UNDER this heading we must
first inquire into the origin of the word Berwick, and then into the origin
and history of the town and Guild. It is well known that various attempts,
all unsuccessful, have been made to discover the origin of the word. In
Holinshed's ' Scotland' there is the following legend: In the 9th century,
during the reign of Kenneth, King of Scotland, the strongest castle in the
whole country Kenneth bestowed upon that valiant captene named "Bar," whose
counsel and forward service stood the Scots in no small stead in the English
wars—that fortress ever after called by the name Dunbar, that is to say, the
Castle of "Bar."' May not the 'bar' in Berwick and in Dunbar be one and the
same word?
Another story runs thus:
After this Armoger (54 a.d., ob.) reigned his son Westman and wele governed
the lande, and in his tyme came Roderik, a Gascoigne, into this land, unto
Stenmore. Thanne King Westman assembled a gret oyste and faught with Roderik
and slough hym in Bataille, and than he gave theyme a forlete countre whos
chiuetaine [chieftain] was called Beryng, and ther began a town called
Berwyke, and edified and bilde all the cuntrye aboote and become ryche menne;
bot their were no wommen among theym; and the Britains wolde not marie with
theym because they were strangers, wharfor thei sent ovir the see into
Irelande to the gentills to sende theym wommen both of gentilwomen and of
commoners.'
In support of this view: 'Berengus
interfecto Roderigo domino suo obtinuit locum habitandi in Britannia a mari
et postea aedificavit villam de Berwick'.
The Rev. Joseph Stevenson,
who is certainly an authority, says that Doddington may be the head of the
family of Duddo, and gave it his name; and that his descendants founded
Doddington. Berrington, again, is from 'Beor'. May not Berwick be the town
of 'Beor'?
Chalmers, in his 'Caledonia'
asserts that North Berwick derived its name from the same source as
Berwick-upon-Tweed, which, in all the early charters, is called South
Berwick. It means the 'bare' or naked village or castle. North Berwick
stands on the naked shore of the Forth, being a small narrow promontory
projecting from the town into the Frith.
Again, the prefix 'Par' or
'Bar' in Celtic names generally denotes a Border tribe. Hence the name of
the Parisii, who occupied the country adjoining the Senones. It was the most
northerly part of the possessions of the Celts as distinguished from the
Belgians. Hence probably the bar of the river, or the barrier of a town,
Query, then, is Berwick equal to Bar vie, the Border town ?
Berwick is the same as
Beretum, Villa Frumentariae or grange. It is not likely that Berwick was a
villa Frumentariae or grange when it must have received its name from the
Saxon settlers at the mouth of the Tweed. It was much more probably named
from the circumstances of its want of verdure, from the Anglo-Saxon bare,
nudus, and wic, vicus.
Others, again, incline to the
very simplest interpretation, viz., that the 'Ber' is simply 'Bere' or
Barley, and 'vie' a town; so that Berwick is the Beretown. Either it might
mean that the lands around Berwick grow excellent barley, or that much of
the grain was sold in Berwick, that there were large granaries in the town
in ancient times.
We cannot omit the fact that
the bear has long been connected with the arms of Berwick. A very early
specimen is found on a seal attached to one of the Coldingham charters which
is still in the Durham Register. It bears date about the year 1250 a.d. How
the bear became attached might affect the etymology of the word. Between
'Bear' and the first syllable of Berwick there is a close resemblance. It is
much more probable, however, that the bear on the Berwick arms was suggested
by the name, than that the origin of the name had anything to do with bears.
The second syllable may be from 'vyk' or 'vik' a 'bay 'in the Scandinavian
tongue, or simply from the Latin vicus. Further than this, it can serve no
good purpose to pursue the subject. The word seems to yield no indisputable
etymology. Its spelling, also, varies immensely. Some of the more curious
forms are given: Beruuic, Beruic, Beruwyk, Beruik, Berwyq, Bar-whek,
Berwugca, Berewyc, Berwicchii. The real name is Berwick-upon-Tweed, or
Berewicum-super-Twedam. In passing from the origin of the name to the origin
of the town we pass to equally difficult ground. There is no reason to
believe that the beginning of Berwick differed much from that of other
seaside towns. The following remarks of Cosmo Innes are peculiarly
applicable to Berwick:
'I have alluded to some of
the causes which determined the position of our Scotch burghs. The royal
demesne and castle formed the nucleus of some, as of Ayr, etc. The cathedral
or great abbey attracted others. . . . Some have an evident fitness as
barriers against the wild mountaineers . . . But more of our ancient burghs
owe their origin to the mouth of a river, indenting our rugged coast, and
tempting some adventurous natures or some sea-rovers from Flanders to seek
shelter there for their cobbles and busses, to carry on their fishing, and
to establish their infant trade and even some rude manufacture. Such lovers
of the sea needed little more. They had the shelter of the cove and the bar
against storms, a sufficient stream to drive their corn-mill and their waulk-mill.
They had in the constitution of their race the power of uniting and
submitting to authority, and a coherence and vitality quite sufficient to
meet on any common emergency. Such towns were, I suppose, as old as anything
like society among us, and probably long before any of the ascertained facts
of our history, when later some enlightened sovereign like David I. led
these burghers forward, protecting their industry by his laws and a charter,
and further by the natural defence of a little castle built at the head of
the town, where a few of the King's "Milites," or a body of townsmen under
the King's bailie, arming suddenly, could show face against any roving
galley of " heathen Danes," or equally lawless robbers of our own hills
seeking to reap where they had not sowed—the aboriginal village proud of its
new charter, passes for the creation of a sovereign who only gave legal form
and sanction to its old customs.'*
All trace of the origin of
Berwick is lost, but, in these lines of Innes, we have the most probable
account of the formation of early Berwick; for until the time of David we
learn nothing of it as a town. But, in the beginning of his reign, it had an
existence—a corporate existence, too—from the fact of its actual position
and influence. Its aldermen, as we have said in a previous page, were
learned in all the usages of a burgh; and whence could this knowledge be
derived, if it were not a burgh obeying a recognised code of laws? It became
a Royal Burgh under David, and a member of the Court of the Four Burghs. It
was evidently then a most important town, growing in activity and trade. It
was thus the Anglo-Norman Burgh, with its feudal castle and civic
population, distinct and separate from the garrison, which was the model of
the burghs established and confirmed by David beyond the Tweed. It may be
doubted whether any free communities engaged in commerce and occupying
walled towns were in existence much before this reign, even in the Lothians;
though the germs of such societies may have existed at several places at
that early date. Had there been burghs or walled towns in any part of Saxon
Northumbria before the close of the eleventh century, the invading Scots
would surely have been checked before they reached the gates of Durham.'
We begin our history of the
Guild from the reign of David, and at once pass to consider the laws that
governed this early society. There were undoubtedly guilds in Berwick
earlier than this reign, for guilds seem to have existed in towns from their
earliest beginnings. The term ' guild' most probably means a feast. The
craftsmen of each trade met occasionally over their feast of ale and bread
to discuss matters of deep interest to themselves, and thus formed guilds,
which were in their nature simply trade associations. These separate guilds
could never, in their disunited form, govern the township. The community,
therefore, chose the Borough Reeve, or Provost, who should preside at their
common meetings where they deliberated on their welfare and their freedom.
Each burgh seems to have been originally divided into four wards, similarly
to a shire into four quarters. Over every ward was placed a Bailie, a type
of the rural Mair of the Quarter; the leading personage being the Burgh
Reeve or Provost, chosen annually with the Bailies and Bedells of the
community of the burghers, in the first burgh moot held after Michaelmas.
Complete self-government, indeed, was conferred from the outset upon the
Scottish burghers by a Sovereign desirous of attracting such a class to his
kingdom. And the enlightened policy of David, together with the state of
peace and prosperity which he secured for the whole of the north of England,
as well as for the settled portion of his own kingdom, soon filled the
walled towns, which rapidly sprang up on every side, with a crowd of willing
settlers from South Britain and from, Flanders, who were guaranteed the
enjoyment of even more than the usual freedom and privileges under the royal
protection. The original burghers as a class were, with few exceptions, of
foreign extraction—emigrants from Southern Britain, and, not unfrequently,
Flemings, as in Berwick, where the Flemings long dwelt apart as a separate
Guild/J Their common interests gave rise to unions of several burghs into a
sort of parliament. Of this nature was the Hanse of Northern Burghs, to
which David had granted his protection, confirmed by King William, and a yet
more memorable combination in the South, consisting of the Four Burghs,
Berwick, Roxburgh, Edinburgh, and Stirling. These were the Four Burghs from
whose deliberations emanated the code of laws that still bears their name.
Such was the origin of these laws, which, in due time, received the sanction
of the King's Court of Parliament, but which, even independent of that
action, were received as authoritative by all the burghs of Scotland. We see
here the real origin of our third estate, which had this defined
organization and authority, and constituted that remarkable parliament of
the curia quattuor burgorum centuries before the burghs, as one of those
estates, sat and voted in the national Parliament.
Berwick's interests
internally were in the hands of the Bailies and the Provost, who guided the
community prosperously onward. Appeals from their decisions went to this
Court of the Four Burghs, which met once a year in Haddington, presided over
by the Chamberlain of Scotland (hence called the Chamberlain Air'), and was
competent to decide cases of appeal from all the burghs of Scotland.
Representatives from the Four Burghs sat in the Court with the Chamberlain,
to aid him in reviewing the decisions of individual burghs. What were the
precise functions of this Court cannot now be fully ascertained; but it is
obvious that the Court decided questions involving the usages of burghs and
the rights and privileges of burgesses, and even regulated, in regard to
such matters, the principle of movable succession.' In that assembly,
probably, were ordered and assessed the taxes which the burghs contributed
to the necessities of the State. We know, indeed, that they joined in the
aids of public contributions from a very early period/%
In the Chamberlain Air
inquiries were, likewise, made whether the Bailies and other officers of the
King in the several burghs performed their duties properly. For instance, in
one Chamberlain Air which is extant, the date of which is uncertain, there
are inquiries—
'If the Bailies do judgment
and justice at all times, and equally to the puir and the ritch; if they tak
gifts for doing justice to any or mak themselves parties in Court, or kepe
the assize of brede, aill, and flesche ; if they search thrice in the year
for casting furth of lipper folk, and have caused wechtes and elnes to be
duly examined. Inquiry is to be made if brewster wives sell aill conform to
the price set upon it by the taistcrs, and if they selle before it has been
prized by the tasters, and if they sell by potfuls and not by sealed
measures.
'Again, if fleschers by ony
vthyr than sound beastes or sell otherwise than publicly in the market, and
keep the assise imposed on beef, mutton and pork. Also inquire if there be
ony common sklanderers not punished, and if double wechtes be used, one for
buying and one other for selling. If ony are using the burgh freedom who are
not free, and who used the freedom and have not biggit land after a year.
Inquiry is to be made of coukes makand reddie flesche or fish in pastry not
fit for the use of man, or if, after they have kepit such the proper time,
they heat it again and sell it to the manifest deception of the people.'
Another important and curious
inquiry is set down in this long and inexhaustible list. It is anent some
four score marks of Silver granted by our Lord the King for the cleansing of
the town'of Berwick into whose hands they have come, and whether into the
hands of private persons, and the town was not cleansed of that money/ Some
malappropriation of money is evident here. Innes hints that if the date of
this grant could be discovered, then the date of the whole 'Air' could be
ascertained. This is impossible, as no data remain whereby anything of this
grant can be learned at all.
In the proceedings of the
cAir' we have the manner given at length in which they 'chalance' the 'Ail
Taistares':
'In the first they are nocht
redic at the fourth puttyn of the Takyn for to tast ail. Secondly, they are
nocht rcdy to tast ail as oft as the Brewster tunnis. The third, that they
wannes [go] within the hous, whar thai sulde stand in the middis of the
streyt befor the dur, and send an of thar falowis in with the bedal that sul
chesc of what pot he will tast, the whilk he sal present to his falowis, and
thai sail discern thar apone, efter the assise to thaim put The fourth, that
they present nocht the defaultis before the Balzeis in the next Court
followand. The fifth is that thai mak nocht the assise of ail, but sayis
sympilly, "it is gud or it is ewill."'
This curious custom would not
be unacceptable work for some even at the present day; but, for the sake of
decency, it is to be hoped that the € ail' was not strong, for, if there
were many houses to visit in one day, the consequences with heady ' ail *
may be imagined. Baxters, fleschers, and salmon-fishers were all under the
control of this Court. Various other matters were settled in the same
manner. Its whole powers may not be thoroughly known, but surely in these
remarks enough has been said to give us an idea of a very busy Court, and
one which, if well worked, performed an important and extensive duty.
There are two sets of laws
published—the one relating to the internal regulations of the town or burgh,
and called the 'Statutes of the Gild' (Statuta Gilda) the other referring
more to the relationship between those who lived in the country and those
who lived in the burgh. These were the laws of the Four Burghs referred to
above. The original language of both is Latin. Both sets of laws have been
published by different editors. The whole set of Guild Laws in Latin, and
the first seventeen in Scotch, were printed in the first volume of the 'Acts
of the Scottish Parliament'. Cosmo Innes, in the first volume of the Burgh
Record Society, published them again in the same form, and translated the
remainder in Latin into modern English. Toulmin Smith, in 'English Gilds'
has printed only an inaccurate copy, taken from a work published at Rouen
and edited by H. Houard, a learned French antiquary, and from a German work
entitled 'Das Gildewesen im Mittelalter,' edited by Dr. Wilda. Thomson and
Innes edited their copies from what is known as the 'Ayr MSS./ whichj are
now in the Advocates' Library, Edinburgh. Through the carelessness of the
custodiers, no Latin copy has been preserved in the Berwick archives. In
1568 evidently a copy was in existence; for, among the writings and charters
mentioned that year in the i Guild Book,' as handed over to the custody of
Anthony Temple, Mayor, there is this interesting notice: ' One Book in Paper
wryten in Lattin touchinge the statuts of the Towne of Barwick.' It seems to
have been entirely overlooked by the authorities here that even an English
copy still existed among the Records of the Guild. Toulmin Smith asked the
question of a late town clerk, and his answer was, * That no such laws were
here, and never had been.' These laws were all the time in his keeping, in
the English of the later part of the fifteenth or early part of the
sixteenth century. I do not think the language is older, and the handwriting
is certainly not older, than the reign of Henry VII.
The copy is a specimen of very careful and very beautiful penmanship.
These laws will be found complete in Appendix No. VII.
Meanwhile we shall give an idea of their scope. They bear to have
been enacted under the presidency of Robert Bernham, Mayor of
Berwick-upon-Tweed, and Simon Maunsel and other good men of the burgh. Now
Robert Bernham was Mayor in 1238 and in 1249 The general understanding by
Thomson and Innes is that these laws were made about the latter year.
Probably made is not the proper term; codified seems the more correct. They
were, at that time, brought into unity and harmonized for the good of the
town. These laws greatly resemble, both in form and substance, the Laws of
the Four Burghs. These latter were certainly older than this date; as old as
the reign of David. Thomson says of them, 'They bear a great resemblance to
the Laws of Newcastle made in the reign of Henry II.,
and probably in use as early as Henry I.'
(1100-1135), that is, contemporary with David. The Latin in both those of
the Four Burghs and those of Newcastle is identical, or nearly so. Here is
the Latin of the first law of 'Leges Quattuor Burgorum,' followed by the
Latin of the first of the Newcastle Laws:
'Quilibet Burgenses potest
maniare foris habitentes infra forum suum et extra infra domum suam et extra
sine licencia prepositis sine nisi commercia vel nundine teneantur in burgo
et nisi fuerit in exercitu regis vel in custodia Castelli.'
'Burgenses possunt maniare
foris habitantes infra suum forum et extra et infra suum domum et extra et
infra suum Burgum et extra sine licentia prepositis nisi comitia teneantur
in burgo et nisi in exercitu custodia Castelli.'
The resemblance here is more
than accidental. It is well-known that David was frequently about Newcastle
during his reign. His son Henry was Earl of Northumberland ; there is,
therefore, no improbability in supposing these laws to have the same origin.
Again, the customs leviable at the ports of Berwick and Newcastle were the
same in nature, and in amount on any given article, which clearly shows the
close connection between the two towns at that time.
To return to the laws of the
Guild. There is no doubt but that the laws, codified in 1249, had been in
existence since David's reign, and towns had been governed by methods
indicated therein. The reason given by Bernham and his coadjutors for
drawing up these laws is thus set forth: Up to this time a number of Guilds
had existed with divers interests, and not always working harmoniously one
with the other. Now the desire was to amalgamate all these Guilds into one,
'that from hensflzrth that no man presume to procure any other gilde within
our burgh, but all gang together with on assent and trew lowff.' This desire
seems to have become general at this epoch, and probably it shadows forth
the growing influence of the merchant class. The Guilds were generally
tending to become mere Merchant Guilds, and to a very great extent all
tradesmen were debarred entrance thereinto. Also it is ordered that no
bowcher by nother woll nor hyds whils he occupys that craft, or melles with
the slaying of bees.' No butcher while he handles the axe can be a merchant
or meddle with the staple trade of the town. These Guilds were very
arbitrary and conservative in their action. No unfreeman could trade and no
freeman was permitted to assist any unfreeman in his trade. Freemen, and
these alone, were to have entire control over all commerce coming within
reach of the burgh. Hence the Guild was very careful that everything traded
in was good. 'Noe shomaker to tand eny hyds bot of whom the erys and homes
be bothe of on lenthe.' 'If it hapyn the byere of any merchandise se it gud
above and wars vnder, the seller shall mend it after the seyght of the
Feryngmen/ However, entire selfishness did not regulate all Guild concerns.
There was a kinder, a more lovable side to it. In short, the Guild formed
not only an exclusive trading society of merchants, but also a society for
helping their poorer and more unfortunate brethren. 'If any of oure brether
of oure gilde fawll in age or in poverte of in seknes, and not hawyinge
whervpon he may lefF, at the disposision of our alderman and other of oure
brether he shalbe releffed with the goods of our gylde.' If anyone died poor
and left wife or daughter, the wife was to be relieved, and provision to be
made for the daughter, either to enable her to marry or to enter a religious
house. The true bequeathing of property was also clearly laid down, as well
as the amount of fine for admission to the freedom, which was asserted to be
40s., and in addition every freeman who had goods worth £40 must possess a
horse worth 40s. The trade regulations were strict, minute, and definite. No
married woman could trade in woo]. There must be no sale of goods but in the
market-place and in market hours. Forestalling the market was a serious
offence. No wool was to be taken from sheepskins from Whitsunday till
Martinmas. Wool from the skins of recently-clipped sheep would be short and
useless. Herring must be sold to a freeman at the same price as they were
bought for in the boat. A favourite fine for breaking any trade regulation
was a tun of wine forfeited to the Guild. The government of the town by
these laws was vested in twenty-four feering-men, a maior, and four bailifs.
The Maire and bailleffs be elect and chosyn be the consideration and syght
of the comonty; and if there be any contravers or debayt in the chesyn of
them, then they shall be chosyn be the oth of the xxiiij ferynge-men/ The
deliberations of this body were secret, and all were bound to secresy, under
penalties of dismissal after the third offence, and he that was in this
manner disfranchised was to be considered for ever 'a vntrewe man.'
Attendance at meetings was compulsory, and he that came not at the ringing
of the bell was fined 12d. There was to be no quarrelling among the
representatives as they went to the Guild or during the meeting, or in
returning home, under a penalty of 3s. 4d. If the quarrel resulted in
striking with the fist, he that was proved to be in fault was fined 100
marks, and had, moreover, to amend to him that was struck what the feryngmen
judged expedient. 'If any brother drawe blode of another with a clowbe or
with any other wapyn, or maym hym of any membre, he shalbe condempened at
the arbeterment of the aldermen/ These forfeits or fines were not to be
lessened at any 'Mane's prayers.' So careful were they over their behaviour,
and so little faith had they in the self-restraint of their neighbours,
that, considering prevention better than cure, they forbade a knife to be
carried into Guild, under a fine of 1s.
Thirty-eight of these
regulations appear to have been made in 1248. The remaining eight have
separate dates, and were drawn up from 1281 to 1294. The feryngmen for this
purpose met in the church of St. Nicholas and in the hall of the Friars of
the Holy Trinity ;* although the Berfreyt is mentioned in the body of the
code as the place for meeting. In the Ayr MSS. the separate enactments
number fifty-one ; but there is no important difference between the two
sets. The Berwick Code is shorter, as if the language had been stripped of
some of the redundancy of the early MSS.
The code of the Four Burghs
is a much more extensive series of enactments. One hundred and nineteen are
given in Innes's volume of the Burgh Record Society. We cannot load our
history with these laws; nor is there any necessity, for we have already
referred to their close resemblance to English laws, amongst which most of
them may be read.
Berwick continued to be
governed on the basis of these laws till the charter of James in 1603, or,
more correctly it might be said, till the passing of the Municipal
Corporation Act in 1835. The Guild brethren were undoubtedly assisted to
some extent by the laws of the Four Burghs, which, along with the Guild
Laws, gave all necessary powers and furnished all necessary regulations. The
laws of the Four Burghs are characterized as more complete and compact, and
have in them more of the qualities of a body of statute law, than any other
fragments of ancient legislation.
It is a problem yet unsolved
whether any early charters were conferred upon the town. The presumption is
that such was the case. None, however, have been found, and none are
referred to save in the time of the Alexanders. The nature of a grant of
Alexander HI. is still extant. It is set forth in an inquisition in the time
of Edward III., still preserved in the Tower of London. By this inquisition
the jury returned, * That in all past times the town of Berwick-upon-Tweed
had been a free burgh, and had had a Mayor and Bailiffs and a Common Clerk,
and that these officers were each entitled to a certain annual fee ; that,
when the revenues of the burgh were in the hands of Alexander III. of
Scotland, these salaries were paid by his Chamberlain (an officer whose
duties were then similar to those of the Treasurer of the Exchequer of
England), until Alexander granted the town with all its revenues and issues,
reserving an annual rent to the Crown payable at his exchequer at Berwick,
to the Mayor and commonalty of that burgh, after which the salaries were
paid out of this annual rent.'
Considerable light is thrown
upon the subject of the nature of the revenues of Berwick by records at a
date subsequent to this, but no contemporary records of this period remain.
It may safely be concluded that the King of Scotland was the lord of the
soil and of the fisheries of the Tweed, and that he gave grants —some in fee
subject to annual rents, called 'Burgh Mail' a term of payment that remained
in Berwick till quite a recent date; and some upon lease—that certain tolls
and customs were also payable in respect to merchandise, and that the lands
were subject to a Castle-guard rent for the maintenance of Berwick Castle.
These revenues were chargeable with the expense of keeping the Castle in
repair, with the salaries of the officers appointed to collect them, with
the annual fees to the Mayor, and Bailiff, and Town Clerk for executing
certain duties within the burgh, the nature of which is not explained.
In 1296, Berwick was
conquered by the English; but it is quite evident, from the after-history of
its records, that even Edward I. did not change its government, but
continued all its officers as in the time of Alexander HI., viz.,
'Chancellor, Chamberlain, Sheriff, Justiciar, Maior, and Bailiffs'.
The original charter of
Edward I. is not to be found ; but, in the confirmations by'the other Kings,
it is quoted at length; and from a translation in the c Oath Book' in
Berwick archives, the substance is given as follows. We omit the
introductory matters:
'Know ye that for the
betteringe of oure town of Barwick-upon-Tweed and the profitte and comodytie
of our men of the same towne, we will and grant, for us and our heires, that
our foresaid towne be from hensforth a free Burroughe, and the men of the
same town free Burgesses; and that they have all liberties and free customes
to a free Burroughe belonging for ever. And that they may have a Guild Hall
or place of meeting, and a Brotherhoode or Guild of Merchants and other
customes and liberties to that Guild belonginge, so that none of that Guild
make any merchandize within that Burrough, but by the will of the burgesses
of the same Borrough. Furthermore we grant to the same burgesses that they
of themselves elect every yeare one Maior, a discreete and meete man who
shall be faithfull to us and our heirs and serviceable in the government of
the same Borough, so that when the Mayor is chosen he shalbe presented to us
or our Chancellor, Treasurer, and Barrons of Exchequer of Scotland (yf we or
our heirs be not then present), and to us shall swear fealty, and that it
shall belong to the same burgesses that Maior in the end of the year to
amove, and him or another to elect and present in manner aforesaid. And that
the Maior and Comonaltie of the same Boroughe of themselves electe ffbwer
Baliffs descreete and meete men which faithfully shall doe and execute those
things which to their office dothe apperteyne within the Borough aforesaid
and to us and to our heirs before the said Maior shall swear fealty. That
the burgesses shall have power to bequeath their property in their last will
and testament without any hindrance from us or our ministers. That they be
impleaded only in their towne of Berwick before the Maior and Baliffs. That
they haue the retorne of all wrytts whatsoever touching that Borough, and
that no one interferc unless in defaulk of the Maior and Baliffs. That the
burgesses elect a coroner who shall be presented to the Maior, to whom he
shall swear to act in his office faithfully. Further we grant that a certain
prison be maide and had within the said Borough to chastise malefactors
there taken ; and that a gallowse likewise be erected without the said
Borough upon our owne grounde, so that the said Maior of infangthief and
outfangthief may doe judgment. We grant likewise that the Burgesses have
Theolonium, Pontagium, Passagium, Muragium, Pavagium, Canagium, Lastagium,