
audiobook
Transcribed from the 1913 edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
Loughton. Essex.
Loughton. Essex.
Loughton before the Conquest.
Domesday Book.
The 12th and 13th Centuries.
Landlord and Tenant in the Middle Ages.
Tenants’ Duties.
Social Life in the 13th Century.
Origin of some Local Place-names.
This short, scholarly essay invites listeners on a journey through the deep‑rooted history of a modest Essex village. Beginning with a rare 1062 charter that names Loughton alongside its neighboring settlements, the narrative traces how early land grants, recorded in both Latin and Anglo‑Saxon, set the stage for a complex tapestry of ownership. The author then unpacks the strikingly detailed Domesday entries, revealing a patchwork of six manors and assorted holdings that illustrate medieval concepts of tenure and taxation.
Moving forward, the talk shifts to the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, where surviving charters and abbey records illuminate the gradual expansion of monastic lands and the emergence of the village’s first church. Along the way, familiar landmarks—like the enduring Plum‑tree Mead—are linked to medieval donors, offering a tangible connection between past and present. Listeners will come away with a vivid sense of how Loughton’s landscape and community were shaped long before the modern era.
Language
en
Duration
~35 minutes (34K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2017-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1850–1917
A devoted local historian and antiquary, he turned the story of Loughton into vivid, carefully researched writing. His work preserves the parish’s early records, landmarks, and traditions with the patient eye of someone who clearly cared about place.
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