Listed as Hoxana in the Domesday Book, the hundred owes its name to the village of Hoxne, site of St Edmund's martyrdom, which in turn means "settlement of the Hoxan", believed to be a small Saxon tribe.
Hundred Years' War | Hundred Days | One Hundred and One Dalmatians | One Hundred Years of Solitude | Council of Five Hundred | Hundred Family Surnames | Hoxne | Three Hundred Tang Poems | Thame (hundred) | Dorchester (hundred) | Chadlington (hundred) | Bullingdon (hundred) | Banbury (hundred) | The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared | Hundred Reasons | Company of One Hundred Associates | West Derby Hundred | West Derby (hundred) | United States one hundred-dollar bill | Stoke (hundred) | Salford (hundred) | Ongar (hundred) | Lonsdale (hundred) | Leyland Hundred | Leyland (hundred) | Hundred Thousand Sons of Saint Louis | Haircut One Hundred | Gumboro Hundred | Your Hundred Best Tunes | Wilford (hundred) |