By the Rev. J. E. Jackson. 



305 



Robert Godmanstone's (two) : William Warwyke's and 

 William Swayne's. 



St. Martin's Church (old). Leland saw on the north side 

 of St. Nicholas's Hospital, a barn which the people told him 

 was the wreck of Old St. Martin's. Hall [Memorials of 

 Salisbury, p. in.], doubts this. 



Harnham. College of St. Nicholas, or Domus de Valle 

 Scholarum, or Yaux (dissolved). This had a Master and two 

 chaplains. The chapel was partly converted into a residence 

 for the Master of St. Nicholas Hospital. The chancel was 

 turned into a kitchen. The piscina remains. [Hall.] Mr. 

 Hatcher (p. 43) thought that an older hospital and chapel exist- 

 ed here before the foundation of the Cathedral. In Hatcher (p. 

 701) is a list of the Masters : and in Gent. Mag., 1818, May, 

 a plate. 



St. John's Chapel on an island near the bridge : was 

 built by Bishop Bingham, c. 1230. It had two chaplains. 

 " In order to secure the stability of the bridge which he had 

 built, by placing it under the constant superintendence of a 

 body interested in its preservation, the Bishop founded this 

 chapel and connected it with the hospital and chapel of St. 

 Nicholas." [Hatcher, p. 46.] In Hall's Pict. Mem. of Salisb. 

 plate xxiii., is a view of this ruined chapel. 



A House of Lepers at Harnham is often alluded to, but its 

 site is unknown. [Hatcher, p. 92.] 



The Religious Houses in Salisbury were two small establish- 

 ments. 



1. The Dominicans, Black Friars, or Friars Preachers. They 

 came from Wilton and settled at Fisherton. Their conventual 

 church is mentioned. [Hatcher, p. 90.] 



2. The Franciscans, Grey Friars, or Friars Minors. They also 

 had a conventual church. [Ditto p. 57, 90.] 



Seagry, (Malmesbury Hundred.) John Aubrey says of an old 

 manor house here " it was sometime a Nunnery." He was mis- 

 led (in the way alluded to, in the remarks introductory to this 

 paper), by some traces of ecclesiastical style in an old country 



