|
There is, at
present, no documentary or numismatic evidence of a mint at Blythburgh.
However, according to the decrees of Aethelstan, no one is to coin
money except in a port or burh. Now a burh is an entity known to
the law and thus every burh should have a moneyer. The burh is essentially
a stronghold, a place of refuge and probably with a military presence
and with its own judicial administration and also an established
market. In medieval latin, the word portus means a maritime port
and the word porta means a doorway or entrance of some kind. Blythburgh
was a burh and it also had a market with possibly foreign trading
as far back as 8/9th century, so a mint could have been justified,
but coinage of this period has to bear the name of the moneyer who
struck coins officially but not the actual name of the town or burh.
Kings of East
Anglia from c. 750 to 870 are known to have issued silver coinage
and also coins are known to have been struck in Danish East Anglia
c. 885 - 915 but the names of the mints are not known since exchequer
records did not exist. So, if indeed there was a mint, it must have
been between 750 and 915. There is no record in Domesday of a mint
or a moneyer for Blythburgh, but in the entry for Dunwich appears
a very concise note (312B) 'In the time of King Edward (the Confessor)
there was not, there, a money exchanger (cambitor) but in Blythburgh'.
It is by no means clear what the last part of the entry infers.
Does it mean that in the time of Edward there is a money changer
or there was a money changer? It seems very reasonable to suppose
that had there been such an office in Blythburgh at the time of
Domesday then the record would most certainly have included this
valuable piece of information.
If then, we
believe that there was not a money changer in Blythburgh at Domesday
may one assume that there was one before the Conquest: that in Aethelstan's
time when a money changer (and a mint) would be quite acceptable?
Be that as it may, there was the necessity for a money changer in
Blythburgh to deal with the foreign trade, but for how long we cannot
tell. What is quite clear is that there was not a mint at Blythburgh
or Dunwich after the mid-eleventh century when royal mints were
very effectively established in every borough and were recorded
at the exchequer. The two silver pence found in Blythburgh belong
to Danish East Anglia - St Edmund's memorial coinage of about 885
- 915 and struck by the moneyers Adradus and Risleca.
Tom Gardner, Reydon, March 1996
|