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Great Staughton

Great Staughton
Great Staughton is located in Cambridgeshire
Great Staughton
Great Staughton
Great Staughton shown within Cambridgeshire
Population 896 (2011)
OS grid reference TL137645
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town St Neots
Postcode district PE19
EU Parliament East of England
List of places
UK
England
CambridgeshireCoordinates: 52°16′01″N 0°19′59″W / 52.267°N 0.333°W / 52.267; -0.333

Great Staughton is a village and civil parish in Cambridgeshire, England. Great Staughton lies approximately 8 miles (13 km) south-west of Huntingdon. Great Staughton is situated within Huntingdonshire which is a non-metropolitan district of Cambridgeshire as well as being a historic county of England.


In 1085 William the Conqueror ordered that a survey should be carried out across his kingdom to discover who owned which parts and what it was worth. The survey took place in 1086 and the results were recorded in what, since the 12th century, has become known as the Domesday Book. Starting with the king himself, for each landholder within a county there is a list of their estates or manors; and, for each manor, there is a summary of the resources of the manor, the amount of annual rent that was collected by the lord of the manor both in 1066 and in 1086, together with the taxable value.

Great Staughton was listed in the Domesday Book in the Hundred of Toseland in Huntingdonshire; the name of the settlement was written as Tochestone in the Domesday Book. In 1086 there was just one manor at Great Staughton; the annual rent paid to the lord of the manor in 1066 had been £10 and the rent was the same in 1086.

The Domesday Book does not explicitly detail the population of a place but it records that there was 21 households at Great Staughton. There is no consensus about the average size of a household at that time; estimates range from 3.5 to 5.0 people per household. Using these figures then an estimate of the population of Great Staughton in 1086 is that it was within the range of 73 and 105 people.

The Domesday Book uses a number of units of measure for areas of land that are now unfamiliar terms, such as hides and ploughlands. In different parts of the country, these were terms for the area of land that a team of eight oxen could plough in a single season and are equivalent to 120 acres (49 hectares); this was the amount of land that was considered to be sufficient to support a single family. By 1086, the hide had become a unit of tax assessment rather than an actual land area; a hide was the amount of land that could be assessed as £1 for tax purposes. The survey records that there were 10.5 ploughlands at Great Staughton in 1086 and that there was the capacity for a further 4.5 ploughlands. In addition to the arable land, there was 24 acres (10 hectares) of meadows and 100 acres (40 hectares) of woodland at Great Staughton.


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