Liber Exoniensis
Not to be confused with Exeter Book.
Liber Exoniensis | |
---|---|
Exon Domesday, Exeter Domesday | |
Manuscript(s) | Exeter Cathedral Library, MS 3500, arranged and rebound in 1816 |
Length | 552 folios, single column |
The Liber Exoniensis or Exon Domesday is a composite land and tax register associated with the Domesday Survey of 1086, covering much of Southwest England. It contains a variety of administrative materials concerning the counties of Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Somerset and Wiltshire. The sole surviving copy is MS 3500 in the Exeter Cathedral Library.[1]
Contents
The leaves may have been rearranged and rebound in 1816, when the first edition of the volume appeared in print. The original arrangement of the quires cannot be recovered. Five principal types of records can be distinguished:[1]
- The greater part consists of records obtained from the returns of the Domesday Inquest, covering Somerset, Cornwall, Devon (incomplete), Dorset (incomplete) and one entry for Wiltshire. Most entries have identical counterparts in Great Domesday. However, while the Great Domesday entries are organised county by county, Exon has them arranged by landholder.[1]
- Summary accounts of geld, a form of public tax assessed on the hide. Three (A, B and C) are for Wiltshire, while single summaries are included for Cornwall, Devon, Dorset and Somerset. For every hundred, the total number of hides is given, and of these, the number of hides that owed geld and those that did not because they were held in demesne by the king or his barons. The text ascribes the collection of geld to an inquisitio geldi (Geld Inquest), which was undertaken around the time of the Inquest, probably in 1086.[1]
- Terre Occupate (or Terrae Occupatae), i.e., lists of lands in Somerset, Devon, and Cornwall that were appropriated, e.g., by illegal means.[1]
- Two lists of hundreds in Somerset, Devon and Cornwall.[1]
- Summaries of fees held by individual tenants-in-chief as well as an index-list of 26 fees.[1]
folios | summary | comment |
---|---|---|
1–3v | Wiltshire geld account A | latest revision |
7–9v | Wiltshire geld account B | |
11–12v | Dorset boroughs | |
13–16v | Wiltshire geld account C | |
17–24 | Dorset geld account, Summary | |
25–62v | Dorset Domesday: 12 fees in Dorset, 1 in Wiltshire (f. 47) | |
63–64v | Two lists of the hundreds in Devon, Cornwall, and Somerset | |
65–71 | Devon geld account | |
72–73 | Cornwall geld account | |
75–82v | Somerset geld account (part) | |
83–494v | Exeter Domesday: fees in Devon, Cornwall and Somerset | |
495–506v | Terre Occupate in Devon | |
507–508v | Terre Occupate in Cornwall | |
508v–525 | Terre Occupate in Somerset | |
526–527v | Somerset geld account (small part only) | |
527v–531 | Accounts of some fees | |
532–532v | Index listing 26 fees and headings | [1] |
Notes
References
- Darby, H. C.; Welldon Finn, R., eds. (1967). The Domesday Geography of South-west England. Cambridge.
- Roffe, David (2000). Domesday: The Inquest and the Book. Cambridge.
Primary sources
- Ellis, Henry, ed. (1816). Libri Censualis, vocati Domesday Book, Additamenta ex Codic. Antiquiss. Exon Domesday; Inquisitio Eliensis; Liber Winton; Boldon Book. London: Record Commission.
External links
Further reading
- Finn, Rex Welldon (1964). Domesday Studies: The Liber Exoniensis. London.
- Finn, Rex Welldon (1958–59). "The Exeter Domesday and its Construction". Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 41: 360–87.
- Finn, Rex Welldon (1957). "The Immediate Sources of the Exchequer Domesday". Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 40: 47–78.
- Galbraith, V. H. (1961). The Making of Domesday Book. Oxford.
- Webber, T. (1989). Beal, Peter; Griffiths, J., eds. "Salisbury and the Exon Domesday: Some Observations Concerning the Origins of Exeter Cathedral MS 3500". English Manuscript Studies, 1100–1700 (Oxford) 1: 1–18.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, January 27, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.