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 THE DOMESDAY SURVEY He then tells the ' famous tale ' of Ealdred, archbishop of York and protector of the see of Worcester, examining the site and denouncing Urse in the grim English lines : Hightest thou Urse, Have thou God's curse.* Urse derived the surname which Worcestershire still preserves in Croome d'Abitot and Redmarley d'Abitot from St. Jean d'Abbetot some tw^elve miles to the east of Havre. In one instance, it is interesting to observe, Domesday gives him the alternative name of Urse ' de Wirecestre ' (fo. i6b), an illustration of the practice by which sheriffs, in the Norman period, were assigned the names of the capitals of their shires. This is particularly well seen in the case of the sheriffs of Gloucestershire, who held the office by hereditary right, and who, from the Conqueror's reign, took their name from Gloucester till raised to an earldom by the empress Maud in 1 141. There can be no question that the shrievalty of Worcestershire also was hereditary, and that Urse was succeeded in it by his son Roger.^ On the fief passing to Urse's son-in- law, Walter de Beauchamp, he obtained the shrievalty also, and was succeeded in it, as I have elsewhere shown, by his son William.^ It seemed desirable to explain this point at some length, because it is asserted by Professor Freeman that Urse was sheriff of Gloucestershire as well as Worcestershire.^ The statement has been copied by a local writer, but it is without foundation. Durand (de Pitres), sheriff of Gloucestershire at the time of Domesday, is there styled ' Durandus vice- comes,'^ and his fief is headed 'Terra Durandi de Glowecestria.' The interest of Urse in that county was limited to the one hide he held, as a tenant-in-chief, at Seisincote ; Worcestershire alone was the scene of his remarkable proceedings.^ The traces they left upon that county were deep and of long duration. For the acquisition of his wide possessions by his son-in-law, Walter de Beauchamp, founded a great territorial house long mighty in Worcestershire and famous in our feudal history. Although in Worcestershire he held of the Crown a fief at least as large as that of any other lay tenant,' his real power, as a land- ' The authority for this story is William of Malmesbury's Gesta Pontificum, and its date, as Mr. Freeman points out, must be anterior to Ealdred's death in Sept. 1069. ^ The charter of Henry I. in favour of the prior of Worcester and his monks is addressed ' Waltero vicecomiti Gloucest[rie] et Rogero vicecomiti de Wirecestria ' (Hale's Registrum Prioratus Beata Maria Wigorniemis^ p. 30). ^ In her charter to William (1141 ?) the Empress says : ' Dedi ei et reddidi vicecomitatum Wigorn[ie] ... in feodo et hereditarie per eandem firmam quam pater eius Walterus de Bellocampo inde reddebat' (Geoffrey de Mandeville, p. 313). conspicuous amongst the most oppressive of his class, and whose hand seems to have fallen heavily on clerks and laymen alike' {Norman Conquest [1871], IV. 174). ' Urse, Ursus, Urso of Abetot, appears in Domesday as sheriff of both Worcestershire and Gloucestershire ; and we hear much of his evil deeds in both shires' {Ibid. [1876], V. 760). ^ fo. 168^, et passim. ® He had also, as a tenant-in-chief, holdings of no great consequence in Herefordshire and Warwickshire. ' About 40 hides. 263
 * ' We find that the two shires were put under a single sheriff, Urse of Abetot, who stands