Ilketshall St Andrew - History
This is the place for your photographs and memories of our Village, more material required.
Credit to Tim Maycock for some of the photos below.
Credit to Tim Maycock for some of the photos below.
Nine Parishes

The sketch map shows the major arial units of the western portion of the
Hundred of Wangford (Wainford; meaning river crossing of the wagons) as it appeared in Domesday book and up to the present. The boundaries form a
remarkably regular rectangular array of seven distinct communities with
boundaries aligned to the course of the River Waveney to the north and the road
from Halesworth to Wainford towards the east. Two large rectangles may be
defined. The Nine Parishes make up the western rectangle and the eastern one
consists of the four Ilketshalls, plus Bungay and Mettingham. Looking at the
precision of this large scale division of land, the conclusion cannot be avoided
that the comparmentation was part of one great plan, which probably predated the formation of the Hundred and came after the formation of the road. The old name for this road is Stone Street, an indication that it follows the line of a Roman highway.
Hundred of Wangford (Wainford; meaning river crossing of the wagons) as it appeared in Domesday book and up to the present. The boundaries form a
remarkably regular rectangular array of seven distinct communities with
boundaries aligned to the course of the River Waveney to the north and the road
from Halesworth to Wainford towards the east. Two large rectangles may be
defined. The Nine Parishes make up the western rectangle and the eastern one
consists of the four Ilketshalls, plus Bungay and Mettingham. Looking at the
precision of this large scale division of land, the conclusion cannot be avoided
that the comparmentation was part of one great plan, which probably predated the formation of the Hundred and came after the formation of the road. The old name for this road is Stone Street, an indication that it follows the line of a Roman highway.
Ilketshall.
Ilketshall signifies the hall or chief residence of Ulketil, who was Earl of East Angliain the eleventh century. Thus Redenhall, in Norfolk, is mentioned in Domesday Book as the hall of Rada, who held it in the time of Edward the Confessor.
This district comprehends the parishes of St. Andrew, St. John, St. Laurence, St. Margaret, and All Saints Mettingham; to which the two parishes of St. Mary and Holy Trinity, in Bungay, are added, and make up what are commonly called 'The seven parishes;' in contradistinction to the South Elmhams, or 'The nine parishes.'
Among the Saxons mentioned in the Domesday Survey as holding estates here, Uchetel, a free-man, had property in Bungay; and a free-woman, whose name is not recorded, appears as an under-tenant of the wealthy Burchard—an early instance of a female Suffolk farmer. The King and Earl Hugh took possession of the greater part of Ilketshall, but their estates were soon afterwards divided into smaller parcels, upon which various families fixed their residence. The principal of these was one which assumed its surname from the township. Sir Gilbert de Ilketshall was lord of Hedenham and Kelling, in Norfolk, and of Ilketshall, in Suffolk, as early as the reign of William Rufus. Sir Thomas de Ilketshall was son of Sir Gilbert, as appears from the register of Holm Abbey. Gilbert de Ilketshall, Esq., was son and heir of Sir Thomas, and in the thirty-second of Henry III. had a charter of free-warren in
Ilketshall. Sir James de Ilkeshall was son of Gilbert, and in the fifty-second of Henry III. Mortgaged for twenty-seven marks and a half of silver, to the Lady Sarah, Prioress of Bungay, certain lands, &c. In the following year he
conveyed an acre of land, and the advowson of the church of St. John Baptist of Ilketshall, by fine to the Priory of the Holy Cross in Bungay. Amongst the knights of Suffolk in the seventeenth of Edward I. occurs the name of this Sir James de Ilketshall: he died in 1312.
In the list of towns and their lords, made in the ninth of Edward II., the Sheriff of Suffolk returns that Ilketshall had three lords—namely, Comitissa Marescall, Guido Ferre, (fn. 1) and Jacobus deIlketshall. This Sir Jacobus or James de Ilketshall was son and heir of the former Sir James, and married Ida, daughter and coheiress of Sir Robert de Stafford, Knight, by Gundreda his wife; and Sir Robert was son of Sir William de Stafford by Ermetrude his wife, daughter and coheir of Robert, lord of Rodbourn, in Derbyshire. In the sixth of Edward II. a deed was executed between Sir James de Ilketshall on the one part, and James his son and Ida his wife, whereby James and Ida grant the manor of Kelling, in Norfolk, to Sir James for life, and Sir James released to them £9 per annum out of his £15 per annum annuity, which they were to pay him and Aliva his wife, for the manor of Hedenham: dated at Ilketshall on Monday next after the feast of St. Michael.
Sir James, the son, was lord of Ilketshall in the ninth of Edward II., as appears by the record called Nomina Villarum. He and Ida his wife were living in the fifteenth of Edward III., and left two sons, Sir Philip, the younger, and Sir Robert de Ilketshall, his heir, who died before 1381; for at that time Claricia, his late wife, was married to Sir Robert de Morley. By this Claricia, Sir Robert de Ilketshall had two sons and four daughters. The daughters were, Joan, married to William de Sharnbourn, Esq.; Idonea, married to . . . . . . . ., whose daughter and heiress Margery was wife to Laurence Fitz-Piers. Margaret married to Thomas Seive, of Worstead; and the fourth daughter married Gilbert de Debenham. The sons were, William de Ilketshall, who was the younger, and living in the nineteenth of Richard II.; and Sir Thomas de Ilketshall, son and heir of Sir Robert, who married Isabel, daughter of . . . . . . ., who afterwards became the wife of William Deyvile, Esq. Philip de Ilketshall, their son, married, but died without issue in the reign of Henry VI. (fn. 2)
The arms of Ilketshall were or, a fess between two chevronels gules, and a cantonermine.
In the second of Edward III., the King granted to John Bardolf, and Elizabeth his wife, daughter and heiress of Roger Damery, the manor of Ilketshall in fee. (fn. 3) "Rex concessit Joh: Bardolfe et Eliz: ux: ejus, filiæ et heredi Rogeri Damery, in feodomaneriā de Ilkelleshall, et de Clopton, in Com: Suff: per servitium ¼ unius feodi militis,necnon 40s. annui redditus de Abb: de Waltham S. Crucis pro firmâ de Waltham, inescambio pro maneriis de Kenyngton, et de Frankeshall in Com: Surr." (fn. 4)
This grant was the manor of Bardolf in Ilketshall St. Laurence, and Bungay Trinity, which acquired its appellation from this family. They bore az. 3 cinquefoilsor, and descended from the famous Thomas, Lord Bardolph of Stoke-Bardolph, in the county of Nottingham, in the reign of Henry I.; who was killed at the battle of Branceholm Moor in Northumberland. Hugh Bardolph was in the advanced guard at the siege of Kaerleverock in Scotland, twenty-eighth of Edward I. Sir Thomas Bardolph was a Knight Banneret in the reign of Edward I., and was present at the tournament of Dunstable, in the second of Edward II. Both Hugh and Sir Thomas bore the arms as above, but the
cinquefoils are said to have been afterwards perforated. The family was seated at Bardolph Hall in Ilketshall, and in Dennington, in Hoxne Hundred, till the seventh of Henry IV., when Thomas, Lord Bardolph, was attainted in Parliament.
He left two daughters, Joan, married to William Philips, and Ann, married first to Sir William Clifford, and secondly to Reginald Cobham.
The Bardolphs held the manor of Barren, in the thirty-fourth of Edward I.; two knights' fees in Fretingham, Sproughton, and Spiksworth, in the first of Edward III.; the manor of Clopton, and £20 per annum out of the manor of Ilketshall, in the forty-fifth of Edward III.; Ringshall in Clopton, with the advowson of Debash; and Bardolph Hall in Ilketshall, in the fourth of Henry IV. Sir William Philips, who bore quarterly, gul. and arg., an eagle displayed or, in the first quarter, married, as before stated, Joan, daughter of Lord Bardolph, and was by Henry V. created Lord Bardolph, jure uxoris. His seats were Bardolph Hall in Ilketshall, and Dennington, where he founded a chantry for two priests to celebrate divine service daily, and to pray for the good estate of himself and his wife Joan, during their lives, and for their souls after their departure; also for the souls of Henry IV., Henry V., and all the faithful deceased. He was Knight of the Garter, and left Elizabeth his sole daughter and heiress, who married John, Lord Viscount Beaumont, who settled at Dennington, after his marriage.
Beaumont bore az., a lion ramp. or, within a bordure ermine. They were Viscounts for several generations, and Lords of Ilketshall, Dennington, and Clopton, in the first of Henry VIII., about which time Lords Viscount Beaumont died without issue, leaving Brian Stapleton and John Morris, his heirs.
In 1309, we meet with William de la Park, of Ilketshall, who had lands called Park's Manor, from his own name, in Aslacton in Norfolk.
In 1345, William Del Park was lord. He bore az. an eagle displayed arg. This ancient family came originally from Heveningham; for we find that in 1289, William, son of William Del Park of Heveningham, had the whole manor of Bartlets, alias Herewards, in Wickmere, in Norfolk, with the advowson. (fn. 5) The Parks were seated at Ilketshall, till Joan, sole daughter and heiress, married John Duke, of Brampton. This estate remained with the Dukes for several generations, of whom it was purchased by the Richmonds, and passed by the marriage of Mary,
daughter and heiress of William Richmond, to Charles Garneys, Esq., of Hedenham. From the Garneysit passed again by marriage to James Calthorpe, Esq.
In the tenth of Henry VIII., Sir Richard Wingfield held the manor of Ilketshall of the King, by knight's service, and the rent of one penny per annum. By the inquisitio post mortem Jacobi Bungay, taken November 2nd, in the tenth of Queen Elizabeth, he held lands in Ilketshall St. Andrew, of Peter Rede, Esq., as parcel of his manor of Ellys; also in Beccles, of John Blennerhasset, as of his manor of Barsham; and in Ilketshall and Shipmeadow.
In the fifteenth of Elizabeth, Thomas Rouse, Arm: held lands in St. Laurence, Bungay, &c., valued at £13 per annum, and also the manor of Ilketshall Bardolph: he died 20th February in that year, leaving his son, Thomas Rouse, his heir, aged about twelve years. These manors and estates have subsequently merged into various channels. In 1561, this district had the following number of freeholders. St. Andrew Ilketshall 10; among whom was
Edward Tasburgh, Gent.; Saint Laurence 3, and St. Margaret Ilketshall 4. (fn. 6)
The several churches in these parishes became appropriated to the Benedictine Priory in Bungay, except that of the Holy Trinity, which was given to the Monastery of Barlings, in Lincolnshire.
Dugdale cites a long and interesting charter of Henry II., granted at the petition of Roger Glanville and Gundreda his wife, confirming to the nuns of Bungay, inter alia, the churches of St. Cross (St. Mary) in Bungay, All Saints Mettingham, St. Margaret, St. Andrew and St. Laurence Ilketshall. St. John's Church was afterwards conveyed to them, as before shown.
A second charter of the same King mentions several donations to the nuns of Bungay, among which are the gifts of Thomas, fil: Gilb: de Ilketshall, the homage of Ulketel the merchant, and the donations of John Hockedez of Ilketshall, who gave the homage of Alan, fil: Arnulphi de Metingham.
In 1474, John Bernard, Esq., of Norwich, bequeathed legacies to the churches of St. John, St. Laurence, and St. Margaret Ilketshall; and also made a bequest to Mettingham Castle.
The Liberty of the Duke of Norfolk includes this district.
From: 'Ilketshall', The History and Antiquities of the County of Suffolk: volume 1 (1846), pp. 111-118. URL:
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=75121 Date accessed: 19 February 2013.
This district comprehends the parishes of St. Andrew, St. John, St. Laurence, St. Margaret, and All Saints Mettingham; to which the two parishes of St. Mary and Holy Trinity, in Bungay, are added, and make up what are commonly called 'The seven parishes;' in contradistinction to the South Elmhams, or 'The nine parishes.'
Among the Saxons mentioned in the Domesday Survey as holding estates here, Uchetel, a free-man, had property in Bungay; and a free-woman, whose name is not recorded, appears as an under-tenant of the wealthy Burchard—an early instance of a female Suffolk farmer. The King and Earl Hugh took possession of the greater part of Ilketshall, but their estates were soon afterwards divided into smaller parcels, upon which various families fixed their residence. The principal of these was one which assumed its surname from the township. Sir Gilbert de Ilketshall was lord of Hedenham and Kelling, in Norfolk, and of Ilketshall, in Suffolk, as early as the reign of William Rufus. Sir Thomas de Ilketshall was son of Sir Gilbert, as appears from the register of Holm Abbey. Gilbert de Ilketshall, Esq., was son and heir of Sir Thomas, and in the thirty-second of Henry III. had a charter of free-warren in
Ilketshall. Sir James de Ilkeshall was son of Gilbert, and in the fifty-second of Henry III. Mortgaged for twenty-seven marks and a half of silver, to the Lady Sarah, Prioress of Bungay, certain lands, &c. In the following year he
conveyed an acre of land, and the advowson of the church of St. John Baptist of Ilketshall, by fine to the Priory of the Holy Cross in Bungay. Amongst the knights of Suffolk in the seventeenth of Edward I. occurs the name of this Sir James de Ilketshall: he died in 1312.
In the list of towns and their lords, made in the ninth of Edward II., the Sheriff of Suffolk returns that Ilketshall had three lords—namely, Comitissa Marescall, Guido Ferre, (fn. 1) and Jacobus deIlketshall. This Sir Jacobus or James de Ilketshall was son and heir of the former Sir James, and married Ida, daughter and coheiress of Sir Robert de Stafford, Knight, by Gundreda his wife; and Sir Robert was son of Sir William de Stafford by Ermetrude his wife, daughter and coheir of Robert, lord of Rodbourn, in Derbyshire. In the sixth of Edward II. a deed was executed between Sir James de Ilketshall on the one part, and James his son and Ida his wife, whereby James and Ida grant the manor of Kelling, in Norfolk, to Sir James for life, and Sir James released to them £9 per annum out of his £15 per annum annuity, which they were to pay him and Aliva his wife, for the manor of Hedenham: dated at Ilketshall on Monday next after the feast of St. Michael.
Sir James, the son, was lord of Ilketshall in the ninth of Edward II., as appears by the record called Nomina Villarum. He and Ida his wife were living in the fifteenth of Edward III., and left two sons, Sir Philip, the younger, and Sir Robert de Ilketshall, his heir, who died before 1381; for at that time Claricia, his late wife, was married to Sir Robert de Morley. By this Claricia, Sir Robert de Ilketshall had two sons and four daughters. The daughters were, Joan, married to William de Sharnbourn, Esq.; Idonea, married to . . . . . . . ., whose daughter and heiress Margery was wife to Laurence Fitz-Piers. Margaret married to Thomas Seive, of Worstead; and the fourth daughter married Gilbert de Debenham. The sons were, William de Ilketshall, who was the younger, and living in the nineteenth of Richard II.; and Sir Thomas de Ilketshall, son and heir of Sir Robert, who married Isabel, daughter of . . . . . . ., who afterwards became the wife of William Deyvile, Esq. Philip de Ilketshall, their son, married, but died without issue in the reign of Henry VI. (fn. 2)
The arms of Ilketshall were or, a fess between two chevronels gules, and a cantonermine.
In the second of Edward III., the King granted to John Bardolf, and Elizabeth his wife, daughter and heiress of Roger Damery, the manor of Ilketshall in fee. (fn. 3) "Rex concessit Joh: Bardolfe et Eliz: ux: ejus, filiæ et heredi Rogeri Damery, in feodomaneriā de Ilkelleshall, et de Clopton, in Com: Suff: per servitium ¼ unius feodi militis,necnon 40s. annui redditus de Abb: de Waltham S. Crucis pro firmâ de Waltham, inescambio pro maneriis de Kenyngton, et de Frankeshall in Com: Surr." (fn. 4)
This grant was the manor of Bardolf in Ilketshall St. Laurence, and Bungay Trinity, which acquired its appellation from this family. They bore az. 3 cinquefoilsor, and descended from the famous Thomas, Lord Bardolph of Stoke-Bardolph, in the county of Nottingham, in the reign of Henry I.; who was killed at the battle of Branceholm Moor in Northumberland. Hugh Bardolph was in the advanced guard at the siege of Kaerleverock in Scotland, twenty-eighth of Edward I. Sir Thomas Bardolph was a Knight Banneret in the reign of Edward I., and was present at the tournament of Dunstable, in the second of Edward II. Both Hugh and Sir Thomas bore the arms as above, but the
cinquefoils are said to have been afterwards perforated. The family was seated at Bardolph Hall in Ilketshall, and in Dennington, in Hoxne Hundred, till the seventh of Henry IV., when Thomas, Lord Bardolph, was attainted in Parliament.
He left two daughters, Joan, married to William Philips, and Ann, married first to Sir William Clifford, and secondly to Reginald Cobham.
The Bardolphs held the manor of Barren, in the thirty-fourth of Edward I.; two knights' fees in Fretingham, Sproughton, and Spiksworth, in the first of Edward III.; the manor of Clopton, and £20 per annum out of the manor of Ilketshall, in the forty-fifth of Edward III.; Ringshall in Clopton, with the advowson of Debash; and Bardolph Hall in Ilketshall, in the fourth of Henry IV. Sir William Philips, who bore quarterly, gul. and arg., an eagle displayed or, in the first quarter, married, as before stated, Joan, daughter of Lord Bardolph, and was by Henry V. created Lord Bardolph, jure uxoris. His seats were Bardolph Hall in Ilketshall, and Dennington, where he founded a chantry for two priests to celebrate divine service daily, and to pray for the good estate of himself and his wife Joan, during their lives, and for their souls after their departure; also for the souls of Henry IV., Henry V., and all the faithful deceased. He was Knight of the Garter, and left Elizabeth his sole daughter and heiress, who married John, Lord Viscount Beaumont, who settled at Dennington, after his marriage.
Beaumont bore az., a lion ramp. or, within a bordure ermine. They were Viscounts for several generations, and Lords of Ilketshall, Dennington, and Clopton, in the first of Henry VIII., about which time Lords Viscount Beaumont died without issue, leaving Brian Stapleton and John Morris, his heirs.
In 1309, we meet with William de la Park, of Ilketshall, who had lands called Park's Manor, from his own name, in Aslacton in Norfolk.
In 1345, William Del Park was lord. He bore az. an eagle displayed arg. This ancient family came originally from Heveningham; for we find that in 1289, William, son of William Del Park of Heveningham, had the whole manor of Bartlets, alias Herewards, in Wickmere, in Norfolk, with the advowson. (fn. 5) The Parks were seated at Ilketshall, till Joan, sole daughter and heiress, married John Duke, of Brampton. This estate remained with the Dukes for several generations, of whom it was purchased by the Richmonds, and passed by the marriage of Mary,
daughter and heiress of William Richmond, to Charles Garneys, Esq., of Hedenham. From the Garneysit passed again by marriage to James Calthorpe, Esq.
In the tenth of Henry VIII., Sir Richard Wingfield held the manor of Ilketshall of the King, by knight's service, and the rent of one penny per annum. By the inquisitio post mortem Jacobi Bungay, taken November 2nd, in the tenth of Queen Elizabeth, he held lands in Ilketshall St. Andrew, of Peter Rede, Esq., as parcel of his manor of Ellys; also in Beccles, of John Blennerhasset, as of his manor of Barsham; and in Ilketshall and Shipmeadow.
In the fifteenth of Elizabeth, Thomas Rouse, Arm: held lands in St. Laurence, Bungay, &c., valued at £13 per annum, and also the manor of Ilketshall Bardolph: he died 20th February in that year, leaving his son, Thomas Rouse, his heir, aged about twelve years. These manors and estates have subsequently merged into various channels. In 1561, this district had the following number of freeholders. St. Andrew Ilketshall 10; among whom was
Edward Tasburgh, Gent.; Saint Laurence 3, and St. Margaret Ilketshall 4. (fn. 6)
The several churches in these parishes became appropriated to the Benedictine Priory in Bungay, except that of the Holy Trinity, which was given to the Monastery of Barlings, in Lincolnshire.
Dugdale cites a long and interesting charter of Henry II., granted at the petition of Roger Glanville and Gundreda his wife, confirming to the nuns of Bungay, inter alia, the churches of St. Cross (St. Mary) in Bungay, All Saints Mettingham, St. Margaret, St. Andrew and St. Laurence Ilketshall. St. John's Church was afterwards conveyed to them, as before shown.
A second charter of the same King mentions several donations to the nuns of Bungay, among which are the gifts of Thomas, fil: Gilb: de Ilketshall, the homage of Ulketel the merchant, and the donations of John Hockedez of Ilketshall, who gave the homage of Alan, fil: Arnulphi de Metingham.
In 1474, John Bernard, Esq., of Norwich, bequeathed legacies to the churches of St. John, St. Laurence, and St. Margaret Ilketshall; and also made a bequest to Mettingham Castle.
The Liberty of the Duke of Norfolk includes this district.
From: 'Ilketshall', The History and Antiquities of the County of Suffolk: volume 1 (1846), pp. 111-118. URL:
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=75121 Date accessed: 19 February 2013.
St. Andrew Ilketshall
St. Andrew Ilketshall was the lordship of James de Ilketshall, in the ninth of Edward I. The interests of this family here are given in a previous page. In the fifth of Queen Elizabeth it was held by Sir Henry Denny, who sold it to Sir Nicholas Bacon, whose heirs, in 1657, re-sold it to William Gymmingham, Gent., of St. John's Ilketshall, who by his will, dated October 8th, 1658, left his wife, Rebecca, a life interest therein, and directed it to be sold on her decease. She held it till 1677, when she alienated it, with the property called St. John's Hall, to John Hunt, Esq., and it became united with the Mettingham Castle estate. The soil of all the commons and waste lands within the parish appears to belong to this manor; there being divers presentments in the court books for persons commoning, not being tenants of the manor; and for incroachments and nuisances therein. In 1751, forfeitures were remitted, on payment, by Thomas Clendon, Gent., of £21 to the lord, for having cut down timber trees, &c. (fn. 7) The manor now belongs to the Rev. Jeremy Day.
The appropriation of the rectory to the nuns of Bungay was granted as early as the reign of Henry II. They continued in possession of the great tithes and the advowson of the vicarage till the dissolution of religious houses by Henry VIII., who, on the 18th of December, in the twenty-ninth year of his reign, granted them to Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, to be held by him and the heirs of his body in capite, &c. On the 27th of February, 1724, Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, sold " all and singular the rectory or parsonage impropriate of Ilketshall St. Andrew, with the glebe lands, tithes, & c., there to belonging." to Henry Williams, of Bungay, for £265.
By indrē of bargain and sale, dated March 9th, 1778, between Sarah Williams, relict of Robert Williams, of the first part; Henry Williams, of Marlesford, Clk., only son and heir-at-law of Robert Williams, deceased, and Sarah Williams, of Bungay, spinster; said Henry Williams and Sarah Williams being the only surviving issue of the said Robert Williams, of the second part; and Philip Walker, of Lowestoft, merchant, of the third part, in consideration of the natural love and affection, &c., and for barring all entails, &c.; the said Sarah Williams, the elder, Sarah Williams, the younger, and Henry Williams, did grant, bargain and sell to Philip Walker, his heirs and assigns, the said premises, to hold to him, to the use of Henry Williams, and his heirs and assigns for ever. (fn. 8)
The said Henry Williams afterwards contracted with the proprietors of lands in the parish of St. Andrew for the sale of the great tithes issuing out of their respective estates. (fn. 9)
In 1779, the Rev. Henry Williams, of Marlesford, sold to Mr. Arnold the great tithes growing on his farm in St. Andrew Ilketshall, for£189. (fn. 10) In the same year Williams conveyed to Dr. Tanner the great tithes of his lands. Williams executed a covenant to keep the chancel in repair, and to pay all procurations and synodals. (fn. 11) The unsold portion of the great tithes was afterwards purchased by Alexander Browne, Esq., and is now the property of Elizabeth, his eldest daughter, the wife of John Page Scott, Esq., of Norwich. The vicarage passed from the Howards to the same family of Williams, from whom it was transferred to the trustees of Bungay School, as will be shown hereafter, who are the present patrons.
The parish contains 1694 acres, 3 roods, 9 perches of strong, but fertile land, whereof 71 acres are commons. The glebes amount to 29 acres. The great tithes have been commuted for £395. 12s. 2½d., of which the impropriatrix receives £128. 11s. 1d., the residue being the property of divers owners. The vicarial tithes are commuted for £130. 7s. 7½d. The Rector of St. John's has a portion of tithes amounting to £27 per annum out of this parish, and the Rector of Shipmeadow £1. 10s.
The population amounted in 1841 to 548 souls.
From: 'Ilketshall', The History and Antiquities of the County of Suffolk: volume 1 (1846), pp. 111-118. URL:
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=75121 Date accessed: 19 February 2013.
The appropriation of the rectory to the nuns of Bungay was granted as early as the reign of Henry II. They continued in possession of the great tithes and the advowson of the vicarage till the dissolution of religious houses by Henry VIII., who, on the 18th of December, in the twenty-ninth year of his reign, granted them to Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, to be held by him and the heirs of his body in capite, &c. On the 27th of February, 1724, Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, sold " all and singular the rectory or parsonage impropriate of Ilketshall St. Andrew, with the glebe lands, tithes, & c., there to belonging." to Henry Williams, of Bungay, for £265.
By indrē of bargain and sale, dated March 9th, 1778, between Sarah Williams, relict of Robert Williams, of the first part; Henry Williams, of Marlesford, Clk., only son and heir-at-law of Robert Williams, deceased, and Sarah Williams, of Bungay, spinster; said Henry Williams and Sarah Williams being the only surviving issue of the said Robert Williams, of the second part; and Philip Walker, of Lowestoft, merchant, of the third part, in consideration of the natural love and affection, &c., and for barring all entails, &c.; the said Sarah Williams, the elder, Sarah Williams, the younger, and Henry Williams, did grant, bargain and sell to Philip Walker, his heirs and assigns, the said premises, to hold to him, to the use of Henry Williams, and his heirs and assigns for ever. (fn. 8)
The said Henry Williams afterwards contracted with the proprietors of lands in the parish of St. Andrew for the sale of the great tithes issuing out of their respective estates. (fn. 9)
In 1779, the Rev. Henry Williams, of Marlesford, sold to Mr. Arnold the great tithes growing on his farm in St. Andrew Ilketshall, for£189. (fn. 10) In the same year Williams conveyed to Dr. Tanner the great tithes of his lands. Williams executed a covenant to keep the chancel in repair, and to pay all procurations and synodals. (fn. 11) The unsold portion of the great tithes was afterwards purchased by Alexander Browne, Esq., and is now the property of Elizabeth, his eldest daughter, the wife of John Page Scott, Esq., of Norwich. The vicarage passed from the Howards to the same family of Williams, from whom it was transferred to the trustees of Bungay School, as will be shown hereafter, who are the present patrons.
The parish contains 1694 acres, 3 roods, 9 perches of strong, but fertile land, whereof 71 acres are commons. The glebes amount to 29 acres. The great tithes have been commuted for £395. 12s. 2½d., of which the impropriatrix receives £128. 11s. 1d., the residue being the property of divers owners. The vicarial tithes are commuted for £130. 7s. 7½d. The Rector of St. John's has a portion of tithes amounting to £27 per annum out of this parish, and the Rector of Shipmeadow £1. 10s.
The population amounted in 1841 to 548 souls.
From: 'Ilketshall', The History and Antiquities of the County of Suffolk: volume 1 (1846), pp. 111-118. URL:
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=75121 Date accessed: 19 February 2013.
Kelly's Post Office Directory of Suffolk 1875
Ilketshall St. Andrew is a parish and scattered village, 4 miles south-east from Bungay, in the Eastern division
of the county, Wangford hundred and union, Beccles county court district, Wangford rural deanery, Suffolk archdeaconry, and Norwich diocese. The church of St. Andrew is a small ancient Gothic structure, and consists of a
chancel and nave, with round tower, upper part octagonal; it has a Norman doorway; in the tower are 4 bells. The parish register dates from the year 1542. The living is a vicarage, ththe rent-charge £130, with 28 acres of glebe, in the gift of M.B. Metcalfe, esq., and held by the Rev. Wallace Metcalfe, M.A., of St. John’s College, Cambridge. The
greater portion of the great tithes has been sold to the landowners of the parish; Mrs. Smythe, of Edgbaston, owns the rest, about £130 yearly. The Wesleyans have a small chapel, erected in 1840. The Town lands, 13 acres and a double cottage and two single ones are now let for £21 10s.yearly, which sum is applied to the repair of the church and other incidental expenses of the parish. The school is at present being enlarged and St. John’s, Ilketshall, will be attached. Lord Waveney, John Garden, esq., and the Rev. J. Micklethwaite are chief land owners. The soil is generally heavy; subsoil, sandy clay. The chief crops are wheat, barely and beans. The area is 1,694 acres; rateable value, £2,412; and the population in 1871 was 465.
Parish Clerk, William Kemp
_____
Letters through Bungay. Letter box at Churchgate, cleared at 4 p.m. daily. The nearest money order office is at Bungay.
Metcalfe Rev. Wallace, M.A. (Vicar)
Boon Jonathan, farmer
Brighten George, shopkeeper
Button Robert, Farmer
Calver Walter, builder
Cullum Stephen, farmer
Dyer Robert, shopkeeper & coal dealer
Gates William, shoe maker
Green John, Hare & Hounds
Green William, miller
Hadingham Maria (Mrs.),farmer
Hamment Horace, farmer
Hancy Robert, Blacksmith
Hunting Charles, veterinary surgeon
Keable John, sheep dresser
Le Grice John, farmer
Low Daniel, show maker
Low Edward, shoe maker
Oldring John, farmer
Phillipo James, farmer
Salter John, Farmer, Hall farm
Sayer Wm. Grocer. China & earthwr. dlr.
Spurgeon William, farmer
Stebings James, farm bailiff to Peter Adamson, esq. Of Yarmouth
Tooke John, farmer
Wyatt William, beer retailer
of the county, Wangford hundred and union, Beccles county court district, Wangford rural deanery, Suffolk archdeaconry, and Norwich diocese. The church of St. Andrew is a small ancient Gothic structure, and consists of a
chancel and nave, with round tower, upper part octagonal; it has a Norman doorway; in the tower are 4 bells. The parish register dates from the year 1542. The living is a vicarage, ththe rent-charge £130, with 28 acres of glebe, in the gift of M.B. Metcalfe, esq., and held by the Rev. Wallace Metcalfe, M.A., of St. John’s College, Cambridge. The
greater portion of the great tithes has been sold to the landowners of the parish; Mrs. Smythe, of Edgbaston, owns the rest, about £130 yearly. The Wesleyans have a small chapel, erected in 1840. The Town lands, 13 acres and a double cottage and two single ones are now let for £21 10s.yearly, which sum is applied to the repair of the church and other incidental expenses of the parish. The school is at present being enlarged and St. John’s, Ilketshall, will be attached. Lord Waveney, John Garden, esq., and the Rev. J. Micklethwaite are chief land owners. The soil is generally heavy; subsoil, sandy clay. The chief crops are wheat, barely and beans. The area is 1,694 acres; rateable value, £2,412; and the population in 1871 was 465.
Parish Clerk, William Kemp
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Letters through Bungay. Letter box at Churchgate, cleared at 4 p.m. daily. The nearest money order office is at Bungay.
Metcalfe Rev. Wallace, M.A. (Vicar)
Boon Jonathan, farmer
Brighten George, shopkeeper
Button Robert, Farmer
Calver Walter, builder
Cullum Stephen, farmer
Dyer Robert, shopkeeper & coal dealer
Gates William, shoe maker
Green John, Hare & Hounds
Green William, miller
Hadingham Maria (Mrs.),farmer
Hamment Horace, farmer
Hancy Robert, Blacksmith
Hunting Charles, veterinary surgeon
Keable John, sheep dresser
Le Grice John, farmer
Low Daniel, show maker
Low Edward, shoe maker
Oldring John, farmer
Phillipo James, farmer
Salter John, Farmer, Hall farm
Sayer Wm. Grocer. China & earthwr. dlr.
Spurgeon William, farmer
Stebings James, farm bailiff to Peter Adamson, esq. Of Yarmouth
Tooke John, farmer
Wyatt William, beer retailer
Introduction to the Ilketshalls
Four parishes to the east of South Elmham bear the name Ilketshall. These communities, named after the
dedications of their churches, St Andrew, St John, St Lawrence and St Margaret, together with three adjacent parishes bounding the Waveney, namely the village of Mettingham (All Saints) and two communities of Bungay town (All Saints and St Mary), have been known since at least the 18th century as 'The Seven Parishes'.
Together with the 'Nine Parishes' to the west based on South Elmham, this district is known to local people as 'The Saints'. It comprises the western section of Wangford Hundred. Like the South Elmhams, the Ilketshalls are a
unified topographical unit sharing the same flat glacial landscape broken by almost imperceptible dips and troughs of melt water 'brooks' and 'becks' . It is impossible to discern where one village ends and another begins and easy to get lost in a maze of angular roads, lanes and footpaths.
The name Iketshall is said to relate to the Anglo-Saxon Ulfcytel (died 1016) an Anglo-Saxon nobleman. He was apparently an important warlord of East Anglia from 1004 to his death at the battle of Assandun. Scandinavian sources refer to him as Ulfkell Snillinge, the byname meaning bold. Ulfcytel also appears as a character in Saint Olaf's saga in the Scandinavian Heimskringla, and here East Anglia is called "Ulfcytel's land."
It appears that the Seven Parishes estate had developed as a distinct property in Saxon times because Bungay, Mettingham and Ilketshall were grouped together in the Domesday folios under the ownership of Earl Hugh
(Earl of Chester). From this point of view the estate predates the formation of Wangford Hundred into which it was incorporated together with the South Elmham bishopric estate to the east. The ancient interdependence of the seven parishes through a common origin is reinforced by the practices of sharing common lands (intercommoning) which persisted into the 19th century. According to the local historian, Norman Scarfe, the whole of the 'Seven Parishes' was also known as the 'Duke of Norfolk's Liberty', because it descended to the dukedom from the
Bigod family. Roger Bigod was a henchman of William The Conqueror who was rewarded with lands in nine of Suffolk's Hundreds, and in particular with a small parcel of land in Ilketshall. The Bigod family became
firmly established in their castle at Bungay during the following century. Their Bungay property descended with the ancient rights of the Bigods to the Howard Dukes of Norfolk of Arundel, and in 1987 the castle was presented to the town by the Duke of Norfolk with an endowment towards its preservation.
According to the historian Alfred Suckling (1846), after the Conquest :- "The King and Earl Hugh took possession of the greater part of Ilketshall, but their estates were soon afterwards divided into smaller parcels, upon which various families fixed their residence. The principal of these was one family which assumed its surname from the township. Sir Gilbert de Ilketshall was lord of Hedenham and Kelling, in Norfolk, and of Ilketshall, in Suffolk, as early as the reign of William Rufus". Also, in the second year of his reign, Edward III. granted to John Bardolf, and Elizabeth his wife, the manors of Ilketshall St Lawrence and the lands of Bungay that belonged to the manor of the Holy Trinity. There is no evidence that the Duke of Norfolk ever posessed any of the manors of the Seven Parishes.
The supposed ownership of Ilketshall manors by the Duke of Norfolk surfaced in 1988 when the villagers of Ilketshall St Andrew questioned it at a meeting with Mathew Roth, Commons Commissioner, with respect to the question of who owned the common land in Ilketshall St Andrew and St John. The Duke's agent was unable to
substantiate any legal claim of ownership of the land, the only documented link with the dukedom being an entry in White's 1855 directory that several greens in Ilketshall St Andrew were in the 'Duke of Norfolk's Liberty'. This statement was probably Scarfe's source for the existence of the 'Duke of Norfolk's Liberty'.
Some kind of ancient link between the Ilketshall commons and the Duke of Norfolk's ancestors was certainly substantiated by the Duke conveying to the Village Hall Trustees 'such rights as he might possess' with
respect to the Great Common, the site of the Village Hall, in 1978/9. Also it was stated at the 1988 meeting that the Duke's agents had dealt with encroachments to the commons since at least 1945. A 'liberty' could be a manor,
or group of manors, but it could also be any area lying outside the jurisdiction of the sheriff, with a separate Commissioner of Peace. It was probably in the latter sense that the the Bigod family of Bungay, ancestors of the Dukes of Norfolk, had become the arbiter of the rights of the commoners in the Seven Parishes. If so, this takes makes the commons of Ilketshall an ancient English symbol of the rights to land of the 'common man'.
dedications of their churches, St Andrew, St John, St Lawrence and St Margaret, together with three adjacent parishes bounding the Waveney, namely the village of Mettingham (All Saints) and two communities of Bungay town (All Saints and St Mary), have been known since at least the 18th century as 'The Seven Parishes'.
Together with the 'Nine Parishes' to the west based on South Elmham, this district is known to local people as 'The Saints'. It comprises the western section of Wangford Hundred. Like the South Elmhams, the Ilketshalls are a
unified topographical unit sharing the same flat glacial landscape broken by almost imperceptible dips and troughs of melt water 'brooks' and 'becks' . It is impossible to discern where one village ends and another begins and easy to get lost in a maze of angular roads, lanes and footpaths.
The name Iketshall is said to relate to the Anglo-Saxon Ulfcytel (died 1016) an Anglo-Saxon nobleman. He was apparently an important warlord of East Anglia from 1004 to his death at the battle of Assandun. Scandinavian sources refer to him as Ulfkell Snillinge, the byname meaning bold. Ulfcytel also appears as a character in Saint Olaf's saga in the Scandinavian Heimskringla, and here East Anglia is called "Ulfcytel's land."
It appears that the Seven Parishes estate had developed as a distinct property in Saxon times because Bungay, Mettingham and Ilketshall were grouped together in the Domesday folios under the ownership of Earl Hugh
(Earl of Chester). From this point of view the estate predates the formation of Wangford Hundred into which it was incorporated together with the South Elmham bishopric estate to the east. The ancient interdependence of the seven parishes through a common origin is reinforced by the practices of sharing common lands (intercommoning) which persisted into the 19th century. According to the local historian, Norman Scarfe, the whole of the 'Seven Parishes' was also known as the 'Duke of Norfolk's Liberty', because it descended to the dukedom from the
Bigod family. Roger Bigod was a henchman of William The Conqueror who was rewarded with lands in nine of Suffolk's Hundreds, and in particular with a small parcel of land in Ilketshall. The Bigod family became
firmly established in their castle at Bungay during the following century. Their Bungay property descended with the ancient rights of the Bigods to the Howard Dukes of Norfolk of Arundel, and in 1987 the castle was presented to the town by the Duke of Norfolk with an endowment towards its preservation.
According to the historian Alfred Suckling (1846), after the Conquest :- "The King and Earl Hugh took possession of the greater part of Ilketshall, but their estates were soon afterwards divided into smaller parcels, upon which various families fixed their residence. The principal of these was one family which assumed its surname from the township. Sir Gilbert de Ilketshall was lord of Hedenham and Kelling, in Norfolk, and of Ilketshall, in Suffolk, as early as the reign of William Rufus". Also, in the second year of his reign, Edward III. granted to John Bardolf, and Elizabeth his wife, the manors of Ilketshall St Lawrence and the lands of Bungay that belonged to the manor of the Holy Trinity. There is no evidence that the Duke of Norfolk ever posessed any of the manors of the Seven Parishes.
The supposed ownership of Ilketshall manors by the Duke of Norfolk surfaced in 1988 when the villagers of Ilketshall St Andrew questioned it at a meeting with Mathew Roth, Commons Commissioner, with respect to the question of who owned the common land in Ilketshall St Andrew and St John. The Duke's agent was unable to
substantiate any legal claim of ownership of the land, the only documented link with the dukedom being an entry in White's 1855 directory that several greens in Ilketshall St Andrew were in the 'Duke of Norfolk's Liberty'. This statement was probably Scarfe's source for the existence of the 'Duke of Norfolk's Liberty'.
Some kind of ancient link between the Ilketshall commons and the Duke of Norfolk's ancestors was certainly substantiated by the Duke conveying to the Village Hall Trustees 'such rights as he might possess' with
respect to the Great Common, the site of the Village Hall, in 1978/9. Also it was stated at the 1988 meeting that the Duke's agents had dealt with encroachments to the commons since at least 1945. A 'liberty' could be a manor,
or group of manors, but it could also be any area lying outside the jurisdiction of the sheriff, with a separate Commissioner of Peace. It was probably in the latter sense that the the Bigod family of Bungay, ancestors of the Dukes of Norfolk, had become the arbiter of the rights of the commoners in the Seven Parishes. If so, this takes makes the commons of Ilketshall an ancient English symbol of the rights to land of the 'common man'.