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Document Type

Article

Peer Reviewed

1

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Abstract

Many historians view the thirteenth-century as the height of English forest law, a system that governed lands set aside as royal forests and the rights to the resources of those lands. Forest boundaries could include villages, pastures, or meadows; they were not just treed woodlands. Oftentimes, scholars define forest law simply as the laws designed to protect the king’s hunting grounds. In modern connotations, that definition places forest law solely as a purview of nobility and the masculine. From the tenants who resided in a forest to the noble widows who held rights in or over forested areas, forest law affected all levels of society. In that, women were active in forest law as litigants, heirs, land holders, and even as officers in forest law administration.

This article explores whether women as operators in forest law were subject to a gendered experience or whether they shared a more equitable status with their male counterparts. Until recently, forest law historiography has either ignored women’s involvement or mentioned them only in tandem with their spouses, the exception being royal and ecclesiastical women, those set above or apart from everyday society. Yet even those women have been subject to a gendered interpretation by previous generations of scholars. Modern scholars increasingly are addressing the roles and actions of women in forest law, yet when it comes to understanding the gestalt of women operating in medieval English forest law, more research is necessary. Thirteenth-century legal and administrative sources demonstrate women were pivotal in forest litigation, inheritance issues, rights of the forest, and royal or locally appointed offices.

Through the lens of family, this study will demonstrate how women were active agents in thirteenth-century English forest law adjudication and administration in accordance with their social status, not simply their gender. Evidence supports the argument that women were informed participants at the height forest law. In that, this article will add to the growing body of fresh interpretations of women’s involvement in English society at the time of a burgeoning bureaucracy.

Keywords

Forest law, Land ownership, Rights of the forest, Matrilineal Connections, Inheritance

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