Recordings & Info 175. The Rising in the North

Recordings & Info 175. The Rising in the North

[There is one known recording.]

CONTENTS:

 1) Alternative Titles
 2) Traditional Ballad Index
 3)  Child Collection
    
ATTACHED PAGES: (see left hand column)
  1) Roud No. 4005: The Rising in the North (4 Listings)  

Alternative Titles

Risinge in the Northe

Traditional Ballad Index: Rising in the North, The [Child 175]

DESCRIPTION: The Earls of Westmoreland and Northumberland, suspected of treason, go into rebellion, bringing in others such as Master Norton. They gather their forces, but are delayed in besieging a castle. Loyal forces defeat the rebels
AUTHOR: unknown
EARLIEST_DATE: 1765 (Percy)
KEYWORDS: nobility rebellion
HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1558-1603 - Reign of Elizabeth I
Nov 14, 1569 - Beginning of the northern rebellion
FOUND_IN: Britain
REFERENCES: (3 citations)
Child 175, "The Rising in the North" (1 text)
Percy/Wheatley I, pp. 266-278, "The Rising in the North" (2 texts, one being that in the Reliques and the other being the manuscript copy)
Leach, pp. 484-488, "The Rising in the North" (1 text)
Roud #4005
CROSS_REFERENCES:
cf. "Northumberland Betrayed by Douglas" [Child 176] (subject)
cf. "The Earl of Westmoreland" [Child 177] (subject)
cf. "Rookhope Ryde" [Child 179] (context)
NOTES: The Percies of Northumberland and the Nevilles of Westmoreland were the great lords of the English north; on those rare occasions they agreed on anything, they could usually take Northumbria with them.
The north was also conservative; Catholicism was strongest there. By 1569, Elizabeth was securely Protestant, and her heir Mary Queen of Scots was in her custody.
The "Rising in the North" did not actually begin in Northumbria; Thomas Howard, the Duke of Norfolk, first contacted the Spanish about giving the throne to Mary. His interest, however, was political (he resented the power of the Cecils); he quickly backed down. (Though he would rebel again in 1571 and be executed.)
With the Duke of Norfolk out of the picture, the northern earls took over. They did not actually demand Elizabeth's overthrow -- but wanted Mary back on the Scottish throne and a restoration of Catholicism in England. The threat to replace Elizabeth with Mary was obvious.
The northern Earls succeeded in raising the north (including even Yorkshire, led by its sheriff Richard Norton), but they did not capture Queen Mary and could not bring the rest of the country to their banner (Holinshed says they gathered about seven thousand men, but even this may be exaggerated; such reports often are).
However large the rebellion was, it was dispersed by the end of December, with the rebels in full flight. Leonard Dacre tried to fan the flames in 1570, but he was easily suppressed. Some eight hundred rebels were executed.
For the sequel to this, see "Northumberland Betrayed by Douglas" [Child 176] and "The Earl of Westmoreland" [Child 177]. -

Child Collection- Child Ballad 175: The Rising in the North

Child-- Artist-- Title-- Album-- Year-- Length-- Have
175 Seelie Court Rising in the North + Percy's March Rising in the North 2001 7:28 Yes