Pre-Saxon The immense strategic value of the site, which is able to command traffic between the
Channel coast and the Sussex interior, was recognised as early as the
Iron Age, when a hill-fort was built on
Mount Caburn, the steep-sided hill that overlooks the Ouse (and the modern town of Lewes) from the east. During the
Roman period, there was an aristocratic
villa at
Beddingham, at the foot of Mount Caburn, and there have been several finds of Roman coins and pottery sherds in Lewes itself. The Victorian historian
Thomas Walker Horsfield therefore reckoned that there must have been a Roman settlement on the site, and he identified it with the otherwise unlocatable town of
Mutuantonis. Another antiquarian, John Elliot, even suggested that central Lewes's distinctive network of
twittens was based on the layout of a
Roman legionary fortress; however modern historians are rather more cautious about the possibility of a Roman Lewes, as there is as yet no archaeological evidence for a built-up area dating back to the Roman period.
Anglo-Saxon and Anglo-Norman The earliest phase of
Anglo-Saxon settlement in Sussex was concentrated between the Rivers Ouse and
Cuckmere, and Anglo-Saxon finds begin to appear in Lewes from the sixth century. The town of Lewes was probably founded around this time, and it may have been one of the most important settlements in the
Kingdom of Sussex, along with
Chichester and
Hastings, though the evidence for this early period is very sketchy. By the ninth century, the Kingdom of Sussex had been annexed to the
Kingdom of Wessex, and in 838
Ecgberht, King of Wessex donated the estate of Malling, on the opposite side of the Ouse from Lewes, to the
Archbishop of Canterbury. As a result, the Parish of Malling became a '
peculiar', which means that the parish was directly subject to the Archbishop of Canterbury rather than the
Bishop of Chichester like every other parish in Sussex. Malling would retain this anomalous status until as late as 1845. Information about Lewes becomes much more plentiful from the reign of
Alfred the Great onward, as it was one of the towns which he fortified as part of the network of
burhs he established in response to the
Viking raids. The peace and stability brought by Alfred and his successors evidently stimulated economic activity in the area, for in the late Anglo-Saxon period Lewes seems to have been a thriving boom town – during the reign of Alfred's grandson
Æthelstan it was assigned two royal
moneyers, more than any other
mint in Sussex, and according to Domesday Book it generated £26 of revenue for
the Crown in 1065, almost twice the amount of any other town in the county, and comprised 127 households. After the
Norman Conquest,
William the Conqueror rewarded his retainer
William de Warenne by making him
Earl of Surrey and granting him the
Rape of Lewes, a strip of land stretching along the Ouse valley from the coast to the Surrey boundary. De Warenne constructed
Lewes Castle within the walls of the Saxon
burh, while his wife
Gundreda founded the
Priory of St Pancras, a
Cluniac monastic house, in about 1081.
Battle of Lewes During the
Second Barons' War,
King Henry III was ambushed at Lewes by a force of rebel barons led by
Simon de Montfort. Henry marched out to fight de Montfort, leading to a pitched battle on the hills above the town (roughly in the area of modern Landport Bottom). The king's son
Prince Edward, commanding the right wing of the royal army, succeeded in driving off some of the baronial forces, but he got carried away with the pursuit, which took him as far as
Offham. In Edward's absence the remainder of the royal army was attacked by de Montfort and
Gilbert de Clare and decisively defeated. The king's brother
Richard of Cornwall was captured, and the king himself was forced to sign the
Mise of Lewes, a document which does not survive but was probably aimed at forcing Henry to uphold the
Provisions of Oxford. Despite this uncertainty about its consequences, the battle is often seen as an important milestone in the development of English democracy.
Late Mediaeval and Early Modern The
de Warenne family died out with
Earl John in 1347, whereupon lordship of the
Rape of Lewes passed to his sororal nephew
Richard Fitzalan, 4th Earl of Arundel. Fitzalan preferred to reside at
Arundel Castle rather than at Lewes, and the town therefore lost the prestige and economic advantages associated with being the seat of an important magnate. This was only the beginning of a series of misfortunes that struck Lewes, for in 1348 the
Black Death arrived in England and later on in the century the
Hundred Years War led to a series of French and
Castilian raids on Sussex, which badly disrupted trade. On one occasion in 1377 the
Prior of
St Pancras, John de Charlieu, was abducted by the raiders and held to ransom. Furthermore, after the main branch of the Fitzalan family died out in 1439, the Rape of Lewes was subsequently partitioned between the three sororal nephews of the
last earl, namely
John Mowbray, 3rd Duke of Norfolk,
Edward Neville, 3rd Baron Bergavenny, and Edmund Lenthall. As a result of this dismemberment the district became even more neglected by its lords, although feudal politics was starting to become less important anyway due to the centralising reforms of the
Yorkist and
Tudor kings. The
English Reformation was begun by one of these Tudor monarchs,
Henry VIII, and as part of this process the
monasteries of England were dissolved;
Lewes Priory was consequently demolished in 1538 and its property seized by the Crown. Henry's daughter
Mary I reversed the religious policy of England, and during the resulting
Marian Persecutions of 1555–1557, Lewes was the site of the execution of seventeen
Protestant martyrs, most of them actually from the
Weald rather than Lewes itself, who were burned at the stake in front of the Star Inn (now the site of
Lewes Town Hall). Commemoration of the martyrs is one of the main purposes of
Lewes Bonfire, and a stone memorial to the martyrs was unveiled on
Cliffe Hill in 1901. Lewesian politics was dominated by a strongly
Puritan faction in the reign of
Charles I, and during the
English Civil War it was one of the most important
Parliamentarian strongholds in Sussex. As such it became the target of a
royalist attack in December 1642, but the royalist army was intercepted and defeated at the
Battle of Muster Green by Parliamentarian forces commanded by
Herbert Morley, one of the two
Members of Parliament (MPs) for Lewes. Lewes recovered relatively quickly after the Civil War, and prospered during the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. It had always been one of the principal market towns of Sussex, as well as an important port, and by the end of the
Georgian era it also had well-developed textiles, iron, brewing, and shipbuilding industries. During the
Crimean War, some 300 Finns who had served in the Russian army during the
Åland War and been captured at
Bomarsund were imprisoned in the naval prison at Lewes. Lewes became a
borough in 1881. Lewes Town Hall opened in 1893 in premises converted from the former Star Inn and in 1913 Council Offices were added in Arts-and-Crafts style.
Lewes Victoria Hospital opened in 1909 in its current premises, as Victoria Hospital and Infirmary, having previously been on School Hill where it opened as the Lewes Dispensary and Infirmary in 1855. In October 2000, the town suffered major
flooding during an intense period of severe weather throughout the United Kingdom. The commercial centre of the town and many residential areas were devastated. In a government report into the nationwide flooding, Lewes was officially noted the most severely affected location. As a result of the devastation, the Lewes Flood Action group formed, to press for better flood protection measures. ==Governance and politics==