Cashio Hundred: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Hundreds of Hertfordshire]]
{{Hertfordshire hundreds}}

Revision as of 09:21, 26 February 2016

The Cashio Hundred highlighted in Hertfordshire

The Cashio Hundred, formerly the Liberty of St Albans is a hundred of Hertfordshire

As the Liberty of St Albans, it was an extraordinary civil jurisdiction in which power belonged to the Abbey of St Alban. The abbey's scattered estates across the county were drawn together as the Liberty of St Albans, for which reason the hundred is scattered, consisting of a main, contiguous piece in the southeast of the county and several estates further west. The Liberty also separates the Dacorum Hundred from its southernmost parishes.

History

The origins of the liberty are unclear, but the abbots of St Albans claimed that the privileges had first been granted by King Offa of Mercia, who founded the abbey in 793.[1] Exactly what powers the liberty possessed previous to the twelfth century are not known. Edward I gave the abbot of St Albans palatine powers equal to those enjoyed by the bishops of Durham and Ely.

At the time of the Domesday Book the liberty was known as Albanestou. The boundaries of the area expanded over time, including at times parts of Buckinghamshire. It became known by the alternative titles of St Albans Hundred, and eventually as the Hundred of Cashio.

With the dissolution of the abbey the Borough of St Albans was granted a charter of incorporation as a free borough, having previously been under the control of the abbot. The liberty was henceforth placed under the corporation of the borough. Palatine status was discontinued, although the borough and liberty retained its own quarter sessions. The administration was headed by a high steward chosen by the corporation.

The liberty was extinguished and its authority assumed by the justices of Hertfordshire in 1874 by Act of Parliament, the Liberty of St Albans Act (37 & 38 Vict. c.45).

Parishes

By the nineteenth century the liberty contained all or part of the following parishes:[2]

References

  1. The hundred of Cashio- The Victoria County History of Hertfordshire}}
  2. Youngs, F.A., Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England, Vol. I, London, 1979
Hundreds of Hertfordshire

Braughing • Broadwater • Cashio • Dacorum • Edwintree • Hertford • Hitchin • Odsey