While recognising that different journals and publication series impose their own guidelines, we provide these guidelines and ask that you follow them as closely as possible in order to ensure that credit is given to the respective contributors.

All content for which no author is specified is to be considered as by the Exon Project team collectively.

The content on this site represents Version 1.0 (October 2018). Corrections and further information will be added in the next update, Version 1.1, currently planned for October 2019.

The Exon Domesday Project website as a whole should be cited as follows: 

  • Exon: The Domesday Survey of South-West England, ed. by P.A. Stokes, Studies in Domesday, gen ed. J. Crick (London, 2018), available at http://www.exondomesday.ac.uk

Both the extended Latin text and the translation are the work of F. Thorn. Individual entries should be cited by their entry number:

The palaeographical and codicological description is by Francisco Álvarez López:

  • F. Álvarez López, 'Codicological Description: 172r', in Exon: The Domesday Survey of South-West England, ed. by P.A. Stokes, Studies in Domesday, gen ed. J. Crick (London, 2018).

Blogs and News should give the individual author, title and year specific to that entry:

For any other individual pages in the website, add the page title as it appears in the browser, in quotes.

  • 'Manuscript Image: Exeter 3500, 10v', in Exon: The Domesday Survey of South-West England, ed. by P.A. Stokes, Studies in Domesday, gen ed. J. Crick (London: King's College, 2018). Available at http://www.exondomesday.ac.uk/digipal/page/160/ 

And for annotations give the name and folio/image on which it appears:

For collections, cite the name of the collection, the person who compiled it (if available) and the site details. You will probably want to use a short URL, but be sure that the shortening service you are using will preserve your URL for the time that you will need it.

  • P.A. Stokes, ed. 'Examples of d.m. by Ksi'. in Exon: The Domesday Survey of South-West England, ed. by P.A. Stokes, Studies in Domesday, gen ed. J. Crick (London: King's College, 2018). Available at http://goo.gl/W6lnwN