PART I
THE FRAMEWORK OF LORDSHIP OVER RESOURCES
1 —
Consumption and Pastoral Resources on the Early Medieval Estate
Lordship and Resources
From its foundation in the seventh century the abbots of Peterborough Abbey expressed their agrarian lordship through consuming resources. The Domesday inquest and a royal survey of the estate made in 1125, a generation after the Norman Conquest, offer the earliest comprehensive documentation for management of its resources. A discussion of that written evidence forms the core of this chapter. Evidence for formative phases of resource use during the seventh through tenth centuries comes from the archaeological record. Although archaeologists cannot yet precisely define local arrangements, their excavations so far have revealed important shifts in the regional framework of the estate economy during the early medieval period. Historians can better appreciate the transformations of lordship occurring in the eleventh and twelfth centuries by considering the early medieval archaeology of the Abbey's regional economy.
The Regional Framework of the Mercian Estate
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle attributes the Abbey's foundation to Wulfhere (A.D. 657-674), under whose rule the Mercians gained dominance over petty kingdoms of southern England.[1] Wulfhere appointed Seaxulf (d. A.D. 691), the first recorded Abbot of Peterborough, or Medeshamstede, the monastery's Anglo-Saxon name, as Bishop of the Mercians. Peterborough's abbots remained politically prominent as Mercian power grew over the eighth century. They frequented the court of Offa (A.D. 757-796), the most powerful leader of the Mercian dynasty. As an important Mercian foundation, the
Abbey headed a confederation of monasteries in the late seventh century. The houses of that confederation, which linked the Abbey with the political heartland of the Mercians in the West Midlands and a trading outlet near London, appear in figure 1.[2]
The archaeological record offers a perspective on the regional framework of this Mercian estate. The foundation of the monastery marked a political effort to stabilize a locale that had undergone much change since the fifth century.[3] The archaeological remains of pagan Saxon settlement in the Peterborough area during the fifth and early sixth century have an ephemeral, frontier quality.[4] Not until the seventh century, coincidental with Mercian interest in the eastern Midlands and the activities of the Christian mission, do archaeological remains grow more complex and substantial. Excavations of a mid-seventh-century nunnery founded on the site of a Roman palace complex at Castor, two miles (3.2 km) west of Peterborough, uncovered a prestigious ecclesiastical occupation associated with a substantial domestic settlement.[5]
So far archaeologists have excavated only one Mercian rural settlement in the Abbey's vicinity.[6] At Maxey, a site located six miles (9.6 km) north of Peterborough, excavation uncovered timber-framed buildings, pits, postholes, and ditches. A series of large pits and slag deposits offer ambiguous evidence for industrial activities, possibly the tanning of hides and smelting of ore for exchange at emporia, such as London, or Dorestad across the Channel. These emporia had begun to develop vigorously during the opening phase of the monastery's growth.[7] Mercian interest in trade and monasteries coincided. They used their monasteries as reception centers for messengers and ambassadors who facilitated diplomatic and commercial exchange.[8]
The regional distribution of local stone quarried at Barnack, some eight miles (12.8 km) northwest of Peterborough, shows the role of sacred centers in consumption and distribution. Barnack stone found its way into Mercian workshops that produced the sculptural friezes found at Peterborough, and nearby Castor, Fletton, and Breedon-on-Hill, Leicestershire.[9] The sculptural tradition bound the regional religious centers symbolically.
The Mercian Abbey of Peterborough enjoyed access to a range of political and ecological resources. Although the Abbey's foundation in the mid-seventh century predates the earliest surviving English land charters, grants to ecclesiastical foundations preserved from the

Fig. 1.
Mercian Peterborough. The arrows point to monasteries of the confederation headed
by Peterborough. Stippling marks the conjectural territory of the Mercian Abbey.
The other names refer to important locations of the early medieval period mentioned in the text.
later seventh century typically endowed monasteries with a large tract of land loosely bounded by rivers or extensive woodlands.[10] Garbled charter materials from the eleventh century do recall fragments of such a Mercian land grant to Peterborough. A reconstruction of the Mercian estate based on these charters suggests that the Abbey held lands that extended deep into the peat and silt fens to its east and also controlled extensive upland to the west along the river Nene.[11] The conjectural territory of the Mercian Abbey is represented in figure 1.
The spotty documentary evidence for the Abbey's actual management of such resources with their arable and pastoral potential shows that the collection of feorms , or renders of goods and services from estate centers, served as the organizational framework.[12] The feorm had its origins in a chief's right to "eat off the land," a consumption practice typical of societies organized as complex chiefdoms.[13] Based on the collection of renders from different settlement units of the estate, a system of feorms coordinates the subsistence resources in a territory with the consumption needs of lordship. Consumption, and not production, regulated social relations and resource use.[14]
The actual details of goods rendered in feorms, only rarely preserved, offer clues to the ecology of early estate management. Fortunately, a Peterborough lease for two lives for holdings located in Sempringham and Sleaford, Lincolnshire, includes such instructions.[15] The lessee owed a food rent deliverable in three parts. First, he had to render annually some woodland products; sixty wagons (fothers) of wood, twelve wagons of brushwood, and six wagons of faggots.[16] The second part of his feorm reserved the following supplies for the monastery: two casks of clear ale, two cattle for slaughter, six hundred loaves of bread, ten mittan of Welsh ale. The Abbot, "lord of the church," collected a separate food render from the lessee: one horse, thirty shillings, and one day of food rent including: fifteen mittan of clear ale, five mittan of Welsh ale, fifteen sesters of mild ale.[17]
Consumption of feorms linked processing and storage on the estate. First, the lessee processed food at the point of production. The monastic center did not require storage space for unprocessed food or a staff to process it. The lessee had to malt barley, grind grain, and bake loaves of bread. The ubiquitous ale required in food renders actually served as storage of barley.
Mercian power that supported Peterborough Abbey relied on wider economic relations that grew more fragile as the ninth century progressed. Politics and agrarian organization shifted profoundly in England in the mid-ninth century.[18] The political dominance of the Mercians collapsed. Lay magnates extended their local lordship in the countryside and assumed a defensive stance. They built the first fortified manorial complexes during this period and contested control over land and other resources.[19] The same magnates who were busy defending their holdings also erected their own churches, thus deflecting sacral power from the monasteries to themselves.[20]
Local competition for power and land stimulated regional agricultural development in the East Midlands over the later ninth century. Archaeologists have excavated a rare iron ploughshare, part of a heavy medieval plough, from a late Saxon context at the small town of St. Neots, Huntingdonshire, not far from Peterborough.[21] In his fortified manorial complex the ninth-century lord of Goltho controlled weaving activities on the scale of Carolingian gynecea .[22] Such local magnates purchased the new, wheel-turned pottery produced in pre-Conquest regional centers of Stamford, Northampton, and St. Neots.[23]
In the midst of such political and economic transformation in the East Midlands, Peterborough Abbey lay in ruins. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle reports that in A.D. 869 the Danes "came to the monastery at Medeshamstede and burned and demolished it, and slew the abbot and monks and all that they found there, reducing to nothing what had once been a very rich foundation."[24] So far we know little more about Peterborough in the later ninth and early tenth centuries than this "sleeping beauty" story.
At the time of the great monastic revival in the mid-tenth century, the fen-edge of the eastern Midlands served as the bulwark for important royal refoundations.[25] Bishop Aethelwold's campaign there had as its objective the landed endowment of the Benedictine abbeys of Peterborough (966), Crowland (966), Ely (970), Ramsey (971), and Thorney (972).[26] He restored Peterborough Abbey to its former royal splendor and dedicated "a basilica there furbished with suitable structures of halls, and enriched with surrounding lands."[27]
Within twenty years the Abbey joined in the economic boom of the later tenth century. For a brief period the Abbey controlled a mint. The Abbey was well positioned as a small economic center near the
regional town of Stamford, which ranked eighth among English towns according to its known number of moneyers.[28] Over the century between its refoundation and the Norman Conquest, the Abbey succeeded in filling in its holdings in Northamptonshire and adding some properties in Lincolnshire.[29] Under Abbot Leofric (1052-1066) chroniclers called Peterborough the "Golden Borough": "more than any man before or since he [Leofric] enriched the Abbey of Peterborough with gold and silver, with vestments and land."[30] At the time of the Domesday survey, the valuation of the estate amounted to 323 pounds of silver and ranked the Abbey among the top thirty English estates in its gross value.[31]
Domesday Resources: Their Extent and Management
Peterborough Abbey rebounded after its refoundation. It enjoyed a comparable range of resources, but managed them no longer as a territorial unit but through manors scattered in the landscape. Between the Domesday survey in 1086 and the survey of 1125 the Abbey had subinfeudated some properties.[32] The following discussion considers only those properties over which the Abbey retained control in the Domesday generation.[33] Figures 2 and 3 show the locations of the Abbey's manors.
The Setting of the Domesday Manors
The eastern perimeters of the estate of Peterborough Abbey in the Domesday generation extended into the adjacent peat fens. The monasteries of Peterborough, Thorney, Crowland, and Ramsey did not fight for sharp definition of their fen boundaries until the thirteenth century.[34] The river Nene bounded the estate to the south. Several manors (Boroughbury, Castor, Fletton, Alwalton, Warmington, Oundle, Irthlingborough) hugged its banks. To the west, the Welland River formed an estate boundary. Northern holdings of the estate lay along transportation routes to the town of Lincoln and to the north. This slice of the East Midlands defined by the scattered manors of Peterborough Abbey roughly coincided with the Mercian territory over which it had wielded power. The ecology of its agrarian

Fig. 2.
The twelfth-century estate of Peterborough Abbey. The manors controlled by the
Abbey are marked with circles, except for the home manors of the Abbey, which
are represented in the inset map.

Fig. 3.
Inset Map: The home manors and vaccary at Oxney surveyed in the twelfth century are represented by circles.
For the places underlined—Pilsgate, Etton, and Oxney—there are no manorial accounts in the early fourteenth century.
lordship, control over fen, river meadows, woodlands, and diverse soil-types, had not altered radically.
Fen
From the eastern borders of the monastic precincts the peat fen stretched to the horizon. The Abbey's home manor of Boroughbury and the manors of Glinton, Werrington, and Walton lay along the margin of the fen on the slightly elevated gravel terraces of the river Nene (6-21 m OD). Within the fen the manor of Eye and the cell at Oxney, resting on gravel and clay ridges, rose as islands above the surrounding peat.
The classification of peat fen as a pastoral resource depends upon the history of its local management. Fen vegetation is as sensitive as woodland to human intervention.[35] During dry periods unmanaged peat fen reverts to a dense growth of brush and small trees, a vegetation known as carr. Typically, the woody growth is composed of alder (Alnus ), ash (Fraxinus ), hazel (Corylus ), buckthorn (Rhamnus catharticus ), elm (Ulmus ), dogwood (Cornus sanguineus ), raspberry (Rubus idaeus ), and oak (Quercus ). The ground surface of brushwood-peat or carr is firm enough for the tread of livestock. The habitats of fen-edge woodland and carr, therefore, do not differ radically as rough forage. When fen carr grows dense, it becomes impenetrable to cattle, sheep, and horses, thus diminishing its use as rough pasture. Only pigs, with their ability to crash through bush, benefit from foraging on the herbaceous ground cover of dense carr.
Grazing and mowing effectively coax fen's botanical succession away from dense carr and enhance the growth of reeds and rushes, vegetation commonly associated with fen flora.[36] Regular cropping at intervals of one to two years and four to five years respectively maintains the mixed sedge (Cladio -Molinetum ) and litter (Molinetum ) habitats characteristic of mown fen. Under wet conditions—and the medieval fenland grew wetter over the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries—peat fen reverts to reed swamp (Phragmitetum ) and pure sedge (Cladietum ). Drainage can deflect succession to such swampy conditions.[37]
The Domesday Book ignores the Abbey's fen resources.[38] It recorded only 140 acres (57 ha) of meadow for the Abbey's fen-edge manors of Boroughbury, Glinton, and Werrington. In the eighteenth
century the antiquarian John Bridges estimated that the common fen, Borough Great Fen, adjoining Peterborough, measured six thousand acres (2,429 ha), and the Victoria County History records half that acreage.[39]
The 1125 survey fails to evaluate either fen or meadow resources. It does, however, list labor services. Those required of peasants living along the fen-edge reveal aspects of fen management in the early twelfth century. Peasants on the manors of Glinton, Walton, and Werrington rendered carriages of rushes (junci ) to the Abbey. Such renders show that the Abbey's peasants mowed fen on a four-to-five-year cycle. Peasants on the manors of Werrington and Walton carried carriages of fodder (herbae ) to the Abbey. A shorter mowing regime of one to two years produced the mixed sedge (Cladio -Molinetum ), typical fen fodder. The labor services show that the Abbey relied on its peasants to mow parts of the fen on regular cycles of different rhythms to produce different fodder crops. Some of the renders listed in the 1125 survey also hint at the use of other fen resources, such as water birds. The Abbey received ducks and geese from peasants in the manor of Glinton, the only manor listed with a fowler in 1125.
As a fen landlord the Abbey also enjoyed the products of fish and eels from the fen rivers and streams. The Domesday Book states that the Abbey had one boat on Whittlesey Mere, the largest freshwater lake in England until its drainage in 1851.[40] The Abbot had sublet another boat, a fishery, and fisherman from Thorney Abbey in exchange for wood and pigs from the upland behind Peterborough. The Domesday survey valued at eighty shillings a fen fishery belonging to Peterborough Abbey, a value that exceeded any one of its mills, markets, or woodlands. The 1125 survey reveals much less about the Abbey's fisheries. It reports only that the Abbot collected fifteen shillings in fish from three fishermen in Boroughbury and six shillings for a fishery in Glinton.
Neither survey accounts for the vast quantities of fen eels collected by the Abbey, which other documents mention. According to a tenth-century foundation charter of the neighboring Abbey of Thorney, Peterborough Abbey was entitled to eight thousand eels from the fen fisheries at Upwell, Outwell, and Elm located east of Peterborough, near Wisbech.[41] These eel renders came from locations that once stood at the edge of the more extensive fen territories attached to the
Mercian estate of Peterborough Abbey. Their collection probably harks back to earlier territorial arrangements.
The written sources offer only a fragmentary picture of the Abbey's fen management. The scale and intensity of the Abbey's utilization of the fen remains uncertain. Statistics for the Abbey's demesne livestock recorded in the survey of 1125 (to be discussed further in chapter 2) do not suggest that its dairying or sheepherding, which would later dominate the fen and fen-edge, had developed much beyond small-scale production in the early twelfth century. Perhaps underutilization of its fen resources contributed to their absence from valuations of the estate. Some producers, however, must have supplied the nearby looms of Stamford textile industry with wool and Stamford households with food.[42] The written documents tell us even less about the utilization of local fen resources by the Abbey's peasants.
Meadow
The manors of Peterborough Abbey enjoyed good riverside locations that provided the estate with 1,515 acres (613 ha) of Domesday meadows.[43] Geographically the Abbey's holdings of assessed meadowlands were quite dispersed. The greatest concentration of meadow resources lay furthest from the Abbey. Its more distant manors, which served as staging points to the north (Thurlby, Collingham, Fiskerton, Scotter, Walcot), possessed 61.4 percent (930 acres) of the assessed holdings.[44] Its home manors (Boroughbury, Longthorpe, Castor, Glinton, Werrington, Pilsgate, Fletton) husbanded only 17.8 percent (271 acres) of assessed meadow. Slightly less than a quarter of the Abbey's assessed meadows lay on its western Northamptonshire manors. Figures 4 and 5 show the distribution of meadow on the Abbey's estate.
Medieval farmers usually mowed meadows for hay. From mid-December to early summer, they enclosed meadows to protect the production of the hay crop. They mowed the hay from mid-June to July. Then, depending on management, livestock grazed the mown meadows, unless a second hay crop was to be taken in late August.
Farmers can also choose to graze meadows with their stock rather than mow them.[45] The decision to mow or graze riverside meadows depends on seasonal strategies of matching livestock populations with

Fig. 4

Fig. 5
Figs. 4 and 5.
The meadow and woodland resources of the Abbey recorded in the Domesday Book.
pastoral resources. Mowing and storage of hay for winter fodder implies a pastoral economy where the number of animals exceeds winter pasture and one in which movements of livestock can be coordinated with storage locations. If farmers graze meadows in the summer, they must store some other source of fodder for the winter or move the animals to winter pasture. The decision to mow or graze depends, too, on who controls the resource and on the demands of the livestock economy. Medieval farmers usually restricted the grazing of alluvial meadows to cows and horses. Dairy cows, in particular, had special need to feed on the early spring flush sprouting in alluvial meadows, when other forage was scarce.
Low-lying river-meadows can also be managed as water meadows by constructing a system of drains, weirs, and channels. Archaeologists have found evidence of water meadows in late Saxon Winchester.[46] Water meadows are usually associated with sheep farming. The sheep, especially ewes, are let on the irrigated meadow in March and April to graze on the spring flush. They are then removed to allow irrigation for a July hay crop. Livestock then grazed the new growth of late summer, the aftermath.
The Domesday survey assesses meadow acreage on the estate, without comment on its management. The 1125 survey rarely mentions meadow acreage or meadow-related activities such as mowing in its list of peasant services. At Kettering the survey does mention extra meadow worth fifteen shillings. To give a comparative value for this figure, 6,048 acres (2,419 ha) of stocked (oneratur ) woodland at Oundle in 1086 were valued at twenty-five shillings. Tinwell also had extra meadow valued at six shillings. Extra hay (et de feno de super plus ) valued at six shillings is reported at Great Easton. When the 1125 survey does record mowing services, they are owed usually by the Abbey's sokemen. At Glinton and Fiskerton, sokemen mowed and carted hay one day for the Abbot.
The Domesday survey did not record demesne or peasant livestock on the Abbey's manors. The 1125 survey lists demesne livestock and the number of peasant ploughs on many of the manors. Only the weakest associations between the numbers of demesne oxen, or the estimated number of peasant oxen, or the total of demesne and peasant oxen and the Domesday meadow acreage can be found when those values are plotted. The estimated number of peasant oxen correlated most closely with meadow acreage, but in this case there was only a 13 percent probability that the correlation was significant. Such statistics belie a linear relation between pastoral resources and tillage on the estate in the early twelfth century.[47]
Woodland
The Abbey controlled nine times more woodland than meadow, according to the Domesday survey. Figures 4 and 5 illustrate the distribution of woodland on the estate. In toto, the Abbey controlled 13,880 acres (5,619 ha) of woodland, which included 1,390 acres (563 ha) of woodland for pannage and 310 acres (125.5 ha) of underwood
in 1086.[48] Its manors in western Northamptonshire, especially those located on the eastern and western edges of Rockingham Forest, had access to over two-thirds (8,814 acres or 63.5 percent of total woodland acreage) of the Abbey's woodland resources. Through its home manors the Abbey controlled another 3,366 acres, or 24.2 percent, of its woodland. On the northern manors, where the Abbey had access to so much meadow, it husbanded only 1,700 acres, or 12.2 percent, of its total woodland resources compared with 61 percent of its meadow.
The Abbey dominated much of the woodland of Northamptonshire, which by 1086 covered only 8.8 percent of that county.[49] According to thirteenth-century surveys, the forest bounds of Rockingham Forest enclosed 16,822 acres (6,729 ha), much of it woodland. In 1086 the Abbey controlled 50 percent of that area through its manors on the perimeter of the forest. By the early twelfth century the Abbey had begun to retain its woodland when it leased its manors (Et abbas tenuit boscum in sua manu ). At Oundle it assarted over 400 acres (162 ha) of woodland by 1189 to create its great cereal grange, La Biggin.[50]
Medieval woodlands were managed as renewable resource.[51] Fellers husbanded an upper tier of woodland, composed of timber or standard trees such as oak, ash, and maple, on a thirty-year cycle, and a lower tier of underwood or coppice, usually sallow (Salex ), oaklings (Quercus ), and hazel (Corylus ), on a seven-to-twenty-one year cycle. The cropped underwood provided faggots for firewood and rods used for weaving wattles for housing, fences, folds, and so on. Underwood also provided raw material for charcoal makers. Such practices kept the woodland in a constant process of reproduction and harvest.
Topographically, grassy swards and heaths for grazing flourished in the mosaic composed of woodland in different stages of regeneration. The requirements of coppicing conflicted, however, with herding pigs on autumn mast, a practice often associated by our textbooks with medieval woodlands. Coppiced plots must be herbivore-proof during their early stages of regeneration, since cattle, pigs, and other browsers can do great damage to new, tender shoots. The small pigherds recorded in the 1125 survey are consistent with a picture of the Abbey as a manager of coppiced woodland and the keeper of pigs on a modest scale.[52]
As the center of a complex household and developer of a monumental building program in the twelfth century, the Abbey con-
sumed timber and other woodland products. From the manors located within a seven-mile radius (11.3 km), it received 129 carriageloads of wood as an annual render from its peasants, who also rendered oats and fowl for their right to collect firewood in the Abbey's woodland. As a rule of thumb one acre (0.40 ha) of twenty-year coppice yields about twenty carriageloads of bulky bundles of firewood.[53] Thus the render represents only about 12.5 acres (5 ha) of coppice ready for harvest. If the Abbey used a ten-year cycle for coppicing, it would have a total area of 125 acres (50 ha) of its woodland under coppice. This measure reflects, of course, the Abbey's customary right to extract wood renders from its tenants and not the total productive capacity of its woodland resources. The woodlands of the Abbey also lay close enough to the town of Stamford to fuel the greedy kilns of the Stamford pottery industry.[54] If the Abbey redirected to Stamford the carriages of firewood collected by its peasants, they would support about three hundred firings.
Arable
As a cereal cultivator the Abbey had its share of good and bad soils. Lighter gravel and drift deposits characteristic of the Nene and Welland river terraces served as an arable focus for most of its Soke and Northamptonshire manors.[55] The higher-lying soils sloping up from the river terraces may be divided into two basic types: (1) lighter soils of limestone, cornbrash, and sand; (2) heavier soils of different clay deposits. Dry, light soils of cornbrash found at Castor, Longthorpe, Alwalton, Pilsgate, and Walton; the Lincolnshire limestones of Cottingham, Tinwell, and Great Easton; and sands at Collingham and Scotter can produce good crops, but their porosity makes them very susceptible to summer drought. Arable in the central part of the Soke, where few streams run off from the Welland and Nene, was particularly vulnerable to dryness.[56] The threat of parched crops reduced the potential value of soils composed of cornbrash and limestone. These dry areas also posed problems for summer pasturing, since herds required convenient sources of water.
The second type of soil, the clays, characterized the higher-lying parts of the manors of Warmington, Oundle, Ashton, Aldwincle, Stanwick, Irthlingborough, Pytchley, and Fiskerton. The tractability of the clays could vary from the lighter clays at Fiskerton to the very
sticky boulder-clays of the middle Nene Valley at Irthlingborough, Oundle, and Aldwincle.
The Domesday survey and the survey of 1125 shed light on the Abbey's management of its arable resources. They record information on demesne and peasant ploughs and labor services owed by the Abbey's peasants. The arable resources of the estate could not be utilized without the labor of the Abbey's tenants; therefore, an analysis of those labor services opens discussion of their management.
The Abbey's Peasants and Its Use of Their Resources
The basic pattern of peasant labor services rendered on the estate was already in place in the early twelfth century.[57] Topographical studies of Northamptonshire charters show that the headlands and furrows of field systems had extended to parish boundaries by the twelfth century.[58] The agrarian landscape had taken on its medieval shape, and lordship had staked its claims to human resources within this developed landscape. In what ways had labor services become part of the political ecology of the estate of Peterborough Abbey?
Peasants owed week work and ploughing services to the Abbey. Ploughing services were a greater capital investment for the peasant, since they required not only their time but their ploughs and plough animals. The survey of 1125 defines ploughing services differently on different manors of the estate. On some manors ploughs of the village appeared for the Abbey a specified number of times for winter, spring, summer, and fallow ploughings; or the ploughs had to plough so many acres. Sometimes these types of ploughing services were combined on manors.
When ploughing services were expressed in acres, a virgater commonly had to plough one acre. At Eye and Boroughbury, tenants had to plough two acres and four acres respectively. The Abbot also reserved the right to call for ploughing boons (precaria ), or days where all ploughs were expected to work for him, at his call. The number of precaria owed to the lord varied from manor to manor.
A specific example best illustrates how the Abbey matched human resources with the requirements of managing its arable resources. On the manor of Kettering, the manor with the most peasant ploughs in 1125, and a heavy burden of three days of week work, the Abbey expected twenty-two village ploughs to plough four acres (1.6 ha)
|
each for summer sowing. This service amounted to ploughing 88 acres (35.6 ha). The Abbey also required its peasants at Kettering to plough thrice in winter, thrice at the summer sowing, and thrice in the summer. Estimating the amount ploughed per day in the heavier winter and spring ploughing at 3.5 rods, the villagers cultivated then 115.5 acres (46.7 ha).[59] Thus, in total, the Abbey had 225.5 acres (91.3 ha) of demesne ploughed by its peasants at Kettering. This figure comes reasonably close to the sown area of the Kettering demesne over the period 1280-1310 when the Abbey planted a mean acreage of 271 acres (109.7 ha) in a winter-spring rotation of rye and oats.
The Abbey could convert its labor resources into cash as a way of collecting them. The patterns of commutation reflect both management decisions and differences in wealth and demand for labor on individual manors. On those manors where the Abbey had already commuted much peasant labor for cash payments, peasants worked only one or two times a week, except during the busy days of August, and they rarely ploughed. The Abbey charged higher rents per virgate on such manors: Thurbly, 4.12s .; Collingham, 4.00s .; Scotter, 3.18s .; and Fiskerton, 2.67s . As early as the turn of the twelfth century the Abbey decided that cash commutation was cheaper than surveillance when considerable distances were involved. The manors of Scotter (68 miles—110 km), Collingham (49 miles—79 km), and Fiskerton (45 miles—73 km) were each not less than forty-five miles (73 km) distant from the Abbey. Thurlby, located only thirteen miles from the Abbey, is an exception to this rule; but the Abbey viewed Thurlby as part of its staging system to the north and treated it as a northern manor.
These four manors do not exhaust the list of manors with weekly labor services of less than three days. Three other manors, Tinwell, Great Easton, and Fletton, also fell into this category. Peasants on these manors paid middle-range rents of 1.21s ., 0.83s ., and 0.71s . respectively. In addition to two days of week work, peasants at Tinwell owed light ploughing services of one acre (.40 ha) per virgate. Here soil conditions influenced the calculation for commuting labor services. Tinwell was located on lighter soils of the Lincolnshire limestone, and the Abbey itself kept plough teams composed of only six oxen, instead of the normal complement of eight. The rent per virgate at Tinwell is probably lower, since there was less actual labor
in the arable sector to commute. Great Easton and Fletton provide an alternative picture of rent and labor services. Peasants owed light week work, but the Abbot still collected a form of ploughing service that was unique to these two manors. Peasants had to sow a portion of the area that they ploughed with their own seed. The cost of seed increased the cost of ploughing services for peasants and probably accounted for the lower rent per virgate on these two manors.
The remaining manors owed to the Abbey the heavy render of three days of week work. Rents varied from 2.13s ., per virgate to a low of .35s . The variation in rent on manors with three days of labor service may be explained by variations in wealth on the different manors and by differences in the additional labor extracted by the Abbot. For instance, Kettering, with the highest rent of 2.13s . for the manors with heavy week work, has every appearance of being one of the Abbey's wealthiest manors. The forty Kettering villeins are full virgaters, and they had the highest ratio of villeins to villein ploughs (1 : 0.55). Kettering villeins owed no labor services beside week work and ploughing services, according to the 1125 survey. Their high rent reflected their wealth and also masked commuted carrying services. Manors where peasants paid low rent per virgate, such as Glinton (0.35s .), owed heavy carrying services to the Abbey. Peasants at Glinton had to ferry the Abbot where he wished, and for every plough they had to carry three carriages of timber (lignum ) to Peterborough. They also dried two carriages of firewood and transported them to the Abbey. The Abbey collected carrying services from its nearby manors; therefore those rents were lower.
The pattern of labor services recorded in the 1125 survey highlights the Abbots's logic of resource use. By 1125 the Abbey had already established basic expectations for consuming labor services. Within these limits the Abbey could play off collecting them in cash or in actual service. The costs of supervision clearly bothered the Abbey. On those manors some distance to the north, it collected the labor services mostly in their cash equivalent. The Abbey could increase labor services further only by defining the amount of work to be accomplished within a unit of time—a Tayloresque piecework approach—or by defining the given units of time more closely, that is, that a day of work required service from a specified starting time to a specified stopping time.[60] If the Abbey wished to increase its total units of labor service collected, it could do so only by increasing
human resources on the estate. The Abbey's growing need to consume labor would, therefore, affect the demography of its peasantry.
Conclusion
The Domesday survey and the survey of 1125 offer a limited view of the ecology of the estate of Peterborough Abbey. Activity in the arable and the woodland can be pieced together best. Fundamental aspects of labor structure and the Abbey's use of its human resources were in place at the turn of the twelfth century. The Abbey managed its human resources the most intensively. It husbanded its woodland too, but had already begun converting some of it into arable. The surveys leave fenland resources largely unaccounted for. Such neglect camouflages the Abbey's development of its fen islands of Eye and Oxney as well as incipient definition of fen boundaries among those communities sharing this resource.
Only further archaeological investigation into the allocation and management of resources in the regional economy over the seventh to the twelfth century can provide a much-needed sense of scale and process to regional development sketched here from the sparse written documentation and excavation results available now.
Fundamental questions of early medieval agricultural development await archaeological exploration. What was the storage capacity of this economy? When did the large granaries and hay barns, which begin to be written about in the mid- to later twelfth century, first appear as regular installations in the countryside?[61] Who provisioned the growing towns of Stamford and Northampton? Did these towns stimulate specialization in animal and crop husbandry in the Peterborough area?
The surveys of the Domesday generation do cast doubt that the estate functioned as a large-scale producer in the countryside. Peasants, therefore, enjoyed greater access to resources during the eleventh and twelfth century than they would in the thirteenth century, when agrarian lords directly managed their demesnes. The scale and nature of demesne production was crucial to the well-being of the peasant economy. The following chapter further explores documentary sources for evidence of the scale of demesne economy as the problem of scale awaits ongoing archaeological research to supply a more secure context.
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The Scale of Consumption and Production on the Estate of Peterborough Abbey in the Domesday Generation
Valuations and Development
The Norman conquest of England expressed itself fiscally in increased valuation of estates, ideologically in the burden of monumental public building, and economically in regional shifts in town development.[1] By the early twelfth century, lords of English estates found themselves competing more intensively with kingship for resources. Traditional methods of managing estates, which relied on farmers of manors to provide lords with sustenance and some cash, gave way to direct management of seigneurial estates by the end of the century.[2] The effects of these changes on resource management will be the subject of this chapter.
A chapter from the Leges Henrici Primi (1114-1118) describes how agrarian lords evaluated their manorial resources in order to negotiate farming arrangements in the early twelfth century. An estate agent reviewed and adjusted the notional value of a manor upon termination of a leasing arrangement. On the basis of this information he set a new value on the redditus , or "rent," for the next lease:
When the manor is returned to the lord, inquiry must be made of the herdsmen concerning the beasts, their number and kind, and of the other servants about matters which are their particular concern, that is, whether individual items are maintained in full quantity and of equal value; they must be questioned about increase in the number of men and cattle, about whether the manor has decreased in value in respect of demesne land and tenants, pasture or woods, about whether any occu-
pant has increased his due payments or whether anyone has unjustly withheld them; about what is held in the granaries and what has been sown.[3]
The emphasis on "assessing" individual items in their "full quantity and equal value" tells us much, but not nearly enough, about the relations of accounting and valuation in the early twelfth century. How did agents pass from counting heterogeneous physical units to assigning a value in a single unit of currency?[4] The instructions do not reveal whether accountants distinguished spheres of production from those of consumption in their valuations.[5] The few leases preserved from the twelfth century suggest that the length of leases grew shorter and their bids grew more competitive as the function of money and the market changed.[6] Commercialization of leases could threaten the consumption arrangements typical of such farming leases. Close study of the surveys can show some of the tensions between consumption and such commercialization prior to the decision to abandon farming leases.
The Domesday survey recorded values for the manors of Peterborough Abbey in 1066 and 1086. In the 1125 survey, every manor of the estate, with the exception of Fletton, paid a cash rent (redditus), a form of valuation. Ten manors also rendered grain to the Abbey.[7] The change in valuations for manors over the Domesday generation can be used to explore whether or not development of resources contributed to increased rents.
The valuations of the manors of Peterborough Abbey display a typical pattern of increase over the Domesday generation.[8] Overall, valuations increased by 60 percent between 1066 and 1086. By 1125, Peterborough manors paid a redditus 79 percent higher than the valuations of 1086, a striking increase.
The increases between 1086 and 1125 were not distributed evenly. Table 2 groups manors according to different ranges of increase. Manors experiencing the highest increases in fiscal valuations at or greater than 200 percent constitute a diverse group. Glinton, a fen-edge manor, five miles (8 km) from the Abbey, with its Domesday appendicia (or dependency), Etton, underwent an increase of 300 percent, as did Cottingham, located on the edge of Rockingham Forest some twenty-four miles (38.6 km) from Peterborough. Returns from Pilsgate in the western Soke, ten miles (38.6 km) distant
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from the Abbey, and Boroughbury, the home manor just outside the monastery precincts, increased 250 percent and 200 percent respectively.
An increase in the number of demesne ploughs did not account for the leap in valuations on the Abbey's manors. Gains and losses of demesne ploughs over the Domesday generation are also set out in table 2. On the twenty-two manors for which we have comparable information, the Abbey made a net gain of only 6.5 ploughs over its Domesday ploughs. The Abbey actually lost ploughs on its demesnes of Boroughbury, Irthlingborough, and Thurlby; nor does its small gain in the number of ploughs correlate well with its "growth" manors.
If the Abbey wished to increase the value of its manors, it could have relied on expanding its commercial resources, especially tolls and market rents, which contributed substantially to income on some manors. At Glinton and Boroughbury the rents from tolls account for 17 percent and 20 percent of their cash renders respectively. The population of trades- and craftspersons, presumably the fifty-five men listed at Boroughbury, paid lucrative rents of 71s. 2d. , or 13.5 percent of the total manorial rent. At Oundle the value of the market increased from 25s. to 83s. (37 percent) over the Domesday generation; however, the actual rent of the manor had not increased to reflect the increased revenue from the market. Oundle's Domesday value and its 1125 redditus were the same.
Much of the increase in manorial values came not from growth of demesne cereal production or commercial income, but from growth in tenant productivity and some expansion of the Abbey's pastoral activities.[9] The addition of peasant ploughs and the increase in peasants recorded on the manors between 1086 and 1125 are set out in table 2. At Boroughbury, a manor undergoing revenue increases, peasant ploughs multiplied 7.5 times (from two to fifteen ploughs). The manors of Glinton and Etton saw the greatest increase in the peasant population over the Domesday generation. The number of peasant cultivators more than doubled from twenty-six to sixty-eight persons. Such a sharp rise could reflect the fact that the Domesday survey subsumed Etton under Glinton as an appendicia and the 1125 survey valued Etton separately. Unfortunately, it is not possible to corroborate population growth among the peasantry with their increased productivity at Etton and Glinton, since the 1125 survey failed to record peasant ploughs on the two manors.
The 1125 survey does show that Glinton and Etton were comparatively well endowed with livestock. In the early twelfth century Etton herded the largest sheep flock in the Soke of Peterborough, and Glinton kept horses and to a lesser extent pigs. Growth and specialization in the pastoral resources on the two manors, as well as an increase in the peasant population, contributed to the increase in their valuations.
Demesne livestock at Pilsgate undoubtedly added to its high valuation as well. Neither demesne nor peasant ploughs increased there over the Domesday generation, although the peasant population increased by 45 percent (from 38 to 55 peasants). With the second largest sheep flock in the Soke in 1125 and as one of two manors (the other being Etton) on the estate with a shepherd, Pilesgate shows signs of a demesne undergoing pastoral development. Its high valuation suggests how lucrative livestock could be. Located five miles (8 km) from the town of Stamford along the Barnack Road, both Pilsgate and Etton could supply wool to the Stamford textile industry.
Over the Domesday generation the valuation of the manor of Cottingham increased at the high rate of 300 percent, even though the manor lost one-third of a hide to predatory royal constable Robert de Olli. The manor also lost four peasant ploughs and the peasant population declined by 37 percent between the two surveys.[10] Woodland resources of 504 acres (204 ha) in Rockingham Forest greatly enriched Cottingham, where the Abbey stocked its largest herds of pigs and goats. The growing value placed on pastoral resources contributed to the increased valuation of this manor.
On the thirteen other manors, where cash rents increased substantially, the overwhelming contribution to increased productivity came from the increase in peasant ploughs over the Domesday generation. Table 2 lists the ratio of demesne ploughs to peasant ploughs and the percentage changes between 1086 and 1125 in peasant ploughs and in the peasant population. For those manors where comparisons between 1086 and 1125 are possible, the Abbey added four ploughs, raising the number of its demesne ploughs from 46 to 50, an increase of 8.7 percent. On the same manors the number of peasant ploughs rose from 157.5 to 214.25, an increase of 35.8 percent. Such figures probably underestimate growth. For instance, table 2 indicates that peasant ploughs declined at Fiskerton. Failure to mention the ploughs of the Domesday sokemen in 1125 probably contributed to
the observed decline, as well as the waste of the Conquest, which had not yet been fully restored. At Pilsgate, where the Abbey has half of its holding, three out of six hides, peasant ploughs decreased by only 9 percent.
The figures from 1086 to 1125 also indicate that the peasant population grew over the Domesday generation. It is notoriously difficult to compare people counted in either survey; so the figures can be taken only as general guidelines to an order of magnitude. For those manors that appear in both surveys, the population increased by 38 percent (765 to 1,053) in line with the increase of ploughs already observed (36 percent). The rate of population growth and increase in ploughs on individual manors varied, however. The "growth" manors, Glinton with Etton (162 percent) and Pytchley (158 percent), absorbed a good portion of the observed population growth.
The rent income of the Abbey increased over the Domesday generation. Some growth occurred on those manors where the Abbey developed its pastoral and commercial resources. Peasants greatly increased productivity in the arable sector through their demographic increase and the ploughs they added to exploit the resources of the manor. The Abbey itself did not develop its own demesne agriculture aggressively over the Domesday generation. It increased its own demesne ploughs at a modest rate compared to the increases among its peasants.
There were tensions in such a pattern of development. The Abbey's pastoral development required pasture, but so did the peasants' plough oxen, upon whose increase the Abbey gained increased revenue. At some point the Abbey would have to choose between its own pastoral development and development of the peasant sector. The Abbey's short-term strategies for developing its revenues, which relied on its peasants, would ultimately conflict with allocation of its pastoral resources.
Food Rents and the Scale of Demesne Production
Variations in the growth of valuations on the estate over the Domesday generation indicate that the manors developed unevenly. The pattern of uneven development camouflages some of the regular
dues that Abbey collected from all its manors, such as portions of its food rent. The Abbey expected to feed its household with liveries of food sent from its manors. Given the size of the Abbey's household in 1125 and its provision of hospitality, such foof liveries or their cash equivalents were substantial. In 1125 the surveyors enumerated 114 members of the monastic household. The Abbey had to satisfy the consumption needs of sixty monks and a number of Abbey servants working in the bakehouse (9), brewhouse (6), kitchen (7), tailorshop (4), piggery (1), church (2), infirmary (5), and leper hospital (13 lepers and 3 servants), as well as those permanently employed in the Abbey's building program, including a mason (1), stonehaulers (2), and an overseer of the works.
The Abbey fed its household through a system of food rents collected from its manors. By 1125 the Abbot had commuted to money renders a good portion of the food owed by its manors. Only the manors of Thorpe, Castor, Glinton, Etton, Werrington, Walton, Alwalton, Fletton, Warmington, and Oundle sent grain shipments to the Abbey. As an accounting convenience during the vacancy of the Abbot's office, the surveyors of 1125 placed a cash value on the renders collected in kind in order to generate a grand total of revenues expressed in cash. The value of grain collected in kind from the manors constituted 25.5 percent (£97 12s. 0d. out of £382 5s. ) of the total of revenues collected by the Abbey in 1125. To what extent did the balance of the total (74.4 percent) represent surplus over and above the consumption needs of the Abbey?
To answer this question it is useful to examine the annual consumption of food by a Benedictine abbey in the early twelfth century. No such annual food budget exists for Peterborough Abbey. Fortunately, the archive of the neighboring Benedictine monastery, Ramsey Abbey, has preserved a schedule of its annual food farm at the turn of the twelfth century suitable for comparison.[11] Ramsey manors lay along the fen and clay lands just south of Peterborough. Domesday surveyors comparably valued both estates. The details of the Ramsey schedule can help to reveal what lies hidden behind the screen of commuted food farms listed in the Peterborough survey of 1125.
The Ramsey schedule of food rents lists the grain and livestock collected annually by the monastic household. The Abbey collected the food in monthly installments from a manor or a group of manors organized to yield a monthly render. The value of the Abbey's annual
food farm can be calculated from the schedule, which gives the cash equivalent of each item of food composing the monthly rent. A detailed itemization of the food renders and their values may be found in appendix 1.
The annual cash equivalent of the monthly food renders, including monthly renders in money, amounted to 4,981 shillings. Processed grain in the form of fine flour for bread, baked loaves, flour of second grade, malted grain for drink, and oat fodder constituted 34 percent of the annual value. Meat did not form a significant portion of the food render, as was proper in an observant Benedictine house.[12] Secondary animal products (lard, cheese, butter, eggs) ranked second in their contribution (22 percent) to the value of the annual food rent, lard being almost as important as malt grain in the valuation. Ramsey Abbey also collected a monthly cash payment of 80 shillings, which comprised 20 percent (960/4, 981s. ) of the total annual value of the renders collected from Ramsey manors.
The figures for the annual food rent collected by Ramsey Abbey offer a context for evaluating the cash rents collected by Peterborough Abbey in 1125. The rents collected at Peterborough break down as shown in table 3.
Peterborough Abbey collected one-quarter (1,952/7,645s. ) and Ramsey one-third of their respective incomes in grain. A comparison of Peterborough's total cash render (7,645s. ) with the cost of Ramsey's annual consumption renders (4,981s. ) shows that Peterborough Abbey collected cash in excess of 53 percent of the consumption budget proposed by the Ramsey figures. Peterborough Abbey thus
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enjoyed a return from its estate in excess of approximately 50 percent over annual consumption values of a comparable monastic neighbor.
The king recognized such profitability during the Peterborough vacancy of 1125. He reserved 55 percent of the Abbey's annual cash rents (4,245.3s . out of 7,645.3s .) for himself, leaving the Abbey with 3,400s ., or 68 percent (3,400s . out of 4,981s .) of the estimated amount of money it required for consumption. The king thus directed the surplus of the estate to himself in the vacancy.
The cereal and livestock products consumed annually by Ramsey also provide interesting guidelines to the minimal level of demesne production required to feed a monastic household in the early twelfth century. To such figures can be added the expectations of surplus indicated in the Peterborough Survey. Calculations for the acreage and livestock required to produce the food consumed by the monks of Ramsey appear in appendixes 2 and 3 and are summarized in tables 4 and 5. The farmers on the manors of Ramsey Abbey had to harvest between 1,300 and 1,700 acres of land, depending on two- or three-
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course rotation, to produce the required amount of grain for consumption and a surplus of 50 percent over consumption needs. With fifty-two demesne ploughs recorded in the Domesday survey, Ramsey Abbey could have easily cultivated demesne land to the extent of the above estimate. There was one Ramsey plough for every 37.5-41 demesne acres, with double ploughing of the fallow included.
Figures for demesne ploughs of Peterborough Abbey show that the Abbey too could have managed cereal agriculture at a scale comparable to the calculation for Ramsey. Given the acreage required to satisfy consumption (1,300-1,700 acres) the sixty-two demesne ploughs listed in the 1125 survey would have worked between 28 and 34.4 acres respectively, depending on whether the rotation was two-course or three-course. The ratios of demesne ploughs to acreage on both estates approximate the scale of peasant agriculture, where the virgater ideally worked a 30-40-acre (12-16 ha) holding with one plough.
The quantities of secondary animal products consumed annually according to the Ramsey food schedule provide a base from which to extrapolate the size of the herds necessary to yield renders of cheese and lard. (See appendix 3 for calculations and table 5 for a summary.) To produce 17,280 pounds of lard, Ramsey Abbey would have to have herded 8,640 pigs. To produce the same weight of cheese, the Abbey would have to have herded 197 cows or 1,970 ewes or combinations thereof.
The survey of 1125, which lists demesne livestock, enables the historian to compare such levels of consumption with the size of the demesne herd. Statistics on manorial livestock drawn from a royal survey of manors held in wardship in 1185 also offer some comparison of the scale of livestock husbandry on lay estates in the same century just as lords were turning to direct management.[13]
The Scale and Organization of Livestock Husbandry[14]
Tables 6 and 7 compare the number of livestock on the Peterborough Abbey estate with those on lay estates held in wardship in 1185. The figures show that the Abbey was better shocked. The surveyors of 1185 frequently commented, however, on the understocking of estates and recommended restocking. With such recommendations an estate in
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1185 would have herded on average one and one-half times more sheep than the average Peterborough manor. The greater expectations for stocking levels of sheep in the later twelfth century will be explored shortly. Most striking are the variations in the number of different livestock present on Peterborough and the more scattered lay manors of the 1185 survey. The coefficient of variation, almost double the mean in most cases, renders the mean an ambiguous index of comparison. Variation itself can help us to understand better how the Abbey coordinated herding among its different manors.
Cattle
Consumption depended on the Abbey's herding enough plough oxen to draw its demesne ploughs. The Abbey maintained a strict equilibrium between the number of oxen on each manor and demesne ploughs.[15] Manors located on lighter limestones and gravels held demesne plough teams composed of six oxen. The majority of manors kept the standard eight-oxen team. The total number of oxen on the estate numbered 462 for the sixty-two demesne ploughs. The mean number of oxen on the estate in the first decade of the fourteenth century, 529, represented only a 20 percent increase over the twelfth-century herd.[16] The Abbey had already established the scale of its oxen husbandry by the early twelfth century. Peasant oxen, based on the number of peasant ploughs on the Abbey's manors, clearly out-numbered those on the demesne by a ratio of three to one in the early twelfth century.
The Abbey followed a complex strategy for herding its cows. On most of its manors it maintained just enough cows to produce oxen for demesne ploughs. On over half of the manors, cows numbered less than one quarter of the oxen herd. Seven manors without a cow herd had to rely on the market or other manors to supply them with their oxen. To ensure the supply of draft beasts on the estate, the Abbey kept three herds of breeding cows at the manors of Eye, Oxney, and Alwalton. Specialization in dairying activity could be expected on the three breeding manors. The herd of 123 cows on the Peterborough estate in 1125 was not large enough to provide enough milk to produce the 17,280 pounds (6,472 kg) of cheese collected annually in the Ramsey food farm. Even in the early fourteenth century with a herd of dairy cows numbering just under two hundred, Peter-
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borough Abbey produced approximately 15,000 pounds (6,818 kg) of cheese, butter, and milk and marketed 50 percent of the yield of dairy produce. The Abbey very rarely milked its ewes in the early fourteenth century. In the twelfth century the Abbey must have milked both sheep and cows to produce enough cheese for consumption.
The Abbey continued to use breeding manors to supply stock to its manors in the fourteenth century. The ratio of oxen to cows maintained on the manor of Castor illustrates the continuity of management practices on an "equilibrium" manor, where just enough cows were kept to produce the requisite oxen (table 8). On the manor of Castor the proportion of oxen, cows, and calves remained similar over two centuries even with an overall increase in demesne cattle.
The Abbey kept bulls on seven of its manors located in different geographical areas of the estate. On average, one bull served fifteen demesne cows, a better ratio than that for the fourteenth century, when one bull served eighteen cows. The presence of two bulls at the breeding manor of Eye underscores its specialization as breeder of demesne cattle for the estate.
Historians regard the animalia otiosa enumerated in the 1125 survey as young cattle.[17] On the Peterborough estate no manors without cows kept animalia otiosa. Their association with cows supports the link between breeding and young stock. Their distribution on the Peterborough manors also suggests links with carrying and hauling, although their claim to leisure (otiosa ) belies such a connection. Every manor responsible for grain shipments to the Abbey kept animalia otiosa. Such animals were most heavily concentrated (74/87) within seven miles (10.4 km) of the Abbey, where carriage services were
heaviest. Manors within this radius supplied the Abbey not only with grain but with wood and other materials, such as building stone. Interestingly enough, Boroughbury, the home manor just outside the Abbey precincts, kept no animalia otiosa. The carriage of goods on the estate moved toward the Abbey precincts. Carriage did not emanate from the Abbey, which had not yet entered the economy as the direct producer and distributor of surplus it would become in the next century.
Horses
The Abbey did not rely much on horses for ploughing and hauling in the early twelfth century.[18] Horses, including draft horses (auri [affri , averi ]), younger horses (pulli ), wild horses (equi indomiti ), and a harrow horse (herciator ), were in low supply. Kettering, the manor with the most ploughs (four demesne and twenty-two peasant ploughs), possessed the greatest number of draft horses: three auri. Of the five manors without draft horses, three were located on the western edge of the estate on lighter limestone soils. These manors (Great Easton, Cottingham, Tinwell) kept the smaller plough teams of six oxen. The remaining two, Thurlby and Fiskerton, were still recovering from the depredations of the Conquest, which might explain their failure to keep any horses.
Only five young horses were counted on the manors, apart from the young horses running in the wild herd. Their location on different manors displays an incipient specialization in horse breeding. Warmington, the one manor on the Northamptonshire manors with a young horse, later served as the horse-breeding center for that area of the estate in the fourteenth century. The wild horses and their offspring at Glinton on the fen-edge and the young horse nearby at Etton also anticipated the Abbey's use of its fen pastures as a breeding ground for horses in the fourteenth century.[19]
The horse husbandry of the Abbey is most striking for its comparative underdevelopment.[20] In 1125 the Abbey possessed one horse (26 : 462) for every eighteen demesne oxen (including the categories: auri, pulli, herciator) compared to one horse for every 1.78 oxen in the fourteenth century.[21] This remarkable expansion of horse husbandry took place within a framework already in place in the twelfth century. The fen pastures served as the locus for horse breeding. Only
one manor outside the orbit of the home manors, Warmington, bred horses for manors further afield. The market also played a role in the Abbey's recruitment of carriage horses in the fourteenth century. A revolution in horse husbandry on the estate occurred after the 1125 survey.
Pigs
With its generous endowment of Domesday woodland (13,880 acres), Peterborough Abbey had the capacity to herd the 8,000 pigs required to produce the great amounts of lard required by the Ramsey food farm. The statistics for a demesne herd numbering 773 pigs recorded in 1125 show, however, that the Abbey was a modest pig-keeper. The strategy of managing woodland resources extensively by collecting pannage already conflicted with the more intensive management of coppiced woodland practiced on the estate by the early twelfth century.
The distribution of pigs on the estate bore little relation to the Abbey's woodland resources in the early twelfth century.[22] The Abbey already managed its pig herd intensively through sty management rather than extensively in a pannage system. Swineherds tended the pigs at the manors of Glinton, Kettering, and Castor. The Abbey also employed a swineherd, presumably for its own piggery, within its precincts. The surveyors claimed that the swineherd at Castor tended both pigs and sheep, but they recorded no demesne sheep there. By the fourteenth century the Abbey altered the scale of its pig husbandry by doubling the size of its demesne herd.
Sheep
The scale and geography of sheepherding on the estate in the early twelfth century differed radically from management in the late medieval period. Of the twenty-seven manors with demesne animals in 1125 only sixteen kept sheep flocks. In the twelfth century the Abbey herded no sheep on the fen-edge where during the fourteenth century they would be concentrated in large numbers.[23] In 1125 the Abbey herded its flock on higher-lying manors of Castor, Etton, and Pilsgate located in the central Soke. The Abbey had not yet turned its attention to developing its fen pasture on the scale that would support
the local transhumance typical of its later more intensive sheep husbandry.
The surveyors recorded the greatest concentration of demesne sheep on the western Northamptonshire manors—a pattern that persisted at the height of sheep farming in the fourteenth century. The manor of Etton alone supported a breeding population composed of arietes (rams), oves (sheep), and agni (lambs). Shepherds watched the largest sheep herds at Kettering (300 sheep), Etton (280 sheep), and Pilsgate (180 sheep).
All the other entries in the survey simply describe the sheep as oves and do not enumerate milking ewes (oves cum lacte or oves lactantes ). A contemporary survey of the English estates of the Abbey of Holy Trinity, Caen, does enumerate milking ewes, and they made up just under fifty percent of the flock (1,010/2,144 sheep).[24] If Peterborough Abbey milked a proportionate number of its own sheep, then its dairy could have produced at levels commensurate with those of the fourteenth century, when dairy cows provided the Abbey's main source of dairy products.
Management of the twelfth-century sheep flock differs most from early fourteenth-century sheep husbandry in its lack of specialization. It is likely that the Abbey relied on its sheep flock more for dairy products than for wool in the early twelfth century. By the fourteenth century the demesne flock chiefly produced wool. By integrating fen pastures into the pastoral cycle of sheepherding over the thirteenth century, the Abbey was able to increase its flock size. Increasingly, the Abbey rationalized flock management so as to satisfy different requirements of its wethers, ewes, yearlings, and lambs. Such coordination of resources with different subgroups of the flocks represents the technological accomplishment of demesne wool production in the high-farming era.
Goats
Goats figured more prominently on the estate in the early twelfth century than they would two centuries later.[25] The surveyors expected one hundred goats to be stocked at Cottingham, the manor on the edge of Rockingham Forest, where they also expected the largest Abbey pig herd. The association of goats with pigs at Cottingham and
Walton suggests some scrubby woodland there. Goats and pigs can thrive on scrub. At Kettering, a manor on the perimeter of Rockingham Forest, the peasants had to pay a render of one penny for their billy goats and a half penny for their nanny goats. The Abbey's goat herd still grazed at Cottingham in the fourteenth century, and the Abbey milked the nanny goats to prepare goat cheese.
The survey teaches a compelling lesson about the organization of the livestock economy on the estate in the early twelfth century. The Abbey produced to consume in the early twelfth century. Its consumption needs in the arable sector determined the size of its ox herd. Cows bred to reproduce the oxen. The Abbey did not rely heavily on horses to supplement draft power on the estate. The contribution of the Abbey's sheep flock to either dairy or wool production was modest too in the twelfth century. The annual harvest of wool would have been just enough to clothe the sixty monks with new garments.[26] The Abbey also managed pigs for consumption. Its woodland was already too valuable to be used simply as a source of pannage. The higher expectations for dairy production in the early twelfth century, based on estimates from food-rent schedules, suggest several economic interpretations. The pastoral economy at large, both demesne and peasant sectors, may have been more dairy-oriented in the earlier period.
The Scale of Other Forms of Pastoral Consumption
The Abbey did not restrict itself to consuming only the fruits of its own demesne economy. It tapped into the peasant economy by collecting renders in pastoral and cereal goods. The peasants on the estate owed the Abbey a combination of customary food renders, wood dues, and a heavy feast-day rent for the celebration of Saint Peter's Day.[27] The Abbey had commuted some of the peasant renders for cash by 1125. Table 9 lists renders it still collected in kind. The sums indicate that the Abbey collected a goodly amount of food and craft surplus from its peasants.
Peasant renders, like the monthly food rent already observed, emphasized processed foods and materials. Peasants baked grain into loaves and wove wool and hemp into cloth.[28] They prepared disci , either some food render or pottery vessels; the meaning is uncertain.
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In any case the peasant food rents, in particular the feast-day rent, looked back to a world of consumption in which many households cooked, collected, and processed for their lords.
Conclusion
A study of the scale of production required to meet the expectations of annual consumption on a twelfth-century monastic estate has yielded important insights. The manors of Peterborough Abbey yielded a cash return 50 percent in excess of annual consumption requirements calculated from the monthly food-rent schedule of its neighbor at Ramsey. Even with such a surplus the scale of cereal and pastoral husbandry on the estate was modest. First and foremost, the Abbey appeared as a consumer and not a producer in the early twelfth century. The Abbey also relied heavily on the peasant sector, the small-scale producers, for its sustenance and surplus.
The Abbey began to shift this framework of lordship over the twelfth century as it developed a fierce appetite for cash. To acquire the denarii produced by the king and his moneyers the Abbey found that it had to produce on an ever-expanding scale, one that out-
stripped its long-standing methods of producing to consume. By the end of the twelfth century the Abbey turned to direct management of the estate to control better the links between production and markets. The markets linked the Abbey into a new world, which Braudel has called "the medieval world economy"; the link transformed the character of medieval agricultural production in England.[29]
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From Consumption to Production: Peterborough Abbey in the Thirteenth Century
Indebtedness and Estate Management
The monastic community of Peterborough Abbey produced to consume in the early twelfth century. An analysis of its move toward large-scale production and direct management must account for changes in consumption. A growing demand for money combined with indebtedness and inflation to transform money as a medium of consumption and production in medieval society over the twelfth century.[1] The transformation of money in the twelfth century is more easily grasped at the regional level first. Its impact on one agrarian estate, Peterborough Abbey, can then be considered.
English kings began to search for new sources of money over the twelfth century as traditional revenues, such as county farms, settled inertly at their customary limits. The fiscal valuation of military services based on the fee, the inauguration of tallages levied on English towns, the implementation of high fees for settlements and writs in the king's court, and the shift of the taxation base away from land to movable wealth, all served to drain money from town and country into the king's coffer at a quickening tempo.[2] The king in turn dissipated this revenue on war.[3] Paying mercenary troops, erecting and maintaining castles, settling alliances with money pacts, and supporting a growing bureaucracy, all increased the costs of administrative kingship in England over the twelfth century.
As the demands of English feudal government on its lords and peasants mounted, European trading networks underwent depression and realignment.[4] Silver grew scarcer for coinage and trade wars
flourished.[5] To satisfy the new levels of demand for money in the world economy, credit and finance developed at a European scale over the twelfth century. On the basis of fragmentary early evidence it is not possible to measure the scale of interregional or international indebtedness; it is possible, however, to examine qualitatively the early techniques used by merchants to indebt agrarian lords. Such techniques created a new set of economic relations between creditor and debtor in the twelfth century and impinged on agricultural production in England.
By the mid-twelfth century, English agrarian lords were contracting debts by taking advance payment from merchants for crops and animal products, especially wool.[6] Most impressive were the activities of the Flemish financier, William Cade, who advanced them money and then collected in kind. The economic relations created by such contracts are crucial to understanding agricultural development in England in the twelfth century. First, such loans, really instruments of trade, drew the agrarian producer into vertical links with financiers who monopolized the exchange of agricultural products from production points to the distribution points of the industrializing sectors they represented.[7] If English lords spent the cash advances before their creditors collected in kind, they were induced to commit future crops to the same merchant. The relation produced a structure of indebtedness whereby creditors pushed agrarian producers further into cash-cropping.
English agrarian lords grew structurally indebted over the late twelfth and early thirteenth centuries.[8] They increased the scale of their production to compensate for the costs of their borrowed money; agrarian loans were more costly than commercial loans.[9] Increased scale of production also ensured the increased flow of borrowed money. Structural indebtedness locked the English agrarian sector into cash-cropping grain and wool for the expanding industrial sector of Flanders. As a response to this structural change, English agrarian lords moved abruptly toward direct management of their estates.[10] The older agrarian arrangements of farming out estates and collecting food or its cash equivalent were unsuited to new forms of agrarian indebtedness and its demands for large-scale production.
The Abbey of Peterborough was vulnerable to such economic transformations. Its monks grew familiar with debt over the twelfth century. The chroniclers of the Abbey first comment on debts left by
abbots upon the death of Martin of Bec (1132-1154). His successor, William of Waterville (1155-1175), "settled all the debts of Abbot Martin to the amount of three hundred silver marks (£200) except the sixty marks (£40) of interest which by the Abbot's effort our lord the king ordered to be pardoned."[11] The interest rate represented 20 percent of the principal. The actual interest rate for the loan depended on the time involved, which we do not know.
William left his own debts of more than 1,500 marks.[12] Locally, the same William advanced money. He kept lands of a certain Ives of Gunthorpe until "the Abbacy should receive therefrom sixty marks" a good example of a vif-gage.[13] During his abbacy William also faced the growing fiscal demands of the Crown. The continuous series of Pipe Rolls, preserved from 1159, furnish information on the royal charges on the Abbey and the Abbey's payments on these charges.[14] In figure 6 the annual fiscal renders demanded of Peterborough Abbey by the Crown are plotted along with the Abbey's annual payment on those demands. Over the period 1159-1218 (for which edited Pipe Rolls are available) the royal levy on the Abbey increased. The Abbey did not meet these demands and emerged as a chronic debtor to the Crown. The king did not regard benignly the failure of the Abbey to pay. Exercising his feudal prerogative, the king seized the Abbey upon the death of its Abbot in 1177 and again in 1210 and used the seizure as an occasion to funnel the Abbey's income into the royal treasury. In 1177, for instance, the king seized 23 percent of the Abbey's annual income from the estate and did not reduce the debt of the Abbey accordingly.
The Pipe Rolls also reveal that the Abbey owed money to Aaron of Lincoln, a leading Jewish financier in twelfth-century England.[15] Upon his death in 1191, the king confiscated the Abbey's debts to Aaron and charged the Abbey one hundred pounds for settling them. The total sum of the Abbey's debts to Aaron is not known. The discounted debt of one hundred pounds ranked the Abbey fifth among twenty-eight Northamptonshire debtors whose debts to Aaron ranged from twenty shillings to 493.5 pounds. Even deeper debts lay in the Abbey's future. In the abbacy of Robert of Sutton (1262-1274), Peterborough owed £4,324 18s . 5d ., almost twice the debt of Canterbury Cathedral Priory in 1254, when their debt stood at £2,168.[16]
The Abbey had harvested money as a chief crop of its estate in the

Fig. 6.
The Abbey's payments and debts to the royal treasury as recorded in the
Pipe Rolls, 1159-1219.
early twelfth century. By the end of the century the Abbey was a sharecropper of money. The king deflected a growing share of the crop to his treasury, and a good part of the crop was burdened by the surcharge of debt. The purchasing power of English money also changed over the later twelfth century.[17] By 1200 the Abbot could buy 30 percent less with the money returns from the estate. The Abbey faced a choice between continuing to consume cash returns from its estate as a sharecropper and undertaking the direct production of grain and animal products. Along with other English agrarian lords, the Abbey chose the latter course.
Reorganization of Estate Management
The Peterborough evidence for reorganizing agrarian lordship in response to the fiscal problems of the late twelfth and early thirteenth century is meager. It consists of the chronicle of Robert of Swaffham and the vacancy entries in the Pipe Rolls for the years 1176, 1210, and 1211.[18] The Abbey still farmed out its manors over these years; nevertheless, the fragmentary sources do indicate a marked intensity in developing agrarian resources on the estate.[19] Before taking over direct management of the estate, the Abbey experimented with agricultural innovations pioneered by the Cistercians and attempted to augment its production in the interstices of the manorial framework of the estate.
The Abbey's adaptation of some Cistercian innovations can be pieced together from the chronicle of Robert of Swaffham, who took up the narrative history of the Abbey with the abbacy of Benedict (1177-1193). Robert, who wrote in the mid-thirteenth century, had a keen interest in the managerial activities of Peterborough's abbots and reported regularly on their agrarian efforts.
Swaffham recounts that Abbot Benedict (1177-1193), in obvious imitation of the Cistercians, set up the grange of Novum Locum (later called La Biggin) on the border of Rockingham Forest in Northamptonshire.[20] Benedict had pieced the grange together from over six managed their own, "independent of communal agriculture and of servile labor."[21] Abbot Andreus (1194-1199) shared Benedict's predilection for Cisterican technology; early references to local windmills appear during his reign.[22]
Peterborough Abbey also participated in the rush to acquire houses and storage space in the towns, a policy which Cistercians vigorously pursued.[23] For over 250 marks, Abbot Acharius (1200-1210) purchased a house in London.[24] At that price, the house was undoubtedly stone-built and its undercroft could serve as a storage space for wine and other goods which the Abbey bought and sold in London.
The Abbots of Peterborough followed the Cistercians too in developing the storage capacity of their manorial properties. First notice of granaries (horea ) appear in the chronicler's treatment of the abbacy of Robert of Lyndsey (1214-1222), who erected granaries at Novum
Locum, Oundle, Thorpe, and Boroughbury itself.[25] The Peterborough documents do not mention if the granaries were stone-built. Given its attentiveness to Cistercian innovations, the Abbey would have been acquainted with the great Cistercian masonry barns built on their granges over the early thirteenth century.[26]
The chronicle sources hint at several steps taken by the Abbey to create an economy of scale on their estate. The obituary of Abbot Walter (1233-1245) shows the measure of such an enterprise: "He left behind an abbey that had all things in good order, namely in the left behind an abbey that had all things in good order, namely in the stocking of horses, oxen, cows, sheep, and all livestock in the greatest number, and in many places he left behind grain for three years."[27]
The vacancy accounts of 1176, 1210, and 1211 entered on the Pipe Rolls offer an opportunity to estimate the change of scale in the Abbey's agrarian enterprise. Production estimates calculated from the 1125 Survey and the vacancy accounts are set out in table 10.[28] The returns for 1176 suggest some agricultural stagnation on the estate at the opening of the last quarter of the twelfth century, marking a possible hiatus as feudal demands and indebtedness weighed on traditional methods of consumption.
The figures for 1211 dramatically contrast with those of 1176. Agricultural enterprise on the estate crossed a threshold in the first decade of the thirteenth century. The estimated area of demesne devoted to cereal agriculture and the income from grain sales more than doubled. The bill for necessary expenses, a category that included wage stipends for servants and the cost of upkeep for ploughs and other agricultural tools and buildings, mounted for the Abbey. Both grain sales and expenses increased faster than the rate of inflation at the end of the century.
The purchases of ploughs and livestock in the vacancy accounts also suggest a radical leap forward in scale. In 1176 the vacancy managers purchased four horses for the mill. Between the Feast of the Annunciation (25 March) and Michaelmas (29 September) 1210, the managers bought three horses, seven oxen, and sixteen ploughs. They bought an additional sixteen oxen and two plough horses in 1211. The Abbey increased its sheep flock by three-fifths over the twelfth century. Its sheep herds would double again by the end of the thirteenth century.
Demesne agriculture also crossed a threshold in the balance of its cereal and pastoral sectors. In the vacancy account of 1176 the Abbey
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made more money from its pastoral sector with the sales of wool, hay, and herbage (343.9s .) than from the sale of grain (245s .). In 1211 the pastoral sector contributed only one-third of the combined cereal and pastoral income. A shift in the balance of pastoral and arable occurred in spite of a great increase in the sale of hay and pasture on the estate. The increase in sales of herbage undoubtedly reflected the activities of Abbot Acharius (1200-1210) in developing the fen pastures east of the Abbey. He drew up boundaries in the peat fen between Peterborough and neighboring Crowland Abbey and paid King John one hundred marks (£66.6) "pro habenda pastura,"[29]
Agricultural production on the estate transformed in scale over the century separating the 1125 survey and the vacancy account of 1211. Such dramatic shift in the allocation of resources on the estate could not help but severely affect the peasant sector of agricultural production.[30] Prior to the late twelfth century the scale of demesne agriculture on any one of its manors did not depart radically from that of the peasant sector. Now the Abbey engaged in agrarian production in plantation-owner style. A sense of the consequences of the new demesne agriculture for the peasantry can be gained by comparing a survey of demesne manors in the Soke of Peterborough and Lincolnshire drawn up by the Abbey in 1231 with the 1125 survey.[31]
The peasant sector of the English agrarian economy was not immune to the structure of agrarian indebtedness that locked itself into place by the thirteenth century. The social and economic value of land changed in the peasant household as a peasant land-market developed in England by the middle decades of the thirteenth century.[32] The courts developed the common law of villeinage as they sought to define the legal status of the peasantry over the same period.
Peasants on the Lincolnshire manors of the Peterborough Abbey estate challenged their status in an early villeinage plea in 1169-70.[33] The Abbey's peasants had cause for concern about their status, since the Abbot managed to increase rents and in many cases services of its unfree tenants over the twelfth century.
The demographic and economic fortunes of the Abbey's peasants changed between the surveys of 1125 and 1231. The survey of 1231 itself may be taken as evidence of the Abbot's desire to define more closely the holdings of his peasants.[34] Figures for the peasant population on the home manors of the Abbey in 1125 and 1231, along with the rents collected, are set out in table 11. The number of virgaters on the home manors increased 32 percent (101/133) over the century. At the same time the number of half-virgaters decreased by 44 percent (58/32). The pattern of decline in the population of half-virgaters and the increase in the number of full-virgaters repeats itself on every home manor with the exception of Glinton, which experienced the greatest overall growth of all the home manors.
On the manor of Eye the thirteen half-virgaters of 1125 had disappeared. In their place in 1231 stood fifteen full-virgaters, owing a full complement of rents and services. The Abbey had upgraded the labor services of its peasants at Eye with the upgrading of their status. In 1125 half-virgaters at Eye were subject to no week work. They each ploughed two acres and further ploughed three times a year. In 1231 the full-virgaters at Eye performed a full complement of labor services. They owed three days of work a week to the Abbey along with carrying, mowing, and boon services. The Abbey also managed to increase their ploughing services. Eye virgaters were to plough three acres in 1231 and owed ploughing services on an additional five occasions. In 1125 the peasants at Eye were developing a frontier manor of the Abbey on an island in the peat fen. By 1231 the manor had fully matured and the Abbey extracted a full complement of labor services from its peasants.
The sharpest increase in the peasant population occurred among the smaller landholders. The number of tofters increased by 209 percent (34/105). The tofters held their tofts with either crofts or one to two acres of land attached to the toft. They provided a growing pool of labor service for the peak periods of seigneurial demand during haymaking and harvesting. The typical burden of labor service for the Abbey's tofters involved two days of summer work, usually mowing and lifting hay, and two days of autumn work.
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A new type of smallholder, plotholders, appeared in the 1231 survey. Typical of the plotholder was Agnes Pudding of Boroughbury manor, who held two acres of land from the Abbot for the annual rate of two pennies. Presumably these peasants were assarters and the source of the Abbey's casual hired labor in the great period of demesne expansion in the early thirteenth century.
A comparison of the two surveys shows that the number of peasants holding virgates on the home manors of the Peterborough Abbey estate increased slightly over the twelfth century while half-virgaters declined. Assarting activities undertaken by peasants on the home manors could account for the growth of the number of customary virgate holdings. More puzzling is the sharper decline of the "middling peasants," those holding half-virgates. Half-virgaters did not replace themselves over the century, nor did assarting tofters advance into this category. The patterns suggest that the Abbey manipulated the status of its customary tenures over the twelfth century by labeling half-virgaters as virgaters in order to increase the collection of rents and services.[35] The Abbey encouraged tofters to settle on its home manors, since it could collect labor services and rents from them. The appearance of small plotholders was undoubtedly related to the Abbey's increasing demand for casual hired labor. The 14 percent increase in its necessary expenditures observed in the vacancy accounts (see table 10), which included wages to hired labor, is easily matched by contribution of 32 percent made by the plotholders to the increase in customary tenants over the century.
The Abbey succeeded in raising its rents with such demographic strategies. The surveyed population of customary tenants on the home manors increased by 31 percent over the century. At the same time the Abbey increased its customary rent roll by 150 percent (172.6s ./430.6s .). The town of Peterborough also served as growing source of rent for the Abbey over the twelfth century. In 1125, seventy-two townsmen paid the Abbey 71s . 2d . in rents. In 1231 an unspecified number of Peterborough burgesses paid five times this amount (360s .).[36]
Not only did the Abbey extract more rent and labor, it also transferred pastoral and arable resources away from the peasant sector to the demesne.[37] By 1231 the Abbey had almost quadrupled the scale of its agricultural production.[38] It would double this scale again by the turn of the fourteenth century. The account rolls
preserved for the estate in the early fourteenth century enable the historian to study in detail the organization of this economy of scale.
The Problems of Seigneurial High Farming and Pastoral Husbandry
Economic historians have traditionally divided English seigneurial farming into four phases: (1) a pre-twelfth-century period of direct demesne farming; (2) the dissolution of demesne farming over the twelfth century; (3) seigneurial "high farming" between 1200 and 1325 marked by rationalized, profit-conscious direct management of the demesne; (4) a period of demesne leasing by rentier landlords over the later fourteenth and fifteenth centuries.[39] Historians have associated economies of scale with direct management of demesne farming.
So far this study has argued that there was no primal phase of large-scale demesne production prior to the twelfth century.[40] English agrarian lords farmed out the manors of their estates and consumed cash and food collected from their farmers. Such arrangements can be documented for the estate of Peterborough Abbey as early as the eighth century. Factors more complicated than gradual population growth and inflation transformed the scale and management of seigneurial farming at the end of the twelfth century. The structural indebtedness of English lords pushed them into direct management of agrarian production on a scale hitherto unknown.
Historians have regarded the thirteenth century as the period of high farming for English agrarian lords.[41] The feats of scale and the growth of agrarian bureacracy to monitor production have impressed historians and undoubtedly inspired the term high farming . High farming has invoked praise and criticism. The chief critique of high farming is consistent with the prevailing demographic model of agrarian development.[42] According to the model, cereal agriculture in both the demesne and peasant sectors expanded over the thirteenth century as population grew. Such expansion reduced available pastoral resources; thus the pastoral sector contracted. Fewer livestock produced less manure for the upkeep of soil fertility. The vicious cycle of expansion in the cereal sector and contraction of the pastoral sector resulted in the great famine of the second decade of the fourteenth century.
No studies of seigneurial pastoral husbandry exist to verify such a
model of high farming. The chapters that follow examine in detail how one high-farming estate, Peterborough Abbey, organized its pastoral sector in the first decade of the fourteenth century, the zenith of the high-farming era. The study utilizes the detailed information recorded in the livestock sections of manorial account rolls to establish the demographic characteristics of the Abbey's herds and its production and consumption of secondary products including traction, dairy products, hides, wool, and meat.[43] A general introduction to the herds of the Abbey will establish a context for the detailed discussion of the management of each domesticate.
At the turn of the fourteenth century the estate of Peterborough Abbey herded 1,293 cattle, 4,718 sheep, 269 horses, and 1,394 pigs and tended 1,160 hens, 992 chicks, 2,582 doves, 729 geese, 128 capons, and 65 ducks. Since the survey of the estate in the early twelfth century, the cattle and pig herds had doubled their numbers and the number of horses and sheep had tripled. The Abbey farmed 4,906 acres (1,986 ha) in 1300-01, over four times the area estimated in 1125. Peterborough's acreage compares with an estimated 8,373 acres under cultivation by Canterbury Cathedral Priory, 4,835 acres by Westminster Abbey, and 6,969 acres by the Bishop of Winchester in the early fourteenth century.[44] Gross livestock numbers had increased on the estate, but so too had the area of demesne arable expanded. The livestock ratios devised by Postan and Titow provide a means of comparing the changing proportions of livestock to cereal acreages.[45]
The livestock ratios calculated for the estate of Peterborough Abbey along with comparative figures available from the estate of the Bishop of Winchester and seigneurial demesnes in Norfolk are set out in tables 12 and 13. Fluctuations in the size of seigneurial sheep flocks drive the thirteenth-century ratios up and down. The low animal ratios for eastern Norfolk reflect the relative unimportance of sheep raising in that fertile corn-growing area without access to extensive rough pasture.[46] The ratios for horses and cattle remain static. Early modern historians have devised methods of calculating livestock ratios that are less susceptible to fluctuations in size of sheep herds. Tables 12 and 13 list livestock ratios calculated according to the latter method.
The livestock ratios for Peterborough Abbey and the Bishop of Winchester were comparable. For both the Abbey, with access to fen
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pasture, and the Bishop, who controlled stretches of downland pasture, sheepherding played an important part in their pastoral economies. The high animal ratios reflect the importance of sheep.
The figures in tables 12 and 13 also point to important shifts in Peterborough's pastoral economy. The animal ratio was higher in the twelfth century, suggesting that the estate economy was more pastoral in its emphasis. Relative to the cereal acreage, the Abbey herded more oxen and horses and fewer sheep than it did in the fourteenth century.
The proportionately higher number of oxen on the twelfth-century estate makes sense, since oxen served the dual purpose of ploughing and haulage. Not until the latter twelfth and the thirteenth century did lords rely extensively on horses for vehicle transport. The shift in economic emphasis among the different domestic animals on the estate over the two centuries appears more clearly when the ratios of different animals to oxen are compared over time. These ratios are set out in table 14. Relative to the number of oxen, the number of cows, horses, and sheep increased over 100 percent in the two centuries. The growth of these herds reflects the diversification and
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growing commercialization of dairying, transport, and wool in the estate economy.[47]
The changing composition of livestock in the herding economy of the estate characterizes a pastoral sector of some dynamism and complexity and dispels any notion of linear relations between animal and cereal husbandry. The relations of the Abbey's cereal yields to livestock units and other inputs further underscore the diverse and multiple links between the cereal and pastoral sectors.
Cereal Production and Animal Husbandry
In the first decade of the fourteenth century the Abbey sowed approximately five thousand acres with grain. Wheat and oats occupied half of the total acreage and the crops of barley, dredge (a mixture of oats and barley used in brewing), rye, and legume the rest. Summary statistics for the acreage sown on the estate and sowing rates appear in tables 15 and 16. Bruce Campbell has shown that seeding rates tended to reflect local practices.[48] Compared with recent findings for demesnes in eastern Norfolk, the Abbey tended to sow wheat and rye moderately, barley thinly. On half of its manors it sowed oats moderately and on the others heavily. Seedings rates for legumes varied most from place to place but tended to grow heavier through the decade.
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Cereal yields can be calculated from manorial accounts in two ways. With continuous series of account rolls the sowing of one year can be matched with the harvest recorded in the subsequent account. With discontinuous series, such as the Peterborough accounts, the historian must rely on the calculations of yields to seed scribbled by medieval auditors in the margins of grain accounts.[49]
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Auditors of Peterborough Abbey made such marginal notes in 1307-08 only, for the manors of Boroughbury, Eye, and Fiskerton. That year the Abbey experimented with increasing yields by extra manuring and weeding on the manors of Boroughbury and Eye. At Fiskerton it followed its normal policy of collecting labor services for manuring and weeding and added no special inputs. Apart from such special efforts taken to increase yields, the Abbey's special interest in 1307-08 might have come from the cumulative pressure of harvest failures of barley and oats in 1305 and of barley in 1306. The manors of the Winchester estate, mostly located in south-central England, experienced serious harvest failures for these cereals in those years.[50]
The Abbey's yields per seed and per acre appear in table 17 along with comparative data available from eastern Norfolk, Westminster, and Winchester demesnes and from the recommendations of the Husbandry , a thirteenth-century agricultural manual. The Abbey enjoyed yields at Boroughbury well above average. Its barley yield of 28.3 bushels per acre exceeded the demesne maximum for eastern
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Norfolk and came close to the harvest maximum there of 29.5 bushels per acre.
The Abbey worked hard for such high yields on its home manor of Boroughbury in 1307-08. First, the Abbey used 22 percent of the labor services rendered that year for harrowing, manuring, and weeding, inputs that helped to increase yields. The Abbey, however, regularly used such labor services as table 18 and figure 7 illustrate.[51] In 1307-08 the Abbey supplemented its regular labor inputs with extra manuring and weeding. It spent a considerable amount of money on collecting manure in the town (46s . 9 1/2d .) and spreading it on the fields (6s . 6d .). It also spent an additional sum (33s . 8d .) on hired weeders. An index of the Abbey's investment in improving yields, based on converting labor services to their local cash value (5d .) with the Abbey's extra cash investment in manuring and weeding, shows the Abbey's effort to improve yields. In 1300-01 the Abbey invested 0.92d . an acre on improving Boroughbury yields. It increased investments by 192 percent in 1307-08 when it spent 2.69d . per acre on yields. In 1309-10 the investment fell to 1.53d . per acre.
The home manor of Boroughbury had livestock ratios much lower than the average for the estate (table 19) and closer to the low livestock ratio of 34.8 recorded for demesnes in eastern Norfolk prior to 1350. The strategies followed to achieve high yields at Boroughbury are reminiscent of those described by Bruce Campbell for eastern Norfolk, where expenditures on manure and weeding produced high yields.[52] In 1307-08 the Abbey certainly invested in high yields by recruiting and paying laborers to manure and weed and probably
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Fig. 7.
The use of labor services collected on the manor of Boroughbury. The graph depicts what
percentage of the total labor services collected the Abbey devoted to different agricultural
activities. The use of labor services sent to the Abbey precincts itself is not specified.
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supervised labor services more closely on this manor just outside its precincts. Proper rotation of legumes could also have enhanced yields. Unfortunately, such rotations cannot be reconstructed from the discontinuous Peterborough series.[53] The Abbey planted only 7 percent of its demesne acres with legumes at Boroughbury, compared to an
average of 14 percent for eastern Norfolk. The strategies pursued at Boroughbury to achieve high yields thus place the manor somewhere between the intensive practices of eastern Norfolk and extensive low-yielding ones Westminster and Winchester.
At the other manors where the accountants had also noted yield to seed in 1307-08—the fen manor of Eye and the manor of Fiskerton, located just outside Lincoln—yields were respectable. At Eye the Abbey invested 1.86d . per acre to improve yields in 1307-08. It hired labor to weed and to collect and spread manure in addition to its usual budget of labor services. At Fiskerton the Abbey relied solely on such labor services to cultivate its crops. Although the Abbey did hire workers to dig and spread marl at Irthlingborough in 1307-08, it entered no marginal notations about the manor's yields. It spent some money at Irthlingborough on digging and spreading marl and feeding the horses used in marling. Perhaps the Abbey marled some part of the sixty-five acres taken out of cultivation since 1300-01 and therefore did not show immediate interest in return on yields.
Consumption of Grains and the Pastoral Sector
The Abbey used its grain to feed the monastic household, its famuli (employed agricultural staff), and some of its livestock, especially horses. Such strategies of consumption linked different grains in different ways to the pastoral sectors of the estate economy.
The Abbey planted between 4,906 and 5,228 acres of demesne and harvested between 62,980 and 81,190 bushels of cereals and legumes (table 20). Figure 8 illustrates the proportions of grains consumed by the Abbey, its famuli, and its livestock. In the year 1300-01 the Abbey consumed 44 percent of its total harvest, its livestock another 21 percent, and its manorial workers 10 percent. Of the amount of grain fed to livestock that year, almost two-thirds (62 percent) fattened livestock for slaughter and consumption by the household or fed the riding horses of its stables, animals that marked the Abbot's status as an agrarian lord. The Abbey used the remaining quarter of its total harvest for seed corn and sales. Together the grain eaten by the monastic household and the grain that fattened livestock produced a consumption rate for the household of 57 percent of the annual harvest in 1300-01. Historians have tended to ignore the
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Fig. 8.
Consumption of grain on the estate. The graphs depict what percentage of the different
cereal grains were consumed by the household of the Abbey, by its famuli (employed
agricultural staff), and by the demesne livestock.
inroads of such consumption on marketable yield. During the thirteenth century, Ramsey Abbey and the Bishopric of Worcester sold only 10 percent of its grain harvest. The demesnes and rectories of the prior and convent of Westminster provided by value 40 percent of their grain. Such figures, although crude, show variations in consumption strategies and also emphasize that often less than half of estate harvest made it to the market.[54] The consumption strategies call in question Postan's notion of large estates as "federated grain factories for the production of cash."
Studies of the Abbey's involvement in the grain market show that analysis of sales alone can mislead. The Abbey's purchases of wheat nearly offset its wheat sales. The Abbey followed a policy of selling wheat on its northern manors of Collingham, Fiskerton, Walcot, and Scotere, and purchasing it within its sphere of consumption, the home manors and the manors of Northamptonshire.
The Abbey grew oats as a fodder crop for its horses. Its riding horses ate between one-quarter and one-third of the oat harvest. Cart horses fed on the second highest ration of oats ranging from 15 to 25 percent of the crop. Workhorses received less oats, ranging between 6 and 12 percent of the annual harvest. The Abbey also fed modest portions of its oats to other animals, usually oxen and some young cattle selected by the Abbey for fattening and slaughter. Oats comprised one-third of the total harvest and occupied one-quarter of the sown demesne. Oats did not feed humans but horses used by the Abbey largely for riding and haulage. The Abbey's demands for status and speedy communication thus deflected many acres from human to animal nutrition. Such findings caution against interpreting expansion of acreage sown as a simple response to population pressure. Issues of speed and transport governed decisions about how much oats to plant.
The Abbey brewed its harvest of barley and dredge. To keep up with its household consumption of ale, it sowed one-quarter of its demesne with these malting grains, which yielded over one-third of the total grain harvest. The Abbey brewed ale from the grain left after it reserved seed necessary for the next planting. The Abbey rarely traded dredge. It sold some barley from the northern manors. Purchases of barley on the home manors tended to offset the barley sales. Occasionally it fattened some pigs on barley or the dregs of malted grain.
Rye and legumes occupied a smaller area of the Abbey's fields. The Abbey raised rye as the chief ingredient of mixtura , or the mixed grain paid to its famuli. Manorial servants of higher status, such as reeves, received an occasional payment in wheat. The Abbey divided its harvest of legumes between its workers and its pigs. Pigs consumed between one-quarter and one-half of the peas, beans, and vetches raised by the Abbey.
Conclusion
A discussion of livestock ratios, yields, and consumption reveals a matrix of interactions between the cereal and pastoral sectors. The changing composition of livestock in the herding economy of the estate characterized a pastoral sector of some complexity. The management within herds of groups with different economic functions (e.g., oxen and cows) required coordination. A study of the demography of the estate herds can offer insight into such complexity. The manner in which the estate governed the reproduction of herd structures over time related to its strategies of production, consumption, and exchange. In the following chapters a discussion of herd demography serves as a starting point for exploring the pastoral economy of a high-farming estate.