Warwick castle and its earls : from Saxon times to the present day . tchurch, and MaudsCastle, and as many as fifty manors ; the Despencerestates in Gloucestershire, including the manors ofTewkesbury, Sodbury, Fairford, Whittington, Ched-worth, Wichwar, and Lidney ; the manors of Upton-on-Severn, Hanley Castle, and Bewdley, with theCastle of Elmley and twenty-four estates of less im-portance in Worcestershire ; nine manors, includingTamworth, in Warwickshire ; five manors and the Forestof Wychwood in Oxfordshire ; seven manors and theseat of Hanslape in Buckinghamshire ; forty-eight othermanor


Warwick castle and its earls : from Saxon times to the present day . tchurch, and MaudsCastle, and as many as fifty manors ; the Despencerestates in Gloucestershire, including the manors ofTewkesbury, Sodbury, Fairford, Whittington, Ched-worth, Wichwar, and Lidney ; the manors of Upton-on-Severn, Hanley Castle, and Bewdley, with theCastle of Elmley and twenty-four estates of less im-portance in Worcestershire ; nine manors, includingTamworth, in Warwickshire ; five manors and the Forestof Wychwood in Oxfordshire ; seven manors and theseat of Hanslape in Buckinghamshire ; forty-eight othermanors in Kent, Hampshire, Sussex, Essex, Hertford-shire, Suffolk, Norfolk, Berkshire, Wiltshire, Somerset,Devon, Cornwall, Northampton, Stafford, Cambridge,Rutland, and Nottingham ; and Barnards Castle, on theTees.^ A man so greatly endowed, provided that he werea great man, was clearly cast for a great part. For He was also entitled to various knights fees, advousons, chantries,town tenements, etc., etc., for which the curious may be referred to theEscheats Roll. 146. Warwick Castle the times were not such that any great mans lightwas likely to remain for long hidden under a bushel. Let us turn, then, to examine the character of thetimes in which Warwick the King-maker came into hisimmense inheritance. The years in which he was growing to manhoodwere the years in which the King of England wasgradually losing his domains in France. The siegeof Orleans was in progress when he was born. Rouencapitulated in the year in which he came of age. Howand where he spent his youth cannot be discovered,though it may be presumed that much of it was passedin London, at his fathers house in the tenementcalled the Harbour in the Ward of Dowgate. Thetimes were stormy, as we have seen. They were thetimes of the free fights, already referred to, in the Houseof Parliament, and of private wars between antagonisticbarons. In the private war between the King-makersfather and his step-brother of Westmorela


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1903