History of Corn Milling Vol 2 1898
History of Corn Milling Vol 2 1898
History of Corn Milling Vol 2 1898
IN PREPARATION,
UNIFORM WITH THE PRESENT VOLUME,
BY THE SAME AUTHORS.
C3
s:
C5
CO
HISTORY OF CORN MILLING
VOL. II
LONDON
SIMPKIN, MARSHALL AND COMPANY LTD."
LIVERPOOL
EDWARD HOWELL, CHURCH ST.
1899
\AU Right* of Trandation Reserved.]
; I. \
later, Rome devised the ship or floating mill, which also still
remains in use in some parts of Europe and Asia. Thus water-
milling alone prevailed till the twelfth century a.d. or over
a thousand years after the invention of the Greek watermill :
SECTION I.WATERMILLS.
CHAPTER I.
THE WATERMILL.
Page
1.
Origin and designation I
2.
Speculative theories of origin 3
CHAPTER- II.
CHAPTER V.
COLLEGIUM PISTORUM.
Page
1. Memorial to Antoninus ... ... ... ... ...
43
2. Laws: a.d. 319-A.D. 417 ... ... ... ... ...
45
CHAPTER VL
THE FLOATING MILL.
1. Roman ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 61
2. Medieval ... ... ... .. ... ... ...
63
3. Modern 66
CHAPTER VH.
THE EARLY CONTINENTAL MILL.
1 . Salic laws ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
71
2. French miniatures ... ... .. ... ...
73
3. Bohemian laws ... ... ... ... ... ...
77
4. Lombard laws ... ... ... ...
78
CHAPTER VIII.
CHAPTER IX.
DOMESDAY MILLS.
1. The Survey ... ... ... ... ... ... 10 1
2. Of Saxon origin ... ... ... ... ... ...
103
3. None in some counties ... ... ... ... ... 104
4. i?^Output 106
5. Other than cornmills ... ... ... ... ... 106
6. Nomenclature ... ... ... ... ... ... 107
7. Rentals 108
8. Winter mills 113
9. Sites 113
10. Shares ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 114
11. Hall mills 115
12. Town mills ... ... ... ... ... ...
115
13. Working millers ... ... ... ... ... ... 116
14. Owners ... ... ... ... ... ... .. 118
Xll CONTENTS.
CHAPTER XII.
MYTHS OF ORIGIN.
Page
No ancient evidence 224
Fourth century 226
Seventh century 226
Eighth century 227
Ninth century 227
Tenth century 228
Eleventh century 229
Early twelfth century 229
Crusaders ... 230
CHAPTER XIII.
CHAPTER XVII.
THE SUNK POST MILL.
Page
1. Birkdale ...
278
2. ... ... ... ... ...
Aughton 279
CHAPTER XVIII.
CHAPTER XIX.
POST MILLS IN THE WARS.
I.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
WATERMILLS.
Page
The Greek mill 9
Ancient Irish Norse shaft 15
Scalloway, Scotland Norse mill :
17
Foula, Scotland Norse mill ... : 18
Shetlands Norse mill, exterior
:
interior
Page
Oliver Evans' mill 196
Aber, North Wales 198
Horning- on-Bure 200
Cleeve, on Thames 2or
WINDMILLS.
Fifteenth century miniature 225
Templar mill near A ntioch 231
Heraldic charges and milling ...
232,
Engraved memorial brass at Lynn 246
A rubbing from memorial brass at Lynn ...
247
Illuminations from fourteenth century MSS. ... 248, 249
from a MS. of fourteenth century ...
250
from a MS. of fifteenth century... ...
251
from map of Thanet, fifteenth century ... ...
251
from plan of Carthusian monastery, London,
fifteenth century
252
Strutt's sketch from Rouse's MS. 253
Rouse's original sketch, fifteenth century 254
"
from fifteenth century miniature The Finding
:
of Moses" 254
from fifteenth century "miniature The Book of :
Joshua 255
from fifteenth century MS. Bible 255
from fifteenth century Monastic Chronicle 255
from fifteenth century Monkish History 255
Post mill, as bolted to the ground, sixteenth century 256
Diagram of mills Magnus sixteenth century
: :
257
Diagram of windmill Cardanus sixteenth century
: : ...
258
xvi ILLUSTRATIONS.
Page
Windmill and watermill, Helsby, Cheshire ... ... ... 265
Baxterley, Warwickshire ancient tripod mill : ... ... ... 266
Bozeat, Northampton modern tripod mill : ... ... ... 267
Diagrams: construction of tripod post mills ... ...
269,270
Removal of Brighton tripod mill ... ... ... ...
275
Fishbourne, Sussex tripod mill after removal : ... ...
277
Birkdale, Lancashire sunk post mill ... ... ; ... ... 278
Formby, Lancashire turret mill, exterior ... : ... ... 280
interior ... ... ... 281
Irby, Cheshire :
decayed turret mill ... ... ... ... 282
Sherwood Forest : old turret mill ... ... ... ...
283
Burton Wood, Cheshire : ruin of turret mill ... ... ... 284
Freckleton, Lancashire : modern turret mill ... ... ... 284
Diagram: Wavertree type of turret ... ... ... ...
285
Rustington, Sussex turret, automatic winder : ... ... 286
Bungay, Suffolk turret, automatic winder
: ... ... ... 287
Metfield, Norfolk turret, automatic winder ...
: ... ... 288
German post and tower mills seventeenth century : ... ...
293
Detroit, U.S A. ancient beam tower ...
: ... ... ... 294
East Hampton, U.S.A. modern beam tower .. : . ... ...
295
Diagram: modern tower, cap and beam ... ... ...
296
Reikjavit, Iceland : modern beam tower ... ... ... 297
Tholen, Holland : modern beam tower ... ... ... 298
Newport, U.S.A. : a famous ruin ... ... ... ... 299
Chesterton, Warwickshire Gothic tower mill .. : . ... ... 301
Ilford, Essex tower, pulley winder
: ... ... ... ...
302
Diagram automatic tower cap
: ... ... ... ...
303
Rye, Sussex old tower automatic winder
: ... ... ...
304
Horsey Mere modern automatic winder
: ... ... ...
305
Ludham type of modern tower windmill
: ... ... ...
306
Southdown, Yarmouth tower 120 feet high ... : ... ...
307
Rhodes: group of six-sail windmills ... ... ... ...
308
Vallorcine, Switzerland curious form of windmill : ... ...
308
Diagram: mechanism of tower mill ... ... ... ...
310
Raylish, Essex : modern rural tower mill ... ... ...
313
Kirkham, Lancashire : ruined tower mill ... ... ...
317
Long Buckley, Hampshire : ruined tower mill ... ...
318
Wimbledon Common a picturesque : relic ... ... ...
319
Miller's tomb by the mill ... ... ... ... ...
320
Diagram: horizontal windmill ... ... ... ... ...
327
WATERMILLS AND WINDMILLS.
SECTION L WATERMILLS.
CHAPTER I.
THE WATERMILL.
1. The
earliest power-mill of the world, the water- i. the
^^ atermill.
mill, is ofbut comparatively recent introduction in the
history of mankind. As already shown, it appears to 1- Origin and
be not more than two thousand years ago that the designation,
revolving quern came into use, preceding but shortly -pg^t 1. 128.
:
VOL. II. A
HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
Pt. xiii.
English
Old English
Anglo-Saxon
Welsh .
Gaelic .
Manx .
Italian .
Spanish
French .
Bas Breton
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. . 3
Magyar or )
Mnlnt, ^- '^^^
lUyrian .... Malin Hungarian
" *
WATERMILL.
Laplandish Milla
. . . Albanian ....J
Muli n
7
Icelandic .... Mylna Sanscrit .... Molano
\
i- origin ana
Finnish .... mUuw Persian . ... Mai Designation.
'' '
suggestion.
Pomponius Sabinus (of so late a date as a.d, 1480)
in an apparently confused passage states that the use
of handmills was invented in Cappadocia then (or :
' re V irgil.
usus earum ad ventum et ad equos Paulo ante Augustum molse 544)
:
Origin.
incorrect ;
and in a later chapter his suggestion as to
Text : I. 133.
windmills is found to be untenable. The statement
as to watermills seems to be due to some miscon-
ception of the circumstances attending the introduction
Text : 1. 98. of the Macedonian pistores into Rome by Paulus
Emilius in 167 B.C. for there is no corroborative
;
*
Upon this subject Heringius gives a somewhat elaborate though not very
profitable disquisition ^De. Mol. Vet., ii. 26).
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 5
CHAPTER II.
power
L Of Anti-
of Thessalonica, who flourished at about
Antipater
pater.
85
^
B.C. :
Ye maids who toiled so faithful at the mill,
Now cease your work, and from those toils be still :
Sleep now till dawn, and let the birds with glee
Sing to the ruddy morn on bush and tree :
to her call, throw themselves on the wheel, force round the axle-
tree, and so the heavy mill. Beckmann.
In this elegant metaphor we discern the maids and
slaves of the saddle-stone, the mortar, and the quern,
liberated from their toil by the discovery that quern-
stones could be revolved by the force of a running
stream.
The exact date at which this jeu d'esprit was
written is unfortunately, however, a matter of some
doubt. Three Greek
poets named
Antipater
flourished within a comparatively short period of
each other and of the great number of epigrams
;
ii. the
sufficiently
^
careful distins^uish the three writers,
to
r u
1 -n
r L GREEK MILL.
there is some confusion in the classmcation ot the
Moreover, this particular * ^^
^"*'"
poems attributed to them."
'
2. Of Strabo.
rarity though Strabo does not distinctly claim it as a
;
having held high office under the king), and had lived
there during a great part of his long life the local ;
Hambleton and " Book XII. [that with which we are concerned]
^ ^'''
turned by water, and sometimes also they employ for the purpose the mill" Ou
de roues que I'eau fait tourner, et parfois aussi ou y emploie la meule.
SEC. I. WATERMILLS.
ii. the
which Phny
in s day was the only one that could
.,,,.'
be in
', ,
1
use throughout the greater part ot
^ GREEK MILL.
possibly
rural Italy. The Roman type of watermill was cer- 3. Pliny's
Doubtful
tainlyknown in the time of Pliny to the philosophers Mill.
of Rome, but, so far as can be traced, it was not used
there nor elsewhere. The Greek mill of Antipater,
on the other hand, was in use about i6o years before,
and probably by the time that Pliny wrote had been
adopted regions of Italy by the rural popu-
in the hilly
II. THE to the upper stone. Thus the water-w^heel, the shaft,
GREEK MILL.
and the upper stone all revolved together. Such a
4. Construc-
mill, erected upon a small stream, would only grind
tion.
very slowly, as one revolution of the water-wheel
would of course only produce one revolution of the
grinding-stone. Subject to this drawback, however,
the extreme adaptability of the mill to the limited
demands of early times, its simplicity of construction,
together with the absence of cogs or other compli-
cated gearing all combined to ensure it a large and
lasting popularity far beyond the confines of early
Greece. Its use spread throughout Europe till, about
the eighth century, it was generally superseded by the
larger and more powerful Roman watermill and at ;
in 1588:
"On the Garonne they have a curiously i tin. Gall.,
the Greek
mill, as a rule, worked slowly. As Henzer
mentions that the stones were exceedingly large, it is
possible that in this case gearing intervened and a
large cog-wheel reduced the speed of the stone and ;
CHAPTER III.
III. THE the position of the rynd on the upper stone were still
NORSE MILL. ^ t\- ^ u . J A/r n j
apparent. Discoveries at Joantry and Mallow revealed
i
3. In Ireland, t^g same general features but here were also found
;
iH- the
parts of a machine for fullincr cloth
r ^ i-rijj-uj
but clearly they
;
One of the most complete relics of the wheel was ^- ^" Ireland,
described in 1856 by Mac Adam, who states the ac-
livinsf
^ memon', thougrh it was said they had been to ni- the
some extent
'
-r
utihsed
J* ru
^' '"
smuggled spirits. Throughout the district the Norse ^^*"
'
III. THE
NORSE MILL.
5. In Scot-
land.
entirely open below, so that the water can have a free course through
it. On the ground is placed a loose beam (sufificiently heavy to
retain its position by its own weight), having in the middle a piece
of iron with a smooth hole in it, made to receive the gudgeon of a
perpendicular axle, which proceeds up to the millstone, and this axle
supplies the place of a crown wheel and spindle. To the upper end
of the axle is fixed a round rod of iron, which passes through the
lower stone, and which supports the iron cross that bears the upper
millstone. At the lower end of the axle there are eight leaves or
boards morticed into it, about 18 inches in lengthand a foot in breadth,
and from i to 1:5 inch thick. These leaves are placed in an oblique
direction so as to turn their fiat sides to the water which falls upon
them and the spout, which must give the water a sudden fall, is placed
;
with its lower end close to these leaves. From one end of the beam
lying on the ground which supports the axle and upper millstone
a piece of wood rises in a perpendicular direction towards the mill-
work, where it rests on wedges and by pushing in or drawing out
;
these wedges the upper stone can be raised or lowered. The mill-
stone makes a hundred revolutions in a minute ; but as the stones in
general are small and have no furrows they grind slowly, and are not
calculated for the preparation of grits or barley.
SEC I. WATERMILLS. 19
In the Shetlands numerous slender rills were ambling down the ill. THE
dales. These occasionally served to supply some small mill, the NORSE MILL,
presence of which was signified by a low shed of unhewn stones '"^ . Z 7"
^- "
stretching across a diminutive streamlet, over which it was possible in ^" ^^^'
or Scotland, the grinding apparatus of Shetland seemed destined for Hibbert's Shet-
a race of pigmies. The m.illstones are commonly formed of a lands, 1822.
micaceous gneiss, being from 30 to 36 inches in diameter. Under the
framework by which they are supported is a sort of horizontal wheel
of the same diameter as the millstones, named a Tirl. consisting of
a stout cylindrical post of wood about 4 feet long, into which are
morticed twelve small floats placed in a slanting direction. It
has a pivot at its under end, which runs on a hollowed iron plate
fixed on a beam. An iron spindle attached to the upper end of
the Tirl passes through the lower millstone and is firmly wedged
in the upper one.
In Lewis the mills are probably the greatest curiosity a stranger Xew Statistical
can meet with. There is scarcely a stream on which a mill is not Account of
to be seen. These mills are of very small size and very simple Scotland. 1845.
construction. The water passes through the middle of the foun-
dation of the structure, where the spindle of the wheel, a solid
piece of wood, generally 18 inches in diameter, stands perpen-
dicularly. There are nine pieces of boards 8 inches broad and 1 \
foot long fixed in the wheel.
The expense of a Highland mill does not amount to a great many M'Culloch's
shillings. The millstones are about 3 feet in diameter, the upper Western Is-
lands. 1819,
being fixed on a vertical axis about 4 feet long, which passes through
" 3-
the floor of the hurst and works on any casual stone by an iron
pivot.
III. THE but, to use thewords of one of the crofters, If I get '
NORSE MILL
all the power I need from the burn as it flows past,
5. In Scot- " '
Past in
Present :
Mitchell,
1876, 39.
Shetlands Exterior.
owners of the grain. As shown in Mitchell's sketches,
the little hurst of timber, roofed with thatch or turf,
^"
to a single farmer being v-alued, in complete working
j" ^^*'
order, at about ^3. The hopper hangs from the roof
by ropes of straw. The feeder attached to it
receives
the necessary vibratory motion in a curiously simple
manner. A
pebble being fastened to it by a piece of
string, and loosely laid upon the top of the upper
Shetlands Interior.
of the latter as
it
goes round, with the result of causing
the string to drag irregularly at the feeder, and
pro-
duce the jerking motion necessary for shaking out the
grain. The hurst is of the most insignificant propor-
tions, the doorway being so low that access cannot
be had without stooping one, for instance, only
;
than shutting off and diverting the little stream into m. the
another channel, so that it passed alongside instead 1 .'
III. THE task for the man. The photo, shows a mill and the
NORSE MILL. r ^^ ..
. . snowhelds.
6. In Norway.
^^^
^"
I
the '
The
axle of this wheel is fixed
to the mill-stone. . . These mills are so disposed that all the parts
.
^er&uson
the water-wheel should never make less ; and in order that the effect Brewster, 1823-
may be a maximum, the velocity of the wheel must be one-half that
of the current. Suppose the millstone, for example, to be 5 feet
. . .
III. THE with a determinate velocity ; for any other purpose they may be used
NORSE MILL, however small the fall of water.
In the southern provinces of France, where horizontal wheels are
9. Modern
very generally employed (1823), the floats are made of a curvilinear
Efficiency. form, so as to be concave towards
the stream and notwithstanding
;
From evidences it
these
will, we believe, be agreed
that the whole of these mills,
common form and for
of one
one common use, were all of
one common origin, and that the primitive type from
which they sprang may be discerned in that of the
little mills of Antipater and Mithridates.
i.
58. and comprising the germ of the modern turbine, was
called Dr. Barker's, or sometimes M. Parent's wheel,
from its early inventors, and that Desaguliers seems
SEC. 1. WATERMILLS. 29
^^- '^"^'
wheel, the latest form of the Norse wheel, to that of T*^^
the turbine, will be immediately recognised, the impor-
tant divergence being that the Norse wheel is driven
in one direction by the direct force of the water, while
the turned in a reverse direction by the
turbine is
CHAPTER IV.
turn round
J
:
'
ROMAN MILL.
Ut fluvios versare rotus atque baustra videmus.^ 2. Of
Vitruvius.
However, from this startinor-point Vitruvius proceeds .
De
. . . Rer. Nat
to give the specification of the new Roman vertical v.
water-wheel :
517.
IV. THE wheel. Connected with this tympanum is a larger one, D, toothed
ROMAN MILL, and placed horizontally, and containing an axis E, at the top of
~ ~~
which is an iron mortice F, which is inserted in the millstone
. marked *. Thus the teeth of the tympanum B, which is bolted on
Vitruvius.
J.Q ^j^g ^^-g Q impel the teeth of the horizontal tympanum D, and
effect the rotation of the mill, the suspended hopper above supplying
the grain to the stones, and the rotation of the latter ejecting the flour.
Vitruvius.
the text in passages where all the copies agree, the
rather as the ancient mill may have differed from the
modern ones in this respect, and yet have performed
their office as well." Perrault and others have also con-
verted the pinion-wheel B into a spindle-box, as shown
in the foregoing illustration, copied from the Venetian
edition of 1567 merely because such a basket spindle-
;
btate.
have pressed rapidly forward the lonsf-delayed adop- ^- ^*^
/, -11
tion ot the watermill.
T o 1- riT
In 398 an edict ot Honorius and
1 Adoption,
milling. Yet
contemporary writers seem to have
thought it not worth a chronicling word no historian, ;
3. Its
refers to the greatest treasure of them all, and the only
Adoption.
one which has remained to the world. Coming to
Decline and later times, Gibbon, the voluminous chronicler of the
Fall, V. xxxi. minutiae of Roman history, stops in the course of his
history at this precise period of the reign of Honorius
and Arcadius to survey the topography and resources
of the city and the condition of the people. Temples,
mansions, houses, streets, stupendous aqueducts,
granaries, grain supply, and free distribution of bread,
are all graphically described, but the birth of the
Roman corn-mill is utterly forgotten the cluster of ;
The source of supply appears to have been the old iv. the
a distance of to Mount ^^
tina, twenty-two miles, ^; Jani-
culum, across the Tiber. Thereon had stood the
temple of Janus and thus this famous spot, in Pagan
;
IV. THE
Procopius, writing at about 550, tells us that all
ROMAN MILL
the watermills of Rome were at Janiculum :
4. At This is a region across the Tiber where rise several tolerable
Janiculum.
hills,and where now, as in former times, are erected all the mills ; a
large body of water being conveyed by timber structures, direct from
the top of the hills, and the water falling down the slope with
considerable force.
Belli Ibique omnes moletrinae iam inde olim extructse sunt quippe :
Gothicorum, magna aquae vis per alneum structilem ad coUis verticem deducta
i.
19. inde vehementi cum impetu in declive labitur.
dius, issued in the vear ^q8, to which allusion has iv. the
1
already been
J ,
made
'
J
:
ROMAN MILL.
_
mills employed for the purpose of supplying the city with abun-
dant bread, he shall be fined five pounds in gold, unless he imme-
diately desist from the same. Any magistrates holding office as
prefects of the food supply, or any officers ser\ing under them,
consenting to or conniving at any such, these most dishonest
persons shall be amenable to the same penalty.
An enactment of Zeno about the year 485, con-
firmed in the Justinian Code of 538, prohibits the use
of the public water supply for mill driving apparently ;
regulations, and which, as every one knows, has been decreed for
the future about such matters
That any suburban farm, bath,
:
watermill, or garden, for the service of which the public water has
been drawn off; or any of these placed near an aqueduct and
having trees planted injurious to the aqueducts, then to whatsoever
place, man, or house it may belong, it shall be liable to confiscation,
and may rightly be claimed by the imperial Treasury.
ROMAN MILL,
~ ~
to erect or pull down again
to others be caused thereby.
any thing, provided no inconvenience
CHAPTER V.
COLLEGIUM PISTORUM.
1. As
already suggested, the adoption of water- v.
COLLEGIUM
milling followed very closely upon the reconstitution PISTORUM
of the old Colleore of Pistors, and the issue of a ., ^ ,
.
, .
11- 1 11
Memorial to ,
1. Memorial to
Antoninus.
Corp. Inschp. :
IMP. C^SARI DIVI.
Gruterus, cclv. TRAIANI. HADRIANI. FIL.
DIVI. TRAIANI. PARTHICI. NEP.
DIVI. NERV.. PRONEP.
T. ^LIO. HADRIANO.
ANTON INC. AUG. PIO.
PONT. MAX. TRIB. POTEST. VII.
IMP. II. COS. III. P.P.
CORPUS
PI.STORUM.
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 45
TO TITUS .LIUS HADRIANUS ANTONINUS V.
AUGUSTUS PIUS, PONTIFEX MAXIMUS, SEVEN COLLEGIUM
TIMES [invested WITH] TRIBUNICIAN POWER, PISTORUM.
TWICE SALUTED IMPERATOR, THRICE CONSUL, 1 . Memorial to
FATHER OF HIS COUNTRY SON OF THE DEI-;
Antoninus.
FIED EMPEROR C.tSAR TRAJANUS HADRIANUS;
GRANDSON OF THE DEIFIED TRAJANUS PAR-
THICUS GREAT-GRANDSON OF THE DEIFIED
;
NERVA
THE COLLEGE OF PISTORS
[erect THIS tablet].
QU^ESTORIBUS
C. PVPIO FIRMING
. . . II.
G CALPVRNIO. MAXIMO.
V.
being intended by him to confirm the laws of the
?iSTORUM. Christian emperors from Constantine to his own
Aurelius Victor A
college was formed, to which those in the trade were neces-
et 1. I, cunctis sarily attached, without power of quitting it under any pretence
;
], 2, si quis ; whatever. Their sons were not free to quit it to take up other
1. 14. si cui. and those who married their daughters were constrained to
trades,
same profession. follow the
1. 18, cum de The college was put in possession of all the places which up to
lanionis; then had served for grinding grain, and everything which had been
1.4,improborum, employed by the State for that purpose. Other properties were
c. th. de canon
added, comprising lands and heritages, in Rome and the provinces,
frument. urb.
from which might be derived a revenue to keep the mills in good
Rom.
condition.
1.
3, quicumque The State continued to condemn to the pistrina all those who
;
1.
5, leviorum were convicted of minor offences ; and in order that the number of
;
1. 12, secundum,
such workers might not fail, the Judges of Africa were directed to
ibid.
send every five years to Rome all those who had been condemned
1. 17, in-
;
utensils, seeing that the same were kept in good condition, and that
1. si quis,
c. th. ibid.
every one employed there did his duty properly.
;
These patrons
1. 7, post quin-
met before the magistrates, and chose one among them to have
c. th.
quenarii,
ibid. 1. 3.
the inspection and superintendence over the others, under the title
;
pistoribus urbis. of Prefect. He was charged with the affairs of the college, was
treasurer of the common fund, and at the end of his administration
rendered account of the same. Such an official remained in office
five years.
1. I, cunctis, It was prohibited to all those who composed the college to
c. th. de pistor ;
dispose of by sale, gift, or otherwise the goods which belonged to
1. 4, praedia, them in common, and which had been given to them originally at the
c. th. ibid.; 1.
13, foundation of their college, and which were called for that reason the
non ea sola,
c. th. ibid.
common fund. It was also prohibited to them to dispose of any of
the goods which they had gained in their trade, or which had been
inherited from their parents in the same trade. Nor could they
give these same goods privately or by will, except to their children,
sons-in-law, or nephews, since these also would become pistors.
Whoever, of whatever station he might be, bought or acquired by
any title any portion of such goods from pistors, would remain
amenable to the college, and meet all demands in reparation.
Pistors could dispose of goods which had come to them otherwise
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 47
than as part of their trade or which had been inherited from their v.
parents, but if this were not done personally before death, the goods COLLEGIUM
It was not permitted to magistrates, PISTORUM.
appertained to the college.
senators to purchase goods belonging to pistors, and of
officers, or 9 Laws.
which they had the full disposition for the profit of other persons.
As soon as a son was born to a pistor the infant was reputed a 1.
5, filios,
member of the college, and was counted with the rest ; but until he c- th. ibid,
was twenty-one years of age he was not obliged to work at the trade,
and the commonalty was bound to maintain, up to that time, a
man in his place, so that the complement of members should be
always full.
was prohibited to magistrates to permit any pistor to quit the 6, nulli licet,
It 1.
trade or dispose of his inalienable goods, even if he had obtained c. th. ibid. ;
letters from the Prince according him that permission, and if even 7, nullum,
^-
^'
the college agreed. They were also prohibited soliciting his dis- ^^- J^ T^^^ '
charge under pain of a fine of five pounds in gold, payable to the ^^-^^ g .
j
treasury, and all judges were prohibited pronouncing his discharge, jn speculis,
under pain of a fine of two pounds in gold. But this referred only c. th. cod. titul.
to pistors by birth or who had joined the college, for those persons et ibid,
who had been condemned to penal labour at the mills might be Gothofred.
discharged by favour of the Prince, or by decision of a magistrate
on hearing their cause.
It was considered so important to maintain
always a sufficient 1. ii,hac
number of pistors for the public service, that in addition to all the sanctione.
precautions just explained an express law added to them that it was
not permitted to any pistor to withdraw himself from his trade and
enter the church as a cleric, and if he had done so, he should be
obliged to return to his employment.
Pistors could not be discharged from their trade in order to
join l.i8,utconcessa,
the army, even if they had obtained letters from the Prince. ^ t^. ibid.
They were not, however, totally denied attaining to the honours I. 4, optio.
of the republic. Some of their number, who had served the State l-,unicacodicilis,
with great zeal, principally in times of dearth, were from time to ^- ^h- de per-
time elevated to the dignity of senators. Still it was ordered that
|ectissimatus
'8^'^^^^-
after being nominated they should have the
option either to accept
the honour
in which case they had to abandon their trade and all
the goods they possessed as pistors to another who should take
up
the trade or else to renounce the dignity and remain at business.
The rank of senator was the highest to which a pistor could attain.
It was prohibited to elevate them to the
magistracy or to any other
"
high dignity to which was attached the title Perfectissimatus."
Great as was the care taken to preserve the aggregate number of 1- 21, nulli
the pistors, no less was observed to maintain their c. th.
personal pro- piftori,
'^"^
bity and honour. It was in this view decreed that
they should not
ally themselves in marriage with comedians or gladiators, under pain
of flogging, banishment, and confiscation of their
goods to the
benefit of the community. Any officer or magistrate having facili-
tated such union was amenable to a fine of ten For the ] .i5> ne quis,
pounds.
same reason, another law enacted that any pistor who had dissipated '^'^
all his goods should be expelled from the college as a bankrupt,
48 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
ing
quid, c. th. de
penalty of five pounds in gold and the pistors were ordered to
;
pistor; 1. 22,
quicumque, render due account to the magistrates of all such grain received by
c. th. ibid. them. It had indeed occurred that the officers of the Prefect,
in order to extort money from the pistors, had delivered grain false
in measure and bad in quality to those who gave them no bribe,
but the offenders being discovered, were committed to the mills
for life.
1. 46, qui in In order that a full and constant supply of bread should be
provided for the citizens, the pistors were rendered exempt from
I.
collegio ; 5,
'
from the port, Ostia, to Rome, and place it in the public granaries.
^if^fjl ^sto'^'
Another body of porters; termed Catabolences, was maintained by gj catabol
the State to transfer the grain from the public to the private grana- ]. 10,
libert'ini,
ries of the pistors, and to carry out the bread for free distribution to c. th. cod. titul.
the citizens. These porters were usually chosen from the freemen, et ibid Gotho-
and certain of them were required to enter the company of pistors, ^''^^
provided they had heritages or goods worth thirty pounds in silver.
The
various enactments themselves rarely appear
in expositions upon Roman Law, or indeed in
pro-
fessed compilations of the edicts of the emperors of ;
Lei'ps^^^^736
ago, and still the standard authority upon the intri- hb. xiv., tit. iij.
cacies of the ancient text.
Y warrant discharge ;
but abuse of this is here guarded against, as also in Lex
COLLEGIUM ^^Tfif''t
Of which
V, V,.
he might
V,
1 11 ^- H
Hence K
an innocent purchaser
,
was not
PTcrnPTTA/T
i-lb UK U M.
1
legally dispose.
jQ ^^ jj^^jg ^Q j^^^j^g restitution.
2. Laws.
Lex II. Promulgated by Constantius, 6th July 355 ^
:
the lot of the bakehouse. Being admitted to the family, let him
be compelled also to undertake the duties of a pistor.-
And since it is necessary ^ that this Guild {i.e. the Pistorian)
should be fostered, I forbid that the patrons who have been
appointed to the milling fraternity be called away to other official
duties, and especially that they be connected with the Guild of
the Navigators of the Tiber.* I do so in order that, being freed
from other claims, they may attend to this function only, with all
the energies of a free mind.
1
This Law consists of two quite independent sections the one relating to the
marriage of the daughters of pistors, the other directed to securing efficient per-
formance of their duties on the part of the patrons or elective officers in superin-
tendence of the Pistrina. (As to these cf. Lex VIL infra.)
-
cf. also
Lex XIV. infra.
3 i.e. for
the city food supply.
grain-ships, and were thus of a Guild allied with that of
These manned the
the Pistors. Various examples of men holding office in more than one corpora-
tion are given by Gothofred.
official by Augustus, being originally chosen from the Equestrian order. {Cf.
Ramsay's Roman Antiquities, p. 235. )
over the several establishments of the pistors, who were entrusted with the care
of the pistrin;i, &c., and to whom new pistors were committed in charge. . . .
There being in Rome, from very early times, large establishments in which bread
was prepared for distribution among the citizens (Socrat. Hist. Eccles. 5, c. 18),
there were patrons placed over each of these. But although there were several
patrons of a bakery, the prior or chief only of these was vested with supreme
control, the others under him being indeed of the number of the patrons, but not
yet come to chief control, waiting, each in his order, that authority. ... As
each pistrinum had its several patrons, so, too, a corporation chose patrons for
Itself, of whom one, however, was vested with supreme authority, and that for the
space of five years." (Gothofred, j-.z/. this Law.) Gothofred goes on to cite corpora-
tion inscriptions relative to these elective priors, quinqueniales or quinquenalicii,
from which he infers that certain at least of them were, though not continuously,
still perpetually liable to service, some of the cited inscriptions pointing to second
and third terms of service. The subject is, however, left somewhat obscure.
The Prpefectus Annonas, or official in supreme charge of the public food-supply
(originally appointed temporarily in times of stress), became a standing official
about the close of the Republic. He was not, at least at first, an elected but
an appointed functionary, and held his office under no restriction as to period."
(Ramsay's Antiquities, loc. cit. supra.) ,
the grinding of grain as well." (Paulus, b. HI., tit. vi. sec. 64.)
3 These
fundi dotales were the lands held by the Corporation of the Pistors,
from which they derived a revenue. (Cf. infra. Law XIX.)
Lex XL Promulgated
by Valens and Valentinian, 27th Septem-
ber 365 :
Hac sanctione generaliter edicimus, nulli omnino ad eccle-
sias, ob declinanda pistrina licentiam pandi ; quod si ingressus
fuerit, amputato privilegio Christianitatis sciat se omni tempore
ad consortium pistorum et posse et debere revocari.
By this our decree we provide in the most general terms, that
to no one at all shall license be accorded, through the Church, to
enable him to escape his lot as a pistor. Nay, if one shall have
entered the Church. ^ let him understand jhat for all time to come
he both can, and ought, to be recalled to the fellowship of the
-
pistors, any privilege pertaining to his Christian ministry being
(to this extent) abrogated.
' "
i.e. probabiy the c'erical state."
2 Gothofred
points out a doubt whether the privilege here struck at was one
which had been, actually or supposedly, incidental to the mere profession of
Christianity or to the clerical status alone. While noticing the fact that instances
existed of exemption from particular duties being accorded to a// Christians out
of respect to their religion, he leans to the view that in the present instance the
was to
" clerks and
privilege peculiar ecclesiastics."
come, too, in such wise that the Bureau, which owes you obe-
dience, may make report of them in State records, to the patrons
of the pistors and to the Inspector-General of the Public Food
Supply. And if any Judge shall fail to send at the appointed
time any one who is due to be sent, then, forsooth, he himself
will come under liability for the duty from which he is proved
to have withheld one who was amenable to it. Let a suitable
punishment, too, be demanded over and above the force of law
and custom against any officer of his court who either has with
dissimulation neglected, or has by fraud deliberately forborne to
*
put his Judge in mind [of any persons to be sent j
1 This date doubtful.
is
*
A respectful form of allusion frequently used by later emperors towards their
predecessors.
2 i.e.
apparently the office (or bureau) of certain of the inferior judges in
MxxQZ. [vide infra, "owing obedience to you"), the persons sentenced in whose
courts, for minor offences, were prescriptively assigned to the Corporation of
Pistores.
4
cf. also Lex XVII. infra.
June 369 :
Non ea sola pistrini sint, vel fuisse videantur quae in originem
adscribta corpori dotis nomen et speciem etiam nunc retentant,
sed etiam ea quae ex successione pistorum ad h.^eredes eorum,
vel quos alios, devoluta noscuntur, quo eorum quoque distractio
inhibita evidentius cerneretur. In his vero solis liciti contractus
eidem corpori reservetur quae ad ipsos non haereditario pistorum
nomine, sed privatorum institutione, liberalitate, vel dote aut
quolibet titulo probantur esse transfusa, et si qua ipsi ex privata
munificentia consecuti, in rebus humanis agentes, in aliquem ex
sociis, id est in pistorem alterum, transtulerunt. Caeterum si
hsec quoque in successione propria reliquere, etiam eadem dotis
nomine et titulo nuncupamus quia pistrino proficere convenit,
;
of " dotal property," but also such goods as are known to have
devolved through the course of succession to pistors or their
heirs or others, alienation by any of whom is clearly to be ac-
counted as forbidden. Contracts are indeed allowable to [mem-
bers of] this Guild only in regard to those things which are proved
to have been conveyed to themselves, not by inheritance in their
character of pistors, but by bequest or the liberality of private
persons, or as dowry, or by some other such title, and anything
which they themselves, having acquired it by private bounty,
may, engaging in affairs, have conveyed to one of their confreres,
i.e. to another
pistor. ISIoreover, if even such private posses-
sions are left in the succession of their owners, we reckon them
also under the name and title of "dotal," because it is fitting
that what has remained the property of a pistor throughout his
life should go to the benefit of his pistrinum. It is therefore
maintained, as an established rule, that if any one whosoever
has obtained from pistores out of their private goods, by dona-
tion of a pistor, anything which is the due of the Guild, either by
desert of heirship or succession, he must know that he cannot
sell or alienate the property which is within the Guild's preroga-
:
*
Judices Africanos laudabilis Sinceritas Tua. Huismodi in
terminatione conterreat, ut nisi tempore solito debitos Pistores
Venerabilis Romae usibus ditigere curaverint, sciant siepos,
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 57
" de
V. expression is to be understood omnibus pistoribus qui panem conficerent,
COLLEGIUM coquerent."
2 Law VI. and Law XX.
supra infra.
PISTORUM. cf.
CHAPTER VI.
circumstance :
When the water was cut off and the mills stopped, and cattle Gothicoram,
could not grind, the city was deprived of food, and provision could ed. 1531, i. 19.
scarcely be found for the horses. But Belisarius, an ingenious man,
devised a remedy for the distress. Below the bridge across the
Tiber, which arches to the walls of Janiculum, he extended ropes,
well fastened across the river from bank to bank. To these he
affixed two boats of equal size, two feet apart, at a spot where the
current flowed with the greatest velocity under the arches; and
placing large millstones in one of the boats, he suspended the
62 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
VI. THE machines by which they were turned in the water space between.
FLOATING He on the river, other machines
also contrived, at certain intervals
MILL. of the like kind, and these being put in motion by the force of
the water, drove as many mills as were necessary to grind food
1. Roman.
for the city.
Antichita
Romaine :
Rossini :
the water-wheel, though not verv ' clearly perceivable vi. the
FLOATING
in our small photograph, is placed upon a barge or mill!^
2. Medieval.
"^""^^*^ ^>' towers and turrets, and representing
doubtless the great Temple of Belus, is seated
Harl. MSS
4979, 4^
ti
^rtiiijin ki Unmt h flcitnt M tJiiwr'^tta?mdfitn*;
plaint be made to the sergeant of the Chapter, the offender shall pay
to the Chapter a fine of two shillings and sixpence Paris money, of
which sum the masters of the mills shall have sixpence amends and
the priests of the Chapter the remainder.
VI. THE deceased before Joan his wife, then she to have 40 marks the year
FLOATING during her life.
MILL.
In 1588 we find these mills abandoned in favour of
2. Medieval.
costly structural watermills of ordinary type, built at
London Bridge but in the meantime barge -mills
;
'
Cyn., 1775 to the ship-mill, I must own I have not the least idea
=
ii.
13-
of either its form or construction."
3. Modern. 3. Though the floating mills at Paris, in the
twelfth century, seem to have been abolished in 1296,
as already mentioned, the Seine is found, five centuries
later, again bearing these curious structures. Leander,
in the middle of the eighteenth century, gives an
excellent description of them, accompanied with the
diagrams we reproduce.
Spectacle de Fig. shows the general aspect of the mill with the
I
la Nature, 1753
V. 321. water-wheel, and a platform in the rear of it, upon
which one of the millers is standing this was the ;
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 67
VI. THE
FLOATING
MILL.
3. Modern.
(Figs. I, 2, 3.)
(Figs. 4, 5.)
3. Modern. hopper and the top of the stones are here seen, and a
miller represented dressing the upper stone, raised on
is
flour, S bin,;
cable Y
or rope
;
for raising millstone for
dressing, Z chopper,
;
T at the left-hand corner of
:
L, cog-wheel on shaft K
M, trundle turning cog-wheel
:
D'Aiissy, 1782.
was almost entirely provided with flour by floating
mills, there being no convenient facilities for other
watermills, while windmills had been abandoned on
account of the impossibility of protecting them from
frequent storms. Boat-millsRhone, moored in the
^^^i5S5!S'^S5';^sfJ:gsS?iSr'5!; S%S-'*i5=5!SiS:
Daily Gtaphic,
Feb. 3, 1897.
3. Modern.
At various places along the Danube also the mills
are still in frequent use. Mr
Wilson Marriage, of
Colchester Mills, in forwarding a photograph of seve-
ral lying at Rath, in Hungary, states that the mill
is driven by a single wheel, and the further
bearing
of the main shaft is supported on a pontoon :
Milling, Feb. Both the mill-barge and the pontoon are anchored in the stream;
27, 1897. the current acting on the broad flat vanes of the wheel turns it
slowly, and the power is transmitted to the machinery in the mill.
As the river rises and falls, so the mill and pontoon also rise and
fall. In severe winters the mills have to be removed from their
anchorage to avoid destruction by the masses of ice. The corn is
conveyed in boats to the mills, and the manufactured goods landed
in the same. During recent years the number of these mills has
greatly lessened, owing to the competition of the gigantic steam
flour factories established in the great cities, and they may in time
disappear, as the picturesque country mills and windmills in other
countries seem likely to do. The mills were photographed from
the passenger steamer in passing through the great fortress of
Komoru, in Hungary [the photograph unfortunately proving too
indistinct for reproduction]. At Raab and other places there are still
many of these interesting mills to be seen at work, not all of which
are employed in corn milling, however. A large working model of
one of these mills, with other types and examples, was exhibited by
the Millers' Association of Hungary at Budapest, at the National
Millennial Exhibition in 1896.
CHAPTER VII.
.. ^
r .i, -T-i ., , 1. Salic Laws.
protection ot mills. 1 hese enactments are attributed
'^' ''^'
by a mill with marvellous velocity and in the Lives ;
again a charter
in of St. Bertin of May i6, 704.
Later charters of this house contain no references to
mills till the year 855, when the abbey held three,
which were rented out for thirty large measures of
flour annually. It was at this house, too, that Abbot
Odlandus (who died in 805) distinguished himself
by inventing a new watermill, which the monks say
turned against the current of the stream, a thing never
seen before in their day, and so wonderfully made,
that no man presumed to construct such another.
Still,though for a time the monks preserved the
marvel for the use of their house, they unfortunately
failed to adequately describe it :
Ibid. quod mirabile nostris hactenus monstratur temporibus.
Ibi etiam,
Cart. Sithieuse, molendinum fecit volvere aquis contra motum currentibus consti- :
fuit conservatum.*
tit. 5, c. I.
Si quis ferramentum de molino alieno furaverit IDCCC den. qui Ibid. : tit. 24,
faciunt sol. XLV
culp. jud.
Si quis sclusam de farinario * alieno ruperit dc den. qui faciunt Le Mare :
Harl. MSS.,
334, yi''-
Mag. Pittor.
Paris, 1846,
217.
Roy 15 E vi.
4^
North-
western
Miller
1896.
VII. In Ecclesia vel infra curtem Ducis vel infra Basilicum vel in
EARLY COX- Mulino aliquid furaverit, triujungeldo componat, quia istae quatuor
TINENTAL. domus casae publicse sunt et semper patentes.
3 Bohemian^
Whoso shall steal anything from the Church, the Court of the
Laws Duke, the Common Hall, or the Mill, shall be fined three hundred
gulden for those four are as public buildings, and always open.
;
Leges Bajorum -n
tit. vii. cap. 2 An old
i i i
Bohemian chronicler quotes the year 718 as
that of the introduction of water-milling in that country,
but his testimony is very doubtful. With watermills
on the Moselle and other places in 380, they are
very unlikely to have remained unknown in Bohemia
for over three centuries moreover, the chronicler
;
tit. 19, c. 5. authoritate, judicis componat solidos xii illi cujus molinum esse
invenitur. Et si judicem interpellaverit et judex dilataverit ipsam
causam deliberare, et licentiam dederit advers?s partei ipsum molinum
evertendi, componat solid xx.
Ifany one break the shaft or sluice of a mill of another without
authority, he shall be adjudged to pay twelve shillings to him whose
mill it isfound to be. If the matter be disputed, and the judge
holds over the cause for deliberation, and give a decision against
the party who destroyed the mill, then he shall pay twenty shillings.
Ibid.: tit. 19, Si quis molinum alterius asto animo incenderit, in triplum eum
c. 4-
restituat, sub sestimatione pretii, cum omnibus quae intus cremata
sunt.
Any one wilfully firing the mill of another shall pay, by estima-
tion, three times its value, and the value of everything burnt in it.
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 79
CHAPTER VIII.
the return of Julius Caesar from Britain, when the internal condition Arch. Camb.,
and resources of the country had been laid open to the ambitious ^^5) supple-
"^^'^t-
views of Rome. It was during the reign of Augustus that the agency
of water became the subject of speculation in domestic economy ;
and this suggestion must have received its origin not in the eastern,
*
The learned Adam Smith was obviously widely in error in stating that Wealth of
" neither wind nor water mills of
any kind were known in England so early as the Nations l8il
beginning of the sixteenth century, nor so far as I know in any other part of i, ^^c.
Europe north of the Alps."
80 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING: vol. ii.
VIII. but in the western part of the Roman Empire, where, in Ireland,
INTRODUCED to which the Romans never penetrated, the watermill was known.
IN BRIT AIN,
vitruvius, in his work on Architecture, particularly describes the
1 Norse machinery of a mill ; and a Greek writer of the same Augustan
period, Antipater of Thessalonica, dresses up the same idea in an
epigram. . The simple expedient of applying a cog to the British
. .
Londonderry,
1837, 215.
remarkable that the circumstance is still most vividly
preserved by tradition, not only in the neighbourhood,
where a small mill still occupies the site, but also in
most parts of Ireland."
To this inconclusive evidence it remains to be
added that relics of horizontal mills, found in Ireland
as in Scotland, are also valueless as to the period of
introduction. Archaeologists do not attempt authori-
SEC. I. WATEKMILLS. 83
tatively to date them earlier than the Saxon period in ,^,^pY";- tn^
ii'i J11 INTRODUCED
England and though there had without doubt been
;
ix britaix.
mills at an earlier date in this country, still these i. Norse,
particular remains
are not likely to appertain to them.
Further, speculation is not quite extinct upon the
mill having been introduced into
possibility of the
Ireland in that remoter period still when, as tradition
avers, colonists from Greece established themselves in
Hibernia. "A
colony of Nemedians from Greece, Hist. Ireland :
^- ^^"&^t' ^- 9-
named by the chroniclers the Tuatha Danaan, - de -
arrived on the Irish shores and deprived their prede-
cessors of the sovereignty these Danaans, during
:
doned ;
and have become covered with
their relics
surface soil, precisely as have those of the camps, villas,
baths, and roads, which are of so frequent occurrence.
The negative evidence this paucity or absence of relics
affords cannot be overlooked, when we remember
that it is purely a popular assumption that watermills
were ever erected in Britain by Roman hands or in
Roman times. The exceptional instance of a supposed
discovery of a Roman watermill is that stated to have
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 85
I have
Ducatus Leod. ^hese : fragments of another dug up at the same
1816, 160. it is about three inches thick at the centre,
place ;
but is not convex as the other two are, and has rows
[furrows] yet remaining on it." Such a description,
however, applies exactly to the lower stones of nume-
Text: I. 137. rous Roman querns, which are almost flat, as already
described. Various of these so-called "mill-stones"
prove on investigation to be stones of querns. Among
many instances which might be cited, one of the latest
"
is that of the discovery of a portion of an old mill-
stone" in the ruins of a Roman villa near Dartford ;
Hoc, sicut et ecclesiam sancti istius, mulieres non intrant. Nee in lij- I'ij-
^^^
authorising stay of execution for one day The :
eight parts which constitute a mill muillond the :
For the eight parts which constitute the mill {rnuillond), i.e. the
-eight parts which are necessary to the mill, we shall explain. The
spring, i.e. from which water comes i.e. the water which is drawn
;
from the spring and rests in the land of the pond. The mill-race,
90 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
VIII. i.e. from the spring to the pond. The land of the pond, i.e. the
INTRODUCED first requisite, viz. which is at the head of the water. The stone,
IN BRIIAIN jg ^Yie second requisite, viz. the upper stone.
.
The shaft {jnol),
viz. the third requisite this is its own proper name. The support-
Brehon ;
Laws. ing stone, the fourth requisite, viz. the lower stone.
i.e. The shaft-
stone, i.e. the fifth requisite, viz. the little stone, which is under the
head of the shaft, and on which the shaft turns. The paddle-wheel
{pircel), i.e. the sixth requisite, viz. over its paddle the water flows.
The axis (milaine) i.e. t^e seventh requisite, viz. the burden of the
shaft is on it, i.e. the gamul. The hopper {aip), i.e. the eighth
requisite, viz. it drops the corn out of itself into the upper stone, i.e.
the tual, i.e. the perforated iron. The comla, i.e. they are all in
place of a bondmaid to a person, i.e. the whole mill, i.e. the mill
common to them all. For the bondmaid was bound to mind it ; she
was bound to mind everything of these which a person wished ; or
everything that one has which is worth a cumhal is entided to a
gate {comla) to protect it, i.e. the whole mill.
Ibid. : III. 2i The laws of the Book
of Aicill, supposed to confirm
intro. Ixxvii.
those of King Cormac, 227-266 (though "the date at
which they were collected and commented upon is a
very different matter"), allot in some detail various
responsibilities for accidents in mills :
Of Grinding at the Mill. If the millstone should slide off or
break without the knowledge of any one, it is then as if the sledge
should slide off the anvil. There are three concerned, viz., the
millwright, the man who is grinding his corn, and the miller. If
the miller knew there was any danger, he is forthcoming for any
trespass done. If the millwright and the man who is grinding his
corn fear anything to happen, the man who is grinding his corn
is answerable for any damage done afterwards and the
millwright
is free.
Why
is the first
sliding of the millstone a trespass here, and the
firstsliding of the sledge not made a fine in another part of these
laws ? The reason is, the mill is turned by water, the sledge by
hands of man.
If the miller, the millwright, and the man whose corn is grinding
be present, and the miller knew there was any danger, he is answer-
able for all damage. If the miller be not present, whether he knew
there was danger or not, and the millwright be present knowing that
there was danger in regard to his own work, he is answerable for
any damage that shall happen.
Why is the man whose corn is being ground charged here for a
trespass, and why is the other man not charged ? The reason is, the
man whose corn is being ground made no obstacle, and took upon
him to be under any damage that might happen.
The miller is free if the rest consented to go on with the grind-
ing. The first sliding of the stone is not to be charged to any. If
the millwright should leave the mill in bad order after him, he is to
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 91
pay all the debt or damage, and if any mischance should happen by VIII.
the strength of the water when the mill is not in bad order, the INTRODUCED
I^' BRITAIN.
miller then is to pay all the fines
The mill-owner is exempt from liability for injury to a person ^ Brehon "
pensation for the fourth slipping. And the slipping is always like a
first slipping if the millstone was fixed each time. And if an acci-
dent happen because the millwright left the stone badly arranged
it is he that pays all these fines ; if, however, it be the too great force
of the water and not the bad arrangement of the stone that caused
the accident, it is the mill-owner that pays all these fines.*
Among the miscellaneous laws are various enact- Ibid., iii. 192.
to be escheat or not ? The law sayes thereto nay, and be this reason :for it is ane
dead thing, and ane dead thing may do na fellany, nor be made escheat throw
their gilt. Swa the milne in this case is not culpable, and in the law it is lawfull
to the lord of the land to have ane myln on his awin water quhere best likes him.
Merrie questioun anent the burning of a milne. Gif it happin that ony
man be passand in the king's gait or passage, drivand befoir him twa sheip
festnit and knit togidder, be chance ane horse havand ane sair bak is
lying in
the said gait ; and ane of the sheip passis be the ane syde of the horse and the
uther sheip be the uther side ; swa that the band quhairwith they are bund twich
or kittle his sair bak ; and he thairby movit dois arise and caryis the said sheip
with him heir and thair, untill at last he cumis and enteris in ane milne havand
ane fire without ane keipar, and he skatteris the fire quhairby the niiln, horse,
sheip, and all is brunt: Quaritur Quha sail pay the skaith? Respondeiur
The awner of the horse sail pay for the sheip, because his horse sould not have
I)eyn lyinge in the king's hie streit or common passage ; and the miliar sail pay for
the miln and the horse, and for all uther damage and skaith, because he left ane
fire in the miln wiihout ane
keipar.
92 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING: vol. ii.
VIII. the ditch of a fair green, the ditch of a mill-race, the embankment
INTRODUCED of a mill-pond, the ditch of a turf bog, a ditch which is at the bridge :
by the work of a mill in grinding their corn, the owner of the mill
paid them to the amount of sixty "screpalls," to indemnify them
for the injury done to their lands by the channel and embankments
necessary to conduct the water to the mill. The price was paid to
each in proportion to the value of his land, for the contemporary
commentator says that ten " screpalls were paid for arable land,
"
even if the water had been conducted only over a foot and a quarter
of it. The mill was of such importance to the neighbourhood that
none of them could prevent the conducting of water to it when the
price was offered.
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 93
There are three lands which are not entitled to price, and for
which nothing is paid for conducting water through them, viz., land
on which a mill stands so that it yields produce a house which has ;
mill \u
c ^r L- '
// c . f INTRODUCED
irons ofme kings the hrst occurrence ot a ix Britain.
~
term subsequently made memorable throughout the ~,y . .
country.* The
smith, according Laws, to the Gwentian
code of South Wales, was an exceptionally favoured Laws and
personage, being declared entitled to "the same free- j^^^^^j^JJ*"^^
dom grinding as the king," that is, grinding gratis xxxviii.
in
at any watermill and in the preceding allusion to the
;
Domesday.
Another of these ancient laws of Wales provides
against conflagrations at mills :
Affinia incendi : pro molendino x solidi ; pro domo annone id Leo^es
Wallice,
est granario x solidi et annonam quantum in ea sit reddere. lib. II. c. vi.
Fines for incendiary fires. For a mill, ten shillings ; for a grain
house, that is to say, a granary, ten shillings and as much grain as
it contained.
VIII.
INTRODUCED
earliest definite pronouncement known in any British
IN BRITAIN. law of that privilege, designated "milling soke," which
manorial lords afterwards possessed for many cen-
turies but which cannot be further referred to here.
;
mining document
.
Ill
constituting at once the earhest
our records and the ear- ix Britain.
in
viii.
INTRODUCED
purely
liest tangible, if faint, evidence of milling soke 6
:
Anglo-
Saxon
>i* In nomine domini nostri Jesu Christi. Possessio quaedam Charters and
est terrae in regione quae vocatur Cert, monasterii scilicet beatorum Laws.
Petri et Pauli apostolorum, quod situm est ad orientem civitatis
Dorovernis. In hac autem terra habetur molina cuius quippe
semis utilitas, id est dimidia pars molendinae, a possessoribus praefati
monasterii ac terrag huius ad villam regalem quas vocatur Uuyth
tradita est pro hac videlicet conditione atque commutatione, ut
:
homo ille qui banc terram, in qua molina est, tributario jure tenet, Codex Dip. Sax.
unius gregis porcorum pascuam atque pastinationem in saltu Ando- I- 132.
redojugitur haberet. Hanc autem commutationem ego ^^i^thelbertus MSS. Aul. :
rex Cantiae, ut rata in perpetuum existat, signo dominicae crucis Trin., 55'>.
roborare curavi, et testes religiosos ut id ipsum facerent adhibui. Harl. 66, 91.
Actum in civitate Dorovernis anno ab incarnatione domini dcclxii.
*i* Ego .-Ethelbertus rex ut prjefata commutatio atque donatio
firma perpetuo existat, in nomine Dei omnipotentis quibusque digni-
tatis ac conditionis hominibus praecipiet et per crucem dominicae
which for greater force I have marked on this [last] small folio.
Ji I, Bregovinus, archbishop, on behalf of the canons consent-
ing, have signed.
>i* I, Albert, prefect, have signed.
VOL. II. G
98 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING: vol. ii,
Leg. Ang. Sax. pear to contain no reference to watermills till the late
'''^^
fo^n^''"^"' period of the reign of the Confessor (i 041 -1066), and
then they are mentioned but twice. The first allusion
*
We understand that among the mass of inedited ancient documents now
being indexed at Westminster Abbey, some Saxon MSS. occur wliich, on investi-
gation, may be found to add somewhat to the present available evidences.
SEC. I. VVATERMILLS. 99
great Roman highways across the country
,
ix Britain. :
INTRODUCFD ^trongly
with abundance in the laws of various
their
IN BRITAIN, other nations, and which, without reference to foreign
6. feudal laws, renders the early history of British milling
Anglo-
Saxon almost impossible to trace.
Charters and
Referring to the mills of Anglo-Saxon England,
Strutt observes: "The form and construction of
these ancient watermills would be esteemed a very
curious acquisition, but unhappily no such thing can
be traced from their delineations, or any description
Chron. of Eng-
be found in the ancient historians, so that nothing
land, 1779,
II. 219!'"
satisfactory can be said on that head." It is, however,
CHAPTER IX.
DOMESDAY MILLS.
pleted
J
1080, m
rr
anords us
^
statistics
r
ot
v
the
Ml-
milling
'
mills.
resources of the kingdom of a more comprehensive ^
character than has at any period since been effected. The Survey.
By this valuable national return, twenty years after
the Conquest, we are definitely raised above the
myths, doubts, and conjectures that up to this period
invest British milling and may survey and number
:
is fully
exemplified in a later part of this chapter.
"
2. The mill is an item of careful and particular 2.
survey in
Domesday," remarks Canon Eyton and, ;
^^h^^""
says Ellis, "wherever a mill is specified in Domesday Dorset, 1878,41.
104 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING: VOL. II.
IX.
DOMESDA^'
we generally find it still subsisting facts which
"
MILLS. enable us at this day clearly to identify numbers of
watermills still existing in the shires as the direct
Of Saxon survivals of Saxon foundations. Though hundreds of
origin. our present rural watermills must thus date from a
period earlier than Domesday, we are aware of but
one, which is now formally claimed to be of Saxon
origin, to remain on the same site, and to evidence in
some portion of its fabricSaxon workmanship th ;
i
" "
being the restored Saxon Mill at Guy's C iff
Warwickshire.
DOMESDAY
MILLS.
IX. of destroyed mills, as well as mills payino- no rent,
.
Corn Mills, the mills mentioned were corn mills, and we can but
remember that possibly some, though comparatively
few, were devoted to other purposes. The mills of
Lecheswrde (Somerset) at all events paid rent in
Domesday: metal Ibi II. molini redd 11. plubas ferri, these being
:
is now to be
clature. recognised as molinum, molendinum,
molinarium, molendinarium, molione, moletrina (the
combined mill and bakery), molendinellus (a little
mill), &c.
while the special variety, the watermill, the
;
*
Domesday values are to be estimated at about xTTrth of that of the present
currency, a mill quoted at is. being worth $, los. present money.
WATERMILLS.
'
SEC. I. 109
corn and all fruits, so that between Christmas and Candlemas one
acre's seed of wheat, i.e. two seedlips, sold for six shillings, and one
of barley for six shillings, and one of oats, being four seedHps, for
four shillings.* It was thus because corn was so scarce and the penny
was so bad that any man who had a pound at the market could
hardly for anything pass twelve of these pennies.
At such periods the miller who had to pay the
whole or the greater portion of his rent in wheat evi-
dently had to bear a heavy increase at the very time
when, corn being scarce with consumers and very
little being ground, his trade would be worse than
of Edward I., the legal price of eels was fixed at 2d. Old and New
L^"'^^"' ^'^
per stick of twenty-five (that of a turbot 6d., pike 8d.,
salmon is. 3d., &c.), a rate that somewhat consorts
with their probable value at the time of Domesday.
Payment in eels was quite as ceremonious a matter
as payment in cash the abbot of Ramsey (Hunting-
;
don) about 1345 entered upon the abbey books the Cart. Ramesia :
^^- '*^^'
fact of one of his tenants being charged one stick of
112 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
IX.
DOiMESDAY
that
r
one could be erected there i mot pot
^ ibi
MILLS. nerL
Portions of sites and of mills, i.e. proprietary
10.
"lo^hares^
shares in sites and in the right to work mills, are
often recorded (a degree of minutiae not excelled by
the exactness with which, for instance, it is recorded
Ibid., \.
298. ti^at in York one Laudric, carpentarius, held io|
Ibid, I.
ssii-. houses ;)
Archintone (Lincoln), here are half a church
Ibid., I.
341k and half the site of a mill Welletone (Lincoln), the ;
third part of the site of one mill tcia part sedis mold. : i
v'""
pars moline pars alteri molini Bromselle
7 tcia ;
Ibid., I.
45^
(Hants) possessed the fourth part of a mill worth
Ibid., I. 203. lod. iiii'^:
pars molin de x den at Huntingdon the ;
king received from the mill 40s., and the earl, holder
of the barony, 20s. the milling receipts happily being
;
had two parts, and of these two parts the earl had
one third De duob3 molendinis \\t rex duas partes 7
consul tciam. H't etia rex de tcio mot duas partes.
7 de comes ft't tcia.
his 1 1
partibj
While some manors are seen to be so scantily
provided as to be compelled to combine to support
a mill, and even a church, others are found very
liberally supplied with mills ;
of course the absence or
portions of 2, ih, i, i, k
Ordinarily manorial mills were retained ex-
11. 11. Hall Mills,
St. Milburg had held two mills for the use of the
monks Ecctam s milburgse renuit ii molini ser-
:
occur :
At Derby time of King Edward there
in the ^^^^'" '^^'*'^-
paid King Edward a total rent of ^23 ; now with the ibid., i. 280.
mills and the town of Ludecerce it pays
rent of the
IX.
7 villa Ludecerce reddit xxx The
burgesses of
life.
DOMESDAY
MILLS. Norwic held among them half one mill and the fourth
part of another inr eos oins habebant dinP mot 7
:
12.
Town Mills. quarta parte^ uni^ molini. At Lewisham (Kent), the
Ibid., I. 1x6''. eleven town mills had the custom of the rustic popu-
Ibid., I. 12''. lation xi molini cu gablo
:
rustico3. At Esledes
Ibid., I. 7\
(Kent) are five mills of the townsmen v molini vil- :
lanoj.
13. 13. Though the "pistor" appears in Domesday
Working he is no longer the miller and the latter is found
;
Millers.
honoured with a distinctive appellation molendinarius,
indicative of his devotion to the one avocation of grind-
Ibid., I.
231. molen cu molinario de iiii sot. Svinford (Leicester), ;
were beneath the water mills, but that the millers were
subject to the mill owners. This custom was not Fr. Doc. inedit :
'-'^'^- ^'^^^^"'^
peculiarly British. In 648 the foundation charter of
the French Abbey of St. Bertin's hands over to the
abbot among other
effects of the estate of /Eroaldus,
the farinarii, or flourmen. In 980 a similar grant con- Cart.
"^^'
fers the mill with the miller belonging to it molen- :
d^Jc"!,^^
dinum cum mulinario '"
sibi super posito. In the reign
of Louis VIII., about 1220, we read of molinum unum piadtum
cum molinario suo one mill with its miller, scheduled ^udovico
:
Uu
:
Cange.
m as matter-of-fact a manner as a mill with its horse.
The working miller was in fact mere part and parcel
of the equipment of the mill. Like others who " paid
tithes and tolls to their lords or the church, and con-
sumed in anxiety the bread they were allowed to re-
Early
tain," the most aspiring hope of the humble grinder of
^'^""- ^^^
grain was limited by the law of the Conqueror " which
his relative
King Edward had enforced before him,''
that slaves should not be sold out of their own
Leges Ang. Sax.
country, but should live and die on the manor in which Spelman, 229.
they were born.
" "'
way world
in the were esteemed as noble as any of
them. The laws of the city of London in the time of
Athelstane (925-941), for example, enact "
If a churl
:
Leges. or husbandman thrive so that he has fully five hides
Ang. Sax.: 70.
of his own land with a church, a kitchen (kycenan),
[this doubtless containing, like the Roman
pistrinum,
the bakery and the mill], a bellhouse, a gatehouse,
and a general seat and office in the hall of the king,
thenceforth he worthy of the rights of a thane"
is
Text : II. viii. exactly as one of the Brehon laws of Ireland de-
clares the owner of a kiln or a mill entitled to take
rank as a freeman. Many such men do we now
find holding mills. Still, that holders of Domesday
estates or mills were not always thanes or nobles is
evident, since in that case there would have been no
necessity to state owners as being free or not free as
the case might be. Among the holders of portions of
the manor of Stibenhede (Stepney), of which the Bishop
of London was manorial lord, were the four Saxon
Domesday, I. holders of mills already mentioned, one or two if not
all of whom were unable to
give or sell their land
without the license of the bishop : 11
potuit dare vel
vendere pter licentia.
ej*^
Sudtune manor (Worcester)
with its was held by ^Ifi, who could not leave
mill
the manor to live elsewhere n poterat recedere a
:
7 val xl solid.
Among the free Saxon proprietors were the
holders under what was known as the allodial system,
possessing their lands as absolutely as any freeholder
of the present day, and not subject to their confisca-
tion at the will of the kinor. It was this latter con-
Ibid., I. I J
Burgum de grentbrige, ipse Picot fecit ibi iii molend"
q' aufef pastura 7 plures domos destruunt 7 mol unum
a'bfcis de Ely 7 alteru Alani comitis, ipsa molend"
reddt ix p lib This high-handed proceeding
annu.
on the part of Picot still needs explanation the city ;
Domesdav, iv,
records with perfect complacency the fact that Picot,
the sheriff, has in the town of Cambridge two mills
yielding ^8 per annum. In contrast to Picot's
uno hoe.
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 121
the mill belonged to, and who owned it, being dis-
puted questions with the jury. At Ardintone (Berks),
are a Saxon mill held bv Edwin at a rent of lis.,
and two others held by Savuin, paying him 25s. ;
DOMESDAY
MILLS. it on a site where no mill had been in the time of
15. Disputes.
Edward, and where he (Randolph) had no right to
erect one and as it stood upon the land of Bertran
;
borderers, radmen,
J 1-1
admitted men,
occ.
u
o
villems
the ;
Ml DOMESDAY
mills.
paying to the lord the custom of 13s. 4d,, the admitted I6. Embryo
at the ^^ Soke,
residents paying three sextars of wheat, &c. ;
^^'*^-' ^- '79*'-
same time there are here two mills paying to the lord
26s. 4d., and it is added that from the customs, the mills,
the villeins, and the associated men de csuetudirP
7 de molinis 7 uittis 7 colifetis, was
received 105s.,
besides certain income in eels yet no stipulation
;
IX. reference
the jjury to the reign of Athelstane
DOMESDAY by
J j &
MILLS. is
probably erroneous, and at all events not suffi-
16 Embryo ciently
valid to prove on its isolated authority that
of Soke, the custom existed in Saxon times. Still there was
no law in 940 to prevent the Saxon manorial land-
owner who might build a mill compelling his tenants
to grind their corn and possibly the custom
there ;
was not the case at the date of Domesday, nor has ix.
.
,
, . ... r DOMESDAY
in this form,
non fuerunt solutse, prohibemus, &c., et sententiam ex-
communicationis si quam hac occasione promulgaveritis,
* A I. of Germany, dated 1 159, includes the
Cod. Dipl. Pal diploma of Frederick ownership
atinus : of public mills the rights of the crown, which are specified, in order to
among
Beckman. set doubts at rest, as comprising money, public roads, aqueducts, rivers, public
ap.
mills, and bakeries, &c. Quia vero superius mentionem de regalibus fecimus
ne quis de eis dubitet, nominatim ea exprimus hasc itaque regalia esse dicuntur,
:
11 1 , 1 . 1 1 J DOMESDAY
per annum.
Weatherhead v. Bradshaw (Court of Exchequer,
27th January 1773). The plaintiff, rector of Halton,
near Lancaster, in this case claimed tithe in respect of
the mill there. The Bill charged that the defendant ibid., in. 426.
Ibid., I. I.
T.R.E. de hoc dicit nepos Herberti q'^ ep^s baio-
;
23. iWt'/ls are mentioned in the Survey at the plcues 23. Schedule.
named in the appended list. At each place the number of
mills is stated with the rentals so far as they are given :
in Essex, Suffolk, and Norfolk, rents are not scheduled
Arriving at the mill with a sack of wheat on the back of a horse, they cordially
greet the unsuspecting miller, inquiring after the health of his wife and daughter ;
VOL. II. I
130 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING: vol. ii.
IX. will be about one hundred and ten times the amount
DOMESDAY ^^^^^
iiaiea.
MILLS.
The Co7nmissio7iers sometimes quote, with regard to the
23. Schedule. mills, similar comparative figures to those they usually
and remarking that they have some corn which the miller will oblige them by
grinding with what speed he may :
" It shall be done
(quod Simkin) by my fay.
What will ye do while it is in hand ?"
"
By Gad, right by the hopper will I stand
(Quod John) and see how the corn goes in :
Thereupon quietly setting free the students' horse which was tethered behind the
mill, he proceeds with the grinding the two youths watching the process as
:
arranged. Ere long they emerge with their sack of meal, and finding their beast
of burden gone, hastily leave the sack with the miller, and pursue the horse :
Late at even the students return, crestfallen and weary, and conscious that
Our corn is stoln, men will us foyyes call.
Both the warden and eke our fellows all :
Cantvaria, i
5s., formerly be- :
Litelcert, 2 :
5s. lod.
longing to the Archbishop. Welle, I :
3od.
Tarent, 2 50s. :
Estreia, i| :
30s.
Otefort, 6 72 s. :
Apeltres, i : 2s.
Do. 2 :
24s. Estanes, i : 6s. 8d.
Sondresse, 3^ :
13s. 6d. Fachesham, 2 :
15 s.
Do. I : 6d. Bronlei, i :
4s.
Bix, 3 :
48s. MeUingetes, i : 2s.
Erhedre, 3 :
50s. 6d. Esnoiland, 3 :
40s.
Metlinge, 2 : los. Coglestane, i :
3od.
Norflvet, i :
los., with a fishery. Frandesberie, i : 12s.
Broteham, 3 15 s. :
Borchetelle, 2 : 20s.
Meddestane, 5 36s. Sd. :
Hagelei, i 20s. :
Do. 1
5s. :
Lolingeston, i 15s., 150' eels. :
Estvrsete, 1 2 :
^, 5 s. Tarent, 2 : i8s.
Do. 3. Do. I : 20s.
Bvrnes, 2 : 8s. 6d. Hortvne, i :
5s.
Cheringes, i :
4od. Do. I :
15s.
Wingheham, 2 :
34s. Do. |: 5s.
Merseham, 2 :
5s. Hov, I : 10s.
Aldringtone, 3 : 16s. Rochelei, i : 12 s.
Estursete, 5 : 20s. Ciresfel, i : los.
Romenel, i
250. :
Wicheham, i : 2od.
Leminges, i
306. :
Craie, i :
4 2d.
Hede, 2 :
7s 6d. Grenviz, 4 :
70s.
Elesford, 2 :
43s. Crai, 1 : I OS.
Do. I :
5s. Codeham, 2 :
14s. 2d.
Breistede, 2 :
24s. Bacheham, i.
132 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING: VOL. II.
Ofeham, i
5od. :
Cilleham, 6i ^^6, 8s. :
Meletvne, i.
Eslinges, i : los.
Ofeham, i : los. Do. I : I OS.
Berlinge, i :
los., 330 eels. Hortone, 2 : i silver mark.
Borham, i : 6s. Berchevelle, i :
4od.
Haslow, 2 iis. :
Piventone, i : 6od.
Hariardesham, 2 11 s. 6d. :
Ringetone, i :
40s.
Ferebvryne, 2 4od. :
Ewelle, 2 46 s. :
Bogelei, i :
5s. Lertham, 2 : 6s. 8d.
Westselve, i :
i5d. Borne, 2 :
9s. 6d.
Oteham, i :
5s. Estvrai, 10 :
%.
Brvnfelle, i : 6s. 8d. Tanet, i.
Tvrnha, i 6s. :
Rapentone, \: i5d.
Gelingeham, i i6s. 7d.
:
Mundingeham, i : i6s.
Ceteham, i :
3 2d. Levisham, 11: ^^8, 12s., with
Hov, I I OS.
: the grinding of the rustics.
Ferlagam, i :
5s. Sievetone, i lod. :
Nedestede, 2 :
14s. Essetesford, 2 los. 2d. :
Otringeberge, 2 :
3s. Etretone, i 20s. :
Bvrnes, i :
38d. Oistreham, i 5s. :
Wicheham, 2 :
50s. Boltvne, 2 7s. 2d. :
Fvlchestan, 7 :
^% 12s. Hallinges, 2 :
25s.
Do. \\: 1 6s. 5d. Bermehnge, i :
5s.
Do. 2 :
24s. Wivarley, i :
9s., 60 eels.
Do. I :
3od. Marovrde, 2 : los.
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 133
IX.
SVDSEXE. (I. 1 6.)
DOMESDAY
MILLS.
Boseham, 8 :
j4, 3oJd. Cochinges, 5 :
38s. 6d.
100 23. Schedule.
Meninges. 5 :
^4, los., 2000 eels. Seleham, i : los., eels.
Do. 2 : I OS. Tadeham, I :
i4d.
Do. I :
5$. Peteorde, i :
20s., 180 eels.
Odintvne, i :
39d. Tolintone, i :
20s., 120 eels.
Pageham, i : los. Greteham, i : ids.
Loventone, i : 6s. Donechitone, 4 :
38s.
Hafelse, i with a fishery frac-
:
Svdtone, 3 13s. 9 d. :
Staninges, 4 :
47s. Borne, 3 40s. :
Boseham, 3 :
14s. Do. I : I OS.
Halestede, i :
4s. Do. I : I OS.
Ferle, 2 :
30s. Perham, i 3Gd. :
Sesingeham, i :
los., 500 eels. Lolinminstre, i :
5s.
Hertevel, i :
4s., 350 eels. Nonneminstre, i :
3od.
Gorde, i 9s. :
Wepeham, i :
3od.
Hortsede, i 8s. :
Bigenevre. 2 28s., and one mill- :
Do. I 10 modias :
Rochintone, 2 12s. 6d. :
Bradwatre, i :
ys. Welbedinge, i : los.
i i
Svltinges, :
3s. Epinges, :
3s. 4d.
Waletone, 2 :
30s. Werpedesdvne, i :
3od.
Cherchefelle, 2: 12 s. 2|d. Civentone, i 32d. :
Feceham, 4 :
4s. Bochelant, i 6s. :
Gomeselle, i :
4od. Beddingtone, 2 40s. :
Dorchinges, 3 :
15s. 4d. Taleorde, i sine censu.
Do I : for the Hall. Ditvne, i 9s. :
Godelminge, 3 :
41s. 8d. Meldone, i 12s. :
Croindene, i :
5s. Cisendone, \\ iis.
Mortelage, 2 : loos. Waletone, i 12 s. 6d. :
Merstan, i Stoche, I
:
3od. :
7s.
Ferneham, 6 :
46s. 4d. Do. I : 6s.
i
Wochinges i :
3od. Eldeburie, :
5s.
Brvwlei, 5 : 26s. Scaldefor, 3 : i6s.
Celeorde, i :
7s. Tornegrostam, i : 20s.
Do. I : 2od. Becesworde, i : los.
Codintone, i :
4od. Abingeborne, i : 6s.
Mordone, i :
40s. Beddingtone, 2 35s. :
Biflet, I :
5s. Odetone, i : 2od.
Limensfeld, i 2s. :
Wiselei, i : los.
Wachelestede, i 6s. :
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 135
IX.
HANTESCIRE. (I. 38.)
DOMESDAY
MILLS.
Odiham, 8 56s. 8d. : Abedestvne, i
15s. :
los.
23. Schedule.
Neteham, 8h: ^4, 14s. 3id. Benedlee, i :
Malpedresha, 3 20s. :
Ciltecvbe, 4 :
^4.
Svdbertune, 2 15s. :
Notesselinge. i : 22s. 8d.
Do. I :
5s. Cilbodentvne, i :
15s.
Menestoche, i : los. Wilcerce, 3 :
40s,
Menes, 6 40s. :
Frigefolc, i : 20s.
Bertvne, 3 42s. 6d- :
Eisseburne, 5 :
25 s.
Wallope, 3 15 s. : Do. I : I2S. 6d.
Do. 3: 25s. Clere, i :
3od.
Brestone. In the time of King Crvndele, i :
3s.
Edward certain land was given Fernebergam, i : lod.
for a mill for this manor ; and Drochenford, 2 :
15s. 2d.
in the time of King William Benetstede, i : los.
the mill was accepted and so Polemtvne, 2 :
33s.
matters remain. Essessentvne, 2 20s. :
Do. I 3od. :
Ordie, i 25 s. :
Cladford, 3 57 s. 6d- :
Wenesistvne, i 7s. 6d. :
Stanevde, i 5s. :
Brandesberee, i 15 s. :
Edlinges, 2 :
25s. Eccleswelle, 2 lood. :
Thvinam, i : :
5s. Fvgelerestvne, i los. :
Holeest, i :
15s. Lehtford, ih 22 s. 6d. :
Basingestoches, 3 :
30s. Avltone, | 4Sv 7d. :
Clere, 2 lood. :
Betametone, 2 for the HalL :
Edintvne, J :
7s. Tochiton, 2 35s. :
Hovstvn, 4 :
70s. Anna, 2 30s. :
136 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
Effelle, I Brocheseve, 1
:
5s :
5s.
Bromselle, | : lod. Fvntelei, i : 12s. 6d.
Stradfelle, 1 : for the Hall. Ormeresfelt, i : 6s. 6d.
Herdel, i. Vlwarcvbe, i :
35d.
DOMESDAY
iis.
MILLS.
Begeslei, i :
3od. Witesfel, 3 :
i Alvrestone, i 4od.
Melleford, :
3od. :
23. Schedule.
Einforde, i held by a : which is Evreland, i : 12s.
certain custodian for the lord Sidam, 2 :
5s.
the king. Sorewelle, i :
4od.
Broc, I :
i5d. Seldeflat, i : iid.
Bovecome, i :
4od. Sevtecome, i.
Side, 4 : 12s. 6d. Sidam, i los. :
Alwinestvne, 2 :
5s. Melevsford, i : sine censu.
Cavborne, 2 : 6s. 3d. Essevete, i : sine censu.
I
Gatecome, i :
4od. Socte, :
40s.
Cavborne, i :
5s. Hvncheford, i : sine censu
Cocheha, 2 22s. 6d :
Bocheland, i : 12s. 6d.
Blitberie, 3 :
37s. 6d Comenore, 2 50s.
:
Celsea, 3 : 62 s. Bertvne, 2 :
40s.
Bastedene, i :
15s. Do. 2 : of the Court of the
Wanetinz, i : \ ood. abbot [of Abingdon] : sine
Cerletone, i :
7s. 6d., which censu.
Walter Gifard holds unjustly, Waliford, 5 : 60s.
as the Hundred says. Merceham, i :
15s.
Waregrave, i :
gs. 2d. Wareford, i :
7s. 6d.
Rameham, 1: 20s., 1000 eels. Hanlei, i: 12s.
Soanesfelt, i :
5od. Middeltvne, i : los.
Selingefelle, i :
5s., 150 eels. Do. I : I2S. 6d.
Fuichamestedem, i :
7s. 6d. Apleford, 2 :
25 s.
Chenetberie, 2 :
32s. 6d. Witeham, i : los.
Eseldeborne, i : los. Wiselai, i
250 eels
:
5s.,
Eddevetone, i :
15s. Lewartone, i los. :
Ledencvbe, 5 :
^^4. Offentone, 1 :
5s.
Seriveham, 2 : 20s. Spersold, i :
5 s.
Ferendone, i :
35s., with fishery. Serengeford, i 3od. :
Henret, i 42 s. :
Eissesberie, i : 12s. 6d.
Stivetone, 3 45 s. :
Sotwelle, I :
15 s.
Ordia, i 12s. 6d. :
Coleselle, \: los.
Redinges, 4 35s., increased to :
Reddinges, 2 :
40s
50s. Cheneteberie, i 4s:
Pandeborne, i 20s. :
Sewelle, i : los.
Heldremanestvne, i : 20s. Borgedeberie, i :
4s,
Olvricestvne, 2: 12 s. 6d. Colecote, i 4s. :
Harvvelle, i 3od. :
Blitberie, i :
4s.
Bristowelle, i 20s. :
Hannei, i : 12s. 6d.
138 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
Cerletone, i :
5s. ingtone [manor].
Slanford, 2 :
7s. 6d. Avintone, i los. :
Borgefelle, i :
5s. lod. Siford, \: 7s. 6d.
OUavintone, i
15s.
:
Celrea, i :
5od.
Inglefelle, i : los. Brintone, i : 12s.
Bradefelt, 3 :
53s. Stradfeld, i : sine censu.
Etingedene, i :
5s. Borgefel, \: 5s. lod.
Stanworde, i : 12 s. Cerletone, \: 5 s.
Hingepene, i : 12s. 6d. Brochentone, i :
5s.
Peteorde, | 7s. 6d. :
Clivore, i : los.
Svdcote, I i8s. :
Vlvretone, 2 50s.
:
Deretone, i 15s. :
Essages, i : 20s.
Mortvne, i : 12s. 6d. Porlei, I : los.
Tanebvrne, x : 20s. Bagenore, i 20s. :
Coleshalle, ^ 10s. :
Bochesorne, i 27s. 6d. :
Celrea, i 4s. :
Coleselle, g ros. :
Hannei, 2 :
30s. Hacheborne, i : 12s. 6d.
Lamborne, 2 :
15s. Henret, i los. :
Ledecvbe, 2 :
^^3. Henret, i 20s. :
Cavna, 7 :
jQa,, i 2S. 6d. Aldeborne, 4: i6s. 8d.
Do., 2 : 20s. Cosseham, 2 8s. 6d. :
Amblesberie, 8 :
^4, i os. Cvmbe, 2 :
25s.
Gverminstre, 7 :
^4. Bromham, 2 :
5s.
Chepeham, 12 :
;^6. Westberie, 6 :
70s. 6d.
Malmesberie, i : los. Wintrebvrne, i : los.
23. Schedule.
Elendvne, 6 :
42s. 6d. Bradeforde, 2 :
^^3.
Wemberge, i :
5s. Ledentone, 2 :
5s.
Enedforde, 2 :
25s. Domnitone, 2 : 12s. 6d.
Poterne, 6 :
43s. 4d. Newetone, i : 12s. 6d.
Do., \ :
30s. Chelche, 5 65s. :
Svindvne, i :
4s. Newentone, 2 :
40s.
Dechementvne, 4: 27s. Wilgi, I : I OS.
Liteltone, i :
7s. 6d. Ocheforde, i 5s. :
Etvne, I los. :
Febefonte, 2 17 s. 6d. :
Svmreford, i los. :
Lavvregestohes, i 7 s. 6d. :
Dobreham, 4 20s. :
lerchesfonte, 3 : 21s. 4d.
Hanindone, 2 : 8s. Caninge, i :
13s.
Devrel, i 5s. :
Edendone, 2 :
19s.
Cristemeleforde, 2 :
40s. Aistone, 3 32s. 6d. :
Badeberie, i 4od. :
Boltintone, 2 65s. :
Mildenhalle, i 30s. :
Devrel, i 3od. :
Niteletone, 3 22 s. 6d. :
Uptone, I 20s. :
Nortone, i :
15 s. Retmore, i :
14s.
Brocheneberge, 8 :
j6, 1 2s. 6d. Bredecvbe, i : los.
Corstone, i : 12 s. 6d. Fiscartone, i : los.
Chemele, 2 :
15s. Con tone, i : los.
Celeorde, i : los. Tedrintone, \ 3od. :
Newentone, 2 :
30s. Alentone, i 20s. :
Cerletone, i :
15 s. Stradford, 2 :
17s. 6d.
Gardone, 2 :
25 s. Awltone, i : los.
Breme, i : i6s. Of this land Wrdervsteselle, i : i8d.
Edward holds four hides and Wintrebvrne, i :
5s.
Eodricfour hides and here : is a Stoche, I :
3od.
mill between them yielding 1 6s. Somreforde, part i5d. :
Do. 2 30s. :
Blontesdone, i 2 5d. :
Piritone, i :
5s. Boientone, i 15s. :
Essitone, i :
5s. Lacoch, 2 1 7s. 6d. :
140 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING : VOL. II.
Calestone, i :
15s. Adhelmertone, i :
7s.
Standom, i : 6s. Coteford, | :
3 s.
Caldefelle, | : i8d. Digeric, | :
5s.
Helmerintone, i :
7s. Lachlam, 2 :
30s.
Rode. 2 9s. 8d. : William holds Opetone, i :
5s.
1 8 hides, Gislebert i hide, and Svtone, I 4s.
:
Wildehille, I :
25d. Herdicote, ^ 6s. :
Chenete, i 12s. :
Witeberge, i 12s. 6d. :
Broctone, 2 9s. :
Mildestone, i i8s. :
Svmreford, J 8s. :
Estone, i 6s. :
Suntecote, i :
5s. Fontel, I 5s.
:
Wih, I :
15 s. Devrel, i 3od.
:
Colerne, i :
13s. 6d. Ogeford, i :
4s.
Goltone, i 15s. :
Coleselle, 2 : 22s. 4d.
Wodetone, i :
3od. Calestone, i 15s. :
Cilletone, 2 :
40s. Stratone, i 2s. :
Ochebvrne, i :
30s. Chesigeberie, i 7s. 6d. :
Haseberie, 2 :
35 s. Svdtone, ^ 6s. 8d. :
Calvedvne, i ids. :
Stoche, 1 5s. :
Litelfrome, i :
4s. Do. 2 28d. :
Watrecome, h :
4s. W^intrebvme, i : i6d.
Cerminstre, i : 6s. Do. I :
r5d.
Altone, I :
15s. Tarente, i :
5s.
Obcerne, i :
15s. Do. 2 :
30s., 1000 eels.
Etiminstre, i :
5s. Newentone, 3 :
40s.
Hinetone, i : I OS. Do. I :
3s. gd.
Do. i: A.dford, I :
5s.
Winbvrne, i Pidrie, 3 : 60s.
Scirebvrne, 4 : 1 8s. 6d. Tarente, i :
5s.
Do. 3 :
3od. Cerneli, i : 20s.
Do. I : IDS. Affapidele, 2 :
15 s.
142 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II,
Mideltone, i :
65d. Blaneford, i 20s. :
23. Schedule.
Sidelinge, 2 :
7s. 6d. Stoches, I :
15s.
Mideltvne, i 15s. :
Stanberge, i.
Stoche, I isd. :
Mortone, i 3s. :
Pidele, i 4od. :
Lahoc, I 6s. :
Osmentone, i :
5s. Wodetone, i i5d. :
Ertacomestoche, 3 3 yd. :
Cerfeli, i :
3d. [this and Svn-
Cerne, i 2od. In the pos- : done Somerset being the
in
session of Cerne Abbey in the lowest cash rentals in the list].
time of King Edward, and Fifhide, 2 : 22s. 6d.
could not be separated from Lelsametone, i.
Frantone, 2 20s. :
Iwerne, i 3s. :
Stvre, 3 :
30s. Cheneford, 2 15s. :
Meleberie, 3 :
15s. 3d. Bradeford, 2 20s. :
Evneminstre, 3 :
17s. Svere, i : i6s.
Fifhide, i :
5s. Wenfrot, i : los.
Stoche, I : I2d. Frome, i : los.
Cesebvrne, i :
15s. Werne, 2 : 12s.
Hanford,
Acford, ^ of
2 :
2
i6s.
: los. - Malperetone,
-^Seltone, 3 :
5s.
i :
5s.
i -Milletone, i
Stanford, :
4s. ,
:
i5d.
Cerne, i :
5s. Todeberie, i : ids. '.
Do. I :
4od. Ristone, i.
Wai, 2 : 20s. Chenistetone, 2 : 12s.
Do. 2 :
32s. Candelle, i 9s. :
Pidele, i :
4od. Do. I :
3s.
Do. I 4od :
Manestone, 2 : 12s.
Wichemetone, i :
5s. Mordvne, i 45d. :
Lodre, i :
3s. Bridie, i : los.
SEC. WATERMILLS. 143
Dorsete contd. Dorsete confd. IX.
Melebvme, i :
3 2d. Tarente, i 3od. : DOMESDAY
6s.
MILLS.
Ogre, I :
Warnewelle, i 5s. :
Meleberie, i 5s. :
Harpere, i 2od. :
23. Schedule.
Povestoch, 2 3s. : Tacatone, i 12s. 6d. :
Pidere, i :
3s. Waia, I 15 s.
:
Odetvn, 2 :
15 s. Craveford, ^ 3od. :
Ringestede, \ 4s. :
Werm, i : 2s. 4d. l^
Cernel, i 3od. :
Povrtone, i.
Mortestorne, i 7 s. 6d. :
Ciltecome, i 5s. :
Alford, I :
33s. 6d. Gaveltone, i 12s. 6d. :
Wintrebvrne, i i6d. :
Stoche, I 4od. :
Frome, i 5s. :
Pidele, i :
7s. 6d.
Geoselbvrne, i 3od. :
Meleborne, i 2 5d. :
Bocheland, i 20s. :
Frome, i 5s. :
Waia, 3 35s. :
Wintrebvrne, 3 parts 9s. :
Winbvme, 1 :
i5d. the town.
Bere, i : 20s. Waldie, i 45d. :
Penaganole, i : 12 s. 6 d. Bochehatone, i :
5s.
Wintrebvre, i :
5s. Moleham, i : 6d.
Svdperet, i 20s. :
Cainesham, 6 : 60s.
Willetone, Candetone, and Car- Beletone, i :
15 s.
entone, 2 5s. :
Stantone, i : los.
Beiminstre, i 5s. :
Cuvetvne, 5 :
30s. ^^d.
Frome, 3 25s. :
Estone, 2 : lood.
Brvmetone, 6 : 20s. Tan tone, 3 : iocs.
Milebvrne, 6: 77s. 6d. Do. I :
3s.
Brvnetone, 2 3s. : Do. 2 : 6s. Sd.
Give, 2 54d. : Do. 2 :
14s. 2d.
Langeford, i 7s. 6d. :
Seveberge, h : lod.
Winesford, i 6d. :
Contone, i :
3od.
Crice, i : Sd. Stoches, I :
3s.
Crvche, 4 40s. :
Harpetrev, i :
5s.
Cvngresberie, 2 :
7s. 6d. Clvtone, I :
3od.
Camel, 2 : 20s. Temesbare, 2 parts :
3s.
Cocre, I :
5$. Do. ^: 2S.
i
Hesterige, :
3od. Nortone, i 4od. :
144 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING: VOL. II.
Porteshe,
"'^^ i
^ :
= ^^
8s. Chivve, 3 : 20s.
23. Schedule. J""^.
Bacoue, i :
4s. Do. 2 : I OS.
Contone, 2 25 s. :
Estone, 2 : 6s. 8d.
Stratone, i :
5s. Lideford, i : los.
Picote, I 4od. :
Piltone, 2 : los.
Tvvertone, 2 30s. :
Piltone, 2 :
4s. 6d.
Stoche, I 13s. :
Baltvnesberge, i :
5s.
Babingtone, i 4od. :
Cerletone, i gd. :
Lolictone, i 20s. :
Westcvbe, 2 :
5s.
Horcerlei, i 12s. 6d. :
Mvlle, I :
5s.
Tablesford, \ 7s. 6d. :
Watelei, i :
5s.
Do. 2 9s. :
Weretone, 3 :
14s. 2d.
Rode. From the mills issue, 27s. Dicesget, i :
7s. 5d.
Caivel, i :
3od. Lamieta, 3 13s. 4d. :
Estone, i 3od. :
Ileminstre, 3 : 22s. 6d.
I
Herpetrey, i 5s. :
lie, :
15s.
Camelei, i 5s. :
Camelle, i : los.
Liteltone, i 5od. :
Atiltone, i :
7s. 6d.
Weregrave, i 3s. :
Crvche, i :
5s.
i
Welle, 4 30s. :
Monteburg, :
3od.
Do. 2 5od. : Lands of St. Andrews, i : 20s.
Do. 2 : I OS. Church of Frome, i :
5s.
Do. I :
7s. 6d. Bera, i : 6d.
Chingesberie, 2 :
3od. Newentone, i :
i5d.
Cerdre, i 3od. : Locheston, i : 6d.
Wivelscome, i i
:
sod. Belgetone, :
15s.
Walintone, 2 15s.:
Conititone, i :
64d.
Lidegar, i :
3 id. Sanford, i.
Banwelle, i :
los., payable to Crvche, i 12 s. :
Richard. Sevenehantone, i :
5s.
Do. I :
payable
4od., to Slantvne, i : sine censu.
I 14s.
Ordolph. Isle, :
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 145
Svmersete contd. Svmersete con/d. IX.
Tintehalle, i 3od. :
Clive, I : 6s. DOMESDAY
Stochel, I :
4od. Hille, I : i2d. MILLS.
Draicote, 15 i : s. Sanford, i : 8d.
23. Schedule.
Stoche, 2 9s. :
Tome, I : los.
Brvcheford, i 12s. 6d. :
Ache, I :
4s.
Aisse, 2 :
15 s. Brinetone, i :
3od.
Grindeham, i 5s. :
Bertone, i :
5s,
Domet, I sine censu. :
Limintone, i 20s. :
Staple, I :
3od. Halse, I ids. :
Meriet, 3 :
30s. Hiwis, I I2d. :
Harpetrev, i 5s. :
Scheligate, i : lod.
12s. 6d.
Bredene, i :
Radingetone, i :
grinding for the
Bradeford, i los. : Hall.
Hele, I los.
:
Chedesford, i 7s. :
Cinioch, i :
i5d. Svtone, I i6s. :
Peret, 2 :
14s. Bechintone, i 20s. :
Vdecome, i :
7s. 6d. Birchelei, i : 12 s. 6d.
Ceolseberge, i 15 s. :
Mersitone, i : 6s.
Cinioch, i los. :
Peune, i 4od. :
Clovewrde, i :
15s. Wincaletone, i :
3od.
Claford, i 3s. :
Cari, 3 :
34s.
Gerlintvne, i :
7s. Spercheford, i :
7s. 6d.
Vfetone, i 3od. :
Almvndesford, i :
7s. 6d.
Svtone, I sine censu. :
Br\-gie, i :
5s.
Do. I :
7s. 6d. Bagetrepe, i :
4s.
Credelincote, i :
5s. Contvne, i 6d. :
Stoche, I lod. :
Harpetrev, i 5s. :
Aldedeford, i :
7s. Stochelande, i lod. :
Geveltone, 2 :
30s. Hantone, 2 :
34s.
Hantone, i :
4s. Nortvne, i :
5s.
Ivle, I : I OS. Westone, i : 20s.
Stoche, I : i6d. Reddene, 2 :
15s.
Otone, I : lod. Tvmbeli, i :
3od.
Horstenetone, i 42d. Mideltone, i
5 s.
: :
Cantocheheve, i :
7s. 6d. Melecome, i : 1 2d
Hewis, I 3s. :
Candetone, i
5s. :
Hille, I :
3od. Brochelande, i :
7s.
Lochintone, i : los. Cvme, I
5od. :
Pidecome, 2 :
15s. Lideford, i 15 s. :
Cadeberie, 2 22s. :
Timesberie, i 4od. :
Westone, \ 45d. :
Estone, i 5s. :
Cvntone, i 8s. :
Claftertone, i 7s. 6d. :
DEVENESCIRE. (L 100.)
Alseminstre, 2 los. :
Vlpesse, I : I2S.
Cvlitone, i 4od. : Do. I : 2 OS.
Chentone, i 5od. :
Tavestoch, i :
serving the Court.
Wodeberie, i 7s. 6d. :
Adrelia, i : 6d.
Tovretone, 2 : 66d. Otrei, 3 :
30s.
Coletone, i :
7s. 6d. Otritone, 3 :
40s.
Chenemetone, i :
5s. Herticome, i : 6s.
Witeford, i :
5s. Honetone, i : 6s. 6d.
Taletone, i :
5od. Chent, I :
3od.
Nimetone, i :
4od. Hantone, i :
4s.
Chentesberie, i 5s. :
Bernardesmore, i 5s. :
Coic, I : I OS.
Essoic, I : I OS.
Hidone, i :
3od.
Colvn, I :
3od.
Brenford, i : 8s.
Otrit, I :
5s.
Chetelescome, i : 2s.
Vlveberie, i :
5s.
Mvsberie, i 5s. :
Corneorde, i 15 s. :
Forde, i 3od. :
Line, i new. :
Alforde, i :
3od.
Derte, i.
Poldreha, i 5od. :
Baentone, i los. :
Depeforde, i 8d. :
Offecome, 2 los. :
Otri, 1 : I OS.
Stoch, I :
serving the Hall.
Gidesha, i : los.
CORNVALGIE,
148 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
IX.
DOMESDAY HERTFORDSCIRE.
MILLS. (L 132.)
Watone, 2 :
17s. Peritone, 4 :
73s. 4d.
Hadam, i :
4s. Emmewelle, i : 6s.
Wideford, i :
5s. Hertfordingberie, 2 : 6s.
Storteford, 2 :
30s. Stanestede, i 10s. :
Wetamestede, 4 :
40s. Belingehou, i : 6s. 8d.
Eldeham, i 5s. :
Westone, i los. :
Escewelle, 2 :
14s. Hertford Hd., i : 6s. 8d.
Do. I : I OS. Gatesdene, i 5s. :
Waldene, 2 :
15s. Belingehou, i : los.
Villa S. Albani, 3 :
40s. Sabrixteworde, i : 20s.
Codicote, 2 : 12s. Torlei, 1 : 10s.
Absa, I 10s. :
Rochesforde, i :
5s.
Prichenmareworde, i :
5s. 4d. Esteuuiche, i :
5s.
Caisov, 4 26s. 8d. :
Dichelesuuelle, ^ :
4od.
Hegaestanestone, 2 :
3s. 4d, Senechape, i : 20s.
Brichendone, i 8s. :
Esceuuelle, i : los.
Berchewastede, 2 20s. :
Radeuuelle, i : 6s. 8d.
Tenuinge, i 8s.
Wigentone, i 5s. : :
Eilesberia, 2 :
23s. Brotone, i : of the Hall.
Wendovre, 2 : los. Brichelle, i : los.
Riseberge, 2 :
14s. bd. Brotone, i : los.
Opetone, i :
4s. Havresham, i :
8s., 75 eels.
Haltone, i :
15s. Caldecote, i : 8s.
Herdeuuelle, i 8s. :
Wirecasberie, 2 40s. :
Westone, 4 33 s. 4d. :
Eddinberge, 2 15s. 4d. :
Celfunde, i 6s. :
Santesdune, 2 8s. :
Elmodesham, i :
4s. Sobintone, i los. :
Cestreham, 2 :
3s. Votesdone, i 12s. :
Dileherst, i :
3s. Stan tone, i los. 8d., 50 : eels.
Imere, i los. :
Elmodesham, i :
5s.
Prestone, i :
3 2d. Cestreham, i : los.
Ceteode, i 3od. :
Calvretone, i 13s. 4d.
:
Tedinwiche, i 4s. :
Hortvne, i : 20s.
Gateherst, i :
13s. Ettone, 2 20s. :
Lauuendene, i :
los., 50 eels. Radeclive, i 5 s. :
Brichella. 2 :
30s. Ternitone, i 10 oras. :
Credendone, i iSs. :
Celsunte, 3 One rendering 5 :
Wichendone, i :
20s., 70 eels. oras and the other two render-
Lechamestede, i : 2od. ing nothing.
Becentone, i : los. Torneberge, i : 20s.
Vlesdone, i :
4s. Pateberie, i :
15s.
Vlsiestone, i : los. Stoches, I : 8s.
150 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
MILLS.
Elmodesham, i :
4s. Cestreham, i 6s. 8d. :
Oxenford. Niwetone, \ :
25d.
Besintone, 2 :
40s. Do. I : i6d.
Hedintone, 2 :
50s. Bertone, i : 2S.
Cherielintone, 2 :
35 s. Do. 2: IDS.
Sciptone, 6 55 : s. Sanford, i :
3od.
Bentone, 4 25s. :
Cestitone, i :
5od.
Blochesham, 6 565. 4d. :
Lineham, i :
7s. 6d.
Langefort, 2 20s. :
Levachanole, i : 2od.
Witenie, 2 32s. 6d. :
Codesdone, i.
Edbvrgberie, 2 30s. :
Bereford, i :
9s.
Dorchecestre, i 20s. : Tademertone, i :
4s.
Do. 4 38s. : Do. I :
5s.
Tame, i : 20s. Henestan, 4 :
19s.
Middeltone, i :
15 s. Teigtone, 2 :
32s. 6d.
Banesberie, 3 45s. :
Westone, i :
4s.
Cropelie, 2 28s. :
Peritone, i :
5s.
Eglesham, i :
12s., 450 eels. Tachelie, i : los.
Cropelei, 3 :
35s. 4d. rent of one virgate of land).
Wicham, i :
30s. Cavesham, i : 20s.
Stoch, I :
9s. sd. Lachebroc, site : los.
Cvbe, I 3s. :
Cravmares, 2 :
40s.
Dadintone, 3: 41s., 100 eels. Hen tone, i : 12 s.
Stantone, 3 :
40s. Hvnesworde, i : 8s.
Svmertvne, i :
20s., 400 eels. Celford, i :
3s. 4d.
Feringeford, 2 : los. Dene, 2 :
5s.
Blade, 2 14s., 125
: eels. Hornelie, i 5s. :
Cersetone, i :
15s. 6d., 75 eels Garinges, i : 20s.
Rowesham, parts of 2 :
Brotone, 2 12s. 6d. :
Celgrave, 5 60s. :
Hansitone, i 5s. :
Redrefeld, i 20s. :
Midelcvbe, part 2s. :
Witecerce, i 20s. :
Bvrtone, i 3s :
Stoches, 2 20s. :
Radeford, i 2od. :
Cestretone, i los. :
Chidintone, part 2od. :
Caningeham, i :
44d. Salford, part : 1 2d.
Langeberge, i :
5s. time of King Edward now :
Avre, I :
3od. the rent is increased by 8d.
152 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
Lindenee, i 4od, :
Drifelle, i :
5s.
Tedeneha, i 4od. :
Stanhos, 2 17s. 6d. :
Cedeforde, 3 :
14s. 2d. Odelaveston, i 4od. :
Chenvichelle, 2 20s.
:
Dvntesborne, i : 8s.
Aicote, I 64d. :
Witetvne, i los. :
Becheberie, 2 17s. :
Risedone, i : los.
Contone, i 5s. :
Getinge, 3 24s. :
Surham, i i2d. :
Egesworde, i 3od. :
Pvlcrecerce, 2 lood. :
Stratone, 2 : 20s.
Bertvne, i 5s. :
Svintone, i : los.
Boxewelle, i 5s. :
Sclostre, i : 12 s.
Cvlne, 2 Wermetvn, i 8s.
25 s.
: :
Ledene, i :
4s. Teteberie, i :
i5d.
Omenie, i :
5s. Hasedene, \ 3od. :
Bladintvn, i :
Horedone, i : 6s.
5s.
Cerletone, i : 2od. Sapletorne and Frantone, 2 : 6s.
Rindecome, i 8s.
Kvlege, I 5od. : :
Svdlege, 6 52 s. :
Todintvn, 2 20s. :
Westone, i los. :
Brocowardinge, i : 2s,
Sciptvne, i : los.
Benewedene, i : los.
Cerintone, i :
3od.
Alrelie, i : los.
Svineberie, i 6d. :
Estvne, i 8s. :
Hildeslie, 3 : i8s.
Torteword, 3 :
156.
Stantone, 2 :
35s.
Winestane, i : 2cd.
154 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
Rueland, 2 15s. :
Etvne, I :
5s.
Do. I
7s. :
Capel, I :
3s.
Mavrdine, i 20s., 24 sticks of :
Widingtvne, i : 2s.
eels. Frome, i : 8s.
Do. 2 :
25s. Rosse, I 6s. 8d. :
Lege, 2 :
24s. Pevne, i 3 2d. :
Riseberie, 1 :
4s. Mortvne, i :
4s.
Bradeford, i los. :
Bromgerbe, i : los.
Stantone, i 4od. :
Lvtelonhereford, i : 6s. 8d.
Boniniope, ^ of 2 :
14s. 8d. Penebrvge, i los. :
Stratone, i :
3 2d. Estvne, i rendering nothing.
:
Brismerfrvm, i los. :
Lvdeforde, i : 6s.
GRENTEBRSCIRE. (L .)
Bvrgvm de Grentebrige, 3 :
;^9 ; Salseton, i : 26s. 2d.
builtby Picot. Scelgei, i : los.
Witborham, i los., and : 2 oras Melrode, 2 :
15s. 4d.
in toll. Fuleberie, i : 20s.
Sahara, 2 :
24s. Hintone, 4 :
25s.
Fordeham, 3|: 22s. 8d., i25oeels. Bercheham, i :
5s.
Essehnge, 3 :
20s., 7000 eels. Do. I : 2S.
Histetone, i 8s. :
Abintone, i 6s. 8d. :
Belesham, i 4s. :
Wandric, 2 45s. :
Bodichessha, 4 :
14s. Esceprid, 1 :
7s. 2'^d.
Suafha, 3 :
30s. 4^d.,and 300 eels. Orduuelle, i : 8s.
Do. I. In the time of King Snellewelle, 4: 14s. 4d.
Edward, Alurin, harparius, Suafham, i :
7s.
held this manor and one Wiborgham, i : 22s.
mill,which he farmed from Hildricesham, i los. :
king, and was not able to Coeia, 2|- : 22s. Held by Picot.
recede without license from Do. ^: iid.
the abbot. Hestitone, 2 21s. 4d. :
Brantvne, 2 loos. :
Alwoltvne, 2 40s.
Godmvndcestre, 3 : loos. Sibestvne, ^ : los.
Bvgedene, i 30s. :
Opetvne, i 3s. :
Lactone, i :
3s. Chenebaltone, i 5s. :
Broctvne, i :
3s. Cateworde, i 2s. :
Adelintvne, 2 :
40s. Einvlvesberie, i :
23s.
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 157
Lestone, 2 :
158 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
IX.
DOMESDAY NORTHANTSCIRE. (L 219.)
MILLS.
Chetene, i : 6s. 8d. Stoche, 2 : 8s.
23. Schedule.
Tichesovre, i :
5s. Esindone. i : i6s.
Seietone, i :
36d. Ceevecvbe, 3 : i6s.
Lvfenham, i :
36d. Bvrg, 1:5s.
Do. and Scvletorp, 2 :
4od. Cotingeha, i :
4od.
Castretone, i : i6s. Castre, i : 8s.
Nortone, 2 15 s. :
Eglesworde, 2 : 12s.
Tovecestre, i 13s. 4d. :
Pillesgate, i : los.
Svdtone, i los. 8d. :
Vndelle, i :
20s., and 250 eels.
Hardingestorp, 2 50s. :
Wermintone, i :
40s.,and 325
Gretone, i 3s. : eels.
Brigstoc, I :
5s. Ascetone, 2 40s., and 325 : eels.
Dodintone, i :
4s. Tedinwelle, 2 24s. :
Rodewelland Overtone, 2 :
9s, 4d. Erdibvrne, i i8s. :
Briclesworde, 2 :
33s. 4d. Stanwige, i 20s. :
Bassonha, i Erdinbvrne, i
:
13s. 4d. :
5s.
Wiclei, I :
64d. Craneford, i : 2s.
Waltone, i :
4s. Werchintone, i 12s. :
Hertewelle, i :
17s. 4d. Bernewelle, 2 24s. :
Deneforde, 2 :
50s. 8d., and 300 Edintone, i 13s. 4d. :
Do, I :
13s. 4d., and 65 Nevbote, i : 2s.
eels. Arintone, 4 2s. :
Hargindone, i 8s. :
Svtone, I 3 2d. :
Wedone, i :
4od. Aldevincle, i : 6s.
Welintone, i i2d.
:
Cvgenho, i :
13s.
Svtone, I : 2s. Wacherlei. i :
5s.
Wodeford, i : 8s. Estone, i : 20s.
Echentone, 2 14s. :
CHwetone, i : 2s.
Stoche, I : i2d. Hintone, i : 2s.
Teworde, i 3od. :
Cvleorde, i 4od. :
Blarewiche, i 3od. :
Ceselingeberie, 2 : 40s.
Ristone, \: lad. Stowe, I 64d. :
Xevbote, i :
7s. Cnutestone, i 8d. :
Risetone, i :
3 2d. Abimtone, i : 20s.
Lilleforde, i :
24s. Ferendone, i : i2d.
Ledcestre, ^ :
5s. 4d. Cotesbege, i :
3s.
Cuipetone, 6 :
13s. 4d. Avintone, i : 2 s.
Rodolei, i :
4s. Gerberie, i 4s. :
Setintone, i 2s. :
Glen, I 3s.:
Dislea, 2 :
5s. Svtestone, i : 8s.
Sepeshefde, i 5s. :
Bvrstele, i : i2d.
Walecote, i lod. :
Siglebi, 2 :
30s.
Halleach, i 5s. 4d. :
Heletone, i 2s. :
Crochestone, i T2d. :
Stapeford, 2 8s. :
Branestone, 2 8s. :
Saxebi, i 2s. :
Pachintone, i i2d. :
Castone, i : los.
Ailestone, 4 48s. :
Scepa, I 2s. :
r
Crebre, i :
4s. Scela, :
5s.
Svinford, i :
4s. Nevbold, i : i2d.
Tevlingorde, i : 2s. Botesford, 4 :
40s.
Torp, I 28.
:
Gniptone, x 5s. :
Rotebie, i 28d. :
Walendelia, i 3s. :
Tvrchitelestone, i :
3s. Reresbi, \\: 2s.
Merdegrave, i : 12 s. Lvdintone, i i6d. :
Nortone, i 2s.
Sapecote, i :
3s. :
Greg, I :
3s.
Do. I : 2S.
Endrebie, i :
5s. Sprotone, i 4s. :
Pichewelle, Lvvestorp, i :
4d.
CvnibvTg, I : los.
Sprotone, i :
5s. 4d.
Minstretone, i : 2s.
Cilebi, I : 2S.
Ricoltorp, I 4s. :
Reresbi, i 2s. :
Glowesbi, i 2s. :
Adelachestone, i : 2s.
Ascbi, I :
4s.
Gadesbi, i : i2d.
Do. \ 2S. :
Adelachestone, i : i6d.
162 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING: VOL. II.
Wara, i 2s. :
Wara, i 2s. :
Bertanestone, i i
:
4s. Haselia, :
4s.
Bvdebroc, i : 2s. Haselove, i 6s. 8d. :
Estone, i 3s. :
Icentone, 2 : 6s. 8d.
Hardintone, i :
3s. Salford, i :
5s.
Berricestone, i : lood. Herdeberge, i : i6d.
Horvlvestone, i :
4s. Coltvne, I i2d. :
Brevde, 2 4s. :
Gestreon, part lod. :
Actone, i 2s. :
Titesovre, i 8d. :
Haiwode, i :
5s. Crotewiche, i 4s. :
Egleshelle, 2 4s. :
Elachestone, i 3 2d. :
Statford Civitate, i :
4s. Cvdvlvestan Hd., i : i2d.
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 163
Statfordscire- -contd. Statfordscire contd. IX.
Estretone, i :
4s. Rischale, i 4d. :
DOMESDAY
I i6d.
MILLS.
Etone, I :
3s. Pino, :
Langvedvne, i :
5s. Aitone, i : los.
Recordine, i : 12s. Estone, i :
rendering nothing.
Conendovre, i : 8s. 6d. Gleslei, i :
5s.
Membrefelde, i : 10 sumas of Aldeberie, i : 2s.
Marcemeslei, i 5s. :
Rvitone, i 5 sextars of fine :
the entire value of the manor, and the rent of the mill not being stated.
164 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING: VOL. II.
MILLS.
Catewinde, i 5s., and 64 sticks :
Nene, i : i modium of wheat.
of eels (with two fisheries). Claiberie, i 2 sumas of
23. Schedule.
:
grain.
Seinebre, 1 64d. :
Nene, i : 2s.
Hvgle, I 64d. :
Lentevrde, i : 6s. 8d., and 6
Bardestvne, i 3s. : sticks of eels.
Clone, I
54d. Melam, i : 20s.
Do. I :
Lege, I 6s. :
Wistanestov, i 5 sumas of grain ; :
CESTRESCIRE. (L 263.)
Wivreham, i :
serving the Hall. Bogedone, i : i6d.
Alretvne, i : a winter mill. Ferentone, i.
Cotintone, i. Eitvne, i :
4s.
Estha, I. Bretone, i : i2d.
Maclesfeld, i :
serving the Hall. Witvne, i :
3s.
Hvrdingberie, i : a new mill. Stapleford, i.
Tillestone, 1 : 8s. (Millers men- Gretford, i. Osburn has a grain
tioned among manorial ser- mill grinding for his Court.
vants. ) Rolend, i 3 modios of grain. :
Bero, 2 los.:
Diffard, i :
3s. 2d.
Estone, i serving the Court. :
Inglecroft, i :
5s.
DERBYSCIRE. (L 272.)
Onestune, 2 :
4s. Bubedene, i : los.
Hope, I :
5s. 4d. Sudtone, i : 2s.
Westune, i :
19s. 4d. Tizinctvm, i :
3s.
SEC. 1. WATERMILLS. 165
Derbyscire contd.
166 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
Marneha, i :
4s. Scelford, i :
4s.
Westone, i. Bonei, i i2d. :
Troclavestune, 2 3s. :
Epstone, 4 77s. :
Bolvn, 2 32s. :
Gamelestun, 2 40s. :
Colewic, I 5s. :
Alretun, 2 i6s. :
Sibetorp, i 2od. :
Holtone, i 5s. 4d. :
'
Stanford, i : 6s. 8d. Watone, i :
4s.
Holmo, J :
5s. Startorp, i :
5s.
Gvnnvlvestvne, 2 :
40s. Aigrun, i 5s. :
Baseford, 3 :
25 s. 4d. Crunwelle, i : i2d.
Langare, 2 :
5s. Labeleia, 2 : 20s.
Stantune, i :
5s. 4d. Nordmuscha, i : los.
Horingeha, 2 :
40s. tJdeburg. i 20s. :
Nordmuscha, i : los.
EVRVICSCIRE. (L 2()Z.)York.
Basewig, 8. Saletvn, i :
5s.
Pochlinton, 2 :
Stivelinctvn, i :
3s.
5s.
Do. I : 2S. Bevreli, 3 :
13s.
Maltune, i site. Scogerbud, i.
Brvnbi, i 6s. :
Witebi, I los. :
Hode, I :
4s.
..?''[' ^J
'^'-
. 23. Schedule.
Basevvic, i : los. Maltebi, &c., 3 : i6s.
Lecheton, i :
13s. Bodetone, i :
5s.
Cherca, i : 8s. I'irneslavve, i site.
Estorp, 2 :
32s. Hadevvic, i 5s. :
Brvnton, i :
5s. 4d. Ledelai, i : 2s.
Bedale, i :
5s. Lintone, i : i6s.
Brvntone, i :
5s. Estorp, 2 : 6s.
Crachele, i :
4s. Fodstone, i 5s. :
Chirchebi, i :
5s. 4d. Nadbartone, i 5s. :
Dalbi, I 2S. :
Atvne, I :
5s.
Bruntun, i :
5s. Topeclive, i :
55.
Bochetone, i 6s.
:
Otrengham, i.
Mennistorp, i 12s. :
Risvn, I.
Chipeseh and Ledestune, 3 : los. Nonninctvne, i :
3s.
Ledes, i 4s. :
Adelingsflvet, i : los.
Saxtvn, 2 : 10s. Rodemese, i : los.
Berchinge, i :
3s. Svdtvne, i.
Nivvchvsv, I site. Chirchebi, i :
4s.
Ermesdale, i site. Bvtecram, i 20s. :
Nortone, i :
5s. Cotingham, i 8s. :
Hanepol, \ 3s. :
Lanton, i 5s. :
Smedetone, 2s. i :
Screngham, i 20s. :
Rvhale, i :
3s. Nevtone, i site.
Tateshalle, 3 :
42 s. Scarpenbec, i : 2s.
IX.
DOMESDAY LINCOLESCIRE. (I. 336.)
MILLS.
Stanford, 30s. Which Eustasius
1 :
Spilesbie, 2 :
9s.
23. Schedule. of Huntingdon, who was one 20s.
Caditon, 3^^ :
them. Tavelsbi, i :
2s., and another
Do. I 40s. In King : which belongs to Grosbi.
Edward's time belonging to Torp, part : 1 2d.
the Abbot of Bury. Martone, i : 8s.
Do. In the time of King Stratone, i : 8s.
Edward there were in five Clinchebi, i site.
Herlavestune, 2 2s. :
Nortune, i site.
Sudstoches, 2: 21s. 4d. Welletone, 5 :
40s.
i
Nougtone, i :
13s. 4d. Messingeham, :
5s.
Burchestone, 2 whichTurned had. :
Elehain, i site.
6s. 8d.
Basingeham, 2 32 s. :
Chelebi, i :
Chirchetone, i i2d. :
Aresbi, i 3s. :
Castre, 4 : 1
3s. 4d. Billesfelt, i i2d. :
Stalingburg, | :
3 2d. Corninctune, 2 : 1 6s.
Herigberi, 2 los. :
Welletune, 2 parts of one site.
Northniche, i 5s. :
Binnibroc, 2 20s. :
Hamingebi, \ :
7s. Abvrne, i : 20s.
Staintune, i : i2d. Oresbi, i :
3s.
Tadewelle, i : i6d. Chevremont, i : 2s.
Medricesham, i 8s. :
Stainton, i : 1 2d.
Ormesbi, i 3 2d. :
Lagesbi, i 6d. :
Chetelesbi, i :
32d. Ferebi, i los. :
Torgrebi, 3 parts of i 5 s. :
Badeburg, i : 8s.
Crosbi, 3 8s. :
Ellingetone, i : i6s.
Bliburg, I i2d. :
Risvn, I i2d. :
EUingetune, 1 8s. :
Scotstome, i.
Bolinbroc, 3 los. :
Cheftesbi, i : i6d.
Radebi, i 12s. :
Dodintone, h 3s. :
Hundelbi, i 5s :
Merestone, site.
Haltun, Sec, 4 24s. :
Bolinburg, i : 6s. 4d.
Archintone, h site of one. Ulnesbi, i :
5s. 4d.
Brune, ^ 2od. :
Do. site.
Winelestorp, 2 20s. :
Hechelinge, i 3s. :
Merestvne, 2 8s. :
Tavelesbi, 3 : 12s.
Tauvlesbi, i in the soke district : Do. 3 sites.
of the Bishop of Bayeux. Grimesbi, i :
4s.
Brune, J 3s. 4d.
:
Torentune, ^ :
3s.
Hagetorne, i i6d. :
Caretorp, ^ : i os.
Revrne, i 3s. :
Torintune, 2 : 20s.
Bvlesforde, site. Scrivelesbi. i :
13s. 4d.
Tavelsbi, 3 : i6s. Tadewelle, 2 :
14s.
Adredebi, i 2s. :
Holtham, 2 :
13s. 4d.
Sumerdebi, J lod. :
Sidestam, 6 :
50s.
Wizebi, i 4s. :
Staintone, site.
Torp, 2 :
7s. Do. I : IIS.
Tvnbi, 2 : 20s. Coerinton, site.
Westrecale, i Widcale, ^
:
3s. :
4s.
Sassebi, 2 :
3s. Hagetorne, i i2d. :
Torp, 2 6s.
:
Randebi, i : los. 8d.
Normanebi, site. Staintone, 2 5s. 8d. :
Paintone, i 6s. :
Cotes, I i2S.
:
Westbitham, i 4s. :
Torgrebi, 4 parts of i : 2s.
Bitham Hd., i 3s. :
Belesbi, | :
3s.
Hacberdingham, i i8d. :
Waragebi, site.
Beltone, 3 30s. :
Svinhope, i 5s. :
Messingeham, i :
5s. Germuntorp, 3 25s. 4d. :
Herigerbi, i :
4s. Neteltone, i i2d. :
2?. Schedule.
Tudetorp, 3 40s. :
Tadeuuelle, i. The
jury of the
Gunfordebi, i 5s. :
Wapentake say that this mill
Burtun, i 2s. : which was Agemund's, and
Toft, I : I OS. which Lambert and Gozelin
Sudtorp, I : 2s. his son had after him, Robert
Bergebi, i :
3s. Clachesbi, i. Gozelin, the son
Caschingetorp, 2 4s. : of Lambert, should have here
Stanwald, i 4s. : one mill which Goisfred, a man
Sechebroc, 3 i6s. : of Ivo Taillebosc, has invaded
Breseburg, 2 20s. : and seized from him.
Brune, ^ 3s. 4d. :
Lude, I. The Bishop of Lincoln
Haconesbi, i i2d. : claims here one mill of Earl
Cherchebi, \ :
5s. Alan, and the jury say that it
Gunnebi, i : i2d. ought to belong to the said
Bliburg, I : 2s. bishop.
Reschintone, 3: ^^4, 12 s. 8d. Church of Caistor, i. A mill
Westburg, 2 30s. : with other property granted to
Claipol, I : I OS. the Church by King William.
Burg, I : 20s. Crosbi, I. William Blundell
Brune, \: i8d. ought to have one garden
Beltone, 2 : 12s. on the land of Ivo Tailbois,
Hochtune, 2 :
30s. but is hindered on account
Ulvesbi, \ :
3s. of the mill, which was not
Aschebi, i 12 s. : there in the time of King
Colstevorde, 2 2 s. : Edward.
[Various places are entered iti this and the following lists as having mills in the
time of Edward, but not in the time of William, and are marked respectively
t. (tunc, then) and m. {modo,
jiow).'\
Gernestedam, i. Witham, i.
Celmersfort, i. i.
Cringefort,
Wochadunam, i.
Legam, i.
Waldham, 2. Stanestedam, 1.
Hobruge, i. Vdeham, i.
Brumseldam, i. Wendena, 2.
Legram, i. Benedfelda, i.
Mosam, i. Widemondefort, i.
Nutleam, i. Winnhov, i.
Halingebriam, \. Briciam, i.
i.
Alferestuna, Richeham, i.
Rodinges, i. i.
Accleiam,
Waledana, i^. Scortegrava, /. i m. o.
172 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
i.
m. o.
Mucingam,
Hocheleia,
Tolestiam, i.
2.
i.
Domanuam, i.
Cadenhov, t. i m. o.
Pentelava, i.
Litelbyriam, 4.
Burneham, i. Strathala, i.
Baduuan, i. Witham, i.
Wdeham, i.
Breddinchon, i.
i.
Terlinga, Herlana, i.
Favisledam, i. Ramesdenam, i.
Beuentren, 8. Currincham, i.
Meldonan, i. Bractedam, i.
Deppedana, i. Langhon, i.
Hidingforda, i. Birdefeldam, i.
Cestrefordam, i. Wrabenasam, i.
Becangram, i. Estram, i.
Caldefordam, i. Tacheleia, i.
Berdestapla, \. BiHchangram, i.
Witham, i.
Phenstedam, 2.
Beuentreu, i. Baduuen, i.
Odelesforda, 2. Phenge, i.
Phincingheseldam, i. Pacingas, i.
Westrefeldam, i. Melesham, i.
Staningam, i. Tyrindunam, i,
Bictriceseia, i. Nutleam, 2.
Lalefordam, i. Cogheshalam, i.
Newport, 2. Ruenhale, \.
Coghessalam, i Clare, i.
Brochinges, i. Teiam, i.
Stiesteda, i. Bocchestedam, t. i m. o.
Watbricteshemam, i. Stanfort, i.
Wenesta, i. Borham, i.
Legram, i. Monehalam, 2 parts : 20:
Raines, i.
Legam, i.
Celmeresfort, i.
Halingebiam, i.
Wicham, i. Chellenadanam, i.
Writbla, i. Raines, i.
Lalinge, i. Gerham, i.
Lessendena, 2. Haltestedam, 2.
Clachintuna, i. Polheia, i.
Tillingham, i. Tachestedam, 2.
Tidwoldetuna, i. Gestingetorp, /. i ;. o.
^Iduluesnasam, 2. Stanbruge, i.
Chellenedana, i. Hocheleiam, i.
Leituna, i. Rochefort, i.
Pheringas, 3. Plumbergam, i.
Keluenduna, i. Puteseiam, i.
Molesham, i. Hacheleia, i.
SEC. WATERMILLS. 173
Excessa contd.
174
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 175
Norfulc^^<7/^.
176 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
Dunestun, i. Herlingam, i.
Hechincha, i. Creic, i.
Wermegai, \. Taseburch, \.
Westbruge, i. Suanetua, 3.
Rynghetona, i. Lecesham, i.
Lecham, i. Derham, i.
Winebergam, i. Croukethor, i.
Eddenham. |. Holekinka, i.
Buccham, i 7n. t. o. Heinestede, |.
Guidenham, i. Tauresham, \.
Nortuna, i. Falla, \.
Wenlingam, i. Bukestuna, i.
Rungehetune, i. Ohbouuessa, i.
Feltunella, i. Markeshalla, 2.
How, I. ThurketHart, i.
2. Caldanchola, i.
Marthingeforda,
Castru, \. Winetuna, i.
Thorp, /. I m. o. Walsingaham, \\.
Lodua, I. Stinecai, i.
Kercheby, i. Witeingeham, i.
Mareham, i. Scotohu, \.
Nortwalde, 2. Penestorpe, i.
Mondefort, \. Nechetuna, i.
2. Cressiagaham, i,
Brugam.
Derham, 3. Parva Cressiagaham, i :
paying
Torp, I. nothing.
Brunester, i. Do. 4 parts of
Dodenham, i. a mill : invaded.
Pullaham, i. Bodeneia, i.
Tuit, I. Mideltuna, i.
Hobnisse, \. Buchenham, \.
Tutineghetuna, i. Rokeliunt, \.
Horningham, i. Possuic, I.
Walsam, 1. Tewda, \.
Pastuna, i. Helmingeham, i.
Todenes, i. Blideforda, i.
Framesdena, i. Almaha, 1.
Bernha, i. Neotuna, i.
Uggiceheala, /. i m. o. Leacforda, 2 mills now : ii molin
Bunghea, if. c?) [modo].
Do. ii Hemegratham, i mill now : i
Ilcheteleshala, ^. molin (^ .
[The style of this
Eduardestuna, i winter mill. and the
preceding entry is
Cratinga, \. rare but the Saxon co is at
;
Ludham, i. Fornham, i.
Eiam, 2. Kkewortha, i.
Torentuna, i. Sexham, |.
Sutburna. i. Flemingtuna, i.
Usseworda, i.
Hyrningwellam, 2.
Farnham, 1. Malaforda, 2.
Plegeforda, i. Cothefelda, i winter mill.
Beria, i. Grotena, i winter mill.
Healesuurde, i. Pachenham, i.
Kuluerestuna, 2. Corsforde, i.
Kinebroh, i|. Cerleswrda, i.
Ferneham, i. Merle sforda, i. -
Menham, i. Linburna, i.
Acle, I.
Resebi, j.
Buckeshala, |. The city where desired to be
Clainduna, i. buried St. Edmund, king and
Blacham, 2. martyr, 2.
Cokeli, I. Hetlega, 3.
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 179
Svdfvlc ,
180 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
Perreham, i.
Ecclingaham, i. Kelebroc, \.
Codenham, \.
Parua Belinges, i.
i.
Bura, I. Campeseia,
Codenham. From the mill of Glereuinges, i.
Gnedassala, A.
Torp, I.
Giswortham, i.
SEC. WATERMILLS. 181
CHAPTER X.
^ '^-T.r,, .. wheel.
THE,. MODERN .
We Roman times the
have seen that from
. .
.,i , , , i
WATERMiLL. Obstruction streams by mill dams was
ot -
navigable
1 Causeways, rigorously prohibited by
law and innumerable instances :
men, the Admiral shall send his warrant to the sheriff that (by reason
of the obedience he oweth to the Admiral) he pull down the said
mills ; and the owners thereof shall be fined to the king.
Ibid., No. D. Item, soit enquis de tous ceulx qui soustiennent sur les gros
stremes et chanelles de havens ou ports weres kedylles blyndestakes
watermylles ou autres instruments en aneantance des ports par les
quelz nefz ou bateau ait este periz ou homme mort.
Let inquiry be made of all those who maintain on the great
streams and channels of havens or ports, weirs, kiddels, blindstakes,
watermills, or other instruments, to the injury of the ports, by which
ships and boats may have perished, or lives been lost.
Ibid., No. E. vii
Inquiratur si quis in grossis rivis levavit molendina kydellos seu
alia instrumenta qu?e navigantibus sen navibus communiter sunt
nocumenta.
Let inquiry be made if any one shall have erected on the great
rivers mills, kiddels, or other instruments, whereby sailors or vessels
may commonly be injured.
SEC. I.
WATERMILLS. 183
step, as were, off the breezy ocean into his little mill
it
i Causeways
on river or creek but this official had by this time good
: &c.
reason to complain of the trade freely blocking up
rivers with wheels and dams, and entering upon a kind
of enterprise which threatened to put a stop to what
should have been reorarded as the most valuable re-
venue of the craft, viz., inland navigation and many ;
'^-
Still it was not always actually by the action of
THE MODERN , i i
i -n i i
Text : Vol. IV. a mill which impeded navigation and without resort to ;
treatment usually meted out to the medieval milling craft. The ballad (only a
portion of which we have quoted) was rescued from oblivion, or as some say, was
written by the Rev. J. Smith, D.D., chaplain to the Earl of Cleveland, 1650. It
is in much the same strain as The Twa Sisters, also
popular in England about the
year 1650 a jealous sister taking a younger one to the mill by the shore and
:
*
The causeway at Chester, views of which appear in a later volume, was per- Raines' Lane. :
haps the largest in the kingdom. An instance of a small one occurs in the mill H., 198.
of Thomas del Booth. Lancashire, 1370, who leaves 30s. in one case, and 20s. in
another, to make bridges and causeways at his mills.
186 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING: vol. ii.
THE MODERN
X.
, i-irir
of relief that the craft learned that causeways were
WATERMiLL. to be Subjected tor the future to supervision by the
--t,
^^^^ warlike, but equally
1.Causeways, incongruous authority, the
&c. Commissioners of Sewers. This body, however, did
not supervise dams and mills without considerable
criticism and opposition from mill owners an order :
Text : Vol. IV. our account of Dee mills. The commissioners, who
comprised a number of local boards consisting of
prominent landowners or other persons of local import-
ance, continued their supervision of navigable rivers
under confirmatory Acts of 4 Henry VII. 6 and 25 ;
Harl. MSS.,
5256.
is
very little room left to doubt their being anciently ai" dern
erected upon the self-same plan." To the illustrations watermill.
of such mills we have already given from MSS. of "2. Uniform
the twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth cen- Type,
turies, may here be added one from a French MS. Text: 11. vii
dated 1597, depicting, as well as a windmill, a water-
mill of the usual Roman type, beyond a bridge, to-
wards which a man on an ass is carrying a sack of
corn to be orround.
The penthouse or shed covering the water-wheel,
mentioned by Strutt, has long been discarded, but
examples may still be found of wheels enclosed under
a roof. At Strata Florida, South Wales, is a mill
in a long, low, cottage-like structure, divided into three
parts, one comprising a miller's domicile, another the
mill hurst, and a house for the water-wheel.
third a
The Saxon Guy's Cliff, Warwickshire, has its Text
mill at .-
^^
water-wheel enclosed in an arch within the building. ^^^^"^
An exceedingly curious case of a covered water-wheel
occurs at Tycroes, in Anglesea, where, in a combined
watermill and windmill a rather unusual combina-
tion
the water-wheel is completely enclosed within
the basement of the tower. The latter is built quite
across a race of water fed from an adjoining dam ;
is
geared as required to drive the stones when the
sails are at rest. From the exterior this curious
structure resembles an ordinarv windmill standine on
the edge of a dam or pool. It was first built as a
190 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
Uniform
was restored in its original form and still is considered
;
On the Shannon.
asrain In many places the said mills be set on one side of the X.
a?pnr river THE .\[ODERN
great nvcr.
Also there be two manner of watermills a brast mill and an
watfrmtTT "
be. Mills upon great rivers that be broad, heavy, and weighty, must
needs have two great thick hoops of iron, four inches broad and one
inch thick and eight or nine inches between the sides, set on both
ends of the shaft. .Insomuch as there is great profit to the lords
. .
in the making these mills, and the most rent is raised on so little
ground, oftentimes for the want of the seed of discretion and ex-
perience of good making there be many defaults made in them. . . .
smith mills, and all others as the wheel goeth by drift of water. And
[even] though they be not mills properly to grind corn, yet it is a
profit to the lord, the which a surveyor may not forget to put in his
book, and to butt and bound as they lie and who be the farmers,
;
2. Uniform ._
Type.
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 193
till, finally
following inevitably
in the vanishing train
of obsolete saddle-stones, querns, and cattle mills the
stone-grinding watermill, raised by modern engineer-
ing skill to its highest stage of efficiency, has been
completely disranked from among the premier mills
of the world by the steam-driven roller mill which
now dominates the art. Numbers of watermills
nevertheless survive, but are of but secondary status
in the national industry, save in those instances alone
in which their ancient stones have been replaced by
rollers.
3. The mill of the last century, that
by which, de- 3. Evans'
spite its
imperfections, the production of flour rose Improve-
ments.
from one of the smallest to one of the greatest and
most valuable industries of the world, was essentially a
structure of few parts, whether driven by water or wind,
and its processes were exceedingly simple. The wheat,
cleaned by a rude machine consisting of a couple of
VOL. II. N
194 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
3, Evans'
in order that the greatest amount of flour might be
Improve- produced at one grinding. The meal was then bolted,
ments. and the tailings, consisting of bran, middlings, and'
adherent flour, again sifted and reground. It seems
motion is generally
1,1,,
The annexed illus-
slow.
3. Evans'
trationfrom The Young Millwright was intended by
Improve- Evans not as a plan of any particular mill, but simply
ments. as a diagram showing at one view the combinations
and processes of his machines in what he regarded
as an ideal mill.
WTiite wheat, j
mixed with ,- 61.00 368 9-54 2.40 5.6 3970
'
green garlic
White wheat,
56.CO 5.48 7.86 1.85 5.00 3581
very clean
White wheat, j
with some (
cockle and (
59-25 6.79 '1-33 1.47 4.40 3526
light grains )
that have been employed in it have not been men of either family, Sutcliffe, 1816.
fortune, or education hence they have been almost excluded from
;
200 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
X. the society of the gentleman and the merchant. Add to this that
THE MODERN the trade itself has frequently been very unpopular, and those
WATERMILL.
employed in it persecuted when they deserved the greatest encourage-
4. Caustic ment and protection. Second, when want of education, of capital,
Criticism.
and a regular association with men of science prevail, improvement
will make slow progress but the clouds of ignorance and prejudice
:
that have governed the unthinking multitude are passing away very
fast; and the farmer and the miller will soon rank with the most
polished part of the community. There are not two other characters
in the kingdom upon which the necessary comforts of life so much
depend and yet there are no two classes of men in the community
:
Homing-on-Bure.
Photo, by P. Jennings, Ashtcad.
I may venture to assert, with the greatest confidence, that there
isnot one miller in twenty that knows anything about grinding well.
The general estimate of the most experienced and intelligent master
millers is that there is 2S. per qr. difference between grinding well,
and in but a middling way; and more than 4s. per qr. difference
between grinding very well and ill. Grinding and dressing well is
of much more importance to the master miller and the public than
men in general are aware of. And it is truly surprising that it should
have been so little attended
considering the high price of grain
to,
for so long a time. There is no manufactory in the kingdom that
is of half that consequence to the public as that of grinding corn ;
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 201
nowadays
to adopt the words of the poet
the
"
memory of even Sutcliffe's diatribes, scarce make one
sad
"
:
Isee the wealthy miller yet, In yonder chair I see him
His double chin, his portly size ;
sit.
Three fingers round theold silver cup
And who that knew him could forget Isee his grey eyes twinkle yet
The busy wrinkles round his eyes? At his own jest : grey eyes lit up
The slow, wise smile that round about With summer lightnings of a soul
His dusty forehead drily curled. So full of summer warmth, so glad.
Seemed half within and half without. So healthy, sound, and clean and whole,
And full of dealings with the world. His memor)' scarce can make me sad.
The Miller's DaughUr.
* now
Cleeve, one of the oldest flour mills on the Thames, is a private
residence, with the old wharf laid out as a lawn.
202 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING:
X.
THE MODERN i
WATERMILL.
the
a new
watermill
,,,..,
Kettleburg^h, Suffolk, fitted with THE MODERN
of
.
x.
Kettlebuigh, SuflFolk.
"
The mills were giving out their cheerful click Trans. Ha^vick
clack the busy ripple of the waters in the lades fell ^^-'
;
'^^^'
merrily on the ears of the miller and his assistant.
204 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING : VOL. II.
5.
longer
Decadence.
casts his eyes along the grassy banks of the dam
to look at the flowers dotting the banks of the little
stream. The mills and men have served their day
and generation, and a new order of things is upon us.
And yet, glancing back from amidst the bustle and
excitement of the present day, one cannot help think-
ing that life has lost much of the happiness of those
liarvington, Worcester.
Photo, by J. H. Crabtree, Birmingham.
but all too late, for the miller had died of hunger after gnawing his hands and his
feet." Only a Bible chained on the dungeon steps sufficed to lay the wraith of the
unhappy miller but the incident, which in these days would certainly enhance
;
the value of the ancestral tower, then, on the contrary, led to its depreciation
and ruin.
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 207
personal vanity to the wish of meeting the Chesapeake, or that I depend only on
your personal ambition for your acceding to this invitation. We have both nobler
motives. Favour me with a speedy reply. We are short of provisions and water,
and cannot stay here long." This obliging communication duly despatched, the
Shannon stood in close to Boston lighthouse and lay to. Lawrence, to whom the
challenge was sent, had been lately captain of the Hornet the Alabama of its
time and not long before had challenged to a duel a Briti.sh ship acting as guard
to a vessel with half a million sterling on board, stranded at St. Salvador. This
challenge under the circumstances had been declined, and Brooke seems to have
thought it incumbent upon him to vindicate the honour of Britain by entreating
Lawrence in his new frigate to fight him. At midday, 1st of June 1813, the
Chesapeake was under weigh, and sailed down the harbour, accompanied by a
number of pleasure boats filled with sightseers. The Shannon's foretopsail was
laid aback that the Chesapeake might overtake her, and the latter,
bearing at the
fore a large white flag inscribed "Free Trade and Sailors Rights," hauled
up
within 200 yards of the Shannon's weather beam, and gave three hearty cheers :
the while, hurrahs came ringing over the bright summer sea from the Shannon
as she beat to quarters. As in some gala scene the vessels passed within a
stone's throw of each other. The battle began at half-past five, and was over in
fifteen minutes. "After two or three broadsides had been exchanged. Captain
208 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
_,
X.
^^^^ The frigate
^ was captured and sent first to Halifax
THE MODERN , , t-" i i i
WATERMiLL. and thence to Jingland, where she lay up from 1814
6. The
to 1820. In the latter year she was .sold for
breaking
Chesapeake, up to John Prior, miller of Wickham, who thereupon
demolished his old mill and erected in its place, from
the deck, about 12 feet long, being used for joists, watermill.
brattices, &c. many of these timbers yet
partition ;
q^tu
iDearing the marks of the Shamions grape-shot, which Chesapeake,
at the present day can be seen deeply buried in the
"
ever remain so Thus in the peaceful role of a flour
!
the useful. The brook-side mill affords us almost the only instance
of labour that is graceful, picturesque, and seductive. We can
imagine a life of labour under the sweet and inspiring conditions of
musical waterfalls, shadowy forests, soft airs laden with the perfume
of wild flowers, that would possess a certain rich and munificent
VOL. II. O
210 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING: VOL. II.
X. poetic calm. Too often labour mars the landscape it enters, but
THE MODERN the mill seems to partake of the spirit of its surroundings ; to gain a
WATER MILL. ^^arm from woods and waters and to give one. This is peculiarly
^'^^ ^ ^^ flour factories along the Brandywine ; they are of
7 American
sufficient age to have mellowness and tone ; glaring red brick does
Relics
not enter into their composition ; and they greatly vary and brighten
the beauty of each woodland picture.
On uie Brandywine.
X-
THE MODERN Upon the French Broad in North Carolina, a point
. . , . .
It was built
building on this side of the mountains.
there by the settler Reem, from whom its name is
derived, "as a sort of fort, something of a store and
a little of a mill." A
few miles up the stream, on
one of the mountain spurs, are corn fields 3500 feet
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 213
bakinor
^ upon
^ and Sir Wm. Fairburn bavins^
the spot ;
'
x.
^ THE MODERN
, , ^ ,
, .
hold was automatically raised to the winnower, the hopper, and the
mill. Thence the flour was automatically carried to the dresser, g'g
\ \^^ '
where, having been separated into a fine and a coarse quality, it was
delivered into sacks. During the time the Bruiser was in harbour
at Balaklava the daily produce of flour from the mill was about
24,000 lbs., and that from very hard wheat, full of small gravel.
The mill never got out of order during the whole period of service
in the Black Sea. The results of working on both vessels are given
in the official reports at 20 tons of flour
ground per day of twenty-
four hours. The quantity of flour ground in the three months,
ist January to ist March 1856, was 1,331,792 lbs., with 358,172
lbs. of bran the wheat supplied being 1,776,780 lbs.
: The expenses
of working were ;^205o, or 2s. 4d. per 100 lbs. of wheat ground, or
3s. id. per 100 lbs. of flour produced. The total cost of the flour
produced was 25s. 3d. per 100 lbs., the wheat costing about 18s. per
100 lbs., and the value of the bran being deducted at 7s. per 100
lbs., or less than id. per lb. On one occasion, when the vessel was
steaming 6i knots or 7^ miles per hour, ten sacks of 168 lbs. each
of wheat were ground per hour, and the mill was kept in constant
work for thirty-five hours, the men being divided into watches of four
hours each. The mill worked well throughout, and, was found to go
more steadily than when the screw was disconnected. When it
happened that this latter took place, the engines were kept working
at only a quarter of their power for the
grinding, as there were only
four pair of stones, requiring not more than 20
horse-power out of
the whole 80 horse-power of the
engines, and they could not there-
fore run so steadily as when connected with the screw.
Sir Wm.
Fairburn's interesting paper on the subject
is accompanied with several technical drawings, fully
illustratmg the peculiar manner in which these novel
mills were fitted up. On the conclusion of the war
one of the mills, purchased by a firm of French millers,
was worked at Constantinople for some years.
218 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING: VOL. II.
CHAPTER XI.
XI.
TIDE MILL.
1. The historian D'Aussy observes that it was in
^- ^'^edieval.
being: described in the records of the town as com-
munis 7nole7idini aquatici subtus A Itarn, Crticem. extra
portam Domus Dei the common watermill under
the High Cross outside the gate of God's Hospital.
In 7 Henry VI. (1429), this mill was farmed by the
borough at an annual rent of 20s.
2. In 1729 a private Act of Parliament authorised 2. Modern.
XI.
TIDE MILL. sionally makes a fall of water to each. (4) A sliding
lantern pinion, with eight trundles on a perpendicular
2. Modern.
shaft, is provided on the top of the shaft being a
;
forwards with the flux and reflux of the tide. (5) This
mill has a false bottom or fence-board, which is raised
or lowered with the water-wheel, by which the dead
water under the float-wheel is conveyed off by a sort
of whirlpool." In 1764 Robert Lord was awarded a
premium of ten guineas for a tide mill constructed
upon two caissons, the water-wheel working both with
the flux and reflux of the tide, and the whole mill
rising and falling therewith: "by means of two face
wheels fronting each other, the mill shifts on its axis
so as to work the crown-wheel alternately and turn
the stones constantly the same way, though the water-
wheel changes its motion with the tide." These mills
appear to be of the same nature, so far as the alter-
nate motion of the water-wheel is concerned, with the
medieval floatinor-mills of Venice. A somewhat simi-
by W. Coulthard, in 1762, containing "many
lar mill,
. .
J- J c c TIDE MILL.
XI. and a half acres water space, and the smaller, into
TIDE MILL.
which the stream ran from the wheel, about one and a
2. Modern. half acres. The concern established on this basis
evidently throve for a time, and the proprietors mani-
fested as great enterprise in conducting the business as
had their engineer and manager in inaugurating it. The
mill continued in operation till 1827, when the site was
Murray,
1861, 18. which runs the new Stromness Road, from a tidal
SEC. I. WATERMILLS. 223
which, if we
believe the guide books, exists in the
island of Sivona. On all the islands a stormy west
wind lashes the ocean spray over the surface, but on
Sivona it is in such quantities as to have rendered it
advantageous to form a pond for its collection, whence
it is afterwards drawn off to move a thrashinsf mill.
It certainly reducing theory to practice to employ
is
CHAPTER XII.
MYTHS OF ORIGIN.
Christian
era; nor
MYTHS OF
origin.
(Questions (v. i8),
Egerton
MSS.
:
070 :
29''.
that time all the Bohemian mills were windmills ^e?: 1697, 23.
erected on mountains." The statement, which appears Hist, inv., 1797,
*
'*
observes, I shall consider it false."
5. Of Ninth
Ingulphus, the alleged historian of Croyland,
5.
c. v.
much earlier notice of a windmill in the charter granted '^^7.
5. Of Ninth
anachronisms in the history "place the work of In-
"^
Chron. Eng, built] would have been very inconvenient for wind-
mills they, however, seem also to have been known
1778 : II. 219.
;
The
Gloucester antiquary Fosbroke also states "the
Diet. Antiq.,
encyclopedists assert windmills were introduced into
France and England about 1040 :" but either he or his
authorities are in error. The
valuable Survey of mills
included in Domesday affords presumptive evidence
that windmills, the name of which does not once occur
in the record, were unknown in England even in 1086. 8. Of Early
Mabillon, historian of the Order of St. Bene-
8. 'T'^^j^^
Century.
diet,quotes a charter of 1105, by which the Abbot
of Savicjny is "ranted leave to erect either watermills '^"P^^?.^ 95"
dims St. Bene-
or windmills, molendina ad aquam et ventum, for the diet, 1713, v.
abbey of Holy Trinity at Newburgh, which he was
-^74-
then building and Carpentier quotes the same charter Gloss. Nov.
;
"
Lebeuf {Sciences depuis Robert jusqud Philippe,
*
Fair Em, the Miller's dati^hter
of Manchester ; a pleasant comedy ; As it
was sundry times acted in the Honourable City of London by the Right Hon. the
Lord Strangers servants, 1631. The first edition of this play is undated; the
second was issued in 1619, and another at Dublin in 1750. It was considered
to have been written by Shakespeare, and was translated into German
by Tieck ;
XII. 1
740) and Le Grand d'Aussy Vie Priv^e des Fran-
MYTHS OF (
In 1
27 1, when this fortress was abandoned, wind- ^^onuments des
mills were of common occurrence throughout Europe, 3^43!^^' ^^''^'
232 HISTORY OP^ CORN MILLING VOL. II.
Vie Priv. Fr., reason why we so frequently find the different parts
1752, I. 62.
of these mills in ancient heraldry." In suggesting that
heraldry supports the Crusade connection with wind-
milling,D'Aussy is altogether in error, for among the
various well-known heraldic devices relating to corn-
mills there does not appear to be a single one relating
specially to windmills. De Roquefort, a later editor
of D'Aussy's work (181 5), says he has found it im-
possible to find any heraldic charges representing the
parts of a mill, and not only fails, therefore, to discover
the milling coats of arms of some of the most distin-
guished of ancient families, but, further, commits the
error of stating that " the choice of these milling
devices little agreed with the spirit of the times."
Non-industrial as were the nobles of ancient feudal
periods, some of the most magnificent of them carried
on pennant and surcoat emblazons which originated
solely in the cornmill as, for example, the rynd or
;
as a charge in heraldry in Ryton churchyard, on a gravestone,
which beneath the shield bears the inscription " Heare lyeth
the bodye of Jane Smith, wife was to William Smith, miller.
She departed to the mercj'e of God the 29 of December 1621."
XII.
MYTHS OF alleged use does bring us any nearer to the
not
ORIGIN. discovery of the date of the latter besides, the verses
;
CHAPTER XIII.
XIII.
perfectly reliable. The incident is related by Jocelyn,
EARLIEST
RECORD. almoner and cancellarius, with considerable vivacity,
2. Dean and some humour :
Herbert's Herbertus decanus levavit molendinum ad ventum super Han-
Mill. berdun, quod cum audisset abbas tanta ira excauduit quod vix
voluet comedere vel aliquod verbum proferre. In crastino, post
Chronicon :
missam auditam, prsecepit sacristse ut sine dilatione faceret car-
Joceylin de pentarios suos illuc ire et omnia subvertere et materiam lignorum
Brakelond, 43. in salvam custodiam reponere. Audiens hoc decanus, venit dicens
se hoc de jure posse facere super liberum feudum suum nee bene-
ficium venti alicui homini debere denegari, et dixit se velle suum
proprium bladum ibi molere non alienum ne forte putaretur hoc
facere in vicinorum molendinorum detrimentum.
Et respondit abbas adhuc irratus :
" Gratias tibi
reddo ac si
ambos pedes meos amputasses per os Dei numquam panem man
:
Present: Bk. II witness his address to old Herbert the Dean, who in a too thrifty
ch. XV.
manner has erected a windmill for himself on his glebe lands at
Haberdon. [So overpowering was the ire of Samson when he heard
of it that he could neither eat nor speak.] On the morrow, after
Mass, our lord abbot orders the sacristan to send off his carpenters
to demolish the said structure without delay, and lay up the wood
in safe keeping. Old Dean Herbert, hearing what was toward,
c jmes tottering along hither to plead humbly for himself and his
mill [urging that surely on his own holding, where no man could
deny him the benefit of the wind, he had a right to build the mill,
which, moreover, he intended merely for grinding his own corn, and
which could not, therefore, be imputed to injure the custom of the
"
I am as obliged to thee
abbey mill]. The irate Abbot answers :
home again thou shalt hear what has become of thy mill." The very
reverend old dean totters home again in all haste ; tears the mill
to pieces by his own carpenters [and when the servants of the
sacristan arrive nothing to pull down do they find].*
"
Easy bully-down poor old rural deans and
to
blow their windmills away," moralises Carlyle but ;
and the masterly picture there drawn will ever remain a standing ornament to our xlviL
literature. Writing under a sense of the hopelessness of democracy, and believing
that the heroic ruler, gifted with the necessary courage and
insight, was the sole
hope whether of a mi^Tiided nation or a struggling institution, Carlyle, who had
read the Chronicle oi^otxVjn, conceived that Abbot Samson was a living example
of the truth and value of his principle. So might Englishmen, he argued, set the
heroic element in command and precedence whenever wise
organisation is
required."
238 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING: vol. ii.
'Abb
^^^^ ^ ^^^ twelfth century they will be well under-
;
Text :
p. 255.
ductions being of the fifteenth century.
The myths and which have crowded round
fallacies
the earliest windmill may, in conclusion, be illustrated
by one or two errors as extraordinary as any of ancient
times. An
antiquary of the early part of the present
century postpones the introduction of windmills into
England till even after the reign of Henry VIII. :
"
no mention is made of windmills in Italy till the
fourteenth century and that they were not known in
; Antiq. and
"French Milling Industry" "the next stage in the
development of milling was the pounding of grain in
mortars and then came the flat French buhrs.
;
At
this same period windmills were introduced from the
Orient, and were popular ^z// the eleventh century^ when
they were supplanted by the watermilV as strange
a perversion and reversal of fact as could well be
conceived.
240 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL. II.
CHAPTER XIV.
SOKE OF WINDMILLS.
., X, 1-
J r SOKE OF
1
evidence on the point appearing in a judicial record oi windmills.
1283, in which the tenants of Ince, pleading guilty to 2. Ince
yield it in future.
Hec conuentio facta inter abbatem et conuentum loci Bene- Coucher Book
est
dicti et Willmum filium Johannis Blundel Whalley Abbey,
de Stanlawe ex una parte
de Ynes ex altera. Ita videlicet quod predictus Willmus dedet ^^- 509-
concessit et hoc presenti scripto confirmauit dicti abbati et conuenti
totum molendinum suum ventricium in territorio de Ynes cum secta
omnium hominum in dicta villa de Ynes manentium, nichil sibi vel
heredeb} suis in dicto molendino retinendo nisi tummodo libertatem
molendini omnimodum bladum et brasium domus sue proprie sine
multura, et hoc post illud bladum quod super molendinum invenerit
et hoc sine fraude utriusque partis. Eandem et libertatem predicti
abbas et conuentus dicto Willmo et heredibj suis in molendino suo
aquatico quod situm est super ripam de Alte in omnib} et p
omnia p se et successorib} dederunt et concesserunt. Habendum
et tenendum dictis abbati et conuentui et successorib} suis
imppetuum de dicto Willmo et heredi} suis totam molendinum
ventricium cum prefata secta et illam plateam terre super quam
dictum molendinum ventricium situm est, et etiam cum libertate
fodiendi et capiendi terram circumquaque ad situm dicti molendini
elevandum et exaltandum, quotiescunque necesse fuerit ubi dictus
Willmus capere solebat, et etiam unam plateam terre extra dictum
situm ad triticum purgandum in vento, ubi dictus Willmus et eius
homines purgare solebat, et etiam cum libero introitu et exitu situm
ad dictum molendinum cum bobus et equis ad molas et meremium
cariand, et alia cariagia facienda p vias et semitas quib} dictus
Willmus homines sui ad dictum molendinum accedere et uti sole-
et
bant cum omnib} libertatib} ptenentijs et commodis dicto
;
Benedictum Locum [the " Blessed Place " *] of Stanlawe on the one
part, and William, the son of John Blundell of Ince, on the other
to wit
The said William has given, conceded, and by this present
:
:
writing, confirmed to the said abbot and convent all his windmill in
the territory of Ince, with the soke custom of all the men
living in
the said town of Ince no right in the said mill being reserved to him or
:
his heirs except that of grinding all corn and malt for the
proper use
of their manor house without payment of toll, such com and malt
*
Locus or place was the ordinar)- monastic term at this period for an abbey.
VOL. n. Q
242 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING: vol. ii.
2 Ince vent, for themselves and their successors, have given and conceded
^^ ^^^ ^^^^ William and his heirs in his watermill which is situated
Soke Deed
on the bank of the Alt [this neighbouring mill having evidently
also been granted to the monks]. To have and to hold, by the said
abbot and convent, and their successors in perpetuity from the said
William and his heirs, all the said windmill, with the said soke,
together with that plot of land on which the said windmill is situated :
Also with liberty to dig soil round about where the said William
has been used to do and carry it away for elevating and exalting
the site of the windmill as may be necessary Also with a plot of
:
land, outside the site of the mill, for winnowing grain in the wind,
where WiUiam and his men have been used to winnow Also with :
liberty of coming and going to and from the with oxen and
site,
horses carrying millstones or structural timber, and for other trafific,
by the roads and lanes by which the said William and his men have
been used to come and go Also with all liberties, appurtenances,
:
said Peter appearing before you on our behalf in this matter may do.
In testimony of which, &c. Farewell in God ever.
Done at Ince, St. Matthew's Day (24th February), anno domini
1283.
CHAPTER XV.
3. Fourteenth
Century
Drawings.
Roy. MSS.
lo E. IV.
89.
mHttitctmiwiiht
'miitflticq'cxwwctmlum uitiiiorauit
tnmacfcimcinutc qtmtottutti
fcqucotc
Ibid., 1
15,
cmirttqdr
airrcrauica
A'ninmct^timttc
Ibid., joK
Ibid., 114.
A
vellum roll containing a plan of the estate of
the Carthusian Monaster)^ London, compiled in 1430,
indicates the mill of the monastery of the site of
;
*
A map of Thanet, at the close of the last century, still shows a windmill on Hasted's Kent,
the medieval site at the foot of the beacon mound at Birchington. 1 799.
252 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING: vol. ii.
4 Fifteenth
The mill is described' in the key to the plan, "the
Century myll hill in ye commaunders mantillis." On an
Drawings.
Horda Ang.
Syn. II. 14.
XV.
THE TRIPOD
POST MILL.
4. Fifteenth
Century
Drawings.
views ;
of which illustrate, though occasionally not
all
the
t'i 1 r t
Book of Joshua.
i
Aa
third is of the ambiguous form already illustrated by
SEC. II. WINDMILLS. -00
XV.
THE TRIPOD
POST MILL.
4. Fifteenth
Centurj'
Drawings.
Ibid., 275.
Illustrated Ex-
hibitor: London
1852, 310.
*
The smaller of the foregoing illustrations from the illuminated MSS. are
from drawings by Mr. E. W. Cox the whole of the others being from photo-
;
Hist. Gent.
Septen. Venice.
:
VOL. II.
j^
258 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL, II.
XV.
THE TRIPOD philosopher Cardanus, who gives us a technical speci-
POST MILL. fication of the method of constructing the windmills
6. Specifica-
we have so fully described from pictorial representa-
tion by tions. Cardanus had visited most parts of Europe,
Cardanus.
including England, France, Germany, and Italy yet ;
POST MILL
picture of the machine, let him refer to the work of Jerome Girava
,
torum, 1622. but yet it is not generally well demonstrated or explained. The
sails stand right opposite the wind that is blowing, one side, how-
ever, turning more to the wind and the other gradually inclining,
;
might strike with greater force ; but this did more harm than good,
as the repercussion deadened the primary motion. Again, I made
the sails double their former width in order to compress the wind
more and the lateral percussion stronger. This at least was com-
*
Biog. Gen., Of Jerome Gerava little is known save that, as Didot states, he published
Paris, 1857. La Cosmographia y Geographia at Venice in 1570, which, though printed in Italy,,
was, as Cardanus states, a Spanish work. As he mentions it in 1557, the edition
of 1570 mentioned by Didot cannot have been the first.
SEC. II. WINDMILLS. 261
pletely successful, for the sails were turned by a much gentler blast xv.
and revolved much faster. THE TRIPOD
This increase of motion will perhaps be produced more con- PQST MILL.
veniently by eight sails than by four sails of double breadth, unless y Lord
by chance the weight should be so great as to impede the motion. Bacon's
But of make a trial.
this
Theories
The
length of the sails likewise contributes to motion. For in
rotations a little force towards the circumference is equal to a far
greater force towards the centre. But to this there is one drawback,
namely, that the longer the sails are the further are they separated
at the top and the less is the wind compressed. It might perhaps
answer to make the sails a little longer, but widening at the top like
the blade of an oar. But of this I have made no experiment.
Admonition If these experiments be put in practice in wind-
:
water of the dyke of Eschedyk which dyke, both then and before
:
close proximity.
SEC. II. WINDMILLS. 265
XV.
THE TRIPOD
POST MILL.
8. Erection
near
Watermills.
originally constructed
that even in the present day
the shires are thickly dotted with post-mills in no
material degree differing, except in size, from the mills
of Norman times. If manv of them are mere decavine
silent emblems of the past, yet many others generally
engaged the occupation, important though less
in
XV,
THE TRIPOD
POST MILL.
9. Modern
Survivals.
Baxterley, Warwick.
Photo, by IV. G. Chambers.
XV.
THE TRIPOD
POST MILL
9. Modern
Survivals.
wick), the late miller informs us, indeed, that "as the
wind is never regular," he has ground with one of the
two pairs of stones (though the mill could drive both
if she got the
"
wind-power) in an hour from a gallon
to a sack, more or less perhaps a sack one hour and
;
9. Modern
Survivals.
SEC. II. WINDMILLS. 271
the fore part bearing the sail beam and the entire
machinery of the mill. The obliquity of the sail beam
and arms, also the importance of which Cardanus
and Bacon were among the earliest to point out
will be observed more clearly from the diagram than
from any of the photographs of existing mills.
Though many of the antique structures, restored
and rebuilt time after time, still remain scattered
CHAPTER XVI.
Oleron.
taining a more exposed site, or a more advantageous
position near a main road. The laws of Oleron the
enterprising little commercial community, from whose
island in the Bay of Biscay emanated various laws,
which, about the year 13 14, were adopted in this
country took cognisance of the possibility of
full
remuement, porreit hom par meisme raison dire que maison qui est XVI.
toute sus estelous poet hom remuer et por ce est moeble. Mais ceu REMOVALS
OF TRIPOD
est apertement faus, quar nule mayson est moebles et domques MILLS.
molins nest nie moubles car cest maison si cum nos auom dit.
Watermills are not moveables, for they are firmly fixed into the 1. Laws of
Oleron.
ground and cannot be removed entire without damage to their
original materials.
And likewise with regard to windmills, some of which are alto-
gether held above the ground, and have a high ladder, and some
have their foot fixed in the ground, being, as men say, well affixed ;
and, accordingly, they are not moveable, for they cannot be detached
from the ground, nor removed without damage to their original
structure. .Of those mills which are actually upon the ground, some
people say they are moveable because a man may move them without
destroying their original materials ; but there is reason to the con-
trary. For they are not such machines as tubs, casks, or chests,
and still less are they like wine-presses, which a man can remove.
A windmill is like a house with a ladder, having windows and a
fireplace, a cupboard and rooms, and closing with a key, and estab-
lished on its own ground and in its own place. And for that reason
it is not moveable.
This was adjudged some time ago, in the time of Sir Peter Dors,
Sir Helies Ronas, Sir John Viau, Don Viau his brother, Don Ber-
tome Saugeta, and many other good men, in a contest regarding
some mills and haystacks, and to whom they belonged. Speaking
of removing, a man might say that a house which is entirely
upon posts might be removed, and for that reason is a moveable.
But this is obviously false, for no house is a moveable ; hence a mill
is not a moveable, for it is a house, as we have said.
pro-
ventus decimarum ipsius molendini de jure possiderent, idem abbas ^^^' ^^~'
Willielmus, pro eo quod idem molendinorum in Beforth prope paro-
chium de Skypse extitit situatum dicturh molendinum de loco suo
deponi fecit et in territorium de Drynghow infra parochium de
Skypse in loco eminentiori iterum elevatum transferebat de quo :
XVI. a more eminent and elevated place so that now it yields the
:
tithe,
REMOVALS valued at four or five shillings
^ ^per annum, to Skipsea
^
'
Church.
OF TRIPOD
MILLS.
This summary method of extinguishing the claim of
2.Meaux the rectors of Berford to tithe was all very well so
Abbey Mill,
j^^^ ^^ ^^^ Abbot was both lord of the manor and
owner of the mill, otherwise the operation of the
Oleron law would have prevented its removal without
the consent of all parties concerned.
Apart from legal complications the practical feasi-
bility of removing a peg windmill has been frequently
demonstrated.
3. Modern 3. The Avloffe ''Calendars" contain, under date 14
emovas.
^^^ ^^ Charles I., "an order concerning the removing
Ayloffe: I. 246. of a windmill that formerly stood on Monthill, Middle-
sex to be brought back again."
:
Reji"ter Sept
^^ 1768 we read:
"There is a windmill near Sir
1768. C. Peer's seat at Bromley, in Kent, which being in a
disagreeable situation. Sir Charles is now removing
the whole building together by means of capsterns :
3. Modern
Removals.
4 Leon ^ITx
^^ freehold or was a mere chattel j and the jury found
Gray 7/. Ulysses, that it was not a fixture
a view of the matter which
Latch. 123.^
was m J
arhrmed on appeal. 1 -rr
CHAPTER XVII.
CHAPTER XVIII.
I.
Formby
Type.
I'ormljy, Lancashire.
SEC. II. WINDMILLS. 281
stories
tunes
of brick
,
this
.
^
mode
or
r
or
stone
-11
thouQfh for several cen-
;
1-1
erection has been exceedingly
xviii.
THE TURRET
post mill.
common, and evidently was an improvement upon j~^ ^
the original plan of leaving the space occupied by Type,
the tripod foundations unenclosed and unutilised. A
characteristic specimen of the turret mill was that
at Formby, Lancashire, which was blown down in a
furious gale in 1883, Mr. John Robinson, the miller,
who was within at the time, narrowly escaping with
his life. The photograph of the exterior, for which
we are indebted to the kindness of Mr. W. H.
Robinson, son of Mr. John Robinson, just mentioned,
shows the fixed conical turret of brick, above which
the mill itself was turned upon its central peg by
the beam ;
the latter also will be noticed to be
supported upon a small wheel which rested upon
a circular paved way of stone surrounding the mill,
something like the walking track round the ancient
Carthusian mill, London the operation of turning;
Irby, Cheshire.
the wheel of the beam and its circular track round the
mill being well defined.
2. In the more recent
type of turret post mill a 2. Wavertree
considerable improvement was effected ^>'P^-
by freeing the
284 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING: vol. ii.
XVIII.
THE TURRET
POST MILL,
2. Wavertree
Type.
Rustington, Sussex.
Photo, ly R. H. Gault, A'ew.
3. Automatic 3. As
the turret mill yielded one suggestion for the
Gear. construction of the tower mill, so it seems later to
have adopted from the latter one of the systems by
which the tower mill was manoeuvred. The cap of
the latter only, and not the entire mill, being turned
to the wind by automatic gear, this latter was applied
to the turret mill. As described with regard to towers,
SEC. II. WINDMILLS. 287
the gear comprised a small sail wheel, fixed on the xviii.
cap at right angles to the main sails of the mill, so post mi:
that when
the wind chanored, and ceased to revolve
the main sails, the small set of sails were revolved, Gear
and, their motion being communicated to the cap,
caused it to turn till the fly sails ceased moving, when,
of course, the larger sails again revolved. At the
turret mill this fly gear was attached above the wheel
at the end of the beam, or at the end of the ladder :
Metfield, Norfolk.
CHAPTER XIX.
\. The
old post mill, in time of war, ordinarily xix.
obtained a distinct strategical value for either purposes in^^he^war^s.
and while in common with
of defence or offence
of
;
Title page.
yet the touch of awesomeness which creeps upon you
as you gaze is not to be reproduced on paper or canvas."
3. Latham. 3. At the famous siege of Latham House, near
mill, and more than one miller. The night after his
escape from the defeat of Worcester, September 4,
1
65 1, while making his stealthy way to Madeley, in
company with Richard Penderell, the fugitives had to
pass Evelith mill. The king himself recounted what
SEC. II. WINDMILLS. 291
called out 'Who goes there.'*' Upon which Richard Jj^^ Qf^^haries
'
Drawn up
Penderell answered, Neighbours going home,' or n..
'
some such like words. Whereupon the miller cried 1766^ 15.
out, If
'
rogues !
'
IN THE WARS, hospitable house he was mounted upon the horse that
6. White^ ordinarily carried corn and flour to and from the mill
ladies. of Humphrey Penderell of Whiteladies, near Boscobel.
As the miller set out with Charles on his secret
journey, the weary king grumbled that his mount was
The Book of the dullest jade he ever rode on whereupon Hum- ;
Cockle thereupon taking him to the mill and lodging him for the night. Next
day he ascertained, from a party of courtiers who had been arrested as poachers,
the identity of his guest, and was rewarded by the thanks of the king, a knight-
hood, and a pension of a thousand marks a year.
SEC. II. WINDMILLS. 293
CHAPTER XX.
XX. or flour, that the idea arose of thus devoting: the re-
THE TOWER , . ,
, -n
, i
J j"^^g^
for turning a mill round to every wind was first found
out in the middle of the sixteenth century by a
Fleming. The primitive tower mill of brick or stone,
^
^'m^^ ''^'^^w
Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A.
SEC. II. WINDMILLS. 295
"
surrounded by wooden o'able or cap, appears
its small xx.
, r T L
u ^-n r r THE TOWER
tnereiore but a very slight modincation oi the turret mill.
'
post mill.
2. The beam which turned the post mill was 2. Beam
first affixed to the cap on the summit of the fixed Winder.
tower ;
which cap alone it turned to keep the sails
filledby the wind. mill of the kind A is found
in a very ruinous old timber structure at Detroit,
which stands on the first white settlement in the Pict. Amer.
^^'''' ^' ^^-'
north-west of the United States founded by French
Canadians in 1683. A pleasing aspect of the same
type of structure occurs at East Hampton, Long ibid., 1. 256.
Spon's Diet.
of Engineering,
1873-
Modern Tower :
Cap and Beam.
Reikjavit, Iceland.
Photo, by Mr. P. Lange.
and Tholen,
illustrations those of Reikjavit, Iceland,
Holland, both of which are excellent modern examples
of the type in actual working order.
3. The use of this cumbrous beam was at best 3. Pulley
a difficult and laboursomeeven upon many task, Winder.
towers of not sufficient height to be provided with
balconies while disasters have frequently occurred
;
XX.
THE TOWER
MILL.
3. Pulley
Winder.
Tholen, Holland.
of wind required that the wings with the top should XX.
THE TOWER
be turned round, it took a yoke of oxen to do it." MILL.
This mill is somewhat of a curiosity in the style of 3 Pulley
Winder.
its erection. Longfellow, adopting a popular tradi-
Pict. Amer., storm but fire, and would at least look like a fort :
11 1-1- J J
and -1
thus as towers generally were neigntened sail- mill.
3. Pulley
Winder.
XX. travel on its grooved track and carry the cap with
THE TOWER
MILL. it round the tower, thus adjusting the sails to their
Still this arrangement, like the
3. Pulley
required position.
Winder. beam, necessitated constant watchfulness on the part
of the miller, who had to keep alert to every change
of wind and trim his sails accordingly. In mode-
Ilford, Essex.
Spon's Diet, of
Engineering :
1873-
-ruT. ^.xr^^ ^^^ change self-acting was to fit the back of the cap
MILL. With a large vane, in form something like a fan, which,
4. Automatic acting in the same way as a weather-cock, would
Winder. always keep the sails up to the wind. But when
mills were of considerable size, such a vane would
necessarily be very large and cumbrous and to meet
;
Rye, Sussex.
SEC. 11. WINDMILLS. 305
Horsey Mere.
Photo, by P. Jennings, Ashtead.
XX.
^
ing- and dangfer-
also as illustrative of the troublesome
THE TOWER
i
i i r -i i i
i
/<^
SEC. II. WINDMILLS. 311
apply the brake and stop his mill in a furious gale.'"" mill.
Another prominent and curious feature was the 5 Mechanisni
arrangement for setting the stones, which, though on
a larger scale, was practically identical in its nature
with the method adopted in the quern for grinding
fine or coarse meal. Referring to the diagram, the
spindle G N,
revolved by the basket pinion F E, con-
nected with the sail beam, is fixed to the upper stone
by the iron rynd on the under side of the same thus :
described by Brewster:
The bridgetxee is a piece of wood nine feet long, one foot broad, Nat. Phil.,
and five inches thick, and rests upon props at its ends. . .. Under 1823 : IL 317.
*
The stonn in question, disasirous both on land and sea, took place on
Sunday night, January 6, 1839. The North Townsend mill, a tall brick erection,
tenanted by a well-known local worthy of the craft, Jeremiah Shaw, stood on the
shore of the Mersey, seaward. Ordinarily accounted one of the " best blown " of
the cluster of windmills which girt the shore at this exposed point, it received the
full volume of the storm, and proved unmanageable. Shaw, who early found that <
the mill could not be held in (writes his old firiend, Mr. George lAint) was on
duty all night, and every sack of wheat had been shot on to prevent her taking
fire ; but it was all of little avail, and she tore away in spite of
every eflfort to
check her. There was a point in the mill to which a brake could be applied,
and to this ultimately he applied a strong and long lever of wood by which for
some time she was held in ; but finding his strength failing, he contrived to balance
himself on the end of the beam, and there sat ; succeeding finally in keeping the
mill somewhat in check till assistance arrived. But the straining and shaking,
too much for a man of his years, proved fatal, for he died from the effects very
shortly afterwards.
312 HISTORY OF CORN MILLING VOL, II.
of
frequently being devoted merely to the grinding ^hj-^q^^.j-j^
stuffs for cattle food, and rarely indeed endeavouring mill.
to compete with the giant roller mills of our ports g Decadence.
that enjoy every facility of transport and inter-com-
Raylish, Essex.
Photo, by P. Jennings, AshUad.
he does the honours of his dusty workshop. You must not mind
your clothes becoming whitened with the flour which has settled
thickly over floor and rafters and ledges
in every conceivable and
inconceivable nook and cranny in fact. As for the miller, his face,
his beard, his clothes, are all grey with thin deposits of it, while the
creases of his waistcoat and the rim of his hat hold drifts of the
powdered grain. There are generally three floors to windmills. The
top one is a veritable cave of the winds it rocks and echoes much
;
more than any other part of the building with the whirl of the great
sails outside and the grinding of the machinery below. In the next
storey the grain is tipped into the insatiable maws of revolving cog-
wheels and rapidly circulating millstones, to come lower still, in the
shape of flour, into great bins and other sacks. The miller, perhaps,
opens the "bolter" for you, and. amid a cloud of fine flour-dust, you
perceive the chief constituent of the future half-quartern loaf descend-
ing in a continuous stream. The smell encountered within a wind-
mill is a peculiarly wholesome and appetising one, and everything
recalls the leisured ways of old England, before the fever of modern
times seized upon the land.
THF TOWFP
^^^^^^^ ^^ ^^ hour. A pair of shelling stones, 5 feet
MILL. in diameter, have turned out 125 bushels in a day of
6. Decadence. ^^^ hours.
But with respect to this topic we are met in all
directions with that constant source of uncertainty and
delinquency to be hidden
as a consequence of such XX.
THE TOWER
temerity.* MILL.
Naturally many of the disused mills which havCg Decadence.
not been dismantled have fallen into decay, and nume-
rous such examples of ruin as are presented by the
desolate structures at Kirkham, Lancashire, and Lone
Kirkham, Lancashire.
XX.
THE TOWER
MILL.
6. Decadence.
the past, and of the great distance the milling art has
since traversed towards perfection. Others of the old
towers have been preserved for far different purposes
than those for which they were erected. The con-
servators of Wimbledon Common (like the purchasers
of Orient Mill, Long Island, U.S.A.), retain near
the golf links on the common an old tower solely
as a picturesque adjunct to the landscape its sail ;
shop was in Devon Street, considerably further from the mill than my father's,
was already there and had roused Rawsthorne. Blanchard had wheat in the mill
also, and claimed a prior right of grinding, his having been delivered before my
father's;
but after a palaver the miller agreed to start and the two bakers agreed
to shoot sack and sack of their wheat alternately into the mill, and take off sack
and sack of the flour agreeing also to pay Rawsthorne's fine in case he should
;
be penalised. The mill ground grandly, and though close by St. John's and
Christ Churches, was kept at it all the Sunday through ; the result being that
on Monday Lunt and Blanchard had flour to sell while others had none, and
cleared it out as fast as it arrived from the mill. Fortunately the authorities
under the circumstances overlooked the offence, and nothing further was ever
heard of it."
SF.C. II. WINDMILLS. 319
XX.
THE TOWER
MILL.
6. Decadence.
Wimbledon Common.
XX. "
and preached a homily from Micah vii. 5, 9 : Trust
THE TOWER
MILL. ye not in a friend, put ye not confidence in a guide :
6. Decadence. keep the doors of thy mouth from her that Heth in
thy bosom :
rejoice not against me, O mine enemy,
when I fall, I shall arise
"
indicative no doubt of
some sad experience of the lonely old miller. Upon
one side of the tomb he had had inscribed, " For the
reception of John Oliver when deceased to the will
of God granted by William Westbrook Richardson,
:
of April,
1793, aged eighty-four years." He left 'by
will^20 a year for the tending of the tomb and the
summer house, but of their ultimate fate we have no
knowledcye.
SEC. II. WINDMILLS. 321
CHAPTER XXI.
I. Under
the feudal laws no one without special ^^ xxl
claimed.
^^. . .
it
appears clear that, if the mill were an ancient
manorial one, it would be possessed of its ancient
prescriptive right to the wind, of which no new
owner of the surrounding land had any right to
deprive it while if it were a modern one, it would
;
CHAPTER XXII.
j^ jj^^ ^^
Beatson is
adopted the returning sails being made
:
\^y\/\Jl^itZ]
'**
Engineering,
^ ^^ ^
as if produced inwards
\/Nsl x^^^Sv^
would touch the circum-
ference of the windwheel,
^^^^>^-/^''^^^__^"**^
^^^^sss^^s^- r>w-
Horizontal windmiii.
By this arrangement, from
whatever point the wind may blow it will cause the
wheel to revolve in the same direction. Part of the
breeze passes between the oblique ports of the casing
and acts on the plates of the wheel while part is ;
Page
Abandoning trade : Roman pistors forbidden to ...
52, 53
Accidents at mills : Brehon laws 90
Scotch Regiam Majestatem 91
Actresses: Roman pistors not to marry them 47. 59
Admiral, Lord High :
supervising mills 182
Admiralty: Black Book of 182
Adoption of watermill delayed by Rome 36
Alban, St. miracle at a mill ...
: 88
Allodial system of Saxon land tenure 199
American old watermills 209
old windmills 294, 299
Ammianus Marcellinus : Terence the pistor... 60
Ancient Britons :
alleged inventors of the watermill 79
Andoredo forest mill ...
97
Anglo-Saxon pistors or pincernas 116
watermills: first record 96
construction 100
a reputed existing example 104
as recorded in Domesday lOI
charters ... 96
windmills : fabulous instances of 226-230
laws. See Laws.
Ansehn Liber : thirteenth century miniature... 74
Anthony, St. :
travelling on a millstone 87
Antipater's epigram invention of watermilling : 6
Antoninus Pius pistors' monument to :
43
Aqueducts of Rome and water supply of mills 38, 41, 42
Articuli Cleri tithe freedom of mills
: 126
Turkey modern
Asiatic :
floating mills 69
Aughton: sunk post mill 279
capacity of tower mill 315
Augres soke of early windmill
: 240
Ausonius early watermills ...
: 2
Automatic appliances Oliver Evans' :
193
bridgetree of windmills ... 3"
winding gear :
post mills ... 286
tower mills 303
Avon Dassett capacity of post mill ...
: 266
Ayloffe calendars removal of windmill : 274
"
"Danish mills : modern Norse mills so called 16
Danube: modern floating mills 70
Darvieux Greek : mills in Holy Land and Italy II
Harbury mill :
fatality 298
Hale post mill removal
: ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 275
Hall mills : manorial ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
115
Halton mill
: tithe ... ... ... ... ... 127
Hampshire :
Domesday mills ... ... ... ... ... ...
135
medieval tide mills ...
219
Hart, E. C :
Norwegian Norse mills ... ... ...
23
Helsby windmill and watermill
:
264
Henry Vni. and miller of Mansfield ... ... ... ... ... 292
Heraldry and milling ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 232
Herefordshire: Domesday mills ... ... ... ... ... ...
154
Hertfordshire: Domesday mills ... ... ... ... 148
Heuzer : Greek mill in medieval France ... ... ... .. ... 11
HighdowTi tomb beside the mill
: ... ... ... ... ... ...
319
Highest (reputed) tower mill ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 307
Historians ignore introduction of watermilling ... ... ... ... 37
Honorius I. builds mills at Rome ... ... ... ... ... ... 40
Hopper freedom of manorial lord ... ... ... ... ... ... 241
334 GENERAL INDEX.
Page
Hora B. Maries Virginis : fifteenth century MS.
Horizontal watermills ...
windmills ...
Naseby mill in the civil war ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
290
Naval mills in Crimean war ... ... ... ... ... .. ... 216
Neuburgh : fabulous windmill ... ... ... .... ... ... 229
Newport, U.S.A.: ancient windmill ... ... ... ... ...
300
New England. U.S.A.: Sage's Ravine mill ... 213
Nith river and the earliest Irish mill ... ... ... ... ... 82
Nomenclature variations :
Mola aquaria : the watermill ... ... ... ... ... i, 107, 108
Mol. navale or pendens the floating mill : ... ... ... ... 63
Molendinum: the mill house ... ... ... ... ... ... 107
Molendinarius the miller ... : ... .,. ... ... ... 117
Mol. ventricium the windmill : ... ... ... ... ...
237
Norfolk: Domesday mills ... ... ... ... ... ...
173
Norse mill, the : of Greek type ... ... ... ... ... ... 12
in Wales ... .. ... ... ... ... 12
in Ireland ... ... ... .. ... ...
13) 82
in Isle of Man 16
in Scotland ... ... ... ... ... 16, 82
in Norway ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 22
in Roumania ... .. ... ... ... ... 24
in China ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 26
its modern efficiency ... ... ... ... ... 26
the turbine ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 28
relicsof doubtful period ... ... ... ... ... 82
introduction into Britain ... ... ... ... ...
83
identified by Brehon laws ... ... ... ...
89
Northamptonshire: Domesday mills ... ... ... ...
158
Norway: modern Norse mill ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 22
Nottinghamshire: Domesday mills ... ... ... ... ... ... 165
Novgorod: miraculous millstone ... ... ... ... ... ... 87
of Roman mills 85
Strabo watermill of Mithridates
:
7
Streams: mills obstructing ... 41, 182
Strutt ship mills not known in his day
: 66
Anglo-Saxon watermill charters 96
alleged Anglo-Saxon windmill charters 228
improvement upon MS. sketch of windmill 253
Suffolk :
Domesday mills 177
Suming : action r<r tithe of mill 127
Sunday: working com mills ...
316
Sunk post mill, the 278
Surrey: Domesday mills 134
Sussex Domesday mills
:
33
Sutcliffe : caustic criticism of millers 198
Switzerland: interior of old watermill 191
a curious windmill 309
Syria: medieval Greek watermill 10
Yorkshire :
Domesday mills 166
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