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THE GENTRY, THE COMMONS, AND THE POLITICS OF COMMON RIGHT IN ENFIELD, c. 1558 – c. 1603*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 July 2011
Abstract
This article explores the uses made of common land in late sixteenth-century England by members of the landowning elite, focusing in particular on those who held manorial lordship. Other studies have focused on landlords’ efforts to enclose the commons, a process identified by some as a key element in the transition to capitalist farming. By contrast, this study shows that landlords made commercial use of common land, using it, for example, as a site on which to build new cottages or by putting large number of animals out to graze. As such, it suggests that the development of commercial farming and the exercise of common right were not mutually exclusive. Based on the evidence of equity court material relating to the Middlesex parish of Enfield, the article sheds light on the nature of relations between landlords and tenants and the strategies both groups adopted in their efforts to exploit and defend communal resources. When the two groups came into conflict, landlords had significant resources at their disposal with which to overcome opposition. Relations were, however, more complicated than this might imply. The politics of common right produced complex alliances based on shifting alignments of interest, and could unite or divide local society along both vertical and horizontal lines.
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Footnotes
The initial research for this article was undertaken as part of my doctoral studies at the University of Cambridge. I am pleased to acknowledge the financial support of the University, and the Arts and Humanities Research Council. Versions of this article have been read in Cambridge, Exeter, and Reading: I am grateful to all those who provided comments. I am also grateful to Steve Hindle for his comments on an earlier draft of this article; and to the two referees (one of whom generously identified himself as Andy Wood) for their suggestions.
References
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17 Pam, Tudor Enfield, p. 12.
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22 TNA DL1/27/W2, DL1/132/A39, DL1/200/A42, DL3/18/E2. An important discussion of elite representations of the ‘riotous’ poor is provided in Walter, John, Understanding popular violence in the English Revolution: the Colchester plunderers (Cambridge, 1999), pp. 238–9Google Scholar, 265.
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26 Hipkin, ‘“Sitting on his penny rent”’, pp. 25–6, makes a similar point when he writes that it is important not to underestimate ‘the role cynicism might play in framing elite and popular perceptions of the uses of the law’. This view contrasts with much of the literature on early modern litigation, which has stressed the importance of values of reconciliation, legality and order: John Brewer and John Styles, ‘Introduction’, in John Brewer and John Styles, eds., An ungovernable people: the English and their law in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries (London, 1980), p. 11–20; J. A. Sharpe, ‘“Such disagreement betwyx neighbours”: litigation and human relations in early modern England’, in John Bossy, ed., Disputes and settlements: law and human relations in the west (Cambridge, 1983), pp. 167–87; J. A. Sharpe, ‘The people and the law’, in Barry Reay, ed., Popular culture in seventeenth-century England (London, 1985), pp. 244–70; Muldrew, Craig, ‘The culture of reconciliation: community and the settlement of economic disputes in early modern England’, Historical Journal, 39 (1996), pp. 915–42CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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29 TNA DL4/30/31, fo. 4r.
30 This aspect of early modern customary culture is most fully explored in Wood, Andy, ‘The place of custom in plebeian political culture: England, 1500–1800’, Social History, 22 (1997), pp. 46–60CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Wood, Andy, The politics of social conflict: the Peak Country, 1520–1770 (Cambridge, 1999)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; although see also the earlier work of Tawney, R. H., The agrarian problem in the sixteenth century (London, 1912)Google Scholar. The enduring power of custom within plebeian political culture is an important theme running through studies of eighteenth-century society and popular politics: Bushaway, R. W., By rite: custom, ceremony and community in England, 1700–1880 (London, 1982)Google Scholar; Searle, C. E., ‘Custom, class conflict and agrarian capitalism: the Cumbrian customary economy in the eighteenth century’, Past and Present, 110 (1986), pp. 106–33CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Randall, Adrian, Before the Luddites: custom, community and machinery in the English woollen industry, 1776–1819 (Cambridge, 1991)Google Scholar; Thompson, Customs in common, esp. introduction and ch. 3; John Rule, ‘Against innovation? Custom and resistance in the workplace’, in Tim Harris, ed., Popular culture in England, c. 1500–1850 (Basingstoke, 1995), pp. 168–88.
31 A point also made in Whyte, Inhabiting the landscape, p. 96.
32 Tim Stretton, ‘Women, custom and equity in the Court of Requests’, in Jennifer Kermode and Garthine Walker, eds., Women, crime and the courts in early modern England (London, 1994), pp. 170–90; Fox, Adam, Oral and literate culture in England, 1500–1700 (Oxford, 2001)Google Scholar, ch. 5.
33 TNA DL1/54/F7a.
34 TNA DL1/119/A30a.
35 TNA DL1/118/S19a.
36 TNA DL1/119/A30a.
37 The court's order book details the establishment of a commission to investigate the matter, but the case afterwards falls from view; see: TNA DL5/17, fos. 429r, 528r, 533r, 598r, 607r, 618r, and 634r.
38 TNA DL5/14, fo. 136r.
39 TNA DL5/29, fo. 243r.
40 TNA DL5/29, fos. 84r, 241r–243r.
41 TNA DL41/190, ix, fos. 5r, 8r; Birtles, Sara, ‘Common land, poor relief and enclosure: the use of manorial resources in fulfilling parish obligations, 1601–1834’, Past and Present, 165 (1999), pp. 74–106CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed.
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43 TNA DL1/131/W6. In 1589 an act of parliament declared that all newly built cottages had to have at least four acres of land attached: 31 Eliz., c. 8.
44 TNA DL1/118/S19, DL4/30/31, DL4/31/43.
45 TNA DL4/31/43 (fos. 2r–4r, 7r).
46 TNA DL41/190, ix, fo. 8r, DL4/30/31.
47 TNA DL4/31/43 (fo. 9r).
48 TNA DL1/131/W6.
49 TNA DL41/190, vi, fo. 5r, vii, fo. 8r.
50 TNA DL41/190, ix, fo. 35r; Steve Hindle, ‘A sense of place? Becoming and belonging in the rural parish, 1550–1650’, in Alexandra Shepard and Phil Withington, eds., Communities in early modern England: networks, place, rhetoric (Manchester, 2000), pp. 96–114.
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52 TNA DL1/1/E5 and E5A, DL3/21/E1.
53 Pam, Fight for common rights, pp. 4–5.
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55 TNA DL1/72/H5, DL4/27/86.
56 TNA DL1/72/H5, DL1/74/T2.
57 TNA DL4/27/86 (fo. 14r), DL1/132/A39.
58 TNA DL4/27/86 (fo. 24r).
59 TNA DL1/72/H5.
60 TNA DL1/72/H5a, DL1/74/T2a.
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65 TNA DL1/132/A39. And see the similar accusations levelled against anti-enclosure protestors in TNA DL1/27/W2, DL1/131/T8, DL1/131/W6, DL3/18/E2.
66 TNA DL4/27/86 (fos. 13r, 14r). A very similar defence was made by tenants of South Mimms in 1584: TNA DL1/131/T8a.
67 TNA DL5/18, fo. 141r.
68 TNA DL1/131/W6.
69 TNA DL1/127/W15.
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77 British Library, London (BL) Lansdowne 59, fo. 59r.
78 BL Lansdowne 59, fo. 61r.
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82 TNA DL1/131/W15. The reference to ‘Camelot’ in Wroth's statement appears to have been to a section of earthworks, the remains of an early moated manor house. The site still had significance in the eighteenth century, when the antiquarian Richard Gough recorded various local stories connected to it: Bodleian Library, Oxford, MSS Gough Middlesex. On the importance of archaeological remains within the early modern mental landscape more generally, see Whyte, Inhabiting the landscape, pp. 146–54.
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87 Hindle, ‘Persuasion and protest’, p. 75.
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