- Clavering hundred
-
Clavering hundred was a hundred – or geographical subdivision – comprising parishes and settlements in Essex and Norfolk.[1] Hundreds were divisions of areas of land within shires or counties for administrative and judicial purposes – and for the collection of taxes.[2]
In the Domesday Book of 1086, there were 27 places listed as part of the hundred. The two largest settlements within the hundred were Raveningham, with 115.5 households - according to the Domesday Book - and Clavering, with 80 households. Clavering had the largest taxable value within the hundred.[3]
Contents
Locations in Essex
- Bentfield Bury
- Berden
- Bollington Hall
- Clavering
- Farnham
- Manuden
- Peyton Hall
- Pinchpools
- Ugley
- Pledgdon Hall
Locations in Norfolk
- Aldeby
- Ellingham
- Gillingham
- Haddiscoe
- Hales
- Heckingham
- Kirby Cane
- Norton Subcourse
- Raveningham
- Stockton
- Thurlton
- Toft Monks
- Wheatacre
Four further Clavering hundred settlements in Norfolk - Ierpestuna, Naruestuna, Thurketeliart and Torvestuna - are also mentioned in the Domesday Book, however these names no longer exist and the sites can only be located approximately.
See also
List of Essex Hundreds in 1844
Hundreds of Norfolk
References
Categories:- Hundreds of Essex
- Hundreds of Norfolk
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.