DENNS, DROVING AND DANGER1
By PROFESSOR F. R. H. DU BOULAY, M.A., F.R.Hist.S.
THE colonization of the woodlands which forms so large a part of our
county's early history has yet to be treated systematically by a modern
writer.2 The limited intention of this paper is to look at the woodland
pastures which belonged to the mediaeval archbishops of Canterbury,
to set out the principal rents he derived from them, and to indicate the
differing and often conflicting interests of archbishops and woodland
settlers.
THE ARCHBISHOP'S WOODS
In the great description of his lands and tenants which Archbishop
Pecham caused to be made between 1283 and 1285,3 the woodlands are
set down in the paragraphs devoted to the demesnes. In each demesne,
after the lists of arable fields, meadows and pastures, there are written
the names and areas of any woods which happened to lie within that
particular manor, and finally the names of the denns, often many miles
distant, which were also still attached to the manor in question.
The amounts of woodland that the manors possessed within their
own localities varied very much. In Domesday, the largest of the
archbishop's intramanorial woods seems to have been at Wrotham
which, " at the time when it is producing most ", rendered 500 swine.
In 1285 this appears as Bechewode, and covered 1,100 acres.4 Some
manors had little. The great manor of Wingham, early and extensively
cleared, possessed woodland at the time of Domesday which rendered
five swine only, and is credited with none at all in the 1285 description.5
1 The writer is indebted to Miss C. A. Goatman, M.A., for drawing the map
which illustrates this paper.
2 The principal work is still R. Furley, A History of the Weald of Kent (2 vols.
in 3, Ashford, 1871-74). There is much unsystematic learning in N. Neilson,
introduction (pp. 2-39) to The Cartulary and Terrier of the Priory of Bilsington,
Kent (Records of the social and economic history of England and Wales, vol. VII :
British Academy, 1928). A masterly foreshadowing of new work was Dr. P. H.
Reaney's paper on Kentish place-names, delivered in May, 1960, to the Kent
Archseological Society at Kingsgate. There is much interesting material in an
unpublished London Ph.D. thesis (1960) by J. L. M. Gulley, on The wealden
landscape in the early seventeenth century and its antedecents. The present writer is
grateful for permission to read this, and has benefited from some of the suggestions
made there.
3 Dean and Chapter of Canterbury MS. E 24.
4 Victoria County History of Kent, vol. iii (1932), p. 210 ; MS. E 24, fo. 75.
6 V.C.H., iii, p. 212. But a recently discovered transcript shows Wingham in
1285 to have possessed 224 a. wood in Curlswood (Nonington), 296£ a. in Woolwich
Wood (Womenswold), and a denn in Sandhurst. (Dr. Partner's typescript in
St. Paul's Cathedral Library.)
75
DENNS, DROVING AND DANGER
MAIDSTONE :4
GTLLINGHAM :5
TEYNHAM :6
CHARING :7
The amounts of extramanorial wood likewise varied. These were
sometimes called " forinsec " woods,1 but are more usually known by
the familiar name of denns. The following list is of those denns which
the survey of 1285 shows to have been attached to the archiepiscopal
manors in Kent.
RECULVER :2 Hathewolden [High Halden].
WESTGATE (of Canterbury) :3 Betenhame [Bettenham, in Cranbrook] ;
Hatewolden [High Halden].
Telden [Tilden, in Marden.] ; Lodelyngton [Loddington,
in Linton].
Fyneherst [Finchurst, in Goudhurst] (26 acres) ;
Harteherst, Herteherst or Heyteherst [Haythurst, in
Marden] (7 acres, 1 vbgate) ; Bikynden ; Trindeherst
[lost, in Biddenden?].
Kelsham [in Headcorn].
Wandigsuode ; Newenden ; Chemonden [Comenden,
near Sissinghurst?] ; Halingherst [Hallingburst, lost
in Smarden] ; Bithelegh ; Bordeherst and Elmherst
[Elmhurst, in Brenchley?] ; Blethchynden [Bletchenden,
in Headcorn] ; Wythinden [Witherden, in
Headcorn] ; Helesden.
The Charing text alhides to the men of the " seven
denns ", but there appear to be nine enumerated here.
Herdelmere or Herdlemere; Bedynden; Leden
[Lydden, in Hawkinge?] Metekingham or Mettelingham
[probably the same as Myddyllyngham, which is
possibly Misleham] ; Casyngham or Kasingham
[Kensham, in Rolvenden] ; Presden or Preseden
[lost, in Tenterden] ; Fresingham or Fressyngham
[Freezingham, in Rolvenden] ; Tenglingden or Tenglynden
[Dingleden, in Benenden] ; Ealdingheth or
Eldyngheth; Shirthe or Syerth [Shirley, in Woodchurch]
; Rolvenden ; Lymeryn(g)den ; Henden or
Henyden [Henden, lost, in Woodchurch] ; Helden
and Sandhurst.
1 E.g. in 1484 one James Baker was appointed warden of all the archbishop's
forinsec woods called dreffedennys [drovedenns] in Kent (Register of Archbishop
Bourgchier, Canterbury and York Society, vol. liv, p. 66).
2 MS. E 24, fo. 18v. The spelling of the names here is taken from the MS. which
is of the late fifteenth century. Probable identifications are placed within square
brackets.
3 Ibid., fo. 22v. Note that a single, named woodland place, like High Halden,
might include denns belonging to more than one parent manor.
4 Ibid., fo. 28v.
6 Ibid., fo. 29v.
6 Ibid., fo. 33v.
' Ibid., fo. 47. 8 Ibid., fos. 60, 60v.
ALDINGTON :8
76
DENNS, DROVING AND DANGER
LYMINGE •} Beterinden and Pledeshedde [Betherinden and
Plashead, in Sandhurst] ; Estherndon [East Hernden,
in Sandhurst] ; Iden [in Benenden] ; Hole [in
Rolvenden] ; Sponden [or Spunden, in Sandhurst] ;
Chelinden [Challenden, lost, in Sandhurst?] ;
Steynden [Standen, in Benenden] ; Frosteshame
[Forsham, in Rolvenden] ; Herynden [Heronden]
and Tenterden ; Rempynden [Rempendene, in Woodchurch]
; Westryden.
A marginal note in the MS. says that these denns of
Lyminge are known by the tenants as " t h e twelve
denns ", though it will be observed that more than
twelve are enumerated.
PETHAM :2 Bysshoppenden near Hathewelden [Bishopsden, near
Halden].
BISHOPSBOURNE :3 Bisshoppenden [Bishopsden, probably as above.] ;
Lollesden.
The list is clearly incomplete. Not all the known denns even at that
moment were set down in the demesne descriptions. At Gillingham, for
instance, Bekynden and Trindhurst, which have been included above,
were only referred to casually in part of the manuscript describing
tenants' holdings. Also, the denns themselves were in a constant state
of change. Woodland pastures anciently attached to a distant parent
manor might lose that link and develop independently. There is in
1285, for instance, no sign of the swine pastures attributed to Bexley in
814.4 Conversely, denns belonging to certain manors might multiply
by process of new colonization or subdivision, just as " manors "
themselves multiplied through the vigour of populations and the action
of the land-market. So, in the list above, the seven denns of Charing
and the twelve denns of Lyminge have abeady in 1285 increased beyond
those numbers. In the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, we find a
great increase in the number of denns attached to the huge manor of
Aldington. In this hst of 1285 rather more than a dozen are listed as
denns of Aldington, and are given above, though several other tenements
are mentioned which later would be called denns.5 Occasionally this
creation of new denn names can be seen happening. In 1285 a group
of tenants in the weald held half a yoke " in Huntebourne, Peniland and
1 Ibid., fo. 64v.
2 Ibid., fo. 67v.
3 Ibid., So. 68v.
1 W. de Gray Birch, Cartularium Saxonicum, No. 346.
6 E.g., Horynbroke, Regwey, Rogheye, Hunteborne, etc. (MS. E 24, fo. 59, 59v.).
77
DENNS, DROVING AND DANGER
Rempinden ".1 In 1364 a lease refers to the " half denn of Rempynden
which in the custumal is called Huntyngborne [Huntbourne] in the
parish of Woodchurch".2 Ultimately there appear to have been 44
denns of Aldington. It is not appropriate to trace them out here, but
they are visible in the sixteenth century and still existed in 1703 as two
large entities of property composed of 32 denns and of the 12 denns
originally belonging to Lyminge. In the eighteenth century they were
fragmented into many individual parcels of arable and pasture as well
as wood, developed by the holders with barns, stables and other
buildings.3
THE LORD'S RENTS
These woodlands belonged to the archbishop. He could not exclude
tenants and settlers from enjoying them, but from remote times he
required various forms of payment in return for their use. The most
ancient forms of use were, of course, the pasturing of herds of pigs, and
the cutting of timber and brushwood. Before long, people wanted to
grow crops in the open spaces or where the axe and the pig's snout
had made clearings. The rents paid for the right to do these various
things have caused a certain amount of confusion, but are easily
understandable in the light of elementary botanical facts.4
The trees were principally oak and/or beech. Beech, which grows
only on well-drained soils, had probably existed since neolithic times on
the lighter soils of the south-east : for example on the chalk escarpments
of the North Downs and the lighter loams of the North Downs plateau
between Maidstone, Charing and Sittingbourne. On the escarpments
beech would appear by itself, for it tends to drive out other growths in
such circumstances. The great wood of Wrotham, as has been seen
above, was a beech wood.5 But on light loams beech would grow intermixed
with oak, providing a varied canopy, with underwood from which
fencing could readily be made, and with glades and open patches.
There is, in fact, mediaeval evidence for this mixture of beech and oak
in the regions of Cranbrook, Rolvenden, Tenterden and Haythurst, for
1 E 24, fo. 59.
2 Dean and Chapter of Canterbury MSS., Register N, fo. 70v. Rempendene
itself was old enough to owe " Romescot ", or Peter's Pence, as a fixed charge
(E 24, fo. 67).
3 The 44 denns are mention by Furley, op. cit., and discussed by Dr. Gulley.
Many of them are itemized in court-rolls of 1539 and 1556 (Kent Archives Office
U86/M2 and U89/M1). See also Guide to the Kent County Archives Office (ed. F. Hull,
Maidstone, 1958), p. 223 and Plate XXII. The large rental of 1703 is KAO
U 89/M12. I owe these references to Dr. Gulley's kindness.
* For much of this paragraph I am indebted to the special knowledge of my
colleague, Dr. F. Rose, Lecturer in Botany at Bedford College.
6 The wood cannot have always been pure beech, however, for in 1506-07 oakloppings
are recorded as sold from le Bechynwode of Wrotham (Lambeth Roll,
no. 1253, document 20).
78
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R O C H E S T E R t
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Notes
1 The map shows places mentioned in the text, and is not a
complete account of the archiepiscopol manors and woodlands.
2 Hernhill and Gravcney formed part of the manor of Boughton -
under-Blcon, but hove been shown separately here as their
customs were separately described.
3 Certain denns arc not shown either because they have not been
i d e n t i f i ed or because they are now lost,They o r e : Betherinden
in Sandhurst# Bikyndeni Bithelegh, Bordherstt Cheldynden(
Faldingheth or £ldchacchel£dyndenl Hotlinghurst in Smardent
Hayihurst in Marden, Heldenl Henden in Woodchurch.Herdelmere,
Lollesden, Lymeryngden, Metekingham or Myddyllyngham (in the
area of Rolvenden ), Mettelinghamt Plashead in Sandhurst,
Presden, Rempendene in Woodchurch, Ridgewoy in Woodchurch ,
Sibersnoth in Orlestone, Slepinden in Smarden, Trindeherst
(probably either in Biddenden or Yalding )lWandigsuode)
Westrynden.
ARCHIEPISCOPAL WOODLANDS IN KENT,c. 1285.
[fare p. 7S
DENNS, DROVING AND DANGER
the archbishop complained that tenants were stealing those kinds of
timber there.1 In some of the denn country, however, the heavy clays
would have inhibited the growth of beech, and the oak would have
reigned supreme.
Beech fructifies irregularly, and best in the year after a hot summer.
Beech mast may not be available in more than three or four years out of
ten, but it is excellent for pigs and, according to the younger Pliny,
makes their flesh easy to cook and digestible.2 Oak provides a somewhat
more regular supply of pig food in the form of acorns, and also better
facihties for fencing with the underwood that pure beech growth inhibits.
But the pessona of the documents certainly means both beech mast and
acorns, and may even to a small extent have signified hornbeam mast.
The trees fructify in autumn, and in the texts the " time of mast " was
pre-eminently the six weeks between Michaelmas (29th September) and
Martinmas (11th November).3 Outside those times unguarded pigs
must live off pasture, woodland or other.
In the thirteenth-century custumal on which this paper is based we
find the archbishop claiming various combinations of four rights or rents
in his woodlands. These were : the wood itself (boscum) ; pannage ;
danger ; lefgavel (also called leafy eld or lej'silver). Each requires a few
words.
1. Boscum
This meant the right to fell and take away timber, in distinction from
the underwood (subboscum) and branches blown down by the wind. In
1285 the archbishop claimed boscum in all his denns except Repynden,
belonging to Lyminge, from which he was said to receive nothing but
rent.4 But at Witherden and Helesden, belonging to Charing, he had
only a half and a third of the wood respectively.5 In the Gillingham
wood of Haythurst he had oaks and beeches only, and the tennants were
presumably free to take other varieties.6 These exceptions to the lord's
total right may mean that some agreement had been negotiated already
with the tenants or a farmer. We shall see in the sequel that such agreements
became frequent in the fourteenth century. But they do not for
that reason imply that the tenants were yet, in 1285, in a strong position
in relation to their lord. At Charing, where the archbishop's wood
rights were less than total, tenants were bound to fashion boards in the
1 Furley, op. cit., ii (I), pp. 200-204, citing Placita Quo Warranto for 1309-10 ;
also MS. E 24, fo. 32 v.
2 Natural History, Book XVI, viii. But the superior nutritive value of acorns
is asserted by R. Trow-Smith, British Livestock Husbandry to 1700 (1957), pp. 80-84.
3 MS. E 24, llOv. (swineherd's allowance for six weeks in the weald of Sussex) ;
also Neilson, Bilsington Cartulary, p. 16.
4 MS. E 24, fo. 64v.
6 Ibid., fo. 47.
0 Ibid., fo. 32v.
79
DENNS, DROVING AND DANGER
archbishop's woods whenever he required them, and the archbishop
might fell his wood and carry it away through the middle of men's corn
if he wished, and no complaint could be entertained.1
2. Pannage
The most universal primitive use of the woodlands, both on the
manors and in the denns, was for the pasture of swine. This, as is well
known, was a source of rent to the lord, either in pigs or in money.
Domesday almost always expresses the render in pigs, but fractions of a
pig obviously indicate a cash commutation, and occasionally a commutation
rate is given.2
Pannage meant both the pasturing itself and the rent paid by tenants
and others for the right to send their animals into the pasture. The lord
had his own herds, and swineherds to look after them, and he required in
addition the occasional services of tenants in driving his pigs about and
fencing the woods so that they could not get out and wreck crops or
escape.3
A problematical point is whether the lord's pigs were kept in the
woods only during the time of mast, or for longer periods or permanently.
On the one hand the texts describe the organization of droving,
and suggest that the movement of swine to the distant woodlandpastures
was a seasonal work of fairly frequent if not regular occurrence.
At Maidstone, certain tenants had to collect five men each to help drive
the archbishop's pigs to mast.4 At Teynham, the swineherd might
have five of his own pigs free in the mast with the archbishop's pigs
" wherever they are in Kent ; and if they are outside Kent he shall have
a quarter of barley..." At Boughton-under-Blean, Hernhill, Graveney
and Charing the cotters had to drive the lord's pigs to mast in Kent, but
not beyond.5 On the other hand, denns were often 20 miles and more
from the parent manor, and it is open to doubt whether a double
journey was worth-while for an occasional six-week pannage season.
What happened was probably this : that the lord's stocks of swine were
kept locally on the manors (this is clear from account rolls), but that
they, or some of them, might be driven over long distances either because
they were wanted permanently on another manor, or because excellent
pannage had become available in a particular district. If this hap-
1 Ibid., fo. 53v.
2 Woodland at Burnes [Bekesbourne?] to render 6£ swine (V.C.H. Kent, iii,
p. 323b.) ; as much woodland at Kennington as renders for pannage dues 40 swine,
or else 54J pence (ibid., p. 246a.).
3 E.g., at Charing in 1285 the tenants of yokelands must enclose whenever the
wood produced a reasonable amount of mast (quando boscum fert pessonam
rationabiliter) (E 24, fo. 53).
4 MS. E 24, fo. 29.
6 Ibid., fos. 43v., 46v., 53v.
80
DENNS, DROVING AND DANGER
pened, the pigs would be fattened there and slaughtered when they
were wanted. At Slindon in Sussex, the archbishop was said sometimes
to " make a larder ", which is precisely what this means.1 There was
an interesting arrangement at Westgate, Canterbury, where a group of
tenants had to guard the lord's pigs in the pannage if they were driven
there to fatten. The group was organized in a roster : John le Suon
took the first quarter of the year, Stephen Spicer the second, Robert
Lardiner and John Mot the third, and Luke Pips, Robert Godsman and
John the son of Henry Joce the fourth.2 Since new pannage does not
become available all the year round this envisages the permanent
custody of pigs in the woods. The name of Robert Lardiner may even
signify the additional function of butchering which fell to these tenants
who had to leave their own holdings for a while to control the lord's
herds.
Yet pigs belonging to the tenants themselves were probably much
more numerous than those belonging to the lord, and more profitable to
the lord, too, from the pannage rents they occasioned. Pigs were
peasants' animals, not objects of market economy to the same degree
as cattle and sheep. The men of Bexley kept their pigs in the lord's
local woods in winter and summer, and complained when the woods
were reduced.3 In most of the denns the archbishop possessed the
pannage rights in the thirteenth century. He could take the pannage
rents from others than simply his own tenants. At Charing, the
settlers in the denns might each have five pigs free of pannage rent
there, but they had to pay 2d. a pig if they pastured more, and this 2d.
rate was fixed irrespective of how much the lord could get from outsiders.
4 This looks at first sight like a guaranteed rent for the lord, but
fixed rents generally operate in tenants' favour, and this is nicely demonstrable
from a surviving pannage account of 1295-96 from Otford. It
gives two lists, pannage of pigs of outsiders (forinsecorum), and pannage
of pigs belonging to the lord's tenants. A simple calculation shows that
tenants paid 2d. for a pig, Id. for a yearling (this was also the rate at
Bexley, and probably elsewhere on the archbishop's estates), while the
outsiders had to pay exactly double.5
1 Ibid., fo. 104 (Sussex Record Society, vol. 57, p. 3). The large account roll for
1273-74 shows a swineherd and a stock of demesne pigs on almost all manors
(Brit. Mus. Add. MS. 29, 794). Porkers were systematically raised on the demesne
of Bishopsbourne, where payment was made in 1324 for the castration of pigs
(KAO, U 270, M304), and where there was a tiled piggery in the fifteenth century,
when the demesne was leased (Lambeth Roll, no. 1195, of A.D. 1446-67). Special
payment was made in Otford in 1296 for droving pigs to pannage in Teynham
(Lambeth Roll, no. 831, m. 3), and there are numerous other instances of this.
2 MS. E 24, fo. 23v.
3 Ibid., fo. 91v. The importance of the peasant's pig finds literary expression
in Flora Thompson's classic From Lark Rise to Candleford.
1 MS. E 24, fo. 53v.
6 Lambeth Roll, No. 831, attached account.
81
DENNS, DROVING AND DANGER
3. Danger and Lefgavel
The woodland pastures were akeady being colonized and divided
when the Domesday survey was made. There are several references
in its pages to denae where dwelt peasants with ploughs, paying rent ;
and sometimes the denn was assessed in terms of the yoke, like the older
cultivated land.
The archbishop's rental of 1285 naturally gives more detail than
Domesday about tenant settlements in waldis. The woodland area
which belonged to Aldington and was divided into denns had already
been formed into a collectorate by the archbishop's administration, and
was arranged into half and quarter yokes, burdened with carrying
services and suit of court. Small-holders of forlands (more recent
clearances) near Kensham in Rolvenden had to help drive distrained
animals thence to Aldington.1 The same assimilation of woodland to
the conditions of the ancient arable is visible in the denns of Gillingham.
Of Haythurst and Finchurst it was said that " the tenants of these denns
associate together as two yokes (pro duobus jugis) when a collection
happens to be made for Rochester Bridge, or for a taxation of the
yokes".2 In fact numerous permanent woodland tenants may be found
in places which in Domesday were hardly inhabited or even known, and
comparison of their names with the names of tenants in other vills of the
same manor suggests that in 1285 they were not recent immigrants or
close kinsmen of neighbouring villagers, but born woodlanders.
Permanent settlement like this was bound to disrupt the lord's
unchallenged enjoyment of wood and pannage, partly because sturdy
colonists could hardly fail to help themselves to the timber on their
doorsteps, and partly because they and their pigs would soon reduce the
amount of pannage available,3 and access to it.
There were, then, three hazards which might deprive the lord of some
part of his ancient income : the natural hazard of a bad season when the
trees produced h'ttle or no mast, and the man-made hazards of tenants
who destroyed or denied pannage by cultivating, and of tenants who
cut and used or sold the best timber. It is contended in this paper that
for each of these happenings the archbishop (and possibly other Kentish
landlords) took a separate, identifiable payment : danger, lef gavel, and
a new fixed rent, respectively.
The word danger (dangerium) signifies damage or a payment in compensation
for something lost. Miss Neilson hesitantly followed Du
1 MS. E 24, fo. 60.
2 Ibid., fos. 32v., 33v.
3 The continued pasturing of pigs itself tended to diminish the returns of that
pannage by the destruction of seedlings. As the abbot of Stoneleigh noted in the
fourteenth century, porcus est anvmal destruens pasturam per eversionem terrw (The
Stoneleigh Leger Book, ed. R. H. Hilton, Dugdale Society Publications, vol. xxiv,
p. 101).
82
DENNS, DROVING AND DANGER
Cange in thinking it was the rent paid for permission to cut wood within
the denn, whereby the pannage would be damaged.1 Du Cange drew
his instance from Continental texts about royal forests. This use
of the term danger is admittedly found in the denns belonging to
St. Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury.2 Yet it is abundantly clear that
on the wide archbishopric estates, at least, danger was intimately linked
with pannage, and was compensation of the natural lack of pannage,
which might occur in the majority of years. The link between danger
and pannage is visible in the accounts kept by royal custodians of the
archbishopric property when the see was vacant. In 1228-29 for
instance, they collected £34 l i s . 8d. de padnagio et dangeriis padnagii?
The meaning is also apparent from evidence which Miss Neilson herself
cited, namely, an agreement of 1406 between the prior of Christ Church,
Canterbury, and his tenants of Slepinden in Smarden, who were said
to have paid him 2s. in the years when pannage failed, as a custom called
danger.4 Above all, the meaning of danger is made plain in the account
given in 1285 of the right which the archbishop had in his denns of
Aldington.5 These are tabulated below:
Herdlemere : The whole pannage, but danger if it is lacking (si
deficiat) ;
Bedynden : the whole pannage, but not danger, because they pay
lef gavel ;
Helden and Sandhurst : the whole pannage but, if there is none, no
danger because they are free through leafyeld ;
Presden : the whole pannage [further comment probably omitted
from the MS. accidentally] ;
Freezingham : half the pannage, or 6d. pro dangerio ;
Metekingham and Kensham : half the pannage, but no danger if there is
none because they are free by lef gavel ;
Dingleden : the whole pannage except for five pigs which the
tenants may have in the pannage, and no danger if it
is lacking because they pay lef gavel ;
Ealdingheth, Shirley, Rempindene, Rolvenden, Henden and Lymerynden
: neither pannage, danger nor lefgavel.
In each denn of Lyminge the scheme is simpler, for the lord was said to
have pannage, and 12 pence as danger when occasion arose (quando cadit,
or quando accidit).
1 Bilsington Cartulary, p. 16.
a The Black Book of St. Augustine (ed. G. J. Turner and H. E. Salter, Records of
the social and economic history of England and Wales, vol. ii, British Academy, 1915),
i, p. 235.
3 Pipe Roll, No. 73 ; and No. 76 m. 5d.
4 Bilsington Cartulary, p. 20.
6 MS. E 24, fos. 60, 60.
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DENNS, DROVING AND DANGER
Brief inspection shows that in many denns the archbishop looked for
income from pannage rents in good years, but in years when there was
no mast he was compensated for this natural " damage " by a payment
of Is. from each denn. In some denns he possessed only half the
pannage rents, on account of some unspecified arrangement, and he
would then claim only 6d., or half the danger, if pannage were lacking.1
But in some denns the tenants were free from the obligation to pay
danger by reason of another due called lefgavel or leafyeld. There is
httle doubt that this was money paid for leave to plough in the denn
whether there was mast or not. The term might, indeed, be translated
as " money for permission ". A custumal of Teynham defined it in so
many words : " tenants in the weald cannot plough their land from the
autumn equinox until the feast of St. Martin without licence. And
therefore they render annually half a mark at the feast of St. Martin,
whether there be mast or not, and it is called Lyefyeld."2 If this
arrangement were made, the lord's loss of pannage would be deliberate,
more certain and probably greater, so it is not surprising that lefgavel
was a larger payment than danger, and fixed by individual bargaining.
As against the Is. a denn danger, which appears to have been common,
we read that in the seven denns of Charing " the two marks they pay
at the feast of St. Thomas the Apostle [21 December] are a fine made
in the time of Archbishop Stephen [Langton, 1207-1228] in order that
they may plough in the time of danger without damage to the archbishop.
3 Again, in the denns of Gillingham, the custumal says, the
lord had danger, and the tenants make fine [i.e. for more than this] as
they are able.4 In the denn of Kelsham, in Rolvenden but belonging
to Teynham, the tenants paid 6s. 8d. at Martinmas as lefgavel.6 At
Charing the rate was about 3s. 6d. a denn. All these rates were notably
higher than the danger payments.
In general, where the tenants had contracted to pay lefgavel we may
suppose a more advanced degree of cultivation. It may not be accidental
that the 12 denns of Lyminge, where pannage and danger only
1 It was, of course, possible for some districts to yield pannage and others
danger in the same year. Also, there were places like Rotherfield, Sussex, which
produced rent for mast and less rent for scarce mast (Sussex Notes and Queries,
1927, pp. 18-23, cited by Dr. Gulley, op. cit., p. 334).
2 Cited by Neilson, Bilsington Cartulary, p. 16. For the various forms of leave,
see the New English Dictionary.
3 MS. E 24, fo. 47. Note that the permission is to plough, not in the time of
pannage, but in the time of danger. Lefgavel supersedes both pannage and danger.
This distinction between danger and lefgavel, though explicit in Pecham's custumal,
and doubtless copied from an earlier, lost custumal, was sometimes blurred in later
thirteenth-century minds, for in 1297 the sergeant of Maidstone accounted for 4s.
danger from Tilden and Loddington, but in 1299 he called precisely the same
payment lefselver (Lambeth rolls, nos. 657, 658).
•> Ibid., fo. 32v.
5 Ibid., fo. 33 v.
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DENNS, DROVING AND DANGER
were paid, retained their identity for a long time after the thirteenth
century, while the denns of Aldington, where lefgavel was more usually
paid, seem to divide and multiply with greater vigour.
In half a dozen of the archbishop's denns of Aldington it will have
been seen that neither pannage nor danger nor lefgavel were paid.
Possibly this means that the archbishop had already begun what his
successors in the fourteenth century were to do widely, and had disposed
of all his wood-rights for a consideration.
LORD'S INTERESTS AND TENANTS' INTERESTS IN THE DENNS
It will be apparent that lord and settlers alike wished to exploit
the woodlands, but in different and sometimes mutually exclusive ways.
By the thirteenth century the lord's pasturing of swine was well past
its peak of importance, but his timber was of increasing value. For
their part, the tenants wanted to cultivate, which diminished pannage
and pannage rents, and they too wanted the timber. Archbishop
Winchelsey in 1310 prosecuted tenants for cutting timber in Maidstone,
Linton, Marden, Cranbrook, High Halden, Woodchurch, Tenterden,
Benenden, Newenden, Rolvenden, Sandhurst, Charing, Smarden,
Biddenden, Kensham, Freezingham and neighbouring denns.1 The
tenants fought back. They argued correctly that Kensham and
Freezingham have been converted by Archbishop Edmund [1233-40]
from gavelkind to knight's fee, and drew the conclusion that he had thus
alienated the wood.2 The legal sequel to this is not clear, but the
tenants were in practice on the winning side. The archbishop continued
to lose timber. Before long he was to cut his losses by selhng to
the tenants, who were already leasing the denns, the right to dispose of
the tall wood also. This was the last of the old woodland rights for
which the lord could get a rent income, and he evidently thought it
worth his while to do so, and for rents which seem both fixed and rather
low.
Even if the archbishops had leased the whole wood here and there
at an earlier date, there seems to have been no systematic policy of
doing so before the remarkable series of indentures preserved from
1364 to c. 1370 in a Canterbury register.3 These show Archbishop Islip
agreeing with groups of tenants who were already leasing the denns to
grant them the free disposal of the timber also. The 30-odd leases in
1 Furley, op. cit., ii (I), pp. 200-204. The recently published Stoneleigh Leger
Book (see above p. 82, n. 3) reminds us that these conflicts were by no means confined
to the south-east, for the Warwickshire abbot's tenants, who had been paying
id. a pig for the pannage, complained in the late fourteenth century that the mastbearing
trees were being cut down. The abbot retorted that they too had been
abusing the wood by pasturing their larger animals there (p. 105).
2 MS. E 24, fo. 59v.
3 Dean and Chapter of Canterbury MSS. Register N, fos. 55-78 passim.
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DENNS, DROVING AND DANGER
this register follow a similar form, and it will be helpful to paraphrase a
typical example :
The archbishop's predecessors have leased to certain tenants the
land (fundum) in the denn of Newenden, for certain rents, services
and suit of court, as is written in the custumal of the manor of
Charing, but he has hitherto reserved to himself all the wood there.
But because the modern tenants of the denn, and other invaders
(alii invasores), often cut and carry away the tall wood growing there,
to the hurt of the archbishop and the danger of their own souls,
Archbishop Simon now grants them, and their heirs and assigns, the
whole wood for the sum of 7s. lOd. as a new, annual, fixed rent
(redditus assisus). Of this, 2s. 6d. is to be paid at the four principal
terms, Is. 8d. at the equinox, and 3s. 8d. at the feast of St. Thomas
the Apostle [21st December]. The tenants are : John Peneneseye,
rector of Smarden, Robert of Hallinghurst, William of Hallinghurst,
Simon Chemynden, Agnes the widow of Thomas Doul of Egerton,
Denys of Elmhurst, Richard Pemell, William Aleyn junior, William
Setenore, Thomas Munde, John the son of Robert of Homersham,
John Cherell, William Besce of Egerton, William Newenden, Thomas
Hogeman, John Bydynden of Smarden, John Spys of the same, and
Richard Rumdenn of the same. The old reliefs are to be paid when
a tenant's heir succeeds. The rents are secured by a clause of
distraint, and nothing further is to be demanded because of the new
rents.1
The other entries in the register are all like this, though some are in
short form and do not give the manor to which the denn in question is
attached. The denns must have varied a good deal in area or quality,
because the rents varied between about 3s. and 30s.2 The rents are for
odd amounts, to be paid in complex and diverse instalments, but they
do not seem to be in proportion to the number of tenants. As for the
tenants, most of their names are local ones, though occasionally a wellknown
one, like Vincent Fynch, appears.
This scheme of leasing continued, and groups of tenants were still
paying the rents here laid down in the fifteenth century.3 At that time
the archbishop's reeve was trying to collect danger as well, but the
tenants were refusing to pay, on the ground that by having bought the
wood-rights they were absolved from the lesser due.4 Here again the
i Ibid., fo. 56v.
2 These denns (identified where possible) were: High Halden, Oxney, Hallinghurst,
Newenden, Ashenden, Edynden, Pinkhorn [in Headcorn], Kensham, Hole,
Birchley, Little Halden, Rolvenden, Hinksden, Heronden in Tenterden, Elmhurst,
Bordhurst, Cheldynden, Challenden, Plashead, Field, Biddenden, Huntboume,
Rogley, Shirley, Eldchecche, Sandhurst, Lydden, Hardlemere, Wissenden and Bonnington.
3 Public Record Office, Ministers' Accounts (S.C.6), 1129/3.
1 Lambeth Rolls, Nos. 1193A, 1194, etc.
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DENNS, DROVING AND DANGER
dispute seems not to have come to a point, but the claims and counterclaims
petered out, and the tenants did not pay. Right appears to have
been on their side, and in any case it was not an easy matter for a
fifteenth-century archbishop to constrain his lessees.
Although the archbishop had released his rights to tenants in so many
of his denns, he did not by any means cease to exploit his other woodlands
during the later middle ages. Possibly he kept portions of extramanorial
wood for himself. The forester of Sibersnoth in the 1460's
was selling wood and underwood on the archbishop's behalf from his
forinsec woods in the weald.1 But for the most part the archbishop
was concentrating on the woods and parks which lay near his manors.
The continuing production of firewood, manufactured woods like
roofing shingles, and great timber, was organized by the archbishop's
foresters of Buckholt (near Petham), of Oakenpole (near Maidstone)
and of Whitley (near Otford). The parkers too are sometimes indifferently
known as woodwards, selling wood as a flourishing sideline from
their masters' more accessible and pleasant places.
1 Public Record Office, Ministers' Accounts (S.C.6), 1129/3.
87