Stannary

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The word stannary is historically applied to:

  • A tin mine, especially in Devon or Cornwall
  • A region containing tin works (mines and refineries, assay offices, etc.)
  • A chartered entity comprising such a region, its works, and its workers
  • The town constituting the administrative center of such a region (stannary town)
  • Any of the courts or parliaments established to maintain the rights of such a charter (see Stannary Courts and Parliaments—often in the plural).

Contents

[edit] Etymology of the word "stannary"

The English word stannary is derived from the Middle English stannarie, through Medieval Latin stannaria "tin mine", ultimately from Late Latin stannum "tin" (cf. the symbol for the chemical element Sn).

[edit] Devon Stannaries

Devon Stannaries are usually referred to by the names of Stannary Towns. These towns were the locations where refined tin (or white tin) was assessed, coined, and sold. They were also the location for some of the institutions associated with the operation of the stannary.

King Edward I's 1305 Stannary Charter established Tavistock, Ashburton and Chagford as Devon's stannary towns, with a monopoly on all tin mining in Devon, a right to representation in the Stannary Parliament and a right to the jurisdiction of the Stannary Courts. Plympton became the fourth Devon stannary town in 1307.

The Devon Stannary Towns are all on the fringes of Dartmoor, which is the Granite upland which bore the tin. No definition of the boundaries of the Devon Stannaries is known, if indeed one ever existed.

[edit] Cornish Stannaries

The four Cornish Stannaries were (from West to East):-

  • Penwith and Kerrier - Land's End and the Lizard peninsulas
  • Tywarnhaile - St Agnes & Carn Brea area
  • Blackmore - the Hensbarrow granite upland, now better known as the China Clay country
  • Foweymore - the historic name for Bodmin Moor

The geographical jurisdiction of each Cornish Stannary was more clearly demarcated from each other than was the case in Devon as each represented a separate tin-bearing area, but again, the boundaries were not precisely laid down.

The towns at which coinage was carried out in Cornwall varied over time. The Cornish coinage towns included at various times: Penzance, Truro, Helston, St Austell, Bodmin (probably) and Lostwithiel.

[edit] Surviving Records of Stannary Matters

Survival of stannary records to the present time has been rather patchy. The Cornwall Records Office has records from the Vicewarden's Court of the Stannaries of Devon and Cornwall, mostly from the mid nineteenth century onwards, which is rather late in the overall history of the Stannary organisations. Earlier survivals in the CRO include the Tin Abstract Books from the Truro Tin office for 1703-10 and 1833-35. These books record the quantities of tin coined in the various coinage towns of Devon and Cornwall, the purchase of tin by the crown and the shipment of this tin by sea to London.

Many stannary-related papers including registration of tin bounds, records of tin production and papers relating to disputes are to be found in the records of families with tin mining interests, although these are frequently intermingled with records on other matters so location of specific information is more difficult.

The National Archives hold most of the records of central government, which includes records on stannary matters including court rolls for part of the reign of Charles 1. The House of Lords Record Office also contains relevant material, primarily relating to the special position of the stannary organisations (and tinners) with respect to the law.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links