52 An Enquiry into the Name of 
build them a monastery, is observable in other in- 
stances; he being known to have brought over a 
great number of Gascoignes to serve King Edward 
in his Welsh wars,* and to have given to the monks 
of Rufford, Nottinghamshire, the whole lordship 
of Roderham, &c.t He seems to have made 
two pilgrimages to the Holy Land—one, about the 
year 1240; the other, after he had been taken pri- 
soner at the battle of Evesham; and had been, by 
Dictum de Kenilworth, admitted to composition. 
~I now proceed, sir, to the seconp part of 
this memoir, which will consist of 
REMARKS ON \DR. FERRIAR’S ACCOUNT 
OF THE MONUMENT IN THE CHURCH OF 
HULN ABBEY. 
There are, it seems, armorial bearings about the 
monument; viz. a bend; a chevron, &c. Dr. Fer- 
riat infers, that the bend is the ancient arms of 
Vescy ; but in regard to the chevron, he says, “« To 
whom the shield, charged with a chevron on the 
left, ere I have attempted in vain to deter- 
mine.’ . 
I. As to the bend, Mr. Grose’s supposition seems 
* Dugdale’s Baronage, vol. 1. p. 94. 
+ Dugd. loc. cit. & Monast. Anglic. 1, 849. 
+ H, Knyghton, 2438, n. 30. Fa 
