This fourth volume, featuring a good series of manorial accounts and rentals, complements the court roll material by painting a more textured picture of life in late-medieval Walsham.
The Suffolk Records Society has already published three volumes on Walsham Le Willows: 17, the Field Book of 1577 edited by Kenneth Dodd, and 41 and 45, the Court Rolls of 1303-1399, edited by Ray Lock. This fourth volume, featuring a good series of manorial accounts and rentals, complements the court roll material by painting a more textured picture of life in late-medieval Walsham through furnishing further details of its society and economy. These include documents from the small lay manor of High Hall, which was highly typical of medieval English lordships but hardly any sources have survived from such places. The accounts and rentals provide insights into Walsham’s agricultural practices, including woodland management for the production of fuel, the balance of crops and livestock, the disposal of produce, the remuneration of workers, the consumption habits of harvest workers and local lords, and the role of women in the management of the manorial estate. There are insights into local tensions following the national political turmoil in the summer of 1450.
Yet even these four volumes hardly scratch the surface of the surviving archive. In addition to the published fourteenth-century court rolls there is a long run of rolls from 1399 through to the early twentieth century and there are many more surveys and rentals from the early modern period. Indeed Walsham may reasonably claim to be one of the best documented places in England between 1300 and 1900.
Table of Content
The late Audrey Mc Claughlin, an appreciation
Introduction
THE DOCUMENTS
1. Rentals of Walsham High Hall, 1327
2. Accounts of Walsham High Hall
3. Accounts of Walsham manor with High Hall, 1390-1407
4. Accounts of Walsham manor with High Hall, 1426 to 1559
5. Indentures of Receipts of Payments, 1447-1451
Glossary
Bibliography
Index of People and Places
Index of Subjects
About the author
AUDREY MCLAUGHLIN (1931-2010) provided local historians around Walsham with inspiration, leadership and technical knowledge for three decades. Her dissertation for the University of Cambridge’s Board of Extra Mural Studies was ‘The Three Surveys of Walsham, Their Uses and Limitations’ (1985). She co-authored (with Stanley West) A landscape history of Walsham Le Willows (1998).