Domesday Book of England
According to the National Archives, the Domesday is our most famous and earliest surviving record. It is a highly detailed survey and valuation of all the land held by the King and his chief tenants, along with all the resources that went with the land in late 11th century England.
The survey was a massive enterprise, and the record of that survey, DOmesday Book, was a remarkable achievement. There is nothing like it in England until the censuses of the 19th century.
Historical Context
In 1066 William Duke of Normandy defeated the Anglo-Saxon King, Harold II, at the Battle of Hastings and became King of England. In 1085 England was again threatened with invasion, this time from Denmark. William had to pay for the mercenary army he hired to defend his kingdom. To do this he needed to know what financial and military resources were available to him.
At Christmas 1085 he commissioned a survey to discover the resources and taxable values of all the boroughs and manors in England. He wanted to discover who owned what; how much it was worth and how much was owed to him as King in tax, rents, and military service.
A reassessment of the tax known as the geld took place at about the same time as Domesday and still survives for the southwest. But Domesday is much more than just a tax record. It also records which manors belonged to which estates and gives the identities of the King's tenants-in-chief who owed him military service in the form of knights to fight in his army. The King was essentially interested in tracing, recording and recovering his royal rights and revenues which he wished to maximize. It was also in the interests of his chief barons to co-operate in the survey since it set on permanent record the tenurial gains they had made since 1066.
William only commissioned the survey (descriptio) in 1085 and never intended the results to be written up into a book. Some say that it was his son and successor, William Rufus, who ordered the production of Domesday Book itself.
For many centuries Domesday was regarded as the authoritative register regarding rightful possession and was used mainly for that purpose. It was called Domesday by 1180. Before that it was known as the Winchester Roll or King's Roll, and sometimes as the Book of the Treasury.
World of Domesday
William I captured England in 1066 he became King of what was probably the wealthiest and most well-governed kingdom in western Europe. On inheriting the kingdom, William confiscated most of the land from the Anglo-Saxon nobility and divided it up between Norman barons and the church. At Christmas 1085, intent on knowing more about the land he had reigned over for nearly twenty years, William commissioned the survey that became known as Domesday Book. The survey was much more than a means to satisfy William's fascination with his new kingdom. It recorded the value of land he held personally and that held by his tenants-in-chief. Where there were disputes over land it helped settle disagreements. At a time when England was again under threat of invasion, this time from Denmark, finances and men to support his campaigns were crucial. Domesday provided an estimate of the taxation William could expect to receive and the military service he could demand from his lords.
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