Extract from the Domesday Book
The
The same Theodric holds HAMPSTEAD NORREYS. Lang held it of King Edward. [It was] then [assessed] at 17 hides; now at 6 hides. There is land for 12 ploughs. In demesne are 2 ploughs; and 13villans and 9 bordars with 8 ploughs. There are 8 slaves, and 4 acres of meadow, [and] woodland for 40 pigs. Of this land a priest of the church holds half a hide in alms and has nothing on it. It was worth
12l; and afterwards 9l; now 10l. The same Theodric holds SULHAM. Edward held it of King Edward. [It was] then [assessed] at 1 hide; now at half [a hide]. There is land for 2 ploughs. In demesne is 1 plough, with 5 bordars, and 2 slaves and 2 acres of meadow. It is and was worth 30s. The sameTheodric holds in PURLEY half a hide. Edward held it; and it was assessed at as much then, as now. There is land for 2 ploughs. In demesne is 1 [plough]; and 1 villan and 3 bordars with 1 plough, and 5acres of...
One observer wrote of the survey that,” there was no single hide nor a yard of land, nor indeed one ox nor one cow nor one pig which was left out". The grand and comprehensive scale on which the Domesday survey took place and the irreversible nature of the information collected led people to compare it to the Last Judgment, or 'Doomsday', described in the Bible, when the deeds of Christians written in the Book of Life were to be placed before God for judgment. Thus, in the late 12th century the name ‘Domesday’ was adopted for the collective survey. William, unfortunately, died before it was fully completed.
It provides an invaluable insight into the economy and society of 11th century Norman England. For historians it can be used, amongst other things, to discover the wealth of
History of the Domesday Book
The Domesday Book, commissioned by William the Conqueror, records the amount of land and resources owned in
The Domesday Book provides extensive records of landholders, their tenants, the amount of land they owned, how many people occupied the land (villagers, smallholders, free men, slaves, etc.), the amounts of woodland, meadow, animals, fish and ploughs on the land (if there were any) and other resources, any buildings present (churches, castles, mills, salt houses, etc.), and the whole purpose of the survey - the value of the land and its assets, before the Norman Conquest, after it, and at the time of Domesday. Some entries also chronicle disputes over who held land, some mention customary dues that had to be paid to the king, and entries for major towns include records of traders and number of houses.