Anglo-Saxon and early Norman Cambridge
One settlement
was on the ruins of the Romano-British town and called Grantaceastr in the
seventh century. Its name of The Old Borough survived to modern times. A burh
was an Anglo-Saxon defended settlement. King Alfred (871 - 899) created a
network of them to defend against the Vikings.
The other settlement was on the lower ground south and east of the river,
centred roughly in the St Benet church area. They were united under Mercian
rule as a port called Grantabrycge in the ninth century. The Anglo-Saxon bridge
was probably built by King Offa (756 - 793).
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that after the great Danish army wintered
in Repton in 873/4, part of it came to Grantebrycge led by the kings Godrum,
Oscytel and Anwynd. They'd passed through in 870 but this time stayed a whole
year.
A few years later it came under Danish rule, which lasted 40 years. During
this time the town acquired various Scandinavian features such as government
by "lawmen" and a lasting aversion to outside interference. The
Danes settled mainly to the south of modern Quayside, in the Holm, as indicated
by the dedication of St Clement's church there - common in Danish settlements.
They are also described as Irish merchants so may have originated from the
Viking port of Dublin.
In 921 the town swore allegiance to the English king (Edward the Elder), which
subsequently helped earn it recognition as the county town. The town minted
coins from the tenth century until the Conquest.
There was a final visit of looting and burning by the Danes in 1010.
With its good trading links to the Continent and a market, Cambridge became
prosperous. The Great Bridge (now Magdalene Bridge) was the last river crossing
downriver to the mouth at King's Lynn. Merchants founded St Benet's Church
about 1025. The churches from modern St John's Street to King's Parade probably
were all founded before 1066 and by merchants in this area, above the main
docks.
The first Norman Sheriff Picot treated the place (then known as Cantebrigge
or Grentebrige) as his own, knocking down 27 houses to build a castle (probably
of wood), seizing land, building mills and raising taxes. However his wife
persuaded him to found St Giles Church just below the castle, which grew to
become Barnwell Priory.
Various religious orders and hospitals became established, such as Leper Hospital
and the Hospital of St John.
Domesday Book entry.
This set out to compare property ownership and population before 1066 and
in 1086.
The Burgum de Grentebrige was a Hundred - the subdivision of a county of roughly
a hundred households (also known as wapentakes - weapon-takes - in the Danelaw).
In the borough there were ten wards before 1066 but two were merged for the
survey as 27 houses had been destroyed for the castle.
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