Since the
Norman Conquest of England, the forest, chase and warren lands had been exempted from the
common law and subject only to the authority of the king, but these customs had faded into obscurity by the time of
The Restoration.
William the Conqueror William I, original enactor of the Forest Law in England, did not harshly penalise offenders. The accusation that he "laid a law upon it, that whoever slew hart or hind should be
blinded," according to the
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is little more than propaganda.
William Rufus, also a keen hunter, increased the severity of the penalties for various offences to include death and mutilation. The laws were in part codified under the Assize of the Forest (1184) of
Henry II.
Magna Carta Magna Carta, the
charter forced upon King
John of England by the English barons in 1215, contained five clauses relating to royal forests. They aimed to limit, and even reduce, the King's sole rights as enshrined in forest law. The clauses were as follows (taken from translation of the great charter that is the
Magna Carta): • (44) People who live outside the forest need not in future appear before the
Royal Justices of the Forest in answer to general summonses, unless they are actually involved in proceedings or are
sureties for someone who has been seized for a forest offence. • (47) All forests that have been created in our reign shall at once be disafforested. River-banks that have been enclosed in our reign shall be treated similarly. • (48) All evil customs relating to forests and warrens, foresters, warreners, sheriffs and their servants, or river-banks and their wardens, are at once to be investigated in every county by twelve sworn knights of the county, and within forty days of their enquiry the evil customs are to be abolished completely and irrevocably. But we, or our chief justice if we are not in England, are first to be informed. • (52) To any man whom we have deprived or dispossessed of lands, castles, liberties, or rights, without the lawful judgement of his equals, we will at once restore these. In cases of dispute the matter shall be resolved by the judgement of the twenty-five barons referred to below in the clause for securing the peace (§ 61). In cases, however, where a man was deprived or dispossessed of something without the lawful judgement of his equals by our father
King Henry or our brother
King Richard, and it remains in our hands or is held by others under our warranty, we shall have respite for the period commonly allowed to
Crusaders, unless a lawsuit had been begun, or an enquiry had been made at our order, before we took the Cross as a Crusader. On our return from the Crusade, or if we abandon it, we will at once render justice in full. • (53) We shall have similar respite [to that in clause 52] in rendering justice in connexion with forests that are to be disafforested, or to remain forests, when these were first afforested by our father Henry or our brother Richard; with the guardianship of lands in another person's `
fee', when we have hitherto had this by virtue of a `fee' held of us for knight's service by a third party; and with abbeys founded in another person's `fee', in which the lord of the `fee' claims to own a right. On our return from the Crusade, or if we abandon it, we will at once do full justice to complaints about these matters.
Charter of the Forest After the death of John,
Henry III was compelled to grant the
Charter of the Forest (1217), which further reformed the forest law and established the rights of agistment and pannage on private land within the forests. It also checked certain of the extortions of the foresters. An "Ordinance of the Forest" under
Edward I again checked the oppression of the officers and introduced sworn juries in the forest courts.
Great Perambulation and after In 1300 many (if not all) forests were
perambulated and reduced greatly in their extent, in theory to their extent in the time of
Henry II. However, this depended on the determination of local juries, whose decisions often excluded from the Forest lands described in
Domesday Book as within the forest. Successive kings tried to recover the "purlieus" excluded from a forest by the Great Perambulation of 1300. Forest officers periodically fined the inhabitants of the purlieus for failing to attend Forest Court or for forest offences. This led to complaints in Parliament. The king promised to remedy the grievances, but usually did nothing. Several forests were alienated by
Richard II and his successors, but generally the system decayed.
Henry VII revived "Swainmotes" (forest courts) for several forests and held Forest Eyres in some of them.
Henry VIII in 1547 placed the forests under the
Court of Augmentations with two Masters and two Surveyors-General. On the abolition of that court, the two surveyors-general became responsible to the Exchequer. Their respective divisions were north and south of the
River Trent. The last serious exercise of forest law by a court of justice-seat (Forest Eyre) seems to have been in about 1635, in an attempt to raise money.
Disafforestation, sale of forest lands and the Western Rising By the
Tudor period and after, forest law had largely become anachronistic, and served primarily to protect timber in the royal forests.
James I and his ministers
Robert Cecil and
Lionel Cranfield pursued a policy of increasing revenues from the forests and starting the process of disafforestation. Cecil made the first steps towards abolition of the forests, as part of James I's policy of increasing his income independently of Parliament. Cecil investigated forests that were unused for royal hunting and provided little revenue from timber sales.
Knaresborough Forest in Yorkshire was abolished. Revenues in the Forest of Dean were increased through sales of wood for iron smelting. Enclosures were made in Chippenham and Blackmore for herbage and pannage. Each disafforestation would start with a commission from the Exchequer, which would survey the forest, determine the lands belonging to the crown, and negotiate compensation for landowners and tenants whose now-traditional rights to use of the land as commons would be revoked. A legal action by the Attorney General would then proceed in the Court of Exchequer against the forest residents for intrusion, which would confirm the settlement negotiated by the commission. Crown lands would then be granted (leased), usually to prominent courtiers, and often the same figures that had undertaken the commission surveys. Legal complaints about the imposed settlements and compensation were frequent. Ultimately, however, enclosure succeeded, with the exceptions of Dean and Malvern Chase. In 1641, Parliament passed the Delimitation of Forests Act 1640 (
16 Cha. 1. c. 16, also known as
Selden's Act) to revert the forest boundaries to the positions they had held at the end of the reign of James I.
After the Restoration The Forest of Dean was legally re-established in 1668 by the
Dean Forest Act 1667. A Forest Eyre was held for the
New Forest in 1670, and a few for other forests in the 1660s and 1670s, but these were the last. From 1715, both surveyors' posts (covering England north and south of the Trent respectively) were held by the same person. The remaining royal forests continued to be managed (in theory, at least) on behalf of the Crown. However, the commoners' rights of grazing often seem to have been more important than the rights of the Crown. In the late 1780s, a
royal commission was appointed to inquire into which Crown woods were surviving, and their condition. It found only one north of the Trent,
Sherwood Forest. South of the Trent, it found the
New Forest, three others in
Hampshire, Windsor Forest in
Berkshire, the
Forest of Dean in Gloucestershire, Waltham or
Epping Forest in Essex, three forests in
Northamptonshire, and
Wychwood in Oxfordshire. Some of these no longer had swainmote courts, and thus had no official supervision. The commission divided the remaining forests into two classes, those with the Crown as major landowner, and those without. In certain Hampshire forests and in the Forest of Dean most of the soil belonged to the Crown, and these became reserved to grow timber to meet the need for
oak for
shipbuilding. The others would be enclosed, the Crown receiving an "allotment" (compensation) in lieu of its rights. In 1810, responsibility for woods was moved from Surveyors-General (who accounted to the Auditors of Land Revenue) to a new
Commission of Woods, Forests, and Land Revenues. In 1832 "Works and Buildings" were added to their responsibilities, but removed in 1851. In 1924, the royal forests were transferred to the new
Forestry Commission (later to become
Forestry England). == Surviving ancient forests ==