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Kinver Village Website

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by: RossTaylorB
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Word Count: 597
Date: Sun, 18 Sep 2011 Time: 10:34 PM

Kinver and William the Conqueror

The initial in depth mention of Kinver is as the Village of Chenevare within the Domesday Book of 1086. The census was commissioned by William the Conqueror in a campaign to consolidate his energy following his victory over Harald the third o f Norway on the Battle of Hastings in 1066 as well as the subsequent surrender of Edgar Aetheling of England (the rightful Saxon heir towards the throne). It consists of specifics regarding the ownership of land and estates along with the employees attached to the land and the associated productive capacity. This was of excellent significance to William as he most probably used it to settle disputes over house in between the English and Norman aristocracy, at the same time as utilizing it to serve as a basis for tax and dues calculations for his coffers. The village's entry within the Domesday Book lists it as currently being the Kings land - William getting taken ownership from the son of with the late Earl ?lfgar of Mercia who played an active part within the 1069 rebellion against William. The location is listed as obtaining a size of 5? hides (about 660acres) and 16 ploughs of cultivated land. A single plough refers to a plough group (eight oxen and one particular physical plough) and was employed to measure the agricultural capability of the land as it was a regular unit of measurement with the time, as a group was capable to cultivate a selected area of land in a season. The Domesday Book entry also particulars that there was a portion of land worked in demesne (land worked exclusively for the owner) by a single Plough, 3 slaves (peasants tied completely to the land and proficiently owned by the landowner), 17 villans (peasants who worked land for the lord element time and also farmed land for his very own provision), and 7 bordars (a peasant who had even less land he could farm for himself then a villan). There is certainly also a mention of two water mills, who contributed a really worth of 20 shillings towards the village - no tiny quantity thinking about the village's total worth amounted at only a single hundred shillings. The vast are of woodland that would have surrounded Kinver is pointed out as covering three leagues in length and one particular in width, translating to an area or about 16.five by five.five kilometres by today's standards.

Kinver Inside the Late Middle Ages


For the 564 years following Phillip of Kinver's death, the regions estates passed to numerous knights, lords, royalty as well as some monks until finally Phillip Foley, the Son with the eminent Thomas Foley the industrialist, purchased the manors of Dunsley and Stourton in 1672. The Manors then passed through the Foley family including Philip's son Paul (1716), Pauls son William (1735) and Williams sister Elizabeth. Elizabeth then married into the Hodgetts loved ones, taking John Hodgetts of Shut Finish as her husband in 1755. The estates then descended with all the Hodgetts family members with John's death in 1789, but had been under no circumstances fully occupied by the family, who instead favored to manage their affairs from their household property in nearby Prestwood. The estates then returned to the Foley household when Eliza Maria (of the Hodgetts) married a distant cousin, Edward Foley of Stoke Edith (Herefordshire). The Dunsley, Stourton and Prestwood estates then passed to their son John Hodgetts-Foley, who changed his name back to Foley and steadily sold his holdings until he no longer had a presence in the area inside the early 1900's

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