34 A ROYAL PURVEYANCE IN THE ELIZABETHAN AGE. 



HANINGTON. * 



Margery Dicker for her liould there - ij buh. 



Thomas Wareham t for his hould there ij buh. 



Kichard Drewett for his hould there - j buh. 



Thomas Drewett for his ffarme there J - iij buh. 



the same Thomas for the parsonage there ij buh. 

 William Soper for his ffarme groundes 



there ------ uij buh. , 



CHURCH OAKLYE. II 

 Sr. William Kingsmill, knight, If for 



malsanger and for the Deanes land - iij buh. 



the Lady Wareham** for her ffarme there iij buh. 



William Wigg ft for his ffarme there - iiij buh. 



William Ayliffe for his ffarme there - iij buh. 



Richard Winckworth for his ffarme there iij buh. 



Humfrie Ayliffe for his hould there - ij buh. 



the Lady Wareham for the parsonage - ij buh. 



iqr. 

 vj buh. 



qrs. 

 vij buh. 



Suma totall of wheate 

 in Chutlye Hundred. 



xij 



xij qrtere. 



* Harrington or Hannington. A village on the sonth side of the North 

 Downs, 2 ni. S. by E. of Kingsclere. Part of the village is in the tithing of 

 Hannington Lances, in Kingsclere parish. The Dean and Chapter of Win- 

 chester are Lords of the Manor. 



f Thomas Wareham. See note to Church Oakley. 



J Thomas Drewett. The name of Drewett or Dreweatt, from the Norman 

 Druett or Drouet, occurs in England in the form of Druett about 1272. A 

 well-known family of this name was long settled in the parish of Welford, 

 Berks, and the present head of that family is the well-known Mr. Thomas 

 Dreweatt, of Newbury. 



The family of Soper has always been resident here from Elizabethan 

 days, and earlier, to the present time. 



|| Church Oakley. A small village, 4$ m. W. by S. of Basingstoke. 



If Sir William Kingsmill, Knt., of Sydmonton. 



** Lady Warham. Malshanger in the parish of Church Oakley was the 

 birthplace of William Warham, Lord Chancellor of Englend from 1504 to 

 1515, and Archbishop of Canterbury from 1504 till his death in 1532. The 

 Warhams appear to have been a numerous family in this part of North Hants 

 at the period before us, and we find them holding land at Church Oakley, 

 Monks' Sherborne, Lawrence Wotton, Hanington, Kingsclere, North Oakley, 

 and North Waltham. From the pedigree entered in the Hants Visitation, it 

 appears that the Archbishop, who was the son of William Warham, of 

 Malshanger, by Ann his wife, eldest daughter of Thomas Hednor, of Denton, 

 Co. Sussex, had three brothers, Nicholas of Malshanger, Hugh of the same 

 place, and Robert. Nicholas had two sons, Sir George Warham of Mal- 

 shanger, and William Warham, Archdeacon of Canterbury. Hugh had two 

 sons, Richard, a priest, and Sir William, knt., of Malshanger, whose daughter 

 and heiress Anne, married Richard Puttenham, of Sherfield in this county, 

 and probably carried the estate of Malshanger into that family. 



j- The Wigg family is still a well-known one in the neighbourhood of 

 Basingstoke. A William Wigg was Mayor of Winchester In 1399 1400. 



