MEMBERSHIP OF THE CONFEDERATION
As the name Cinque Ports ( from the Norman French for five and pronounced "sink" not "sank") suggests, the Confederation originally comprised the five ports of Hastings, Romney, Hythe, Dover and Sandwich. Under the system of ship service, the Ports were required to supply 57 ships, each with a crew of 21 men and a boy, for 15 days every year. These ships were used not only in warfare, but also to transport the King, members of his entourage and his armies to and from Normandy and other parts of the Continent. In return, the Ports were granted rights which included:-
Ship service was an onerous duty and the five original head ports enlisted the help of neighbouring towns and villages, which were known as members or limbs, to help them fulfil their quotas of ships and crew. Some of the limbs were merely small villages and hamlets and these non-corporate members negotiated directly, with their head port, to provide ships and men, in return for the right to share in the privileges granted to the head port. Other limbs were more substantial communities and were granted their own charters by the Crown, thus becoming corporate members. At one time, there were 23 limbs covering an extensive area from Seaford, in the west, to Brightlingsea on the Essex coast. Rye and Winchelsea were, originally, corporate members of Hastings but, as the harbour at Hastings silted up, the port found it difficult to fulfil its quota and relied increasingly on the assistance of its major limbs. Eventually, the two antient towns of Rye and Winchelsea were admitted as full members of the Confederation, with equal status to the five head ports.

Cinque Ports Barons carry the canopy at the coronation of King James II in 1685
During the annual Herring Fair, the Yarmouth area came under the jurisdiction of the Cinque Ports, which appointed bailiffs to maintain law and order. These arrangements continued well into the 17th Century and were a cause of bitter fighting between the Portsmen and the local Norfolk fishermen. There were also increasing objections from the town of Great Yarmouth, which had become established by the 14th Century.
ŠThe Confederation of the Cinque Ports (2001)