Eustace Folville

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Eustace Folville
Bornc. 1288
Died1347[1]
Known forSlaying of Sir Roger de Beler
Parent(s)Sir John Folville and Alice
Conviction(s)None
Criminal chargeMurder, rustling, highway robbery, kidnapping
Details
VictimsSir Roger de Beler
Date1326

Eustace Folville (c. 1288 – 1347)[a] was an English criminal and outlaw who is credited with assassinating the unpopular Sir Roger de Beler, Baron of the Exchequer and henchman of the despised Hugh le Despencer and King Edward II. He was the most active member of the Folville Gang, which engaged in acts of vigilantism and outlawry in Leicestershire in the early 1300s, often on the behalf of others.

Folville family[edit]

Eustace was the second of seven sons of Sir John Folville,[3] a respectable member of the gentry who acted on many occasions as a Commissioner or knight of the shire for both Rutland and Leicestershire.[2] Eustace's elder brother, also identified in contemporary records as Sir John Folville, inherited all of his father's lands in 1309 and abstained from most (but not all) of the law-breaking of his younger brothers. More recent research shows the Folville pedigree detailed by local historian George Farnham is flawed.[4] Sir John de Folville and Eustace, along with their other siblings, appear to have been the issue of a Sir Eustace (who died shortly before 1284) by Dame Alice.

Background[edit]

Upon the death of the well-respected King Edward I, the "Hammer of the Scots", he was succeeded by his son Edward II, who did not inherit his father's abilities. Edward II promoted a young French knight called Piers Gaveston ahead of the existing aristocracy and his corruption and abusive nature meant that relations between the King and his subjects soon broke down. Gaveston was exiled but returned and was executed by Thomas, 2nd Earl of Lancaster in 1312.

Gaveston was soon replaced in the affections of the king by another knight, Hugh Despenser the Younger. Despenser's greed and corruption became rampant and relations between him and the baronage disintegrated, resulting in the Despenser War of 1321–1322, led by the Marcher Lords Roger Mortimer[b] and Humphrey de Bohun. This culminated in the Battle of Boroughbridge on 16 March 1322, which was won by the King and Despenser and saw Gaveston's killer, Thomas, 2nd Earl of Lancaster (King Edward's cousin), himself executed.

Many of the rebels were imprisoned, including Roger Mortimer (who escaped to France in August 1323) and Robert de Holland, 1st Baron Holand.[c] Others fled and engaged in outlawry; Sir William Trussell (who later became Speaker of the House of Commons and oversaw Edward's abdication) led a rebel group that raided in Somerset and Dorset in August 1322.[5]

As the injustices continued and the effects of the Great Famine of 1315–1322 lingered, discontent remained. Despenser and his father Hugh le Despenser, 1st Earl of Winchester were rewarded with lands that had belonged to Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, including those in Leicestershire.[6] On 14 Mar 1323, Roger de Beler, Baron of the Exchequer, Richard de Willoughby, and William de Gosefeld were issued arrest warrants for Sir William Trussell, his son William, Roger la Zouch (son of Sir Roger la Zouch, Lord of Lubbesthorpe), Roger's brother Ralph, Robert de Holland, 1st Baron Holand, and others who were accused by Hugh le Despenser of stealing horses, oxen, pigs, sheep, and swans from his parks in Leicestershire.[6] The warrant was reissued in 1324 alongside similar ones that dealt with rioting against Despenser in Warwickshire, Staffordshire, and Worcestershire by other rebels.[6]

Sir William Trussell was forced to flee to France, where he joined Roger Mortimer and plotted revenge against the Despensers and the King. Queen Isabella joined them in 1325 and embarked upon an affair with Mortimer, having been estranged from Edward II since he had left her dangerously unprotected from the Scottish in 1322.

By January 1326, English supporters of Isabella, Mortimer, and Trussell, perhaps including the la Zouches, were assembling and equipping troops in preparation for an approaching invasion.[6]

The Folville Gang[edit]

Slaying of Roger Beler[edit]

A great variety of crimes were committed throughout the gang's career, including murder, extortion, and kidnapping.

Rehabilitation[edit]

A year after the kidnapping of Willoughby, Eustace Folville was serving in the armies of Edward III against the Scottish. He may well have fought at the Halidon Hill in 1333. In recognition of this military service, Eustace received another full pardon for his crimes. He was in combat again in 1337 and 1338, in Scotland and Flanders respectively. He finally died in 1347,[1] a member of the council of the Abbot of Crowland, having stood trial for none of the charges lodged against him. He is buried at St Mary's church, Ashby Folville. His monument has been badly damaged: a Victorian description states that "the fragments of his helmet form the only part of his funeral achievement now remaining".[7]

Assessment[edit]

Eustace Folville faced little resistance to his crimes during his lifetime and suffered no form of legal penalty, despite being widely known as a habitual offender for two decades. During this time he went wholly unpunished, unlike his unfortunate brother Richard. Two factors may explain Folville's apparent good fortune. Firstly, the political turbulence of the 1320s worked in his favour, particularly in the case of his worst crime, the murder of Beler. Beler had been closely connected to the Despensers: he was appointed attorney to Hugh Despenser the Younger in 1322, and used the revenues of confiscated lands to curry favour with the family.[8]

Secondly, and most importantly, there was a widespread perception that Eustace and others like him were basically honest and forthright, at least more so than the authorities that pursued them. This would have meant that the justices and their clerks, reliant as they were on testimonies from local people, found their jobs extremely difficult in Folville's home territory. As E. L. G. Stones notes, complaints along these lines were frequently made by the trailbaston and other commissions: "in all these things they are aided and abetted by local people, who incite them to their evil deeds and shield them after they are done".[9] While these laments might seem to excuse the commissions' own failures, there is undoubtedly some truth to them. After all, a tip-off from a local source allowed the Folvilles and Cotterels to elude capture in the Peak District.

This popular support seems to have been rooted in a sense that the Folvilles were allies of the common people, combating the crooked establishment which oppressed them. There is at least some justification for this view. Eustace's two principal victims were certainly highly corrupt individuals. Beler used his office to seize land and siphon money to his patrons, and his murder might be regarded less as a crime by the Folvilles alone and more as a conspiracy by several Leicestershire landowners. Eustace's accomplices were members of the Halewell and Zouche families, which suggests a breadth of ill-feeling against Sir Roger, going well beyond any one group. Willoughby was no more popular. In 1340 he was targeted by a second gang, who trapped him in Thurcaston castle. He was later imprisoned by Edward III on charges of corruption, indicted by several juries across the country, and forced to pay 1200 marks for the king's pardon.[10] Eustace was respected as an opponent of such figures, even if this opposition was not his primary motive.

Later reputation[edit]

For generations after Eustace's death, the positive view of the Folville gang only increased. In later sources they are not merely regarded as law-breakers, but agents of an unofficial law, outside human legislation and less susceptible to abuse.

In William Langland's (a Midlander himself) Piers Plowman (c. 1377–1379), he sees them as instruments of the divine order. While he is scathing about the popular veneration of "Robyn Hood and Ralph Erl of Chestre", he speaks approvingly of "Folvyles lawes". The crimes of the family are presented as correctives to the "false" legal establishment, and the "Folvyles" themselves are listed among the "tresors" that Grace has given to combat "Antecrist". Langland states:

Therefore, said Grace, before I go, I will give you treasure and weaponry to fight with when Antichrist attacks you

[11]

and

And some to ride and some to recover what unrightfuly was won;

He instructed men to win it back again through strength of hands

And to fetch if from false men with Folvilles Laws

[12][d]

The contemporary chronicler Henry Knighton is no less sympathetic. He portrays Bellere and Willoughby as entirely legitimate targets: Willoughby's ransom is reduced to a less avaricious 90 marks, while Bellere becomes the aggressor of his killers, not only "heaping threats and injustices" on to his neighbours but coveting their "possessions". The kidnapping of Willoughby is portrayed as a direct conflict between the two codes represented by the outlaws and the justice: Sir Richard is abducted as punishment for trespassing on the territory of a rival order, specifically "because of the trailbaston commissions of 1331".[13]

For his contemporaries and near-contemporaries, Eustace Folville was clearly more than an acquisitive thug. He was, according to Eric Hobsbawm, something closer to an enforcer of "God's law and the common custom, which was different from the state's or the lord's law, but nevertheless a social order".[14]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Eustace's elder brother John was born in 1286.[2]
  2. ^ whose grandfather Roger Mortimer, 1st Baron Mortimer had killed Hugh Despenser the Younger's grandfather, Hugh le Despencer, 1st Baron le Despencer at the Battle of Evesham in 1265, initiating a long-running feud between the two families.
  3. ^ who was married to Maud, daughter of Alan la Zouch, Baron la Zouch of Ashby.
  4. ^ Looting of lands belonging to the Despenser regime was widespread in the year following the invasion.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Lumley2 1895
  2. ^ a b Moor 1929
  3. ^ Farnham 1919–20
  4. ^ Lewis 2022
  5. ^ Close Rolls 1224–1468.
  6. ^ a b c d Patent Rolls 1232–1509.
  7. ^ William Kelly, 'The Murder of Roger Beler, and the Laws of Chivalry', Notes and Queries II.VIII (1859), p.496
  8. ^ Jens Röhrkasten, 'Beler, Sir Roger (d. 1326)', in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  9. ^ E. L. G. Stones, 'The Folvilles of Ashby-Folville, Leicestershire, and Their Associates in Crime, 1326–1347', Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 77 (1957), p. 131.
  10. ^ S. J. Payling, “Willoughby, Sir Richard (c. 1290–1362),” in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  11. ^ William Langland, The Vision of Piers Plowman: a critical edition of the B-text, ed. by A.V.C. Schmidt (London: J.M. Dent, 1978), pp.242–3, XIX.226-47: ISBN 0-460-10571-X
  12. ^ Musson 2009
  13. ^ Knighton, Chronicon, I (1889), pp. 460–461.
  14. ^ Eric Hobsbawm, Bandits (New York: Delacorte Press, 1969), p. 149: ISBN 1-56584-619-2. See also Richard Firth Green, 'Medieval Literature and Law', in The Cambridge History of Medieval English Literature, ed. by David Wallace (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999), p. 422: ISBN 0-521-44420-9.

Bibliography[edit]

  • Farnham, George (1919–20). Leicestershire Manors: The Manors of Allexton, Appleby and Ashby Folville (PDF). Leicester: Leicestershire Archaeological and Historical Society.
  • Lewis, David J. (2022). The Folvilles of Ashby Folville. London: Society of Genealogists, Genealogists' Magazine, vol.34.4, pp.169-177.
  • Fryde, Natalie (1979). The Tyranny and Fall of Edward II 1321–1326. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521222013.
  • Lumley, Joseph (1895). Chronicon Henry Knighton. Vol. I. London: HMSO.
  • Lumley2, Joseph (1895). Chronicon Henry Knighton. Vol. II. London: HMSO.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • Musson, Anthony (2009). Crime, law and society in the later Middle Ages. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0719038020.
  • Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem. Vol. VI. London: HMSO. 1910.
  • Moor, Charles (1929). The Knights of Edward I. London: Harleian Society.
  • Nichols, John (1795). The History and Antiquities of the County of Leicester. Leicester: John Nichols.
  • Close Rolls. Westminster: Parliament of England. 1224–1468.
  • Fine Rolls. Westminster: Parliament of England. 1199–1461.
  • Patent Rolls. Westminster: Parliament of England. 1232–1509.

External links[edit]