[History of the English People, Volume II (of 8) by John Richard Green]@TWC D-Link book
History of the English People, Volume II (of 8)

CHAPTER IV
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The Lollard preachers stirred up riots by the virulence of their preaching against the friars.

But they directed even fiercer invectives against the wealth and secularity of the great Churchmen.

In a formal petition which was laid before Parliament in 1395 they mingled denunciations of the riches of the clergy with an open profession of disbelief in transubstantiation, priesthood, pilgrimages, and image-worship, and a demand, which illustrates the strange medley of opinions which jostled together in the new movement, that war might be declared unchristian and that trades such as those of the goldsmith or the armourer, which were contrary to apostolical poverty, might be banished from the realm.

They contended (and it is remarkable that a Parliament of the next reign adopted the statement) that from the superfluous revenues of the Church, if once they were applied to purposes of general utility, the king might maintain fifteen earls, fifteen hundred knights, and six thousand squires, besides endowing a hundred hospitals for the relief of the poor.
[Sidenote: Disasters of the War] The distress of the landowners, the general disorganization of the country, in every part of which bands of marauders were openly defying the law, the panic of the Church and of society at large as the projects of the Lollards shaped themselves into more daring and revolutionary forms, added a fresh keenness to the national discontent at the languid and inefficient prosecution of the war.

The junction of the French and Spanish fleets had made them masters of the seas, and what fragments were left of Guienne lay at their mercy.


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