In
Norman times a court was set up to deal summarily with thieves and debtors of the market and fair called the
Pie-Poudre Court (also spelt
pie poudre or Piepowders). The name comes from the French, "pieds poudrés" which can be translated as "dusty feet", and was a temporary court set up for the duration of a fair or market to deal with travellers who were not resident in the town. It was held in the open air under an ancient
oak tree, the site of which the
Stag and Hounds was built on. There is no actual record of when the court moved into the inn, where it was reputedly held in the first-floor room. It is believed that this was the last "active" Court of Piepowders, being abolished by the
Courts Act 1971. Although it had not actually met since the abolition of the fair in 1870, an annual proclamation was still read on the last day of September under the portico of the inn. ==Gay Village==