142 



Herm. 



Ketehou or Keitehuml) with its church. I know of no other 

 place where the church is spoken of. In the middle of the 13th 

 century Sir W. de Chaeney, Seigneur of the Fief Le Comte, 

 had the life enjoyment of Jethou, which was to return to the 

 abbey at his death. The Abbot made some profit by the 

 warrens and wreckage on the island, and the accounts of the 

 Vale priory for the year 1314, give those profits at 40 sols. 

 Like Herm, Jethou was preserved as a chase for the use of the 

 Governor of Guernsey. 



