^tittefllfljjm Cantiana.
4.
THE OWNERS OE ALLINGTON CASTLE,
MAIDSTONE (1086—1279).
BY AGNES E. CONWAY.
THE desire to recover from the past some trace of the
persons who lived and moved and had their being amidst
the same surroundings as oneself, gazing on the same hills,
protected by the same moat, sheltered within the same
walls, is natural enough. To print the result for others
who do not chance to possess the same personal interest may
need some warrant. But these ghostly owners of Allington,
800 years ago, shared in a society so unlike our own, that
any authentic, although most literal record of their daily
lives, in some degree revives a vanished world.
Eor the owners of Allington after 1280, the year that
Stephen of Penchester began to build the Castle as it exists
in its essentials to-day, I would refer the reader to the Paper
by Mr. Bellewes in the present volume, and to Sir Martin
Conway's article in Archceologia Cantiana, Vol. XXVIII.,
p. 337.
Kilburne in his Topographical Survey of Kent, published
in 1659, undertakes to give an account of the successive
owners of Allington who preceded Stephen of Penchester.
Although at every line he is contradicted by contemporary
documents, successive Kentish historians have repeated his
errors, not without embellishments of their own. Kilburne,
Philipot, Hasted, reiterate the same sequence of the family
of de Columbariis, Earl Warren, Lord Fitzhngh and Sir Giles
Allington. After 1279 the Kentish historians are on firm
ground, but for the earlier centuries, Kilburne, Philipot and
Hasted must be disregarded,- else no progress can be made.
VOL. XXIX. B
2 THE OWNERS OE
I t is however quite possible to account for the origin of
their errors. The noted family of de Columbariis, who are
said by Kilburne to have built the earliest Castle, had no
connection with Allington till Avice, the daughter of Stephen
of Penchester, born in 1269, married one of them. But
Burke in his Dormant and Extinct Peerage, page 4, quoting
an old pedigree in the possession of a Mr.. Allington of
Swinhope, says that Medwaycester Castle (Allington) belonged
at the Conquest to Sir John de Columbariis, whose
daughter Emlyn married Sir Hildebrand de Alyngton,
undermarshall of William I. at the Battle of Hastings, and
conveyed the Castle to him. He goes on to say that the
grandson of this Sir Hildebrand, a certain Solomon, living
in the reign of Henry I., built the Castle and Solomon's
Tower. Since the tower was built by Stephen of Penchester
about 1290 this story may have been invented to account for
the name, the origin of which is unknown. The pedigree in
Burke is continued to a certain Sir Giles Allington who
died in 1522, from whom the Lords Alington descend ; but
the attempt to connect the family of Alington with Allington
Castle is only an interesting specimen of seventeenth century
pedigree-forging, which on the face of it can be discredited,
even were it not contradicted by surviving contemporary
statements.1 Earl Warren, whose daughter is said by Kilburne
to have transferred it to Lord Mtzhugh, owned
Allington near Lewes in Sussex,2 which doubtless was confounded
with the Kentish Allington; and this, combined
with Lord Alington's pedigree, suffices to account for the
errors of Kilburne, Philipot and Hasted.
The present Paper is concerned with the building up
de novo of the history of Allington Castle from Domesday
Book to 1280, the year when Stephen of Penchester obtained
a licence to fortify the Castle. Search has so far yielded
no mention of Allington earlier than Domesday Book. It
suffices here to quote a translation of that entry. Eor a
1 Bound, J. H., Peerage and Family History, p. 62, says: " Lord Alington
no longer seeks his progenitor in Sir Hildehrand de Alington, a name that
would have gladdened Sir Walter Scott." ' ;
' Memorials of the Earls of Warren and Surrey, vol, i., p. 97,
ALLINGTON CASTLE, MAIDSTONE. 3
commentary on the agrarian facts see Sir Martin Conway's
article (Archceologia Cantiana, Vol. XXVIII., p. 339):—
"Anschitel holds of the Bp. [Odo of Bayeux] Elentun. It
answers for one solin. There is the. arable land of 3 teams. In
demesne there are two teams. And 15 villains with two bordars;
they have one team and a half. A church there. And two slaves.
And half a mill. And one dene of 15 shillings. Wood of 8 hogs.
And one acre of meadow. - In the time of King Edward it was
worth 100 shillings. When he received it 60 shillings. Now 100
shillings. Dluric held it of Alnod Cilt."
This Alnod Cilt,1 a great Kentish thane who may have
been a son of King Harold by his Canterbury consort, was
still living in 1086, the year of the Domesday Survey, but
with greatly diminished lands. After the Conquest, 184
manors in Kent were granted to Odo, Bishop of Bayeux,
William I.'s half-brother, twenty of which had previously
been held by Alnod Cilt; among these were Allington and
Boxley. Anschitel, who is mentioned as holding Allington
of the Bishop, was probably Anschitel de Ros, an ancestor
of the family of de Ros who were overlords of Allington to
the time of Queen Mary. This Anschitel de Ros is mentioned
in Domesday Book as the holder of many Kentish manors,
including that of Hortune in the hundred of Axstane, the
same Horton which in 1254 was held with the barony of Ros
by Gilbert Kirkeby2 and afterwards called Horton Kirby.
In 1346, when a feudal aid was paid at the knighting of the
Black Prince, Allington is referred to as having been held of
John de Ros by Margaret of Penchester as of his manor
of Horton Kirby.3 As there is no doubt that the De Ros's'
were overlords of Allington for centuries, that Anschitel de
Ros held Horton Kirby, which was always associated with
Allington, and that an ; ...'
ALLINGTON CASTLE, MAIDSTONE. 11
anniversary and that of his wife were honoured with the
same celebrations as Bishop Odo of Bayeux, on the sixth
Kalends of November (October 26th). The description of
Odo's masses seems incomplete:—
" Cappa 1 missa ad minus altare 11 . . . . 11 . . . . Signum
grossum unum cum ceteris in parva turri."1
But whatever the observances were, Ansfrid and Mabel
had the same,2 and so in his turn had his son William, for
in the same list of the anniversaries of benefactors (Custumale
Roffense, p. 37) we read:—
" 1111 Won: Februarii [Eeb. 1st] pro Willelmo filio Ansfridi
sicut pro Odone."
This son William, who appears in the Registrum Roffense
and in the Pipe Rolls as " Willelm de Elintona," inherited
Allington, and in his turn made the many gifts to Rochester
already recorded. Another son John inherited his father's
life interest in Stisted. This Essex manor had originally
been given by King Canute to Godwin, Earl of Kent, who in
1046 gave it to the monks of Christchurch, Canterbury.3
I t was one of the many manors stolen by Odo, Bishop of
Bayeux, from Canterbury, which he was obliged to give back
at the Conference at Pennenden Heath held in 1072.4
Odo had been granted a portion of Godwin's lands by the
King, and i t was probably because Stisted had belonged to
Godwin that he had seized upon it. In Domesday Book
Stisted is entered as held of the Holy Trinity (Christchurch,
Canterbury), as a manor and half a hide, but the holder is
not named. He may even then have been Ansfrid. After
the death of Lanfranc, Anselm seems to have kept the rent
of the manor in his own hands until 1106, when, in the
charter already referred to as witnessed by Ralf, nephew of
Gundulf, he gave it back to the monks of Christchurch,
" because it is known to pertain and have pertained to their
use."6 •
1 Thorpe, Custumale Roffense, p. 37.
2 Ibid. "VI. Kal. Novembris pro Ansfrido et Mabilia sicut pro Odone."
,' .. 3 "Wright, History of Essex,,ii., p. 12.
4 Cave Browne, Boxley Parish, Appendix D. 6 Campbell MS.'VII,, f>.
12 THE OWNERS OE
The records of the manors belonging to Christchurch,
Canterbury, are still kept in the library of the Cathedral,
and among them, in a charter given by Archbishop Theobald
(1139—1161), some information can be gleaned about the
actual people who held Stisted, worked the manor, and paid
the yearly rent to the monks of Christchurch.
In this charter Theobald returns the manor of Stisted to
the prior and monks of Christchurch, Canterbury, on the
death of John, son of Ansfrid. He explains that Ansfrid
never had more than a life interest in the manor, and no
power of transmitting it to his descendants, but that- before
the death of Archbishop William of Corbeuil, in 1138, John
had violently seized Stisted and been ejected by the Archbishop,
who returned the manor to the prior and convent of
Christchurch. Then Matilda de Sancto Sydonio was given
Stisted for her life, paying £10 a year to the monks, but
without any power of bequest.1
The charter by which Matilda de Sancto Sydonio held
Stisted still exists at Canterbury.2 It was given her on the
request of King Stephen, who refers to her as " Cognata
mea." What relation, if any, she was as well to Ansfrid it
is hard to say.3 In Theobald's charter Ansfrid's son John
is represented as having seized and lost Stisted before
Matilda had it for her life. But the occasion of that charter
1 Canterbury MSS., S. 315. 2 Register B.
3 Sanctus Sidonius is Saint-Saens in Normandy, a place a few miles north
of Rouen, in the arrondissement of Neufchatel-en-Bray.
William the Conqueror.
Robert, Duke of Lambert de Sancto Sydonio Adela^Stephen Henry
Normandy. (circa 1066). of Blois.
Natural daughter^Helie de Sancto Sydonio (circa 1106). King Stephen
Mathieu de Sancto Sydonio (] 150 ;=Perica. Matilda de Sancto Sydonio,
gives a charter to the monks of died before 1161.
Saint-Saens). -
See Memoires de la SociM Nationale des Antiquaires de. France, vol. iv.,
p. 123; Stapleton, Magni Rotuli Scaccarii Normmniae, vol. i., p. cui;. Freeman,
William Rufus, vol. i., pp. 235^-7. ••••
ALLINGTON CASTLE, MAIDSTONE. 13
is the restitution of the manor to the monks on the death of
John, who then it seems must have held it for the remainder,
of his life after the death of Matilda de Sancto Sydonio.
She was presumably King Stephen's first-cousin once
removed, and possibly some relation as well of John the
son of Ansfrid, but this cannot be proved. Although
unlikely, it is not impossible, from the fact that although
the holders of Stisted, as is affirmed over and over again,
had no power of bequest, and although the manor reverted
absolutely at the death of each tenant to the monks at
Canterbury, yet nevertheless it continued, as we shall see
later, in the hands of descendants of Ansfrid for 250 years,
each of them being a tenant for life. Matilda de Sancto
Sydonio would be the solitary case of a stranger entering
that line of succession.
What other sons of Ansfrid, if any, inherited his other
lands is not known, and need not concern a historian of
Allington. William succeeded Ansfrid at Allington, as his
name William of Allington implies. But further proof of
his tenure, and of that of his overlord William de Ros, is
afforded by an investigation into the number of knights'
fees in England, which was undertaken by Henry II. in
1166. This complete list of knights' fees is published in
Hearne's Black Book of the Exchequer and in the Red Book of
the Exchequer,1 and forms an invaluable contemporary
account of the owners of land in England at that date.
Carta Willelmi de Ros.
WiUelmus de Helinton.
feodum 1 militis.
William de Ros, the probable descendant of Anschitel de
Ros, held seven knights' feeS of the King, that is to say, he
was responsible for providing seven fully armed knights to
fight for the King on the outbreak of any war. He was his
tenant-in-chief, holding of him without any intermediate
overlord. In Domesday Book Anschitel de Ros held of the
Bishop of Bayeux, but after his disgrace the King had
> H, Hall, vol. i., p. 196,
1 4 THE OWNERS OE. -
taken over his lands, and became the immediate overlord of
his tenants. On the death of a tenant-in-chief leaving a
grown-up heir, a sum of money called a " relief" was paid
to the King to ensure the peaceful succession of the heir.
In the event of his being a minor the King took over his
custody and that of the land until his coming-of-age, and if
the relative desired the care of the heir and the land a sum
had to be paid to compensate the King. Allington as we
have seen was not held of the King in chief, but of William
de Ros. Nevertheless the Pipe Roll for the eleventh year
of Henry II. has the following entries under Kent:—
" The wife of William of Elintone owes 100 marks for the custody
of the land of her son. She pays 50 marks " [p. 105].
" Agnes de Elintone owes 30 shillings and six pence. And she
is quit" [p. 107].
Whether Agnes was the name of the wife cannot be
certainly said. The widow paid off 50 marks of her debt
(£33 6s. 8d.) this year, £23 6s. 8d. the following year,1 and
£10 the year after,2 making a total of £66 13s. 4d., the
equivalent of 100 marks. A mark was (not an English coin,
but a money of account, originally representing the value of
a mark weight of pure silver) equal in the twelfth century to
13s. 4d., and accounts in the Pipe Rolls were often calculated
in marks, but always paid in pounds, shillings, and pence.
To explain why this money was paid to the King and
not to William de Ros it is necessary to look forward and
backward. Tn 1236 there is an entry3 to the effect that the
owner of Allington, a certain WilHam de Longchamp, holds
Ovenhill (in Boxley) which is a sergeanty of the King,
worth 100 shillings a year, from which the service due is
the personal attendance of the holder upon the King whenever
he goes to a Welsh war, with a horse worth five
shillings and a sack and fastening pin. The horse was a
baggage horse and the sack and buckle for carrying armour.
Tenure by sergeanty entailed as its essence some personal
1 Pipe Roll, 12 Henry II., p. 112. 2 Pipe Roll, 13 Henry II., p. 200,
3 Testa de Neville, p. 215,
ALLINGTON CASTLE, MAIDSTONE. 18
attendance upon the monarch, which might be of a high or
low nature, from bearing the banner of the King in battle
to finding a truss of straw for his outer chamber when he
stayed in Cambridge.1 Another characteristic of a sergeanty
was that the King claimed relief and wardship from
the holders of all except " petty " sergeanties which held by
trifling services. In Henry III.'a time a sergeanty worth
100 shillings like Ovenhill was a "grand" sergeanty and
owed relief and wardship to the King.2
Although 1236 is the earliest year in which Ovenhill is
described as a sergeanty held by the owner of Allington,
there is a reference to land in Ovenhill in connection with
Allington as early as 1195. The first time it appears by
name is in a manuscript about the upkeep of Rochester
Bridge contained in the Textus Roffensis, which was compiled
by Bishop Ernulf (1115—1123) :—
" Then is the fourth peere the Kinges and three yeardes and a
halfe to planke, and three plates to laye, of Aylesford and of all
that lathe that thereunto lyeth, and of Ovenhille and of Aclay,
etc., etc. . . . ."8
In Ansfrid dapifer's holding of 100 shillings worth of
land of the'King in Boxley in 1130 it is not difficult to see
the earliest mention of Ovenhill held as a sergeanty. Now
if in 11 Henry IL, 1166, Ovenhill descended to William de
Allington with the manor of Allington, when William's
widow had to pay wardship, she paid for Ovenhill as well as
for Allington. A quotation from Pollock and Maitland's
History of English Law (vol. i., p. 802) will complete this
digression:—.
" Once more we see the King above the common rules. If a
dead man held in chief of the Crown by Knights service or by
grand sergeanty the King was entitled to the wardship of the heir's
body and to his marriage no matter how many other lords there
might he. But further, the King was entitled to the lordship of
all the lands which this dead man held, no matter of tuhom Tie held
them. Such was the right of prerogative wardship."
1 Pollock and Maitland, History of English Law, vol. i., p. 262 (1st Edition). '
2 Ibid., p, 304, . 3 Lambarde, Perambulation of Kent, p. 348,
16 THE OWNERS OE
This means that the widow of William had to pay wardship
to the King for Allington as well as for Ovenhill, and
that William de Ros lost his feudal due from his tenant at
Allington because that tenant happened also to hold of the
King by grand sergeanty at Ovenhill.
Hard as this was for William de Ros, the fact proves a
boon to the historian of Allington, because it ensured that
the payment of wardship and relief should appear on the
Pipe Rolls, on which alone payments to the King's Exchequer
were noted. Eor the latter half of the twelfth century, when
the Pipe Rolls are almost the only contemporary source of
knowledge, information about a person who was not a
tenant-in-chief of the King is almost impossible to get.
The historian's luck is even more apparent in the next piece
of evidence taken from the "Rotulus de Dominabus" or Ladies'
Roll of 1185. In that year Henry II., most indefatigable
of monarchs in collecting financial information, undertook
an enquiry into the extent and value of land in England held
of him in chief by widows and orphans. It only exists for
twelve counties, one of them being Essex1 and, as chance
would have it, is most relevant to our researches. The
following is a complete translation of the entry :—
ESSEX.—Hundred of Hinckford.
" The daughter of William de Allington is in the custody of
our Lord the King, and is 15 years old and the niece of Archdeacon
Paris [of Rochester]. Stisted, which the aforesaid William held of
the monks of Canterbury by a rent of £10, was after his death in
the hands of the King with the daughter of the said William, and in
the custody of the sheriff of Essex; who the first year received
thence £4 less 4 shillings, the second year 4 marks and stock,
namely 10 oxen and 5 horses. And if there were 16 oxen,,4 horses;
6 cows, 1 bull, 4 pigs, 1 boar, and 60 sheep there, the said vill would
be worth £6 above and beyond the payment to the monks of £10.2
The first important piece of information to be derived"
from this entry is that Stisted, which had belonged for his;
1 Lincolnshire, Northamptonshire, Bedfordshire, Buoks, Rutland, Huntingdonshire,
Norfolk, Suffolk, Herts, Essex, Cambridge, Middlesex, not Kent, 2 Rotulus de Dominabus, Staoey Grimaldi, p. 38,
ALLINGTON CASTLE, MAIDSTONE. 17
life to Ansfrid's son John, had afterward come into the
possession of William de Allington. That it should descend
in the family in spite of the fact that the manor reverted
absolutely to the monks at the death of each tenant, seems
to be the normal proceeding. The heiress of William de
Allington inherited Stisted as she inherited Allington and
Ovenhill, and being a tenant-in-chief of the King through
her ownership of Ovenhill he exercised " prerogative wardship,"
and had the custody of her person and of her manor
of Stisted. If she had not been a ward of the King we
should have heard nothing of her on the Ladies' Roll.
Returning to the same entry it is evident that the sheriff
of Essex had received the proceeds of the manor for two
years, which fixes William de Allington's death approximately
to the year 1183. But the widow of William the
elder, the son of Ansfrid, paid for the custody of the land of
her son in 1165. He must have been named William too,
and have grown up and married before 1169, since 1170
must have been the year of his daughter's birth if in 1185
she was fifteen years old.
On the Pipe Roll of the first year of Richard I., 1189
(p. 21), we read that the sheriff of Essex paid £4 to the King
from Stisted, and that the prioress of Clerkenwell paid £4
for the care of the daughter of William de Allington. The
name of the heiress is given in another place in the same
Pipe Roll (p. 17).
" And to Avelina, daughter of William de Allington 60 shillings
for (her) clothes"1 [possibly a trousseau, see p. 20].
Of this William, the father of Avelina, I can find nothing
personal, but it was during his lifetime that the first mention
was made of any building at Allington. It occurs in the
Pipe Roll for the year 1174-5 (20 Henry II. , p. 212).
"Et in prosternendo castello de Alintona 60 solidi per breve
regis."
The great rebellion against Henry II. stimulated by his
1 "Et Aveline filie Willelmi de Elinton tx solidos ad Pannos, per breve
Regis."
VOI,, XXIX. 0
18 , THE OWNERS OE
son Prince Henry, in which a large number of the barons
and the middle class of the realm took part, occupied the
years 1173 and 1174 with bloodshed. When King Henry
was finally successful he ordered a great destruction of
castles all over the country, of which Allington was one.
The foundations and one small portion of the wall of this
oldest Castle still exist. That William de Allington followed
the rebels seems not unlikely. If so he was the precursor of
a still greater rebel at the Castle 400 years later.
After 1174 Allington was not again the site of a castle
till Stephen of Penchester obtained his licence to crenellate
the existing house in 1280. In the only mention of the
building that occurs between these years we shall see that it
is ref erred to as a "house." A substantial portion of this
building still exists. But although at the period which we
are now approaching, Allington as a building was not
important, its owners took a more prominent part in the
affairs of their country. Around the heiress Avelina, brought
up at the priory of Clerkenwell, throng echoes of stirringdays,
of which enough remain recorded to endow this first
lady of Allington with character and life.
The feudal guardianship of a ward brought with it the
right to dispose of her in marriage and reap the profits of
the transaction. In 1189 Avelina was still a ward, approaching
the age of twenty-one, and the King must have been
anxious to bestow her upon a suitable husband. Richard I.,
in 1189, had just succeeded his father, and was preparing to
start on the third Crusade. His essential needs were to leave
England in the hands of men who would govern in his
interest while he was away, and to raise as much money as
he could for travelling expenses. Before his accession to
the throne his right-hand man had been a certain William
de Longchamp,1 his chaplain, and afterwards Chancellor of
Aquitaine.3 When Richard came to England, William de
Longchamp accompanied him and paid £8000 to be made
Chancellor of the realm. As he was so entirely devoted to
> Eor the career of William de Longchamp see Stubbs, "Preface to the
Ohroniole of Eoger of Hoveden " vol, iii,
? JRobert of Denizes, p. 0,
ALLINGTON CASTLE, MAIDSTONE. 19
the interests of the King he was given the Chancellorship,
although the Bishop of Bath bid £4000 for it.
On the last day of the year Longchamp was consecrated
Bishop of Ely. The King had departed for Prance a fortnight
earlier on his way to Palestine, leaving Bishop Hugh
of Durham justiciar, though the Chancellor was entrusted
with certain other powers which clashed with those of
Bishop Hugh. Divided authority gave rise to quarrels,
which were carried to the King in Erance, and ended in
Richard bestowing the sole justiciarship upon William de
Longchamp for the whole of England south of the Humber.
This was in March 1190, and for the next year Longchamp
lived in regal state.
" A visit of a single night cost the house which received him three
years' savings. He entertained °a train of a thousand horsemen.1
He moved through the kingdom like ' a flash of lightning.' "2
In June he was made Papal Legate in place of the Archbishop,
who had gone on Crusade, and thus became Chancellor,
Justiciar and Legate all in one. Such power achieved
in one year by a Norman, hitherto unknown in England, was
fated to draw down odium upon his head, and by October
1191 his fall was bitter indeed. All his offices were taken
from him, and he was obliged to fly disgraced to Erance.
But he had had his day. During that one year of omnipotence
he procured for his six brothers offices of importance,
preferments in the Church, or rich wards in marriage. His
nearest brother Osbert, referred to by Giraldus Cambrensis
(iv., p. 406) as " frater suus germanus," married Avelina de
Allington, and no doubt William obtained her for his brother
during the height of his power.
In the Pipe Rolls of 3 Richard I. (1191), under Kent,
stands the following entry:—
" de Longchamp pays 20 marks to do service of the King,
by writ of the Chancellor."
1 Stubbs, " Preface to Roger of Hoveden," vol. iii., p. 223 (Historical Introductions
to the Rolls series). 2 Robert of Devices, p. 14,
Q2. •
20 THE OWNERS OE
Unfortunately the Christian name is torn off, but as none
of the Longchamps were associated with Kent except
Osbert, through his wife Avelina, it seems probable that
Osbert is the name lost, and that he was doing service to
the King because of the land in Kent which had come into
his possession when he married Avelina. At any rate, by
1194 we know that they were married, since both appear as
parties in a suit,1 but 1190 or 1191, when William was
Chancellor and able to bestow the King's wards in marriage
himself, seems the most likely year for the match to have
taken place.
Through their association with William de Longchamp
his six brothers, from 1189 onwards, were prominent on the
political horizon: too prominent in the view of the contemporary
chroniclers. One of the reasons for William's
unpopularity which led to his fall, says Roger of Hoveden
(iii., p. 142), was that he consistently advanced his own
family:—
" His nephews and relations, no matter how distant and born in
a peasant's Cottage, sought eagerly to unite themselves in matrimony
with counts, barons, and magnates of the realm, thinking to
acquire the greatest favour from him by any show of relationship."
Already before the end of 1189 Osbert de Longchamp
had been given the custody of the Fleet prison with an
annual salary of £7 12s. lcZ.,3 and there are entries in the
Pipe Rolls under London and Middlesex from 1190 onwards,
shewing that he received £10 12s. lid. every year for the
custody of the King's house at Westminster.3
Early in 1190 William de Longchamp went north with
two of his brothers, Henry and Osbert, to quell a rebellion
which had broken out at York, and in April he made Osbert
sheriff of Yorkshire, so as to keep his own influence over
the county firm. He deposed the former sheriff, John
Marshall, who accounted on the Pipe Rolls for the first
half of the year.4 In 1190 and 1191 Osbert was also sheriff
1 Palgrave, Rotuli Curim Regis, ii., p. 49. 2 Rymer, Fcedera,.i., 50.
3 " Pro custodia domorum regis de Westmonasteriuip."
* Stubbs, Roger of Hoveden, iii., p. 34,
ALLINGTON CASTLE, MAIDSTONE. 21
of Westmoreland, but hardly can he have been married to
Avelina for more than a year, when the crash in the fortunes
of the Chancellor brought him also to ruin. William
de Longchamp had been consistently faithful to the
interests of Richard against those of John, who was plotting
to be recognized as heir to the throne in place of
Prince Arthur. But the Chancellor's arrogance had offended
everyone, and when he was known to be intriguing for his
election to the see of Canterbury, just vacant, the discontented
forces combined against him and were overpowering.
At a great meeting in the fields around the Tower he was
deprived of the justiciarship and made to give up all his
castles except Dover, Cambridge, and Hereford. Osbert de
Longchamp and Mathew de Cleres, castellan of Dover, his
brother-in-law, were pledges that he would not escape1 from
the country. But when he reached Dover the temptation
was too great, and dressed up as a woman he tried to board
a ship. The attempt was unsuccessful, and he was banished
instead, but his brothers suffered, Osbert being deprived of his
sheriffdom and another brother Henry imprisoned at Cardiff.3
We are not here concerned with the remainder of the
career of William de Longchamp, his fluctuations in favour
at home, his help in the matter of Richard's ransom, and
his faithful attendance abroad upon the King till his death
in 1196. Witnesses to his past power in England remained
in the territorial prominence of his relations. Osbert, it is
true, disappears from view entirely till 1194 (6 Richard I.),
when he emerges as sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk, which
position he retained for several years. Meanwhile we may
imagine that he lived quietly at home at Allington.
A type of document, novel except to the law-learned, now
makes its appearance, helping us much in our search. It was
a method of conveyance of land in the form of a fictitious lawsuit,
arranged for the purpose of bringing the transaction into
court and securing its authority in case the gift were afterwards
disputed. Following a preliminary process in the courts,
1 Ralph de Diceto, p. 664. 2 Q-iraldus Qambrensis, p. 399.
22 THE OWNERS OE
the actual document began with the words " Haec est finalis
concordia," and hence was called a fine. It was a triple
document, one part, the " foot," being kept in the Treasury
for reference, and each party keeping one of the others.
The earliest fine is dated 1175, but the series of " Feet of
Fines" taken from the Treasury begins in 1195 and throws
light upon Allington from the very first year.
On November 14th, 1195,1
Allington and Ovenhill are
mentioned together in a fine, made as follows between
Osbert de Longchamp and a certain Hamo Peverel:—
" Between Osbert de Longchamp and Hamo Peverel about one
mill with its site in Ovenhill . . . . namely Hamo recognizes this
mill to be the right of Osbert and gives him besides 2 marks of
silver. And for this agreement Osbert concedes to Hamo to hold
the mill for himself and his heirs of Osbert and his heirs by the
service of five shillings sterling to be paid at the following terms;
15 pence at Michaelmas, 15 pence at Christmas, 15 pence at Easter
and 15 pence at the feast of St. John the Baptist."
The next fine, dated May 12th, 1196,2 is here quoted (in
a free translation) because of the light it casts upon the life
of Allington:—
" Between B. the Abbot of Boxley and the Convent, and
Osbert de Longchamp and Avelina his wife . . . . About the land of
Ovenhill . . . . there was a suit between them in the above court,
to the effect that the Abbot and Convent of Boxley quit-claimed to
Osbert and Avelina all their right in the land of Ovenhill with its
appurtenances. And in return for this fine and concord and quit
claim, Osbert and Avelina his wife gave to the Abbot and Convent
6 marks sterling. And in addition they gave to them in pure and
perpetual alms 2 shillings of rent from the mill of ' Cuciddemille '
payable annually twice a year, half at Easter and half at Michaelmas.
So that Osbert and Avelina and their heirs can claim nothing
from the mill except the grinding of flour for their own house at
Helinton. And if they claim more the Abbot can summon the
millers to his court. Besides this they give annually to the Abbot
and Convent 2 shillings from land at Oxefrid, from which the
ancestors of Avelina annually gave 12 pence. They quit claimed
1 Pipe Roll Sooiety, vol. xvii., p. 60.
• 2 .Printed in Latin in Archmologia Cantiana, Yol. I.', p. 235.
ALLINGTON CASTLE, MAIDSTONE. 23
to the Abbot and Convent from themselves and their heirs, all the
right which they said they had in the house of Paris, Archdeacon
of Bochester [Avelina's uncle] in London on the Thames, and
also the claim and right which they said they had in the tenement
of the Park at Boxley. In addition they conceded to the monks
free and peaceful fishing in the Medway opposite their land
[Allington]."
To this' document some importance accrues from its
confirmation of the supposition (p. 18) that Allington or
Helinton was a house after 1174. Of interest too is the
name " Cuciddemille." After a search made this year
in Boxley parish where the sergeanty of Ovenhill was
situated, the remains of three mills were discovered. Of
one there are only slight traces left, but an old labourer
in the place remembered when it was pulled down about
forty years ago, and he called it " Cuddymill," clearly
the very same " Cuciddemille" mentioned 700 years
before. It may have been also the " half mill" of Domesday
Book.
Of the holding of Avelina's ancestors at Oxef rid I have
been able to find nothing. Archdeacon Paris, who appears
here for the second time, becomes a familiar figure. As a
witness of charters his name occurs twice to my knowledge,
and in 1176 he went to Sicily with the Bishop of Norwich1
on a legatine journey, but of his parentage nothing is noted.
One is inclined to think him a brother of Avelina's mother,
since the widow of William of Allington, senior, only mentioned
her one son. But it is no guess which pictures the
monks of Boxley fishing peacefully in the river flowing
past the Castle walls of Allington.
Two other fines about Ovenhill are in existence, one dated
November 21st, 1198,2 but they are not of sufficient interest
to quote. Osbert and Avelina appear side by side as benefactors
to Rochester in a charter copied into a register of
Rochester Charters preserved in the British Museum,3 but
1 Leland, Antiquarii Collectanea, vol. i., p. 162,
2 Archmologia Cantiana, Vol. I., p. 271.
3 Bibl. Cotton Domitian A.X., No. CXXIII.
24 THE OWNERS OE
unfortunately the original charter with its seals has disappeared
from the Cathedral archives :—
" To all the faithful of Christ and to those whom the present
writing concerns, Osbert de Longchamp and Avelina his wife give
greeting. May your community know that I, Osbert de Longchamp,
and Avelina my wife, with the consent of our heir, grant
and confirm to the church of St. Andrew at Rochester and to the
monks there serving God, the lands and rent in our vill of Stisted,
which they had by the gift and concession of Ansfrid the sheriff
. . . . In this year they have received us into the full society of their
chapter and into participation in all the good things of their
church. They have granted to us that after our death our names
shall be written in the martyrology between the names of the
brethren and that yearly a service shall be held for us. This grant
and confirmation we give to the monks for the health of our souls
and for those of our ancestors and successors."
Unfortunately the martyrology with the names of Osbert
and Avelina exists no longer. The charter quoted only
confirms the gift already made to Rochester by Ansfrid,
Avelina's great-grandfather, which hardly seems to warrant
such a special favour as that of putting their names in the
martyrology. However, if it was a pleasure to them we
may be glad, for after 1198 their misfortunes gathered fast.
In accounting to the King as sheriff of Norfolk and
Suffolk in 9 Richard I. Osbert was £24 lis. Sd. in debt
from his tenure of the office two years before. This official
debt, far from being paid off, increased each year that he
held the sheriffdom till in 3 John it stood at £52 18s. 9d.
Not content with this indebtedness, he committed an offence
in 10 Richard I. for which all his goods and chattels were
forfeited. In the Pipe Roll for Kent, 10 Richard I.
(printed in Madox. Exchequer I. 514d) is the following
entry:—
" Osbert de Longchamp owes 500 marks to have grace of the
King and seisin of all the lands and chattels from which he was
disseised by order of the King, and to have seisin of the custody
of the Gaol of London and of the house of the King at Westminster."
ALLINGTON CASTLE, MAIDSTONE. 25
What the nature of the offence was that called down
upon Osbert a fine of £333 6s. 8d., the equivalent of 500
marks,1 can only be surmised. This sum must be multiplied by
at least twenty to approximate to the modern value of money.
On p. 119 of the printed Chancery Roll of 3 John, Gilbert
Fitz Renfred is put down as owing £20 because " he went
into the forest with Osbert de Longchamp." We must
suppose that Osbert had been living in the forest as an
outlaw defying the King's authority. But whatever he had
done the penalty seems to have been reduced, for although
there is no record of any payment in 10 Richard I., Osbert
is put down in the Pipe Roll of 1 John, the year after, as
only owing the King £140 for the seisin of his goods.
Perhaps it will not be without interest to follow closely
the payment of this debt as it was recorded year by year
upon the Pipe Rolls. In the first year, 1 John, there seem
to have been two payments. On the Kent membrane it is
written that Osbert paid £6 4s. 2d., leaving an indebtedness
of £133 15s. IOd. But on the Essex membrane he is recorded
as paying a further £6 6s., which, being subtracted from
the whole, is made to leave his debt at £127 15s. 10d.,
six shillings too much.
The Pipe Rolls after 1181-2 have not yet been printed,
but the writing is extremely clear and there is no doubt
about this inaccuracy. Nevertheless considering that many
thousands of entries were made on each Roll and that the
methods of reckoning were primitive, the very small percentage
of error is remarkable.
I t will be simpler to account for the remaining years in
tabular form:—
Tear. Debt owing. Payment. Remainder of debt.
£ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d.
2 John. 127 15 10 — 127 15 10
3 John.2 127 15 10 5 0 0 122 15 10
This year his personal debt is added to the £52 18s. 9d.,
which still remained to be accounted for from his tenure of
1 1 mark = 13*. 4d.
2 Printed in Chancery Roll,.3 John,,p. 218.
26 THE OWNERS OE
the sheriffdom of Norfolk and Suffolk, making a total
of £175 14s. Id. Of this he pays off another £15, leaving
£160 14s. Id. John de Corherde, who was associated with
him in the sheriffdom in 8 Richard I., owes £2 l is. 9d. of
this, which he received from Osbert, and thus Osbert's total
remaining debt stands at £158 2s. IOd. The entry closes
with the command that it is to be paid off at the rate of £30
a year.1 How nearly this was complied with will be seen.
Tear.
4 John.
5 John.
6 John.
7 John.
8 John.
9 John.
10 John.
Debt owing.
£ s. d.
—
158 2 10
Payment.
£ s. d.
No entry.
15 0 0
(Annual compulsory payment
143 2 10
143 2 10
123 2 10
103 2 10
93 2 10
—
20 0 0
20 0 0
10 0 0
—
Remainder of debt.
£ s. d.
—
143 2 10
reduced to £20.)
143 2 10
123 2 10
103 2 10
93 2 10
93 2 10
Thus far all went smoothly, though the payments were
irregular; but after the end of the tenth fiscal year of John,
i.e., after September 29th, 1208, and before the beginning of
the calendar year 1209, Osbert died, leaving poor Avelina to
cope with the peculiar difficulties of a widow under the feudal
system, burdened with debts and a son under age. The
position is described in the Fine Rolls, 9 John (1208), Kent,
p. 430 :—
"Avelina, who was the wife of Osbert de Longchamp, gives
200 marks [£133 6s. 8d.] and two palfreys to have the land which
joins her inheritance, of which she was disseised hy order of the
King, because of the death of her husband, and so that she may
not be obliged to marry, and may be able to pay off the debts of
Osbert, her former husband, at the times she ought to pay them.
Her son and heir will remain in the custody of the King. And the
sheriff is ordered to accept from her security for paying the fine,
and to cause her to have seisin of her land."
•'Printed in Chancery Roll, 3 John, p. 222.
ALLINGTON CASTLE, MAIDSTONE. 27
Before Osbert can have been much more than buried
another man appeared upon the scene to buy Avelina in
marriage, with her land; but Avelina seems to have been
devoted to Osbert, or at any rate to have had a will of her
own, and in spite of the advantages offered in her extremely
hard position of a widow, refused to be party to any such
transaction. • The following are translations of the documents
bearing on the case (Fine Rolls, 9 John, 1208, p. 432,
Oxford) :—
" Walter de Tywe gives 400 marks and 4 palfreys to have in
marriage Avelina, who was the wife of Osbert de Longchamp, with
her inheritance ; namely 200 marks and 2 palfreys, which she herself
promised to the King, to be allowed to marry according to her
wish, and 200 marks and 2 palfreys over and above this. Iu addition
he will answer to the King, at the Exchequer, for the debts which
Osbert owed him, at the same times that Osbert ought to have
answered. And the sheriff is commanded to take security for this
from Walter, and to tell the sheriffs of Kent, Lincolnshire,1 and
Essex so that they may do the bidding of the King. And the
sheriffs in whose bailiwicks Avelina has her inheritance are commanded
to give her to Walter with her land. And even if she be
unwilling, nevertheless they shall cause Walter to have the seisin
of her lands."
Here is poor Avelina, who has promised and given
security to pay 200 marks and two palfreys for the possession
of her lands, and not to be obliged to marry, forestalled and
bought by Walter Tywe, who gives security for double that
sum, in addition to a promise to pay all the debts. No wonder
it was difficult for a widow to remain single, if a King only
desired money, not justice.
The 7th and 8th Clauses of Magna Carta run as
follows:—
"A widow after the death of her husband shall, straightway
and without difiiculty, have her marriage portion and her inheritance,
nor shall she give anything in return for her dowry, her
1 This is the sole reference to any Lincolnshire land belonging to Avelina
or Osbert.
28 THE OWNERS OE
marriage portion, or the inheritance which belonged to her, and
which she and her husband held on the day of the death of that
husband. Aud she may remain in her husband's house after his
death for forty days, within which her dowry shall be paid over
to her.
" 8. No widow shall be forced to marry when she prefers to
live without a husband, so, however, that she gives security not to
marry without our consent, if she hold from us, or the consent of
the lord from whom she holds if she hold from another."
Magna Carta was passed only seven years after this
episode, and Avelina lived to see a law in operation under
which she would not have been required to pay anything.
Her plight may be taken as an instance of what tyranny
and extortion led to the passing of Magna Carta.
The sequence is shewn in an entry on the Pipe Roll of
10 John for Kent:—
"Avelina, who was the wife of Osbert de Longchamp, owes
500 marks and the debts which Osbert owed to the King's
Exchequer on the day of his death, to have custody of the land
which bounds the inheritance of the heir of Osbert until he comes
of age, saving the King's marriage of the heir, and so that she
shall not be required to marry, but if she does marry it shall be by
consent of the King. At the end of the 10th year of John, 300
marks shall be paid, at the end of the year following, 200 marks,
and at the end of the third year, all the rest. She pays £100 and
owes 350 marks."
I t was only Avelina's payment of 100 extra marks above
and beyond the sum offered by Walter Tywe, that is 300
more than was at first required, that cancelled Walter's
agreement. No doubt the sum really had to be paid rapidly;
at any rate there was no delay. £100 was paid the first
year, and the whole 350 marks the second,1 which contrasts
with the dawdling manner in which Osbert's debts were
afterwards paid off. This £93 2s. IOd. now remained the
> Pipe Roll, 11 John, Kent.
ALLINGTON CASTLE, MAIDSTONE. 29
sole burden upon Avelina, which must have seemed triflingafter
her own debt of £333 6s. 8d. For the next ten years
she accounted for it on the Pipe Roll, her son being- still
under age. The first four years she accounted in Kent, the
remainder of the time in Essex:—
Year. Debt. Payment. Remainder of Debt.
£ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d.
12 John (Kent). 93 2 10 —' 93 2 10
13 John. 93 2 10 5 0 0 88 2 10
(The payment of 13 John is repeated first.)
15 John. 88 2 10 6 15 3 81 7 8 (Id!, out).
1 / ( T W O , . s J 8 1 7 8 706 74 7 2
14 John (2 entries). < „ , . „ „ „ „ •,„»„
v M 74 7 2 2 0 0 72 7 2
(Somehow the payments of 14 and 15 John have got
transposed to the wrong Pipe Eolls.)
16 John (Essex). 72 7 2 2 10 6 69 16 8
17 John. No entry.
1 Henry III. (Pipe Boll does not exist.)
2 Henry III. 69 16 8 — 69 16 8
3 Henry III. 69 16 8 — 69 16 8
4 Henry III. 69 16 8 — 69 16 8
Why Avelina paid nothing for five years it is impossible
to say. Far from having paid off the whole debt by 1211
as was commanded, more than half of it remained unpaid
in 1220. If fines were large in the thirteenth century,
there was at any rate considerable laxity in the time of
payment.
By the end of 5 Henry III., September 29th, 1221,
William de Longchamp, the heir, must at last have come of
age, for in the Pipe Roll of that year, under Kent, is the
following entry:—
" William de Longchamp, son of Osbert de Longchamp, owes
£46 lis. 2d. of the; debts of his father, namely two-thirds of
£69 16s. 8^., which debt was divided between himself and his
mother Avelina, who answers for the third part in Essex."
30 THE OWNERS OE
William paid
Tear.
6 Henry III.
7 Henry III.
8 Henry ILL
9 Henry III.
10 Henry III.
his off as follows:—
Debt.
£ s. d.
46 11 2
28 15 10
19 18 2
11 0 5
2 3 0
" And he is
Avelina continues thus:—
Year.
6 Henry III.
7 Henry III.
8 Henry III.
(2 payments)
9 Henry III.
(2 payments)
Debt.
£ s. d.
23 5 7
14 7 5
1 r9 18 4
J i 7 13 10
Payment.
£ s. d.
17 15 4
8 17 8
8 17 9
8 17 5
2 3 0
i quit."
Payment.
£ s. d.
8 18 2
4 9 1
2 4 6
2 4 6
r5 9 8 3 4 10
> < (4id. wrong.)
J L2 4 6 2 4 6
" And she :i s quit."
Remainder.
£ s. d.
28 15 10
19 18 2
11 0 5
2 3 0
—
Remainder.
£ s. d.
14 7 5
9 18 4
7 13 10
5 9 4
2 4 6
Both of them seem to have turned over a new leaf after
William's coming of age. The Pipe Roll of 6 Henry III.
states that William shall pay at the rate of £8 17s. 9\d.
a year, and Avelina at the rate of £4 9s. Id., and this they
actually did.
When the dreary proceeding was at last over, Avelina
was 55 years old, and had been burdened with Osbert's
debts for 27 years. Nevertheless after his death she made
another gift of land in Stisted to Rochester for the good
of his soul. The original charter is in the library of the
Cathedral with its seal torn off, and a copy exists in the
British Museum.1 The boundaries of the land in Stisted
and three acres of wood called " Le F r id" are set forth in
detail, but the total yearly value seems only to have amounted
to five shillings, judging from the list of Rochester bequests
in the Registrum Roffense, p. 118, where Avelina de Long-
1 Bibl. Cotton Domitian A. 2L 0X011,
ALLINGTON CASTLE, MAIDSTONE. 31
.champ is entered as having given five shillings rent in
Stisted.
" Redditus de Celario.
Item de Stisted ex dono Aveline, 5 solidi."1
One more very prettily-written charter of hers is preserved
in the British Museum,3 but again the seal has been
torn off. It conveys 3^ acres of land to John the miller of
Stisted, to be held at a rent of 15 pence, payable four times
a year, S^d. at Michaelmas, 3^d. at Christmas, S^d. at
Easter, and 4<\d. at the Feast of St. John the Baptist.
I t looks as though Avelina had spent her latter years at
Stisted, since her payments of debt were made in Essex
after 1215, and all her charters relate to Stisted. In the
Red Book of the Exchequer^ she appears in a different light
in 12 and 13 John, as a knight holding of the Archbishop of
Canterbury."
" Avelina de Longo Cbampo tenet dimidium feodum in Alintone."
Now in 1166, as we have seen, Allington was one knight's
fee held of William de Ros. How it became reduced to
half a knight's fee in the next fifty years I cannot discover,
but in the Library at Lambeth Palace, amongst the Cartse
Antiquse,* is the following original charter, shewing how
Allington came to be held of the Archbishop of Canterbury
in 1201:—
" John, by the grace of God, King of the English, etc., to his
Archbishops, Bishops, etc., greeting.
" Know ye that we for the health of our soul, etc., have returned
and confirmed by this charter to God and Christchurch, Canterbury,
and to our venerable Father in Christ, Hubert, Archbishop of this
see, and to his successors, the service of the xoholefee of William
de Bos. Whereof there was contention between us and our
ancestors, and the Archbishop and his predecessors . . . . Given
by our hands on the 1 Oth day of January in the third year of our
reign."
Concerning the " contention " about the fee of William
1 Thorpe, Custumale Roffense, p. 16. 2 Cart. Harl. 112, B. 7.
3 H. Hall, vol. ii., p. 472, 4 Yol, xi„ No, 12,
32 THE OWNERS OE
de Ros I know nothing, and it had little to do with Allington.
Whether William de Ros held of the King or the
Archbishop of Canterbury cannot greatly have affected
Avelina.
When the debts were all paid and her son was grown up
Avelina drops into obscurity. Only once more does she
appear as party to a fine in 20 Henry III., when she was
66 years old.1 Let us hope this silence implies that nothing
went wrong in her old age, and that it passed as peacefully
as her youth in the Priory of Clerkenwell.
The year of her death was probably 1238, for in the
library of Canterbury Cathedral there exists an indenture
of that year between the Prior and Convent of Christchurch
and William de Longchamp, son of Osbert, concerning two
carucates of land in Stisted to be held by William and his
heirs of the Prior by payment of £16 a year.2 This must
be the new agreement made with William de Longchamp
when he entered upon his life tenure of Stisted on the
death of his mother. But the conditions have altered;
money is worth less, and at any rate £16 is the yearly rent
instead of £10.
Stisted had certainly been Avelina's for her life, but
William must have become possessed of Allington and
Ovenhill when he came of age in 1221 and entered upon
his payment of two-thirds of his father's debts. If she had
not done so before, she would naturally on his coming of
age have gone to live at Stisted. The first mention of
his tenure belongs to the 20th year of Henry III. (1236).
I t is printed on p. 215 of the Testa de Nevill, a collection of
royal inquisitions into the tenure of land, belonging to the
reigns of Henry III. and Edward I., but from internal
evidence the Kentish portion has been assigned to the year
1236.3 In this document for the first time the full service
due from the sergeanty at Ovenhill which I have already
quoted (p. 14) is set forth. Unlike his mother, William
1 Abstracted in Lansdowne MS. 267, p. 161, B. M.
2 Register B and a fine among the Cartso Antiqute,
3 Archmologia Cantiana, Vol, XII., p, 199,
ALLINGTON CASTLE, MAIDSTONE. 33
de Longchamp does not. fill a great place in the annals of
Allington. The year of his death, 1256, is fixed for us yet
again by an entry in Register B of the Canterbury manuscripts,
settling the succession of Stisted. Osbert de Longchamp
is to answer to the Prior of Christchurch about the
fine made between William de Longchamp " pater predicti
Osberti" and the former Prior in 1238. Osbert says he is
the heir of William de Longchamp, his father, and that
Stisted on William's death was given to his widow Alice as
dower. Alice and Hugh, her present husband, pay to the
Prior £16 a year. This marriage of the widow of William
de Longchamp is corroborated by an entry in the Fine Roll
of 40 Henry III., 1256,1
giving the name of her second
husband "Hugh, son of Richard de Stisted."
In the light of these certain facts, an entry in Archceologia
Cantiana, Vol. XII., p. 224, is extremely puzzling. It
is taken from a list of the holders of knights' fees in Kent in
38 Henry III., 1254 :—
" Bohert de Longchamp holds in Elyntone half a fee of the Archbishop
of Canterbury."
Now William de Longchamp was alive till 1256, and
Robert de Longchamp was not his heir when he died. As
Allington was always held together with the sergeanty of
Ovenhill, a possible explanation which occurs to me, if the
name Robert3 does not represent a scribe's mistake, is that
before his death William wa,s too feeble to do any personal
service and so handed Ovenhill and Allington to his son
Robert, who appears as the owner in 1254. But Robert
must have died before 1256, leaving Osbert, another son of
William, sole heir. At any rate Robert is never mentioned
again, and Osbert continued to hold Allington and Ovenhill
till 1279.
The year 1275 produces the next reference to his tenure.
I t comes from another inquiry into the land held of the
1 Emcerpta e Rotulis Finium, vol. ii., p. 218.
2 Robert de Longchamp is mentioned in 1251 and 1255 as present in Northamptonshire.
Selden Society, vol. xiii., pp. 99 and 34,
VOl. XXIX, n
34 THE OWNERS OE
King in chief, printed in the Hundred Rolls, 3 Edward I.,
vol. i., p. 218. Osbert1 de Longchamp is said to hold
Ovenhill by the same sergeant service as William de Longchamp,
and to have alienated 16 acres of it to Stephen de
Cosington, which he holds by a payment of 4s. yearly.
Two years later in the Parliamentary Writs for 12772—
" Robert le Snoke offers for Osbert de Longchamp, who is said
to be ' infirm,' the service of providing in his own person a horse,
a sack, and a fastening pin."
Osbert cannot have been very old in 1277, in fact he
must be the same Osbert who in 1296, on p. 713 of the
same volume of Parliamentary Writs, is enrolled pursuant
to the ordinance for the defence of the sea coast as a knight
holding lands in the county of Essex, but unfit for service
C'impotens").
He was then nineteen years older, and still "infirm."
I t looks as though he had been a cripple, and this perhaps
explains why William de Longchamp first passed Ovenhill to
his son Robert, who was presumably able-bodied; but when
Robert died, Osbert, who was perhaps the only other son,
inherited on the death of his father.
If Osbert was permanently an invalid, unable in person to
do the service incumbent upon him as holder of the sergeanty
of Ovenhill, it would explain why he enfeoffed Stephen of
Penchester to Ovenhill and Allington in 1279. I cannot discover
that Stephen of Penchester was any relation to Osbert.
He was a son of Sir Laurence de Cobeham, as is shewn on
p. 114 of the Calendar of Bodleian Oharters. His mother
must have been a sister of that John de Belemeyns who, in a
document dated 1240, is called—
" Vir venerabilis dominus Johannes Bellemeyns, canonicus Sancti
Pauli Lond: et dominus manerii de Peneshurste."3
In the same book (p. 462) a charter of Stephen of Penchester
confirms to the Chapel of Leigh near Penshurst lands
given by " Johannes Belemeyns avunculus meus."
1 The scribe started to write Robert, but erased it.
2 Parliamentary Writs, vol. i., p. 718, 3 Registrum Roffense, p, 461,
ALLINGT6N CASTLE, MAIDSTONE. 35
This John Belemeyns, uncle of Stephen of Penchester,
who passed on to him the manor of Penshurst or Penchester,
from which Stephen took his name, and which he owned,
must have belonged to the family of Belemeyns so notably
connected with St. Paul's- Cathedral in the twelfth century.
Richard Belmeis, Bishop "Walter Belmeis.
of London, 1108-1127. I
Robert Belmeis. Riohard Belmeis, Bishop of London, 1152—1167.
William de Belmeis, Canon of St. Paul's 1163—1187.
I cannot place John Belmeis or Belemeyns in the pedigree,
1 but as he was a Canon of St. Paul's doubtless the connexion
was not lacking. He left striking bequests to that
cathedral,2 and his anniversary was kept there on December
26th at an annual cost of £1 10s.3
Neither the Belemeyns family nor the Cobhams seem to
have been associated at any time with the Longchamps.
Stephen of Penchester's first wife Roesia de Baseville,
who died after 1271,* came from Buckinghamshire, and
was not connected. Who his second wife Margaret was,
whom he had already married in 1279, I am unable to discover.
She is generally said to have been the daughter of
John de Burgh, who died in 1279, and had a daughter named
Margery, but that lady was undoubtedly a nun.5 An analysis
of Margaret of Penchester's inquisition post-mortem6 shews
that very nearly all the land she owned had belonged to
Stephen of Penchester, and went at her death to his children
and not to hers. There is no clue to be found in it as to her
origin or possible Longchamp connexion.
1 Eyton, Antiquities of Shropshire, vol. ii., p. 208.
2 Dugdale, St. Paul's, p. 197.
3 Ibid., p. 29.
4 Inquisitions post-mortem, Hawis de Baseville, 54 Henry III. (vol. i.,
No. 737).
5 Ibid., John de Burgh, 8 Edward I., vol. ii., No. 349.
6 Ibid., Margaret of Penchester, 2 Edward II., vol. v., No. 13i.
J> %
36 THE OWNERS OE
Whatever the cause may have been, Osbert de Longchamp
made over Allington and other lands to Stephen and
Margaret of Penchester and the heirs of his body in 1279 by
the following fine1:—
" This is the final concord made in the Kings Court at Westminster
on the day following the Ascension of our Lord, in the
8th year of the reign of Edward I., between Stephen of Penchester
and Osbert de Longchamp, about one messuage and one carucate
of land in Boxley and Aylesford with appurtenances, and about the
manor of Allington with appurtenances and the advowsons of the
Church of St. Peter and the Chapel of St. Laurence2 of that
manor. Namely that Osbert recognizes the aforesaid tenements to
be the right of Stephen and that Stephen has them by the gift of
Osbert, so that Stephen and Margaret his wife shall hold the
messuage and land at Boxley and Aylesford of the King and his
heirs for ever by the services which pertain to that messuage and
land. And besides, Stephen and Margaret and the heirs of Stephen
shall hold the aforesaid manor (Allington) with the advowsons of
the Church and Chapel, of Osbert, and his heirs for ever; at a
yearly rent of a chaplet of roses on the Nativity of St. John the
Baptist, for every service, custom and exaction due to Osbert and
his heirs; and by doing to the overlords of the fee, through Osbert
and his heirs, all the other services which pertain to that manor.
And Osbert and his heirs warrant to Stephen and Margaret and
the heirs of Stephen, the Church and Chapel with appurtenances
by the aforesaid services, against all other men for ever. And for
this recognition, warrant, fine and concord, Stephen and Margaret
gave 300 marks of silver [£200] to Osbert. And this concord was
made by the assent aud will of the King."
Whenever this conveyance of Allington is mentioned,
whether in Margaret of Penchester's inquisition postmortem,
or the record of a suit in the Assize Roll of 1293,
1 Eeet of Pines, 8-9 Edward I., Kent, No. 151. Abstraoted in Lansdowne
MS., vol. 268, p. 28.
2 The Chapel of St. Laurence was suppressed in. 1545, and Allington Parish
Churoh is to-day oalled St. Laurence's, not'St. Peter's. The Ohurch must
either have been rededicated to St. Lawrence after the suppression of the
Chapel^ whioh is almost impossible, or, what is much, more likely, the old
dedication to Sfc. Peter was forgotten, and the memory of St. Lawrenoe surviving
vaguely, his name became associated recently with the Church instead
of the Chapel,,
ALLINGTON CASTLE, MAIDSTONE. 37
or elsewhere, the transaction is always referred to as a
" gift."
Quoting from Pollock and Maitland again (vol. ii.,
p. 12) :-•
"Every sort and kind of alienation in the 13th century is a
' gift.' In our eyes, it may be really a gift, or it may in substance
be a sale or an exchange, since the so-called donee has given money
or land in return for the so-called gift, or it may be what we
should call an onerous lease for life; but in all these cases it will
be described as a ' gift.' "
In this instance Osbert's transference of Allington to
Stephen of Penchester was not a gift, but a sale; Stephen
paid £200 and got the sergeanty of Ovenhill, which it is not
difficult to recognize in the messuage and carucate at Boxley
and Aylesford held of the King. For this of course he had
to continue the sergeant service of providing a horse with a
sack and a buckle for the King in the event of any Welsh
war. This service is continually mentioned as due from the
descendants of Stephen. But the £200 bought the manor
of Allington and the advowsons outright, subject to the
service due to the "overlords of the fee," namely the
holders of the barony of Ros. The gift of a chaplet of
roses to Osbert on Midsummer day is only a beautiful
mediseval way of expressing a nominal rent:—
" The service which the tenant owes to his lord may be merely
nominal: he has no rent to pay or has to give but a rose every
year by way of shewing that the tenure exists . . . . There may
well have been what in truth was a sale of the land ; in return for
a gross sum paid down a landowner has created a nominal tenure.
To have put the purchaser in the vendor's place might have been
difficult, perhaps impossible, so the purchaser is made tenant to the
vendor at an insignificant rent."1
These charming nominal rents of " a rose in the month
of roses," or a " chaplet of roses," a grain of pepper, a gilt
spur, a clove," etc., are not uncommon, but one wonders
whether Stephen of Penchester really rendered it.
1 Pollook and Maitland, History of English Law, vol. i., p. 271,1st edition,
3'8 tfHE OWNERS OE
Not because of lacking heirs did Osbert de Longchamp
part with Allington.1 Stisted still remained in his hands,
as is proved by the Parliamentary Writ of 1296 already
mentioned (p. 34), and it descended in his family till
1394.
Avice, the widow of Osbert de Longchamp, is referred to
in Essex in 1327.3 Unless she outlived her husband a very
great many years, I should imagine this Osbert to be a son
of " Osbert impotens," especially as the heirs of an Osbert
Longchamp are mentioned as late as 1347.3
These heirs of Osbert, the younger, one of whom was
probably Sir Henry de Longchamp, mentioned in the Close
Rolls of 1338 at Wenham in Suffolk, must have bridged the
gap at Stisted between their father and Sir Henry de Longchamp,
who was granted the manor for his life in 1341 by
the Prior of Christchurch. By this time the rent has risen
to £20,4 double the earlier sum.
The companion half of the indenture is preserved in the
Canterbury Library, and the seal of Henry Longchamp
exists in perfect preservation.5 Henry died in 1352, and
Stisted is next found in the possession of Thomas de Longchamp.
He seems to have been the last descendant of the
Longchamps of Allington, for after his death Stisted was
let to a different family, and all records of the Essex
Longchamps cease.
The fading fortunes of the early owners of Allington
have now been lightly traced. This Paper must not shine
with reflected light from the new Castle and its builder,
Stephen of Penchester. With Allington manor and the
Longchamps it may fitly close.
1 In the Assize Roll of 21 Edward I. (Berewyok, No. 376) Stephen de
Longchamp is said to have held Ovenhill before Stephen of Penohestor.
Unless this is a scribe's mistake for Osbert de Longchamp, Osbert must have
handed it to Stephen after 1277 (see p. 34) aud before 1279, when it was sold
to Stephen of Penchester. Stephen de Longchamp does not appear again.
2 Placita de Banco, 1 Edward III. , Easter Term.
3 ArchmoloQip Cantiana, Vol. X., p. 158.
* British Museum, Add. Oharters; 15,456.
. 5 British Museum, No. 11, 870, <
ALLINGTON 'CASTLE, MAIDSTONE. 39
Eeinfrid (Registrum Ralf, monk at Ansfrid, living 1087 ;=fMabel, died
Roffense, p. 118). Roohester. died after 1181. I after 1131.
John. William, drowned (half- William de Elintune, died=f=Agnes (?).
brother?). 1165. I
William de Elintune, died 1183=pSister of Paris, Archdeacon of Rochester.
Osbert de Longohamp=j=Avelina (1170—1238).
• I
William de Longchamp^ Alice=(2) Hugh, son of Biohard of Stisted
I
Bobert de Osbert de Longchamp, living 1296 " impotens.":
Longchamp.
Osbert de Longchamp, died before 1327: r:Avice.
Sir Henry de Longohamp (?), died 1341.T=
Sir Henry de Longchamp, died 1352.^=
Thomas de Longchamp.
(Sold
Allington.)
(My grateful thanks are due to Mr. J. H. Round, Sir
Frederick Pollock, and Mr. Hubert Hall, for invaluable
guidance and kindness, and to Mr. G. 0 . Bellewes for most
useful suggestions.)