[116] Eyton's Dorset Domesday, p. 14.
[117] I drew attention in the Archæological Review (vol. 1) to a Cornish survey of 21 Ed. I. (Testa de Nevill, p. 204), in which every Cornish acre contains a Cornish carucate.
[118] Domesday Studies, p. 172.
[119] 'A New View of the Geldable Unit of Assessment of Domesday.' Ibid., pp. 227-363, 561-619.
[120] Archæological Review, i, 285-95; iv, 130-40, 391.
[121] Ibid., iv, 325.
[122] A curious hint of the grouping of Vills is afforded in Oxfordshire by Adderbury and Bloxham. Domesday first gives us an assessment of 34½ hides in the two, and then 15½ hides in Adderbury, making in all, for the two, 50 hides, the same as Banbury.] (Return to p. [72])
[123] This evidence is rendered available by the useful Notes on the Oxfordshire Domesday, published by the Clarendon Press in 1892.
[124] 40 + 5 + 5.
[125] 'Unam hidam et iiies. virgatas et iiiciam. partem de i. virgata.'