The Men Behind the Masque:
Office-holding in East Anglian boroughs, 1272-1460
[contents]
CHAPTER 6
The Quality of Government
The Practice: Crimes of Violence
The unlawful behaviour of men whose principal
concern in life was the pursuit of profit is not restricted to crimes
of cupidity, however. Quick to anger - and perhaps quick to forget
(if not forgive) - medieval townsmen inhabited environments that
bred violence, both on private and public levels. The relative
instability of social and political relationships in the town has
been put forward to explain the high incidence of homicides perpetrated
by the urban upper class,[92] and
crowd psychology partly explains the eruptibility of the burgesses
en masse against rival forces. Many of the latter type of
incident occur in the first half of the fourteenth century, when
East Anglian boroughs were, on the whole, at the peak of their
prosperity and local patriotism was most keenly felt. Some were
clearly organised excursions against local landlords with whom
there was a jurisdictional rivalry.[93]
Others were not so obviously under conscious control. The seizure
of Robert de Monthalt by the Lynn burgesses in 1313 has some
appearance of mob proceedings, but the concessions he was coerced
into agreeing to were carefully drawn up, and the list of those
guilty is headed by the mayor and town clerk. The
attack by citizens on Norwich's
cathedral-priory in 1272 may have degenerated into
uncontrolled plundering and violence, resulting later in a number
of citizens being hung; but, in its early stages, it was likely
directed by the city rulers who appear among the accused. Regarding
the attack on Bishop Despenser in 1377, the leading burgesses of
Lynn, fully aware of what was liable to happen, made a point of
excusing themselves beforehand from any
complicity.[94]
It is the Yarmouth burgesses, markedly more
than those of our other towns, who provide examples of group aggression.
In their pleas for financial relief from the crown, they described
Yarmouth as a frontier town,[95] and
certainly frontier lawlessness prevailed there at times. Periodically,
small armies of burgesses would sally out into the surrounding
countryside with some malicious intent. In 1314 pardons were issued to
314 townsmen accused of having: ridden "with banner displayed" in
Suffolk; taken and imprisoned men until they made ransome; perpetrated
homicides, arsons, and other breaches of the peace; and sold weapons
and victuals to the king's enemies.[96]
The king refused to include in the pardons piracy or smuggling. At
the former the seafaring men of Yarmouth were, naturally, rather adept.
The king was prepared to overlook piracy when conducted against
enemies of the realm - although the sailors of Yarmouth discriminated
against no nationality - or when raids produced Scottish hostages.
But it could prove politically embarrassing to him to have his subjects
attack those of his allies.[97] Yarmouth
is of course well-known for its rivalry with the Cinque Ports; a
rivalry that at times, particularly when the king's attention was
elsewhere engaged, erupted into virtual civil war, with battles at sea or
raids on the town of the rival side.[98]
And during the interludes in this hostility, Yarmouth could always
direct its aggression against the closer rivals of Gorleston,
Lowestoft, and Norwich. Piracy, we may note, was a two-way affair,
with Yarmouth mariners being on the receiving as well as the giving
end. In 1307 William de Goseford was among the townsmen charged
with abducting ships that had tried to unload merchandise at Little
Yarmouth and Gorleston (to the prejudice of Great Yarmouth's tolls);
in 1317, 1328, and 1340 his ships were involved in piratic acts, and
in 1337 he was permitted to keep a Flemish ship he had captured. But
in 1333 we find him complaining of the seizure of one of his ships
at Bremerhaven. Robert de Gimingham is also found complaining of
the loss of his ship to Flemish pirates in 1317, just a few months
before he was charged with attacking a ship off the Sussex coast
and carrying off its wine cargo.[99]
The more serious cases of personal violence
often appear to be connected with political rivalries or
inter-family disputes. In all, 23 of our office-holders participated
in homicides, and 9 themselves met death by foul play, whilst 2
died in prison accused of manslaughter. Lynn jurat John atte
Lathe's complicity in the murder of John Toth, at the instigation
of the latter's wife, daughter of Geoffrey Tolbooth, seems a
calculated act. We may read vendetta into the murder of Lynn's
Robert de Waltone in 1316, by several members of the Lomb family,
some of whom had already been imprisoned and subsequently pardoned
(1316) for the death of William de Waltone (father of
Robert).[100] Yarmouth in particular
was a hotbed of family rivalries, probably with a political
foundation - we have already noted the unusual prominence of a
limited number of long-lasting families there. A bitter feud in
the late thirteenth century produced, among other crimes, the death
of John de Drayton at the hands of William Gerberge junior, who
took refuge in a Cambridge friary and obtained a pardon in January
1302, only to meet his own end later in the year at the hands of
members of the Drayton, Goseford, and Fastolf families; in 1303 we
hear of the killing of another Drayton, by persons unknown. In a
fresh outbreak of family hostility in 1359, the Draytons and Fastolfs
led an attack on Stephen de Stalham.[101]
At Ipswich we see a not dissimilar situation:
violence in the context of power-struggles between established
cliques and the nouveaux riches. The families in control of
the borough government at the end of the thirteenth century provided
a legacy of violence for their up-and-coming rivals. John Clement,
Hugh Leu, and Philip Harneys had taken part in a mob killing in
1263; Nicholas le Clerk and Thomas le Rente in another in 1283. John
Leu had found his way into the Tower, crime unknown, in 1285. Thomas
le Rente and Thomas Stace, during their period of power tempore
Edward II, led groups of burgesses in violent excursions against
local estates; prominent in these groups were their allies: the
Roberts, le Fevres, Maisters, Malyns, and Goldings. In 1289 Gilbert
Robert was imprisoned for assaulting John Costyn armed with
daggers.[102] The reformers were no
more restrained when they fought for power in 1321: one of Thomas
Stace's sons was killed and Thomas le Rente's house was plundered
and his wife and servants assaulted.[103]
But the men who came to power after the fall of Stace and le Rente
soon developed new alignments and fell out among themselves. Geoffrey
Costyn, one of the reform leaders, sued reformer John Baude in 1331
for building a windmill to the damage of his neighbouring tenement,
and forced the demolition of the mill. In 1338 John's son Roger
murdered Costyn in what was claimed to have been a drunken brawl. In
the previous year Roger had mortally wounded the wife of William
Malyn senior, who is found prosecuting Roger for an unspecified
transgression in 1336.[104]
John de Halteby, the principal leader of the
Ipswich reform movement, was also one of our worst offenders. Despite
occasional forays into the realm of crime, none of our men seem to
deserve the title 'villain' so much as Halteby. He and his father
were participants in the raids led by his subsequent enemies in
1312 and 1315. In 1317 he, with Geoffrey Stace and others, assaulted
Thomas de Veer's miller at Bramford and intimidated de Veer's
tenants so that they dared not grind their corn there. Again he
led an attack, in 1318, on the estate of minor Thomas de Shaldeford
at Rivenhall (Essex), probably at the instigation of a relative of
Shaldeford, and carried off young Thomas and much of his
property.[105] In the events which
led to the supplanting of bailiffs
Stace and le Rente, John de Halteby seems to have been the prime mover;
his name consistently heads the lists of those accused of rebellious
activity, and of plundering le Rente's residence. Indeed, so prominent
was he in affairs at this time that he was known in the local countryside
as "the King of Ipswich". There is strong suspicion that he was
acting in this as agent provocateur of Hugh Despenser junior
and that the despoliation of le Rente's messuage was, under guise of
political hostilities, really related to the large debt (£200+) in
which le Rente was held to Despenser.[106]
This connection would help explain why he was, in 1330, accused by
the Archbishop of York of having tried to procure the latter's
involvement in the misguided conspiracy of the Earl of Kent to
rescue Edward II. It probably also explains how he came to be
in the office of undersheriff of Suffolk, and his lieutenant John
de Preston in that of constable of Norwich castle, posts from which
they were removed in March 1328 when accused of the death of the
parson of Bramford. And again it makes sense of the general pardon
Halteby took out in April 1327.[107] The
pardon was, of course, a political safeguard, not a prelude to
behavioural reform. In 1336 he was acccused of breaking into the
estate of the archdeacon of Suffolk at Debenham, and carrying off
goods therefrom. In the 1340s he is found fraternising again with
Geoffrey Stace, son of his former enemy, who by now had married
the widow of Geoffrey Costyn and had already spent a bout in
Marshalsea for failing to pay the £250 damages awarded against
him when convicted of kidnapping (c.1328-30). In March 1343 Halteby
and Stace were summoned to Chancery to receive the king's
instructions (i.e. a royal reprimand). In February 1344 they took
out general pardons, covering the reigns of Edwards II and III, and
in July they were accorded a royal protection against enemies who
threatened them for prosecuting certain business before the
Suffolk justices; this probably related to the
Malyn smuggling ring, since Halteby and
Stace had acted as king's commissioners in arresting Malyn's lands and
chattels in that year.[108] Halteby had
made himself so obnoxious to his fellow townsmen by his thuggery that,
when he was murdered in the summer of 1344 by Malyn and associates, a
large proportion of the burgesses "quam de maioribus quam de
mediocribus et minoribus" rejoicingly condoned the crime,
provided supplies for the conspirators who had taken sanctuary, and
so disrupted the royal investigation that the guilty parties could
not be brought to justice, with the result that the king was obliged
to seize town government into his own
hands.[109]