Downton

The ancient and heavily wooded parish of Downton was situated a few miles to the south-east of the city of Salisbury; much of its own boundary to the south formed the Wiltshire/Hampshire border close to the New Forest. VCH Wilts. xi. 19. The manor had been owned from the seventh or eighth century by the bishops of Winchester and leased from 1551 by the Herberts, earls of Pembroke. VCH Wilts. xi.

Wootton Bassett

Wootton Bassett, in north east Wiltshire about six miles south west of Swindon, has the appearance of a planned settlement, with its long, straight high street flanked by burgage plots. These probably date from the thirteenth century, when Gilbert Basset built a large house in the parish, later Vastern Park. That a weekly market, granted in 1219, was held on ground belonging to the lord of the manor is certainly suggestive. According to a 1571 grant, the market itself, together with two annual fairs, belonged to the mayor and burgesses.

Westbury

Westbury, a centre of the north-west Wiltshire clothing industry since the later fifteenth century, was by 1600 home to several substantial clothier families, including the Whitakers, Phippses, Adlams and Benetts, who also accumulated property in the surrounding area. The borough had first sent representatives to Parliament in 1448, but it had never received a charter of incorporation. The parish, which was co-terminous with the hundred, contained about ten manors, all with burgage tenements.

Old Sarum

By 1100 Old Sarum, which had ancient origins as a hill-fort, boasted a castle, a cathedral and a mint. By about 1130 it had a market and a charter. The latter was renewed in 1229, but the town had already begun an inexorable decline. Nine years earlier the bishop had moved his seat to Salisbury, where water was easier to come by. In the sixteenth century no vestiges of the cathedral or episcopal palace remained and the castle was in ruins, while the town walls were demolished in the early seventeenth century. VCH Wilts. vi. 60, 62, 63, 65, 67.

Devizes

By the 1630s Devizes was struggling to maintain its pre-eminence among Wiltshire towns after the city of Salisbury. Although in a commanding position at the centre of the county, well-served by roads, it was on the edge of the cloth-making area, badly hit by depression. Unlike some other nearby towns, Devizes had not responded by diversification into the manufacture of medley broadcloth, while the serge and duffel production which was to consolidate its fortunes later in the century was only just being introduced. VCH Wilts. x. 225, 227-8, 255-6; E.

Cricklade

Cricklade was a small town, consisting of two parishes. Although it was situated in Wiltshire, it was near the Gloucestershire border, and shared many of the characteristics of a Cotswold community, including the presence of a clothing and woollen industry. There had been signs of modest prosperity in the sixteenth century in the shape of a new market house (1569), but the town had never achieved a royal charter, and its governing institutions were simply manorial and parochial.

Calne

Situated at the west end of the Marlborough downs on the London-Bristol road, Calne was one of the leading north Wiltshire clothing towns, although it ranked behind nearby Chippenham and Devizes in administrative importance. VCH Wilts. xvii. 30, 32, 84. It had sent two representatives to Parliament intermittently since 1295 and regularly since 1425 but, unlike its neighbours, it did not have a formal charter until 1685. VCH Wilts. xvii.

Canterbury

One of the most populous cities in the country, with over 4,500 communicants in 1676, Canterbury was the most important city in Kent, not least as the seat of the country’s senior archbishop.

Sandwich

The easternmost of the cinque ports, Sandwich, which incorporated Deal, Fordwich, Ramsgate and Brightlingsea, was located inland of the south Kent coast, on the banks of the River Stour and on the southern side of the Wantsum Channel which traditionally divided mainland Kent from the Isle of Thanet. D. Gardiner, Historic Haven (1954), 3. Like many ports in the region, its fortunes were threatened by encroaching sandbanks, but it fared worse than most.

Maidstone

Maidstone had been a small manorial market town dominated by the archbishopric of Canterbury until the sixteenth century, but a century later it was one of the most important towns in Kent. W. Lambard, Perambulation of Kent (1656), 229; P. Clark and L. Murfin, Hist. Maidstone (Stroud, 1996), 1-2, 20-39. Maidstone evidently made an impression upon visitors.