290 Ancient Chapels, &c., in Co. Wilts. 
Lanerorp Parva, (Branch and Dole.) A chantry was founded on 
the south side of the church, about A.D., 1825, by John of 
Langford, and endowed with lands given to the Prior of St. 
John’s, Wilton, to find one chaplain to pray for the souls of 
the founder and his wife Agnes. The Jacobean altar tomb 
now within it, with the letters J. H., erroneously attributed to 
the Hungerfords, is that of John Hayter who married Melior 
Marvyn of Pertwood. In 1457 and 1502, the chantry belonged 
to the Stourton family. They had lands in this parish called | 
Langford Dennis. On the north porch is a shield of Stourton 
impaling Dennis, and over it, the old Stourton crest, the sledge, 
or fire-dray. 7 
LanetEy. See Kington Langley. ; 
Laverstock, near Salisbury. (Alderbury Hundred.) The will of 
Sir Hugh Cheney of Laverstock, dated 1385, directs the 
foundation of a chantry in the church there, with daily service 
for the souls of himself and Joan his wife, for the maintenance 
of which he bequeathed a messuage and shops in the “ Poletria” ! 
in New Sarum. [Mod. Wilts, Alderbury, 215.] 
Lavineton, East: alids, Market, Staple, Chipping or Forum. 
(Swanborough Hundred.) A chantry in the church, worth 
£5 15s. 8d., a year, Thomas Webbe, cantarist, is named in 
the Valor Eccles., A.D., 1534. It paid 6s. a year to the Abbot 
of Westminster, and 8s. to Edington Priory, which was Rector 
here, and patron of the Vicarage. The founder was most 
likely Robert Delamere, Kt., A.D., 1849. [Wilts Instit., 
Staple Lavington.|] It belonged afterwards to Beauchamp, 
Lord St. Amand ; and to the Baynton family. William, Lord 
St. Amand, who died in March, 1457-8, desired by will to be 
buried ‘in the chapel of the Saints Mary, Katherine, and 
Margaret.” [Kite’s Wilts Brasses, p. 37.] 
Lavineton, West, or Bishop’s. (Hundred of Potterne and 
Cannings.) The “ Beckett Aisle,” as it is called, a small 
ee 
1 Hence what is called the ‘‘ Poultry Cross.” ‘‘ Poletria,”’ however, is not 
Latin for domestic fowls. It is a medieval word in Ducange for a drove of 
young horses. 

