![]() One of the instigators, one of the people who helps Who is preaching at this time and is considered maybe But to go into what they were doing there, I want to start with a quote and this again comes from TheĬhronicles of Jean Froissart that I mentioned and this is a quote that he attributes to John Ball. ![]() Of what it might look like for the king to be confronted by thousands of angry subjects. It's added back into the Chronicles later, so the picture is not entirelyĪccurate of the period, but it does give us a sense So we have a picture here, and this is a picture from TheĬhronicles of Jean Froissart, and he is writing hisĬhronicles of what's going on at the same time that So why did this happen? Why did people rebel? And secondly, we want to think about were these uprisings successful? And if so, what does success look like in these circumstances? So I want to start withĪ specific example, and that example is the These popular uprisings in a way that just didn't People choose to revolt against their government? And especially after about the 1320s, we see a huge number of As we look at these events, we want to keep two questions in mind, sort of big-picture questions. ![]() Them as popular uprisings, which means that they involvedĪ lot of common people. ![]() Later about whether or not that's a really an appropriate term given who actually participated in the events. Known as peasants' revolts, and we'll talk a little So we're talking about between roughly the 14th and the 16th centuries. Video I want to look at popular uprisings in ![]()
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