The
hundred court meeting place was on the
River Wey at a place called Perry Bridge, or La Perie at the western edge of Shalford. The jurisdiction of the
sheriff's court was much curtailed by private rights. In 1086
Odo, Earl of Kent (and Bishop of Bayeux) held Bramley, its central area. The
Victoria County History attributes its conflation with Bramley to its stated size of 6½
hides of land, versus 97 stated to exist before the Norman Conquest in the same '
Domesday Book' survey document. The manorial lords of Bramley, Shalford, Wintershull, and Gomshall, and the
rectors of Shalford and Cranleigh also had
courts leet, and the lord of Albury
view of frankpledge, but the latter gave those profits to the Crown. The lord of Shere claimed view of frankpledge up to 1238, the lord of Albury claimed the same, and it was granted to Bramley by charter of Henry III. These
townships paid an annual fine to the sheriff. In 1671
Shere paid the most, at 20
s. The royal rights, such as they were, were granted by
James VI and I in 1620 to Sir Edward Zouche of
Woking Palace, and to the heirs male of Sir Alan his uncle, together with the very large manor of
Woking (the main asset),
Woking Hundred and other lands, to be held by the service of bringing in the first dish to the king's table on St. James's Day and paying annually £100 (initially but reduced in modern terms by inflation). All
feudal system incidents were expressly abrogated at that time. Eventually the hundred rent ceased to be reclaimable from any tenants in the area.
Charles II granted the £100 rent and the reversion for 1,000 years legally to
Viscount Grandison, Henry Howard, and Edward Villiers, in reality in trust for the first's daughter, his most favoured mistress, who he later created
Duchess of Cleveland. In 1708 James Zouche, younger son of Sir Edward, the last of the male heirs, died. The Duchess of Cleveland succeeded, but died on 9 October 1709. Her trustees in 1715 sold the rights, as well as in Woking, to John Walter of Busbridge House, Godalming, whose son sold them to
Lord Onslow in 1752. The dwindling value hundreds later came to possess was lost outright by a process of population expansion and industrialisation, with rights and land ownership becoming bound up with the smaller estates within them in the 19th century. ==References==