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The Tribal Hidage
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 July 2016
Extract
The Tribal Hidage is a list of about thirty tribes of Anglo-Saxon England together with the number of lands of one family (hides) belonging to each tribe. Historians agree that it is a seventh or eighth century Mercian document so difficult to understand that it is a ‘puzzle’ and ‘a mysterious catalogue—barely intelligible’. Part of the mystery is caused by failure to identify even large tribes in the list, and perhaps more mystery is produced by the inability to fit the data into its alleged historical setting. As a piece of literature it belongs to the intellectual movement sometimes known as the Mercian Renaissance which has received little attention. The great epic, Beowulf, has recently been assigned to it, and another, Widsith, falls in the same period. Alfred drew a majority of his scholars from Mercia. This Mercian Renaissance is thus worth further study for its general significance, but it has a peculiar interest for students of the Tribal Hidage as the environment for this singular document. It is the thesis of this study that the Tribal Hidage, although a Mercian survival, is actually a revision of data of the time of Aethelbert of Kent of about 590 A.D. and that it gives a valuable picture of the political divisions of England of that important time.
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References
1 In this article the volumes of the Place-Name Society are abbreviated by P-N and the name of the county. Other abbreviations are Collingwood and Myres = Collingwood, R. G. and Myres, J. N. L., Roman Britain and the English Settlements (Oxford 1936); Hodgkin = Hodgkin, R. H., A History of the Anglo-Saxons (Oxford 1935); Stenton = Stenton, F. M., Anglo-Saxon England (Oxford 1943).Google Scholar
2 Maitland, F. W., Domesday Book and Beyond (Cambridge 1897) 506–15.Google Scholar
3 Corbett, W. J., ‘The Tribal Hidage,’ Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, new series 9 (1900) 187–230. Evidence exists of the relation of soldiers to hides in a later period. Stenton 288. For a good study of Anglo-Saxon taxes see ibid. 284–9.Google Scholar
4 Brownbill, J., ‘The Tribal Hidage,’ English Historical Review 27 (1912) 625–48; 40 (1925) 497–503. The problem of the grand total is discussed on p. 498.Google Scholar
5 Chadwick, H. M., Studies in Anglo-Saxon Institutions (Cambridge 1905) 263–8.Google Scholar
6 The manuscripts have been described by Brownbill, , op. cit. 625–7. A facsimile of the one manuscript of E appears in ibid. 497 and in Hodgkin, II, 389.Google Scholar
7 Possibly the mistake occurred as follows. The original in a Latin copy would have been ‘mdccc.’ A careless copyist may have assumed that the initial m was actually on the end of the preceding word, Spalda, and by placing a line over the last a of Spalda would have lost the m from the number, thus: Spalda mdccc Spaldā dccc The chief objection to assigning 1,800 as the number would be that it is the only instance of this number in the catalogue. However, it fits into the pattern of numbers as half of 3,500 or three times 600. See note 58 below.Google Scholar
8 The longest treatment is by Professor Stenton (pp. 292–4) who believes that the Tribal Hidage is ‘an attempt to guide a king's minister in the exaction of his dues from subject provinces.’ No evidence, however, is given in support of this thesis. Hodgkin II, 401; Collingwood and Myres 383.Google Scholar
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19 The Mercian letters come from Speculum 18 (1943) 460–1. The Kentish letters are from Cambridge Historical Journal 7 (1942) 114.Google Scholar
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23 Cambridge Historical Journal 7 (1942) 111. Some charters of Kent attributed to Aethelbert of Kent give termini of boundaries (Kemble, , Codex I, 1, 2, 3).Google Scholar
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25 An objection may be raised that hidage became static and thus does not represent population accurately. This is true but it does not preclude the idea that an increase of hides in an age of light settlement means an increase of families and thus of population.Google Scholar
26 See below note 34 for revision of East Anglia's hidage to 15,000.Google Scholar
27 The assumption that this was a Mercian document made Wight a difficult problem. Some thought it an unidentified place in central England (Hodgkin I, 401; Stenton 293), while another thought that the Cilternsaetan were West Saxons (Brownbill 498–9). The latter believed that the 1,200 of Bede's Wight included the Gifla and the Hicca (the Yte across the water from Wight).Google Scholar
28 At one time it seemed to me that this document might have come from the time of Raedwald. In this case East Anglia's 30,000 might be considered an imperial total which would have included 15,000 of the East Anglia together with the tribes from ‘Hendrica’ to ‘East Sexena’. The difficulty of reconstructing an original based upon this hypothesis makes this choice less attractive than the other even without the presence of Wight.Google Scholar
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30 The root is assumed to be Gag, and thus does not fall into the series of terms ending in ga which is discussed below.Google Scholar
31 Hodgkin I, 189.Google Scholar
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32 Hist. Eccl. 5, 23, as translated by King, J. E. (Loeb Classical Lib.) II, 371.Google Scholar
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34 The East Saxon hundreds were located as follows: 20 in Essex, 5 in Middlesex, and 2 in Hertfordshire. If we have identified Hendrica with Surrey correctly, its hundred-hidage relationship is correct: 14 hundreds and 3,500 hides. The Sussex relationship shows 600 hundreds but only 7,000 hides.Google Scholar
35 Collingwood and Myres, map opposite p. 383; Hodgkin, maps on pp. 284, 285; Stenton, map on p. 200.Google Scholar
36 Bede, , Hist. Eccl. 3, 24. For a statement of recent work on the Wrekin and pictures which illustrate the commanding position of the heights see Kenyon, K. M., ‘Excavations on the Wrekin, Shropshire, 1939,’ The Archaeological Journal 99 (1942) 99–109.Google Scholar
37 Chadwick, , Studies 291, note 1. See also Thorpe, , Diplomatarium 61.Google Scholar
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39 See the appendix by Professor U. T. Holmes, University of North Carolina, upon this point.Google Scholar
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42 Phepson would seem to be a case of movement of the Feppinga to Worcestershire. P-N Worcestershire xvii-xix.Google Scholar
43 This may well explain the series of places which seem to have the Widerigga in their names, see below note 56.Google Scholar
44 That is, it is no argument against an identification of a tribal name as an element in a place name if the Place-Name Society does not consider the possibility of its being the source. The existence of several places with elements possibly deriving from a tribe may be used as evidence that the tribe was in the area.Google Scholar
45 The name, Surrey, and a subregulus of the area can be carried back as far as 675 A. D. Early forms of the name were Suthrige and Sudergeona. P-N Surrey xvi.Google Scholar
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47 Bede (Hist. Eccl. 4, 6) says that Peterborough was among the Gyrwas. Their name would appear in such places as Girton, Glitton and Guyerne in Cambridgeshire (P-N Cambridgeshire 177, 64 and 293 respectively); and Girton, Nottinghamshire (P-N Nottinghamshire 204).Google Scholar
48 Both hundreds of Rutland are called Wiceslea. Notice also Wixamtree, Bedfordshire (P-N Bedfordshire 27); Wixenabroc (P-N Worcestershire 16).Google Scholar
49 Spalding, Lincolnshire, is the most obvious place. A Spalding River was in the area. Notice also a Spaldwick (P-N Huntingdonshire 247) and Spalford (P-N Nottinghamshire 207).Google Scholar
50 Unfortunately no Place-Name Society volume for Leicestershire has appeared yet.Google Scholar
51 The mistake of an ‘e’ for an ‘s’ was made in the case of Sudrica-Hendrica. For Hurstingstone see P-N Bedfordshire–Huntingdonshire 203; Anderson, O. S., The English Hundred Names (Lund 1934) 109.Google Scholar
52 P-N Bedfordshire–Huntingdonshire 190. Note also Swordersland (P-N Essex 483).Google Scholar
53 For Gifla, P-N Hertfordshire xvii; Bedfordshire–Huntingdonshire xviii-xix. Note also Yelden (ibid. 20) in Bedfordshire; Ivinghoe and Iver in Buckinghamshire (P-N Buckinghamshire 96 and 239); Ivel River (P-N Hertfordshire 3); Willingham (P-N Cambridgeshire 173). For Hicca, P-N Hertfordshire xvii. Notice also Hinchinbroke (P-N Huntingdonshire 261); Hitchin (P-N Hertfordshire 8); Ixhill and Ixhill Hundred (P-N Buckinghamshire 127 and 114).Google Scholar
54 Harrow is usually Herghe or some similar form in the Middle Ages. (P-N Middlesex 52, 53). The hundred in which Harrow lies is Gara ( ibid. 50).Google Scholar
55 The Feppinga are said by Bede ( Hist. Eccl. 3, 21) to be among the Middle Angles. Bede apparently never mentions the Middle Saxons so this cannot be used to exclude the Feppinga from Middlesex. The Tribal Hidage has the statement inserted as an interpolation: it probably comes from Bede. Possibly Epping comes from the Feppinga. Or Fobbing (P-N Essex 156) or Punge Wood (Brownbill 499). There are many places beginning with Billing which might possibly come from this tribal name. One of the most tempting is Belymyle (P-N Cambridgeshire 292). See also P-N Northamptonshire xiv.Google Scholar
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57 The present Willey Hundred (P-N Bedfordshire 25). See also Welwyn (early form Wilga) (P-N Hertfordshire 144). Possibly also Widford, Willingale (P-N Essex 275, 500); Willen (P-N Buckinghamshire 26); Wilbury (P-N Hertfordshire 115); Wilden, Willington (P-N Bedfordshire 66, 99); Willingham (P-N Cambridgeshire 117); Willesden (P-N Middlesex 160).Google Scholar
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60 Gray, H. L., English Field Systems (Cambridge, Mass. 1915) ch. ix.Google Scholar
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63 Stenton 56, 219.Google Scholar
64 Lyons, J. E., ‘Frisian Place-Names in England,’ Publications of the Modern Language Association 33 (1918) 644–55. He finds Frisian very closely related to the Northern and Midland dialects of Middle English, just the areas of the small tribes.Google Scholar
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66 Little is known of the West Hecana group which Stenton calls the Magonsaetan (Stenton 46–7). Ammianus Marcellinus tells of the disbanding of the Arcani in the fourth-century England because of their treachery along the frontier. One would like to think that they might have been the founders of Archenfeld and of the West Hecana, but they seem to have been a group of messengers rather than a tribal group. Collingwood and Myres 284–5.Google Scholar
67 The situation in Bernicia is described by Hodgkin I, 147–53.Google Scholar
68 Collingwood and Myres 287. There was also a cohors I Frisiavonum in England. Enciclopedia Italiana under ‘Frisia’.Google Scholar
69 Stenton 4–8.Google Scholar
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