Compter
A compter, sometimes referred to as a counter, was a type of small English prison controlled by a sheriff.[1] The inmates were usually civil prisoners, for example dissenters and debtors. Examples of compters include London's Wood Street Compter, Poultry Compter, Giltspur Street Compter and Borough Compter and the lock-up over the Abbey Gateway, next to St Laurence's church, in Reading, Berkshire (this was the Compter Gate and the lock-up was known as the Compter).
The Compter's Commonwealth (1617), by William Fennor, was a work written from the author's experience of imprisonment at London's Wood Street Compter,[2] and is regarded by many historians as one of the principal primary sources for assessment of English 16th-century prison conditions.
References
- Phillip Shaw (1947). The Position of Thomas Dekker in Jacobean Prison Literature. PMLA 62 (2): 366–391 JSTOR 459268
- The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes (1907–21). Volume IV. Prose and Poetry: Sir Thomas North to Michael Drayton. XVI. London and the Development of Popular Literature. § 23. Discoverie of the Knights of the Poste.