Many of the Portsmen were fishermen, and in pursuit of
herring sailed annually to the Norfolk coast, where they claimed rights of "den and strand" on the sandbank at the mouth of the
River Yare. The settlement there gradually developed into the town of
Yarmouth. The ports therefore became closely involved in the regulation of the annual autumn Herring Fair at Yarmouth, and this was probably the main incentive for the individual ports to work together collectively in confederation. A
Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports was appointed, an office frequently, and by the end of the 13th century permanently, combined with that of
Constable of Dover Castle. The joint office survives to the present day, but is now a purely honorary title, with an official residence at
Walmer Castle. The confederation had its own system of assemblies and common courts: • The court of
Shepway is first mentioned in the late 12th century. It was a local royal court of justice (effectively the equivalent of an
eyre court), presided over by an officer of the Crown, and linked the confederation to central government. It met at Shepway Cross, near
Lympne, where officers of the various members of the confederation were summoned to attend. The court met at irregular intervals, and over the course of the 15th century appears to have fallen into a slow decline. By the early 17th century it had effectively ceased to function. Nevertheless, it continued to hold a nominal existence, as it was at special sessions of the court that the Lord Warden was installed in office. The court of 1598, summoned for the installation as Warden of
Henry Brooke, Lord Cobham, was held at his manor of
Bekesbourne; and in the late 17th century the court was moved to Dover. The approximate site of the original meeting place is now marked by a war memorial erected in 1923, also known as
Shepway Cross. • The
Brodhull was a general assembly for representatives of the five head ports and two ancient towns. "Brodhull" is thought to have been originally a place-name, and presumably the original place of meeting, close to
Dymchurch. The assembly subsequently met in Dymchurch, but after 1357 came to meet regularly in New Romney. One of the principal tasks of the Brodhull was the supervision of the Yarmouth Fair, and the appointment of bailiffs to manage it. By 1432 it met regularly twice a year. Meetings followed a parliamentary pattern, and were presided over by a "Speaker": the speakership changed on 21 May each year, the right of appointment moving from port to port in geographical order from west to east. In the 15th and 16th centuries the name "Brodhull" gradually became corrupted (through
false etymology) into "Brotherhood", and in the post-medieval period the court was more usually known as the
Brotherhood. • The
Guestling appears to have originated as a local meeting of the west ports (Hastings, Winchelsea and Rye, and perhaps their limbs). It probably took its name from the village of
Guestling, a few miles west of Winchelsea, which may have been its original meeting-place. Over the course of the 16th century it developed into a more general meeting of all the head ports, ancient towns and corporate limbs, usually held annually and often in conjunction with the Brotherhood. As it represented a larger group of ports than the Brotherhood, it eventually became the pre-eminent assembly. However, in 1663 the Yarmouth service was suspended indefinitely, and thereafter both the Brotherhood and the Guestling fell into decline. The two courts continue to hold a nominal existence, but since 1866 have been held jointly.
Barons : one of the Cinque Ports at its bow (left), the other of the
three lions of England at its stern. All Freemen of the ports, termed "Portsmen", were deemed in the age of
feudalism to be
barons, and thus members of the
baronage entitled to attend the king's parliament – a privilege granted in 1322 in recognition of their earlier support of the Despensers,
father and
son. Termed "Barons of the Cinque Ports", they reflected an early concept that military service at sea constituted land tenure making them
quasi feudal barons. The early-14th-century treatise
Modus Tenendi Parliamentum stated the Barons of the Cinque Ports to hold a place of precedence below the lay magnates (
Lords Temporal) but above the representatives of the
shires and
boroughs (
Knights of the Shire and
burgesses). During the deposition of
Edward II, the chronicles made a specific point of noting the presence of the Barons in the embassy of deposition – "praecipue de portubus ... barones des Portez" ("especially the [Cinque] Ports ... the barones of the Ports").
Writs of summons to parliament were sent to the warden following which
representative barons of the Cinque Ports were selected to attend parliament. Thus the warden's duty in this respect was similar to that of the
sheriff who received the writs for distribution to the barons in the
shires. The existence of common (i.e. communal)
seals of the barons of the individual ports (see illustration) suggests they formed a
corporation as the seal was designed to be affixed to charters and legal documents which would bind them as a single body. This no doubt related to their privileges as
monopolies. The warden and barons often experienced clashes of jurisdiction. In the 21st century the title "Baron of the Cinque Ports" is now reserved for Freemen elected by the Mayor, Jurats and Common Council of the Ports to attend a
coronation and is solely honorary in nature. "Since
time immemorial", the barons had held the right to hold a canopy above the monarch during the procession on foot between
Westminster Hall and
Westminster Abbey. This procession was discontinued after the
Coronation of George IV in 1821, but for the
Coronation of Edward VII in 1902 the barons were found a new role. They were to process inside the abbey as far as the
choir and there receive the banners of the monarch's realms, a function which they have repeated at all the 20th-century coronations. For the
Coronation of Charles III and Camilla in 2023, fourteen barons joined the congregation in the abbey, representing the original five ports, the two ancient towns and the seven limbs. == Decline ==