The Harvest of the Hills: Rural Life in Northern England and the Scottish Borders 9780585441856

This illustrated environmental history of rural life in Northern England and the Scottish Borders in the late medieval a

170 16 43MB

English Pages 194 [208] Year 2000

Report DMCA / Copyright

DOWNLOAD FILE

Polecaj historie

The Harvest of the Hills: Rural Life in Northern England and the Scottish Borders
 9780585441856

Citation preview

The Harvest OF THE

Hills

The

Harvest OF THE

Hills Rural Life in Northern England and the Scottish Borders, 1400-1700

ANGUS

J.

L. WINCHESTER

EDINBURGH University Press

©Angus

J. L. Winchester, 2000

Edinburgh Universitv Press Ltd 22 George Square, Edinburgh RepnntO

o

••

o·"'·

~,.....,·

·?· ors /

0

"\

o 0 0

eo

0

0

0 o~

.,.,;

c9

o

Ob ~ CO o;'rD~ '0"' o .'00o

0

0

0

OJ

cl'Oo upon paine of vis viii d as abovesaid. And it is ordred that any may drive theire hoggs att the first time into what place of the fell as hee pleaseth (and not else but as other goods are turned over att, and att the places aforesaid, upon paine as abovesaid vis viii d). And that none shall exchange any sheepe from one bancke to another but in distresse of weather upon paine as abovesaid vi 5 viii d. Wee judge and awarde that John Braythwaite shall take this yeares breede of lambes and putt them to other places upon paine of iii s iiii d.

I 110

4.9 4.10 4.11 4.12 4.13 4.14 4.15 4.16 4.17 4.18 4.19 4.20 4.21 4.22 4.23 4.24 4.25 4.26

4.27 4.28 4.29

4.30

THE HARVEST OF THE HILLS

And that none shall keepe any greate goods in our bancks, but milking cowes and one horse for a tenement, which horse to be one month on the moore, upon paine as above vis viii d. And that noe man put any greate goods into uppermer Lingmell, but penny calves from St James day [25 July] till six weekes after upon paine as abovesaid vis viii d. And none shall heafe or drive any sheepe of the fell, butt from comon folds upon paine as above-said vi 5 viii d. And to gitt our thatch brackens att our latter Lady day [8 September]; and to gitt our topp brackens that day seavennight [15 September]. And for our heade garth on Lingmellside to be made six feate and a halfe high upon paine of vi 5 viii d as above said; and for the other side to be referred to the sworne men. And for our infeild ground, every man to occupie his ground according to neighbourhoode hath bene (and as proufe will serve). And every man to amend high wayes, and kepe in water alongst his owne ground upon paine as above said vi 5 viii d. And noe man shall have any sheepe in the comon feild upon paine as aforesaid iii 5 iiiid. And it is agreed if a cowe milke but to St Jam[e]s day [25 July] she shall goe to moore upon paine as aforesaid iii 5 iiiid. And that none shall fetch any kine of the moore till they be within five weekes of calveinge upon paine as aforesaid iii s iiii d. And noe greate goods shall be suffred to goe in the bancks from Michaelmas day [29 September] to StThomas day [21 December] upon paine as abovesaid vis viiid. And that our outlyeing goods shalbe brought to our fell yeates betwixt StThomas day [21 December] and our Lady day in Lent [25 March] upon paine as abovesaid vis viii d. And that they shall make all garthes and yeates aboute there houses lawfull upon paine as abovesaid vis viii d. And that all men keepe theire swine lawfull and out of the feild upon paine as above said vis viii d. And for our improvements and infeild walles to be referred to the sworne men. And every man must keepe stinte in the feild, upon paine as abovesaid vis viii d. All tenants and occupiers may have theire yeare old colts and fylleys in our bancks a fortnight aboute St Jam[e]s day [25 July]. And if our geld goods cannot goe to the moore att May day for the stormey weather which may continue a weeke or a fortnight, it is referred to the sworne men when they shall goe; and such like for theire horses. If any man wilbe att charges to measure his owne improvement he may. And it is thought good that our penny calfes shall goe to moore a moneth after May day. And we judge and award that noe man shall drive his sheepe on the gathring day but unto theire owne heafe that the same goods belongs to, upon paine as abovesaid for every defalt vi d. And we judge and award that they may have thirteen oxen upon height of Lingmall. October 14th 1664 Wee doe confirme and allowe of this order and byerlawe. Pa: Curwen Jo: Clarke

APPENDIX I: AWARD OF THE JURY OF THE BARON COURT OF WASDALE HEAD, 1664

171

NOTES TO TEXT 4.1 'forrestmale': literally 'forest money', the payment made by the tenants for grazing their stock on the lord's forest, preserving the memory of the forest status of the fells (Winchester 1987, p. 84). 4.4 'rydeing time': the mating season. 4.5 'riggalts': incompletely castrated rams. 4.10 'penny calves': meaning unclear; 'great goods': cattle and horses, as opposed to sheep. 4.20 'yeates': gates.

I

1n

THE HARVEST OF THE HILLS

DOCUMENT 5: BYELAWS AT HALTON GILL [YW], 1579

The final two documents bring us as close as it is possible to come to decision-making in the hill farming hamlets. Both are brief statements of local byelaws, apparently drawn up by hamlet communities and enrolled in the record of the manor court of which the hamlet in question was a member. As with the award of the court at Wasdale Head (Document 4), it is not clear to what extent these byelaws re-iterate ancient custom or lay out new regulations. They are presumably to be interpreted as responses to local disagreements, the nature of which can only be surmised from the byelaws themselves. Unlike the more formal paine lists, these are concerned exclusively with the day-to-day practicalities of hill farming: the upkeep of fences; grazing rights and stints.

Figure A.4. Halton Gill, nestling between dale-bottom meadows and fellside pastures at the head of Littondale.

Halton Gill (SD 88 76) is a small clustered hamlet, deep in the Yorkshire dales at the head of Littondale (Fig. A.4). It contained ten tenements in 1496 (Michelmore 1974, p. 22). Part of Fountains Abbey's property in Craven, Halton Gill fell within the jurisdiction of the court of Litton. Each of the constituent hamlet settlements retained its own identity: the call list grouped the tenants under five headings (Cosh, Foxup, Halton Gill, Litton and Horton), each division bringing its own presentments to the court. In 1581, for example, the court noted that 'ther ys not any presentment concernynge neyghborhead in Foxehopp presented this two yere nor for Lytton this yere'.

APPENDIX: I BYELAWS AT HALTON GILL, 1579

t73

I

The text below is entered in the Litton court roll for 14 May 1579 (YAS, DD 121/1/2, f. 24) and is printed by permission of Yorkshire Archaeological Society. DOCUMENT 5: TEXT

Haltongill bylaws 1. Imprimis that no inhabitor ther shall kepe any riggold tuppes to com emonges ther ewes in ryding tyme, peyn iii s iiii d. 5.2 2. Item that every inhabitor shall make & uphold ther dikes & fenses to save their neybors harmeles from Pekearsenoke to the east corner of John Ellyson gresse garth in peyn every gapp iiiid. 5.3 3. Item that every inhabitant shall make upp ther yeates & dikes about ther mores & field before myd aprill day in peyn of every yeat & gapp iii s iiii d. 5.4 4. Item that every inhabitor shall smytt ther shepe which they fest with a buy smytt to be knowne from them which they kepe at home in peyn of every shepe iiii d, and that none shall get any £leathers or gresse after they begyn to mmoe in peyn of every burden xii d. 5.5 5. Item that every inhabitant shall kepe ther stint both winter & somer in field & pasture in peyn of iii s iiii d. 5.6 6. Item that none shall put any horses in Haltongill field to pasture in hey tyme but during the tyme they lead their heye in peyn of every tyme xii d.

5.1

NOTES TO TEXT 5.4 'fleathers': recorded as an alternative name for'bur(d) blades' (YAS, DD 121/1/2, f. 14), which is identified as'bog rhubarb' (Smith 1961, p. 114), that is butterbur (Petasites hybridus).

THE HARVEST OF THE HILLS

I t74

DOCUMENT 6: 'A BYARLEY MAID AT ULTHWATT' [OUTHWAITE, ROEBURNDALE, La], 1580

Outhwaite (SD 61 65) lies on the flank of Roeburndale in the northern fringes of the Bowland fells. Roeburndale, a private forest attached to the manor of Hornby, was probably the location of the vaccaries in the manor recorded in 1336 (Farrer 1915, p. 40). Outhwaite was described as 'a pasture' in 1212 (Farrer 1903, p. 29). The manor of Hornby was extensive and the court's business was arranged by the consituent settlements, the burlawmen of each township, including Roeburndale, bringing in separate presentments. The following document appears to represent a set of agreements among neighbours, enrolled in the formal record of the court. The text below, entered in the record of Hornby court capital held 12 October 1580 (Hornby Castle muniments, Hornby court books, vol. II, ff. 60-60v.), is printed by permission of Mr D. R. Battersby. DOCUMENT 6: TEXT

A Byarley maid at Ulthwatt. A byarley and orders maide by the tenantes of Hulthwatt as is hereunder sett downe in articles the xii 0 daie of October by the consentes of all the said tenantes anno regni Elizabethe regine &c. xxii 0 as foloweth: 6.1

6.2 6.3

6.4 6.5 6.6 6. 7 6.8

6.9

Imprimis that every tenaunt of Ulthwat shall kepe there styntt in the fyld in the eatyshe tyme, that is to saye every xx 5 rent to have xxiiii bease gate, every marke rent xvi bease gatte & every x 5 rent xii bease gate, and what tenant soever breake this stint to forfayt to lord for every tyme vi 5 viii d. Item that there shall no tenant of Ulthwatt take no oxen into there somer pasture to geyst sub pena every tyme iii 5 iiiid. Item that every tenant of Ulthwatt kepe there old styntt in there somer pastures; that is every marke rent nyne heade of bease and yf any tenant take any geyst into the said pastures that shall chaunge there styntt all somer tyme without lycens of all there neybours; nor take iiii calves for a best nor to put any horses into the new close in the somer tyme; nor to put geyse into eythe Cow Close subpena every article iii 5 iiiid. Item that the said tenantes shall freth there somer pastures at myddaprill daye yerely and to make all there rynge hedges able by the same daye yerely sub pena eyther article iii s iiii d. Item to putt into there somer pastures the xx daye of Maye and not affore sub [penal every one to lord xiid. Item that no tenaunt shall take no horses into the eatyshe nor in the wynter tyme into none of there tenementes butt at most every noble rent one horse sub pena iii s iiii d. Item that every tenant kepe there swyne yoked and ringht at all tymes in the yere, allwayes upon warning gyven them of the rest of there neybours subpena xiid. Item that no tenant shall putt into any of there gresses a styrke for a calve, that is to saye that calve that is calved beffore Martynmas daye to go the next so mer for a styrke sub pena iii s iiii d. Item that yf any tenant of Ulthwatt do tether any horses in the fyld by night to forfaytt for every tyme iii s iiii d.

APPENDIX I: 'A BYARLEY MAID AT ULTHWATT', 1580

175

NOTES TO TEXT 6.1 'eatyshe tyme': 'edish' or 'foggage' time, during which stock grazed the aftermath after the crop had been gathered. 6.2 'geyst': to agist. 6.6 noble: coin with the value of 6s. Sd. (later lOs.).

APPENDIX II

Upland Manor Court Records used in this study Unless otherwise stated, the documents cited below are the records of court proceedings, usually preserved in court rolls or court books. Dates are the outer dates of records consulted: they do not necessarily indicate a complete sequence of records.

Place

Records

Dates

Reference

verdicts

1649-1713 1473-1684 1597 (copy) 1597 1683-94 1696-1725 1538 1678-19th and see Derwentfells 1472-1534 1585-1674 1683-94 1605-35

DUL, HN/C.176/9-10 PRO, ADM74/1/1-10 NRO, EP 46/85 see Appendix I: Doc. 2 Keswick Museum 4692 CRO, D/GN/1/1 PRO, DL30/32/281 CRO, D/Lec/120

1472-1597 1639-41 1677-19th 1604-35 1673-1766 1521-23 1587 1595 1678-1733

CRO, D/Lec/299 CRO, D/Lec/127 CRO, D/Lec/85 PRO, SC2/165/8 CRO, D/Lons/W8/7/1 CRO, D/Lec/299/18, 20 CRO (copy, 1692) CRO, D/Lec/299/27 CRO, D/Lec/94

Cumberland 'Above Gelt' (Gilsland) Alston Moor

drift roll paine roll Bewcastle Borrowdale Braithwaite & Coledale

verdicts

Caldbeck Castlerigg & Derwentwater1 Dacre estreats Derwentfells (incl. Brackenthwaite (to 1534), Braithwaite (to 1597), Lorton (to 1594))

Ennerdale

verdicts estreats

Eskdale & Wasdale drift roll verdicts

CRO, D/Lec/299/1-26 PRO, ADM74/2/2-18 Keswick Museum 4692 PRO, SC2/165/7

APPENDIX II: UPLAND MANOR COURT RECORDS USED IN THIS STUDY

Gilsland Barony (incl. Askerton, Castle Carrock, Cumrew)

Hutton John Kelton & Arlecdon Kinniside

paines

verdicts Loweswater

Millom Seigniory (incl. Bootie, Kirksanton, 'Satherton', Ulpha) N etherwasdale verdicts Ousby

1576-96 DUL, HN/C.178/1-7 1612-24 DUL, HN/C.178a/1-6 and see 'Above Gelt' 1566-1602 Hudleston 1969 1642-1717 CRO, D/Lons/W8/11/1-2 1595 CRO, D/Lec/299/27 CRO, D/Lec/8 1678-19th 1472-1534 CRO, D/Lec/299/1-26 CRO, D/Law/1/248 1614 1645-88 CRO, D/WM/11/121-2 1510-1679 1595 1678-1733 1530-1720

verdicts

1650s

Wasdale Head

award

Watermillock Wythbum

paine book award

1683-94 1610-11 and see Millom 1664 and see Eskdale 1610-1710 1606

Skirwith

Thomthwaite Ulpha

177

1677

CRO, D/Lons/WS/12/1-22 CRO, D/Lec/299/27 CRO, D/Lec/94 CRO,WD/Crk/M.1, M.12-M.13 CRO, WD/Ry, box 27, file 'Skirwith (unnumbered)' Keswick Museum 4692 CRO, D/Lons/W8/21/1 see Appendix I: Doc. 4 Hodgson 1883 CRO,DNan/Wythbum box ibid.

Co. Durham

Edmundbyers Weardale

orders verdicts

1364-82 1602 1598-1613 1595-1607

Booth 1889 DUL, WCP/45 DUL, WCP/48, 51 PRO, SC2/171/12 (see Appendix I: Doc. 3)

Lancashire Bowland Clitheroe Honour Accrington Colne (incl. Trawden Forest) Ightenhill

see Yorkshire (West Riding) 1509-67 1425-1567 1425-1567

Farrer 1913 Farrer 1897 Farrer 1912

I

THE HARVEST OF THE HILLS

I 178

1561

Whitaker 1878, ii. pp.227-8

Furness Fells Colton, Hawkshead

1538

Hawkshead Hornby Lordship

1546 1561 1586 1537-88

1579-1620 1477 1638-64 1524-45 1477

Brownbill 1919, pp. 678-85 LRO, DDSa/29/1 PRO, DL 30/80/1086 West 1774, pp. 157-67 Hornby Castle, Hornby ct.bks. I (1537-57), II (1578-88); see Appendix I: Doc. 6 LRO, DDLk/1/1 PRO, DL30/79/1028 Hornby Castle muniments CRO, BD/HJ/200/Torver/1 PRO, DL30/79/1028

verdicts

1629-63 1627-64 1653-73 1618-49 1649-53

NRO 672/1/PR/16-115 NRO 672/1/PR/A1-A21 PRO, ADM74/3/2 Alnwick Castle, C.XI.l Alnwick Castle, C.XI.2a

Crosthwaite & Lyth Grasmere, Langdale

verdict

Langdale Shap Staveley

verdict paines verdicts

1659 1560 1599-1610 1654 1578-1747 1650-78

Strickland Ketel Thornthwaite Windermere (incl. Ambleside, Troutbeck)

paine roll

c. 1545 1626-34

CRO, D/Lons/LS/2/11/28 CRO, D/Lons/LS/2/11/1 CRO, D/Lons/LS/2/11/6 CRO, D/Lons/LS/2/11/15 Whiteside 1903 CRO, D/Lons/LS/2/11/252, 23, 99 CRO, D/Lons/LS/2/4/11 CRO, D/Lons/LS/2/20/1

1441-43 15th cent. 1560

PRO, SC2/207/121-122 see Appendix I: Doc. 1 CRO, D/Lons/LS/2/11/1

Extwistle

paine list

award

Lowick Quernmore Tatham To rver Wyresdale

Northumberland Allendale Kirkhaugh Redesdale (Harbottle)

Westmorland

jury charge

APPENDIX II: UPLAND MANOR COURT RECORDS USED IN THIS STUDY

179

Yorkshire (North Riding) Applegarth

1453-54

Bellerby

1418-71 1492 1496

Bowes, Arkengarthdale & New Forest Cotherstone

1441 1431-1626 1446 1511 1546

Cotherstone & Hunderthwaite Fremington

1525-60 1615-41 1446-75

Lartington

1416-1699

verdicts

1546 Mickleton (incl. Holwick, Lune)

1433-76 1458-75 1472

verdicts Wensleydale (Dale Grange)

1511 1562-1674 1466-1561

DRO, D/St/E.3/1/4; NYCRO, ZJX 3/1/53 NYCRO, ZDX (MIC 1145) NYCRO, ZJX 3/1/68 (MIC 2004) Essex RO, D/DLIM.106 BL, Harl. Roll G.23 NYCRO, ZPS 1/4-35 (MIC 964) DRO, D/St/E.3/1/4 Essex RO, D/DLIM.107 NYCRO, ZJX 3/1/117 (MIC 2004) DRO, D/Bo/A.801 DRO, D/Bo/A.802-A.817 NYCRO, ZJX 3/1/46, 53, 60, 65 (MIC 2004) NYCRO, ZPS 1/1-88 (MIC 964) NYCRO, ZJX 3/1/117 (MIC 2004) DRO, D/St/E.3/1/4 NYCRO, ZPS 1/12-14 (MIC 964) NYCRO, ZJX 3/1/63 (MIC 2004) Essex RO, D/DL/M.107 DRO, D/St/E.3/1/6-16 BL, Egerton Rolls, 8683-6,8699-8700

Yorkshire (West Riding) Airton Barden Forest Bentham & Ingleton Bowland (Slaidburn court)

1603-28 and see Malhamdale 1542-93 1506 1392-4 1514-15 1519-70

LRO, DD:Ma, box 17 YAS, DD 121/3/1 PRO, SC2/211/68 LRO, DDHCl, Slaidburn ct r. no. 1 PRO, DL 30/78/1019 LRO, DDHCl, Slaidburn ct r. nos. 2-46

I

I

tso

THE HARVEST OF THE HILLS

Bowland Forest (Whitewell court) Buckden & Starbotton Calton

Dent Giggleswick

estreats byelaws

Kettlewell Langstrothdale

estreats

Litton

extracts

1554-1628 1545-92 1536-46 1603-24 and see Malhamdale 1613-27 1564-1602 and see Settle 1614 1547-57 1559-97 undated 2

1558-62 1648-53 1457 1420

1663-1718 1523-42 1666-1719 1678-97 1655-1807

SRO, RHll/14/2 Dickinson 1937 Sheddon-Dobie 1884 SRO, RH11/71/1 Gunn & Gunn 1905

1560-87 extracts

undated 3 1534

Malhamdale Sedbergh Settle & Giggleswick

PRO, SC2/211/33 Brayshaw & Robinson 1932,pp. 83-7 PRO, SC2/211/69 YAS, DD 121/1/1 YAS, DD 121/1/4 BL, Additional MS 40010, ff. 31-31v. Michelmore 1981, pp.303-11 YAS, DD 121/1/2 (see Appendix 1: Doc. 5) BL, Additional MS 40010, ff. 14v.-16v. Michelmore 1981, pp.303-11 LRO, DDMa, box 9 LRO, DDMa, box 17 NYCRO, ZDX (MIC 1145) YAS, DD 121/112/22

1534

Malham

LRO, DDHCl, box 86 YAS, DD 121/1/3 LRO, DDMa, box 9 LRO, DDMa, box 17

Southern Scotland Carrick Bailiary (Ayrshire) Carnwath (Lanarkshire) Corshill (Ayrshire) Pentland (Midlothian) Stichill (Roxburghshire)

NOTES 1. Manor called'Keswick and Castlerigg'in court rolls 1585-95. 2. Abstracts probably made in 15th century. 3. Abstracts probably made in 15th century.

Bibliography Note: The manor court records on which this study is based are listed in Appendix II. Other archive sources are cited in end notes. Standard works of reference are not included below. Adams, I. H. (1973) 'The legal geography of Scotland's common lands', Revue de l'Institut de Sociologie, 2, pp. 259-332. Adames, Jonas (1603) The Order of Keeping a Court Leet and Court Baron, London. Facsimile of 1650 edition printed by Manorial Society's Publications, No.8, London, 1914. Appleby, Andrew B. (1978) Famine in Tudor and Stuart England, Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. Armstrong, AM., Mawer, A, Stenton, F. M., and Dickens, Bruce (1950-2) The Place-Names of Cumberland, 3 vols. English Place-Name Society XX-XXII, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Ashcroft, M. Y. (1984) Documents relating to the Swaledale Estates of Lord Wharton in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, North Yorkshire County Record Office Publications 36. Atkin, Mary A (1990-1) 'The medieval exploitation and division of Malham Moor', Nomina, 14, pp. 61-71. Atkinson, J. C. (ed.) (1884) Quarter Sessions Records, North Riding Record Society, Vols I-II. Ault, Warren 0. (1960) 'Village assemblies in medieval England', Album Helen Maud Cam, i. pp. 13-35. Louvain: Studies Presented to the International Commission for the History of Representative and Parliamentary Institutions XXIII. Ault, Warren 0. (1965) Open Field Husbandry and the Village Community: a study of agrarian by-laws in medieval England, Philadelphia: Transactions of American Philosophical Society, new ser. 55, pt.7. Ault, Warren 0. (1972) Open Field Farming in Medieval England: a study of village by-laws, London: George Allen & Unwin. Bagot, Annette (1962) 'Mr. Gilpin and manorial customs', CW2, 62, pp. 224-45. Bailerr Mark (1989) 'The concept of the margin in the medieval English economy', Economic History Review, 2nd ser. 42 (1), pp. 1-17. Bain, J. (1894-6) Calendar of Letters and Papers relating to the Affairs of the Borders of England and Scotland, 2 vols, London: HMSO. Barrow, G. W. S. (1992) Scotland and its Neighbours in the Middle Ages, London: Hambledon Press. Bil, Albert (1990) The Shieling, 1600-1840: the case of the central Scottish Highlands, Edinburgh: John Donald. Birrell, Jean (1987) 'Common rights in the medieval forest: disputes and conflicts in the thirteenth century', Past & Present, 117, pp. 22-49. Blum, Jerome (1971) 'The internal structure and polity of the European village community from the fifteenth to the nineteenth century', Journal of Modern History, 43, pp. 541-76. Booth, John (ed.) (1889) Halmota Prioratus Dunelmensis, Surtees Societ_Yr 82. Bown, C. J. and Shipley, B. M. (1982) Soil and Land Capability for Agriculture: South-East Scotland, Aberdeen: Macaulay Institute for Soil Research. Brayshaw, Thomas and Robinson, Ralph M. (1932) A History of the Ancient Parish of Giggleswick, London: Halton & Co. Brears, Peter C. D. (1974) 'Oatcake in the West Riding', Folklife, 12, pp. 55-9. Breay, John (1996) Light in the Dales, Norwich: Canterbury Press. Brown, W. (1892) Yorkshire Inquisitions Volume I, YAS Record Series 12.

I

tsz

THE HARVEST OF THE HILLS

Brown bill, J. (ed.) (1916, 1919) Coucher Book of Furness Abbey Volume II (parts ii and iii), Manchester: Chetham Society, new series 76, 78. Calendar of Inquisitions Miscellaneous, 7 vols (1916-69), London: HMSO. Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem, 16 vols (1904-74), London: HMSO. Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem, Second Series, 3 vols (1898-1956), London: HMSO. Charlton, D. B. and Day, J. C. (1979) 'Excavation and field survey in upper Redesdale, Part II', Archaeologia Aeliana, 5th series, 7, pp. 207-33. Chippendall, W. H. (ed.) (1939) A Sixteenth-Century Survey and Year's Account of the Estates of Hornby Castle, Lancashire, Manchester: Chetham Society, new series, 102. Coggins, Denis (1986) Upper Teesdale: the archaeology of a North Pennine Valley, Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, British Series 150. Collingwood, W. G. (1930) 'The medieval fence of Rydal and other linear earthworks', CW2, 30, pp. 1-7. Crossley, E. W. (1943) 'The manor of Cotherston with Hunderthwaite: extracts from the custom book', YAJ, 35, pp. 330-8. Davis, J. M. and Beckett, John V. (1999) 'Animal husbandry and agricultural improvement: the archaeological evidence from animal bones and teeth', Rural History, 10, pp. 1-17. Denyer, Susan (1991) Traditional Buildings and Life in the Lake District, London: Gollancz/National Trust. Dickinson, Frances (1996) The Reluctant Rebel, Newcastle upon Tyne: Cresset Books. Dickinson, W. C. (ed.) (1937) Court Book of the Barony of Carnwath, Edinburgh: Scottish Hist. Soc. 3rd ser. val. 29. Dietrich, S. C. (1973) 'Liberties and Lawlessness: reiver society in Tudor Tynedale and Redesdale', Ph.D. thesis, Cornell University. Dilley, RobertS. (1967) 'The Cumberland court leet and use of the common lands', CW2, 67, pp. 125-51. Dilley, RobertS. (1973) 'Common land in Cumbria, 1500-1850', MPhil. thesis, University of Cambridge. Dilley, Robert S. (1974) 'The meaning of acrewall', CW2, 74, pp. 29-32. Dilley, RobertS. (1991) 'Agricultural Change and Common Land in Cumberland 1700-1850', Ph.D thesis, McMaster University. Dilley, Robert S. (1997) 'Rogues, raskells and turkie faced jades: malediction in the Cumbrian manorial courts', CW2, 97, pp. 143-51. Dixon, Philip (1972) 'Shielings and bastles: a reconsideration of some problems', Archaeologia Aeliana, 4th ser. 50, pp. 249-58. Dixon, Piers (1994)'Field systems, rig and other cultivation remains in Scotland: the field evidence', inS. Foster and T. C. Smout, (eds.), The History of Soils and Field Systems, Aberdeen: Scottish Cultural Press, pp. 26-52. Dodgshon, Robert A (1981) Land and Society in Early Scotland, Oxford: Clarendon Press. Dodgshon, Robert A (1983) 'Agricultural change and its social consequences in the southern uplands of Scotland, 1600-1780', in T. M. Devine and D. Dickson (ed.), Ireland and Scotland 1600-1850, Edinburgh: John Donald, pp. 46-59. Drury, J. Linda (1978) 'Durham palatinate forest law and administration, specially in Weardale up to 1440', Archaeologia Aeliana, 5th ser. 6, pp. 87-105. Drury, J. Linda (1987) 'More stout than wise: tenant right in Weardale in the Tudor period', in David Marcombe (ed.), The Last Principality: politics, religion and socieh; in the Bishopric of Durham 1494-1660, Nottingham: University of Nottingham Department of Adult Education, pp. 71-100. Dyer, Christopher (1980) Lords and Peasants in a Changing Society: the estates of the Bishopric of Worcester, 680-1540, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Ellwood, T. (1899) 'The mountain sheep: their origin and marking', CWl, 15, pp. 1-8. Ewbank, Jane (ed.) (1963) Antiquary on Horseback: the first publication of the collections of the Rev. Thos. Machell ... towards a history of the barony of Kendal, Kendal: Titus Wilson. Farrer, William (ed.) (1897, 1912-13) Court Rolls of the Honour of Clitheroe, 3 vols. Manchester (1897) and Edinburgh (1912-13). Farrer, William (1903, 1907, 1915) Lancashire Inquests, Extents and Feudal Aids, 3 parts; Record Society of Lancashire and Cheshire, Vols. 48, 54, 70.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

183

Farrer, William (1923, 1924) Records Relating to the Barony of Kendale, Kendal: Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society Record Series, N and V. Faull, Margaret L. and Moorhouse, Stephen A (ed.) (1981) West Yorkshire: an archaeological survey to AD 1500, West Yorkshire Metropolitan County Council. Fells Association (1907) The Shepherd's Guide: being an amalgamated association comprising the following societies: the East, South and North Fells Association, Barnard Castle: A & E. Ward. Ferguson, R. S. (ed.) (1890) A Cursory Relation of all the Antiquities and Familyes in Cumberland by Edmund Sandford, circa 1675, Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological SocietyTract Series, N. Fieldhouse, R. T. (1980) 'Agriculture in Wensleydale from 1600 to the present day', Northem History, 16, pp. 169-95. Fieldhouse, R. and Jennings, Bernard (1978) A History of Richmond & Swaledale, Chichester: Phillimore. Fleming, Andrew (1997) 'Towards a history of wood pasture in Swaledale (North Yorkshire)', Landscape History, 19, pp. 57-73. Fleming, Andrew (1998) Swaledale: valley of the wild river, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Fleming, Andrew and Ralph, Nicholas (1982) 'Medieval settlement and land use on Holne Moor, Dartmoor: the landscape evidence', Medieval Archaeology, 26, pp. 101-37. Fleming, Peter (1998) 'Stone foxtraps, borrans and goose bields', CW2, 98, pp. 269-76. Ford, J. Rawlinson and Fuller-Maitland, J. A (eds) (1931) John Lucas's History of Warton Parish, Kendal: Titus Wilson. Fox, H. S. A (ed.) (1996) Seasonal Settlement, Leicester: University of Leicester, Vaughan Paper No. 39. Fraser, Constance M. (ed.) (1991) Durham Quarter Sessions Rolls 1471-1625, Durham: Surtees Society, 199. Fraser, Constance M. and Emsley, Kenneth (eds) (1977) Court Rolls of the Manor of Wakefield Vol. I (1639-40), Leeds: Yorkshire Archaeological Society. Gelling, Margaret (1984) Place-Names in the Landscape, London: J. M. Dent. Gilbert, John M. (1979) Hunting and Hunting Reserves in Medieval Scotland, Edinburgh: John Donald Greenwell, W. and Knowles, W. H. (1895) 'Muggleswick', Trans. Architectural & Archaeological Soc. of Durham & Northumberland, 4, 286-315. [Page numbers cited are those of pamphlet reprint; copy in DUL.] Greenwood, C. (ed.) (1915) Modus Tenendi Cur' Baron' cum Visu Franci Plegii, London: Manorial Society, Publication No.9. Gunn, G. and Gunn, C. B. (eds) (1905) Records of the Baron Court of Stitchill 1655-1807, Edinburgh: Scott., Hist. Soc. 1st ser. vol. 50. Hair, Nick and Newman, Caron (1998) 'Excavations at Crosedale Beck in Howgill Part II', Sedbergh Historian, 4 (1), pp. 2-6. Harbottle, Barbara and Newman, T. G. (1973) 'Excavation and survey on the Starsley Burn, North Tynedale, 1972', Archaeologia Aeliana 5th ser. 1, pp. 137-75. Hardin, Garett (1968) 'The tragedy of the commons', Science, 162 (13 Dec. 1968), pp. 1243-8. Harris, Brian and Ryan, Gerard (1967) An Outline of the Law Relating to Common Land, London: Sweet & Maxwell. Harrison, Christopher (1997) 'Manor courts and the governance of Tudor England', in Christopher Brooks and Michael Lobban (eds), Communities and Courts in Britain 1150-1900, London: Hambledon, pp. 43-59. Harrison, J. V. (1967) 'Five Bewcastle wills 1587-1617', CW2, 67, pp. 93-111. Hartley, Marie and Ingilby, Joan (1976) Life and Tradition in West Yorkshire, London: J. M. Dent. Harvey, P .D. A (1999) Manorial Records, London: British Records Association (revised edition). Hearnshaw, F. J. C. (1908) Leet Jurisdiction in England, Southampton Record Society. Hodgson, John (1828) A History of Northumberland, Newcastle upon Tyne: E. Walker. Hodgson, W. (1883) 'A century of "paines" or local government in the time of the Stuarts, as illustrated by extracts from"A Paine Book for the Hamlet ofWeathermelock'", CWl, 7, pp. 27-47. Hodgson, William (1849) The Shepherd's Guide, or a delineation of the wool and ear marks of the different stocks of sheep in Lancashire, Cumberland & Westmorland, Ulverston: R. Soulby. Howard-Davies, Christine, Hair, Nick and Newman, Richard (1996)'Excavations at Crosedale Beck in Howgill, 1995', Sedbergh Historian, 3 (5), pp. 2-13.

I 1s4

THE HARVEST OF THE HILLS

Hovle, Richard W. (1987) 'An ancient and laudable custom: the definition and development of tenantright in ~orth-western England in the sixteenth century', Past & Present, 116, pp. 24-55. Hovle, Richard W. (1998) Review of Razi and Smith (1996) in Agricultural History Review, 46 (2), pp. 217-20. Hudleston, Nigel (1969) 'Elizabethan paines at Hutton John', CW2, 69, pp. 115-28. Hutchinson, William (1794) The History of Cumberland and some places adjacent, 2 vols. Carlisle: Jollie. Hutton, Ronald (1996) The Stations of the Sun: a history of the ritual year in Britain, Oxford: Oxford University Press. Ironfield, Christine (1978) 'The parish of Chipping in the seventeenth century', Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire, 127, pp. 25-46. Jarvis, R. A., Bendelow, V. C., Bradley, R.I., Carroll, D. M., Furness, R. R., Kilgour, I. N. L., and King, S. J. (1984) Soils and their Use in Northern England, Harpenden: Soil Survey of England and Wales Bulletin No. 10. Jennings, Bernard (ed.) (1967) A History ofNidderdale, Huddersfield: Advertiser Press. Jones, Graham (1986) 'Holy wells and the cult of St Helen', Landscape History, 8, pp. 59-75. Kershaw, Ian (1973) Bolton Priory: the economy of a northern monastery 1286-1325, Oxford: Oxford University Press. King, Walter J. (1980) 'Leet jurors and the search for law and order in seventeenth -century England:" galling persecution" or reasonable justice?', Histoire Sociale- Social History, no. 26, pp. 305-23. King, Walter J. (1982) 'Untapped resources for social historians: court leet records', Journal of Social History, 15, pp. 699-705. Kinsley, James (ed.) (1969) The Oxford Book of Ballads, Oxford: Oxford University Press. Lancaster, Kevin J. (1989) 'The purchase of the manor of Garsdale', Sedbergh Historian, 2 (4), pp. 9-14. Littledale, R. P. (1925) 'Some notes on the Patricksons of Ennerdale', CW2, 25, pp. 128-243. Mabey, Richard (1996) Flora Britannica, London: Sinclair-Stevenson. McCay, Bonnie J. and Acheson, James M. (ed.), (1987) The Question of the Commons: the culture and ecology of communal resources, Tucson: University of Arizona Press. Machin, R. (1977) 'The great rebuilding: a reassessment', Past & Present, 77, pp. 33-56. McDonnell, John (1988) 'The role of transhumance in northern England', Northern History, 24, pp. 1-17. McDonnell, John (1990) 'Upland Pennine hamlets', Northern History, 26, pp. 20-39. McDonnell, John (1992) 'Pressures on Yorkshire woodland in the later middle ages', Northern History, 28, pp. 110-25. McDowell, R. B. (ed.) (1991) The Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke Vol. IX, Oxford. McKinley, Richard (1981) The Surnames of Lancashire, London: Leopard's Head. MacQueen, Hector L. (1993) Common Law and Feudal Society in Medieval Scotland, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Maitland, F. W. and Baildon, W. P. (1891) The Court Baron, London: Selden Society, Vol. IV. Maley, Teresa and Elliot, Walter (eds.) (1993) Selkirk Protocol Books 1511-1547, Edinburgh: Stair Society and Walter Mason Trust. Marshall, J.D. (ed.) (1967) The Autobiography ofWilliam Stout of Lancaster 1665-1752, Manchester: Manchester University Press. Marshall, J.D. (1973) 'The domestic economy of the Lakeland yeoman 1660-1749', CW2, 73, pp. 190-219. Marshall, J.D. (1980)'Agrarian wealth and social structure in pre-industrial Cumbria', Economic History Review, 2nd series, 33 (4), pp. 503-21. Michelmore, D. J. H. (ed.) (1974) The Fountains Abbey Rental1495-6, privately printed. Michelmore, D. (ed.) (1981) Fountains Abbey Lease Book, YAS Record Series 140. Miller, Edward (ed.) (1991) The Agrarian History of England and Wales Vol. III, 1348-1500, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Morehouse, H. J. (ed.) (1877) 'A dyurnall, or catalogue of all my accions and expences from the 1st of January 1646, by Adam Eyre', Yorkshire Diaries and Autobiographies in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, Surtees Society, 65. Morris, Christopher (ed.) (1982) Illustrated Journeys of Celia Fiennes, London: Macdonald/Exeter: Webb & Bower.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

tss

I

Netting, Robert McC. (1976) 'What Alpine peasants have in common: observations on communal tenure in a Swiss village', Human Ecology, 4, pp. 135-46. N[orden], I[ohn] (1618) The Surveiors Dialogue, London: T. Snodham. Ogilvie, Astrid and Farmer, Graham (1997) 'Documenting the medieval climate', in Hulme, M. and Barrow, E. (ed.), Climate of the British Isles, London: Routledge, pp. 112-33. Ornsby, G. (ed.) (1878) Household Books of Lord William Howard of Naworth Castle, Surtees Society 68. Ostrom, Elinor (1990) Governing the Commons: the evolution of institutions for collective action, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Parry, M. L. (1978) Climatic Change, Agriculture and Settlement, Folkestone: Dawson. Parsons, Margaret (1993) 'Pasture farming in Troutbeck, Westmorland, 1550-1750', CW2, 93, pp. 115-30. Pearsall, W. H. (1950) Mountains and Moorlands, London: Collins. Pearson, Sarah (1985) Rural Houses of the Lancashire Pennines 1560-1760, Royal Commission on Historical Monuments (England), Supplementary series 10, London: HMSO. Pollard, Sidney (1997) Marginal Europe, Oxford: Clarendon Press. Porter, John (1978) 'Waste land reclamation in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries: the case of southeastern Bowland, 1550-1630', Trans Hist. Soc. Lanes & Ches., 127, pp. 1-23. Porter, John (1994) The Forest of Bowland: its landscape and history, Farnborough, privately printed (copy in LRO). Powley, Miss (1876) 'Past and present among the northern fells', CW1, 2, pp. 354-74. Raistrick, Arthur (1971) Old Yorkshire Dales, London: Pan Books. Raistrick, Arthur, and Jennings, Bernard (1965) A History of Lead Mining in the Pennines, London: Longman. Ramm, H. G., McDowall, R. W. and Mercer, Eric (1970) Shielings and Bastles, London: HMSO. Ratcliffe, D. A and Thompson, D. B. A (1988) 'The British uplands: their ecological character and international significance', in M. B. Usher and D. B. A Thompson (eds), Ecological Change in the Uplands, Oxford: Blackwell Scientific, pp. 9-36. Razi, Zvi and Smith, Richard M. (1996) 'The historiography of manorial court rolls', in Razi and Smith (eds), Medieval Society and the Manor Court, Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp. 1-35. RCAHMS (1994a) Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland, Southdean, Borders: an archaeological survey, Edinburgh: HMSO. RCAHMS (1994b) Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland, Glenesslin, Nithsdale: an archaeological survey, Edinburgh: HMSO. Redmonds, George (1973) Yorkshire West Riding, English Surnames series, I. London: Phillimore. Roberts, Brian K. (1977) Rural Settlement in Britain, Folkestone: Dawson. Robinson, Lilian (ed.) (1990) Court Rolls of Manor of Wakefield, 1651-2, YAS Wakefield Court Rolls Series, VIII. Robson, Ralph (1989) The Rise and Fall of the English Highland Clans, Edinburgh: John Donald. Robson, Michael (1987) A History of the Whitlaw Mosses (TS report prepared for Nature Conservancy Council). Rodwell, J. S. (ed.), (1992) British Plant Communities Vol. 3: Grasslands and Montane Communities, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Rollinson, William (1974) Life and Tradition in the Lake District, London: J. M. Dent. Ryder, M. L. (1976) 'The origin and history of British breeds of sheep', Ark, 3, pp. 166-72. Ryder, M. L. (1983) Sheep and Man, London: Duckworth. Rymer, L. (1976) 'The history and ethnobotany of bracken', Botanical Journal of Linnean Society, 73, pp. 151-76. Sanderson, Margaret H. B. (1982) Scottish Rural Society in the Sixteenth Century, Edinburgh: John Donald. Sanderson, Roundell Palmer (ed.) (1891) Survey of the Debateable and Border Lands adjoining the Realm of Scotland and belonging to the Crown of England taken AD 1604, Alnwick. Sanderson, Stuart F. (1971)'Sheep marks in Lakeland', Folk Life, 9, pp. 135-9. Searle, C. E. (1986) 'Custom, class conflict and agrarian capitalism: the Cumbrian customary economy in the eighteenth century', Past & Present, 110, pp. 106-33. Searle, C. E. (1993) 'Customary tenants and the enclosure of the Cumbrian commons', Northern History, 29, pp. 126-53.

I

1s6

THE HARVEST OF THE HILLS

Shedd on-Dobie, John (ed.) (1884) 'Corshill Baron -Court Book', Archaeological and Historical Collections Relating to the Counties of Ayr and Wigtown Vol. IV, pp. 65-259, Edinburgh. Slack, Paul (1988) Poverty and Policy in Tudor and Stuart England, London: Macmillan. Smith, Tom C. (1894) History of the Parish of Chipping in the county of Lancaster, Preston: Whitehead. Smith, A H. (1961) Place-Names of the West Riding ofYorkshire, Part VI, English Place-Name SocietyVol. xxxv; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Smith, A H. (1967) Place-Names ofWestmorland, 2 parts, English Place-Name SocietyVols XLII-XLIII, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Smout, Chris and Watson, Fiona (1997) 'Exploiting semi-natural woods, 1600-1800' in T. C. Smout (ed.) Scottish Woodland History, Edinburgh: Scottish Cultural Press, pp. 86-100. Sobo, Muriel (ed.) (1995) Parliamentary Survey of Muggleswick 1649, Durham County Local History Society. Spray, M. (1981) 'Holly as fodder in England', Agricultural History Review, 29, pp. 97-110. Swain, J. T. Industry Before the Industrial Revolution: North-East Lancashire 1500-1640, Chetham Society 3rd series, 32. Manchester: Manchester University Press. Thirsk, Joan (ed.) (1967) The Agrarian History of England and Wales, Vol. IV, 1500-1640, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Thirsk, Joan (1973) 'Field systems of the East Midlands', in Alan R. H. Baker and Robin A Butlin (eds) Studies of Field Systems in the British Isles, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 232-80. Thirsk, Joan (ed.) (1984) The Agrarian History of England and Wales, Vol. V, part i, 1640-1750: regional famting systems, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Thomas, Keith (1971) Religion and the Decline of Magic, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. Thompson, B. L. (1954) 'The IN.indermere"Four and Twenty'", CW2, 54, pp. 151-64. Thompson, Bruce L. (1968) The Troutbeck Hundreds and the Common Lands ofTroutbeck, Westmorland, Kendal: Titus Wilson. Thompson, E. P. (1991) Customs in Common, London: Penguin. Thwaite, Hartley (ed.) (1968) Abstracts of Abbotside Wills 1552-1688, YAS Record Series 130. Tipping, Richard (1998) 'Towards an environmental history of the Bowmont valley and the northern Cheviot hills', Landscape History, 20, pp. 41-50. Todd, John M. (ed.) (1997) The Lanercost Cartulary, Gateshead: Surtees Society 203. Toulmin Smith, L. (ed.) (1964) The Itinerary of]ohn Leland, vols 4-5, London: Centaur Press. Trow-Smith, Robert (1957) A History of British Livestock Husbandry to 1700, London: Routledge. Tupling, G. H. (1927) Economic History of Rossendale, Manchester: Chetham Soc. new series, 86. Wallace, William (1890) Alston Moor: its pastoral people, its mines and miners (facsimile reprint, 1986), Newcastleupon-Tyne: Davis Books. Ward, Tam (1998) Glenochar Bastle House and Fermtoun, Biggar Museum Trust/Lanark and District Archaeological Society. Watts, S. J. (1971) 'Tenant-right in early seventeenth-century Northumberland', Northern History, 6, pp. 64-87. Welch, D. (1975)'Three Elizabethan documents concerning Milburn Fell, CW2, 75, pp. 136-49. Welford, Richard (1912) 'Alston manor paine roll', Archaeologia Aeliana, 3rd series, 8, pp. 264-71. West, Thomas (1774) The Antiquities of Furness, London: T. Spilsbury. \A/hitaker, T. D. (1876) History of the Original Parish of Whalley and Honour of Clitheroe, 4th edn., revised J. G. Nichols and P. A Lyons, London. Whitehead, G. Kenneth (1972) The Wild Goats of Great Britain and Ireland, Newton Abbot: David & Charles. Whiteside, J. (1903) 'Paines made at Shap', CW2, 3, pp. 150-62. Whyte, I. D. (1979a) Agriculture and Society in Seventeenth Century Scotland, Edinburgh: John Donald. \A/hyte, I. D. (1979b) 'Written leases and their impact on Scottish agriculture in the seventeenth century', Agricultural Histon; Review, 27, pp. 1-9. Willan, T. S. and Crossley, E. W. (eds) (1941), Three Seventeenth-Century Yorkshire Surveys, Leeds: YAS Record Series 104.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

ts7 I

Wilson, James (ed.) (1915) The Register of the Priory of St Bees, Surtees Society 126. Winchester, Angus J. L. (1978) 'Territorial Structure and Agrarian Organisation in Medieval and SixteenthCentury Copeland, Cumberland', Ph.D thesis, University of Durham. Winchester, Angus J. L. (1983) 'The castle household and demesne farm at Millom in 1513-14', CW2, 83, pp. 85-99. Winchester, Angus J. L. (1984) 'Peat storage huts in Eskdale' CW2, 84, pp. 103-15. Winchester, Angus J. L. (1986) 'The distribution and significance of "Bordland"in medieval Britain', Agricultural History Review, 34, pp. 129-39. Winchester, Angus J. L. (1987) Landscape and Society in Medieval Cumbria, Edinburgh: John Donald. Winchester, Angus J. L. (1998) 'Wordsworth's"Pure Commonwealth"? yeoman dynasties in the English Lake District, c. 1450-1750', Armitt Library Journal, 1, pp. 86-113. Winchester, Angus J. L. (forthcoming) 'Hill farming landscapes of medieval northern England' in Della Hooke (ed.) The Richest Historical Record, Society for Landscape Studies.

Index Abbotside (YN), 18-20 Above Derwent (Cu), 18-20 Accrington (La), 138 acregarth, 53, 73n see also head-dyke agistment, 29, 32, 81, 93-8, 109

Agrarian History of England and Wales, 3 Airton ryw), 45, 64, 94, 129 Allendale (Nb), 10, 56, 73, 81-2, 93, 94, 113, 117, 129 Alston Moor (Cu), 6, 7, 9, 13, 16, 18-20, 24n, 40, 46, 48, 53, 54, 86, 88, 89, 90, 96, 117, 129, 133, 136, 141, 151 drift roll, 112-13 paine roll, 37, 39, 107, 160-5 Ambleside (VVe), 30, 95, 118, 125, 135, 152, 158 Applegarth (YN), 158n Applethwaite (VVe), 152-3, 156-7 arable cultivation, 5-6, 9, 18, 20 Arkengarthdale (YN), 13, 16, 83, 84, 94 Arkholme (La), 130 Arlecdon (Cu), 81 Askerton (Cu), 55, 88, 89, 95, 96, 117 North Moor, 85 Askrigg (YN), 70 Ault, Warren, 1, 4, 33, 42, 47 Austhwaite (Cu), 28 Ayle Shield (Nb), 58, 90 Aysgarth (YN), 128 Bailey, Mark, 3 Bainbridge (YN), 13 bake stones, 139-40 Bampton (VVe), 131 Bardale (YN), 69 Barden forest ryw), 48, 57, 136 Barnard Castle (Du), 63 Barton (VVe), 116, 118, 128, 131 beastgate see stints Beckermonds ryw), 31,67

Bellerby (YN), 45, 72 bent, 138 Berrier (Cu), 128 Bewcastle (Cu), 5, 67, 83, 85, 139 birch, 124, 125 Bishopdale (YN), 69 Black Death, 6 Blaze Fell (Cu), 136 Blean (YN), 59, 69 Bleasdale (La), 71 Bootie (Cu), 44, 66, 73, 119, 133, 136 Border hills, 2, 8-9, 11, 12, 18-21 Borders, the, 17, 18-21, 23, 85, 98, 151, 158n, 160 reiving, 46, 162 service, 16, 17 Survey, 88, 89, 139 warfare, 6, 17 Borrowdale (Cu), 16, 21, 24n, 55, 104 Botton (La), 46, 74n boundaries, across waste, 27-32 see also field boundaries Bowden (Rox), 30 Bowes (YN}, 70, 72, 139 Moor, 8, 83 Bowes, Lady Jane, 68 Bowland (La, YW), 15, 24n, 45, 68, 117, 125, 141 court see Slaidburn forest, 34, 49n, 56, 57, 72, 83, 84, 96, 114, 136, 138, 139 swainmote, 37,40-1,47, 69 woodmote, 126 bracken, 7, 9, 133-6, 149 Brackenthwaite (Cu), 41 Bradford, West ryw), 45, SOn Braithwaite (Cu), 133, 135, 136, 137 court, 43 buchts, 59-60 Buckden ryw),45,5~59,64,81 Burke, Edmund, 46 burlawrnen,44-5,46, 129,149,174

INDEX

Burneside (We), 67, 158n Burnley (La), 68 butterbur, 67 Buttermere (Cu), 13, 62, 70, 72, 109 byelaws, 1-2,33,37-40, 150-1 compilations (texts of), 152-74 byrlaw courts, 34, 42-4, 47, 149, 150, 167 Caldbeck (Cu), 115, 130, 158n Calder abbey (Cu), 22, 109 Calton ('/W), 64, 105, 125, 129, 132, 139 Camden, William, 85 Carnforth (La), 138 Carnwath (Lnk), 83, 128, 136 Castle Carrock (Cu), 104, 114 Castlerigg (Cu), 48, 49n, 73, 92, 97, 104, 115, 132, 133, 137 cattle driving, 116-17 herd size, 18-20 husbandry, 54-7, 110-11 marks, 105 tethering, 66-7 trade, 17 see also cow pastures; drovers; stints cattlegates see stints charcoal-burning, 124 chase see forest Cheviot, 9, 21, 22, 85, 104 sheep,20 Chirdon (Nb), 93 Clarilaw (Rox), 30 Clitheroe (La), 45 coal, 139 Colne (La), 68, 139 commercial stock rearing, 17, 21-3, 148 common land, 1, 26, 148 see also meadows; open fields; waste common rights, 27, 32-3, 149 see also estovers; pasture rights; stone quarrying; turbary rights commonty, 30, 32, 47 Commonty Act, 30 Coniston (La), 21, 62 Conistone ('IW), 72 Consett (Du), 92 Copeland forest (Cu), 96, 167 Coquetdale (Nb), 85 corn marigold, 158n Corshill (Ayr), 45 Cotherstone (YN), 36, 45, 47, 63, 66, 67, 79, 81, 103, 10~ 121n, 129, 139, 151n

189 cottage settlement, 17, 39, 125, 149 cottagers, restrictions on, 48, 79-81, 104, 115, 129, 132-3, 136 Cotterdale (YN), 22, 114 courts baron, 33, 35, 37 barony, 33 leet, 33, 35, 40, 48 see also byrlaw courts; manor courts Coverdale (YN), 58, 72 cow pastures, 68-73, 110-11, 167 Craven ('IW), 8, 15, 58, 64, 66, 68, 97, 115 Cray ('fW), 44, 114 Cronkley (YN), 68, 86, 115 Crook (We), 125 Crosby Ravensworth (We), 64 Crossthwaite (YN), 28, 49n, 58, 90, 117 Crosthwaite and Lyth (We), 136 cultivation features, 6, 7, 160 see also arable cultivation Cumrew (Cu), 21, 61 Cupar-Angus, 42 custom, 46-7 customary tenure, 16, 148 cuthill courts, 43 Dacre, Lord William, 117, 118 Daddryshield (Du), 117 Dale Grange (Wensleydale, YN), 42, 69 Dalton in Furness (La), 44 Deepdale ('IW), 31, 44, 114 deer, 28, 126 parks,22,83, 124,152 Denton, Thomas, 5, 21, 136, 160 Derwentfells (Cu), 96, 97 court, 41, 42, 43, 44, 103, 104, 119 Derwentwater, Lord, 47 Devon, 65 Dietrich, S. C., 17 Dilley, Robert, 33 Dockray (Cu), 130 dogs, 28, 115-16, 166 Downham (La), 109, 118 driftways, 56, 111-13,130-1,167,169 drovers, 20, 81, 149 Dunnerdale (La), 62, 104, 131 Durham, bishop of, 84, 166 Durham Priory, 44, 79, 104, 115 ear marks, 105-7 economy, upland, 3, 18-21, 147 Eden valley (Cu, We), 5, 96, 129

I t9o

THE HARVEST OF THE HILLS

Edgerston (Rox), 21, 22 edish see foggage Edmundbvers (Du), 67, 158n Egremont~ lordship court (Cu), 42 Ellwood, T., 107 Elsdon parish (Nb), 18-20 Elshieshiels (Dmf), 45 enclosure, 52, 146-7, 148 of open fields, 56, 62-6 of waste, 3, 30, 47, 68-71 Ennerdale (Cu), 13, 82, 84, 109, 114 environment, upland, 5-10, 23, 78, 123, 126, 133, 136 Eskdale (Cu), 105, 109, 110-11, 130, 131, 167 Eskdale (Dmf), 13 estovers, 32, 123, 133-8 Ettrick forest (Slk), 10, 13, 16, 21 Exchequer, court of, 83, 96 Extwistle (La), 45, 80, 117

field boundaries, 62-6 firewood, 124-5 'flaws' (turf), 126-7, 129 Fleming of Rydal, 21 foggage,54-6,66-8 'foldbreak', 40, 118 forests (hunting), 10-11, 12, 13, 14-15,27, 28-30 courts, 34, 35-7 pasture rights in, 32, 84, 94 forest silver, 29, 84, 94, 98 Fountains Abbey, 13, 58, 84, 97, 172 jury charge, 37, 39, 44, 103, 154, 158n fox, control of, 105 Fremington (YN), 45 'fristneck' cattle, 82, lOOn fuel, 124-5 see also gorse; heather; peat; wood Furness Abbey, 69 Furness Fells (La), 16, 24n, 69, 95, 129, 141

Faeroe Islands, 107 Farlam (Cu), 55 Farleton (La), 128, 135, 138 feast days All Saints, 55, 56, 57, 163 Beltane, 55 Christmas, 164 Easter, 37 Ellenmas see St Helen Invention of Holy Cross, 55, 94 Lady Day: 25 Mar, 55-6,58, 104, 146-7, 170; 15 Aug, 88; 8 Sep, 96, 97, 170 Lammas,6~ 88,116,163 Martinmas, 55, 56, 57, 72, 104, 174 May Day, 55, 56, 64, 114, 116, 129, 132, 170 Michaelmas, 37, 56, 57, 58, 66, 90, 94, 104, 114, 132, 135-6, 138, 139, 164, 170 Mid April Day, 55, 67, 114, 163 Rood Day, 88, 163 St Andrew, 58, 163 St Bartholemew, 135, 138 St Catherine ('Kathren'), 169 St Helen, 37, 55, 66, 88, 90, 114, 146-7, 163, 164 StJames,66, 138,170 St Lawrence, 135 St Luke, 57 StMary Magdalene ('Maudlenday'), 67, 89 St Matthew, 135 St Peter, 163 StThomas, 58, 170 Whitsuntide, 37, 66, 89 fences, repair of, 39, 45, 46

Galloway, 104, 123 Garrigill (Cu), 9, 160, 163 Garsdale (YW), 69 geese, 104-5 Geltsdale (Cu), 94 Giggleswick (YW), 45, 57, 119 Gilsland (Cu), 82, 85, 94, 104, 123 Glencorse (Mdl), 83 Glencoyne (We), 134 Glengeith (Lnk), 60 goats, 18-19,104 Goosnargh (La), 93 gorse, 138 granges see monastic estates Grasmere (We), 29, 60, 62, 66, 69, 79, 116, 117, 126 Grassington (YW), 6 grassland management see meadows; pastures grazing rights see pasture rights Greskine (Dmf), 21, 59 Greystoke (Cu), 95, 128 Grindleton \'!W), 125 Grisedale (We), 30 Gunnolfsmoors (La), 27 Halton Gill (YW), 31, 44, 109, 172-3 hamlet communities, 13, 16, 30-2, 34, 69-71 byelaws, 172-4 Hanlith (YIN), 59 Harbottle (Nb), 42, 87, 139 Hardin, Garrett, 26 Harrington family, 22 Harrison, Christopher, 150

191

INDEX

Hartlington ryw), 136 Haslingden (La), 68 Haverigg (Cu), 114 hay, 54, 81, 88 see also meadows; winter feed haybote, 62-3 head courts, 37, 41-4 head-dyke,52-5, 146-7 heafs, 111-12 heather, 7, 8, 136-7 Hebden ryw), 136 hedges,62-6, 125,141-2,146-7 Helton 0Ne), 64, 65, 114 Helvellyn (Cu, We), 30 herding regulations, 114-16 herdsmen, 114 Herdwick sheep, 20, 59, 105 Heversham 0Ne), 105 hog houses, 58, 69 holly, 57 Holwick (YN), 38, 49n, 58, 64, 79, 96, 107, 117 Holydean (Rox), 127 Hope forest (YN), 84 horn marks, 105, 109, 120n Hornby (La), 44, 45, 66, 72, 73, 104, 125, 128, 129, 130, 151n, 174 horses, 18-20, 103 Hoyle, Richard, 47 Hudleston family, 68 Hunderthwaite (YN), 55, 58, 67, 68, 115, 136, 139 hunting, 34, 39, 40 see also fox, control of Hutton John (Cu), 49n, 63, 66, 116, 118 llton ('Ilkton', YN), 27 impounding of livestock, 40, 96, 116-18 Ingram (Nb), 6 inmates, 39, 48, 115, 125, 133, 149 intakes, 68-9 intercommoning, 30, 78-9, 148 Jedburgh forest (Rox), 22, 54, 83, 85 Johnstoun of Elshieshiels, 21 jury charges, 37, 39-40, 44, 152-8 Keld 0Ne), 46 Kelton (Cu), 81, 114 Kendal barony 0Ne), 45, 97, 109, 125, 138, 152 Kentmere 0Ne), 21, 30, 84 Kerr family, 21 Kershopefoot (Cu, Dmf), 85 Keswick (Cu), 105, 133

Kettlewell ryw), 6, 72, 114 Kidland (Nb), 85, 88, 98 Killhope (Du), 94 King, Walter, 48 Kinniside (Cu), 65, 69, 132 Kirk Gill ('Kyrgyll', YW), 44, 79 Kirkburton ryw), 40 Kirkhaugh(Nb),58, 130,136, 165n Kirknewton (Nb), 21 Kirksanton (Cu), 44, 67, 72, 78, 114, 115, 125 Knaresborough forest ryw), 10 Lake District, 6-7, 10-11, 13-14, 16, 18-22 see also individual places Lammermuir Hills, 6 Lamplugh (Cu), 21 Lancaster, 133 forest of, 10, 37 Lancaster of Sockbridge, 21, 114, 118 Lanchester (Du), 79 landless, 48, 79, 151 see also cottagers; inmates Langdale 0Ne), 8, 112, 131 Langstrothdale ryw), 31, 37, 44, 67, 79, 81, 83, 84, 107, 114, 137, 138 Lartington (YN), 45, 55, 57, 58, 65, 72, 73, 74n, 104, 127, 132, 138, 139 Laversdale (Cu), 66, 104 lead mining, 13, 16, 17, 23, 148 leases, 16, 17, 21-2, 81, 90 Leland, John, 136 levancy and couchancy, 79-81, 96, 98, 147 Leyburn family, 114 Libberton (Lnk), 83, 128 Liddesdale (Rox), 11, 13, 16 ling see heather Litton ryw), 172, 173 Littondale ryw), 10, 67, 96, 103, 104, 138, 172 see also Halton Gill; Litton livestock joint ownership, 82, 97 management, 46, 109-18 restrictions, 103-4 see also cattle; goats; horses; pigs; sheep lodgers see inmates lodges (shielings), 86, 89, 92 Long Mynd (Shropshire), 105 Longsleddale 0Ne), 21, 30, 71, 84, 93, 97, 114, 119, 131 see also Sadgill lord's privileges, 39-40 Lorton (Cu), 21, 44, 109, 132

I

I t92 Loweswater (Cu), 68, 73, 81, 92, 119, 132, 158n Lowick (La), 59, 107 Lowther Hills, 21 Lune forest (YN), 21, 58, 65, 86, 88-90, 94, 96, 109, 115, 120n Lunedale (YN), 107 McDonnell, John, 93 Malham (YW), 55, 61, 67, 82, 115 Moor, 95, 103, 139 Mallerstang (We), 69, 96 manor courts, 1, 33-48, 148-51 juries, 40-2, 47-8, 149, 151 officers, 44-5, 149 records of, 176-80 see also byrlaw courts manorial waste see waste marks, livestock, 105-9 Marsden (La), 139 Martindale (We), 21, 114, 116-17, 118, 128 Marwood Hagg (Du), 63 Masham Moor (YN), 27, 28, 73n Matterdale (Cu), 49n, 56, 58, 116, 130 meadows, 7, 9, 67-8, 93 Melling (La), 130 Mellingshaw (Dmf), 21 Melmerby (Cu), 21, 126 Merton, Statute of, 27 Mickleton (YN), 16, 61, 63, 66, 67, 78, 86, 103, 109 court, 37, 38, 42, 88, 89, 90 Middlefell family, 112 Middleham lordship (YN), 5 Midlem (Rox), 30 Milburn (We), 86, 94, 138 milking, 56, 59, 92-3 Millom (Cu), 40, 43-4, 48, 57, 59, 79, 81, 104, 105, 107, 109, 111, 115, 119, 128, 129, 132, 137, 138, 151n minerals, 3, 138-9, 148 see also lead mining Miterdale (Cu), 110-11, 167 monastic estates, 31, 97 granges, 11, 13, 22, 30, 109 moor-burning, 136-7 Moorhouse, Stephen, 14 moorland, 7 see also waste Moresby, Christopher, 21 Mosedale (Cu), 128 Mosser (Cu), 33, 119 Muggleswick (Du), 79, 92, 104, 115, 124, 137 Mungrisdale (Cu), 21

THE HARVEST OF THE HILLS

'neighbourhood', good, 39-40, 45-7 Netherwasdale (Cu), 107, 108 New Forest (YN), 84 Newbiggin (We), 44 Newlands (Cu), 105, 114 Newton by Slaidburn (YW), 114 Nidderdale (YW), 16 Norden, John, 125,126,138 Northumberland, earl of, 167 open fields, 61-2 grazing rights in, 66-7 open/closed season, 54-6, 146 Ostrom, Elinor, 26, 148, 149 Otley (YW), 27 Oughtershaw (YW), 31, 79, 138 Ousby (Cu), 21, 45, 46, 49n, 57, 58, 59, 64, 66, 82, 129, 136 Outhwaite (Roeburndale, La), 44, 67, 72, 73, 174 outrake see driftways overleap, 78-9, 95, 116, 117, 148 overstint, 79 oxen, 18-20 paines see byelaws Parry, M., 6 partible inheritance, 13, 17, 87-8 pasture rights, 32, 45 in meadows, 67-8 in open fields, 66-7 on wastes, 78-99, 109-11 'without number', 79-82 see also driftways; levancy and couchancy; stints pastures enclosed, 52, 68-73, 99, 146-7 private, 32-3, 68, 94-6, 98 see also waste Patrickson of Ennerdale, 22 peasant colonisation, 11, 13 peat 7, 126-7 digging, 46, 126-33 see also turbary rights peat scales, 90, 130, 131 Pendle (La), 61, 68, 133, 139 Hill, 118 Pennine Hills, 7-8, 11, 13, 15-16, 18-20

see also individual places Pentland (Mdl), 45, 46, 47, 133 Hills, 83 pigs, 45, 103-4, 105, 122 pinfolds, 96, 97, 117

INDEX

place-names, significance of, 58-9, 85, 90-3, 136, 138, 139-40 Pollard, Sidney, 3 pollards, 57, 125 population growth, 13, 47, 124-5, 133, 140, 151 'pound loose', 117-18 Pringle family, 21 probate inventories, 18-20 Quernmore (La), 83 'rake' see driftways rams, control of, 57-8, 146, 147 Rannerdale (Cu), 119 Ravenstonedale 0Ne), 39 Redesdale (Nb), 8, 13, 16, 17, 18-20, 28, 32, 66, 98, 124 court see Harbottle shieling grounds, 85, 86-90, 93 regional contrasts, 6-9, 16-17, 18-23, 147-8 Renwick (Cu), 61 'rescue', 40, 118 Ribton (Cu), 96 Richmond lordship (YN), 5 Richmondshire (YN), 136 riggalds, 58 ring garth see head-dyke Roeburndale (La) see Outhwaite Romaldkirk parish (YN), 63 Rombaldsmoor 0/W), 27 roofing materials, 141 see also bracken; 'flaws'; heather; rushes; slate Rookhope (Du), 94 Rossendale (La), 13, 27, 68 routes to waste, 56, 58, 111-13, 130-1, 167 rushes, 137-8 Rutherford of Edgerston, 21-2 Rydal 0Ne), 29-30, 95, 115, 117, 118 Rylstone 0/W), 61 Sadgill 0/Ve), 81, 83, 93, 96, 101n, 117 St Johns in the Vale (Cu), 132 saints' days see feast days Sandford, Edmund, 160 'Satherton' (yVhicham parish, Cu), 44, 59, 111 Scalthwaiterigg 0/Ve), 107 Scott family, 21 Searle, Charles, 47 seasonal movement of livestock, 54-61, 72, 146 Sedbergh 0/W),55, 104,115 Sedbusk (YN), 97 Selkirk South Common (Slk), 30, 31

193 Setmurthy (Cu), 136 Settle 0/W), 45 settlement history, 13-18 Shap 0Ne),46,64, 72,80, 119,138 sheep breeds, 20, 105 flock size, 18-22 heafs, 111-12 husbandry, 57-61 marks,61, 105-9,162 Shepherd's Guide, 107 Shetland, 107 shieling grounds, 11, 12, 17, 20, 21, 67, 84-93, 115, 147 byelaws governing, 88-90 shieling huts, 46, 85, 90-2 shire moors, 27-8 Skene, Sir John, 43 Skirwith (Cu), 22, 60, 61, 129 Slaidburn 0/W), 68, 119, 125 court, 41, 42, SOn slate, 136, 139 'smit' marks, 107-9 soils, 6-9 soums, 83 see also stints Southern Uplands, 13, 16-17, 21 see also Borders; individual places Spadeadam (Cu), 94 Stalling Busk (YN), 59, 69 Stanhope (Du), 92 Stanley of Hornby Castle, 22, 114 Starbotton 0/W), 45, 72, 81 statutory regulation, 39, 40, 103, 120n, 125, 137, 149 Staveley 0Ne), 132, 135 Stichill (Rox), 45, 104, 132, 138 stinted pastures see cow pastures; pastures; enclosed stints, 148 in enclosed pastures, 71-2 in open fields, 66-7 on waste, 82-4 Stockdale Moor (Cu), 22, 61, 96, 97 stone quarrying, 138-40 stray livestock, 78, 109, 116-17 Subberthwaite (La), 57 subinfeudation, 28 subletting see'taverning' summer pasture see agistment; shieling grounds swainmote court, 34,35-7,40-1 Swaledale (YN), 13, 16, 20, 28, 57, 62, 69, 71, 90 sheep,20

I

I t94 swine see pigs Swinton (YN), 27 Tatham (La), 93, 116, 117, 127, 132, 136 'taverning', 13, 39, 158n Taylor family of Ribto~ 96 Teesdale (YN), 63, 68, 86, 88, 90, 96, 98, 107, 151, 160 see also Cotherstone; Crossthwaite; Holwick; Hunderthwaite; Lartington; Lune forest; Mickleton tenantright see customary tenure thatch see bracken; heather; rushes Thompson,E.P, 151 Thoralby (YN), 128 Thornthwaite (Cu), 137 Thornthwaite (We), 56 Thursby (Cu), 92 Thwaites, Anthony, 21 timber, 124 Tarver (La), 104 townships, 42-4 transhumance see agistment; shieling grounds Trawden forest (La), 72, 151n Triermaine (Cu), 104 Troutbeck (We), 30, 67, 69, 83, 125, 152, 157-8 Park, 22, 109, 152 turbary rights, 32, 45, 123, 126-33 turf, 126-8, 129, 132 Tweeddale (Slk/Rox), 21, 92 Tynedale (Nb), 8, 16, 17, 18, 85, 90, 93, 130, 139, 160 Uldale (Cu), 21, 57, 63, 66, 76n, 119, 158n Ulpha (Cu), 41, 44, 67, 104, 117, 125, 132 Undermillbeck (We), 152-3, 156-7 underwood, 124 vaccaries, 10, 13, 15, 29, 30, 69, 84, 167, 174 verdict sheets, 38, 42 vert, 34, 124 violence, 119 Wakefield ryw), 40, 42 Wallowbarrow (Cu), 72 walls, 62, 64-5 Walton Wood (Cu), 104

THE HARVEST OF THE HILLS

Wark (Nb), 85, 88 Wasdale (Cu), 13, 22 see also Netherwasdale; Wasdale Head Wasdale Head, 7, 58, 67, 68, 74n, 110-11, 112, 168 award (1664), 167-71 washfolds,59-61 waste, 52-3 livestock management, 103-19 ownership, 27-32 see also enclosure; estovers; moor-burning; pasture rights; turbary rights Watermillock (Cu), 80, 118, 127, 130, 132, 138 Weardale (Du), 10, 28, 37, 44, 48, 49n, 56, 58, 70, 83, 84, 92, 94, 117, 118, 124, 141 forest court, 34, 35, 42, 46 paine list, 37, 39, 166 Wellhope (Du), 94 Wensleydale (YN), 13, 16, 22, 42, 59, 62, 69-71, 83, 94, 97,128 see also Abbotside Westward forest (Cu), 92 Wet Sleddale (We), 6 Wharfedale ryw), 6, 72, 81, 84, 138 see also Buckden; Kettlewell; Starbotton Whicham (Cu), 138 see also'Satherton' Whillimoor (Cu), 27 whin see gorse Whitbeck (Cu), 111 Whitmuir Hall (Slk), 30 Windermere (We), 44, 104, 107, 111, 124, 125 jury charge, 37, 39, 48, 84, 126, 152-9 winter feed, 56-7, 81 wintering, away, 96-7 woodland, 34, 40, 57, 123-5, 141 industries, 16, 23 see also haybote; vert wool gathering, 118-19 Wray (La), 46, 103, 158n Wyresdale (La), 30, 34, 45, 83, 84 Wythburn (Cu), 30, 57, 84, 111, 117, 124, 135, 136 Wythop (Cu), 6, 28 Yanwath (We), 58 yeomen, 16-10 18, 150 Yockenthwaite ryw), 81, 114