COMPOSITION. 



39 



v buh. 



xiij buh. di. 



iiij buh. 



j buh. 



HANITON LAUNCELEWELL. * 

 Henry Kingsmill, Esq., for the ffarme 



there - - iiij buh. 



John Tyler for his land there j buh. 



EWHURSTE. t 

 Eiehard Aylife for his lande there - vij buh. 



WOOLVERTON. + 



Thomas Gardner for the ffanne there - vij buh. 

 Robert Heron for the parsonage there - iij buh. 

 John Butler for his hould there - - j buh., di. 

 Hugh Keene for his hould there j buh. 



Lawrence Style for his hould there - j buh. 



SANDFORD. 



Elizabeth Hunte for the ffarme there - iij buh. 

 John Mason for his hould there j buh. 



SYDMONNTAINE. II 



The ground called Cambers in the occu- 

 pation of Sir William Kingsmill, knight 



FFROBERRYE. If 



James Hunte for the ffarme of flroberrye iij buh. 



Eiehard Knight, gent, for his hould there ij buh. 



Greorge Hunte for his landes there - y buh. 

 Henry Smith, gent., for his land and 



house ------ j buh. 



the same Henry Smith for the Chapell 



landes ** j buh. 



* Haniton Lanncelewell. Now called Hannington Lances a tithing, 2 m. 

 8.E. of Kingsclere. 



f Ewhurste. A small parish, 3J in. E. by S. of Kingsclere. 



J Woolverton or Wolverton, 1} to 2$ ui. E. of Kingsclere. 



Sandford. One of the eleven tithings of Kingsclere, 1 in. E. of that place. 



|| Sydinonntaino now Sydmonton. The SuUmaneaton of Domesday, 

 Sydmonton Conrt has been the seat of the Kingsmill family since the dissolu- 

 tion of the monasteries, when the estate was granted by Henry VIII. to John 

 Kingsmill and his wife Constance, dau. of John Goring, of Burton, co. Sussex, 

 Esq. A In .in 764 acres of land in the parish belonged lo Romsey Abbey, and 

 paid one acre of wheat and one of barley in lieu of rectorial tithe, and 40 

 annually in lien of vicarial tithe. 



U ffroberrye, now Frobury, a tithing, A-m. N.W. of Kingsclere. 



* * The remains of the old manor-house is now occupied by the fanner of the 

 lands. On the south side of the house are the ruins of an ancient chapel, to 

 which it will be seen certain " landes " were attached. The huu*e at this 

 time was in the occupation of Henry Smith, gent., whose descendant* for 

 generations were yeomen in the neighbourhood. In 1641, Robert Towers is 

 described as of Frobury, gent., and received King Charles I., at his house 

 here 21 Oct., 1644, a few days before the second battle of Newbnry, the king 

 being then on his march towards that place. 



ix buh. 



