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The Domesday Book
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Introduction
The Domesday
Book was a detailed survey and valuation of landed property in England at the
end of the 11th century. The survey was ordered by William the Conqueror at
Christmas 1085 and undertaken in 1086. It was referred to as the Domesday Book
as its decisions were unalterable, as in the Last Judgement.
There is an In Our Time podcast on the Domesday Book.
What it recorded
It recorded who
held the land and how it was used, and also includes
information on how this had changed since the Norman Conquest in 1066.
It was not a
census of the population, and the individuals named in it are almost
exclusively land-holders.
Sworn juries
were appointed to gather the information required.
The Domesday
survey was carried out by commissioners holding sworn inquests in local courts,
where they asked fixed questions of local men. For each property, each question
was asked of three different times, to cover changes over time. The
commissioners asked how land had been held:
1.
As
it had been on the last day of the reign of Edward the Confessor (5 January
1066) – this is abbreviated in Domesday as TRE;
2.
As
it had been when it was granted by King William;
3.
As
it was in 1086 (when the survey was taken).
The Domesday
Book is arranged by county, and within each county, by landholder. Each new
landholder is given a number, written in red in roman numerals at the start of
their entry. There is a table of contents at the beginning of each county,
which lists the landholders with their numbers, starting with the king, but no
index. However, later editors have produced excellent indexes to the online and
printed editions which make finding particular entries straightforward.
The questions
The questions
included:
·
What
is the manor called?
·
Who
held it in the time of King Edward the Confessor?
·
Who
holds it now?
·
How
many hides (a land measurement)?
·
How
much has been added or taken away from the manor?
·
How
much has or had each freeman and each sokeman?
·
How
many plough teams?
·
How
many freemen, sokemen, villeins, cottars and slaves?
·
How
much wood, meadow and pasture?
·
How
many mills and fisheries?
·
How
much was the whole worth in 1066, and how much now (1086)?
Language
Domesday is
written in Latin, although translations are available today.
Overall findings
The survey
listed land use, minerals and forms of manufacture.
It found:
·
109,000
productive individuals from earls to villeins (villagers), almost all men;
·
28,000
slaves;
·
Livestock
including plough teams and bees;
·
6,000
mills.
By 1086:
·
The
King held 20% of the useful land;
·
The
Church held 25%
·
About
a dozen large magnates held 25%
·
2,000
foreign knights and 8,000 new settlers from the rank and file held about 30%
So about three
quarters of the land was held by some 250 people. Most of the land was held by
non-indigenous folk. Of a population at that time of about 2M, only 4
indigenous aristocrats were still significant landowners.
Sources
See Open Domesday.