'Richard II's gyration was a tour of England by Richard II in 1387 to muster support against oversight by a commission of three Lords appointed by the Wonderful Parliament.
The word gyrare is used by the contemporary chronicler Henry Knighton. [1]
Despite a fear of a French invasion in October 1386 the Wonderful Parliament , with the support of senior Lords, [2] refused a high request for a very high tax request [3] until the chancellor Michael de la Pole was removed. [4] The King initially replied that he would not dismiss as much as a kitchen scullion at parliament's request. [5] and only when threatened with deposition did Richard remove Pole. [6] A commission was set up to review and control royal finances for a year. [7]
Richard saw this commission as an affront to the royal prerogative, [8] and from February to November 1387 went on a "gyration" of the country to muster support for his cause. [9] This prolonged absence from London [10] was intended to allow the King to consolidate his popular support [11] in areas where loyalty to the Crown was particularly strong. [12] By installing Robert de Vere as Justice of Chester, he began the work of creating a loyal military power base around the Midlands [13] and in Cheshire. [14] Much of the funding came from Nicholas Brembre, a rich wool merchant and recent Mayor of London. [13] He also secured a legal ruling from Chief Justice Robert Tresilian that parliament's conduct had been unlawful and treasonable. [15]
It ended with the formation of the Lords Appellant to oppose Richard's move which they did in the Merciless Parliament.
{{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)