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Gentleman's Magazine 1812 part 2 p.233
of placing many Cities and Towns at the end of the
respective Counties:- and, for the sake of comparision,
other Towns, which have arisen into importance since the
disuse of granting charters and immunities, although these
Towns are for every purpose included within some Hundred of
the County,- are placed with the rest. The most ready way
therefore of finding the Population of a principal Town, is
to refer to the Summary of its County, before searching for
the Hundred in which it is locally situate. The Metropolis
presents an unusual difficulty, as extending into two
Counties, and therefore has been necessarily inserted
distinctly in an Appendix. In the County Summaries the Total
of entire Hundreds is usually to be found; in the Body of
the County all recognized Sub-divisions of the Hundred are
distinguished, each with its separate Total.
'So far the arrangement of the ensuing volume differs little
from that of 1801, nor indeed from the several Poor Returns
of 1776, 1786, and 1803; nor ought it to differ from
established precedent, without good reason for so doing. But
the very repetition of such inquiries has been found to
render it absolutely necessary to enter more minutely into
the relative connexion and identity of places than before.
This necessity will best be understood by stating, that
there are in England and Wales about 550 Parishes which are
known to extend into Two Counties, or into more than One
hundred or other Jurisdiction; and that every one of these
places creates a danger of duplicate entry. No person
entrusted with the care of perfecting the Population
Returns, can fail to refer to all preceding authorities;
nor, doing so, can fail to apply for Returns to Parish
Officers, who apparently, but not really, have made a
default: nor can any effort of memory prevent this; the
orthography of the names of places being too little settled,
and indeed many names identically the same occuring too
often. to permit any certain recognition of the same place.
The best method of avoiding these difficulties appeared to
lie in a more careful attention to the parochial connexion
of places; besides that for many purposes, particularly
ecclesiastical, the knowledge of the Population of a
Parish is, at least, as useful as that of its
constituent parts. The instruction, prefixed to the
questions of the printed Schedule, was intended to produce
information of this kind, which indeed had before been asked
with some effect, as appears in the Poor Return Abstract of
1803; with the help of which, and of the present Returns, it
was hoped that a successful attempt might be made, to
ascertain the parochial connexion of all places in Great
Britain; so that no Parish should be named in the
Enumeration Abstract, without a reference to all its
constituent parts; and that no such part should be named
without a reference to its Parish; and this whether the
whole Parish be in the same County and Hundred, or
otherwise.
'In this attempt some difficulty has occurred, which renders
it necessary to enter into a brief Statement respecting the
Parochial Division of the Kingdom; which may be deemed
Ecclesiastical rather than Civil.
'The Country Parishes in England (in the modern sense of the
word Parish) seem originally to have been the same extent
and limits as the several Manors; nor could it well be
otherswise, because, when it became settled, during the
Ninth and Tenth Centuries, that Tithe was generally due to
the Church, every Lord of an independent Manor would of
course appoint a Clergyman of his own chusing, or make a
donation of his Tithes to some religious community. Hence
the Parochial Division of England appears to have been
nearly the same as now established, in the Taxatio
Ecclesiatica, which was compiled in the reign of King
Edward the First. (A.D. 1288-1292.)
'In the Towns indeed there is considerable variation,
personal tithes having been much more productive before the
Reformation of Religion than afterwards, and consequently a
greater number of Clergymen maintained in populous places.
Thus the City of London (within and without the Walls, but
not including the Borough of Southwark), which now reckons
108 Parishes, forming no more than 72 Ecclesiastical
Benefices, had at that time 140; Norwich, in like manner, is
reduced from 70 Parishes to 37, and other antient Cities in
proportion: a sufficient indication that the number of
Parishes in Towns was formerly suffered to increase in
proportion to the population: and, besides that personal
Tythes and Dues must always have been in a great degree
voluntary, it appears from the Taxatio Ecclesiastica,
that the profits accruing from one and the same Parish were
not confined to one Spiritual Person, nor even to one
Religious House or Community. Under such circumstances, it
is not likely that Town-Parishes were antiently limited,
either in number or extent; but the conflicting rights of
Tithe-owners, and the perambulations ordained by the Canon
Law, must have
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