. A history of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight . mily till about1435-6. 16 Ibid. 38 note f; Feet of F. 5 Edw. Ill ; ibid. Trin. 14 17 Inq. 2 Hen. IV, no. 4 ; 8Hen. V, no. 89 ; 26 Hen. VI, no. 26. 18 Dom. Bk. (Rec. Com.), i, 66 d. 5iv, 16. 19 Somers. i, 414. The feesheld of the Abbot of Glastonbury in thereign of Henry I by William son ofWalter, who would appear from theancient records of Glastonbury to be a descendant of Serlo de Burci, had passedby 1166 to the son of Robert son ofMartin (Hoare, op. cit. 38 ; Red Bk. ojExch. [Rolls Ser.], 223). 80 Testa de AW/ (
. A history of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight . mily till about1435-6. 16 Ibid. 38 note f; Feet of F. 5 Edw. Ill ; ibid. Trin. 14 17 Inq. 2 Hen. IV, no. 4 ; 8Hen. V, no. 89 ; 26 Hen. VI, no. 26. 18 Dom. Bk. (Rec. Com.), i, 66 d. 5iv, 16. 19 Somers. i, 414. The feesheld of the Abbot of Glastonbury in thereign of Henry I by William son ofWalter, who would appear from theancient records of Glastonbury to be a descendant of Serlo de Burci, had passedby 1166 to the son of Robert son ofMartin (Hoare, op. cit. 38 ; Red Bk. ojExch. [Rolls Ser.], 223). 80 Testa de AW/ (Rec. Com.), 151 ;Hoare, op. cit. 38, 23. 21 Hund. R. (Rec. Com.), ii, 253. M Subs. R. Wilts. 196, no. 87. 88 Harl. MS. 3961, fol. 147-87. 24 Hoare, Hist, of Wilts. South DamerhamHund. 28. 25 Dimensions : chancel, 27 ft. 2 16 ft. 3 in. ; nave, 53 ft. 10 in. by17 ft. 7 in. ; north chapel, 42 ft. 8 in. by14 ft. 5 in. ; south transept, 17 ft. 7 16 ft. 4 in. ; west tower, 10 ft. 11 592 Rockbourne Church : The Nave looking East. Martin Church : The Nave looking East FORDINGBRIDGE HUNDRED part of the 16 th century the north transept wasenlarged to form the present chapel with the insertionof an arcade of two bays, a new chancel arch beingbuilt to the east of the line of its predecessor, with abuttress to support it on the south. The tower seems to have given trouble from earlytimes, buttresses being added to it in the 14thcentury, a great part of it rebuilt with a new upperstory in the 15th, and late in the 18th century thespire and parapet were added. In modern times thechurch ha» been patched and restored but not struc-turally altered. The quoins of the eastern angles ofthe chancel are in unusually large stones, but probablyare not earlier than the 14th century, and have beenreset in modern times. The east window of the chancel is of early 14th-century date, but its tracery is modern. On thenorth of the chancel is an original window, c. 1310,of two trefoiled
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