HISTORY of SUSSEX
Domesday Book Survey Introduction
In 1066 Duke William of Normandy conquered England. He was crowned King,
and most of the lands of the English nobility were soon granted to his followers.
Domesday Book was compiled 20 years later. The Saxon Chronicle records
that in 1085 at Gloucester at midwinter.
' the King had deep speech with his counsellors ... and sent men all
over England to each shire ... to find out ... what or how much each landholder
held ... in land and livestock, and what it was worth ... The returns
were brought to him.
William was thorough. One of his Counsellors reports that he also sent
a second set of Commissioners 'to shires they did not know, where they
were themselves unknown, to check their predecessors' survey, and report
culprits to the King.'
The information was collected at Winchester, corrected, abridged, chiefly
by omission of livestock and the 1066 population, and fair-copied by one
writer into a single volume. Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex were copied, by
several writers, into a second volume, unabridged, which states that 'the
Survey was made in 1086'.
The surveys of Durham and Northumberland, and of several towns, including
London, were not transcribed, and most of Cumberland and Westmorland,
not yet in England, was not surveyed. The whole undertaking was completed
at speed, in less than 12 months, though the fair-copying of the main
volume may have taken a little longer. Both volumes are now preserved
at the Public Record Office. Some versions of regional returns also survive.
One of them, from Ely Abbey, copies out the Commissioners' brief. They
were to ask;
The name of the place. Who held it, before 1066, and now?
How many hides. How many ploughs, both those in lordship and the men's
How many villagers, cottagers and slaves, how many free men and Freemen.
How much woodland, meadow and pasture?
How many mills and fishponds?
How much has been added or taken away?
What the total value was and is?
How much each free man or Freeman had or has?
All threefold, before 1066, when King William gave it, and now;
and if more can be had than at present?
The fly volume also describes the procedure. The Commissioners took
evidence on oath 'from the Sheriff; from all the barons and their Frenchmen;
and from the whole Hundred, the priests the reeves and six villagers from
each village'. It also names four Frenchmen and four Englishmen from each
Hundred, who were sworn to verify the detail.
The King wanted to know what he had, and who held it. The Commissioners
therefore listed lands in dispute, for Domesday Book was not only a tax-assessment.
To the King's grandson, Bishop Henry of Winchester, its purpose was that
every 'man should know his right and not usurp another's'; and because
it was the final authoritative register of rightful possession;
'the natives called it Domesday Book, by analogy from the Day of Judgement';
That was why it was carefully arranged by Counties, and by landholders
within Counties, 'numbered consecutively ... for easy reference'.
Domesday Book describes Old English society under new management, in minute
statistical detail. Foreign lords had taken over, but little else had yet
changed. The chief landholders and those who held from them are named, and
the rest of the population was counted. Most of them lived in villages,
whose houses might be clustered together, or dispersed among their fields.
Villages were grouped in administrative districts called Hundreds, which
formed regions within Shires, or Counties, which survive today with minor
boundary changes; the recent deformation of some ancient county identities
is here disregarded, as are various short-lived modern changes.
The local assemblies, though overshadowed by lords great and small, gave
men a voice, which the Commissioners heeded. Very many holdings were described
by the Norman term manerium (manor), greatly varied in size and structure,
from tiny farmsteads to vast holdings; and many lords exercised their own
jurisdiction and other rights, termed soca, whose meaning still eludes exact
definition.
The Survey was unmatched in Europe for many centuries, the product of a
sophisticated and experienced English administration, fully exploited
by the Conqueror's commanding energy. But its unique assemblage of
facts and figures has been hard to study, because the text has not been
easily available, and abounds in technicalities. Investigation has therefore
been chiefly confined to specialists; many questions cannot be tackled
adequately without a cheap text and uniform translation available to
a wider range of students, including local historians.
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The Domesday Book