1. THE CHRONICLE OF BATTLE ABBEY
  2. I have studied the details of this manuscript in my manuscript in pages 18 - 22.
  3. This states that William "landed safely near the town called Pevensey… the army extensively along an area of shore"….."the Duke spent no long time there, but made his way with his men to the near-by port called Hastings. There he found a suitable place, and with foresight he quickly built a wooden fort".
  4. This Chronicle also confirms that William landed near Pevensey, not at Pevensey, Pevensey being most likely that area of land between Hastings in the east and Pevensey in the west. They appeared to be spread out, "extensively along an area of shore", but they made their way to "the port nearby of Hastings" where they "built a wooden fort".
  5. The same paragraph continues "arriving at the hill called Hedgeland, which lies towards Hastings, while they were hurriedly getting one and another into armour, a hauberk (a sort of tunic), was held up to the Duke to get into, and unaccountably it was offered the wrong way round". This is an important point and I would like to raise a flag here! This was taken as a bad omen, but is important, because the place called Hedgeland is named in the Chronicle as the name of the hill where this event took place. Somewhere near Hastings nearby the port of Hastings.
  6. This same story is recounted in the Wace manuscript, which I shall look at next. However in the Wace version this event takes place on a hill and this hill is the site of the Norman camp near Hastings. In consequence the main conclusion from the Chronicle of Battle Abbey is that the Norman camp was also at this place called Hedgeland.
  7. This observation is of immense importance, because until now Hedgeland was believed to be located on the ridge between Telham and the Battle Abbey, less than a mile from the battle site. However there is no record of Hedgeland in the Domesday Book, as a land holding at that time, and it is not recorded anywhere near the port of Hastings.
  8. I make the case in my manuscript (pages 21-22) that the authors of the Chronicle indeed knew the Norman camp was at what they believed was called Hedgeland, near the port of Hastings, but that the name has been changed through mispronunciation or transcription between the period when the Normans first landed, and when it was first recorded in the Chronicle.
  9. Like the Charters drawn up at the same time, I make the case that the monks invented a place called Hedgeland up on the ridge, in order to justify their position and privileges granted to the Abbey by the forged charters. This was most probably not an intentional deceit, but one that is common in relation to place names.
  10. Here I would like to proffer an explanation, which demonstrates better how this probably occurred. which shows that in these circumstances the common derivatives of the name from Old English are not relevant to the development of the name.
  11. In this case we have an Abbey, which was built on the site of the place where William is supposed to have stated, "And to strengthen the hands and hearts of you who are about to fight for me, I make a vow that on this very battlefield I shall found a monastery, for the salvation of all, and especially for those who fall here" - you can just image William saying that, cant you? A nice eloquent battlefield oath. Almost good enough to be in Shakespeare's Henry 5th?
  12. However, we now know that the Charters upon which the Abbey claimed its authenticity, were in fact forged, and the battlefield oath was a common element of rhetoric, employed by authors of the time to flatter their patrons. In practice the oaths were never made on the battlefield, but made up after the event, when some willing scribe materialised the deed, in order to gain the blessing of the church.
  13. In the case of the Battle Chronicle, the Abbey had indeed been built over 90 years previously, and the time to write the events down had come. The scribe knew that the Norman camp was at what he believed to be Hedgeland, so he recorded it as such, including the elements of the now famous holding up of the tunic the wrong way round.
  14. In the meantime Hedgeland, which was not recorded by the monks as being on their land, knew that according to the Wace manuscript the Norman camp could be seen the night before the battle. In consequence when sitting in their cloisters in the newly built Battle Abbey and they were asked where Hedgeland was, they pointed to the Ridge, because that was where it had to be, in order for their beloved Chronicle to be correct, because it must be possible to see Hedgeland from the battle (and now Abbey) site.
  15. They could not know that at the correct site of the Norman camp, at the port of Hastings, there still existed a place named, which somehow had been lost to their knowledge. This place is now, and I believe was then, called Redgeland, and that was the original name of the Norman camp. That was the name that should have been recorded by the author of the Chronicle. However it had nothing to do with what the original Old English name was, it was a mistake in the original transcription, from the spoken word to the written one.
  16. This sole mistake has been the single greatest contribution to the misunderstanding of where the Norman camp and landing site is located. If that original author had written Redgeland, as he should, the development of two Redgeland's would have been spotted by historians. However the two names Hedgeland and Redgeland were accepted as being different by place name experts, because of their assumed different Old English origins.
  17. I make the case in my manuscript that Redgeland and Hedgeland are the same place and in consequence this manuscript confirms absolutely that the Norman Camp is located on the same hill that is above Redgeland Wood, where I make the case that the old port of Hastings is located. That hill is now called Upper Wilting Farm and is proposed to be cut in half by the Highways Agency trunk route, and also the amenity group route S6A of the A259 Bexhill to Hastings bypass.
  18. It might be argued that the two names, being so close are just a coincidence. If that is so I would say that you have to be absolutely certain that this is a coincidence, before you throw the lever on the gallows. Because building a trunk road across this site, would be the equivalent doing just that, to an innocent man. There is absolutely no chance, that a site of such delicate archaeological content, would survive once the bulldozers move in.
  19. If we suppose that the place name closeness is just a coincidence, then it must surely be stretching the imagination, to find that Redgeland and the hill behind it fulfils the requirements of almost all of the thirty-four elements, I have identified in my manuscript, as applying to the site of the Norman camp (my manuscript pages 64 - 71). NO! NO! NO! - to use a popular expression from a famous Prime Minister.
  20. This is not a coincidence! One or two elements might qualify as a coincidence, but not thirty-four, that is just beyond belief. Redgeland and Hedgeland are one and the same. Not because of place name development - that would be too great a coincidence. Two places connected with the battle of Hastings and the Norman Invasion site? Both at the camp of William the Conqueror - No No No.It was because the name was known and used in connection with a different place from the original by the monks who recorded the events. In the course of time the camp site name changed subtly from Hedgeland to Redgeland. The Old English origins have no basis in the history of either site, and therefore must be excluded from any conclusion in that respect. The obvious conclusion is that the monks got the name wrong from the phonetics and invented a site called Hedgeland on the ridge. A simple case of "obvious but true" - no complicated convoluted explanation, involving separate name development expressing some remarkable coincidence.
  21. The Battle Abbey Chronicle is correct, the Norman camp is based on the hill above the land that is now called Redgeland, and was known to them as Hedgeland. This evidence cannot be ignored, because if I am correct ,it proves conclusively that Wilting, where Redgeland is still located, is the site of the first Norman camp built in 1066. It proves that Wilting is the landing site and it proves that the archaeological information that I shall bring to your attention, is of unique heritage value to this country. It proves that Wilting has the potential to be more than just another archaeological site, but would undoubtedly qualify as a national archaeological treasure which cannot be lost to road development, under any circumstances, no matter how slight that risk may be.
  22. I shall now look at the manuscript called the
  23. ROMAN DE RUE**********************
  24. by Master Wace referred to here as "Wace".
  25. This manuscript is accepted in France as the main authority for the Bayeux tapestry version of the Invasion and is quoted almost word for word in the Centre for the Bayeux Tapestry, in Bayeux northern France. It contains over 16,000 lines of verse and is very detailed.
  26. One of the most important elements that I have identified relating to the Invasion in this manuscript, involves the claim that this is a story which is told, with the benefit of an eye witness account. Wace states that his father recalls that there were 696 ships involved. It confirms, like the previous manuscripts, "They arrived near Hastings", " each ship was ranged by the other's side" and their landing was unopposed. In this instance Wace goes into considerable detail about the landing, describing the area adjacent to the landing site as a "plain", and describing the fort which they bought with them, with "pins…. Cut and ready in large barrels". On the evening of the landing they enjoy a banquet and the text follows in a word for word account of the pictures shown in the Bayeux Tapestry, adding considerable detail along the way.
  27. Wace states that after the landing the Duke ordered that the ships be "dismantled and drawn ashore and pierced", the present day equivalent of decommissioning. This is indirectly confirmed by both the Carmen, which uses the expression "surrounded them with earthworks" and the Chronicle of Battle Abbey states that most of the ships "were burnt".
  28. Historians have failed to understand these three versions (decommissioning, earthed up or burnt)by believing that only one version of events can be correct. Thus casting doubt on the one's which did not suit your particular perspective.
  29. I take the view that all these versions are correct and can be applied to the site at Wilting. Here we have circumstances where some of the boats that I have up till now identified have 1) been earthed up in an inlet, 2)have suffered from burning because of the presence of charcoal and 3) were probably in part dismantled. Only proper archaeological excavation will confirm these matters. It is the object of this presentation to seek to ensure the integrity of this site, to allow such an investigation to be completed.
  30. As stated earlier Wace claims "The first day they held their course along the sea shore: and on the morrow came to a castle called Pevensey". All the evidence from the Domesday data, which I have studied in detail in the next manuscript, confirms this version of the events of the landing to be correct. Wace states they landed near Hastings and moved to Pevensey the following day.
  31. Wace reports a spy watching the landing. Being positioned behind a hill at the camp site, he watches the Normans build a fort, and dig a ditch. A detailed description of the events shown in the Bayeux Tapestry, but in the Wace version he reports that the knight in question "journeyed on by night and day to seek Harold his Lord"
  32. This is an interesting use of the word Lord, because it infers that the connection between the knight in question and the king was one of lord, as in feudal lord. If this was not the case the text would have referred to "Harold his king" or "king Harold" This is not a coincidence, because Crowhurst, the manor to the north of Wilting is the only manor east of Lewes where Harold was the lord of the manor.
  33. In consequence Wace is indirectly telling us, through his detailed knowledge of the events of the time, that a knight from Crowhurst was the one spying on the Norman camp.
  34. Wace repeats the details of the knight, when he gets to Harold's camp, stating "The Normans, he cried, are come! They have landed at Hastings" not Pevensey. This time not even near Hastings, but at Hastings.
  35. Lastly, before the Normans leave to go to battle, Wace reports they build chapels in the field, where their camp is located, and the Duke stands on the hill, to get a better view and to give them a pre-battle pep talk. After this the story of the tunic turned the wrong way round is told yet again in the Norman camp.
  36. In conclusion there can be no doubt to anyone who has conducted a thorough research of these matters, that the Norman camp was at Hastings, and the hill in question was at the port of Hastings. Taken in conjunction with the other texts that name this hill Redgeland. There can be no doubt from these historical documents that Wilting does hold what is left of the Norman camp and landing site.
  37. I shall now look at the Domesday Book

RETURN TO CORRESPONDENCE