RELIGIOUS HOUSES 



Deans of Wimborne '^ 



Martin de Pateshull, presented 1223^-' 



Randolf Brito, presented 1229" 



John Mansell, presented 1247 



John Kirby, 1265 



John de Berwick, presented 1286 



Stephen de Male Lacu or Mauley, presented 



1312'=' 

 Richard de Clare, presented 131 7" 

 Richard de Swynnerton, presented 1335^' 

 Richard de Murymouth, presented 1330 '^■'' 

 Robert de Kyngeston, presented 1342"'' 

 Thomas de Clopton, presented 1349," died 



in the same year 

 Reginald Brian, presented 1349"* 



Thomas de Brembre, presented 1350'' 



Henry de Bukyngham, presented 1 36 1 



Richard de Beverley, presented 1367'" 



John Carp, presented 1387'^' 



Roger Coryngham, presented 1400^^ 



Peter de Altobasso or Altobosco, presented 1 4 1 2 



Walter Medford, occurs 141 5 



Gilbert Kymer, presented 1423" 



Walter Hurte, occurs 1467 



Hugh Oldham, presented 1485 



Thomas Rowthel, occurs 1508 



Henry Hornby, occurs 1509 as an executor of 



the will of the countess of Richmond and 



Derby 

 Reginald Pole, presented i 5 i 8 '* 

 Nicholas Wilson, presented 1537 '' 



ALIEN HOUSES 



33. THE PRIORY OF FRAMPTON 



The Domesday Survey records that the manor 

 of Frampton in Dorset was held by the church 

 of St. Stephen, the Norman abbey of Caen 

 founded by William the Conqueror 'for the 

 weal of himself, his wife, his children, and his 

 relatives,'' and that 2 hides of land adjoining 

 the manor were the gift of his queen Matilda, 

 the whole being worth 40;.^ Henry II, con- 

 firming to the monks of Caen the gifts of his 

 predecessors, enumerates the manor of Northam 

 in Devonshire with its appurtenances, including 

 wreck of the sea and dues of the ships calling 

 there, given by Matilda in her last illness ; the 

 manors of Frampton and Bincombe in Dorset, 

 the gift of the Conqueror together with 7 hides 

 of land in East Hendred, Berkshire ; the manor 

 of Burton Bradstock, Dorset, given by Henry I, 

 partly for the redemption of his soul and those 

 of his father, mother and relatives, and partly 

 in lieu of the crown and other ornaments belong- 

 ing to it which William his father had bequeathed 

 to the abbey ; and the little manor [maneriolum) 

 of Pantfield in Essex.' Richard, archbishop of 



" The following are taken from the list given by 

 Hutchins {Hist, of Dorset, iii, 186) from Browne 

 Willis, verified and in some cases corrected according 

 to the patent rolls and other official records ; where 

 no further reference can be found the list has been 

 allowed to stand. 



"' Pat. R. Hen. Ill, m. 12. 



" Ibid. 13 Hen. Ill, m. I. 



" Ibid. 5 Edw. II, pt. 2, m. 3. 



^ Ibid. II Edw. II, pt. I, m. 30. 



" Ibid. 8 Edw. Ill, pt. 2, m. 5. 



" Ibid. 12 Edw. Ill, pt. I, m. 13. 



'° Ibid. 16 Edw. Ill, pt. 2, m. 14. 



" Ibid. 23 Edw. Ill, pt. I, m. 31. 



'' Ibid. m. 4. 



" Ibid. 24 Edw. Ill, pt. 2, m. 17. 



'" Inq. p.m. 41 Edw. Ill (2nd nos.), No. 37. 



" Pat. II Rich. II, pt. I, m. 27. 



2 I 



Canterbury, 1172-84, confirming to the abbot 

 and convent of St. Stephen's all their possessions 

 in the province of Canterbury, includes the 

 churches of Frampton, Bincombe, Winterborne, 

 and Bettiscombe — saving the rights of the bishop 

 of the diocese — according to the charter of Jocelin 

 bishop of Salisbury.* Henry III in 1252 granted 

 to the prior and monks of Frampton the right 

 of free warren within their demesne lands of 

 Frampton, Ernley, Bettiscombe, Mosserigg, 

 Burton Bradstock, and Bincombe, Dorset, and 

 Northam (Devonshire), provided their lands 

 should not lie within the king's forest.* 



The Taxatio of 1 291 gives the prior tempor- 

 alities in this county amounting to £b2 2s. ; 

 £j 31. 4r/. from Northam, Devonshire, and 

 ;^3 lOJ. from East Hendred, Berkshire.^ The 

 spiritualities of the priory are omitted. In the 

 same year an order was sent to the treasurer and 

 barons of the exchequer to acquit the prior of a 

 fine of lOOf. in which he had been amerced for 

 his claim for wreck of the sea within his manor 

 of Northam.' 



" Ibid. I Hen. IV, pt. I, m. 34. 



'' Ibid. 2 Hen. VI, pt. I, m. 33. 



" L. and. P. Hen. Vlll, ii (2), 3943. 



'» Ibid, xii (i), 1 115 (42) 



' See the Conqueror's charter for the abbey, CaL 

 Doc. France, 155. 



' Dom. Bk. (Rec. Com.), i, 78^. 



' Cal. Doc. France, 155-60. The charter of 

 Richard I in I 190, contained in the inspeximus 

 charter of Henry IV (Pat. 2 Hen. IV, pt. I, m. 33),. 

 confirms the two manors of Frampton and Bincombe 

 with their members ; the manor of Northam, Devon,, 

 7 hides of land at East Hendred, Berks ; Pantfield ini 

 Essex ; Burton Bradstock, Dorset ; and a grant by 

 Henry II of all kinds offish cast up on their land. 



' CaL Doc. France, 162. 



'Chart. R. 37 Hen. Ill, m. 21. 



^ Pope Nich. Tax. (Rec. Com.), fol. 132^, I S3, 

 184, 196. 



' Close, 19 Edw. I, m. 7. 



n »5 



