Nomansland Common, as its name implies, is extra-parochial, and was the source of frequent disputes between the monastery of
St Albans and that of
Westminster, both claiming it to be within their respective dioceses, and the manors of
Sandridge and Wheathampstead. It is now divided between the parishes of Wheathampstead and Sandridge. In 1427 the abbot of Westminster erected a gallows there, which the servants of
St Albans Abbey promptly destroyed. In 1428 a shepherd died on the common and the Vicar of Sandridge claimed the body for burial, but the men of Wheathampstead spirited the corpse away and buried it in their churchyard. In 1429 a jury agreed that both abbeys should share grazing rights and beat the boundaries according to their own claims. In 1460 the
Second Battle of St Albans was fought on
Bernards Heath, and part of the conflict (the flight of the
Yorkists) occurred on the common. In the 18th century, cannonballs and 25 skeletons were recovered from the site, and are believed to date from the battle. In the 17th century brigands and footpads preyed upon travellers around the common, the most famous of which was the "Wicked Lady", a
highwaywoman claimed, after her death, to have been
Lady Katherine Ferrers of
Markyate. Ferrers Lane, which runs through the middle of the common, takes its name from her, and her exploits are the subject of
two films of that name. Also, a
pub on the edge of the common is called
The Wicked Lady. Two murders are associated with the Common. In 1977 the body of 24-year-old Janie Shepherd, an Australian heiress, was dumped there; she had been raped and murdered. In 2009, a severed male forearm was discovered on a grass verge in Drovers Lane by a group of walkers. The arm proved to be part of the body of
Jeffrey Howe, who had been stabbed to death and dismembered before his severed body parts were dumped across two counties. ==Sport==