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What was Alfred like as a governor of his kingdom?

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As king of Wessex, Alfred administered his kingdom very efficiently, organizing his finances and precisely measuring services and payments due from tenants of his burghs. The burghs that he had erected and fortified as a defense against Danish attacks were divided into hides, a form of land measurement used in Old English times. These divisions of land were the foundation of Alfred’s taxation and conscription system; fractions or totals of hides measured payments and services owed. The number of men that would defend the wall of a burgh was judged based on the number of hides. These careful calculations helped to keep Alfred’s kingdom secure. The king’s administrative skill also extended to his household, as both his will and the account in a biography of him written in 893 reveal a meticulous allocation of labour and corresponding payments to his family members and secular followers.

Alfred was an assiduous ruler in matters of law and the execution of justice. He scrutinized the judicial processes of his kingdom and required judges to be literate and have a good education; in his view, ignorance made a man unfit for such an office. His special concern in this was the protection of the weak, as it was in his law-giving. The king himself drew up an important law code, after studying the principles of law-giving in the biblical book of Exodus and the codes of other Anglo-Saxon kings. Criminal jurisdiction became severe during Alfred’s time and was rigorously enforced by his successors.