1388: Three evil counselors of Richard II
Add comment May 12th, 2012 Headsman
On this date in 1388, James Berners, John Beauchamp, and John Salisbury were convicted by the “Merciless Parliament” of treason, and put to immediate death.
You could say that relations between the branches of government were a bit on the frayed side, since crown and parliament had civil war for political primacy. Parliament won.
It just wasn’t quite one of those all-out, kill-you-when-we’re-done wars to depose the king outright. (That would come later.) “We do not rebel or arm ourselves against the King except in order to instruct him,” one of the rebelling Lord Appellant told His Majesty.
“Instructing” Richard II meant politically isolating him and then mercilessly — hence the resulting parliament’s name — attainting his aides and allies for treason.
So all that spring, young Richard II helplessly “presided” over a parliament where his supporters were condemned on trumped-up charges.
This date was the turn for Sir John Beauchamp of Holt and Sir James Berners (or Barnes), two guys noble enough to suffer “merely” beheading, plus Sir John Salisbury, who was far enough down England’s class hierarchy that he got to endure the full drawing and quartering treatment.
Berners may have been the father of a 15th century prioress and author, Juliana Berners.
This woman wasn’t the type to keep to her cloister and meditate: Berners wrote books on her vigorous pastimes of heraldry, hunting, and hawking. Her Treatise of Fishing with an Angle remains one of the seminal books for the sport of angling.
On this day..
- 1944: Oskar Kusch, Wehrkraftzersetzung U-boat commander - 2020
- 1899: Claude Branton, gallows photograph - 2019
- 1974: Leyla Qasim, Bride of Kurdistan - 2018
- 1775: William Pitman, for murdering his slave - 2017
- 1868: Robert Smith, the last publicly hanged in Scotland - 2016
- 1543: Jakob Karrer, Vesalius subject - 2015
- 1625: Not Helene Gillet, beheading survivor - 2014
- 1936: Buck Ruxton, red stains - 2013
- 1730: James Dalton, Hogarth allusion - 2011
- 1641: Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford - 2010
- 1993: Leonel Herrera, perilously close to simple murder? - 2009
- 1916: James Connolly, socialist revolutionary - 2008
Entry Filed under: 14th Century,Arts and Literature,Beheaded,Capital Punishment,Cycle of Violence,Death Penalty,Drawn and Quartered,England,Execution,Gruesome Methods,History,Nobility,Notably Survived By,Politicians,Power,The Worm Turns,Treason,Wrongful Executions
Tags: 1380s, 1388, merciless parliament, richard ii
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