[841] D. B. i. 100, 108 b.
[842] D. B. i. 86 b.
[843] D. B. i. 87.
[845] D. B. 38 b, 44.
[846] D. B. 64 b.
[847] D. B. 66.
[848] The burgesses belonging to Ramsbury are really at Cricklade: D. B. i. 66.
[849] It seems very possible that already before the Conquest some boroughs had fallen out of the list. In cent. x. we read, for example, of a burh at Towcester and of a burh at Witham in Essex. We must not indeed contend that a shire-supported town with tenurial heterogeneity came into existence wherever Edward the Elder or the Lady of the Mercians ‘wrought a burh.’ But still during a time of peace the walls of a petty burh would be neglected, and, if the great majority of the inhabitants were the king’s tenants, there would be little to distinguish this place from a royal village of the common kind. See for Towcester, D. B. i. 219 b; for Witham, D. B. ii. 1 b. In later days we may see an old borough, such as Buckingham, falling very low and sending no burgesses to parliament. It will be understood that we have not pledged ourselves to any list of the places that were boroughs in 1066. There are difficult cases such as that of St Albans; see above, p. 181. But, we are persuaded that few places were deemed burgi, except the shire towns.
[850] A last relic of the old borough peace may be found in Britton’s definition of burglary (i. 42): ‘Burglars are those who feloniously in time of peace break churches, or the houses of others, or the walls or gates of our cities or boroughs (de nos citez ou de nos burgs).’