. A history of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight . ield were in BosmereHundred,3 while the Hampshire portion of Stratfield Mortimer was enteredunder Bountisborough By the 14th century the hundred hadassumed its modern dimensions,6 the only exception being that it still includedthe tithing of In 1639 a witness in an Exchequer suit deposed thatthe tithing of Minley and the lands belonging to the farm of Minley laywithin the hundred of Holdshot ;7 and another stated that he knew thatfor his time there had been a tithingman continued for the tithing of Minleyas a distinct tithing
. A history of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight . ield were in BosmereHundred,3 while the Hampshire portion of Stratfield Mortimer was enteredunder Bountisborough By the 14th century the hundred hadassumed its modern dimensions,6 the only exception being that it still includedthe tithing of In 1639 a witness in an Exchequer suit deposed thatthe tithing of Minley and the lands belonging to the farm of Minley laywithin the hundred of Holdshot ;7 and another stated that he knew thatfor his time there had been a tithingman continued for the tithing of Minleyas a distinct tithing from the tithings of Hawley and Yateley, that suchtithingman was always elected at his majestys court for the hundred ofHoldshot and usually took up all waives and estrays and other royalties 1 Cf. Pop. Ret. of 1831 and 1841. * Hants, i, 472^, 483^, 490^, 4920, 49;^, 496a, 503^, 505/7. * Ibid. 483^. 4 Ibid. 491*. 4 Feud. Aids, ii, 313, 331. * Vide Exch. Lay Subs. R. Hants, bdle. 175, no. Exch. Dep. Hil. 14 & 15 Chas. I, 13. 3«. A HISTORY OF HAMPSHIRE happening within the tithing of Minley as lying within his majestys hundredof Holdshot, and that the tithingman of Minley was sometimes amerced atthe said court for not appearing By 1831, however, Minley wasreckoned as part of Yateley, and was therefore returned with the hundred Until 1228 the hundred of Holdshot was one of the five out-hundredsbelonging to the royal manor of Its separation is indicated bythe wording of the charter of Henry III, which in that year granted onlythe manor of Basingstoke with the in-hundred to the good men of the townof Basingstoke at a fee-farm Holdshot being a royal hundred cameunder the Parliamentary Survey of the Crown property in the time of theCommonwealth. From this survey it appears that the courts leet and lawdayfor the hundred were held under a certain oak called The Hundred Oak inHeckfield at Michaelmas and EVERSLEY Everes
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