Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Dedication
- An Early Fourteenth-Century Affinity: the Earl of Norfolk and his Followers
- John of Gaunt's Household: Attendance Rolls in the Glynde Archive, MS 3469
- ‘With my life, his joyes began and ended’: Piers Gaveston and King Edward II of England Revisited
- Clerical Recruitment in England, 1282–1348
- Secular Patronage and Religious Devotion: the Despensers and St Mary's Abbey, Tewkesbury
- The ‘Calculus of Faction’ and Richard II's Duchy of Ireland, c. 1382–9
- Richard II in the Continuatio Eulogii: Yet Another Alleged Historical Incident?
- Was Richard II a Tyrant? Richard's Use of the Books of Rules for Princes
- Court Venues and the Politics of Justice
- Morality and Office in Late Medieval England and France
Richard II in the Continuatio Eulogii: Yet Another Alleged Historical Incident?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Dedication
- An Early Fourteenth-Century Affinity: the Earl of Norfolk and his Followers
- John of Gaunt's Household: Attendance Rolls in the Glynde Archive, MS 3469
- ‘With my life, his joyes began and ended’: Piers Gaveston and King Edward II of England Revisited
- Clerical Recruitment in England, 1282–1348
- Secular Patronage and Religious Devotion: the Despensers and St Mary's Abbey, Tewkesbury
- The ‘Calculus of Faction’ and Richard II's Duchy of Ireland, c. 1382–9
- Richard II in the Continuatio Eulogii: Yet Another Alleged Historical Incident?
- Was Richard II a Tyrant? Richard's Use of the Books of Rules for Princes
- Court Venues and the Politics of Justice
- Morality and Office in Late Medieval England and France
Summary
A well known passage in the continuation of the Eulogium Historiarum has been very influential in assessments of Richard II and his policies. In its account of events in the year 1398 the Eulogium describes a rather bizarre scene in Richard's chamber:
After this, on solemn festival days, which were set aside for royal display, the king ordered a throne to be set up in his chamber, on which he often sat in full view from dinner until vespers, speaking to no one but overlooking all men, and if his gaze fell upon anyone, no matter what his rank, that person had to genuflect toward the king.
This celebrated passage has been consistently cited in support of the view that near the end of his reign Richard II had adopted innovative, tyrannical, and perhaps even insane policies that played a part in his deposition from the throne in 1399. Kenneth A. Vickers says that the king might well have gotten away with his tyrannical behavior ‘had not Richard himself drawn attention to his despotism [when] he emphasised his power by increasing the solemnity of Court ceremonial’. Anthony Steel interprets the Eulogium's account as attesting ‘the last stage of his illness; the regality had grown until it had swallowed the entire world and as Richard looked around him he saw nothing but the mirror of his royal personality, inhabited by flickering shades whose movements could be governed by a glance’.
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- Information
- Fourteenth Century England V , pp. 116 - 129Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2008