Blything Hundred

Blything Hundred

Blything was a hundred of eastern Suffolk, and with an area of 87,641 acres (354.67 km2) was the largest of Suffolk's 21 hundreds.

The origins of the hundred centre on the ancient royal estate of Blythburgh, whose hall housed the hundred's central meeting place.

Listed as Blidinga in the Domesday Book, the hundred's name means "the people of the Blyth" a subgroup of the Iceni who populated the valleys of the River Blyth; the hundred corresponds closely to the drainage basin of the River Blyth together with other minor rivers.[1] The name "Blyth" itself means 'blithe' or 'pleasant' and shares its name with a river in Northamptonshire, and one in Northumberland.[2]

  1. ^ P. M. Warner. Blything Hundred: A study in the Development of Settlement, 400-1400 AD (PDF) (Thesis). Leicester University. p. 109. Archived (PDF) from the original on 18 July 2011. Retrieved 14 February 2010.
  2. ^ Walter Skeat (1913). The Place-names of Suffolk.

Blything Hundred

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