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March 2022                            March 2022

       BERE REGIS HISTORY SOCIETY


       Parish and Hundred

       In common  with all  other  counties in  England  especially,
       the  county  of  Dorset  has  been  divided  into  specified
       areas.  The  "Parish"  was  invented  first,  and  was  first  mentioned  under  the  Latin
       name "Parochia" in the 390s AD by the Romano-British contingent here in England.
       A "Parochia" was defined as "An area with one church and one incumbent." The
       Roman Empire had added Christianity to its wide range of religions in 333 AD and
       it became policy here too. Not much seems to have happened as just about 15
       to  23  years  later  all  the  Romans  left  Britain.  The  proper  beginnings  of  the  Parish
       system  began  between  the  690s  and  about  750  AD  under  the  Anglo-Saxon
       influence, embracing Roman Catholicism of course. The beginning of Tithe Barns
       began here by about 700 AD. The expansion across the British Isles was rolled out
       properly in the 960s AD, but it was not completed across the country until about
       1370  when  Edward  III  was  able  to  focus  on  British  matters.  The  original  Parish
       system  continued  through  the  rest  of  the  Mediaeval,  Post-Mediaeval,  Early
       Modern  and  Modern  periods,  right  up  until  the  Parish  Rate  was  compulsorily
       ended in 1868 in favour of County Council running of local matters.
                                          The  "Hundred"  system  evolved  out  of
                                          what  was  later  called  "The  County
                                          Hidage"  which  had  its  origins  between
                                          the  690s  and  about  750  AD.  There  have
                                          been various theories on the origins of the
                                          Hundred  system,  but  these  centre  on
                                          there being 100 Hides from a collection of
                                          adjacent  Parishes,  and/or  that  anciently
                                          a  Hundred  would  contain  100  families
                                          and  "the  district  that  those  families
                                          occupied."  The  Parish  was  for  religious
                                          purposes,  the  Hundred  was  for  legal
                                          jurisdiction. By the time of the Domesday
                                          Book  there  were  39  Dorset  Hundreds
       embracing  a  total  of  about  280  Parishes.  Later  in  the  Mediaeval  period  the
       Hundreds had Sessions of travelling courts which met 12 times a year on average,
       and this continued until the 15th century. They had the authority to try cases up to
       a value of 40 shillings (£2). Inflation had been so rife under the Tudors in the 16th
       century that these travelling courts ceased to operate. The Bere Hundred, at the
       beginning consisted of Bere, Kingston, Turnerspuddle, Affpuddle, part of Milborne,
       part  of  East  Stoke  and  part  of  Wool,  places  still  reflected  in  our  local  church
       ministry teams. Small legal matters continued to be managed under the Hundred
       scheme, but it was abolished in 1867.
                                                    John Pitfield, Projects Secretary

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