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DANEGET

Volume 17 · 186 words · 1810 Edition

an annual tax laid on the Anglo-Saxons, first of ts. afterwards of 2s. for every hide of land throughout the realm, for maintaining such a number of forces as were thought sufficient to clear the British seas of Danish pirates, which heretofore greatly annoyed our coasts.

Daneget was first imposed as a standing yearly tax on the whole nation, under King Ethelred, A.D. 991. That prince, says Camden, Britan. 142, much distressed by the continued invasions of the Danes, to procure a peace, was compelled to charge his people with heavy taxes, called Daneget.β€”At first he paid 10,000l. then 16,000l. then 24,000l. after that 36,000l. and lastly 48,000l.

Edward the Confessor remitted this tax: William I. and II. reassumed it occasionally. In the reign of Henry I. it was accounted among the king's standing revenues; but King Stephen, on his coronation-day, abrogated it for ever.

No church or church-land paid a penny to the danegets; because, as is set forth in an ancient Saxon law, the people of England placed more confidence in the prayers of the church than in any military defence they could make.