John Stow's
Survey of London records that the "
soke" – in this context the right to extract fines as a source of income – (later "
liberty") was granted in the time of Saxon king
Edgar the Peaceful, east of Aldgate to a guild of knights, the
Cnichtengild, in exchange, essentially, for regular jousting. Norman kings confirmed these rights but later the land was voluntarily transferred to the Priory of the Holy Trinity by the descendants of the guild. , commemorates the
Cnichtengild In 1120 or 1121 (the exact date is unknown), the Portsoken was granted as a liberty to the
Holy Trinity Priory, which had been founded in 1107 by
Queen Matilda, the wife of
King Henry I. The sitting prior of Holy Trinity became,
ex officio, an
alderman of the
City of London Corporation representing the Portsoken ward, and remained so until the
Dissolution of the Monasteries by
King Henry VIII in 1531. The Ward was originally coterminous with the once slightly larger parish of
St Botolph without Aldgate and extended as far south as the Thames. However, the growth of the
Tower of London beyond the line of the London Wall, disputes with the Tower, the creation of the
Tower Liberty other factors resulted in the southern area being lost to the ward and to the City of London, after around 1200. The area taken for the Tower Liberty was lost to both the city ward of Portsoken and to the parish, while East Smithfield was lost to the Portsoken but remained a part of the parish. In 1442, St Katharine's (first established in 1147) became an independent Precinct, the
Precinct of St Katharine by the Tower and so ceased to be a part of the East Smithfield area of the parish.
People In 1332, a tax assessment showed 23 taxpayers in the Portsoken. However, this figure only included
freemen of the City of London who possessed moveable property worth more than 10
shillings, and so did not include the poor, non-citizens, or members of
religious orders. A later subsidy roll from 1582 showed that the ward's taxpayers had been assessed to pay a total of 57
pounds, 11 shillings and 4 pence. The Portsoken has long had a mixed population, and in 1483 is recorded as having more
aliens in its population than any ward in the City of London. This pattern of diversity continued, during the late 16th and early 17th centuries the parish of
St Botolph without Aldgate as a whole (both the Portsoken and
East Smithfield parts) is recorded as having a population of at least 25 people identified as "blackamoors." They appear to have arrived as a result of the
war with Spain, being freed from Spanish slave ships, or slavery in Spanish colonies, by English warships. These free black Londoners, some of whom had mixed African and Spanish ancestry, often found work as sailors or interpreters. Many were servants and one appears to have worked at the
Whitechapel Bell Foundry. The parish records from that time also reveal the presence of French, Dutch and Indian residents as well as at least one Persian and one East Indian (Bengali). ==Boundary Changes==