Stalbridge Weston Manor: Historical Timeline

933 to c.1760 · Monarchs · Lords of the Manor · Key Documents · Key Events

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The Anglo-Saxon Period

933–1066
924–939
Monarch King Æthelstan
933
933–1539
939–946
Monarch King Edmund I
946–955
Monarch King Eadred
955–959
Monarch King Eadwig
959–975
Monarch King Edgar the Peaceful
975–978
Monarch King Edward the Martyr
978–1016
Monarch King Æthelred II, ‘the Unready’
998
1013–1014
Monarch King Sweyn Forkbeard
1016
Monarch King Edmund Ironside
1016–1035
Monarch King Cnut
1035–1040
Monarch King Harold Harefoot
1040–1042
Monarch King Harthacnut
1042–1066
Monarch King Edward the Confessor
1066
Monarch King Harold II
1066
1086

The Medieval Period

1066–1485
1066–1087
Monarch King William I
1087–1100
Monarch King William II
1100–1135
Monarch King Henry I
1135–1154
Monarch King Stephen
c. 1135–1153
1154–1189
Monarch King Henry II
1189–1199
Monarch King Richard I
1199–1216
Monarch King John
1215
1215–1217
1216–1272
Monarch King Henry III
1272–1307
Monarch King Edward I
1307–1327
Monarch King Edward II
1315–1322
1327–1377
Monarch King Edward III
1332
1348–1349
1349/50
1377–1399
Monarch King Richard II
1381
1399–1413
Monarch King Henry IV
1413–1422
Monarch King Henry V
1422–1461
Monarch King Henry VI
1461–1483
Monarch King Edward IV
1483
Monarch King Edward V
1483–1485
Monarch King Richard III

The Tudor Period

1485–1603
1485–1509
Monarch King Henry VII
1485–1551
1509–1547
Monarch King Henry VIII
1513
1525
1535
1539
1539–1546
1539
1546
19 March 1546
1546–1572
1547–1553
Monarch King Edward VI
1547–1558
1553–1558
Monarch Queen Mary I
1558–1603
Monarch Queen Elizabeth I
1572–1608
1594–1597

The Stuart Period

1603–1714
1603–1625
Monarch King James I
1603
1608–1610
1610–1611
1611–c.1657
1611
1625–1649
Monarch King Charles I
1641–1642
1642–1651
1642–1662
1649–1660
Monarch The Interregnum
c.1657–1663
1660–1685
Monarch King Charles II
1662
1663–1671
1663–1716
1671–1719
1685–1688
Monarch King James II
1685
1688–1689
1689–1702
Monarch King William III and Queen Mary II
1702–1714
Monarch Queen Anne

The Georgian Period

1714–c.1760
1714–1727
Monarch King George I
1719–c.1721
c.1721–1746
1721
1727–1760
Monarch King George II
1746–1753
1753–1780

A History Of Stalbridge Weston Manor

Watercolour of a hen next to a milestone on a track overlooking a rural landscape.

How a Small Manor Survived Eight Hundred Years of Other People’s Drama

Stalbridge Weston is a small manor in the Blackmore Vale, Dorset. Nobody famous was born here and no battles were fought on its fields. For most of its history, it doesn’t even appear in the records, because nothing happened that anyone thought worth writing down.

But dig through the archives and you’ll find a Saxon boundary walk that names the farmers who worked the land a thousand years ago. You’ll find people who survived the Black Death, the Dissolution, the Civil War and the Bloody Assizes, and still turned up to work the land the next morning.

This is their story. It is also, unavoidably, the story of the people who owned the manor.

It begins in 933 AD, when King Æthelstan granted the estate to Sherborne Minster, and the boundary charter preserves a landscape of stubble-fields, game hedges and a great oak that has long since returned to the earth: Saxon Origins and Domesday Book.

For the next four centuries, Sherborne Abbey ran the manor at arm’s length while England managed to produce all five horsemen of the apocalypse: famine, plague, war, death and taxes. The Book of Revelation only promised four. The fifth arrived with the royal tax collectors, right on schedule: Medieval Weston under Sherborne Abbey.

The Tudors brought a wool boom, muster rolls and Henry VIII’s urgent need for cash. By 1535 the monks had stopped farming altogether and were simply collecting rent. Then the monasteries were dissolved, and six hundred years of continuity ended with a signature: Tudor Weston: The Wool Boom, the Reformation and a New World.

What followed was a masterclass in insider dealing. The manor passed through the Crown to Edward Twynyhoo, who held it for exactly one day before flipping it to Richard Duke – Clerk of the Court of Augmentations, whose signature was on the original grant. Duke was twenty-one when he got the job and owned half of Devon by the time he’d finished: The Manor Changes Hands.

Duke’s daughter Christina inherited the estate and married twice. She may have regretted that. Her sons had some very bad luck, and the family’s affairs landed in the hands of Robert Cecil, the most powerful man in England, who happened to be their cousin’s husband: The Duke Inheritance.

Cecil sold up within a year. George Thornhull bought the manor in 1611, the first steady landlord the estate had known in seventy-five years. His tenants got on with things: Back to Earth.

After fifty years the Thornhulls sold to William Whitchurch, a Frome linen draper with serious money. The Whitchurches produced a High Sheriff of Somerset. Then Peter Walter arrived: New Money, Same Land.

And through all of it, somebody still owed twenty-two hens in rent every Martinmas — a payment first established around 700 AD, which nobody could quite explain but nobody dared stop: About Those Hens.

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