Jack Straw (rebel leader)

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Jack Straw (probably the same person as John Rackstraw or Rakestraw) was one of the three leaders (together with John Ball and Wat Tyler) of the Peasants' Revolt or Great Rising of 1381, a major event in the history of England.

Contents

Biography

Little is known of the Rising's leaders. It been suggested that Jack Straw may have been a preacher, but his name may suggest a link to thatching. Some have argued that the name was in fact a pseudonym for Wat Tyler or one of the other peasants' leaders; all of them appear to have used pseudonyms, adding to the confusion. 1

Several chroniclers, including Henry Knighton, mention Straw. Thomas Walsingham stated that Straw was a priest and was the second-in-command of the rebels from Bury St Edmunds and Mildenhall.2 This story is most likely a result of confusion with a John Wrawe, an unbeneficed priest who was formerly the vicar of Ringfield near Beccles in Suffolk, and who seems to have led the Suffolk insurgency.3 Walsingham also states that Straw and his followers murdered both notable local figures in Bury and, after reaching the capital, several of its Flemish residents, an accusation also made by Froissart. However, according to information in the church of St Mary in Great Baddow, in Essex, England, Jack Straw led an ill-fated crowd from the churchyard there to the risings, and he is elsewhere referred to as the leader of the men from Essex (as opposed to Tyler, who led the rebels from Kent).

Straw is generally supposed to have been executed in 1381 along with the other main figures of the Revolt. Froissart states that after Tyler's death at Smithfield, Straw (along with John Ball) was found "in an old house hidden, thinking to have stolen away", and beheaded.4 Walsingham gives a lengthy (and most likely invented) 'confession' in which Straw states that the insurgents' plans were to kill the king, "all landowners, bishops, monks, canons, and rectors of churches", set up their own laws, and set fire to London.5

The later chronicles of Raphael Holinshed and John Stow, in addition to detailing the 'confession', repeat a story, originating in the 15th century account of Richard Fox, that Jack Straw, alias John Tyler, was provoked into his actions by an assault perpetrated on his daughter by a tax collector.6

Jack Straw in British culture

Whether Straw was a real person, a pseudonym for Tyler, or simply a result of confusion on the part of chroniclers remote from the events they were describing, he went on to become a part of the popular narrative of the revolt. Straw is mentioned in Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, in the Nun's Priest's Tale, as the leader of a mob targeting foreign workers:

Certes, he Jakke Straw and his meinee
Ne made nevere shoutes half so shrille,
Whan that they wolden any Fleming kille.7

Straw was central to an anonymous 1593 play dramatising the events of the Rising, The Life and Death of Jack Straw. In the modern era, the rather confused reporting of events was briefly satirised in Sellar and Yeatman's parody of Whig history, 1066 And All That, stating that the peasants revolted "in several reigns under such memorable leaders as Black Kat, Straw Hat, John Bull and What Tyler?", with objectives including "to find out [...] which of them was the Leader of the Rebellion".8

Straw is commemorated in the name of a pub on the edge of Hampstead Heath, London. The Jack Straw's Castle, reputed to be the highest pub in London, takes its name from a story that Straw addressed groups of rebels on the Heath from a hay wagon which became known as "Jack Straw's Castle".9

The British politician John Whitaker Straw (born 1946) adopted the name Jack Straw, allegedly after the rebel leader.10

Notes

  1. ^ See Brie, F. W. 'Wat Tyler and Jack Straw', in The Historical Review, v.21, 81 (January, 1906). Brie states that "the Continuator of Knighton held this view [...] and that two or three ballads and several fifteenth-century chroniclers [...] speak of Jakke Straw being killed by Walworth at Smithfield [i.e. in the same manner as Wat Tyler]."
  2. ^ Preest, D. (ed., transl.) The Chronica Maiora of Thomas Walsingham, 1376-1422, Boydell, 2005, p.148
  3. ^ Ibid, p.142
  4. ^ The Chronicles of Froissart ed. Macaulay, transl. Bourchier, p.82
  5. ^ Walsingham, pp.147-148
  6. ^ Archer, I. W. 'Discourses of History in London', in Kewes, P. (ed) The Uses of History in Early Modern England, University of California Press, 2006, p.218
  7. ^ Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales (Penguin Classics, 2005), p. 618.
  8. ^ p.43. The names are presumably a humorous garbling of those of 15th-century rebel Jack Cade, Straw, Ball, and Tyler.
  9. ^ Full Pint Issue 6, CAMRA North London, accessed 21-10-08
  10. ^ O' Grady, S. Jack Straw: Diplomatic hard man, The Independent, 29-09-01

References

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