[801] D. B. i. 298. Of York we read: ‘In the geld of the city are 84 carucates of land, each of which gelds as much as one house in the city.’ This seems to point to an automatic adjustment. To find out how much geld any house pays, divide the total sum that is thrown upon York by the number of houses + 84.
[802] Mr Round (Domesday Studies, i. 129) who has done more than anyone else for the elucidation of the finance of Domesday, has spoken of ‘the great Anglo-Saxon principle of collective liability.’ This may be a useful term, provided that we distinguish (a) liability of a corporation for the whole tax whenever it is levied; (b) joint and several liability of all the burgesses for the whole tax whenever it is levied; (c) liability of each burgess for a share of the whole tax, the amount that he must pay in any year being affected by an increase or decrease in the number of contributories.
[803] See the entry touching Colchester, above, [p. 201, note 787].
[804] D. B. i. 1.
[805] D. B. i. 238. The custom of Warwick was that when the king made an expedition by land ten burgesses of Warwick should go for all the rest. He who did not go when summoned [summoned by whom?
[806] D. B. i. 56 b.
[807] D. B. i. 179.
[808] At Chester (D. B. i. 262 b) the twelve civic iudices paid a fine if they were absent without excuse from the ‘hundret.’ This seems to mean that their court was called a hundred moot. It is very possible that, at least in the earliest time, the moot that was held in the borough had jurisdiction over a territory considerably larger than the walled space, and in this case the urban would hardly differ from the rural hundred. A somewhat new kind of ‘hundred’ might be formed without the introduction of any new idea.
[809] D. B. i. 336.
[810] Hist. Eng. Law, i. 631.