A HISTORY OF BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 



5 February, 1524,* that its revenues might be 

 applied to the support of the new college at 

 Oxford, and received a pension of 10 a year. 2 

 The five monks who remained were given 6s.%d. 

 each as ' reward,' 3 but it is uncertain whether 

 this was a regular pension or only paid to them 

 at their dismissal. Probably they entered 

 other houses of religion. 



The original endowment of this house 

 comprised the demesne land at Tickford with 

 other small parcels of land in this county and 

 Northamptonshire, and several churches : 

 Newport Pagnel with the chapels of Little 

 Linford and Little Crawley ; Chichely, 

 Broughton, and half North Crawley, Willen, 

 Astwood, Bradwell, Sherrington, and the 

 chapel of Petsoe in this county ; Aston, War- 

 wicks, with three dependent chapels ; Bar- 

 nack and Botlingdon, Northants. Most of 

 these were given by various members of the 

 family of Paynel before 1154.* Broughton 

 and North Crawley had passed out of the 

 possession of this monastery by the thirteenth 

 century, and Sherrington was granted to the 

 bishops of Lincoln in 1291. William Paynel 5 

 gave the monastery the churches of Bridge- 

 water and ' Hynnespill ' in the diocese of 

 Bath in 1224, but they were lost some time 

 later as well as the two churches in Northamp- 

 tonshire, before the house was dissolved. At 

 the time of the Taxatio the priory was valued 

 104 i6s. 3$d., e of which only 15 15*. 3%d. 

 were in temporalities. 89 is. includes the 

 revenues of all the churches, which were not 

 of course by any means clear profit. The 

 survey of 1325 gives a total of jo is. ; there 

 were pensions to be paid out of this amounting 

 to 18 ids., besides ten corrodies in kind. 7 

 In 1302 the prior held one tenth of a knight's 

 fee in Chichely and one eighth in Hardmead 8 : 

 in 1 346 he had one fee in Chichely, one eighth 

 in Bradwell, and one eighth in Hardmead. 9 

 At the dissolution of the house in 1524 its 

 total issues amounted to 57 us. \d. 10 ; the 

 bells and lead were worth 33 6s. 8d., and 

 the moveable goods only 5 4*." The 



1 L. and P. Henry VIII. iv. 1137. 



2 Ibid. 3 Ibid. 6222. 



4 Round, Col. of Doc. France, i. \\] ; and the 

 confirmation charter given in Dugdale, Man. v. 

 202, and dated 1187. 



Harl. MS. 2188, f. I2sd. 



Pope Nicb. Tax. (Rec. Com.). A survey of 

 the manor taken 22 Edw. I. amounts to 141 15.1. 2d. 

 (Dugdale, Man. v. 204-5). 



i Ibid. v. 205. 



8 Feud. Aids, i. 104. 



Ibid. 130, 132. 



10 L. and P. Henry VIII. iv. 6788. 



" Ibid. 6222. 



Ministers' Accounts however give a total of 

 122 i<)s. 7^. 12 



PRIORS OF TICKFORD 



Robert de Bohun, 13 occurs 1187 

 Walter, 14 occurs 1199 

 Bernard, 15 occurs 1200 

 Hugh, 16 resigned 1220 

 William, 17 elected 1220, resigned 1232 

 John de Colne, 18 elected 1232, resigned 1233 

 Robert Hamelyn, 19 elected 1233 

 Oliver, 20 occurs 1255 and 1259 

 Gilbert, 21 occurs 1262 

 Bartholomew, 22 died 1270 

 Reginald de Cossam, 23 elected 1270 

 Simon de Reda, 24 occurs 1 275, deposed 1 291 

 Geoffrey Villicus, 23 elected 1291, resigned 



1302 



William de Menevere, 26 elected 1302, re- 

 signed 1332 

 Fulk de Champaigne, 27 elected 1332, died 



1349 



William de Tanqueterre, 28 elected 1349 

 John de Garry, 29 occurs 1352 and 1355 

 John de Fresney, 30 occurs 1362 

 Francis Quatresoulz, 31 elected 1363 

 William Daunay, 32 elected 1365 

 John Dvien, 33 occurs from 1383 to 1416 

 Thomas Chace, 34 occurs 1419 

 John Carlell, 35 occurs 1431, died 1434 

 Robert Blythe, 36 elected 1434 

 Thomas Derneton, 37 elected 1464, resigned 



1468 



12 Dugdale, Man. v. 206. 



13 Charter of Fulk Paynel ; Dugdale, Man. v. 

 202. i* Ibid. 



15 Feet of Fines (Rec. Com.), i. 187, 190. 

 ' Line. Epis. Reg. Rolls of Hugh of Wells. 

 "Ibid. Ibid. Ibid. 



20 Feet of F. 19 Hen. III. 13. 



21 Dugdale, Man. v. 201. 



22 Ibid. 



23 Line. Epis. Reg. Rolls of Gravesend. Dug- 

 dale's list has Reginald de Bernewell also, occurring 

 3 Edward I. ; who is probably the same person. 



a< Pat. 6 Edw. I. m. 19, etc. 



2S Line. Epis. Reg. Inst. Sutton, H7d. 



28 Ibid. Inst. Dalderby, 176. His name is spelt 

 in two or three different ways. 



57 Ibid. Inst. Burghersh, 341. 

 Ibid. Inst. Gynwell, 240. 



29 Dugdale, Man. v. 202. 

 3 Ibid. 



31 Line. Epis. Reg. Inst. Bokyngham, 409. 



32 Ibid. 4lod (William de Alneto). 



33 Pat. 9 Richard II. m. 4od, etc., and Bull, 

 History of Newport Pagnel, 97. 



34 Dugdale, Man. v. 201. 



36 Ibid, and Line. Epis. Reg. Inst. Gray, 49. 



36 Line. Epis. Reg. Inst. Gray, 49. 



37 Ibid. Memo. Chadworth, 64. 



364 



