Researching Rutland Copyright © Rutland Local History and Record Society - All rights reserved Registered Charity No 700273
Occasional Publications
Menu
No 1: Domesday Book in Rutland: the dramatis personae - by Prince Yuri Galitzine (1986) Sorry, no longer available No 2: The Oakham Survey 1305 - Ed. by Allen Chinnery (1988) Medieval survey: population: occupations; topography: customs, and personal/place-name evidence (Select to download FOC) No 3:The Rutland Hearth Tax 1665 - Ed. by Jill Bourne & Amanda Goode (1991). Population details and payment information for every household in each village and town, with an introduction. (Select to download FOC) No 4: The History of Gilson's Hospital, Morcott - by David Parkin (1995). The story of this small charity, founded in 1612 and still operating, its almshouse, trustees, clerks, agents and beneficiaries, and its farm at Scredington, Lincs;foundation deed; George Gilson and his Will. (Select to download FOC) No 5: Lyndon, Rutland - A Guide By Charles Mayhew (1999). The Village Scene, St Martin's Church, Church Restorations, William Whiston and Thomas Barker, Lyndon Today. (Select to download FOC) No 6: The History of the Hospital of St John the Evangelist and of St Anne in Okeham - By David Parkin (2000). Published to celebrate the still-flourishing 600-year old charity, founded in 1399 and revived in 1597: its history, chapel and archives; schedules of trustees and beneficiaries. (Select to download FOC) No 7: The 1712 Land Tax for Rutland, with Poll Book for 1710 - Edited by T H McK Clough (2005). Introduction by Dennis Mills; editorial commentary on this rare Land Tax survival and the 1710 poll book; transcripts for each parish (prepared by the Village Studies Group for Rutland); indexes of clergy, trades, field and place names, personal names. (Select to download FOC) No 8: Common Right and Private Interest: Rutland’s Open Fields and their Enclosure - By Ian Ryder September (2006) History of the county’s common fields in the context of agricultural development through the centuries, explaining the factors that caused them to be enclosed, with case studies of Greetham,Lyddington, Caldecott & Uppingham, and Thorpe-by-Water, estate maps and photographs,as well as transcripts of some relevant archives. There is a full listing of the sequence of enclosure for each Rutland parish, and there are subject, place and personal name indexes. (Select to download FOC) No 9: Who Owned Rutland in 1873? Rutland Entries in Return of Owners of Land 1873 - By T H McK Clough (2010). Transcript of the Rutland section of the 1873 Return of Owners of Land, with notes on most of the 563 entries. Analysis of who they were, where they came from and what they did. Special sections on Lyddington parish and on a mysterious group of small landowners with strong Gloucestershire connections. Illustrations, many tables, index of addresses. (A4 paperback, 60pp. £5.00). Please select to use the GENfair online ordering service No. 10: Medieval Property Transactions in Rutland - Abstracts of Feet of Fines 1197-1509 - Edited by Bridget Wells-Furby The medieval feet of fines in The National Archives record local property transactions. Arising originally in the late 12th century from legal disputes over land, the format was quickly adopted as the most secure form of property transfer. They continued to be couched in the same legal terminology long after that background became a mere fiction. (A4 paperback £5.00). Please select to use the GENfair online ordering service No. 11: John Barber’s Oakham Castle and its archaeology - Compiled and edited by Elaine Jones and Robert Ovens Oakham Castle is one of England’s most important Romanesque vernacular buildings, it has been undergoing refurbishment following the award of a £2m grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund. In the 1950s, John Barber carried out excavations adjacent to the Great Hall of Oakham Castle with the assistance of boys from Oakham School, where he was a master. Circumstances conspired against his being able to produce a detailed excavation report at the time, but he subsequently wrote extensive notes about the Great Hall and the castle site. (Please select to read online FOC) or Download as a pdf No. 12: Oakham Lordshold in 1787: a map and survey of Lord Winchilsea’s Oakham estate - Edited by T H McK Clough A very detailed and accurate map of Oakham and four field books in the Finch MSS in the Record Office for Leicestershire, Leicester & Rutland give an unparalleled view of the extent and nature of the town in the late 18th century, before enclosure of the parish. The map is fully described and interpreted, and the primary field book is transcribed. The topography of the town and its properties are discussed, as are the people mentioned both in the field books and in the Oakham entry in the Universal British Directory of 1791. The map is the earliest detailed plan known, and can be used to suggest the medieval form of the town, with its church and castle. (A4, 104pp, colour, with index. £5.00). Please select to use the GENfair online ordering service No. 13: The Governance of Rutland 1614-1664 - By Ian E Ryder An analysis of how Rutland was governed in the unsettled times of the seventeenth century, based on surviving Justices of the Peace and Lieutenancy archives. These enable the author to show how Rutland’s ruling elite managed criminal law and the poor, handled an outbreak of plague, maintained the militia, impressed men for military service, ensured the free operation of markets, and organised the collection of taxes. This account covers the reign of Charles I and then the period of the Civil War and its aftermath, showing the impact of these events on life in Rutland. Although the majority of Rutland’s major landowners had supported the king, its parliamentary minority was able to control the county through outside support. Very many Rutland individuals are listed in the surviving records, too many to include in the printed work, and their details are being made freely available on-line on this website. A4, 130pp, with appendixes and index. £10.00 Please select to use the GENfair online ordering service All orders for publications, with payment in sterling including postage as shown above, and trade enquiries should be sent to: The Honorary Editor, RLHRS, c/o Rutland County Museum, Catmose Street, Oakham, Rutland, LE15 6HW, England. Postage and Packing £3.00 one issue + £1.00 each additional title, maximum £5.00 Overseas charged at cost – please enquire for details: payment in sterling only -Please note that you can also order directly from GENfair (link below) our on-line trading partner, using a credit card transaction. Overseas post and packing costs will be calculated at time of placing order. The Society can only accept payment for orders by post by cheque in sterling made payable to ‘RLHRS’ and drawn on a UK bank. If you wish to order and pay on-line by credit or debit card (whether from overseas or from the UK), please follow the link to GENfair, where you will be able to do so securely. Please note that the postage and packing charges levied by GENfair may be different from those for sales direct from the Society, and that members' reduced rates are not available through GENfair. Please select to use the GENfair online ordering service
Rutland Local History & Record Society
Copyright © Rutland Local History and Record Society Registered Charity No 700273
Occasional Publications
No 1: Domesday Book in Rutland: the dramatis personae by Prince Yuri Galitzine (1986) No longer available No 2: The Oakham Survey 1305 - Ed. by Allen Chinnery (1988) Medieval survey: population: occupations; topography: customs, and personal/place-name evidence (Please select to download FOC) No 3:The Rutland Hearth Tax 1665 Ed. by Jill Bourne & Amanda Goode (1991). Population details and payment information for every household in each village and town, with an introduction. (Please select to download FOC) No 4: The History of Gilson's Hospital, Morcott - by David Parkin (1995). The story of this small charity, founded in 1612 and still operating, its almshouse, trustees, clerks, agents and beneficiaries, and its farm at Scredington, Lincs;foundation deed; George Gilson and his Will. (Please select to download FOC) No 5: Lyndon, Rutland - A Guide By Charles Mayhew (1999). The Village Scene, St Martin's Church, Church Restorations, William Whiston and Thomas Barker, Lyndon Today. (Please select to download FOC) No 6: The History of the Hospital of St John the Evangelist and of St Anne in Okeham - By David Parkin (2000). Published to celebrate the still-flourishing 600-year old charity, founded in 1399 and revived in 1597: its history, chapel and archives; schedules of trustees and beneficiaries. (Please select to download FOC) No 7: The 1712 Land Tax for Rutland, with Poll Book for 1710 Edited by T H McK Clough (2005). Introduction by Dennis Mills; editorial commentary on this rare Land Tax survival and the 1710 poll book; transcripts for each parish (prepared by the Village Studies Group for Rutland); indexes of clergy, trades, field and place names, personal names. (Please select to download FOC) No 8: Common Right and Private Interest: Rutland’s Open Fields and their Enclosure By Ian Ryder September (2006) History of the county’s common fields in the context of agricultural development through the centuries, explaining the factors that caused them to be enclosed, with case studies of Greetham,Lyddington, Caldecott & Uppingham, and Thorpe-by-Water, estate maps and photographs,as well as transcripts of some relevant archives. There is a full listing of the sequence of enclosure for each Rutland parish, and there are subject, place and personal name indexes. (Please select to download FOC) No 9: Who Owned Rutland in 1873? Rutland Entries in Return of Owners of Land 1873 - By T H McK Clough (2010). Transcript of the Rutland section of the 1873 Return of Owners of Land, with notes on most of the 563 entries. Analysis of who they were, where they came from and what they did. Special sections on Lyddington parish and on a mysterious group of small landowners with strong Gloucestershire connections. Illustrations, many tables, index of addresses. (A4 paperback, 60pp. £7.50, members £6.00). Please select here to use the GENfair online ordering service No. 10: Medieval Property Transactions in Rutland - Abstracts of Feet of Fines 1197-1509 - Edited by Bridget Wells-Furby The medieval feet of fines in The National Archives record local property transactions. Arising originally in the late 12th century from legal disputes over land, the format was quickly adopted as the most secure form of property transfer. They continued to be couched in the same legal terminology long after that background became a mere fiction. (A4 paperback £10.00, members £8.00) Please select here to use the GENfair online ordering service No. 11: John Barber’s Oakham Castle and its archaeology Compiled and edited by Elaine Jones and Robert Ovens Oakham Castle is one of England’s most important Romanesque vernacular buildings, it has been undergoing refurbishment following the award of a £2m grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund. In the 1950s, John Barber carried out excavations adjacent to the Great Hall of Oakham Castle with the assistance of boys from Oakham School, where he was a master. Circumstances conspired against his being able to produce a detailed excavation report at the time, but he subsequently wrote extensive notes about the Great Hall and the castle site. (Please select here to download FOC) No. 12: Oakham Lordshold in 1787: a map and survey of Lord Winchilsea’s Oakham estate - Edited by T H McK Clough A very detailed and accurate map of Oakham and four field books in the Finch MSS in the Record Office for Leicestershire, Leicester & Rutland give an unparalleled view of the extent and nature of the town in the late 18th century, before enclosure of the parish. The map is fully described and interpreted, and the primary field book is transcribed. The topography of the town and its properties are discussed, as are the people mentioned both in the field books and in the Oakham entry in the Universal British Directory of 1791. The map is the earliest detailed plan known, and can be used to suggest the medieval form of the town, with its church and castle. (A4, 104pp, colour, with index. £10.00 (members £7.50). Please select here to use the GENfair online ordering service No. 13: The Governance of Rutland 1614-1664 - By Ian E Ryder An analysis of how Rutland was governed in the unsettled times of the seventeenth century, based on surviving Justices of the Peace and Lieutenancy archives. These enable the author to show how Rutland’s ruling elite managed criminal law and the poor, handled an outbreak of plague, maintained the militia, impressed men for military service, ensured the free operation of markets, and organised the collection of taxes. This account covers the reign of Charles I and then the period of the Civil War and its aftermath, showing the impact of these events on life in Rutland. Although the majority of Rutland’s major landowners had supported the king, its parliamentary minority was able to control the county through outside support. Very many Rutland individuals are listed in the surviving records, too many to include in the printed work, and their details are freely available on-line on this website. (A4, 130pp, with appendixes and index. £10.00 Please select here to use the GENfair online ordering service All orders for publications, with payment in sterling including postage as shown above, and trade enquiries should be sent to: The Honorary Editor, RLHRS, c/o Rutland County Museum, Catmose Street, Oakham, Rutland, LE15 6HW, England. Postage and Packing £3.00 one issue + £1.00 each additional title, maximum £5.00 Overseas charged at cost – please enquire for details: payment in sterling only -Please note that you can also order directly from GENfair (link below) our on- line trading partner, using a credit card transaction. Overseas post and packing costs will be calculated at time of placing order. The Society can only accept payment for orders by post by cheque in sterling made payable to ‘RLHRS’ and drawn on a UK bank. If you wish to order and pay on-line by credit or debit card (whether from overseas or from the UK), please follow the link to GENfair, where you will be able to do so securely. Please note that the postage and packing charges levied by GENfair may be different from those for sales direct from the Society, and that members' reduced rates are not available through GENfair. Click here to use the GENfair online ordering service