button to main menu  Camden's Britannia, edn 1789

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Page 151:-
  roman roads
  turnpike roads

The great Roman road passed through this county from Stanemore to Brougham castle, and till the turnpike road was made it was very conspicuous almost the whole length of its course, six yards broad, formed of three courses of large square stones, (the lowermost largest) or of gravel and flint as materials varied. Maiden way, so called perhaps from Maiden castle a small fort at the first entrance over Stanemore, branched out from the other at Kirkby Thore, stretching northwards over the low end of Cross fell to where it joined with the Picts wall in Northumberland. Beside these two Roman roads there are in this county eight good turnpike ones [m].
  Westmorland at the Conquest
  Border Service

The country though barren is populous, and the inhabitants civilized; which advantage Dr. Burn ascribes to the institution of small schools in almost every village. Here are large remains of the antient feudal policy, retained longer in these parts by reason of the particular military tenure against the Scots. These lands were first granted out in large districts by William the Conqueror and his successors to certain great Norman barons. These parcelled them out to inferior lords, and they again granted them to individuals. And they seem to have extended this regulation as far as it would go. The soldier's estate from the number of antient tenements in the several manors appears to have been small, as what would now let for about 10 or 12l. per annum. And besides the general military service in the king's wars at home and abroad, the tenants in the borders were liable to be called out in the particular service against the Scots, at the command of the lords wardens of the marches. Even the very diversions of the children still have a reference to this border enmity. The boys to this day have a play called Scotch and English, an exact picture in miniature of the raid or inroad, and a very active and violent recreation [n].
The common people eat oaten bread as in Scotland, and oats are imported weekly out of Cumberland and the adjoining counties of York, Lancaster, and Durham. They breed great numbers of cattle, and export largely butter and hams [o].
This county is divided into the barony of Kendal and the barony of Westmorland, in later times called the barony of Appleby. The former belongs to the diocese of Chester, the latter to that of Carlisle. In each barony we find two wards, being districts of the like number of high-constables, who presided over the wards to be sustained at certain fords and other places for repelling plundering parties out of Scotland. Two of these wards are in Kendal Barony, Kendale and Lonsdale wards; and two in the bottom called East and West wards. There was antiently a middle ward between the two last, but since watching and warding ceased it has fallen into the other two [p].
It is a mistake that in antient times these parts paid no subsidy, being sufficiently charged in the border service against the Scots [1]; for we find all along collectors of the subsidies here granted both by clergy and laity from the reign of Edward III. downwards, and taking all the taxes together we shall find this country pays more to government in proportion to the wealth of the inhabitants than any county in the kingdom.
  Barony of Kendal.
In the Domesday survey an account is taken of many places within the barony of Kendal, together with the adjoining places in Lancaster and Yorkshire, whereas of Westmorland properly so called no survey was made, it being all wasted and destroyed and worth nothing. This barony extended a good way into that part which is now called the bottom of Westmorland, particularly into almost all the west part comprehending the greatest part of the parishes of Barton, Lowther, and Morland. But now the boundary of Kendal barony as distinguished from the bottom of Westmorland is the same nearly as the boundary of the several parishes of Gresmere and Kendal on one side and Barton, Shap, and Orton on the other. It is in the diocese of Chester, and has two rural deaneries of Kendal and Kirkby Lonsdale, both of which extend into the adjoining parts of Lancaster. The bottom of Westmorland is in the diocese of Carlisle, and is all one rural deanry called the deanry of Westmorland [q].
The general military tenure of this county was by homage, fealty, and cornage; which last seems peculiar to the border service, and drew after it wardship, marriage, and relief, and the service of this tenure was knight service. Cornage was early converted into pecuniary payment, and White rent was the lord's rent paid in silver. Scutage was another service or compensation in money instead of personal service against the Scots. A knight's fee in these northern counties according to the register of Wetheral priory was estimated not according to quality but quantity of the land. According to that register 10 acres made one ferndell, four ferndells a virgate (which is half a carucate), four virgates one hide, and four hides a knight's fee: so that the knight's fee in this case would amount to 640 acres. The value of these appears to have been ascertained at the time of Magna Charta, which fixes the relief to be paid for a knight's fee at 5l. and as the relief in all the cases there specified was after the rate of a quarter of the yearly value of the fee, it follows that knight's fee was then estimated at 20l. per ann.. [r]
The last tenure to be explained in this county, and which has puzzled former antiquaries, is drengage, which Dr. Burn proves to be the most servile of all tenures, in opposition to the free tenants, who were so called because they were not villains or bondmen [s]. For other customary tenures in this county I must refer to Dr. Burn [t].
  Kendal.
  Kendal
"In Westmorland is but one good market town called Kendale, otherwise, as I wene, Kirkby Kendale. It hath the name of the river called Kent, unde & Kendale, sed emporium laneis pannis celeberrimum. In the town is but one church: the circuit of the parish by the country adjacent hath many chapels and divers in the town itself. About half a mile of on the east side of the town is on a hill a park longing to young Mr Par, the chiefest of that name, and there is a place as it were a castle [u]."
Kendal is a large town situated in a beautiful valley prettily cultivated and watered by the river Kent. The principal street is above a mile long, rising north and south; the houses old and irregular, mostly of stone plaistered, yet the whole has an appearance of neatness and industry: the number of inhabitants
[m] Burn, 8, 9.
[n] Ib. 9, 10.
[o] Ib. 11.
[p] Ib. 12, 13.
[1] G.
[q] Burn, 11, 12, 13.
[r] Ib. 14-20.
[s] Ib. 21.
[t] Ib. 22-26.
[u] Lel. VII. 62.
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gazetteer links
button -- "Barony of Appleby" -- Barony of Appleby
button -- "Barony of Kendal" -- Barony of Kendal
button -- "East Ward" -- East Ward
button -- Kendal Castle
button -- "Kendal Ward" -- Kendal Ward
button -- "Kendale" -- Kendal
button -- "Lonsdale Ward" -- Lonsdale Ward
button -- Maiden Way
button -- "Middle Ward" -- Middle Ward
button -- (roman road 82c, Cumbria)
button -- "West Ward" -- West Ward
button -- Westmorland
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