholders and the gentry class began to hear whispers about the commoners plotting their deaths. So they dispatched a peace commission, chaired by the exact same men as the royal
Starting point is 00:55:24 Inquisition. The same guys who had just robbed the fuck out of them and made their daughter stripped naked. The Essex Commission was set up in Brentwood and ordered each town and village in Essex to send a representative to voice their concerns to them. Brentwood is a nice area. Alright, that's good. The commission was met with a wave of hatred and one representative from the town of Fobbing, a man named Thomas Baker, accused them of taking advantage of the pure, sweet boy king. The Commission fired back, accusing Baker and his town of being tax cheats who owed
Starting point is 00:55:56 the crowd untold amounts of money. Baker helpfully pointed out that they had already taken more money from him and his town a few months before. Baker even accused them, a group of of gentry men for using the Peace Commission as an excuse to levy another tax and steal from them. And as funny as that is to us, it's unheard of for a peasant like Baker to talk to these men that way. And they were solidly clutching pearls.
Starting point is 00:56:19 The commission threatened him with their accompanying contingent of knights, but there was only two of them. Normally, this would have been more than enough, but again, Baker and his people had been pushed too fucking far, because there was hundreds of them there that had been called to the Commission, and they told the Commission to fuck off. They're not getting another cent. There are two versions of events as to why Baker suddenly found himself squaring off with, almost certainly, at this point, a certain death sentence for a man like him.
Starting point is 00:56:49 One version is he was simply a man pushed too far. The other is he was an avenging father, as one of these men, one of the commissioners or a knight in their service, had assaulted his daughter during one of the tax roundups. So he was out for blood. assaulted his daughter during one of the tax roundups. So he was out for blood. Brampton ordered the knights to take Baker into custody, which caused the peasants to grab weapons, mostly like the farm tools and rocks they had laying around, and chase the knights and the commissioners
Starting point is 00:57:16 away from the town back towards London. From here on June 1st, 1381, the peasants really didn't have a plan, so they grabbed their weapons and retreated into the forest, officially kicking off the English Peasant's revolt. Now I should point out here that normally when you say a bunch of peasants ran off into the woods away from knights, they would be badly prepared for what was eventually going to come for that ass, right? But not in the case of the English peasant.
Starting point is 00:57:38 Thanks to Edward III starting about 20 years before the events in Essex, training with a bow and arrow would have been mandatory for all men, minimum one day per week, normally on Sunday. To further reinforce the training of archery is the only hobby available for the common man, in the same declaration, the king banned football because it was a distraction to bow practice. This was more state-enforced military training than anyone else's mandatory to have at the time. In short, this is a revolt made up of the most dedicated and skilled bowmen possibly in Europe.
Starting point is 00:58:10 So soon, across Essex, men were gathering up their legally mandated stockpiles of bows and arrows. Messengers from the men who chased off the commission were heading back to where they were coming from in order to spread word about what had happened. After years of being fucked with, there was no shortage of men and women who grabbed weapons in order to join them, and the small fact that a bunch of regular, everyday people had just chased off the commission only bolstered that spread. And for the day, the word spread fast as fuck. Just by the next day, word had gotten out across the county of Essex, helped by the
Starting point is 00:58:42 fact that it was the holiday of Whitsun, the Pentecost, because that meant people from the surrounding area all were already gathered together in large numbers to pray, feasts, games, shit like that. Eventually, these men all gathered together in Bocking to swear odes to one another and to swear to murder any royal officials who dare come through and ignore any law that did not come from either themselves or the King directly."
Starting point is 00:59:08 That's like where the beginning of this is, is like, they believe that the sweet boy King is being taken advantage of by the Council of Unks, the Unkocracy is corrupt. My court is full of Unks. My court is full of scheming Unks. They also agreed that anyone who did not join the revolt would have their houses burned to the ground. That's one thing. This revolt is mostly burning shit to the ground. As soon as that happened, that same weekend, the rebellion was already spreading outside of Essex into Kent through a man named Abel Kerr. While Kerr and his
Starting point is 00:59:39 neighbors didn't have a run-in with the taxman like Baker and his guys did, the people of his village of Aerith had a long-running land dispute with a local abbey. The people of Aerith also had a common issue with their abbey of that the abbey was being run like a mafia. They were squeezing the town for increased rent and protection money and it was way too much. So Cur grabbed a group of people, whipped them into a revolutionary fervor, and stormed the abbey and captured the abbot, William Deheath.
Starting point is 01:00:07 There upon the threat of death, they forced the abbot to swear an oath to support the revolt and the boy king. And he did. Probably because the other option was getting his skull ventilated with a fucking arrow. I mean that is the most accurate Kent and Essex thing. It's like I am having a land dispute with my neighbour and I am willing to have a revolution over it. Soon afterwards, Kerr and his men boarded boats, crossed the Thames, and marched to Essex to meet the bros and beginning to plan what to do next.
Starting point is 01:00:34 That is when Kerr suggested they go after a Royal Judge named Sir Robert Belknap, who like many judges of the day, was also something of a travelling tax assessor, and he was on his way to Dartford in his regularly scheduled weekend assessing visit. Belknap had heard what was going on. It was hard to miss at this point, but he and virtually everyone else in the government at the time thought, well, they'll probably calm down anyway. After all, don't they know who I am and the authority I carry with me? They won't possibly touch me. It's the royal version of okay, but I'm built different Yeah, as soon as Belknap and his crew got to Dartford, they were immediately assaulted by a mob
Starting point is 01:01:11 He got snatched up and got his ass beat The crowd made him swear on a Bible that he would never act as judge or collect taxes ever again and then he was released to flee back to London and had been about a week since the fine people of Essex and Kent rose up and they were kind of surprised that, well, the government hasn't sent anybody to deal with us yet. The reason for that was, well, they couldn't. The Crown had no available army. We already talked about all the problems with the general funding of the armies and the ongoing war in France and the holdings that they have to garrison and all that, but the newest army they had formed with the last round of taxation was given to John of Gaunt and was sent to protect the border with Scotland.
Starting point is 01:01:51 So there's absolutely nobody in London or in the surrounding areas. To the peasants, they had seemingly broken the state's monopoly on violence and it was time for them to take it away completely. One of the things that Belknap was made to do before being released was turn over a list of names of people who had snitched them out to the government for tax fraud. Curran Baker quickly labeled these men traitor, captured them, cut off their heads, staked them on poles, and carried the poles around them as if they were banners. That's a drastic move, I'm going to say.
Starting point is 01:02:22 There's going to be a lot of heads on polls here. The growing army of peasant rebels spread through Kent Essex's countryside, spreading the word of their seeming victory. After all, look at these heads! Word of the revolt spread all the way to London, and soon men from London were running out to the countryside, telling the revolt's leadership, or their ad hoc leadership, that if you walk to London, there's plenty of allies in the city and no army to stand against you. And as nice as that probably sounded, the countryside rebels had a revenge mission to
Starting point is 01:02:51 carry out. Also, despite all the odes or whatever, they were hardly unified. As you probably already picked up, there's a hard divide between the Essex and Kent men. The Essex contingent was largely but not always led by Baker, and the Kent contingent was entirely led by Kerr the Kent contingent was entirely led by Kerr. Baker wasn't much of a rebel. He seemed to be a guy out for revenge, while Kerr had higher but not necessarily well thought
Starting point is 01:03:12 out ideas. Baker and his Essex men took the revenge mission towards Sheriff Sewell's house, who for some reason was still at home like nothing was going on. He's just chilling. He's watching Severance. You know, he's just having a mental health day. Yeah. He's, he's checking in on the lads who are burning down his house. Yeah. Sometimes you need to burn down someone's house for men's mental health. I don't disagree. Meanwhile, Kerr and his Kent men marched toward the town
Starting point is 01:03:38 of Rochester, home of Rochester Castle. Now the Kent rebels knew they weren't going to put the castle to siege. Of course. They have no siege weapons. Instead, they just began ravaging the village of Rochester itself, hoping to cause everybody to freak out. And it worked. Seeing hundreds of armed men outside the village burning, the castle guards just ran. They abandoned their posts, allowed the mobs of civilians to climb the castle walls and open the gates and flood inside. Then they broke into the castle dungeon, freeing everybody held in detention there. The rebel ranks swelled with numbers and the castle's commander was captured, largely without any real fight.
Starting point is 01:04:16 Word once spread again, they had taken a fucking castle. More rebels joined the ranks from all over the southeast and soon the only road heading to London in the entire region is locked down and under the control of the rebels. Anyone passing the road would be taken aside and forced to swear an oath to the true boy king and refuse to serve orders from anyone else who they are now loudly proclaiming to be traitors who have taken over the government. On top of that, they made people to never follow a quote, King named John, meaning John of Gaunt, the Regent.
Starting point is 01:04:49 The head-unk. Head-unks. At the 10 of Maidstone, it was the next to fall. Once again, the jail was broken into and the men inside became the newest recruits. But among the followers who are now joining the ranks and sprung from jail were two men, Watt Tyler and John Ball, who quickly ascended
Starting point is 01:05:06 to the ranks of leadership. John Ball protesting the king taking groats out of your scrote. That's why he's John Ball and not John Ball's. There's only one of them. There's only one John Ball. Tyler was a military man, a veteran of the war in France with a mind for tactics more than anyone else. Nobody's entirely sure why he war in France, with a mind for tactics more than anyone else, nobody's entirely sure why he was in jail, but he was. Then there was John Ball, a radical priest.
Starting point is 01:05:31 He had spent his life touring the countryside whipping people up into a frenzy with his sermons and had been imprisoned so many times by the Archduke of Canterbury that everyone in the dungeon was on a first name basis with him. His belief system, to make a very long story short, effectively kind of made him a Jesuit, but also like an apostolic. He believed that the church institutions had been corrupted by wealth, that clergy had lost sight of the true meaning of Jesus in order to simply become landlords and tyrants, and the best way to fix this was to make priests live as Jesus did.
Starting point is 01:06:07 I.E. poverty. Own nothing. Over the years, Ball's belief system followed, in what my opinion, was the only road it could go down as a true believer. Lords, feudalism, kings, all of that was a sleight against God. Even the ranks of clergy were heretical because last time he checked, Jesus never preached any of that shit. Instead he wanted to strip the church down to its bare bones and leave at best an archbishop overseeing the entire country.
Starting point is 01:06:35 And of course that archbishop should be him. Of course, obviously. It's the natural choice that like we are going to radically reform the church and, you know, trim down the administration and have one person run it. And obviously that choice is me. Yeah. Who else could it be? Yeah. It did not take long for the rebels spiteful of the various injustices committed against them by the same men ball was now preaching against for them to buy into his ideas. So now with the rebels, sadly with an ideology and a military leader, that is where we'll pick up next time on part 2.
Starting point is 01:07:12 I am so excited. These guys are going to get so fucked up. And it is also as well, you know, we get to talk about men's mental health, you know, how sieging the capital is good about men's mental health, you know, how sieging the capital is good for men's mental health and how also weirdly these guys could have also drank Stella Artois at this time. It does remind me of my walk over here. I saw a sign outside the train station said, get together and cry with the boys.
Starting point is 01:07:38 Yeah, exactly. No, madry wouldn't be invented for another couple of hundred years shy of a thousand years, but they could have had cans of Stella. Buckfast is almost around I think. Yeah Buckfast I think is like fifteen hundred... Damn. No, like the brewery that made Stella was founded in 1366. Okay so they are literally all tip to the gills on fucking Stella. Yeah they are just, they are Millwall fans.
Starting point is 01:08:03 Oh, I mean that does explain why their ideology isn't great but they're really good at fighting people. Yeah, they're just, they are Millwall fans. Oh, I mean that does explain why their ideology isn't great, but they're really good at fighting people. Yeah, there you go. That is part one. Tom, you host other podcasts. Plug those podcasts. Beneath the Skin, the show about the history of everything told you, the history of tattooing, and also I have, sure to have books back in stock, both my photography book and some cool
Starting point is 01:08:25 tattoo flash books. So check out NeatSkinShop.com. This is all I got. This is the only podcast I do. But support us on Patreon. It makes everything we do possible. Just five bucks gets you everything. Years and years and years of bonus content, side series, discord access, first dibs and
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Starting point is 01:09:12 Yeah. A semaphore. I don't know where the podcast fits into the hanky code, but you'll figure it out. I believe in it. Yeah. Thank you, everybody, for listening. And until next time, check our show notes for patron links and for our live show tickets for October. And until next time, secure them groats.

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