Who called bengal watt tyler?
Answers
Explanation:
Wat Tyler. Walter Tyler, commonly known as Wat Tyler (1320 – June 15, 1381) was the leader of the English Peasants' Revolt (1381) also known as Tyler's insurrection. He has been described as the hero of nine days, referring to the length of the uprising.
Answer:
Walter Tyler, commonly known as Wat Tyler (1320 – June 15, 1381) was the leader of the English Peasants' Revolt (1381) also known as Tyler's insurrection. He has been described as the hero of nine days, referring to the length of the uprising. Social unrest in the wake of the Black Death encouraged peasants in various parts of Europe to rebel against the feudal system. Religious teaching associated with such figures as John Wycliffe and John Ball stressing individual worth and inner-renewal combined with the equalizing lesson of the Plague, from which nobility of birth was no protection, to inform new notions about social and political organization. An immediate incentive to rebel was the imposition of a new tax to finance the King's wars in France, which were his personal project and did nothing to benefit the population, who had no interest in these endeavors. On June 7, 1381 rebels met in Canterbury and elected Tyler as their leader. The rebellion spread to London, where it was crushed, and Tyler killed. Tyler had been elected their leader. Marxists would later depict the rebellion as an early episode in the class struggle. Tyler has served with distinction at the Battle of Poitiers before becoming a blacksmith in the Kent village of Broxley, where he may have been born although some sources cite Essex