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1626-1967

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1561-1838

BRAUNCEWELL: DUNSBY ST ANDREW           TF 040515

The site of Dunsby St Andrew, or Coldunsby as it was known in the sixteenth century, occupies an exposed position on the heath one kilometre south west of Brauncewell, and is now part of Brauncewell parish (Fig 5). The name, 'Dunn's homestead', is Danish in form, but the first reference to it is found in Domesday Book (1). At this time it appears to have identified a twelve-carucate hundred (the Lincolnshire equivalent of the vill), and therefore does not exclusively refer to settlement in Dunsby itself, for six carucates which were soke of Ramsey Abbey's manor of Quarrington 'in Dunsby' were both in 1051 and subsequently said to lie in Cranwell (2). The later settlement is represented by six carucates of sokeland which belonged to Geoffrey Alselin's large estate of Ruskington and probably had its origin as an element in an early shire which encompassed much of the wapentake of Flaxwell (3). In 1086 Dunsby was of modest size with a recorded population of thirteen sokemen and one bordar. Geoffrey had two teams in demesne, but these were probably managed from his inland in Brauncewell, and the relationship between the vill and the manorial caput in Ruskington may have remained essentially tributary. There is no explicit evidence of the form of settlement at this time, but it is likely that dispersed smallholdings were the norm: in 1182 some selions in the territory of Dunsby were still known as 'the Toftes' (4). In the mid twelfth century, however, the land was enfeoffed. The lord's hall was almost certainly situated in neighbouring Brauncewell, and much of the land in the village was given by successive lords to Catley Priory, Newbo Abbey, and the Knights Templar of Temple Bruer in the later twelfth century (5). But onerous labour dues were imposed on the peasantry, if not already rendered in 1086 (most land was held in villeinage by 1287) and the process of manorialisation probably encouraged some nucleation of settlement around the church (6). The existence of granges, like that of Newbo Abbey, however, points to the continuing importance of dispersed patterns in the landscape (7)

The concentration of monastic lands in Dunsby and their exploitation through granges may have led to contraction of settlement in the thirteenth century as arable farming gave way to pastoral. With the climatic and social changes of the next century, the process probably quickened, and by 1428 there were only six servants, presumably paid labourers, living there (8). Dunsby, then, was already shrunken when, after the Dissolution, the manor was bought by Robert Carre of Sleaford, and the area of tillage was laid down to grass for sheep, the redundant peasants evicted, and the church and parsonage demolished. By 1563 there were five householders left in the vill, and the only substantial structure was the hall (9). Various members of the Carre and Death families remained in residence until the house was occupied by Parliamentary troops in the Civil War. They left it in a half ruined condition and it was never reoccupied (10). By the nineteenth century there were only three cottages left in Dunsby, although it was stated that the foundations of the church 'and of a large mansion, may still be seen' (11).

The layout of the earthworks bears little resemblance to a village site, and may be more readily interpreted as a building complex, perhaps including some garden remains (Fig 7). Aerial photographs show in more detail a group of buildings round a yard centre west on the site (12). The field is named Hall Close on the 1839 map (13) and the site can almost certainly be identified with that of the sixteenth century manor house. In 1872 Trollope mentions 'portions of the garden wall' but says that there is no trace of the chapel and houses (10). One particular individual structure south of the main complex, is about 12 metres across, consistent in size with a dovecote. Tradition gathered by the late Mrs. E. H. Rudkin, places the church west of the main road, beneath the present Dunsby House (converted some years ago from the last pair of cottages); if the cottages were post 1842 (they were probably erected by the Bristol estate in the second half of the nineteenth century) this would explain the lack either of earthworks or of ploughed-out building stone from a church. Field walking west of Dunsby House has produced little evidence of occupation, although the ploughed out remains of dry stone walls can still be seen. These surround closes of about nine hectares (twenty acres) in size which are apparently those shown on the Brauncewell Tithe map; they are not necessarily of any earlier date than enclosure of the heath, which took place in this area in the late eighteenth century. However, aerial photographs in the possession of North Kesteven District Council clearly show a few ploughed out crofts immediately north of Dunsby House. It is not certain that there was more of the village east of the road.

1. E. Ekwall, The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-Names, Oxford 1960, 153; Lincs DB, 10/3; 64/7.

2. D. R. Roffe, 'The Lincolnshire Hundred', Landscape History 3, (1981), 27-36; Cartularium Monasterii de Rameseia, eds W. H. Hart, P. A. Lyons, London 1884-93, i. 43, 67, 280; ii. 137, 268; iii. 167, 211, 221, 314, 315.

3. D. R. Roffe, 'Origins', Sleaford, eds C. M. Mahany, D. R. Roffe, Stamford 1979, 11-16.

4. Transcripts of Charters Relating to Gilbertine Houses, ed. F. M. Stenton, Lincoln 1922, LRS 18, 83.

5. LRdeS, 341; BF, 1024; Transcripts of Charters Relating to Gilbertine Houses, ed. F. M. Stenton, Lincoln, 1922, LRS 18, 83; Templars, 87; Mon Ang vi, 888.

6. CI ii, 392-3.

7. Religious Houses ii, 95.

8. Norwich, 247; Taxatio Ecclesiastica, RC London 1812, 61a; FA iii, 337.

9. R. W. Ambler, M. Watkinson, 'The Agrarian Problem in Sixteenth-Century Lincolnshire: Two Cases from the Court of Star Chamber', LHA 11, (1976), 13-4; Trollope, 234-5.

10. Trollope, 234-5.

11. White 1842, 628; White 1856, 445.

12. CCAP, ARC 62-4

13. LAO, Tithe Map 639

Text courtesy of D.R.Roffe from his excellent  History site

 

BRAUNCEWELL                            TF 045523

In recent years the site known as Brauncewell Lodge or Grange has developed as a small village, but the original settlement of Brauncewell was situated on the edge of the heath some two miles to the east where the medieval church still stands (Fig 5). The place is first noticed in Domesday Book. In 1086 there was one small manor of two carucates and six bovates - the area is one of extremely high carucation - which was held by Alfred of Lincoln in succession to a certain Aldene. Most of the land, however, was soke of Geoffrey Alselin's manor of Ruskington, and it seems likely that the whole of Brauncewell was formerly a minor element in a shire which had its caput there. By 1086 the tributary dues which held the estate together were under pressure, and in Brauncewell were already giving way to new forms of exploitation. Alfred's manor had been booked out of the shire before the Conquest, and Geoffrey Alselin had established a demesne there and further provided for two of his men in the reign of King William (1). Subsequently all of the land was granted to the successors - whether direct or otherwise is not clear - of these tenants when the land was enfeoffed in the mid twelfth century, and Alfred's manor was likewise demised in hereditary fee. All three fees descended into the fifteenth century, but much of their land had passed to the foundations of Catley, Haverholme, Newbo, and the Temple at Temple Bruer by the thirteenth century (2). At the Dissolution almost the whole settlement was acquired by Robert Carre, and the manor descended to the present day as part of the Bristol estate (3).

As in Dunsby, there may have been a degree of dispersed settlement before the Conquest, but manorialisation was probably responsible for nucleation on the present site. In 1086 there were thirteen sokemen, three villeins, and five bordars in Brauncewell, representing a population of perhaps a hundred individuals or so. The subsequent desertion of the site has been attributed to a catastrophic fire (4), but the fall in population appears to have been a far more gradual process. The grant of land to religious houses must have taken much land out of arable cultivation in the thirteenth century and probably led to the contraction of the village. Climatic changes compounded the shrinkage and by the early fourteenth century there even seems to have been a labour shortage, for direct exploitation gave way to the leasing of estates (5). The Black Death appears to have exacerbated the situation, and in 1406 it was reported that two tenements in Brauncewell were wasted 'and all the land belonging to [them] lies uncultivated, and in the lord's hands for want of tenants' (6). Despite the enclosure of land for sheep, there was some recovery in the sixteenth century, and by 1616 there were 60 communicants in the combined parishes of Brauncewell and Dunsby (7). In the nineteenth century there were still a few houses there, and a population of 131, but this included the Lodge area. Only the Manor House farm and its buildings remain on the site at the present time (8).

The larger area of settlement is aligned east-west along one street, and the rectangular shapes of small stone houses and stone-walled crofts are clearly visible (Fig 6). From the ground it can be seen that these extend eastwards beyond the scheduled site into a field now under plough, and at the time of survey the farmer confirmed that ploughing had taken place there long before the site was scheduled. The earthworks south of the church, in the field called Church Close (9), and aligned north-south, are of quite different character. They consist of larger, almost square enclosures with fewer obvious remains of buildings, although some foundations are visible on air photographs (10). That illustrated (Pl II), taken in snow in 1978, reveals regularly spaced dark squares in each of these enclosures. On the 1839 map two large ponds are shown at the south and south-east end of the complex and, being adjacent to the Manor House, the whole area would appear to be formal gardens in which water was was a feature. Perhaps the square marks represent statuary or regularly spaced ornamental trees.

1. Lincs DB, 27/45; 64/6.

2. LRdeS, 341; BF, 1024; RH i, 281a; FA iii, 154, 155, 205; CI ii, 392-3, 423; CI iv, 86; CI 181; CI 191; CI xii, 295; CI xvi, 86; CIM vii, 170; Trollope, 213-5; 'Haverholme Charters' ed. C. W. Foster, Lincolnshire Notes and Queries 17, 29; Religious Houses ii, 95, 125, 145.

3. Trollope, 214-5.

4. Trollope, 215.

5. The Knights Hospitallers in England being the Report of Prior Philip de Thame to the Grand Master Elyan de Villanova for AD 1338, eds L. B. Larking, J. M. Kemble, London 1857, 154.

6. CIM vii, 170.

7. Trollope, 216.

8. White 1856, 445.

9. LAO, BRA 641.

10. M. W. Beresford and J. K. St. Joseph, Medieval England, Cambridge 1979, 127-9, Pl. 50; CCAP, CFK 060.

Text courtesy of D.R.Roffe from his excellent  History site