( 103 )
A CLAIM TO " ROYAL FISH " STRANDED OFF
DUNGENESS.
BY OHARLES JOHNSON, F.S.A., F.B.A.
THE cartulary of ·St. Leonard's, York, in the Cotton MSS.
at the British Museum (Nero D. III), has bound up with it
two leaves of parchment purporting to be copied from
a "white book" marked 0V, and presumably a lost
cartulary of Battle Abbey. They are bound up in the
wrong order, and they appear to be a statement of the claim
of the abbot of Battle to a share of all whales and other
royal fish driven ashore on the borders of Dunge Marsh,
which was appendant to the abbey's manor of Wye. The
writing of these leaves appears to be of the late fourteenth
or early :fifteenth century, but I have not been able to discover
or even to guess on what occasion or before what court
they were produced. The substance of the statement is
as follows :-
William the Conqueror founded Battle Abbey in memory
of his victory on that spot and gave it, amongst other things,
the manor of Wye in Kent, with all its customs and liberties
as a royal manor. This included the whole of any
" Craspeis " or royal fish coming ashore on any of the land of
the manor, and the tongue and two thirds of the body of any
such fish stranded within the boundaries of "Horsmede,
Blakewase and Bradelle " as far as " Witheburne " whoever
might own the land.
Before the manor left the king's hands, while Richard
of Dover was reeve, a fish was thus stranded on land held by
Hugh de Montfort of the Archbishop. Richard claimed the
king's share but was forcibly repulsed, and so, when making
his account as reeve before the treasury at Winchester,
claimed an allowance of £30 for the loss of this advantage.
Hugh was compelled to make good the loss and fined £100.
104 A CLAIM TO " ROYAL FISH "
This right was expressly transferred to Battle in the
charter which gave Wye,1 as also the king's right to twopence
a piece on all forfeitures and pleas pertaining to the
summons of Wye.
Under William Rufus a fish came ashore at " Blakewase
", and a royal serjeant called Alfred Nuspier claimed
the king's share and took it by sea to Southampton. Abbot
Gausbert, hearing this, waited on the king first at Charing,
then " at the house of Croc the huntsman", 2 and lastly at
Salisbury, and obtained a writ ordering the proper share
to be given him. He reached Southampton at midnight,
and found the fish had been taken to the king's larder at
Winchester. As the writ only mentioned Southampton,
a new writ was needed, and the abbot had to send to the
king who was staying at the bishop of Winchester's manor
of Taunton. The Iring sent Ivo Taillebois with a writ to
Hugh the larderer ordering the fish to be given up. Copies
of both writs are appended.
In the reign of Henry I, Ramo dapifer being sheriff of
Kent (c. 1100-1115), a fish came ashore at Romney, which
the sheriff seized and ordered to be taken to Canterbury.
Sired the priest, reeve of Wye, claimed the king's share as
due to the manor, and the sheriff allowed the claim.
Thomas, a monk of Battle was sent to Romney to take
possession and found John de Tremmrede and Richard,
son of Rabel, arranging to take away the whole fish, as
previously ordered. They refused to listen to him and he
went to Canterbury and complained to the sheriff of the conduct
of his men. The sheriff sent to reprimand them, and
the monk got his share.
Another fish came ashore on the land of the abbey at
" N esse " (Dungeness i), near the boundary between
Dunge Marsh and Romney Marsh. The Archbishop's
men of Romney and " Ledis " (Lydd i ) came down and
attempted to carry off all or part of the fish on the pretext
1 Mon. Angl., III, 244. This Charter is marked as spurious by
H. W. C. Davis in Regesta Reg. Anglo-Normann. I, No. 62.
2 Probably Crux Easton in Hampshire.
STRANDED OFF DUNGENESS. 105
that it had come ashore on the Archbishop's land. A man of
Dunge Marsh, Aliosicus ( 1) opposed them and the men of
Battle secured the fish. Abbot Warner (1124-1138) sent
his servants who put the whole fish in the abbey larder,
and made the king (then in Normandy) a present of 20 loads
(summas) from the tongue, and gave liberally of the rest to
churches in England and Normandy. Here follows king
Henry's charter confirming the liberties of the men of Dunge
Marsh, which are the same as those of Hastings and repeating
the provision as to royal fish. The precept being addressed
to Hamo dapifer and attested by Robert, count of Meulan,
cannot be later than A.D. 1118. We must assume that it
issued on some occasion before the time of abbot Warner.
In the same reign another :fish was stranded on the
boundary between.Kent and Sussex, and was claimed simultaneously
by William, son of Robert, son of Ralph of Hastings
and by Reimbert de Berhe, abbot Warner's reeve of Wye.
Four lawful men were chosen on each side and decided that
the fish was half in Kent and half in Sussex. It was taken
to Winchelsea and divided equally between William and the
abbot.
On Friday, February 9th, 1258, 1 a :fish forty feet long and
about six feet thick was cast up at Dunge Marsh at daybreak
and remained unperceived except by the bailiff and
the abbot's men till nine o'clock, owing to snow and a violent
wind. Then came burgesses of Romney and tried to get
possession. The bailiff, fearing a breach of the peace,
forbade them in the name of the king and of abbot Ralph
(1235-c. 1261) to touch the fish or infringe the custom of the
manor. The elder men obeyed, grumbling, but bargained
to have part of the fish given or sold to them. The bailiff
said that was beyond his power, but presumed so far on his
master's liberality as to make presents to the more important
men. The rabble, however, threatened force; and the
bailiff, mfodful of the rough ways of sailors, to avoid bloodshed,
made a speech in which he asked his " good friends
and neighbours " to help him to cut up the fish, and told
1 The ninth was actually a Saturday.
106 .A CL.AIM TO " ROY.A L FISH "
them they should be rewarded for their trouble. The men
of Winchelsea arriving later were given the same terms as
those of Romney. The constable of Dover and the sheriff
claimed the fish for the king, but the bailiff pleaded the
abbot's liberty and succeeded in keeping the peace for five
or six days and in preventing anyone from carrying off
portions of the fish without his leave. The bulk of the fish
was sent to Battle, and the abbot sent a servant with part
of it as a present to the king, half the tongue and four
large pieces of blubber. The king lost his temper and said
" By God's head I owe the abbot no thanks ! It is my right,
and anyone who has laid hands on the fish without my
knowledge has wronged me." He was informed that the
abbot had charters, one of which had the king's own seal,
and answered: "If the right is mine, I owe the abbot no
thanks; if it is his, I thank him heartily for his handsome
present, and will repay him on a suitable occasion."
The abbot sent presents of parts of the fish to the archbishop
of Canterbury, the bishop of Chichester, the chancellor, the
treasurer and others, to the number of 120.
Notwithstanding this, the abbot was summoned before
the king's court to answer for not giving up the fish. The
charters were pleaded and pronounced good, but the court
ordered an inquisition to prove user. Here follow the writ
to the sheriff dated 16th March, 1258,1 and the inquisition,
taken at Romney, 27th May, 1258, by which it was found
that the abbot had used this liberty, and had acted correctly
in taking away the :fish.
Such is the case as stated, and like all such statements,
it is on the face of it suspect. It is noticeable that none of
the charters quoted at length appears in the "Royal
Charters" section of the Battle Abbey cartulary now in
the Huntington Library. On the other hand, except for
the name of Waldric as chancellor of William Rufus, 2 and
1 The date is in the impossible form '' xvii. Kal. April", and, if genuine,
is therefore probably 17 April, with which the date of the inquisition fits
pretty well.
2 On which see Engl. Hist. Rev., XXVI, 84.
STRANDED OFF DUNGENESS. 107
the reference to Abbot Warner, there are no obvious
anachronisms, and the names of the sheriff and undersheriff
in 1258 (Nicholas de Molls and Walter de Berstede)
are correctly given. The lively details of the personal
acts of the kings mentioned recall the picturesque style
of the Battle Abbey chronicle, though they are
obviously by a later hand. But to determine the exact
degree of credit to be given to the several parts of the statement
would require more local knowledge and a more
thorough investigation of the Plea and Memorand Rolls
than the writer can claim credit for.
COTTON MS. NERO D.3, ff. 225, 224.
f. 225. [Rubric.]
De quodam Grasso pisce, vulgariter a Craspeys, qui applicuit
apud Deng[e] mar[eis]
Postquam nobilis princeps Willelmus Anglicum
regnum deo favente armis sibi subjugavit, in loco Belli
quasi memoriam victorie ecclesiam sancti Martini construxit,
eamque variis donis et diversis muneribus et libertatibus
decoravit. Inter que quoddam manerium in Cancia Wy
nominatum cum saca et soca et omnibus regalibus consuetudinibus
et libertatibus quas ipse in eo habuit eidem
ecclesie regia magni:ficencia contulit. Hujus manerii jus
semper extitit, ut si in aliqua terra que ad ipsum manerium
pertinet piscis qui vulgariter 'craspeis' vocatur appulerit,
regis totus esset, si vero infra terminos de Horsmede et
Blakewase et Bradelle usque Withiburne appulisset, linguam
et dues partes ipsius piscis, regis videlicet porciones, possessor
manerii de Wy haberet, ut subjectis exemplis lucide
cognosci potest.
Regnante glorioso rege Willelmo fundatore ecclesie
Belli, Ricardo autem de Dover manerii de Wy preposito,
nondum tamen ipso manerio ecclesie Belli a rege collato ;
contigit hujusmodi piscem super terram Hugonis de Mundford
quam de archiepiscopo tenebat appulisse. Mox
Ricardus ad locum quo piscis devenerat festin.anter ivit,
108 A CLAIM TO " ROYAL FISH "
Hugouemque ibi reperiens rogavit ut sibi partem p1sc1s,
videlicet duas partes et linguam ejus regi debitam traderet.
Set ille ejus dicta parvipendens vi atque armis totum sibi
piscem vendicavit. Adveniente autem tempore quo
Ricardus debitum censum illius mauerii reddere deberet ad
locum thesauri Wint[ onie], cetera reddidit, x.x:xta vero
libras super partem piscis injuste sibi ab Hugone ablatam,
regios thesaurarios sibi debere uumerare edocuit. Asciscitur
regis precepto [W]intoniam hicque agitatur de pisce percepto
questio, ibique regalis curie judicio piscis restituitur. Et
regis forisfacture Hu[go] adjudicatus, centum denariorum
libras regi persolvere cogitur. Quin eciam omnes qui inde
aliquid presumpserant regis forisfacture subjacere debere
decernuntur.
Oum autem ipsum Manerium de Wy cum omnibus
membris suis ecclesie Sancti Martini de Bello gloriosus rex
Willelmus dedisset, hanc consuetudinem de craspeis et
omnes regales consuetudines et libertates quas in eodem
manerio et in omnibus membris ejus in bosco et in plano
ipse rex habuit, eidem ecclesie concessit et dedit. Inter
quas consuetudines nominatim in Lingemareis (sio) quod est
unum membrum de Wy, concessit et dedit omnes maritimas
consuetudines quas illic habuit, cum omni warec quod illic
contingeret, et ut piscis predictus si illic appulerit, abbatis
et monachorum de Bello sit totus. Similiter et si infra
terminos predictos craspeis quodcu[mque ad] terram de
Wy appulerit, duas partes illius cum lingua illis dedit,
et tarn libere semper habere concessit sicut ipse liberius
possidere potuit. De omnibus eciam forisfacturis et placitis
omnium hundredorum qui pertinent ad summoniciones de
Wy, dedit idem rex eidem ecclesie duos denarios quos ipse
semper habere solebat.
Tempore vero regis Willelmi junioris, hujusmodi piscis
qui vocatur craspeis in loco qui dicitur Blakewase appulsus
est, de quo regis partem quidam regis serviens Aluredus
nomine cognomento Nuspier u.na cum sociis suis, regis
scilicet famulis sumens et navi imponens, ad Hantonam
usque devexit. Quod cum Gausbertus, tune ecclesie Belli
STRANDED OFF DUNGENESS. 109
abbas, comperisset, regum prius in Cancia apud Cerringes,
deim in domo Croc venatoris, ad postremum Salesberie hac
de causa requisivit, tandemque impetravit quod volebat.
Cum breve regis pattern piscis ecclesie Belli reddi precipiente
Hantonam profunda nocte pervenit, set piscem jam Wintonie
delatum et in regis lardario illatum comperit. Itaque
festinus Wintoniam Hushoni lardario regis breve ostendit,
set illo abnuente nisi sibi missum, nee de Wintonia set de
Hamtona precipientem (sic), abbas ad regem apud Tantuna
manerium Wintoniensis episcopi denuo mittit. Statimque
rex per lvonem Taileboys breve ad Hugonem lardarium
fieri mandat, ut sine mora piseem de Caneia allatum abbati
de Bello tradat. Hoe preeepto viso, Hugo de lardario
e:x:traetum piseem abbati tradidit, quern ille continuo ad
ecelesiam de Bello transmisit.
Exemplar vero brevium regis Willelmi junioris de
Craspeis reddendo hoe est, que Hugoni lardario misit :
W.
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