Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 July 2014
What determined the value recorded for a manor in the Domesday Book? This is a controversial question among scholars engaged in Domesday studies, and various arguments have been adduced as solutions to this problem. It has been suggested that the Normans calculated manorial value by using the quantity of a manor's sheep, its annual income, the amount of its tax units, or the number of its plow lands; but no one has proved which of these factors were used by the Normans in 1086 to compute manorial value. Many of these proposed solutions overlook the importance of agrarian agriculture, which was the basis of Domesday economy. Some historians disregard the contemporary meaning of Domesday terminology to advance their new and, as yet, unacceptable interpretations of how to compute the value of a manor. This article uses the contemporary meaning of Domesday terminology combined with traditional historical method and statistical analysis to argue that the Normans used plow lands as the basis for determining manorial value in Domesday Essex county.
Before the arrival of modern computers, the vast amount of available information in the Domesday Book obscured this simple solution to the problem. There was just too much data to be assessed accurately by pen and pencil. The unique qualities of the Domesday survey make it particularly suitable for a computerized statistical analysis of its database. This is because the survey employed a predetermined set of questions that yield data appropriate for statistical analysis, and manorial value is one of those questions.
1 Davis, R. H. C., “Domesday Book: Continental Parallels,” in Domesday Studies, ed. Holt, J. C., (London, 1987), pp. 20–25Google Scholar.
2 Holt, J. C., “1086,” in Domesday Studies, pp. 41–64Google Scholar. Hampshire, J. D., “Regressing Domesday Book: tax assessments of Domesday England,” Economic History Review, 2nd sen, 40, 2 (1987): 247–51Google Scholar for criticism, and John McDonald and G. D. Snooks, “The suitability of Domesday Book for cliometric analysis,” ibid., pp. 252–61 for rebuttal, and J. D. Hampshire, “Domesday Book, cliometric analysis and tax assessments,” ibid., pp. 262–66 for further comments.
3 Sawyer, P. H., “The Wealth of England in the Eleventh Century,” Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 5th ser., 15 (1965): 145–164CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
4 Power, Eileen, Medieval English Wool Trade (London, 1941), p. 30–31Google Scholar.
5 Lennard, Reginald, Rural England 1086–1135 (London, 1921), pp. 465–73Google Scholar.
6 Table 1.
7 Table 1.
8 Table 1.
9 McDonald, John and Snooks, G. D., Domesday Economy (Oxford, 1986), pp. 51–96CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
10 Ibid. p.85.
11 Harvey, Sally P. J., “Domesday Book and Anglo-Norman Governance,” Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 5th ser., 25 (1975): 186–89CrossRefGoogle Scholar; for criticism; see Green, J. A., “The last century of Danegeld,” English Historical Review 96 (1981): 242–43Google Scholar; and for further argument, Harvey, Sally P. J., “Taxation and the Economy,” in Domesday Studies, ed. Holt, J. C., pp. 251–64Google Scholar; for other comments see McDonald, John and Snooks, G. D., Domesday Economy (Oxford, 1986), p. 67CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
12 Bridbury, A. R., “Domesday Book: A re-interpretation,” English Historical Review 415 (April 1990), pp. 284–309CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
13 Henry of Huntingdon, “account of the Domesday inquisition by Henry of Huntingdon (before 1129),” English Historical Documents: 1042–1189, ed. Douglas, David C. and Greenaway, George W. (New York, 1981), p. 915Google Scholar.
14 Seebohm, Frederic, The English Village Community (London, 1905), p. 84Google Scholar; and Moore, J. S., “The Domesday Teamland: A Reconsideration,” Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 5th ser., 14 (1964): 109–30CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Lennard, R., “Composition of Domesday Caruca,” English Historical Review 81 (1966): 770–75CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Sawyer, P. H., “The Wealth of England in the Eleventh Century,” Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 5th ser., 15 (1965): 145–164CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Power, Eileen, Medieval English Wool Trade (London, 1941), p. 30–31Google Scholar.
15 McDonald, and Snooks, , Domesday Economy, p. 85Google Scholar.
16 Table 1.
17 Maitland, Frederic, Domesday Book and Beyond (London, 1921), pp. 465-73, 447–48Google Scholar.
18 Table 2.
19 Doubleday, Arthur and Page, William, eds., The Victoria History of the Counties of England: Essex, 1: 448Google Scholar.
20 Table 2.
21 Doubleday, and Page, , The Victoria History of the Counties of England: Essex, 1: 546Google Scholar.
22 Darby, H. C., Domesday England (London, 1977), p. 9CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
23 Warren, W. L., The Governance of Norman and Angevin England (Stanford, 1987), pp. 37–38Google Scholar.
24 Table 2.
25 The Oxford English Dictionary (Oxford, 1931), p. 142Google Scholar; and Latham, R. E., Dictionary of Medieval Latin, vol. IIC. (London, 1981), p. 290Google Scholar; and Niermeyer, J. F., Mediae Latinitatis Lexicon Minus (Leiden, 1976), p. 148Google Scholar.
26 Seebohm, Frederic, The English Village Community (London, 1905), p. 84Google Scholar; and similarly, Maitland, , Domesday Book and Beyond, p. 395Google Scholar, and Hart, Cyril, “Oundle: Its Province and Eight Hundreds,” Northamptonshire Past and Present 8 (1989–1990): 7–9Google Scholar.
27 Sayles, G. O., The Medieval Foundations of England (London, 1964), p. 289Google Scholar.
28 Roger of Howden, “The Articles of Pleas of the Crown of the King,” English Historical Documents: 1189–1327, ed. Rothwell, , p. 305Google Scholar; and Keefe, Thomas K., Feudal Assessments and the Political Community under Henry II and His Sons (Berkeley & Los Angeles, 1983), p. 23Google Scholar.
29 Table 5.
30 Darby, , Domesday England, pp. 127–34Google Scholar; and Roger of Howden, “The Articles of Pleas of the Crown of the King,” in English Historical Documents: 1189–1327, ed. Rothwell, , p. 305Google Scholar.
31 Vinogradoff, Paul, English Society in the Eleventh Century (Oxford, 1908), p. 383Google Scholar.
32 McDonald, and Snooks, , Domesday Economy, p. 4Google Scholar.
33 Moore, David S., Statistics Concepts and Controversies (San Francisco, Calif., 1979), p. 162Google Scholar.
34 Ibid., p. 148.
35 Figure 1 and Figure 2.
36 Ott, Lyman, An Introduction To Statistical Methods and Data Analysis (North Scituate, Mass., 1977), pp. 624-26, 701Google Scholar.
37 Figure 1 and Figure 2.
38 Table 2.
39 Table 3.
40 Table 5.
41 Table 4.
42 Figure 3 and Figure 4.
43 Norusis, Marija J., The SPSS Guide to Data Analysis (Chicago, 1986), p. 291Google Scholar.
44 Figure 5.
45 Figure 6.
46 Norusis, , The SPSS Guide to Data Analysis, pp. 314–20Google Scholar; and Moore, , Statistics Concepts and Controversies, p. 181Google Scholar.
47 Figure 6.
48 Figure 7.
49 Figure 7.
50 Norusis, , The SPSS Guide to Data Analysis, pp. 337–47Google Scholar.
51 Figure 8.