Authors: Rory Clements
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Mystery & Detective, #Thrillers, #Espionage
Respectable townsfolk were both afraid of them – and fascinated by their lifestyle, much in the way we now find old-time pirates glamorous.
In 1565, the printer and writer John Awdeley brought out a small volume entitled
The Fraternitye of Vacabondes
, which was so popular that it was immediately reprinted – and then brought out again ten years later. His book was followed by Thomas Harman’s equally famous
Caveat
, published in 1567.
Both men claimed to have talked extensively with vagabonds to obtain their information, and there are great similarities between their accounts.
A Vagabond Who’s Who
This is the hierarchy of the vagabond bands, as outlined by Awdeley (and modernised and shortened by this author):
Upright Man:
One that goes with a staff. He has so much authority that meeting with any of his profession he may call them to account and command a share of all that they have gained. And if he do them wrong, they have no remedy against him, even though he beats them. He may also command any of their women, which they call doxies, to serve his turn.
Curtall:
Much like an upright man, but his authority is not so great.
Kitchen co:
an idle, renegade boy.
Kitchen mort:
A girl. She is brought at her full age to the Upright Man to be broken, and so she is called a doxy, until she comes to the honour of an Altham [the wife of a Curtall].
Abraham Man:
He walks bare-armed and bare-legged, and feigns himself mad and calls himself Poor Tom.
Ruffler:
Carries a weapon and seeks work, saying he has served as a soldier in the wars. But his main trade is robbing poor wayfarers and market women.
Prigman:
Steals clothes and poultry and carries them to the alehouse, which they call the boozing inn, and there sits playing at cards and dice until he spends all he has stolen.
Lackman:
One that can read and write and sometimes speak Latin. He makes counterfeit licences [i.e., to prove he has permission to beg alms], which they call ‘gybes’.
Whipjack:
He uses counterfeit licences to beg as though he were a mariner, but his chief trade is to rob booths at a fair, which they call ‘heaving of the booth’.
Frater:
He goes with a licence to beg alms for a hospital and preys upon poor women.
Quire bird:
One that came lately out of prison and goes to seek work in service. He is commonly a stealer of horses, which they term a Prigger of Palfreys.
Washman:
Also called a palliard [one who wears a patched cloak]. He lies in the path, begging with lame or sore legs or arms, bitten with spickwort and sometimes with ratsbane.
Patriarch co:
He makes marriages, until death do part the married couple, which happens like this: when they come to a dead horse or any dead cattle, then they shake hands and so depart.
Abram:
naked
Betty:
picklock
Bleating cheat:
sheep
Bubble-buff:
bailiff
Bube:
pox
Chive:
knife
Clapperdudgeon:
someone born a beggar
Collar the cole:
lay hold of the money
Cull:
a fool
Dads:
old man
Dell:
a young wench not yet broken by the Upright Man
Elf:
little
Fambles:
Hands
Fencer:
receiver of stolen goods
Fog:
smoke
Gage:
excise man
Grub:
food
Hog:
shilling
Horsebread:
poor-quality bread made of beans or bran, designed for horses
Hum:
strong
Jem:
ring
Jet:
lawyer
Kick:
sixpence
Kin:
thief
Leake:
Welshman
Mauks:
whore
Mish:
smock
Mort:
a female
Mort of Rome:
the Queen of England
Nan:
maid of a house
Nap:
an arrest
Nimming:
stealing
Nip a bung:
cut a purse
Otter:
sailor
Plant the whids:
mind what you say
Popps:
pistols
Ruffmans:
woods
Rumbo ken:
pawnbroker
Rum mort:
fine woman
Shark:
to swindle; prey upon
Smeer:
painter
Snaffler:
highwayman
Tip:
give
Tit:
horse
Tom Pat:
parson
Tout:
take heed
Tripe:
belly
Wobble:
to boil
Yam:
to eat
Yelp:
town crier
Zad:
crooked