44 The Church Heraldry of North Wiltshire. 
In domestic architecture few counties are so rich as Wiltshire. 
In the northern part of the county nearly every parish can shew 
specimens of the fifteenth and sixteenth century small manor house, 
with long low gabled front, two-storied porch, hall and solar, lighted 
by stone-mullioned windows. ‘There also several examples of the 
larger and more stately mansions, especially those of South Wraxall, 
with a good deal of later adaptation. I may also mention Great 
Chaldfield and the Duke’s House, at Bradford, all of which we are 
to inspect, Norrington, Charlton, Corsham, Littlecot, and many 
more. The still larger and more magnificent houses of Wiiton, 
Longleat, and Longford, and others, have few rivals in any part of 
England. The town houses of Salisbury, the Audley Mansion now 
the Church House, the Hall of John Halle, and others, more or 
less mutilated, are excellent illustrations of the domestic life of our 
civic forefathers. 
Naturally the examples of later architecture are more abundant, 
but earlier examples are not wanting. The fourteenth century 
houses at Stanton St. Quentin; Place Farm, Tisbury ; Woodlands, 
Mere; and the Barton Farm, at Bradford, with its noble barn, 
deserve the most careful examination. 
The Church Heraldry of ANorth Wiltshive, 
By ArrHur ScHOMBERG. 
(Continued from Vol. xxiii., p. 313. 
HUNDRED OF SWANBOROUGH. 
WOODBOROUGH. 
North Aisle. 
830. I.—Or, three cinquefoils sable, impaling, argent, a fess 
erenely, between six fleurs-de-lys barwise, gules. 
