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Salisbury was given a grant of murage dated 30/1/1227.

This was in the form of:-

Wording
Henry, by the grace of God king of England, lord of Ireland, duke of Normandy and Aquitaine, and count of Anjou, to his archbishops, bishops, abbots, priors, counts {earls}, barons, viscounts, provosts, ministers and all bailiffs and vassals: health and greetings.
You should know that we, out of reverence and honor for God and the blessed Mary, eternal virgin, and for the health of ourselves and of our ancestors and heirs, conceded and with the present charter confirmed to God, to the church of Saint Mary, whose translation from our castle of Salisbury to a lesser place we hold {to be} correct, and at whose foundation we laid the first stone, and {we confirmed} to bishop Richard, bishop of the same place, to his successors, to the canons of this church, and to their men, {we confirmed to all of these people} the liberties and free customs which they have held from the time of our predecessors, the kings of England, in all parts of our kingdom. Having been gathered together and confirmed through the charters of our ancestors and of other persons of our kingdom, these liberties and customs should be upheld according to the rational testimony of these same charters. Moreover, we want and concede for us and for our heirs that the place which is called "New Sarum" shall be a free city in perpetuity, with fortified enclosures as is noted below, and that the citizens of this town living there shall be quit throughout the entire realm of commerce-duties, bridge-tolls, passagium, tolls, lastage, stallage {due paid for stalls in a market}, cartage service, and every other custom throughout our whole realm, concerning all their goods that they will ship by land or by sea. And we prohibit anyone from troubling or disturbing them, their possessions, their lands, or their servants against the liberty of our charter or in spite of our penalty. And we confirm that the said citizens shall have in perpetuity the same liberties and exemptions throughout our entire kingdom as do our citizens of Winchester.
We wish and concede that the aforesaid bishop and his successors should enclose the aforesaid city of New Sarum with stout walls because of the fear of thieves, and that they shall hold {the city} in perpetuity as part of their own lordship, saving to us and our heirs the advocacy of this see and every other right that we have, and ought to have, when the see is vacant, just as we retain in other vacant cathedral churches within our kingdom. Indeed, it will not be legal for the aforesaid citizens to give, sell, or mortgage any burgage or tenement that they hold or shall hold in the same city to a church or to a religious person without the licence and consent of the aforesaid bishop and his successors.
On top of this, we concede to the same bishop and his successors that for their needs and those of their church they shall take a tallage or reasonable aid {both tallage and aid refer to a lordly exaction from dependents} from their aforesaid citizens whenever we or our heirs shall collect a tallage from our own domains.
We also concede to the bishop and to his successors that, for the completion and betterment {emendationem} of the said city, they shall create, shift, and alter the roads and bridges leading to this city as they shall see fit, as long as such correction does not infringe on the rights of anyone else.
We want and concede that the aforesaid bishop and his successors shall have {the right to hold} each year in perpetuity a fair in the aforesaid city of New Sarum, which shall last from the eve of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin until the morrow of the eighth day after the same feast, and {we also concede} a market {to be held} there each week through March, with all liberties and free customs pertaining to these fairs and market.
On top of this, we want and command that all merchants of our lands, as well as merchants of other lands who are within our peace, together with their merchandise, who are coming to the said city, delaying there, or departing from there, shall have the liberty to come, remain and depart, both by water and bridges as by land, and that they shall be free in entering and exiting our land, without any impediment from our bailiffs or those of any other lord, {as long as they shall} hold to the required and correct customs.
We concede all the aforesaid liberties and exemptions to the aforesaid bishop and his successors, to the canons and to the citizens of the said city, such that through this liberal concession made to the said church, to the bishop and his successors, to the canons, and to the citizens, nothing shall be subtracted from the liberties conceded to the bishop and his successors and to the canons of this church through the charters of our predecessors the kings of England or of other donors. All these aforementioned things we conceded to the said bishop and his successors, the canons, and the citizens saving the liberties of our city of London.
For which reason we want and firmly command that the aforesaid bishop and his successors, the canons, and the citizens of this city shall have and hold in perpetuity all the aforesaid liberties and free customs and exemptions well and in peace, freely and wholly, and honorably, in all things and places throughout our entire realm, just as has been said.
{Done} with these witnesses: Eustace, bishop of London; Peter des Roches, bishop of Winchester; Joscelin bishop of Bath; Hubert de Burgh, our justiciar; Gilbert de Clare, earl {count} of Gloucestershire and Hertfordshire; Richard de Argenton; Ralph fitzNicholas, our seneschal; Henry de Capella; and others.
Written by the hand of the venerable father Ralph, bishop of Chester, our chancellor, at Westminster, on the thirtieth day of January, in the eleventh year of our reign

Granted by Henry III. (Regnal year 11). Granted at Westminster.
Primary Sources
Jones, W. Rich (ed), 1891, Charters and Documents Illustrating the History of the Cathedral, City, and Diocese of Salisbury in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries (Rerum Britannicarum Medii Aevi Scriptores - Rolls Series) Vol. 5 p. 97 (London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1891). Reprint, Kraus Reprint Ltd., 1965

Secondary Sources
Coulson, C., 1995, 'Battlements and the Bourgeoisie: Municipal Status and the Apparatus of Urban Defence' in Church, Stephen (ed), Medieval Knighthood Vol. 5 (Boydell) p170n201
Crittal, Elizabeth (ed), 1962, 'Salisbury: Bridges, bars, gates and mills', VCH Wiltshire Vol. 6 p. 87-90 online copy
Ballard, A. and Tait, J. (eds), 1923, British borough charters, 1216-1307 p. 121 online copy

Comments
SALISBURY 4143 1300. 1334 Subsidy £750.08. Site was part of the estate of ‘Old Salisburys’ (veteres Sarisberias) by the river Avon held by the bp of Salisbury in the eleventh century. The bp had a house on this estate by 1218. From 1219, Richard Poore, bp of Salisbury, established a new town and cathedral at Salisbury, moving down from his cathedral and borough on the nearby hill. The development around the new cathedral became known as (New) Salisbury, whilst the site of the previous cathedral became known as Old Sarum, Wiltshire (q.v.). Salisbury developed rapidly during the thirteenth century and was the most prominent town in the county by the fourteenth century. Market town c.1600 (Everitt, p. 472). Fair 1587, 6 Jan; fifth Sun in Lent; 29 Dec (Harrison, pp. 392-3, 397). See also VCH Wiltshire vi, pp. 51-64, 69-85, 138-41; Beresford, pp. 506-09. (Letters, S., 2003, Gazetter of Markets and Fairs in England and Wales to 1516 (Centre for Metropolitan History) online copy)

Record created by Philip Davis. This record created 09/02/2009. Last updated on 05/01/2013. First published online 5/01/2013.

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