| The Harbour at Rye | |||||||||||||||||||
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| In this section: Introduction --- Historic Overview --- Cinque Ports --- Medieval Harbour --- Tudor Harbour --- Decline of Rye Harbour --- Smeaton's Harbour --- 19th Century Rye Harbour --- The harbour today | |||||||||||||||||||
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Rye Medieval Harbour
The harbour between Rye and Winchelsea consisted of saltings and mud flats covered at high spring tides. The Brede was a larger winding river opening into the main port at Rye with an outlet to the sea. A large creek formed on the Marsh and was protected by a shingle head. This creek was known as the Wainway and was a haven for large ships to shelter. Throughout the 13th Century numerous storms and a rise in sea level destroyed the port of Old Winchelsea and the River Rother altered its course from its exit to the sea at New Romney to a new position near Rye. This was due to the inundations of the Marshes after the great storms from 1234 to 1336. During Medieval times Rye suffered from the effects of the Black Death in the 14th Century and the Hundred Years War (1337 – 1453) with France. Trade was slack although timber and wine and captured cargoes provided a living. Henry V undoubtedly used the port to transport men to France prior to the Battle of Agincourt (1415), using the Confederation fleet.
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