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History of the New Forest
The New Forest in Hampshire, England was
originally commandeered in 1079 as a deer hunting area by the king,
William the Conqueror. As Duke William of Normandy (known as "William
the Bastard"), he had successfully invaded England in 1066.
The New Forest is a beautiful area, but it is not "natural" in the
sense of untouched by man.
The Forest has been moulded by the fads of monarchs since William, and
the changing priorities of the Crown over the last 900 years: deer;
timber for naval shipbuilding; commercial timber production;
recreation.
"Forest" in a medieval sense was a legally defined area - subject to
special laws - where the "beasts of the chase" (deer & wild pig) and
their food were protected for the pleasure of the monarch. It was not
necessarily a wooded area in the modern meaning - nearly half the New
Forest is open heath, grassland and bog.
The laws enacted to preserve the deer for the royal pleasure were the
Forest Laws. The odious penalties of Forest Law for interference with
the king's deer and its food ("browse") became less severe over the
centuries, but remnants of the legal structure that policed the area
for the Crown are still present in the New Forest as the Verderers'
Court.
The dominance of the preservation of the deer over the agricultural
and fuel requirements of the sparse local population led to some
concessions by the Crown. These concessions - which include the right
to turn out stock into the open Forest, the gathering of fuel-wood,
the digging of clay - are now enshrined as the "Rights of Common".
These Rights attach to certain plots of domestic and agricultural land
both within the boundaries of the Forest, and close by.
The ponies, cattle and pigs turned out into the open forest are owned
by the "Commoners", and are there by the Rights whose foundations
extend back 900 years to William's time.
The Commoner has also shaped the Forest. The open forest is dominated
by the activities of his stock, and by the deer. These herbivores have
been called the "architects of the Forest". The flora is defined by
what they will, or will not eat.
Above their heads is the hand of man - the Inclosures (fenced
woodland) - either still enclosed to keep stock out to prevent damage
to timber, or mature plantations "thrown open" for the Commoners'
animals to enter.
At its greatest extent in the 12th & 13th centuries, 3% of the acreage
of England was used for the keeping of deer in Forests; the legal
boundaries of Forest Law extended beyond this physical Forest and up
to one third of England was subject to Forest Law. The demands of
cultivation and other pressures have led to the extinguishing of
nearly all the Royal Forests.
Why has the New Forest survived? In a simple practical sense, it has
survived because the soils are impoverished.
There is evidence of cultivation within the area in the Bronze Age
(field enclosures) but the clearing of woods in that era and the
subsequent leaching of nutrients impoverished the poor soils.
It was an infertile "waste" when William brought it under Forest Law
("afforested" it); it is still an infertile waste.
It will support grazing herbivores and the cultivation of timber
(which in the 17th, 18th & 19th centuries was for shipbuilding). It
has supported little else, but this waste has served the requirements
of the Crown.
Its preservation now is an - at times - uneasy balance of commercial
forestry, its ecological status as a unique environment and the Rights
of the Commoners (guarded by the Verderers). This balance of the
frequently divergent interests of the Commoners and the Crown is not
new. Historically, the Crown could only exploit the Forest at the
expense of the Commoners; on the other hand, the exercising of Rights
by the Commoners reduced the ability of the Crown to expand timber
production and maintain the deer.
Remarkably, the New Forest has survived many challenges over 900
years. These pages offer an overview of its history, ancient practices
and beauty.
"But in its wild scenery lies its greatest charm...... Nowhere, in
extent at least, spread such stretches of heath and moor, golden in
the spring with the blaze of furze, and in the autumn purple with
heather, and bronzed with the fading fern. Nowhere in England rise
such oak-woods, their boughs rimed with the frostwork of lichens, and
dark beech-groves with their floor of red brown leaves, on which the
branches weave their own warp and woof of light and shade."
John Wise, 1895 - The New Forest. Its History and Its Scenery. |
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