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| | [[Image:Highfield Farm, Old Bolingbroke - geograph.org.uk - 869761.jpg|thumb|right|350x250px|<center>Highfield Farm, Old Bolingbroke<center>]] | | | [[Image:NLW documents 9 May 2022.jpg|thumb|right|700x500px|<center>Land records bundle<center>]] |
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| == Online Records == | | == Online Records == |
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| *'''1086''' [http://www.domesdaybook.co.uk/landindex.html The Domesday Book, landholders index] | | *'''1086''' [http://www.domesdaybook.co.uk/landindex.html The Domesday Book, landholders index] |
| | *'''1222-1967''' [https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/62646/ UK and Ireland, Families of Historic Properties, 1222-1967] at Ancestry — index & images ($) |
| *'''1717''' [https://search.findmypast.com/search-world-Records/england-and-wales-roman-catholics-1717 England & Wales, Roman Catholics, 1717 Forfeited Estates] at Findmypast — index & images ($) | | *'''1717''' [https://search.findmypast.com/search-world-Records/england-and-wales-roman-catholics-1717 England & Wales, Roman Catholics, 1717 Forfeited Estates] at Findmypast — index & images ($) |
| *'''1873''' [http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=2040 England, Return of Owners of Land, 1873] at Findmypast — index ($) | | *'''1873''' [http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=2040 England, Return of Owners of Land, 1873] at Ancestry — index ($) |
| | *'''1873''' [https://search.findmypast.com/search-world-records/england-and-wales-return-of-owners-of-land-1873 England & Wales, Return of Owners of Land 1873] at Findmypast — index & images ($) |
| | *'''1998-Onward''' [https://www.myheritage.com/research/collection-20645/united-kingdom-deceased-estates-notices?s=275764761 United Kingdom, Deceased Estates Notices] at MyHeritage — index ($) |
| *[http://www.landregistryservices.com/ Land Registry Title Registers, Title Plans and Conveyancing Searches for UK and Ireland] ($) | | *[http://www.landregistryservices.com/ Land Registry Title Registers, Title Plans and Conveyancing Searches for UK and Ireland] ($) |
| | *[http://www.uklrs.co.uk/landregistry/?gclid=CLnizd3m7MMCFYaTfgod0lkA2Q Land Registry documents, including Title Register, Title Plan and Deeds for Great Britain] |
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| | | == Land and Property == |
| === Introduction === | |
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| Following the Norman Conquest in 1066 all the land of England was technically owned by the Crown. Under the feudal manorial system which subsequently developed, the Crown made grants of land to earls and barons who in turn granted smaller areas to knights in return for the provision of a set period of active military service in the field called ‘knight service’. Over the years this service was slowly commuted to a money payment called ‘scutage’ and it had practically disappeared by the end of the thirteenth century, though feudal tenure was not finally abolished until 1660. These people were not Knights in the modern sense and would remain esquires unless they paid the heavy fees for knighthood (something that they were supposedly obliged to do after 1306 if their property was worth more than £40 a year). | | Following the Norman Conquest in 1066 all the land of England was technically owned by the Crown. Under the feudal manorial system which subsequently developed, the Crown made grants of land to earls and barons who in turn granted smaller areas to knights in return for the provision of a set period of active military service in the field called ‘knight service’. Over the years this service was slowly commuted to a money payment called ‘scutage’ and it had practically disappeared by the end of the thirteenth century, though feudal tenure was not finally abolished until 1660. These people were not Knights in the modern sense and would remain esquires unless they paid the heavy fees for knighthood (something that they were supposedly obliged to do after 1306 if their property was worth more than £40 a year). |
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| == [[Domesday Book]] == | | == Domesday Book == |
| | | *See also: [[Domesday Book]] |
| See also: [[Domesday Book]] | |
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| The first general survey of the land of England, known as Domesday Book, was compiled by order of William the Conqueror in 1086. The entries were arranged by county in two books under the name of the manor, and show the names of the tenants-in chief and their sub-tenants (the names of the tenants before the Conquest also being noted). They record the number of hides of land in the manor (a hide was about 120 acres); the number of ploughs on the demesne (that part of the manor reserved for the lord’s use) and the number of ploughs available to the tenants; the number, but not names, of homagers (jurors on the manor court), villeins (unfree men who held their land by agricultural service to the lord), cottars (cottagers), serving men or slaves, free tenants, and tenants in soccage (renters); the extent of the woodland, meadows, and pasture; the number of mills and fish ponds; how much land had been added or taken away; and the gross value of the manor in 1086 and in the time of Edward the Confessor. | | The first general survey of the land of England, known as Domesday Book, was compiled by order of William the Conqueror in 1086. The entries were arranged by county in two books under the name of the manor, and show the names of the tenants-in chief and their sub-tenants (the names of the tenants before the Conquest also being noted). They record the number of hides of land in the manor (a hide was about 120 acres); the number of ploughs on the demesne (that part of the manor reserved for the lord’s use) and the number of ploughs available to the tenants; the number, but not names, of homagers (jurors on the manor court), villeins (unfree men who held their land by agricultural service to the lord), cottars (cottagers), serving men or slaves, free tenants, and tenants in soccage (renters); the extent of the woodland, meadows, and pasture; the number of mills and fish ponds; how much land had been added or taken away; and the gross value of the manor in 1086 and in the time of Edward the Confessor. |
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| == Pipe Rolls == | | == Pipe Rolls == |
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| Research use: They are one of the major sources in the Medieval time period. They are used to show individuals and the property they owned. They are also used to show succession of tenants-in-chief.
| | Pipe rolls were one of the major sources in the Medieval time period. They are used to show individuals and the property they owned by showing rents and Crown revenue on property recorded by the Exhequer clerks. They are also used to show succession of tenants-in-chief. |
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| Record type: Land record showing rents and Crown revenue on property recorded by the Exchequer clerks.
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| Time period: 1120-1831.
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| Contents: Names of individuals involved, place of residence, succession of tenants-in-chief is given.
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| Location: The National Archives
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| Population coverage: 25% of recorded population.
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| Reliability: Very accurate as they were created by an official of the Crown.<ref name="profile" />
| | These records exist from 1120 to 1831 and include: Names of individuals involved, place of residence, succession of tenants-in-chief is given. They can be found at the National Archives. |
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| == Patent and Close Rolls == | | == Patent and Close Rolls == |
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| == Feet of Fines and Recoveries == | | == Feet of Fines and Recoveries == |
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| Because an entry on the rolls of one of the royal courts was regarded as binding upon all persons it became customary to create and transfer interests in land by bringing collusive actions in the Court of Common Pleas so that the resulting agreements were registered. One of the major sources in the Medieval time period. They are used to show relationship of individuals to their parents and also list individuals and their place of residence.<ref name="profile">The Family History Department of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, “Family History Record Profile: England,” Word document, private files of the FamilySearch Content Strategy Team, 1984-2000.</ref> | | Because an entry on the rolls of one of the royal courts was regarded as binding upon all persons it became customary to create and transfer interests in land by bringing collusive actions in the Court of Common Pleas so that the resulting agreements were registered. One of the major sources in the Medieval time period. They are used to show relationship of individuals to their parents and also list individuals and their place of residence. |
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| There were two principal methods by which this was done. In the first, called the Final Concord or Fine, the purchaser (who was the plaintiff or querient) alleged that the seller (the vendor or deforciant) had agreed to sell the property in question but had failed to do so. Before the court could reach a judgment the parties came to an out of court settlement (the Final Concord) and an order was then made which gave the purchaser the freehold of the property. The final judgment was recorded three times on a sheet of parchment which was then cut into three pieces with wavy cuts. The top left and right pieces were given to the seller and the purchaser and the bottom piece, or foot, was retained by the Court and enrolled. The resulting records in the Court of Common Pleas, called Feet of Fines, run from 1182 to 1834 (CP 25), but the later ones are little used by genealogists. They give the names of the parties, who may include a husband and wife or father and son, and provide a very brief description of the land being sold. | | There were two principal methods by which this was done. In the first, called the Final Concord or Fine, the purchaser (who was the plaintiff or querient) alleged that the seller (the vendor or deforciant) had agreed to sell the property in question but had failed to do so. Before the court could reach a judgment the parties came to an out of court settlement (the Final Concord) and an order was then made which gave the purchaser the freehold of the property. The final judgment was recorded three times on a sheet of parchment which was then cut into three pieces with wavy cuts. The top left and right pieces were given to the seller and the purchaser and the bottom piece, or foot, was retained by the Court and enrolled. The resulting records in the Court of Common Pleas, called Feet of Fines, run from 1182 to 1834 (CP 25), but the later ones are little used by genealogists. They give the names of the parties, who may include a husband and wife or father and son, and provide a very brief description of the land being sold. |
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| The second collusive action was the Recovery, in which the purchaser (or demandant) brought a case against the vendor (the freeholder or tenant-in-tail) to ‘recover’ the property, claiming that he had been ejected from it by a fictitious third party (given a name such as Hugh Hunt or Richard Rowe). The vendor would call on some other person as a ‘vouchee’ to vouch for his title and when consulted out of court by the purchaser the vouchee would disappear, allowing judgment to be made for the purchaser. The latter would then be given a freehold which effectively dispensed with any remainder or entail which there may have been on the property, indeed the process was often gone through for that purpose alone. The resulting deeds, which are recorded on the Plea and Recovery Rolls, continue to 1834 (CP 40, 43). There are manuscript lists, arranged by date, at The National Archives (see the''‘Legal Records Information 7’ ''guide online mentioned above). | | The second collusive action was the Recovery, in which the purchaser (or demandant) brought a case against the vendor (the freeholder or tenant-in-tail) to ‘recover’ the property, claiming that he had been ejected from it by a fictitious third party (given a name such as Hugh Hunt or Richard Rowe). The vendor would call on some other person as a ‘vouchee’ to vouch for his title and when consulted out of court by the purchaser the vouchee would disappear, allowing judgment to be made for the purchaser. The latter would then be given a freehold which effectively dispensed with any remainder or entail which there may have been on the property, indeed the process was often gone through for that purpose alone. The resulting deeds, which are recorded on the Plea and Recovery Rolls, continue to 1834 (CP 40, 43). There are manuscript lists, arranged by date, at The National Archives (see the''‘Legal Records Information 7’ ''guide online mentioned above). |
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| == Statute of Enrollments, 1535 == | | == Statute of Enrollments, 1535 == |
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| Leases for three lives are said to have been popular in the west of England and leases for twenty-one years in the east. Those for three lives, in which three living people (not necessarily related) were named, were cancelled or ‘determined’ at the end of 99 years, fresh names being added to the original three on payment of a fine. Although it was unwise to include the names of children who might die young this form of lease was generally considered more favourable than those for a fixed term of years. | | Leases for three lives are said to have been popular in the west of England and leases for twenty-one years in the east. Those for three lives, in which three living people (not necessarily related) were named, were cancelled or ‘determined’ at the end of 99 years, fresh names being added to the original three on payment of a fine. Although it was unwise to include the names of children who might die young this form of lease was generally considered more favourable than those for a fixed term of years. |
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| === Rentals and labour books === | | === Rentals and Labour Books === |
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| On the larger estates with good records the rentals, when used alongside the estate labour books, are a rich source of information about employees. Shane Beaver provides a good example from the records of the Marquis of Salisbury’s estate at Hatfield [''Hertfordshire People'', no. 64 (March 1998) page 13; FS Library book 942.58 D25h] where Richard Oakley, a labourer, did hedging and ditching. Richard Oakley started by renting a house from Charles Kidman, who farmed Suttons Farm and was a tenant of the Marquis. As a sub-tenant Richard Oakley does not himself appear in the records (a standard problem with sub-tenants on estates and manors), but when Charles Kidman gave up the farm in 1881, Richard Oakley became a tenant of the Marquis and appears in the estate book. His wife and children appear in the labour book doing ‘twitching’ (weeding) at 2s 6d a day. The books show how, on becoming a parkman in 1894, he moved to one of the park lodges, and later, on retirement, to one of the estate’s cottages in Hatfield New Town. | | On the larger estates with good records the rentals, when used alongside the estate labour books, are a rich source of information about employees. Shane Beaver provides a good example from the records of the Marquis of Salisbury’s estate at Hatfield [''Hertfordshire People'', no. 64 (March 1998) page 13; FS Library book 942.58 D25h] where Richard Oakley, a labourer, did hedging and ditching. Richard Oakley started by renting a house from Charles Kidman, who farmed Suttons Farm and was a tenant of the Marquis. As a sub-tenant Richard Oakley does not himself appear in the records (a standard problem with sub-tenants on estates and manors), but when Charles Kidman gave up the farm in 1881, Richard Oakley became a tenant of the Marquis and appears in the estate book. His wife and children appear in the labour book doing ‘twitching’ (weeding) at 2s 6d a day. The books show how, on becoming a parkman in 1894, he moved to one of the park lodges, and later, on retirement, to one of the estate’s cottages in Hatfield New Town. |
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| === Sales and advertisements === | | === Sales and Advertisements === |
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| Many estate and family papers contain printed advertising material about properties which have been sold in the past and many advertisements about farms in particular have appeared in local newspapers. These may relate to sale, at the end of a tenancy, of farm equipment (both for cultivation and the making of cheese) and of livestock, showing their numbers and breed. | | Many estate and family papers contain printed advertising material about properties which have been sold in the past and many advertisements about farms in particular have appeared in local newspapers. These may relate to sale, at the end of a tenancy, of farm equipment (both for cultivation and the making of cheese) and of livestock, showing their numbers and breed. |
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| {{Place|England}} | | {{Place|England}} |
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| == Additional Websites ==
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| [http://www.uklrs.co.uk/landregistry/?gclid=CLnizd3m7MMCFYaTfgod0lkA2Q Land Registry documents, including Title Register, Title Plan and Deeds for Great Britain]
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| [[Category:England Land and Property]] | | [[Category:England Land and Property]] |
| | [[Category:England]][[Category:Land and Property]] |