The
toponym "Cutteslowe" is derived from
Old English. The earliest known record of it is from AD 1004 as
Cuðues hlaye, which seems to be a mis-spelling of
Cuðues hlawe. A
hlāw is a
burial mound, in this case for someone called Cūþen or Cūþwine. The village of
Cuddesdon, about southeast of Cutteslowe, is also named after someone called Cūþwine. It is not clear whether the two toponyms refer to the same Cūþwine. The
Domesday Book of 1086 records Cutteslowe as
Codeslam or
Codeslaue. Later mediaeval spellings include
Cudeslawe,
Codeslowe,
Kodeslawe,
Codeslawe,
Cudeslawia,
Cudeslowe,
Cudeslauya,
Cuddeslawe,
Culdeslauia and
Coteslowe. In 1797 it was recorded as
Cutslow or
Old Cutslow. The burial mound was prehistoric, and was razed in the 13th century after two people were found murdered in the hollow below it. An
assize roll records that in 1261 a jury of
Wootton hundred court "testify that evil doers are wont to lurk in the hollow of the how, and that many robberies and homicides have been committed there. Therefore the
sheriff was commanded to level the how." ==Manor==