[186] Ibid., p. lxxvi.

[187] 'De gelto v. sol'' (D.B., ii. 286b). Sudbury was an outlying portion of the Hundred of Thingoe, in which is situated Bury St Edmunds, of which we read (D.B., ii. 372): 'quando in hundredo solvitur ad geldum i. libra, tunc inde exeunt lx. d. ad victum monachorum.' This substitution, apparently, of Sudbury (as three leets) for Bury St Edmunds (of which the monks received the geld) deserves investigation.

[188] See [p. 58].

[189] 'Wisbeche, quæ est quarta pars centuriatus insulæ' (Liber Eliensis p. 192).

[190] 'In Sparle et in Pagrave, xviii. d. quando hundret scotabat xx. solidos et in Acra vi. d. et in pichensam xii. d. quicunque ibi teneat' (ii. 119b). See also note 182.

[191] See Domesday Studies, p. 117.

[192] Reprinted from the English Historical Review, October 1892.

[193] Ninth Report on Historical MSS., App. I, 38.

[194] Domesday of St. Paul's, p. iv.

[195] This is a slip. Drayton was in Middlesex, and the words (which Mr Seebohm quotes) are 'cum una hida de solande'.