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A54665 Villare cantianum, or, Kent surveyed and illustrated being an exact description of all the parishes, burroughs, villages and other respective mannors included in the county of Kent : and the original and intermedial possessors of them ... / by Thomas Philipott ... : to which is added an historical catalogue of the high-sheriffs of Kent, collected by John Phillipot, Esq., father to the authour. Philipot, John, 1589?-1645.; Philipot, Thomas, d. 1682. 1659 (1659) Wing P1989; ESTC R35386 623,091 417

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surrender his Soul to God Sheriffs of Kent under the Scepter of K. Charles Sir Thomas Hamon of Brasted Knight was Sheriff of Kent in the first year of K. Charles Sir Isaac Sidley of great Chart Knight and Baronet was Sheriff of Kent in the second year of K. Charles Basel Dixwel of Folkstone Esquire afterwards Knighted was Sheriff of Kent in third year of K. Charles Sir Edward Engham of Goodneston Knight was Sheriff of Kent in the fourth year of K. Charles and had a Dispensation under the Kings Hand and Signet to inhabit within the County and City of Canterbury during his year of Shrievalty and to find a meet Person to attend at the Assises in his Place in regard of his indisposition of Body Sir William Champion of Combwel in Goudherst Knight was Sheriff of Kent the fifth year of K. Charles Jo. Brown of Singleton in Great Chart Esquire was Sheriff of Kent in the sixth year of K. Charles and kept his Shrievalty at Hinxhill Court Sir Robert Lewknor of Acris Knight was Sheriff of Kent in the seventh year of K. Charles Nicholas Miller of Horsnels Crouch in Wrotham Esquire was Sheriff of Kent in the eighth year of K. Charles Sir Thomas Stiles of Watringbury Knight and Baronet was Sheriff of Kent in the ninth year of K. Charles Sir John Baker of Sisinghurst in Cranbroke Baronet was Sheriff of Kent the tenth year of K. Charles Edward Chowt of Surrenden in Bethersden Esquire was Sheriff of Kent in the eleventh year of K. Charles and kept his Shrievalty at Hinxhill Sir William Colepeper of Preston in Alresford Baronet was Sheriff of Kent in the twelfth of K. Charles Sir George Sonds of Lecze Court in Shelvich Knight of the Bath was Sheriff of Kent in the thirteenth of K. Charles Sir Thomas Henley of Coursehorne in Cranbroke Knight was Sheriff of Kent in the fourteenth year of K. Charles Sir Edward Masters of East Langdon Knight was Sheriff of Kent in the fifteenth year of K. Charles David Polhill of Otford Esquire was Sheriff of Kent in the sixteenth year of K. Charles James Hugison of Lingsted Esquire was Sheriff of Kent in the seventeenth year of K. Charles Sir William Brockman of Bithborough in Newington Belhouse Knight was Sheriff of Kent in the eighteenth year of K. Charles but being called to manage this Office by that King when he was in Arms at Oxford he was thought by the Parliament then sitting to be a Person in that Juncture of Affairs not fitting to have the Manegerie of a Place of so great Concernment and was accordingly supplanted Sir Iohn Honywood of Evington Court in Elmested Knight was chosen by the Parliament then sitting to serve the Sheriff of Kent part of the eighteenth year of King Charles and continued in that Office the nineteenth year and twentieth year of the abovesaid Princes Reign Sir Iohn Rayney of Wrotham Baronet was Sheriff of Kent in the twenty first year of K. Charles Sir Iohn Henden of Biddenden Knight was Sheriff of Kent in the twenty second year of K. Charles Sir Stephen Scot of Hays by Bromley Knight was Sheriff of Kent in the twenty third year of K. Charles George Selby of the Moat in Ightham Esquire was Sheriff of Kent in the twenty fourth year of K. Charles In which year that Noble but infortunate Monarch was put to Death Sheriffs of Kent since the Death of K. Charles Henry Crispe of Quekes in Birchington Esq was Sheriff of Kent part of the year 1649 and part of the year 1650 but in Respect of age and indisposition of Body his place was supplied by Sir Nicholas Crispe Son and Heir George Curtis of Chart by Sutton Esquire was Sheriff of Kent part of the year 1650 and part of the year 1651. He was chosen to serve upon the Decease of William Draper of Crayford Esquire who was named to serve but died not long after his Nomination but by reason of Age and the Craziness of his Constitution his Son Norton Curtis Esquire discharged the Office for him Thomas Floyd of Gore Court in Otham Esquire was Sheriff of Kent part of the year 1651 and part of the year 1652. Bernard Hide of Bore Place in Chiddingstone Esquire was Sheriff of Kent part of the year 1652 and part of the year 1653. The right Honourable Sir Iohn Tufton Earl of Thanet was Sheriff of Kent part of the year 1653 and part of the year 1654. Sir Humphry Tufton of the Moat by Maidston Knight was Sheriff of Kent part of the year 1654 and part of the year 1655. Sir Michael Livesey Baronet of East Church in Shepey was Sheriff of Kent the Remainder of the year 1655 and part of the year 1656. Sir Michael Livesey Baronet was again Sheriff of Kent the residue of the year 1656 and a part of the year 1657. Charles Bolles of Rochester Esquire is now Sheriff of Kent 1658. Having a in succinct Register represented to the Reader an Historal View of those who were successively Sheriffs of this County as high as the Light of Publick Record will guide us to discover I shall now in a narrow Landskip give him a Prospect of those who in elder Times were styled Conservatores Pacis from whence our modern Justices of the Peace may have seemed to have extracted their Original Institution They were first established by Edward the third and then invested and fortified with an Authority and Power of a very wide Latitude but suitable indeed to an Office of so much concernment and importance as they were intrusted with the main End of their Place in the first Foundation of it was as appears Pat. de Anno primo Edwar. tertii Pars prima Memb. septima in Dorse to array and train the Inhabitants of each respective County where the Scene of their Power was laid that so they might be put into a Capacity to repress all homebred Insurrections within and secure the Nation from the Eruptions of forraigne Invaders from without and it is further evident Pat. de Anno duodecimo Edwar. tertii Memb. 16. in Dorso and again Pat. de Anno decimo Edw. tertii Pars secunda Memb. 35. in Dorso They were authorised by two Commissions to reduce all Vagabonds and Wanderers to dissipate all mutinous and riotous Conventions and to suppress all Thieves and Outlaws and all other Persons disaffected to the Peace established and to vindicate and assert the two Statutes of North-Hampton and Winchester in all the Ends and Consequences of them both which Laws direct an Inspection into the Premises The Catalogue or Register of those who were Conservatores Pacis for the County of Kent does here ensue Pat. 1. Edwar. 3. prima Pars Memb. septima in Dorso Bartholomeus de Burgherst   Johannes de Ifield Pat. 3. Edwar. 3. Par. prima Memb. 16. in Dorso Bartholomeus Burhurst   Johannes de Cobham Joannes de Ifield Pat. 5. Edwar. 3. Par. prima Memb. 24. in Dorso Johannes de Cobham   Johannes
the thirty second year of his Raign granted it to Sir Robert Southwell who in the thirty fifth year of that Prince conveyed it to Sir Edmund Walsingham of Scadbery whose Successor Sir Thomas Walsingham of the same place hath lately passed away all his Interest here to his Son in Law Mr. James Masters Roger de Merworth obtained a Market weekly and a Fair yearly to his Mannor of Merworth in the eighteenth year of Edward the first as appears by an old originall patent in the hands of the Earl of Westmerland Middleton is so called by Reason it is placed in the middle of the Shire and gives Name to the whole Hundred which is divided into five Baylywicks one whereof is called the Bailiwick of Shepey because it comprehends that Island Antiquity has set a noble Attribute upon it for in ancient Records it is styled Regia Villa de Middleton and here at Kemsley Downe derived from Campsley viz. the pastures where the Camp was kept Within the Parish of Middleton is the very place where in the Time of King Alfred Hasten the Dane that so much infested France arrived and fortified in such manner as he before had at Apuldore where he erected a Castle whose Fragments and Reliques are yet visible Our ancient Chroniclers inform us that this Town was in a good Condition till the Ragin of Edward the Confessor in whose days during the Disgust between him and Earl Godwin such as confederated with the Earl at home burnt the King's House here at Middleton a castellated Pallace beneath the Church whilst he and his Sons ransack'd and ruin'd many other places upon the Seacoasts and Skirts of the Shire In Times of a latter Date John de Burgo the elder had a Grant by Patent of the Mannors of Middleton and Marden in the second year of Edward the first and after Margaret Queen of England had a Grant by Patent likewise in the tenth year of Edward the second and after her Queen Philippa Wife to Edward the third had probably this Mannor in Dower for in the nineteenth year of that King's Raign as appears Pat. Anno 19. part prima memb 26. she grants it for some term of years to William de Clinton Earl of Huntingdon with all the Liberties annexed to it reserving only some royal Franchises which were so inherent to the Crown they could not be separated for an Annual Rent of 200. lb per Annum after his Time was expired it reverts to the Crown and there it remained for ought I can yet discover till the English Scepter was put into the Hands of K. James and then he grants the Mannors of Middleton and Marden for ever to Philip Earl of Pembroke not long since deceased There is within the Limitts of this Parish a Mannor called Northwood Chasteners which Name complies with the situation for it stands North from the Town in a Wood where Chest-Nut Trees formerly grew abundantly Stephen the Son of Jordan de Shepey desirous to plant himself out of the Island in some place not far distant built here a Mansion-house moated about Ez veteri Rot. penes Edo Dering Mill. Baronettum defunctum and a goodly well-wooded Park stored with plenty of Deere and wild Bores and had Licence from the Arch-bishop of Canterbury and religious Men of Christ-church to erect a Free-Chappell which some old People hereabouts who remembred it in the declining Age described to my Father when he visited Kent to be a curious peice of Architecture for Form and Beauty * Rog. de Northwood is listed in the Inventory of those worthy Kentish persons who were engaged with K. Ric. the first at his Seige of Acon in Palestine His Successor was Sir Rog. de Northwood who was ever fast and faithfull to H. the third and having always given himself to a military and martial Profession conceived it was ignominious to hold his Lands here by a lazy and unactive Socage Tenure and therefore in the forty first year of Henry the third changed them from Gavelkind to Knights Service He dyed in the thirteenth year of Edw. the first and his eldest Son Sir John Northwood succeeded both at Northwood and at Shorn and in the time of Ed. the first together with his eldest son Sir Jo. de Northwood was with that K. in his Wars in Scotland at the Seige of Carlaverock The Mannor of Shorn holding by this Tenure viz to carry a white Banner forty Days together at their own Charge when the King should make War in Scotland Sir Jo. de Northwood was called by Writ to sit in Parliament as Baron the first of Edw. the second and his Son John de Northwood was often summoned to sit as Baron in Parliament in the raign of Ed. the third Certainly a numerous Race of worthy Successors were Possessors of this Mannor of Northwood some of which lye buryed crosse-leg'd in Milton Church that had taken upon them to defend the Sepulchre of Christ or otherwise profest themselves for the Wars in the Holy Land And at last it devolved to John Northwood who as all things are wound upon a fixed and determined Period concluded in two Daughters and Coheirs one married to Barley of the County of Hertford and Joan the other was matched to Sir John Norton whose Ancestors were derived from one Nicholas de Norton who flourished in King Stephens Days and had much Land about Norton and Feversham as appears by the Book of St. Austins This Sir John Norton's Son for diverse remarkable Services performed in Flanders was knighted by Mary Queen of Hungary then Lady Regent of the Low-countries for Charles the fifth by the Name of Sir John Norton and his Grandchild Sir Thomas Norton some thirty five years since alienated it to Manasser Northwood Esquire collaterally branched out from the abovesaid John Northwood and his Son Mr. Robert Northwood passed away the Premises by Sale to Sir John Tufton third Brother to Nicholas Tufton Earl of Thanet whose second Son Sir Charles Tufton upon the late Decease of his eldest Brother Sir Benedict is now entered upon it Helmes or Holmes is a Mannor which is partly situated in Iwade and partly in Milton and had still the same Proptietaries as namely Savage and then Clifford whither for Satisfaction I referre the Reader only this I must add that about the latter end of Queen Elizabeth it was rent off by Sale and planted in the Revenue of Thompson Ancestor to Mr ...... Thompson of Royton Chappel in Lenham who is at this instant in the enjoyment of it Kempsley in this Parish puts in its Title to be of Roman extraction and there is something in the Name and in the Situation which does seem to support this originall nor hath Time with its destructive Impressions so defaced it but that there are some Reliques yet remaining of a Camp and other antiquated Fortifications Middleton in the fifteenth of Edward the first had a Market granted by that Prince to be held there
eminent Kentish Gentlemen that accompanied King Edward the first into Scotland and for his signal Service performed at the Siege of Carlaverock was made a Banneret by that Prince See Rot. Pipae de Anno 17. Edw. 2. but he likewise expired in two Daughters and Coheirs Agnes one of them was wedded to Thomas de Poynings and Joan the other was matched to Walter de Pateshull Upon the Partition of the Estate Rokesley's Interest in Westenhanger wholly accrued to Poynings and he had Issue Nicholas de Poynings who was summoned to sit in Parliament as Baron the thirty third year of Edward the third Michael Poynings who was likewise summoned to sit in Parliament as Baron the forty second year of that Prince and thirdly Lucas de Poynings who in the year abovesaid was honored with the same summons Upon the Devision of the Estate Westenhanger was annexed to the Demeasne of Michaell de Poynings and he had Issue Thomas de Poynings who was summoned to sit in Parliament as Baron in the sixth year of Henry the fourth his Son and Heir was Robert Poynings who in the twelfth year of Henry the sixth with Iohn Perry were designed by Authority to take the Subscriptions of those Kentish Gentlemen who were summoned in to renounce the Title of the House of York which it seems was then in secret Agitation to be set up against she House of Lanc●ster and this Robert was oftentimes summoned to sit in Parliament as Baron in the reign of that Prince The last time I find him summoned was in the twenty third year of his Government and his Son and Heir was Robert Poynings who was likewise summoned to sit in Parliament as Baron in the reign of the above-mentioned Monarch and deceased the eighth year of Edward the fourth and left his Estate here to that worthy Person his Son and Heir Sir Edward Poynings of whom more hereafter I shall now discover how that Division of Ostenhanger which devolved to Nicholas de Crioll by the Heir of Auberville was passed away Nicholas de Crioll had Issue John de Crioll who in the nineteenth year of Edward the third obtained a Licence to found a Chantry in the Chappel of St. Johns in Ostenhanger and endow it with one Messuage forty five Acres of Glebe and six Acres of Pasture situated in Limn as appears Prima Parte Pat. de Anno 19. Edwardi tertii Memb. 4. And before in the seventeenth year of that Prince was permitted by Grant from the Crown to embattle and make Loop-holes in his Mansion house at Ostenhanger as is manifest secunda Parte Pat. de Anno 17. Edwardi tertii Memb. 34. And he left it secured and invested with these new acquired Franchises to his Son Sir Nicholas de Crioll and he dyed seised of it in the third year of Richard the second Rot. Esc Num. 40. And from him did it successively devolve to Sir Thomas Keriell or Crioll who was slain at the second Battle of St. Albans in the thirty eighth of Henry the sixth whilst he asserted the Quarrel of the House of Yorke and dying without Issue-male Thomas Fogge Esquire in his Wife 's Right who was one of his Daughters and Co-heirs entered upon his Estate here at Ostenhanger and about the latter end of Edward the fourth passed it away to his eldest Brother Sir John Fogge of Repton who died possest of it in the seventeenth year of Henry the seventh and bequeathed it by Testament to his Son and Heir Sir John Fogge who about the beginning of Henry the eighth demised his Concernment here to Sir Edward Poynings which Edward Poynings was one of the Privy Councel to Henry the seventh and lived here when he so vigorously in the tenth year of that Prince opposed the proceedings of James Lord Audley who was afterwards defeated at Black-heath and likewise was Lord Deputy of Ireland and Knight of the Garter and by his Influence on that Nation was that eminent Statute enacted which ever since hath been adopted into his Family and called Poynings-Law He was likewise at the Siege of Terwin with Henry the eighth and was there for his eminent Service created Knight Banneret and Governour of that Town He died in the twelfth year of King Henry the eighth and was found after a serious Inquisition taken after his Death in the fourteenth year of that Prince to have neither any Issue lawfully begotten nor any collateral Alliance that could by any remote Affinity eptitle themselves to his Estate and so by Escheat it became invested in the Crown but King Henry the eighth out of his indulgent Bounty by Royal Concession made it the Inheritance of his natural Son Thomas Poynings who was a Person of excellent and elegant Composure and eminent Merit and was made Knight of the Bath at the Coronation of Queen Anne in the twenty fourth of that Prince's reign and afterwards having represented to the World signal Demonstrations in a publick Joust or Tournament of a remarkable Strength and Courage was in the thirty sixth year of Henry the eighth called to sit in Parliament as Baron Poynings of Ostenhanger but in the thirty seventh of that Prince's reign deceased without Issue upon whose Exit this Mannot reverts to the Crown and there lay couched until the first year of Edward the sixth and then it was granted to John Dudley Earl of Warwick afterwards Duke of Northumberland upon whose Attainder in the first year of Queen Mary it became again parcel of the Royal Patrimony and afterwards Queen Elizabeth about the beginning of her reign passed it away by Grant to her Kinsman Sir Thomas Sackville and he not long after alienated it by Sale to Thomas Smith Esquire vulgarly called Customer Smith who much enhaunsed the Beauty of the Fabrick which had been empaired and defaced with Fire with magnificent Additions from whom it is now transmitted by paternal Descent to his great Grand-child the Right Honorable Philip Smith Viscount Strangford who hath made it his principal Residence The Mannor of Heyton lies likewise in Stamford which was anciently possest by a Family of deep Antiquity which was known to the World by that Sirname and bore for their Cognisance in Ancient Armorials Gules three Piles Argent Alanus de Heyton called in some old Records Alanus Vicecomes because he was joyned as an Assistant to Ralph de Picot Sheriff of Kent in the execution of his Office in the third fourth and fifth years of Henry the second held a whole Knights Fee of Gilbert de Magninot in the Government of that Prince but deceased without Issue so that Elveva his Sister matched to Deringus de Morinis Son of Norman de Morinis became his Heir from whom the Mannor of Heyton descended to his Son Deringus de Morinis who still writ himself in his Dateless Deeds Dominus de Heyton and so did * It is probable this was the Richard Fitz-Dering who was with Richard the first at the Siege of Acon Richard Fitz-Dering his
Juliana de Leybourn after his Decease remarried to William de Clinton Earl of Huntington who in her Right was likewise possest of them but likewise Deceased without any Issue by her in the twenty eighth of Edward the third after whose Death it is more then probable she continued a Widow For in the Inquisition taken in the forty third year of Ed. the third she is styled Comitissa de Huntington and was found upon a serious winnowing both of her Direct and collaterall Alliances to have no Heirs that could directly pretend to the Title so that her Estate here laps'd to the Crown and King Edward the third in the fiftieth year of his Rule granted the Mannors of Northcourt Denton and Plomford to the Abby of St. Mary Grace on Tower Hill where they rested untill the Dissolution and then King Henry the eighth granted them to Sir Thomas Cheyney one of his Privy Councel whose lavish and unthrifty Son Henry Lord Cheyney after his Estate mouldered away by Retail in the eighth year of Queen Elizabeth passed them away to Martin James Esquire whose great Grandchild Mr. Walter James is at this instant the indisputable Proprietary of them Huntingfield in Estling gave Sirname to that illustrious Family of Huntingfield and stands a Monument to this Day to inforce and perpetuate its Memory to Posterity though the Name be long since extinguished and gon out in two Daughters and Coheirs being entombed in Coupledick and Norwich The capital Seat of this Family was at West-Wickham on the Skirts of Surrey where I shall make a more ample mention of them but they had other parcels of Land which lay scattered in the severall Parishes of Northsleet Mepham Ludsdown Cobham and other places and it is probable this Family was possest of an Estate likewise in Somersetshire For in Mr. Bishe late printed Notes upon Upton one Walter de Huntingfield is represented as Teste to that memorable Compact which bears Date the twenty eighth of Aprill in the forty second year of Henry the third and was made between Henry de Ferneburgh and the Abbot and Covent of Glastenbury to defend the Lands of the abovesaid Abbot against all the Claim or Pretence of the Bishop of Bath and Wells with the Dean and Canons of the same place or any of their Champions and certainly this Walter de Huntingfield is he who is mentioned to have paid respective Aid in the Book called Testa de Nevist for much Land which he held in Kent at the Marriage of Isab the Kings Sister in the twentieth year of Henry the third The last of this Family who was possessor of this Mannor was Sir John Huntingfield who was summoned to sit as a Baron in Parliament in the thirty sixth year of Edw. the third and he passed it away to Sir Sim. de Burley in whom it was resident until the tenth year of Richard the second and then he being by Parliament convicted of high Treason for seeking in a Time when too much Loyalty was ruinous to support the shaking Prerogative of his Prince against the Assaults and Impressions made upon it by some of the ambitious Nobility This Mannor with Northcourt likewise in this Parish which was granted to him upon the Decease of Juliana Countesse of Huntington escheated to the Crown and there made its aboad untill the twenty first of Richard the second and then that Prince setled it by a new Grant as appears Pat. 1. An. 21. Ric. 2. Memb. 35. Pars tertia On the Dean and Canons of St. Stephens in Westminster and continued chained to their Revenue untill the Link was by the general Dissolution of Religious Gonventions in the Reign of Henry the eighth untied and broken and then being cast into the Demeasne of the Crown it was in the thirty fifth year of Henry the eighth granted to Alured Randolph and John Guldford Esquires and they not long after conveyed their Interest in it by Sale to Sir Thomas Moil from whom the same Fatality in the seventh year of Edward the sixth carried it away and transplanted it into John Wild Esquire and he not long after transmitted his Concernment in it to Gates and from this Name the Propriety about the Beginning of Queen Elizabeth was by the Vicissitude of Sale conveyed to Martin James Esquire Examiner of the Chancery from whom the Title by descendant Right is flowed down to his great Granchild Mr. Walt. James who is now in the Possession of it Estling had the Grant of a Market obtained to be held there Weekly and a two Days Fair at St. Crosse by the Mediation of Fulke de Peyferer in the thirty second of Edward the first Diven Arnold is a third place of mark in Estling It is called so because it was in Ages of a very venerable Inscription the Inheritance of a Family called Dive and it had the Addition of Arnold because one Arnoldus de Dive possest it and is often mentioned in Deeds without date and was Teste to a Deed whereby John de Valoigns does convey Lands to Robert de Dive Prior of the Hospiral of St. Johns of Jerusalem which is justified by a fine levyed between the said John and this Robert in the ninth year of Henry the third And in this Family did it continue untill the Beginning of Richard the second and then it was alienated to Sharp of Nin-place in great Chart in which Name the Signorry and Title was for sundry Generations constant untill about the latter end of Henry the seventh it was conveyed away to Thurstan of Challock a Name of great Antiquity in that Parish from whom not many years after it went over by Sale to Jo. Wild Esquire and he in the entrance of the Government of Queen Elizabeth by the same Revolution disposed of his Right in it to Gates who alienated it after to Croyden who in our Fathers Remembrance transmitted it by Sale to Bunce and continues still in the Revenue of that Family Eastry gives the Name to the whole Hundred wherein it is seated and was given to the Church in the year of Grace nine Hundred seventy and nine by King Egelred that is Etheldred Father to Edmund Ironside Et est de Cibo Monachorum say the Records of Christ-Church that is it was granted to the Monks for the Support of their Kitchin and was in the first Intention of the Gift I believe invested in the Ecclesiastical Revenue purposely to expiate that Murder which was at this place acted upon the Persons of Ethelbert and Etheldred Brethren of Egbert King of Kent by one Thunner as if that dark Tincture of Guilt which the effussion of this Royall and Innocent Blood had stained the earth with could not have been assoiled without so munificent a Donation In the time of Edward the Confessor this Mannor was held by the Monks of Christ-Church under the Notion of Seven Plough-lands nor was it represented under a lesse Bulke in the Reign of William the Conquerour and was rated
seemed to be Corrivalls with the Egyptians who expended more upon the Structure of their Tombs then Houses because they knew they were to dwell longer in them But I have digressed I now proceed Thus have you seen how this Seat fell under Signiory of Diggs and the succeeding Records of this Family will inform you that the Title made its aboad in this Name untill allmost that Age we call our Fathers and then it was transmitted by Sale to Archer from whom not many years since a Fatality like the former hath now brought it to bee the Possession of Thatcher Feversham affords a Name to the whole Hundred wherein it is placed In the year 812 in the Charter of Kenulf King of Mercia it is called the Kings little Town It seems it was of no bigg Dimension then though it be multiplyed and swolne into a greater Bulk since yet as small as it was Athelstan in the year 903 held a publick Moot or great Counsell here which Assemblies since the Normans entring here were termed Parliaments and enacted severall Laws in this Convention Probably enough it belonged to the Crown in elder Times and was a Mannor-house of the Kings for William the Conquerour as the Records of St. Austins testifie gave the Advowson of the Church to that Abby in the year 1072 and the Mannor it self to a Norman in Recompence of some signal Service But when King Stephen resolved to erect the Abby there he compounded with William de Ipre Earl of Kent and gave him the Mannor of Lilly-Church in Exchange for it and his Queen Matilda raised a stately Monastery which she stored with Monks of the Order of St. Bennet which were brought thither by Clarembald the first Abbot from the Abby of St. Marys at Bermondsey in Southwark and procured a Letter to be writ from Peter Abbot of that place to absolve and release them from all Obedience to the Order of the Cluniac's And here was K. Stephen Matilda his Wife and Eustace Earl of Boloign his Son Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports and Constable of Dover Castle solemnly enter'd Of which former King it is observed that though his Reign were rough and tempestuous by Reason of his perptuall Debates and Contests with Mawd the Empresse and her Son concerning the Title yet were there more Religious Convents erected in his Rule then either before or after which made it appear though the Times were bad they were not impious And certainly from the uneven and imperfect Prospect which those Times folded up in the Flame and Smoak of Civil War have afforded us of this Prince and of his Sway of the Scepter we may conclude that in all things he was fit to be a King but that he was one Thorne the Chronicler relates two Contests that happened between the Monks of St. Augustins and others the first was between them and King John animated by Hughbert Archbishop of Canterbury touching the Right of Patronage of the Church of St. Mary Charity at Feversham The K. apprehending the Advowson of the Church belonged to him or at least made to believe so by the Archbishop presents a Clerk to the Church and commands his Presentment should be received which they not only disobeyed but ejected the Clerk and sent diverse of their Monks to maintain the Possession of the Church by strong Hand Which the King understanding commanded Reginald de Cornhill the Sheriff to disseise them and restore his presented Clerk which he in Order to the Kings Injunction not without a vigorous Resistance by the Monks effected Upon which the Monks complain to Stephen the Popes Legat who then was there journeying to Rome and in his Way sojourned at their Cloister And he compassionating their Condition advised them to send their Prior to Rome least the Power of the See Apostolick might by this Affront and Inroad upon it be trampled under Foot Hereupon the Pope upon Advertisement received issues out a Commission to understand the Matter in Debate But the Monks upon a serious Debate with themselves knowing the King 's impetuous Temper they found out a more compendious Method for an Accommodation and presented the King with two Hundred Marks in a Purse and a meet Palfrey for his Saddle by which Donative they so endeared the K. that they obtained Restitution of their Right and made him for the future their gratious Patron Another Conflict fell out after this between the Abbot and Maior and Burgers of this Town about some Intrusions and encroachments made by the Townsmen as was pretended upon the Franchises of the Church You may be sure Thorn who relates it is warped with a partial Engagement to his own Fraternity and with that Caution you may read him Upon the Dissolution made in the Reign of Henry the eighth this Mannor with all its Priviledges returned to the Crown and lay incorporated with its Revenue untill the Reign of King Charles And then it was granted to Sir Dudley Diggs of Chilham Castle who not long after setled it on his second Son Mr. Jo. Digg who not long since demised it to Sir George Sonds of Leeze-court Fishbourne in this Parish is an ancient Mannor from whence a Family of that Sirname borrowed its Appellation One John de Fist bourn was a Witnesse to that Charter by which a place called Messewell was given to Feversham Abby in the Reign of Henry the second Afterwards in the Reign of Edward the third I find the Dreylonds to be possest of it but their ancient Seat was at Cokesditch in this Parish For in a Deed dated the twenty fifth year of Edward the third John the Son of Stephen Dreylond whereby he demises some Land in a place called Crouchfield to William Makenade writes himself of Cokesditch and in this Family did the Interest of Fishbourne continue untill the Beginning of Henry the eighth And then it was alienated to Simons to which Name the Title hath remained constantly allied to this Day Nor was Cokesditch fixed in Dreylond by a Tenure more permanent for katharine Sole Heir of Sir Richard Dreylond was matched to Reginald Norton of Milton Esquire and so with her both the Name and Propriety of this place were entombed in this Family and this Reginald upon his Decease gave it to his second Son William Norton and from him successively was it transmitted to others of that Line untill those Times which confined upon our Fathers Remembrance And then it was alienated to Parsons who was not long seated in his new Acquists but he conveys it away to Ashton by whose Daughter and Heir it is lately transplanted into Buck. Frittenden in the Hundred of Cranbroke resolves it self into several places which call for our Notice The first is Comden It was clapsed up within the Revenue of the Priory of Leeds untill the Storm or Hurricano rather in the Reign of Henry the eighth threw it into the Demeasn of the Crown And then that Prince in the thirty second year of his Reign
of Kent the eighth ninth tenth eleventh twelfth thirteenth and fourteenth years of Henry the second Sir Richard de Lucy was Lord chief Justice and Protector of England in the Raign of the above mentioned Prince of whom I have more largely discoursed at Lesnes in Erith * Ex veteri Rot. penes Edo Dering Mil. Baonettum defunctum Aymer de Lucy was with Richard the first in Palestine at the Seige of Acon and in Memory of some Signal Service manifested there in that holy Quarrel added the Crosse Crosselets unto his Paternal Coat which was before only three Pisces Lucii that is Pike Fish Geffrey de Lucy was frequently summoned to sit in Parliament as Baron in the Raign of Edward the first as the Rols of Summons which relate to that King's Time now preserved in the Tower sufficiently inform us This Geffrey with his two Brothers Aymery and Thomas de Lucy were engaged with Edward the first at the Seige of Carlaverock in Scotland in the twenty eighth year of his Raign and there received the Order of Knighthood They were Sons to Geffrey de Lucy who was constituted High Admiral of England in the Time of Henry the third as appears Pat. 8. Hen. 3. Memb. 4. William and Anthony Lucy both of this Family were frequently summoned to sit in Parliament as Barons in the Raign of Edw. the third In the sixth year of Edward the third Geffrey de Lucy who held Lucy's at his Death which was in the twentieth year of that Monarch had a Charter of Free-warren to this Mannor which priviledge was renued and confirmed by Henry the sixth to Sir Walter Lucy in the 27. year of his Raign in which year he dyed and left his estate here to his Son Sir Jeffery Lucy who with his Sole Daughter and Heir Mawd Lucy transmitted this Mannor to her Husband Sir William Vaux of the County of North-Hampton whose Son Thomas Vaux alienated it about the twenty seventh year of the Raign of Henry the eighth to Sir Roger Cholmeley a younger Branch of the Cholmeleys of Cholmeley in Cheshire from which Family in our Grand-fathers Memory it was by Sale passed away to Sead and from Sead by as quick a vicissitude it came over by purchase to Osborne by whom not many years since it was sold to Pagitt of London Tracies is a second place in this Parish which comes within this List it was in elder Times the Inheritance of a Family of that Appellation John de Tracy was Teste to an old Deed of Richard de Lucy which I have seen wherein he demises some Land to William de Frogenhall the Deed is without Date but by the Antiquity of the Character seems to commence from the Raign of Henry the third Whether these Tracies were extracted from the Tracies of Devon and Gloucestershire or not I cannot positively determine because these of Kent bore a different Coat from the other as appears by all old Ordinaries Vid. Argent two Bends between nine Escollops Gules After the Tracies had left the possession of this place which was about the Beginning of Henry the fourth the Colepepers of Bedgebury were by purchase seised of the Fee-simple of it but staid not long in the Fruition of it for in the Raign of Henry the sixth the Cliffords of Bobbing Court not far distant from whom by Sale in the Raign of Henry the eighth it fell under the Signory of Thomas Linacre Priest Frogenhall in this Parish likewise was a Branch of that wide Demeasne which lay diffused in this Territory and did acknowledge it self to be of the possession of the Ancient Family of Frogenhall whose Seat was in Frogenhall in Tenham but whether this were the Land which I mentioned to be by Deed transmitted to William de Frogenhall in the time of Henry the third by Sir Richard de Lucy I cannot positively determine though it was probable it was and that afterwards as was usuall in those Times to perpetuate the Memory of the Possessor William de Frogenhall fixed his own Name upon it And in this Family did the Possession continue till Thomas Frogenhall concluded in three Co-heirs of which Elizabeth was one who matched with John Northwood of Milton and so linked it to the Inheritance of that Family where it had not long remained when a semblable Fatality brought this Family likewise to expire in Daughters and Co-heirs so that this place came by Joane one of them to be the Fee-simple of Sir John Norton but was not long resident in this Family for he about the Beginning of Henry the eighth conveyed it to Thomas Linacre Priest above mentioned who dying in the seventeenth year of the above-recited Prince gave both Tracies and Frogenhall for ever to augment the Revenue of All-souls Colledge in Oxford The Mannor of Newington it self belonged as an Ancient Manuscript now in my Custody informs me to a Nunnery which was erected here in this Parish but by whom it was founded or endowed is unknown only this Manuscript I mentioned before rehearses a direful Tragedy which it cites as is pretended out of Thorn the Chronicler of St. Augustins and other old Manuscripts It was this Divers of the Nuns being warped with a malitious Desire of Revenge took the advantage of the Night and strangled the Lady Abbesse who was the Object of their Fury and passionate Animosities in her Bed and after to conceal so execrable an Assassination threw her Body into a Pitt which afterwards contracted the traditional Appellation of Nun-pitt but this barbarous offence being not long after miraculously discovered the Manuscript does not intimate how King Henry the third in whose Time this Tragedy was acted seised this Mannor into his Hands and having by Consent of the Church transmitted the Nuns who were culpable to the secular power by Death to make expiation for this Crime he sent the Guiltless Nuns into Shepey and after filled their Cloister with seven secular Canons four of which not long after as if some secret Impiety had lurked in the Wals of the Covent murdered one of the Fraternity upon which the King seises this Mannor again into his Hands which he had before given back to the support of this new instituted Seminary two parts of which laying in the Hamlet of Thetham by the two guiltlesse Canons with the approbation of Henry the third were assigned to the Abby of St. Augustins though some Writings more Ancient affirm them to be given under the Notion of two Prebendaries to that Covent by William the Conqueror and the other five parts of this Mannor were by the abovesaid Henry the third granted to his Lord Chief Justice Sir Richard de Lucy whose Son Almericus de Lucy saies the Manuscript did in the year 1278. exchange them with the Monks of St. Augustins And thus was this Mannor fastned to the Patrimony of the Church and so continued till the General Dissolution in the Time of Henry the eighth disunited it and linked it
Attorney General to Henry the eighth and he died possest of it in the thirty third year of that Prince and left it to his Son Sir James Hales who not long after alienated it to Sir Thomas Moile Chancellour of the Court of Augmentations who erected almost all that stupendious Fabrick which now so obliges the Eye to Admiration and left it to Sir Thomas Finch who had married Katharine his Daughter and Co-heir a Gentleman who merited a calmer Fate and a Nobler Tomb for after many gallant Archievements performed at Newhaven in France he suffered Shipwrack in his return to England and left it to his Son Sir Moile Finch who very much inlarged Eastwell-court with both sumptuous elegant and convenient Additaments and left it in Dower to his Widow Elizabeth Finch Daughter and Heir of Sir Thomas Heneage first created Viscountess Maidstone by King James and after Countess of Winchelsey in the year 1638. by King Charles from whom both the Honour and East-well descended to her Son Thomas Earl Wenchelsey and from him to his Son the Right Honorable Heneage Finch now Earl of Winchelsey and Viscount Maidston Since I am so happily engaged to a Discourse of this eminent Family of Finch I shall discover in Landskip the deep Antiquity of their first Extraction They were originally descended from Henry Fitz-Herbert Chamberlain to King Henry the first who married the Daughter and Heir of Sir Robert le Corbet and had Issue by her a Son named Herbert and he was Father to Herbert Fitz-Herbert who by his first Wife Lucy Daughter and Co-heir of Milo Earl of Hereford and Lord High Constable of England had Issue a Son named Peter Fitz-Herbert from whom the Herberts Earls of Pembroke originally issued out and by his second Wife Matilda after his Deeease remarried to the Lord Columbers he had Issue Matthew Fitz-Herbert who was one of the Magnates or Barons at the compiling of Magna Charta and was one of the powerful Partisans of King John at the making the accord between that Prince and his Barons at Running-Mead between Windsor and Stanes his Son likewise called Matthew Fitz-Herbert was the fourth Baron mentioned in the Roll of that Parliament which was convened at Tewksbury The alteration of this Name into Finch was about the tenth of Edward the first at which Time Herbert Fitz-Herbert purchased the Mannor of Finches in Lidde of which being entire Lord as he was not of Netherfeild he assumed his Sirname from that as many other Families fell in that Age under the same Mutation and borrowed Sirnames from those places which were wholly under their possession and Signory In the eighth year of Edward the second there was a Supersedeas issued out mentioning that Herbert Fitz-Herbert called Finch was a Ward in the twenty eighth year of Edward the first and so could not personally serve with the King in his Wars in Scotland and therefore was released of his Escuage for all his Estate in Kent and Sussex which together with some of the ancient Patrimony and several Knights Fees at Netherfeild in Sussex and elsewhere are not yet departed from this Noble Family Westwell in the Hundred of Calchill was confirmed to the Monks of Christ-church in Canterbury for a supply in their Diet in the year 1241. But it seems they were questioned Quo Warranto they possest this Mannor and after a Solemn Decision per patriam it is affirmed and attested in the Confirmation of the abovesaid Prince that it was enstated upon them by his Predecessors and continued afterwards unquestionably parcel of the Demeasne of the Cloister abovesaid until it was resigned by the Monks of Christ-church into the Hands of Henry the eighth and so it rested in the Crown until not many years since it was granted to Sir Nic. Tuston of Hothfield The Parsonage anciently belonged to the Arch-bishop of Canterbury until Thomas Arundell the Arch-bishop gave it in the year 1397. to the Monks of Christ-church to counterpoise those vast expences which they were to be at in re-erecting the Nave or Body of the Cathedral called Aulam Ecclesiae by Eadmerus which Simon de Sudbury plucked down and had intended that it should like a Phoenix have rose more glorious out of its Ashes but was intercepted in his Design by a suddain Death being beheaded by Wat Tiler and the confluence of his impious and barbarous Complices This Church thus appropriated was confirmed to the Monks abovesaid in the year 1400. by King Henry the fourth and upon the suppression was re-enstated upon the Dean and Chapiter of Christ-church by Henry the eighth Ripley-court is a Seat of good Antiquity in this Parish and more eminent because it afforded a Sirname to Gentlemen of good Ranke in this Track of which Number was Richard de Ripley who died seised of this Mannor in the thirtieth year of Edward the first Rot. Esc Num. 91. and in an old Deed is called Miles Archiepiscopi that is he held this Mannor of the Arch-bishop by Knights Service but before the latter end of Edward the third this Family was vanished and then the Brockhuls and Idens succeeded in the possession the last of which was a Family of great Antiquity and no lesse Revenue about Iden in Sussex and Rolvenden in this County For in the year 1280. as appears by a Fine levied that year John the Son of Thomas de Iden passes away Lands to John de More And of this Family was Alexander Iden Esquire Sheriff of Kent in the thirty fourth year of Henry the sixth who in the twenty eighth year of that Prince slew Jack Cade who had borrowed the disguised Person of Mortimer excited thereunto as was the Opinion of those Times by the Suggestions of Richard Duke of Yorke to fathom the Peoples Affections to that man in the strength of whose Title he intended in the future to claim the English Diadem But the Attempts of Cade being disappointed by the formerly infatuated but now disenchanted Multitude's deserting of him who began to risent his Fraud and Imposture upon their total Dissipation shrowded himself in some of those Grounds which belonged to Ripley-court and lay not far distant from Hothfeild and were then in the Tenure of VVilliam Iden Justice of the Peace and Father of the abovesaid Alexander where being discovered he was by that Worthy Person offered up a Sacrifice to the Justice of Henry the sixth But I have digressed I now return After this Seat had for so many Descents been the Residence of this Family and the Cradle and Seminary of many Worthy Persons who had been subservient and ministerial to the Honour and Interess of this County by their Magnanimity and Prudence it went away from Iden by Sale to Darell and George Darell in the last year of Edward the sixth conveyed it to Baker Ancestor to Mr. ...... Baker of VVindsor now proprietary of it Diggs-court is another eminent Seat in this Parish which was the Mansion of the Noble Family of Diggs or
bore the same paternal Coat were known by the same Name and were both deduced from the same Root and Original Ex Autograph's penes Dom. Tho. Peyton Baronettum onely Peyton was the elder House Now the ground on which the Mutation of the Name was established was briefly this John de Peyton flourished in the reign of Henry the second and left four Sons whereof the three eldest were named John Robert and John to John the eldest he gave his Mannor of Peyton lying extended into Stoke Neyland Boxford and Ramsholt Parishes in Suffolk to Robert his second Son he gave his Mannor of Ufford lying in Suffolk likewise who altered his Name from Peyton and assumed that of Ufford a Name borrowed from that Signory of which he was become newly possessor and from him the Name of Ufford was communicated to the Earls of Suffolk and other persons of eminent Repure in those Generations wherein they flourished John de Peyton the third Brother by Deed without Date demises all his Interest in Boxford to his elder Brother John de Peyton by that Name he there calls him which justifies nor only the Antiquity but the Seniority of this Family of Peyton before that of Ufford And from John de Peyton the elder above mentioned are the Peytons of Cambridgeshire and Sir Tho. Peyton of Knolton Baronet originally descended Lidde in ancient Records written Hlyden is a second Mannor in Werd of considerable Account ever since it was given at the Request of Janibert the Arch-Bishop by K. Offa in the year 874 to the Monks of Christ-Church as the Records of that Church discover to me under the Notion of three Sullings or Ploughlands And the Instrument which confirmed this Donation was signed with the Marks that is Crosses of Offa the King Janibert the Arch-Bishop Kenedrith the Queen three other Bishops five other Abbots Duke Edbald and eleven other principal Persons or Noblemen And that this was the manner of Signature in elder Times that is the affixing of Crosses to all publick Instruments and other original Donations is most certain For Sealing came into England with Edward the Confessor who being bred up in Normandy in which Province and in France the Use of affixing Seals to Deeds had been in Use long before his Time introduced that Custome and way of Signature into this Nation as being more conspicuous and distinguishable than that of Crosses or those other wayes of confirming of Grants of Land either to the Church or to secular Uses which was either per Collocationem Gladii seu Cultelli supra Altare by the placing or laying a Sword or Knife upon the Altar whereby those which did make Donations of Land did tacitly insinuate that their Honour was involved in their Conscience or else per Traditionem Surculi vel stipitis which Custome is yet observed in our Copy-hold Land where Surrenders are made by delivery of a Turfe Twig or white Wand But sealing with Coats of Arms was not brought in untill the reign of Edward the first but were borne by persons of Honor on their Tabards or Surcoats two Examples of which I have seen one of William Warren Earl of Pembroke who in the second year of Henry the second sealed with the Figure of a Chivaler on Horseback his Caparisons Tabard and Shield being all Checquee the paternal Coat of this Family the other was of Richard Curzon of Croxall in Derbyshire who in the reign of King John stands in a Window pourtrayed in his Surcoat surmounted with a Bend charged with a Martlet And this was done in Imitation of the Heralds who wore the Arms of those Princes they serv●d on their Tabards as Badges to distinguish them from the Heralds of other Princes either in the Time of War or Peace Indeed Seals in higher Ages were of that sacred Estimate that being lost they were decryed by the owners least they might be affixed to any surreptitious Instrument which might prejudice either their Fame or Estate And in the interval of their Absence or Losse the Owners abovesaid were accustomed to Seal with the Seal of the Bishop of the Diocess or else with that of the next adjacent Abbot all Deeds and Instruments either of Publick or private Interess But to return this Donation of Offa's though thus secured and strengthned could not shelter this Mannor from the Rage of ahat Tempest which in the twenty ninth year of Henry the eighth like a Whirlwind caught it up in the Patrimony of the Church and drop'd it into the Revenue of the Crown where it lay untill Queen Elizabeth in the Beginning of her Raign passed it away by Grant to William Lovelace Esquire Serjeant at Law whose Son Sir William Lovelace not long after demised it by Sale to Sir John Smith Grand-father to Philip Viscount Strangford who now enjoys it Wickham Brews in the Hundred of Downhamford distinguished from other places of that Name by the Addition of the Sirname of Brews which Family were Lords thereof In the twentieth year of William the Conquerour Odo Bishop of Baion and Earl of Kent held this place of the Gift of his half Brother which was that Prince and Trendle Park adjoyning there was a Composition between the Arch-bishop and this Man for certain Land of the said Arch-bishop to be inclosed and included within the said Park at Trendley which signifies thus much unto us that Woodstock which boasts it self to be the first inclosed Park of England was not so ancient as this at Trendley In Times of a more modern Character that is in those which commence from the reign of Henry the third it acknowledged the Brewses Barons of Brember in Sussex to be its proprietaries who engrafted their own Name upon it which hath sprouted out and flourished upon it untill this Day William de Brewosa or de brewe held it and was several times summoned to sit in Parliament as Baron in the reign of King Edward the first and Edward the second and dyed in the ninth year of the last Prince Rot. Esc Num. 204. After this Family had deserted the possession which was about the Beginning of Edward the third it became the Inheritance of many of the most eminent Nobility of this Kingdome I shall represent them out of some ancient Court-rolls in a Compendious Series Edmund Plantagenet Earl of Kent held it in the fourth year of Edward the third William Longspey had it in the the twentieth year of the abovesaid Prince and paid an auxiliary supply for it at making the Black Prince Knight John Earl of Kent dyed seised of it in the twenty sixth year of Edw. the third Thomas Holland Earl of Kent and Joan his Wife Sister and Coheir of the abovementioned Earl were possest of it in the thirty fifth year of Edward the third Lucie Wife of Edmund Holland Earl of Kent was seised of it in the second year of Henry the sixth After whom it devolved to Edmund Mortimer Earl of March and he held it in the
an irrecoverable Ruine was in an infortunate Encounter made Captive by that Prince and being attainted of high Treason and Executed his Estate here by Escheat devolved to the Crown and was by Edward the second in the ninth of his reign granted to Bartholomew Lord Badelesmere but he having again lost it by his Revolt and Defection in the sixteenth and seventeenth years of that Prince it revolved to the Crown and continued there until K. Edward the third in the second year of his Reign restored it to Bartholomew de Badelesmer his Son who died in the twelfth year of the abovesaid Prince and left it to his Brother Giles de Badelesmer and he deceasing without Issue it accrued by Mawde one of his Sisters and Coheirs to be the Inheritance of John Vere Earl of Oxford and he held it at his Death which was in the thirty fourth year of Edw. the third and to this Family it remained by the Links of many Descents successively fastned until at last that Revolution which is made by Sale cast it into the possession of Phineux the last of which who enjoyed it was John Phineux Esquire who concluded in a Daughter and Heir called Elizabeth who by matching with Sir John Smith of Ostenhanger knit it to his Estate from whom by the Devolution of Descent it is now come to confess for proprietary the right honourable Philip Viscount Strangford his Grand-child Secondly there is Chestfield which was the Mansion of a Family which bore that Sirname and although I can trace none higher by any publick Record then James Chestfield who paid respective Aid for it at the making the Black Prince Knight as is manifest by the Book of Aid collected in the twentieth of Edward the third yet it is upon possible Conjectures to be argued that they were farre more ancient here because they assumed their Denomination from this Seat from Chestfield about the latter end of the Government of Richard the second it came over by purchase to Henry Reyner but whether he issued from Borden or the Reyners of Borden from him I cannot discover but it is very probable he determined in four Daughters and Coheirs matched to Edmund Meade Jo. Badkin John Reynolds and John Springate who concurred in one united Consent and by one common conveyance demised their Interest in it to John Roper of St. Dunstans from whom Edward Roper Esquire now of Well-hall in Eltham claims the instaut Demeasn and Signory of it The third is Grimgill so vulgarly called but originally and more properly Greenshield for so it is in Records of an elder Aspect alwayes written It was the Seat of a Family that was known by that Appellation and although the Breviat of the private Evidences which relate to it discover to us owners of the Name no higher then John Greenshield who flourished here about the entrance into the reign of Henry the sixth and who was Father to Henry Greenshield whose Will is Registred at Canterbury and which bears Date from the last of Edward the fourth yet it is more then probable that they were eminent here long before because the above-recited John and Henry Greenshields were Lords of no despicable or narrow fortune not onely here but about Sandwich and Wodnesborough likewise from Greenshield by sale the propriety passed over to Quekes of Quekes in Birchington who suddenly after being extinguished in a Daughter and Heir all his Interest in Grimgill was with her transported in Marriage to Crispe originally extracted out of the County of Glocester and Nicholas Crispe Esquire held his Shrievalty here which was in the second year of Q. Elizabeth from Crispe it was by purchase conveyed into the Revenue of Paramour where after it had for several years been fixed it was very lately taken off from this Family and by Sale made the Possession of Mr. Twiman of Canterbury Fourthly here was Condies-place which was the Residence of John Condie who had in the reign of Edward the third contracted upon himself which is yet indelibly fixed upon his Memory a Character of high Account because he had made an eminent Enemie of the Kings Captive in Congressu Bellico those are the words of the Record in a personal Combat for which he had thirty pound per Annum setled upon him out of the Kings Profits of the Staple at Canterbury by Charter or Grant from Edward the third dated the seventh day of July in the fourteenth year of his reign Now if you will know where this memorable Action was commenced the same Record will inform you that the Scene of it was laid at Swine in Normandy But to proceed this Man not long after he was thus adorned with these Tophies of Honour paid that Debt to Nature which we all owe and left Condies Hall to his Son William Condy who dying without any lawful Issue Margaret Condy one of his Sisters became his Co-heir who by her espousals with Robert Grubbe made Condies Hall parcel of his Demeasn but he likewise in the Age subsequent to this determining in Females Agnes one of his Coheirs being wedded to John Isaack of Blackmanbery in Bridge did much swell and improve his Patrimony with that Additional Estate she united to his and here in this Name was the possession for sundry Descents resident even till our Fathers Memory But here for want of Intelligence I can proceed no farther and indeed the Place being fallen from its original Name by Disuse and that Repute it was under when it was possest by so noble proprietaries is now onely fit to find the Common Sepulcher of Oblivion Wicheling in the Hundred of Eyhorne was folded up in the Patrimony of the noble Family of Cobham of Sterborough issued out f●om the Cobhams of Cobham Hall and of this Family was Reginald de Cobham who was frequently summoned to sit in Parliament as Baron in the reign of Edward the third and from this worthy person did this Mannor by successive Devolution come down to Thomas Lord Cobham of Sterborough who deceased in the eleventh of Edward the fourth and left his Estate here and elsewhere to Anne his sole Daughter and Heir marched to Edward Lord Borough called to sit in Parliament as Baron of Sterborough and Gainsborough in the reign of Henry the seventh and from him both the Title of Baron and of this Mannor flowed down successively to his Grandchild Thomas Lord Borough who passed away the Inheritance to Edward Filmer Esquire whose Grand-child Sir Edward Filmer in relation to that purchase challenges the instant right and revenue of it Willesborough in the Hundreds of Chart and Longbridge has nothing to make it memorable but that it was a principal piece of that revenue which in this County related to the noble and ancient Family of Brent of which was Falcatius de Brent a man whom our English History pencils out to us under a Character of the most perfect Courage and Magnanimity though disordered with some wild Sallies and Excesses which
lies entombed under an Arch in the Southwall with his pourtraicture insculped in a Marble in Minster Church whose Tomb is become the Scene of much Falshood and popular errour the vulgar having digged out of his Vault many wild Legends and Romances as namely that he buryed a Priest alive that he swam on his horse two miles thorough the Sea to the King who was then neer this Island on Shipboard to purchase his pardon and having obtained it swam back to the Shore where being arrived he cut off the head of his said Horse because it was affirmed he had acted this by Magick and that riding on hunting a twelvemoneth after his horse stumbled and threw him on the Scull of his former Horse which blow so bruised him that from that Contusion he contracted an inward impostumation of which he dyed and in memory of which an Horse Head is placed at his Feet which fictitious Story is rent into the disunion of so many absurd circumstances that I shall represent to the Reader the Foundation on which this fabulous Natrative was formerly established which is no more but this Sir Robert de Shurland above-mentioned being Lord Warden of the Cinque-ports and a man of eminent Authority under Edward the first obtained Grant of priviledge by Charter to have wrack of Sea upon his Lands confining on the Sea Shore neere Shurland now the extent of this Royaltie is evermore esteemed to reach as far into the Water upon a low ebb as a man can ride in and touch any thing with the point of his Launce and so you have the explication of this marvel and the couching either of whole Creatures or part of them at the Feet of worthy personages is most frequent both now and in elder Times that these inanimate Representations might be the Symbols or Hieroglyphicks to intimate to posterity those Virtues which were resident in them when alive But to proceed the abovementioned Sir Robert de Shurland having improved his Reputation with many noble and worthy Actions left That only to perpetuate his Name to posterity having no Issue-male to continue it for he left only one Daughter and Heir matched to W. de Cheyney of Patricksbourn Cheyney who was son and heir to Sir Alexander de Cheyney who is in the Inventory or List of those Knights Bannerets who were ennobled with that Dignity by E. the first at the Siege of Carlaverock in the twenty eighth year of his reign and in Right of this Match dyed possest of it in the eighth year of E. the third Rot. Esc Num. 58. And from him did it come down to his great Grandchild Sir John Cheyney who was Knight of the Garter and frequently Knight of this Shire in sundry Parliaments under the Government of Henry the fourth in the first year of whose reign as our Chronicles inform us he was sent Embassador to several forreign Princes to represent to them the Reasons or Motives which induced him to assume the English Diadem and in the first and second year of that Prince he was chosen Speaker of Parliament Sir William Cheyney another of this Family of Shurland was first a Judge and secondly Lord Chief Justice of the Kings Bench in the reign of Henry the fifth but the greatest Honour this Mannor atchieved was when it came to be possest by Sir Thomas Cheyney who was Knight of the Garter Lord Warden of the Cinque-ports Constable of Quinborough Castle and one of the Privy Councel to Henry the eighth and he had Issue Sir Henry Cheyney created Henry Lord Cheyney of Tuddington by Queen Elizabeth who having exchanged this Mannor of Shurland with that Princesse it remained with the patrimony of the Crown untill the second year of King James and then it was by royal Concession from that Prince made the Inheritance of Philip Earl of Montgomery and after of Pembroke upon whose late decease it is now come to confesse the Signory of his second Son Mr. James Herbert Kingsborough is another Mannor in this Parish whose Name tacitly intimates to us that it was involved formerly in the Revenue of the Crown and was the place which the Inhabitants frequented not only for the holding of a Court for the choice and election of the Constables of the Island but likewise here assembled to nominate and appoint those Wardens or Bailiffs that were to take Cognisance or Charge of the passage called King ferry which divides the Island and the main Land of me County this Mannor after it had for many Generations layn folded up in the royal Demeasne was by Queen Elizabeth granted to Mr. Henry Cary who about the Beginning of K. James passed it away to Swaleman whose Descendant is still entituled to the propriety of it Leisdon next offers it selfe up to our view which was parcel of that estate which acknowledged the noble and ancient Family of Grey or Rotherfield in Sussex for its ancient Owners The first which made this Family eminent was John de Grey who was frequently summoned to sit in Parliament as Baron in the reign of Edward the third and dyed possest of this Mannor in the thirty third year of that Prince Rot. Esc Num. 38. And so did Robert Grey his Successor in the second year of Henry the fourth After his Exit I do not find it long constant to the Signory of this Name for about the Beginning of Henry the sixth it was alienated to Lovell and by virtue of this purchase Sir William Lovell held it at his Death which was in the twenty third year of Henry the sixth After this Family had abandoned the possession the Cheyneys of Shurland were by purchase planted in the Inheritance and remained setled in the Fee-simple of it untill Sir Henry Lord Cheyney exchanged it with Queen Elizabeth Nuts called so vulgarly but in the ancient Court-rolls named Notts as being the Inheritance of a Family called Nott is a little Mannor in Leisdon which after it had for many descents acknowledged no other proprietaries but this Family about the Beginning of Edward the fourth was rent from them by purchase and transplanted into Bartholomew a Family which were Owners anciently of much Land about Lingsted Throuley and other places in that Track and continued Masters of this Lordship untill the reign of Henry the eighth and then it was conveyed to Sir Thomas Cheyney whose Son Sir Henry Cheyney about the Beginning of Queen Elizabeth passed it away to Sampson a Family which had been possessors of Sampson-court not far distant many hundred years and were descended from William Sampson who was frequently summoned to sit in Parliament as Baron in the reign of Edward the first From Sampson it was again in our Fathers Memory carried off to O●borne in the Descendants of which Family the right is still fixed Werdon is the last place of Account in this Island It was in times of an elder Inscription involved in the Inheritance of Savage of Bobbing and in the twenty third year of Edward
a place yet under the Lord Wardens jurisdiction insulated the Isle of Thanet Rutupis RICHBORROW near SANDWICH on the same Shore and Anderida was situate near NEW ENDEN in Kent upon the river of Rother that anciently passed by Apeldore and disembogued it self into the Ocean at Romney one of the Ports upon the Saxon Shore and under the Lord Wardens goverment Portus Adurni is supposed to have been Arundel or Edrington near Shorham in Sussex Branodunum is taken for BRANCASTER in Norfolk and Gariono or Gariononum for YARMOUTH both of them lying upon the Saxon Shore in Norfolk And do not the Barons of the Ports injoy a Priviledge upon the said Coast sending yearly two of their said Barons as their Bailiffs to joyn with them of Yarmouth since they were incorporated in the Administration of publick Justice during the free Fishing Fair which thing they have used to do before ever the Town of Yarmouth was built The Fortress where the Garrison appointed for the defence of this part of the Saxon Shore was resident is now called Burrough-castell adjoyning to the River of Yare as Mr. Camden hath observed in his description of that Place The Barons of the Ports did Anciently send 7 of their Barons Bailiffs to Yarmouth and after reduced that number to 4 whereof 2 were sent to see justice and right done among the Portsmen that did Fish upon the Saxon Shore where Branodunum in Norfolk stood and in those times they continued 40 dayes which since hath been reduced to 2 Bailiffs and their time of stay to 20 dayes the Cerimonial of their entrance and reception into Yarmouth continues some similitude of what is before expressed yearly upon the Vigil of St. Michael the Arch-angell the Bailiffs of the Barons of the Ports with the Banner or Ensign of their general incorporation displaid and of this form ride on horseback into the said Town to the house provided for them during their abode there and are to be received with civil and mutuall respect by the Magistrates of that Place The Officers Atending upon the Bailifs of the Barons of the Ports are these A Register A Serjeant of the Banner A Serjeant of the Horn Serjeants at Mace As for that Officer called the Serjeant of the Horn be it understood as an ancient note of the Ports tenure by Cornage from King Canutus time by which as the best Customals of the Cinque Ports inform me there Moots and publick Assemblies are summoned Sonitu Cornu Having entred into a Discourse of the Cinque Ports I shall take a farther propsect of those privileges they were invested with from or before the Conquest especially by that signall Charter which was granted to them in the 20 year of Edward the first First then they were exempted from all Taxes and Tallages that they might with more vigor and alacriry be encouraged and emboldened to attend the publique Service Secondly they had Sac and Soc Sac is a privilege to take Cognisance of causes either Criminal or Civil within their own Courts Soc is a power planted in them to compel all persons which live within the Confines of their Liberties to plead in their Courts and from hence anciently they were called Socmanni that is Suiters to that Court where they were forced to plead Thirdly they had Toll and Theam Toll was a Liberty of buying and selling within their own juisdiction and a power to receive the Toll or Gabel imposed on commodities there vended Theam is both a civil and coercive power or jurisdiction settled in them by Charter over all those who are inhabitants of the Cinque Ports or any of the limbs or members of them Fourthly they had Bloodwith and Fledwith Bloodwith is a power to punish the effusion of Blood Fledwith is an authority to punish those who having committed any misdemeanor or outrage and seeking to secure themselves by flight are again seised upon and offered up to deserved Justice Fifthly they had Pillorie and Tumbrell Tumbrell was an Engine much resembling our Cucking-stool and was instituted to restrain the fury of loud clamorous and impetuous Women Sixthly they had Infangetheof and Cutfangetheof that is a power to imprison and upon just and legal evidence which is the Lanthorn of the Law to execute all those though Forainers and Aliens which should commir any felony in places subject to their jurisdiction Seventhly they had Mundbriech that is a priviledge to raise banks and mounds on any persons land whatsoever whose proprietie lay within their jurisdiction to secure the common Interest from the eruptions and casuall Inundations of the Sea Eightly they had Waives called by a generall name in old Law-Latin Weveragium and Strays Waives was a word of a common latitude used to signifie all those things either wandering Chattel or other goods which being waved or lost and not claimed within a year and a day were to be possest by those within whose jurisdiction they were seis'd according to that of the Civill Law Quae nullius juris sunt pro derelictis habentur cedunt occupanti Strays is a word of a more circumscrib'd and restrained sense relating only to stragling Cattel to whom if none did entitle themselves by claim in a year and a day their propriety was invested in those who possest them Ninthly they had Waste and Strep or Estrepment Waste was that parcell of common earth which by prescription and custome belonged to the Crown but by Charter was enstated on them Strip or Estrepment is a power granted to them to cut down Trees within their own jurisdiction without impeachment of waste In the tenth place they had the grant of Flotsom Jetsom Witsom Flotsom were goods upon some visible wrack floating to the shore Jetsom were goods in a storme thown over board to preserve the Ship and sinking did again buoy up themselves anr were again by the agitation of the waves thrown on the Strand Witsom were goods driven to the shore when there had not been for some space any wrack visible from whence they were anciently styled Goods of Gods mercy Wit in old English importing as much as Misericordia in Latin Their eleventh priviledge was to be a Guild that is a Fraternity or Combination of men that had all the Franchises of Court-Leet and Court-Baron annex'd to them as likewise they were endow'd with a power upon emergent occasions to improve the common interest to lay Assessements and Taxes upon the Inhabitants of the Cinque Ports and their Members the word Guild being extracted from an old Latin word called Geldo which signifies to tax Their twelfth Franchise was to assemble at Shepway which was anciently called the Portmote or Parliament of the Cinque Ports there they punish'd the infringers of their priviledges and amerc'd all those who being Inhabitants of the Cinque Ports or of those Towns which were circumscrib'd within their Jurisdiction sued out of those Courts which were properly established to hear and determine all causes arising within their Liberties
Clifford lineally descended who almost in our Fathers Remembrance passed away his Interest here to Sir Coniers Clifford and the Lady Mary his Wife Widow of Southwell whom he had made joynt purchaser with him in the Conveyance after whose Decease she was remarried to Sir Anthony St. Leger of Ireland by whom she had Issue Sir Anthony St. Leger now of Wierton House in Boughton Montchentsey who by a Right derived from a Donation of his Mother divided the Mannor of Bobbing with his two half Brothers Henry and Coniers Clifford all whom not many years since by mutuall and joynt Consent alienated the whole demise to Sir Edward Duke of Cosington and he not long after passed away his Right in it by Sale to Sir Richard Gurney of London from whom the same Vicissitude and Conveyance hath now brought it to be the Patrimony of his Brother in Law Captain Henry Samford Esquire Borden in the Hundred of Milton hath nothing memorable in it but the Mannor of Criolls and Poyles for they were alwaies united together and were parcell of that spreading Demeasne which fell under the Signory of Bertram de Crioll and he dyed possest of them in the twenty third year of Edward the third and left it to John Crioll his Son and Heir who dying without Issue Joan his Sister and Heir Generall brought this and much other Land to be possest by her Husband Sir Richard de Rokesley but he likewise deceasing without Issue the same fatal Vicissitude brought it by Joan sole Daughter and Heir to be the Patrimony of Thomas de Poynings in which Family the Title flowed with an uninterrupted Current untill it devolved to Sir Edward Poynings who dyed in the twelfth year of Henry the eighth without Issue lawfully begotten and as it appears by the last Inquisition taken after his Decease in the fourteenth year of that Prince without any respective Kindred that could legally entitle themselves to his Estate so this Mannor escheated to the Crown and was granted by the abovesaid Prince to Sir Thomas Wiat who lost it again upon his attainder in the second year of Queen Mary but was restored again by Queen Elizabeth in the twenty fifth year of her Reign to his Son George Wiat Esquire only for life for the Reversion thereof was by King James by his Letters Patents bearing Date the fifteenth Day of June in the sixteenth year of his Reign granted to Thomas Hooker and Jo. Spencer Gentlemen who joyn after in a fine and settle it on the Heirs of Mr. George Wiat in the second year of King Charles Sir Francis Wiat was found to be his Heir who with his Ladies Consent Dame Margaret Wiat did by good and sufficient Assurance in Law not many yeers since convey it to Isaac Seward Gentleman Sutton Barne is a little Mannor in this Parish remarkable only in this that Roger de Savage Son of Sir John Savage obtained a Charter of Free Warren to it in the fifth year of Edward the second and continued with the Name untill the Heir Generall carried it away with Bobbing to Clifford in which Family it remained untill the latter end of Henry the eighth and then it was passed away to Platt Ancestor to Mr ....... Plat of Borden who now enjoys the Inheritance of it Bonnington in the Hundred of Street did anciently appertain to the Knights Templars and being found in the Register of their Demeasne at their total Suppression which was in the second year of Edward the second it was in the seventeenth year of that Princes Rule by a new Provision made by Act of Parliament setled on the Knights Hospitallers or of St. Johns of Jerusalem and so lay enwrapped in their Patrimony which was wide and spacious in this Track untill the Reign of Henry the eighth and then by the Suppression of this Order it was made parcell of the Royall Revenue untill the abovesaid Prince in the thirty fifth year of his Government granted it to Sir Thomas Moile and he not long after conveyed it by Sale to Sir James Hales of the Dungeon neer Canterbury from whom it devolved by successive Right to his Successor Sir James Hales who almost in our Memory alienated his Interest in it to Sir William Man of Canterbury Singleton is another Mannor in Bonington which was the Inheritance of a Family which anciently extracted its Sirname from the abovesaid Parish and was called Bonington of which Family was Ni. de Bonington who paid respective Aid for this Mannor at making the Black Prince Knight after this Family was extinguished which was about the Beginning of Richard the second the Breslands a Family who were Owners of a plentifull Estate in East Kent were entituled by Purchase to the Possession of this Mannor and continued in the Tenure of it untill about the latter end of Henry the fourth and then it passed away as appears by some ancient Court Rolls to Cobbe whose Arms viz. Argent a Cheveron between three Cocks Gules if not assaulted by the barrous rudenesle of these Times stand in old coloured Class both in the Churches of Bonington and Limne But to proceed Singleton had for several Generations and Ages been folded up in that Demeasne which related to this Family it was carried down by the Vicissitude of Time to Edward Cobbe Esquire who about the Beginning of Queen Elizabeth deceased without Issue male and so both this Place and Cobbs place in Aldington became the Inheritance of Sir John Norton of Northwood by matching with Alice sole Daughter and Heit of the abovesaid Edward and from him did it transmit it self by Descent to his Successor Sir Thomas Norton of Northwood who dying without Issue male Elizabeth his Female Inheritrix brought this to be parcell of that Estate which acknowledges the Signory of Sir James Hales now of the place or Court called the Dungeon neer Canterbury Brookland in the Hundred of Aloesbridge anciently was wrapt up in the Patrimony of a noble Family called Passeley whose Seat was at Thevegate in Smeth Edmund de Passeley is the first whom in publick Record I discover to have been possest of it as appears by an Inquisition taken after his Decease in the nineteenth year of Edward the second Rot. Esc Num. 57. but the aboad of this Family at this Place was no longer then untill the end of Henry the fourth and then it was by John Passeley alienated to the Lord Cobham of Sterborough and here was the Tenure and Title more transient and volatile then in the former Family for Thomas Lord Cobham of Sterborough dyed in the eleventh year of Edward the fourth and left it to his sole Daughter and Heir Ann matched to Edward Borough afterwards in her Right Lord Borough of Sterborough and Lord of this Mannor and in this Family was it fixed untill Thomas Lord Borough Grandchild to the abovesaid Edward about the middle of Queen Elizabeth passed it away to Eversfield of Sussex from whom by as quick a Transition it was
it is observable that in these Assemblies and in other Recorded by Sir Henry Spelman either the King immediately or else some Thane which was a Dignity equivalent to our English Baron who did Personate the Prince was joyntly President with the Bishop that as one took Cognisance of the Affaires of the Church so the other managed the Concernments and Interest of the State and this was done with much of Reason and Prudence in the original Constitution of these Synods for the mingling the divided Interests of the Laitie and Clergie together and making them mutually to interfere extinguished all jealousie and Emulation between them and by consequence all those black effects and inconveniences which are still the Retinue to those two Furies for we cannot be so Citizens of the Common-wealth but we must be Sons of the Church nor so Sons of the Church the Temporall and Spirituall Interest are so complicated together but we must in some relation be Citizens of the Common-wealth and what causeth annoyance to the one creates disturbance to the other for like Hippocrates Twins they laugh and mourn and live and die together But to proceed when this Mannor had for many Ages been incorporated with the Inheritance of the Church Henry the eighth judging the Clergie grown too Luxuriant in a wide Revenue prun'd off this and Malingden a Mannor which was ever an Appendage to Cliffe as two superfluous Excrescencies and engraffed them again in the Royall Demeasn but suddenly after Cliff was by this Prince granted to George Brooke Lord Cobham and he left it to his Son Sir William Brooke Lord Cobham who enstated it by entaile on his second Son George Brooke and in Defailance of Issue male by him surviving to the next Heir male of the Name after this man was beheaded at Winchester in the second year of King James this devolved to his Son Sir William Brooke who dying without Issue male in the year 1643. Sir Jo. Brooke now Lord Cobham became his Heir Malingden was by Queen Elizabeth granted to William Ewens who quickly after this Concession transferred his Interest in it by Sale to Brown from whom by as sudden a Decursion the Title by Purchase went in to Sompner who in Times which almost attaque our Remembrance sold it away to Hills Perry Court in Cliffe was always a Limb of the Revenue of the Family of Cobham and so for many Hundred years continued till Henry Brooke Lord Cobham being wound up in that fatal and mysterious Design of the noble but infortunate Sir Walter Rawleigh in the Time of King James forfeited this to the Crown but this Seat was by the abovesaid Prince after the Death of Frances Widow to the abovesaid Henry Lord Brook granted to Robert Cecill Earl of Salisbury in Reversion who married Elizabeth Brook this Lords Sister and his Son Will. Earl of Salisbury Knight of the Garter and Captain of the Band of Pentioners to his late Majesty passed it away by Sale to Bernard Hide of London Esq whose Grandchild Mr. Bernard Hide does enjoy the present Fee-simple of it Cardans is the last Mannor in Cliffe which untill the publique Dissolution tore it off belonged to the Charter-House in London and being thus ravished away was by Henry the eighth in the thirty first year of his Reign granted to Thomas Gethins from which Family not many years since it passed away by Sale to Oliver Leder and was lately if it be not still in the Tenure and Possession of that Name West-Clive vulgarly called West-Cliff in the Hundred of Bewsborough was the Patrimonial Inheritance of the Lord Cobham of Sterborough Castle in Surrey a younger Branch of the Lord Cobham of Cobham Reginald de Cobham second Son of John de Cobham was summoned to Parliament as Baron of Sterborough in the twenty second year of Edward the third and dyed possest of this Mannor and much other Land in Kent and Surrey in the forty fifth year of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 15. and so it remained interwoven for some Descents with the Demeasne of this Family till Thomas Lord Cobham this mans great Grandchild resolved into Ann Cobham who was his Female Heir who by being espoused to Edward Borough Lord Gainsborough linked this to his Demeasne and Propriety but it was unloosned in Thomas Lord Borough this Mans Grandchild who in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth alienated his Interest in it to Guibon whose Grandchild Mr Thomas Guibon is invested in the instant Possession of it Bere Court or Mannor in this Parish was formerly a parcell of the Demeasne of a Family who in times more ancient fell under this Denomination Williant de Bere was Bailiff of Dover and was to account the profits to the Constable of Dover Castle Anno secundo Edwardi primi Memb. 19. Anno quarto Edwardi primi Memb. 34. After this Family had waved the Possession of this place the Tookes were setled in the Inheritance and by a Decursion of many Ages have brought down the Inheritance to Mr. Charles Tooke who is the instant Possessor of Bere Cobham in the Hundred of Shamell afforded a Seat and Sirname to that noble and splendid Family * Sir Hen. de Cobham Sir Reginald de Cobham Sir Stephen de Cobham Sir Henry de Cobham le Uncle are enrol'd in the Register of those Knights who were assistant to K. Edward the first at the Seige of Crlaverock in Scotland in the twenty eighth year of his Reign who from hence borrowed the originall Denomination of Cobham and certainly this place was the Cradle or Seminary of Persons who in elder times were invested in Places of as signall and principall a Trust or Eminence as they could move in in the narrow Orbe of a particular County Henry de Cobham was one of the Recognitores magnae Assisae in the first year of K. John who were in some proportion equivalent to the Judges Itinerant for they took Cognisance of all Causes Criminal declared to be so by the Laws then in force and likewise determined in sundry Actions of a meer Civill Aspect either Reall Personal or Mixt Reginald de Cobham Son of John de Cobham was Sheriff of Kent from the Beginning of the thirty third year of Henry the third to the end of the fortieth year of the said Prince and was again Sheriff in the forty second year of the above mentioned Prince in which year he dyed and Roger de Northwood and his other Executors answered for the Remainder of the year Sir Henry de Cobham was Sheriff of Kent the twenty ninth thirtieth and part of the thirty first year of Edward the first he is written in the old Rolls of the Arms of the Knights of Kent Henry Cobham le Vncle that is he was Uncle to the Lord Cobham he lies buried in Shorne Church with his Portraicture armed in Mail and Crosselegg'd with a Barons Robes cast over but whether he were ever actually engaged in the Defence of the Crosse and
It was when it flourished most but a Cell of Benedictin Monks belonging to Saint Peters in Gaunt and paid to them 40 s. per Annum as a Rent-Service as appears Rot. Esc An. 12. Ric. secundi N. 72. And so continued till King Henry the fifth perceiving the ill Effects and impressions which the Influence of Priories-Aliens and their Fraternities might cause upon those Religious persons who were his Subjects who were altogether chained by a Connexion of Canonical Obedience to them suppressed this and sundry others of the like Nature and with their Revenue endowed that stately Monastery which he erected at Shene storing it with Carthusian Monks and dedicating it to the Name of Jesus of Bethlem and in the Patrimony of this Cloister did this Mannor lie included till the total Dissolution in that general Shipwrack in the Rule of Henry the eighth and then it returned to the Crown and there was lodged till Queen Elizabeth in the fifth year of her Government granted it to Ambrose Dudley Earl of Warwick who soon after exchanged it for other Lands with the said Princess and she in the year 1575 granted it in Lease for a space of forty years to Sir Nicholas Stodard of Modingham which expiring in the year 1605 King James passed it away in Lease for forty years more to Sir Francis Knolls and the Fee-simple in Reversion to John Ramsey Earl of Holderness who dying before the Expiration of the Lease gave it to his Brother Sir George Ramsey whose Son John Ramsey when the former Lease was worn out which was about the year 1645 sold the Fee-simple to Mr. Reginald Grime Catford in this Parish was formerly a Mannor which anciently was involved in the Inheritance of the Abels of Hering-Hill in Eri●h and John Abel had a Charter of Free Warren to this and other of his Lands in Lewsham in the twenty third year of Edward the first and after this Family was worn out the Lords Mountacute were Lords of the Signory and Fee-simple of it for William de Mountacute Earl of Salisbury obtained by Charter a Confirmation of Free Warren to this Mannor of his of Catford in the fifth year of Edward the third and in this noble Family did the Possession dwell till Richard de Nevil married Eleanor Daughter and Heir of Thomas de Mountacute Earl of Salisbury and in her Right had the Title of that Earldome and the Possession of this Place enstated upon him and divers of the Windows of the most ancient Houses in Lewsham are stained and coloured with his Armes This was that Rich. who gave up his Life to the Cause and Quarrel of the House of York and with Richard Duke of York most resolutely asserting the Truth and Justice of their Title to the Crown perished in the fatal and infortunate Battle commenced with the Partisans of the Lancastrian Claim between Sandall and Wakefield and afterwards his Son Richard Earl of Warwick he that broke and piec'd up the Scepter as he pleased and his younger Son John Nevil created Marquess Montacute by Edward the fourth in the year 1470 fell in that dysastrous Encounter waged with Edward the fourth at Barnet upon whose Ruines and Tombs he built his Throne and with their Blood coemented the Fabrick of his future Greatness But whether upon the Shipwrack of this Family it came by Escheat to the Crown or else to George Duke of Clarence second Brother to Edw. the fourth who espoused Isabel Daughter and Coheir of Richard E. of Warwick is incertain though it is probable it did because in a Great House of Mr. Streets at Lewsham the Armes of the Duke of Clarence stand empal'd with Nevil In Times of a more modern Aspect Catford was the Polsteds a Family of very deep Antiquity in Surrey for Hugh de Polsted gave Lands called Inwood by his Deed dated the sixteenth year of King John to the Abby of Waversley in that County but whether this place came to them or not by Grant from the Crown or by Purchase from some other I am ignorant 't is certain that Francis Polsted Cousin and Heir to Richard Polsted sold Catford to Brian Annesley Esquire in Reversion after the Decease of Elizabeth Wife of John Wolley and Widdow of the said Richard in the twentieth year of Queen Eliz. And He afterwards dying without Issue Male his two Daughters married to Sir William Harvey after Lord Harvey of Kidbrook in Kent and Sir John Wildgoose shar'd the Inheritance of this Place There were two Chantreys founded at Lewsham One by Rich. Walker for one priest to celebrate Mass at the Altar of the Trinity for the Founder's Soul The other by Roger Fitz who by the Appointment of his last Will the seventeenth of Henry the seventh devised that his two Houses the Lion and the Ram in the Stews on the Banck-side near London should be sold to build the Chantry House and indow it with maintenance for one Priest to celebrate at the Altar of the Trinity in Lewsham Church for the Founder's Soul Leybourne in the Hundred of Larkfield was the ancient Demeasn of the Lords Leybourne who erected here a Castle esteemed a strong Pile in our Ancestors Dayes however the Ruines and Raggs of it at present appear mean and despicable yet it hath by several Gradations sunk into this Condition The first of which Family which I find to be eminent was * Ex veteri Rot. penes Edw. Dering Militem Baronettum desunctum Roger de Leybourne who is enrolled in the Catalogue of those Kentish Knights who accompanied Richard the first to the Siege of Acon and another Roger de Leybourne is in the Roll of this Kentish Gentlemen who assisted Henry the third in his Expedition into Gascony in the thirty seventh year of his Raign and afterwards was a principal Partisan of Simon de Montforts in his Emotions and rude Essorts against his Scepter and Government for which he was pardoned by the Act of Amnestia or Pacification of that Prince made in the fiftieth year of his Raign at Killingworth and this is that Roger which slew Ernulphus de Monteney at a meeting of the round Table in the thirty sixth year of Henry the sixth and was the Husband of Eleanor Countess of Winchester Sir Henry and Sir Simon de Leybourne are recorded in the List of those Kentish Gentlemen who assisted the Edward the first in his Siege of Carlaverock in Scotland in the twenty eighth year of his Reign and for their signal Service performed in that Expedition were dignified with the Order of Knighthood William de Leybourne one of this Family was frequently summon'd to sit in Parliament as Baron in the Raign of Edward the first and by that Title subscribes in that memorable Letter which the abovesaid Prince and all the English Peerage wrote to the Pope in the year of Grace 1301 that is in the twenty ninth of Edward the first 's Government to justifie those Grounds on which the war was
who in so many remarkable and triumphant Conflicts asserted the Interest of this Nation in France in the Raign of the abovesaid Prince and at last received a mortal Wound by a Splinter of a Window struck into his Face by a Cannon shot at the Siege of Orleans of which he died 1428 and left his Estate here to his Natural Son James Montacute * Ex vetustis Autographis penes Rich. Lea Arm. de Rochester so written in the Deed but in all our printed Books of Nobility falsly and corruptly John and he in the thirtieth year of Henry the sixth conveyed it by Deed to Thomas Davy Gentleman and he not many years after alienated it to Edward Nevill Baron of Aburgavenny from whom it was transported by Descent to his Successor Henry Lord Aburgavenny who dying in the twenty ninth year of Q. Elizabeth without Issue Male gave it to his second Brother Sir Edward Nevill from whom it is come down to his Descendant John Lord Aburgavenny the instant Proprietary of it Buckland in this Parish did acknowledge the Bucklands for its Heirs and Possessors who sometimes did inhabit at Preston in Shorham and sometimes at this place which however now obscure and despicable was of Credit when Sir John Buckland paid respective Aid for his Lands at Ludsdown at the making of the Black Prince Knight in the twentieth of Edward the third from Buckland by a Daughter and Heir some few Ages since it came over with Preston in Shorham to Folhill and in that Family is the Title still at this instant resident Lullingston in the Hundred of Axtan was in ancient Records written Lullingston Rosse for Anketellus Rosse held Lands here in the twentieth of William the Conqueror William de Rosse this mans Grand-child as appears by the Pipe Rolls held two Knights Fees in Lullingston in the first year of King John Alexander de Rosse this mans Son was one of the Recognitores magnae Assisae or of the grand Assise about the end of that Prince's Rule but not long after this the Possession of this place was not lincked to this Family for Lora de Rosse Sole Daughter to William de Rosse by matching with William de Peyforer fastned it to the Revenue of that Stock from whence it assumed the Title of Lullingston Peyforer but it quickly deserted both the Title and Possessor for Gregory de Rokesley Lord Maior of London in the seventh year of Edward the first purchased it of the abovesaid William and in the same year obtained a Charter Warren to his Lands at this place In the twentieth year of Edward the third John de Rokesley Son to Walter Rokesley and Grand-child to the before mentioned Gregory paid Aid for the Mannor of Lullingston which held by a whole Knights Fee at the making the Black Prince Knight In the thirty third year of Edward the third Sir John Peche purchased the Mannor of this John de Rokesley this Sir John was Son to Sir John de Peche who was Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports and Constable of Dover Castle and was called to Parliament among the Barons in the fourth year of Edward the third In the same year he bought Lullingston he obtained a Charter of Free Warren to his Lands there which was renewed and by Confirmation fortified in the thirty fourth and thirty fifth of Edward the third Sir William Peche was his Son and Heir whose Widow the Lady Joane Peche who died seised of this Mannor in the eleventh year of Henry the fourth lies entombed in St. Mary Woolnoth Church in London Sir John Peche was Son and Heir to them both Sir William Peche was Son and Heir to this Sir John who died at Lullingston 1487 and had two Children Sir John Peche Knight and Banneret who died sans Issue which Sir John was a man of exemplary Account being Lord Deputy of Calais and of signal Charity as is evident by his Munificence and Bounty towards the Poor for he founded the Alms-Houses at Lullingston and gave 500 lb. to other Pious Uses to be performed by the Grocers Company in London of which he was Free and Elizabeth marched to John Hart Esquire who in his Wife 's Right upon the Decease of her Brother enter'd into the Possession of the Premisses from whom it is transmitted to William Hart Esquire his great Grand-child who hath the instant Signory and Fee-simple of this Mannor of Lullingston M. M. M. M. MAidstone giveth Name to the whole Hundred wherein it is seated an elegant Town it is whether we consider it in respect of the uniform and regular Building or of the healthful Situation of it spreading it self out partly upon a Hill and partly upon a Valley which are interlaced with a smal River which hath its Original about Leeds and on the other side its Banks are washed with the waters of the Medway from whence it primitively borrowed its Name being in Saxon called Medwegston The Places of most eminence which are circumscribed within the Limits of it are First Buckland which is situated on the opposite Banck of the River upon the Knob or Knoll of an Hill of easie Ascent from whence it takes in a various and delightful Prospect of the adjacent Valley It was anciently part of the Demeasn of the Bucklands but whether it originally gave Seat and Sirname to them or not is not evident because there was another Place which likewise bore this Name at Luddesdowne and which also acknowledged it self to be Parcel of their Proprietie John de Buckland held it at his Death which was in the third year of Edward the third and his Son and Heir was Sir John Buckland who was a Person of remarkable Reputation and Note in this Track for he had Lands about Wouldham Halling Snodland Ludsdowne and Shoreham as well as at this Place After this Name went out the Lords Cobham were Proprietaries of Buckland and in this Family was the Possession guided along by an undivided Clew of several Ages till the infortunate Henry Lord Cobham about the entrance into the Raign of King James being with Sir VValter Raleigh and others entangled in a Design which the then present Power after a serious and solemn Debate adjudged treasonable he could not unravel himself out of it but with the Forfeiture though not of Life yet of Estate but this Mannor before his Attaint being settled upon his Lady Francis Cobham as part of her Jointure upon his Decease was granted by the Crown to her and the Reversion to Robert Cecil Earl of Salisbury in respect he had married Elizabeth Daughter to William Brooke Lord Cobham and Sister to this last Lord Henry and She shortly after by marrying with ....... Fitz Gerald Earl of Kildare settled the present Interest of it in him and He and his Countess being embarked in a mutual and joint consent with the above-mentioned Earl of Salisbury passed away their Right in it about the year One thousand six hundred and eighteen to William
Warden of the Saxon Shore by Pancerollus in his Book called Notitia Provinciarum under the Name of Anderida and sometimes written Anderidos and here was the Castle which the Saxons called Andreds Ceaster and the great Wood which stretched out in length from hence into Hampshire 80. miles was named Andreds-wald and by the Britons Coid Andred other reasons are laid down for the Identity of the place extracted from the Name which the English Saxons gave it who termed it Brittenden that is The Britons Vale from whence the whole Hundred adjoyning is called Sellbrittenden that is The Britons Woody Vale. Here for Defence of the Coast against the Eruptions of Saxon Rovers the Romans placed the Prapositus Numeri Abulcorum and hither the River of Lymen long fince called Rother was sufficiently Navigable But soon after the Romans deserted Brittain it shrunk into Decay being ruined by the English Saxons and yet a marke of the Losse is covertly couched under the Name of the principal Mannor called Losenham of which something is to be remembred when we have done with the History of this place which I have thus abbreviated Hengist being fully determined to expell all the Britons out of Kent and thinking it would much conduce to the improvement of his Design to recruite his Army with Troops of his own Nation called Ella the Founder of the South-Saxon Kingdome and his three Sons with a strong Power out of Germanie and then gave a sharp Assault against this Anderida but was intercepted at that instant in his Designe by those vigorous Impressions which the Britons out of their Ambushments in the Woods then made upon him In Fine after many Prejudices and Losses both given and taken Hengist divided his Army and not onely discomfited the Britons in the adjacent wood but also at the same Time forced the City by Assault and became so enflamed with revenge that nothing but the Extinction of the Inhabitants by a publick slaughter and the totall demolishing of the Town could supersede or allay so great an Animosity The place lying thus desolate was shewed as Henry of Huntingdon reports many Ages after to inquisitive Passengers till in the year 791 King Offa gave this and other Lands to the Arch-bishop and Monks of Canterbury ad Pascua Porcorum for the Pannage of their Hoggs In the Time of the Conquerour the Arch-bishops and Monks of Canterbury held this Mannor of Newenden and it was rated in the extent of it but at one Sulling and was an Appendage to Saltwood and in the Patrimony of the Church did the Title of it remain locked up till the general Dissolution in the Raign of Henry the eighth and then it was unloosned and by Act of Parliament fastned to the Revenue of the Crown where till these infortunate Times it did successively continue Losenham in this Parish was the ancient Seat of the Auchers an eminent and numerous Family this was both in Kent Sussex Nottingham and Essex where they made Coppt-Hall by Epping the Seat and Head of their Barony and it is very probable they derive this their Name from Aucherus that was Consul or Elderman of Kent and led the power of the County wherewith at Richborough nere Sandwich he foiled and defeated the Danes as Alfred of Beverley writes In the Book called Nova Feoffamenta collected in the Raign of Henry the second it is there recorded that that Prince Rot. pipae de Scutagio Walliae An. 42 Hen. 3. gave William Fitz Aucher the fourth part of a Knights Fee in Essex called Lagfare Richard Fitz Aucher his Grandchild is in the Number of those Kentish Gentlemen who were engaged with Henry the third in his Expedition into Wales in the forty second year of his Raign Will. Fitz Aucher See Camdens Britannia pag. 307. another of this Family held the Mannor of Boseham in Sussex by Grant from William the Conquerour and his Rent-service or Acknowledgement was to pay into the Exchequer in whose Time he lived forty pound of tryed and weighted Silver Henry Fitz Aucher fills up the Roll or Inventory of those Kentish Gentlemen who assisted Edward the first at his Seige of Carlaverok in Scotland in the twenty eighth year of his Raign and for his Service there was made Knight Banneret Peter Aucher or Auger for so in old Records they are promiscuously written was Valet to King Edward the second an Office equivalent in its Trust and Dignity to those we called Gentlemen of the Bed-chamber to our late Kings and it seems was mistaken for a Knight Templer in the fourth year of that Prince because he nourished a spreading Beard in that Age an eminent Adjunct of that Order but Edward the second rectified this Mistake and affirmed that his diffused Beard did not evince he was a Knight Templer as appears Pat. 14. Hen. 2. parte secunda Memb. 20. And if it could any way multiply or improve the Eminence of a Family that was so deeply rooted in Antiquity before I could tell you that sundry of this Name and Family were Conservators of the Peace and concerned in other Comissions both to levy Taxes imposed by Parliament and to have Inspection into Sewers both in the Raign of Edward the third and Richard the second but I avoid the recital lest this Book might swell into too large a Bulk by these curious and unnecessary Disquisitions It is enough to inform you that after this Mannor had for many Centuries of years been wrapt up in the Patrimony of this Family it went away by Ann Sole Daughter and Heir of John Aucher of Losenham to Walter Colepeper second Son of Sir John Colepeper of Bayhall in Pepenbury from which Alliance Sir John Colepeper created Lord Colepeper at Oxford by the late K. Charles claims at this instant the Inheritance and Lordship of Losenham There was in this Parish a House of Carmelite Friers called so because they came from Mount Carmel in Palestine and was the first Seminary of that Order here in England who by their Rule were styled Brothers of Mary the blessed Virgin to whom this Covent was dedicated It was founded in the year of our Lord 1241 and in the twenty sixth year of the Government of Henry the third by Sir Thomas Alcher or Fitz Aucher for the Name was often promiscuously written so but never Albuser as Mr. Camden and Mr. Speed have printed it though I do not deny but such a person might be a Benefactor to the Foundation Newenham in the Hundred of Feversham was parcell of that Demeasn which related to the Abbey of Boxley and continued united to it till the Suppression by Henry the eighth and then it was granted by that Prince to Sir Thomas Wiatt in the twenty eighth year of his Government and he by his unhappy Defection in the first year of Queen Mary forfeited it to the Crown where it remained till Queen Elizabeth by royal Concession invested the Possession in her faithfull Servant John Astley Esquire
old German practise is also asserted by Tacitus And that it was customary amongst the Danes Several Urns discovered in Jutland and Sleswick not many years since do easily evince which contained not only Bones but many other Substances in them as Knives peeces of Iron Brass and Wood and one of Norway a Brass guilded Jews-harp When this Custome of Burning of the Dead languished into Disuse is incertain but that it began to vanish upon the Dawning of Christianity as Vapors and Mists scatter before a Morning Sun is without Controversie but when the Light of it did more vigorously reflect like a Meridian Beam on all the gloomy Corners and Recesses of Paganism and Infidelity then this Use of Urn-Burial was wholly superseded and found a Tomb it self in the more sober and severer practise of Christianity And thus much shall be said concerning these Urns digged up at Newington The Mannor of Levenoke in this Parish ought in the last place to be taken Notice of but the Deeds being dispersed into the Hands of those who are Strangers both to this County and my Design I cannot give the Reader that satisfaction in this particular that I aime at Only thus much I can inform him that by an old Court Roll in the Hands of Mr. Staninough of this Parish lately deceased I discovered that in the Raign of Edward the third and Richard the second it was the possession of John Beau Fitz and it is probable by the Heir General of this Name it devolved to Arnold of Rochester and more to fortifie this some ancient Country people at my being there did assure me they had it by Traditional Intelligence from their Predecessors That that Knight purchased it of one Arnold but of that there is no certainty only this is positive that about the latter end of Henry the eighth that Knight enjoyed it and in this Name it remained until almost our Memory and then it was conveyed to Gouldsmith and he alienated it to Barrow whose Descendant having morgaged it to Mr. ...... Alston of London he very lately hath transplanted all his Right by Sale into Mr. ........ Lisle of Middlesex now deceased Nockholt in the Hundred of Ruxley was a Branch which was incorporated into the Revenue of the Lord Say William de Say died possest of it in the twenty third year of Edward the third and from this man was it transmitted to his Grand-child Geffrey Say who concluded in a Sole Daughter and Heir called Elizabeth who was married to William Fiennes Esquire and so in her Right was Nockholt united to the possession of this Noble Family from this man was Richard Fiennes descended who enjoyed this Mannor successively from him and married Joane the Sole Female heir of Thomas Lord Dacre of Hurstmonceaux in Sussex who was extracted from Edward Lord Dacre who was summoned to Parliament by the Title of Lord Dacre of Hurstmonceaux in the Raign of Edward the second and in her Right was this man summoned to Parliament by the Name of Richard Fiennes Lord Dacres in the Government of Henry the sixth And here did both the Barony of Dacre and the Inheritance of Nockholt continue till Gregory Fiennes Lord Dacres deceased in the thirty sixth year of Queen Elizabeth and left by Testament Margaret his Sister matched to Sampson Lennard Esquire he having no Issue Heir to his large possessions amongst which this Mannor was involved from Sampson Lennard who was created Lord Dacres in the second year of King James it is now come down by Successive Inheritance to be the instant Patrimony of his Grand-child Francis Lord Dacres the present Baron of Hurstmonceaux There are two other Mannors in this Parish but of small importance called Brampton and Shelleys-court or at Ockholt both which had Owners who engrafted their own Sirname upon them There is a recital in the Book of Aide of one John de Brampton who held Land at Nockholt and Ditton in the Raign of Edward the first From this Family Brampton came by a Female Heir to be the Inheritance of Petley who about the latter end of Henry the sixth conveyed it to Oliver alias Quintin and hath been for almost two Hundred years as appears by the Evidences now in the Hands of Mr. Robert Oliver of the Grange in the Parish of Leybourn in the Tenure and Possession of that Name and Family Shelleys Court called in the Evidences likewise at Ockholt was as high as the Raign of Edward the third as the originall Deeds now in the Hands of Mr. Rob. Austin of Bexley inform me the Inheritance of Shelley and remained united to the Possession of that Family till the Government of Queen Mary and then by Sale the whole Demise was passed away by Sir John Champneys Lord Maior of London by William Shelley the last of this Name at this place from whom it devolved to his Son Sir Justinian Champneys who left it to his Son Mr. Richard Champneys Esquire and he almost in the Remembrance of that Age we live in alienated his Concernment in it to the present Possessor Mr. Gooday of Suffolk Nonington in the Hundred of Wingham and Eastry hath diverse places in it of considerable Repute The first is Fredville called in old Deeds Froidville from its bleak and eminent Situation Times of an elder Inscription represent it to have been the Possession of Colkin vulgarly called Cokin who it is probable erected the ancient Fabrick and brought it into the Shape and Order of an Habitation this Family was originally extracted from Canterbury where they had a Lane which bore their Name being called Colkins Lane and likewise had the Inheritance or Propriety of Worth-gate in that City William Colkin founded an Hospital neer Eastbridge which celebrated his Name to Posterity and was called Colkin's Hospital he flourished in the Time of K. John and was a liberal Benefactor to the Hospitals of St. Nicholas St. Katharine and St. Thomas of Eastbridge in Canterbury as is recorded by Mr. William Somner in his Survey of that City Page 116. But to proceed John Colkin dyed possest of Fredvill the tenth of Edward the third and in his Posterity was the Title resident untill the latter end of Richard the second and then it was conveyed to Thomas Charleton and he by a Fine levyed the second of Henry the second transplants his Interest into John Quadring in whose Name it made its aboad untill Joan Quadring the Heir General of Thomas Quadring this man's Successor carried the Title along with her to her Husband Richard Dryland and he about the latter end of Edward the fourth alienated it to John Nethersole who by Fine levyed in the second year of Richard the third conveyed it to William Bois Esquire descended from I. de Bosco or de Bois so written in some old Copies of the Battle Abby Roll and in others R. de Bosco or de Bois who entered into England with William the Conquerour which William had Issue Thomas Bois who dying in the
Demeasne where it continued couched till Queen Elizabeth first granted it in Lease for Life to her Foster-brother Saunders so he was styled because his Mother had been her Nurse upon whose Decease it reverts to the Crown and King James upon his first Ascending the English Throne granted the Demeasne to Sir Edwin Sandys The Mannor was sold the 1630. to Mr. Edw. Bois Father to Jo. Bois of Betshanger Esq a Person who had performed some exemplary Service for him upon his first admission to the Scepter of this Nation which obliged him to this Concession from whom it is now by Descent transferred to his Grand-child Son to Colonel Sandys who in the late intestine Contests between the King and his two Houses received a mortal wound in a vigorous encounter betwixt him and Prince Rupert at Worcester of which some time after he languished away and deceased There was when Leland made his Survey of Kent which was in the Raign of Henry the eighth the Reliques of an old Stone-house which the Tradition of that Age did affirm to have been the Pallace of the above mentioned Eadbald And there was not many years before the same Author made this perambulation as he in the same Manuscript does assert a Wall broken down by which Hole or Inlet was discovered a little Cell or Chamber into which it opened where were found the Fragmentary Remains of two Children who had in that gloomy Repository been as was then conjectured for many preceding Ages been mured up and which did improve the wonder in one of these obsolete Skeletons was descried a stiff Pin of Latine Tikenhurst in this Parish now by Corruption of the first Etymology called Ticknes in elder Times was the Revenue of a Family known by that Sirname some of whom are Witnesses to Deeds of a very high Date now in the Hands of Mr. Richard Fogge of Dane-court in Tilmanston After this Family which had left its Name ingrafted upon this place was worn out which was before the Raign of Henry the sixth Little Mongcham was given by King Edbert under the Notion of 6 Ploughed Lands to the Abby of St. Austins the Stoddards from whom the Stoddards of Modingham near Eltham were originally extracted became Possessors of the Fee and in the Patrimony of this Family was the Title of this Place for several Generations involved till in our Grand-fathers Memory it was by Sale transplanted into the Propriety of Peyton of Knowlton so that it is in Right of that Purchase now incorporated into the Income of Sir Thomas Peyton Baronet who is the present Lord of the Fee Northfleet was alwaies a Branch of that Revenue which fell under the Spiritual Signory of Christ-church By the Pages of Doomes-day Book we may take a brief Prospect of what it was in the Time of the Conqueror Northfleet saies that Record in T. E. R. se defendebat pro VI. Sullingis nunc pro V. est manerium appretiatum XX. VII lb. That is Northfleet in the Time of Edward the Confessor did defend it self for six Sullings or Ploughed Lands but now that is in the Time of William the Conqueror only for five and upon the appraisment was rated at twenty seven pound and thus did it continue riveted by the Charters of several Princes which had confirmed the Patrimony of Christ-church in Canterbury into the Estate of the Church till that Whitlwind which arose in the Time of Henry the eighth threw it into the common Dissolution and then by publique Authority it was united to the Revenue of the Crown and there was fixed till the year One thousand six hundred and eight and then the Title was torn off Ifeild Well Cosington and Shinglewell are four small Mannors which are circumscribed within the Limits of this Parish They were in Ages of a more venerable Aspect the Patrimony of Hever of Hever William de Hever had a Charter of Free-warren granted to his Lands at Ifield and Shinglewell and other Lands in Northfleet in the ninth year of Edward the first which was renued to Thomas de Hever in the fourth year of Edward the third but he left no Heits male to enjoy this priviledge for he and his Name expired in Females whereof Joan one of his Coheirs was espoused to Reginald Cobham who was summoned to Parliament by Writt as Baron of Sterborough in the twenty second year of Edward the third and the other was matched to Iohn Brocas but his Estate at these above-mentioned places was upon the Partition annexed to the Patrimony of the Lord Cobham from which Family about the raign of Henry the fourth it came over to Iohn Rykeld who with his Son William Rykeld lyes entombed in Northfleet Church but it seems this last mentioned William deceased without Issue-male for Rose his Sole Daughter and Heir was married to Edward Limsey descended from Ralph de Limsey who held the Mannor of Budbrook in Warwickshire the twentieth of William the Conquerour as is testified by Dooms-day Book● and this Man had Issue Iohn Limsey to whom Ifield Shinglewell and the other two places in right of his Mother did successively devolve But it seems the Title of Wells Cosington and Ifield did not long dwell in Iohn Limsey for in the first year of Richard the third he alienated them to Iohn Young from which Family in the middle of the raign of H. the eighth they came back again to acknowledge the Signiory of Limsey in whom again the Possession was as transitory as formerly for before the latter end of H. eighth they were conveyed to Rainsford from whom about the Beginning of Queen Elizabeth they were by Sale passed away to Alderman Garret of London and in this Family was the Inheritance lodged untill allmost those Times which fell under the Cognisance of our Remembrance and then they were disposed of by Sale to Child Derndale is another ancient Seat in Northfleet which in old Evidences some of which are not bounded with any date is styled Derendale as having in elder Times as it appears by old Deeds Possessors of that Name and when they had deserted the Possession which was before the latter end of Edward the third it became the Inheritance of William Wangford whose Son William Wangford was Serjeant at Law and a great Benefactor to Rochester Bridge and he being his Heir to this place in the fifteenth year of Henry the sixth passed it away to John and William Flucke from whom suddenly after it came over by purchase to Iohn Rouse descended from William Rouse of Birling whose Son Iohn Rouse demised Land in Northfleet as appears by an old Deed to Iohn Rouse in the thirty third year of Edward the third and this above-mentioned Iohn Rouse in the tenth year of Edward the fourth demised his Right in this place to Thomas Wombwell and Iohn Clifton Esquire and this Iohn Clifton dying without Issue in the year 1471 bequeaths his Interest in it by Will to Thomas VVombwell and
History since even the very Ruines of the Ruines themselves have now got an unknown enterment Helburgh is an ancient Seat in this Parish The first that I find possest it was Nicholas Tingewike originally descended from Tingewick in the County of Buckingham and who likewise held large possessions at Dartford and he dyed seised of it in the fourteenth year of Edward the second Rot. Esc Num. 182. After this Family deserted the possession the Pines became its Proprietaries of which Family was James de la Pine who was Sheriff of Kent in the twenty sixth and twenty seventh years of Edward the third and was in the possession of this place at his Decease which was in the thirty third year of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 13. And left it to his Son Thomas Pine after whom I meet with another James Pine who about the Beginning of Henry the fourth passed it away to Cheyney and in this Family did it reside untill the Beginning of Queen Elizabeth and then the Lord Henry Cheyney who then began to retail himself and his estate out to Ruine in parcels alienated this to Maycott whose Son Sir Cavaliero Maycott that eminent Courtier in the reign of Queen Elizabeth and King James in the entrance of that Prince into his Government passed it away to Sir Christopher Clive and he immediately after conveyed it away to Contry vulgarly called Cuntry whose Son Mr. Thomas Contry almost in our memory cast it by Sale into the possession of Sir Edward Masters of Canterbury whose Son Richard Masters Esquire is entituled to the instant possession of it Reinham in the Hundred of Milton with Mere-court was in the reign of H. the first the patrimony of the noble Family of Camville Robert de Camville was engaged with Richard the first at the Siege of Acon in Palestine Robert de Camville his Son Rot. pipae de An. 41. Hen. 3. was an Assistant to Henry the third in the forty second of his Rule when he marched from Chester against the Welsh Geffrey de Camville was frequently summoned to sit in Parliament as Baron in the reign of Edward the first After this Family was worn out the noble Family of Leybourn of Leybourn Castle was entituled to the Inheritance Henry de Leybourn held it in the twenty eighth year of Edward the first and so did Thomas de Leybourn in the thirty fifth year of that Prince's Government Rot. Esc Num. 10. And so did his Brother likewise William de Leybourn who held the greatest part of it at his Death which was in the third year of Edward the second and transmitted it to his Kinsman Roger de Leybourn in whom the Male-line determined and he left it in Dower to his Wife Juliana de Leybourn who held it at her Death which was in the third year of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 86. And after her Decease it was enstated on his and her Daughter and Heir Juliana de Leybourn who for her vast Income merited the Title of Infanta of Kent and she married for her first Husband Iohn de Hasting a Kinsman of Laurence de Hasting but he dyed without any Issue by her upon whose Exit she was espoused to William de Clinton Earl of Huntingdon Lord Warden of the Cinque-ports who likewise deceased without any posterity by her in the twenty eighth year of Edward the third after whose Decease she continued a Widow untill her Death which was in the forty third year of the above-mentioned Prince Rot. Ese Num. 57. And is styled in the Escheat-roll Comitissa de Huntington which fortifies the former Assertion that she continued in the State of Widowhood till her dissolution upon whose decease the Crown upon an exact and solemne Inquisition discovering none that could inforce any Claim either directly and lineally or else by collateral deduction entitled it self to her estate as legally escheated and that Prince in the fiftieth year of his reign grants it to the Abbey of St. Mary Grace on Tower-hill where it was fixt until it was by the Suppression wrested away and then K. Edward the sixth in the second year of his reign granted it to Sir Thomas Cheyney Lord Warden of the Cinque-ports and one of the Privy Councel to that Prince whose Son Henry Lord Cheyney in the thirteenth year of Q. Elizabeth passed it away by Sale to Samuel Thornhil Esquire who upon his decease gave it by Testament to his second Son Sir Iohn Thornhil not many years deceased whose eldest Son Charles Thornhill Esquire is the present Heir to the propriety of it Silham is a second place considerable It was the Mansion formerly of a Family of no despicable extraction whose Sirname was Donett John Donett dyed possest of this and part of the Mannor of Reinham in the thirtieth year of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 57. And left them to his Son Iohn Donett who likewise was in the possession of them at his Death which was in the thirty sixth year of the above-named Prince and had Issue Iohn Donett in whom the Male-line failed so that his Lands at Reinham and Silham devolved by Margery his Sole Daughter and Heir to Iohn St. Leger Esquire Sheriff of Kent in the ninth year of Henry the fourth and was descended from Hugh St. Leger who was one of the Recognitores magnae Assisae an Office of a very great Latitude and Circumference of power in elder Times in the second and seventh years of King Iohn In the St. Legers the possession of these places rested not long for not long after that Interest which he had in Reinham to Cheyney and Silham to Bloer Cheyney transmitted his Concernment with that part of Reinham that related to the Priory of Leeds to Sámuel Thornhill Esquire who disposed of it upon his death as is abovesaid but Christopher Bloer determined in Olympia Bloer his Heir General who brought it over to Mr. Iohn Tufton in the reign of Henry the eighth from whom it is now come down to the right honorable Iohn Tufton Earl of Thanett who possesses the present Signory of it Reyersh in the Hundred of Lerkefield though a Village of no great Account in it self Carews Court in Reyersh was for many descents the Inheritance of a Family of that Sirname and remained locked up in their Demeasn until the twelfth year of H. the sixth and then Nich. Carew demises it by Deed to Tho. Watton who upon his Decease setled it on his Nephew Will. Watton and from him the Thread of many descents hath guided the Title down to the instant Proprietary Mr. Will. Watton of Addington yet is disengaged of its original Obscurity by the splendor and eminence of those who successively possest it The first whom I find concerned in it was Hugh de Crescie originally in all probability extracted from Crescie who is mentioned in the Battle Abby-roll and he dyed seised of it in the forty seventh year of Henry the third Rot. Esc Num. 42. After
Patent conveyed in the thirteenth of Richard the third to John Brockman In Times of a lower step that is in the reign of Henry the eighth I find it in the Possession of John Newland but whether by Purchase from Brockman or not for want of Intelligence I cannot discover And in this Family the Propriety continued until the latter end of Queen Elizabeth and then it was conveyed to Sir George Perkins from whom almost in our Memory the same Mutation brought it to confess the instant possession of Mr. ...... Aldridge of Tilers near Reding Rucking in the Hundred of Hamme in Ancient Records written Roking was by the Piety and Charitable Munificence of King Offa in the year seven hundred eighty and one given to the Prior and Monks of Christ-church and was in the Original Donation granted ad Pascua Porcorum for the Pasture of their Hoggs and it continued clasped up in their Revenue until the Tempest of the general Dissolution arose and overtook it for there being a Surrender of the Revenue of this Covent into the Hands of Henry the eighth in the thirty third year of his reign he united it to the Dean and Chapiter of Christ-church which he shortly after established and moulded out of their Ruines and here it continued until a late Storm arose again and tore it off Barbedinden is another eminent Mannor within the Boundaries of this Parish which had in Ages of a more Ancient Inscription Proprietaries of the same Denomination William de Barbodinden held it at his Death which was in the ninth of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 3. And left it to his Son and Heir John de Barbodinden who in the twentieth year of Edward the third as appears by the Book of Aid paid an Auxiliary supply for it at making the Black Prince Knight After this Family was extinguished Robert Belknap the Judge succeeded in the Possession of it and I do not find that though the Crown upon his Attaint seised upon much of his Estate that ever his Interest here was ravished away from him for he was in Possession of this place at his Death which was in the second year of Henry the fourth and disposed it by Will to his Son John Belknap who about the Beginning of Henry the sixth alienates it to Engham amongst whose Demeasne the Propriety of this Mannor had not many years dwelt but the Title was by Sale supplanted and cast into the Possession of Sir Matthew Brown Knight and his Son Thomas Brown Esquire in the last year of Edward the sixth passed it away by Sale to Anthony Lovelace Esquire Ancestor to Richard Lovelace who some few years since alienated his entire Concernment in it to the late Possessor Mr. Richard Hulse descended from the ancient Family of Hulse of the Borough of Hulse lying within Namptwich in the County of Chester S. S. S. S. SAltwood in the Hundred of Hene hath an open Prospect into the Ocean which flowed up much nearer then now it doth and imparted its Nature to its Name for in Latin it is written de Bosco Salso The Arch-bishops of Canterbury had here formerly a magnificent Castle which Time hath much dismantled and a Park well stored with Deere now vanished and gon Many Mannors in this Track are held of it by Knights Service which justly made it to be counted and called an Honour It was granted to the Church in the year 1096 by one Halden who for Grandeur and opulency was reckoned one of the Princes of England The Value and extent of it are more particularly set forth in the Records of the Church of Canterbury in the Conquerour's Time and they speak thus In Limwarlaed in Hundred de Hede habet Hugo de Montfort de Terra Mouachorum I Manerium Saltwode de Archiepiscopo Comes Godwinus tenuit illud tunc se defendebat pro VII Sullings That was Godwin Earl of Kent who by a possessory right held many Towns along this Coast nunc sunt V. tamen non Scottent nisi pro III. Et in Burgo de Hede sunt CC. XXV Burgenses qui pertinent huic Manerio de quibus non habet Hugo nisi III. Forisfacta for it lies in the Franchise of the five Ports and the King was to have their Serice est appretiatum XXVIII lb. IIII. This was Hugh Montfort who was one of those powerfull Men which entered England with William the Conquerour In the Time of K. Henry the second Henry de Essex Baron of Ralegh in that County Lord Warden of the Cinque-ports pro Tempore and the King's Standard-bearer in right of Inheritance held this Castle of the Arch-bishop who having in a leight Skirmish against the Welsh in Flintshire not only cast away his Courage but his Standard also was appealed of high Treason and in a legal Duell or Combate vanquished by his Challenger and being possest with regret and shame contracted from this Defeat shrouded himself in a Cloister and put on a Monks Cowle forfeiting a goodly Patrimony and Lively-hood which escheated to King Henry the second But Thomas Beckett acquainting the King that this Mannor belonged to his Church and Sea that Prince being beyond the Seas directed a Writt to K. Henry his Son the Draught of which is represented to us by Matthew Paris whither I referre the Reader for Restitution But in regard of new emergent Contests between King Henry the second and that insolent Prelate it was not restored unto the Church untill the Time of Richard the second The Castle was magnificently inlarged and repaired by William Courtney Archbishop of Canterbury in the Time of Richard the second as his Will doth declare and his Arms in Stone-work eminently demonstrate and remained after his Decease annexed to the Archiepiscopal Revenue untill Thomas Cranmer in the twenty ninth of Henry the eighth exchanged it with that Prince And his Son King Edward the sixth in the fourth year of his Raign granted it to Edward Lor● Clinton who not long after conveyed it to Mr. Henry Herdson whose Grandchild Mr. Francis Herdson passed it away about the latter end of Queen Elizabeth to Robert Cranmer Esquire by whose Daughter and Heir Ann Cranmer it devolved to Sir Arthur Harris of Crixey in Essex whose Son Sir Cranmer Harris not many years since alienated it to Sir William Boteler Father to Sir Oliver Boteler Baronet the instant Lord of the Fee There is an old vast Mansion House of Stone at Brochull in this Parish on the side of a Steep Hill which was the Seat and ancient Residence of a Family as eminent for Antiquity as any in this Track and extracted their Sirname from hence and were called Brochull who flourished here in Knights Degree and in some Parliaments in the Time of Edw. the third and Edw. the fourth sate there as Knights of the Shire Margaret the Wife of William builded or caused to be built an Isle on the Northside the Parish Church You may rove at the Time by
Reginald Sir Stephen and Sir Henry de Cobham who lies buried here at Shorne are in the Catalogue of those Kentish Knights who supported the Cause and Quarrel of Edward the first at the Siege of Carlaverock in Scotland in the twenty eighth year of his Reign Jo. de Cobham was frequently summoned to sit in Parliament as Baron in the Reign of Edw. the third Richard de Cobham was made Knight Banneret by Edward the third for his exemplary Service performed against the Scots as appears Pat. Edw. tertii Parte secunda Memb. 22. This Mannor escheating to the Crown upon the Attainder of Henry Lord Cobham in the second year of K. James it was by that Prince granted to Lodowick Duke of Lenox who upon his Decease bequeathed it to his Nephew James Duke of Lenox who being lately dead Esme Duke of Lenox his onely Son is now heir apparent of it Stowting lies in a Hundred which borrows its Name from this place In the reign of K. Iohn sundry ancient Records which have an Aspect upon that Prince's Time inform us that Stephen de Haringod was Lord of this Mannor and had the Grant of a Market to be held weekly at this place on the Tuesday and a Fair to be observed yearly for the space of two dayes viz. the Vigil and Day of Assumption of the Virgin Mary as is manifest Cart. 16. Joan. Num. 43. and died possest of it in the forty first of Henry the third But after this mans exit I can track no more of this Stem or Stock to have been proprietaries of it The next Family which was successively entituled to the possession was the noble Family of Burghurst or Burwash the first of which whom by some old Deeds I discover to have held this place was Bartholomew de Burwash who received the Order of Knighthood by Edward the first for his Noble and generous Assistance given to that Prince at the Seige of Carlaverock in the twenty eighth of his Reign and he had Issue Stephen de Burwash who obtained a Charter of Free-Warren to his Mannors Stowting Sifleston Ditton and Burwash in Chiddington in the first year of Edward the third and died possest of this Mannor and Hundred in the third year of that Prince's Government as appears Rot. Esc Num. 41. and from him did it descend to his Grand-child Bartholomew Lord Burwash who in the forty third of the abovesaid Monarch conveyed this Mannor with much other Land to Sir Walter de Paveley Knight of the Garter in which Family the possession was constant but until the beginnning of Richard the second and then it was passed away by Sale to Trivet from whom the same Fatalitie about the fifteenth year of that Prince brought it over to Sir Lewis Clifford and by Descent this devolving to his Successor Lewis Clifford he in the twelfth year of Hen. the sixth conveyed it by a Fine then levied to William Wenlock who not long after alienated his Right in it to Richard beauchampe Baron of Aburgavenny who had Issue Richard Beauchampe in whom the Male Line determined so that Elizabeth his onely Daughter and Heir being matched to Edward Nevill brought this Mannor and the Barony of Aburgavenny to be united to that Family and continued linked to the Demeasn of this Name until it was by Descent brought down to Henry Nevill Baron Aburgavenny who about the latter end of Henry the eighth passed it away to Sir Thomas Moile whose Daughter and Coheir Amy Moile united it to the Inheritance of her Husband Sir Thomas Kempe whose Son Sir Thomas Kempe setled it on his Brother Reginald Kempe and from him it descended to his onely Son Mr. Thomas Kempe who dying without Issue it came to be shared by his two Sisters and Co heirs matched to Denny and Clerk and they not many years since by mutual Concurrence and Assent alienated their joynt Interest here to Jenkins of Aythorne Stockbery in the Hundred of Milton celebrates the Memory of the illustrious Family of Crioll who lived here in Reputation amongst the eminent Gentry of this County and in the Recital of their Possessions in this Parish their Mansion was called a Castle and divers of their old Deeds bore Teste at their Castle of Stockbery Sir Nicholas de Crioll was the first that brought this Family into Repute and Eminence for he was one of those who accompanied Edward the first in the twenty eighth year of his Reign in his fortunate Attempt upon Scotland when after a pertinacious Siege he reduced the Castle of Carlaverock a piece in the repute of those Times held almost inexpugnable and for his signal Service in that Expedition was created Knight Banneret and died possest of this place in the thirty first of Edward the first and in this Name and Family did the Title of this place by an uninterrupted Current of Descent stream down to Sir Thomas Crioll Knight of the Garter eminent for several Services performed under the Scepter of Henry the sixth who being infortunately beheaded at the second battle of St. Albans whilst he endeavoured to support the Title of the House of York in the thirty eighth year of Henry the sixth determined in Daughters and Co-heirs one of which was wedded to Edward Bourchier who cast this Mannor into his possession and he in her Right died seised of it in the fourteenth year of Henry the seventh but after this it was not long constant to the Interest of this Family for in the twenty third year of the abovesaid Prince Robert Tate died seised of it by right of purchase And in the Descendants of this Name was the Possession involved by a long Series of years until those Times which almost fell under our Cognizance and then this Mannor was conveyed to Sir Edward Duke of Cosington in Alre sord whose Lady Dowager in Right of Joynture hath now the enjoyment of it The Mannor of Gillested in this Parish did formerly relate to the noble Family of Savage and was wrapped up in those Lands to which John de Savage Grand-child to Rafe de Savage who was with Richard the first at the Siege of Acon obtained a Charter of Free-Warren in the twenty third year of Edward the first and Arnold Savage Son of Sir Thomas Savage died possest of it in the forty ninth year of Edward the third and left it to his Son Sir Arnold Savage whose Daughter and Heir Elizabeth Savage was first matched to Reginald Cobham by whom she had no Issue and after to William Clifford Esquire second Brother to Robert Clifford who was often Knight of the Shire in the Reign of Henry the fourth whose Posterity in Right of this Alliance were possest of this place until the latter end of Hen. the eighth and then it was altenated to Knight Ancestor to Mr. William Knight upon whose Decease his sole Daughter and Heir Mrs. Frances Buck Widow of Mr. Peter Buck of Rochester lately deceased is now entred upon the Possession of it Cowsted
was father to Will. de Septuans who was seised of it when he deceased which was in the twenty fifth year of Edw. the third but it seems it was not long permanent in the Tenure of this Name for immediately after the Gowers had it and Iohn Gower when he died was in the enjoyment of it which was in the forty third year of Edward the third from whom not many years after it was by purchase transported to Iohn Brockhul Esquire and with the Demeasn of this Family did the right of this place many years appear to be interwoven till Anne Daughter and Heir of Henry Brockhull married to Sir Iohn Taylor and then both the Name and Estate were swallowed up in this Family where the possession for sundry Ages remained till lately it was conveyed by Sale to Freake issued out from the Freakes of the County of Dorset who by marrying the Darghter of Sir Thomas Colepeper of Hollingbourne has planted himself in this County There was a Castle anciently in Thurneham which as Darel affirms in his Tract de Castellis Cantii had both its Name and Foundation from Godardus a Saxon being called Godard Castle which is so despicable an Heap that not the least Crums or Fragments continue of the Ruines which might signifie to us the lest symptome of its former strength and Grandeur Tunstall in the Hundred of Milton did about the twenty ninth of Henry the third confess it self to be under the Dominion of Walter de Grey who was Lord Paramont of this place but long did not remain invested in the Signory of it for in the forty fourth year of Henry the third I find Iohn de Burgh descended from Hubert de Burgh in the possession of it and he that year by the favourable compliance of that Prince obtained a Charter of Free-Warren to his Mannors of Norton and Tunstall but before the latter end of Edward the first this Family had deserted the Inheritance of this place and then the next which succeeded proprietarie of it was Thomas de Brotherton Earl of Norfolk who ending in Daughters and Co-heirs Margaret one of them being first matched to Iohn de Segrave and afterwards to Walter de Mayney descended from VValter de Meduana or Mayney who held twenty Knights in this County in the reign of Henry the third brought this to be the Demeasn of her second Husband Walter de Mayney a person on whom the Beams of Majestie reflected with so vigorous impression that he was summoned to sit in Parliament as Baron in the reign of Edw. the third and in whom that Prince reposed so great a confidence that as Daniel represents to us in his Chronicle he and his Son Edward the Black Prince fought under his Colours in a private Habit against Monsieur de Charmy a Frenchman near Calais in Picardy in the twenty third year of his reign and deceased full of Fame and of Years in the forty fixth of that Prince but determined in Anne Mayney his Sole Inheritrix who by matching with John Hastings Earl of Pembroke linked this Mannor to his Inheritance but he dying in the thirteenth year of Richard the second Reginald Grey and Richard Talbot were found to be his Heirs and they bring a pleading in the fifteenth year of the Prince abovesaid against John le Scroope who pretended some Title to his Estate and having rescued it from collateral Claim about the beginning of Henry the fourth conveyed it to Sir Robert Knolles who in the seventh year of that Prince passed it by Fine then levied to Sir William Cromer Lord Maior of London his Son William Cromer Esquire who was Sheriff of Kent in the twenty third year of Henry the sixth and was afterwards in the twenty seventh year of that Prince barbarously assassinated by Jack Cade whilst he endeavoured to impeach that Arch-Incendiarie in his March towards London He married Elizabeth Daughter of James Fiennes Lord Say and Seal by whom he had Issue Sir James Cromer Father of Sir Will. Cromer who was Sheriff of Kent the ninteenth year of Henry the seventh and the first year of K. Henry the eighth and George Cromer who was Arch-Bishop of Armagh in Ireland This Sir William had Issue James Cromer Esquire from whom descended Will. Cromer Esq his Son and Heir who was Sheriff of Kent the ninth and twenty seventh of Q. Elizabeth and had Issue Sir James Cromer of Tunstall Knight Sheriff of Kent in the second year of K. James in whom the Male-line determined so that Francis his Daughter by his first Wife matched to Sir Mathew Carew Elizabeth his Daughter by his second Wife wedded to Sir Iohn Steed of Steed-hill and Christian born likewise by that Venter married to Sir Iohn Hales eldest Son to Sir Edward Hales of Wood-Church became his Co-heirs Upon the partition of the Estate Tunstall was shared by Sir Iohn Hales from whom it is now descended to his Son and Heir Sir Edw. Hales Baronet who lately hath begun to erect upon the ancient Foundation a Frabrick of that stupendious Magnificence that it at once obliges the eye to Admiration and Delight Vfton is a place of Repute Seated in this Parish but it is raised up to a higher estimate since we find it was anciently parcel of the patrimony of Shurland for Robert de Shurland had a concession by Charter of Free-Warren to sundry of his Lands in Kent amongst which there is a recital of Vfton afterwards in Times subsequent to this by the Heir General of Shurland it was cast into the possession of Cheyney and Will. de Casineto for so this Name is rendred in Latine Records or William Cheyney held it at his Death which was in the eighth year of Edward the third and after for many Descents it had layn included in the Interest and proprietie of Cheyney it was by a Daughter and Heir put into the Demeasn of Astley from whom again the like flux of Circumstances bore away the Inheritance and transferred it to Harlackenden the instant Lord of Vfton Gore-Court in this Parish in Times of elder Derivation was the Seat of a Family whose Sirname was At-Gore and sometimes in ancient Court-rolls written De la Gore called so from their Habitation which was situated near some publick way Gare Gate and Gore importting no more in the Saxon Dialect then some common passage But to proceed Henry At-Gore held Gore-Court when he deceased which was in the thirty first year of Edward the third and for several Generations was the Inheritance knit to his Name till the common Fatalitie of Time brought it to expire in Alice Gore the Heir General of this place and of Iohn Gore the last of the Male-line who enjoyed it and she disposed of her Concernment in it to Will. Croyden in which Family after the possession had resided it was alienated to Wood descended from the Woods of Muston in Hollingbourne in whom the right of Gore-Court continues still invested Tunbridge gives Name to that
third year of Henry the sixth Joan the Wife of Sir Iohn Grey one of the Sisters and Coheirs of the abovesaid Edmund was invested in the possession in the fourth year of the abovesaid Prince Not long after this it came to own the Signory of the Tiptofts and continued fastned to their patrimony until the renth year of Edward the fourth When Iohn Tiptoft Earl of Worcester being empeached of close Confederacy and Combination with the abovesaid Prince then forced into Exile was by the Parliament then principally moulded out of the Lancastrian Faction attainted and beheaded and his estate here confiscated to the Crown and there was lodged until the first year of Queen Elizabeth and then it was granted to Anthony Brown Viscount Montague who in the year 1592 deceased and left it to his Son and Heir Anthony Brown Viscount Montague and he setled it upon his second Son Mr. Stanislaus Brown who now is in the enjoyment of it East-wickham is situated in the Hundred of Little and Lesnes and celebrates the memory of the noble Family of Montchensey and was wrapped up in their Demeasn William de Montchensey held it at his Death which was in the fifty second year of Henry the third and left it to his Sole Daughter and Heir Dionis matched to Hugh de Vere but he dying without Issue in the seventh year of Edward the second as appears Rot. Esc Num. 51. the Title and possession diverted to VVilliam de Valentia Earl of Pembroke half Brother by the Mothers side to Henry the third who had matched with Joan Sister and Heir to VVilliam de Montchensey before named from whom it descended to his Son Aymer de Valence who dying without Issue Isabell one of his Sisters and Coheirs who was affianced to Laurence de Hastings summoned to sit in Parliament by Edward the third as Earl of Pembroke upon the approportioning the estate entituled her Husband to this Mannor and from him was the Title carried down to his Grandchild Iohn de Hastings Earl of Pembroke who was in possession of it at his Decease which was in the thirteenth year of Richard the second Rot. Esc Num. 30. And Reginald Grey was found to be his Heir in which Family it remained until the Beginning of Henry the sixth and then it was passed away to VVilliam Lord Lovell who was often summoned to sit as Baron in Parliament in that Prince's reign and from him it came down to his Grandchild Iohn Lord Lovell summoned to sit in Parliament as Baron in the second year of Edward the fourth and he about the Beginning of his reign passed it away to Iohn Lord Howard afterwards created Duke of Norfolk who being a close and eager Complice of Richard the third sunk in his Ruines in the Battle commenced at Bosworth and Henry of Richmond having by that successeful Combat ascertained himself to the English Scepter seised upon this Mannor by Escheat in the first year of his Reign as relating to a person who had actually appeared in Arms against him and being thus united to the Crown it lay couched in its Revenue untill the seventh year of Edward the sixth and then it was granted to Sir Martin Bowes who not long after passed it away to Alderman Oliff of London who left it to Joan his Sole Daughter and Heir matched to John Leigh Son and Heir of Nicholas Leigh of Addington in Surrey Esquire Father to Sir Oliff Leigh who much enhaunsed the Magnisicence of the ancient Fabrick with increase of Building and left it to his Son Sir Francis Leigh whose Widow the Lady Christian Leigh in Right of Dower is now in Possession of the Signory of it VVest-Wickham in the Hundred of Rokesley is much enobled by being anciently entituled to the possession of the eminent Family of Huntingfield Peter de Huntingfield held it who was Sheriff of Kent the eleventh twelfth and thirteenth years of Edward the third and is registred in the Scroles of those Kentish Gentlemen who accompanied Edward the first in his Victorious Expedition into Scotland in the twenty eighth year of his reign when he reduced Carlaverock by a successeful Seige for which his merit was repayed with the Honour of Knighthood his Son and Heir was Walter de Huntingfield who in the eleventh year of Edward the second obtained a Charter of Free-warren to his Mannor of West-Wickham a Market weekly on the Monday and a Fair yearly on the Vigil and day of St. Mary Magdalen as appears Pat. 11. Edwardi secundi Num. 23. And left it invested with these Priviledges to his Son and Heir Sir John de Huntingfield who paid Aid for three Knights Fees which he held in this County at making the Black Prince Knight and was a Man of that Eminence that he was summoned to sit as Baron in Parliament the thirty sixth year of Edward the third and several other Times during the Raign of the above-named Prince William de Huntingfield this mans Son was summoned likewise many Times to sit as Baron in Parliament about the latter end of Edward the third but dyed without Issue so that Joan and Alize Huntingfield his Cozens matched to Copledike and Norwich were his Heirs and by an old Deed I find that one John Copledike held this Mannor by Right of Partition the last year of Richard the second but it was not long after this fixed in the Patrimony of this Family for in the seventeenth year of Flenry the sixth Thomas Squerrie died possest of it and left it to his Son and Heir John Squerrie who dying without Issue in the fourth year of Edward the fourth Dorothy one of his two Sisters and Coheirs entituled her Husband Richard Mervin upon the Division of the Estate to the proprietie of this Mannor and he not long after passed it away to Richard Scrope who in the seventh year of Edward the fourth alienated it by Fine to Ambrose Creseacre who not long after transmitted it by Sale to Henry Heyden Esquire to whom the principal part of the ancient Pile now visible ows its Erection and from him did it devolved to that eminent Scholler and Souldier Justice of the Peace and Captain of the trained Bands of this County in the Reign or Queen Elizabeth Sir Christopher Heydon who about the latter end of that Princess passed it away to Sir Samuel Lennard Father to Sir Stephen Lennard who is entituled to the present propriety of it Wymingswould in the Hundred of Wingham contains within the Circuit or Limits of it an ancient Seat called Nethersole from its situation near some Pool or descending Pond and was as high as the Time of K. John and Henry the third the possession of a Family which was represented to the world under this Sirname for as it appears by the Original Deeds and Evidences which fortifie the Title of this Mansion Richard de Nethersoll flourished here about the Government of the abovesaid Monarchs and from him was it by a perpetuated Succession chained