Patton (hundred)

Patton
Patinton
Hundred of Shropshire
History
  OriginOrganisation of Mercia into shires
  Createdearly 10th century
  Abolishedc. 1100-35
  Succeeded byHundred of Munslow
StatusHundred
GovernmentCaput (in 1066 & 1086)
  HQCorfham (extraterritorial)
Contained within
  CountyShropshire
Subdivisions
  TypeTithings & (later) manors
  Units27 manors (in 1086)

Patton was a hundred of Shropshire, England. Formed during Anglo-Saxon England, it encompassed manors in eastern central Shropshire, and was amalgamated during the reign of Henry I (1100 to 1135) with the neighbouring hundred of Culvestan to form the Munslow hundred.

It included the upper Corvedale and the well-populated manors of Wenlock, Stoke and Ditton. The original folkmoot place, which gave its name to the hundred, was Patton, a manor recorded as being part of the hundred in the 1086 Domesday Book.

Patton is written in the Domesday Book variously as Patinton(e) or Patintun(e).