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Leicestershire

Leicestershire was a county of below average size and wealth. At about 527,000 acres, it ranked 28th of the 39 ancient counties; among the assessments for the 1451 subsidy its total assessable wealth ranked it 19th of the 29 counties for which figures are available. S.J. Payling, ‘County Parlty. Elections’, Parlty. Hist. xviii.

Lancashire

Lancashire had several distinctive features that influenced its parliamentary representation. Although not agriculturally rich, it was home to a significant number of gentry families of knightly rank. This was a function both of its size – it was the sixth largest English county – and the distribution of property within its borders. The landholdings of neither the aristocracy nor the Church were extensive, and thus an unusually high proportion of property, perhaps as much as three quarters, was in the hands of the gentry. M.J.

Rochester

Situated on a bend of the Medway where Watling Street crossed that river, Rochester dated back to the time of the Romans who built the first bridge across the river between it and Strood. It was also one of the earliest English cathedral cities: shortly after his conversion to Christianity, King Ethelbert of Kent built a church there and it was one of the first episcopal sees created by St. Augustine in 604.

Canterbury

Pre-Roman in origin, Canterbury had emerged as the capital of the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Kent by the sixth century. King Ethelbert granted his palace there to St. Augustine in 597, so ensuring the city’s place as the first and long unrivalled centre of Christianity in England. At the beginning of the fifteenth century, Canterbury was a sizeable settlement of 12 parishes and an estimated population of some 4,000. Lacking in any industrial specialization in this period, it flourished as a regional market for east Kent and as one of the leading centres of pilgrimage in western Europe.

Kent

Late medieval Kent was a fertile and prosperous county of contrasts and diverse communities. Its cities of Canterbury and Rochester and its Cinque Ports of Sandwich, Dover, Hythe and New Romney were relatively cosmopolitan and influenced by a constant influx of visitors, among them foreign merchants, soldiers, royal officials and the pilgrims making their way to Canterbury, one of the leading pilgrimage centres in western Europe. Some of Kent’s rural areas, the High Weald, the Isles of Thanet and Sheppey and Romney Marsh, by contrast, were relatively isolated.

Huntingdon

In spite of its advantageous location in a fertile valley where Ermine Street, the main road connecting London with the north-east, crossed the river Ouse, Huntingdon was already in decline before the Black Death. The consequences of the plague were extremely serious: a charter Edward III granted to the burgesses in 1363 observed that its ravages and other ‘sudden adversities’ had left one quarter of the town uninhabited. Huntingdon was never the sole trading centre for Huntingdonshire, owing to the proximity of St. Ives and its important annual fair.

Huntingdonshire

One of the smallest of all English counties, Huntingdonshire bounded Cambridgeshire, with which it shared its sheriff and escheator, Bedfordshire, Northamptonshire and the soke of Peterborough. Its geography was by no means uniform, for the gently rolling countryside in the Ouse valley to the south and the wolds in the west provided a real contrast to the fenland in the north-east. Outside the fens, the Ouse valley’s soils were considerably more fertile than the marginal agricultural land in the west.

Hertfordshire

There were few natural boundaries between Hertfordshire, a small county well suited to arable farming, and neighbouring Essex, Middlesex, Buckinghamshire, Bedfordshire and Cambridgeshire. Its proximity to London and Westminster ensured that it attracted a steady stream of immigrants, among them servants of the royal household, bureaucrats of central government departments and lawyers.

Leominster

John Leland, writing in the 1530s, gave a confused and confusing account of the town of Leominster. He found it ‘meatly large’ with ‘good buyldinge of tymbar’, and remarked that it had once flourished through a clothmaking industry fed by local wool of exceptionally high quality. Yet, he continued, ‘of later dayes’ the town’s prosperity had been compromised when, after complaints by the citizens of the borough’s commercial rivals, Hereford and Worcester, its Saturday market had been moved to Friday.

Hereford

As early as the reign of Richard I Hereford had been granted certain privileges in return for an annual fee farm of £40, but incorporation did not come until 1597. The loss of the bulk of the city’s medieval records means that little is known of the operation of its internal government in the intervening period. For the city’s surviving records: HMC 13th Rep. IV. 283-353. The form of that government is known only in outline. The mayoralty was instituted in 1383, with the mayor elected annually in October on the Monday after the feast of St. Luke.