56 
Another John Talbot Viscount Lisle challenged Lord Berkeley 
after they had quarrelled for some years about the title and 
estates. ‘ Merveile you come not forth with all your carts 
of gunnes and bowes and other ordinances,” and at Nibley 
Green (20th March, 1469) Lord Lisle was slain. 
No notice has been taken in history of this battle because 
Clarence and Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, were then in arms 
against Edward, and Barnet and Tewkesbury so soon followed, at 
which so many of those I have mentioned fell, and sorrow entered 
into the hearts of the women who survived. 
There is one tile with the three boars heads the arms of Wyat 
of Tewkesbury which I cannot connect with the tale, and the 
others appear to have belonged to the Sacrarium which may have 
been Bath Abbey, or can they have come from Farleigh or Bristol 
where so many of them appear in one of the old windows ? 
There is one other solution of the appearance of the Hungerford 
shield. An old manuscript authority has preserved a few arms once 
in Farleigh Chapel which are now lost which unqestionably 
belong, says Canon Jackson, to Hungerford Alliances ; among them 
is one quartering Hungerford with Richard Earl of Warwick. I 
hope some one may be able to clear up this point. 
Nore.—Since the above was written I find that the tiles were 
found near the west end of Bath Abbey Church, 1833. 
Notes on Roman Pavement found at the Royal United Hospital. 
By Tuomas Browne, Architect. 
(Read 9th February, 1898.) 
As a Paper is to be read to the Field Club by the Rev. C. W. 
Shickle on the discovery of a Roman Villa at Northstoke, I have 
thought that the Members might also be interested in seeing the 
accompanying drawing of Roman Pavement at the Hospital. 

