
The Kingdom of Mercia at its greatest
extent (7th to 9th centuries) is shown in green, with the original
core area (6th century) given a darker tint.
The
Tribal Hidage is a list of territorial
assessments in
Anglo-Saxon
England which lists regions and the number of
hides those regions contained. The earliest copy
of the document is British Library, MS Harley 3271 which dates from
the 11th century.
A slightly different recension survives in a
number of later medieval manuscripts containing legal tracts on the
history of London
.
Though we
do not know the date for or context surrounding the list's
creation, it is generally understood to have been created in
Mercia
sometime between the mid-7th and mid-9th
centuries.
The Regions
The Tribal Hidage lists a complicated array of regions and their
hidage assessments.
Sizes range from small
Mercian
regions such as suth gyrwa and east
wixna (300 hides) to an estimate of 100,000 hides for Wessex
.
The
assessment is much more detailed in what is now the English
Midlands
, strongly
suggesting that this was a Mercian document. Other kingdoms,
which have been referred to as part of the '
Heptarchy', are counted as much larger
units.
It is not clear why these larger regions were juxtaposed alongside
numerous smaller regions. Other regions, such as Hwinca (
Hwicce, 7000 hides) and Ciltern (4000 hides) were
also of considerable size. Many of the groups listed are highly
obscure: some can only be identified and localised with the aid of
place-names, and a few cannot be
confidently localised at all.
The complexity of the document may mirror the complexity of
political structures in early
Anglo-Saxon England, an important
criticism of the concept of
Heptarchy.
Administration
It is not clear for what purpose the Tribal Hidage was created,
though it may have been a
tribute list. Most
importantly, it demonstrates that assessments in hides were made in
this period, and most probably earlier.
Bede
makes passing references to hide assessments in his
Ecclesiastic History, written in 731.
Anglo-Saxon kings must have utilised
assessments to extract labour and resources for the creation of
projects such as Offa's
Dyke
. Military service,
tax and payments in kind were assessed on the
hide level in later
Anglo-Saxon
England and Tribal Hidage shows this may have been happening
earlier.
Alfred of Wessex used a similar hide
assessment system in Wessex
to manage
his new system of burhs, resulting in
the document known as the Burghal
Hidage. The number of men required to man the wall of a
town or fort was given in land units.
Notes
References
- S. Basset ed. The Origins of the Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms,
(Leicester University Press, 1989)
- John Blair, "The Tribal Hidage", in The Blackwell
Encyclopaedia of Anglo-Saxon England. eds. Michael Lapidge et
al. (Blackwell, 1999) ISBN 0-631-22492-0
- James Campbell et al., The Anglo-Saxons, (Penguin,
1991), pp. 58–61
- David Dumville, 'The Tribal Hidage: an Introduction to its
Texts and their History', in The Origins of Anglo-Saxon
Kingdoms, ed. S. Bassett (Leicester, 1989), pp. 225–30
- N.J. Higham, An English empire: Bede and the early
Anglo-Saxon kings, (Manchester U.P., 1995), pp. 74–111. ISBN
0-7190-4424-3
External links
- Text of Tribal Hidage The text of several
recensions of the Tribal Hidage transcribed and compared on the
Georgetown University Web site