342 ANTIQUITIES OF SELBORNE. 
“Ttem 1. junctorium St. Ricardi.* 
“Ttem 1. pecten St. Ricardi.F 
The s¢aurum, or live stock, is quite ridiculous, consisting only of 
‘> vacce. I sus, 4 hoggett. et 4 porcell.”—viz., two cows, one sow, 
four porkers, and four pigs. 
OLD COINS.f{ 
* April 3, ibid. Richard bishop of Chichester, in the 13th century, his surname De la 
Wich in 1245. ; 
Junctorium, perhaps a joint or limb of St. Richard; but what particular joint the 
religious were not such osteologists as to specify. This barbarous word was not to be 
found in any dictionary consulted by the author. 
+ ‘* Pecten inter ministeria sacra recensetur, quo scil. sacerdotes ac clerici, antequam in 
ecclesiam procederent, crines pecterent. E quibus colligitur monachos, tunc temporis, non 
omnino tonsos fuisse.”-—Du FRESNE. ; 
The author remembers to have seen in great farm-houses a family comb chained to a 
post for the use of the hinds when they came into their meals. 
+ These with the key and hinge, p. 340, are kept in the old manor house, and are shown 
to visitors by the hospitable inmates. ‘This was the site of Selborne priory, ana che relics 
have been dug up at various times in the vicinity. 
