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| Remains of the medieval town wall discovered at
the top of Market Street in 1866. |
The sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
Medieval England passed with
the Reformation in the 1530s. In the closing years of the old Catholic
regime local people still seem to have been relatively pious, paying
for building work on the three parish churches and the Carmelite friary,
but the town conformed when called upon to do so and the great priory
at Lenton, lying to the south-west of the town was dissolved. Nicholas
Heath, the prior, together with seven of his monks and a secular priest,
was found guilty of treason in 1538. He and two of the other defendants
were executed, and the remaining monks expelled without pensions.
From the earliest maps of 1609 and 1610, we know that by he turn of
the seventeenth century Nottingham still sat within its medieval boundaries.
Empty plots depicted in the east and north-east areas of the town suggest
there may even have been some contraction from its medieval peak. So
much stone had been taken from the town wall that it had virtually disappeared.
A new west-east route across the northern edge of the town had been created.
This was used by heavy commercial traffic, particularly horses and carts,
carrying coal from the pits at Wollaton to Trent Bridge. The stone for
building Wollaton Hall, which was funded by coal sales, was probably
among goods passing in the opposite direction. Houses intended for the
poor had been built along the line of this route, and developments to
the north of the town are shown on a birds-eye view of 1675.
From the 1580s population rose slowly, but the total was kept in check
by food shortages and by depressingly regular outbreaks of plague. This
stopped being a major killer by the 1660s and 1670s, but there was no
respite since it was rapidly followed by the scourge of the eighteenth
century, smallpox.
Malting and tanning were among the main occupational interests in the
town. The malting trade was supported by the prosperous arable farming
in the area, and many Nottingham people farmed either full or part time,
reflecting the close contacts between town and countryside. Innkeepers
brewed their own beer which they often stored in caves below their premises.
The traveller Celia Fiennes, who visited Nottingham in the 1690s, commented
that ‘Nottingham is famous for good ale so for Cellars they are all dug
out of the rocks and so are very cool ... I drank good ale'.
Nottingham was a market town. A daily market was held at Weekday Cross,
but the highlight of the week was the great Saturday Market in the market
place. Visitors came to Goose Fair, first named as such in the contemporary
record in 1542. They also attended Lenton Fair, which survived the dissolution
of the monasteries and was an important regional and even national interchange
for goods in the seventeenth century. Many of the goods bought and sold
at the fairs reached Nottingham by packhorse, but there was also a flourishing
trade along the River Trent: fish and timber were among the goods brought
in, and coal was sold along the river and into Lincolnshire.
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| Watercolour painting of Thurland Hall (formerly
Clare House) by A Parker (1831). |
Most sixteenth-century houses in the town would have been timber frame
structures, built on two or three storeys. The timber frames were infilled
with a daub made of clay, and many were rendered on the outside with
a lime plaster coating. Only higher status houses had tiles; the rest
were thatched, creating fire hazards. A number of larger buildings of
medieval origin survived in 1609-10, including Plumptre Hospital and
Thurland Hall.
Nottingham, because of its strategic position between London and northern England,
played a significant role in the Civil Wars of the 1640s. It was here
that Charles I raised his standard in August 1642, on a site subsequently
known as Standard Hill. Charles I did not stay long at Nottingham castle;
by mid-September 1642 he had departed, and the town became an important
Parliamentarian stronghold for most of the war. Royalist forces attacked
Nottingham on a number of occasions but were never able to retake the
town permanently. After the Battle of Worcester in 1651, when the future
Charles II was defeated and forced to flee abroad, what was left of the
old castle was demolished. |