By the Rev. J. E. Jackson. 805 
Robert Godmanstone’s (two): William Warwyke’s and 
William Swayne’s. 
St. Martin’s Church (old). Leland saw on the north side 
of St. Nicholas’s Hospital, a barn which the people told him 
was the wreck of Old St. Martin’s. Hall [Memorials of 
Salisbury, p. iii.], doubts this. 
Harnham. Oollege of St. Nicholas, or Domus de Valle 
Scholarum, or Vaux (dissolved). This had a Master and two 
chaplains. The chapel was partly converted into a residence 
for the Master of St. Nicholas Hospital. The chancel was 
turned into a kitchen. The piscina remains. [Hall.] Mr. 
Hatcher (p. 43) thought that an older hospital and chapel exist- 
ed here before the foundation of the Cathedral. In Hatcher (p. 
701) is a list of the Masters: and in Gent. Mag., 1818, May, 
a plate. 
St. John’s Chapel on an island near the bridge: was 
built by Bishop Bingham, c. 1230. It had two chaplains. 
“In order to secure the stability of the bridge which he had 
built, by placing it under the constant superintendence of a 
body interested in its preservation, the Bishop founded this 
chapel and connected it with the hospital and chapel of St. 
Nicholas.” [Hatcher, p. 46.] In Hall’s Pict. Mem. of Salisb. 
plate xxiii., is a view of this ruined chapel. 
A House of Lepers at Harnham is often alluded to, but its 
site is unknown. [Hatcher, p. 92.] 
The Religious Houses in Salisbury were two small establish- 
ments. 
1. The Dominicans, Black Friars, or Friars Preachers. They 
came from Wilton and settled at Fisherton. Their conventual 
church is mentioned. [Hatcher, p. 90. ] 
2. The Franciscans, Grey Friars, or Friars Minors. They also 
. had a conventual church. [Ditto p. 57, 90. ] 
Seacry, (Malmesbury Hundred.) John Aubrey says of an old 
manor house here “it was sometimea Nunnery.” He was mis- 
led (in the way alluded to, in the remarks introductory to this 
paper), by some traces of ecclesiastical style in an old country 
