The Court of Chivalry

Source:

Richard Cust and Andrew Hopper, ‘Index of places’, in The Court of Chivalry 1634-1640, ed. Richard Cust and Andrew Hopper, British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/no-series/court-of-chivalry/places-index [accessed 2 February 2019].

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Published in: on February 2, 2019 at 10:06 am  Leave a Comment  
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Medieval Iron Working

There are a few medieval references to iron working in Medieval Salford Hundred, some iron may have come from local “ironstone”.

We have a 14thC. mention of a dispute over iron in Whitworth, involving Whalley Abbey, mentioned in Fishwick’s History of Rochdale. There is also a 15thC. Blackley reference to a shortage of wood for charcoal and associated iron working.

Hundersfield (Rochdale)

It would appear that iron ore could be found in Hundersfield (near Walsden):

” it shall be lawful for Robert and Alice, and the heirs of Alice to assart the whole of that wood, which is on the north side of Lichitheselegh, and  there to make meadow or arable land at their will, and to put up forges, and dig for iron and steel ore to supply those forges, wherever they will on the moors and in the woods which belong to the town of Hunewrthefeld. “

‘Lancashire Fines: 12-19 Henry III’, Final Concords for Lancashire, Part 1: 1189-1307 (1899), pp. 54-74. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=52533&strquery=iron Date accessed: 16 July 2012

Local place-names are interesting in Walsden (valley of the Welsh), they include: Pot Oven, Burnt Hills and the water of Ramsden clough is nearby! Inchfield was an old manor and the place-name Ragby is the only by name in the historic Parish of Rochdale!
See the lidar and old maps together below:
https://maps.nls.uk/geo/explore/side-by-side/#zoom=15&lat=53.69178&lon=-2.12654&layers=6&right=LIDAR_DTM_1m

Archaeological evidence

Castleshaw

For research in Castleshaw, see this document here.

Cutler’s Green

Fishwick mentions (History of Rochdale p.44) iron working and slag associated with the Ashworth family at Cutler’s Green in what was the north of Spotland township, Rochdale.

Healey

A probable medieval bloomery was discovered on a bank of the Spodden river above the ruins of Broadley Mill near Healey by a William Grindrod. The site was excavated by JL Maxim from 1917-9

Pilsworth

Medieval iron working (“tap slag”) was revealed in excavations by Norman Tyson of the Bury Archaeological group at Meadowcroft Fold, Pilsworth 1983-4. Further evidence of iron working and associated medieval pottery was found during field walking in 1997.

See also this ADS (Archaeology Data Service) record here.

Holcombe

At Holcombe are the remains of a bloomery, probably of the Tudor period.Trans. Hist. Soc. xxiv, 60; the place is called Cinder Hill.

‘Townships: Tottington’, in A History of the County of Lancaster: Volume 5, ed. William Farrer and J Brownbill (London, 1911), pp. 143-150. British History Online
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/lancs/vol5/pp143-150
[accessed 21 May 2018].

Read about an excavation there at the Holcombe Moor Heritage Group website

Medieval Iron Working Research in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire

Myers Wood, Huddersfield: A geophysical assessment of a medieval iron-working site.
Great research paper by Robert Vernon, with a good technical overview of survey methods. 

2004VernonTalkHeritageAward10thSept

Overview of Medieval Iron Working Process from Hungary

Good overview of medieval iron production, including bog iron.

Bog iron
“Bog iron ores form lenses under the ground, which can be found in the beds of brooks, where the brook has eroded one to two metres below ground level (see Thiele and Kecsmár,2013 for details about the geological and archaeometallurgical background of bog iron ores in Somogy County). From these lenses the iron ore can be collected with the help of spades, shovels and pickaxes. The collected iron ore lumps are then washed in a basket in the brook which washes away the dirt and sand.”

https://exarc.net/issue-2014-2/at/soil-iron-product-technology-medieval-iron-smelting

References

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Medieval Deeds from Chetham’s Library

headeed

Many medieval Latin documents from Lancashire remain to be translated. These documents are a little-known treasure chest for the medieval history of the region, Chetham’s Library houses many medieval documents in the medieval former manor house of Manchester.

An aerial/map view of Chetham’s is here.

The deeds below are an example of this rich archive, they are reproduced with the permission of Chetham’s Library

These deeds and many others are mentioned in the CD of the Raines manuscripts scanned by Peter Davenport of the family history Society of Cheshire, great work! Read more about this here.

These deeds refer to land in Spotland, a township in the north-west of the large medieval Parish of Rochdale, in south-east Lancashire. They are part of the large collection of deeds in the Raines Collection, just one of the many unique collections held at Chetham’s.  Special thanks to Fergus for making these scans.

Witnesses

At the bottom of the deeds can be seen the names of the witnesses, usually local landowners.For example, Gilbert de Notton as well as witnesses from Clegg (“de cleg”) and Falinge (“de phalleng”) can be seen in this deed:  raines_e45_bundle1_04.jpg.

Note: These are large files, they may take a while to download.

Download scanned deeds  relating to Spotland, Rochdale from the Raines Collection, Chetham’s Library

Want More?

We are hoping to run some projects in the future, please comment if you are interested.

If you plan to translate these please send me the information so I can link to your translations, thanks.

Published in: on February 8, 2009 at 10:45 pm  Comments (9)  
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