Clay Lane

The Copy Book

A Library of History and Literature in English

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295

A Matter of National Security

As various ball sports began to take hold in England, King Edward III became convinced that Government action was required.

In 1363, with England’s glorious victories at Crécy and Poitiers nearly twenty years behind him, King Edward III was seized with anxiety lest England’s famous archers should squander their skills on such fripperies as football and quoits. He therefore issued an order prescribing stiff penalties for those who put amusement ahead of the defence of the realm.

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Picture: © Kresten Hartvig Klit, Wikimedia Commons. Licence: CC BY-SA 3.0.. Source.

296

The Thrice-Holy Hymn

When the capital of the Roman Empire was in the grip of a violent earthquake, it fell to one small child to save all the people.

According to tradition, the Trisagion or Thrice-Holy Hymn was revealed by angels one September 24th during the tenure of Patriarch Proclus of Constantinople (434-446). Some thirty years later Peter, the abrasive Patriarch of Antioch and a former fuller by trade, took it upon himself to add an extra line. Three centuries after that John Damascene was still upset about it.

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Picture: Grigoriy Myasoyedov (1834–1911), via the National Museum of Warsaw and Wikimedia Commons. Licence: Public domain.. Source.

297

The Coronation of Henry IV

On October 13th, 1399, Henry Bolingbroke was crowned King Henry IV of England in Westminster Abbey.

The reign of Richard II began with the Peasants’ Revolt, and by 1399 he had done little to win his unhappy people over. He had become both greedy and extravagant, and when the powerful Percy family in Northumberland encouraged Richard’s second cousin Henry Bolingbroke to claim the crown, he won it with only a few hundred men. On Monday October 13th, 1399, Henry was crowned at Westminster Abbey.

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Picture: From a manuscript of Froissart’s ‘Chronicles’ (?1470-72), via the British Library and Wikimedia Commons. Licence: Public domain.. Source.

298

Poisoned Chalice

Scientist and clergyman Temple Chevallier believed that the fast pace of recent discoveries in astronomy risked substituting a new superstition for an old one.

In the Hulsean Lectures for 1827, astronomer and clergyman Temple Chevallier explored the opening words of Psalm 19: ‘The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament sheweth his handy work’. He spoke of the wonder of the heavens, of the spell it has exercised upon the mind of man, and of two superstitions into which it has drawn him: blind faith in the stars, and blind faith in scientists.

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Picture: © Mike Cattell, Wikimedia Commons. Licence: CC BY-SA 2.0.. Source.

299

Sanctuary!

As late as the fifteenth century, criminals on the run could find refuge in the precincts of England’s great churches.

From at least the time of King Ine of Wessex in 693, criminal first offenders fleeing to the protection of the Church could expect at least safe conduct out of the kingdom, and even a pardon. The custom persisted at Durham long into the fifteenth century, but was increasingly abused and records ended abruptly in 1503, during Henry VII’s reign.

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Picture: © Michael Beckwith, Wikimedia Commons. Licence: CC BY-SA 2.0.. Source.

300

The Shimabara Rebellion

Forty thousand men, women and children, the last survivors of Japans’s persecuted Christian population, took refuge without earthly hope in a seaside castle.

In 1587, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, Regent of Japan, had vowed to stamp out Christianity after a Spanish sea-captain boasted that, to the Pope and the King of Spain, its spread was a step towards European conquest. The repression grew in savagery until, on December 17th, 1637, forty thousand Christians huddled together in the seaside fortress of Hara Castle, on the southern tip of the Shimabara Peninsula.

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Picture: Via Wikimedia Commons. Licence: Public domain image.. Source.