ANTIQUITIES OF SKLBORNE. 
355 
hundred and eighteen pounds sixteen shillings and seven pence 
per annum. Here then was a preceptory unnoticed by antiqua- 
ries, between the village and Temple. Whatever the edifice of 
the preceptory might have been, it has long since been dilapi- 
dated , and the whole hamlet contains now only one mean farm- 
house, though there were two in the memory of man. 
It has been usual for the religious of different orders to fall 
into great dissensions, and especially when they were near neigh- 
bours. Instances of this sort we have heard of between the 
monks of Canterbury ; and again between the old abbey of St. 
Swythun, and the comparatively new minster of Hyde in the city 
of Winchester.* These feuds arose probably from different orders 
being crowded within the narrow limits of a city, or garrison- 
town, where every inch of ground was precious, and an object of 
contention. But with us, as far as my evidences extend, and 
while Robert Saunford was master,f and Richard Carpenter was 
preceptor, the Templars and the Priors lived in an intercourse of 
mutual good offices. 
My papers mention three transactions, the exact time of which 
cannot be ascertained, because they fell out before dates were 
usually inserted; though probably they happened about the 
middle of the thirteenth century ; not long after Saunford became 
master. The first of these is that the Templars shall pay to the 
priory of Selborne, annually, the sum of ten shillings at two half 
yearly payments from their chamb-er, "camera," at Sudington, 
"per manum preceptoris, vel ballivi nostri, qui pro tempore 
fuerit ibidem," till they can provide the prior and canons with an 
* NOTITIA MONA9TICA, P. 155. 
'•Winchester, Newminster. King Alfred founded here first only a house and chapel for the 
learned monk Grinihald, whom he had brought out of Flanders : but afterwards projected, and by 
his will ordered, a noble church or religious house to be built in the cemetery on the norch side 
of the old minster or cathedral ; and designed that Grimbald should preside over it. This was 
begun A. D. 901, and finished to the honour of the Holy Trinity, Virgin Mary, and St Peter, by 
his son king Edward, who placed therein secular canons : but A. D. 963 they were expelled, and 
an abbot and monks put in possession by bishop Ethelwold. 
•* Now the churches and habitations of these two societies being so verj' near together, the dif- 
ferences which were occasioned by their singing, bells, and other matrers, arose to so great a height, 
that the religious of the new monastery thought fit, about A. D. 1119, to remove to a better and 
more quiet situation without the walls, on the north part of the city called i Jyde, where king 
Henry I. at the instance of Will. Gilford, bishop of Winton, founded a stately abbey for them. 
St. Peter was generally accounted patron ; though it is sometimes called the monastery of St. 
Grimbald, and sometimes of St. Barnabas," &c. 
A few years since a county bridewell, or house of correction, has been built on the immediate 
site of Hyde Abbey. In digging up the old foundations the workmen found the head of a crosier 
in good preservation. 
t Robert Saunforde was master of the Temple in 1241 ; Guido de Foresta was the next in 1292. 
The former is fifth in a list of the masters in a MS. Bib. Cotton. Nero, E. VI. 
2 A 2 
