Text this colour is a link for Members only. Support us by becoming a Member for only £3 a month by joining our 'Buy Me A Coffee page'; Membership gives you access to all content and removes ads.
Text this colour links to Pages. Text this colour links to Family Trees. Place the mouse over images to see a larger image. Click on paintings to see the painter's Biography Page. Mouse over links for a preview. Move the mouse off the painting or link to close the popup.
All About History Books
The Chronicle of Geoffrey le Baker of Swinbroke. Baker was a secular clerk from Swinbroke, now Swinbrook, an Oxfordshire village two miles east of Burford. His Chronicle describes the events of the period 1303-1356: Gaveston, Bannockburn, Boroughbridge, the murder of King Edward II, the Scottish Wars, Sluys, Crécy, the Black Death, Winchelsea and Poitiers. To quote Herbert Bruce 'it possesses a vigorous and characteristic style, and its value for particular events between 1303 and 1356 has been recognised by its editor and by subsequent writers'. The book provides remarkable detail about the events it describes. Baker's text has been augmented with hundreds of notes, including extracts from other contemporary chronicles, such as the Annales Londonienses, Annales Paulini, Murimuth, Lanercost, Avesbury, Guisborough and Froissart to enrich the reader's understanding. The translation takes as its source the 'Chronicon Galfridi le Baker de Swynebroke' published in 1889, edited by Edward Maunde Thompson. Available at Amazon in eBook and Paperback.
Black Death Plague is in 1340-1349 Plague and Crecy.
In June 1348 the Black Death Plague arrived in England. The first of many occurrences. It is estimated to have killed between 25 to 60 percent of the population of around six million. The outbreak lasted through 1349 recurring in 1362, 1369 and regularly thereafter until its last significant outbreak in The Great Plague of 1666.
On 11th September 1349 Bonne Luxemburg Queen Consort France (age 34) died of plague in Maubisson, Pontoise.
In 1348 John Savoy (age 10) died of plague during the Black Death Plague.
In 1348 John Barcelona (age 31) died of plague.
Annales of England by John Stow. 1348. There began amongst the East Indians and Tartarians a certaine pestilence, which at length waxed so general, infecting the middle region of the ayre so greatly, that it destroyed the Saracens, Turks, Syrians, Palestinians, and the Grecians with a woonderfull or rather incredible death, in so much that those peoples, being exceedingly dismaid with the terrour therof, consulted amongst themselves and thought it good to receive the Christian faith and Sacraments, for they had intelligence that the Christians which dwelt on this side the Greekish sea were not so greatly (more then common custome was) troubled with sicknesse and mortalitie. At length this terrible slaughter passed over into those countries which are on this side the Alpes, and from thence to the partes of Fraunce which are called Hesperia, and so by order along into Germany and Dutchland. And the seventh yeere after it began, it came into England and first began in the townes and ports joyning on the sea coasts, in Dorsetshire, where, even as in other countries, it made the country quite void of inhabitants, so that there were almost none left alive. From thence it passed into Devonshire and Somersetshire, even unto Bristow, and raged in such sort that the Glocestershire men would not suffer the Bristow men to have any accesse unto them or into their countrey by any meanes. But at length it came to Glocester, yea even to Oxford, and London, and finally it spred over all England, and so wasted and spoyled the people that scarce the tenth person of all sorts was left alive.
Chronicle of Geoffrey le Baker of Swinbroke [-1360]. In the year of Christ 1349, the 23rd year of the king's reign, a widespread plague arising from the East, from the lands of the Indians1 and Turks, infected the central regions of the inhabited world. It ravaged the Saracens, Turks, Syrians, and Palestinians, and finally the Greeks, with such slaughter that many, driven by terror, considered it wise to receive the faith and sacraments of Christ, hearing that death had struck Christians on this side of the Greek sea neither as frequently nor as suddenly as it did among them. At last, this cruel plague rolled onward to the transalpine regions, and from there to the western lands of Gaul and the Germanic peoples, and in the seventh year after its outbreak, it reached England. First, it struck the seaports of Dorset, nearly depopulating the region, and then swept through Devon and Somerset as far as Bristol with such ferocity that the people of Gloucester refused to let those from Bristol enter their area, fearing that even the breath of the living among the dying was contagious.
Anno Christi MCCCXLIX, regni regis anno XXIIJ, ab oriente Indorum et Turcorum repens pestilencia generalis, medium nostri habitabilis inficiens, Saracenos, Turkos, Siriacos, Palestinos, et demum Grecos depopulavit tanta strage, quod terrore compulsi fidem atque sacramenta Christ! recipere consult! diiudicabant, audientes quod Christianos cis mare Grecum mors non terruit crebrius aut magis repente consueto. Tandem ad partes transalpinas et abhinc ad Gallias hesperias et Teutonicas seva clades successive devoluta, anno septimo sue incoacionis ad Angliam devenit. Primo quidem portus maris in Dorsetia et rursus patriam suis incolis fere privavit, et abhinc Devonian! ac Somersetiam usque Bristolliam ita desevit, quod Glovernienses illis de Bristollia ad suas partes denegarunt accessus, quolibet putante anelitus vivencium inter sic morientes fuisse infectivos.
Note 1. Stow Annales 384.
The Black Death, so called from the dark blotches which appeared on the skin, owing to the infiltration of the blood into the disorganized tissues, was the Levant or oriental plague. This fearful outbreak is said to have had its origin in central China, in 1333. It reached Europe in 1347, and appeared at Avignon at the beginning of 1348. Thence it spread northwards through France and Germany, and reached England in August of that year. It is said to have extended even to Iceland and Greenland. After making the circuit of Europe it visited Russia in 1351, and seems to have been finally stopped at the Caucasus. Baker's account of its progress in England has formed the chief basis of all later notices, through the medium of Stow's Annales. According to Professor Thorold Rogers, from one-third to one-half the population of the country perished. See Hecker, Epidemics of the Middle Ages (Sydenham Society), 1846; Rogers, History of Agriculture and Prices in England, 1.292; also, with regard to the extent of its ravages, see papers by Mr. Seebohm and Professor Rogers in The Fortnightly Review, 2.149, 268, 3.191; and The Black Death in East Anglia, by Dr. Jessopp, in The Nineteenth Century, 16.915, 17.599.
It will be observed that Baker dates its appearance at Bristol on the festival of the Assumption of the Virgin [15th August 1348]; its first entry into the country on the Dorsetshire coast is placed by Avesbury 406.
According to the Eulogium Historiarum (Rolls Series), 3.213.
Baker states that London was attacked about Michaelmas; Avesbury, about All Saints. The progress of the epidemic into the Eastern counties was remarkably slow, for it does not seem to have made its mark in Norfolk until about the end of March 1349.
On 6th June 1349 William Harcourt (age 49) died of plague at Stanton Harcourt, Oxfordshire [Map].
On 20th September 1349 Archbishop Simon Islip was elected Archbishop of Canterbury. His two predecessors Archbishop Thomas Bradwardine (deceased) and Archbishop John de Ufford having died of plague in quick succession during the Black Death Plague.
Before 21st September 1349 Hugh Fitzhugh Fitzhenry (age 15) died. Possibly by plague given the Black Death Plague occurring at this time.
On 29th September 1349 Margaret Wake Countess Kent (age 52) died of plague. Her son John (age 19) succeeded 4th Baron Wake of Liddell and inherited her dower lands and the estates she had inherited from her brother Thomas Wake 2nd Baron Wake of Liddell.
On 26th March 1350 Alfonso "Avenger" XI King Castile (age 38) died of plague. His son Peter (age 15) succeeded I King Castile.
Chronicle of Geoffrey le Baker of Swinbroke [-1360]. At the same time, after the capture of Calais, that great plague, which had gradually flowed from the eastern regions, began in those parts. As a result, in every part of the world, a great multitude of people, of both sexes, entered the way of all flesh, as will be described more fully below.
Eodem tempore, post Kalesii capcionem, incepit illis in partibus ilia generalis pestilencia a partibus orientis successive defluxa, unde in qualibet parte mundi magna multitude hominum utriusque sexus viam universe carnis ingrediebatur, sicud infra plenius dicetur.
John of Fordun's Chronicle. 167. Pestilence among men.
In the year 1350, there was, in the kingdom of Scotland, so great a pestilence and plague among men (which also prevailed for a great many years before and after, in divers parts of the world — nay, all over the whole earth), as, from the beginning of the world even unto modern times, had never been heard of by man, nor is found in books, for the enlightenment of those who come after. For, to such a pitch did that plague wreck its cruel spite, that nearly a third of mankind were thereby made to pay the debt of nature. Moreover, by God's will, this evil led to a strange and unwonted kind of death, insomuch that the flesh of the sick was somehow puffed out and swollen, and they dragged out their earthly life for barely two days. Now this everywhere attacked especially the meaner sort and common people; — seldom the magnates. Men shrank from it so much that, through fear of contagion, sons, fleeing as from the face of leprosy or from an adder, durst not go and see their parents in the throes of death.