ee 
By the Rev. J. E. Jackson. 307 
and 1460, orders are entered to the steward to see that this 
service, which had been neglected, be duly performed. [P. 
Scrope’s History of Castle Combe, pp. 221, 249.] 
SueErston Pinkney, or Parva, (Hundred of Chippenham.) Here 
was anciently a Free Chapel, belonging to the hamlet (which 
is now united with Sherston). The building has been long 
destroyed, and the site forgotten. The names of several In- 
cumbents are in the Sarum Registry, from A.D. 1300 to 1640. 
[ Wilts Instit.] They were presented by lords of the manor. 
In 1 Edw. VI., when confiscated, Simon Shewer was Rector ; 
and the clear value was 66s. 8d. a year. [See Wilts Collec- 
tions, p. 110.] 
Pakesi, in Dauntesey parish, (Hundred of Malmesbury.] A 
chapel of St. Anne, to which the Dauntesey family presented, 
A.D. 1826-1443. [Wilts Instit.] The site is not known: 
nor has any notice of endowment been met with. [Wilts 
Collections, p. 217. See also Dauntesey, supra. | 
Sovruwick, in the parish of North Bradley, (Whorwellsdown 
Hundred.) Chapel of St. John the Baptist. There are two 
documents in the Chartulary of Edingdon Priory, which seem | 
to prove clearly that there was a chapel at Southwick Court 
(now a farm-house of Mr. Long’s), about one mile from the 
parish church. Before these documents can be rightly under- 
stood, it is necessary to explain that originally, North Bradley 
Rectory was considered as a ‘‘Chapel of the Prebend of Eding- 
don,’ which Prebend belonged to Romsey Abbey in Hants. 
But about 1354 this Prebend of Edingdon was detached from 
Romsey Abbey, and appropriated to the foundation of Eding- 
don Priory of Bonhommes, the head of which assumed the 
title of Rector of Edingdon Priory. 
The first deed is of about A.D. 1294: (before the foundation 
of Edingdon Priory.) Its substance is as follows :— 
‘A controversy having arisen between the Rector of Brad- 
ley ” (then Prebendary of Edingdon in Romsey Abbey) “and 
Adam de Grenvyle” (then owner of Southwick), “about a 
chantry chapel of the said Adam Grenvyle, in his court of 
