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Domesday Book

Domesday Book (/ˈdmzd/) – the Middle English spelling of "Doomsday Book" – is a manuscript record of the "Great Survey" of much of England and parts of Wales completed in 1086 by order of King William I, known as William the Conqueror.[1] The manuscript was originally known by the Latin name Liber de Wintonia, meaning "Book of Winchester", where it was originally kept in the royal treasury.[2] The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle states that in 1085 the king sent his agents to survey every shire in England, to list his holdings and dues owed to him.[3]

Domesday Book
The National Archives, Kew, London
Domesday Book: an engraving published in 1900. Great Domesday (the larger volume) and Little Domesday (the smaller volume), in their 1869 bindings, lie on their older "Tudor" bindings.
Also known asGreat Survey
Liber de Wintonia
Date1086
Place of originEngland
Language(s)Medieval Latin

Written in Medieval Latin, it was highly abbreviated[a] and included some vernacular native terms without Latin equivalents. The survey's main purpose was to record the annual value of every piece of landed property to its lord, and the resources in land, manpower, and livestock from which the value derived.

The name "Domesday Book" came into use in the 12th century.[4] Richard FitzNeal wrote in the Dialogus de Scaccario (c. 1179) that the book was so called because its decisions were unalterable, like those of the Last Judgement, and its sentence could not be quashed.[5]

The manuscript is held at The National Archives at Kew, London. Domesday was first printed in full in 1783; and in 2011 the Open Domesday site made the manuscript available online.[6]

The book is an invaluable primary source for modern historians and historical economists. No survey approaching the scope and extent of Domesday Book was attempted again in Britain until the 1873 Return of Owners of Land (sometimes termed the "Modern Domesday")[7] which presented the first complete, post-Domesday picture of the distribution of landed property in the United Kingdom.[8]

Content and organisation

 
A page of Domesday Book for Warwickshire
 
Great Domesday in its "Tudor" binding: a wood-engraving of the 1860s

Domesday Book encompasses two independent works (originally, in two physical volumes): "Little Domesday" (covering Norfolk, Suffolk, and Essex), and "Great Domesday" (covering much of the remainder of England – except for lands in the north that later became Westmorland, Cumberland, Northumberland, and the County Palatine of Durham – and parts of Wales bordering, and included within, English counties).[9] Space was left in Great Domesday for a record of the City of London and Winchester, but they were never written up. Other areas of modern London were then in Middlesex, Surrey, Kent, and Essex, and have their place in Domesday Book's treatment of those counties. Most of Cumberland and Westmorland and the entirety of the County Palatine of Durham and Northumberland were omitted. They did not pay the national land tax called the geld, and the framework for Domesday Book was geld assessment lists. [10][11]

"Little Domesday" – so named because its format is physically smaller than its companion's – is more detailed than Great Domesday. In particular it includes the numbers of livestock on the home farms (demesnes) of lords, but not peasant livestock. It represents an earlier stage in processing the results of the Domesday Survey, before the drastic abbreviation and rearrangement undertaken by the scribe of Great Domesday Book.[citation needed]

Both volumes are organised into a series of chapters (literally "headings", from Latin caput, "a head") listing the manors held by each named tenant-in-chief directly from the king. Tenants-in-chief included bishops, abbots and abbesses, barons from Normandy, Brittany, and Flanders, minor French serjeants, and English thegns. The richest magnates held several hundred manors typically spread across England, though some large estates were highly concentrated. For example, Baldwin the Sheriff had one hundred and seventy-six manors in Devon and four nearby in Somerset and Dorset. Tenants-in-chief held variable proportions of their manors in demesne, and had subinfeudated to others, whether their own knights (often tenants from Normandy), other tenants-in-chief of their own rank, or members of local English families. Manors were generally listed within each chapter by the hundred or wapentake in which they lay, hundreds (wapentakes in eastern England) being the second tier of local government within the counties.

 
HIC ANNOTANTUR TENENTES TERRAS IN DEVENESCIRE ("Here are noted (those) holding lands in Devonshire"). Detail from Domesday Book, list forming part of the first page of king's holdings. There are fifty-three entries, including the first entry for the king himself followed by the Devon Domesday Book tenants-in-chief. Each name has its own chapter to follow.

Each county's list opened with the king's demesne, which had possibly been the subject of separate inquiry. Under the feudal system, the king was the only true "owner" of land in England, by virtue of his allodial title. He was thus the ultimate overlord, and even the greatest magnate could do no more than "hold" land from him as a tenant (from the Latin verb tenere, "to hold") under one of the various contracts of feudal land tenure. Holdings of bishops followed, then of the abbeys and religious houses, then of lay tenants-in-chief and lastly the king's serjeants (servientes), and thegns.

In some counties, one or more principal boroughs formed the subject of a separate section. A few have separate lists of disputed titles to land, called clamores (claims). The equivalent sections in Little Domesday are called Inuasiones (annexations).

In total, 268,984 people are tallied in the Domesday Book, each of whom was the head of a household. Some households, such as urban dwellers, were excluded from the count, but the exact parameters remain a subject of historical debate. Postan for instance contends that these may not represent all rural households, but only full peasant tenancies, thus excluding landless men and some subtenants (potentially a third of the country's population). Darby, when factoring in the excluded households and using various different criteria for those excluded (as well as varying sizes for the average household), concludes that the 268,984 households listed most likely indicate a total English population between 1.2 and 1.6 million.[12]

Domesday names a total of 13,418 places.[13] Apart from the wholly rural portions, which constitute its bulk, Domesday contains entries of interest concerning most of the towns, which were probably made because of their bearing on the fiscal rights of the crown therein. These include fragments of custumals (older customary agreements), records of the military service due, of markets, mints, and so forth. From the towns, from the counties as wholes, and from many of its ancient lordships, the crown was entitled to archaic dues in kind, such as honey.

The Domesday Book lists 5,624 mills in the country, which is considered a low estimate since the book is incomplete. For comparison, fewer than 100 mills were recorded in the country a century earlier. Duby indicates this means a mill for every forty-six peasant households and implies a great increase in the consumption of baked bread in place of boiled and unground porridge.[14] The book also lists 28,000 slaves, a smaller number than had been enumerated in 1066.[15]

In the Domesday Book, scribes' orthography was heavily geared towards French, most lacking k and w, regulated forms for sounds /ð/ and /θ/ and ending many hard consonant words with e as they were accustomed to do with most dialects of French at the time.

Similar works

In a parallel development, around 1100, the Normans in southern Italy completed their Catalogus Baronum based on Domesday Book. The original manuscript was destroyed in the Second World War, but printed copies survive.[16]

Name

The manuscripts do not carry a formal title. The work is referred to internally as a descriptio (enrolling), and in other early administrative contexts as the king's brevia (writings). From about 1100, references appear to the liber (book) or carta (charter) of Winchester, its usual place of custody; and from the mid-12th to early 13th centuries, to the Winchester or king's rotulus (roll).[17][18]

To the English, who held the book in awe, it became known as "Domesday Book", in allusion to the Last Judgment and in specific reference to the definitive character of the record.[19] The word "doom" was the usual Old English term for a law or judgment; it did not carry the modern overtones of fatality or disaster.[20] Richard FitzNeal, treasurer of England under Henry II, explained the name's connotations in detail in the Dialogus de Scaccario (c.1179):[21]

The natives call this book "Domesday", that is, the day of judgement. This is a metaphor: for just as no judgement of that final severe and terrible trial can be evaded by any subterfuge, so when any controversy arises in the kingdom concerning the matters contained in the book, and recourse is made to the book, its word cannot be denied or set aside without penalty. For this reason we call this book the "book of judgements", not because it contains decisions made in controversial cases, but because from it, as from the Last Judgement, there is no further appeal.

The name "Domesday" was subsequently adopted by the book's custodians, being first found in an official document in 1221.[22]

Either through false etymology or deliberate word play, the name also came to be associated with the Latin phrase Domus Dei ("House of God"). Such a reference is found as early as the late 13th century, in the writings of Adam of Damerham; and in the 16th and 17th centuries, antiquaries such as John Stow and Sir Richard Baker believed this was the name's origin, alluding to the church in Winchester in which the book had been kept.[23][24] As a result, the alternative spelling "Domesdei" became popular for a while.[25]

The usual modern scholarly convention is to refer to the work as "Domesday Book" (or simply as "Domesday"), without a definite article. However, the form "the Domesday Book" is also found in both academic and non-academic contexts.[26]

Survey

'"According to the domesday Survey the kings of England had three churches in Irchenfield (Archenfield), the priests of which were employed to go on embassies for the English court into Wales, a knowledge of the ancient British tongue (Welsh) being necessary in those days for such important missions. From Domesday survey it also appears that there was a considerable Welsh population in this district, for amongst the inhabitants enumerated in the several villages the Welshmen from a large portion, and Welsh laws were administered in some parishes and manors. Under the head of Wormelow Hundred it is stated: The king held here six hides, one of these had Welsh customs and the others English." This admixture of English and Welsh government was frequent in the Marches, and to this circumstance may be ascribed the existence of the custom of gavelkind in Irchenfield, the ancient British law of freehold inheritance. In many of the Courts of the Lords Marchers both English and Welsh laws were concurrently administered amongst the respective suitors who resorted thither for redress."'

Archaeologia Cambrensis : a record of the antiquities of Wales and its Marches and the journal of the Cambrian Archaeological Association by Cambrian Archaeological Association - 1846[27]

 
Domesday Counties showing Little and Great Domesday areas and circuits

The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle states that planning for the survey was conducted in 1085, and the book's colophon states the survey was completed in 1086. It is not known when exactly Domesday Book was compiled, but the entire copy of Great Domesday appears to have been copied out by one person on parchment (prepared sheepskin), although six scribes seem to have been used for Little Domesday. Writing in 2000, David Roffe argued that the inquest (survey) and the construction of the book were two distinct exercises. He believes the latter was completed, if not started, by William II following his assumption of the English throne; William II quashed a rebellion that followed and was based on, though not consequent on, the findings of the inquest.[28]

Most shires were visited by a group of royal officers (legati), who held a public inquiry, probably in the great assembly known as the shire court. These were attended by representatives of every township as well as of the local lords. The unit of inquiry was the Hundred (a subdivision of the county, which then was an administrative entity). The return for each Hundred was sworn to by 12 local jurors, half of them English and half of them Norman.

What is believed to be a full transcript of these original returns is preserved for several of the Cambridgeshire Hundreds – the Cambridge Inquisition – and is of great illustrative importance. The Inquisitio Eliensis is a record of the lands of Ely Abbey.[29] The Exon Domesday (named because the volume was held at Exeter) covers Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Somerset, and one manor of Wiltshire. Parts of Devon, Dorset, and Somerset are also missing. Otherwise, this contains the full details supplied by the original returns.

Through comparison of what details are recorded in which counties, six Great Domesday "circuits" can be determined (plus a seventh circuit for the Little Domesday shires).

  1. Berkshire, Hampshire, Kent, Surrey, Sussex
  2. Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Somerset, Wiltshire
  3. Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Cambridgeshire, Hertfordshire, Middlesex
  4. Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, Oxfordshire, Staffordshire, Warwickshire
  5. Cheshire, the land Inter Ripam et Mersham ("between Ribble and Mersey", now much of south Lancashire), Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, Shropshire, Worcestershire – the Marches
  6. Derbyshire, Huntingdonshire, Lincolnshire, Nottinghamshire, Rutland,[30] Yorkshire

Purpose

Three sources discuss the goal of the survey:

  • The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle tells why it was ordered:[3]

After this had the king a large meeting, and very deep consultation with his council, about this land; how it was occupied, and by what sort of men. Then sent he his men over all England into each shire; commissioning them to find out 'How many hundreds of hides were in the shire, what land the king himself had, and what stock upon the land; or, what dues he ought to have by the year from the shire.' Also he commissioned them to record in writing, 'How much land his archbishops had, and his diocesan bishops, and his abbots, and his earls;' and though I may be prolix and tedious, 'What, or how much, each man had, who was an occupier of land in England, either in land or in stock, and how much money it was worth.' So very narrowly, indeed, did he commission them to trace it out, that there was not one single hide, nor a yard of land, nay, moreover (it is shameful to tell, though he thought it no shame to do it), not even an ox, nor a cow, nor a swine was there left, that was not set down in his writ. And all the recorded particulars were afterwards brought to him.

  • The list of questions asked of the jurors was recorded in the Inquisitio Eliensis.
  • The contents of Domesday Book and the allied records mentioned above.

The primary purpose of the survey was to ascertain and record the fiscal rights of the king. These were mainly:

  • the national land-tax (geldum), paid on a fixed assessment,
  • certain miscellaneous dues, and
  • the proceeds of the crown lands.

After a great political convulsion such as the Norman Conquest, and the following wholesale confiscation of landed estates, William needed to reassert that the rights of the Crown, which he claimed to have inherited, had not suffered in the process. His Norman followers tended to evade the liabilities of their English predecessors. The successful trial of Odo de Bayeux at Penenden Heath near Maidstone in Kent less than a decade after the conquest was one example of the Crown's growing discontent at the Norman land-grab of the years following the invasion. Historians believe the survey was to aid William in establishing certainty and a definitive reference point as to property holdings across the nation, in case such evidence was needed in disputes over Crown ownership.[31]

The Domesday survey, therefore, recorded the names of the new holders of lands and the assessments on which their tax was to be paid. But it did more than this; by the king's instructions, it endeavoured to make a national valuation list, estimating the annual value of all the land in the country, (1) at the time of Edward the Confessor's death, (2) when the new owners received it, (3) at the time of the survey, and further, it reckoned, by command, the potential value as well. It is evident that William desired to know the financial resources of his kingdom, and it is probable that he wished to compare them with the existing assessment, which was one of considerable antiquity, though there are traces that it had been occasionally modified. The great bulk of Domesday Book is devoted to the somewhat arid details of the assessment and valuation of rural estates, which were as yet the only important source of national wealth. After stating the assessment of the manor, the record sets forth the amount of arable land, and the number of plough teams (each reckoned at eight oxen) available for working it, with the additional number (if any) that might be employed; then the river-meadows, woodland, pasture, fisheries (i.e. fishing weirs), water-mills, salt-pans (if by the sea), and other subsidiary sources of revenue; the peasants are enumerated in their several classes; and finally the annual value of the whole, past and present, is roughly estimated.

The organisation of the returns on a feudal basis, enabled the Conqueror and his officers to see the extent of a baron's possessions; and it also showed to what extent he had under-tenants and the identities of the under-tenants. This was of great importance to William, not only for military reasons but also because of his resolve to command the personal loyalty of the under-tenants (though the "men" of their lords) by making them swear allegiance to him. As Domesday Book normally records only the Christian name of an under-tenant, it is not possible to search for the surnames of families claiming a Norman origin. Scholars, however, have worked to identify the under-tenants, most of whom have foreign Christian names.

The survey provided the King with information on potential sources of funds when he needed to raise money. It includes sources of income but not expenses, such as castles, unless they needed to be included to explain discrepancies between pre-and post-Conquest holdings of individuals. Typically, this happened in a town, where separately-recorded properties had been demolished to make way for a castle.

Early British authors thought that the motivation behind the Survey was to put into William's power the lands, so that all private property in land came only from the grant of King William, by lawful forfeiture.[32] The use of the word antecessor in the Domesday Book is used for the former holders of the lands under Edward, and who had been dispossessed by their new owners.[33]

Subsequent history

 
The Domesday Chest, the German-style iron-bound chest of c.1500 in which Domesday Book was kept in the 17th and 18th centuries

Custodial history

Domesday Book was preserved from the late 11th to the beginning of the 13th centuries in the royal Treasury at Winchester (the Norman kings' capital). It was often referred to as the "Book" or "Roll" of Winchester.[17] When the Treasury moved to the Palace of Westminster, probably under King John, the book went with it.

The two volumes (Great Domesday and Little Domesday) remained in Westminster, save for temporary releases, until the 19th century. They were held originally in various offices of the Exchequer: the Chapel of the Pyx of Westminster Abbey; the Treasury of Receipts; and the Tally Court.[34] However, on several occasions they were taken around the country with the Chancellor of the Exchequer: to York and Lincoln in 1300, to York in 1303 and 1319, to Hertford in the 1580s or 1590s, and to Nonsuch Palace, Surrey, in 1666 for a time after the Great Fire of London.[35]

From the 1740s onwards, they were held, with other Exchequer records, in the chapter house of Westminster Abbey.[36] In 1859, they were transferred to the new Public Record Office, London.[37] They are now held at The National Archives at Kew. The chest in which they were stowed in the 17th and 18th centuries is also at Kew.

In modern times, the books have been removed from the London area only rarely. In 1861–63, they were sent to Southampton for photozincographic reproduction.[38] In 1918–19, prompted by the threat of German bombing during the First World War, they were evacuated (with other Public Record Office documents) to Bodmin Prison, Cornwall. Likewise, in 1939–45, during the Second World War, they were evacuated to Shepton Mallet Prison, Somerset.[39][40]

Binding

The volumes have been rebound on several occasions. Little Domesday was rebound in 1320, its older oak boards being re-used. At a later date (probably in the Tudor period) both volumes were given new covers. They were rebound twice in the 19th century - in 1819 and 1869, on the second occasion, by the binder Robert Riviere and his assistant, James Kew. In the 20th century, they were rebound in 1952, when their physical makeup was examined in greater detail; and yet again in 1986, for the survey's ninth centenary. On this last occasion Great Domesday was divided into two physical volumes, and Little Domesday into three volumes.[41][42]

Publication

 
Entries for Croydon and Cheam, Surrey, in the 1783 edition of Domesday Book

The project to publish Domesday was begun by the government in 1773, and the book appeared in two volumes in 1783, set in "record type" to produce a partial-facsimile of the manuscript. In 1811, a volume of indexes was added. In 1816, a supplementary volume, separately indexed, was published containing

  1. The Exon Domesday – for the south-western counties
  2. The Inquisitio Eliensis
  3. The Liber Winton – surveys of Winchester late in the 12th century.
  4. The Boldon Buke (Book) – a survey of the bishopric of Durham a century later than Domesday

Photographic facsimiles of Domesday Book, for each county separately, were published in 1861–1863, also by the government. Today, Domesday Book is available in numerous editions, usually separated by county and available with other local history resources.

In 1986, the BBC released the BBC Domesday Project, the results of a project to create a survey to mark the 900th anniversary of the original Domesday Book. In August 2006, the contents of Domesday went online, with an English translation of the book's Latin. Visitors to the website are able to look up a place name and see the index entry made for the manor, town, city or village. They can also, for a fee, download the relevant page.

Continuing legal use

In the Middle Ages, the Book's evidence was frequently invoked in the law courts.[43] In 1960, it was among citations for a real manor which helps to evidence legal use rights on and anchorage into the Crown's foreshore;[44][45] in 2010, as to proving a manor, adding weight of years to sporting rights (deer and foxhunting);[46] and a market in 2019.[47]

Importance

 
In 1986, memorial plaques were installed in settlements mentioned in Domesday Book

Domesday Book is critical to understanding the period in which it was written. As H. C. Darby noted, anyone who uses it

can have nothing but admiration for what is the oldest 'public record' in England and probably the most remarkable statistical document in the history of Europe. The continent has no document to compare with this detailed description covering so great a stretch of territory. And the geographer, as he turns over the folios, with their details of population and of arable, woodland, meadow and other resources, cannot but be excited at the vast amount of information that passes before his eyes.[48]

The author of the article on the book in the eleventh edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica noted, "To the topographer, as to the genealogist, its evidence is of primary importance, as it not only contains the earliest survey of each township or manor, but affords, in the majority of cases, a clue to its subsequent descent."

Darby also notes the inconsistencies, saying that "when this great wealth of data is examined more closely, perplexities and difficulties arise."[49] One problem is that the clerks who compiled this document "were but human; they were frequently forgetful or confused." The use of Roman numerals also led to countless mistakes. Darby states, "Anyone who attempts an arithmetical exercise in Roman numerals soon sees something of the difficulties that faced the clerks."[49] But more important are the numerous obvious omissions, and ambiguities in presentation. Darby first cites F. W. Maitland's comment following his compilation of a table of statistics from material taken from the Domesday Book survey, "it will be remembered that, as matters now stand, two men not unskilled in Domesday might add up the number of hides in a county and arrive at very different results because they would hold different opinions as to the meanings of certain formulas which are not uncommon."[50] Darby says that "it would be more correct to speak not of 'the Domesday geography of England', but of 'the geography of Domesday Book'. The two may not be quite the same thing, and how near the record was to reality we can never know."[49]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ One common abbreviation was TRE, short for the Latin Tempore Regis Eduuardi, "in the time of King Edward (the Confessor)", meaning the period immediately before the Norman Conquest.

References

  1. ^ "Domesday Book". Merriam-Webster Online.
  2. ^ "Domesday Book". Dictionary.com.
  3. ^ a b The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. Translated by Giles, J. A.; Ingram, J. Project Gutenberg. 1996. Retrieved 6 November 2016.
  4. ^ Emerson, Ralph Waldo & Burkholder, Robert E. (Notes) (1971). The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson: English Traits. Vol. 5. Harvard University Press. p. 250. ISBN 978-0674139923.
  5. ^ Johnson, C., ed. (1950). Dialogus de Scaccario, the Course of the Exchequer, and Constitutio Domus Regis, the King's Household. London. p. 64.
  6. ^ Cellan-Jones, Rory (13 May 2011). "Domesday Reloaded project: The 1086 version". BBC News.
  7. ^ Hoskins, W.G. (1954). A New Survey of England. Devon, London. p. 87.,
  8. ^ . 1873. Archived from the original on 10 September 2012. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
  9. ^ "Hull Domesday Project: Wales". Retrieved 14 February 2019.
  10. ^ Darby, Henry Clifford (1986). Domesday England. Cambridge University Press. p. 2.
  11. ^ Stenton, Frank Merry (1971). Anglo-Saxon England. Clarendon Press. p. 645.
  12. ^ Robert Bartlett. "The Making of Europe: Conquest, Colonization, and Cultural Change, 950-1350."Princeton University Press; First PB Edition (August 23, 1994). Page 108.
  13. ^ "The Domesday Book". History Magazine. Moorshead Magazines. October 2001. Retrieved 10 September 2019.
  14. ^ Gies, Frances; Gies, Joseph (1994). Cathedral, Forge, and Waterwheel: Technology and Invention in the Middle Ages. HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. p. 113. ISBN 0060165901.
  15. ^ Clanchy, M. T. (2006). England and its Rulers: 1066–1307. Blackwell Classic Histories of England (Third ed.). Oxford, UK: Blackwell. p. 93. ISBN 978-1-4051-0650-4.
  16. ^ Jamison, Evelyn (1971). "Additional Work on the Catalogus Baronum". Bullettino dell'Istituto Storico Italiano per Il Medioevo e Archivio Muratoriano. 83: 1–63.
  17. ^ a b Hallam 1986, pp. 34–35.
  18. ^ Harvey 2014, pp. 7–9.
  19. ^ Harvey 2014, pp. 271–328.
  20. ^ Harvey 2014, p. 271.
  21. ^ fitzNigel, Richard (2007). Amt, Emilie; Church, S. D. (eds.). Dialogus de Scaccario: the Dialogue of the Exchequer; Constitutio Domus Regis: Disposition of the King's Household. Oxford Medieval Texts. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 96–99. ISBN 9780199258611.
  22. ^ Hallam 1986, p. 35.
  23. ^ Hallam 1986, p. 34.
  24. ^ Harvey 2014, pp. 18–19.
  25. ^ Hallam 1986, p. 118.
  26. ^ "The Domesday Book Online". Retrieved 7 December 2018.
  27. ^ "The Falkirk Herald And Midland Counties Journal". 1846 – via Internet Archive (archive.org).
  28. ^ Roffe, David (2000). Domesday; The Inquest and The Book. Oxford University Press. pp. 224–49.
  29. ^ . Domesday Explorer. Archived from the original on 26 May 2011. Retrieved 24 April 2010.
  30. ^ Sometimes considered part of Nottinghamshire in this period.
  31. ^ Cooper, Alan (2001). "Extraordinary privilege: the trial of Penenden Heath and the Domesday inquest". English Historical Review. 116 (469): 1167–92. doi:10.1093/ehr/116.469.1167.
  32. ^ Freeman, Edward A., William the Conqueror, pp. 186–187
  33. ^ Freeman, Edward A., William the Conqueror, p. 188
  34. ^ Hallam 1986, p. 55.
  35. ^ Hallam 1986, pp. 55–56.
  36. ^ Hallam 1986, pp. 133–34.
  37. ^ Hallam 1986, pp. 150–52.
  38. ^ Hallam 1986, pp. 155–56.
  39. ^ Hallam 1986, pp. 167–69.
  40. ^ Cantwell, John D. (1991). The Public Record Office, 1838–1958. London: HMSO. pp. 379, 428–30. ISBN 0114402248.
  41. ^ Hallam 1986, pp. 29, 150–51, 157–61, 170–72.
  42. ^ Forde, Helen (1986). Domesday Preserved. London: Public Record Office. ISBN 0-11-440203-5.
  43. ^ Hallam 1986, pp. 50–55, 64–73.
  44. ^ Foundation, Internet Memory. "[Archived content] UK Government Web Archive – The National Archives". webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 5 January 2016. Retrieved 10 January 2017.
  45. ^ Iveagh v Martin [and another] [1961] 1 Q.B. 232; [1960] 3 WLR 210; [1960] 2 All ER 668; 1 Lloyd's Rep. 692 QDB (1960)
  46. ^ Mellestrom v Badgworthy Land Company (adverse possession over continued common) [2010] EWLandRA 2008_1498 (21 July 2010) https://www.bailii.org/cgi-bin/format.cgi?doc=/ew/cases/EWLandRA/2010/2008_1498.html
  47. ^ Harvey, R (on the application of) v Leighton Linslade Town Council [2019] EWHC 760 (Admin) (15 February 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/760.html
  48. ^ Darby, Domesday England (Cambridge: University Press, 1977), p. 12
  49. ^ a b c Darby, Domesday England, p. 13
  50. ^ Maitland, Domesday Book and Beyond (Cambridge, 1897), p. 407

Bibliography

  • Darby, Henry C. (1977). Domesday England. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-31026-1.
  • Domesday Book: A Complete Translation. London: Penguin. 2003. ISBN 0-14-143994-7.
  • 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica: "Domesday Book" at Wikisource
  • Freeman, Edward A. (1888). William the Conqueror. London: MacMillan and Co. OCLC 499742406.
  • Hallam, Elizabeth M. (1986). Domesday Book through Nine Centuries. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0500250979.
  • Harvey, Sally (2014). Domesday: Book of Judgement. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-966978-3.
  • Holt, J. C. (1987). Domesday Studies. Woodbridge, Suffolk: The Boydell Press. ISBN 0-85115-263-5.
  • Keats-Rohan, Katherine S. B. (1999). Domesday People: A Prosopography of Persons Occurring in English Documents, 1066–1166 (2v). Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell Press.
  • Lennard, Reginald (1959). Rural England 1086–1135: A Study of Social and Agrarian Conditions. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-821272-0.
  • Maitland, F. W. (1988). Domesday Book and Beyond. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-34918-4.
  • Roffe, David (2000). Domesday: The Inquest and The Book. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-820847-2.
  • Roffe, David (2007). Decoding Domesday. Woodbridge, Suffolk: The Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1-84383-307-9.
  • Roffe, David; Keats-Rohan, Katharine (2016). Domesday Now: New Approaches to the Inquest and the Book. Woodbridge, Suffolk: The Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1-78327-088-0.
  • Vinogradoff, Paul (1908). English Society in the Eleventh Century. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Wood, Michael (2005). The Domesday Quest: In Search of the Roots of England. London: BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-52274-7.

Further reading

  • Bates, David (1985). A Bibliography of Domesday Book. Woodbridge: Boydell. ISBN 0-85115-433-6.
  • Bridbury, A. R. (1990). "Domesday Book: a re-interpretation". English Historical Review. 105: 284–309. doi:10.1093/ehr/cv.ccccxv.284.
  • Darby, Henry C. (2003). The Domesday Geography of Eastern England. Domesday Geography of England. Vol. 1 (revised 3rd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521893968.
  • Darby, Henry C.; Terrett, I. B., eds. (1971). The Domesday Geography of Midland England. Domesday Geography of England. Vol. 2 (2nd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521080789.
  • Darby, Henry C.; Campbell, Eila M. J., eds. (1961). The Domesday Geography of South-East England. Domesday Geography of England. Vol. 3. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521047706.
  • Darby, Henry C.; Maxwell, I. S., eds. (1977). The Domesday Geography of Northern England. Domesday Geography of England. Vol. 4 (corrected ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521047730.
  • Darby, Henry C.; Finn, R. Welldon, eds. (1979). The Domesday Geography of South West England. Domesday Geography of England. Vol. 5 (corrected ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521047714.
  • Finn, R. Welldon (1973). Domesday Book: a guide. London: Phillimore. ISBN 0-85033-101-3.
  • Snooks, Graeme D.; McDonald, John (1986). Domesday Economy: a new approach to Anglo-Norman history. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-828524-8.
  • Hamshere, J. D. (1987). "Regressing Domesday Book: tax assessments of Domesday England". Economic History Review. n.s. 40 (2): 247–51. doi:10.2307/2596690. JSTOR 2596690.
  • Leaver, R. A. (1988). "Five hides in ten counties: a contribution to the Domesday regression debate". Economic History Review. n.s. 41 (4): 525–42. doi:10.2307/2596600. JSTOR 2596600.
  • McDonald, John; Snooks, G. D. (1985). "Were the tax assessments of Domesday England artificial?: the case of Essex". Economic History Review. n.s. 38 (3): 352–72. doi:10.2307/2596992. JSTOR 2596992.
  • Sawyer, Peter, ed. (1985). Domesday Book: a reassessment. London: Edward Arnold. ISBN 0713164409.

External links

  • Commercial Site selling Domesday Book on The National Archives website, home of Domesday Book.
  • Online Edition of Domesday Book, housed on The National Archive website. Searchable; downloads are charged.
  • Searchable index of landholders in 1066 and 1087, Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England (PASE) project.
  • , from . Annotated sample page.
  • Secrets of the Norman Invasion Domesday analysis of wasted manors.
  • Domesday Book place-name forms – All the original spellings of English place-names in Domesday Book (link to PDF file).
  • Commercial site with extracts from Domesday Book Domesday Book entries including translations for each settlement.
  • Open Domesday Interactive map, listing details of each manor or holdings of each tenant, plus high-resolution images of the original manuscript. Site by Anna Powell-Smith, Domesday data created by Professor John J.N. Palmer, University of Hull.
  • In Our Time – "the Domesday Book". BBC Radio 4 programme available on iPlayer
  • Domesday Book and Cambridgeshire
  • Doomsday Book at The Manor of Hunningham

domesday, book, other, uses, disambiguation, domesday, redirects, here, other, uses, domesday, disambiguation, middle, english, spelling, doomsday, book, manuscript, record, great, survey, much, england, parts, wales, completed, 1086, order, king, william, kno. For other uses see Domesday Book disambiguation Domesday redirects here For other uses see Domesday disambiguation Domesday Book ˈ d uː m z d eɪ the Middle English spelling of Doomsday Book is a manuscript record of the Great Survey of much of England and parts of Wales completed in 1086 by order of King William I known as William the Conqueror 1 The manuscript was originally known by the Latin name Liber de Wintonia meaning Book of Winchester where it was originally kept in the royal treasury 2 The Anglo Saxon Chronicle states that in 1085 the king sent his agents to survey every shire in England to list his holdings and dues owed to him 3 Domesday BookThe National Archives Kew LondonDomesday Book an engraving published in 1900 Great Domesday the larger volume and Little Domesday the smaller volume in their 1869 bindings lie on their older Tudor bindings Also known asGreat Survey Liber de WintoniaDate1086Place of originEnglandLanguage s Medieval LatinWritten in Medieval Latin it was highly abbreviated a and included some vernacular native terms without Latin equivalents The survey s main purpose was to record the annual value of every piece of landed property to its lord and the resources in land manpower and livestock from which the value derived The name Domesday Book came into use in the 12th century 4 Richard FitzNeal wrote in the Dialogus de Scaccario c 1179 that the book was so called because its decisions were unalterable like those of the Last Judgement and its sentence could not be quashed 5 The manuscript is held at The National Archives at Kew London Domesday was first printed in full in 1783 and in 2011 the Open Domesday site made the manuscript available online 6 The book is an invaluable primary source for modern historians and historical economists No survey approaching the scope and extent of Domesday Book was attempted again in Britain until the 1873 Return of Owners of Land sometimes termed the Modern Domesday 7 which presented the first complete post Domesday picture of the distribution of landed property in the United Kingdom 8 Contents 1 Content and organisation 2 Similar works 3 Name 4 Survey 5 Purpose 6 Subsequent history 6 1 Custodial history 6 2 Binding 6 3 Publication 6 4 Continuing legal use 7 Importance 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External linksContent and organisation Edit A page of Domesday Book for Warwickshire Great Domesday in its Tudor binding a wood engraving of the 1860s Domesday Book encompasses two independent works originally in two physical volumes Little Domesday covering Norfolk Suffolk and Essex and Great Domesday covering much of the remainder of England except for lands in the north that later became Westmorland Cumberland Northumberland and the County Palatine of Durham and parts of Wales bordering and included within English counties 9 Space was left in Great Domesday for a record of the City of London and Winchester but they were never written up Other areas of modern London were then in Middlesex Surrey Kent and Essex and have their place in Domesday Book s treatment of those counties Most of Cumberland and Westmorland and the entirety of the County Palatine of Durham and Northumberland were omitted They did not pay the national land tax called the geld and the framework for Domesday Book was geld assessment lists 10 11 Little Domesday so named because its format is physically smaller than its companion s is more detailed than Great Domesday In particular it includes the numbers of livestock on the home farms demesnes of lords but not peasant livestock It represents an earlier stage in processing the results of the Domesday Survey before the drastic abbreviation and rearrangement undertaken by the scribe of Great Domesday Book citation needed Both volumes are organised into a series of chapters literally headings from Latin caput a head listing the manors held by each named tenant in chief directly from the king Tenants in chief included bishops abbots and abbesses barons from Normandy Brittany and Flanders minor French serjeants and English thegns The richest magnates held several hundred manors typically spread across England though some large estates were highly concentrated For example Baldwin the Sheriff had one hundred and seventy six manors in Devon and four nearby in Somerset and Dorset Tenants in chief held variable proportions of their manors in demesne and had subinfeudated to others whether their own knights often tenants from Normandy other tenants in chief of their own rank or members of local English families Manors were generally listed within each chapter by the hundred or wapentake in which they lay hundreds wapentakes in eastern England being the second tier of local government within the counties HIC ANNOTANTUR TENENTES TERRAS IN DEVENESCIRE Here are noted those holding lands in Devonshire Detail from Domesday Book list forming part of the first page of king s holdings There are fifty three entries including the first entry for the king himself followed by the Devon Domesday Book tenants in chief Each name has its own chapter to follow Each county s list opened with the king s demesne which had possibly been the subject of separate inquiry Under the feudal system the king was the only true owner of land in England by virtue of his allodial title He was thus the ultimate overlord and even the greatest magnate could do no more than hold land from him as a tenant from the Latin verb tenere to hold under one of the various contracts of feudal land tenure Holdings of bishops followed then of the abbeys and religious houses then of lay tenants in chief and lastly the king s serjeants servientes and thegns In some counties one or more principal boroughs formed the subject of a separate section A few have separate lists of disputed titles to land called clamores claims The equivalent sections in Little Domesday are called Inuasiones annexations In total 268 984 people are tallied in the Domesday Book each of whom was the head of a household Some households such as urban dwellers were excluded from the count but the exact parameters remain a subject of historical debate Postan for instance contends that these may not represent all rural households but only full peasant tenancies thus excluding landless men and some subtenants potentially a third of the country s population Darby when factoring in the excluded households and using various different criteria for those excluded as well as varying sizes for the average household concludes that the 268 984 households listed most likely indicate a total English population between 1 2 and 1 6 million 12 Domesday names a total of 13 418 places 13 Apart from the wholly rural portions which constitute its bulk Domesday contains entries of interest concerning most of the towns which were probably made because of their bearing on the fiscal rights of the crown therein These include fragments of custumals older customary agreements records of the military service due of markets mints and so forth From the towns from the counties as wholes and from many of its ancient lordships the crown was entitled to archaic dues in kind such as honey The Domesday Book lists 5 624 mills in the country which is considered a low estimate since the book is incomplete For comparison fewer than 100 mills were recorded in the country a century earlier Duby indicates this means a mill for every forty six peasant households and implies a great increase in the consumption of baked bread in place of boiled and unground porridge 14 The book also lists 28 000 slaves a smaller number than had been enumerated in 1066 15 In the Domesday Book scribes orthography was heavily geared towards French most lacking k and w regulated forms for sounds d and 8 and ending many hard consonant words with e as they were accustomed to do with most dialects of French at the time Similar works EditIn a parallel development around 1100 the Normans in southern Italy completed their Catalogus Baronum based on Domesday Book The original manuscript was destroyed in the Second World War but printed copies survive 16 Name EditThe manuscripts do not carry a formal title The work is referred to internally as a descriptio enrolling and in other early administrative contexts as the king s brevia writings From about 1100 references appear to the liber book or carta charter of Winchester its usual place of custody and from the mid 12th to early 13th centuries to the Winchester or king s rotulus roll 17 18 To the English who held the book in awe it became known as Domesday Book in allusion to the Last Judgment and in specific reference to the definitive character of the record 19 The word doom was the usual Old English term for a law or judgment it did not carry the modern overtones of fatality or disaster 20 Richard FitzNeal treasurer of England under Henry II explained the name s connotations in detail in the Dialogus de Scaccario c 1179 21 The natives call this book Domesday that is the day of judgement This is a metaphor for just as no judgement of that final severe and terrible trial can be evaded by any subterfuge so when any controversy arises in the kingdom concerning the matters contained in the book and recourse is made to the book its word cannot be denied or set aside without penalty For this reason we call this book the book of judgements not because it contains decisions made in controversial cases but because from it as from the Last Judgement there is no further appeal The name Domesday was subsequently adopted by the book s custodians being first found in an official document in 1221 22 Either through false etymology or deliberate word play the name also came to be associated with the Latin phrase Domus Dei House of God Such a reference is found as early as the late 13th century in the writings of Adam of Damerham and in the 16th and 17th centuries antiquaries such as John Stow and Sir Richard Baker believed this was the name s origin alluding to the church in Winchester in which the book had been kept 23 24 As a result the alternative spelling Domesdei became popular for a while 25 The usual modern scholarly convention is to refer to the work as Domesday Book or simply as Domesday without a definite article However the form the Domesday Book is also found in both academic and non academic contexts 26 Survey Edit According to the domesday Survey the kings of England had three churches in Irchenfield Archenfield the priests of which were employed to go on embassies for the English court into Wales a knowledge of the ancient British tongue Welsh being necessary in those days for such important missions From Domesday survey it also appears that there was a considerable Welsh population in this district for amongst the inhabitants enumerated in the several villages the Welshmen from a large portion and Welsh laws were administered in some parishes and manors Under the head of Wormelow Hundred it is stated The king held here six hides one of these had Welsh customs and the others English This admixture of English and Welsh government was frequent in the Marches and to this circumstance may be ascribed the existence of the custom of gavelkind in Irchenfield the ancient British law of freehold inheritance In many of the Courts of the Lords Marchers both English and Welsh laws were concurrently administered amongst the respective suitors who resorted thither for redress Archaeologia Cambrensis a record of the antiquities of Wales and its Marches and the journal of the Cambrian Archaeological Association by Cambrian Archaeological Association 1846 27 Domesday Counties showing Little and Great Domesday areas and circuits The Anglo Saxon Chronicle states that planning for the survey was conducted in 1085 and the book s colophon states the survey was completed in 1086 It is not known when exactly Domesday Book was compiled but the entire copy of Great Domesday appears to have been copied out by one person on parchment prepared sheepskin although six scribes seem to have been used for Little Domesday Writing in 2000 David Roffe argued that the inquest survey and the construction of the book were two distinct exercises He believes the latter was completed if not started by William II following his assumption of the English throne William II quashed a rebellion that followed and was based on though not consequent on the findings of the inquest 28 Most shires were visited by a group of royal officers legati who held a public inquiry probably in the great assembly known as the shire court These were attended by representatives of every township as well as of the local lords The unit of inquiry was the Hundred a subdivision of the county which then was an administrative entity The return for each Hundred was sworn to by 12 local jurors half of them English and half of them Norman What is believed to be a full transcript of these original returns is preserved for several of the Cambridgeshire Hundreds the Cambridge Inquisition and is of great illustrative importance The Inquisitio Eliensis is a record of the lands of Ely Abbey 29 The Exon Domesday named because the volume was held at Exeter covers Cornwall Devon Dorset Somerset and one manor of Wiltshire Parts of Devon Dorset and Somerset are also missing Otherwise this contains the full details supplied by the original returns Through comparison of what details are recorded in which counties six Great Domesday circuits can be determined plus a seventh circuit for the Little Domesday shires Berkshire Hampshire Kent Surrey Sussex Cornwall Devon Dorset Somerset Wiltshire Bedfordshire Buckinghamshire Cambridgeshire Hertfordshire Middlesex Leicestershire Northamptonshire Oxfordshire Staffordshire Warwickshire Cheshire the land Inter Ripam et Mersham between Ribble and Mersey now much of south Lancashire Gloucestershire Herefordshire Shropshire Worcestershire the Marches Derbyshire Huntingdonshire Lincolnshire Nottinghamshire Rutland 30 YorkshirePurpose EditThree sources discuss the goal of the survey The Anglo Saxon Chronicle tells why it was ordered 3 After this had the king a large meeting and very deep consultation with his council about this land how it was occupied and by what sort of men Then sent he his men over all England into each shire commissioning them to find out How many hundreds of hides were in the shire what land the king himself had and what stock upon the land or what dues he ought to have by the year from the shire Also he commissioned them to record in writing How much land his archbishops had and his diocesan bishops and his abbots and his earls and though I may be prolix and tedious What or how much each man had who was an occupier of land in England either in land or in stock and how much money it was worth So very narrowly indeed did he commission them to trace it out that there was not one single hide nor a yard of land nay moreover it is shameful to tell though he thought it no shame to do it not even an ox nor a cow nor a swine was there left that was not set down in his writ And all the recorded particulars were afterwards brought to him The list of questions asked of the jurors was recorded in the Inquisitio Eliensis The contents of Domesday Book and the allied records mentioned above The primary purpose of the survey was to ascertain and record the fiscal rights of the king These were mainly the national land tax geldum paid on a fixed assessment certain miscellaneous dues and the proceeds of the crown lands After a great political convulsion such as the Norman Conquest and the following wholesale confiscation of landed estates William needed to reassert that the rights of the Crown which he claimed to have inherited had not suffered in the process His Norman followers tended to evade the liabilities of their English predecessors The successful trial of Odo de Bayeux at Penenden Heath near Maidstone in Kent less than a decade after the conquest was one example of the Crown s growing discontent at the Norman land grab of the years following the invasion Historians believe the survey was to aid William in establishing certainty and a definitive reference point as to property holdings across the nation in case such evidence was needed in disputes over Crown ownership 31 The Domesday survey therefore recorded the names of the new holders of lands and the assessments on which their tax was to be paid But it did more than this by the king s instructions it endeavoured to make a national valuation list estimating the annual value of all the land in the country 1 at the time of Edward the Confessor s death 2 when the new owners received it 3 at the time of the survey and further it reckoned by command the potential value as well It is evident that William desired to know the financial resources of his kingdom and it is probable that he wished to compare them with the existing assessment which was one of considerable antiquity though there are traces that it had been occasionally modified The great bulk of Domesday Book is devoted to the somewhat arid details of the assessment and valuation of rural estates which were as yet the only important source of national wealth After stating the assessment of the manor the record sets forth the amount of arable land and the number of plough teams each reckoned at eight oxen available for working it with the additional number if any that might be employed then the river meadows woodland pasture fisheries i e fishing weirs water mills salt pans if by the sea and other subsidiary sources of revenue the peasants are enumerated in their several classes and finally the annual value of the whole past and present is roughly estimated The organisation of the returns on a feudal basis enabled the Conqueror and his officers to see the extent of a baron s possessions and it also showed to what extent he had under tenants and the identities of the under tenants This was of great importance to William not only for military reasons but also because of his resolve to command the personal loyalty of the under tenants though the men of their lords by making them swear allegiance to him As Domesday Book normally records only the Christian name of an under tenant it is not possible to search for the surnames of families claiming a Norman origin Scholars however have worked to identify the under tenants most of whom have foreign Christian names The survey provided the King with information on potential sources of funds when he needed to raise money It includes sources of income but not expenses such as castles unless they needed to be included to explain discrepancies between pre and post Conquest holdings of individuals Typically this happened in a town where separately recorded properties had been demolished to make way for a castle Early British authors thought that the motivation behind the Survey was to put into William s power the lands so that all private property in land came only from the grant of King William by lawful forfeiture 32 The use of the word antecessor in the Domesday Book is used for the former holders of the lands under Edward and who had been dispossessed by their new owners 33 Subsequent history Edit The Domesday Chest the German style iron bound chest of c 1500 in which Domesday Book was kept in the 17th and 18th centuries Custodial history Edit Domesday Book was preserved from the late 11th to the beginning of the 13th centuries in the royal Treasury at Winchester the Norman kings capital It was often referred to as the Book or Roll of Winchester 17 When the Treasury moved to the Palace of Westminster probably under King John the book went with it The two volumes Great Domesday and Little Domesday remained in Westminster save for temporary releases until the 19th century They were held originally in various offices of the Exchequer the Chapel of the Pyx of Westminster Abbey the Treasury of Receipts and the Tally Court 34 However on several occasions they were taken around the country with the Chancellor of the Exchequer to York and Lincoln in 1300 to York in 1303 and 1319 to Hertford in the 1580s or 1590s and to Nonsuch Palace Surrey in 1666 for a time after the Great Fire of London 35 From the 1740s onwards they were held with other Exchequer records in the chapter house of Westminster Abbey 36 In 1859 they were transferred to the new Public Record Office London 37 They are now held at The National Archives at Kew The chest in which they were stowed in the 17th and 18th centuries is also at Kew In modern times the books have been removed from the London area only rarely In 1861 63 they were sent to Southampton for photozincographic reproduction 38 In 1918 19 prompted by the threat of German bombing during the First World War they were evacuated with other Public Record Office documents to Bodmin Prison Cornwall Likewise in 1939 45 during the Second World War they were evacuated to Shepton Mallet Prison Somerset 39 40 Binding Edit The volumes have been rebound on several occasions Little Domesday was rebound in 1320 its older oak boards being re used At a later date probably in the Tudor period both volumes were given new covers They were rebound twice in the 19th century in 1819 and 1869 on the second occasion by the binder Robert Riviere and his assistant James Kew In the 20th century they were rebound in 1952 when their physical makeup was examined in greater detail and yet again in 1986 for the survey s ninth centenary On this last occasion Great Domesday was divided into two physical volumes and Little Domesday into three volumes 41 42 Publication Edit Main article Publication of Domesday Book Entries for Croydon and Cheam Surrey in the 1783 edition of Domesday Book The project to publish Domesday was begun by the government in 1773 and the book appeared in two volumes in 1783 set in record type to produce a partial facsimile of the manuscript In 1811 a volume of indexes was added In 1816 a supplementary volume separately indexed was published containing The Exon Domesday for the south western counties The Inquisitio Eliensis The Liber Winton surveys of Winchester late in the 12th century The Boldon Buke Book a survey of the bishopric of Durham a century later than DomesdayPhotographic facsimiles of Domesday Book for each county separately were published in 1861 1863 also by the government Today Domesday Book is available in numerous editions usually separated by county and available with other local history resources In 1986 the BBC released the BBC Domesday Project the results of a project to create a survey to mark the 900th anniversary of the original Domesday Book In August 2006 the contents of Domesday went online with an English translation of the book s Latin Visitors to the website are able to look up a place name and see the index entry made for the manor town city or village They can also for a fee download the relevant page Continuing legal use Edit In the Middle Ages the Book s evidence was frequently invoked in the law courts 43 In 1960 it was among citations for a real manor which helps to evidence legal use rights on and anchorage into the Crown s foreshore 44 45 in 2010 as to proving a manor adding weight of years to sporting rights deer and foxhunting 46 and a market in 2019 47 Importance Edit In 1986 memorial plaques were installed in settlements mentioned in Domesday Book Domesday Book is critical to understanding the period in which it was written As H C Darby noted anyone who uses it can have nothing but admiration for what is the oldest public record in England and probably the most remarkable statistical document in the history of Europe The continent has no document to compare with this detailed description covering so great a stretch of territory And the geographer as he turns over the folios with their details of population and of arable woodland meadow and other resources cannot but be excited at the vast amount of information that passes before his eyes 48 The author of the article on the book in the eleventh edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica noted To the topographer as to the genealogist its evidence is of primary importance as it not only contains the earliest survey of each township or manor but affords in the majority of cases a clue to its subsequent descent Darby also notes the inconsistencies saying that when this great wealth of data is examined more closely perplexities and difficulties arise 49 One problem is that the clerks who compiled this document were but human they were frequently forgetful or confused The use of Roman numerals also led to countless mistakes Darby states Anyone who attempts an arithmetical exercise in Roman numerals soon sees something of the difficulties that faced the clerks 49 But more important are the numerous obvious omissions and ambiguities in presentation Darby first cites F W Maitland s comment following his compilation of a table of statistics from material taken from the Domesday Book survey it will be remembered that as matters now stand two men not unskilled in Domesday might add up the number of hides in a county and arrive at very different results because they would hold different opinions as to the meanings of certain formulas which are not uncommon 50 Darby says that it would be more correct to speak not of the Domesday geography of England but of the geography of Domesday Book The two may not be quite the same thing and how near the record was to reality we can never know 49 See also EditBBC Domesday Project Crowdsourced born digital description of the UK published in 1986 Cestui que Concept in English law regarding beneficiaries Medieval demography Photozincography of Domesday Book Publication of Domesday Book Quia Emptores English statute of 1290 Return of Owners of Land 1873 Taxatio Valuation for ecclesiastical taxation of English Welsh and Irish parish churches and prebendsNotes Edit One common abbreviation was TRE short for the Latin Tempore Regis Eduuardi in the time of King Edward the Confessor meaning the period immediately before the Norman Conquest References Edit Domesday Book Merriam Webster Online Domesday Book Dictionary com a b The Anglo Saxon Chronicle Translated by Giles J A Ingram J Project Gutenberg 1996 Retrieved 6 November 2016 Emerson Ralph Waldo amp Burkholder Robert E Notes 1971 The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson English Traits Vol 5 Harvard University Press p 250 ISBN 978 0674139923 Johnson C ed 1950 Dialogus de Scaccario the Course of the Exchequer and Constitutio Domus Regis the King s Household London p 64 Cellan Jones Rory 13 May 2011 Domesday Reloaded project The 1086 version BBC News Hoskins W G 1954 A New Survey of England Devon London p 87 Return of Owners of Land 1873 Wales Scotland Ireland 1873 Archived from the original on 10 September 2012 Retrieved 15 April 2013 Hull Domesday Project Wales Retrieved 14 February 2019 Darby Henry Clifford 1986 Domesday England Cambridge University Press p 2 Stenton Frank Merry 1971 Anglo Saxon England Clarendon Press p 645 Robert Bartlett The Making of Europe Conquest Colonization and Cultural Change 950 1350 Princeton University Press First PB Edition August 23 1994 Page 108 The Domesday Book History Magazine Moorshead Magazines October 2001 Retrieved 10 September 2019 Gies Frances Gies Joseph 1994 Cathedral Forge and Waterwheel Technology and Invention in the Middle Ages HarperCollins Publishers Inc p 113 ISBN 0060165901 Clanchy M T 2006 England and its Rulers 1066 1307 Blackwell Classic Histories of England Third ed Oxford UK Blackwell p 93 ISBN 978 1 4051 0650 4 Jamison Evelyn 1971 Additional Work on the Catalogus Baronum Bullettino dell Istituto Storico Italiano per Il Medioevo e Archivio Muratoriano 83 1 63 a b Hallam 1986 pp 34 35 Harvey 2014 pp 7 9 Harvey 2014 pp 271 328 Harvey 2014 p 271 fitzNigel Richard 2007 Amt Emilie Church S D eds Dialogus de Scaccario the Dialogue of the Exchequer Constitutio Domus Regis Disposition of the King s Household Oxford Medieval Texts Oxford Clarendon Press pp 96 99 ISBN 9780199258611 Hallam 1986 p 35 Hallam 1986 p 34 Harvey 2014 pp 18 19 Hallam 1986 p 118 The Domesday Book Online Retrieved 7 December 2018 The Falkirk Herald And Midland Counties Journal 1846 via Internet Archive archive org Roffe David 2000 Domesday The Inquest and The Book Oxford University Press pp 224 49 Inquisitio Eliensis Domesday Explorer Archived from the original on 26 May 2011 Retrieved 24 April 2010 Sometimes considered part of Nottinghamshire in this period Cooper Alan 2001 Extraordinary privilege the trial of Penenden Heath and the Domesday inquest English Historical Review 116 469 1167 92 doi 10 1093 ehr 116 469 1167 Freeman Edward A William the Conqueror pp 186 187 Freeman Edward A William the Conqueror p 188 Hallam 1986 p 55 Hallam 1986 pp 55 56 Hallam 1986 pp 133 34 Hallam 1986 pp 150 52 Hallam 1986 pp 155 56 Hallam 1986 pp 167 69 Cantwell John D 1991 The Public Record Office 1838 1958 London HMSO pp 379 428 30 ISBN 0114402248 Hallam 1986 pp 29 150 51 157 61 170 72 Forde Helen 1986 Domesday Preserved London Public Record Office ISBN 0 11 440203 5 Hallam 1986 pp 50 55 64 73 Foundation Internet Memory Archived content UK Government Web Archive The National Archives webarchive nationalarchives gov uk Archived from the original on 5 January 2016 Retrieved 10 January 2017 Iveagh v Martin and another 1961 1 Q B 232 1960 3 WLR 210 1960 2 All ER 668 1 Lloyd s Rep 692 QDB 1960 Mellestrom v Badgworthy Land Company adverse possession over continued common 2010 EWLandRA 2008 1498 21 July 2010 https www bailii org cgi bin format cgi doc ew cases EWLandRA 2010 2008 1498 html Harvey R on the application of v Leighton Linslade Town Council 2019 EWHC 760 Admin 15 February 2019 URL http www bailii org ew cases EWHC Admin 2019 760 html Darby Domesday England Cambridge University Press 1977 p 12 a b c Darby Domesday England p 13 Maitland Domesday Book and Beyond Cambridge 1897 p 407Bibliography EditDarby Henry C 1977 Domesday England Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 31026 1 Domesday Book A Complete Translation London Penguin 2003 ISBN 0 14 143994 7 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica Domesday Book at Wikisource Freeman Edward A 1888 William the Conqueror London MacMillan and Co OCLC 499742406 Hallam Elizabeth M 1986 Domesday Book through Nine Centuries London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0500250979 Harvey Sally 2014 Domesday Book of Judgement Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 966978 3 Holt J C 1987 Domesday Studies Woodbridge Suffolk The Boydell Press ISBN 0 85115 263 5 Keats Rohan Katherine S B 1999 Domesday People A Prosopography of Persons Occurring in English Documents 1066 1166 2v Woodbridge Suffolk Boydell Press Lennard Reginald 1959 Rural England 1086 1135 A Study of Social and Agrarian Conditions Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 821272 0 Maitland F W 1988 Domesday Book and Beyond Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 34918 4 Roffe David 2000 Domesday The Inquest and The Book Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 820847 2 Roffe David 2007 Decoding Domesday Woodbridge Suffolk The Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 307 9 Roffe David Keats Rohan Katharine 2016 Domesday Now New Approaches to the Inquest and the Book Woodbridge Suffolk The Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 78327 088 0 Vinogradoff Paul 1908 English Society in the Eleventh Century Oxford Clarendon Press Wood Michael 2005 The Domesday Quest In Search of the Roots of England London BBC Books ISBN 0 563 52274 7 Further reading EditBates David 1985 A Bibliography of Domesday Book Woodbridge Boydell ISBN 0 85115 433 6 Bridbury A R 1990 Domesday Book a re interpretation English Historical Review 105 284 309 doi 10 1093 ehr cv ccccxv 284 Darby Henry C 2003 The Domesday Geography of Eastern England Domesday Geography of England Vol 1 revised 3rd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521893968 Darby Henry C Terrett I B eds 1971 The Domesday Geography of Midland England Domesday Geography of England Vol 2 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521080789 Darby Henry C Campbell Eila M J eds 1961 The Domesday Geography of South East England Domesday Geography of England Vol 3 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521047706 Darby Henry C Maxwell I S eds 1977 The Domesday Geography of Northern England Domesday Geography of England Vol 4 corrected ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521047730 Darby Henry C Finn R Welldon eds 1979 The Domesday Geography of South West England Domesday Geography of England Vol 5 corrected ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521047714 Finn R Welldon 1973 Domesday Book a guide London Phillimore ISBN 0 85033 101 3 Snooks Graeme D McDonald John 1986 Domesday Economy a new approach to Anglo Norman history Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 828524 8 Hamshere J D 1987 Regressing Domesday Book tax assessments of Domesday England Economic History Review n s 40 2 247 51 doi 10 2307 2596690 JSTOR 2596690 Leaver R A 1988 Five hides in ten counties a contribution to the Domesday regression debate Economic History Review n s 41 4 525 42 doi 10 2307 2596600 JSTOR 2596600 McDonald John Snooks G D 1985 Were the tax assessments of Domesday England artificial the case of Essex Economic History Review n s 38 3 352 72 doi 10 2307 2596992 JSTOR 2596992 Sawyer Peter ed 1985 Domesday Book a reassessment London Edward Arnold ISBN 0713164409 External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Domesday survey Wikimedia Commons has media related to Domesday Book Commercial Site selling Domesday Book on The National Archives website home of Domesday Book Online Edition of Domesday Book housed on The National Archive website Searchable downloads are charged Searchable index of landholders in 1066 and 1087 Prosopography of Anglo Saxon England PASE project Focus on Domesday from Learning Curve Annotated sample page Secrets of the Norman Invasion Domesday analysis of wasted manors Domesday Book place name forms All the original spellings of English place names in Domesday Book link to PDF file Commercial site with extracts from Domesday Book Domesday Book entries including translations for each settlement Open Domesday Interactive map listing details of each manor or holdings of each tenant plus high resolution images of the original manuscript Site by Anna Powell Smith Domesday data created by Professor John J N Palmer University of Hull In Our Time the Domesday Book BBC Radio 4 programme available on iPlayer Domesday Book and Cambridgeshire Doomsday Book at The Manor of Hunningham Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Domesday Book amp oldid 1129858565, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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