Where were they?

When were they created and where were they?

Reference: ZHE 5/11 Alnwick

CONTEXT

WHEN WERE THEY CREATED?

Only one borough is mentioned in records for Northumberland before 1100. In the northeast, six boroughs were founded in Northumberland and seven in Durham during the period 1100-1200. The rest of Northumberland’s medieval boroughs (16) were first mentioned in early 1200s.* 

* Marian L. Wilson Plan analysis of the medieval boroughs of Northumberland PhD thesis Edinburgh, 1989 

Burgages are medieval. Something similar (gable) may have been present in Britain before the Norman Conquest, but the name burgage has a French origin. 

WHERE WERE THEY?

Boroughs were founded across the country during the Middle Ages. Northumberland has quite a high number of medieval boroughs (23), only five counties had more, Middlesex only had one. 

Although boroughs are usually associated with towns, many of these medieval boroughs were not large. 

Burgages are often found around the marketplace of the borough, near the church and along the main roads into a settlement. 

They were deliberately placed to be where the most people would be passing by. This made them ideal for tradespeople who sold their wares in the shop fronting onto the street. They often made their products above the shop or in the back house. 

According to the work of Marian Wilson, this is a list of the medieval boroughs of Northumberland: 

Wark* 

Norham 

Holy Island* 

Warenmouth 

Bamburgh* 

Wooler* 

Alnwick* 

Alnmouth* 

Newton 

Warkworth* 

Rothbury* 

Harbottle 

Felton* 

Mitford 

Morpeth* 

Newbiggin* 

Newcastle 

Newburn 

Corbridge* 

Hexham* 

Newbrough 

Haydon Bridge* 

Haltwhistle* 

 

*Maps, plans and other documents relating to these places can be found at https://communities.northumberland.gov.uk/  

GIVE IT A GO

  1. Use the list of Medieval boroughs of Northumberland to create a map showing the historic distribution of boroughs across the county.

OTHER ONLINE RESOURCES

Burgages 

Burgage Plots website, fantastic source of information about all aspects of burgage plots: www.burgageplots.info 

Burgage Plots website, page with links to other online sources: https://www.burgageplots.info/links 

Amble and District Local History website, page about Warkworth (from JC Hodgson A History of Northumberland 1899): https://www.fusilier.co.uk/warkworth_northumberland/warkworth.htm  

Morpeth Conservation Area Review website, page about town’s heritage: https://morpeth-conservation-area-review-luc.hub.arcgis.com/  

Royal Berkshire History for kids website, page about burgage plots (includes diagram): http://www.berkshirehistory.com/kids/burgage_plots.html  

Marian L. Wilson Plan analysis of the medieval boroughs of Northumberland PhD thesis, Edinburgh, 1989 (PDF download): https://era.ed.ac.uk/bitstream/handle/1842/6884/294040.pdf?sequence=1  

Manorial records 

Cumbrian Manorial Records website from Lancaster University (includes glossary of manorial terms): 

https://www.lancaster.ac.uk/fass/projects/manorialrecords/manors/whatis.htm  

Digital Humanities Institute website (Shffield University), pages about Conisbrough Manor (includes glossary of manorial terms): https://www.dhi.ac.uk/conisbrough/index.html  

Manorial Documents Register database from The National Archives: https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/manor-search  

Hexham 

Hexham Local History Society website, page with gallery of leather working images: https://www.hexhamhistorian.org/historic-hexham/photograph-archive/photo-archive-choices/hexham-choices/industry-and-transport-gallery/leather-gallery/