The Men Behind the Masque:
Office-holding in East Anglian boroughs, 1272-1460
[contents]
CHAPTER 6
The Quality of Government
Introduction: Chronicles of sin
If it seems to the reader that heretofore a
somewhat rosier, or more sympathetic, picture has been painted of
borough government than is consonant with orthodox views of the
subject, it may be that this chapter will redress the balance a
little. For we must now look at evidence of the general conduct
of the men who governed their boroughs, not so much from the
perspective of corporate policy as of individual behaviour.
It is largely due to the character of the surviving
records that the judgements we, not as moralists but as historians,
must pass speak unfavourably of our subjects. When judicial matters are
one of the principal foci of borough and national records, we unavoidably
receive an impression, not so much exaggerated as unbalanced, of
the misdemeaning or felonious conduct of townsmen. Documents of
the town court are central to the medieval archives of several of
our towns, in a variety of forms ranging from leet to assize and
coroners' records, and therefore encompassing a broad spectrum of
illegal activities; in addition, the assembly was also a disciplinary
and punitive institution. Both Chancery and Exchequer records
provide us with information on an equally broad ranges of crimes,
complementing more than duplicating local records. It is difficult
to provide a contrast to the criminality of the townsmen, since the
vast majority of public records were not created for the purpose of
chronicling commendable behaviour; in this case good news is,
unfortunately, no news.