Title: The complete history of South Marston
1The complete historyof South Marston
- darren.cook_at_henryandco.co.uk
2Sources
- Books Roman Wanborough, Highworth Hundred, Tax
Lists, Inquisitions PM, Alfred Williams - Maps early county maps, 1773 Andrews Dury,
1840 Tithe Map, 1886 Ordnance Survey, 1918
Auction - National Archives Wiltshire Swindon History
Centre over 500 deeds, leases, wills, 1840
Tithe Records - Parish Records baptisms, marriages burials
1539-1840 onwards - Census Records 1801 onwards
- Archaeological records Wiltshire Sites
Monuments Record, Archaeological Data Services,
WANHS Magazine - National Monuments Record - aerial photographs
- Google Earth
- British Museum pottery collection
- Field-walking fossils, pottery coins
3Dinosaurs
- 4.6 metres, each mm one million years
- repeated ages of desert, jungle, sea, ice
- prehistoric sea - fossils of 500 million year old
coral 200 million year old ammonites,
belemnites bivalves - did dinosaurs exist 100 million years ago in
South Marstons Kimmeridge Clay?
4 Geology
Ridgeway
Highworth
South Marston
coral limestone
greensand
alluvium
clay
chalk
Kimmeridge clay
5Prehistoric man
- 40,000 years ago Neanderthals?
- 10,000 end of the Ice Age hunter-gatherers
appear along the Ridgeway? - 6,000 - neolithic farming SM stone axe
- 4,500 Bronze Age civilisation ritual
worship SM round barrow - 2,500 Iron Age society Atrebates Dobunni,
forts, pottery, burials
6Neolithic stone axe from South Marston
7A man-made landscape
SM
8Roman 43 - 410
- Ermin Street, Cunetio, mansio Cirencester
- Durocornovium population more than 3,000 - a
society that flourished for 350 years but no
written record - Romano-British farming estates (c.1800 acres)
- Villas at Bishopstone Stanton Fitzwarren how
about Earls Court Rowborough? - S Marston road, villa, pottery, coins, SM Park
burials
9Roman villas in the area?
Stanton Fitzwarren
Rowborough ?
Earls Court ?
Bishopstone
10South Marstons Roman Road?
Durocornovium
11AD 500 Saxon Influence
- AD 410 Roman administrators soldiers leave to
defend Rome from Germanic tribes - towns economy decay - Durocornovium
- towns people disperse as Saxons raid settle in
kin-based rural farms - Saxons Britons eventually live together
- Saxon charters but no written record for SM
12AD 700 dispersed farms, marsh forest (1280
names ley, ledenhull, leighmannesheys field
shapes) north-south road to Lotmead Roman
junction?
13AD 900 King Alfreds burh, security
collectivism sees arable replacing forest
nucleated village Mersh Tun
14Mersch tun Merston
- where was the marsh? The entire central area is
below 95m Longleaze below 90m - see Google
Earth next - consider sub-soil clay greensand interspersed
to give dispersed marsh (e.g. West Marsh Long
Marsh to the west) - consider changing climate water table
15Longleaze Farm Great Marsh, then channels -
drainage of the marsh or water meadows cattle
ponds? Do the channels pre-date the enclosed
fields of 1600?
hotel
16The Feudal System
- Saxon Shires divided into Hundreds of 100 tuns
-Highworth Hundred Coleshill to Castle Eaton
Haydon Wick to South Marston 30 villages by
1300 - Hundreds divided into Manors held by a lord -
demesne, chapel, reeve, court bailiff,
tithingman, free tenant, villein, cottar
customary tenancies (later copyhold), rents,
fines services nucleation open-field system
to share oxen, ploughing, good bad soil,
haymaking harvests, in allocated ridge furrow
strips common pasture meadow virgate (30)
demi-virgate (15) grain subsistence for beer,
bread pottage animal products (wool cheese)
for market Sainsburys! - Norman Monastic exploitation of Saxon system
17Royal Merston
- 1086 Domesday Book omission Saxon Royal Manor
of Sevenhampton? - 1150 Queen Matilda gave an estate in Merston to
the Priory of Farley - 1150 construction of the church of Mary Magdalene
- 1200-1350 Kings itineraries Marlborough
Lechlade (London, York, Marlborough,
Leicester) - 1276 Sevenhampton Manor reverts to the Crown
18AD 1200 Priory of Farley planned village, less
wood marsh, new church, road alignment, Berton
Wick
East Field
West Field
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20Medieval 1280
- 141 Merston villagers named in Manorial Court
Records from 1271-88 comparison with
Sevenhampton (70 houses) indicates - estimated 300 people in 60 houses the highest
population until 1831 (339)! - some houses at Berton (10), Wick (10) one or
two farmsteads (Chelesies, Wydie, Ley?) but
majority in Merston (40) in toft croft plots
30m x 100m, wattle, daub thatched houses
211280 villagers named
- Merston 96 inc. 44 from the families of Thomas
Warde, Richard Faber (Smith), William Yrmongar,
Robert le Messor hayward, Simon Cowherd, Walter
Molendinarius windmill?, Robert Godchep, Jacob
Renfrey, Stephen Poynant, Henry Le Bedel, Hugo
Abbod, Thomas Felawe, Walter Url Everard the
chaplain. - Berton 21 inc. 15 from the families of William
de Berton, Robert de Abendon, Hugo Stone quarry
Walter Hyldyth hill ditch - Wick 14 inc. Richard de Wyk (chaplain steward
of the Priory), other de Wyks Thomas, Nicholas,
Andrew, Robert Walter Walter Sculhard
family, Agnes, William, Robert Margery the
brewers of the priory - Out-lying farms? inc. 10 from Johannes de la
Leye, Richard de Marisco, Robert de Wydie (
Cheles ?)
221280 tracks
- primary routes north-south Berton Highworth to
Wick Ermin Street east-west Sevenhampton
Court to Stratton Market - Dark Lane to waddebroke brokforlonge?
- Green Lane to Bradymoor Heldichesham
- Pathlay to Ley Farm ? Leighmannesheys, Ledenhull,
Berefurlong - (Nightingale) lane to Chelsiesmede Chels Farm?
- drove to north of Chelsiesmede
- diagonal holloway to Priors Farley, Hackerne
Bridge Bourton - Rowborough Lane (1629) to Wydie (Great
Rowborough)? - de Marisco Old Vicarage Lane drove A420 O V
Lane roads post-1700?
231280 tracks? No canal, railway, A420
alternative Bourton Lotmead routes Dark Lane,
Green Lane, Path Lay, Chelesies Drove
marsh
24Chelesies Drove pre-1200
251315 flooding
- land use at full stretch to feed 5 million
(building oak from Savernake in 1280 indicates
reduced woodland) - the chronicles describe the famine in biblical
terms rains fell nearly continuously for three
years .crops rotted many people died of
starvation or disease - sheep murain cattle rinderpest creates the
Great Famine 1315-21, killing 10 of the
population - Did it happen here? Are we flooded every
century? - Alfred Williams recalled freak weather the
ruination of Farmer Wheeler at Rowborough Farm
excessive rains came and the floods washed the
whole of it away and left him penniless in the
severe frosts of 1891 the canal was frozen for
seven weeks.
261332 Tax List
- tax of moveable goods of wealthier villagers
- Merston is wealthy - good pasture meadow for
animal products (second in the Hundred only to
Hannington same in 1334) - familiar names from 1280 de Abyndone, atte Stone
(Berton), atte Wyke Scolarde (Wick), de
Marisco, atte Leghe, atte Wydie also Le
Revehyne (Reeve for absent Priory?)
27Black Death 1349
- killed 2 million of a population of 5 million in
just two years (compare WWI dead 1 million of 35
million in four years) - 1377 tax record suggests 145 people died in
Merston 155 remained did it destroy Wick? - where are they buried?
- the Black Death recurred four times to 1380
destroyed communities, religious orders, manors
the feudal system - many copyhold life tenancies were replaced by 7
year leases!
28145 skeletons in South Marston?
291365 allocation
- Thomas Pykote, wife Alice son Robert rent a
messuage with toft croft between William le
Cartere to the west Andrew le Heywarde to the
east planned plots for their lives for 6
shillings yearly, pasture for 3 oxen in the
woodland 8 acres of arable - one acre in leighmannesheys, trokenbergh, benhull
rywardeslade - half an acre in longforlong, lowstede,
stokforlonge, ledenhull lithesmore - one a half acres in waddebroke
- illustrates copyhold landholding about to
change!
30Winchester College Leyplace
- Lay or Ley (wood clearing) referred to in
peoples names field names 1230, 1280, 1332 - 1391 Winchester College acquires Leyplace
comprising c.60 acres (spread out in common
fields) - 1393 to 1596 eight leases for terms between 7
40 years, rather than lifetime copyholds, with
the rent decreasing from 23 shillings to 20 shows
reduced population meant reduced demand for
arable - WC land allocation becomes enclosed in 1640 is
centred on Pathlay, later Pidgeonhouse Farm
31The missing 1400s
- few manorial, court, tax records or deeds have
been published for South Marston - historical
fracture in surnames (no more Poynant, Godchep,
Wyk, Marisco, Ley, Wydie, Berton, Hyldyth etc) - 1380-1480 golden age of wool, cloth
aristocratic magnets - Hungerfords (courtiers to
the kings) had stewardship of the Priory of
Farley acquired land for themselves throughout
Wiltshire, including South Marston perhaps paid
for the church tower c.1440? - Hungerfords relatives from 1500 include
inter-marrying Wanborough/Stratton/Stanton/SM
families of Brind, Cusse, Burges, Bryant Harris
it is they who comprise SM tax payers in 1545
1576
32Elizabethan Mansion
- Manor Farm Henry Hungerford 1576-82 my lower
house - Berton Manor Henry Hungerford junior until
1626. - Wynnings in Leycrofte, mansion built by the
Harris family? - Old Farm - William Brind, the farmer of Marston
died 1577 - Cusses Place - once de Marisco? now Longleaze
Farm? - Rowborough Burgess family
- Bennetts Becks Dorothie Mundaies
- Population 150 30 families Jenckins, Pinching,
Edne, Grundie, Mundy, Stevens, Tayler, Lewis,
Drue, Fowler, Davis, Smarte
331600 Will of Hercules Burges (1565-1617)
including 20 shillings to his servant Edmund
James (1581-1658) both in Parish Records
34Family Histories
- Parish Records from 1539 WSHC 120 wills, 500
leases deeds name the villagers - the Parish Records contain family histories for
the Southbys (1670-1832), the Mundays (1569-1824)
the Kempsters (1687-1840) - frequent internet enquiries from people compiling
histories of Elizabethan Hungerford, Brind, Cusse
Burges more recent villagers from the
Victorian era - we have one villager who can trace her history
back to 1600 inc. Jackie Bridges cottage
Nightingale Lane
35Village hierarchy
- Before 1500 classed according to type of
land-holding in the manor cottar, villein,
freeman, lord - After 1500 classed according to monetary wealth
husbandsman, yeoman, gentleman, squire no
agricultural labourer - After 1600 Enclosure, at first, creates many
self-sufficient husbandsmen yeomen farming
copyhold or leasehold land of 5 to 50 acres.
361650 Enclosure Sale
- Enclosure of the common fields started with the
Hungerfords in the 1400s was complete by 1650 - we can trace ownership of most of the parish back
to 1650 - enclosed land was more valuable, the Hungerfords
gambled their wealth at the Court of King
Charles I sold two-thirds of the Parish by
1650 - central manor Old Farm to John Southby (JP,
MP, Encloures Commissioner) who rebuilt the manor
house (Manor Farm) - Berton (Burton Grove Farm) to the Dowe family
- SM Farm, Longleaze Dorothie Mundays to James
family?
371700s chalk cheese
- North Wiltshire Cheese boom the Marlborough
factors selling to London, new A420 turnpike road
Old Vicarage Lane post-1700 1600 acres of
pasture by 1840! - landed gentry of Southby, Dowe, James Goddards
joined by Hippisley, Freke Warneford rents
increase, farms renovated new ones built (most
of those we see today) - yeomen farmers pay higher rents for farms of more
than 100 acres displace many self-sufficient
husbandsmen who now become landless employees,
the agricultural labourers
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39The worn out agricultural labourer
- 1801 Census 151 agricultural workers out of
c.190 adults in 252 population (only the gentry
3 vote) - canal, railway, industrial agricultural
revolutions alter appearance of village way of
life - Alfred Bells brick slate villas with
allotments replace stone, wattle daub, thatch
meadow - 1840 Tithe Map, Censuses 1918 Auction name
people their houses trace change - Alfred Williams Nelus farming, medieval
harvest-home feast, soldiers, railway factory - 20th Century owner-occupation of freehold land in
small house plots (320 in SM, Sevenhampton 40) - farm land becomes recreational countryside (C
Forest)
40Our landscape shows us
- field shapes names evidencing 1,000 years of
reclamation, occupation, ownership Enclosure,
traceable in deeds - the central channels drainage or irrigation?
- road development at expense of field tracks
- features - medieval holloways, platforms,
headland, wells, ponds Parish boundaries
41Our archaeology may show us
- dinosaurs
- a Roman villa estate dispersed Saxon farms
- our lost roads (Roman Rowborough Lotmead N-S)
- the medieval planned village, manor windmill
- burials of plague victims the death of Wick
- the remains of Wynnings, the Elizabethan mansion
42New development
- How important to you
- is the preservation of our
- landscape archaeology?