By Canon Chr. Wordsworth. 23 



cir. 1235. 40 days granted by Edmund, Abp. of Canterbury, to con- 

 tributors to the structure of Salisbury Cathedral Church (marked 23). 

 " Sane, . . . dilectissimi. Seal, green wax : St. Edmund, Abp. 

 6 medallions. Verso, martyrdom of St. Thomas. [Box " jEdmund,"] 

 Report (1901) pp. 377—8. 



dr. 1235. 40 days, granted by [St.] Edmund [Rich, of Abingdon], Abp. 

 of Canterbury, to contributors to the fabric of Salisbury Cathedral. 

 " Si juxta sapientis," n.d. (Duplicate, but seal lost.) [S. 2.] 



1253. 1 year and 40 days, granted by Pope Innocent IV., promulgated 

 by William of York, Bp. of Sarum, to contributors to S. Paul's, London. 

 Feb., 1252—3. Camden Soc, N.S. xxvi., pp. 3, 4. ex Brit. Mus. Add. 

 Charter 5957. 



1258. "Licet is, cuius munere." 100 days, granted by Pope Alexander IV. 

 to visitors at Salisbury Cathedral Church on the feast of the Assump- 

 tion (15 Aug.). 

 40 days, ditto, at Candlemas (2 Feb.) and 

 40 days, ditto, at the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin (8 Sept.). 

 Sum, 180 days. 21 May, 1258. 



Misdated by Benson & Hatcher, p. 734. Registrum Rubrum, 120 ; 

 Sarum Charters, p. 329. 



1258. 122 days are granted by Abp. Boniface and his suffragans (besides 

 Papal indulgences, &c.) to those who go ad certam ecclesiam to observe 

 the dedication festival octaves of Salisbury Cathedral. Emman. Coll.. 

 Cambridge, MS. I. 2, 6, f. 174. 



1261. 40 days, granted by Giles de. Bridport, Bp. of Sarum, to contribu- 

 tors to St. Paul's, London. Camden Soc. NS.. xxvi., p. 176, n. 40. 



1264. Granted by Walter de la Wyle, Bp. of Sarum, to contributors to 

 St. Paul's, London. H. H. Milman, Annals o/S. Paul's, app. c. 



1266. 20 days, granted by Walter de la Wyle, Bp. of Sarum, to persons 

 attending Lincoln Sermons, and reciting 3 Paters and 3 Aves for the 

 soul of H. de Lexington, Bp. of Lincoln. Lincoln Muniments. 



1270. 30 days, granted by Robert Kilwardby, for prayers at the tomb 

 of Earl W. Longespe. Salisbury Ceremonies, p. 43. [Hatcher's] Hist. 

 8f Descriptive Account of 0- & N. Sarum, 1834, p. 40. 



cir. ? 1 270, or earlier. 13 days' pardon granted at Salisbury, for a Pater 

 and 5 Aves, at the tomb of Agnes, xiiith century inscription on a 

 buttress outside the south side of the Salve or Lady Chapel, near St. 

 Stephen's altar and porch (now blocked up). The buttress having had 

 a niche and a square opening, apparently for a tablet, cut in the face 

 of it, there is about one-third of the lettering of the indulgence entirely 

 destroyed. It was presumably either this inscription, or else the 

 curious epitaph of Precentor Adam Mottram, A.D. 1415, which is cut 

 on the next buttress, westward of the indulgence before us (and which 

 Mr. A. R. Maiden has deciphered and described in W. A. Mag., xxxv., 

 359), that Leland appears to have found already illegible in 1540, when 

 he left a blank space for it in his Itinerary ; see Miss L. T. Smith's 

 edition, 1907, i., p. 265, as " in one of the mayne butteres (of the south 

 isle again the high altare) of the chirch an inscription . . . [Latin] 

 sumwhat defacid." It may be read, I think, as follows : — 



