07.10.2015 Views

heraldryofyorkmi01custuoft

  • No tags were found...

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

148 THE HERALDRY OF YORK MINSTER.<br />

seems to have been kindled at Louth on Sunday, October 3rd, 1536, where<br />

Heneage, the commissioner appointed to examine into the condition of the<br />

churches and clergy, found himself on his arrival surrounded by a mob<br />

armed with belts and staves ("the stir and the noise arising hideous"),<br />

and compelled to swear to be true to the Commons.<br />

The prompt measures of Lord Hussey of Sleaford and Lord Shrewsbury<br />

eventually prevailed, and the result of a gathering at Lincoln Cathedral,<br />

on October i3th, was that the country gentlemen persuaded the people to<br />

trust the King, who had said they were misinformed as to the character of<br />

his measures, and to wait and see.<br />

But the smouldering embers were soon to be fanned into a blaze.<br />

John, Robert, and Christopher Aske, three Yorkshire gentlemen, whose<br />

mother was the daughter of John Lord Clifford, the stout old Lancastrian<br />

slain at Towton, having spent a short time cub-hunting with their brotherin-law,<br />

Sir Ralph Ellerkar, of Ellerkar Hall, separated to return to their<br />

duties and homes. Robert, en route to London, where he was a barrister<br />

in good practice, after crossing the Humber at Welton, found himself in<br />

the midst of a party of rebels at Appleby, who forced him to take the<br />

oath and become their leader. Flattered by their attentions, or convinced<br />

by their grievances, he put himself at their head, recrossed the Ouse, and<br />

having satisfied himself by a hasty visit to Lincoln, where he found the<br />

people again excited by the answer which the Duke of Suffolk had brought<br />

from the King, he went back at full speed, persuaded that an opportunity<br />

now presented itself which could never occur again.<br />

That night beacons blazed throughout Yorkshire, and all Yorkshire<br />

was in movement. At Beverley, William Stapleton, a friend of Aske's,<br />

was, in a similar manner, forced by the excited crowd to be their leader ;<br />

while Lord Darcy of Templehurst (an old man, who had won his spurs<br />

under Henry VIII., and fought against the Moors by the side of Ferdinand),<br />

temporised by merely putting out a proclamation and shutting himself up<br />

with twelve followers in Pontefract Castle, and took no further steps to<br />

secure peace and order. The conflagration now spread swiftly, and seemed<br />

likely to extend over the whole north.<br />

Lords Darcy, Lumley, Scrope, Conyers,<br />

Constable of Flamborough, the<br />

Tempests, Bowes, Fairfax, Strangeways, Ellerker, Sir John Bulmer, Mallory,<br />

Lascelles, Norton, Monckton, Gower, Ingleby, responded; only the Cliffords,<br />

Dacres, Musgraves, refused to come in to the confederacy. Scarcely one<br />

blow was struck anywhere. Skipton Castle alone in the West Riding held<br />

out for the Crown, although the whole retinue of the stout Earl of Clifford<br />

abandoned him, leaving him with some eighty people; together with<br />

Christopher and John Aske, who having rescued Lady Eleanor Clifford and<br />

her little children from Bolton Abbey, brought them in safety within the

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!