EDITORIAL PREFACE.
The favourable judgment which was passed upon the first volume of
this work, not only by the unanimous voice of the literary press, but
also by individual readers who were well qualified to pass an opinion
upon its merits or demerits, has stimulated me to make every effort to
preserve the good opinion of these kind critics. I have tried to win
even greater appreciation for the present instalment of the "Cardiff
Records," by including in it documents of more general interest than
was practicable in the case of Vol. I. There can be little doubt that
the fine series of Calendar Rolls and Gaol Files, extending from the
reign of Henry the Eighth to that of George the Fourth, the Corporation Vouchers, 1789–1803, and the Records of the Custom
House, ranging from the year 1686–1806, will interest every
reader. The Gaol Files are replete with thrilling stories of great
crimes, of religious persecution and of terrible penalties, while
amusing details about petty offenders supply the humorous relief
which is essential to every drama. The Vouchers are a striking
example of the historical interest with which time often vests
insignificant memoranda; and the narratives of adventure on sea
and land, given to us in the matter-of-fact reports of the Customs
officers, equal anything to be found in the pages of Marryat.
The chapter on the Manors has been compiled from various
manuscript sources. Originally written by me at the request of the
Royal Commissioners on Lands in Wales and Monmouthshire, and
printed in the Appendix to their Report, it was afterwards so
considerably amended and enlarged, as to be practically re-written.
I have in this matter received so much valuable help from Mr. John
Stuart Corbett, and been by him saved from so many antiquarian
pitfalls, that I cannot sufficiently acknowledge my indebtedness to
his wide knowledge and accurate judgment. To the same antiquary's
skill and care the public are indebted for the treatise on the Lords of
Cardiff, which forms the second chapter of this volume. It can
hardly fail to be appreciated by every student of our local history.
The chapter on Manorial Records forms a useful sequel to the
Ministers' Accounts and other feudal documents printed in Vol. I.,
while Town Clerk Wood's Memoranda furnish some unique information respecting the municipal constitution of Cardiff Borough. The
great Sessions Miscellanea comprise some of the earliest existing
papers of the Civil side of that Court. The South Wales Chantries
Certificate of 1548 will be read with keen interest by those whose
studies lie in the direction of Welsh ecclesiastical history, while all
persons concerned in any way with the public life of the Borough will
be pleased with the varied information afforded by the Corporation
Miscellanea. So many of Cardiff's inhabitants are connected with
the Docks, that the Earliest Record Book of the Cardiff Customs
will not lack readers curious to see what manner of business was
transacted in this Port in the days when the names of Quay Street,
the "Cardiff Boat" and the "Ship on Launch" were less inappropriate than they are now that their locus in quo is about five hundred
yards from the river and a mile from the shipping.
Thomas Morgan's Commonplace Book is a delightful repertoire
of curious information upon the domestic life of a Welsh country
gentleman of the olden time. The editing of this decayed old
manuscript has been a most pleasing task, in spite of the difficulty
which I experienced in ascertaining its compiler's place in the
genealogical tree of the great Morgan family.
To turn now to the embellishments which accompany the
present text: The illustrations have been arranged (as was the
case with the previous volume) by Mr. John Ballinger, Librarian
of the Cardiff Free Library, who has been at great pains to obtain
a satisfactory series of seals of the Lords of Cardiff, and whose
services have in various ways been placed at the disposal of the
Records Committee. Mr. John Ward, F.S.A., has again given to
the Committee the benefit of his knowledge and skill, in preparing
the head and tail pieces. In this second volume they carry on the
series of designs from mediæval tiles found at Cardiff. I have more
than once been asked, by gentlemen familiar with the proprieties of
heraldry—most exact of arts—why in some of these tiles the lions
and other animal charges are turned "to the sinister," in other
words, are looking the wrong way. It will therefore be well to
explain here that the original designs were transferred to the tiles
directly, from the front, thus necessarily assuming the position which
is heraldically incorrect, or at least unusual. The initial letters to
the chapters in this volume are by the artistic pen of Mr. J. A. Sant,
architect, of Cardiff. They impart a welcome addition of "local
colour" to a book which is essentially and entirely a production
of Cardiff.
JOHN HOBSON MATTHEWS,
("Mab Cernyw.")
Cardiff, May 1st, 1900.