Bji John Watson- Taylor. 49 



worse, for a Pipe Roll of 1184-1185 shows that Herbert's lands 

 were then in the hands of Geoffrey Fitz-Piers, who returned the 

 gross receipts at £121 19s. 2d., and some of the items of expenditure 

 seem to suggest that Herbert himself had been in custody also.^ 

 Early in the next reign these clouds of royal disfavour had passed 

 away, and in 1189-1190 Herbert had obtained possession of his 

 share of his wife's inheritance in Wiltshire, for which he had been 

 charged a relief of one hundred marks, but eight years later he 

 still owed a portion of a relief due on the sanae account in Berkshire. 

 By Lucy de Hereford Herbert had three sons, Eeginald, Peter, 

 and Matthew, and the family thus constituted is said to have been 

 associated in a grant to Waverley Abbey (Surrey), of land at 

 Boviatt (Hants), the father as grantor, the mother and eldest 

 son as consenting parties and the two younger sons as witnesses.- 

 To Eeginald the father seems to have made over the manor of 

 Calston and Stanton, which must have been, like the rest of his 

 his property, under forfeiture, for in 1189-1190 — during the reign 

 of Henry II. — Reginald paid the first part of an instalment of 

 £100 for the manors of Calston and Stanton,^ but later they 

 returned to the father's hands, and it is thus evident that 

 the son predeceased his father without issue.* This manor of 

 Stanton, sometimes called Stanton Fitz-Herbert,^ was a portion of 

 the present Stanton Fitz-Warren, which was at this time shared 

 with Fulk of that surname, the son-in-law of Goce or Josce de 

 Dinant who was associated with Herbert Fitz-Herbert in a grant 

 of the church and half a hide of land to the Priory of St. Andrew, 

 Hamble.^ It is shown above that William Fitz-Herbert had held a 

 portion of Stanton by grant from his father and brother and in the 



' The entry is found at the foot of an account for Surrey, on the back of 

 an account for Kent and Dover. Vide Eyton, Anfiquities of Shropshire, 

 (viii., 152), from which many of these references were obtained. 

 - Dugdale, Baronage, i., 627. 

 ■* Pipe Roll, Wilts, (36) 2 Eic. I., m. 2. 

 ^ Pipe Roll, Wilts, (38) 4 Eic. 1. 

 ' Vid. Wiltshire Collections, p. 194 ; Inst. Clericorum, sub an. 1392. 

 ' ArchcBologia, V., 253. In the 13th century the grandsons of these two 

 are recorded as the holders each of half a fee at Stanton. T. de N., 150, 1506. 



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