England Manors: Difference between revisions

Updated information about the completed, searchable database for the Manorial Documents Register, with the full list of available counties was added. The previous information reflected information from 2013. The links were updated as well. A link to the Manorial Document Register Digitial Guide from NA was also added.
m (Text replacement - "([\s\[\(\=])FHL" to "$1FS Library")
(Updated information about the completed, searchable database for the Manorial Documents Register, with the full list of available counties was added. The previous information reflected information from 2013. The links were updated as well. A link to the Manorial Document Register Digitial Guide from NA was also added.)
Line 26: Line 26:
#'''Court Leet''', originally for villeins, dealt with petty crimes, and the election of officials for the manor. These officials were: bailiff (appointed by the steward), reeve, hayward, beadle, constable, ale-taster, and two affeerers.<br>
#'''Court Leet''', originally for villeins, dealt with petty crimes, and the election of officials for the manor. These officials were: bailiff (appointed by the steward), reeve, hayward, beadle, constable, ale-taster, and two affeerers.<br>


== Manor Records ==
== Manorial Records ==


Records survive from 1246; most manors stopped holding court in the 1800's.<br>  
Records survive from 1246; most manors stopped holding court in the 1800's.<br>  


The Manorial Documents Register (MDR) lists extant manorial records and their location. They also have a list, by parish, showing the manors lying within each parish. The MDR is a type of catalogue, which identifies what records exist and where they are located. Actual records are held in The National Archives (Kew, near London), county record offices, large reference libraries, muniment rooms in the manor house, and sometimes in the private papers of the solicitors for the estate.<br>  
The '''Manorial Documents Register (MDR)''' lists extant manorial records and their location. They also have a list, by parish, showing the manors lying within each parish. The MDR is a type of catalogue, which identifies what records exist and where they are located. Actual records are held in The National Archives (Kew, near London), local archives, county record offices, large reference libraries, muniment rooms in the manor house, and sometimes in the private papers of the solicitors for the estate.<br>  


The National Archives website describes the MDR:  
The National Archives website describes the MDR:  
<blockquote>The Manorial Documents Register is the official register of manorial documents for England and Wales. We maintain it on behalf of the Master of the Rolls. The Register contains information about the nature and location of surviving manorial documents. Manorial documents have statutory protection under the Manorial Documents Rules. They are defined in the Rules as court rolls, surveys, maps, terriers, documents and books of every description relating to the boundaries, franchises, wastes, customs or courts of a manor. Only those types of document defined in the Rules as manorial documents are noted in the Manorial Documents Register. Title deeds and other evidences of title are not defined as manorial documents and are therefore not included in the Register. The Manorial Documents Register is not a register of title, and we do not seek to collect information about the ownership or descent of manors.<ref>The National Archives, About the Manorial Documents Register. Retrieved 16 Nov 2011 from http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/mdr/aboutapps/mdr/about.htm.</ref><br> </blockquote>  
<blockquote>The '''Manorial Documents Register''' is the official register of manorial documents for England and Wales. We maintain it on behalf of the Master of the Rolls. The Register contains information about the nature and location of surviving manorial documents. Manorial documents have statutory protection under the Manorial Documents Rules. They are defined in the Rules as court rolls, surveys, maps, terriers, documents and books of every description relating to the boundaries, franchises, wastes, customs or courts of a manor. Only those types of document defined in the Rules as manorial documents are noted in the Manorial Documents Register. Title deeds and other evidences of title are not defined as manorial documents and are therefore not included in the Register. The Manorial Documents Register is not a register of title, and we do not seek to collect information about the ownership or descent of manors.<ref>The National Archives, About the Manorial Documents Register. Retrieved 16 Nov 2011 from http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/mdr/aboutapps/mdr/about.htm.</ref><br> </blockquote>  
<br> The MDR is being placed [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/mdr/ online]. As of June 2013, the catalogue of extant manorial documents available online includes:<br>
<br>In 2022, the National Archives completed the digitization of the Manorial Document Register. Click here to visit the [https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/manor-search '''MDR searchable database'''] on the National Archives' website.


*Wales (all counties)
*Berkshire,
*Buckinghamshire, <br>
*Cumberland, <br>
*Dorset
*Gloucestershire
*Hampshire and the Isle of Wight, <br>
*Hertfordshire, <br>
*Lancashire<br>
*Middlesex, <br>
*Norfolk<br>
*Nottinghamshire,<br>
*Shropshire, <br>
*Surrey, <br>
*Warwickshire
*Westmorland, and <br>
*Yorkshire (all three Ridings). <br>


all other counties can be searched at The National Archives search room.<br>
The '''MDR''' provides record indexes for the following counties in England and Wales:
 
<br>1. Anglesey
 
2. Bedfordshire
 
3. Berkshire
 
4. Brecknockshire
 
5. Buckinghamshire
 
6. Caernarfonshire
 
7. Cambridgeshire
 
8. Cardiganshire
 
9.Carmarthenshire
 
10. Cheshire
 
11. Cornwall
 
12. Cumberland
 
13. Denbighshire
 
14. Derbyshire
 
15. Devon
 
16. Dorset
 
17. Durham
 
18. Essex
 
19. Flintshire
 
20. Glamorgan
 
21. Gloucestershire
 
22. Hampshire
 
23. Herefordshire
 
24. Hertfordshire
 
25. Huntingdonshire
 
26. Kent
 
27. Lancashire
 
28. Leicestershire
 
29. Lincolnshire
 
30. Merioneth
 
31. Middlesex
 
32. Monmouthshire
 
33. Montgomeryshire
 
34. Norfolk
 
35. Northamptonshire
 
36. Northumberland
 
37. Nottinghamshire
 
38. Oxfordshire
 
39. Pembrokeshire
 
40. Radnorshire
 
41. Rutland
 
42. Shropshire
 
43. Somerset
 
44. Staffordshire
 
45. Suffolk
 
46. Surrey
 
47. Sussex
 
48. Warwickshire
 
49. Westmorland
 
50. Wiltshire
 
51. Worcestershire
 
52. Yorkshire<br>
 
Click [https://cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/archives/mdr-map.pdf '''here'''] to view the Manorial Documents Register Counties Map.
 
 
The National Archives has created the following helpul resource: '''[https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/archives-sector/finding-records-in-discovery-and-other-databases/manorial-documents-register/a-guide-to-manorial-documents/ A Guide to Manorial Documents.]''' The digital guide offers background, descriptions, instructions, and document images to guide researchers through the process of searching for manorial records.  


Razi and Smith attempted to create a nationwide inventory of all surviving pre-1500 manor court records. It is published in the Appendix to Zvi Razi and Richard Smith, ''Medieval Society and the Manor Court'' (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996) {{FSC|2544651|item|disp=FS Library British Book 942 P2rz}}.<br>
Razi and Smith attempted to create a nationwide inventory of all surviving pre-1500 manor court records. It is published in the Appendix to Zvi Razi and Richard Smith, ''Medieval Society and the Manor Court'' (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996) {{FSC|2544651|item|disp=FS Library British Book 942 P2rz}}.<br>
7

edits