By the Rev. G. S. Master. 283 



to the chaplain fvom the freehold tenements underwritten, namely, from the 

 tenement of Nicholas Hulot fifteen pence half-penny, William Hulot fourteen 

 shillings, Thomas Elynge two shillings, John le Bolter two shillings and two 

 pence, Thomas Dodde eleven pence, John Walypuch sixteen pence, Thomas le 

 Couper two shillings and two pence, Isabell Doudyng eight pence, Thomas Dodde 

 two pence half-penny, the prior of the monastery- of Ivychurch four pence. Also 

 as to tenements held in villenage ; from that of John le Kyng six shillings, 

 Walter Coremnoys four shillings and two pence, Agnes Huckol three shillings 

 and ten pence half-penny, Robert le Heyward five shillings and ten pence, 

 Stephen le Kyng five shillings and six pence, W^illiam Spileman seven shillings 

 and nine pence, Henry Hukol six shillings and eight pence half-penny, William 

 le Heyward six shillings and eight pence half-penny, John le Kyng and Stephen 

 le Kyng eleven shillings, Julian Walypuch four pence, and Alice Dobyn eight 

 pence. There are payable, moreover, from the tenements held in villenage ten 

 shillings called bacon or larder money [" lardar "] and five shillings and four 

 shillings called customary work money [" operar "], moreover two shillings 

 called cartage or grass money [" earectagium ffarcionium" :} to have and to 

 hold the aforesaid rent charge of the chief lords of the fee by the services therein 

 due and accustomed, to the aforesaid Edward and his successors [as long as they 

 say mass P] in the chantry in the aforesaid Church of the Blessed Mary, of Deone, 

 for the souls of the lord Edward, late King of England, grandfather of our present 

 king, and for the souls of Gilbert de Clare, late Earl of Gloucester and Hertford, 

 and Joan, his wife, John de Ingham, and Marjorie, his wife, and for the good estate 

 of the venerable father, the lord Eobert de Wyvyle, Bishop of Salisbury, Oliver 

 de Ingham, Eobert le Boor, and of me, Eobert de Borbach, and for our souls, 

 when we shall have departed this life, and for the souls of all the faithful dead. 

 The said intercession for the souls aforesaid shall be celebrated daily in the Church 

 of the Blessed Mary of Deone above mentioned, in the form appointed by the 

 venerable father, the lord Eobert, by the grace of God Bishop of Salisbury, or 

 his deputy, when the see is vacant guardian of the spiritualities, to be observed 

 in the chantry aforesaid. Moreover, dui-ing the lifetime of me, the said Eobert 

 de Borbach, it shall be lawful for me, as often as the said chantry happens to be 

 vacant, to present a fit chaplain within two months ; failing which the collation 

 shall devolve upon the Bishop of Salisbury for the time being. I will, moreover, 

 and direct that after my death the advowson and presentation of the chantry 

 aforesaid shall belong for ever to the aforesaid venerable father and his successors. 

 Bishops of Salisbury ; so that the said father, or the Bishop of Salisbury for the 

 time being, as often as the chantry happens to be vacant, shall confer it upon a 

 fit chaplain within the term aforesaid. Otherwise the presentation of it shall 

 pass to the Dean and Chapter of the Cathedral Church of Salisbuiy for that 

 turn. And [that] the aforesaid priest and others for the time being shall be the 

 better furnished for the discharge of their office in the chantry aforesaid, as well 

 in ornaments as in other utensils, I, the aforesaid Robert, confer upon the chantry 

 aforesaid, and the chaplains in the same, the underwritten — namely, three suitable 

 vestments, one missal, one chalice, one breviary, one coffer, one brass five gallon 

 jar, one washing basin and ewer, and one brass jug, all of which, received at his 

 induction to the said chantry, or others of equal value, the priest aforesaid shall 

 1»e bound at his peril to keep and repair, and hand down at his death. And I, 



