SMITH, Charles Roach, Esq., F.S.A., London. SNOULTEN, Osborn, Esq., Woodville Hall, near Dovor. STARR, Thomas, Esq., Barrister-at-Law, Canterbury. STEPHENS, John Cribb, Esq., Maidstone. STILWELL, James, Esq., Dovor. STONE, William, Esq., Tunbridge Wells. STRINGER, William, Esq., New Romney. STROUD, Thomas, Esq., 11, Victoria Place, London. 2 copies. T. TARLETON, Francis, Esq., 2, Augusta Terrace, Stockwell. TAYLOR, William, Esq., Greenwich. TEMPLE, Rev. William, Rector of St. Alphage, Canterbury. TOKER, Miss Clarissa Mary Josephine, Canterbury. TOOTELL, R. Esq., Mayor of Maidstone. TURNBULL, W. B. D., Esq., Edinburgh. V. VERRIER, Mr. W. Curling, Bridge, near Canterbury. W. WACHER, Mr. John, Chislett, Kent. WALKER, Robert, Esq., Canterbury. WALKER, GRANT, and Co., Messrs., Solicitors, London. WARD, Mr., Librarian and Publisher, Canterbury. 2 copies. WATTS, Edward, Esq., Hythe. WATSON, Robert William, Esq., Dovor. WELBY, Mr. William, High Bailiff, County Courts, Canterbury. WHATMAN, James, Esq., Vinters, near Maidstone. WHICHCORD, John, Esq., Maidstone. WHITE, James, Esq., Bridge Street, Canterbury. WHITE, John Meadows, Esq., Lincoln's Inn Fields. WHITE, Rev. John, St. Stephen's Vicarage, near Canterbury. b WILKINSON, Thomas, Esq., Canterbury. WILLEMENT, Thomas, Esq., F.S.A., Davington Priory, Kent. WILSON, John Elliott, Esq., Cranbrook, Kent. CONTENTS. FAC-SIMILE of an antient Charter of Feoffment, sans date, before FAC-SIMILE of an antient Charter of Feoffment, 49 Hen. III, A.D. 1264, before the Stat. of "Quia emptores." (An English translation of the same, p. 228) FAC-SIMILE of an antient Charter of Feoffment, 27 Edw. III, PAGE to face the to follow the CUSTUMAL OF KENT.-(ANGLO-NORMAN AND ENGLISH.) Objections to the history and existence of Hengist and Horsa (the founders of the Jutish kingdom of Kent) considered, and their The Jutes were the earliest of the Saxon tribes who settled in Britain Tabular arrangement of the Saxon Octarchy, comprising one Jutish, three The Jutes possessed Kent, the Isle of Wight, and part of Hampshire The Jutes did not speak a Scandinavian, but a Germanic (A.-Saxon) dialect Specimens of the A.-Saxon and Scandinavian languages Table of the Celtic languages in two branches (Cymric-Gaelic) Table of the Teutonic languages in two branches (Germanic-Scandinavian) The Norman conquerors of England were a Scandinavian race The Normans at the time of the Conquest had abandoned the language of their ancestors, and had adopted a corrupt Latin dialect, called Norman French, which afterwards became the language of the court, In this language is handed down to us the "Custumale Cantianum" CONSUETUDINES KANCIÆ. These customs part of the Lex non scripta, or common law Coeval with the foundation of the Jutish kingdom of Kent Oppressive and unconstitutional proceedings of K. Edw. I gave rise to the statute of "Quo warranto," and to the compilation of the The first kings of this realm had all the lands of England in demesne . In the Saxon, or Jutish, kingdom of Kent, the prerogatives of the king, the privileges of the thanes or nobles, the liberties and franchises of the people, the tenure of land, the territorial divisions into lord- ships and manors, and into lathes, hundreds, and boroughs, or townships, arose by silent and imperceptible degrees The division of the realm by K. Alfred into shires, hundreds, and tithings, Kent divided into lathes, hundreds, and boroughs, or townships Other kingdoms of the Octarchy into trithings (vulgo ridings), wapen- Account of these districts in the laws of K. Edw. the Confessor Tabular arrangement of the antient and modern lathes, hundreds, and Borowe and towne in Kent correspond with tithings in other parts of Exemplified by an extract from the Subsidy-Roll of 13 Qu. Elizabeth Ecclesiastical division of the kingdom into provinces, dioceses, arch- 65 Kent divided into parishes by Abp. Honorius, c. A.D. 630 ecclesiastical (parochial) divisions, and the cause of this change SECTION 1. The terms'usage' and 'custom' explained Account of our Saxon ancestors; their love of liberty, and Saxon liberty contrasted with that extorted by the Norman Table of charters of liberties from K. John to K. Edw. I. These charters limited to the free only, "nullus liber homo,” &c.-The great body of the people (except in Kent) still in a Drayton's spirited description of Kent in Poly-Olbion, Cant. The Gavelkind tenures.-Table showing the distinction between lands in Gavelkind and at common law, in the cases of Descent, Alienation, Dower, Curtesy, and Wills. Saxon tenures considered under two periods: 1, From the time of Hengist to the introduction of Christianity-2, After 93 |