The 'Stannary Parliaments' and 'Stannary Courts' were legislative and legal institutions in
Cornwall and in West
Devon (in the
Dartmoor area),
England. The Stannary Courts administered
equity for the region's tin-miners and tin mining interests, and they were also
courts of record for the towns dependent on the mines. Executive authority in stannary areas was exercised by the
Lord Warden of the Stannaries.
The separate and powerful government institutions available to the tin miners reflected the enormous importance of the tin industry to the English economy during the
Middle Ages. Special laws for tin miners predate written legal codes in
Britain, and ancient traditions exempted everyone connected with tin mining in Cornwall and Devon from any jurisdiction other than the Stannary Courts in all but the most exceptional circumstances.
King John granted a charter to the tin miners of Cornwall and Devon in
1201, confirming their "just and ancient customs and liberties". The tin miners of both areas originally met together at
Hingston Down and referred to themselves as a
parliament.
Edward I of England split the stannary institutions between Cornwall and Devon, establishing parliaments and courts for the two counties separately. The jurisdiction of the Cornwall stannary institutions covered the whole of the county, while those of Devon were more limited in geography and scope - restricted primarily to mining questions and to the
stannary towns.
As the tin mines of Cornwall and Devon lost their economic importance during the
18th and
19th centuries, their political institutions also waned in power and ultimately faded away, until recent efforts to restore them.
Devon Stannary Parliament
Edward I's
1305 Stannary Charter established
Tavistock,
Ashburton and
Chagford as Devon's
stannary towns, with a monopoly on all tin mining in
Devon, a right to representation in the Stannary Parliament and a right to the jurisdiction of the Stannary Courts.
Plympton became the fourth Devon stannary town in
1307.
The parliament consisted of ninety-six jurates, with twenty-four being chosen by each of the four Devon stannaries. The jurates were chosen at special courts held in each stannary by "tinners": a term broad enough to include not just miners and tin work owners, but others concerned with the tin industry.
[G.R. Lewis, ''The Stannaries, a study of the medieval tin miners of Cornwall and Devon'' (11 Mb PDF document)] The Parliament usually met in an open air forum at
Crockern Tor, but was reputed to meet in the nearest pub whenever it rained. The last convocation of the Devon Parliament was in
1748, but as late as the
1980s, an honorary Stannator would be named whenever a new tin mine was opened.
[1]
Cornish Stannary Parliament
The privileges of the stannaries of Cornwall were confirmed by
Edward III on the creation of the
Duchy of Cornwall in
1337. This confirmed that the tin miners were exempt from all civil jurisdiction other than that of the Stannary Courts, except in cases affecting land, life or limb.
The Cornish Stannaries were suspended as a consequence of the
Cornish Rebellion of 1497.
[2] Henry VII restored them in return for a payment from the tin miners of the, at the time, enormous sum of
£1000, to support his war on Scotland. In addition to restoring the Stannaries and pardoning the people who participated in the rebellion, Henry's
Charter of Pardon of 1508 provided that no new laws affecting miners should be enacted without the consent of twenty-four stannators, six being chosen from each of the four stannaries:
★ Foymore (or Foweymore): chosen by the mayor and corporation of
Lostwithiel
★ Blackmore: by the mayor and corporation of
Launceston
★ Tywarnhaile (or Tynwarnhail): by the mayor and corpoartion of
Truro
★ Penwith and Kerrier: by the mayor and corporation of
Helston
The 1508 Charter states, "No [Westminster] Act or Statute shall have effect in the Stannaries without the assent and consent of the twenty-four stannators." Acting in its capacity as appeal court for the colonies, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council has declared that any reference to The Stannaries means the whole of Cornwall.
Although England had its own London based Exchequer, the unabridged Charter of Pardon makes no less than ten separate references to the
Lostwithiel exchequer; thus illustrating one aspect of the constitutional linkage between Stannary and Duchy.
However, there is controversy over the standing of the Cornish legal system and attempts by Stannators to assert their ancient rights have all been defeated in the English Courts. The validity of these judgements have yet to be tested in the European legal theatre.
The stannators were described in
1831 as being ''"some of the principal gentlemen of the mining district"''. On assembly the stannators elected a speaker, the meeting being termed a Stannary Parliament. The parliaments were convened occasionally by the
Lord Warden of the Stannaries when it was felt that laws concerning the miner's rights needed to be made or revised.
The Cornish Stannary Parliament last assembled in at Truro in
1752, and continued until
September 11 1753.
[3] The English legal system does not recognise
desuetude (laws lapsing through lack of use), and the precedent of the
Court of Chivalry, which sat in 1952 for the first time in over 200 years, means that the Stannary Parliament, although not in session, still exists. The 1508 Charter of Pardon is still on the statute books as was confirmed in the House of Commons in recent years. (In 1977 the
Plaid Cymru MP
Dafydd Wigley in Parliament asked the Attorney General for England and Wales if he would provide the date upon which enactments of the Charter of Pardon of 1508 were rescinded. The reply, received on 14 May 1977, stated that a Stannator's right to veto Westminster legislation had never been formally withdrawn).
[4] [5]
Stannary Courts
The Devon Stannary Courts met in
Lydford and operated a prison there, while the Cornish Stannary Courts met primarily in
Truro. The Devon and Cornwall Stannary Courts were merged following the ''Stannaries Act of 1855'', but their powers were later transferred to county authorities by the ''Stannaries Court (Abolition) Act 1896''.
[6]
The tensions between the Stannaries and
Westminster is illustrated by ''
Strode's Case'' (
1512).
Mining courts and customs in other counties
While the stannaries of Devon and Cornwall had the most developed legal systems, a number of other mining communities had similar privileges. The customs of the community were usually confirmed by charter, with the miners having the right to seek for minerals in all areas other than tilled fields, subject to paying taxes to
the Crown.
Examples included:
★
Gloucestershire: The Free Miners of coal and iron of the
Forest of Dean had their customs confirmed by charter attributed to
Edward I, with a miner's court to try cases between the miners, and a miner's parliament.
★
Derbyshire: The hundreds of
High Peak and
Wirksworth (an area known as the "King's Field") were divided into eight "liberties" for the purposes of lead mining.
★
Somerset: The customs of the lead-mining district of the
Mendip Hills were encoded under
Edward IV. Two courts, consisting of twelve miners, were held annually to enforce the code.
★
Cumberland: The lead miners of
Alston Moor enjoyed legal privileges from the thirteenth century. By the reign of
Henry V there was in existence a court of mines, and the miners elected a coroner and bailiff, with the king's officers having no authority to serve writs in the area.
Revived Cornish Stannary Parliament
Main articles: Revived Cornish Stannary Parliament
Some Cornish political activists claim to have revived the Stannary Parliament since 1974, along with the right to veto British legislation. Indeed, it purports to have actually vetoed acts passed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom, although has been unable to enforce this.
On 12 December 1974 the Home Office replied to letters from the members of this revived Parliament, saying that the Home Office could accept elections by the stannary towns only as constitutive of a valid Stannary Parliament. However, the Stannaries were not abolished, and the Home Office has made no effort to hold these elections. The Revived Cornish Stannary Parliament is driven primarily by Cornish nationalism and demands for greater local autonomy, along with arguments about the constitutional status of Cornwall.
See also
★ Stannary
★ Stannary town
★ List of topics related to Cornwall
External links
★ Revived Cornish Stannary Parliament
★ Cornish Stannary (Tin) Law and Institutions by Paul Laity
★ Cornish Timeline
★ Cornwall Record Office Online Catalogue for the Vicewarden's Court of the Stannaries
References
1. Devon's mining history and Stannary Parliament
2. Timeline of Cornish History 1966 -1700 AD, (Cornwall County Council)
3. Samuel Lewis, ''Topographical Dictionary of England'', volume I, 1831
4. 14th May 1977 - Cornwall Council - Stannator's right to veto Westminster legislation had never been formally withdrawn.
5. Reference - National Library of Wales, Aberystwyth, where Dafydd Wigley deposited his papers regarding this in 1978
6. 1911 ''Britannica'' entry for "Stannaries"