:he " Professor 

 ;iS were made later fro 

 .^ :■,: ....iiop of Chichester, rou:;^ . . 

 Aph Neville had built in 1228. Part >. 

 ite was the *' coney garth," which belonged to one 

 William Cottercll, and hence is often mentioned as 

 ** Cotterell's Garden." «"■-•-''" of course only meant a 

 garth or yard, and th^ name now signifies an 



enclosure f other enclosures 



were 

 the ■ 

 garth " ■ 



^ iiaLH>^^ 



at a much later date, from Edward IV. to Henry VIII., 

 there were various ordinances in force for punishing law 

 students who hunted rabbits with bows and arrows or 

 darts. 



In the first year of Queen Elizabeth the Garden was 

 separated from the fields by a clay embankment, and a 

 little later a brick wall was added, with a gate into the 

 j^pi4^ '"hich is probably the same as the pre?-* - '•"'- 

 g he north of the new hall, at the c; 



bord' n in the illustration. The Garden 



much tuuher along the wall then, and only 

 when th' - hall and library were ^- 

 The del:., .erracc which is raisc.^ 



overlooking the "fiWnji E^VIJOOVIIJ 

 27th of that year, Tepys, who on 



