A moot hall is a meeting or assembly building, traditionally to decide local issues.[1]
In Anglo-Saxon England, a low ring-shaped earthwork served as a moot hill or moot mound, where the elders of the hundred would meet to take decisions. Some of these acquired permanent buildings, known as moot halls.[2]
Surviving moot halls include:
- Moot Hall, Aldeburgh
 - Moot Hall, Appleby
 - Moot Hall, Brampton
 - Moot Hall, Daventry
 - Moot Hall, Elstow
 - Moot Hall, Hexham
 - Moot Hall, Holton le Moor
 - Moot Hall, Keswick
 - Moot Hall, Newcastle upon Tyne
 - Moot Hall, Newark-on-Trent
 - Moot Hall, Maldon
 - Moot Hall, Mansfield
 - Moot Hall, St Albans
 - Moot Hall, Steeple Bumpstead
 - Moot Hall, Wirksworth
 
See also
References
- ↑ Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary. G. & C. Merriam. 1913.
 - ↑ The Columbian Cyclopedia. Vol. 20. 1897.
 
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