Page:The Victoria History of the County of Surrey Volume 3.djvu/32

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A HISTORY OF SURREY

The lordship of the hundred continued in the family of More and More- Molyneux of Loseley till 1871, when it was conveyed with the manor to Mr. James Stewart Hodgson. The lordship of the hundred was by this time meaningless. The courts of the hundred had become at an early period indistinguishable from those of the manor. There are at Loseley a large number of Hundred Court Rolls, views of frankpledge, and views of frank- pledge on the rectory manor, from the time of Edward III downwards. Courts were held at three weeks' intervals for 'playnts and accions,' dealing with tenants of all the manors in the hundred except the royal manors of Witley and Puttenham. Two 'lawdays,' or leets, were held at Hocktide and Michaelmas, except for the town of Godalming, for which a 'lawday' was held on St. Matthew's Day; this was called Enton lawday. These included in their business the view of frankpledge, the Visus Personatus, election of tithing-men, of ale-taster, a reeve (prepositus) for Godalming by the customary tenants, and of a bedell, and the receiving of the burgage rents of Haslemere. There were also yearly leets at Catteshull, Hambledon, Loseley, Artington, Farncombe, and Compton. The hundred and three-weekly courts and Enton court were held, latterly at least, in the old town hall of Godalming, where the market house now stands.[1] Fines levied in the hundred court were accounted for to the More-Molyneux family as lords of the hundred up to at least I79O.[2]

  1. Rolls at Loseley, passim, and Misc. Bks. Exch. L.T.R. vol. 169; Godalming Hundred, 1–3 Edw. VI.
  2. Accts. at Loseley.


Index Map to the Hundred of Godalming

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