this post was submitted on 30 May 2025
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The Peasants' Revolt, also known as the Great Revolt, was a largely unsuccessful popular uprising in England in June 1381. The rebellion's leaders included Wat Tyler and they wanted massive social changes which included a removal of the poll tax, an end to the cap on labour wages, redistribution of the Church's wealth and the total abolition of serfdom.

The revolt began in the south-east of England and then spread to London and elsewhere. Although desiring social change, the rebels did not want to remove King Richard II of England (r. 1377-1399). It lasted only four weeks and was put down by Richard, first by negotiation and then through ruthless persecution of the ringleaders. The consequences of the revolt were, therefore, limited, but the poll tax was abandoned, restrictions on labour wages were not strictly enforced, and peasants continued the trend of buying their freedom from serfdom and becoming independent farmers.

Causes of the Revolt

The Peasant's Revolt of June 1381 was the most infamous popular uprising of the Middle Ages and it was caused by a simmering discontent in England that went as far back as the middle of Edward III of England's reign as king (1327-1377) and the arrival of the Black Death plague in 1348. It was, though, Edward's successor, Richard II of England, who had to deal with the chaos when the widespread discontent boiled over into all-out rebellion.

The principal causes of the Peasants' Revolt were:

  • a new poll tax imposed on all peasants irrespective of wealth (the third such tax since 1377).
  • the limit by law on wages after labour costs had risen dramatically following the Black Death plague.
  • unscrupulous landlords trying to turn free labourers back into serfs (aka villeins) to save money on wages.
  • a general feeling of exploitation by local authorities during a time of economic decline.

Violence Erupts

The uprising began, then, in May-June 1381 in England's south-east where royal tax inspectors were investigating why tax returns had been surprisingly low. These inspectors suddenly met with opposition for their demands for payment of the poll tax which Parliament had passed in November 1380. Officials and sheriffs were kidnapped and murdered. Bands of rebels toured the countryside on horseback, torching manors and destroying their records - a clear indicator of the peasants' desire to overturn manorialism. The public records at Maidstone, Rochester, and Canterbury all went up in flames. The ringleaders seemed to be better-off small farmers and included in their number parish priests and village constables. This was not a revolt of the absolute poor but those commoners who had something to lose. The Crown sent men-at-arms to deal with the problem areas, but these were too few in number and many were killed.

Two leaders, in particular, came to the fore. Wat Tyler of Maidstone, perhaps a former soldier but any certain details are lacking, and the demagogue priest John Ball, who radically sought for more equality in society. Ball had already seen the inside of a prison a few times for his extreme preaching.

Consequently, with leadership, genuine grievances and an ideological framework to justify their actions, the disturbances developed into a full-scale rebellion with a mission: confront the King and get things changed. It is important to note, however, that the rebels did not want to topple the king and their members even swore an oath of loyalty to 'King Richard and the true Commons'. The rebels marched to London on 11 June - causing much havoc on their way - where they were joined by equally discontented townsfolk illustrating that the revolt was not simply one of feudal labourers. In London, there had long been rivalries between the rich and poor, factions of the Church, medieval guilds, native and foreign merchants, and apprentices and their masters, and all these divisions would be widened by the revolt. Some chroniclers noted the rebels now numbered over 60,000 people, and all this while the king's army was in Scotland.

The Peasants' Demands

When the mob got to London on 13 June they continued to loot, pillage, and murder. Lawyers, foreigners, and petty officials of the Crown were just some of the groups targeted as old grudges resulted in wanton acts of vengeance. Prisoners were freed while those thought to be guilty of crimes were hanged by peoples' courts.

Although only 14, King Richard emerged from the safety of the Tower of London and bravely promised to meet the protest leaders at Mile End, a field on the outskirts of London. There Richard listened to their demands and blithely promised to meet all of them, issue charters accordingly and even permitted Tyler to extract justice on any person he thought deserved punishment. Tyler then promptly ordered the storming of the Tower of London and had the hated Chancellor, Archbishop Simon of Sudbury, decapitated on Tower Hill.

The participants of the Peasants' Revolt demanded the following changes:

  • the total abolition of serfdom
  • a repeal of labour laws limiting wage increases brought in after the Black Death
  • free fishing and hunting rights for all
  • more peasant participation in local government
  • the Crown should be the only authority in the counties, not local lords
  • the redistribution of the Church's riches, especially of the great abbeys

Richard then employed the much-used tactic of making a load of extravagant promises he had no intention of keeping such as giving everyone involved royal pardons. These promises were enough to stave off more rioting, and the mob disbanded, escorted out of London by the city's militia.

Consequences of the Revolt

Utterly ruthless, Richard next ensured that around 150 of the rebels were hanged, so many that new gibbets had to be built for the purpose. Wat Tyler's head was displayed on London Bridge. There were other minor outbreaks of rebellion thereafter, but these were mercilessly quashed and their ringleaders executed as traitors. As the king boldly stated: 'villeins ye are, and villeins ye shall remain'. The whole affair was perhaps the high point of Richard's reign as things went downhill from then on, the once-admired young king turning out to be a major disappointment and ending his days with a short imprisonment and a mysterious death.

Ultimately, though, there were social changes in England, as had already be seen prior to the revolt. The poll tax was abandoned, the limits on labourers' wages were not rigorously enforced, and serfs continued to buy their freedom. Significantly, the law and legal records were now used not by landowners to enforce an obligation of labour but to demonstrate a labourer had legitimately bought their freedom and could pass on their land to their descendants.

Text From Worldhistory article Peasants' Revolt

Wat Tyler's Rebellion

Another England: The Story of the Wat Tyler and the Peasants' Revolt

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[–] rhubarb@hexbear.net 4 points 6 days ago

Tbh I'm not the biggest fan of how my neighbors installed a metal fence on their patio and now every flock of birds in town takes turns fighting a turf war against their own reflections

[–] peppersky@hexbear.net 3 points 6 days ago

man i waited all fucking day to play elden ring nightreign with a friend of mine and we managed to get it to run yesterday after like an hour because he didn't update his graphics drivers in two years and then today we get a completely different problem where it takes ages to load only to then throw him out of online play. i try all my best to diagnose shit but at some point he should just get a new pc, like he has the money, at least buy like an ssd for fifty bucks but nah he's a dull ass cheapskate who just can't be arsed.

if everything is just going to get more and more dysfunctional life is just going to stop working altogether in a decade

[–] oscardejarjayes@hexbear.net 3 points 6 days ago (1 children)

Nooo, Aldanmarki got suspended off of twitter

they make some banger videos

[–] DornerStan@lemmygrad.ml 24 points 1 week ago (8 children)

looking for a leftist group

ask the representative if their org is anarchist or trot

he doesn't understand

pull out illustrated diagram explaing what is anarchist and what is trot

he laughs and says "it's a good org sir"

pay for membership

its trot

gonna give it an honest go because a lot of trots are still comrades but damn I wish there were more options lmao

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[–] hexaflexagonbear@hexbear.net 17 points 1 week ago (1 children)

We're in fuckin 1320 motherfucker. You are a serf. Bitch, you live in Alsace. You are a peasant. You need to give your fuckin' lord the grain. Your fucking children, you've had 15 children. You've never taken a bath. You've literally never. washed. your. penis. You've never used toilet paper. Motherfucker, you have worms. You are dying. You've had 40 children, 3 of them are alive. 2 of them are child soldiers in the Duke's army.

Bitch, the greatest thing you can hope for is to die at the old age of 36. You fucking can't read. You don't know what TV is. If you were transported into today, you would be the worst gamer of all time. You don't know shit. You literally probably don't even know what the direction 'left' is. I'm sure some Medieval guy is gonna get mad at me for this, bitch I've been to the Renaissance Fair. I've eaten a large turkey wing, which the Juggalos call 'bitch beaters', which I think is problematic but a funny thing to call them.

Motherfucker, you gotta recognize where you are, and then you gotta get passed that. You gotta be unemotional. You can't sink into this hole. You live in the oubliette. Your job is to crawl up the ladder, motherfucker. You live in the HOLE. You're in the HOLE. You are a RAT. And the rat, when he's in the hole gets fucked. People only throw trash in the hole.

You need to eat a body. And you need to carry the plague. And you need to carry a plague around this whole world, that will change this whole fuckin world. And all your enemies will vomit black bile and will choke on blood and will grow boils and die. But only if you get together with your other RATS. And you come up with some kind of super plague, to fuckin end your enemies and...

End. This. Nightmare.

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[–] thelastaxolotl@hexbear.net 16 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (4 children)

New Megathread nerds! caught-in-4che

MAUL: SHADOW LORD will show Maul re-evaluate whether creating the Empire was a good idea, says Sam Witwer.

β€œ[Maul’s] like, β€˜Is that what [Sidious] had in mind? This is a little scary.’ … Maul comes from a time of swords and sorcery and magic and knights, and now all of that color of the universe is being sucked out of this mechanized Empire. And Maul’s like, β€˜Is this right? Is this the universe we’re trying to build?’”

seized from twitter

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@thelastaxolotl@hexbear.net

@CARCOSA@hexbear.net @Alaskaball@hexbear.net @liberal@hexbear.net @ella@hexbear.net @KiraNerys@hexbear.net @BoarAvoir@hexbear.net @dialectical_analysis_of_gock@hexbear.net @RotundLadSloopUnion@hexbear.net @tls123@hexbear.net @cloudy@hexbear.net @IgnusNilsen@hexbear.net @Lyudmila@hexbear.net

No current struggle session discussion here on the new general megathread, i will ban you from the comm and remove your comment, have a good day/night :meow-coffee:

[–] HarryLime@hexbear.net 15 points 1 week ago

I have to admit, I am intrigued by Darth Maul experiencing the Empire and reacting like the Taliban guys who hate working in offices now.

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[–] DornerStan@lemmygrad.ml 14 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (4 children)

Watching a dental lecture and the professor proudly talks about using ChatGPT for a case example. Lazy but whatever

After presenting the case he asks students for first steps

A few make suggestions, he singles out one as being too early in the process

He then reads the ChatGPT response and it mentions that suggestion as the first step.

He says, β€œah, I was wrong, I guess you do do that first!”

AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA

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[–] Keld@hexbear.net 14 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Sure the police is more evil on an absolute level. But minor security personnel can't even pretend they're the thing blue line or whatever, they literally just harass poor people and make public transport worse

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[–] plantifa@hexbear.net 12 points 1 week ago (5 children)

"On previous occasions they had been persuaded to such thoughts by a mad priest from the county of Kent called John Ball, and for his mad words he had been thrown into the Archbishop of Canterbury's prison a good many times; for on Sundays after mass, when the people were leaving the church, this John Ball had been in the habit of going to the lectern and preaching there, causing the people to gather around him, and saying to them,

'Good people, things in England cannot work, nor will they until wealth is shared equally; until there are neither peasants nor noblemen and we are all united. Why are these men, whom we call lords, masters over us? What have they done to deserve this? Why do they keep us in servitude? Do we not all come from one father and one mother, Adam and Eve? How can they claim or prove that they are any more lords than we are, except by forcing us to earn and toil for what they spend? They dress in velvet, silks and satins lined with miniver and grey fur, while we wear poor cloth. They have wine, spices and good bread while we have rye, bran and straw and drink water.

They have their ease in fine manor houses, while we have toil and labour, and the rain and wind in the fields, and from our exertions comes the means for them to maintain their estates. We are called serfs and beaten if we are not at their beck and call, yet we have no figurehead to whom we may complain, nor who might be inclined to listen to us or administer justice. Let us petition the king for he is young, and we will make him aware of our servitude and tell him that we would wish things to be otherwise or else we will find our own remedy. If we go to him directly and as a group, all manner of people who are called serfs and are kept in bondage will follow us in order to be liberated. When the king sees or hears us, he will provide a solution, peaceful or otherwise.'"

-From Froissart's Chronicles Book II, translation taken from the Online Froissart webpage

[–] duderium@hexbear.net 3 points 6 days ago (1 children)

John Ball more like John Ballz.

[–] plantifa@hexbear.net 3 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

kitty-cri-screm

E:

John PIGPOOPBALLS & walter Tyler

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