There is evidence to suggest that
Neolithic and
Roman inhabitants once settled in Bluntisham. The manor of Bluntisham goes back to the early part of the 10th century, when it was seized by Toli the Dane, who is said to have been the
jarl or
alderman of
Huntingdon. Toli was killed at the
Battle of Tempsford in 917, at which point the county returned to the rule of
Edward the Elder. Bluntisham later became the property of
Wulfnoth Cild who sold it circa 970–75 to Bishop
Æthelwold of Winchester and Brithnoth, the first
Abbot of Ely, for the endowment of
Ely Abbey. The sale was confirmed by
King Edgar, but when he died in 975 a claim was made by the sons of Bogo de
Hemingford, who believed that it was the inheritance of their uncle. Their claim was declared false at the county court, and the sale to Ely Abbey went ahead. Bluntisham was listed as
Bluntesham in the
Domesday Book of 1086 in the
Hundred of
Hurstingstone in Huntingdonshire. There were two manors and 16 households at Bluntisham, giving an approximate population of 56 to 80 people. The survey records that there was 6
ploughlands with the capacity for a further 2.62. In 1341 the wood was recorded as the boundary of the Bishop of Ely's right of hunting. Bluntisham's woodland declined from in 1843 to by 1925. ==Government==