312 Ancient Chapels, §c., in Co. Wilts. 
presented by the Abbot of Glastonbury, from 1307 to 1511. 
(Wilts Instit.) In 1. Edw. VI., it was confiscated by the name 
of “The Free Chapel of Tutpytt, in the parish of Marten. 
John Holwaye, aged 60 years, incumbent, clear value, 51s. 6d.” 
In the Eccles. Taxation of 1291 it had been £4 6s. 8d. The 
chapel is destroyed. In the Valor Eccles., Ecton, and Bacon’s 
Liber Regis, it is miscalled “‘ Badpytt.” 
Tissury. (Dunworth Hundred.) Bishop Tanner says that in the 
Life of St. Boniface [Cressy’s Church History], mention is made 
of one Wintra, an Abbot of ‘ Tissel-bury,” in the kingdom of 
the West Saxons, about A.D. 720. The manor belonged to 
Shaftesbury Abbey from A.D. 924: but of any house 
of Religion being within the parish itself, nothing is 
known. 
There was a Chantry Chapel of St. Mary in the church. 
At the Dissolution of Chantries, 1 Edw. VI., Thomas Bryger 
was cantarist: the value was £5 ayear. The lands belonging 
to it were bought some years ago by the governors of Queen 
Anne’s Bounty, and were added to the Rectory of Compton 
Chamberlayne. [Sir R. C. Hoare, Hundred of Dunworth, 
p- 238.] See Hatch, suprd. 
TirHERmncTon KeLiLaways, near Chippenham, (Hundred of Ditto.) 
An ancient little church here, dedicated to St. Giles, and 
called in the Sarum Registers, until 1450, ‘“Cayleway’s 
Chantry,” had disappeared in 1760. Its founder had no doubt 
been one of the Cayleway or Keilway family. In Bacon’s 
Liber Regis it is miscalled “Calloes.” There is now a little 
parish church, but on a different site. 
TrowsripGE. Terumber’s Chantry. Leland (1540), says, “of 
later tymes, one James Terumber, a very rich clothier, buildid 
a notable fair house in this toune, and gave it at his deth with 
other landes to the finding of two cantuarie prestes yn 
Through-bridg Chirch. He also made a litle almose house by 
the chirch, and yn it be a 6 poore folkes having a 3 pence a 
peace by the week toward theyr fyndyng” (perhaps equal to 
5s. now). 
