THE TOWNSHIP AND PARISH OF NEWENDEN
LIES adjoining to Sandhurst eastward. It was called
in Latin, Noviodunnum. Lambarde says, in Saxon. Nifeldune, that is, the low or deep valley. Leland calls it
Noviodunum, which word is framed out of the Saxon,
Niwandune, and soundeth as much as the new hill. (fn. 1)
But it most probably took its name from its being
raised on the scite of some more antient town, perhaps
built in the time of the Romans, of whom there are
many vestigia in and about this place.
Part of this parish is in the hundred of Selbrittenden,
the rest of it, called The Township Of Newenden,
is exempt from any hundred, having an officer of its
own, called the bailiff, whose power is much the same
here as that of high constable in other parts of the county,
and is appointed merely to prevent this district merging
into the jurisdiction of the hundred; and this bailiff
has an under bailiff subordinate, who is the same as a
borsholder in other parts.
At A SMALL DISTANCE north-eastward from the
present village of Newenden, it is conjectured by many,
among which are Lambarde, Camden, and Selden, that
the station and city of the Romans stood, called by
Pancirollus, in his Notitia Provinciarum, ANDERIDA,
and sometimes Anderidos; by the Britons, Caer Andred, and afterwards by the Saxons, the castle of Andred, or Andredceaster; being situated in the immense
forest which extended from hence for the space of
eighty miles into Hampshire. It was called by them
Andredwald; by the Britons, Coit-Andred; and now
by us, the Weald. This was one of those ports where
the Romans placed their castra riparensia, for the defence of the coast against the piracies of the Saxon rovers. And here they placed a detachment of soldiers,
under the command of the honourable the count of
the Saxon shore, distinguished by the name of Præpositus numeri Abulcorum; for hither at that time the river
Limen, long since called the Rother, was sufficiently
navigable. After the Romans had deserted Britain,
this place seems to have been still accounted a port of
great strength by the Britons, and to have been used
by them as one of their principal places of refuge, when
harrassed by the Saxons. Hengift, the Saxon king of
Kent, died in 488, and was succeeded by his son Escus, during the three first years of whose reign there
was a general truce between the Saxons and Britons;
at the end of which Ella, a famous Saxon chief, who
had come over from Germany, with a large company
of Saxons, on the invitation of Hengift, and had placed
themselves in Sussex, having received a strong reinforcement out of Germany, renewed hostilities, and
went and besieged the Britons in this their principal
port of Andred-ceaster, which at length, after a vigorous
defence, was taken by storm. But the Saxons were so
much enraged at the losses and satigues it had occasioned them, that they put all the inhabitants to the
sword, and totally demolished the city itself. (fn. 2) In which
desolate state it afterwards continued, a monument of
curiosity to future ages, till at length it was granted,
by the name of Andred, by king Offa, to Christ-church,
Canterbury.
There are two places here, by which the remains of
the antient station may still be discovered; the one is
called Castle-toll, and is a raised piece of ground, containing about twenty acres, situated on a point of land
between the river Rother and Haydon sewer, about a
mile and a quarter east north-east from Newenden
church, and about two miles south-west from Rolvenden. On the east side of it are the remains of a deep
ditch, and bank, which seem to have been continued
quite round it.
The other lies at a small distance from the above,
north-north-east, and is a piece of ground raised much
higher than the former; this was encompassed with a
double ditch, the traces of which are still visible in
some places, and within the innermost of them is somewhat more than an acre of land. The shape is a square,
with the corners a little rounded; and at each corner,
within the area, is a circular mount of earth. When
Dr. Plot viewed this place in 1693, the valla were
then very losty, and he was informed by an antient
countryman, who had often ploughed upon this hill,
that both the mounts and the valla were then at least
four feet lower than when he first knew the place; so
that in a process of time it is most probable they will
be reduced by the plough to a plain level with the adjoining lands. The plain remains of such strong entrenchments, together with the circumstance of several
Roman coins having been sound from time to time in
and about this place, gives no small weight to the opinion of those, who have placed the scite of the antient
Anderida here at Newenden.
THE MANOR of Newenden was given by Offa, king
of Mercia, by the name of Andred, to the monks of
Christ-church, in Canterbury, for the seed of their
hogs, being in the vast wood or forest then called Andred, or the Weald. In the time of king Edward the
Confessor it was accounted part of the archbishop's
demesnes, and was held of him by one Leofric, being
then taxed at one suling, and esteemed as an appendage
to Saltwood, and in the general survey of Domesday,
taken in the year 1080, it is thus described, under the
title of the archbishop's lands:
In Selebrist hundred the archbishop himself holds
Newedene. It was taxed at one suling. The arable land
is. . . . There are twenty-five villeins, with four borderers having five carucates. There is a market of forty
shillings all but five pence. Wood for the pannage of forty
hogs. In the whole, in the time of king Edward the
Confessor, it was worth one hundred shillings, when he
received it twelve pounds, and now ten pounds, and yet
the bailiff paid eighteen pounds and ten shillings.
After which, anno 21 Edward I. it appears that Boniface, archbishop of Canterbury, had claimed an exemption for his tenants here from service in the hundred court, and from such taxations as were usually
made; but upon trial it was given against him.
In which state this manor continued till the 51st year
of Henry VIII. when Thomas Cranmer, archbishop
of Canterbury, by deed that year, and inrolled in the
Augmentation-office the year afterwards, conveyed it
in exchange, among other premises, to that king; and
after the death of king Charles I. anno 1648, the
powers then in being having seized on all the royal
estates, this manor, as one of them, was sold to Hugh
Peters, (fn. 3) with whom it continued till the restoration,
when it returned to the crown, and remained there, till
at length it was granted to the earl of Aylesford, in
whom the fee of it was afterwards vested by act of
parliament. His descendant Heneage Finch, earl of
Aylesford, conveyed it, together with the fishery belonging to it, (which extends on the river Rother from
New Barn, at the eastern extremity of this parish, to
Odaiarne Oak, about a mile beyond Bodiam westward)
by sale in 1760 to Mr. Samuel Bishop, of Losenham,
in this parish, who is the present possessor of it. A court
leet and court baron is held for this manor.
LOSENHAM, usually called Lossenham, is a manor
and seat in this parish, about half a mile north-east from
the church, situated within the township of Newenden,
and within the hundred of Selbrittenden. It was antiently the seat of a branch of the family of Aucher,
who were both eminent and numerous, as well in this
county as in those of Essex, Sussex, Nottingham, and
elsewhere, deriving their origin from Ealcher, or Aucher, the first earl of Kent, who had also the title of
Duke, from his being intrusted with the military power
of this county. His descendant Walter Fitz Auger, a
noble Briton, flourished at the time of the conquest,
and was a good benefactor to the monks of St. Saviour's, Bermondsey. His descendant Thomas Fitz
Aucher was become possessed of this manor of Losenham, with divers other lands in Essex, in the reign of
king John. His descendant Henry Fitz Aucher is in
the roll of those Kentish gentlemen, who were with
Edward I. in his 28th year, at the siege of Carlaverock,
in Scotland, and for his service there was made a
knight-banneret, bearing for his arms, Ermine, on a
chief, azure, three lions rampant, or. Nicholas Aucher,
esq. resided at Losenham in the next reign of king
Edward II. His grandson Henry, married first Isabel
at Towne, by whom he had Thomas, who succeeded
to Losenham; and Robert, from whom descended
those of Westwell. And secondly Joane, daughter and
heir of Thomas St. Leger, of Otterden, (remarried to
Robert Capys) from whom came the Auchers, of Otterden, Bourne, and Nonington. (fn. 4) At length his descendant Henry Aucher, esq. of Losenham, left an
only daughter and heir Anne, who, in the reign of
Henry VII. carried this manor, together with that of
Woods, in this parish likewise, in marriage to Walter
Colepeper, esq. of Bedgebury, (fn. 5) whose grandson Sir
John Colepeper, of Wigsell, in 1628, sold them to
Adrian Moore, esq. of Egham, in Surry, in whose family they continued till they were alienated in 1702,
to Mr. Nicholas Bishop, whose grandson Mr. Samuel
Bishop is the present owner of them, and resides at
Losenham. There has not been any court held for this
manor for many years.
There is a moat round the present house, which was
built in 1666. Many foundations have been dug up
southward of the house, and a few years ago a stone
coffin was dug up, composed of four flat stones, perforated with several holes to let the moisture through.
AT LOSENHAM above-mentioned, Sir Thomas Alcher, or Fitz Aucher, in the year 1241, being the 26th
of Henry III. founded A HOUSE, or PRIORY, dedicated to the Virgin Mary, for Friars Carmelites, or
Carms, as they were commonly termed, being so called
from their being brought hither from Mount Carmel,
in Palestine; this place being most desirable to them,
as they affected to take up their abode in retired and
solitary habitations. The first institution of their order
was in 1170; and they were likewise called White
Firars from the colour of their habit. They were first
brought into England in 1240, and were settled at Alnewick, in Northumberland, and Aylesford, in this
county, and the next year here, and at Brunham, in
Norfolk. William Stranfield, born in Kent, a Carmelite friar here, S. T. P. of Oxford, was well versed
in the history of his order, and particularly of his own
house, of which he became prior, and wrote the history of this monastery of Newenden, with lectures and
other discourses of divinity. He died and was buried
at Newenden in 1390. (fn. 6) Under the patronage of this
family of Aucher, whose residence was almost adjoining to this priory, it continued safe till the general dissolution of religious houses in the reign of Henry VIII.
in the 27th year of which it was suppressed, as not having revenues to the clear amount of two hundred
pounds per annum, and was, with all its possessions, surrendered up into the king's hands.
The scite of this priory seems to have continued in
the crown till the 5th and 6th year of Philip and Mary,
when it was granted to Edmund and Henry Gilberd.
It afterwards passed into the family of Colepeper, and
from thence into the name of Moore, from which it
was sold, at the same time with the manors of Losenham and woods, to Mr. Nicholas Bishop, whose grandson Mr. Samuel Bishop, of Losenham, has now the
property of it.
Kilburne, p. 198, says, that in this parish, near the
priory, stood a castle, which was destroyed by the
Danes in 892, and not so much as the ruins then remained, only the memory of it was preserved by a place
here still called Castle toll.
NEWENDEN is situated on the southern confines of
this county, adjoining to Suffex, from which it is parted
by the river Rother, which flows along the southern
bounds of it for upwards of two miles, being the whole
length of this parish. The high road from the western
parts of Kent into Suffex, across the river Rother,
over which there is a modern bridge of three arches,
built of brick, called Rother bridge, leads through it
south eastward. There are but fifteen houses in the
whole parish.
The village, which is but small, consisting of a very
few cottages, with the church amongst them, stands on
this road, near Rother-bridge. It was built on its
present spot in the reign of Edward I. and seems, from
the many remains of foundations and wells, all round
the church, especially on the north and east sides of it,
to have been formerly a place of considerable size;
and the reports of the inhabitants, from tradition, of
the antient and more flourishing state of this place, are
very extraordinary. The middle part of this parish,
from east to west, being a narrow slip, is high ground
and arable, the rest, being by far the greatest part of it,
is a low flat of pasture and marsh lands, the whole of it
has a most forlorn and dreary aspect, and is far from
being healthy. About a quarter of a mile eastward
from the village is a spring of water, which is a strong
chalybeat. It is situated in the marshes, at a small distance northward from the Rother. This water, with
oaken leaves put into it, turned blackise; and with
powder of galls, it sparkled and turned like Champaigne wine.
There are no parochial charities. The poor constantly relieved are about five, casually three.
NEWENDEN is within the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanry
of Charing.
The church, which is dedicated to St. Peter, stands
within the township of Newenden. It was formerly
much larger, but becoming very ruinous in 1700, a
faculty was procured from the archbishop for the parishioners, to take wholly away the steeple and chancel,
and that they might put the body of the church only in
repair, and build a turret upon the top of it, to hang up
one of the bells in; and that they might fell the other
two bells, with the materials of timber and stone remaining after they had made such repairs. All which
was soon afterwards done; so that the church is now
very small, about sixty feet long, consisting of one isle,
and a very narrow one on the north side of it. The
chancel is a small room, about eight feet square, on the
south side very dark, having the altar-rails across it,
being very mean, and unfitting for the purpose. There
is a fine old stone, font, standing on four stone pillars,
with capitals of flowers and antient Saxon ornaments
round the top.
Over the porch of the church was a room, with iron
grates to the windows, called the gaol, and was so to
the jurisdiction of the township. It was taken down
about eighteen years ago, by order of the archdeacon.
Thomas Twysden, of Newenden, as appears by his
will, was buried in this church-yard in 1521.
This church is a rectory, valued in the king's books
at 7l. 13s. 4d. the yearly tenths of which are 15s. 4d.
In 1640 this rectory was valued at fifty pounds, and
the communicants here were sixty.
Church of Newenden.
|
| PATRONS, | RECTORS. |
| Or by whom presented. | |
| The Archbishop. | John Tunbridge, obt. 1609. |
| Richard White, A. M. Dec. 14,
1609. |
| Thomas Brown, resigned 1664. |
| Walter Collins, Jan 26, 1664. |
| James Kay, A. M. July 18,
1668. |
| David Maccorne, Nov. 2, 1677,
obt. 1686. |
| James Stretion, March 4, 1686,
resigned 1694. |
| Thomas Fishenden, A. M. June
10, 1694, obt. 1737. (fn. 7) |
| William Huddleston, A. M. inducted Sept. 1, 1738, obt.
June 8. 1743. |
| Richard Morton, A. M. July
28, 1743, obt. October 21,
1772. (fn. 8) |
| Thomas Morphett, A. M. Nov.
19, 1772, the present rector. (fn. 9) |