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 A HISTORY OF NORTHAMPTONSHIRE There is little to be said, in the case of Northamptonshire, on the actual manuscript itself. The survey of the county occupies twenty-one pages (ten and a half folios) of Domesday Book, and its chief peculiarity is the discrepancy, at times, between the order in which the fiefs are entered and the list of the tenants-in-chief at the head of the survey of the shire. That of Hugh de Grentmaisnil was entered by inadvertence before that of earl Hugh of Chester. The numbers prefixed to their names in the text are, therefore, in reverse order. William Peverel's fief also is wrongly numbered in the text, as are the others on its own and the preceding pages. The bishop of Durham, it is clear, had been over- looked by the scribe, for his holding has been huddled in at the foot of a column. This was also the case with the tiny fief of Hugh Luri, and possibly with that of William de ' Cahainges.' It seems probable, from these circumstances, that the numbers were prefixed to the names in the text after the scribe had written it, and that the schedule of tenants-in- chief was added last of all. But our knowledge of the actual system on which Domesday Book was compiled is as yet so imperfect that on this and other points one can only speak with caution. THE NORTHAMPTONSHIRE HUNDREDS We have in Northamptonshire exceptional facilities for tracing'the changes in the boundaries and names of those venerable divisions of the land, the Hundreds. Our earliest list is found in what I term the Northamptonshire geld-roll, which is of the reign of William I., and some years earlier than Domesday Book. This list gives us the names of 28 Hundreds, two of which (' Navereslund ' and ' Uptune ') are styled double Hundreds, while four more (' Neoubotle grave,' ' Gildesburh,' In Domesday Book the number is unchanged, but on the one hand the Hundreds of East and West ' Hwicceslea' (the Rutland portion of the shire) appear there as one only, while on the other, an interesting Hundred makes its appearance, as it would seem, there only. This is the Hun- dred of Collingtree (' Colentreu ' ' Colestreu '), to which are assigned the adjoining vills of Collingtree, Milton (' Midleton Malsor '), Rothersthorp, Blisworth, and Courteenhall, on the west of Wymersley Hundred.* In the Northamptonshire Survey (12th cent.) this Hundred disappears, as does also ' Wicesle,' which was now part of Rutland. On the other hand the ' double ' Hundred of ' Navereslund,' as the geld-roll styles it, is here surveyed, as two Hundreds, ' Suthnaveslunt ' and ' Northnaveslunt.' In this survey, also, Foxley has become ' Norton,' and Gravesend has already added that ' Fawsley' which is its later designation. ' Optone,' moreover, ' Compare p. 259 above. ^ A Hundred of ' Geritone ' is alluded to once (fo. 220), but nothing seems to be known of it. 296
 * Hehham ' and ' Wimereslea ') are styled, each, a Hundred and a half.*