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  1. The Twelve Articles of the Peasants (March 1525) [Introductory note: “The Fundamental and Correct Main Articles of All the Peasants and Subjects of the Ecclesiastical and Secular Authorities” contained the points of agreement among delegates to an assembly of delegates from the peasant armies operating in Upper Swabia, who met in the imperial city of Memmingen on March 1525.

  2. The Twelve Articles of the Swabian Peasants. Volume 1. From the Reformation to the Thirty Years’ War, 1500-1648 Grievances and Demands – The Twelve Articles of the Swabian Peasants (February 27-March 1, 1525) The document reproduced below was the archetype for the numerous grievance lists drawn up during the German Peasants’ War.

  3. 7th June 1381 Wat Tyler is appointed leader of the rebels in Kent. 7th to 12th June 1381 The Peasants Revolt was a march through Kent and from Suffolk towards London. It was not a march just of peasants though. Local priests, reeves, smaller landowners were among the rebels. Word was spread quickly throughout the South East and into East Anglia ...

  4. Many peasants decided that it was time to support the ideas proposed by John Ball and his followers. It was not long before Wat Tyler, a former soldier in the Hundred Years War, emerged as the leader of the peasants. Tyler's first decision was to march to Maidstone to free John Ball from prison.

  5. The Peasants’ revolt had a profound impact on the young King, with the events of 1381 having a lasting effect on his mistrust of the people and often harsh punishment for traitors and rebels. The revolt, alongside the other dramatic changes of the 14th century, eventually saw an end to serfdom but the inequality that Ball, Tyler and the rest of the rebels were so eager to destroy, ultimately ...

  6. 26 de ene. de 2024 · The Peasants (2024) NR, 1 hr 54 min. THE PEASANTS tells the story of Jagna, a young woman determined to forge her own path within the confines of a late 19th century Polish village -- a hotbed of gossip and on-going feuds, held together, rich and poor, by pride in their land, adherence to colorful traditions and a deep-rooted patriarchy.

  7. by some 4,500 peasants, living in sixteen villages, forty-odd ham-lets and the central market town of Ottobeuren. The Ottobeuren peasants were active participants in the Peasants' War; the monas-tery itself was sacked and plundered by its subjects on 30 March 1525. The abbot was only restored by the armed might of the Swabian League in July.