110 A ROYAL PURVEYANCE IN THE ELIZABETHAN AGE. 



Walter Warren hath in his occupacon xv ac. errable in comon. 



Thomas Pesoodde hath in his occupacon xij ac. errahle in comon 

 and dim. ac. in medow. 



Thomas Waterman hath in his occupacon xxx ac. errable in comon 

 and dim. ac. in medow. 



William Skeye hath in his occupacon xxviij ac. errable in comon 



j pullett. 



John Eoase hath in his occupacon xxviij ac. errable in comon and 

 dim. ac. medow, charged with j pullett. 



Robert Grenoway hath in his occupacon xxxvj ac. errable in comon 

 and j ac. in medow. 



A Ilice Dowce * hath in her occupacon 1 ac. errable in comon, and 

 j ac. dim. in meadow; the said Robert Grenoway and Allice 

 Dowce, charged between them with halfe a lambe. 



Thomas Hellyer t of ffaccombe hath in his occupacon xxvj ac. of 

 errable ground in comon. 



John Hellyer hath in his occupacon of his ffarme 180 ac. of 

 errable ground, wherof 104 ac. lye in comon, and Ix ac. in 

 seuerall, and xvj ac. meade ground, more ouer the Lord Marquis 

 hath in Dowles* J xij Copses, and the said John Hellyer hath 

 halfe the herbage for vij yeares after the sale therof . 



The said John Hellyer hath in his occupacon one Copie hould in 

 Husborne Tarrante conteyning xxx ac., wherof one of the said 

 acs. is medow, and the rest lyeth in the comon fields. 



The said John Hellyer hath in his occupacon of the parsonage in 

 gleebe land Ix ac. errable in common, and iij ac. medow and pas- 

 ture : the said ffarme and parsonage charged with wheate xij buh. 



Sum of Wheate in the Tything ) 



P TT TT V f *J ^ V1 3 



of Upper Husborne. ) 



* There is a pedigree of Dowce of "Husborne" entered in the Hants 

 Visitation of 1634. See note to Sloake or Stoke, St. Mary Bourne. 



} The family of Hellyer or Hillier was a widely distributed one in North 

 Hants. There is a pedigree of the family in the Hants Visitation of 1634. 

 The name is still common in the neighbourhood in the form of Hillier, Hilliard, 

 and other varieties. 



t Dowles or Doles Wood. According to Dr. Johnson, Dole means to share 

 a grant, hence the name of this well-known wood, originally part of the great 

 forest of Chute, may have been derived from its having been divided or shared 

 by the several tenants of the Lord's manor. Dole is also an agricultural word 

 for a void space left in tillage. The "Lord Marqnis" referred to was John 

 Paulet, 2nd Earl of Wiltshire ; and Marqnis of Winchester, who died shortly 

 after his more famous father, in 1576. The manor of Hnrstbourne Tarrant, 

 at the dissolution of religious houses, was granted with other property in 

 Hampshire to the first Marquis of Winchester for the maintenance of a small 

 garrison at Netley Fort, near Netley Castle, on Southampton water, which 

 had then lately been erected as one of the defences of that port. 



