during the
Roman occupation of Britain Prehistoric evidence suggests that, following the
Mesolithic hunter-gatherers, the
Neolithic inhabitants had turned to farming, with the resultant clearance of the forest. With the
Iron Age came the first use of the Weald as an industrial area. Wealden sandstones contain
ironstone, and with the additional presence of large amounts of timber for making
charcoal for fuel, the area was the centre of the
Wealden iron industry from then, through the
Roman times, until the last forge was closed in 1813. The index to the Ordnance Survey Map of Roman Britain lists 33 iron mines, and 67% of these are in the Weald. The Weald is thought to have undergone repeated cycles of clearance and re-forestation, and the decline in the population following the end of the Romano-British period allowed the tree cover to re-establish. According to the 9th-century
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, the Weald measured or longer by in the Saxon era, stretching from
Lympne, near
Romney Marsh in Kent, to the
Forest of Bere or even the
New Forest in Hampshire. The area was sparsely inhabited and inhospitable, being used mainly as a resource by people living on its fringes, much as in other places in Britain such as
Dartmoor,
the Fens and the
Forest of Arden. While most of the Weald was used for
transhumance by communities at the edge of the Weald, several parts of the forest on the higher ridges in the interior seem to have been used for hunting by the
kings of Sussex. The forests of the Weald were often used as a place of refuge and sanctuary. The
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle relates events during the
Anglo-Saxon conquest of
Sussex when the native
Britons (whom the Anglo-Saxons called
Welsh) were driven from the coastal towns into the forest for sanctuary: '' pattern of fields and woodland on the
Surrey–
West Sussex border between
Ewhurst and
Rudgwick Domesday Book of 1086 suggests that the Weald was sparsely populated, but Peter Brandon suggests that the inhabitants and settlements may have been undercounted. The population of the area increased steadily between 800 and 1300, as woodland was cleared, resulting in the
bocage pattern of irregularly shaped fields. Charters of
Sele and
Lewes Priories from the end of the 11th century, indicate that numerous churches had been established in the Sussex Weald. Similarly, the
Domesday Monachorum of
Christ Church Canterbury, compiled 1089–, suggests that Kent Weald had already been divided into parishes by the start of the 12th century. The origins of several Wealden settlements are reflected in their
toponyms. Villages whose names end in
fold, were established on better drained soils by inhabitants of the Sussex Coastal Plain in the late Anglo-Saxon period. The suffix derives from the
Old English falod, meaning an enclosure of
pasture. These folds were occupied on a seasonal basis to graze livestock during the summer months. Settlements ending in
den, found in the Kentish Weald, were established on a similar basis. The seasonal settlements in the region are thought to have become permanently occupied by the end of the 12th century. By the outbreak of the
Black Death in England in June 1348, most parts of the Weald were under human influence. In 1216 during the
First Barons' War, a guerilla force of archers from the Weald, led by
William of Cassingham (nicknamed Willikin of the Weald), ambushed the French occupying army led by
Prince Louis near
Lewes and drove them to the coast at
Winchelsea. The timely arrival of a French fleet allowed the French forces to narrowly escape starvation. William was later granted a pension from the Crown and made warden of the Weald in reward for his services. The inhabitants of the Weald remained largely independent and hostile to outsiders during the next decades. In 1264 during the
Second Barons' War, the royalist army of King
Henry III of England marched through the Weald in order to force the submission of the
Cinque Ports. Even though they were not aligned with the rebellious barons, the Weald's natives – mostly operating as archers – opposed the royalist advance, using
guerrilla warfare. Even though they were unable to stop the army, their attacks inflicted substantial losses on the royalists. In retribution, King Henry ordered the execution of any Weald archers who were captured alive, for instance beheading 300 after a local shot his cook. The king also fined
Battle Abbey for the disloyalty of its tenants. == Geography ==