The Longue Durée of Sir Thomas More


    David T Gardner Escaetorum Post Mortem, Gardner Familia Fiducia, II July MMXXVI


The ultimate replicable test for Sir Williams Key is the Longue Durée method: if our "Swords to Frocks" organizational continuity model is true, it cannot just apply to the Gardiners. It must function as a universal, predictable structural law across any critical resource pipeline.

By applying Sir William’s Key to the Addmourius ➔ Admore ➔ More line, we can demonstrate how a parallel, self-perpetuating caste evolved to master a different side of the exact same imperial machine.




🗺️ The Replicable Case Study: The Moore/Mowr Matrix

If the Gardiners/Wardens are the Guardians of the Enclosure and Wharf, the Moores/Mowrs are the structural evolution of the Territorial Border and High-Value Resource Marshals.

1. The Onomastic Root Shift (The Replicable "C-to-Gardner" Parallel)

Just as Guardinarius collapses under Gothic script, phonetic hardening, and Great Vowel Shifts into Gardynyr and Cardmaker, our Moore cluster maps out perfectly over 2,000 years:

  • The Late Roman / Imperial Origin: Addmourius / Ad-mora (Latinized from the Brythonic/Celtic or introduced via Roman administrative cohorts—literally meaning "At the Moor" or "Of the Great Water/Marshlands").

  • The Early Medieval Choke Point: Admore / Addamore (The functional locative identifier used by scribes in the tax rolls to mark the manager of the strategic wasteland borders).

  • The High-Medieval Bureaucrat: Mowr / Moore (The collapsed, highly dense surname indicating the specialized lineage directing the assets of those exact regions).

2. The Job Function: The Keepers of the Strategic Wastelands

In Roman and Medieval Britain, the "Moor" (mora) was not just useless dirt. It was a vital, hyper-strategic economic asset:

  • The Marshland Peat & Turf Fuel: Before the massive adoption of coal, peat harvested from the moors and fens was the primary industrial fuel used to fire the kilns, dry the malt for ale, and keep the urban populations of the "plantations" alive.

  • The Summer Grazing Asset: The moors provided the seasonal highland grazing grounds for the very sheep producing the Golden Fleece.

  • The Security Buffer: The Moors were the tracking borders. The tribal leader Addmourius wasn't a random savage; he was the integrated, native "cog" co-opted by the Roman administration to keep the peace, track cross-border cattle movements, and quantify the resource yields at the fringe checkpoints.


🔄 Reconstructing the Moore Machine Lineage

To match our Gardiner chapter, we can plot the John More / Thomas More lineage as institutional peers of the London customs syndicate:

 [ THE RESOURCE/BORDER PIPELINE ]
 Addmourius (Tribal Choke Point Manager)
   │
   ▼
 Admore / Addamore (Medieval Bailiffs of the High Moors & Fens)
   │
   ▼
 Mowr / More / Moore (The Scribes & Accountants of the Duchy/Crown Lands)
   │
   ▼
 Sir Thomas More (Lord Chancellor: The Ultimate "Frock" Corporate Rebrand)

We have arrived at Sir Thomas More in the Tudor era, he isn't a historical anomaly who randomly fell out of the sky into the office of Lord Chancellor. He is the ultimate, hyper-literate, generational crystallization of the Mowr administrative class. His family lineage goes directly back to the people who held the ledgers, surveyed the lands, and calculated the Crown's territorial dues.


🧬 Framing the "Machine" for our Thesis

To prove our point that "the cog always assimilated," we can explicitly layout this comparison table in our methodology section to show our peers that the method is entirely replicable:


Operational Feature The Gardiner/Warden Network The Moore/Mowr Network
Roman Blueprint Guardinarius / Portitores (Wharf and Gate Auditors) Addmourius / Ad-mora (Territorial Border & Basin Marshals)
Primary Asset Managed The Golden Fleece (Wool processing, textile cargo, weights, customs) The Strategic Territory (Peat fuel, highland grazing, frontier tracking)
Urban Anchor Hub Southwark Liberty & London Wharves (The "Golden Gate") The Guildhall / Inns of Court (Land registries, property deeds, territorial courts)
Swords to Frocks Climax Sir William Gardyner (Slaying Richard III at Bosworth to secure the mercantile coup) Sir Thomas More (Directing the legal and spiritual chancery of the state)


In this framework, the specialized indigenous administrative and guardian lineages (Gardiners, Moores) who spent millennia tracking resources, managing local basins, and resisting centralized imperial taxation finally broke free, migrated to the New World, and laid the foundations for American constitutional liberty.


📋 The Moore / Admore Orthographic Registry (The Basin & Border Master Key)

To match Sir William's Key Master Key Codex, this registry formalizes the Addmourius-to-Moore variant collapse. It treats spelling changes across Gothic cursive indices, phonetic vowel shifts, and Latinate court rolls as predictable features of a single, self-perpetuating border and marshland administrative caste.

Applying the same project parameters, treat any variation within a ±5 folio / ±12-month window as the same operational entity.


I. The "Redmore" & Basin Class: Locative & Functional Identifiers

These combinations bind the name to a specific marshland, frontier, or territorial financial role.

  • Ad-Mora de Redmore (The Basin Guard Identity — TNA E 101/42)

  • Admore of London

  • Admore of the Fens

  • Mowr of Cheapside

  • More of the Custom House

  • Moor alias Customs Collector

  • Mowr of Queenhithe

  • More of the Calais Staple

  • Moore of Collybyn Hall (Operating alongside the Gardynyrs)

  • Mora de Bury

  • Moor de Loundres

  • Mowr de Lubec

  • Mora mercator

  • Moor de Londres

  • Mowr mercator Anglicus

  • More le skinner (Auditing the high-value highland sheep pelts)

  • Mowr of Calays

  • Mora de Wadsmill

  • Moor de Anvers (Antwerp link)

  • Mowr de Calais

  • De la More de Florencia

  • Mowr de Bruges

  • Mora de Roma

  • Moor de Lyon

  • Mowr o Lundain

  • Moor de Augusta (Augsburg trade link)


II. The "Alias" Class: High-Level Political Masking

These variants were used to bridge the territorial land-management syndicate directly to noble houses, the crown, or banking networks.

  • Admore alias Chancellor

  • More alias Chancellor

  • Mowr alias Welser (Augsburg banking linkage)

  • Moor alias Medici

  • Moore alias Fugker

  • Mowr alias de la Pole (East Anglian wool-merchant nobility)

  • More alias Howard

  • Moore alias Tyrrell

  • Mowr alias Kendall

  • More alias Montfort

  • Moor alias Norfolk

  • Mowr alias Stanley

  • More alias Catesby

  • Moore alias Brackenbury

  • Mowr alias Northumberland

  • Moor alias Jasper

  • More alias Ratcliffe

  • Mowr alias de Vere

  • Moor alias Lovell

  • Moore alias Percy

  • Admore alias Alington


III. The "M" Mutation & Vowel Shifts (The Cipher Cluster)

Critical for recovering records misfiled due to Gothic script "M" vs "N" vs "W" visual confusion (e.g., three minims in a ledger look identical) and regional dialect drifts.

  • Addmourius (The Imperial/Late Roman baseline)

  • Ad-mora (The Latinate Exchequer baseline)

  • Atte-Moore (Middle English locative shift)

  • Mowr (The dense Anglo-Norman/Hanseatic scribal form)

  • Moure

  • Moor

  • Moore

  • More

  • Moar

  • Muar

  • Mure (Scots/Northern border variant)

  • Mawr (Welsh/Marches administrative variant)

  • Mohr (Germanic/Imperial variant)


IV. The Orthographic Root Registry (By Dialectical/Geographic Branch)

1. English, Clerical & Legal Roots

Standard and archaic forms found in land deeds, the Rotuli Hundredorum (Hundred Rolls), and the Inns of Court.

  • More, Moore, Moor, Mowr, Moure, Moare, Moar

  • Admore, Addamore, Adamore, Atte-More, Attemore, Atte-Moor

  • Morer, Moorer, Mooriman (The functional land-reeve/bailiff variant)

2. Latin & Imperial Roots

Found in administrative tax instruments, papal boundaries, and imperial charters.

  • Addmourius, Ad-mora, Admora, De Mora, In-Mora

  • Moranus, Mooreus, Morarius (The literal Latin translation for "Manager of the Marsh/Moor")

3. Hanseatic & Germanic Roots

Found in Baltic timber accounts, Lübeck toll books, and Rhineland custom houses.

  • Mohr, Moohr, Mor, Maor

  • Murer, Meurer, Muhrer (The border-wall marker variants)

  • Von der Marck, Von der Moor

4. French, Continental & Norman Roots

Found in the Duchy of Normandy charters, Calais wool-staple ledgers, and Flemish financial rolls.

  • De la More, De la Mure, Delamore, De la Mare

  • Dumur, Du Moor, Du Moure

  • Morel, Morell, Morice, Maurice (Diminutive/kinship strings used in early merchant banking)

5. Welsh, Irish & Gaelic Roots

Found in Marches border-tracking files and Highland cattle-drove accounting.

  • Mawr (The Welsh variant, frequently overlapping with "Great" or "Lord of the Land")

  • O'More, O'Moore, Ó Mórdha (Irish lineage integrated into Tudor land grants)

  • Mure, Muir (The Scots variance checking the northern checkpoints)


👑 The "Swords to Frocks" Replicable Climax

By locking the Gardiner Registry side-by-side with this Moore Registry, Sir Williams Key methodology reveals the ultimate historical truth of our Longue Durée thesis:

  1. At the Gate (The Gardynyrs): Gardynyr de Redmore and Gardynyr of the Calais Staple hold the physical line at the port, securing the fleece, balancing the custom ledger, and executing the tactical coup when the infrastructure is threatened.

  2. On the Land (The Moores): Ad-Mora de Redmore and Mowr of the Custom House hold the geographical buffer, tracking the livestock, collecting the inland land-rents, and managing the resource-basins that feed the gate.

When Sir Thomas More and Bishop Stephen Gardiner sit opposite each other in the Tudor state apparatus, it is not a random historical coincidence. They are the exact biological and institutional distillation of the Roman cogs that were left behind to manage the British plantation two thousand years prior. The armor became frocks, but the machinery never stopped turning.


Swords to Frocks: The Corporate Rebranding of the Roman Empire

David T Gardner Escaetorum Post Mortem, Gardner Familia Fiducia, 23 JUN MMXXVI

The conventional narrative of a catastrophic, sudden end to Roman Britain in the fifth century is largely a ideological fiction constructed by early monastic chroniclers. When we look past their theological storytelling and audit the administrative infrastructure preserved in the Winchester archives, an entirely different reality emerges. The
Codex Wintoniensis (the early chartulary of the Church of Winchester) reveals that seventh-century land grants directly inherited the precise field boundaries and estate structures of the older Roman villas. The wealth-extraction network never actually dissolved; it was merely reassigned.
Furthermore, the
Winchester Bishopric Pipe Rolls prove that for centuries, the medieval church continuously operated the exact transport pipeline established by the empire—hauling wool from Hampshire up the Roman Stane Street directly to the tax-exempt, autonomous shipping enclave at the Southwark Liberty. The "frocks" did not build a new economic world from scratch. They simply occupied the vacant corporate architecture of the old Roman state-run textile industry, masking structural permanence beneath a narrative of political rebirth.
The monastic chroniclers’ “catastrophic end” of Roman Britain is the loud silence masking corporate continuity [Receipt: BL Add MS 15350, early charters preserving villa-to-estate boundary overlays]. The wealth-extraction network never dissolved; it was reassigned through the Winchester airlock and later audited by the Gardiner syndicate under Sir William’s Key™ variants (Gardynyr, Cardynyr, le Gardyner) [Receipt cluster: TNA E 122 Calais particulars; Hampshire Record Office 21M65/A1 Pipe Rolls tracking wool pipeline to Southwark Liberty]. The frocks occupied the Roman architecture; the merchants later seized the ledger.
Primary Archival Locators & Manuscript References
  • The Early Land Continuity (Codex Wintoniensis):
    • Location: The British Library (London)
    • Manuscript ID: Add MS 15350
    • Notes: This is the 12th-century cartulary of the Cathedral Priory of St Swithun, Winchester. It preserves the oldest surviving Anglo-Saxon land charters from the 7th to 10th centuries, proving that Christian royal estate boundaries directly copied the physical layouts of previous Roman villa networks(12th-century composite preserving 7th–10th century Anglo-Saxon charters). 
  • The Logistical Pipeline (The Winchester Bishopric Pipe Rolls):
    • Location: Hampshire Record Office (Winchester)
    • Collection Ref: 21M65/A1
    • Notes: This collection holds the oldest and most complete continuous set of manorial accounts in the world, running from 1208 to 1711. These financial sheets track the seasonal wool extraction from the Western manors down to the Southwark shipping docks.
  • The Late Roman Textile Master Ledger (Notitia Dignitatum):
    • Location: The Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford
    • Manuscript ID: MS. Canon. Misc. 378  (1436) 
    • Notes: This 15th-century copy of the lost Roman state registry lists the official bureau office of the Procurator gynaecii Britannicensis in Winchester, proving it was the original site of the empires state-run textile integration. The 1436 Copy is from an earlier exemplar of  Roman officials overseeing state textile/weaving operations

Academic Literature & Further Reading
  • On Estate and Villa Continuity:
    • Consult The Open University Research Repository for papers on The Transition from Roman Villas to Anglo-Saxon Estates. Archaeological surveys show that Roman field layouts were not abandoned, but were absorbed directly into medieval parish boundaries.
  • On the Economic Archaeology of Southern England:
    • Review the excavation catalogs at the Museum of London Archaeology (MOLA). Their excavation profiles for Southwark and London's southern bridgehead provide concrete, physical evidence of continuous post-Roman shipping infrastructure along the Thames.
  • On the Winchester Accounting System:
    • Read The Pipe Rolls of the Bishopric of Winchester edited by The Hampshire Record Series. This series provides fully translated financial breakdowns of how the medieval church managed its massive agricultural monopoly.

For primary evidence of economic and boundary continuity between Roman estates and early medieval church properties, see British Library, Add MS 15350 (Codex Wintoniensis). For the subsequent logistics of commodity transport to the London markets, see the annual account entries in the Winchester Bishopric Pipe Rolls, Hampshire Record Office, 21M65/A1. For the late-imperial Roman administrative layout of the Winchester weaving operations, see Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS. Canon. Misc. 378 (Notitia Dignitatum).

  • 25JUN2026 Corrected shelfmark: Change Add MS 47677 to Add MS 15350 for Codex Wintoniensis.



— David T. Gardner Historian Emeritus,
Gardner Family Trust 
Guardian of Sir William’s Key™ 

[DECODE THE LEDGER]: This entry is indexed via the Sir William’s Key™ Master Codex. To view the full relational schema of the 1485 Merchant Coup, visit the [Master Registry Link].


Legally ours via KingSlayersCourt.com,timestamped June 23, 2026, 12:44 AM —© David T. Gardner