Carmarthen, the setting for the county and borough parliamentary elections in the Elizabethan period, was the administrative, financial and judicial centre for South Wales. A flourishing shire town with more than a thousand inhabitants at the beginning of the seventeenth century, it was incorporated in 1546 and governed by a mayor, two bailiffs, twenty councilmen and a recorder.
In contrast to Carmarthen’s prosperity, many other Carmarthenshire boroughs, most of which had grown up round a castle or religious foundation, were in marked decline. This was particularly true of Kidwelly, which had been a serious trading rival to Carmarthen in the past, but was reported in 1609 as ‘grown very poor and out of all trade’. Part of the duchy of Lancaster’s South Wales possessions, it was governed by a mayor, two bailiffs and a body of aldermen.
Small as they were, most of these boroughs responded to the summons to send burgesses to the borough election in the guildhall at Carmarthen. In 1559, for example, the return reveals the presence of the mayor, bailiffs and 12 burgesses of Carmarthen; the mayor and six burgesses from Kidwelly; the portreeve and three burgesses from Llanelly; three burgesses from Newton; and the portreeve of Dryslwyn.
The Carmarthen burgesses seem to have been strong enough to enjoy some control over their choice of MPs, though fierce factional disputes within the governing body, particularly in the latter part of the period, probably made it easier for outsiders to assert their influence. Members of the leading county families, such as the Vaughans of Golden Grove, the Jones family of Abermarlais and the Rices of Newton, owned property in Carmarthen and were active in municipal affairs. They also carried weight in some of the contributory boroughs.
The first two MPs, John Parry (1559) and John Morgan II (1563), were both local burgesses. The identity of the 1571 MP is not known. Although the printed Browne Willis list gives John Morgan, it is considered more likely that the MP was John Vaughan II, MP for Carmarthen Boroughs in 1558, and that Browne Willis was mistaken in naming him for the county seat in 1571. The Member chosen in 1572 was Thomas Wigmore, who probably owed his seat to the influence of his stepfather, Sir James Croft, comptroller of the Queen’s household. Pressure from outside patrons increased as the reign progressed. In 1584, following the return of John Puckering, chief justice of the Carmarthen circuit at both Bedford and Carmarthen, the latter fell back on Edward Donne Lee, a local gentleman who was a nephew of Sir Henry Jones of Abermarlais and was also related to the important Dwnn family of Kidwelly. A convinced puritan, he was re-elected in 1586. In 1589 the young Earl of Essex’s leading Welsh supporter, Gelly Meyrick, was returned. Essex’s father was born in Carmarthen, and chose to be buried in its parish church, and Devereux influence was strong there. Meyrick’s own standing in the county was enhanced by his daughter’s marriage to the heir to Golden Grove. Even before the writs were sent out for the 1593 Parliament, the Carmarthen council had received letters from Puckering, now lord keeper, and from Essex seeking the nomination of their burgess. They decided to send a ‘blank’ return to the Earl, ‘leaving the appointment of the person to your Lordship’s best liking’.
