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9 - Economy and Society in North-Eastern Market Towns: Darlington and Northallerton in the Later Middle Ages

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2023

Christian D. Liddy
Affiliation:
University of Durham
Richard Britnell
Affiliation:
University of Durham
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Summary

The economic history of north-eastern England in the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries is characterised by decline, with the region scarcely recovering from the economic and demographic ravages of the Black Death and subsequent outbreaks of plague before being plunged back into long-term recession. The main urban centres of the region, York and Newcastle-upon-Tyne, suffered considerable dislocation in the fifteenth century and remained in recession until well into the sixteenth. A major factor in the decline of York was the contraction of its cloth making industry, largely as a result of increased competition from the textile towns of the West Riding of Yorkshire, such as Leeds, Wakefield and Halifax. Smaller centres also suffered in this respect. John Leland's later description (c.1538) of Ripon as a town ‘where idleness is sore increased’ bore testimony to the fate of one such small town whose prosperity had once been founded upon the cloth trade. Another market town in decline was Richmond in the North Riding of Yorkshire. Its economy, too, was partially based upon the textile industry, although it was also an important marketing centre for corn and wool, being advantageously placed between the pastoral highlands of the Pennines and the lowland agricultural dales. However, the town suffered, apparently as a result of the great pestilence and agrarian crisis, which further undermined the north-eastern economy in the period 1438–40. By 1440, the burgesses of Richmond felt compelled to appeal to the crown for a reduction in the town's fee farm, citing a contracting population and competition from the numerous neighbouring markets (which were, undoubtedly, vying for the limited amount of trade) as the main reasons for the town's decline.

Nevertheless, the region maintained the principal elements of its marketing structure, as this had developed during the two centuries before 1300. Margaret Bonney's study of Durham, for instance, illustrates how that city managed to maintain a reasonable level of economic stability because there was no significant export industry to suffer from native or foreign competition. Durham, indeed, functioned primarily as a service centre for the twin ecclesiastical administrations of the priory and the bishop, as well as providing marketing facilities for the rural hinterland. Other, less well-known urban communities which also managed to survive as viable marketing centres at this time were the small north-eastern market towns of Darlington and Northallerton.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2005

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