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Richard of Pudlicott

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Richard of Pudlicott (died 1305), also known as Richard de Podelicote (or Pudlicote, or Dick Puddlecote), was an English wool merchant who, down on his luck, became an infamous burglar of King Edward I's Wardrobe treasury at Westminster Abbey in April of 1303. Richard, along with high-ranked accomplices primarily consisting of the monks of Westminster Abbey, stole a large portion of the king's treasury of gems, antique gold and coins, estimated at over 100,000 pounds, or about equal to a year's tax revenue for the Kingdom of England. When priceless objects began flooding pawn shops, houses of prostitution and even fishing nets in the River Thames, the king and his ministers, away at war in Scotland, were alerted. King Edward began his investigation into the incident in June of 1303, which revealed the possible involvement of over 40 monks.[1] Many dozens of people were rounded up and jailed in a wide and indiscriminate net and eventually brought to one of the biggest trials of the High Middle Ages in England. Ultimately most of the loot was recovered and a dozen or so were hanged, including Richard, but most escaped the executioner. Richard gave a false confession that he was the only one involved, saving the clergy—his inside accomplices—from being condemned. After his hanging, his body was flayed, and legend said his skin was nailed to the door of Westminster Abbey as a warning to other would-be criminals. A 2005 study of the door, dating back to the reign of King Edward I (making it the oldest door in England) revealed the legend to be false. The fragments of hide found under the door's lone surviving iron strap turned out to be from an animal hide which once covered the door.[2][3]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • 25 Historic Heists - mental_floss List Show Ep. 322

Transcription

Hi I’m Craig. Welcome to the salon. This is Mental Floss on YouTube and did you know that in 1963, a group of robbers managed to steal over £2.6 million from a Royal Mail train heading to London? Around fifteen men detached the engine and two of the train cars without any of the mail sorters noticing. Then, they entered one of the cars, held up four workers, and took 120 bags of mail and money. The majority were eventually captured and sentenced to prison. DON'T DO CRIME. And that’s the first of many historic heists and robberies that I’m going to share with you today. I’m not going to talk about many art heists because we’ve already done that, so if those interest you, check out that episode here. I'm also not going to talk about the heist that I'm planning. In 2000, a group attempted to rob a diamond exhibition in London’s Millennium Dome. The exhibition included the Millennium Star diamond, worth around £200 million, so if the robbers had grabbed that and some others, it would’ve been the biggest robbery of all time. Of ALL TIME. They dressed up as workers, drove an excavator through the dome, then released smoke bombs. Luckily, police had already been surveilling the group, so they were in the room dressed as cleaners and managed to capture them. Another heist involving robbers dressed as workers was the 2011 Banco Itaú Burglary in Sao Paulo, Brazil. The bank was being renovated, so twelve men dressed in gray uniforms and managed to make it into the building around midnight. They took $58.5 million worth of valuables from around 170 private strongboxes. Another famous Brazilian heist happened at the Banco Central in Fortaleza in 2005. Robbers stole around $95 million after spending three months tunneling underneath the bank for 78 meters. In 2008, a man robbed an armored truck in Washington after putting an ad on Craigslist, my list, for road maintenance workers. About twelve of them showed up to the bank, wearing yellow vests and safety goggles. And that’s how the robber dressed to grab money from the truck, so when authorities went looking for him...they found a bunch of men who looked just like him. Genius. Speaking of yellow and safety goggles we don't meth around here. In 1997, robbers stole $18.9 million from a Los Angeles Dunbar Armored truck depot. They held up the guards during the overnight shift and stole money from the vault. By the time they were caught in the early 2000s, $10 million was gone. Where's the money, Lebowski? An even earlier armored car robbery occurred in 1950 at the Brinks car depot in Boston. Eleven criminals staked out the depot for a year to determine what day it would have the most money. Then, they stole the plans for the alarm system. They got into the counting room, tied up the guards, and stole around $2.7 million. The robbers were caught just days before the crime’s statute of limitations would have expired. China’s largest bank robbery ever took place in 2007 when two managers at the Agricultural Bank of China managed to embezzle 51 million yuan, or $6.7 million. One of them stole a smaller amount earlier in the year -- 200,000 yuan -- And yu-wanna know what he spend it on? Lottery tickets. And he won enough to replace the money and have some leftover. But, when he tried to repeat the crime with a partner, they didn’t win enough, so they kept embezzling and eventually got caught. Lesson is, work alone don't try to cooperate with other people. Or don't do crime! In 1987, Valerio Viccei and his gang stole from celebrities, royalty, and millionaires by breaking into the Knightsbridge Safe Deposit Centre in London. They got into the vault by saying they wanted to rent a safe. Then, they held up the guards and used metal cutters to steal from boxes. Viccei already had around 50 armed robberies under his belt, which helped him bankroll a famous life of luxury. And have a nice belt. In 2013, robbers conducted a heist at the Carlton Intercontinental Hotel and stole a bunch of jewelry worth about $136 million. They took it from a salon in the hotel where the guards didn’t have any weapons to fight back with. Otherwise known as, not guards. One of the suspects was Milan Poparic, a member of the Pink Panther crime gang, since he had just escaped from prison a few days prior. The hotel, by the way, was the setting for Alfred Hitchcock’s To Catch a Thief. Speaking of the Pink Panthers, over the course of about twenty years, they managed to steal around £150 million. Perhaps their most famous crime was the reason they got their name -- in 1993, they stole a diamond worth £500,000 by hiding it in a jar of face cream, just like in the Pink Panther movies. The 2003 Antwerp diamond heist is one of the most famous heists of all time. I don't even have to talk about it. It's too famous. Ok, in order to pull off a jewelry robbery worth over $100 million, Leonardo Notarbartolo did a lot of homework. He rented an office in the building he was going to rob -- the Antwerp Diamond Centre in Belgium -- for over two years. With building access, he later had five men help him rob 123 vaults in the building, then steal the security footage. Another famous heist in 2003 occurred when Robert Mang stole a saltcellar from a museum in Vienna. The sculpture was only about 10 inches long, but its estimated worth is around $58 million since it was created by Benvenuto Cellini in the 16th century. Mang and his group stole it from the museum at around 4am. They did set off an alarm, but the guard figured it was a glitch and just turned it off. He's also known as not-a-guard. Three years later, Mang turned himself in. In 2012, a group of thieves rode into a London mall on motorcycles. They rode right up to a jewelry store, then smashed the glass with axes and bats. They took off with over $3 million worth of jewelry. I'd like to think they were singing while they did it. Like a musical number, the whole time. We are robbers on motorcycles, something like that. A newsworthy 2013 heist occurred a few hours after a Justin Bieber concert in Johannesburg, South Africa. The robbers dressed as security guards then entered through holes they carved into the building. They then carved out a wall leading to a safe room with the cash the stadium acquired that weekend. In 2009, robbers landed a helicopter on the roof of a cash depot in Stockholm, Sweden. They used explosives to get into the building and started loading bags of money into the helicopter. Authorities never figured out how much money they’d stolen, but within a year, the thieves had been caught and sent to prison. Speaking of crimes involving air travel, there was a famous plane hijacking in 1971 on an aircraft travelling from Portland to Seattle. A man (with the alias Dan Cooper) announced he had a bomb and demanded $200,000. He was trying to sell a bomb for $200,000? Oh! Authorities on the ground gathered his money and the plane landed. He received it, then told the pilot to fly him to Mexico. He parachuted from the sky and was never seen again. In 2005, Heather Tallchief turned herself in after around 12 years on the run for robbing the Circus Circus casino in Las Vegas for $2.5 million. She was a driver for an armored car company and just took off with the cash. She fled to Europe where she couldn’t even spend the money she’d stolen. Because you know you can't drive an armored car across the ocean, she just fell right into the ocean that's probably what happened. In 1303, a wool merchant named Richard of Pudlicott managed to steal the wardrobe treasury of King Edward I from Westminster Abbey. It’s estimated that the items he stole were worth 100,000 pounds, which wasn’t too shabby in the 14th century. He was eventually caught and hanged. I mean he'd be dead anyway, that was a long time ago. In 1671, Irishman Thomas Blood attempted to steal the Crown Jewels, probably because his position as Parliamentarian in Ireland was taken away after the English monarchy was restored in 1660. Although his plan of dressing as a priest and taking the jewels backfired, he impressed Charles II who made Blood a member of his court. In 2005, a group of men stole a KLM cargo truck and drove it to Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport where they stopped another car on the cargo terminal carrying uncut diamonds. They took the diamonds, which were worth around $118 million. Another airport heist occurred at JFK International Airport in 1978. Is there anywhere a heist hasn't occurred?! The thieves stole about $5 million cash from a vault in the airport.They had an insider helping them out, so they knew how to avoid setting off the alarm. They then forced one of the employees to open the vault and took bags of cash, leaving through the cargo terminal. Another airport that has seen heists is the Heathrow Airport where the Brink’s-MAT warehouse was robbed in 1983. Robbers got in thanks to a connection with a security guard. They planned to steal around £3 million, but some gold bullion caught their eye and they ended up taking it, which was worth like £26 million. If you see gold bullion, take it. That's the lesson here. A group of thieves stole $30 million worth of cash and items from a safe deposit vault at United California Bank in the seventies. The crime took place over multiple nights and involved avoiding a bunch of alarms and dropping down into the bank’s vault. One of the deposit boxes that was robbed reportedly belonged to President Nixon. The FBI managed to catch the thieves because they committed an almost identical crime in Ohio and the FBI tracked down their headquarters and found fingerprints on their dishes. That's why I wear gloves. Finally, I return to the salon to tell you that in 2009, two men pretended to be customers at the Graff Diamonds in London and managed to steal $65 million worth of jewelry. They were wearing prosthetics that took around four hours to apply. Luckily, police managed to find a cell phone in one of their abandoned getaway cars and were able to catch them. Thanks for watching Mental Floss on YouTube, which is made with the help of all these nice people, that I'm going to rob later. Don’t rob anyone! It’s rude. Bye!

Richard's Confession

In late 1303, Richard of Pudlicott confessed to his robbery of the treasury. However, the legitimacy of this confession is disputed due to his claim that he committed the crime on his own. According to the confession, Richard, a traveling merchant of various goods, was arrested in Flanders due to an outstanding debt in Brussels, and removed of his wool by the British. Soon after, Richard sought financial compensation for this wool and took it to court in Westminster. During his time in Westminster, Richard would watch Serjeants move valuables in and out of Westminster Abbey. Poor from his prior arrest, Richard planned to steal these valuables. Beginning in August 1302, he studied the abbey, and once King Edward had left for Scotland, Richard planned to sneak into the building. Having found a latter positioned against a nearby building, he placed it alongside a chapter house to a window, which he pried open with a knife. He then entered the building and found various silver treasures, which he stole and sold. Having studied the premises of Westminster Abbey, Richard started his plan to rob the treasury. Richard began tunneling into the Abbey on December 17th of 1302 and dug until late April of 1303. He waited until it became dark on April 24th and he entered the treasury for the first time. He remained inside the treasury, rearranging the goods he wished to steal throughout the entire next day, and left late that next night. A day later, he left with all the treasures he wished to keep and buried them beneath a cemetery gate behind the Church of St Margaret.[4]

Motivation

Richard of Pudlicott was a wool merchant during a very difficult time for the profession. Throughout the late 13th century, England faced a severe wool crisis. A possible cause of this crisis was the taxation of King Edward I. During the 1290s, King Edward faced many battles with the Scottish and the French and went on various conquests and expeditions that proved to be expensive. Edward's taxation on wool exports, also known as the “Maltote” began in 1275 at 6 shillings and 8 pence, or a third of a pound, but by the 1290s, King Edward raised this tax to two pounds leading to massive pushback from the public. Due to the public's response, the tax was abolished in 1297 and remained so until King Edward III's rule. Partially as a result, King Edward I was driven to reconfirm Magna Carta in the Confirmation of the Charters, stating that the king shall not tax his people without their consent.[5] Five years later, King Edward created the Carta Mercatoria which directly violated the terms of the Confirmation of the Charters but was not revoked until 1311. Conflicts with King Edward alongside oppressive guilds who restricted entry and attempted to control local markets drove many wool merchants to relocate to the countryside.[6] King Edward's taxation on wool exports may offer a more personal motive for why Richard had robbed him.

A slightly less vindictive motive for Edwards actions may be that England's wool supply was dwindling and Edward was left with little to no funds to fall back on. More modern research into the wool crisis shows that sheep mortality rates saw a steep decline starting in 1275. This is due to a scab and disease outbreak in sheep throughout England. Rapid population growth in Europe at this time expanded the market for England's wool, but they would be unable to meet these demands because of this increased death rate. As word of this outbreak spread throughout England in the late 1270s, many sheepherders, in an attempt to prevent the spread of disease and scabs, quickly either executed their infected stock or sold them at a low price. The mortality rates reflect that these preventative efforts did not have much of an impact. Statistics show that in 1279-1280, England's wool output fell 58% below average due to the declining sheep population, over a decade before King Edward increased the wool tax. Although the peak of this crisis occurred a few decades before the robbery, England's sheep population did not fully recover until the 14th century. [7]

Possible Motivation of Accomplices

Although Richard claimed to have worked alone in his confession, his trial proved multiple monks to have been accomplices, who were then executed. After many of the King's treasures began popping up throughout London, King Edward ordered an investigation into the monks of Westminster Abbey. Throughout the 1290s, King Edward relentlessly imposed taxes on the clergy to fund his war in France and his war in Scotland. Edward began to seize wool and other goods from the clergy and in 1294, demanded half of their yearly income. Edward's demands continued to drive a wedge between England and the church, and in 1297, Pope Boniface VIII issued the Clericis Laicos papal bull.[8] Edward's persistent claims that the taxation was necessary, as it funded his army, eventually drove Pope Boniface VIII to modify the bull with the Etsi De Statu, allowing the clergy to be taxed only out of necessity.[5] King Edward's high taxes on the clergy of England may have angered the monks and made them more than willing to assist or turn a blind eye to Richard and his robbery of the treasury

Legacy

Pudlicott is featured in a BBC TV movie titled Heist (2008) made about the events of 1303. His character was played by Kris Marshall.

Further reading

  • Luke Owen Pike (1873). A History of Crime in England, Vol.1, pp. 199–203 and 466–7. From Google Books
  • Hubert Hall (1891). The Antiquities and Curiosities of the Exchequer, pp. 18–33. From Google Books
  • Paul Doherty (2005). The Great Crown Jewels Robbery of 1303: The Extraordinary Story of the First Big Bank Raid in History. ISBN 978-0-7867-1664-7
  • Davis Family Detective Agency (2022, Nov. 30.) A Holy Heist - 1307 Westminster. [An episode in the Cloak & Dagger podcast] https://www.dfdagency.net/cloak-and-dagger-podcast/a-holy-heist

References

  1. ^ Hardy, Thomas Duffus (1869). Syllabus of the Documents Relating to England and Other Kingdoms Contained in the Collection known as “Rhymer’s Foedera”. London: Longman. p. 612. ISBN 9781276532198.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  2. ^ "Paul Doherty". Archived from the original on 6 October 2008. Retrieved 5 October 2008.
  3. ^ "Westminster Abbey » the Oldest Door". Archived from the original on 24 November 2014. Retrieved 24 November 2014.
  4. ^ Hall, Hubert (1891). Antiquities and Curiosities of the Exchequer. England: Elliot Stock. p. 47. ISBN 9781020059094.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  5. ^ a b Holmes, George (1962). The Later Middle Ages 1272-1485. London: Thomas Nelson and Sons Ltd. pp. 72–78, 107–109. ISBN 9780393003635.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  6. ^ Munro, John (1999). "The Symbiosis of Towns and Textiles: Urban Institutions and the Changing Fortunes of Cloth Manufacturing in the Low Countries and England, 1270-1570". Journal of Early Modern History. 3 (1): 1–74 – via Brill.
  7. ^ Slavin, Philip (2020). "Mites and Merchants: The Crisis of English Wool and Textile Trade Revisited". The Economic History Review. 73 (4): 885–913 – via Wiley Online Library.
  8. ^ Jurkowski, Maureen (2016). "The History of Clerical Taxation in England and Wales, 1173-1663". The Journal of Ecclesiastical History. 67 (1): 53–81 – via Cambridge University Press.

External links


This page was last edited on 12 April 2024, at 03:16
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