CHAPTER I Introduction: Early History of London to the Norman Conquest
THE
question as to the great antiquity of London has formed a field for
varied and long-continued disputes. An elaborate picture of a British
London, founded by Brut, a descendant of Æneas, as a new Troy, with
grand and noble buildings, was painted by Geoffrey of Monmouth. The
absurdity of this conception, although it found credence for
centuries, was at last seen, and some antiquaries then went to the
opposite extreme of denying the very existence of a British London.The
solid foundation of facts proving the condition of the earliest
London are the waste, marshy ground, with little hills rising from
the plains, and the dense forest on the north—a forest that
remained almost up to the walls of the city even in historic times,
animal remains, flint instruments, and pile dwellings. All the rest
is conjecture. We must call in the aid of geography and geology to
understand the laws which governed the formation of London. The
position of the town on the River Thames proves the wisdom of those
who chose the site, although the swampiness of the land, caused by
the daily overflowing of the river before the embankments were thrown
up, must have endangered its successful colonisation. When the vast
embankment was completed the river receded to its proper bed, and the
land which was retrieved was still watered by several streams flowing
from the higher ground in the north into the Thames.Animal
remains, very various in character, have been found in different
parts of London. Examples of mammoth, elephant, rhinoceros, elk,
deer, and many other extinct as well as existing species are
represented. Of man, the mass of flint instruments in the
‘Palæolithic floor’ which prove his early existence is enormous.General
Pitt Rivers (then Colonel Lane Fox) in 1867 made the discovery of the
remains of pile dwellings near London Wall and in Southwark Street.
The piles averaged 6 to 8 inches square, others of a smaller size
were 4 inches by 3 inches, and one or two were as much as a foot
square. They were found in the peat just above the virgin gravel, and
with them were found the refuse of kitchen middens and broken pottery
of the Roman period. There is reason to believe that the piles were
sunk by the Britons rather than by the Romans, and General Pitt
Rivers was of opinion that they are the remains of the British
capital of Cassivellaunus, situated in the marches, and, of
necessity, built on piles.[1]
Dr. Munro, however, who alludes to this discovery in his book on Lake
Dwellings, believes that these piles belong to the post-Roman times,
and supposes that in the early Saxon period these pile dwellings were
used in the low-lying districts of London.[2]The
strongest point of those who disbelieve in a British London is that
Julius Cæsar does not mention it, but this negative evidence is far
from conclusive.We
learn from Tacitus that in A.D. 61 the Roman city was a place of some
importance—the chief residence of merchants and the great mart of
trade—therefore we cannot doubt but that to have grown to this
condition it must have existed before the Christian era. The Romans
appear to have built a fort where the Tower of London now stands, but
not originally to have fortified the town. London grew to be a
flourishing centre of commerce, though not a place capable of
sustaining a siege, so the Roman general, Paullinus Suetonius, would
not run the risk of defending it against Boadicea. Afterwards the
walls were erected, and Londinium took its proper position in the
Roman Empire. It was on the high road from Rome to York, and the
starting-point of half the roads in Britain.Bishop
Stubbs wrote: ‘Britain had been occupied by the Romans, but had not
become Roman.’ Probably few Romans settled here. The inhabitants
consisted of the Governor and the military officers and Romanised
Britons. When the Roman legions left this country Londinium must have
had a very mixed population of traders. There were no leaders, and a
wail went up from the defenceless inhabitants. In the year 446 we
hear of ‘The groans of the Britons to Aetius, for the third time
Consul,’ which took this form of complaint: ‘The savages drive us
to the sea, and the sea casts us back upon the savages; so arise two
kinds of death, and we are either drowned or slaughtered.’[3]In
this place, however, we have not to consider the condition either of
British or Roman London, for the Middle Ages may be said to commence
with the break up of the Roman Empire. Saxon London was a wooden
city, surrounded by walls, marking out the same enclosure that
existed in the latest Roman city. We have the authority of the Saxon
Chronicle for saying that in the year 418 the Romans collected all
the treasures that were in Britain, and hid some of them in the
earth.From
the date of the departure of the Roman legions to that of the Norman
Conquest nearly six centuries and a half had elapsed. Of this long
period we find only a few remains, such as some articles discovered
in the river, and some entries in that incomparable monument of the
past—the Saxon Chronicle. All we really know of Saxondom we learn
from the Chronicle, Bede’s
Ecclesiastical History,
and the old charters. The history of England for the greater portion
of this time was local and insular, for the country was no longer a
part of a great empire.Professor
Earle tells us that the name London occurs fifty times in the
Chronicle, and Londonburh thirteen times, but we do not know whether
any distinction between the two names was intended to be indicated.The
Chronicler tells us of the retreat of the Roman legions, and how
Hengist and Horsa, invited by Vortigern, King of the Britons, landed
in Britain. Then comes the ominous account of the Saxons, who turned
against the friends that called upon them for succour and totally
defeated the British at Crayford in Kent:—
‘457.
This year Hengist and Æsc, his son, fought against the Britons at
the place which is called Crecganford, and there slew four thousand
men; and the Britons then forsook Kent, and in great terror fled to
Lundenbyrg.’Then
for a century and a half there is no further mention of London in the
Chronicle. We are not told what became of the fugitives, nor what
became of the city; as Lappenberg says: ‘No territory ever passed
so obscurely into the hand of an enemy as the north bank of the
Thames.’It
is as difficult to suppose what some have supposed—that the city
was deserted and remained desolate for years—as to imagine that
trade and commerce continued in the city while all around was strife.
There may have been some arrangement by which the successful Saxon
who did not care to live in the city agreed that those who wished to
do so should live there. But all is conjecture in face of this
serious blank in our history.If
there had been a battle and destruction of the city we should
doubtless have had some account of it in the Chronicle. Gradually the
Saxons settled on the hithes or landing places on the river side, and
at last overcame their natural repugnance to town life and settled in
the city. When London is again mentioned in the Chronicle it appears
to have been inhabited by a population of heathens still to be
converted. Under the date 604 we are told:—
‘This
year Augustine consecrated two bishops; Mellitus and Justus. He sent
Mellitus to preach baptism to the East Saxons, whose King was called
Sebert, son of Ricole, the sister of Ethelbert, and whom Ethelbert
had then appointed King. And Ethelbert gave Mellitus a bishop’s See
in Lundenwic, and to Justus he gave Rochester, which is twenty-four
miles from Canterbury.’The
Christianity of the Londoners was of an unsatisfactory character, for
after the death of Sebert, his sons, who were heathens, stirred up
the multitude to drive out their bishop. Mellitus became Archbishop
of Canterbury, and London again relapsed into heathenism. In this,
the earliest period of Saxon London recorded for us, there appears to
be no relic left of the Christianity of the Britons which at one time
was well in evidence. Godwin recorded a list of sixteen
ecclesiastics, styled by him Archbishops of London, and Le Neve
adopted the list in his
Fasti Ecclesiæ Anglicanæ,
on the authority of Godwin.The
list begins with Theanus during the reign of Lucius, King of the
Britons in the latter half of the second century. The second is
Eluanus, who was said to have been sent on an embassy to Eleutherius,
Pope from A.D. 171 to 185. The twelfth on the list is Restitutus,
whose name is found on the list of prelates present at the Council of
Arles in the year 314.Perhaps
the answer to the question as to the extinction of British
Christianity in London is to be found in Geoffrey of Monmouth’s
statement that when the Saxons drove the British fugitives into Wales
and Cornwall, Theon, the sixteenth and last on this list of British
bishops, fled into Wales with the Archbishop of Caerleon, the Bishop
Thadiac of York, and their surviving clergy. The traditional date of
this flight is A.D. 586, not many years before the appearance of
Mellitus. Geoffrey of Monmouth is not a very trustworthy authority,
but there is no reason to doubt his belief in his own story, and it
is interesting to note that he specially mentions Theonus. At all
events, we know from other sources that there were Bishops of London
during the Roman period.The
bold statement that King Lucius founded the Church of St. Peter,
Cornhill, can scarcely be said to find any credence among historians
of the present day, but a reference to the doings of this ancient
King will be found imbedded in the Statute Book of St. Paul’s
Cathedral:—‘In the year from the Incarnation of the Lord one
hundred and eighty-five, at the request of Lucius, the King of
Greater Britain, which is now called England, there were sent from
Eleutherius the Pope to the aforesaid King two illustrious doctors,
Fagnus and Dumanus, who should incline the heart of the King and of
his subject people to the unity of the Christian faith, and should
consecrate to the honour of the one true and supreme God the temples
which had been dedicated to various and false deities.’[4]To
return from the wild statements of tradition to the facts of sober
history, we find that London, after the driving out of Mellitus,
remained without a bishop until the year 656, when Cedda, brother of
St. Chad of Lichfield, was invited to London by Sigebert who had been
converted to Christianity by Finan, Bishop of the Northumbrians.
Cedda was consecrated Bishop of the East Saxons by Finan about 656,
and held the See till his death on the 26th October 664. The list of
bishops from Cedda to William, who is addressed in the Conqueror’s
Charter, is a long one, and each of these bishops apparently held a
position of great importance in the government of the city.In
the seventh century the city seems to have settled down into a
prosperous place and to have been peopled by merchants of many
nationalities. We learn that at this time it was the great mart of
slaves. It was in the fullest sense a free trading town; neutral to a
certain extent between the kingdoms around, although the most
powerful of the Kings successively obtained some authority over it,
when they conquered their feebler neighbours.[5]
As to this there is still more to be said. During the eighth century,
when a more settled condition of life became possible, the trade and
commerce of London increased in volume and prosperity. A change,
however, came about towards the end of the century, when the
Scandinavian freebooters, known to us as Danes, began to harry our
coasts. The Saxons had become law-abiding, and the fierce Danes
treated them in the same way that in former days they had treated the
Britons. Freeman divided the Danish invasions into three periods:—1.
787-855. A period when the object was simply plunder.2.
902-954. Attempts made at settlement.3.
980-1016. During this period the history of England was one record of
struggle with the power of Denmark till Cnut became undisputed King
of England.[6]We
still have much to learn as to the movements of the Danes in this
country, and when the old charters are more thoroughly investigated
we shall gain a great accession of light. Thus we learn from an
Anglo-Saxon charter, printed in De Gray Birch’s
Cartularium Saxonicum
(Nos. 533, 534), that in the year 872 a great tribute was paid to the
Danes which is not mentioned in the Chronicle. London was specially
at the mercy of the fierce sailors of the North, and the times when
the city was in their hands are almost too numerous for record here.Even
when Alfred concluded with Guthrun in 878 the Treaty of Wedmore, as
it is still commonly called,[7]
and by which the country was divided between the English and the
Danes, London suffered much.With
the reign of Alfred we come to the consideration of a very difficult
question in the history of London. It has been claimed for this King
that he rebuilt London. Mr Loftie expresses this view in the very
strongest terms. He writes:—
‘So
important, however, is this settlement, so completely must it be
regarded as the ultimate fact in any continuous narrative relating to
the history of London, that it would be hardly wrong to commence with
some such sentence as this; “London was founded exactly a thousand
years ago by King Alfred, who chose for the site of his city a place
formerly fortified by the Romans, but desolated successively by the
Saxons and the Danes.” ’There
is certainly no evidence for so sweeping a statement. Nothing in the
Chronicle can be construed to contain so wide a meaning. The passage
upon which this mighty superstructure has been formed is merely
this:—
‘886.
In the same year King Alfred restored (gesette)
London, and all the Angle race turned to him that were not in the
bondage of the Danish men, and he then committed the burgh to the
keeping of the Alderman Æthered.’The
great difficulty in this passage is the word
gesette,
which probably means occupied, but may mean much more, as founded or
settled. Some authorities have therefore changed the word to
besaet,
besieged.Professor
Earle proposed the following solution of the problem, which seems
highly probable. London was a flourishing, populous and opulent city,
the chief emporium of commerce in the island, and the residence of
foreign merchants. Properly it had become an Angle city, the chief
city of the Anglian nation of Mercia, but the Danes had settled there
in great numbers, and they had many captives whom they had taken in
the late wars. Thus the Danes preponderated over the free Angles, and
the latter were glad to see Alfred come and restore the balance in
their favour. It was of the greatest importance for Alfred to secure
this city, not only the capital of Mercia, but able to do what Mercia
had not done, to bar the passage of pirate ships to the Upper Thames.
Accordingly, Alfred in 886 planted the garrison of London,
i.e.,
introduced a military colony of men, and gave them land for their
maintenance, in return for which they lived in and about a fortified
position under a commanding officer. Professor Earle would not have
Lundenburh
taken as merely an equivalent to London. Alfred therefore founded not
London itself but the burh of London.[8]Under
Athelstan we find the city increasing in importance and general
prosperity. There were then eight mints at work, which shows great
activity and the need of coin for the purposes of trade. The folkmoot
met in the precincts of St. Paul’s at the sound of the bell, which
also rang out when the armed levy was required to march under St.
Paul’s banner. For some years after the decisive Battle of
Brunanburh (937) the Danes ceased to trouble the country. But one may
affirm that fire was almost as great an enemy as the Dane. Fabyan,
when recording the entire destruction of London by fire in the reign
of Ethelred (981), makes this remarkable statement: ‘Ye shall
understande that this daye the cytie of London had most housynge and
buyldinge from Ludgate toward Westmynstre, and lytell or none wher
the chief or hart of the citie is now, except [that] in dyvers places
were housyng, but they stod without order.’[9]The
good government of Athelstan and his successors kept the country free
from foreign freebooters, but when Ethelred II., called the Unready
(or rather the Redeless), came to the throne, the Danes saw their
opportunity. In 991 he tried to bribe his enemies to stay away, and
was the first English King to institute the Danegelt, which was for
so many years a severe tax upon the resources of the country. The
bribe was useless, and the enemy had to be bought off again. A Danish
fleet threatened London in 992, and in 994 Olaf (or Anlaf) Trygwason
(who appears first as harrier of English soil in 988), with Sweyn,
the Danish King, laid siege to London, but failed to take it. They
then harried, burned and slew all along the sea coasts of Essex,
Kent, Sussex and Hampshire. The English paid £10,000 to the Danes in
991, and in 994 they had to produce the still larger sum of £16,000
in order to purchase peace. Olaf then promised never again to visit
England, except in peace. Subsequently Ethelred brought disaster upon
himself and his country by his treachery. In 1002 he issued secret
orders for a massacre of all the Danes found in England, and in this
massacre Gunhild, sister of Sweyn, was among the victims. In
consequence of Ethelred’s conduct the Danes returned in force to
these shores and had to be bought off with a sum of £36,000. They
came again and made many unsuccessful assaults upon London, upon
which the Chronicler remarks: ‘They often fought against the town
of London, but to God be praise that it yet stands sound, and they
have ever fared ill.’In
1010 Ethelred took shelter in London, and in 1013 Sweyn again
attacked the city without success, but having conquered a great part
of England the Londoners submitted to him, and Ethelred fled to
Normandy. After Sweyn’s death, in 1014, Ethelred was invited to
return to England, as the country was not willing to receive Sweyn’s
son Cnut as its King. When Ethelred returned to England he was
accompanied by another Olaf (Anlaf Haroldson) who succeeded by a
clever manœuvre in destroying the wooden London Bridge, and taking
the city out of the hands of the Danes. The story is told in Snorro
Sturleson’s
Heimskringla
(The Story of Olaf the Holy, the son of Harold): ‘Olaf covered the
decks of his ship with a roof of wood and wicker work to protect them
from the stones and shot which were ready to be cast at them by the
Danes. King Olaf and the host of the North-men rowed right up under
the bridge, and lashed cables round the poles that upheld the bridge,
and then they fell to their oars and rowed all the ships down stream
as hard as they might. The poles dragged along the ground, even until
they were loosened under the bridge. But inasmuch as an host under
weapons stood thickly arrayed on the bridge, there were on it both
many stones and many war-weapons, and the poles having broken from
it, the bridge broke down by reason thereof, and many of the folk
fell into the river, but all the rest thereof fled from the bridge,
some into the city, some into Southwark. And after this they made an
onset on Southwark and won it. And when the towns-folk saw that the
River Thames was won, so that they might not hinder the ships from
faring up into the land, they were afeard, and gave up the town and
took King Ethelred in.’[10]The
later life of Olaf was one of adventure. He was driven by Cnut from
his kingdom of Norway, and took shelter in Sweden. Here he obtained
help, and in the end regained his throne. At the Battle of
Sticklestead he was defeated and slain (1030). His body was hastily
buried, but was afterwards taken up, and, being found incorrupt, was
buried in great state in a shrine at Drontheim. He was canonized, and
several English churches are dedicated to him. There are four
parishes bearing the name of St. Olave in London, one of the churches
is in Tooley Street which also preserves the name of St. Olave in a
curiously corrupted form.After
this Ethelred succeeded in driving Cnut out of England back to
Denmark. Of this success Freeman enthusiastically wrote: ‘That
true-hearted city was once more the bulwark of England, the centre of
every patriotic hope, the special object of every hostile
attack.’[11]There
was, however, little breathing space, for Cnut returned to England in
1015, and Ethelred’s brilliant son, Edmund Ironside, prepared to
meet him. Edmund’s army refused to fight unless Ethelred came with
them, and unless they had ‘the support of the citizens of London.’
Before, however, Cnut arrived Ethelred died, England was in the hand
of the Dane, and London only remained free. Edmund was elected King
by the Witan, united with the inhabitants of the city, and thus the
Londoners first asserted the position which they held to for many
centuries—of their right to a voice in the election of the King.Cnut
was determined now to succeed, and he at once sailed up the Thames.
He was, however, unable to pass the bridge, which had been rebuilt.
He therefore dug a trench on the south side of the river, by which
means he was enabled to draw some of his ships above the bridge. He
also cut another trench entirely round the wall of the city. In spite
of his clever scheme, the determined resistance of our stubborn
forefathers caused it to fail.[12]Edmund
Ironside was successful in his battles with Cnut till his
brother-in-law, Eadric, Alderman of Mercia, turned traitor, and
helped the Danish King to vanquish the English army at Assandun (now
Assenton in Kent). Edmund was now forced to agree to Cnut’s terms,
and it was therefore settled that Edmund should retain his crown, and
take all England south of the Thames, together with East Anglia,
Essex and London, Cnut taking the rest of the kingdom. On the 30th
November 1016 Edmund died, and Cnut became King of the whole of
England. His reign was prosperous, and he succeeded in gaining the
esteem of his subjects, who appreciated the long-continued peace
which he brought them. Dr. Stubbs describes him as one of the
‘conscious creators of England’s greatness.’ He died in
November 1035 at the early age of forty.We
may now pass over some troubled times, caused by the worthless
successors of Cnut, and come to the period when the West Saxon line
was restored in the person of Edward the Confessor, who, being
educated at the Norman Court, became more a Norman than an
Englishman, and prepared the way for the Conqueror’s success. The
Confessor was but an indifferent King, although he holds a more
distinguished place in history than many a more heroic figure as the
practical founder of Westminster Abbey, where his shrine is still one
of its most sacred treasures. When Edward died, the Witan which had
attended his funeral elected to succeed him, Harold, the foremost man
in England, and the leader who had attempted to check the spread of
the far too wide Norman influence.After
conquering his outlawed brother, Tostig, and Harold Hardrada, King of
Norway, at Stamford Bridge, he had to hurry back to meet William Duke
of Normandy, which he did on a hill on the Sussex Downs, afterwards
called Senlac. He closed his life on the field of battle, after a
reign of forty weeks and one day. Then the Conqueror had the country
at his mercy, but he recognised the importance of London’s
position, and moved forward with the greatest caution and tact.The
citizens of London were possibly a divided body, and William, knowing
that he had many friends in the city, felt that a waiting game was
the best for his cause in the end. His enemies, led by Ansgar the
Staller, under whom as sheriff the citizens of London had marched to
fight for Harold at Senlac, managed to get their way at first. They
elected Edgar Atheling, the grandson of Edmund Ironside, as King, but
this action was of little avail.When
William arrived at Southwark the citizens sallied forth to meet him,
but they were beaten back, and had to save themselves within the city
walls. William retired to Berkhamsted,[13]
and is said to have sent a private message to Ansgar asking for his
support.[14]
In the end the citizens, probably led by William the Bishop, who was
a Norman, came over to the Conqueror’s side, and the best men
repaired to Berkhamsted. Here they accepted the sovereignty of
William, who received their oath of fealty.Thus
ends the Saxon period of our history, and the Norman period in London
commences with the Conqueror’s charter to William the Bishop and
Gosfrith the Portreeve, supposed to be the elder Geoffrey de
Mandeville.In
the foregoing pages the main incidents of the history of Saxon London
are recited. These are, I fear, rather disconnected and
uninteresting, but it is necessary to set down the facts in
chronological order, because from them we can draw certain
conclusions as to the condition of London before the Norman Conquest.
Unfortunately our authorities for the Saxon period do not tell us
much that we want to know, and, in consequence, many of the
suggestions made by one authority are disputed by another. Still we
can draw certain very definite conclusions, which cannot well be the
subjects of contention.The
first fact is the constant onward march of London towards the
fulfilment of its great destiny. Trouble surrounded it on all sides,
but, in spite of them all, the citizens gained strength in adversity,
so that at the Conquest the city was in possession of those special
privileges which were cherished for centuries, never given up, but
increased when opportunity occurred. Patient waiting was therefore
rewarded by success, and London by the endeavours of her men grew in
importance and stood before all other cities in her unique position.The
Governor who possessed the confidence of Londoners, although all the
rest of the country was against him, needed not to despair, while he
who had the support of the rest of the country, but was opposed by
London, could not be considered as triumphant.The
so-called Heptarchy was constantly changing the relative positions of
its several parts, until Egbert, the King of Wessex, became ‘Rex
totius Britanniæ’ (A.D. 827). The seven kingdoms were at some
hypothetical period1.Kent,
—South
of the Thames.2.Sussex,3.Wessex,4.Essex,
—North
of the Thames.5.East
Anglia,6.Mercia,7.Northumbria(including
Deiraand
Bernicia),
—North
of the Humber,and
as far north as theForth.The
walled city of London was a distinct political unit, although it owed
a certain allegiance to one of the kingdoms, which was the most
powerful for the time being. This allegiance therefore frequently
changed, and London retained its identity and individuality all
through.Essex
seems seldom to have held an independent position, for when London
first appears as connected with the East Saxons the real power was in
the hands of the King of Kent. According to Bede, Wini, being
expelled from his bishopric of Wessex in 635, took refuge with
Wulfhere, King of the Mercians, of whom he purchased the See of
London. Hence the Mercian King must then have been the overlord of
London. Not many years afterwards the King of Kent again seems to
have held some jurisdiction here. From the laws of the Kentish Kings,
Lhothhere and Eadric, 673-685, we learn that the Wic-reeve was an
officer of the King of Kent, who exercised a jurisdiction over the
Kentish men trading with or at London, or who was appointed to watch
over their interests.[15]There
is a very interesting question connected with the position of the two
counties in which London is situated. It is necessary to remember
that London is older than these counties, whose names, viz.,
Middlesex and Surrey, indicate their relative position to the city
and the surrounding country. We have neither record of their
settlement nor of the origin of their names. Both must have been
peopled from the river. The name Middle Saxons clearly proves that
Middlesex must have been settled after the East and West Saxons had
given their names to their respective districts.There
has been much discussion as to the etymology of Surrey, more
particularly of the second syllable. A once favourite explanation was
that Surrey stood for South Kingdom (A.S.
rice),
but there is no evidence that Surrey ever was a kingdom, and this
etymology must surely be put aside.In
Elton’s
Origins of English History
there is the following note, p. 387: ‘Three Underkings concur in a
grant by the King of Surrey.—Cod. Diplom. 987.’ This is a serious
misstatement, for the document cited says: ‘Ego Frithuualdus
prouinciae Surrianorum subregulus regis Wlfarii Mercianorum ... dono
concedo,’ etc.Frithwald
is here described as ‘subregulus’ (under-king), subject to the
King of the Mercians; and in the attestation clause it is added: ‘Et
isti sunt subreguli qui omnes sub signo suo subscripserunt.’ Their
names are Fritheuuold, Osric, Wigherd and Ætheluuold. Each is
described as ‘testis’ merely. This does not seem to imply
concurrence; but, even if it does, the title ‘subregulus’ does
not mean an independent sovereign. In the description of the
boundaries of the granted land, which is in Anglo-Saxon, the grantor
is certainly described as ‘Fritheuuold King,’ but this cannot
mean king in the full sense, and the Anglo-Saxon clause in the
charter could not have been intended to contradict the Latin, which
designates Frithwald as ‘subregulus’ throughout.Dr.
Stubbs (Constitutional
History,
vol. i. p. 189), after describing the gradual disappearance of the
smaller sovereignties, and pointing out that ‘the heptarchic King
was as much stronger than the tribal King as the King of United
England was stronger than the heptarchic King,’ wrote: ‘In
Wessex, besides the Kings of Sussex, which has a claim to be numbered
among the seven great States, were Kings of Surrey also.’ The note
to this, however, only refers to Frithewold, ‘subregulus or
ealdorman of Surrey,’ and no mention is made of any ruler who was
capable of making Surrey into a kingdom.The
form of the name used by Bede, ‘in regione Sudergeona’ (Hist.
Eccles.,
iv. 6), may suggest a derivation quite different from any yet
suggested.Surrey
was originally an integral part of Kent, and when it was severed from
that county it became apparently an independent district, a sort of
republic under its own alderman. In later times it became subject to
the neighbouring kingdoms. At the date of this charter it was under
Mercia. It was never reckoned as a separate member of the heptarchy.London
fought an uphill fight with Winchester for the position of chief city
of Southern England. Under Egbert London grew in importance, but
Winchester, the chief town of Wessex, was still the more important
place politically. In the trade regulations enacted by Edgar in the
tenth century London took precedence of Winchester: ‘Let one
measure and one weight pass such as is observed at London and at
Winchester.’ In the reign of Edward the Confessor London had become
the recognised capital of England.Some
dispute has arisen respecting the position of the lithsmen, who
appear at the election in Oxford of Cnut’s successor, and
subsequently. Freeman (Norman
Conquest,
vol. i. p. 538) describes them as ‘seafaring’ men of London,
while Gross (The
Gild Merchant,
vol. i. p. 186) writes: ‘The lithsmen (shipowners) of London, who,
with others, raised Harold to the throne, were doubtless such
“burg-thegns.” ’Another
important point to be noted is the prominent political position of
the bishop. As early as A.D. 900 ‘the bishop and the reeves who
belong to London’ are recorded as making in the name of the
citizens laws which were confirmed by the King, because they had
reference to the whole kingdom. Edward the Confessor greeted William
Bishop, Harold Earl, and Esgar Staller. So that William the Conqueror
followed precedent when he addressed his charter to Bishop and
Portreeve.Foreigners
in early times occupied an important position in London, but there
were serious complaints when Edward the Confessor enlarged the
numbers of the Normans. The Englishman always had a hatred of the
foreigner, and this dislike grew as time went on, and the English
tried to obtain the first place and succeeded in the attempt.Other
points, such as government by folkmoots and gilds, which will be
discussed in the following chapters, find their origin in the Saxon
period. The government of London under the Saxons was of a simple
character, approximating to that of the shire, and so it continued
until some years after the Conquest. When the Commune was extorted
from the Crown a fuller system of government was inaugurated, which
will be discussed in a later chapter.Map
of London 1593