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ARNOLD FITZ THEDMAR (d. 1274)

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Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 448 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ARNOLD FITZ THEDMAR (d. 1274)  ,
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London chronicler and merchant, was born in London on the 9th of August 1201 . Both his parents were of German extraction . The
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family of his
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mother migrated to England from Cologne in the reign of Henry II.; his
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father, Thedmar by name, was a citizen of
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Bremen who had been attracted to London by the privileges which the Plantagenets conferred upon the Teutonic Hanse . Arnold succeeded in time to his father's
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wealth and position . He held an honourable position among the Hanse traders, and became their " alderman." He was also, as he tells us himself, alderman of a London ward and an active partisan in municipal politics . In the Barons' War he took the royal side against the populace and the mayor Thomas Fitz Thomas . The popular party planned, in 1265, to try him for his
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life before the folk-
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moot, but he was saved by the
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news of the
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battle of
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Evesham which arrived on the very day appointed for the trial . Even after the king's triumph Arnold suffered from the malice of his enemies, who contrived that he should be unfairly assessed for the tallages imposed upon the city . He appealed for help to Henry III., and again to
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Edward I., with the result that his liability was diminished . In 1270 he was one of the four citizens to whose keeping the muniments of the city were entrusted . To this circumstance we probably owe the compilation of his chronicle . Chronica Maiorum et Vicecomitum, which begins at the
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year 1188 and is continued to 1274 .

From 1239 onwards this

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work is a mine of curious information . Though municipal in its outlook, it is valuable for the general
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history of the
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kingdom, owing to the important
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part which London played in the agitation against the misrule of Henry III . We have the king's word for the fact that Arnold was a consistent royalist; but this is apparent from the whole tenor of the chronicle . Arnold was by no means blind to the faults of Henry's government, but preferred an autocracy to the
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mob-
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rule which Simon de Montfortcountenanced in London . Arnold died in 1274; the last fact recorded of him is that, in this year, he joined in a successful
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appeal to the king against the illegal grants which had been made by the mayor, Walter Hervey . The Chronica Maiorum et Vicecomitum, with the other contents of Arnold's
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common-place
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book, were edited for the Camden Society by T . Stapleton (1846), under the title
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Liber de Antiquis Legibus . Our knowledge of Arnold's life comes from the Chronica and his own
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biographical notes . Extracts, with valuable notes, are edited in G . H . Pertz's Mon . Germaniae historica, Scriptores, vol.
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xxviii .

See also J . M .

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Lappenberg's Urkundliche Geschichte
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des Hansischen Stahlhofes zu London (
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Hamburg, 1851) . (H . W C .

End of Article: ARNOLD FITZ THEDMAR (d. 1274)
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