- (1086)
contains the
first recorded spelling of the
surname as "Ketel de
Sudtone"; "Suttuna" also
appeared in 1086 in
records from Ely, Cambridgeshire....
- for the
aspiring pilot. The
place was
recorded in the
Domesday Book as
Sudtone,
meaning "south settlement". The prefix,
first recorded in the 13th century...
- borough. The
placename Sutton is
recorded in the 1086
Domesday Book as
Sudtone. It is
formed from Old
English 'sūth' and 'tūn',
meaning 'south farm'....
- and chalk. In 1086 in the
Domesday Book,
Sutton Waldron was
recorded as
Sudtone; it had 24 households, one mill, six ploughlands, 6
acres (2.4 hectares)...
-
existence of a
settlement at
Plymouth was in the
Domesday Book in 1086 as
Sudtone (Sutton),
Saxon for
south farm,
located at the present-day Barbican. From...
-
Sutton Valence (in the past also
called Sudtone, Town
Sutton and
Sutton Hastings, see below) is a
village about five
miles (8 km) SE of Maidstone, Kent...
- The
village was
mentioned in the
Domesday Book of 1086,
identified as
Sudtone.
There were then 9 sokemen, 8
villeins (each with 7.5 acres), 15 cotters...
- at 70 in 2014.
Sutton Howgrave was
mentioned in the
Domesday Book (as
Sudtone) and in the
Middle Ages it was a
manor in the
parish of
Kirklington in...
- the
Tudor mansion is situated,
appears in the
Domesday Book of 1086 as
Sudtone. It was held by
Robert Malet. Its
Domesday ****ets were: 3 hides; 1 mill...
-
little hill
surrounded by water. At this time the
settlement known as
Sudtone (now Sutton)
occupied a
strip of high
ground forming a
connecting link...