noTes^205
The English Peasantry and the Enclosure of Common Fields (London:
Constable, 1907), pp. 41–5.
23 The poor received compensation for the loss of such resources in a number
of Midland enclosures, such as Clipston, Aldwincle, Harlestone, Wappenham,
Wadenhoe, and Wollaston in Northamptonshire.
24 D. Hall, The Open Fields of Northamptonshire (Northampton:
Northamptonshire Record Society, 1995), p. 264.
25 Northamptonshire Record Office Map 3133.
26 British Library Add. Mss. 78141 A. Northampton Record Office uncatalogued
enclosure map of Wollaston; Northampton Record Office Map 4447.
27 S. G. Upex, ‘The uses and functions of ponds within early landscapes in the
east Midlands’, Agricultural History Review 52 (2004), 125–40.
28 Northampton Record Office map 1555.
29 A. G. Louverre, ‘The atlas of rural settlement GIS’, Landscapes 11 (2010),
21–44. T. Williamson, Environment, society and landscape in early medieval
England: time and topography (Woodbridge: Boydell, 2013), pp. 140–5.
30 A. E. Brown and C. C. Taylor, ‘The origins of dispersed settlement: some results
from Bedfordshire’, Landscape History 11 (1989), 61–82.
31 T. Williamson, R. Liddiard and T. Partida, Champion. The making and
unmaking of the English Midland landscape (Liverpool: Liverpool University
Press, 2013), pp. 140–1; D. Hall, ‘Enclosure in Northamptonshire’,
Northamptonshire Past and Present 9 (1997), 351–68.
32 Quoted in D. Hall, Open Fields of Northamptonshire, p. 22.
33 Williamson et al., Champion, pp. 133–43.
34 W. Johnson, ‘Hedges: a review of some early literature’, Local Historian 13
(1978), 195–204.
35 W. R. Mead, Pehr Kalm: a Finnish visitor to the Chilterns in 1748 (Aston
Clinton: Privately published, 2003), p. 116; Johnson, ‘Hedges: a review of
some early literature’.
36 W. Marshall, The Rural Economy of Norfolk (London, 1787), p. 96.
37 A. Young, General View of the Agriculture of Hertfordshire (1804), p. 49.
38 E. Pollard, M. D. Hooper and N. W. Moore, Hedges (London: Collins, 1974),
pp. 79–85.
39 G. Barnes and T. Williamson, Hedgerow History: ecology, history and landscape
character (Oxford: Windgather Press, 2006), pp. 73–80. A. Willmott, ‘The
woody species of hedges with special reference to age in Church Broughton,
Derbyshire, Journal of Ecology 68 (1980), 269–86. J. Hall, ‘Hedgerows in West
Yorkshire: the Hooper method examined’, Yorkshire Archaeological Journal
54 (1982), 103–9.
40 R. and N. Muir, Hedgerows: their history and wildlife (London: Michael
Joseph, 1997), pp. 96–104. A. Brooks, Hedging: a practical conservation
handbook (London: British Trust for Conservation Volunteers, 1975).
41 Barnes and Williamson, Hedgerow History, pp. 3–4. E. Martin and
M. Satchell, Wheare Most Inclosures Be: East Anglian Fields, History,
Morphology and Management (Ipswich, 2008), pp. 237–43.