THE COENWALL DOMESDAY AND GELD INQUEST. 553 



CDe Iticiuisitlo 6eiai 



JFrom t&e ©jcctcr Comcslap 4Soofe. 



Cranelattan ani ^Tabular Statement of ^tUcs in eac() j)untireli. 



These aee the Hundreds of Cornwall. 



Of Saint Petrock, the hundred of Eielton. The hundred of 

 Conarton The hundred of Winneton. The hundred of Tibestern. 

 The hundred of Fawiton. The hundred of Straton. The 

 hundred of Pauton. 



The hundred of Pauton. The hundred of Tibesta. The 

 hundred of Winneton. The hundred of Rielton. The hundred 

 of Fauuiton. The hundred of Conarton. The hundred of 

 Straton. 



These. 



Exon. Domesday, fol. 63, Printed Edition, p. 57. 



These are the Hundreds which are held in Cornwall, 

 conarditona. 



In the hundred of Conarditona are thirty-three hides. 

 Thence the King has of his geld, three pounds less three pence, 

 for ten hides and half a virgate. And from these ten hides 

 and half a virgate, Walter de Claville owes twenty pence. And 

 the King and his barons have in demesne fourteen hides. Of 

 these the King has seven in demesne and [the church of] St. 

 Michael two hides. And [_the canons of] St. Eerrian one hide 

 which never rendered geld. And the Bishop, two hides, which 

 were never gelded, which Roland holds of him. And the Earl 

 of Moretain two hides. And the men of the Earl four hides 

 less one farthing, which were never gelded, according to the 

 witness of the hundredmen. And for one hide which Baldwin the 

 sheriff holds, of the gelded land of the King, the King has 



