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This site was produced by: LOCAL
AUTHORITY PUBLISHING
Publishers for local authorities throughout Great Britain. View
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More accurately, a clash between two of the richest, if not the
two richest, abbeys in the land - St Albans and Westminster.
The manor of Aldenham was, according to some sources, granted in
the year 785 to Westminster by King Offa. By another charter, dated
in the year 959, King Edgar seemed to confirm the same grant, and
Edward the Confessor did likewise in 1066.
However, St Albans laid claim to the manor, citing another charter,
also from King Offa, in which the said King granted Aldenham to
St Albans Abbey, along with many others in the area, viz. Rickmansworth,
Batchworth, Watford, Sarratt, Enfield and Stanmore, amongst others.
In 1202 matters came to a head when St Albans asserted that Westminster’s
claim to the manor lay in a lease for 20 years which Abbot Frederick
of St Albans had granted to Westminster sometime during his Abbacy
[from 1064 to 1077], and that at the expiry of the lease, Westminster
had refused to return the manor to St Albans. The jury gave a verdict
favourable to St Albans, but that did not end the matter. In 1249,
the Abbot of Westminster brought a suit against the Abbot of St
Albans stating that St Albans had, on Tuesday after Pentecost, taken
15 beasts from their manor of Aldenham and driven them to Parkbury,
formerly part of Colney Street, and again on St John’s day
in the same year had taken a further three beasts. It was 1256 before
agreement was reached, and in the King’s Court both parties
agreed to several complicated terms and conditions regarding supervision
and control.

One of the conditions was that a gallows should be erected at Keneprowe
[Kemp Row] which should be common to both abbots for hanging those
condemned.
Although this should have been an end to the matter, the dispute
continued to rumble on and in 1437 another suit was brought regarding
the rights of the Abbots of St Albans in Aldenham, the case being
eventually abandoned for want of funds. And so it continued until
Henry VIII ended the dispute by seizing the Abbey and its lands.
© Philip Eastburn
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Whilst every care has been taken in compiling this publication
and the statements contained herein are believed to be correct,
the publishers and promoters cannot accept responsibility for any
inaccuracies. Reproduction of any part of this publication in any
format, without permission, is strictly forbidden. All the photographs
in this booklet were taken by: Clive Glover, Ken Morris, Wendy Morris
and Philip Eastburn
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