. A history of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight . it was a member By 1316 the hundredwas considerably changed ;Pamber and Inhurst had beenadded,6 while Bransbury, NortonValery and Wonston were in-cluded in Buddlesgate In the 16th century thehundred of Barton Stacey remained unaltered,8 but Inhurst does not seem tohave been included in 1652,9 and it is given in the return of Baughurst in1 831,10 in which year Bransbury, Drayton and Newton Stacey were returnedas tithings of Barton Stacey parish, while Sutton Scotney was added to theparish of Colemore and Priors Dean,
. A history of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight . it was a member By 1316 the hundredwas considerably changed ;Pamber and Inhurst had beenadded,6 while Bransbury, NortonValery and Wonston were in-cluded in Buddlesgate In the 16th century thehundred of Barton Stacey remained unaltered,8 but Inhurst does not seem tohave been included in 1652,9 and it is given in the return of Baughurst in1 831,10 in which year Bransbury, Drayton and Newton Stacey were returnedas tithings of Barton Stacey parish, while Sutton Scotney was added to theparish of Colemore and Priors Dean, though the latter is not mentioned in theDomesday Survey, belonged to the hundred of Barton Stacey till they were 1 The extent of the hundred as given in Pop. Ret. 1831. 2 Hants, i, 452^, 489^, 497^, 467*7, 500^ 4940, 4984, 504^, 488^. 3 Ibid. 452. 4 Ibid. 470. 5 Misc. Inq. file 10, no. 19. 6 Feud. Aids, ii, 311. 7 Ibid. 309. 8 Exch. Lay Subs. R. bdle. 175, no. 495. a Pari. Surv. Hants, 1652, no. 3. 10 Pop. Ret. 1831. 11 Ibid. 4*5. A HISTORY OF HAMPSHIRE included in the upper half-hundred of East Meon in 1834,12 in which yearthe Worthies were transferred to Fawley and Pamber to BasingstokeHundred,13 so that the hundred of Barton Stacey was reduced to the parishof that name, with its tithings of Bransbury, Drayton and Newton Stacey. The hundred of Barton Stacey was granted by King John to Rogo deSacy or Stacey in 1206,14 and afterwards remained in the possession of thelords of the manor of Barton Stacey. When the estate was divided betweenthe daughters and co-heiresses of Aimery de Sacy, the profits of the courtwhich was held at Barton Stacey were also divided,15 and they were shared bythe lords of the moieties till the whole manor came into the hands of ThomasSalmon in A survey of the hundred was taken by the Parliamentary Commissionersin 1 652,17 but this seems to have been owing to a mistake, for it was neverin the possession of Charles I. 12 Hervey, Hist
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