64 



Proceedhhjs of the Royal Irish Academy. 



messuage in Golden-lane,^ parish of S. John a.],- Eooth-street, Dublin 



Dated Monday next before the feast of the I^'ativity, 6° Richard II 



[Seal.] 



{In dorso). — "John de Bow Streete, Bertranscourt, bouses in 

 Cooke-street." 



HiGH-STEEET. 



58. (540) EoGER Coleman grants to the Parishioneks of 

 S. Audoen's, Dublin, IO5. yearly rent towards the work 



[1304.] of the fabric, out of a tenement within the New Gate, 

 Dublin, in High-street, in said parish. . . > 



. Unred, and lying between the land of Anabilla Garget on 

 the one side, and the land of Henry le [Mar] eschal . . 

 in perpetual alms towards the works of said church, and the sus- 

 tenance of a light in . . chapel. 



Witnesses. — [Geo&ey^] Morton, mayor, Edward Colet, and John de 

 Cadwely, bailiffs, Henry . . . le Decer, John le Seriant, 



Eobert de ^^'otingham, Thomas Colice, John de Ley[cester], William 

 Don, and William le . 



59. (507) John de Gayton, apothecary, releases to Robert 

 9 Dec, Menys, citizen, of Dublin, a messuage in High-street, 



1338. Dublin, lying between the tenement formerly John Decer's 

 (senior) on the one side, and the tenement of said Robert 

 on the other ; in length from the highway to the church of S. Audoen 

 in the rere; to hold for ever. Dated, at Dublin, Wednesday next 

 after the feast of S. Nicholas the bishop, 12° Edward III. 



Witnesses. — Robert Tanner, mayor, Robert Houton, John Creks, 



^ No lane of this uame is known to have existed in this parish ; Golden-lane, 

 off Bride-street, was in the parish of S. Bridget (Bride). It seems strange that I 

 there should have been three lanes of the name in the old city, as le Golde-lane," I 

 in the parish of S. Michael, is mentioned in a document of 1438, among the Deeds 

 in T. C. D. Library. This last, however, may be identical with the first-named; 

 the parishes adjoin, and some confusion may have arisen. I 



~ Supplied from 15ook of Abstracts, S. Anne's Deeds (Gilbert mss.). i 

 Illegible. 1 Torn. | 



■5 Morton, Colet, and Cadwely were mayor and bailiffs in 1304. See Register I 

 of All Halloivs, Dublin, p. 44 (Irish Arch. Soc). \ 



