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Mid-Level Officials in Fifteenth-Century Norwich

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2013

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Summary

John Clement, a brewer, entered the Norwich franchise in 1447. Over the next decade he was a constable nine times and a tax collector once, but he never discharged any other civic office. In spite of their important role in administering and maintaining order in English cities, men like Clement have been neglected as a result of English urban historians' tendency to focus on the better-documented and wealthier mercantile elite. Prosopographical analyses of urban political, economic, and social groups have directed some attention towards middling artisans and retailers because of their focus on collective biography, but the relative dearth of information about these groups has made even this approach more effective for understanding the senior officials. Moreover, although these studies have revealed much about civic hierarchies, they have perhaps encouraged the perception that a mercantile elite dominated all aspects of urban political life. Although no one would deny the virtual monopoly of high office by a privileged few, there is considerable evidence that mercantile control was not so comprehensive in the lower levels of civic government.

Non-elite urban officials have received little sustained analysis. Indeed, on the few occasions that mid-level offices have been examined they have generally been cast as part of the cursus honorum or as unwelcome chores rather than as potentially valuable positions. By focusing on a group of non-elite personnel, namely, constables, assessors, collectors, supervisors and searchers in Norwich between 1414 and 1473, this paper demonstrates the essential role played by such individuals and postulates that not all urban office-holders nursed greater ambitions.

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The Fifteenth Century XII
Society in an Age of Plague
, pp. 101 - 122
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2013

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