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 A HISTORY OF NORTHAMPTONSHIRE round it (Leicestershire excepted) by the large number of its sochmanni. This fact is best brought out in Mr. Seebohm's work, The English Village Community} It is there seen that, while in Northamptonshire the pro- portion of ' sochmanni ' was 1 3 per cent, of the population, it was only I per cent, in Huntingdonshire, 3 per cent, in Bedfordshire, and ^ per cent, in Bucks. In Warwickshire and Oxfordshire, where free men (' liberi homines ') are found instead of ' sochmanni,' the proportion is only ^ and ^ per cent. There remains the intensely ' Danish ' Leicester- shire, where the proportion is more than twice as high as in Northants, namely 28 per cent. It is clearly seen, in Mr. Seebohm's maps, that these ' sochmanni ' were, as he asserts, the class characteristic of the ' Danish ' district of England, so that we have here further evidence of that ' Danish ' settlement and influence in the shire of which I claimed to find traces in the assessment of its northern portion.* Although certain dues, which varied in amount and in character, were derived from these ' sochmanni ' by those who had rights over them, they admittedly held a higher and a freer position than the ' villeins.' The consideration of ' soc ' and ' sochmen ' has somewhat drawn us away from the subject of the Crown and its revenue. We have yet to deal with Northampton itself and the rights which the king had there. So far as the ' geld,' or land tax was concerned, I have argued, on the evidence of the local ' geld-roU,* that the borough was assessed, in the Hundred of Spelho, at 25 'hides,'^ as were Bath and Shaftesbury at 20, Chester and Huntingdon at 50.* But the king drew from the boroughs a revenue, as distinct from the tax. This revenue was derived partly from dues, such as the profits of jurisdiction, and tolls, partly from those houses which lay in his ' demesne ' ; for a borough, like a rural manor, consisted of two portions — the demesne, here in the king's lands, and the houses held by private persons, mainly tenants-in-chief. At Northamp- ton, the sixty burgesses' houses which king Edward had held in his demesne had suffered some diminution by ' waste,' but a ' new borough,' such as arose in several towns under the Conqueror, already contained forty burgesses as an addition to the king's ' demesne.' The three great tenants-in-chief of the county held between them ninety-two houses, a hint, surely, that these houses were appurtenant, as was so often the case, to their rural manors. This conclusion is confirmed by a study of the other names of those who held houses in the town, most of whom will be recognised as holders of manors in the shire. The number of houses entered, in all, seems to be about 316. This total is rather smaller, it seems, than that of the houses at Leicester, but exceeds the total at War- wick. In annual value, the houses varied from threepence to sixteen- pence ; but a shilling was about the typical value. The actual letting value, however, may have been greater. The disproportion between the nominal values, then and now, of property is greater perhaps ' *Fif and xx. hida byrigland.' * Feudal England, p. 156. 276
 * See pp. 86-89, ^"'^ ^^^ maps there given by Mr. Seebohm.
 * See p. 268 above.