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Author Topic: Isabella De Fortibus.  (Read 2491 times)
leefer

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« on: Sunday, March 18, 2012, 21:40:41 »

http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=64327

Was in medieval times one of the richest and most powerfull woman in England(through marriage)
She owned and rented out lands all over England and the link above shows an interesting insight in how Stratton near Swindon ,Cricklade,, Wooton Bassett and Worth(Highworth) was run by the people that owned them....Adam de Stratton is mentioned alot but it seems Iabella de Fortibus was the main landlord of these places.
Interesting on the link is the Melksham Forest Cheesy and the deer park at Wooton Bassett.

Now i know to many this is boring as hell,but to those who like Ye Olde History the ancient deeds(copied in 1900)are an interesting insight into our local history.
Also note that there is no mention of Swindon around this time.....12th century as it was basicly not a Town then just a collection of small farms and Hamlets like Cheney Manor,Rodbourne,Walcott and Mannington to name a few..
Such places as Sevenhampton and Lydiard Tregoze are also mentioned in the deeds along with Chelworth near Cricklade.
Incidently at this time Cricklade was a very important town in this neck of the woods with Malmesbury probably the Jewell in the Crown.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isabella_de_Fortibus,_Countess_of_Devon

It is almost certain that Isabella never ever saw our local lands as she lived her life mainly on the Isle of Wight but to this day some of her actions along with our local bigwigs have shaped the places we know so well today.








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Reg Smeeton
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« Reply #1 on: Sunday, March 18, 2012, 21:54:44 »

 Swindon or Suindune was around in the 12th Century, Leefer as it's mentioned in the Domesday book...Wroughton was probably bigger, mind.
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Notts red

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« Reply #2 on: Sunday, March 18, 2012, 22:08:26 »

I know Melkham forest is also mentioned in the Domesday book. It describes the forest as having 8 mills and 130 acres of water meadows. King John used the forest for hunting in the 13th century and Oak was used from there to make the choir alter at Sailsbury cathedral.The Abbess and nuns from Lacock Abbey Had rights to the wood and by the 17th century almost all the forest had gone. Thanks for the link Leefer, I find it interesting Smiley
« Last Edit: Sunday, March 18, 2012, 22:13:41 by Notts red » Logged
Not that Nice If I'm Honest

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« Reply #3 on: Sunday, March 18, 2012, 22:49:06 »


And the people of Oxfordum were obsessed with the archery abilities of the men of Suindune
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Peter Venkman
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« Reply #4 on: Monday, March 19, 2012, 08:13:25 »

Wootton Bassett had its original Royal connections back in the 15/16 century as well, Henry VIII used to enjoy hunting in the area around Braydon Forest and the surrounding areas and the area was resided by several of his Queens.

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The manor and borough of Wootton Bassett were held in jointure by the successive queens of Henry VIII. In July 1547 they were granted to the Protector Somerset in reversion after the death of Queen Catherine Parr; six years later, little more than two weeks before the death of Edward VI, they came into the hands of the Duke of Northumberland’s eldest son, only to return to the crown after the accession of Mary and the fall of the Dudleys. In December 1553 the Marian Councillor Sir Francis Englefield received Vastern park in Wootton Bassett, which had also been held by Somerset, but it was not until March 1555 that he obtained the manor and borough in tail male with remainder to his younger brother John, a provision which helped the family to retain them after Englefield’s own attainder in the following reign. Among those who held office in Wootton Bassett were Sir James Stumpe, made keeper of Little Vastern park in 1546, and Edmund Brydges, appointed steward of the lordship in 1557.

The borough, sometimes called Old Wootton, remained essentially manorial, being largely administered through the manorial courts and courts leet, although there was a mayor by 1408; according to a 17th-century copy of a reputed charter of 1561 authority was vested in a mayor, two aldermen and 12 capital burgesses. The earliest certain grant of privileges was that of a weekly market and two fairs yearly in 1571, but the market-place continued to belong to the lord of the manor. The borough had first returned Members to Parliament in 1447. Elections were held on receipt of a precept from the sheriff of Wiltshire, and indentures survive for all the Parliaments held between 1545 and 1555 save that of 1547. In three of them the contracting parties are the sheriff and the mayor and burgesses, but in 1545 the second party is the mayor, community and burgesses, at the first election of 1553 the mayor and habitantes infra, and at the following one the Members themselves. Many of the Members’ names were inserted in the indentures in hands different from those of the text, some of them over erasures.

None of the 16 known Members was a townsman, although the two who sat in March 1553 came from nearby, Gabriel Pleydell being seated a mile distant and William Garrard three miles; several others held land in Wiltshire, but most of them came from neighbouring Gloucestershire or from London. The most regular parliamentary patron seems to have been the Gloucestershire magnate Sir John Brydges, created Baron Chandos of Sudeley in 1554. Both Richard Tracy and Walter Winston were kinsmen of Brydges, and their next known successors were his eldest son Edmund and another of his relatives and neighbours, Hugh Westwood, who was also a collector of rents for Catherine Parr. John Seymour was the eldest (but disinherited) son of the Protector, and Robert Huick was physician in ordinary to Catherine Parr. Pleydell and Garrard were friends as well as neighhours, and both had links with the Seymours; Pleydell may have owed his election to the Protector’s former steward (Sir) John Thynne. Under Mary the influence of Sir John Brydges is again apparent: Henry Poole was his nephew (as well as being brother-in-law to the sheriff Edward Baynard), Giles Payne his servant and William Hampshire perhaps a client. John Throckmorton was elected on the same day that his kinsmen, Sir Nicholas and John Throckmorton I, were returned for Old Sarum. Edmund Plowden was a client of Sir Francis Englefield and Richard Bruning was later to hold lands jointly with John Englefield. Humphrey Moseley, like Plowden a Middle Templar, probably owed his return to Thynne, whose influence was soon to prevail at Wootton Bassett.
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From the station at Colchester
To the cells of Warrington
From the services at Leicester
To the slums of Northampton

We travel over England
And one day Europe too

Cos we all follow the Swindon
We're the famous Town End crew.
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