[1710] I do not suggest, nor does Bede suggest, that Hii was laid out in hides. He is speaking only of size.

[1711] Bede gives to Anglesey the size of 960 families, to Man that of 300 ‘or more.’ Anglesey has 175,836 acres; Man 145,011. Anglesey in 1895 had ‘under all kinds of crops, bare fallow and grass (mountain and heath land excluded)’ 152,004 acres. Man 96,098. Anglesey had 24,798 acres growing corn crops and 9,305 growing green crops, while the corresponding figures for Man were 22,666 and 11,580. Rationalistic explanation of Bede’s statements would be useless. He is reporting vague guesses.

[1712] Hist. Eccl. iv. 13 (p. 232): ‘Quo tempore Rex Ædilualch donavit reverentissimo antistiti Vilfrido terram lxxxvii familiarum, ubi suos homines, qui exules vagabantur, recipere posset, vocabulo Selæsu, quod dicitur Latine Insula Vituli Marini.’ Bede goes on to describe the Selsey peninsula and Wilfrid’s foundation of a monastery. Wilfrid proceeded to convert the men who were given him. They included two hundred and fifty male and female slaves whom he set at liberty.

[1713] K. 992 (v. 32); B. i. 98.

[1714] K. 464 (ii. 341). The 55 hides are reduced to 42, no mention is made of Medemenige, Egesauude or Bessanheie, and the 32 hides are somewhat differently distributed.

[1715] D. B. i. 17. The Bp of Chichester has 24 hides at Amberley.

[1716] I infer this from the thorough discrepancy that there is between these charters and D. B. A forger at work after or soon before the Conquest would have arranged the church’s estates in a manner similar to that which we see in King William’s record.

[1717] As a matter of fact, however, it is not very easy to reconcile the earlier charter with Bede’s story. The charter makes the land proceed from the West-Saxon Ceadwealla and says nothing of Æthelwealh, who, according to Bede, was the donor. Mr Plummer, Bedae Opera, ii. 226, says that the forger betrays his hand by calling Wilfrid archbishop. Really he seems to cut Wilfrid into two, making of him (1) an archbishop, and (2) a bishop of the South Saxons. See the attestations.

[1718] In D. B. i. 17 the bishop’s manor at Selsey has but 10 hides and but 7 teamlands.

[1719] See above, [p. 378].