. A history of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight . om for his maintenancehe is prepared to assign a sufficient allowance of hisown goods if we will consent to grant him permis-sion. As, however, the Bishop of Winton is workingat present at a great distance, we trust the applica-tion to thy brotherly care to grant so much as thoudeemest expedient (without injury to another) to thisnoble man with reference to what he offers After this date the tithes belonged to , while the advowson of the chapel was acquiredwith the manor of Freefolk by Henry Husee in 126958 u Pop. Ret. 1831, i
. A history of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight . om for his maintenancehe is prepared to assign a sufficient allowance of hisown goods if we will consent to grant him permis-sion. As, however, the Bishop of Winton is workingat present at a great distance, we trust the applica-tion to thy brotherly care to grant so much as thoudeemest expedient (without injury to another) to thisnoble man with reference to what he offers After this date the tithes belonged to , while the advowson of the chapel was acquiredwith the manor of Freefolk by Henry Husee in 126958 u Pop. Ret. 1831, iii, Harl. MS. 1616, fol. 65*.M Ibid. fol. 10. 55 A copy of this bull was found amongthe muniments at Herriard and is endorsed •Pope Clements bull for Freefolk Chappie1265. The existence of this bull atHerriard is explained by the fact and Freefolk Manors belongedto the same lord in the 17th cent. It is 284 dated the 3rd year of the pontificateof Pope Clement, which would be 1267-8. 50 Feet of F. Div. Co. Mich. 54Hen. Hurstbourne Priors : Hurstbourne House : The Great Halland Minstrels Gallery EVINGAR HUNDRED and afterwards followed the descent of the manor 67until the closure of the church in 1896, when SirWilliam Portal became patron of the new 1439 the chapel was known alternatively as thechurch or free chapel and in 1441 it was called thechurch of It was not assessed amongthe churches belonging to the Bishop of Winchesterin Wykehams time propter In agrant of 1582-3 the chapel attached to the manoris described as the free chapel of Freefolk There seems to have been a question as to itstitle in the 16th century when Queen Elizabeth granted it to Edward Wymarks, a fishing grantee,who sold it back to Richard Paulet, the lord of In the grant the chapel is described as now ruined and profaned. A writer in the beginning of the 18th centurydescribes it as a chapel of ease dependent on Whit-c
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