|
page
three
|
![]() |
Bettany What was the typical farm building at that time? Dr Stephen Rippon University of Exeter It was what was called a long house. A long rectangular building where you'd have both the residential uses and also the live stock animals and the crops stored, all within the same building. |
|
|
Bettany |
||
| Bettany It was beginning to dawn on me that the great survey of Norman England that we associate with William the Conqueror is actually contained in books like Exon and not the Domesday Book, which is pretty amazing. Could David Roffe be right, that Domesday Book was compiled in 1089-90? That would put it in the reign of William the Conqueror's son, William Rufus. I wanted David to prove to me that it was written so much later than people think. |
||
|
|
David
|
|
|
Bettany |
||
| Bettany So, the Domesday Book I saw in the Public Record Office was an entirely new land register, quite separate from the inquest conducted by William the Conqueror. It was compiled from surveys like Exon, but the information was then abridged and then re-arranged to produce the Domesday Book we know today. |
![]() |
|
| Philip Shirley has made the journey to Oxford and Linacre College. He's there to meet Katharine Keats-Rohan who, in addition to being the author of a Who's Who of Domesday Book, has created a database to cross-reference the 30,000 names mentioned in the survey. | ||
|
|
Katharine If we look at the Domesday records here, you'll see that there are seven holdings which are attributed to a man called Sasswallow. The holdings themselves, some of them have quite healthy values attached to them, £20, 100 shillings, with some of them quite large. |
|
| And in fact I know that your family has asked itself the question of whether this man is an Englishman or not. I would say definitely not. This name is well evidenced in this part of the continent and for me, there is no doubt at all that he is Norman from the lordship of Ferian in Normandy. | ||
|
Bettany |
||
| Katharine So we see the importance of this family because the Carta entry actually begins with them. |
||
| Bettany The family was determined to consolidate its wealth, so Henry, son of Sasswallow, agreed with his brother, Fulcher, that he would leave his own inheritance to Fulcher's son, another Sasswallow, making him a rich man who could offer the king the military service of nine knights. |
||
| Katharine This shows how important this family was as a tenant family of the Earls Ferrer. And of course, Sasswallow who acquires the rights of the first born is even more distinguished because by the 17th century his family, the Shirley family, is actually acquiring the title of Earl Ferrers, which is saying that the family was very good at husbanding its resources and making the most of them. |
||
|
Bettany |
||
|
page
3 of 4
|
||