Simon of Sudbury




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On the 14th June 1381, the Archbishop of Canterbury was dragged from the Tower of London - where he had sought refuge - by a rebellious mob.
He was then b~headed on Tower Green, with the exEcutioner reportedly taking up to eight attempts!
His head was then placed above the gatehouse on London Bridge.
It was an unceremonious end for the Archbishop, who had found himself caught up in one of the most tumultuous periods of British history.

In May 1375 Simon succeeded William Whittlesey as Archbishop of Canterbury.
Two years later, he crowned the 10-year-old Richard II King, at Westminster Abbey.

The country was not yet halfway through what would become the hundred years war, draining the Treasury.
Army garrisons in France had not been paid for three months, and money was needed for the war to continue.

A sales tax, a wealth tax on property, or a poll tax of one shilling and three groats per head on everybody over the age of 15.
Parliament opted for the poll tax, to raise £100,000 if the Church raised the other £60,000 needed.
The richest people would pay up to six groats per man and wife.
A groat was the equivalent of four pence.

Overall dissent following the Black Death pandemic of 1348 to 1349, wiped out a third of the population, resulting in a labour shortage with inevitable higher wages, which the government had successively attempted to hold down by statute.
The ending of serfdom was an important part of people’s demands.
The new Poll Tax, was the nail in the coffin.

After causing damage and destruction at the Archbishop’s palace, the insurgents moved on to the Archbishop’s Lambeth Palace.

After the meeting ended, Wat Tyler and 400 men went to the Tower of London and found Lord Chancellor Simon of Sudbury and Lord High Treasurer Sir Robert Hales, who was responsible for collecting the third poll tax in four years, at prayer in St John’s Chapel in the White Tower.
Both men were seized and led to their deaths.
Wat Tyler met a similar end the next day by the Mayor of London’s sword.

In addition, he demolished the Norman Nave of the Cathedral which was in a state of bad repair and unsafe.
Reconstruction commenced in 1375.
He gave 3,000 marks, equivalent to more than £2m today, to subsidise the cost of the building works authorised.

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