Some of the names of the hundreds ended with the suffix shire as in Pydarshire, East and West Wivelshire and Powdershire which were first recorded as names between 1184 and 1187.[1]
In the
Cornish language the word keverang (pl. keverangow) is the equivalent for English "hundred" and the Welsh
cantref. The word, in its plural form, appears in place names like Meankeverango (i.e. stone of the hundreds) in 1580 (now The Enys, north of
Prussia Cove and marking the southern end of the boundary between the hundreds of
Penwith and
Kerrier), and Assa Govranckowe 1580, Kyver Ankou c. 1720, also on the Penwith – Kerrier border near
Scorrier. It is also found in the singular form at Buscaverran, just south of
Crowan churchtown and also on the Penwith-Kerrier border. The hundred of Trigg is mentioned by name during the 7th century, as "Pagus Tricurius", "land of three war hosts".[2]
History
The division of
Wessex into hundreds is thought to date from the reign of
King Athelstan, and in the Geld Inquest of 1083, only seven hundreds are found in Cornwall, identified by the names of the chief manors of each:
Connerton,
Winnianton,
Pawton,
Tybesta,
Stratton, Fawton and Rillaton (corresponding to Penwith, Kerrier, Pydar, Powder, Trigg, West Wivel and East Wivel). At the time of the
Domesday Survey of 1086, the internal order of the Cornish
manors in the
Exeter Domesday Book is in most cases based on the hundreds to which they belonged, although the hundred names are not used.[3][4][5][6]
All of the lordships of the Hundreds of Cornwall belonged, and still belong, to the
Duchy of Cornwall, apart from Penwith which belonged to the
Arundells of Lanherne. The Arundells sold their lordship to the Hawkins family in 1813 and the Hawkinses went on to sell it to the Paynters in 1832. The Lordship of Penwith came with a great number of rights over the entire hundred. These included: rights to try certain cases of
trespass, trespass on the law,
debt and detinue, to appoint a jailor for the detention of persons apprehended, to receive high-rent from the lords of the principal
manors and to claim the
regalia of the navigable rivers and havens, the profits of the
royal gold and silver mines, and all
wrecks,
escheats,
deodands,
treasure trove,
waifs,
estrays, goods of
felons and
droits of admiralty happening within the hundred.[7]
The origins of the names have puzzled some earlier writers on the subject: Penwith is certainly the name of Land's End in Cornish (earliest occurrence in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for 997); Kerrier (sometimes Kirrier) is thought by Thomas to be derived from an obsolete name (ker hyr = long fort) of Castle Pencaire on
Tregonning Hill,
Breage; Lesnewth denotes a place where a 'new court' has been established (the 'old court' having been at Henlis(-ton):
Helstone, formerly Helston-in-Trigg); Powder has no certain derivation: 'pou' means 'territory' in Cornish; Pydar (or Pyder) has been variously explained: perhaps it derives from a Cornish word meaning 'a fourth part';
Stratton was at the time of Domesday an important manor and 200 years earlier it is mentioned as 'Strætneat' (etym. dub.);
Trigg is explained in the separate article; East and West (
Wivelshire) must have originally had a Cornish name but it is not recorded. The original English name was Twofold-shire, because it was divided into the two parts, East and West. The names East Twofold-shire and West Twofold-shire were then misdivided, giving the name Wivelshire.[9]
List of hundreds in 1841
By 1841 Cornwall was composed of ten
hundreds as listed below here:
^Henderson, Charles 'A note on the hundreds of Pydar and Powder' in Essays in Cornish History (Oxford University Press, 1935)
^W. G. Hoskins, The Westward Expansion of Wessex (Leicester: Univ. Press, 1960)
^Thomas, Charles, 'Settlement History in Early Cornwall: I; the antiquity of the hundreds' in: Cornish Archaeology vol. 3 (St Ives: Cornwall Archaeological Society, 1964), pp. 70–79