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22/06/2026

in 1265 Simon de Montfort and Prince Llywelyn of Wales agreed to the Treaty of Pipton. It was named after Llywelyn’s camp at Pipton on the Wye inside Cantref Selyf, mid-Wales.

Simon was desperate for military support, and to that end agreed to all of Llywelyn’s demands. He did so in the name of Henry III, who was being dragged about as Simon’s prisoner. This was because Simon needed the king to put his seal to official documents, otherwise they had no validity.

The letter patent of Henry III issued at Hereford on 22 June, effectively summarised the terms. They had been conveyed to Llywelyn a few days earlier, and considered by the prince and his council before he ratified them by issue of letters patent on 19 June.

Llywelyn’s letters, dated ‘in camp at Pipton’ or ‘at Pipton’, are among the most important of the original texts from Llywelyn’s court that have survived. They register the prince’s acceptance of a financial commitment into which he was prepared to enter in exchange for the lands and rights granted to him by the king in Wales. As such it was a precursor to the Treaty of Montgomery in 1267, but on more favourable terms to the prince.

The document was probably drawn up at Hereford and carried to Llywelyn by Peter de Montfort, who then conveyed the prince’s acceptance back to Simon. There is nothing to suggest that Llywelyn and Simon met in person to discuss the terms.

The terms effectively wiped out the English royal presence in Wales, and all of Henry’s gains in the past decades. Any written bonds made against Llywelyn or his predecessor, Prince Dafydd, were destroyed. Everything they held in Wales prior to these bonds would be restored. This included the lordship of all the magnates of Wales plus the principality, Painscastle, the hundred of Ellesmere, and the castles of Hawarden and Montgomery. In addition the king promised to recognise Llywelyn’s title as Prince of Wales and help him to conquer those lands held by his enemies. The sting in the tail was a fine of 30,000 marks (about £20,000), which Llywelyn had to pay in exchange.

Further, it was stated that if the king acted against these terms, he could be deposed. It may be that Simon was seriously contemplating deposing Henry and taking the crown for himself.

He knew that Henry would never agree to the above terms, if he was acting of his own will. Instead they were extracted from him by force, which had no validity in medieval jurisprudence. The latter was a bit of a joke, given the amount of coercion in this period, but still a point of law.

20/06/2026

Names rise and fall with reputations, and in the Middle Ages, a single bad death could poison a name for centuries. One king cut down in battle, one heir executed in a tower, and suddenly, no parent wants to risk the bad luck. Here are 7 boys' names that paid the price.

1. Harold
When Harold Godwinson fell at Hastings in 1066, his name fell with him. The Normans were the new ruling class, and naming your son after the defeated Saxon king was a quick way to mark your family as the wrong sort. Harold all but vanished from English records for nearly 800 years.

2. Hereward
Hereward the Wake led the last serious English resistance against William the Conqueror from the fens around Ely. After his rebellion collapsed in 1071, the name became a quiet liability under Norman rule. It hung on in a few corners of East Anglia but never recovered as a mainstream choice.

3. Edmund
Edmund had royal weight behind it, from the martyr-king of East Anglia to Edmund Ironside. Then came Edmund, Earl of Rutland, butchered at 17 after the Battle of Wakefield in 1460, and the young Edmund of Middleham, Richard III's only legitimate son, died before he could inherit. The name carried a curse by the end of the Wars of the Roses, and parents took the hint.

4. Æthelred
Æthelred the Unready spent his reign losing to Vikings and paying them off with Danegeld, and his son Edmund Ironside died within months of taking the throne in 1016. After the Danish conquest, the old royal name became shorthand for failure. By the time the Normans arrived, it was already on its way out, and they finished the job.

5. Simon
Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester, was hacked apart at the Battle of Evesham in 1265 after challenging Henry III and briefly ruling England through a council. His body was mutilated on the field, his head sent to a noblewoman as a trophy. Among the English baronage, naming a son Simon for the next generation felt like asking for the same ending.

6. Perkin
Perkin Warbeck claimed to be one of the Princes in the Tower and nearly toppled Henry VII before he was hanged at Tyburn in 1499. The name, already a humble nickname for Peter, became attached to impostors and bad ends. It quietly dropped out of use within a generation.

7. Guy
Guy of Lusignan lost the True Cross and the Kingdom of Jerusalem at the Battle of Hattin in 1187, one of the most catastrophic defeats in crusading history. Centuries later, Guy Fawkes finished what Lusignan started, attaching the name to treason and gunpowder. In England, it became a word for a scarecrow effigy, and parents kept their distance for a long time after.

BATTLE OF EVESHAM PRESENTSUK QUEEN - One of the best Queen tribute bands -re-enacting the majesty of Queen.Friday 7pm 31...
19/06/2026

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18/06/2026
15/06/2026

Great to help HistoryHit with creating this documentary on Simon de Montfort ⚔️🛡️👍

13/06/2026

in 1307 a final payment was made to James de Cowpen, a Scottish musician in Edward I’s service.

James was one of two Scots who played for the king. The other was Master Elyas, once the personal harper of Alexander III. Elyas entered Edward’s service shortly after Alexander’s death in 1286, and was afterwards known as the King’s Harper or Master Elyas le Harpur. In 1296 he was granted lands in Perth and Fife, and was probably one of the five Scottish harpers who played for Edward in 1303 at Sandford near Largo Bay in Fife.

As for James, he first performed for the king at the wedding of Edward’s daughter, Joan of Acre, to Gilbert de Clare, in 1290. James was described as ‘King Caupenny of Scotia, who came to Westminster to the feast of the aforesaid nuptials’. He was paid the considerable sum of 50 shillings, by the king’s gift, for performing as ‘Rex Haraldorum’ or King of Heralds.

James appeared again at Edward’s court in 1296, after the deposition of John Balliol, and appears frequently in the accounts after that date. He received many gifts of favour from the king, including jewellery and a horse, and his name appears as Jakketus de Scotia, Monsire Capenny, Capigny, Capainy, Capini, Capin and Copyn. In the last reference, dated 1307, he is “Roy de Copiny, harpour’.

In 1306 James travelled north to Lanercost, where he played to the king to soothe the pain of Edward’s final illness. He vanishes after 1307.

12/06/2026

rād-wērig, adj: weary with riding or journeying. (RAWD-WAY-rih / ˈraːd-ˌweː-rɪj)
Image: Arthurian romances; France, 1290-1300; Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Beinecke MS 229, f. 233r. https://collections.library.yale.edu/catalog/2004282

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