The Men Behind the Masque:
Office-holding in East Anglian boroughs, 1272-1460
[contents]
CHAPTER 2
The Social and Economic Background of Office-holders
Notes (2)
81 J. Jeaffreson, H.M.C. 11th Report, appendix, part
II, p.228; R. Mander, "Walter Coney of Lynn," East Anglian
Magazine, VII (1947-48), 600; Parker, op.cit., 16, 142;
Hillen, op.cit., I, 87; Morey, op.cit., 150; Green,
op.cit., II, 253-54, 403; Howlett, op.cit., 31;
McKisack, "Parliamentary representation of King's Lynn," 583;
Ingleby, Red Reg., I, i-ii.
82 Gross, op.cit., I, 36, 64-65, 74-75, 83, 107-08.
He was scathingly critical of what he saw as selfish, clannish,
monopolistic policies of the gild undermining democracy in boroughs.
83 See Walter Cony's complaint about being elected mayor
while alderman; KL/C7/4 f.165.
84 Gross, op.cit., I, 66-67, II, 167; the ordinance
of 1357 also demonstrates the separateness of gild and borough machinery.
85 KL/C39/32, 34, 45.
86 KL/C38/11 m.2r.
87 Except, of course, for the mercantile supervision which
was the special function of Merchant Gilds.
88 Meyer, op.cit., XVII, 417.
89 Tait, op.cit., 232-34; Records of Norwich,
I, 17, 260-61; Hudson, "Revised list of bailiffs," 245-56. Toftes'
predecessor in the office was also an ex-bailiff.
90 Gross, op.cit., II, 121-23; KL/C5/1; R.R.
4-9 Ric.II m.7d.
91 Gross, op.cit., II, 123-25, 154; G.C.R. 39-40
Hen.III mm.4d, 5d, 54-56 Hen.III passim; Martin, Borough and Merchant
Community of Ipswich, 24-25. Again there was a similar arrangement
in Lynn, whereby outsiders desiring the commercial privileges of
freemen would join the gild.
92 Gross, op.cit., II, 125-26; Martin, Borough and
Merchant Community of Ipswich, 62-63, 148-49; Dogget Roll 18-19
Ed.IV mm.4r, 15d; Add.Ms. 30158 f.9b.
93 Palmer, The History of Yarmouth by Henry Manship,
53, 245; Swinden, op.cit., 812; Rutledge, Court Rolls of
Great Yarmouth, 3, 5; Saul, op.cit., 12-14.
94 This may be inferred from the removal of John Gedneye
from the office of jurat in 1439 (KL/C7/3 f.106), and from the flurry
of entrances into the gild by jurats 1435-36 (KL/C5/4 - a Corpus Christi
gild roll, previously thought to have been a Merchant Gild roll).
95 Records of Norwich, II, 152; M. Grace, ed.,
Records of the Gild of St. George in Norwich, 1389-1547, (1937),
23, 39-43; N. Tanner, Popular Religion in Norwich with Special
Reference to the Evidence of Wills, 1370-1532, (Oxford PhD thesis,
1973), 155-58.
96 P. Studer, ed., The Oak Book of Southampton of c.
A.D. 1300, (1910-11), I, xxi, xxiii, xxx; Hammer, op.cit.,
2-4; Martin, Borough and Merchant Community of Ipswich, 27-28;
Dobson, York City Chamberlains' Account Rolls, xx; KL/C6/3 m.4r.
97 Lawson, op.cit., 15-16.
98 E. Rich, "The mayors of the staples," Cambridge
Historical Journal, IV (1932-34), 121-31; C.Cl.R. 1360-64, 267;
C67/22, 23 passim.
99 KL/C7/2, 3 passim; KL/C4/11.
100 Not to be taken in the modern sense.
101 Tait, op.cit., 69; Alsford, Urban Administration
in Medieval Norwich, 24-25.
102 C.P.R. 1258-66, 235; C.Cl.R. 1377-81, 57; Red Parch. Bk.,
39; KL/C10/2 f.3b; The record shows that the Norwich upper class was
not composed solely of merchants.
103 Add.Ms. 30158 ff.14, 20b.
104 See chapter 1.
105 E.g. Records of Norwich, I, 98. In Norwich in
1389 a distinction was made between citizens sufficient to bear
ballival office and common freemen; Alsford, Urban Administration
in Medieval Norwich, 124.
106 Twiss, op.cit., 162; G.C.R. 1 Ed.I m.1r;
Red Reg. f.144; KL/C7/3 ff.102, 117; D/B 3/3/28 m.2d; D/B 3/1/2 f.10;
Col.C.R., I, 202.
107 Lawson, op.cit., 16; G.C.R.12-13 Ed.I m.2r.
108 Red Parch. Bk., 36, 39; Red Paper Bk., 14; White
Domesday f.18b; KL/C7/3 f.100b; Records of Norwich, I, 98;
KL/C2/29.
109 Records of Norwich, I, 286, II, li, 289;
B. Cozens-Hardy and E. Kent, The Mayors of Norwich, 1403-1835,
(Norwich, 1938), 18, 23, 30; White Domesday f.18; Red Parch. Bk., 36.
110 Records of Norwich, I, 66-67; KL/C6/6 m.20r;
KL/C17/17 m.1r.
111 Meech and Allen, op.cit., 9.
112 For Yarmouth examples see Saul, op.cit., 235-36.
The opinion of Platt, op.cit., 105, that such intermarriage
was "the stuff of which borough government was made" is an allowable
exaggeration perhaps suggested from his study of Southampton more
strongly than from towns studied here.
113 Meech and Allen, op.cit., 24.
114 KL/C39/48 m.9r; KL/C17/13-22; KL/C5/4; KL/C6/5 m.7r;
KL/C38/16.
115 Col.C.R./66 m.22r; Dogget Roll 4-5 Ed.IV m.15;
Red Reg. ff.76, 157.
116 Pipe Roll 12 Hen.II, 25; C.F.R. 1200-16, 64.
117 C.P.R. 1281-92, 116; C.Cl.R. 1307-13, 127-28;
Arundel Castle Ms. MD 424; KL/C37/1 mm.15r, 16d, 17r; E122/93/5;
B. Quamme, "King's Lynn," Norseman, VII (1949), 90.
118 KL/C37/1 mm.14r, 17r; C.P.R. 1272-81, 26, 35;
Smit, Bronnen..., I, 26; Power, op.cit., 10, 15, 96.
119 KL/C5/1 m.1r; Arundel Castle Mss. MD 425, 426.
120 KL/C7/2, 3 passim; Meech and Allen, op.cit.,
221-23; Parker, op.cit., 11; E. Carus-Wilson, "The medieval
trade of the ports of the Wash," Medieval Archaeology,
VI-VII (1962-63), 198.
121 E122/93/31; E122/94/8, 12, 13, 14, 20; E122/95/3,
15, 27; Red Reg. f.119; KL/C10/2 ff.1b, 5, 41b, 121; KL/C7/4 f.60b;
C.P.R. 1413-16, 138.
122 D/B 3/1/1 f.34b; D/B 3/1/2 ff.5-6, 22b.
123 Add.Ms. 30158 ff.6b, 41b.
124 C.P.R. 1429-36, 572, 1436-41, 47; N.C.C. Aleyn f.141;
Cozens-Hardy and Kent, op.cit., 20; Morey, op.cit., 43.
125 As regards the natives, parental identity is specified
in most cases; in others there is strong circumstantial evidence to
suggest the relationship. Surname evidence has not been used as an
indicator of geographical origins, although it would confirm that the
overwhelming majority of migrants came from the local area; on this
see McKinley, op.cit., 76-77; Platt, op.cit., 96.
126 20% of the natives, 17-25% of local immigrants (there
being 2 problem cases), 67% of distant immigrants.
127 C.F.R. 1347-56, 273-74. By contrast, Yarmouth,
Colchester, and Ipswich tended to serve their home counties mainly.
128 Wedgwood, History of Parliament: Biographies, 79;
KL/C7/3 f.16b.
129 KL/C37/4 m.3r; Red Reg. f.75; Davies, op.cit.,
605. [Further analysis of the evidence has since led me to the conclusion
that Burghard was a Norfolk man. S.A., 2003]
130 KL/C7/3 f.119b; PROB 11/6 qu.1; E122/51/28;
Wedgwood, History of Parliament: Biographies, 686.
131 KL/C7/3 f.197b; KL/C38/18 m.9d; C.P.R. 1446-52, 315,
1467-77, 79.
132 KL/C7/3 f.101b; E122/96/35; Wedgwood, History of
Parliament: Biographies, 809.
133 KL/C7/2 f.94; Smit, Bronnen..., I, 601-02, 607-08.
134 KL/C7/4 f.14b.
135 Red Reg. f.178; C.P.R. 1340-43, 252; C.F.R. 1347-56,
3, 44.
136 KL/C39/46 m.2r; E122/50/30, 33; E122/51/2.
137 KL/C7/2 f.177b; C.F.R. 1437-45, 242, 278; Wedgwood,
History of Parliament: Biographies, 166.
138 KL/C7/2 f.148b; Smit, Bronnen..., I, 616-17.
139 C.Cl.R. 1441-47, 113; C.P.R. 1446-52, 528-29;
C1/16/377; C1/33/202; PROB 11/2 qu.1.
140 Col.C.R., III, 27; Col.C.R./41 mm.22r, 27d, /43 m.5r,
/56 m.19d; C.P.R. 1399-1401, 443; E122/50/40; E122/51/2, 29;
E122/193/33 f.42b.
141 Saul, op.cit., 170-72.
142 C.Cl.R. 1377-81, 112; Cal.Inq.Misc. 1377-88, 217,
221; C.P.R. 1361-64, 492, 495, 1364-67, 36, 1370-74, 307; Thrupp,
Merchant Class of Medieval London, 339; Saul, op.cit.,
134, 172, 234, app. VIIH, VIIK.
143 McKinley, op.cit., 77-80, 94; Platt, op.cit.,
98.
144 KL/C7/3 f.233b; N.C.C. Typpes ff.100-101; Red Reg.
ff.51-52.
145 Add.Ms. 30158 ff.1, 3b; Dogget Roll 17-38 Hen.VI m.1d;
Red Parch. Bk., 128.
146 R.R. 4 Hen.IV m.1r; C. Palmer, The Perlustration
of Great Yarmouth, (Yarmouth, 1872-75), I, 102; Col.C.R./41
mm.45r-46r, /72 m.18r; K. Newton, "Some original documents in the
Morant Mss.," Trans. E.A.S., 3rd series, II (1970), 294-95.
[My original text had the statement: "William atte Fen of Ipswich
married his daughter to Richard Purdaunce of Norwich, subsequently
mayor there (1420)." I have since (2005) been shown evidence that
the Richard Purdaunce who married Margaret atte Fen is unlikely to have
been the same man as the Norwich mayor; the former may have been
the father of the latter, who also had a wife named Margaret, but not
before 1422, at least twenty years after Margaret atte Fen was married (for
in 1402 her father settled property on her and Richard, perhaps a dowry.
The Purdaunce who became mayor entered the Norwich franchise in 1394/95
and came from Ipswich. I am grateful to Russ Spurdens for drawing my
attention to this error.]
147 Britnell, op.cit., 469; Reynolds, English
Medieval Towns, 163; Pirenne, op.cit., 116ff.
148 E.g. favourable terms for entrance to the franchise
and Merchant Gild, and a greater readiness to accept sons of fathers
of known reputations.
149 Records of Norwich, I, 179; Morey, op.cit.,
133-34; C.Cl.R. 1349-54, 609-10.
150 KL/C17/3 6; C.P.R. 1348-70, passim; KL/C39/48 m.9r.
151 R.R. 14-15 Ed.II m.1r, 15-16 Ed.II mm.1r, 2d, 2-3
Ed.III m.3r, 4-5 Ed.III m.1d, 5-6 Ed.III m.1r, 8-9 Ed.III m.1d, 11-12
Ed.III m.2d, 17-18 Ed.III m.1r, 19-20 Ed.III m.1d, 22-23 Ed.III mm.1d,
6r; C.P.R. 1340-43, 477.
152 Red Reg. f.110; D/B 3/1/1 ff.22b, 29b, 33b.
153 C.F.R. 1356-83, passim; Rot.Parl., II, 328; C.P.R.
1361-64, 495; C.Cl.R. 1385-89, 439; P.P.R. 17-18 Ric.II m.5d; V.
Redstone, The Ancient House or Sparrowe House, Ipswich, (Ipswich,
1912), 19; Martin, Borough and Merchant Community of Ipswich,
190-91.
154 C.Cl.R. 1377-81, 342; C.P.R. 1324-27, 135, 137;
Feudal Aids, II, 134, 150, 425, 438, III, 472, V, 35; Feet of Fines,
Essex, II, 196; Britnell, op.cit., 472. On this topic see
also N. Denholm-Young, The Country Gentry in the Fourteenth
Century, (Oxford, 1969), 4-5, 65-66; Roskell, op.cit., 150;
Col.C.R./40 m.44r, /54 m.30d.
155 Helen Sutermeister, who had made a thorough study of
the social backgrounds of Norwich merchants, informed me that Thomas'
descent is untraceable.
156 C219/11/1; Lawson, op.cit., 118-23; W. Blake,
"Thomas Wetherby," Norfolk Archaeology, XXXII (1961), 60-68;
Tanner, op.cit., 35, 37.
157 C.F.R. 1471-85, 235; C.P.R. 1436-41, 385; Wedgwood,
History of Parliament: Biographies, 313, 315, 684, 847;
Wodderspoon, op.cit., 208-10; W. Haward, "Economic aspects
of the Wars of the Roses in East Anglia," E.H.R., XLI (1926),
171, 180; E122/96/35, 37, 40; KL/C7/4 ff.43b, 160; Morey,
op.cit., 137; Ingleby, Heart of Lynn, 86.
158 Palmer, Perlustration of Great Yarmouth, I, 102,
II, 423; Swinden, op.cit., 816-17; Britnell, op.cit.,
442-43, 447; C.P.R. 1313-17, 607, 1348-50, 79; C.Cl.R. 1302-07, 358;
Col.C.R./45 m.39r; Cozens-Hardy and Kent, op.cit., 23.
159 C.Cl.R. 1323-27, 518; Cal.Inq.Misc. 1307-49, 71;
Feudal Aids, V, 33, 36, 41, 53-54; E40/3448, 3521; Feet of Fines,
Suffolk, 96, 105, 160; Feet of Fines, Essex, II, 42; R.R. 15-16
Ed.III m.3d; G.C.R. 11-12 Ed.I m.3r; E179/242/42.
160 See Palmer, Perlustration of Great Yarmouth, I,
passim, and Saul, op.cit., 218-20, 234, for details. Want of
space prevents listing of land-holders in our several towns.
161 Saul, op.cit., 93, 125, 230-32, app.VIIK;
C.F.R. 1399-1405, 231, 1405-13, 131; C.P.R. 1399-1401, 151, 188,
232, 336; C.Cl.R. 1377-81, 112.
162 These figures must of course be taken as minima.
163 C.P.R. 1429-36, 404-07.
164 Cal.Inq.Misc. 1399-1422, 142; N.C.C. Jekkys f.2.