England's medieval immigrants revealed by universities Published duration 17 February 2015

image copyright Getty Images image caption About 65,000 people came to cities like London in the medieval period

In medieval England one person in every hundred was an immigrant, new research has shown.

About 65,000 people came to the country between 1330 and 1550.

The England's Immigrants project by the universities of York and Sheffield details the names and occupations of those arriving from other parts of the British Isles and mainland Europe.

Project director Prof Mark Ormrod said the influx was largely a result of the Black Death creating a labour shortage.

He said: "We must remember that for a century or more after the Black Death the population of England was very low and there was plenty of work available.

"So people were coming from all across north-west Europe and also from further a field as well in search of that work.

"England was a magnet for immigrants in this period because the conditions and the wages were relatively good in comparison with back home."

The Black Death

image copyright Getty Images image caption Clothes infected by the Black Death were burnt in medieval Europe

The first outbreak of plague swept across England in 1348-49

It struck London in September 1348 and spread to East Anglia and along the coast the following year

By spring 1349, it was ravaging Wales and the Midlands, and by late summer, it had made the leap across the Irish Sea

It travelled north and reached Scotland by 1350

The disease is thought to have killed between one third and one half of London's population

The new database, accessible to the public, shows that in 1440, the names of 14,500 individuals were recorded, at a time when the population of England was approximately two million.

A number of weavers and goldsmiths from Flanders, now part of Belgium, are listed as well as servants brought back by aristocrats from English-occupied France at the end of the Hundred Years War.

Prof Ormrod said when they arrived many people were given a surname relating to their origin or trade.

"John Frenchman is the most frequent name in the whole of the database," he said.

"[But] lots and lots of people who today have names like Baker, Brewer, Smith or Cooper could actually be descended from immigrants in the Middle Ages who were given a name when they came into the kingdom."

Who, when, where?

image copyright Getty Images

Three Flemish weavers from Diest in Belgium lived and worked in St Ives, Huntingdonshire, in the 1330s

John Lammyns, a goldsmith from Antwerp, lived in Bristol in the 1430s and 1440s

Sir John Montgomery of Faulkbourne, Essex, had five foreigners working in his household in the 1440s

Walter, a minstrel from Germany, settled in London in the late 15th century with his entire family, including his mother, wife, three sons and three daughters

Nationalities listed in the database range from Scottish and Irish to Portuguese, Swedish, Greek and Icelandic.