. A history of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight . ng of Earlstone in the parish of Burghclere. 8 Hants, i, 481£. 4 Ibid. 502*. 8 Ibid. 467^. « Ibid. 474A 7 Ibid. 8 Earlstone is not mentioned by name in Domesday Book, but it is represented by the 3 hides 2 \virgates in Clere in Clere Hundred held by William son of Baderon (ibid. 498^). Earlstone () was heldsubsequently of his descendants the baronial Monmouths. 9 The parish is represented by two entries under Chenol* (ibid. 48it, 490a), the modern Sandford,five entries under Clere (ibid. 481 b, 5080, b), and one under Hanningto


. A history of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight . ng of Earlstone in the parish of Burghclere. 8 Hants, i, 481£. 4 Ibid. 502*. 8 Ibid. 467^. « Ibid. 474A 7 Ibid. 8 Earlstone is not mentioned by name in Domesday Book, but it is represented by the 3 hides 2 \virgates in Clere in Clere Hundred held by William son of Baderon (ibid. 498^). Earlstone () was heldsubsequently of his descendants the baronial Monmouths. 9 The parish is represented by two entries under Chenol* (ibid. 48it, 490a), the modern Sandford,five entries under Clere (ibid. 481 b, 5080, b), and one under Hannington (ibid. 508^), afterwards HanningtonLancelevy ( infra). 10 Ibid. 456*. 11 Ibid. 471£. 12 Ibid. 4870. 13 Ibid. 481£, 482a. The rest of Litchfield was at this time most probably included in the royal manorof Kingsclere. 14 Till 1852 Sydmonton formed part of the parish of Kingsclere. 16 Feud. Aids, ii, 330-1. 16 Ibid. 323. 17 It was not apparently in Pastrow Hundred in the reign of Henry VIII (Exch. Lay Subs. R. Hants,bdle. 173, no. 216).. 245 A HISTORY OF HAMPSHIRE Winchester, was included in Evingar Hundred18 and is so still, and Swamp-ton also before 1346 had been transferred to the same Since 1831 the tithing of Earlstone has been transferred to the hundredof Evingar, and the hundred of Kingsclere now consists of the parishes ofEwhurst, Kingsclere, Litchfield, Sydmonton (constituted a separate parishin 1852) and Wolverton. As its name implies, Kingsclere Hundred formerly belonged to theCrown. The grant of the manor of Kingsclere to the church of St. Mary,Rouen, was followed by the grant of the hundred, the grantor being probablyKing Henry II, and his charter was confirmed by King John and by KingHenry III in By 1 280, however, the hundred had once more becomeCrown property,21 and it is probable that during the reigns of Edward I andEdward II the king held one hundred court only for the vills comprising thehundreds of Pastrow and The hu


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