11^ 



Brotherivick. By J. C. Hodgson. 



APPENDIX. 



Inq., p. m. i.. p. 2, No. 14, 

 30 Henry III., 1245. 



Idem., p. 10, No. 23, 

 36 Henry III , 1251. 



Testa de Nevill, i., p. 221. 



Rot. Hundred, ii., p. 17, 

 3 Edward I., 1274. 



Rot. Hundred, ii., p. 17, 

 1274. 



Richard le Male^' held land at Snthorp — and 

 the manor of Odiam [Hampshire.] 



Alicia, daughter of Richard le Masle, held the 

 manor of Brotherwike and 14 bovates of land 

 in Riplington. 



" Sergeanty of the lord the king — Hngh de 

 Hamville holds Brotherwyc in chief of the lord 

 the king for keeping the falcons of the lord 

 the king." 



[Inquiry of ancient rights and customs, etc] 

 The Jurors say "that William de Hanvill,^^ who 

 is still alive, has withdrawn the half mark which 

 he was accustomed to pay to the lord the king 

 for his land of Broyerwik, and this for 16 years 

 bygone." 



" Also they say that the manor of Roytherwyk 

 was the demesne of King Henry, [i.e. Henry II.] 

 the great grandfather's father of the lord the king, 

 who now is, and the same King Henry gave that 

 manor to Henry de Hanvill for the rental thence 

 to the king of one half mark annually." 



*' In 1245 Richard le Masle held lands in Suthorp and the manor of 

 Odihani [Hampshire], (Inquis., p. mortem i., p. 2, No. 14.) In 1253 

 Wm. Villers held 2 acres of land in Odiham (Inq., p. mortem I., p. 13.) 

 In 1250 Gilbert de Eversley held lands in Odiham {ibid., i., p. 9.) 

 itemp.'] Henry 3, Odiham was held by John de Bending and [femp.] 

 Edward II., by Thomas de Warblyngton {lb., i., p. 288.) Apparently 

 then the le Masle family had held their Hampshire lands but a short 

 time. In 1276 Riplington is part of the lands of Hexham Priory, 

 which are mentioned in Inq., p. m. i., p. 145, but probably part of the 

 manor only, as in 1309 Robert fitz-Roger held, in fee, land in 

 Ripplinton, Inq., p. m. i., p. 238. 



28 Gilbert de Hanvill holds in chief of the lord the king a vill, by 

 the service of sergeanty of falconry. Of that land nothing is aliened or 

 granted by marriage, or gift, or by any other method whereby the 

 king may have his service diminished, Testa de Ne-nll, p. 393, [circa. 

 1218.] Hugo de Hamville holds Brotherwyk, in capite, of the lord 

 the king {ibid., p. 388.) Query was Alicia, daughter of Richard le 

 Masle, wife of Hiijh de Hanvill ? 



