[821] D. B. i. 108 b.
[822] Whether the novum burgum mentioned in D. B. i. 17 is Winchelsea or Rye or a new town at Hastings seems to be disputable. See Round, Feudal England, 568.
[823] D. B. i. 26 b, 27.
[824] D. B. i. 4 b.
[825] D. B. i. 4 b. See also, 10 b.
[826] D. B. i. 12.
[827] D. B. i. 345, 283 b. It has been said that Leofric gave Newark to the see.
[828] Dodsworth’s Yorkshire Notes, ed. R. Holmes (reprinted from Yorkshire Archaeological Journal), p. 126.
[829] D. B. i. 316 b. The estate is ingeldable and therefore looks like an ancient possession of the king.
[830] D. B. 337 b: ‘Toftes sochemanorum teignorum.’ Some commentators have seen here ‘sokemen thegns’; but the other interpretation seems far more probable.