. The Victoria history of the county of Bedford. Natural history. A HISTORY OF BEDFORDSHIRE also of St. Neots Priory, and from an examination of existing charters of these houses the Burnard lordship in Arlesey can be traced. Roger son of Burnard gave I virgate of land in Arlesey and a tenement to St. Neots.'* Odo son of Roger granted I p. ^. rent and right of way through his lands towards the canons' meadow to Waltham ; The Testa de Nevill states that in the thirteenth century Roger Burnard held a knight's fee in Arlesey of the Earl Marshal," and this is the Roger son of Odo w


. The Victoria history of the county of Bedford. Natural history. A HISTORY OF BEDFORDSHIRE also of St. Neots Priory, and from an examination of existing charters of these houses the Burnard lordship in Arlesey can be traced. Roger son of Burnard gave I virgate of land in Arlesey and a tenement to St. Neots.'* Odo son of Roger granted I p. ^. rent and right of way through his lands towards the canons' meadow to Waltham ; The Testa de Nevill states that in the thirteenth century Roger Burnard held a knight's fee in Arlesey of the Earl Marshal," and this is the Roger son of Odo who confirmed to St. Neots all the gifts of his ; In 1270 Stephen Burnard of Edworth, probably a son of the above Roger, was in possession of Arlesey manor, for in that year he received the grant of a fair ; He was the last of his family to hold in Arlesey which, as in the case of Everton, passed to Walter Langton, bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, and followed the same descent as that manor () through the Peverels, de la Poles, Cobhams, Brookes, and Tanfields, until late in the sixteenth ; In 1566-7 Clement Tan- field sold Arlesey manor to Henry Gylberd, a goldsmith of London," from whom it was purchased a year later by John ; The Andrewses did not long retain it, however, for William son of John conveyed it to Thomas Emery in ;' Thomas Emery left six daughters at his death in 1636, one of whom, Florence widow of Henry Goodwin, received Etonbury or Arlesey manor as her ; She subsequently married John Farwell, and they alienated the estate in 1646 to Samuel ; Like Astwick () this manor remained with the Brownes during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, passing to John Schutz on his marriage with Mary daughter of Thomas ; In 1775 John Schutz was holding the manor, for in that year he conveyed it by fine to Edward ; Lysons, writing early in the e


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