Irish merchants and seamen in late medieval England

Author:

Childs Wendy R.

Abstract

Most studies of Anglo-Irish relations in the middle ages understandably concentrate on the activity of the English in Ireland, and unintentionally but inevitably this can leave the impression that the movement of people was all one way. But this was not so, and one group who travelled in the opposite direction were some of the merchants and seamen involved in the Anglo-Irish trade of the period. Irish merchants and seamen travelled widely and could be found in Iceland, Lisbon, Bordeaux, Brittany and Flanders, but probably their most regular trade remained with their closest neighbour and political overlord: England. They visited most western and southern English ports, but inevitably were found most frequently in the west, especially at Chester and Bristol. The majority of them stayed for a few days or weeks, as long as their business demanded. Others settled permanently in England, or, perhaps more accurately, re-settled in England, for those who came to England both as settlers and visitors were mainly the Anglo-Irish of the English towns in Ireland and not the Gaelic Irish. This makes it difficult to estimate accurately the numbers of both visitors and settlers, because the status of the Anglo-Irish was legally that of denizen, and record-keepers normally had no reason to identify them separately. They may, therefore, be hard to distinguish from native Englishmen of similar name outside the short periods when governments (central or urban) temporarily sought to restrict their activities. However, the general context within which they worked is quite clear, and this article considers three main aspects of that context: first, the pattern of the trade which attracted Irish merchants to England; second, the role of the Irish merchants and seamen in the trade; and third, examples of individual careers of merchants and seamen who settled in England.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

History

Reference18 articles.

1. Nicolson G. H. , ‘The medieval wills of Bristol, with special reference to those of merchants’ (unpublished M.A. thesis, University of Birmingham, 1970)

2. Wilson K.P. , ‘The port of Chester in the later middle ages’ (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Liverpool, 1965), p. 94

3. The accounts of John Balsall, purser of the Trinity of Bristol, 1480–1;Reddaway;Camden Miscellany,1969

4. Werkzeug des spätmittelalterlichen Kaufmanns: Hansen und Engländer im Wandel von memoria zur Akte (mit einer Edition von The Noumbre of Weyghtys);Jenks;Jahrbuch für fränkische Landesforschung,1992

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