Place:Cheveley Hundred, Cambridgeshire, England

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NameCheveley Hundred
TypeHundred
Located inCambridgeshire, England
the text in this section is based on an article in Wikipedia

Between Anglo-Saxon times and the 19th century Cambridgeshire was divided for administrative purposes into 17 hundreds, plus the Borough of Cambridge. Each hundred had a separate council that met each month to rule on local judicial and taxation matters.

The shire-system of East Anglia was in all probability not definitively settled before the Norman Conquest, but during the Danish occupation of the 9th century the district possessed a certain military and political organization round Cambridge, its chief town, from where the constitution and demarcation of the later shire most likely originated.

At the time of the Domesday Survey in 1086 the county was divided into the hundreds as they are now, except that the Isle of Ely, which then formed two hundreds having their meeting-place at Witchford, were subsequently divided into the four hundreds of Wisbech, Ely, North Witchford and South Witchford, while Cambridge formed a hundred by itself. The Hundred of Flendish, which might be said to be the Hundred for Cambridge, was then known as "Flamingdike".

A Vision of Britain through Time provides the following description of Cheveley Hundred from John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales:

"The hundred contains four parishes. Acres: 1,905. Population: 4,570. Houses: 917.

Cheveley Hundred is located in the easternmost part of Cambridgeshire, bordering the county of Suffolk, and specifically the town of Newmarket which is the white space to the north of Cheveley Hundred on the map. The list of parishes given here has altered from the time of Wilson's Gazetteer.

Image:Cambridgeshire1832Map of Hundreds 512px.png

List of Parishes

ParishTypeNotes
Ashley ancient parish, civil parish now Ashley cum Silverley
Cheveley ancient parish, civil parish
Kirtling ancient parish, civil parish
Newmarket All Saints chapelry, civil parish until 1889
Newmarket St. Mary ancient parish, civil parish until 1889
Silverley ancient parish now Ashley cum Silverley
Woodditton ancient parish, civil parish