‘Evil May Day’: a 500th anniversary
![‘Evil May Day’: a 500th anniversary](https://www.migrationmuseum.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/A_drawing_of_the_Evil_May_Day_Riots_of_1517-150x150.jpg)
The Stranger’s Case
There is a very special – and topical – 500th anniversary coming up this Bank Holiday Monday (1 May).
![](http://www.migrationmuseum.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/A_drawing_of_the_Evil_May_Day_Riots_of_1517.jpg)
Evil May Day riot in Cheapside, 1517.
St Martin’s le Grand near St Paul’s Cathedral was the scene of a huge anti-immigration riot in 1517 aimed at the Dutch, Flemish and other foreigners, or ‘strangers’ as they were called. The then Under-Sheriff of London, Thomas More, was called on to try and quell the mob. The event is referred to in history as ‘Ill May Day’, or ‘Evil May Day’.
A speech by William Shakespeare from the late-16th/early-17th Century play Sir Thomas More, written in Shakespeare’s own hand, is held at the British Library, along with other sections of the play.
![](http://www.migrationmuseum.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Shakespeares-handwriting-in-The-harley_ms_7368_f003r.jpg)
A page from the surviving playscript of ‘Sir Thomas More’, showing Shakespeare’s ‘Strangers’ speech. The script is held at the British Library. © The British Library.
Three actors, Tim Bentinck (who plays David Archer in the BBC’s The Archers), Bill Bingham and Lachlan McCall are marking the anniversary with a 10–15 minute extract from Sir Thomas More, including the Shakespeare/More call for the rioters to disperse,in four venues around London:
- 10.30 – the new headquarters of the Migration Museum at The Workshop in Lambeth
- 13.00 – Postman’s Park close to St Martin’s le Grand
- 17.00 – Bankside, the steps outside Shakespeare’s Globe
- 19.45 – Montague Close, behind Southwark Cathedral
If there are any more details, they will be added to this blog over the weekend.
![](http://www.migrationmuseum.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Apprentices_attacking_the_Ludgate_on_1_May_1517_-_from_the_British_Museum_Collection.jpg)
Young apprentices attacking ‘strangers’ in the days leading up to the Evil May Day riots of 1517. © British Museum.