7.2.1

Rebellion Starts in Essex & Kent

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The Rebellion Starts - Essex and Kent

The Revolt started in Essex on 20th May 1381 when John Bampton arrived to investigate the non-payment of the poll tax.

John Bampton

John Bampton

  • John Bampton, a Member of Parliament and Justice of the Peace, summoned representatives from each village.
  • They arrived armed and refused to pay.
  • Bampton tried to arrest the villagers. Violence broke out during which three government officials and several villagers were killed.
  • Bampton escaped back to London.
Bocking meeting

Bocking meeting

  • On 4th June, the rebels met at a village called Bocking to discuss their plans.
  • Several thousand rebels then marched from Essex towards London.
  • One group headed into Suffolk to start another rebellion.
  • At the same time, rebels in Kent attacked the jail in Maidstone and the town of Rochester, where the commander of Rochester Castle surrendered.
Wat Tyler's election

Wat Tyler's election

  • On 7th June, Wat Tyler was elected as the rebels' leader at a meeting in Maidstone.
  • Historians don't know much about him apart from that he was from Essex and fought as an archer in the war against France.
  • He may have used the nickname Jack Straw.

March to Canterbury

  • The rebels, led by Tyler, marched to Canterbury and captured it on the 10th of June.
  • They attacked government buildings and dragged suspected enemies out of their homes to execute them.
  • They also deposed the Archbishop of Canterbury, Simon Sudbury, and freed all of the prisoners in the jail.
Other revolts

Other revolts

  • Revolts also broke out in Hertfordshire, Somerset, Cambridgeshire, Norfolk, Yorkshire, Lincolnshire and Northumberland.
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