have attempted here to chronicle a few of the significant events that have shaped our town. It is by no means a complete history of our city of Coventry; such an excercise would be well beyond the scope of any webpage, and of my limited knowledge, too. What follows is a series of brief passages covering various aspects, which either highlight some important chapters in Coventry's past, or are simply interesting enough to warrant a mention.
n ancient times, much of the land traditionally covered by Warwickshire was made up of two main areas known as Arden and Feldon. The River Avon formed the boundary between the two, running from north-east to south-west.
From necessity, many of the hamlets that developed in the Forest of Arden were created in clearings, either man-made or perhaps natural openings in the woods. The old English word for a clearing was "lea", and derivatives of this include leah, ley and leigh, so we can see how many of the settlements with which we're familiar today gained their names. Examples are: Keresley, Henley, Corley, Whoberley, Binley, Allesley, Fillongley, plus many others. The name Henley-in-Arden in fact contains a double reference to its ancient roots. [Footnote 1]
The area from which Coventry grew did, however, contain a particularly good resource.... water. The Sherbourne was much larger in Saxon times, and a large lake called Babba Lacu filled much of the low lying land along the northern edge of the hamlet. Therefore, a supply of fish and drinking water was always plentiful, and the land was also more easily defended in times of trouble. The only remnant of the lake is now a small pool - the Swanswell. [Footnote 2]
With the forest being mostly unsuitable for the cultivation of crops, the Saxon settlers in this area concentrated on cattle and sheep, and so it was this which would eventually lead to Coventry's great wealth in the middle ages with its wool industry.
Although Coventry's documented history stretches back at least a thousand years, its true beginnings are still shrouded in mystery. There is good reason to suggest that the first settlement here grew around a Saxon nunnery, which had been founded around 700 AD by St. Osburga, and which stood in the vicinity of St. Mary's Priory. [Footnote 3]
omething that may never be proven, is the origin of our city's name. The theory that some historians subscribe to, is that Coventry has evolved from the name Cofantreo. It's supposed that an early settler in the area by the name of Cofa, marked his boundary with a tree, (not an uncommon thing to do in Saxon times) hence the name "Cofantreo" which is thought to have meant "Cofa's tree". [Footnote 4]Please note; Old English didn't use the letter v, so therefore in the early spellings where a letter u was used, it might have been, in fact, pronounced as a v, and wouldn't have sounded as alien as it looks when printed. Similarly, the letter f was pronounced v by the Saxons, therefore, for instance, Cofentreo would have been pronounced Coventreo. (This usage is still commonplace today - think about the word 'of '.)
There are many other theories about the reason for the name too, holding varying levels of credence. Some legends associate the town with the Celtic-Roman water goddess, Coventina, but perhaps a leading contender for the original meaning is Coventre derived from the words "Coven", meaning "Convent" and "tre", a celtic word meaning "settlement" or "town", giving rise to "Convent Town". [Footnote 6] This was certainly the view taken in the 18th century as engraved on the official 1749 survey map, and many leading historians over the last few centuries have also held this opinion. Bearing in mind the town's probable origin - a settlement surrounding an early Saxon abbey - this argument is my personal favourite, too.

hy do we have an elephant and castle on our coat of arms? And what is the meaning of our motto, Camera Principis? These appear to be rather common questions - but as usual with Coventry's history, the answer is far from straight forward!

t really cannot be overstated just how much the early development of Coventry owed to the most famous couple ever to be associated with the town; Earl Leofric and his wife, Lady Godiva.
A royal charter by Edward the Confessor, now known to be a forgery, states that in 1043 Leofric and Godiva founded a Benedictine monastery for twenty four monks. This was later to become the priory and cathedral of St. Mary's. Although not original, there is no reason to fully doubt the charter's contents; there have always been many reasons why, in later years, somebody (for instance the prior in this case) might wish to forge or amend such a document. Often it might have been for the purpose of laying claim to land or property which doesn't belong to them, but sometimes it could be simply to replace a lost document, and so reinforce a justified claim of ownership.
Evidence suggests that St. Mary's might have been in existence by 1022 when a Coventry church was presented with the arm of St. Augustine, and if this is true, then Leofric and Godiva's contribution may have been to 'endow' the monastery, not actually 'found' it. Many riches were bestowed upon the church, and William of Malmesbury was recorded as saying; "It was enriched and beautified with so much gold and silver that the walls seemed too narrow to contain it". [Footnote 9]
Lady Godiva is remembered principally nowadays of course, for her naked ride through the town on horseback, allegedly in an attempt to persuade her husband to lower the taxes that were crippling the poor citizens of Coventry. It is a wonderful story that has spanned many centuries (and lost nothing in the telling!) but for various reasons it is unlikely that such an event ever happened at all. Coventry, at that time, was little more than a hamlet, and the ride would have been very short indeed. It was also not a contemporary tale - around 120 years had elapsed since the alleged ride before it was written about in a book called "Flores Historiarum" (meaning "Flowers of History") by Roger of Wendover from St. Albans - a man apparently not known for his accurate historical recording! The story has however, remained part of the city's legend that will keep people talking about Coventry for as long as the place exists.
Records state that Leofric was buried in a porch of the abbey in Coventry, but despite early accounts stating that Godiva was also buried here, there is, in fact, no real evidence to suggest that she ever used Coventry as her home, and it is recorded that her final resting place was Evesham Abbey, alongside Prior Aefic, her friend and Father Confessor. [Footnote 10]
A most fascinating web resource telling virtually all there is to know about this famous lady can be found on this website by Cecilia Parsons.
synod in 1075 by the ecclesiastical Council of London decreed (amongst many other things) that all Bishops seats should, if not already, be relocated in larger, wealthier towns. Thus, in that year, Bishop Peter moved the Mercian see from the then village of Lichfield, to the already substantial town of Chester.
His successor was the infamous and greedy Robert de Limesey whose influence there was diminished by the presence of the Earls of Chester. Evidence in the form of a letter from Archbishop Lanfranc shows that Limesey wished to move from Chester before 1089, and the Midlands turned out to be the preferred choice. He transferred his see to Coventry around 1095, and Papal authorisation for this came in 1102 which turned the Benedictine monastery of St. Mary into a priory and cathedral. [Footnote 11]
This choice of Coventry over Lichfield forms part of an age old mystery. The returns from the Domesday Survey in 1086 suggest that Coventry was little more than a village, with perhaps no more than 350 inhabitants.... so why only a decade or so later was our town's status considered worthy of the seat of a Bishop? The true answer might never be found, but it has been suggested that the answer could lie in the simple fact that the Domesday Survey was, in places, notoriously innacurate. The commissioners with the enormous task of surveying the country often counted the agricultural estates but appeared uncertain of how to treat urban communities. After all, the prime reason for the survey was to establish wealth - and this usually meant livestock and farmland - so residential dwellings and urban areas were more difficult to assess.
It is a fact that many known towns were omitted, either completely or in part, from the Domesday book, so it is feasible that Coventry was neglected in the same way, with only the agriculturally based properties taken into account. Historians generally estimate that, in all probability, Coventry was home to around 1,000 people by 1086.
Whatever the reason for the discrepancy, Godiva and Leofric's influence had sufficiently raised the settlement's profile. With its newly found fame, the town was considered important enough for the Bishop to move here, and Coventry was to grow enormously in wealth and size over the next three centuries.
hat a castle ever existed in Coventry is something not many people realise nowadays. In fact, for many years, historians haven't been able to completely agree on the castle's exact whereabouts - and in one or two cases - its very existence.
One clue, which reveals the possible plot area of the castle grounds at one point in time, is the discovery of a defensive ditch. [Footnote 12] The small map on the right shows in red the probable route taken - only a few short segments of the ditch have been excavated, so parts of the route are conjecture. Also, the medieval streets are only included here for reference - most would not yet have been in existence during the life of the castle. At some point, the ditch was re-routed to run past the north edge of what later was to become the huge tower of St. Michael's (numbered '1' on the map) and through the centre of the then unbuilt church. The original smaller chapel of St. Michael's would have stood within the bailey of the castle grounds.
David McGrory, in his book "A History of Coventry", tells us much about the probable lifetime of our castle, and from this we can glean that the period during which the castle was in use appears to be extremely short. It was built by Ranulf Gernons, Earl of Chester, around 1137 to 1140 - almost certainly using enforced labour from the local population. This was at the time of the 'Barons Wars' during the reign of King Stephen, and Ranulf held the castle against the king. Ranulf's castle had barely been finished, when in 1143 it was challenged by Earl Marmion, who used the nearby Priory as his fort. More details about this on the St. Mary's Priory page.
Ranulf was succeeded as earl by his son, Hugh II, who it appears was also rebellious, and in 1173 held Coventry's castle against the king - this time King Henry II. Henry sent a strong force to Coventry - and the rebellion, and almost certainly the castle, was destroyed.
It seems that from this date the remains of the castle were allowed to decay. Although many references to it would still be made, it would never again be used in battle. The appropriately named 'Earl Street' would soon be built through the grounds from west to east, and the Guildhall (numbered '3' on the map) built within the castle grounds, possibly utilising some of the old foundations. On the back of the guildhall is a wedge-shaped three storey (once four) tower, known as Caesar's Tower. This tower, along with another similar one mirroring it, might feasibly have been an entrance to the castle - which could form a funnelled 'killing zone' for entering intruders.
One of the last mentions of Coventry's castle was in 1569. On this occasion it was suggested by Queen Elizabeth I that Mary, Queen of Scots be held somewhere secure such as Coventry castle. However, it was by that time too decayed for such an event. Mary was first held at the Bull Inn, Smithford Street, then moved to the Mayoresses Parlour in St. Mary's Guildhall. [Footnote 13]
here has been much debate in the last century or so about the division of Coventry into the "Prior's half" and the "Earl's Half". That these two areas existed has been well documented, but until the middle of the twentieth century it was believed that our town was totally split, and had separate government for each half until incorporation in 1345.
Before this time the harmony between the two halves is less clear. There certainly appears to have been a disparity in the general day to day living and working practices - the Earl's tenants appearing to be freer to trade independantly, and seemingly more 'capitalist', and the Priors tenants in the north apparently being bound to work for the benefit of the Priory but having other priviledges like freedom of the market at the Priory gates. These differences, however, only describe the town as having two landlords with differing rules, and do not show that the town was split. County rulings and royal charters were issued in the twelfth century which refer either to just "the men of Coventry" without qualification, or equally to both Earl's and Prior's parts of the town. A mint is documented, the proceeds and running of which appears to be shared between Earl and Prior, and also, there appears to have been only one "portmanmoot" which was an early type of court that administered medieval justice to men of both halves.
Domestic rivalry and competition there might have been, but Coventry moved forward, and due to the energy of its people, prospered in its own single minded way!
he relocation of the Bishop to this town was a major step towards Coventry's growing importance. The next stage of huge significance came in 1182 with the granting of a Royal Charter. King Henry II confirmed liberties that had been granted by Earl Ranulf II some time between 1129 and 1153, and it allowed many new things which would ultimately allow Coventry to grow in prosperity. The four main areas of town life affected were:
In 1330, the second woman to have enormous influence over events in Coventry came onto the scene. It was in this year that the remaining rights of the Earls of Chester passed into the hands of Queen Isabella, the widow of King Edward II, who she'd had murdered in 1327. Isabella had been banished by her son, Edward III, who was to rule England strongly for fifty years, but now from Cheylesmore Manor, she had a new interest - the control of the former Earl's half of Coventry.
As explained above in A Town of Two Halves", since 1250 Coventry had remained under the singular control of the Prior. During this time of the Prior's seignority, the more commercially enlightened men of the southern half of the town were constantly in bitter dispute with their oppressive overlord. Obviously very upset that Roger de Mold had lost much of the Earl's power in Coventry, Isabella used her influence as Queen Mother to fight back against the Prior at every opportunity in an attempt to gain increased control of the town. She broke many written agreements, and made herself extremely unpopular with the churchmen, but the free men of Coventry had a new champion, and it only took Isabella fifteen years for the most significant stage in Coventry's development to occur....
On the 20th January 1345 Coventry's status was confirmed by the granting of a Royal "Charter of Incorporation" by King Edward III. It was supposedly the first municipal charter of its kind in England, and it meant that Coventry could now have its own Council which could elect its own Mayor. Coventry's first Mayor was John Ward, however, his election did not occur until 1348.
We now officially had a city. This act would have come as a fatal blow for the Prior and his monastery because the Charter of Incorporation effectively excluded their involvement with the more powerful Earl's half of the town. A decade later, with another agreement called the "Tripartite Indenture" in 1355, the Prior's and Earl's territories came under the singular control of the Corporation. After centuries of influence, the Prior was no longer a significant power in Coventry.
y medieval times, due largely to a thriving textile and weaving trade, Coventry had become the fourth largest and possibly the best defended city in England, only smaller in population and wealth than York, Bristol and, of course, London. Our city was, in effect, the 'capital' of the Midlands.
In 1974, of course, our long association with Warwickshire also came to an end after a massive Government reorganisation of all counties. Many local people feel that Warwickshire is still our rightful home, and when one looks at a political map showing county boundaries, Coventry stands out like a sore thumb from its current position in the West Midlands which has been our administrative county since the 1974 restructuring. Apart from a narrow strip to our west, Coventry is surrounded on 80% of its periphery by lovely Warwickshire countryside. Perhaps one day we will revert back to the county where we belong.
urther to the Royal family's problems of 1450, things were to get worse. King Henry VI had become prone to periods of mental illness, and in 1455 suffered a second bout, lasting into 1456. It was perceived that the King's power, and indeed his life, might be in danger, and so Queen Margaret, now effectively in charge, moved the Royal Court to Coventry, known by many as her "secret harbour". In August 1456 at St. Mary's Guildhall, Coventry's Mayor and 91 councillors met, and pledged money and allegiance to the Lancastrian cause in the ongoing War of the Roses.
Coventry was now the seat of government, and it is said that Margaret surrounded herself with all the trappings of luxury and culture with which she had become familiar in their London household. For all the prestige that this may have brought on our city, providing home to the Royal Court was a tremendous strain on local resources, and the ordinary people of Coventry must have wondered what advantage was being gained by our sudden fame and hospitality towards the Royals.
The final parliamentary meeting to be held in Coventry occurred in December 1459 as events were turning for the worse between the Yorkists and Lancastrians. In early 1461, Henry's reign was at an end when Richard Neville, the Earl of Warwick, installed Edward IV onto the throne of England. Although Henry VI was to have another brief spell as king between 1469 and 1471, (again, with help from Richard Neville, known as "Warwick the Kingmaker") Edward IV's return for the next twelve years spelled the end for Lancastrian rule. [Footnote 20]
This was not, however, the first time that Coventry had hosted the nation's parliament. In 1404 King Henry IV summoned parliament to be held in St. Mary's Priory - an event which became known as the "Parliamentum Indoctorum" (or "Unlearned Parliament"), so called because all lawyers, who were deemed to be troublesome, (or, more to the point, too familiar with the law) were excluded from the meeting.
hilst most people are familiar with the destruction that the bombing by the Luftwaffe inflicted upon Coventry in World War Two, fewer will be aware that Coventry was uniquely unlucky in being the only city to lose it's cathedral church in this manner. However, it's likely that fewer still will realise that our city has suffered a similar fate twice in its history!
The 16th century dissolution of the monasteries at the hands of King Henry VIII had every bit as devastating an effect on Coventry as Adolf Hitler's reign of terror in the mid 20th century. Thinly disguised as a method of reducing the enormous power that the church, and in particular the monasteries, held across the land, Henry slowly began to dissolve the age old institutions. The real reason that appears to prevail, however, was greed.
In 1536, he ordered his Vicar-General, Thomas Cromwell, to assess all monasteries across England with a view towards suppressing those with an annual income of less than £200 per year. The monies and treasures gained were not to go to charitable institutions, as had been presumed by the Priors, but to bolster the King's coffers. The ordinary townsfolk had been softened up by the King who promised that the income from the dissolution would mean no more taxes would be asked of them.
Not completely satisfied with the return from the first round of suppression, in 1538 Henry ordered that the remaining monasteries be dissolved.
The first monasteries in Coventry to fall were Whitefriars and Greyfriars; the Fransiscan monks of the latter finally surrendered on the 5th October 1538. These two institutions had very modest incomes of just a few pounds per year.
In 1538, the order was given to dissolve the much larger Benedictine priory and cathedral of St. Mary's. Coventry's Bishop, Roland Lee and the Prior of the church, Thomas Camswell, pleaded for it to be saved, suggesting that it could be used by the Church of England but their pleas were unsuccessful, perhaps partly because two substantial parish churches lay nearby, but certainly due to the fact that Coventry was a shared diocese with Lichfield and two cathedrals would be an unnecessary luxury. The choice made by Henry VIII was not a difficult one; he particularly disliked monks, and Lichfield was more secular and conformed more with the king's wishes. The Coventry abbey was officially taken by the Crown on the 15th January 1539, and that same year the smaller St. Anne's Charterhouse on the London Road also fell. [Footnote 21]
The effect of the dissolution on Coventry was enormous. The Priory had been by far the largest single creator of industry in the town, and this is supported by the fact that after the event, the population fell from around 7,000 to somewhere in the region of 3,000. The general effect of the suppression around the country was also testimony to the false economy made by Henry VIII. The money raised for the Crown by the dissolution turned out to be only a small fraction of the income generated by the church through its monastic activities.
As for the former priory itself, records indicate that it remained largely untouched for the first six years. It can be assumed that during this period King Henry VIII robbed it of all valuables, but in 1545 all attempts to retain the church had been exhausted, and St. Mary's was purchased by John Hales, as was Whitefriars monastery which became his personal residence. The cathedral priory, however, was systematically stripped of all materials that could be sold for profit. After 1572 when Hales died, the remaining structure returned to local authority ownership whereby all that could be done was to sell the remnants as building materials. [Footnote 22] Portions of the structure survived intact for several decades, and notably, the north west tower was the largest part still standing three centuries later. In 1856-57, Blue Coat School was enlarged and incorporated this tower into its foundations. All this has been lovingly restored and is open for public viewing at the side of Priory Gardens including a purpose built Visitor Centre which proudly displays the archaeological gems salvaged from the buried ruins of St. Mary's priory and cathedral.
he old saying "sent to Coventry" is a frequently quoted phrase, meaning to be completely ignored or snubbed by everyone, yet few who use it are aware of its origin. As with much historical 'storytelling', the true origin is blurred in the mists of time, but here are some possible reasons for its usage: -
It has also been suggested that because Coventry was a place used to carry out executions, for example, the so called 'heretics' brought here to be burned in the 16th century, another theory is that to be "sent to Coventry" had far more serious connotations. Certainly those poor souls would never have been spoken to again!