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THE KNIGHTS OF PETERBOROUGH

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 October 2010

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Summary

THE interesting “Descriptio militum de Abbatia de Burgo” is found in the same MS. as the Northamptonshire Geld-roll. It was printed by Stapleton in the appendix to his Chronicon Petroburgense (pp. 168-175), but no attempt was made to date it. The name of Eudo Dapifer proves that it cannot have been compiled later than 1120. On the other hand, it cannot well be earlier than 1100, for some of the Domesday tenants had been succeeded by their sons–Robert (?) Marmion, for instance, by Roger, and Coleswegen by Picot–while the mention of “Gislebertus filius Ricardi,” possibly the son of Richard of “Wodeford” (i. 224b), points in the same direction. As the majority of names, however, seem to be those of Domesday tenants, it is probable that the list is not later than the Lindsey survey itself, if, indeed, it is not earlier. The first entry it contains is a good specimen of its value:–

Asketillus de Sancto Medardo tenet de abbatia de Burch in Hamtonascira x. hidas et iii. partes i. virgæ, et in Lincolnescira iii. carrucatas et inde servit se vi. milite. Et de feudo hujus militis dedit rex Willelmus senior Eudoni Dapifero in Estona i. hidam et dimidiam et mandavit de Normannia in Angliam Episcopo Constantiarum et R. de Oilli per breves suos ut inde darent ei excambium ad valens in quocumque vellet de iii. vicinis comitatibus; sed abbas noluit.

Type
Chapter
Information
Feudal England
Historical Studies on the XIth and XIIth Centuries
, pp. 157 - 168
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1895

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