Wiltshire notes and queries . e present writer, willbe found in Wilts ArchaeologicalMagazine, vol. iv, and WiltsBrasses, plate xi, p. 39. Thatof the second son—an ecclesiastic—has, however, been reproducedhere on a larger scale for thepurpose of shewing a peculiarityin his costume, of which very fewexamples are to be met of the hood and capeusually worn over the cassock; a kind of short scarf is herethrown over the shoulders and fastened, apparently by abutton, to the front of one of A rosary is also repre-sented hanging from the right side of the girdle. 1 The late Rev. He


Wiltshire notes and queries . e present writer, willbe found in Wilts ArchaeologicalMagazine, vol. iv, and WiltsBrasses, plate xi, p. 39. Thatof the second son—an ecclesiastic—has, however, been reproducedhere on a larger scale for thepurpose of shewing a peculiarityin his costume, of which very fewexamples are to be met of the hood and capeusually worn over the cassock; a kind of short scarf is herethrown over the shoulders and fastened, apparently by abutton, to the front of one of A rosary is also repre-sented hanging from the right side of the girdle. 1 The late Rev. Herbert Haines, of Paddock House, Gloucester, in thesecond edition of his Manual of Brasses, 1861,—the most valuable work onthe subject hitherto published —has noted ten instances only of the hood thusworn, in slightly varied forms, between the years 1500 and 1530—the Lacockexample being the earliest. In one of them, at Northleach, co. Gloucester,the hood is represented fastened to the surplice instead of the Wiltshire Notes and Queries. Some of the eighteen children may have died of them only are mentioned in the Heralds Visitationsof 1565 and 1623, viz.:—Philip the eldest, a younger sonGeorge, and a daughter Jane, married to William Temmes,of Rood Ashton, to which family also belonged JohannaTemmes, the last Abbess of Lacock—a preferment which shemight have owed to this connexion through marriage withthe Lackham family. To these three we may perhaps addRichard, a Winchester scholar, admitted 1479; William, whowas for Hindon 1491-2 ; and Henry, to whom SirEdward Hungerford,1 in 1520, confirmed land in Sheldon,near Chippenham. The will of Henry Baynarde, gent.,Lacock, was proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterburyin 1551 (F. 35 Bucke). There is also in the same office thewill of Elizabeth Baynard, Chippenham, proved in 1540 ( Allenger). Philip Baynard, the third of that name, and next heir ofLackham, appears to have been f


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