FINCHDEAN HUNDRED 



daughter of Arthur Swayne.*' Sir Nicholas died 

 seised of the manor, capital messuage, and demesne 

 lands of Hinton Daubnay in 1631, leaving a son and 

 heir Arthur, aged thirty-four and more. 66 Hinton 

 Daubnay, however, passed to his second son Laurence, 

 and continued in the family of Hyde until about the 

 middle of the eighteenth century," when on the death 

 of - - Hyde a minor it descended to his cousin 

 Mr. looker, who was the owner in 1 76S. 68 His 

 descendant, Mr. Hyde Salmon Whalley-Tooker, is 

 the present lord of the manor. 



HINTON M4RK4UNT (Henton xiv cent. ; 

 Henton Markewaye alias Marchaunte alias Mer- 

 chaunte xvi cent. ; Hinton Merchant xviii cent.). 

 The first mention of this manor seems to be in 1384 

 when Joan Meyres of Petersfield and her daughter 

 Maud were pardoned for a trespass upon the grange 

 of Sir Robert Markaunt at ' Henton ' in the hundred 

 of Finchdean. 69 Joan the daughter and heir of Sir 

 Robert Markaunt died at the beginning of the fifteenth 

 century, leaving as her heir her kinsman William 

 Levechild of Sheet next Petersfield, from whom the 

 manor of Hinton Markaunt passed, together with 

 West Mapledurham, to John Roger of Bryanston 



MARKAUNT. Argent 

 fretty table tuitb a chief 

 gules. 



ROGIR. Argent a 

 pierced molet table and a 

 cJiief or with ajltur-de- 

 lit gules therein. 



(co. Dors.). 70 It was afterwards granted to the prior 

 and convent of St. Swithun, Winchester, and 

 remained with them until the dissolution." Queen 

 Elizabeth, in February, 1576, granted the capital 

 messuage of ' Henton Marchaunte,' with its appur- 

 tenances " in the parish of Catherington, to Anthony 

 Rotsey and William Fyssher, to hold of her and her 

 successors by the annual payment of 7 3/. IO</." A 

 fortnight later Anthony and William sold the manor 

 to Thomas Crompton and John Morley," who in 



CATHERINGTON 



1579 sold it to John Foster of Hinton Markaunt 

 for 500. On the death of the latter the manor 

 descended to his son John Foster, from whom it 

 passed by sale in 1621 to George Garth, of Morden 

 (co. Surr.), 76 who died seised six years later." Richard 

 son of George Garth in 1633 sold the manor for 

 3,100 to George Vaughan and Margaret Caryl], 

 widow of Sir Thomas Caryll, 78 from whom it was 

 purchased a year later for 3,210 by George Brooke, 

 of Beech, in the parish of Sonning (co. Berks), and 

 Richard Bosson of Wootton Bassett (co. Wilts.)." 

 The latter in 1635 conveyed Hinton Markaunt 

 to Sir Edward Hungerford and William Moore, 

 trustees for William Englefield, a younger son of 

 Sir Francis Englefield, bart. 80 Mary Fetiplace, the 

 granddaughter of William Englefield, brought the 

 manor into the Caryll family by her marriage with 

 Philip Caryll, 81 from whom it descended to their 

 only surviving child Elizabeth, the wife of John 

 Walker of Marylebone, who sold it in 1743 to 

 Lieut.-Gen. Robert Dalzell. 8 ' The latter by will 

 devised it to his grandson, Robert Dalzell, who sold 

 it at the end of the eighteenth century, 83 since which 

 time it has become merged with the rest of the 

 Hinton property. 



HINTON BURR4NT (Henton, xiii cent. ; Hien- 

 ton, xiv cent. ; Henton Bourhont, Henton Burhunt, 

 xv cent. ; Hinton Burrant and Henton Burrunt, xvii 

 cent.) was a small manor dependent upon the manor 

 of Hinton Daubnay. Thus, in an inquisition taken 

 in 1 3 5 8 it was stated to be held of Ellis Daubnay by 

 the payment of a penny a year. 84 Again, in the 

 inquisition taken after Elizabeth Uvedale's death 

 in 1488, it was returned as held of the prior of 

 St. Swithun, Winchester, who was at the time lord of 

 the manor of Hinton Daubnay. 85 The first document 

 relating to this manor seems to be a fine of 1283, 

 whereby Rose de Henton quitclaimed to Roger de 

 Molton a messuage and 80 acres of land in 'Hinton, 

 near Catherington.' ** Five years later Roger de Molton 

 quitclaimed to Richard de Boarhunt and Maud his 

 wife a messuage and I J carucates of land in Hinton 

 and at the same time granted to them the reversion 

 of half a carucate of land in the same place after the 

 death of Anne, the wife of Aimery de Kaunvyle. 87 In 

 the Patent Rolls there are several references to Richard 

 de Boarhunt, in connexion with his property in 

 Hinton. 88 On the death of Richard de Boarhunt the 

 manor passed to Thomas de Boarhunt, whose son and 



85 Hoare, Wilts, iv, 131. 



88 Chan. Inq. p.m. (Ser. 2), Misc. djutvi, 

 No. 9. 



"> Recov. R. East. 2 Will, and Mar)-, 

 rot. 5. 



88 The Hampshire Repository (1799), ii, 

 204 ; Add. MS. 9458, fol. 69 and 78. 



59 Pat. 7 Ric. II, pt. 2, m. n. 



7 Close, 13 Hen. IV, m. 2, and I Hen. 

 VI, m. 21. 



7 1 Mins. Accts. Hants, 32 & 33 Hen. 

 VIII, m. 49. 



7" Lands called ' Emcrys ; crofts called 

 'Little Asheteddes" and 'Great Ashe- 

 teddes ' ; lands called ' Les Leye,' in 

 Hinton Daubnay, and a parcel of land 

 called ' The Style Garden ' in Hormer. 



7' Pat. i 8 Eliz. pt. 7, m. 18-22. 



7< Close, 1 8 Eliz. pt. 5. 



' 6 Ibid. 21 Eliz. pt. 6. 



"Ibid. 19 Jas. I, pt. 33, No. 36. 

 The premises are thus described in the 

 indenture : The manor, grange, capital 



messuage and farm of Henton Mar- 

 chant, lands called The Lees, Barlie Asted, 

 Wheate Asted, Fetch Asted, Chawcrofte, 

 the Barnefield, Durley Grove, Dencroft, 

 Shortridge, Stonridge, Tibs Purrocke, 

 Embres Meade, Oate Purrocke, Kingston- 

 crofte, The Upper and Lower Crumpe, 

 Lampitts Close, The Homefield, The 

 Gaston, The Outer Gaston, The Water 

 Hill, The Outer Hill, Handells, Upper 

 and Lower Breach, Breach garden mea- 

 dow, and the Lawrences, a wood called 

 Lee wood, the two Dencroft coppices, 

 common in the Hurste and Lampitts 

 coppice, fields in Henton Down, and 

 common of pasture in the Forest of East 

 Bere. 



77 Chan. Inq. p.m. (Ser. 2) 3 Chas. I, 

 pt. I, No. 104. 



7 8 Close, 9 Chas. I, pt. 4, No. 1 2. 

 7 Ibid. 10 Chas. I, pt. 9, No. 21. 



80 Vide Recov. R. Hil. 1656, rot. 131. 

 This William Englefield was a recu- 



97 



sant (Cal. of Com. for Compounding, Hi, 



793)- 



81 fide Recov. R. Hil. 12 Anne, rot. 

 19, and Close, 17 Geo. II, pt. 8, No. 22. 

 In a fine of 1691 the manor is called the 

 manor of North Hinton (Feet of F. Div. 

 Cos. Hil. 3 Will, and Mary). 



81 Close, 1 7 Geo. II, pt. 8, No. 22. 



88 Recov. R. East. Geo. Ill, rot. 216. 

 It was then a farm worth 60 a year. 



84 Inq. p.m. 33 Edw. Ill (2nd Nos.), 

 No. 103. 



86 Chan. Inq. p.m. (Ser. 2), iv, No. 16. 



88 Feet of F. Hants, Trin. 1 1 Edw. I. 



"7 Ibid. East. 16 Edw. I. 



88 Thus, for example, in 1303 a com- 

 mission of oyer and terminer was granted 

 to Philip de Hoyvill and Baldwin de 

 Bellany, touching the persons who by 

 night broke a dyke belonging to Richard 

 de Boarhunt at ' Henton by Caterington,' 

 cut down the trees in his wood there and 

 carried them away (Pat. 3 1 Edw. I, m. 



