National Archives to loan Domesday manuscript for British Library exhibition

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Britain’s earliest and most famous surviving public record is to go on exhibition.

Domesday, a near 1,000-year-old manuscript commissioned by William the Conqueror after the 1066 Norman Invasion, will be loaned to the British Library by the National Archives later this year.

The detailed survey, started in Christmas 1085, documents details of the Anglo-Saxon kingdom before and at the time of the invasion, chronicling major societal upheavals.

Domesday book photocall
The Domesday Book will be loaned to the British Library by the National Archives (Jonathan Brady/PA)

She added: “From castles, vineyards, water mills, potteries, fisheries rendering lampreys, eels and even porpoises, it gives an extraordinary level of detail of all the lands held by the king and his tenants-in-chief.”

Domesday book (Jonathan Brady/PA)
The Domesday Book has been hailed as a ‘remarkable document’ (Jonathan Brady/PA)

It will chart the art, literature and culture of Anglo-Saxon England across six centuries, from the eclipse of Roman Britain to the Norman Conquest.

National Archives chief executive Jeff James said: “This remarkable document can still inspire wonder and provides unparalleled insight into our shared history at such a pivotal moment”.

He added it was the “most significant loan” the archives could make.

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