When the Normans arrived in England in AD 1066 they found a kingdom divided into a distinctive and complicated administrative geography. In compiling Domesday Book, the great survey of holdings and liabilities over much of England and parts of Wales completed in 1086, the assessors grouped information firstly into ‘shires’—districts that are in many cases the precursors of modern counties—and then into smaller divisions such as hundreds, wapentakes and vills (estates), with additional groupings such as multiple hundreds and regional ealdormanries also discernible in the source. These administrative entities clearly had a territorial composition. Using the boundaries of estates, parishes and hundreds mapped at later dates, numerous scholars ...
The Norman Conquest of England in 1066 gave birth to the Anglo-Norman State (ANS). This paper treats...
Several questions surrounding the origin and function of Husebyer are familiar to students of Anglo-...
This thesis sets out to create a map of parts of Devon at Domesday. This will be achieved by pursuin...
By the time of Domesday Book the shire was the basic unit of administration throughout the West Midl...
This article presents the first fruits of a long-term project which aims to identify all the landhol...
This thesis is a study of landholders named in Domesday Book in 1066 and 1086 in Hampshire, from the...
This thesis explores the themes of territorial organisation, land use and settlement in the middle T...
PhDThis study explores some of the implications of the distribution of estates between the landholde...
The relationship between sites of Early-Anglo-Saxon activity and territorial boundaries, once much-d...
This thesis sets out to create a map of parts of Devon at Domesday. This will be achieved by pursuin...
Special Collections has recently added the Domesday Books to its collections. This collection was ph...
How were early medieval people connected to each other and to the wider world? In this collection, a...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>The aim of the researc...
This work seeks to explore the progress of rural settlement and colonization in the county of Worces...
This article offers a new interpretation of the Domesday survey, drawing upon a collaborative study ...
The Norman Conquest of England in 1066 gave birth to the Anglo-Norman State (ANS). This paper treats...
Several questions surrounding the origin and function of Husebyer are familiar to students of Anglo-...
This thesis sets out to create a map of parts of Devon at Domesday. This will be achieved by pursuin...
By the time of Domesday Book the shire was the basic unit of administration throughout the West Midl...
This article presents the first fruits of a long-term project which aims to identify all the landhol...
This thesis is a study of landholders named in Domesday Book in 1066 and 1086 in Hampshire, from the...
This thesis explores the themes of territorial organisation, land use and settlement in the middle T...
PhDThis study explores some of the implications of the distribution of estates between the landholde...
The relationship between sites of Early-Anglo-Saxon activity and territorial boundaries, once much-d...
This thesis sets out to create a map of parts of Devon at Domesday. This will be achieved by pursuin...
Special Collections has recently added the Domesday Books to its collections. This collection was ph...
How were early medieval people connected to each other and to the wider world? In this collection, a...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>The aim of the researc...
This work seeks to explore the progress of rural settlement and colonization in the county of Worces...
This article offers a new interpretation of the Domesday survey, drawing upon a collaborative study ...
The Norman Conquest of England in 1066 gave birth to the Anglo-Norman State (ANS). This paper treats...
Several questions surrounding the origin and function of Husebyer are familiar to students of Anglo-...
This thesis sets out to create a map of parts of Devon at Domesday. This will be achieved by pursuin...