Devon & Cornwall notes & queries . milies. I shall be very grateful for any help, or even for anyhints, as to how I can further trace these individuals. Thereferences to Bishop Staffords Registers are those ofPrebendary Hingeston-Randolphs work. George S. S. Strode. 4. Odo de Tregeriot.—Feudal Aids, p. 320, givesOdo de Tregeriot as holding one-fourth part of a fee inLyn in the hundred of Lifton. The transcriber has madea mistake in furnishing the surname with a terminal t. Itshould be c. These two letters in mediaeval writing arevery much alike. When we read it as Odo de Tregerioc,we recognise
Devon & Cornwall notes & queries . milies. I shall be very grateful for any help, or even for anyhints, as to how I can further trace these individuals. Thereferences to Bishop Staffords Registers are those ofPrebendary Hingeston-Randolphs work. George S. S. Strode. 4. Odo de Tregeriot.—Feudal Aids, p. 320, givesOdo de Tregeriot as holding one-fourth part of a fee inLyn in the hundred of Lifton. The transcriber has madea mistake in furnishing the surname with a terminal t. Itshould be c. These two letters in mediaeval writing arevery much alike. When we read it as Odo de Tregerioc,we recognise in this knights name his home at Tregarrick,in the parish of Roche in Cornwall. He was Odo de laRoche or de Rupe, and is mentioned by this name in aCornish Fine of date 12 Nov., 1303. As Odo de Tregeryek,he occurs on 25 June, 1305, in another Cornish Fine. Hewas a younger son of Richard, son of William de himself had a son Robert, whose daughter Alice becamethe wife of William Blundel. J. Hambley Rowe, Dorsal Ventral view. Devon and Cornwall Notes and Queries. 9 5. Note on a Specimen of Rissos Grampus, Grampusgriseus (Cuv.), stranded near Exmouth in October, 1908.—The special interest attaching to the occurrence of this animalon our shores is its rarity. Not many more than twelveBritish examples are known, and to the best of mybelief I am now recording the third Devonshire not found in Polar Seas, it occurs in the and N. Pacific Oceans, the N. Sea, Mediterranean,and in the neighbourhood of the Cape of Good Hope andJapan. The average size of Rissos Grampus is from 10 to13 feet and it is specially characterised by the presence offrom two to seven pairs of teeth in the mandible and theabsence of teeth in the upper jaw. I first heard of our specimen through the Rev. J. , , late headmaster of Rossall, who wrote to mefrom Exmouth, on Nov. 4th : It may interest you to knowthat there is rather an uncommon variety of Cetacea
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