Margaret Roake - Essays in Kentish History [Retail].pdf

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CASS
LIBRARY OF COUNTY HISTOIUES
General Editors:
Dr. W. H. ChaloneI', University of Manchester
Professor T. Barker, University of Kent
ESSAYS IN KENrrISH HISrrOl{Y
ESSAYS IN
KENTISH HISTORY
Edited and with an Introduction
by
MARGARET HOARE
M.A., University of Kent
AND
JOHN
'VHY~[AN
Lecturer in Economic and Social History, University of Kent
With a Preface
by
FELIX HULL
KENT COUNTY ARCHIVIST
FRANK CASS
1
LONDON
First published
1973
in Great Britain by
FRANK CASS AND COMPANY LIMITED
67 Great Russell Street, London WCIB 3BT, England
and in United States of America by
FRANK CASS AND COMPANY LIMITED
c/o International Scholarly Book Services, Inc.
P.O. Box 4347, Portland, Oregon 97208
Introduction Copyright
©
Margaret Roake and John Whyman
These essays are reprinted from volumes of
Archceologia Cantiana
by kind permission of The Kent
Arch~eological
Society
ISBN 0 7146 2956 1
Library of Congress Catalog Card No. 72-90156
Printed /n Great Britain
by
UNWiN BROTHERS LIMITl:D, OLD WOKING, SURREY
ADDENDA ET CORRIGENDA for Late-Continued Demesne
Farming at Otford, by F. R. H. Du Boulay, pp 51-59
Since this article was written two new sources of information about
the fields of Otford have come to light. One is a list of the demesne
fields as they were leased to Sir George Warham on 12 June 1524
(Dean and Chapter of Canterbury MSS. Register T, fo. 254b;
cf.
fos.
157, 313 b. for similar leases of 1518 and of 1526). This list
corresponds very nearly with that of 1515 printed on p. 53. The other
is work in progress by Mr. G. P. Hewlett of Otford who is preparing
a thesis in the Geography Department, University of Southampton,
for which he is using the new technique of hedgerow species analysis.
While agreeing more or less with the literary evidence presented in
this paper, Mr. Hewlett hopes to be able to map more accurately the
medieval landscape of the area: the acreages of cultivated lands, the
deer park, and even the original areas of the individual tenant yokes.
p. 51 footnote
I.
For
problems
read
problem.
p. 52 line 30.
For
'Alvetum'
read
'Alnetum', i.e., 'alder-tree
ground'.
For
'Coridlebushe'
read
'Cradlebush'.
p. 53 line 14.
For
'Blosse medes'
read
'Closse medes'.
line 34.
To the Table add year
1397
160 acres arable
p.
55
(Calendar of Inquisitions, Miscellaneous,
vol. vi,
no. 328).
p. 58 footnote 6.
For
no. 258 (1464)
read
no. 259 (1454).
It
is questionable whether the Multon water
p. 59 last para.
meadows took their name from the Multon family.
The converse is more likely. The local name
Milton, 'mill farm', south of the former Shoreham
Place, can probably be traced back to 'Mylentun'
and 'Meleton' of 822 and 1305 respectively. These
suggestions were made by the late Dr. Gordon
Ward.
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