. A history of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight . fBasingstoke at a rent of £72 12s. This grant appears to have continued inforce till 1256, in which year the king issued another charter whereby he 1 Hants, \, 456, 469, 471, 479, 480, 487, 493, 502, 509. The unnamed church inBasingstoke Hundred (ibid. 469) is Basing Church (). The hide of land belonging to it represents themanor of Basing Byfleet. Lichepit (ibid. 471) is Lickpit in Basing (). Campessete (ibid. 480) isKempshott, a tithing in Winslade (). Heche (ibid. 502) is Hatch, now in Cliddesden ().Newnham, Up Nately a


. A history of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight . fBasingstoke at a rent of £72 12s. This grant appears to have continued inforce till 1256, in which year the king issued another charter whereby he 1 Hants, \, 456, 469, 471, 479, 480, 487, 493, 502, 509. The unnamed church inBasingstoke Hundred (ibid. 469) is Basing Church (). The hide of land belonging to it represents themanor of Basing Byfleet. Lichepit (ibid. 471) is Lickpit in Basing (). Campessete (ibid. 480) isKempshott, a tithing in Winslade (). Heche (ibid. 502) is Hatch, now in Cliddesden ().Newnham, Up Nately and the extra-parochial district of Andwell are not mentioned by name in DomesdayBook, being at that time included in Maplederwell (). Clere (Kingsclere) and Esseborne (HurstbourneTarrant) are also entered under Basingstoke Hundred (ibid. 456), but this is due, apparently, to an error, forthey had already given their names to hundreds (the Clere and Esseborne Hundreds of Domesday Bookafterwards known as Kingsclere and Pastrow). 8 Ibid. IJ3 15 A HISTORY OF HAMPSHIRE made the grant perpetual at a fee-farm rent of £80 a From this datethe hundred has followed the same descent as the manor. An inquisition held in 1275 shows clearly that the hundred ofBasingstoke comprised by this time also the tithings of Woodgarstonin the parish of Monk Sherborne and Hazeley partly in Heckfield and partlyin Hartley There is no mention, however, of Somershill,which was afterwards included in the A hundred court was held every third Saturday at court leet or view of frankpledge held twice a year at Basingstoke onthe first Saturday after the Feast of St. Martin and the first Saturday afterHock-tide6 was attended by tithingmen from Basing, Basingstoke, Bramley,Chineham, Cliddesden, Eastrop, Hatch, Hazeley, Kempshott, Maplederwell,Nately Scures, Newnham, Sherborne St. John, Somershill, Steventon,Tunworth, Up Nately, Winslade and Woodgarston,7 and cer


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