MEDIEVAL YORK
THE 12TH AND 13TH CENTURIES
York in English Political History, p. 25. York as a Centre of Administration, p. 29. York under the
Sheriffs of Yorkshire (1100–1212), p. 30. The Achievement of Civic Liberties, p. 31. The Government
and Customs of the City, p. 34. The City and the Ecclesiastical Franchises, p. 38. The Population of the
City and its Origins, p. 40. Occupations of the Citizens and the Distribution of Wealth, p. 41. The Jewish
Community, p. 47. The Owners of City Property, p. 49. The Aspect of the City, p. 51.
William of Malmesbury, early in the 12th century, described York as urbs amplissima
et metropolis, but at once qualified this description. He pointed to its destruction, and
the devastation of its hinterland, by the Conqueror; and to the stronger attachment of
the Norman (like the Saxon) kings to the southern parts of their dominion. The very
tongue of those who lived beyond the Humber was not easily intelligible, and when
kings did visit their northern territories they were always accompanied by a large military following. (fn. 1) York had still to recover from the disasters of the 11th century before it
properly merited the description of urbs amplissima; and if it was a metropolis, it was
for long mainly a provincial one.
For this latter role, it was marked out by history and location. No longer the capital
of a northern kingdom, it yet remained the seat of secular administration in Yorkshire
and of ecclesiastical administration for the north of England. These attributes alone
would probably have attracted population, stimulated trade and industry, and reanimated urban life. Furthermore the city was a centre of traditional land-routes and
well placed to take advantage of inland waterways. Most important from a political point
of view, York dominated the great route from north to south which ran through the Vale
of York. It guarded the heart of medieval England from northern invasion; and, once
invasion from the north is a major theme in politics, York becomes one of the centres
of English political life. Other things contributed to making it urbs amplissima, but
Anglo-Scottish strife turned it into a metropolis second only to the emerging capital in
London.
York in English Political History
The metropolitan future of York was little in evidence before the end of the 13th
century, when war between England and Scotland became endemic. Before that time,
York figured only intermittently in the dealings of English kings with their own northern
territories and with the kingdom over the border. In the 12th century, indeed, York
seldom saw the king. Not more than four or five visits by Henry I are recorded, (fn. 2) and
only that of 1122 in any detail. Then he appeared in the city in the autumn en route for
a perambulation of the north, returned in December when two monks of St. Evroul
encountered him, and held pleas in York before returning to 'Southumberland'. (fn. 3)
King Stephen's political troubles, and the intervention of the Scottish king in England, for a time gave York a greater prominence in national affairs. David I's invasion
in 1136 brought Stephen north and, after peace had been made between the two kings,
David's son did homage at York for his English lands. (fn. 4) Another Scottish invasion in
1138 was defeated without royal assistance: Archbishop Thurstan and the northern
nobles met at York and determined on the campaign which ended at the Battle of the
Standard. (fn. 5) Stephen's later dealings with the city were a result of domestic discord as
well as Scottish ambition. He came there in 1142 with his queen (perhaps the occasion
when she gave land near the Fishpond of the Foss to St. Nicholas's Hospital) (fn. 6) intending
to stop a tournament between William, Earl of York, and the Earl of Richmond, and to
take steps to restore his rule. Illness, however, prevented him from achieving anything
of note. (fn. 7) A further visit in 1149 met with a more positive welcome from the citizens,
perhaps moved by their dislike of Henry Murdac who had replaced Stephen's nephew,
William Fitzherbert, as archbishop. They had already prevented Murdac from entering
the city which, in consequence, had been placed under interdict. (fn. 8)
Whatever their motives, the men of York were credited with having warned Stephen
of the congregation at Carlisle of Henry of Anjou, David of Scotland, and the Earls of
Chester and Hereford. Stephen sought further to enlist their support by handing over to
them for destruction a fortalice at Wheldrake on the Derwent (E.R.) which commanded
the south-eastern approaches to the city; while they in turn are said to have prompted
him to impose penalties on Beverley for having received Murdac. Nothing came of the
threat from Carlisle and after tallaging the city the king returned to the south, leaving
his son to devastate the lands of rebel barons and to compel the clergy of York to resume
divine service which the archbishop's interdict had suspended. (fn. 9) Very soon, in fact, the
citizens had to receive Murdac, though they drove him out again in 1153 on the eve of
his death. (fn. 10) Stephen visited York on only one further occasion, in the summer of 1154.
There is nothing to show that this had any result of note except that he decreed the
demolition of a fortalice at Drax (W.R.) which commanded navigation on the Ouse. (fn. 11)
For the rest of the century York saw little of the kings of England. Henry II was a rare
visitor, (fn. 12) and the city played a part in national politics only during the young King
Henry's rebellion in 1173–4. Richard Lucy's defeat and capture of William the Lion of
Scotland quickly scotched the rising in the north, but not before York had been drawn
into it. Roger Mowbray was one of the rebels, and
'La bone cite d'Everwic si est a dan Rogier,
Par tut Everwicsire se fait seignur clamer.' (fn. 13)
Retribution came when Lucy returned from his victory. The citizens collectively paid
an 'assize'; individuals were amerced for receiving fugitives, communicating with the
king's enemies, selling them shields, and so forth; a few prominent citizens, including
William of Tickhill and Gerard and Hugh, the sons of Lefwin, paid heavily 'for having
the king's benevolence'; and Thomas de Ultra Usam and his son were amerced because
it was said that they wanted to make a commune. Unfortunately we know nothing
more of this manifestation of a desire for emancipation. (fn. 14) Finally, Henry II and his
son both came to York, and William the Lion did homage to them in the minster. (fn. 15)
Richard I's reign was still less eventful, apart from the anti-Jewish riots in 1190 (fn. 16)
and a little activity in ecclesiastical matters. The citizens were apparently sympathetic
to the archbishop when he quarrelled with the dean in 1190, (fn. 17) and in 1195 Hubert
Walter held a legatine council in York. (fn. 18) Things were very different under John. His
restless wanderings brought him to York more frequently than any previous ruler. He
first appeared in March 1200 hoping, vainly as it turned out, to meet the Scottish king; (fn. 19)
and returned in 1201 when the citizens had to pay him £100 to have his benevolence
'because they did not come out to meet him when he arrived at York, and that they
might be quit because they did not accommodate the king's crossbowmen, and for having
acquittance of the hostages which the king exacted from them at his pleasure'. (fn. 20) Annual
visits between 1204 and 1210 were marked by the purchase of wine from York vintners
and the setting of fishermen to fish 'against the coming of the king'. In 1210, indeed,
there were two separate visits: in the spring when the English Cistercians were called
to York to grant the king an aid, and at Christmas when the king was joined by the earls
and barons of the kingdom, for whose entertainment venison was brought by water from
Torksey (Lincs.). (fn. 21)
By this time, however, the conflict between King John and his barons was beginning
to dominate politics. It was this which brought John to York in 1212 and in September
1213; he dispatched knights from Flanders and Hainault there in 1212; (fn. 22) in 1214–15 the
sheriff was keeping up a garrison in the castle; (fn. 23) and early in 1215 the citizens were
granted timber from the Yorkshire forests to strengthen their own defences. (fn. 24) In 1216
John reached York in the course of his campaign to subdue the north and east. The city
made no resistance, but bought his good will for £1,000 which they paid promptly to
Brian Lisle; and they handed over nineteen hostages as a guarantee of loyalty. (fn. 25) Geoffrey
Nevill, Sheriff of Yorkshire and the king's chamberlain, was put in charge of York, and
he strengthened its defences by cutting a ditch from Foss to Ouse below the castle and
enlarging another in the Micklegate area—work to which St. Leonard's Hospital contributed out of 'mere liberality'. (fn. 26) These fortifications were soon tested, for the northern
rebels laid siege to York; but for a sum of 1,000 marks the citizens bought respite until
Pentecost and the baronial attack was not resumed. (fn. 27) Meanwhile administration had
broken down to some degree. Geoffrey Nevill released all the prisoners from the castle
gaol; and the city accounted at the Exchequer at Michaelmas 1215 for the last time in
the reign, and then for only half a year. (fn. 28)
Compared with King John's reign, the next 80 years were relatively uneventful. Even
during the troubles of the 1260's York was only slightly involved. In June 1263 the
mayor and citizens were ordered to give their support to Robert Nevill when he was
appointed sheriff, keeper of York castle, and captain for the defence of Yorkshire.
A month later, however, Nevill was displaced by Montfort's supporter, John de Eyvill;
but, when Henry III recovered his authority in December, Eyvill in turn was ordered to
give way to Nevill. At first he refused to do so, and, apparently, rebel barons entered the
city by force and spent Christmas there. (fn. 29) Indeed, Nevill still had not recovered possession of the castle on 1 March 1264 though by April he was again in control and strengthened its defences. (fn. 30) In June, however, after Lewes, Montfort's government again
dismissed Nevill, but as late as October he had not handed over the castle although he
must have done so soon afterwards. (fn. 31) Here, so far as our knowledge goes, York's participation in the baronial rebellion ended. There may have been a Montfortian party in the
city, for it was accused of giving Earl Simon £100 and more, and was one of the towns
which sent representatives to his parliament in 1265. (fn. 32) For the rest, we know only that
Henry III came to York in 1268 and that Nevill's account for the custody of the castle
was only brought to audit in 1276. (fn. 33)
These incidents apart, relations with Scotland almost alone brought York within the
orbit of the king's travels in the 13th century. In 1220 Henry III arranged at York a
marriage between the two royal houses, and the wedding took place in the minster in
the following year. (fn. 34) Scottish affairs probably occasioned a visit at Christmas 1227; the
Scottish king was Henry's guest at York in 1229; in 1236 he took counsel from the
magnates at York about the discords between himself and the king of Scots; and a treaty
was made there between Henry and Alexander II in September 1237. (fn. 35) Thereafter the
city, although it supplied arms and provisions for the army in the north in 1244, (fn. 36) saw
Henry no more until Christmas 1251 when his daughter Margaret married Alexander
III. For this event preparations had been going on for five months. Deer had been
taken in the royal forests and wine had been sent from London. Lincolnshire and the
northern counties had provided fowls, partridges, swans, cranes, peacocks, pheasants,
rabbits, hares, pigs, and salmon. Yorkshire bakers had baked bread. Costly accoutrements of all kinds had been bought. Detailed provision was made for the royal sleeping
quarters in the chamber of the archbishop; and the king's marshals had come on ahead
to arrange accommodation for the guests. As a precaution, they billeted all the Scots
in one street, but this did not prevent some fighting among servants seeking to obtain
lodgings for their masters. Finally, on Christmas Day, Henry knighted Alexander;
and on the morrow the marriage was celebrated in the minster by Archbishop
Gray. (fn. 37)
Henry III's protectorate over the young King Alexander again brought him north in
1255. He passed through York on his way to and from the marches; David Lardiner
laid up a stock of salt venison for him in the city, while the mayor and bailiffs provided
wine, and materials to make flags and pennons. (fn. 38) Thereafter, for a time, Anglo-Scottish
relations were relatively quiet, although in 1267 the men of York attacked the following
of John Comyn, a baron of Scotland, on Ouse Bridge. (fn. 39)
With the northern borders quiet, Edward I, down to the 1290's, paid only some five
fleeting visits to York, though in 1279 a permanent cellar was made for him in houses
which had belonged to Jews. (fn. 40) By 1294, however, the city's revenues were contracting
because war with Scotland kept merchants away, and heavy taxation was forcing the
monks of St. Mary's Abbey to accept short commons. (fn. 41) In 1296 Edward stayed in York
on his way to and from his Scottish campaign: the city provided some ships for the
expedition, the Chancery sat briefly in the chapter house of the minster in October, and
in 1297 York men were amongst those ordered to ordain for the town of Berwick. (fn. 42)
Early in 1298 the Earl of Warenne and other magnates published the confirmation of
the charters in York on their way to the north; (fn. 43) and they were followed by the king,
who summoned to York all owing military service and convened a parliament there.
After a pilgrimage to the shrine of St. John at Beverley, Edward met parliament on
25 May and then set out on the campaign which culminated in victory at Falkirk in
July. (fn. 44) Meantime the king had instructed the Exchequer and the benches to transfer
themselves to York from Westminster; and at York they remained for nearly seven
years. (fn. 45) This was the opening of a new period in the history of the city. After many
generations during which it had been a provincial metropolis, it became for a time the
second capital of England.