The Royal Forests of Medieval England (The Middle Ages Series)

by Charles R. Young

Hardcover, 1979

Status

Available

Call number

333.7

Collection

Publication

University of Pennsylvania Press (1979), Edition: 1st Ed., 224 pages

Description

The distinction between the forest and the trees is fundamental to this study, for the royal forest of medieval England was a complex institution with legal, political, economic, and social significance. To protect the "beasts of the forest" and their habitat, initially for the king's hunting and later for economic exploitation, an elaborate organization of officials and courts administered a system of "forest law" that was unique to medieval England.The subject can first be studied in detail in the records and chronicles of the Angevin kings, which reflect the restless activity of Henry II and his growing corps of officials that led to the expansion of the area designated as royal forest. At its height in the thirteenth century, an estimated one-fourth of the land area of England and its riches came under the special jurisdiction of forest law.Barons whose holdings lay within the royal forest were restricted in their use of the land, and the activity of all who lived or traveled in the forest was circumscribed. Until the institution of new taxes overshadowed the economic importance of the forest and the king divested himself of large areas of forest in 1327, the extent of the royal forest, with its special jurisdiction, was often a source of conflict between king and barons and was a major political issue in the Magna Carta crisis of 1215.This is the first general history of the royal forest system from its beginning with the Norman Conquest to its decline in the later Middle Ages. The author pays special attention to the development of forest law alongside common law, and the interrelationship between the two types of law, courts, and justices.The preservation of extensive unpublished records of the forest courts in the Public Record Office makes possible this intensive study of the legal and administrative aspects of the royal forest; chronicles and the records of the Exchequer, among other sources, shed light on the political and economic importance of the royal forests in medieval England. The author's ultimate objective is to show the influence of the royal forest upon the daily lives of contemporaries—both the barons who held land and the peasants who tilled land within the royal forests.… (more)

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1979

Physical description

9.02 inches

ISBN

0812277600 / 9780812277609

Local notes

SS In 1066 Great Britain was heavily wooded. The royal forests, a concept introduced from Europe with the Norman Conquest, comprised about one-quarter of the land area of England. The concept of Royal forests as private hunting grounds of the King contrasts with the fact that their existence slowed the destruction of the woods and wild places. The introduction of forest laws by William the Conqueror ranked prominently among the oppressions of the Normans upon the Saxons.
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