HARDINGHAM and FLOCKTHORP.
The town of Hardingham is not mentioned in the book of Domesday, and was then, no doubt, an hamlet or little village included in
the township of Flockthorp, whereas that has been depopulated for
many centuries, and is now included in Hardingham.
The Conqueror had in Flokethorp a considerable lordship, which
Godric farmed or took care of for him, of which Hacon, son of Swain,
the eldest son of Godwin, Earl of Kent, and nephew to King Harold,
was deprived, who was lord of it in King Edward's reign, containing
2 carucates of land, held by 12 villains; with 6 servi, and 12 borderers,
and paunage for 60 swine, 10 acres of meadow, a mill 3 carucates in
demean, 4 among the tenants or men, &c. and 26 sheep, with 80
goats; and a beruite belonged to it called Mantateston, with one
carucate, and 30 acres of land, and another beruite with 30 acres and a
carucate of land, and 22 socmen held a carucate of land and 6 acres
of meadow; and then there were also 5 carucates.
The whole was valued then at 5l. at the survey at 10l. and was one
leuca long, and half a one broad, and paid 28d. gelt. (fn. 1)
And in Cranworth, and in Shipdam, one socman of Stow held 30
acres of land, and 8 of meadow, &c. valued at 2s. Robert Blund had
these socmen, but Godric never had.
Besides this lordship, the Conqueror had in his own hands here, 40
acres, held by 3 borderers, and one acre of meadow, valued under
Hingham; also one freeman, who had 30 acres of land, an acre and
half of meadow, with half a carucate, held by 2 borderers. (fn. 2)
He was expelled at the conquest, and his land was at the survey in
the King.
Camois Manor.
Out of these tenures arose 2 lordships; one was in the family of De
Camois, who were soon after the conquest enfeoffed of it. Andrew
de Camois was a baron of the realm in the reign of Henry II.
In the 10th of Edward I. David Earl of Huntingdon, in England,
and of Carrick in Scotland, a younger son of David King of Scotland,
had the custody of Stephen de Camois, (fn. 3) a minor, and his lands, and
owed the King 200 marks for the same.
Ralph de Camois held in Flokesthorp one fee, and a fourth part of
one in Hardingham, of the King in capite, in the 12th of King John;
and in the 3d of Henry III. the jury find that Ralph de Camois, senior,
held at his death in this town, 280 acres of land in demean, 34 of meadow, and Ralph was his son and heir, aged 40.
This Ralph was sheriff of Sussex and Surrey, in the 27th of that King,
&c. and died in the 43d, and Ralph was his son and heir; and in the
5th of Edward I. he died seized of a messuage, 280 acres of arable
land, 24 of meadow, 24 of alder, and 50 of wood, held by half a fee,
and of the manors of Hengeston, Orwell, Wode-Ditton, and Burwell
in Cambridgeshire.
In the said year, John de Camois was summoned to attend the King
into Wales, in his expedition against Lewellyn, Prince of Wales; he
paid 100l. relief for his lands; in the 15th of that King he claimed
free warren here, &c.
This was that John who married Margaret, daughter and heir of
John de Gatesden; in the 26th of that King, she came before the barons of the Exchequer, and is styled late wife of Sir John de Camois,
and took an oath not to marry without the King's license, holding
lands in capite.
Dugdale says Sir John de Camois, by deed, &c. granted her over to
her gallant Sir William Paynel, whom she afterwards married; and
sued Eve, relict of Robert de Tybetot, for her dower, in the 3d part
of the manor of Burwell in Cambridgeshire, and recovered it; but by
the judgment of parliament, in the 30th of Edward I. was deprived
of her dower. (fn. 4)
Ralph de Camois was his son and heir; he gave to Margaret, (daughter of Mary, wife of William de Brews, for life) this manor: she was
probably his wife, for it appears on his death, in the 33d of Edward I.
that he and Margaret his wife were seized of it, and of Moulton
in Norfolk.
Ralph de Camois was his successour, and performed his homage for
it in the said year; in the first of Edward II. he and his wife were
summoned by writ to attend on the coronation of that King, and was
lord in the 9th and 13th of that King, and presented then to this
church; and Thomas his son in 1329.
He, with Margaret his wife, conveyed it by fine, with the King's
license, to John de Holveston, who presented in 1342, and 1349, and
died lord of this manor and that of Bilney, in Heveringland, in 1354,
this being then valued at 20l. per ann. and Thomas was his son and
heir, as may be there seen.
Sir Thomas de Holveston died about the 38th of the said King, and
William was his son and heir, who was seized of it in the 45th of that
reign.
In the 3d of Henry IV. Sir Thomas Barre was lord, and before
this, in 1392, presented as lord in right of his wife Elizabeth, who both
presented in 1417, and about this time there was a contest for the
right of advowson between the said Sir Thomas and Robert Hill, of
Marsham in Norfolk, and John Crane.
Elizabeth, wife of Sir Thomas, died in the 9th of Henry V. seized
of this lordship and advowson; and Sir Thomas her husband, dying
also in the same year lord of Knebworth, in Hertfordshire, left John
their son and heir, aged 10 years, aftewards a knight, lord of Clehangre
and other manors in Herfordshire, Bolinghope, &c. in Worcestershire.
The aforesaid Elizabeth was before her marriage, with Sir Thomas,
relict of Sir Edward Kendal, of Wrestlingworth, in Bedfordshire; and
in the 24th of Edward III. Sir Edward and the said Elizabeth his
wife, had the King's license to travel to Rome, with 4 persons and 4
horses.
Sir Thomas Camois is said to have granted it to Sir John Arundel,
afterwards Earl of Arundel, who granted it to Sir Maurice Berkley,
who presented to the church in 1444, and in 1445, William Earl of
Arundel.
Thomas Earl of Arundel, was lord and patron in 1504, as was Henry
Earl of Arundel, in the 38th of Henry VIII.
This Henry sold this lordship about the first of Elizabeth, to Thomas Gresham, Esq. of London; and in 1580 it was sold by the Lady
Gresham, with 10 messuages, and a foldcourse for 1000 sheep, for
1500l. valued at 66l. 13s. 4d. per ann. to Anthony Thwayts, Esq. together with the advowson.
Anthony Thwayts, Esq. presented in 1541, but not in his own right,
but by some grant of the Earl of Arundel.
In 1584, Anthony Thwayts presented as lord and patron; and in
the 4th of James I. the said Anthony, with Jerome his brother, Sir
Arthur Heveningham, Daniel Reeves, S.T.B. convey it to Sir George
Coppin, with all its appertenances, situate, lying and being on the
north side of the King's high way, called Olley Way, leading from
Hardingham church towards Kimberley, but excepting the right of
advowson.
The said Sir John Coppin of Kensington, and Anne his wife, sold
it December 1, in the 6th of that King, to Thomas Bateman, Esq.
and his heirs; and Anthony Bateman, Esq. of Hardingham-hall, and
Constance his wife, held it in the 21st year of the aforesaid King.
By an inquisition taken at Norwich castle, January 14, in the 22d
of James I. the aforesaid Anthony, son of Anne Bateman, was found
to die on November last past, seized of the manor of Flockthorpe, and
to leave by Constance, a daughter and coheir, Philadelphia, married
to William Rochester, Esq. of the Middle Temple.
After this, — Tayler, Esq. a justice of the peace, was lord, and
lived at Hardingham-Hall, and left a daughter and heir, Constance,
married to Robert Rugg, Gent. by whom he had 3 daughters and a
son, Thomas Rugg, Gent. who was lord in 1660, he dying without
issue, by Elizabeth his wife, the estate was divided among his three
sisters and coheirs, and their children.
Justice Tayler had, by will, devised 1000 marks payable out of this
lordship, as a portion to the 3 daughters aforesaid, (his grand daughters,) and Constance, widow of Robert Rugg, their mother, had remarried, first, to John Cowper, of Reymerston, and after to Thomas le Hunt
and by her had George Hunt. Elizabeth, the widow also of Thomas
Rugg, was living in 1680, and in the 6th of William and Mary, and
then the wife of Henry Beecher, Esq. of the Inner-Temple, and had
an interest therein. About the same time it appears that John Pagrave,
Esq. John Meres of London, Gent. and Richard Parker, had a right
also. About the year 1713, Ambrose Meers of Easton by Norwich is
said to have 3 parts of the said lordship, and George le Hunt of New
Bukenham, a 4th part.
Gurney's and Swathing's Manor.
The Gurneys were early enfeoffed of a moiety of this town. Matthew de Gurnay demanded in the 8th of King John, of Gilbert de Runhale, a carucate of land in this town, Swathing, and Runhale, which
William his father held in the reign of Henry II.
Hugh de Gorney granted by deed sans date to Robert, the Burgundian, the manor of Swathing in Hardingham, with the church and
appertenances in fee for 20s. sterling per ann, and for the gift of one
horse, at the time of making this grant; witnesses, Gerard Calebut,
William de Cheyney; it was granted at Ferretre, before the men or
tenants of the said Hugh, a town probably in Normandy, the Gourneys
being lords of Gourney, a town in Normandy, from which they took
their name, and came into England on the Norman invasion, and
this Hugh gave to the chapter of the church of St. Ildebert of Gorney
in Normandy, the said church.
Hugh, son of Hugh Gornay, confirmed to Hugh of Burgundy, son
of Robert, the aforesaid grant, as his father held it, sans date; witnesses, Andrew de St. Martin, Lewis de Gorney, &c.; and King
Henry III. confirmed, at the petition of Robert, the father, this grant
of the land of Swathing to Hugh his son.
In the 41st of Henry III. Rulph Redker and Isabel his wife, conveyed lands to William, son of Roger de Swathing, and in the 52d
of that King, William de Swathyng held of John de Gurney, a messuage,.54 acres of land, and 3 of wood, in this town and Reymerston,
with free grinding, without toll, at John's mill, called Ravensholm, as
he and his ancestors before had at Little mill, whilst Little mill was
repaired, and if they should be both out of repair, that they could
grind at neither, then John to pay 6s. 5d. per ann. till they could
grind.
John likewise granted to William and his heirs a free bull, and a
free ram, with a free fold course, and common of pasture, over all his
lands, for all his cattle (tempore aperto) in time of shack, as his ancestors had; William releasing to John, 2 acres of land, called Shymere.
William de Gurnay claimed free-warren in the 15th of Edward I.
and John Gurney was lord in the 9th of Edward II.
In the 20th of Edward III. Sir John de Mereworth held one fee of
the Lord Bardolf, and he of the King, late John Gurneys; and in
the 43d of Edward III. it was granted to Sir Hamon Felton, Knt. for
life, (fn. 5) remainder to Edmund Gurney, and Catherine his wife, and John
their son, in tail.
Edmund Swathing and Catherine his wife, in the 17th of Richard
II. conveyed by fine the manor of Swathing, to Ralph Bateman,
except 2 messuages, 24 acres of land, 12 of meadow, 16 of wood,
and 20s. rent per ann.
William Gourney, Esq. son of Thomas, and his wife, daughter of
Sir William Calthorp held the manor of Swathing and Hardingham
in the 2d of Richard II.
In the 3d of Henry IV. John Gurney was lord, and in 1469,
Thomas Gournay of West Barsham, sen. Esq. by his will, bequeaths
all his rents and services, called Swathing, which he had bought of
Catherine Sturmer, to be sold. (fn. 6)
Anthony Gurney, Esq. was lord in the 26th of Henry III. and
soon after it was in the family of Thwayts.
Anthony Thwyates, Esq. grants in 1589, to Thomas Thwyats of
Hardingham, Esq. his father, and to Richard, Thomas, and Francis
his brothers, all his right in the manor of Swathing.
This family descends from John Thwaits, Esq. who had possessions
in this town in the reign of Henry VII. who by his will dated
January 29, in the 19th of Henry VII. and on his death in the 22d of
that King, was found to die seised of the manors of Thwaits, Denton
and Ackworth in the county of York; he was son of Thomas Thwayts
by Alice, daughter and heir of Thomas de Hay, son of John Thwayts
of Thwayts, in Yorkshire, by Joan, daughter and sole heir of Robert
Thornton; which Robert married Alice, daughter and sole heir of
Ralph Leke, by Margaret his wife, eldest daughter of Philip Lardiner,
immediate descendant of David, called Lardinarius to the Conqueror,
and lord of Davy Hall at York.
John abovementioned, by his will, desires to be buried in the chapel
of our Lady, in the church of Hardingham, and gives 13s. 4d. to the
high altar of the said church, and by Anne his wife, daughter of Sir
William Knevet, he had Thomas, his son and heir, Edward, Anthony,
and Christopher. Thomas left a son John, who died a minor in the 3d
of Henry VIII. Anthony, his uncle, succeeded in the inheritance, and
by Margaret, his wife, daughter of Thomas Singleton of Michelfield in
Suffolk; had Thomas, his son and heir, who married Bridget, daughter of Robert Spring of Lanham in Suffolk, Esq. by whom he had
Anthony Thwayts, Esq. his eldest son, lord of Quidenham in Norfolk,
by the marriage of Frances, daughter and heir of Humphrey Bedingfield, Esq. and also lord of this manor, and leaving a daughter and
sole heiress Elizabeth, married to Jeff. Cobb, Esq. of Sandringham.
Anthony (as I have above observed) gave it in 1589, to Thomas
Thwayts, Esq. his father, and to his brothers: Thomas died in the
31st of Elizabeth, and by his will was buried in the chapel of St. Mary
in this church.
In 1632, Francis Thwayts, Gent. was lord, and presented to this
church, and about 1695, Richard Thwayts is said to be lord, and soon
after it was possessed by Francis Long, Esq. of Spixworth, lord in
1718.
Alan Earl of Richmond had at the survey, a socman belonging to
Harold, this was depending on his manor of Cossey. (fn. 7)
The tenths were 5l. 6s.—Deduct 12s.
The Church was dedicated to St. George; in the reign of Ed. I.
it was valued at 35 marks and the rector had a manse with 60 acres;
Sir John de Camois was patron, and the Peter-pence were 3s. 4d.
The present valor is 15l. 3s. 4d. and pays first fruits and tenths.
Rectors.
In the first year of Edward I. William, occurs rector.
In the 22d of Edward I. Mr. Stephen de Hepworth.
1309, John de Hampton instituted, presented by Sir Ralph Camoys.
1319, William de Paston. Ditto.
1329, Hugh Lovel, by Thomas, son of Ralph de Camois.
1333, Robert Eam. Ditto.
1342, Hugh Enges, by John Holveston.
1349, Thomas de Schadenfeld. Ditto.
In 1371, Thomas Fraunceys occurs rector.
1379, Thomas occurs rector.
1392, John Hockyngham, by Sir Thomas de la Barr.
1417, Richard Corston, by Sir Thomas Burre and Elizabeth his wife.
1444, Clement Denston, by Sir Maur. Berkley.
1445, Richard Bishop, by William Earl of Arundel.
1494, Richard Wyot, by Sir Henry Heydon, and Sir Thomas Lovell.
1504, Edward Crow, by Thomas Earl of Arundel.
1505, Richard Mylner. Ditto.
1520, Thomas Bleverhasset, aged 11 years, ditto, by a bull of the
Pope's dispensation.
1522, William Hogeson, by Thomas Earl, &c.
1541, Edward Thwayts, by Ant. Thwayts, Esq.; in 1603 he returned
162 communicants to be here.
1632, Nathaniel Flick, S. T. P. by Francis Thwayts, Gent.
Nathaniel Joceling, A.M.
1662, Ger. Wood, S. T. P. by Matt. Chapman, &c.
1665, Robert Steward A. M. by William Brown.
1675, John Sutton, by Mary Steward, widow.
1681, Phil. Hill, by Mary Sutton.
1702, Thomas Coleman, by William and Roger Coleman.
1719, James Smith, by Robert Stone, clerk, executor of Thomas
Coleman.
1720, John Bourn, by Robert Stone.
1724, John Coleman. Ditto.
1733, John Coleman, by John Howes, Esq.
1753, Edmund Hopkinson, died rector in 1758; the patronage in
Clare-hall, Cambridge.
1759, William Green, rector, presented by Clare Hall.
In a north chapel dedicated to St. Mary.
Orate p. a'ia Margarete Whytwell, olim uxor. Joh. Whytwell, que
migravit de hoc seculo 25, Jan. 1497; and the arms of Whytwell, a
cross patonce, impaling a chevron, between three owlets, Appleyard.
Orate p. a'ia Geor. Thwayt, Gent. and a gravestone for Edward
Thwayt, Gent.
Here were the guilds of St. George, the Trinity, and St. Mary, and
a new tabernacle made for St. Mary in 1451; also the lights of St.
George, the Trinity, St. Mary, St. Nicholas, and St. Christopher.
Pope Eugenius, by bull, confirmed the grant of the noble woman,
Mabilia de Bec, of lands and the men of John, son of Ablac in Flokethorp with their customs and services to the church of the Holy Trinity
of Norwich. (fn. 8)
John de la Chambre aliened a messuage and 20 acres of land here
for a chantry in this church by patent Ao. 6 Edward II.
Temporalities of Norwich priory were 63s. 4d. of Wyndham 5s. of
Hickling 6d.
Camois bore, or, on a chief gules, three plates—Swathing, azure, a
bend argent—Thwayts, argent, on a fess between three lis, gules, as
many bezants.