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THE LATHE OF AYLESFORD IN 975.
BY GORDON WARD, M.D., E.S.A.
INTRODUCTION.
It chanced one day that the writer made a list of the
manors which contributed to the upkeep of Rochester Bridge,
as these are set out in the Textus Roffensis. It was noted
that these places were not Usted in any haphazard order but
in the order of the Hundreds in which they were situated ;
first of all those in one Hundred, then those in another, and
so on. Since we have practically no record of the Hundreds
of Kent, or of any other county, before 1086, and since the
Textus Ust was clearly a hundred years or so older, it seemed
worth while to foUow up the clue. Hence this essay.
THE DOMESDAY LATHES AND HUNDREDS.
Our first comprehensive view of the administrative
divisions of Saxon Kent is in the pages of the Domesday
survey of 1086-7, although this was drawn up after twenty
years of Norman influence. In it we find, in the first place,
the Shire and the shire court meeting by custom at Pinnenden
in mid-Kent. It was here, one supposes, that the Commissioners
of the Conqueror came to receive those returns on
which the Domesday Book was later based, and to add to
them sworn evidence of the King's own rights in the county.
Those who swore to these rights included " the men of the
lathes of East Kent." These lathes were large subdivisions
of the county, of which there were two in West Kent and five
in the eastern division of the shire. In addition to these
there was a smaU area freed from all caU to other lathes,
namely, the port of Sandwich which was a lathe and Hundred
mitseK(F.<7.#.,in., 261).
At a lower administrative level were the Hundreds, of
which several were combined to make a lathe. Some of the
8 THE LATHE OF AYLESFORD IN 975.
Hundreds were in turn spUt up into boroughs, which at a
later date sometimes held their own courts. But the
Hundreds, and not the lathes or boroughs, were the chief
administrative sub-divisions of the county. Their courts
were in direct relationship with those of the county, as is
well shown in the Domesday dispute about Badlesmere.
The men of the Hundred reported that this manor belonged
to St. Augustine, while the tenant disputed this (V.C.H., hi.,
236). The shire court gave judgment that Badlesmere
belonged to the Abbey in the time of King Edward and that
the tenant's claim must be rejected (V.C.H., Ui., 246). This
is an example of a case taken up from the Hundred to the
shire court. The opposite procedure was also perfectly
regular. As early as 1072 we have an example in the great
case of Archbishop Lanfranc versus Bishop Odo concerning
the stolen lands of the churches. A manuscript drawn up
at the hearing of this case at Pinnenden has come down
to us (Cotton, Aug. II. 36) and contains the words
" Fecit archiepiscopus Lanfranchus ahos clamores super
episcopum et super Hugonem sed in hundretis debent
diffiniri"—Archbishop Lanfranc made other claims on the
Bishop and on Hugo but they ought to be settled in the
Hundreds. This system of reference by the Hundred to the
Shire and by the shire court to the Hundred seems to have
been the normal procedure at the end of the Saxon period.
It leaves no place for the intervention of any court of the
lathe, nor have we any knowledge that courts were ever held
for the great Domesday lathes of Kent. Nor do these lathes
appear in our later history except as coUecting areas for aids
and subsidies, for the organization of the MiUtia, and for like
purposes. It would seem that for certain purposes it was
necessary for various Hundreds to act together but that
these purposes were rarely if ever judicial or such as to
require the holding of a lathe court. It is part of the purpose
of this essay to show that the Hundreds of the Lathe of
Aylesford were jointly responsible for the upkeep of Rochester
Bridge, a burden too large for any single Hundred but yet not
important enough to be a charge upon the whole county.
THE LATHE OF AYLESFORD IN 975. 9
THE USE OF THE WORD LATHE.
We shaU presently meet with two different areas for each
of which we have no other name than " the lathe of Aylesford."
This is unfortunate and makes it very necessary to
seek for some idea as to what the Saxons meant when they
used the word lathe. It appears first in a compound with
the word geoc or ioc, meaning a yoke, the fourth part of a
suling. Thus we have :
In A.D. 805. An geocled (B. 321).
In A.D. 811. An iocled (B. 332).
In A.D. 812. An ioclet (B. 341).
At a later period we have two latin forms of this compound
:
In A.D. 875. An iocleta (B. 539).
In A.D. 946. An ivclaete (B. 813).
Domesday Book has some similar compounds of " lathe,"
such as Wiwarlet, but the Winchester scribes commonly
preferred the objectionable latinization " lest" and even
went so far, in their ignorance of aU Saxon custom, as to
speak of the " Lest of Wiwarlet." This word Lest has
unhappily obtained a more modern currency for which it is
difficult to find excuse, in pubUcations which it would be
discourteous to specify. But the Domesday Monachorum,
in which we see more clearly the Anglo-Saxon of the original
Hundred returns has always Wiwarlaed, Limwarlaed, etc.
(V.C.H., in., 262).
In the Saxon charters the word occurs but rarely except
in the compound already mentioned. In 975 we have, as
wiU appear later, the word " laethe " used of the Hundred of
Eythorne and of the manor of Aylesford. At the same
period we meet with " laeth " in reference to what is quite
probably, but not certainly, the Hundred of Bromley. These
are Kent charters but there is also a single example of the
use of this word in a Somerset charter (Kemble, 897) in which
" threo motlaethu " means three lathe moots, the right to
hold them being conceded to the town or manor of Taunton.
10 THE LATHE OF AYLESFORD IN 975.
In post-conquest documents we have the Lathe of
Dymchurch, a court held for a part of Romney Marsh and
primarily concerned with the maintainance of sea waUs, etc.,
in the northern hah of the marsh. It had also, however, the
very unusual privilege of appointing magistrates for the area.
It is possible also that the famiUar Court Leet held for view
of frank pledge and for other purposes would have been caUed
a Court Lathe by the Saxons. In the case of Romney Marsh
it is the court itseU which is caUed a lathe but in the expression
Court Leet the second word would necessarily apply to a
district and not to a court. This sort of application is also
seen in the case of the Lathe of Hastings, known as the Rape
of Hastings in Domesday Book. In connection with this we
find the foUowing expressions :
Ledtschet (lathe shot or scot)—Cal. Doc. in France, 42.
Coram le Ledh, and
Coram Lede apud Setelescumbe, and
Multis aliis de Hundredes et del ledh—(Hist. MSS.
Penshurst, i., 34, 39).
In other counties the word Lathe, or one very similar, occurs
with fair frequency, for example, an estate near Norwich is
called the Lathes in 1428 (Norfolk Arch. Soc, xv., 116) and
in Norfolk Place Names (W. Rye) are Usted Lath Street in
SaxUngham and Leaths near Burnham Overy. No doubt
similar examples could be added from other counties, although
one cannot be sure that aU are of the same origin. We may
deduce from the evidence already brought forward that
(1) any district without regard to the particular purpose for
which it formed a unit might be caUed a lathe, and (2) that
this name might also be used only for the court held for a
particular district, or (3) it might be used indifferently for
either the district or the court. In the county of Kent alone
the foUowing were at one time or another designated lathes,
(a) the yokes, (b) the Hundreds, (c) the court of Romney
level, (d) the great Domesday sub-divisions of the county,
and (e) the town of Sandwich. There could scarcely be
clearer evidence that the word Lathe did not originaUy imply
THE LATHE OF AYLESFORD IN 975. 11
any specific sort of unit but merely a territorial division, or
the court of that division, in which one of the many processes
of government or taxation was at the time exercised.
THE SCHEDULE OP CONTRIBUTORS TO ROCHESTER BRIDGE.
There were nine piers to Rochester bridge and the
contributors were arranged in groups according to the pier
or piers for which they were responsible. Each group had
to provide one or more piers, to set in position the necessary
uprights, and to plank a stated part of the footway of the
bridge itself. One group took two piers, every other group
took only one. There are thus eight groups of contributors
for the nine piers.
This method of arrangement persists throughout the
various versions and emendations of the original Saxon
schedule, which is to be found in the Textus Roffensis but
not in Hearn's edition thereof. The fuU Saxon form is given
by Birch (Cart. Sax., 1322) and by Lambarde (Perambulation
of Kent, edition of 1826, p. 347). The latter gives a translation.
Birch (1321) gives also a latin version from the Textus.
In a register of Christ Church, Canterbury, of the time of
Prior Henry of Eastry (1285-1331) there is a copy of an
amended version which perhaps dates from rather before his
time. This is now among the Cotton MSS. in the British
Museum (Galba E.4, fol. 20). Miss Janet Becker in her
Rochester Bridge, 1387-1856, deals splendidly with the later
history of the bridge, and she quotes a schedule of contributors
of the year 1343, by which time the pre-conquest
system was breaking down and several of the contributory
manors could not be identified.
The foUowing translation of the Saxon schedule is based
upon that of Lambarde, but on certain doubtful points
Miss Dorothy Whitelock has kindly given her views.
This is the bridge work at Rochester
Here are named the lands, the men whereof shaU work.
First the bishop of the city taketh on the end, to
make the land pier ; and three rods to plank and
THE LATHE OF AYLESFORD IN 975.
three supports to place, which is (by contributions)
from BorcsteaUe and from Cucclestane and from
Frinondesbyrig and from Stoce.
Then the second pier belongs to GylUngeham and to
Caetham, and one rod to plank and three supports
to place.
Then the third pier again belongs to the bishop, and
two rods and a half to plank and three supports to
place (by contributions) from HeaUingan and from
TrotescUue and from Meallingan and from FUote
and from Stane and from Pinindene and from
Falchenham.
Then is the fourth pier the King's, and three rods and
a haU to plank and three supports to place (by
contributions) from Aeglesforda and from aU that
laethe that lieth thereto and from Uf anhyUe and from
Aclea and from the Smalanlande and from Cusintune
and from Dudeslande and from Gisleardeslande and
from Wuldeham and from Burhham and from
Aecclesse [here a whole Une is erased in the original]
and from Horstede and from Fearnlege and from
Caerstane and from Cealce and from Hennhystae
and from Aedune.
Then is the fifth pier the archbishop's, belonging to
Wroteham and to Maegthanstane and to Wohringabyran
and to Netlestede and to the two Pecchams
and to Haeselholte and to Maeranwyrthe and to
LiUanburnan and to Swanatune and to Offaham
and to Dictune and to Westerham, and four rods to
plank and three supports to place.
Then is the sixth pier belonging to HoUnganburnan and
to aU that laethe, and four rods to plank and four
supports to place.
Then is the seventh and the eighth pier belonging to
Howaran lande to work, and four rods and a half to
plank and six supports to place.
THE LATHE OF AYLESFORD IN 975. 13
Then is the ninth pier the Archbishop's, which is the
land pier at the west end, belonging to Flyote and to
his CUue and to Hehham and to Denetune and to
Melantune and to Hludesdune and to Meapeham
and to Snodilande and to BerUngan and and to
Peadleswyrthe and aU the men of the dens, and four
rods to plank and three supports to place.
There are certain obvious errors of the copyist in this,
for example, a redupUcated " and " in the last paragraph,
and " four supports " for " three supports " (which is the
number in other versions) in the care of HoUingboume.
Hennhystae is certainly Hennhyrst and Caerstane should be
Taerstane. But the greatest difficulty arises from the fact
that a whole Une of the Textus Roffensis has been erased and
thus certain names have been lost. These names are fortunately
preserved in the version of Galba E.4, which fails,
however, to record the interest of the King, and of his ancient
lathe of Aylesford, in the pier in question. There foUows a
translation from the latin of Galba E.4 :
The fourth pier requires three supports and the
planking of three rods, and this the men of Borgham
ought to do from six sulings, and of Woldeham with
Robert Biset and his partners and with Robert Neue
from three sulings, of Achle one suUng, of Henherste
half a suling, of Honden the quarter part of one
suUng, of Cusinton hah a suUng, of Boueheld half a
suUng, of Echles 25 acres, of Therstan one suling, of
Farlegh one suling, of Lose one suling, of LiUinton
two suUngs, of Stokebere two sulings, of GUselardelond,
of Sinelond, of Dulelond, of Lichebundelond,
of Horsted, of Chelke.
It is clear that the spelling of several places in the above
is very corrupt but we have four names which are not in the
Saxon schedule and which may weU be those which were
erased. These are Lose (Loose), LiUinton (Linton), Stokebere
(Stockenbury in E. Peckham) and Lichebundelond (not
identified).
14 THE LATHE OF AYLESFORD IN 976.
THE DATE OP THE SAXON SCHEDULE.
The date of its entry in the Textus Roffensis may well
be about 1115, but even then the clerk was uncertain about
some of the names which he copied and affords us no clue
to the date of the original which he had before him. WaUenberg
(Kentish Place Names, 302) makes the acute suggestion
" about 975 " and, since he was probably judging on
etymological grounds, his view is entitled to aU respect. It
is borne out by the internal evidence. The first and third
piers were repairable by the Bishop of Rochester and the
charge was spread over certain named manors which belonged
to him. One of these is MaUing which he did not obtain
until between 942 and 946 (B., 779). Another is Fawkham
which came at last to the Bishop under the wiU of Byrhtric
which Thorpe (p. 500) dates 950 and Birch (1132/33) " about
964." The possession of Fawkham was much debated, by
violence and by action in the King's court and before the
shire (B. 1296, etc.). It seems rash to suppose that it passed
finally into the Bishop's hands before 973 at the earUest.
Thus the schedule can hardly be much earher than 975.
Nor is it likely to be later than 995 in which year the King
granted Wouldham to Rochester (Kemble, 688). In the
schedule Wouldham stiU pays to the King's pier and not to
those of the Bishop. We thus arrive at a date between 973
and 995. This fits in so weU with WaUenberg's suggestion
that we may well accept " about 975 " as the date of the
schedule which the Rochester clerk copied into the Textus
Roffensis more than 100 years later.
THE MAP OP THESE LANDS.
The next step is to enter these lands on a map and it
would be enormously tedious to specify how each identification
had been arrived at. The majority of the places
mentioned were manors which, as is usual in Kent, were
coterminous with parishes which have maintained their
names and boundaries ever since. Certain other places wiU
be dealt with later as occasion requires ; some remain
unidentified. The map herewith shows aU that are known
THE LATHE OF AYLESFORD IN 975. 15
and it shows also the whole of the lathe of Aylesford as we
know it from Domesday Book: containing aU the bridge
manors except (a) Westerham, which is far removed, with
most of the lathe of Sutton intervening, and (b) a group of
four contiguous manors of the Bishop of Rochester in
(3 HOW A RAN PART Or
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