Simon de Montfort was hunted down and butchered by a medieval death squad at the Battle of Evesham.
This is how he met such a grizzly end 🧵
Misrule by the inept & inconsistent Henry III led to widespread discontent and eventually rebellion by many of the major barons in England.
This culminated in the Battle of Lewes.
Simon de Montfort led his rebel faction to a decisive victory in which the King, Prince Edward, and the King’s Brother Richard, who held the title King of the Romans, were all captured.
However, Montfort’s control over the state turned out also be deeply unpopular. In 1264 he held a parliament in the king’s name and for the first time two knights were summoned from each county, chosen by the county court, and were allowed to comment on general matters of state.
Montfort’s position became increasingly unstable as he was unable to cement his victory at Lewes. Ultimately, English society expected that rule was for the king, and not one disproportionately powerful baron.
Matters came to ahead when Prince Edward escaped from captivity
Prince Edward was able to rally the Welsh marcher lords to his side while Montfort’s most powerful ally, Gilbert de Clare, defected.
Edward attacked and managed to capture the forces of Montfort’s son Simon.
Expecting to rendezvous with Simon the Younger at Evesham, Simon de Montfort & his eldest son Henry were ambushed by Prince Edward flying the Montfort banner.
Edward, breaking with the tradition of capturing noblemen, ordered a squad of men to hunt & kill Simon de Montfort
Montfort led his army on an desperate uphill charge against Edward’s much larger army. The fighting was gruesome. Knowing that he was doomed and upon hearing that his eldest son Henry had been killed, he was recorded to have said;
‘Then it is time to die’
The men Edward sent to kill Simon de Montfort found him & Roger Mortimer stabbed him in the neck with his lance.
His last words were said to have been ‘Thank God…’
In the heat of the battle his body was mutilated. His head was cut off & his testicles were hung on his nose while his hands and feet were cut off and later sent to different corners of the land.
4000 of his 5000 strong force were butchered by Edward’s 10,000 men.
The fighting was so fierce and slaughter so great that the King himself, taken along to the battle by Montfort was only barely rescued by Roger de Leybourne.
Evesham was described as ‘an episode of noble bloodletting unprecedented since the Conquest’
Royal authority was restored and Prince Edward would go on to become on of the strongest Kings of England.
The battle was eventually described by the contemporary historian Robert of Gloucester as the "murder of Evesham, for battle it was none".
Today in 216 BC, the forces of the Roman Republic were annihilated by Hannibal Barca and the Carthaginians at the Battle of Cannae.
One of the most infamous and crushing defeats ever known, here is what happened 🧵
After being soundly defeated at Trebia and Trasimene the Romans had gathered enough men to face Hannibal again, this time at Cannae with a force reported to be between around 65,000 strong
Hannibal knew that the traditional style of Roman warfare was to pour infantry into the centre of the enemy lines with overwhelming force.
He planned around that by placing his Iberian & Gallic infantry at the centre with his Carthaginians at the flanks
Today in AD 1209 the army of the Albigensian Crusade massacred the inhabitants of the town of Beziers.
It was a day of butchery and bloodshed.
On the 21st of July the army, led by the Papal legate, the Abbot of Citeaux, Arnaud Amalric, reached the town of Beziers.
Not many townsfolk has decided to leave and the Bishop of Beziers attempted to negotiate. He was given a list of 222 of Cathars & Waldensians to hand over.
However, these people were too influential in the town and it was not possible to simply hand them over to the besieging crusaders.
At this point the Bishop asked the Catholic townsfolk to save themselves and leave but they refused.
Today in AD 70 the Roman army led by Titus breached the walls of Jerusalem.
Great destruction and slaughter followed.
[Thread🧵]
The roots of the revolt lay in the deadly mix of religious tension between polytheistic Romans & monotheistic Jews, and as discontent over the oppressive rule of the governors of Judea which caused anti-taxation protests which turned into riots which were violently crushed
The Roman governor arrested several leading Jewish figures and seized money from the Second Temple, the most important temple in the Jewish world, built around 516 BC to replace Solomon’s Temple.
This caused outrage amongst the Jews and led to widespread rebellion.
I just traced the link between Charlemagne & Edward III
Charlemagne
Pepin
Bernard of Italy
Pepin, Count of Vermandois
Herbert I
Beatrice
Hugh the Great
Hugh Capet
Robert II
Henry I
Philip I
Louis VI
Louis VII
Philip II (Augustus)
Louis VIII
Louis IX
Phillip III
Philip IV
Isabella
Edward III
I’m sure this is known already. I just did it myself because I was curious
The English fleet led by Edward III obliterated the French fleet at the Battle of Sluys
[Thread🧵]
Since the Norman conquest tensions had been rising between the kings of England and France due to the dual role of the English kings: equal as a fellow monarch & inferior as the Duke of his French possessions
During the reign Edward III (pictured), the King of France, Philip, had been agitating to deprive him of Gascony; a point of contention between both kings, and tensions increased as each man was harbouring fugitives from each other.