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 A HISTORY OF WORCESTERSHIRE explain, a horseload of grain at Martinmas from each hide held by a free man, though he was not liable to pay on more hides than one (fo. 175). If the grain should not be paid on the day appointed, a twelvefold pay- ment was due, said the county, and a penalty {forisfacturd) in addition for the default. These provisions applied both to Worcester ' and to Pershore, but in the case of the latter this penalty was only payable to the Abbot on his own 100 hides, Westminster abbey receiving it, if due, within its own 200 hides. Domesday goes on to explain that the abbot of Eves- ham had the same right in the case of ' his own land, and all the others the same in the case of their lands.'* There was one other right belong- ing to the bishop of Worcester which is mentioned in the valuable Bishampton entry among his recognised dues : this was ' sepultura ' (fo. 173). We find it again in the documents relating to his strife with Evesham, where it is coupled with the circset as due to him from Hampton by Evesham.^ The one other passage in Domesday which should be here compared is that which describes the rights of the bishop of Winchester in his great liberty of Taunton (fo. 87*^). Like the bishop of Worcester in Oswaldslow, he possessed, not only special jurisdiction within the bounds of that liberty, but the privilege of sending to the host his own separate contingent ; * and like him he had ' circieti ' and ' sepultura ' as his right. For after mentioning those of its members in which he had not ' sepultura,' Domesday observes of the others : ' when the lords of these lands die, they are buried in Taunton.' The burial fees and profits were, of course, what was thus obtained.® This is, perhaps, the fitting point at which to discuss that great dispute between the churches of Worcester and of Evesham, which is so closely connected with the Domesday Survey of the County. The bitter- ness of the feeling it aroused is shown by the delightful story told by the monks of Worcester and preserved in Heming's Cartulary.* According to them the saintly Wulfstan, on the death of the despoiler of their house, ^thelwig abbot of Evesham, was rash enough, in his infinite compassion, to offer special and urgent prayers for the soul of his dead adversary. A sudden attack of gout in his legs and feet was the penalty. It was only same ; and, indeed, under Bishampton (fo. 173) 'circset' is found among the dues payable to the Bishop. And one of bishop Oswald's charters, granting two hides at Bentley, reserves the payment ' aecclesiastici censi, id est duos modios de mundo grano ' (Heming's Cartulary, I. 145). his endowments of Studley Priory. ^ The bishop of Coutances, in his certificate, states that the Bishop had proved his right to ' ciricsceat et sepulturam ' from Hampton as due to his vill of Cropthorne, and the Con- queror's writ recognises his right to such * ciricescot et sepulturam ' (Heming's Cartulary, 1.77,78). has * expeditione.' ' Mr. Eyton observes in his Shropshire that ' sepultura ' was a right belonging to the mother churches which they were loth to part with. ^ De conflictu Wlstani episcopi et Agelwii abbatis' (I. 270-272), 252
 * ' Circset ' is not mentioned eo nomine in the Worcester entry, but the payment is the
 * Peter de Stodley {alias Corbizon) gave the 'chirset' of a Worcestershire manor among
 * ' profectio in exercitu cum hominibus episcopi.' The Exon Domesday, for * exercitu '