Fladbury Bishops Manor
Has been described as a Questionable Palace (Bishop)
There are no visible remains
Name | Fladbury Bishops Manor |
Alternative Names | |
Historic Country | Worcestershire |
Modern Authority | Worcestershire |
1974 Authority | Hereford and Worcester |
Civil Parish | Fladbury |
At least ten vills comprised the manor of Fladbury, Worcestershire, a manor of the bishop of Worcester. A minster founded here had probably failed some time before the Conquest and the bishopric had absorbed its lands, as it had so many others. The distribution of its hidage shows that there had once been a traditional inland at Fladbury itself, the site of the minster. Around 1170 this was a typical curial centre (there was a hall there in 1299), the home of permanent estate officials like the beadle and some 'radman', of inland workers, Famuli, bovarii and cottages, and of fifteen customary tenants with yardlands, half-yardlands and 'Mondaylands', owing week-work (and providing beer). (Faith 1997)
The see of Worcester continued to hold the manor until the date of the Domesday Survey, when it paid geld for 40 hides. In the 12th century the bishop still held these 40 hides at Fladbury. Richard I freed 13½ acres from essartum, and King John confirmed this grant. On 15 March 1214 he gave leave to the bishop to plough up 29½ acres of his wood. In 1254 the bishop received a grant of free warren at Fladbury. The manor was confirmed to the church by Pope Gregory in 1275, and in 1291 was worth £29 6s. a year. It remained in the possession of successive Bishops of Worcester, and was in 1535 worth £53 1s. 2d. yearly. (VCH 1913)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SO995463 |
Latitude | 52.1150283813477 |
Longitude | -2.00870990753174 |
Eastings | 399400 |
Northings | 246300 |