188 THE KILLiaRE"W MANTTSCRIPT. 



thereof 5th March, in the 26th of the said Elizabeth, in whose 

 court having placed his two younger sons, Thomas and Simon, 

 where they made their fortunes, and set up the younger housef in 

 greater prosperity than that of Arwenack, as shall be more (^ ^Cre *^) 

 particularly mentioned when I shall have done with the elder 

 house of Arwenack. 



[ Worth, p. 273, par. 2, lmel2, between Extent****' and This woman] 

 and as a proof of this wretched woman's flagrant prosti- 

 tution, the court only compelled him to allow her £20 a 

 year, who being of a family as aforesaid,;]: and bringing 

 a suitable portion, must have been more large, had she 

 not appeared to the court so vitious a woman. 



[JPage 274, line 2, between, Jointure * * * and who lived] which was 

 the whole of this heretofore great estate consisting of the 

 houses then in being in Smithick (now Ealmouth) of little 

 value, Arwenack House and the demesne lands about it, 

 and the little manour of Mylor,* the whole upon an inqui- 

 sition taken in the time of the civil wars did appear, and 

 (™o'waa^) was returned not to exceed the yearly value of 

 eighty pounds. 



[Page 274, line 20, between demise and [Then] unto the said Sir 

 Peter, ( ^{^^'^^ ) and Mary his wife,( ^,^^^1,*"'') and singular 

 those the (^^la^ds"^*) lands tenements, parcells of ground 

 meadow and pasture situate lying and being in the west 

 moor of or near Cardiffe, in the county of Glamorgan, 

 some time in the tenure of William Bowdropp, Esq., and 

 late in the tenure or occupation (^^cup'Stion'') of William 



f See below a comment on Thomas and Symon Killigrew. 



J Dame Jane Killigrew was the daughter of Sir George Fermor. The piracy 

 ascribed by Hals to Dame Jane, and after Hals by Mr. Worth (p. 272, note), was 

 really committed by Dame Killigrew (nee Wolverston), her husband s grand- 

 motjjer. — (Mr. H. M. Whitley Jnur. Royal Institution of Cornwall, Vol. VII, 

 p. 286; see also Mr. Tregellas Cornish Worthies, Vol. II, p. 120). After her 

 husband's death Dame Jane found a second husband in Francis Bluett of 

 Trevathan (Trevethan ?) and died in 1648. During the occupation by the Bluetts 

 in (March, 1646, Arwenack House was burned by the garrison of Pendennis Castle : 

 Bluett was treated as a delinquent and reduced to poverty. (Mr. Whitley, 

 Journal R.I.C., Vol. IX, p. 50.) 



* In the field-map of 1691, preserved at the Manor Office, this estate is 

 drawn. 



