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Christopher Thornton, Jennifer Ward, and Neil Wiffen, eds. The Fighting Essex Soldier: Recruitment, War and Society in the Fourteenth Century. Hatfield: University of Hertfordshire Press, 2017. Pp. 189. £18.99 (paper).

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Christopher Thornton, Jennifer Ward, and Neil Wiffen, eds. The Fighting Essex Soldier: Recruitment, War and Society in the Fourteenth Century. Hatfield: University of Hertfordshire Press, 2017. Pp. 189. £18.99 (paper).

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 June 2018

Andy King*
Affiliation:
University of Southampton
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Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © The North American Conference on British Studies 2018 

A compilation of papers from a conference organized by the Essex Record Office in 2014, The Fighting Essex Soldier appears to be aimed, at least in part, at a nonspecialist readership. Correspondingly, some of the essays (and particularly the introduction, by co-editors Christopher Thornton and Jennifer Ward) provide rather more in the way of general background than might be considered appropriate for a hardcore academic audience. This is by no means, however, to disparage the high scholarly standards of the essays here presented. As well as providing the wider historical context, the introduction discusses the effect of the French wars on the county, using as case studies the parishes of Saint Osyth and Barking, and the manor and borough of Great Bardfield, derived from Thornton's work for the Essex Victoria County History. The evidence he provides seems to suggest that plague, disorder and climate change had rather more impact than war, though this point could perhaps have been developed more explicitly. Ward's own essay serves as an additional introduction, looking at the Essex gentry and their relation with the crown, and building on and complementing her previous work on the county community. Ward provides a good, detailed case study, although the subject of warfare is perhaps not quite as prominent as her title—and indeed the title of the book—might suggest.

David Simpkin's contribution uses Essex as a case study to illustrate his thesis, developed in his monograph The English Aristocracy at War from the Welsh Wars of Edward I to the Battle of Bannockburn (2008), of the high level of participation of the English gentry in the wars of Edward I and Edward II. He demonstrates the existence of a “vibrant military community in late thirteenth- and early fourteenth-century Essex” (62). And it is the Andrew Ayton-esque model of the “military community” that largely shapes the remaining essays in the book. Gloria Harris examines the criminal career of the Essex soldier Sir Hugh de Badewe. She does a very good job of setting his criminal associations in the context of his military career, and of the county's military community; however, there could perhaps have been more analysis of the immediate social setting of the crimes themselves. It might also be added that by the standards of his day, Badewe was actually comparatively law-abiding; his entire criminal record consists of accusations of being party to two park-breakings and an abduction, which hardly puts him in the same league as more notorious contemporaries such as the Folville gang.

Sam Gibbs matches the poll tax records for Essex with the muster rolls of royal armies to look at the social status of archers, concluding that many of them were of low economic status. This is a fascinating study with some potentially important implications for the social structure of English armies. It might, however, be wondered just how securely individuals named in the Essex poll tax records can be identified with their namesakes in the muster rolls, particularly as the latter very rarely provide any explicit indication of where individuals actually come from. Essex landowners did not invariably recruit their men from their Essex estates; and those serving overseas would have been ideally placed to evade assessment for the poll taxes. Can we be sure then that the Thomas Chaumbres, John Newetons and William Somertons (for instance) recorded in royal muster rolls were indeed the same men as the Thomas Chaumbre, John Neweton, and William Somerton who paid poll tax in Essex in 1377 and 1381?

Service at sea during the Hundred Years War is a subject that has, until recently, languished in comparative neglect. The work of Andrew Ayton and Craig Lambert has now done a great deal to compensate for this neglect. Their essay, which examines the service in the king's wars of Essex mariners, may well be the highlight of the volume: it is an important piece that should be widely read. Employing crown records that helpfully name specific Essex mariners from specific ports, as well as detailing the numbers of men from the county who served at sea, the authors show that the crown made increasingly heavy demands for naval service; but they also show that the communities of the larger towns, such as Colchester and Harwich, were increasingly successful at using their political clout to pass on the burden to their smaller and less influential neighbors. What perhaps comes across most vividly from this study is the sheer weight of the crown's demands on the maritime community; and the authors’ cautiously qualified suggestion that disaffection amongst mariners may have contributed significantly to the revolt of 1381 is entirely plausible. The final piece, by Herbert Eiden, sets out to highlight “military aspects” of the revolt itself. In a rather short essay, though, there is perhaps a little too much narrative of events, and not quite enough analysis of their military aspect.

This is an attractively produced book, with a number of illustrations (of memorial brasses and seals) and maps and diagrams, all reproduced to a high standard; and it usefully includes a full bibliography (including archival references) and index. It is also attractively priced. If the quality of the individual contributions might be slightly uneven, the volume nevertheless offers some invaluable case studies, throwing light on the history of Essex, as well as providing the sort of vital details from which the larger, overarching picture can be pieced together.