404 
ANTiaUITIES OF SELBORNE. 
It has been observed already, that bisbop Tanner was mistaken 
when he refers to an evidence of Dodsworth, " De mercatu et 
FERiA de Seleburne.'* Selborne never had a chartered fair ; the 
present fair was set up since the year 1681, by a set of jovial 
fellows, who had found in an old almanack tbat there had been 
a fair here in former days on the first of August ; and were de- 
sirous to revive so joyous a festival. Against this innovation the 
vicar set his face, and persisted in crying it down, as the proba- 
ble occasion of much intemperance. However the fair prevailed ; 
but was altered to the twenty-ninth of May, because the former 
day often interfered with wheat-harvest. On that day it still 
continues to be held, and is become an useful mart for cows and 
calves. Most of the lower housekeepers brew beer against this 
holiday, which is dutied by the exciseman ; and their becoming 
victuallers for the day without a license is overlooked. 
Monasteries enjoyed all sorts of conveniences within them- 
selves. Thus at the Priory, a low and moist situation, there were 
ponds and stews for their fish : at the same place also, and at the 
Grange in Culver-croft,* there were dove-houses ; and on the 
hill opposite to the Grange the prior had a warren, as the names 
of the Coney-crofts and Coney-croft Hanger plainly testify.f 
Nothing has been said as yet respecting the tenure or holding 
of the Selborne estates. Temple and Norton are manor farms 
and freehold ; as is the manor of Chapel near Oakb anger, and 
also the estate at Oakhanger-house and Black-moor. The Priory 
and Grange are leasehold under Magdalen-college, for twenty- 
one years, renewable every seven : all the smaller estates in and 
round the village are copyhold of inheritance under the college, 
except the little remains of the Gurdon-manor, which had been 
of old leased out upon lives, but have been freed of late by their 
present lord, as fast as those lives have dropped. 
Selborne seems to have derived much of its prosperity from 
the near neighbourhood of the Priory. For monasteries were of 
considerable advantage to places where they had their sites and 
estates, by causing great resort, by procuring markets and fairs, 
by freeing them from the cruel oppression of forest laws, and by 
letting their lands at easy rates. But, as soon as the convent 
was suppressed, the town which it had occasioned began to de- 
cline, and the market was less frequented ; the rough and se- 
* Culver, as has been observed before, is Saxon for a pigeon, 
t A warren was an usual appendage to a manor. 
