A HISTORY OF SUFFOLK 



recurrence of units of 80, 60, 40, and 30 acres, and is proved by the 

 entry of Starlinc's estate in Glemham as '180 acres' in Domesday, and as 

 ' I ^ carucates ' in the Inquisitio Eliensis.^ There is direct evidence to show 

 that 12 furlongs went to a league, for 16 qtiarentines in the Domesday Survey 

 are referred to as i league and 4 quarentines in the corresponding passage 

 of the Inquisitio Eliensis : — 



Ratesdane . . . iiabet xvi quarentenas in Rattesdene . . . habet i leugam et iiii quar- 



loneo et x in lato (Dom. Bk. ii, 381 A). cntenas in longo et x quarentenas in lato \lnq. 



EL [Rec. Com.], 522*). 



Another land division which is mentioned twice is the ferding or fer ting. 

 The Bishop of Thetford had soke and sac over the ferting of Elmham {super 

 ferting de Ahneham)}^ This, as we learn from later records," was equivalent 

 to a quarter of the hundred of Wangford, but when we read that ' St. Edmund 

 held six freemen in Ferdinga de ealdham' {Aldham)^' in Cosford Half-hundred, 

 we can only guess at the meaning of the term. 



In the modern county of Suffolk there are twenty-one hundreds. In the 

 Domesday county there were twenty-four and a half hundreds, or twenty-four, 

 if the small hundred of Luding [Lothing) and the neighbouring half-hundred 

 of Ludingaland {Lothingland) be counted as one." The hundreds of the iith 

 century correspond very closely to those of the present day, and, as a com- 

 parison with the Hundred Roll of 1274 shows, the few differences can be 

 traced back to the 13th century. Thus the Domesday hundred of Claydon 

 or Claindune was partly replaced by Thredling Hundred and partly coupled 

 with Bosmere, while the hundred of Bradmere and the half-hundred of Par- 

 ham, irregular and disconnected even in Domesday,'* were altogether lost by 

 the reign of Edward I. Mutford, which forms one hundred with Lothing- 

 land, has taken the place of the older Lothing or Luding, and 'Bishop's' 

 Hundred has changed into the hundred of Hoxne, called after the episcopal 

 manor, Hoxa Episcopi^'" in which, in the time of Edward the Confessor, there 

 was ' a church, the seat [sedes") of the bishopric of Suffolk.' '* The double 

 hundred of Babergh was still double in 1274, and was represented by 

 twenty-four instead of twelve jurors in the inquest of that year. Cosford 

 still counted as a half-hundred, but the hundred and a half of Samford was 

 reckoned as a single hundred." The half-hundred of Thredling and that of 

 Exning, which appears as a half-hundred in the Hundred Roll,'* equalize the 

 lists of 1086 and 1274. 



Of the twenty-four Domesday hundreds, seven, Lackford, Blackbourn, 

 Bradmere, Hartismere, Bishop's, Wangford, and Lothing with Lothingland, 

 lay along the northern or Norfolk border of the county. Seven — Risbridge, 

 the double hundred of Babergh, the hundred and a half of Samford with 

 the half-hundred of Cosford, Colneis, and Wilford — abutted on Essex' to the 



' Dom. Bk. 430 ; Inq. El. 153. '" Dom. Bk. 379. 



"/?«/. HaW. (Rec. Com.), ii, 191. ' Episcopus Norwic. tenet m.inerium de Suthelnih.im et qu.irtam 

 partem hundr. de Waynesford de done Re3um Anglorum antiquit.' Cf. Maitland, Dom. Bk. and Beyond, 93; 

 VinogradofF, Engl. Soc. in Eleventh Century, 151, note i. 



" Dom. Bk. 369. 



" Roy. Hilt. Soc. Trans, (new ser.), xiv, 226. 



" Cf. Map. " Dom. Bk. 329, 438^. 



'• Ibid. 379. " Rot. Hutid. (Rec. Com.), ii, 142, 151^, 176, 177^. 



"Ibid. 197, 199. 



