Extensive Definition
A hundred is a geographic division used in
England,
Denmark,
South
Australia and some parts of the USA, Germany (Southern
Schleswig), Sweden (and today's
Finland)
and Norway,
which historically was used to divide a larger region into smaller
administrative
divisions. Alternative names include wapentake,
herred (Danish, Norwegian), härad (Swedish) and kihlakunta
(Finnish)
The name is derived from the number one hundred,
and in some areas it may once have referred to a hundred men under
arms — in England,
specifically, it has been suggested that it referred to the amount
of land sufficient to sustain one hundred families, defined as the
land covered by one hundred "hides".
It was a traditional Germanic
system described as early as AD 98 by Tacitus (the
centeni). Similar systems were used in the traditional
administrative regimes of China and Japan.
England
In England a hundred
was the division of a shire for administrative, military
and judicial purposes under the common
lawhttp://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/types/status_page.jsp?unit_status=Hundred.
Originally, when introduced by the Saxons between
613 and
1017, a
hundred had enough land to sustain approximately one hundred
households headed by a hundred-man or hundred eolder. He was
responsible for administration, justice, and supplying military
troops, as well as leading its forces. The office was not
hereditary, but by the 10th century
the office was selected from among a few outstanding
families.
Hundreds were further divided. Larger or more
populous hundreds were split into divisions (or in Sussex, half
hundreds). All hundreds were divided into tithings,
which contained ten households. Below that, the basic unit of land
was called the hide, which
was enough land to support one family and varied in size from 60 to
120 old acres, or 15 to 30
modern acres (6 to 12 ha) depending on the quality and fertility of the land. Compare
with township.
Above the hundred was the shire under the control of a
shire-reeve (or
sheriff). Hundred
boundaries were independent of both parish and county boundaries,
although often aligned, meaning that a hundred could be split
between counties (usually only a fraction), or a parish could be
split between hundreds.
The system of hundreds was not as stable as the
system of counties being established at the time, and lists
frequently differ on how many hundreds a county has. The Domesday
Book contained a radically different set of hundreds than that
which would later become established, in many parts of the country.
The number of hundreds in each county varied wildly. Leicestershire
had six (up from four at Domesday), whereas Devon, nearly three
times larger, had thirty-two.
Over time, the principal functions of the hundred
became the administration of law and the keeping of the peace. By
the twelfth
century the hundred court was held twelve times a year. This
was later increased to being held fortnightly, although an
ordinance of 1234 reduced the frequency to once every three weeks.
In some hundreds, courts were held at a fixed place; while in
others, courts moved with each sitting to a different location. The
main duties of the hundred court were the maintenance of the
frankpledge system.
Where the hundred was under the jurisdiction of the crown, the
chief magistrate was a sheriff. However, many hundreds were in
private hands, with the lordship of the hundred being attached to
the principal manor
of the area and becoming hereditary. Where a hundred was under a
lord, a steward
was appointed in place of a sheriff.
The importance of the hundred courts declined
from the seventeenth
century, and most of the powers were extinguished with the
establishment of county
courts in 1867. The remaining duty of the inhabitants of a
hundred to make good damages caused by riot was ended in 1886, when the
cost was transferred to the county police rate. Although hundreds
had no administrative or legal role after this date, they have
never been formally abolished.
Groupings of hundreds were used to define
parliamentary
constituencies from 1832 to 1885. On the redistribution of
seats in 1885 a different county subdivision, the petty
sessional division was used.
By the 19th century
several different single-purpose subdivisions of counties, such as
poor
law unions, sanitary
districts, and highway
districts sprang up, filling the administrative role previously
played by hundreds.
Several ancient hundred names give their name to
modern local
government districts.
The Chiltern Hundreds
The Chiltern
Hundreds are notable as a legal
fiction, owing to a quirk of British Parliamentary law. A
Crown Steward was appointed to maintain law and order in the
area, but the position's duties ceased to be required in the
16th
century, and the holder ceased to gain any benefits during the
17th
century. The position has since been used as a procedural
device to allow
resignation from the House of Commons.
Other terms
A wapentake is a term derived from the Old Norse
vápnatak
http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1O27:wapentake/wapentake.html?refid=ip_hf,
the rough equivalent of an Anglo-Saxon
hundred. The word denotes an administrative meeting place,
typically a crossroads or a ford in a river. The origin of the word
is not known. Folk
etymology has it that voting would be denoted or conducted by
the show of weapons, an
idea perhaps suggested by references in The Germania of Tacitus or current
practice in the Swiss canton of
Appenzell
Innerrhoden. According to other authorities weapons were not
flourished at a Norse þing and "weapon taking" or vopnatak was the
end of an assembly, when one was allowed to take weapons up again,
providing another possible origin of the wapentake.
The Danelaw counties of
Yorkshire,
Derbyshire,
Leicestershire,
Northamptonshire,
Nottinghamshire,
Rutland and
Lincolnshire
were divided into wapentakes, just as most of the remainder of
England was
divided into hundreds.
In Yorkshire, a Norse wapentake usually replaced
several Anglo-Saxon hundreds. This process was complete by 1086 in
the North and West Ridings,
but continued in the East Riding until the mid 12th century.
In some counties, such as Leicestershire, the
wapentakes recorded at the time of the Domesday
Book evolved into hundreds later on. In others, such as
Lincolnshire,
the term remained in use.
The term ward was
used in a similar manner in the four northern counties of Cumberland,
Durham,
Northumberland
and Westmorland.
Lathes
in Kent and
rapes
in Sussex
consisted of several hundreds, and filled some roles usually
associated with hundreds.
In Wales the hundred replaced traditional units
such as the cantref (or
cantred) or commote. Irish counties were divided into
baronies.
Scandinavia
The term hundare (hundred) was used in Svealand (the core
region of early Sweden) and
present-day Finland. Eventually
that division was superseded by introducing the härad or Herred,
which was the name in the rest of Scandinavia. This word was either
derived from Proto-Germanic
*harja-raiðō (warband) or Proto-Norse
*harja-raiða (war equipment, cf. Wapentake)http://runeberg.org/svetym/0347.html.
Hundreds were not organized in Norrland, the
northern sparsely populated part of Sweden. Today the
hundreds serve no administrative role in Sweden.
It is not entirely clear when hundreds were
organised in the western part of Finland. The name of the province
of Satakunta,
roughly meaning hundred, hints at influences from the times before
the Northern
Crusades, Christianization,
and incorporation into Sweden.
United States
Counties in Delaware, New Jersey and
Pennsylvania
were divided into hundreds in the seventeenth
century, in imitation of the British system. They survive in
Delaware (see
List of Delaware Counties and Hundreds), and were used as tax
reporting and voting
districts until the 1960s, but now serve
no administrative role, their only current official legal use being
in real-estate title descriptions.http://www2.lib.udel.edu/subj/genealogy/resguide/hund.htm
The hundred was also used as a division of the
county in Maryland. Carroll
County, Maryland, was composed in 1836 by taking the
following hundreds from Baltimore
County: North Hundred, Pipe Creek Hundred, Delaware Upper
Hundred, Delaware Lower Hundred and from Frederick
County: Pipe Creek Hundred, Westminster Hundred, Unity Hundred,
Burnt House Hundred, Piney Creek Hundred, and Taneytown
Hundred.
Some plantations in early colonial Virginia used the
term hundred in their names, such as Martin's
Hundred, and Flowerdew Hundred.
Australia
In South Australia land titles still record which hundred a parcel of land is located in. Similar to the notion of the South Australian counties listed on the system of titles, hundreds are not generally used when referring to a district and are little known by the general population. Cumberland County (Sydney) was also divided into hundreds in the nineteenth century, although these were later repealed. A hundred is traditionally one hundred square miles. http://www.atlas.sa.gov.au/go/resources/atlas-of-south-australia-1986/the-course-of-settlement/land-survey-and-disposalSee also
- List of hundreds of England and Wales
- Hundred Rolls
- List of hundreds of Sweden
- Moot Mound The meeting place of an Anglo-Saxon Hundred.
- Attundaland
- Chiltern Hundreds
- Fjärdhundraland
- Leidang
- Roslagen
- Tiundaland
- Traditional administrative systems
- Feudal measurement
- Cantref
- Henry de Bracton
References
Wapentake in Danish: Herred
Wapentake in German: Harde
Wapentake in Finnish: Kihlakunta
Wapentake in Croatian: Härad
Wapentake in Italian: Centena
Wapentake in Dutch: Herred
Wapentake in Norwegian Nynorsk: Herad
Wapentake in Norwegian: Herred
Wapentake in Russian: Сотня (административная
единица)
Wapentake in Swedish: Härad