Sussex originated in the 5th century as the
Kingdom of Sussex, which in the 9th century was annexed by the
Kingdom of Wessex, which with further expansions became the
Kingdom of England. While Sussex retained its independence it is likely that it would have had a regular assembly or
folkmoot. Sussex seems to have had a greater degree of decentralisation than other kingdoms. For a period during the 760s there may have been as many as four of five kings based within the territory, perhaps with each ruling over a distinct tribal territory, perhaps on a temporary basis. It seems possible that the people of the
Haestingas may have had their own ruler for a while, and another sub-division may have been along the River Adur. Another possibility is that the rapes may derive from the system of fortifications, or
burhs (boroughs) devised by Alfred the Great in the late ninth century to defeat the Vikings. Various local
folkmoots would have been held in Sussex, for instance at
Ditchling, Tinhale (in
Bersted) and
Madehurst. Placename evidence for early assemblies in Sussex comes from Tinhale (from the Old English
þing (thing) meaning hold a meeting, so 'meeting-hill') and
Madehurst (from the Old English
maedel meaning assembly, so 'assembly wooded hill'). There is also a location in
Durrington that had the name
gemot biorh meaning a moot barrow or meeting barrow, a boundary barrow. The early hundreds often lacked the formality of later attempts of local government: frequently they met in the open, at a convenient central spot, perhaps marked by a tree, as at
Easebourne. Dill, meaning the boarded meeting place, was one of the few hundreds in Sussex that provided any accommodation. From the 10th century onwards the hundred became important as a court of justice as well as dealing with matters of local administration. The meeting place was often a point within the hundred such as a bridge (as in the bridge over the
western River Rother in Rotherbridge hundred) or a notable tree (such as a tree called Tippa's Oak in Tipnoak hundred). ==Late medieval period==