ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL HISTORY TO 1545
It can only have been a small cluster of dwellings
by a weir on the Avon that gave Warwick its name, (fn. 1)
but by the 6th or the 7th century there may have
been a flourishing Anglo-Saxon community in the
area. Such at least is the possible implication of the
two cemeteries discovered nearby, one a mile above,
the other a mile below the site of the later burh. (fn. 2) The
establishment of the burh by Ethelfleda in 914 and
Warwick's subsequent status as a shire town must
have given some impetus to economic development.
The town was, at any rate, sufficiently important to
have had one of the two royal mints set up in
Warwickshire (the other was at Tamworth). Coins
are first known to have been issued in the reign of
Athelstan (925-39). Nothing further is known of the
mint until 973, but thereafter it may have been in
continuous production until 1066. It continued
working after the Conquest until the mid 12th
century: the last known issues are from Stephen's
reign; and payments made by a Warwick moneyer
in 1157-9 were probably connected with the
winding-up of the mint. (fn. 3)
By the beginning of the nth century the owners
of rural estates were acquiring town houses in
Warwick: two are mentioned in 1001 and 1016. (fn. 4) In
1086 there were as many as 112 houses appurtenant
to the rural estates of 27 of the king's 'barons'. (fn. 5) The
Abbot of Coventry had 32, and prominent among
the others were the bishops of Worcester (with 9)
and Chester (7), the Count of Meulan (12), Ralph de
Limesi (9), and Robert de Stafford (6). Among those
with a single house were Richard the huntsman,
Nicholas the crossbowman, and Stephen Stirman.
Stephen may have been one of the boatswains who
helped to perform the town's military obligations; (fn. 6)
it would seem that these were men of some substance, for Stephen also had four hides of land in the
county and two houses in Southampton. (fn. 7)
The king's 113 houses, the 112 of his barons, and
those of the 19 privileged burgesses (fn. 8) suggest a
population of over 1,000. But the total population
of the town was perhaps nearer 1,500, for in the
suburb of Coten End, just outside the burh, were
100 bordars cultivating garden plots. (fn. 9) The Survey
offers no other instance of gardening on such a large
scale and its existence here may reflect the demands
of the military garrison. Nothing more is revealed of
the economy of the town itself, though four rural
estates in the suburbs are more fully described. (fn. 10)
The prosperity of the medieval borough no doubt
depended largely on its standing as an administrative
and military centre: its trade rested above all on the
needs of the castle. Warwick's situation away from
important routes (fn. 11) seems to have denied it a share in
long-distance trade, and even within Warwickshire
it suffered from the competition of numerous other
markets and fairs. (fn. 12) Consequently it was never in
medieval times a commercial or industrial centre of
more than local significance. At first it retained its
Domesday pre-eminence in the county. Warwick
contributed £12 9s. 4d. to a tallage made in 1205,
though Brailes and Ilmington, both with over £9,
were not far behind. (fn. 13) By the early 14th century,
however, Warwick had fallen well behind the growing industrial centre of Coventry: in 1327 it had 84
taxpayers compared with Coventry's 200; (fn. 14) in 1332
its taxpayers contributed £17 16s. (a 10th) compared
with about £47 at Coventry (a 15th); (fn. 15) and in 1340 it
was assessed at £6 13s. 4d. for a subsidy of a 9th of
merchants' goods, while Coventry compounded for
£66 13s. 4d. (fn. 16) Warwick was nevertheless still the
second largest and wealthiest town in the county. In
1332 Stratford-upon-Avon paid only £12 7s., and
Birmingham, Alcester, and Brailes each paid about
£9, and in 1340 Stratford and Birmingham were
assessed at only £2 each.
No doubt the market at Warwick was as old as the
borough, though the first implied reference to it is a
grant by Henry de Beaumont, Earl of Warwick
(1088-1119), of a tenth of the toll of Warwick to one
of his priests. (fn. 17) John du Plessis in 1247 and then
William Mauduit (d. 1268) both granted the nuns
of Catesby Priory (Northants.) freedom from tolls at
the market. (fn. 18) The market days - Wednesday and
Saturday - are first recorded in 1279. (fn. 19) The first
fair was granted in 1261 when John du Plessis
secured one for eight days around the feast of St.
Peter ad Vincula (1 Aug.). (fn. 20) In 1268 William de
Beauchamp was granted a seven-day fair at Michaelmas, (fn. 21) and in 1290 another, for fifteen days around
the feast of St. Peter and St. Paul (29 June). (fn. 22) The
Michaelmas fair was in 1413 moved to the vigil,
feast, and morrow of St. Bartholomew (23-25
Aug.), (fn. 23) but no new ones were established until 1479
when two three-day fairs were granted, around the
feasts of St. Simon and St. Jude (28 Oct.) and St.
Philip and St. James (1 May). (fn. 24)
The High Cheaping or High Market (now the
Market Place) was the centre of trading activity in
the town, and parts of this area and the adjoining
streets were associated with different commodities
and trades. The Sheep Market, the Wheat Market,
the Women's Market, and Shoemakers' Row, for
instance, were parts of the main Market Place ; (fn. 25) and
near to it were Horse Cheaping (now New Street), (fn. 26)
Rother Cheaping (later Cow Lane, now Brook
Street), and Hog Hill. In the centre of the High
Market, in an area known as the Barley Market, was
the Booth Hall, or Tolbooth, built by Thomas de
Beauchamp (d. 1369). (fn. 27) Stalls in it were rented to
traders until 1505 when it became the residence of
the manorial bailiff. (fn. 28) Trading was therefore transferred to the Moot Hall (fn. 29) in Horse Cheaping, a
building with four shops under it in 1482-3. (fn. 30)
Traders remained there until 1554 when the newlycreated corporation was given the Booth Hall. (fn. 31)
Shops in 'les Shamulles' were mentioned in 1482-3, (fn. 32)
and shops under the 'courthous' formed part of the
castle estate in 1422-3. (fn. 33)
The earls' conduct of the markets and fairs and
their profits from them give some indication of the
slowness of Warwick's trade. It was perhaps in an
effort to stimulate trade that John du Plessis, soon
after being granted the fair in 1261, exempted all
attending it from tolls for six years and freed all but
strangers from stallage. (fn. 34) In 1268 tolls were worth
about £20; (fn. 35) in 1279 the markets were valued at £24
a year; (fn. 36) in 1298 tolls were worth £20 and stallage
£1 10s.; (fn. 37) and in 1315-16 tolls and stallage were
together worth £21 4s. (fn. 38) In the early 1320s tolls and
stallage actually yielded about £19, though the
disturbances of 1321-2 (fn. 39) kept some merchants away
and reduced the profits to £15. (fn. 40) At this time all
goods brought into the town suffered an additional
imposition, for grants of murage and pavage were
secured by Guy de Beauchamp in 1305 (for seven
years) and 1315 (for three years), and of pavage alone
by Thomas de Beauchamp in 1332 (for seven years
again). (fn. 41)
It was on account of burdensome tolls that
merchants and tradesmen were staying away from
Warwick and that Thomas de Beauchamp freed
them from tolls, terrage, and stallage in 1359. (fn. 42) The
earls' profits from the markets and fairs were not cut
off completely, for this exemption presumably did
not apply to inhabitants of the town. Stallage still
yielded £4 12s. 10d. in 1398-9, and in 1401-2 Henry
Fisher leased the profits of stallage and of the courts
for £13 6s. 8d. (fn. 43) The late 14th century also saw an
additional imposition on incoming goods in the form
of pontage for the repair of the 'great bridge'.
Grants for this were made to groups of burgesses in
1374, 1377, and 1380, each time for three years. (fn. 44)
Trade continued to languish in the 15th century.
One indication of decay is provided by the relief
from taxation given to the town in 1444-5. The
walled town ('Warwick infra') was relieved of £1 and
the suburbs ('Warwick extra') of £4 4s. 6d. when a
fifteenth and a half was levied ; (fn. 45) their tax quotas had
been fixed in 1334 at £8 9s. 4d. and £11 0s. 4d.
respectively for a tenth. (fn. 46) The Michaelmas fair was
moved to another date in 1413 after Richard de
Beauchamp had reported that it made no profit
because of six or seven other fairs in the neighbourhood, held at the same time. (fn. 47) The profits from
shops and stalls, both inside the Booth Hall and out,
amounted to £5 8s. 9d. in 1422-3, but only £3 in
1451-2 and £2 15s. in 1479-80. (fn. 48) In the late 15th
and early 16th centuries the bailiff regularly accounted for £5 from this source, but the actual
profits did not always reach this: in 1504-5, for
instance, he was allowed £1 13s. 4d. for repairs to
the Booth Hall. (fn. 49) Richard de Beauchamp (d. 1439),
in addition to having the Michaelmas fair moved,
planned an ambitious scheme which, had it been
carried out, might have significantly improved the
town's trade. He proposed to deepen the shallow
parts of the Avon between Tewkesbury and
Warwick, to enlarge the arches of bridges, and to
compound with millers to let ships pass. (fn. 50) Waterborne traffic was not, however, to reach Warwick for
three centuries more.
While many Warwick men must have taken part in
the local and regional trade centred upon the town's
markets and fairs, others undoubtedly traded further
afield. Several Warwick merchants were among the
Warwickshire woolbuyers whose business notably
prospered in the 14th century. The town sent
representatives to a number of the king's assemblies
of wool merchants. (fn. 51) Prominent among them was
John le Whitesmith, who went, with three others, to
York in 1322 and, together with Thomas Avery, to
London in 1338. Whitesmith and Avery were among
the five men responsible for the collection of 1,000
sacks of wool in the county in 1337, and Whitesmith
was again a collector in 1341. But both men also
exported on their own account: they shipped more
than 65 sacks to Dordrecht about 1338, for example,
and Avery was one of the English merchants who
had set up an illegal staple at Bruges in 1332.
Another Warwick merchant was William Thurkyl,
the M.P., (fn. 52) who contributed two sacks to the
collection of 1337. (fn. 53) When wool was again collected
in the county in 1347 it was in Warwick, in a 'strong
house' at St. Sepulchre's Priory, that some of it was
ordered to be stored. (fn. 54) It was almost certainly in
connexion with another of these collections that
Robert and Lawrence de Shepeye, of Coventry,
complained that their wool, goods, and money had
been confiscated at Warwick and other places in the
county. (fn. 55)
The smaller tradesmen, the shopkeepers, and the
craftsmen of Warwick were typical of those to be
found in any small market town. A few men may
have owed their occupation to the needs of the shire
hall, the religious houses, or the castle: a notary (fn. 56) or
an occasional goldsmith, (fn. 57) for instance. But there is
little evidence to suggest any manufactures of more
than local importance; tanners and hosiers are
mentioned, but only infrequently, and the only
street names to suggest association with particular
craftsmen are Smith Street, Shoe Lane, and Walker
Street. (fn. 58) The last of these led to a fulling mill on the
Avon, (fn. 59) but the cloth trade was never extensive.
In 1202 Warwick paid £2 13s. for the freedom to
sell dyed cloths as had been done in Henry II's
reign, (fn. 60) but so small a sum can have bought no
great privilege. Weavers and dyers are occasionally
mentioned after this, (fn. 61) but even if all the cloths
offered for sale in the town in 1397-8 and 1405-6,
for example, were made there, they would still
indicate only a small manufacture: 38 in the first
year and 27 in the second. The cloth sellers were
clearly in a small way of business, too: the average
number of cloths offered by 26 men and women in
those years was only two and a half. (fn. 62)
The fulling mill was only one of several watermills in the town, most of them grinding corn. Six
had been mentioned in 1086: two in Coten End
worth £5 and four in Myton worth £7. (fn. 63) The chief
mill, first mentioned in the time of Henry de
Beaumont, (fn. 64) was known as Loudesham Mill
(probably a fulling mill) (fn. 65) by 1208, when it belonged
to St. John's Hospital, (fn. 66) but two years later was
granted to the Earl of Warwick for £3 6s. 8d. a year. (fn. 67)
St. Michael's Hospital had a mill in 1266, (fn. 68) but there
is no later reference to it. (fn. 69) Soon after this, Goysel
Mill was granted to William de Beaumont (d. 1298);
this stood near the road to Hampton on the Hill, on
a small stream in the West Street suburb. (fn. 70) The
Templars' Ford Mill, on Tach Brook to the south
of the town, is first mentioned in 1309-10, when it
was worth £1 14s. 8d. a year; (fn. 71) and the mill of St.
Sepulchre's, on a stream near the priory, is recorded
in 1479-80. (fn. 72)
The value of the earl's four water-mills in 1315-16
was £16; (fn. 73) the greater part of this was no doubt
contributed by Castle Mill, for about this time Goysel
Mill was worth 10s. a year and Loudesham Mill
(described as 'two water-mills') £6 13s. 4d. (fn. 74) Castle
Mill, which was apparently usually let by the earls,
was worth £12 in 1398-9 and later £14; (fn. 75) in the 15th
and early 16th centuries the leases often included
fishing rights and meadows nearby, and in some the
building is said to have contained 'two water-mills'. (fn. 76)
At least in the later 15th century the earls' tenants
were not obliged to have their corn ground at the
earls' mills: in 1479-80 they were certainly using St.
Sepulchre's mill. (fn. 77) Corn from the town was also
carried to Ford Mill, though both the Templars
(9s. in 1315-16, after their suppression) and the
Hospitallers after them (18s. in 1451-2) made
payments to the earls from the profits of the mill. (fn. 78)
Warwick men may have used other mills, too, like
that at Guy's Cliffe, just into Leek Wootton parish;
in 1506 the millers of both Castle Mill and Guy's
Cliffe Mill were presented in the earl's court for
making excessive charges. (fn. 79)
The Avon was also of value for its fisheries, which
always belonged to the earls' manor. The value of
the fishery in 1268 was £1 6s.; in 1321-2 it was the
same and in 1369 £3 6s. (fn. 80) Later the rights were
shared between several lessees. By 1398-9 one
fishery from Guy's Cliffe to Warwick bridge was let
for £4, and a second from the bridge to Wasperton
(over three miles south of Warwick), for £5 10s.
These had been further divided by 1422-3: from
Guy's Cliffe to the bridge, let for £2 6s. 8d.; from the
bridge to Castle Mill and from there to Loudesham,
both let with the mill; from Loudesham to Barford
Mill, let for £4 6s. 8d.; and from Barford to
'Ingeslowe', for £1 16s. 8d. (fn. 81) The rents had fallen
considerably by the late 15th century: in 1479-80
the first brought in only £1 6s. 8d.; the second and
third, again let with the mill, were apparently valued
at the same sum; the fourth was also let for £1 6s. 8d.;
and the fifth for £1 3s. 4d. (fn. 82) By 1500-1 the whole
stretch of water from Guy's Cliffe to Barford was
let for only £2 13s. 4d. (fn. 83)
With so much territory lying in the suburbs,
agriculture occupied a prominent place in the
economy of Warwick. There were open arable fields
around three of the suburban settlements; there was
extensive meadow and pasture land, especially on
the earls' manor; and in the north-west were the
woods and pastures of Wedgnock Park. The earls'
manorial estate was, indeed, the dominant feature
of the town's agriculture; but the religious foundations, above all St. Mary's College, had valuable
endowments of land in the suburbs, and there were
several significant smaller lay estates. Many townsmen must have found an occupation in the tenancy
of open-field holdings and closes and in labouring
employment.
There was already a considerable extent of
cultivated land in the four rural estates described in
1086 - one in Coten End, assessed at one hide, and
three in Myton, together containing five hides. (fn. 84) In
Coten End there was arable land for as many as 20
ploughs, though only 4 were in use - one on the
demesne, where 4 serfs were working, and 3 held by
10 villeins and 6 bordars. The largest Myton estate
had land for 8 ploughs, though there was only one
plough on the demesne, with 2 serfs, and 3 held by
6 villeins and 11 bordars. The second estate had
land for 2 ploughs, but a larger number was in use:
one on the demesne, with 2 serfs, and 3 held by 7
villeins and 7 bordars. On the third estate was land
for one plough, and one was held, together with a
bond-woman, by 3 bordars. Most of the meadow land
recorded was in Coten End - 80 acres, and perhaps
more if that was not comprised in the 'meadows and
pastures' worth £4. Two of the estates in Myton had
small amounts of meadow, 12 acres and 4 acres.
Coten had the only woodland recorded: 3 furlongs
long and 3 broad.
All four rural estates had increased in value
between 1066 and 1086. Coten End, where two
mills (fn. 85) and £2 10s. rent from garden plots (fn. 86) were
further perquisites, was worth £30 in 1086, having
increased from £17. One Myton estate had doubled
in value, to £6, another increased from £5 to £6, and
the third increased from 5s. to 10s. All four estates
were shortly afterwards acquired by the first Earl of
Warwick (fn. 87) and, although much land in the suburbs
was granted away during the Middle Ages, both to
individuals and to the religious houses in the town,
the earls remained the dominant landowners.
Though there is reason to believe that open-field
land may at one time have been found on all sides
of the town, the open fields which survived throughout the Middle Ages were around Coten End in the
east and north-east, Myton in the south-east, and
Longbridge in the south-west. In the north-east
there was arable land at both Hardwick and Coten
End in 1123, (fn. 88) and in the 14th and 15th centuries
there are occasional references to 'the field of
Hardwick'. (fn. 89) More frequently, however, the description was 'the field of Coten and Hardwick', and
the latter name gradually went out of use altogether.
By 1405 the field of Coten comprised 390 acres of
arable and 33 acres of meadow. (fn. 90)
The fields of Myton may have been equally
extensive, though there is no evidence as to their
acreage. In 1417, however, there were four fields
there, called Warytre Field, Beyond the Heath,
Between Myton Sike and Leamington Sike, and
Middle Field (or 'le Morefield'). (fn. 91) The approximate
position of these fields seems clear: the first was
near the Warwick gallows in the south-west part of
Myton; the second in the south-east beyond the
ground known as Heathcote; (fn. 92) the third between
two streams flowing to the Avon, one through
Myton village, the other along the Warwick boundary
with Leamington; and the fourth in the north-west
of Myton, between the first and third fields. There
were still four fields in 1475. (fn. 93) Open-field land
around Longbridge, to the south-west of Warwick,
is mentioned as early as 1123 when two carucates of
land were said to be 'next to Longbridge', (fn. 94) but
nothing more is known of its extent.
Little is known of the methods of husbandry
followed in the open fields. A four-year rotation may
have been based on the four fields at Myton. In
Coten End a three-year rotation seems likely for
some small pieces of pasture there were said in
1315-16 to be inclosed for two years and to lie in the
fallow field for the third. (fn. 95) Offences against regulations for the pasturage of the fallow and stubble
fields in Myton, Coten End, and Longbridge were
frequently presented in the earls' and the dean and
chapter's courts. The only reference to the period
for such pasturage is contained in an order of 1506
that sheep were not to be fed on the stubbles before
1 November. (fn. 96) The only certain indication of
stinting, at Longbridge, concerns not sheep or
cattle, but geese: in 1533-4, for example, a tenant
was allowed to have four geese for each ploughland
and a cottager could have two. (fn. 97) At Coten End in
1405 a total of 137 cattle and 440 sheep were kept by
those holding land and meadow in the fields; the
ratio was approximately one cow for every three
acres and one sheep for every acre. (fn. 98) One further
glimpse of commoners' animals is provided in 1425
when nineteen men were presented in the castle
court for allowing more than 60 animals to stray
into the earl's pastures; one man had 30 animals but
most of them only one or two. (fn. 99)
At least by the 15th century the size of open-field
holdings was very variable. Houses in Myton in
1482, for example, had 9, 15, 16, and 40 acres of land
in the fields. (fn. 1) At Coten End in 1415 there were
eighteen holdings, ranging from one to 125 acres:
eight were under 10 acres and only seven over 20
acres; thirteen of the holdings included some
meadow, varying from one to 5½ acres. (fn. 2) Thirteen
individuals held sixteen of these holdings, in one
case as a tenant of the Guild of Holy Trinity, in
another, of St. Sepulchre's Priory; the other two
holdings were in the hands of St. John's Hospital,
one of them held from the Earl of Warwick.
There is no certain evidence that there were
common meadows as such anywhere in Warwick,
but it seems that the common fields included both
arable and meadow land. A parcel of meadow in St.
Nicholas Meadow is mentioned in 1332 and again
in 1482, but this is almost certainly the same as St.
Nicholas Field in which there was both arable and
meadow land; (fn. 3) it seems that this area was then in
part cultivated and that it may have been an adjunct
of the field of Coten which, as has been seen, also
contained meadow as well as arable. The same
admixture of meadow and arable was to be found in
1482 in 'le Spytylholme', and parcels of meadow in
'le More' in Myton (fn. 4) may similarly have been in 'le
Morefield', one of the open fields there. (fn. 5) Again,
Earls' Meadow was variously described in 1482 as
'in Myton Field' and 'between the Avon and Myton
Field'. (fn. 6)
The only common pasture or waste in Warwick
was the Clay Pits, lying near the Dominican friary
to the west of the town. The Clay Pits are mentioned
in 1268; (fn. 7) the area was described as common pasture
in 1482, and again in 1541 when it was called 'Frere
Cleypitts'. (fn. 8) It is said to have been given to the town
by Margery, sister of Thomas, Earl of Warwick
(d. 1242); Henry de Beauchamp (d. 1446) is believed
to have proposed to increase the common, (fn. 9) but it is
not known that he actually did so.
Inclosure of open-field land seems to have been of
small extent during the Middle Ages. Much of the
fields of Coten End and Myton remained to be
inclosed in the 18th century, and at least part of
those around Longbridge were still uninclosed in the
early 16th century. (fn. 10) Some inclosure apparently
took place, however, to the west and north-west of
the town. There is little documentary evidence for
the existence of open-field land in this area, but
clear ridge and furrow is to be seen on the northern
half of the modern common - the Lammas Field (fn. 11)
- and on what was later to become Saltisford
Common. The first of these areas was 'all the land
called Levenhull', amounting to 40 acres, which
Robert de Levenhull granted to St. Sepulchre's
Priory in 1245; (fn. 12) it was later called Lethenhull or
Linen Hill. By the early 16th century the priory's
land there consisted of closes and meadows, some of
them called Linen Field or Linen Hill Field. (fn. 13) The
prior was, in fact, reported in 1517 as having
converted to pasture in the previous year 80 acres of
arable land, producing four closes called 'Lynelles'
Fields and one called St. Michael's Field; as a result
two ploughs had been put down and eleven persons
deprived of work. (fn. 14) In 1547 the former priory lands
in this locality included at least three meadows and
two closes, one adjoining a close belonging to St.
Michael's Hospital; two of them were described as
'lying in the fields of Warwick', perhaps a reference
to their former open-field status. (fn. 15)
Perhaps also part of this early-inclosed area was
the land, to the north-west of the town, called
Stokehill. In 1123 two carucates were said to be in
Stokehill and Woodloes (or Woodlow), the latter
north of Warwick. (fn. 16) Common of pasture in the wood
of Stokehill is mentioned in 1251-2, (fn. 17) and in one
19th-century reference Stokehill is described as in
'the field of Warwick'. (fn. 18) Land and pasture in
Stokehill Field are mentioned in 1398-9, (fn. 19) and the
pasture of Stokehill in 1479-80. (fn. 20) If land at Woodloes
was once common, it too may have been early
inclosed for it seems likely that the so-called 'manor'
of Woodloes had a compact estate held in severally. (fn. 21)
Another possible instance of inclosure is provided
by Heathcote, in the south-east of Myton. There
was apparently arable land there in the 12th and 13th
centuries, but subsequently it was let as pasture by
St. Mary's College. (fn. 22)
Apart from that involving St. Sepulchre's Priory,
only one instance of inclosure in Warwick was
reported to the commissioners in 1517. Agnes
Walsh, widow, was said to have let decay, in 1502,
a messuage called Booston House, to which 24 acres
of arable land belonged; a plough was put down and
six persons displaced. It may have been the decay
of the same house and 24 acres for which Thomas
Enyse was, according to Dugdale, reported in
1518. (fn. 23)
The earls' manor appears to have included arable
land which at least from an early date was held in
severally and may, indeed, never have lain in
common. In 1268 there were 240 acres of arable (80
acres of this being 'at Wedgnock') worth £5, 60
acres of mowing meadow worth £9, and various
meadows and pastures worth a further £7 8s. (fn. 24) By
1315-16 there were 342 acres of arable: 80 acres in
a field called 'le Merssh', 33 acres in 'le Ryfeld', 34
acres in a field towards Barford, 80 acres in a field
towards 'le Lee', 30 acres outside Wedgnock Park,
and 85 acres de terra lonelli. At the same time there
were 101 acres of meadow, the largest tracts being
38 acres in 'Lee Meadow', 30 acres in 'the meadow
of Barford', (fn. 25) and 14½ acres in Myton. The pasture
included Packmore, north of the town. (fn. 26) Of the
numerous meadows and pastures belonging to the
manor in 1479-80, Packmore - with 41 acres - was
one of the largest areas of pasture. (fn. 27)
The names of the arable fields in 1315-16, with no
mention of the customary names of the common
fields, suggests that they were inclosed, especially
since the field of Coten is mentioned in another
connexion in the same document. The 30 acres
outside Wedgnock Park is an exception to this, since
it was said to be fallow and to lie in common. The
other fields certainly did not lie in common for the
value assigned to them was the sale value of pasture
there while they were fallow. 'Le Merssh' and the
fields towards 'le Lee' and Barford were probably in
the neighbourhood of Longbridge; the location of
the others is uncertain. (fn. 28)
By the 15th century some at least of these arable
fields had apparently been converted to pasture. 'Le
Field' and 'le Mersh towards Longbridge' appear
among the manorial pastures in 1479-80, and in
1482 the first of these is called 'Lee Field'. (fn. 29) As early
as 1448-9 St. Mary's College had let the tithes of
pastures called 'le Lee' and 'le Mershe'. (fn. 30)
It seems likely that the Templars' estate, south of
the River Avon, was consolidated and inclosed after
it had passed to the Hospitallers. When it was
founded by Roger, Earl of Warwick, in the reign of
Henry I (fn. 31) the house's endowments probably
included land in the open fields of Myton. In 1315-
1316 the estate included 160 acres of arable, and
pasture on stubble and fallow land, as well as 24
acres of meadow. (fn. 32) The situation was similar in
1338, (fn. 33) but at the dissolution of the Hospitallers in
1540 almost all of the land was inclosed and lying
between the old Banbury road and the river. Three
closes of pasture contained together 89 acres (the
acreage of another 'little close' is not given), two
arable closes contained 50 acres, and there was a
meadow of 8 acres; only 4 acres of arable were in
common. (fn. 34) George Plantagenet (earl 1472=8) is said
to have proposed to empark 'the Temple Fields', (fn. 35)
but this was not in fact done until many years later.
It is impossible to discover at what period the
earls' manor and the Templars' estate ceased to be
farmed in demesne. It is not clear, either from Guy
de Beauchamp's inquisition post mortem of 1315-16 (fn. 36)
or from the accounts of the keeper of the castle and
the town of 1321-4, (fn. 37) whether the manor was farmed
in demesne even in the early 14th century. The only
sales of produce were apparently of hay and wood;
crops and animals are not mentioned at all. Receipts
from the arable land were only for the sale of pasture
on it while it was fallow; and when in 1323-4 these
were reduced because 74 acres of 'le Mersh' were
ploughed instead of lying fallow, it was necessary to
buy ploughs, animals to draw them, and corn to
feed the animals. This does not suggest the maintenance of a demesne farm, though it must be noted
that no alternative form of exploitation of the
inclosed arable land is indicated. The earls' land in
the open fields was presumably in the hands of
tenants and is hidden in the rents entry in the
accounts. Late-14th-century accounts also indicate
that there was little direct exploitation of the
manor. (fn. 38)
The Templars' estate, however, clearly was
farmed in demesne in the early 14th century, as is
shown by Guy de Beauchamp's inquisition (the
estate was temporarily in the earl's hands in 1315-
1316) and by accounts of 1309-11. (fn. 39) Corn and hay
crops were the chief sources of income, with stock
apparently of little importance. In 1310-11 106
quarters of corn remained from the previous harvest,
39 of which were sold and 32 sown. The cultivated
land comprised 32 acres of oats, 36 acres of maslin,
9 acres of dredge, 8 acres of peas, and 4 acres of
wheat. Animals and birds sold brought in only £2,
compared with £5 14s. for corn, £1 15s. for straw,
£2 14s. for hay, and £1 4s. for pasturage in gardens
and fields. In 1309-10 stock had fetched only 6s.,
while corn was sold for £7 16s., straw for £2, hay
for £4, and pasturage for £1.
Wedgnock Park provides an exception to the
policy under which the bulk of the earls' manor had
ceased to be directly exploited by the 14th century.
Wedgnock had, of course, long contributed to the
manorial income. (fn. 40) Pannage, herbage, and wood
there and at other woodlands were worth £5 in
1268; at Wedgnock alone they were valued at
£2 13s. 4d. in 1315-16; and in 1369 the value of the
park was put at £13 6s. 8d. (fn. 41) Although some of the
pasture was let out, a demesne farm was still
maintained at Wedgnock in the early 15th century,
and the stock-keeper's accounts of 1417-18 show
that pastures and woods were the chief source of
income. (fn. 42)
A total of 79 oxen, 37 cows, and 32 sheep sold
fetched as much as £68 12s., and a dairy - stocked
with 40 cows and 2 bulls - was let for £9. Hides
fetched a further £1 2s. and pasturage was let for
£5. A tod of wool clipped had yet to be sold. Finally
faggots from the park's woods were sold for £19 4s.
In contrast, 71 quarters of corn sold fetched only
£9; in all 31 quarters of barley and 60 of oats had
been available from the previous harvest, the
remainder being used as cattle feed. The park also
produced large quantities of hay for the stock: 100
cartloads remained from the previous year's mowing,
and a further III cartloads were produced in 1417-
1418. During the year 103 cartloads were used and the
rest still lay in the barns at the castle and in the park.
The stock farm was concerned not so much with the
breeding of animals as with their purchase, fattening,
and re-sale. The 79 oxen sold had all been bought in
earlier in the year, and 40 cows had been similarly
purchased. The animals at the dairy were unaffected
by these comings and goings. The sheep sold all
remained from the previous year and none was left
at the end of 1417-18.
By the late 15th century even the pasture of
Wedgnock was entirely rented out. In 1479-80 the
rent for the first half-year was £10, and after the
lease expired the parker accounted for £7 for the
remainder of the year. He also received £1 9s. for
wood sold from the park. The only other sales of
produce that year were of hay, the hayward receiving
£4 10s. (fn. 43) The remainder of the estate was let out. It
is impossible to separate the rents of land in the
open fields from those of houses in the town and
suburbs, to some of which the land belonged; but
one of the bailiffs was charged with rents totalling
£23 7s. for pasture let. (fn. 44)
The lessees of meadows and pastures were often
Warwick men, though some came from nearby
villages - a Kineton man, for example, leased the
pasture of Heathcote from St. Mary's College in
1493-4. (fn. 45) Some of the lessees were described as
butchers, (fn. 46) and Benedict Lee, who had a lease of the
tithes of Lee Field and 'le Mersh', was described as
a grazier. (fn. 47) Lee also farmed the herbage of Wedgnock,
but died before the expiry of his lease. (fn. 48)
There are few opportunities to examine the social
structure of the town in the early Middle Ages, and
without detailed study the Hundred Roll entry
provides only a superficial idea of tenurial relationships. (fn. 49) The Earl of Warwick and the canons of St.
Mary's were clearly the largest landholders, the
former with at least 24½ burgages, the latter with 20.
Few other individuals had more than a half, one, or
two each, but William Godwyne had 4½ and a share
in another, and Richard Cobbe had 3. Similarly the
holdings of tenants were generally small, and few
seem to have accumulated property to any great
extent. Thomas Payn, described as 'mayor', (fn. 50) was an
exception: he was tenant of 12 burgages and a
tenement, and he either owned or sub-let 14
burgages and several other properties. John le
Norizun held 7½ burgages and 1½ tenements, William
Basset 4½ burgages and 2 tenements, and Henry
Scarlet 6 burgages. No others were so prominent,
though John Lycoryz, who held 2 burgages, had 5½
held from him.
Shortly before 1279 one special group of inhabitants had lost its place in the town - the
Jewish community, whose services had been enjoyed
in Warwick for over a century. The first known
members of it are the Solomon who in 1184-5 was
seeking to recover money from Coventry Priory, (fn. 51)
and Leo of Warwick, whose son Joce paid 100 marks
in 1191 to have his father's goods and debts. (fn. 52) Six
members of the Warwick community contributed to
the Jewish donum of 1194, four of them also appearing among the ten named under the heading
'Warwickshire'; easily the largest sum was paid by
Joce son of Benedict. (fn. 53) Individual Warwick Jews are
mentioned in subsequent years (fn. 54) but the community
did not contribute to the tallage of 1221. (fn. 55) In 1241,
however, on the occasion of another tallage, there
were at least six Jews in the town, (fn. 56) and it is clear
that an order for their expulsion from Warwick in
1234 was only temporarily effective, if at all. (fn. 57)
Warwick was one of 27 centres in England which
had archae for the registration of Jewish debts (fn. 58) and
the Warwick chirograph chest is mentioned at
various dates between 1244 and 1282. (fn. 59) This was,
however, among the lesser Jewish communities: at
the tallage of 1255 its contribution was the smallest
of the 20 Jewries taxed. (fn. 60) Though its property
cannot have been extensive, it seems that the
community gave its name to 'le luerie', so called in
1347 (fn. 61) (now Jury Street); one Jew's house was
certainly in nearby Castle Street. (fn. 62) So small a
community may have had little impact on the life of
the town. One of its early members, Magister, father
of Hela, was a scholar, and another, Vives le
Romaunzur, was a ballad-singer. (fn. 63) A momentary
stir was doubtless caused by the bloody encounter
between the families of Elias of Warwick and Leo
son of Deuleben, which resulted in the latter being
expelled from Warwick in 1245. (fn. 64) Elias's house was
used as the community's synagogue. (fn. 65)
The Warwick Jewry was dissolved some years
before the expulsion of the Jews from England in
1290. There were apparently still Jews living there
until 1275, (fn. 66) and as late as 1278 Moses son of Leo
of Warwick was authorized to carry on his business. (fn. 67)
The justices had been ordered in 1275 to scrutinise
the debts recorded in the Warwick chest, and they
were required to do so again in 1279. (fn. 68) By then the
only Jewish houses in the town, those of Leo and
Moses, as well as the synagogue, were in the king's
hands. (fn. 69) The houses of Jews hanged for felony, or
who refused to enfeoff new owners, were ordered to
be sold later that year, (fn. 70) and Moses's house was
disposed of in 1280. (fn. 71) The last is heard of the
Warwick community in 1282: it was then acknowledged that shortly before he had been hanged for
coin-clipping Moses son of Leo had discharged a
Bromwich man's debt; six Jews who had formerly
lived at Warwick were brought before the court to
give evidence. (fn. 72)
By the early 14th century some light is thrown on
the distribution of wealth in the town by taxation
records. The untaxed poorer classes must have
formed a large proportion of the total population, for
within the walls ('Warwick infra') only 51 people
contributed to the 20th of 1327 and 44 to the 10th
of 1332; in the suburbs ('Warwick extra') the
numbers were 33 and 48. (fn. 73) In both years the suburbs
were the more highly taxed: in 1327 they contributed
£7 7s. 6d. compared with £5 18s. from the town, and
in 1332 £10 0s. 4d. compared with £7 15s. 8d. The
individual contributions (see Table 1) suggest that
the relatively well-to-do were rather more numerous
in the suburbs, but that in the middle ranks of
society the town itself had the greater numbers -
perhaps mainly craftsmen and tradesmen. Two of
the leading taxpayers were the wool-merchants
William Thurkyl and John le Whitesmith : (fn. 74) in both
years Thurkyl's was the largest contribution in the
town (15s. and 20s. respectively), and Whitesmith's
the second largest in the suburbs (13s. 4d. and 16s.).
The leading suburban taxpayer was Hugh de
Nettlestede (26s. 8d. on each occasion), and the
Prior of St. Sepulchre's was also prominent there
(6s. 8d. and 13s. 4d.).
| TABLE 1 |
|
Subsidy Contributions, 1327 and 1332
|
|
1327 (20th) |
1332 (10th) |
|
infra
|
extra
|
infra
|
extra
|
| over 5s. |
3 |
4 |
5 |
5 |
| 5s. and under |
- |
7 |
1 |
8 |
| 4s. and under |
4 |
6 |
6 |
5 |
| 3s. and under |
4 |
3 |
9 |
17 |
| 2s. and under |
27 |
11 |
13 |
9 |
| 1s. and under |
13 |
1 |
10 |
4 |
| TOTAL |
51 |
32 (fn. a)
|
44 |
48 |
At the end of the Middle Ages, the distribution of
wealth in Warwick can best be deduced from the
subsidy assessment of 1543. (fn. 75) With nearly 300
individuals included this was a comparatively
comprehensive assessment, for at least a quarter of
the total population must have been too poor to be
taxed at all. (fn. 76) It is clear (see Table 2) that the
wealthier class was a very small one; moreover the
top nine payers, who were assessed on over £20 each,
owned less than a fifth of the total taxable wealth of
the town. The 'middle class' was small, too, with
only some 23 per cent. of those taxed being assessed
on goods or lands worth between £6 and £20.
Almost 75 per cent. had an estate of only £5 or less.
The assessments reveal significant variations between
the different parts of the town. Thus all the nine
men most highly assessed were in the town as
opposed to the suburbs. Among the suburbs, West
Street had about the average proportion of those in
the lowest class, but Bridge End (63 per cent.) was
well below average and Smith Street (83 per cent.)
and Saltisford (86 per cent.) well above. Among the
town wards, Castle Street, Jury Street, and High
Pavement all had less than 70 per cent. in this class,
and Market Place had only slightly more than
average (78 per cent.).
Turning to individuals, the four wealthiest men
were John Bykar (assessed on goods worth £42) and
Richard Wodwall (£40), both in Castle Street ward,
and 'Master Hawyd' (£40) and John Knyghtley,
Dean of St. Mary's College (lands worth £40), both
in Market Place. Apart from Knyghtley, only one
man had lands of any great value - 'Master Browne
of Woodloes' with £20 ; (fn. 77) the Guild of Warwick had
lands worth £16 in Saltisford. Among those with
goods worth between £11 and £30 were several men
later to become principal burgesses and bailiffs
of the incorporated town: Richard Fisher and
Humphrey Heath in Market Place ward; John
Whood in Saltisford; John Rey in Smith Street;
Walter Haley in Jury Street; and Thomas Oken,
Thomas Brese, Daniel Haley, and Thomas Roo in
High Pavement.
| TABLE 2 |
|
Tax Assessment, 1543
|
|
£1-5 |
£6-10 |
£11-20 |
£21-30 |
£31-40 |
£41-50 |
Total persons assessed
|
| Castle Street |
11 |
7 |
- |
- |
1 |
1 |
20 |
| Market Place |
43 |
5 |
4 |
1 |
2 |
- |
55 |
| Jury Street |
20 |
6 |
1 |
2 |
- |
- |
29 |
| High Pavement |
26 |
6 |
5 |
2 |
- |
- |
39 |
| Saltisford |
25 |
1 |
3 |
- |
- |
- |
29 |
| West Street |
27 |
7 |
2 |
- |
- |
- |
36 |
| Bridge End |
17 |
7 |
3 |
- |
- |
- |
27 |
| Smith Street |
51 |
5 |
5 |
- |
- |
- |
61 |
| TOTAL ASSESSED |
220 |
44 |
23 |
5 |
3 |
1 |
296 |
| PERCENTAGE |
74.3 |
14.9 |
7.8 |
1.7 |
1.0 |
0.3 |
100 |
Doubtless some of the wealthier townspeople
invested in property, and rents formed a part of their
income, but few laymen seem to have accumulated
property on a large scale. The available evidence
reveals only modest estates. Benet Medley, for
example, had three houses in the town and eleven
houses and some land in the suburbs in 1504, (fn. 78) and
John Mayall had eight houses in Warwick and 20
acres in the fields at about the same time. (fn. 79) Another
small estate was built up by the Huggeford family,
several of whose members held offices at the castle.
The possessions of John Huggeford (d. 1485) included
twelve houses and land in the town and suburbs, and
a share in a further ten houses and other land there. (fn. 80)
The property passed to Richard Cotes (d. 1504) and
subsequently to John Beaufoe, (fn. 81) and it was apparently broken up shortly before 1530. (fn. 82)
One substantial lay estate in the suburbs was that
of Woodloes. It is first mentioned in 1123, when the
Earl of Warwick gave the tithes there to St. Mary's
College, (fn. 83) and it was apparently granted soon after
this to Richard son of Ivo, together with the office
of master cook at the castle. (fn. 84) From his son Alan
originated the Woodlow family, long owners of the
estate. In 1279 Thomas de Woodlow paid 1d. to the
Earl of Warwick for two burgages in the town and
'all his land' in the suburbs, (fn. 85) and in 1334 the
property of Alan de Woodlow was described as a
messuage and two carucates of land, with meadow,
wood, and rent. (fn. 86) In 1449 Woodloes passed to the
Brome, or Brown, family. (fn. 87) The Bromes had long
had property in Warwick, including a house in
Bridge End; some of them are said to have been
tanners, and two were lawyers - both of whom
served as M.P.s for the town. (fn. 88)
The earls of Warwick were, of course, easily the
largest property owners in the town and its suburbs.
The extent of their agricultural interests has already
been seen. (fn. 89) By 1268 they had, in addition, rents
from free tenants amounting to £13, and in 1298 the
number of tenants producing that sum was put at
90; in 1315 the rents of 97 free tenants were reckoned
at nearly £17. (fn. 90) The earls' assize rents were said to
be worth £35 in the late 14th and early 15th
centuries, (fn. 91) and in 1479-80 the rent-collector was
charged with over £50 for assize rents in the town,
mostly coming from house property. (fn. 92) The 'decay
of rents' of all kinds was, however, considerable by
this time, amounting to 39 per cent. of the total of
assize rents, increments, and new rents recorded in
1479-80. (fn. 93) In 1482 there were approaching 200
houses belonging to the earl in the town and
suburbs - 25 burgages, 56 messuages, 18 tenements, 70 cottages, and 18 tofts. The decay of rents
seems to be reflected in the descriptions of a number
of these properties; barns, gardens, and vacant plots
were said to have formerly been cottages, and single
houses were each said to have formerly been two or
more. (fn. 94)
Among the ecclesiastics owning property in
Warwick two were already prominent in 1086: the
Bishop of Worcester then had nine houses and the
Bishop of Chester seven; one other, the Bishop of
Coutances (Manche), had one. (fn. 95) The Bishop of
Worcester had three burgages in 1279, and the
Bishop of Chester at least as many. (fn. 96) In the 1330s it
was found that two men hanged for felony had held
a messuage and four cottages from the Bishop of
Worcester, and another messuage from the Bishop
of Coventry and Lichfield. (fn. 97)
One institution drawing substantial rents from
Warwick property was the Guild of Warwick. The
Guild of St. George acquired 2 messuages, a toft
and a quarry in 1392, and that of the Holy Trinity
and St. Mary 7 messuages, 3 tofts, 12 cottages, 8
shops, 38½ acres of land, 4 acres of meadow, and
30s. rent in 1393. (fn. 98) The united guild, shortly before
its dissolution, received rents amounting to over £25
in Warwick itself out of a total of over £32, and had
already sold land worth £2 a year to obtain the royal
grant of St. Mary's Church to the town. (fn. 99)
Several of the religious houses owning property
in the town had held it from an early date. By 1086
Coventry Priory already had 32 houses and Malmesbury Abbey (Wilts.) one. (fn. 1) Kenilworth Priory and
Stone Priory (Staffs.) were both granted houses
there in Henry II's reign, (fn. 2) Bordesley Abbey (Worcs.)
received two houses from the Earl of Warwick in
1189, (fn. 3) and St. Evroul Abbey (Orne) was granted
two burgages by the earl c. 1200. (fn. 4) In 1279 eleven
religious houses, other than those in Warwick,
together had sixteen burgages. (fn. 5) Other names appear
later on - Canons Ashby Priory (Northants.), for
example, had a tenement in Warwick in 1343. (fn. 6) Some
houses added to their possessions, including
Chacombe Priory (Northants.), which had only one
and a half burgages in 1279 but tenements and
cottages worth £4 by the time of the Dissolution. (fn. 7)
Their property in some cases comprised land in the
suburbs as well as houses in the town: by the
Dissolution Thelsford Friary, for example, had
three houses, two closes, and land in the fields of
Myton and Longbridge, together worth £2 10s. in
1547. (fn. 8)
More substantial as property owners were the
Warwick religious houses themselves, all having
land in the suburbs as well as houses in the town. St.
Sepulchre's Priory had six burgages in 1279, (fn. 9) and
three carucates of land in 1291. (fn. 10) By 1547 its
former possessions - tenants' rents, twelve closes,
and other lands - were worth £7 15s. (fn. 11) St. John's
and St. Michael's Hospitals together had seven
burgages in 1279, and St. John's had a carucate of
land in 1291. Each had property in Warwick worth
nearly £12 in 1535. (fn. 12) The Dominican friars had six
houses and land in the West Street suburb which,
together with the site of the friary, were worth
£5 11s. in 1547. (fn. 13) The Templars' property (fn. 14) was
worth £14 in 1315-16, after their suppression,
including £4 12s. in rents from 34 free tenants. (fn. 15) In
the hands of the Hospitallers, the estate was worth
£18 in 1338, (fn. 16) and after their dissolution it was
farmed for £16 in 1540-1. (fn. 17)
St. Mary's College, however, had much the
largest income from Warwick property. Among its
endowments in 1123 were 60 houses in the town and
suburbs, two carucates of land at Longbridge, 100
acres at Coten End, a third of the earl's demesne and
other land at Myton, and a hide at 'Hetha'. (fn. 18) In 1279
it had 20 burgages. (fn. 19) 'Hetha' - probably the same as
'la Hethe' where St. Sepulchre's had a carucate of
land in 1291 (fn. 20) - was later called Heathcote and lay
in the south-east beyond Myton. The college had held
a hide in Myton in 1086 which the earl subsequently
acquired as part of Turchil's possessions, and it was
perhaps the same estate that was granted to St. Mary's
in 1123. A house and thirteen acres of land were
described in 1324 as being in 'Hethcote St. Mary
next Warwick'. (fn. 21) In 1400 the so-called manor of
Heathcote was granted to the college by Walter
Power, (fn. 22) and the pasture of Heathcote was retained
until the Dissolution. (fn. 23)
In 1424-5 St. Mary's had rents amounting to over
£5 in the town and over £11 in the suburbs, (fn. 24) and its
bailiff continued to account for rents of this order
later in the century. (fn. 25) In 1535 its property in
Warwick was worth over £37, (fn. 26) and in 1547 there
still remained of its former possessions about 50
houses in eleven streets, and an unspecified number
in two others, worth in all £4 7s., and rents in
Longbridge amounting to £2 11s. (fn. 27) But much of St.
Mary's Warwick estate, together with other property
in the county, had already been granted in 1545 to
the newly-constituted bailiff and burgesses; as 'King
Henry VIII's Estate', it was for long to be the
corporation's chief source of income.