BBC History Magazine

Two pounds of pepper and ginger, a pair of scarlet trousers and 1,000 eels

In 1194, the monks of Ramsey Abbey in Huntingdonshire needed a way across a local fen, and landowner Ralph Tuberville had a road that he was willing to lease. In return for the use of his elevated causeway, the Ramsey monks agreed to pay Tuber- ville a yearly in-kind rent of 1,000 eels, two pounds each of pepper and ginger, and a pair of scarlet trousers. The abbey later renegotiated the deal with Ralph’s widow, who did not want any more trousers, instead demanding half a mark in coins and 60 cartloads of firewood. And 1,000 eels.

The idea of accepting eels as rental payment may strike modern readers

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC History Magazine

BBC History Magazine2 min read
Alfred Russel Wallace 1823-1913
Alfred Russel Wallace was a British naturalist, explorer, geographer, anthropologist and biologist. Besides independently conceiving the idea of evolution through natural selection at around the same time as Charles Darwin, he explored the Amazon riv
BBC History Magazine2 min readWorld
“Understanding How China Got Here, And What Its Motivations Are, Requires Looking At History”
Your Invention of… series looks at how history has made nations what they are today. Why did you choose to focus on China in these latest episodes? After 30 years of US domination, the last 15 years have seen the so-called multipolar world emerge. Bu
BBC History Magazine3 min read
Michael Wood On…
I MET UP WITH A CHINESE FRIEND THE OTHER day at the British Library. What better place to reflect on human history as told through its literature? From Michelangelo and Leonardo, to the Ma'il Qur'an and the Codex Sinaiticus; from Jane Austen and Geor

Related