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St Scholastica Day riot

51°45′7″N 1°15′26″W / 51.75194°N 1.25722°W / 51.75194; -1.25722

St Scholastica Day riot, as depicted on a 1907 postcard

The St Scholastica Day riot took place in Oxford, England, on 10 February 1355, Saint Scholastica's Day. The disturbance began when two students from the University of Oxford complained about the quality of wine served to them in the Swindlestock Tavern, which stood on Carfax, in the centre of the town. The students quarrelled with the taverner; the argument quickly escalated to blows. The inn's customers joined in on both sides, and the resulting melee turned into a riot. The violence started by the bar brawl continued over three days, with armed gangs coming in from the countryside to assist the townspeople. University halls and students' accommodation were raided and the inhabitants murdered; there were some reports of clerics being scalped. Around 30 townsfolk were killed, as were up to 63 members of the university.

Violent disagreements between townspeople and students had arisen several times previously, and 12 of the 29 coroners' courts held in Oxford between 1297 and 1322 concerned murders by students. The University of Cambridge was established in 1209 by scholars who left Oxford following the lynching of two students by the town's citizens.

King Edward III sent judges to the town with commissions of oyer and terminer to determine what had gone on and to advise what steps should be taken. He came down on the side of the university authorities, who were given additional powers and responsibilities to the disadvantage of the town's authorities. The town was fined 500 marks and its mayor and bailiffs were sent to the Marshalsea prison in London. John Gynwell, the Bishop of Lincoln, imposed an interdict on the town for one year, which banned all religious practices, including services (except on key feast days), burials and marriages; only baptisms of young children were allowed.

An annual penance was imposed on the town: each year, on St Scholastica's Day, the mayor, bailiffs and sixty townspeople were to attend a Mass at the University Church of St Mary the Virgin for those killed; the town was also made to pay the university a fine of one penny for each scholar killed. The practice was dropped in 1825; in 1955—the 600th anniversary of the riots—in an act of conciliation the mayor was given an honorary degree and the vice-chancellor was made an honorary freeman of the city.

Background edit

 
Map of Oxford, showing some 11th-century buildings in black. Brown buildings and parish boundaries (in blue) are later.[1]

Academic teaching has been ongoing at Oxford since 1096; as a university it grew rapidly from 1167 and was given a royal charter in 1248, formalising some of its positions and functions.[2][3] In 1334 Oxford, a town of 5,000 residents, was the ninth wealthiest settlement in England.[4][5][6][a][b] In 1349 the Black Death affected the town; many townspeople died or left, and a quarter of the scholars perished.[8][9] The town began to recover soon afterwards, but its finances had been deeply affected.[10][11] During the first part of the fourteenth century the population was aware of the decline of Oxford's fortunes, and this coincided with disturbance and unrest between the town and university.[12]

Although co-operation between the university's senior members and the town's burgesses was the norm,[13][14] town and gown rivalry existed and relations would periodically deteriorate into violence.[15] On the occasions when peace settlements were imposed on the two sides, the outcome favoured the university.[16] In 1209 two Oxford scholars were lynched by the town's locals following the death of a woman, and among those who left the town to study elsewhere were some who settled in Cambridge to start the university that year.[17][18] In 1248 a Scottish scholar was murdered by the citizens; Robert Grosseteste, the Bishop of Lincoln, enforced a ban of excommunication on the culprits and Henry III fined the town's authorities 80 marks.[13][c][d] Violence continued to break out periodically and 12 of the 29 coroners' courts held between 1297 and 1322 concerned murders by the students. Many of these went unpunished by the university or the law.[21] In February 1298 a citizen was murdered by a student; one of the students was killed by townspeople. The townsfolk responsible for killing the scholar were excommunicated and the town was fined £200 in damages; there were no punishments given to the students.[22][23] This was the first occasion that the town's bailiffs were recorded as taking part in the violence; it was a feature of several subsequent altercations.[16]

Often the scholars rioted among themselves, as they did in 1252, 1267, 1273 and 1333–1334.[14] By the early fourteenth century "altercations and violence between citizens and scholars were commonplace", according to the historian Laurence Brockliss.[15] In a 1314 riot between the two main factions of the university—the Northernmen and the Southernmen—39 students were known to have committed murder or manslaughter; seven were arrested and the remainder sought religious sanctuary or escaped.[21] In 1349 scholars from Merton College rioted to have John Wylliot, their preferred candidate, elected Chancellor of the University.[24]

Dispute edit

 
Site of the Swindlestock Tavern

On 10 February 1355—Saint Scholastica Day—several university students went for a drink at the Swindlestock Tavern.[25] The tavern was located in the centre of Oxford, on the corner of the streets now called St Aldate's and Queen Street, at Carfax; the tavern was a regular drinking spot for the students.[26] Two of the group were Walter de Spryngeheuse and Roger de Chesterfield,[e] beneficed clergymen from South West England;[28] de Spryngeheuse was the former rector of Hamden, Somerset.[29] They were served wine by John de Croydon, who was the tavern's vintner[30] or possibly the landlord,[31] although the scholar Louis Brewer Hall and the antiquarian Anthony Wood, among others, describe him as a friend of John de Bereford, who was the tavern's owner and the mayor of Oxford.[29][32][33] De Spryngeheuse and de Chesterfield complained to de Croydon that the wine was sub-standard and asked that they be served a better drink.[26][f] De Croydon refused to listen to the complaints and, according to Wood, "several snappish words passed" between the men before de Croydon gave them "stubborn and saucy language".[25] As a result de Chesterfield threw his drink in de Croydon's face.[34] Sources differ on what happened next: according to those sympathetic to the university, de Chesterfield threw his wooden drinking vessel at de Croydon's head; those sympathetic to the townsfolk say the student beat him around the head with the pot.[26] A petition by the town authorities to Parliament said the students "threw the said wine in the face of John Croidon, taverner, and then with the said quart pot beat the said John".[14]

Other customers—both locals and students—joined in the fight, which spilled out of the tavern and onto the junction at Carfax.[29][32] Within half an hour the brawl had developed into a riot. To summon assistance, the locals rang the bell at St Martin's, the town's church; the students rang the bells of the University Church of St Mary the Virgin.[35] Humphrey de Cherlton, the Chancellor of the University, tried to calm both sides before things got too far out of hand, but arrows were shot at him and he retreated from the scene. Men from both sides armed themselves with cudgels, staves and bows and arrows. When night fell the violence died down; at this stage no-one had been killed or badly wounded.[26][32][35]

The following morning, in an attempt to stop any recurrence of the violence, the Chancellor issued a proclamation at the churches of St Martin and St Mary that no-one should bear arms, assault anyone or disturb the peace. He was supported by the chief magistrate of the town.[32][36] At the same time, the town's bailiffs were urging townsfolk to arm themselves; the bailiffs were also paying people in the surrounding countryside to come to aid the citizens.[37] About eighty townsmen, armed with bows and other weapons, went to St Giles' Church in the north part of the town, where they knew some scholars were, and chased them to the Augustine priory, killing at least one student and badly injuring several others on the way.[38][39][g] A master of theology was shot at when he tried to leave the priory.[27] The bells of both the town and university churches were rung to rally the respective supporters; students locked and barricaded some of the town's gates, to stop an influx of outsiders coming at them from a new direction.[38]

 
The plaque commemorating the site of the Swindlestock Tavern from 1250 to 1709

Late in the day of 11 February, up to 2,000 people from the countryside came in the western gate of the town to join the townsfolk, waving a black banner and crying: "Havoc! Havoc! Smyt fast, give gode knocks!"[40][41][h] The students, unable to fight against such a number, withdrew to their halls where they barricaded themselves in.[42] The citizens broke into five inns and hostels, where they finished off much of the food and drink; any student found there in his rented rooms or hiding place was killed or maimed.[43] After the violence subsided that night, the authorities from the town and the university went through the streets proclaiming in the king's name "that no man should injure the scholars or their goods under pain of forfeiture".[42]

In the early hours of the following morning de Cherlton and other senior members of the university left for nearby Woodstock, having been summoned there by Edward III, who was staying in the village.[42] The proclamation from the King to the townsfolk had no effect. They again rang the bell at St Martin's to rally their supporters and that day fourteen more inns and halls were sacked by the rioters, who killed any scholars they found. There were reports that some of the clerics were scalped, possibly "in scorn of the clergy" and their tonsures, according to Wood.[42][44][21] Other student corpses were buried in dunghills, left in the gutters, dumped into privies or cesspits or thrown into the River Thames.[45][46]

By the evening of the third day the passions of the townspeople had been spent. Many of the scholars had fled Oxford, and much of the town had been burnt down. Many of the student halls had been plundered or vandalised, with one notable exception being Merton College, whose students had a reputation for quietness and whose hall was made of stone.[45][46] There is no known figure for the number of townspeople killed, but it may have been about 30.[45][47] The number of students killed in the riots is a matter of disagreement among the sources: Wood thinks it was 40;[48] others put the number at 63.[46][49][50]

Resolution edit

 
Ending the St Scholastica Day riot, as depicted on a 1907 postcard

After the rioting ended, both the university hierarchy and the town burghers surrendered themselves and the rights of their respective entities to the king.[45][51] He sent judges to the town with commissions of oyer and terminer to determine what had gone on and to advise what steps should be taken.[52] Four days later the King restored the rights of the scholars and gave them pardons for any offences. He fined the town 500 marks and sent the town's mayor and bailiffs to the Marshalsea prison in London.[45][51][53] While the royal commission of inquiry was in place, John Gynwell, the Bishop of Lincoln, imposed an interdict on the townspeople, and banned all religious practices, including services (except on key feast days), burials and marriages; only baptisms of young children were allowed.[45][53][54]

On 27 June 1355 Edward issued a royal charter that secured the rights of the university over those of the town. The document gave the chancellor of the university the right to tax bread and drink sold in the town, the power to assay the weights and measures used in commerce in Oxford and its environs,[13] other rights relating to the commercial side of Oxford[55] and the power to insist that inhabitants kept their properties in good repair. The town authorities were left with the power to take action in legal situations where it involved citizens on both sides; any action that involved a student or the university on one side was dealt with by the university.[56]

When the interdict was lifted by the Bishop of Lincoln, he imposed an annual penance on the town. Each year, on St Scholastica's Day, the mayor, bailiffs and sixty townspeople were to attend St Mary's church for mass for those killed; the town was also made to pay the university a fine of one penny for each scholar killed.[57] When each new mayor or sheriff was sworn in, he had to swear to uphold all the university's rights.[52][58]

Aftermath edit

A series of poems, "Poems Relating to the Riot Between Town and Gown on St. Scholastica's Day", was written; the work is in Latin. According to the historian Henry Furneaux, who edited the works in the nineteenth century, they could have been written between 1356 and 1357 or in the early fifteenth century.[59]

The charter did not end the conflict between the town of Oxford and the university, although there was a hiatus in rioting.[58] There were further incidents over the following centuries, although these were on a much smaller scale than the events of 1355. According to Cobban, "the St Scholastica's Day riot was ... the last of the extreme bloody encounters" between town and gown; subsequent grievances were settled in the courts or by appealing to the government.[60] During the reign of Henry VIII, both the university and the town authorities petitioned Thomas Wolsey about who held jurisdiction on various points.[61][62]

The historian C. H. Lawrence observes that the charter "was the climax of a long series of royal privileges which raised the university from the status of a protected resident to that of the dominant power in the city".[63] Scholars were free from interference from or prosecution by the civil authorities and the chancellor's jurisdiction covered both civil and religious matters in the town; it was a unique position for any university in Europe.[64] The power of the university over the commercial aspects of the town ensured that the colleges were able to acquire much of the central areas of Oxford at the expense of merchants, and the dominance of the land ownership by the university, particularly in the Carfax environs, is as a result of the settlement following the riots.[12] One unintended corollary of the growing power of the university was that the town's weakened authorities did not accommodate plays or theatre until the sixteenth century. The situation was exacerbated by a lack of a cathedral in the town, which meant no religious plays were performed for pilgrims.[65]

The annual penance undertaken by the mayor continued until 1825 when the incumbent refused to take part and the practice was allowed to drop.[57] At least one previous mayor had refused to take part in the annual event: he was fined heavily and his payment given to the Radcliffe Infirmary.[58][66] In an act of conciliation on 10 February 1955—the 600th anniversary of the riots—the mayor, W. R. Gowers, was given an honorary degree; the vice-chancellor, Alic Halford Smith, was made an honorary freeman of the city, at a commemoration of the events of 1355.[67][68]

Historiography edit

The historian Alan Cobban observes that the two contemporary histories of the events differ in their allocation of blame; he considers that "given that propaganda and exaggeration were involved in these accounts, the whole truth may never be found."[69] He identifies two sources of primary documentation, Oxford City Documents, Financial and Judicial, 1258–1665, edited by the historian Thorold Rogers in 1891, and Medieval Archives of the University of Oxford: Vol 1, edited by the historian Herbert Edward Salter in 1920.[70] The historian Jeremy Catto adds Collectanea, edited by Montagu Burrows of the Oxford Historical Society in 1896.[14]

See also edit

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The figure is based on the taxable wealth of the citizens.[4]
  2. ^ Oxford was a town until 1542 when Henry VIII founded six new bishoprics, including one for Oxford. City status came with the new diocese.[7]
  3. ^ The Bishop of Lincoln oversaw the diocese of Lincoln, which was the largest in England and covered Lincolnshire, Bedford, Buckingham, Huntingdon, Leicester, Northampton, Rutland and Oxford.[19]
  4. ^ A medieval English mark was an accounting unit equivalent to two-thirds of a pound.[20]
  5. ^ The names are also given as Walter Springehouse and Roger Chesterfield.[27]
  6. ^ Hall observes that a practice common in cheaper taverns was to adulterate drinks with lime and water.[29]
  7. ^ The priory was situated where Wadham College now stands.[38]
  8. ^ The use of "Havoc" was possibly the earliest in English.[27] Various sources give different spellings or representations, including "Havac! Havoc!"[40] and "Havock and havock".[41]

References edit

  1. ^ Parker 1871, p. 75.
  2. ^ Hackett 1984, p. 82.
  3. ^ "Introduction and history". University of Oxford.
  4. ^ a b Glasscock 1976, p. 184.
  5. ^ Koenig 2011.
  6. ^ Harding 1993, p. 126.
  7. ^ Moore 1878, pp. 34–35.
  8. ^ Brewer 1813, p. 84.
  9. ^ Moore 1878, p. 24.
  10. ^ Chance et al. 1979, paragraph 35.
  11. ^ Workman 2012, p. 83.
  12. ^ a b Crossley 1979, p. 17.
  13. ^ a b c Cobban 1992, p. 260.
  14. ^ a b c d Catto 1984, p. 167.
  15. ^ a b Brockliss 2016, p. 16.
  16. ^ a b Crossley 1979, p. 16.
  17. ^ "Early records". University of Cambridge.
  18. ^ Leedham-Green 1996, p. 3.
  19. ^ King 1862, p. 401.
  20. ^ Harding 2002, p. xiv.
  21. ^ a b c Musgrave 1972.
  22. ^ Cobban 1992, p. 261.
  23. ^ Maxwell Lyte 1886, pp. 124–125.
  24. ^ Workman 2012, p. 82.
  25. ^ a b Wood 1792, p. 456.
  26. ^ a b c d Cheetham 1971, p. 72.
  27. ^ a b c Hall 1983, p. 56.
  28. ^ Pantin 1972, p. 54.
  29. ^ a b c d Hall 1983, p. 55.
  30. ^ Jeaffreson 1871, p. 227.
  31. ^ Green 1859, p. 41.
  32. ^ a b c d Wood 1792, p. 457.
  33. ^ Catto 1984, p. 160.
  34. ^ Jeaffreson 1871, p. 228.
  35. ^ a b Jeaffreson 1871, p. 229.
  36. ^ Jeaffreson 1871, p. 230.
  37. ^ Wood 1792, pp. 457–458.
  38. ^ a b c Wood 1792, p. 458.
  39. ^ Jeaffreson 1871, p. 231.
  40. ^ a b Morris 2001, p. 54.
  41. ^ a b Jeaffreson 1871, p. 232.
  42. ^ a b c d Wood 1792, p. 459.
  43. ^ Jeaffreson 1871, p. 233.
  44. ^ Jeaffreson 1871, pp. 234–235.
  45. ^ a b c d e f Hall 1983, p. 57.
  46. ^ a b c Cheetham 1971, p. 74.
  47. ^ Selwood 2017.
  48. ^ Wood 1792, p. 460.
  49. ^ "The St Scholastica Day Riot". University Church.
  50. ^ Horan 1999, p. 165.
  51. ^ a b Wood 1792, pp. 461–462.
  52. ^ a b Lawrence 1984, p. 147.
  53. ^ a b Cheetham 1971, p. 75.
  54. ^ Wood 1792, p. 461.
  55. ^ Cobban 2002, p. 190.
  56. ^ Brockliss 2016, p. 18.
  57. ^ a b Cobban 1992, p. 262.
  58. ^ a b c Cheetham 1971, p. 76.
  59. ^ Burrows 1896, pp. 165–166.
  60. ^ Cobban 1992, pp. 262–263.
  61. ^ Rogers 1891, pp. 268–269.
  62. ^ Evans 2010, pp. 133–134.
  63. ^ Lawrence 1984, p. 138.
  64. ^ Lawrence 1984, pp. 138–139.
  65. ^ Robertson 1969, pp. 41–42.
  66. ^ Rogers 1891, p. 247.
  67. ^ "Town and Gown Make it up". The Manchester Guardian.
  68. ^ "Oxford Recalls a Day in 1355". The Times.
  69. ^ Cobban 2002, pp. 193–194.
  70. ^ Cobban 2002, p. 193.

Sources edit

Books edit

  • Brewer, James (1813). The Beauties of England and Wales; or, Delineations, Topographical, Historical and Descriptive, of each County. Vol. 12, part 2. London: Longman & Co. OCLC 650428540.
  • Brockliss, L. W. B. (2016). The University of Oxford: A History. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-924356-3.
  • Burrows, Montagu, ed. (1896). Collectanea. Oxford: Clarendon Press. OCLC 832219035.
  • Catto, J. I. (1984). "Citizens, Scholars and Masters". In Catto, J. I. (ed.). The History of the University of Oxford. Vol. 1: The Early Oxford Schools. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 151–192. ISBN 978-0-19-951011-5.
  • Chance, Eleanor; Colvin, Christina; Cooper, Janet; Day, C. J.; Hassall, T. G.; Jessup, Mary; Selwyn, Nesta (1979). "Medieval Oxford". In Crossley, Alan; Elrington, C. R. (eds.). A History of the County of Oxford. Vol. 4, the City of Oxford. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 3–73.
  • Cheetham, Hal (1971). Portrait of Oxford. London: Hale. ISBN 978-0-7091-2415-3.
  • Cobban, Alan (1992). The Medieval English Universities: Oxford and Cambridge to c. 1500. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-5200-6244-3.
  • Cobban, Alan (2002). English University Life in the Middle Ages. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-36395-6.
  • Crossley, Alan (1979). A History of the County of Oxford. Vol. 4, the City of Oxford. London: Victoria County History. ISBN 978-0-1972-2714-5.
  • Evans, G. R. (2010). The University of Oxford: A New History. London: I.B.Tauris. ISBN 978-0-85773-025-1.
  • Glasscock, R. E. (1976). "England circa 1334". In Darby, Henry Clifford (ed.). A New Historical Geography of England Before 1600. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 136–185. ISBN 978-0-521-29144-6.
  • Green, John Richard (1859). Oxford During the Last Century. Oxford: Slatter and Rose. OCLC 262536606.
  • Hackett, M. B. (1984). "The University as a Corporate Body". In Catto, J. I. (ed.). The History of the University of Oxford: The Early Oxford Schools. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 37–96. ISBN 978-0-19-951011-5.
  • Hall, Louis Brewer (1983). The Perilous Vision of John Wyclif. Chicago: Nelson-Hall. ISBN 978-0-8304-1006-4.
  • Harding, Alan (1993). England in the Thirteenth Century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-31612-5.
  • Harding, V. (2002). The Dead and the Living in Paris and London, 1500–1670. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-52181-126-2.
  • Horan, David (1999). Oxford: A Cultural and Literary Companion. Oxford: Signal Books. ISBN 978-1-902669-05-2.
  • Jeaffreson, John Cordy (1871). Annals of Oxford. London: Hurst and Blackett. OCLC 844210940.
  • King, R. J. (1862). Handbook to the Cathedrals of England: Eastern Division. Oxford, Peterborough, Norwich, Ely, Lincoln. London: John Murray. OCLC 886346587.
  • Lawrence, C. H. (1984). "The University in State and Church". In Catto, J. I. (ed.). The History of the University of Oxford: The Early Oxford Schools. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 97–150. ISBN 978-0-19-951011-5.
  • Leedham-Green, E. S. (1996). A Concise History of the University of Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-43978-7.
  • Maxwell Lyte, Henry (1886). A History of the University of Oxford from the Earliest Times to the Year 1530. London: Macmillan. OCLC 1071824539.
  • Moore, James (1878). The Historical Handbook and Guide to Oxford: Embracing a Succinct History of the University and City from the Year 912. London: T. Shrimpton and Son. OCLC 3772483.
  • Morris, Jan (2001). Oxford. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-280136-4.
  • Pantin, W. A. (1972). Oxford Life in Oxford Archives. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-1982-2351-1.
  • Parker, James (1871). On the History of Oxford During the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries, (912-1100). Oxford. OCLC 1051525769.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Rogers, Thorold (1891). Oxford City Documents, Financial and Judicial, 1258–1665. Oxford: Clarendon Press. OCLC 969494526.
  • Wood, Anthony (1792). The History and Antiquities of the University of Oxford. Oxford: Printed for the editor. OCLC 22265745.
  • Workman, Herbert B. (2012). John Wyclif; A Study of the English Medieval Church. Vol. 1. Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock Publishers. ISBN 978-1-62032-569-8.

Journals and magazines edit

  • Musgrave, L. Curtis (February 1972). "Medieval University Life". History Today. 22 (2).
  • Robertson, Roderick (March 1969). "Oxford Theatre in Tudor Times". Educational Theatre Journal. 21 (1): 41–50. doi:10.2307/3205776. JSTOR 3205776.

News sources edit

  • Koenig, Chris (17 August 2011). "Rioting over wine led to 90 deaths". Oxford Mail.
  • "Oxford Recalls a Day in 1355". The Times. 11 February 1955. p. 10.
  • Selwood, Dominic (10 February 2017). "On this day in 1355: University fracas ends with 93 dead and the birth of a 600-year-long tradition". The Daily Telegraph.
  • "Town and Gown Make it up". The Manchester Guardian. 11 February 1955. p. 16.

Websites edit

  • "Early records". University of Cambridge. 28 January 2013. Retrieved 18 November 2019.
  • "Introduction and history". University of Oxford. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
  • "The St Scholastica Day Riot". University Church. Retrieved 3 December 2019.

External links edit

  • "Poems Relating to the Riot Between Town and Gown on St. Scholastica's Day", 1896

scholastica, riot, 75194, 25722, 75194, 25722, depicted, 1907, postcard, took, place, oxford, england, february, 1355, saint, scholastica, disturbance, began, when, students, from, university, oxford, complained, about, quality, wine, served, them, swindlestoc. 51 45 7 N 1 15 26 W 51 75194 N 1 25722 W 51 75194 1 25722 St Scholastica Day riot as depicted on a 1907 postcard The St Scholastica Day riot took place in Oxford England on 10 February 1355 Saint Scholastica s Day The disturbance began when two students from the University of Oxford complained about the quality of wine served to them in the Swindlestock Tavern which stood on Carfax in the centre of the town The students quarrelled with the taverner the argument quickly escalated to blows The inn s customers joined in on both sides and the resulting melee turned into a riot The violence started by the bar brawl continued over three days with armed gangs coming in from the countryside to assist the townspeople University halls and students accommodation were raided and the inhabitants murdered there were some reports of clerics being scalped Around 30 townsfolk were killed as were up to 63 members of the university Violent disagreements between townspeople and students had arisen several times previously and 12 of the 29 coroners courts held in Oxford between 1297 and 1322 concerned murders by students The University of Cambridge was established in 1209 by scholars who left Oxford following the lynching of two students by the town s citizens King Edward III sent judges to the town with commissions of oyer and terminer to determine what had gone on and to advise what steps should be taken He came down on the side of the university authorities who were given additional powers and responsibilities to the disadvantage of the town s authorities The town was fined 500 marks and its mayor and bailiffs were sent to the Marshalsea prison in London John Gynwell the Bishop of Lincoln imposed an interdict on the town for one year which banned all religious practices including services except on key feast days burials and marriages only baptisms of young children were allowed An annual penance was imposed on the town each year on St Scholastica s Day the mayor bailiffs and sixty townspeople were to attend a Mass at the University Church of St Mary the Virgin for those killed the town was also made to pay the university a fine of one penny for each scholar killed The practice was dropped in 1825 in 1955 the 600th anniversary of the riots in an act of conciliation the mayor was given an honorary degree and the vice chancellor was made an honorary freeman of the city Contents 1 Background 2 Dispute 3 Resolution 4 Aftermath 5 Historiography 6 See also 7 Notes and references 7 1 Notes 7 2 References 7 3 Sources 7 3 1 Books 7 3 2 Journals and magazines 7 3 3 News sources 7 3 4 Websites 8 External linksBackground edit nbsp Map of Oxford showing some 11th century buildings in black Brown buildings and parish boundaries in blue are later 1 Academic teaching has been ongoing at Oxford since 1096 as a university it grew rapidly from 1167 and was given a royal charter in 1248 formalising some of its positions and functions 2 3 In 1334 Oxford a town of 5 000 residents was the ninth wealthiest settlement in England 4 5 6 a b In 1349 the Black Death affected the town many townspeople died or left and a quarter of the scholars perished 8 9 The town began to recover soon afterwards but its finances had been deeply affected 10 11 During the first part of the fourteenth century the population was aware of the decline of Oxford s fortunes and this coincided with disturbance and unrest between the town and university 12 Although co operation between the university s senior members and the town s burgesses was the norm 13 14 town and gown rivalry existed and relations would periodically deteriorate into violence 15 On the occasions when peace settlements were imposed on the two sides the outcome favoured the university 16 In 1209 two Oxford scholars were lynched by the town s locals following the death of a woman and among those who left the town to study elsewhere were some who settled in Cambridge to start the university that year 17 18 In 1248 a Scottish scholar was murdered by the citizens Robert Grosseteste the Bishop of Lincoln enforced a ban of excommunication on the culprits and Henry III fined the town s authorities 80 marks 13 c d Violence continued to break out periodically and 12 of the 29 coroners courts held between 1297 and 1322 concerned murders by the students Many of these went unpunished by the university or the law 21 In February 1298 a citizen was murdered by a student one of the students was killed by townspeople The townsfolk responsible for killing the scholar were excommunicated and the town was fined 200 in damages there were no punishments given to the students 22 23 This was the first occasion that the town s bailiffs were recorded as taking part in the violence it was a feature of several subsequent altercations 16 Often the scholars rioted among themselves as they did in 1252 1267 1273 and 1333 1334 14 By the early fourteenth century altercations and violence between citizens and scholars were commonplace according to the historian Laurence Brockliss 15 In a 1314 riot between the two main factions of the university the Northernmen and the Southernmen 39 students were known to have committed murder or manslaughter seven were arrested and the remainder sought religious sanctuary or escaped 21 In 1349 scholars from Merton College rioted to have John Wylliot their preferred candidate elected Chancellor of the University 24 Dispute edit nbsp Site of the Swindlestock Tavern On 10 February 1355 Saint Scholastica Day several university students went for a drink at the Swindlestock Tavern 25 The tavern was located in the centre of Oxford on the corner of the streets now called St Aldate s and Queen Street at Carfax the tavern was a regular drinking spot for the students 26 Two of the group were Walter de Spryngeheuse and Roger de Chesterfield e beneficed clergymen from South West England 28 de Spryngeheuse was the former rector of Hamden Somerset 29 They were served wine by John de Croydon who was the tavern s vintner 30 or possibly the landlord 31 although the scholar Louis Brewer Hall and the antiquarian Anthony Wood among others describe him as a friend of John de Bereford who was the tavern s owner and the mayor of Oxford 29 32 33 De Spryngeheuse and de Chesterfield complained to de Croydon that the wine was sub standard and asked that they be served a better drink 26 f De Croydon refused to listen to the complaints and according to Wood several snappish words passed between the men before de Croydon gave them stubborn and saucy language 25 As a result de Chesterfield threw his drink in de Croydon s face 34 Sources differ on what happened next according to those sympathetic to the university de Chesterfield threw his wooden drinking vessel at de Croydon s head those sympathetic to the townsfolk say the student beat him around the head with the pot 26 A petition by the town authorities to Parliament said the students threw the said wine in the face of John Croidon taverner and then with the said quart pot beat the said John 14 Other customers both locals and students joined in the fight which spilled out of the tavern and onto the junction at Carfax 29 32 Within half an hour the brawl had developed into a riot To summon assistance the locals rang the bell at St Martin s the town s church the students rang the bells of the University Church of St Mary the Virgin 35 Humphrey de Cherlton the Chancellor of the University tried to calm both sides before things got too far out of hand but arrows were shot at him and he retreated from the scene Men from both sides armed themselves with cudgels staves and bows and arrows When night fell the violence died down at this stage no one had been killed or badly wounded 26 32 35 The following morning in an attempt to stop any recurrence of the violence the Chancellor issued a proclamation at the churches of St Martin and St Mary that no one should bear arms assault anyone or disturb the peace He was supported by the chief magistrate of the town 32 36 At the same time the town s bailiffs were urging townsfolk to arm themselves the bailiffs were also paying people in the surrounding countryside to come to aid the citizens 37 About eighty townsmen armed with bows and other weapons went to St Giles Church in the north part of the town where they knew some scholars were and chased them to the Augustine priory killing at least one student and badly injuring several others on the way 38 39 g A master of theology was shot at when he tried to leave the priory 27 The bells of both the town and university churches were rung to rally the respective supporters students locked and barricaded some of the town s gates to stop an influx of outsiders coming at them from a new direction 38 nbsp The plaque commemorating the site of the Swindlestock Tavern from 1250 to 1709 Late in the day of 11 February up to 2 000 people from the countryside came in the western gate of the town to join the townsfolk waving a black banner and crying Havoc Havoc Smyt fast give gode knocks 40 41 h The students unable to fight against such a number withdrew to their halls where they barricaded themselves in 42 The citizens broke into five inns and hostels where they finished off much of the food and drink any student found there in his rented rooms or hiding place was killed or maimed 43 After the violence subsided that night the authorities from the town and the university went through the streets proclaiming in the king s name that no man should injure the scholars or their goods under pain of forfeiture 42 In the early hours of the following morning de Cherlton and other senior members of the university left for nearby Woodstock having been summoned there by Edward III who was staying in the village 42 The proclamation from the King to the townsfolk had no effect They again rang the bell at St Martin s to rally their supporters and that day fourteen more inns and halls were sacked by the rioters who killed any scholars they found There were reports that some of the clerics were scalped possibly in scorn of the clergy and their tonsures according to Wood 42 44 21 Other student corpses were buried in dunghills left in the gutters dumped into privies or cesspits or thrown into the River Thames 45 46 By the evening of the third day the passions of the townspeople had been spent Many of the scholars had fled Oxford and much of the town had been burnt down Many of the student halls had been plundered or vandalised with one notable exception being Merton College whose students had a reputation for quietness and whose hall was made of stone 45 46 There is no known figure for the number of townspeople killed but it may have been about 30 45 47 The number of students killed in the riots is a matter of disagreement among the sources Wood thinks it was 40 48 others put the number at 63 46 49 50 Resolution edit nbsp Ending the St Scholastica Day riot as depicted on a 1907 postcard After the rioting ended both the university hierarchy and the town burghers surrendered themselves and the rights of their respective entities to the king 45 51 He sent judges to the town with commissions of oyer and terminer to determine what had gone on and to advise what steps should be taken 52 Four days later the King restored the rights of the scholars and gave them pardons for any offences He fined the town 500 marks and sent the town s mayor and bailiffs to the Marshalsea prison in London 45 51 53 While the royal commission of inquiry was in place John Gynwell the Bishop of Lincoln imposed an interdict on the townspeople and banned all religious practices including services except on key feast days burials and marriages only baptisms of young children were allowed 45 53 54 On 27 June 1355 Edward issued a royal charter that secured the rights of the university over those of the town The document gave the chancellor of the university the right to tax bread and drink sold in the town the power to assay the weights and measures used in commerce in Oxford and its environs 13 other rights relating to the commercial side of Oxford 55 and the power to insist that inhabitants kept their properties in good repair The town authorities were left with the power to take action in legal situations where it involved citizens on both sides any action that involved a student or the university on one side was dealt with by the university 56 When the interdict was lifted by the Bishop of Lincoln he imposed an annual penance on the town Each year on St Scholastica s Day the mayor bailiffs and sixty townspeople were to attend St Mary s church for mass for those killed the town was also made to pay the university a fine of one penny for each scholar killed 57 When each new mayor or sheriff was sworn in he had to swear to uphold all the university s rights 52 58 Aftermath editA series of poems Poems Relating to the Riot Between Town and Gown on St Scholastica s Day was written the work is in Latin According to the historian Henry Furneaux who edited the works in the nineteenth century they could have been written between 1356 and 1357 or in the early fifteenth century 59 The charter did not end the conflict between the town of Oxford and the university although there was a hiatus in rioting 58 There were further incidents over the following centuries although these were on a much smaller scale than the events of 1355 According to Cobban the St Scholastica s Day riot was the last of the extreme bloody encounters between town and gown subsequent grievances were settled in the courts or by appealing to the government 60 During the reign of Henry VIII both the university and the town authorities petitioned Thomas Wolsey about who held jurisdiction on various points 61 62 The historian C H Lawrence observes that the charter was the climax of a long series of royal privileges which raised the university from the status of a protected resident to that of the dominant power in the city 63 Scholars were free from interference from or prosecution by the civil authorities and the chancellor s jurisdiction covered both civil and religious matters in the town it was a unique position for any university in Europe 64 The power of the university over the commercial aspects of the town ensured that the colleges were able to acquire much of the central areas of Oxford at the expense of merchants and the dominance of the land ownership by the university particularly in the Carfax environs is as a result of the settlement following the riots 12 One unintended corollary of the growing power of the university was that the town s weakened authorities did not accommodate plays or theatre until the sixteenth century The situation was exacerbated by a lack of a cathedral in the town which meant no religious plays were performed for pilgrims 65 The annual penance undertaken by the mayor continued until 1825 when the incumbent refused to take part and the practice was allowed to drop 57 At least one previous mayor had refused to take part in the annual event he was fined heavily and his payment given to the Radcliffe Infirmary 58 66 In an act of conciliation on 10 February 1955 the 600th anniversary of the riots the mayor W R Gowers was given an honorary degree the vice chancellor Alic Halford Smith was made an honorary freeman of the city at a commemoration of the events of 1355 67 68 Historiography editThe historian Alan Cobban observes that the two contemporary histories of the events differ in their allocation of blame he considers that given that propaganda and exaggeration were involved in these accounts the whole truth may never be found 69 He identifies two sources of primary documentation Oxford City Documents Financial and Judicial 1258 1665 edited by the historian Thorold Rogers in 1891 and Medieval Archives of the University of Oxford Vol 1 edited by the historian Herbert Edward Salter in 1920 70 The historian Jeremy Catto adds Collectanea edited by Montagu Burrows of the Oxford Historical Society in 1896 14 See also editMedieval university University of Paris strike 1229 Authentica habita Benefit of clergy Battle of CarfaxNotes and references editNotes edit The figure is based on the taxable wealth of the citizens 4 Oxford was a town until 1542 when Henry VIII founded six new bishoprics including one for Oxford City status came with the new diocese 7 The Bishop of Lincoln oversaw the diocese of Lincoln which was the largest in England and covered Lincolnshire Bedford Buckingham Huntingdon Leicester Northampton Rutland and Oxford 19 A medieval English mark was an accounting unit equivalent to two thirds of a pound 20 The names are also given as Walter Springehouse and Roger Chesterfield 27 Hall observes that a practice common in cheaper taverns was to adulterate drinks with lime and water 29 The priory was situated where Wadham College now stands 38 The use of Havoc was possibly the earliest in English 27 Various sources give different spellings or representations including Havac Havoc 40 and Havock and havock 41 References edit Parker 1871 p 75 Hackett 1984 p 82 Introduction and history University of Oxford a b Glasscock 1976 p 184 Koenig 2011 Harding 1993 p 126 Moore 1878 pp 34 35 Brewer 1813 p 84 Moore 1878 p 24 Chance et al 1979 paragraph 35 Workman 2012 p 83 a b Crossley 1979 p 17 a b c Cobban 1992 p 260 a b c d Catto 1984 p 167 a b Brockliss 2016 p 16 a b Crossley 1979 p 16 Early records University of Cambridge Leedham Green 1996 p 3 King 1862 p 401 Harding 2002 p xiv a b c Musgrave 1972 Cobban 1992 p 261 Maxwell Lyte 1886 pp 124 125 Workman 2012 p 82 a b Wood 1792 p 456 a b c d Cheetham 1971 p 72 a b c Hall 1983 p 56 Pantin 1972 p 54 a b c d Hall 1983 p 55 Jeaffreson 1871 p 227 Green 1859 p 41 a b c d Wood 1792 p 457 Catto 1984 p 160 Jeaffreson 1871 p 228 a b Jeaffreson 1871 p 229 Jeaffreson 1871 p 230 Wood 1792 pp 457 458 a b c Wood 1792 p 458 Jeaffreson 1871 p 231 a b Morris 2001 p 54 a b Jeaffreson 1871 p 232 a b c d Wood 1792 p 459 Jeaffreson 1871 p 233 Jeaffreson 1871 pp 234 235 a b c d e f Hall 1983 p 57 a b c Cheetham 1971 p 74 Selwood 2017 Wood 1792 p 460 The St Scholastica Day Riot University Church Horan 1999 p 165 a b Wood 1792 pp 461 462 a b Lawrence 1984 p 147 a b Cheetham 1971 p 75 Wood 1792 p 461 Cobban 2002 p 190 Brockliss 2016 p 18 a b Cobban 1992 p 262 a b c Cheetham 1971 p 76 Burrows 1896 pp 165 166 Cobban 1992 pp 262 263 Rogers 1891 pp 268 269 Evans 2010 pp 133 134 Lawrence 1984 p 138 Lawrence 1984 pp 138 139 Robertson 1969 pp 41 42 Rogers 1891 p 247 Town and Gown Make it up The Manchester Guardian Oxford Recalls a Day in 1355 The Times Cobban 2002 pp 193 194 Cobban 2002 p 193 Sources edit Books edit Brewer James 1813 The Beauties of England and Wales or Delineations Topographical Historical and Descriptive of each County Vol 12 part 2 London Longman amp Co OCLC 650428540 Brockliss L W B 2016 The University of Oxford A History Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 924356 3 Burrows Montagu ed 1896 Collectanea Oxford Clarendon Press OCLC 832219035 Catto J I 1984 Citizens Scholars and Masters In Catto J I ed The History of the University of Oxford Vol 1 The Early Oxford Schools Oxford Clarendon Press pp 151 192 ISBN 978 0 19 951011 5 Chance Eleanor Colvin Christina Cooper Janet Day C J Hassall T G Jessup Mary Selwyn Nesta 1979 Medieval Oxford In Crossley Alan Elrington C R eds A History of the County of Oxford Vol 4 the City of Oxford Oxford Oxford University Press pp 3 73 Cheetham Hal 1971 Portrait of Oxford London Hale ISBN 978 0 7091 2415 3 Cobban Alan 1992 The Medieval English Universities Oxford and Cambridge to c 1500 Berkeley CA University of California Press ISBN 978 0 5200 6244 3 Cobban Alan 2002 English University Life in the Middle Ages London Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 36395 6 Crossley Alan 1979 A History of the County of Oxford Vol 4 the City of Oxford London Victoria County History ISBN 978 0 1972 2714 5 Evans G R 2010 The University of Oxford A New History London I B Tauris ISBN 978 0 85773 025 1 Glasscock R E 1976 England circa 1334 In Darby Henry Clifford ed A New Historical Geography of England Before 1600 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 136 185 ISBN 978 0 521 29144 6 Green John Richard 1859 Oxford During the Last Century Oxford Slatter and Rose OCLC 262536606 Hackett M B 1984 The University as a Corporate Body In Catto J I ed The History of the University of Oxford The Early Oxford Schools Oxford Clarendon Press pp 37 96 ISBN 978 0 19 951011 5 Hall Louis Brewer 1983 The Perilous Vision of John Wyclif Chicago Nelson Hall ISBN 978 0 8304 1006 4 Harding Alan 1993 England in the Thirteenth Century Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 31612 5 Harding V 2002 The Dead and the Living in Paris and London 1500 1670 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 52181 126 2 Horan David 1999 Oxford A Cultural and Literary Companion Oxford Signal Books ISBN 978 1 902669 05 2 Jeaffreson John Cordy 1871 Annals of Oxford London Hurst and Blackett OCLC 844210940 King R J 1862 Handbook to the Cathedrals of England Eastern Division Oxford Peterborough Norwich Ely Lincoln London John Murray OCLC 886346587 Lawrence C H 1984 The University in State and Church In Catto J I ed The History of the University of Oxford The Early Oxford Schools Oxford Clarendon Press pp 97 150 ISBN 978 0 19 951011 5 Leedham Green E S 1996 A Concise History of the University of Cambridge Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 43978 7 Maxwell Lyte Henry 1886 A History of the University of Oxford from the Earliest Times to the Year 1530 London Macmillan OCLC 1071824539 Moore James 1878 The Historical Handbook and Guide to Oxford Embracing a Succinct History of the University and City from the Year 912 London T Shrimpton and Son OCLC 3772483 Morris Jan 2001 Oxford Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280136 4 Pantin W A 1972 Oxford Life in Oxford Archives Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 1982 2351 1 Parker James 1871 On the History of Oxford During the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries 912 1100 Oxford OCLC 1051525769 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Rogers Thorold 1891 Oxford City Documents Financial and Judicial 1258 1665 Oxford Clarendon Press OCLC 969494526 Wood Anthony 1792 The History and Antiquities of the University of Oxford Oxford Printed for the editor OCLC 22265745 Workman Herbert B 2012 John Wyclif A Study of the English Medieval Church Vol 1 Eugene OR Wipf and Stock Publishers ISBN 978 1 62032 569 8 Journals and magazines edit Musgrave L Curtis February 1972 Medieval University Life History Today 22 2 Robertson Roderick March 1969 Oxford Theatre in Tudor Times Educational Theatre Journal 21 1 41 50 doi 10 2307 3205776 JSTOR 3205776 News sources edit Koenig Chris 17 August 2011 Rioting over wine led to 90 deaths Oxford Mail Oxford Recalls a Day in 1355 The Times 11 February 1955 p 10 Selwood Dominic 10 February 2017 On this day in 1355 University fracas ends with 93 dead and the birth of a 600 year long tradition The Daily Telegraph Town and Gown Make it up The Manchester Guardian 11 February 1955 p 16 Websites edit Early records University of Cambridge 28 January 2013 Retrieved 18 November 2019 Introduction and history University of Oxford Retrieved 15 November 2019 The St Scholastica Day Riot University Church Retrieved 3 December 2019 External links edit Poems Relating to the Riot Between Town and Gown on St Scholastica s Day 1896 Portals nbsp England nbsp Middle Ages nbsp Oxfordshire nbsp University of Oxford Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Scholastica Day riot amp oldid 1217006540, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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