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THE PEASANTS' REVOLT SERIES
by Samuel Stephen Chronicles.
Episode 1: The Black Death's Golden AgeThe Peasants' Revolt of 1381 wasn't a tax rebellion by desperate, starving peasants. It was a sophisticated assault on a corrupt legal system by a newly prosperous class. Episode 1 traces the revolt's origins to the Black Death of 1348, showing how mass death created unprecedented worker power—and how the English elite tried to crush it through law. This is the story of what happens when institutions fall out of step with economic reality.Duration: 32:23Release Date: 02/03/2026Series: The Peasants' Revolt (Episode 1 of 10) samuelstephennovels.substack.com
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Episode 2: The Corruption Machine (1351-1377)
Episode 2: The Corruption Machine (1351-1377)The Statute of Labourers wasn't just an economic regulation—it was a new kind of law that turned everyday negotiations into crimes. And the men enforcing it? The same men who employed workers.In this episode, we trace how thirty years of systematic legal corruption built the architecture of discontent. From the 94% prosecution rate against workers to the Great Rumour of 1377, when forty villages in Wiltshire mounted a coordinated legal challenge using the Domesday Book.This was not spontaneous rage. This was organised resistance.Topics covered: - The Statute of Labourers enforcement system - Justice of the Peace corruption (94% vs 6% prosecution rates) - The Great Rumour of 1377: Domesday exemplifications - John Ball's coded letters and insurgent literacy - The Law of Winchester demands - Poll tax escalation leading to Brentwood Key figures: Sir John de Cavendish, John Legge, Simon Sudbury, Robert Hales, Thomas Bampton, John Ball Primary sources: Parliamentary petitions, manorial court rolls, William Langland's Piers Plowman, John Gower's Vox Clamantis Runtime: ~33 minutes Get full access to Samuel Stephen Chronicles at samuelstephennovels.substack.com/subscribe
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THE PEASANTS' REVOLT SERIES-Episode 1: The Black Death's Golden Age
Episode 1: The Black Death's Golden AgeIn June 1348, a ship arrived at England's southern coast carrying a disease that would kill half the population. But for the survivors, the Black Death created something unexpected: power.This episode examines how the demographic catastrophe of 1348-1350 inverted England's economic order, giving common workers unprecedented bargaining power—and how the elite's attempt to legislate that power away set the stage for the revolt of 1381.Timeline covered: 1348-1380Key topics:- The demographic impact of the Black Death- The "Golden Age of Labour" and rising wages- From grain to groats: the shift to cash economy- The Statute of Labourers (1351)- Thirty years of legal frictionNext episode: "The Corruption Machine" - How royal justice became a weapon of class warfare.---Sources referenced in this episode:- Mark Bailey, The Decline of Serfdom in Late Medieval England- Christopher Dyer, Standards of Living in the Later Middle Ages- Robert Palmer, English Law in the Age of the Black Death- Statutes of the Realm, 25 Edw. III (1351)- Jean Froissart, Chronicles Get full access to Samuel Stephen Chronicles at samuelstephennovels.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 3 — Æthelstan and the Architecture of Power
Episode 3 — Æthelstan and the Architecture of PowerIn this episode, we examine the most consequential succession crisis in early medieval England — and the quiet political machinery that resolved it.After the death of Edward the Elder, England does not pass smoothly to a single heir. Instead, the nobility of Mercia makes a radical choice: they proclaim Æthelstan king — not of Mercia, and not of Wessex, but of all the English.What follows is not immediate unity, but resistance. Wessex hesitates. Rival claimants emerge. Æthelstan’s legitimacy is questioned. His coronation is delayed tellingly — by more than a year.This episode explores why that delay matters.We look at:Why Mercia acted first — and aloneHow political legitimacy was constructed before coronationThe difference between ruling Wessex and ruling EnglandHow administrative consensus, not force, made unification durableÆthelstan does not inherit a kingdom. He is installed into one — by institutions learning, for the first time, how to think nationally.This is not a story about conquest.It is a story about systems. Get full access to Samuel Stephen Chronicles at samuelstephennovels.substack.com/subscribe
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Episode 1: The Black Death's Golden AgeThe Peasants' Revolt of 1381 wasn't a tax rebellion by desperate, starving peasants. It was a sophisticated assault on a corrupt legal system by a newly prosperous class. Episode 1 traces the revolt's origins to the Black Death of 1348, showing how mass death created unprecedented worker power—and how the English elite tried to crush it through law. This is the story of what happens when institutions fall out of step with economic reality.Duration: 32:23Release Date: 02/03/2026Series: The Peasants' Revolt (Episode 1 of 10) samuelstephennovels.substack.com
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Samuel Stephen Chronicles.
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