New Shoreham

In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries New Shoreham, at the mouth of the River Adur and on the narrow coastal plain between the sea and the South Downs, was among the most important Sussex ports, partly because it offered the shortest transit by land from the Channel to London. Like many neighbouring ports, however, it then suffered a devastating decline. William Camden described it as ‘ruined and under water’, and it was reported to have been exceedingly poor. W.

Seaford

Seaford was an ancient harbour on the south coast of Sussex, on the edge of the South Downs. By the thirteenth century the town’s location at the then mouth of the river Ouse gave it some local importance as both a port and a fort, although it was never a major mercantile centre. Recs. of the Corporation of Seaford ed. F.W. Steer (1959), 52; M.A. Lower, Memorials of Seaford (1855), pp. v, 1. It was the most eminent of the ‘limb’ ports – attached to the Cinque Port of Hastings – and the only one which sent Members to Parliament.

Fowey

Fowey’s relative prosperity was based on its harbour, which provided a safe and generous anchorage on the otherwise forbidding south Cornish coast. According to Richard Carew†, writing at the turn of the century, the harbour entrance was ‘guarded with blockhouses … as is also the town itself, fortified and fenced with ordnance’. Carew, Survey, 134; Parochial Hist. Cornw. ii.

Lostwithiel

Lostwithiel had been the capital of the duchy of Cornwall from its creation in 1337, and was the centre of the royal administration in the county, the venue for the county court, the stannary court and the elections for the knights of the shire. Despite its status, the town was small and relatively poor.

St Ives

St Ives was a small port on the north coast of Cornwall, protected from the Atlantic by the peninsula known as Pendinas or St Ives Head. J.H. Matthews, Hist. of the Parishes of St Ives, Lelant, Towedrack and Zennor (1892), 1. Originally a centre for the export of tin, by the seventeenth century St Ives was dependent on fishing, and suffered greatly at the hands of North African pirates in the 1620s and 1630s. Matthews, St Ives, 180-1, 183; Carew, Survey, 154; Parochial Hist. Cornw. ii.

St Germans

St Germans, on the River Tiddy in eastern Cornwall, had been a major ecclesiastical centre in the middle ages, thanks to the wealth and importance of its priory.

West Looe

West Looe (or Porthbyhan) faced its twin settlement of East Looe across the estuary of the River Looe on the southern coast of Cornwall. The two towns were (according to one contemporary) ‘united and knit together with a fair arched stone bridge’ and shared ‘a pretty little harbour’ which was a centre for the fishing of ‘this silly little fish’, the pilchard. Corporation Chronicles…of East and West Looe ed. A.L.

Newport

Newport originated as a settlement outside the gate of Launceston Priory, and by the seventeenth century it was in many ways merely a suburb of the neighbouring borough of Launceston, holding a fair and market but lacking the normal structures of a parliamentary borough.

St Mawes

St Mawes was a fishing village overshadowed by Henry VIII’s castle, which commanded the eastern side of the Carrick Roads, facing its partner, Pendennis Castle, across the estuary of the River Fal.

Truro

Truro was a medieval town situated at the junction of two main roads and the Truro River, which flowed into Falmouth harbour.