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Observance of
law and order has long been a prime consideration if the country
was not to descend into anarchy. In 1272 Henry III ordered that
watches be mounted nightly in every village, and the Sheriff was
to see that in each, one or two constables were appointed. But look
into any village history and you are likely to encounter many instances
of wrong-doing. Among the Cartularies of Sibton Abbey there is a
late twelfth-century report (no. 817) about the son of Geoffrey
Ailwin. He killed the man he found embracing his wife, and was forced
to flee the country. As luck would have it, Geoffrey's brother Robert
was a friend of the Earl Hugh Bigod, and through him obtained a
King's Pardon for his son.
Some local men found themselves in trouble in Norwich in 1309. In
the Norfolk Records (no. 108) addressed to Norwich Castle Gaol on
the 2 October, Richard Quynchard of Blythburgh and Geoffrey Chaloner,
approvers, appealed Geoffrey atte Bush of Brampton for killing Thomas,
son of John Spark of Yelverton, at Throwse on the night of 25 May,
and robbing him of goods worth 12 pence. Additionally it was alleged
that he robbed two foreigners of cloth and goods worth 8 shillings.
Approvers were criminals who turned informer to achieve a pardon.
However, if the appeal failed and it became obvious that the informer
was lying to save his own life, then he was executed. And so it
turned out for Quynchard and Chaloner. Geoffrey atte Bush said that
he wished to defend himself in a duel. Richard Quynchard, the approver,
claimed that he was missing two fingers on his right hand and therefore
could not duel. So Geoffrey atte Bush put himself on the country.
The jurors acquitted him and both Quynchard and Chaloner were hanged
for false appeal.
The Manor Court
Rolls for Mells show that on 8 December 1344, 25 charges were heard.
Eleven concerned debt and seven were for trespass. Another defendant
was accused of the neglect of an ox but he was cleared when it was
found that the animal died of cattle plague. Another man was fined
half a mark (33 pence) because he kept his master's sheep badly.
During the Peasants'
Revolt in 1381, an unsavoury incident occurred in Wenhaston. It
was reported that 'William Deye of Shadingfield on Wednesday next
before the Feast of Nativity of St John the Baptist in the fourth
year of Richard II at Wenhaston entered the house of John Mekeway
and threatened to behead the said John unless he paid a fine to
him; and the said John made a fine with him of four marks (£2.66).
And the said William was a leader of other malefactors'. It would
seem that Mekeway was a victim of protection money.
Sources: Cartularies
of Sibton Abbey, VII-IX, 1985-7, Suffolk Records Society. Crimes
in East Anglia in the 14th Century, Norfolk Record Society, XLIV,
1976.
Keith
Johnceline, Wenhaston, November 1995
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