Skip to main content

24 May 2018

King's Professor Julia Crick awarded the first bottle of The Holdsworth Claret

King's History Professor Julia Crick was awarded the first bottle of the Holdsworth Claret by the Devon and Cornwall Record Society for her project, The Conqueror's Commissioners: Unlocking the Domesday Survey of South West England.

crickaward
crickaward

King’s History Professor Julia Crick was awarded the first bottle of the Holdsworth Claret by the Devon and Cornwall Record Society for her project, The Conqueror’s Commissioners: Unlocking the Domesday Survey of South West England

The prize is awarded in memory of Emeritus Professor Christopher Holdsworth, an eminent historian who was also a former chairman of the Society.  The Society was formed in 1904 and publishes scholarly editions of original records.  The award is given to mark to an individual who has made a significant contribution to the understanding of manuscripts relating to Devon and Cornwall.  

 “The society is delighted to award the Holdsworth Claret to Professor Crick whose work has transformed our understanding of the West Country in the eleventh century.  Her work and that of her team is one of the most significant pieces of original work which has been undertaken in our generation,” said Dr Todd Gray MBE, Chairman of the Society.

Professor Crick’s projectinvestigates the earliest surviving record of the Domesday survey, a manuscript which has belonged to Exeter Cathedral for more than six hundred years. Exon Domesday, as it is known, consists of more than 100 booklets of detailed administrative data relating to Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Somerset and Wiltshire providing unique information about the landscape, economy and governance of the South West just after the Norman Conquest. The booklets were compiled in 1086 by a team of two dozen scribes and they provided data used in the compilation of the famous (Great) Domesday Book, now in The National Archives at Kew.

 “I am delighted and honoured to accept this award on behalf of the project’s two co-investigators, Professor Stephen Baxter (University of Oxford) and Professor Peter Stokes (École pratique des Hautes Études, formerly of King’s College London), and of the whole team. This has been a multi-disciplinary project and we indebted to our Project Partners, The Friends of Exeter Cathedral, to the Dean and Chapter and the team at the cathedral’s Library and Archives, and to the Arts and Humanities Research Council who funded the project. When our website is released very shortly the text of Exon Domesday will be freely available to the general public to consult,” said Professor Crick.