Book contents
- Frontmatter
- GENERAL PREFACE
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- ABBREVIATIONS AND AUTHORITIES
- CHAPTER I THE OPEN ROAD
- CHAPTER II VILLAGE DEVELOPMENT
- CHAPTER III A FEW CROSS-LIGHTS
- CHAPTER IV A GLASTONBURY MANOR
- CHAPTER V THE SPORTING CHANCE
- CHAPTER VI BANS AND MONOPOLIES
- CHAPTER VII THE MANOR COURT
- CHAPTER VIII LIFE ON A MONASTIC MANOR
- CHAPTER IX FATHERLY GOVERNMENT
- CHAPTER X THE LORD'S POWER
- CHAPTER XI EARLIER REVOLTS
- CHAPTER XII MONKS AND SERFS
- CHAPTER XIII THE CHANCES OF LIBERATION
- CHAPTER XIV LEGAL BARRIERS TO ENFRANCHISEMENT
- CHAPTER XV KINDLY CONCESSIONS
- CHAPTER XVI JUSTICE
- CHAPTER XVII CLEARINGS AND ENCLOSURES
- CHAPTER XVIII CHURCH ESTIMATES OF THE PEASANT
- CHAPTER XIX RELIGIOUS EDUCATION
- CHAPTER XX TITHES AND FRICTION
- CHAPTER XXI TITHES AND FRICTION (CONTINUED)
- CHAPTER XXII POVERTY UNADORNED
- CHAPTER XXIII LABOUR AND CONSIDERATION
- CHAPTER XXIV THE REBELLION OF THE POOR
- CHAPTER XXV THE REBELLION OF THE POOR (CONTINUED)
- CHAPTER XXVI THE DISSOLUTION OF THE MONASTERIES
- CHAPTER XXVII CONCLUSION
- APPENDIXES
- POSTSCRIPTS
- INDEX
- Plate section
CHAPTER XXI - TITHES AND FRICTION (CONTINUED)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 December 2010
- Frontmatter
- GENERAL PREFACE
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- ABBREVIATIONS AND AUTHORITIES
- CHAPTER I THE OPEN ROAD
- CHAPTER II VILLAGE DEVELOPMENT
- CHAPTER III A FEW CROSS-LIGHTS
- CHAPTER IV A GLASTONBURY MANOR
- CHAPTER V THE SPORTING CHANCE
- CHAPTER VI BANS AND MONOPOLIES
- CHAPTER VII THE MANOR COURT
- CHAPTER VIII LIFE ON A MONASTIC MANOR
- CHAPTER IX FATHERLY GOVERNMENT
- CHAPTER X THE LORD'S POWER
- CHAPTER XI EARLIER REVOLTS
- CHAPTER XII MONKS AND SERFS
- CHAPTER XIII THE CHANCES OF LIBERATION
- CHAPTER XIV LEGAL BARRIERS TO ENFRANCHISEMENT
- CHAPTER XV KINDLY CONCESSIONS
- CHAPTER XVI JUSTICE
- CHAPTER XVII CLEARINGS AND ENCLOSURES
- CHAPTER XVIII CHURCH ESTIMATES OF THE PEASANT
- CHAPTER XIX RELIGIOUS EDUCATION
- CHAPTER XX TITHES AND FRICTION
- CHAPTER XXI TITHES AND FRICTION (CONTINUED)
- CHAPTER XXII POVERTY UNADORNED
- CHAPTER XXIII LABOUR AND CONSIDERATION
- CHAPTER XXIV THE REBELLION OF THE POOR
- CHAPTER XXV THE REBELLION OF THE POOR (CONTINUED)
- CHAPTER XXVI THE DISSOLUTION OF THE MONASTERIES
- CHAPTER XXVII CONCLUSION
- APPENDIXES
- POSTSCRIPTS
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
It is true, there was another side to this question; the priest might be almost as needy as the peasant. Sometimes we get glimpses, in the Middle Ages, of that community of feeling between the peasant and the poor parson (as distinct from the numerous clerical capitalists) which was noticeable also in prerevolutionary France. A cleric in 1394, recording the jubilee which emperor and pope concerted that year at Prag, writes “and they fleeced the innocent priests and the poor peasants and all men without exception”. John Ball, “the mad priest of Kent,” is another example; more than once we find a village priest in the van of some revolt. But, to the ordinary peasant, such men certainly did not represent the Church; the peasant saw more squire-parsons than John Balls; and even when the parson was poor he might be obliged, by the very necessities of existence, to curse as heartily for his tithes as the richer incumbent cursed. The hunting parson (to take one species only of the genus squire) has certainly left more traces in medieval records than the parson-ringleader of revolts. And, where writers speak of the poverty of the lower priesthood, they do not represent these men as fraternizing with the peasant, but as helpless parasites upon the rich.
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- The Medieval Village , pp. 295 - 306Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1925