Anglo-Saxon Hundred

by slowhands @, proud of his ancient Dean Forest roots, Thursday, May 01, 2008, 11:34 (6120 days ago) @ Jean Herbert

A hundred is a geographic division

The name is derived from the number one hundred, and in some areas it may once have referred to a hundred men under arms in England, specifically, it has been suggested that it referred to the amount of land sufficient to sustain one hundred families, defined as the land covered by one hundred "hides".


A collection of Hundreds becomes a Shire

and Tithings are subdivisions "tenths" of Hundreds...


hundred, in English history, a subdivision of a shire, first mentioned in the 10th cent. and surviving as a unit of local government into the 19th cent. It is thought that in origin the hundred comprised 100 geld hides, the geld hide being the basic Anglo-Saxon land unit for taxation purposes; but the hundreds varied considerably in size.

The number of hundreds in a shire also varied, and their boundaries were continually changed.

The hundred had its own court. The Saxon tithing groups, which had corporate responsibility for the crimes committed by their members, came before it, and personal pleas of debt and trespass were also brought there. Originally presided over by the king's reeves, the hundred courts continued to meet regularly every four weeks until the 13th cent., by which time many of them had been taken over by local lords. They gradually lost importance and from the 16th cent. had little more than a formal existence.

--
Ἀριστοτέλης A Gloster & Hereford Boy in the Forest of Dean ><((((*>


Complete thread:

 RSS Feed of thread

powered by my little forum