The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 06 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 549 pages of information about The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 06.

The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 06 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 549 pages of information about The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 06.

The wages of servants were strictly settled, and no increase or diminution was permitted.  Three marks and a half a year were the wages of a carpenter or smith, two and a half marks of a coachman, a mark and a half of a laborer, two marks of a domestic servant, and half a mark of a nurse.  Masters had the right to follow their runaway servants, and to pierce their ears; but if they dismissed a servant before the end of his term of service, they must pay him a year’s wages.  Servants were not allowed to marry during time of harvest and vintage, under penalty of losing a year’s wages and paying a fine of three marks.  No bargains were to be made on Sundays and festivals, and no shops were to be open on those days till after morning service.

Sumptuary laws of the most stringent nature were passed, some of which appear very singular.  At a marriage or other domestic festival, officers of justice might offer their guests six measures of beer, tradesmen must not give more than four, peasants only two.  Playing for money, with dice or cards, was forbidden.  Bishops were to visit their dioceses every three years, and to aid missions to the heathen.  Those who gave drink to others must drink of the same beverage themselves, to avoid the danger of poisoning, as commonly practised by the heathen Prussians.  A new coinage was also issued.

The next half-century was a period of general prosperity and advance for the order.  It was engaged almost incessantly in war, either for the retention of its conquests or for the acquisition of new territory.  There were also internal difficulties and dissensions, and contests with the bishops.  In 1308 the Archbishop of Riga appealed to Pope Clement V, making serious charges against the order, and endeavoring to prevail upon him to suppress it in the same way as the Templars had lately been dealt with.  Gerard, Count of Holstein, however, came forward as the defender of the knights.  A formal inquiry was opened before the Pope at Avignon in 1323.  The principal charges brought forward by the Archbishop were, that the order had not fulfilled the conditions of its sovereignty in defending the Church against its heathen enemies; that it did not regard excommunications; that it had offered insolence to the Archbishop, and seized some of the property of his see, and other similar accusations.  The grand master explained some of these matters, denied others, and produced an autograph letter of the Archbishop’s, in which he secretly endeavored to stir up the Grand Duke of Lithuania to make a treacherous attack upon some of the fortresses of the knights.  The end of the matter was that the case was dismissed, and there is little doubt that there were serious faults on both sides.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 06 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.