Explore these editions of the Domesday Book for the English counties south of the rivers Ribble and Tees, the border with Scotland at that time. Findmypast’s browse search allows you to search each counties book from beginning to end.
Explore these editions of the Domesday Book for the English counties south of the rivers Ribble and Tees, the border with Scotland at that time. Findmypast’s browse search allows you to search each counties book from beginning to end.
The Domesday Book is Britain’s earliest public record, it was commissioned in December 1085 by King William the Conqueror, and it provides an invaluable insight into 11th century Norman England.
The ‘Great Survey’ was completed in August 1086, it contained records for 13,418 settlements in England south of the rivers Ribble and Tees, the border with Scotland at that time. The book is written in a short form of Latin.
Needing to raise taxes to pay for his army, the survey was used to assess the wealth and assets of his subjects throughout the land. The survey provides extensive records of landholders, their tenants, the amount of land they owned, and how many people occupied the land.
It was not until 1873 that a survey approaching the scope and extent of the Domesday Book was attempted again in Britain.
The following counties are included:
Bedfordshire
Berkshire
Buckinghamshire
Cambridgeshire
Cheshire
Cornwall
Derbyshire
Devon
Dorset
Gloucestershire
Hampshire
Herefordshire
Hertfordshire
Huntingdonshire
Kent
Leicestershire
Lincolnshire
Middlesex
Northamptonshire
Nottinghamshire
Oxfordshire
Rutland
Shropshire
Somerset
Staffordshire
Surrey
Sussex
Warwickshire
Wiltshire
Worcestershire
Yorkshire