Alured de Lincoln was noted for his loyalty to King William I. In 1087,the King was attended at Lacock Manor in
Wiltshire by many Earls, Counts and Barons including Alured de Lincoln. From these men the King could obtain
first-hand information about every part of England. This association between the King and his leading barons is
shown by every substantial witness list that has come down from the Conqueror's reign. This relationship determined
the whole character of his government. By the end of his reign, Normans of the baronial class were in office in all
parts of the country.
In the time of Henry 1 we find de Lincoln exercising a right of ownership over some property comprised in this barony by
granting to the church of Tewkesbury two tithes in Tachtona and Le Harpine (Acton in Langton Maltravers and
Harpstone in Church Knowle) which gift was confirmed by the king in 1106. After this nearly all the property
found at one time or another comprised in the barony in the Domesday Survey is found in the possession of the de
Lincoln family or their descendants.
Hutchins
writes, "In the Domesday Book Winterborne St. Martin cannot be distinguished from the many Winterbournes
that occur there
. In the earliest account of this place, the manor was a member
of the Barony of Alured de Lincoln, or de Nichol".
This is the Alfred de Lincolne described by de Seriana who claims a barony of Winterborne St Martin existed. This
conflicts with Hutchins who states the manor was simply a member of de Lincoln's Barony
.
At the time of the General Survey Alured de Lincoln held Wimentone in
Bedfordshire and 51 properties in Lincolnshire. Such a group of manors were known collectively as an honour. None
of them formed a compact territorial unit, and many of them consisted of isolated manors or groups of manors
scattered widely over the country. An honour was a number of manors that devolved together. But over the
centuries the significance has changed . The title of Baron was a title of Nobility. This title, unlike those on
the continent, were purely honorific and was lost if the Baron lost his landed status.
Hutchins follows the view of Dugdale's Baronage
in his description of Alured de Lincoln. He was certainly a baron
who held very numerous manors in Lincolnshire at the time of Domesday, but the precise relationship is not
established. Dugdale treats the Lincolnshire and Dorset Alureds as identical, but it appears to be improbable. The
Dorset Alured might have been a younger son of the Lincolnshire baron, although Kirk prefers to consider him to have
been the son of Colswain de Lincoln, who, he supposes, was brother of the first Alured.
Alured held the park of Dunelsshe (Duntish) and Tyley from the Abbot of Cerne,
by the service of holding his
stirrup when the Abbot was to mount his horse. The Manor of Winterbourne St Martin belonged to the Abbot of
Abbotsbury, Roberto de Monasteris. Alured de Lincoln held the Manor from the Abbot
"debet 10 marcas pro
licentia concordandi se cum, quem verbervit": Meaning the cook of Winterborne, town of Alured de Lincoln, owes
10 marks, the licence to agree with Robert de Monasteris This followed the provision of sustenance to the Abbot who
then agreed to leasing the Manor for a payment of 10 marks. The Abbey was founded in 1026 by King Canute and like
The Abbey of Cerne, it belonged to the Benedictine Order
.
The grant of an honour or land for the chivalrous act of sustaining a cleric was not uncommon. Nicholas de Mynyll
held the Manor of Whorlton in the West Riding of Yorkshire from the Archbishop of Canterbury by serving him with a
drink on the day of his consecration . This manor subsequently passed to the Strangways family who in centuries to
come, would appropriate the abbey lands and honours at Abbotsbury as commissioners acting for King Henry VIII.
He was justicar of Dorset in the reign of Henry I. He gave land near Weymouth to Montacute Priory. In 1115 Alured
de Lincoln was a signatory to a charter of King Henry 1 laying the foundation to the presbytery of Heytesbury near
Warminster in Wiltshire.
It was at this time that the original church of St Martin's was built in the manor. The Norman font, thought to date
from about 1125, is of Purbeck marble with decoration of lead arcading. The other remaining Norman features are the
piers and arches, which are stern and simple without the elaborate carvings of later work. They lend a simple
calmness that gives a sense of tranquillity and peace when the church is empty.
In 1131, he is seen to receive pardon for a debt of six pounds, which he owed for Danegeld in Dorset. This shows
that he was then in possession of the barony. In that year he was excused the payment of forty shillings for his
share of a fine for a murder imposed on the Hundred of Winford, and a like sum in respect to a similar offence in
the Hundred of Newton in Dorset; in both of which Hundreds the family held Manors. Also in 1131, Alured de Lincoln
gave to the King 60 marks of silver that he might have the Manor of Pulham for his life.
He fought in the civil war supporting the
Empress Matilda
against King Stephen. The war came about following Stephen's
succession in 1135 when he crossed the channel and took control of England following the death of Henry 1.
| 
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Empress Matilda |

press
Wareham Castle | For two years Stephen
had little trouble but finally lost the support of Anglo-Norman knights. In 1138 Geoffrey of Anjou invaded Normandy,
King David of Scotland (Matilda's uncle) invaded the north, and Robert of Gloucester (Matilda's half-brother) raised
the standard of rebellion in the west-country. There became two rival courts in England, though Stephen was generally
in a better position than the Empress who rarely held more than a few west-country shires. For his part, Alured de
Lincoln seized Wareham Castle in July 1138 on her behalf. Robert, his son was installed the the new governor of the
castle
Their relative strengths are indicated by the number of surviving charters: 720 issued by Stephen, only 88 by
Matilda. |
After Alured's death Robert, founded the priory at Holme as a cell of Montacute, and among his donations were
the tithes of Langton Herring near Abbotsbury and those of Okeford Alured (later Okeford Fitzpaine). By his wife
Beusa, Robert had issue (besides Andrew and Peter, both of whom witnessed the foundation charter of Holme Priory,
and Albreda, who because a nun at Clerkenwell). Alured II was his son and heir. Alured II was lord of this barony in
1166, when he certified his knights fee in Dorset as amounting to £30. In 1170 he was Sheriff of Dorset following an
inquest of the sheriffs.
1164 saw the passing of the Constitutions of Clarendon. They were highlighted the initial stages of the struggle
between Henry II and archbishop Thomas a Becket. The Constitutions were an attempt by Henry II to define the royal
prerogatives. As Justicar of Dorset, Alured de Lincoln held an important role in enforcing these rules. They also
saw the beginnings of the modern jury system, albeit in very basic form. Article 6 of the constitution stated that
laymen ought not to be accused other than by dependable and legal accusers and witnesses in the presence of the
bishop. It further provided for the sheriff to find twelve men of the neighbourhood to determine the truth of the
matter in accordance with their conscience. Article 7. No one who held land from the King could be excommunicated or
his lands or his land confiscated unless the king, or his justiciar first gave his consent at which point the matter
would be decided by the church court. Article 8 provided for an appeal to the Archbishop.
The power of the Barons including de Lincoln was limited by Article 13. If anyone should forcibly prevent archbishop,
bishop, or archdeacon from administering justice in which he or his men were concerned, then the king should to
bring him to justice. If any one should prevent this he could be arrested and tried. There were a total of 16
articles that formalised relations between the church and the crown.
Pestilence and plague played an important role in the history of Dorset's villages, because not only could they be a
major cause of depopulation but they could, and did, result in the long-term or even permanent abandonment of sites.
Pestilence is highlighted in the 1204 records of King John. They show that William de Newmarket of Martinstown held
land in the counties of Dorset and Somerset. He contacted leprosy and was committed to Godfrey de St Martin "so that
he might answer for them to the exchequer". William de Newmarket was unable to pass any of his lands to his friends
or relatives after he fell sick and they had to revert to the de Lincoln Barony. Opinion is divided as to whether
leprosy was a bar to descent, and the record casts no light upon the point. It seems there was a nervous anxiety
that a leper should respond in person at the Court of the Exchequer and carry infection there. As a consequence the
lands of lepers were taken into the King's hands or in this case the barony. The temptation was that the afflicted
man would try to give away his lands to his friends and relations, with whom he could make a private arrangement,
rather than they should be farmed by a stranger appointed by the King. The fear of the spread of
infection throughout a very mobile nobility was particularly pertinent as the King visited Dorchester in that year
and personally collected taxes and dues at the local Court of Exchequer.
The King had an insatiable desire for hunting. He possessed the Royal forests of Blackmoor,
Gilligham and Bere Regis
and had converted the whole of Isle of Purbeck from a hare warren into a forest . The king's huntsman was Robert de
Winterbourne although it is not know in which of the Winterbourne Valley villages he lived.
He was paid £23 a year for his services. William de Montacute was the sheriff
at that time and he had custody of the woods by the road that ran between Dorchester Powerstock and Bridport. He had the
impossible task to keep them guarded because the King also had them well stocked with game for his pleasure.
|
King John deer hunting |
Poaching of the King's dear was common amongst the villagers. It is on record that Adam, brother of Osbert from
Winford Eagle was fined ½ a mark for poaching the king's deer. It seems likely that much of the King's venison came from the Manor of Martinstown. It is thought a deer park
existed on land in the northeast quarter of the parish when Park Farm formed a part of the manor. This was in a
rectangular area bounded on the north by the Bridport Road (A35), on the west by the road leading due north from the
eastern end of Martinstown village, on the south by the lane past Clandon Farm and on the east by the parish
boundary between Winterborne St. Martin and Winterbourne Monkton beneath the embankments of Maiden Castle.

| The suggestion of a deer park is supported by a group of 'park' field names in the Tithe Apportionment; two fields in
the extreme corner were named 'Park Corner' and 'Park Corner Close'. Today much of this former medieval deer park
is in the hands of the Duchy of Cornwall.
Few animals were kept over winter. In the autumn the surplus stock of sheep, cattle and venison was killed and
salted for winter use. |
Duchy of Cornwall |
Large sums were paid for conveying and salting the King's venison. The salt diet throughout
the winter and lack of vegetable food was thought to be the cause of scurvy, and also considered to account for the
prevalence of leprosy in England in those days.
The Manor passed through two further generations of the de Lincoln family who were all named Alured. His son and
heir was Alured de Lincoln (III) who in 1212 held Langton Herring and this manor.
1215 saw the signing of the Magna Carta at
granted (under considerable duress) by King John at Runnymede on June 15.
This document contained 63 clauses or articles and determined how land was to be held and inherited. It was an
important document that would determine the
rights of landholders and remove interference of the crown from the barons.
|
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Magna Carta |
In 1216 Inquisitions post mortum were introduced by King Henry 111 and continued to be held for nearly 450 years.
When a person died, whether male of female holding land from the Crown (in capite) an inquisition was held to
determine what land was held at the time of the death and who should be the next heir. If the heir happened to be a
minor, the lands descending to him were held in ward by the Crown until he came of age. The wardships were generally
a very lucrative business as the rents and profits of the estate went to the person having charge of the heir until
coming of age.
The de Lincoln's association with the church continued throughout this time and the Manor finally passed to Alured
IV. He was to be found in court in Sherborne before six judges. The matter of issue was the rent he should pay to
the Abbot of Glastonbury for the Manor of Child Okeford. The rent was fixed at 3 shillings a year. He together with
Simon de Montfort and others were founder of the priory at Wareham.
The power of the Barons was the cause of considerable concern to the Crown
and in
particular, the power of the Barony of Alured de Lincoln and his successors was in question. At his death in 1264
there was an inquisition in the Counties of Dorset, Somerset and Wiltshire to determine the extent of the lands
under his control and that of his heirs and of the grants of the same lands by subsequent owners of the Priories of
(East) Holme in Dorset and Montecute in Somerset. He died without male heirs. So it was that the land of Alured IV
passed to his three sisters and their heirs. Margery, the eldest, married Robert Fitz Pain. William de Govis was the
son of the middle daughter, Beatrice. The third sister was Albreda de Lincoln (Aubrey in some references) whose land
passed on her death to the heirs of her sisters. The de Lincoln barony was broken up and dispersed, and finally
became extinct. The author maintains a copy of this inquisition.
Henry III was increasingly unpopular because of his foreign expeditions and the Crown's concern of this family's
power was justified. This was the time of the Baronial Wars, a rebellion of the nobility against the King, staged
between 1263 and 1267. The rebellion was led by Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester who was also the lord of the
Manor of nearby Bere Regis. It was precipitated by Henry's refusal, abetted by Pope Urban IV, to effect the
Provisions of Oxford, amendments to the Magna Carta that had been adopted by the nobility in 1258 in an effort to
curb Henry's abuse of his powers. In 1263 the dispute between the barons and Henry was submitted for arbitration to
King Louis IX of France, whose decision favored the English sovereign. Refusing to accept the decision, de Montfort
and his supporters, resorted to arms. They inflicted a severe defeat on Henry's forces at Lewes in 1264
The Nephews of Alured de Lincoln IV were Robert Fitz Pain and his cousin William de Goviz.
The record shows that for their good service at the Battle of Lewis they gained Royal consent to hold the land that
was to pass "Pro Bono" (without cost or tax) to them following the death of their uncle Alured de Lincoln IV in
consideration of the following:
 | the losses they sustained in battle
(this presumably refers to the loss of the knights they were obliged to supply under their various land holdings)
|
| the waiver of payment of an early form of inheritance tax |
 | doing their homage (to the King). |
| The more accurate version of events was that the rebellious Barons under the
banner of Simonde Montfort, Earl of Leicester,took King Henry III prisoner. They also stole his seal and ordered as
they pleased in his name. They were recompensed for its return and for the King's release.
| 
fitz Pain shield |
The Manor (one among many in an estate that covered much of the County of Dorset and beyond) passed to Margery
(or Margaret) the eldest sister of Alured de Lincoln and the last of the family. Margery has two husbands on record.
Most of her land holding including the Manor of Winterborne St Martin
passed on her death her husband Robert Fitz-Pain.
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Copyright Gerald Duke 2002