( 123 )
ON THE LANDINGPLA0E OF
S'11
• AUGUSTINE.
:BY GEORGE DOWKER, F,G,S.
IT may seem presumption in me to re-open the question of
the landing-place of St. Augustine after the learned Antiquaries
who have written on the subject, so that my essay
requires a few words of introduction. I have been led to
this enquiry because there seems no agreement among the
writers as to the exact locality of the place called Ebbsfieet.
In Dean Stanley's Historical Memorials of Oa,nterbury,
at the conclusion of the chapter relating to St. Augustine
(page 54), he reviews briefly the various places where the
event is supposed to have taken place:-
" First, Ebbsfleet: for this the main reasons are, 1st, the
£act that it was the usual landing-place in ancient Thanet,
as shewn by the tradition that Hengist, St. Mildred, and the
Danes came there (Lewis, page 83; Hasted, iv., page 289).
2nd, the fact that Bede's whole narrative emphatically lands
Augustine in Thanet and not on the mainland. 3rd, the
present situation with the local tradition (page 29).
"Secondly, The spot called the Boa,rded Groin (Lewis,
page 83), also marked in the Ordnance Survey as the landingplace
of the Saxons. But this must then have been covered
by the sea.
'' Third, Stonar, near Sandwich. Sandwich MS., in Boys's
Sandwich, page 836. But this, even if not covered by the
sea, must have been a mere island (Hasted, iv., page 585).
"Fourth, Richborough. Ibid., page 838. But this was not
in the Isle of Thanet: and the sto1·y is probably founded
partly on Thorn's narrative (1242), which, by speaking of
Retesburgh in Insula Thaneti, shews that he means the whole
port, and partly on its having been actually the scene of the
final debarcation on the mainland, as described in a previous
124 ON THE LANDING-PLACE
page." Following this summary Stanley gives us a Map of
the Isle of Thanet at the time of the landing of St. Augustine.
In all the accounts of this event that reach us the historical
facts have been supplemented and explained upon the
views which the authors held respecting the physical, I might
almost say geological, changes that have taken place on this
coast since the events then referred to.
It has been my endeavour as a geologist to trace back the
various changes that ha,ve taken place in the River Stour
and W antsmn estuary for some years past. In the year
1880 I read a Paper before the East Kent Natural History
Society, entitled "The Changes which have taken place in
East Kent, in the coast and river valleys since the Roman
occupation of Britain." This Paper appears to have
influenced the British Association on Coast-erosion to ask
me to undertake for them a detailed examination of this
part of the coast, and report thereon; moreover, I was then
furnished with maps and historical data to help me in the
enquiry. I had, previously to this, while engaged in the
excavations at Richborough, examined the surrounding
marshes, and drawn a map which was published with the
account in Vol. VIII. of the Proceedings of the Kent Archreological
Society.
Mr. Green, in the Preface to his book on The Making of
England (page vii), writes: "Physical geography h1:1,s still its
part to play in the written records of human history to which
it gives so much of its shape and form."
It is then to this physical geographical aspect of the
question which I would now direct attention.
I have quite lately read a Paper before the East Kent
Natural History Society on "The Mouth of the Stour." It
will be seen that the ancient limits of the Isle of Thanet
are inseparably bound up ·with this question .
.After the most attentive study of the historical facts
relating to Ebbsfl.eet, I am forced to the conclusion that little
is to be gained from the documentary evidence, and that the
chief reliance must be placed on the physical aspect of the
question.
I must necessarily refer to the documentary evidence, which
OF ST, AUGUS'l'INE. 125
has been translated and commented upon by so many writers,
to which there is nothing of consequence to add. I shall,
however, in quoting their statements make some remarks on
the same as I proceed. Firstly, we :find in 449, according to
the Saxon Chronicle, " Rengist and Horsa, invited by Vortigern,
King of the Britons, landed in Britain on the shore
which is called Wippidsfleet." According to another reading,
449, "Vortigern invited the Angles thither, and they
came to Britain in three ceols at the place called Wippidsfl.eet."
A,D. 465, "This year Hengist and 1Elsc fought against the
Welsh near Wippidsfleet, and there slew twelve Welsh ealdormen,
and one of their own Thanes was slain whose name was
Wipped."*
Mr. Green (Making of England) writes on the landing of
the Jutes, 449-4,50: "A band of warriors was drawn to the
shores of Britain by the usual pledge of land and pay, in
three keels (so ran the legend of their conquest), and with
their ealdormen Hengist and Horsa at their head they landed
at Ebbs fleet in the Isle of Than et." And he goes on to inform
us, "the English Conquest as a whole rests on the authority
of the English Chronicle; the annals of 449 to the end of the
English conquest were probably embodied in the Chronicle
in the middle of the ninth century."t
This foundation of the whole story is cloudy enough;
according to it the landing-place was called after Wipped,
one of the J utish Thanes slain there. But we do not get
any nearer to the exact locality. As these Jutes came at
the invitation of Vortigern, King of Kent, who probably
:fixed his residence at Richborough, we should of course conclude
that they came with their ships to the Rutupian Harbour,
which was probably situated between Stonar and Richborough.
.A.nd if the events of 449 were not recorded till the
ninth century there is an additional source of uncertainty.
Ebbsfl.eet, moreover, is not mentioned-it is a mere conjecture
that Wippedsfieet meant Ebbsfl.eet, the latter term
being supposed to be derived from ebb and flow.
* Bede's Ecclesiastical History and Saxon Chronicle, Giles's edit.
t Making of England, note, page 28,
126 ON THE LANDING-PLACE
Now we come to St. Augustine's landing, A.D. 597.
According to Bede, "On the east of Kent is the large Isle
of Thanet containing, according to the English way of
reckoning, 600 families, divided from the other land by the
River Wantsum, which is about three furlongs over, and
fordable only in two places, for both ends of it run into the
sea. In this Island landed the servant of our Lord,
Augustine, and his companions, being, as is reported, nearly
forty men."*
We learn from subsequent writers that the two fordable
places mentioned by Bede are Sarre and Sandwich; fordable
bas been surmised to mean passable by boa,ts. And we know
that a ferry existed in early times at Sarre and one at Sandwich
crossing the river to Stonar.
It will be seen that the exact spot where Augustine
landed is not mentioned by Bede, only that it was in the Isle
of Thanet. In a note to Dean Stanley's Memorials of Ganbury
(page 53), with regard to Ebbsfleet in Thanet, he writes,
"It must have been at this place, from the fact that it was
the usual landing-place in ancient Thanet, as is shewn by
the tradition that Hengist, St. Mildred, and the Danes came
there, and the fact that Bede's whole narrative emphatically
lands Augustine in Thanet and not on the mainland,"-the
place indicated by Stanley being the spot where the farm
called Ebbsfleet is situated. But Stonar, near Sandwich,
would be equally in the Isle of Thanet, and close to Richborough,
where, according to Thorn and Thomas Sprott, t
Augustine and his companions landed, waiting in the Isle
of Thanet until it pleased King Ethelbert to receive them:
'( Which thing the King hearing came shortly after into
the Isle of Tha,net unto bis pallace or castle of Rupichester,
situate nigh the old citty of Stonehore, and the King
sitting under the cliff or rock whereon the castle is built, commanded
Augustine with his followers to be brought before
him."t A difficulty has been found in accepting this conclusion
because Richborough is not in the Isle of Thanet,
"' Ecclesiastical History, Giles, page 87.
t Catalogue of British History, iii., page 208.
:J: See also Canon Jenkins in A.ralia1olo9ia Oantiana, Vol. VI., page !ix.
OF ST. AUGUSTINE. 127
and Thorn speaks of "Retesburgh in Insula. Thaneti." But
he was probably alluding to the general name of the porb,*
or confused the first landing with the scene of the final
debarcation on the mainland-for the Missionaries crossed
the ferry to Richborough, and from thence advanced by the
Roman road to Canterbury.
Tradition is not a very safe guide, especially when the
traditions are at va1-iance. The mention of St. Mildred as
landing at Ippedsflete is recorded in Lambard and Thorn:
"This woman (saith be) was so mightily defended with
divine power that lying in a hot oven, three hours together,
she suffered not of the flame; she was also endued with
such godlike vertue, that coming out of France, the very
stone whereon she first stepped at Ippede:B.ete in this Isle
received the impression of her foot, and retained it for ever,
having besides this property, that whithersoever you removed
the same, it would within short time, and without help of
man's hand, return to the former place again." t
The former landing-places were mostly fleets or streams
leading into some large river-as we find in the names of
Purfieet, North:B.eeb, Fleet Street, etc., names of like import on
the Thames and suitable landing-places for the ships of those
days. Ebbs.fleet in this case would perhaps mean a stream
leading into a river that ebbs and flows.
Formerly Ebbsfleet was supposed to be situated where
the farm-house of that name stands, and is so placed in
the Ordnance Maps of Thanet; of late the spot bas been
shifted to nel'\ir " The Sportsman," and by a spring of water
called St. Augustine's Well, chiefly on the representation of
the late Mr. W.R. Bubb, who resided at Minster; he walked
with me to the spot where the present memorial cross is
erected, and explained his reasons for concluding that the
landing must have been there, and not at or near the Ebbsfleet
Farm, as usually represented. These reasons were
chiefly the presence of a large oak tree that was said to
* " Te plural form of the n_ame Rutupire suggests the existence in Portus
Rutupens1s of a second town, which would naturally be situated on the Eastern
shore, as Richborough stood on the Western bank, of the estuary." (Arch. Cant.,
Vol. XII., p. 880.) This town may have been Stonar.
t Lambard, Perambulation of Kent, page 100.
128 ON THE LANDING-PLACE
have formerly grown there, and the proximity of the place
to Cottington-.:field, which he thought a corl'uption of Godman-
field.* The said oak tree referred to is mentioned
as coinciding with the account given in Lewis's History of
Thanet. The latter, quoting Bede, states: "Some days after
the King himself came into the Island, and mistrusting they
might use some magical arts to deceive him, appointed to
give them audience in the open air., under an oak which grew
about the middle of the Island, which tree the German
Pagans had in the highest veneration." It will be seen at
once on reference to Bede's Ecclesiastical History that this is
a mis-quotation. Nothing is said in Bede about an oak.
The account of this great oak by Mr. W. Bubb is rather strange,
for at the present time the oak is quite a rare tree in the Isle
of Thanet. Boys, in his g·eneral view of the agriculture of the
Island of Thanet, quoted by Hasted., vol. iv., page 292,
states : "The timber growing in this Island is in general elm,
which in the lower part of it, about Minster and Monkton,
grows to a good height. Just by the house of Powcies farm
there was till lately a small grove of oaks, the only one in
the Island, but the unthriving state of them shewed how
unkind both soil and situation were to them. "t
It must strike every one who reads any modern account
of Ebbsfleet how all the writers draw their conclusions from
the supposed configuration of the county in early times, and
as far as I am able to leam they possessed very small ability
to comprehend geographical and physical forces. I need not
repeat instances, for they appear in all the writers of the last,
and some even of this, century.
Mr. Green, in his Making of England, speaking of the
Jutes in Thanet, writes : " Their quarters in Than et would
satisfy the followers of Hengist, who thus lay encamped
within sight of their fellow pirates in the Channel, and who
felt themselves secure against the treachery which often
proved fata,l to the Germans that Rome called to her aid,
by the broad inlet that parted their camp from the mainland.
Everything in the character of the ground confirms the
* See Bubb'e History (in the Thanet Guide), Hutchings and Crowsley.
t Hasted, folio, vol. iv.
OF ST. AUGUSTINE. 129
tradition which fixes this spot at .Ebbsfleet, for great as the
physical changes of the county have been since the filth
century, they have told little on its features. At the time of
Hengist's landing a broad inlet of the sea parted Thanet
from the mainland of Britain, for the marshes which stretch
from Reculver and Sandwich were then, as they remained for
centuries, a wide sea-channel hardly less than a mile wide."*
Again, Stanley writes :t "You all remember the high
ground where the white chalk cliffs of Ramsgate suddenly
end in Pegwell Bay. Look from that high ground over the
level flat which lies between these cliffs and the point where
they begin again in St. Margaret's cliffs beyond Walmer.
The level ground which stretches between the two cliffs was
then in great part covered with water. .... Moreover at that
remote age Sandwich Haven was not yet choked up, so that
all the ships which came from France and Germany on their
way to London sailed up into this large port, and through
the river out at the other side by Reculver; or if they were
going to land in Kent, at Richborough or the ma.inland, or at
Ebbsfl.eet in the Isle of Thanet."
When any of these writers give us an authority for this
statement it invariably turns on Bede's History and the
map in Battely's .Antiquitates Rutupince. I have been much
puzzled to account for the map in Battely, seeing that he
gives us no description of it in the letterpress, but rather
argues against such a supposition; but I believe I have at last
cleared up the mystery. Battely's .Antiquitates Rutupince
was published some time after his decease, the :first edition
in 1711 and the second in 1745, in which the map I allude to
is found. In a History of the Isle of Thanet, by John Lewis,
1723, and from a Paper he read before the Society of
Antiquaries, October 11, 1744, it appears he then undertook
to shew that Battely was wrong in his account of the
boundaries of the ancient port of Richborough, and he
goes on to state that the mouth of the estuary extended from
Ramsgate cliff to Walmer.
This map is again copied into H asted's History of Kent,
* Malcin,q of England, page 29. t Memorial,,y of Canterbury, page 29.
VOL. XXII. K
130 ON THE LANDING-PLACE
vol. iv., pages 288-9, and up to the present time it seems
generally to have been received as the true explanation of
what must have been the state of the ancient Portus Rutupensis.
With regard to Mr. Lewis's quotations they are
often erroneous, his description of Bede's account of the
Wantsum being a case in point.
The map in Battely's History is not taken from any more
ancient source than that of his own time, in the last century;
it is merely copied from a map giving the outlines of
Thanet and the mainland, omitting altogether Sandwich and
Stonar, which he supposed to be beneath the waters of the
Wantsum; and he omits to give us any historical or physical
data for his broad assertions. It represents the sea-level as
then so greatly in excess of the present high-water mark as
to overflow lands that are now more than thirty feet above
Ordnance datum line, making the sea occupy all the marshland
from Deal to Minster. But I cannot; after a study of
the physical changes and actual evidences presented to a
geological observer at the present time, accept this interpretation.
And when I enquire into the historical evidences
I do not find one single fact to support such a conclusion .
.Although it is sta.ted a.ga.in and again that Ebbsfl.eet was the
usual landing-place in the Isle of Thanet in ancient times,
the only instances adduced are the landing of Hengist and
Horsa, the landing of St. Augustine, St. Mildred, and the
Danish invaders; and the locality of this Ebbsfl.eet is equally
obscure.
With regard to the supposed presence of this great
estuary, with a mouth opening from Walmer to Pegwell Bay
(a distance, remember, of 8 miles), and 2 miles wide between
the mainland and Thanet inside Richborough, opening out
into the mouth of the Thames with a width of ! of a milesuch
an inlet, washed by the waves of the Straits of Dover,
must have left behind it evidences of its presence in cliffs
along its entire length; and where are they P Then it must
have left inside some sort of beach; where is it ? Then the
bed of this sea must be strewn with shells of the molluscs
and other denizens of the sea, of which we :find no evidence
whatever except a few cockle-shells and occasional shells of
R&1&'ltlaL
WINGHAM
-
S'rN/CHOLAS
TH A NAT IS
KAVTIOY
PTO£EM.IEI
/IV BATTELY
NORTH
FORLAND
IS LE OF TH A N·E T
MONKTON MENSTRE
Porfu.s Interior
ft
- C(JQP£R STREi
ASH
MAP COPIED FBOM HA.STED'S "HISTORY OF KENT,"
S"!LAWRENCE -
- "
RAMSCATE
).S
Peppernesse
.A Map of the Rutupian Porui,
the ancient course of the Wantsuwe,
and the present course of
the River Stour. The white space
between the Island of Thanet and
the 001.tnty of Kent, formerly
covered entirely with water, being
now all of it dry land as far as the
Eastern Shore at Peppernesse.
With red dot.s added where Roman remains have been met with. ClifTsend is not give n in the Map, but its position is where
the black dot is placed.
OF ST. AUGUSTINE. 131
brackish-water origin. The tradition about the famed Rutupian
oysters will not bear investigation.
And so far as the relative height of the water in Roman
times is concerned, we have evidence that the foundation of
a Roman house was cut through when the South-Eastern
Railway was laid below the Castrum, and but little above the
present level of the water in the river close by at high tide.
And it is easy to shew from other parts of the coast that at
the period of the Roman occupation of Britain the sea rose
no higher than it does now; nay, the evidence is rather the
other way, viz.: that the land stood relatively higher than at
present.
Such an estuary as I have pictured must have, in the
Roman period, presented at low tide a series of mud-flats on
either side of the main river, which were only covered by
water at high tide, and some portions only at spring tides.
Through these mud-flats the spring water from the chalk
hills of Thanet (which dip down to the .Marsh) would find
their way into the main river as fleets. At high tide they
would be covered by the sea, in this case exactly resembling
the present mouth of the Stour, which runs across Pegwell
Bay, and is marked for the purpose of navigation by poles
driven into the mud on either side of the river. Such, I take
it, must have been the case with the Minster fleet, which
received the greater part of the spring waters from the chalk
hills.
Putting aside then all these hypothetical notions of the
physfoal changes that have be.en supposed to have existed,
let us see what sort of historical evidences we have in respect
to this estuary. First, Solinus, the first Roman writer
who mentions the Isle of Thanet, says that: "It is washed by
the Straits of Gaul, and separated from the continent of
Britain by a small estuary." The estuary is described by
Bede under the name of Wantsum, which Saxon name
clearly has the same meaning as "grea.tly decreasing"
has in English. Although it is described as about three furlongs
in breadth, we are not informed where this is measured
from, and taking the present marsh to represent the course
of the estuary this would only be true at its widest part, and
K2
132 ON THE LA.NDING•PLACE
I may add at spring tides; that it was but a shallow estuary
for most part is also apparent by Bede's adding "and fordable
only in two places."
The Roman writers on the Portus Rutupensis, by way of
description, term it '' Station.em Britannire tranquillam,"*
quiet or calm station or bay for ships, as stated by Somner.t
Battely writes : " The Isle of Thanet, opposite the coast of
Kent, forms such a haven as Virgil describes:-
, Sheltered from the rolling sea
An Island forms a port.' "
The advent of Theodosius is thus described. When he
had come to Bononia, which is separated from the opposite
coast by a narrow channel-where the sea is subject to
transitions from violent tempests and tides to the smoothest
calms and safe navigation-he crossed over, and arrived at
Rutupire, a, safe and quiet station opposite.t
Mr. Battely, quoting :from Giraldus Oambrensis, writes:
"The outer haven of Sandwich, which agrees with my supposition,
for the outer haven was that part of the river which
lay between Sandwich and the sea; the inner was that
which extended from Sandwich as far as Reculver, and these
two together formed the haven of Rutupire."§
I may note that in the map accompanying Battely these
are represented by Portus interior and Po1·tus exterior, but
as the map omits the Stonar beach, which, as I shall shew
further on, shuts off the waters of the exterior from those of
the interior by a barrier opening only between Stonar and
Sandwich, this division must have been absurd, no division
being shewn in the map between them; but by placing the
Stonar beach in its proper position this division would be
quiiie apparent, and it would also account for the Rutupian
harbour being the quiet harbour that is represented by the
Roman writers.
I will now draw attention to Stonar. In the last 6-inch
* Ammianus Marcellinus Rutupire.
t Roman Ports and Forts in Kent, page 3.
t See Roach Smith's ..t1.nti<.1uities of Rioliborou9k, Reculver, and Lymtn,
page 8.
§ Battely, abridged, page 10,
OF ST. AUGUSTINE. 133
Ordnance Map we find it recorded on the piece of ground
just behind the present residence, "Roman coins, urns,
swords, axes, portions of armour, and human remains found
here."
The site of the town destroyed in the reign of Richard II.
is given, and it is called the supposed Lapis Tit-uli. I will
not presume here to argue the vexed question as to the place
called by Nennius Lapis Tituli, which is by many learned
historians described as at Stonar in Thanet. Somner would
have it that this place was at Folkestone; but I believe he
stands alone in this supposition. I may mention as my
authorities Nennius, Camden, and Usher. The name of the
place has been variously described as Stonar, Estanore, Eastanores,
and Scorastan.
I have previously related that it was one of the reputed
landing-places of St. Augustine and his followers in .A..D. 597.
Hasted, folio, vol. iv., page 384, following Battely, states:
" Here Tuskill the Dane is said to have landed in the year
1009, and to have fought the English and afterwards to have
burnt the town, which was however not long after rebuilt,
and notwithstanding the increasing prosperity of its opposite
rival remained a port some time after the Norman Conquest.
In 1216, Lewis, Dauphin of France, landed here. In 1350,
King Edward III. lodged here in Stonar, waiting to embark
at Sandwich for foreign parts." In the same year there was
a great inundation of the sea for the space of three miles on
from Cliffsend to Stonar.
In the reign of Richard II., .A..D. 1385, the French landing
here first plundered, and afterwards burnt, the town. The
Rev. Canon Scott Robertson, in Vol. XII., Archmologia
0(1/Yl,tiana, page 330, in an essay on the Port of Stonar,
identifies this place with the ancient Luudenwic, and I
think with great show of reason, and he concludes " that
Estanore or Stonore existed centuries before Sandwich was
heard of." If this is the case, the early arrivals at the Port
of Sandwich, which most authors have claimed as the ancient
Lwndenwie, must be shifted to Sto11ar. At any rate Stonar
as a port and town existed at such a remote date that it precludes
altogether the notion that it was covered by the
134 ON THE LANDING-PLACE
waters of the sea at the Roman period, as represented in the
map I have previously alluded to. .Another fact shews that
at the time of the Roman occupation of Britain, not only did
Stonar exist as dry land, but that part of the sand-hills
betwee11 Sandown Castle and Sandwich were in existence.
I allude to the discovery of Roman remains and of a hoard of
Roman coins there. Mr. Roach Smith mentions this discovery
in his Retrospection, vol. i., pages 2, 7. * I have of late
had the position of these Roman vestiges pointed out to
me, and have seen them with Mr. Manser of Deal, near the
Rifle Butts in the sand-hills of that town.
1 have sought in vain for any authentic notices of the
lauding of ships at the spot indicated by the traditional
Ebbsfl.eet. In Canon Isaac.'I'aylor's Words and Places, under
the head of Ebbsfleet, he writes: "Ebbsfl.eet, which is now
half a mile from the shore, was a port in the twelfth
century, and its name indicates the former existence of a
tidal channel at the spot." On writing to Canon Isaac
Taylor I :find from his reply that the Abbey of Minster in
Thanet is supposed to mark the site of Ebbs:fleet, the
traditional landing-place of St . .Augustine in 5!)6. But he
adds, ".All the traditions must be taken for what they are
worth." He referred me to Freeman's Historic Town Series,
under Sandwich and the Cinque Ports; but states that in
Freeman's own book there is much nonsense about Ebbsfleet,
a "name which merely implies that the channel which made
Thanet an isle was tidal."
The mention of the Minster fleet as a port appears in
Thorn's Ohronicle, under date of 1242, which is recorded
in Boys's Oollectiuns for a History of Sandwich, page 658:
"'rhe prior and chapter of Christ Church, Canterbury,
entered i.nto a composition this year with the abbot and convent
of St . .Augustine, respecting their respective possessions
at Sandwich, Stonar, and other places in that neighbourhood.
The prior and bis chapter grant to the abbot and
monks a free passage by Sandwich river to Menstre flete,
reserving to themselves their maritime dues from such vessels
* Also Nwmismatio Ohroniole, vol. ii., page 259.
OF ST. AUGUS'.1.'INE. 135
as shall cast anchor in the said river before the fleet, whether
to load or unload, or do any other business there. In the
fleet itself they will not for the future claim any jurisdiction,
but they reserve to themselves and their tenants to be as free
from duties there as heretofore, and stipulate that the abbot,
etc., shall not wantonly fill up the said fleet."
Again, in A.D. 1313, Mr. Boys transcribes from Dr. Farmer's
Manuscripts the following notice of the said fleet :
"A presentment was made at the same session, that the
water-course called Minster flete used to run from a branch
of the river to the village of Minster, to which place vessels
resorted with various kinds of merchandize to the great convenience
of the whole country; that the King took tonnage
and his other customs in the said flete, till Roger, abbot of
St . .A.ugustine's, the predecessor of the present abbot, stopped
up the water-course to the King's damage and the detriment
of the whole county (we find in 1290 the monks of Christ
Church had given up to King Edwa,rd their Port of Sandwich,
and all their rights and customs with certain exceptions).
The abbot alleged that the current of the said flete ran
through his own ground, and that on account of a raging
tide and an extraordinary inundation of the river over his
ground, his predecessor expecting his lands in the neighbourhood
below would be drowned, by which he would have lost
the profit of about a thousand acres of his land, that his said
predecessor therefore had filled up the flete, as he had a right
to do, it being upon his own ground, and agreeable to the
custom of the country, and what was :usually done in marshy
and fenny places for the preservation of cultivated grounds.
The jury find that the prior of Christ Church used formerly
to receive custom from every vessel and boat anchoring
before the mouth of the said :flete in the stream, and without
the soil of the abbot, in right of his manor of Sandwich, then
belonging to the prior, which custom was annually worth half
a mark.* That the flete is part of the King's stream
running over the soil of the abbot to the abbot's town of
Minster, and used to be so wide that two cogges might turn
* See Boys's Sandwick, page 666 :iqq.
136 ON PRE L.A.NDING-PLACE
therein clear 0£ one another, that before the filling up of the
said flete the abbots made walls for the defence of their
lands, which walls had been since neglected ; and that no
hazard or loss could accrue to the said abbot with respect to
the lands aforesaid by opening the flete, provided the walls
were made as good as they used to be. They :find further,
that after the :flete was stopped the manor of Sandwich came
into the King's hands in exchange for other tenements;
after which the King never took any custom in the place
mentioned without the flete ; and that instead of carrying
their things by water through the flete to the town of
Minster, the people of the county cannot now come near it by
four miles, by which they are injured to the amount of £15 a
year. And lastly that the flete should be repaired and made
navigable to the town of Minster."
The description of this Minster :flete will serve to shew
how, up to the thirteenth century, the Sandwioh navigable
rights over Minster had been maintained, and it must in
previous times have been the usual landing-place-meantime
we read of no mention of Ebbs:fleet or any other fleet connected
by the ocean, except through the Sandwich Haven.
It is true that in the annals of Sandwich we find (in a controversy
between the Archbishop of Canterbury and the
monks of Christ Church on the one part, and the abbot of
St. Augustine on the other, concerning the jurisdiction over
the Port of Sandwich, and the maritime customs on both
sides of the river) Marlcsfleet mentioned in the early part
of the twelfth century, and also the men of Sandwich burning
a water-mill belonging to the abbot of St. Augustine at
Hepesflete. These two fletes were probably between Minster
and Sevenscore, or where the Ebbs:fleet Farm is now situate,
and it shews that the fletes wel'e small streams running
through the marsh. We have not the slightest historical
evidence of any great landing at any other place than the
Sandwich Haven, or Lundenwic, or the Portus Rutupensis of
former years. As early as the seventh century we have n otices
of landings in Sandwich Haven; both Danes and French came
there, and the Danish landings in Thanet and Minster must
have been from with;in the estuary. .A.t tha,t time a part of
OF ST. AUGUSTINE. 137
it was a much deeper channel, through which ships made their
way out to the north mouth by Reculver, but we have no reason
to suppose that the whole of the marsh was occupied by these
deep waters, and the mention of these.fleets is suggestive of
the shallow water that was found on either side of the main
course of the river, the fleets by their running water opening
up a channel to the land. So the quotations by authors of
the ships of the Danish invaders sailing through the estuary
by no means proves that it was a broad channel extending
from Cliffsend in Thanet to beyond Walmer, or even from
the Port of Sandwich to Minster.
With respect to Stonar, Lewis supposes it to have been
formerly an island, quoting Kilbume, who states : "It was
antiently compassed with the water, then called Stour, and
by the Britaines the Doure."* He concludes that in Bede's
time the Isle of Thanet must have been much larger than at
present, notwithstanding the addition of Stonar to it. I can
find, however, no other authority fot the assertion that
Stonar was an island, and there seems to be insuperable
objections to such a supposition. First, Bede makes no
mention of two mouths to the south, as in this case there
must have been, nor do we anywhere find any record of the
stopping-up of an opening between Cliffsend. and Stonar.
If the waters of the Wantsum had originally two outlets-one
between Stonar and Sandwich and the other between the
assumed island of Stonar and Cli:ffsend, Thanet-we have no
historical notices of this closing of the latter outlet;
nor does it seem at all likely that it, being the more direct
cut for the water to the sea, should have forsaken its course
for the more circuitous way round by Richborough and
Sandwich.
Kilburne states that Stonar belonged anciently to the
Abbey of St. Augustine, which by the grant of King Henry I.
had a £air holden yearly five days before and after the translation
of St. Augustine (being the 26th day of May), but long
since discontinued.
I have now exhausted all the historical notices of any
* ,';urvey of Kent, page 260.
138 ON 'l'HE LANDING-PLACE
importance in support of the theory of the broad estuary of
the Wantsum (at least from the earliest Saxon period), and
found no ground for the supposition that St. Augustine and
his followers took any route but the usual entrance to the
Port of Richborough, and in that case the suggestion of
Sprott that he landed in Thanet at Stonar has the greatest
claim to our acceptance.
The present position of the monument erected to commemorate
St . .A ugustine's landing may seem to some to offer
a solution of the difficulty, inasmuch as it is supposed to have
been in the little bay that existed beyond Oliffsend that the
landing took place ; but of course this necessitates our
abandoning the notion of any flete in the case. If this be so,
I cannot conceive that a worse place could have been selected;
we must remember that at the present time at low-water an
immense expanse of mud-flat is met with, extending to a
distance of one mile at least from the shore, and it is only at
high-water at spring-tide that the sea approaches the shore,
and is so sha1low that a common rowing boat cannot land.
If St. Augustine with his ships for forty followers had
chosen this spot he certainly would not have landed on the
"mainland," nor in the Isle of Thanet, but most assuredly
in the sea of Pegwell Bay.
We must not assume that the landing-place of Reugist
and his followers, or of St. Augustine and his, was a matter of
chauce; in the first case we are expressly told (as is recorded
by Green in his Makvng of England, page 31), "The Jutes
who landed under Rengist landed not as enemies but as
friends, and their place of landing was the result of a settled
design. In the first year that followed after their landing
Jutes and Britons fought side by side." The fortress of
Richborough still remained in the hands of the British
troops. Here under shelter of the place rested the British
fleet; the far-famed Rutnpine Port was here, the entrance to
this tranquil harbour was by Stonar and Sandwich; and
everything points to the conclusion that the lauding of the
Jutes in Thanet was at Stonar and not Pegwell Bay.
The Saxon pirates had again and again invaded Thanet
in the past. They made their sudden descents upon the island
OF ST. AUGUSTINE. 139
at Margate and Kingsgate, at Broadstairs and Ramsgate, in
all probability on these occasions coming and going "like a
thief in the night." The caves and hiding-places in the woods
in Thanet testify to the terror in which the inhabitants
dwelt of these pirates, who came in flat-bottomed boats propelled
by oars. In Vol. XI. of Archceologia OantiC(JYl,a I gave
an account of a cave near Margate where in all probability
the Roman-British inhabitants of Thanet had hidden themselves
from these invaders. Under these circumstances, the
Saxon landed at any part of the coast where the cliffs were
cut through so that they might gain access to the land; but
we must not conclude in this case that there was any usual
landing-place, nor would this Cli:ffsend Bay present any
facility for their purpose.
In the case of St . .Augustine we are told that he landed
on the spot where Hengist had landed more than a centuty
before. His coming was preceded by negotiations with
Bertha and with the King himself; and, if we conclude that
Ethelbert_ had a palace or fortress at Richborough, nothing
would have been more reasonable than to ask St. Augustine
to remain at Stonar in the Isle of Thanet waiting his advent
to his castle at Richborough.
I£ local tradition is to be our guide, not only does it point
to Stonar as the landing-place of St. Augustine in Thanet,
but that he went from thence to Richborough; and Leland
informs us that in his time it was considered a portion of
the Isle of Thanet-that the Holy Missionary, on leaving
the ship, trod on a stone which retained the print of his foot
as though it had been clay, that this stone was preserved in
a chapel dedicated to St. Augustine after his canonization,
and yearly, on the anniversary of its deposit, crowds of
people flocked thither to pray for and receive health (see
C. Roach Smith's Antiquities of Richborough, pages 160, 161,
and Plauche's Corner of Kent, pages 28, 29).
140 ON THE LANDING-PLACE
THE PHYSICAL CHANGES.
First of all then we have found that the great tongue of
low-land reaching from Cli:ffsend in Thanet to the ancient
town of Stonar near Sandwich must ba.ve been caused by a
very ancient beach, which formerly existed along the entire
distance, and of which we have evidences in sca.ttered portions
which have n.ot been cut away by the bendings of the River
Stour, or the Sandwich Haven as it is here termed, between
Sandwich and Pepperness. This Stonar beach shews
evidences that it had travelled from north to south, or from
Thanet Cliffs towards Sandwich; that it was the result of
marine currents that flowed at the time it was formed in
exactly an opposite direction to the sea currents of the
present time and for many ages past, which have driven
the Walmer beach from south to north. This change in
the direction of the currents was probably due to the widening
of the English Channel between Dover and Calais, which
has caused the great tidal wave that enters the Channel
from the south and west to p1·evail to a greater extent over
the opposite tidal wave that enters from the North Sea, and
consequently the place where these two currents meet and
neutralize one another has been shifted more northward.
So that to go back to the time when the Stonar beach was
formed we must date back to the Pre-historic period. Now
all the historic evidences we have met with point to the
same conclusion, that the Stouar beach and its connection
with t,he Isle of Thanet date back previous to the Roman
occupation of Britain. This great natural barrier not only
kept the sea from coming directly into the Wantsum Estuary,
but compelled the retreating exit-waters of the river to make
a circuitous course round by Sandwich.
A study of the most ancient authentic ma,ps that have
been made from time to time shew quite conclusively that
the Sandwich Have1J, or the mouth 0£ the Stour, has been
progressing more and mo1·e northward, so that whereas in
the reign of Queen Elizabeth it had been som ewh ere opposite
the Stouar Cut, and pointed out eastwa,rd, it has from the
- - --.::;_: __ : __
::·- ·- -- .
:: : ..
8
S'!NICHOLAS
AT WADE
MAP OF' THANET AND NEIGHBOURHOOD
From the 111.51; Ordnance map, shewing the embankments-Bur•
rounding the Stour, the heights above Ordnance datum in red
ink, the unshaded parts being tho110 probably occupied by the
sea at spring high tides before the ancient sea-wall8 were
erected.
-f SLE OF
•
0 I z
MARGATE
NORTH
FORE LANO
BROAOSTAIRS
THAN E7J
-SCALE.-
3 4-
.tj SEA WALLS
• I
. '
.-<.1
' PROBABLL £/fRLY CNTRAffC£ TO THC
, WAffTSUM oo PORTUS RUTVPflflJS
s 6 M'JL£S
OF ST. AUGUSTINE. 141
shore-drift been directed more and more westward and northward,
as we find in each subsequent map. Moreover we find
outside this ancient beach that the bay that existed bad
been in some places so far silted-up that the mud-flats had
been covered with grass. It seems that from time to time
extra high tides and storms had in places swept over the
beach, and at or about the mouth of the river there had been
considerable removal of ancient beach and mud-flat so as to
endanger the level or marsh-land from Canterbury to the sea.
Such appears to have been the great inundation in A.D. 1364.
It appears probable that soon after this artificial walls were
erected to exclude the sea near the place called Hippelesflete,
and beyond, and a bank called the boarded grom may have
been erected. It was this place that Lewis first pointed out
as the position of Ebbs.8.eet.
Seeing that either tbe name of Ebbsflete, or Hippelsflete,
is recorded as existing on the properties of the monks of
St. Augustine at Stonar, between the latter place and Cliffsend,
I have endeavoured to trace out the connection of this
:flete with the Wantsuru Estuary. I may premise that the
wall described as the Ebbs:fleet wall in Thanet is described in
the books of the Commissioners of Sewers as in the Stone
Leei; valley, a name at once suggestive of the beach which I
have mentioned as formerly connected with Stonar. And I
learn from Mr. K. H. Wilkie, who has kindly furnished me
with the data from the Book of Sewers, that when the most
distant target was put down some years ago at the Cliffsend
rifle range, in digging for a foundation beach-stones were
found twelve feet beneath the mud of the Bay. The position of
the stones exactly coincides with an imaginary line connecting
the present Stonar beach with the cliffs at Cliffsend, where I
· bad traced the ancient beach, and inside this line the beach
seems to have been swept away in part, especially near where
the "boarded groin" was erected. In the Commission of
Sewers' Books, 1605, "we find Ebbsfl.eet wall next the cliffs of
Thanet, called the groyne, in very dangerous condition to be
repaired as heretofore by the Stone Lees Valley." In 1652
we find in the same books: "New sluice made through the
groyne; no longer to be scotted to Minster." So it seems
142 ON. THE LANDING-PLACE
it had previously been scotted to Minster. In the map and
survey of the Town and Port of Sandwich, made by 0. Labelye
for Sir George Oxenden, the River Stour is represented as
having a branch that runs parallel to the Haven. This map
was made in 1735. It may be that this branch of the Stour is
not correctly drawn, but we know that the Stour has made
several turns in its course, and that before the Stonar Cut was
made in 1735 a stream did enter the river here and in the
Minster level.
Lewis and others have represented the beach wall between
Cliffsend and Ebbsfleet Lane as an artificial wall made by
the monks of St. Augustine, and in proof of the assertion
quote the Writ of Inquiry, issued in 1280 at the suit of the
Abbot, who sets forth" that he has a wall of sand and stone
between Stanore and Clivesend, by which his manor of
Menstre is protected from the rage of the sea, and that
the people of Sandwich by force dig up the materials and
carry them away in their boats, and will not suffer the
Abbot's officers to distrain in a legal way for the trespass,
but even bring armed men in their boats for the purpose of
preventing such distress. And that he has a marsh belonging
to himself in right of his barony between Stanore and
Hippelesflete, into which the people of Sandwich corne without
leave, and against the peace and consent of the said
Abbot dig the soil and carry it away in their boats by force to
Sandwich," etc.* MS. penes Ric. Farmer.
This proves nothing more than (as I contend) that the
Stonar beach was continuous to Cliffsend. The walls
erected by the Abbots of Augustine were not made of sand
and beach, but of good stiff clay, and the wall alluded to was
the wall or beach cast up by the sea, and the Sandwich
people took it as a common right, even as is done by people
at the present time with these sea-shore accumulations.
Moreover, if we examine the said wall which now
remains by the turnpike road near "The Sportsman," we
shall see it is a natural littoral accumulation of beach and
sand, which extends inland beyond the turnpike road, and
from its uneven aspect appears to have been quat'l'ied for
* Quoted in Boys's OoZlection, puge 660.
OF ST. AUGUSTINE, 143
material. At Stone Lees the remains of a beach are
visible, but it extends nearly to Stonar, and (where absent) it
is evidently owing to the encroachments of the winding
mouth of the river. Nearer Stonar the beach may be seen
to have been cut through at every bend of the river.
If my reasons are cogent, and I believe they are, they
prove firstly, that the most probable place where St.
Augustine landed was at Stonar; secondly, that if it were
near Minster the way thither must have been round between
Stonar and Sandwich ; thirdly, it could not possibly have Leen
near where the present monument is erected to commemorate
the event; and fourthly, the map which appeared in Battely's
Antiquitates Rutupin
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