Notes on Durrington. 269 
found an iron object, much corroded and with gravel adhering 
to it, which looks like the coulter of a plough (?) There is 
nothing in its position to prove its age, the upper floor of the 
-hypocaust. was entirely broken in. It may be Roman, or it 
may not. 
- ++ Not a single coin turned up during our excavations, but 
Mr. Hardy has one of Valens found on the site. 
‘[ This, paper will also be printed in the Archeological Jowrnal.] 
Alotes on Durrington. 
By Rev. C. 8. Ruppie. 
(For previous paper see vol. xxxi., pp. 331.) 
EAST-END MANOR. 
“HE East-end Manor is small, being little over 480 acres, 
and for centuries was joined to a very much smaller 
manor—Knighton, in Figheldean parish; the lords of both being 
the Dean and Chapter of Salisbury. In some respects it was 
subordinate to the West-end Manor: for the lessee of the greater 
manor claimed that his flock had a right to feed all the wheat 
stubble on the East-end Manor from old Michaelmas to Martinmas 
tide (22nd Nov.) yearly; and in the second barley field from 
Luke’s tide (Oct. 29th) to Martin’s tide. 
The earliest lease in existence is in the muniment room of 
‘Salisbury Cathedral. It is one granted to Wm. Grene,' of Heyle 
(Heale, in the parish of Woodford), in 1548, of the Manor or 








1 Wm. Grene bought half the Manor of Stanlynch in 34 Henry VIII. ; and 
‘probably gave up Heale to Gerard Errington, who married his daughter 
‘Margaret, and died at Heale, 1596. 
