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Charnage In Domesday

Land of the Bishop of Salisbury.

The Bishop holds Charnage.

Algar held it before 1066.

It paid tax for 5 hides.

Land for 3 ploughs.

Of this land 4 hides are in lordship; 2 ploughs there.

3 villagers, 6 smallholders and 2 cottagers with 1 and a half ploughs.

Meadow, 10 and a half acres, pasture 3 furlongs long and 2 furlongs wide.

Woodland 2 furlongs long and 1 furlong wide.

The value was 40 shillings but is now £4.

This is in exchange for Shipley. Hugh holds from the Bishop.

Kingston Deverill In The Domesday Book

1086

The Canons of Lisieux.

The Canons of Lisieux hold [Kingston] Deverill.

Edith held it before 1066, it paid tax for 4 hides.

Land for 3 ploughs, of which 3 and a half hides, less than 3 acres, are in lordship;

1 plough there; 2 slaves.

6 Cottagers with 1 villager have 1 plough.

Meadow 3 acres. Pasture 4 furlongs long and 3 furlongs wide.

The value was 40 shillings but is now 70 shillings.

Shrewton In Domesday

1086

MADDINGTON
Land of the Church of Amesbury.
The Church holds Maddington itself.
Before 1066 it paid tax for 4 and a half hides.
Land for 2 ploughs.
Of this land 2 and a half hides are in lordship; 1 plough there.
4 villagers, 4 smallholders and 2 Cottagers with 1 plough.
Meadow 8 acres. Pasture 10 acres.
The value was and still is £4.

SHREWTON
Land of Edward of Salisbury.
Wulfeva held it before 1066, it paid tax for 3 hides.
Land for 3 ploughs.
Godfrey holds from Edward.
Of this land he hold 2 hides in lordship; 2 ploughs there; 4 slaves.
4 villagers and 4 smallholders with 1 plough.
A mill which pays 5 shillings.
Meadow 6 acres.
Woodland 30 acres.
Pasture 6 furlongs long and 4 furlongs wide.
The value was and is £3.

Boyton In The Domesday Book

Land of Edward of Salisbury.
Edward holds Boyton for himself.
Alwin held it before 1066, it paid tax for 11 and a half hides.

Land for 6 ploughs, of which 8 and a half hides are in lordship;
3 ploughs there; 5 slaves.
7 villagers and 5 Cottagers with 2 ploughs.

A mill which pays 15 shillings.

Meadow 10 acres.
Pasture 4 furlongs long and 3 furlongs wide.
Woodland 3 furlongs long and as many wide.

The value was £8 but is now £11 10 shillings.

Ditchampton In The Domesday Book

Ditchampton in the Domesday Book, 1086:

Land of the Bishop of Bayeaux.

The Bishop also holds Ditchampton and Robert from him.

Azor held it prior to 1066; it paid tax for 2 hides.

Land for 2 ploughs; 18 cottagers have them.

4 mills which pay 27 shillings.

Meadow 4 acres. Pasture 10 acres.

The value was 100 shillings but is now £8.

The First Known Reference To Warminster

The Urban District Of Warminster Official Guide 1957/8 noted that:

The first known reference to Warminster is in a document among the Canterbury MSS dated about A.D. 900 : “And Aethlem Higa went from that suit when the King was at Worgemynster, Ordlaf, and Osforth, and Odda, and Withbord, and Aefstan the Bald, and Aethelmoth, being witnesses.”

The Saxon Period In The Warminster Area

From The Warminster Official Guide And Souvenir 1928 (penned by Victor Strode Manley):

The Saxon ravages began about 500 A.D., and following on their heels came the Danes. Alfred rallied the men of Wessex at Cley Hill in 878 A.D. and forced their surrender at Westbury White Horse, thus laying the foundation of the British Empire in this district.

Warminster In Pre-History

From The Warminster Official Guide And Souvenir 1928 (penned by Victor Strode Manley):

Pre-History. Great must have been Warminster’s pristine glory, as evidenced by its wealth of archaeological treasures now housed in Devizes Museum. The first arrivals, about 5,000 B.C., were Neolithic men of the Stone Age, the fierce Picts of later history. They were the original builders of the stone circles at Avebury and Stonehenge, both in Wilts, dependent upon their cattle and equipped only with flint implements. The Celts arrived about 1,400 B.C. with a Bronze Age    culture, bequeathing us many round burial mounds on all the hills from which their decorated cinerary urns have been removed to Devizes. They rebuilt Stonehenge. Battlesbury, as a hill fort, 678 feet above sea level and overlooking the town, has scarce a rival in England, with its tremendous trenches in triplicate encircling the brow of the hill. With its neighbour Scratchbury, it was re-intrenched in the Iron Age about a century before the arrival of the Romans, who built their luxurious villas below at Bishopstrow only to flee before the next invader, leaving their hoards of coins to be unearthed in our own times.

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