230 RECORDS PRESERVED AMONGST THE
The second granted to them freedom from arrest, (except in certain peculiar cases,) the retiu-n of all writs touching Southampton and its liberty, with permission to choose their own coroners, subject to the justices in Eyre. Many other charters were granted by subsequent kings, that of the 25 Hen. VI. being chiefly worthy of note, on account of the license given in it to the citizens to purchase lands, notwith- standing the statute of mortmain, and of the statement that Portsmouth was at that period within the liberty of South- ampton. The corporation is very rich in documents, rolls, and regis- ters, and of these the following may be enumerated as the most deserving of notice. The first, entitled " Liber Niger," commencing 16 Rich. II. A.D. 1393, and ending 1620, contains enrolments of private charters, with a deed for a free grammar school in the town. The second, entitled " Liher Bemembranciarmn villce Suth- amptonicB^' A.D. 1455, is full of miscellaneous matters of con- siderable value to the student of the local antiquities of the town, but of little comparative interest to the general reader. The third is entitled " A Book of Fines, Amerciaments, ^c. from A.D. 1489 to A.D. 1593." The fourth is a book endorsed, " Entry of Burgesses from 1496 to 1704," at the end of which is a census of the popu- lation, taken Sept. 20, 1596, from which it appears that the total number of residents at that period was 4,200, of whom 784 are rated as able men, while the aliens and their families amount to 297. The fifth is entitled " A Booh of Bememhrances for the town of Southampton, from 5 Hen. VIII. to 1601 ; the infor- mation, however, contained in it is of a purely local nature. Besides these, which are perhaps the most important, there are many other volumes containing a vast amount of miscella- neous information, relating to the medieval history of the town, such as Enrolments of the Statutes Merchant from 39 Eliz. to 2 Jac. II., the Steward's Book of accounts from 1432 to 1699, Journal of the Corporatio7i Proceeding's from 1602 to 1642, Books 071 the Brolmge Wl^ Assize of Bread from 1440 to 1694, and others belonging to the Linen and Woollen Halls from 1552 to 1576. There are also the Muster Books for the years 1544, 1555, 1567, 1579, 1583, 1589, and one without date, at the end of which is a census of the inhabitants able to bear