- Hundred Rolls
The Hundred Rolls are a
census ofEngland and parts of what is nowWales taken in the latethirteenth century . Often considered an attempt to produce a secondDomesday Book , they are named for the hundreds by which most returns were recorded.The Rolls include a survey of royal privileges taken in
1255 , and the better known surveys of liberties andland ownership , taken in1274 - 5 and1279 - 80, respectively. The two main enquiries were commissioned byEdward I of England to record the adult population forjudicial andtaxation purposes. They also specify the services due from tenants tolord s under thefeudal system of the time.Many of the Rolls have been lost and other have been damaged, but a minority survive and are stored at the National Archives in
Kew . Where they survive, they are a major source for the period. Those known in the earlynineteenth century were published in1818 , while more recent discoveries are being collated by theUniversity of Sheffield .ources
* Cam, Helen, "Studies in the hundred rolls: some aspects of thirteenth-century administration", Oxford: Clarendon press, 1921
* Cam, Helen, "The hundred and the hundred rolls; an outline of local government in medieval England", London, Methuen 1930ee also
*
Kent Hundred Rolls External links
* [http://www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/displaycataloguedetails.asp?CATLN=3&CATID=12367&SearchInit=4&CATREF=sc5 National Archive on the Hundred Rolls]
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