Hida
Appearance
Hida[1] sive hyda (Anglosaxonice hīd) in Anglia mediaevali fuit mensura terrae, et a principio ea superficies e qua familia una vitam nancisci potebat. Hidae enumerantur regni Merciae in documento cuius titulus est "De numero hidarum in Anglia" (Tribal Hidage), regni Occidentalium Saxonum in "Hidatu burgali" (Burghal Hidage), postea Angliae fere totae in Libro de Wintonia anno 1086 composito. Polydorus Vergilius "hidam" esse asseveravit "mensuram terrae quae 20 continet iugera".[2]
Notae
[recensere | fontem recensere]- ↑ Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources apud ΛΟΓΕΙΟΝ, s.v. "hida"
- ↑ Henricus Spelman, Glossarium archaiologicum s.v. Hida Textus: vide p. 292
Verba quae insequuntur vicificanda sunt ut rationibus qualitatis et Latinitatis propositis obtemperent. Quaesumus ut paginam emendes. |
Bibliographia
[recensere | fontem recensere]- Bailey, Keith, The Hidation of Buckinghamshire, in Records of Buckinghamshire, Vol.32, 1990 (pp. 1–22)
- Darby, Henry C., Domesday England, Cambridge University Press, 1977
- Green, J.A.: The Last Century of Danegeld in The English Historical Review Vol.96, no.379 (April 1981) pp. 241–258
- Harvey, Dr Sally P.J: Domesday Book and Anglo-Norman Governance in Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 5th series, Vol.25 (1975) pp. 175–193
- Lennard, Reginald: The origin of the Fiscal Carucate in The Economic History Review Vol.14, No.1 (1944) pp. 51–63
- Stenton, Frank M., Anglo-Saxon England (3rd edn.), Oxford University Press, 1971
- Darby, Henry C. & Campbell, Eila M. J. (1961) The Domesday Geography of South Eastern England
- Darby, Henry C. & Maxwell, I. S. (1962) The Domesday Geography of Northern England
- Darby, Henry C. & Finn, R. Welldon (1967) The Domesday Geography of South West England
- Darby, Henry C. (1971) The Domesday Geography of Eastern England, 3rd ed.
- Darby, Henry C. & Terrett, I. B. (1971) The Domesday Geography of Midland England, 2nd ed.
- McDonald, John & Snooks, Graeme D. (1985) "Were the Tax Assessments of Domesday England Artificial?: the Case of Essex", in: The Economic History Review, New series, Vol. 38, No. 3, [Aug. 1985], pp. 352–72
- Snooks, Graeme D. and McDonald, John. Domesday Economy: a New Approach to Anglo-Norman History. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986 ISBN 0198285248
- Hamshere, J. D. (1987) "Regressing Domesday Book: Tax Assessments of Domesday England, in: The Economic History Review, New series, Vol. 40, No. 2. [May 1987], pp. 247-51
- Leaver, R. A. (1988) "Five Hides in Ten Counties: a Contribution to the Domesday Regression Debate", in: The Economic History Review, New series, Vol. 41, No. 4, [Nov. 1988], pp. 525–42
- Bridbury, A. R. (1990) "Domesday Book: a Re-interpretation", in: English Historical Review, Vol. 105, No. 415. [Apr. 1990], pp. 284–309