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A54665 Villare cantianum, or, Kent surveyed and illustrated being an exact description of all the parishes, burroughs, villages and other respective mannors included in the county of Kent : and the original and intermedial possessors of them ... / by Thomas Philipott ... : to which is added an historical catalogue of the high-sheriffs of Kent, collected by John Phillipot, Esq., father to the authour. Philipot, John, 1589?-1645.; Philipot, Thomas, d. 1682. 1659 (1659) Wing P1989; ESTC R35386 623,091 417

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Urnes and Vaults and dwelt in the Scene and Comprehension of Darkeness but when they were brought out into the Publick like Camphire they evaporated into the Air that fed them So the Primitive Christians who shone with such a bright and constant Beam in the Night and Agony of their Affliction when they were melted with the warmth and Sun-shine or a calme and prosperous Fortune began to slacken into Luxury and Excess Folly and Disorder and they that had dared Axes and Racks Wheels and Gridirons the Teeth of Beasts and the Fury of Men the Heat of Persecution and the Flame of Oblation and in brief had been inexpugnable to all the Artifices and Engines of Torture contrived by impious men fell afterwards cheaply and tamely like those who are smothered with Roses stifled with Perfumes and strangled with a silken Halter The second Cause that elder observations insinuate to us to have been the Reason of the Clergies deviation is that vast heap of temporal Treasure with which Constantine loaded the Bosome of the Church so that it may be truly affirmed Religio peperit Divitias Filia devoravit Matrem for Poverty though like a streight and narrow Girdle it does with its close and uneasie stricture pinch and afflict us yet it keeps the Garment from falling into Loosness and Disorder whilst superfluity of Wealth is apt to untie those Restraints which are cast upon the Will and unshackle those Fetters which are laid upon the sensual Appetite rendring our Thoughts vain and trifling foolish and impertinent and our undertakings wild and irregular making us soft and easie for the impressions of Vice but difficult and uncapable of the influences of Vertue and the nobler Designs of Religion For it is farther observable that from Riches evaporate the Fumes of Luxury and Ambition which like those Mists which exhale from the Crudities of a raw Stomach debauch the understanding and disorder Reason and muffle them up in 〈◊〉 Vaile and in a Cloud and they that view the Light of Truth which is the grea● Luminary in the Firmament of the Church through the Vapours of secular Interest are like those who take the Prospect of a Star through a gross vaporous Body of Air they behold it by the Chanel of so polluted a Medium they view it in an uneven and incertain Paralax The third Cause of the ●efection of Ecclesiastical Persons in the Church of Rome from the severer Obligations of their original Institution is this the Pope had newly entituled himself to a vast and uncircumscribed Power and found that there was an Obligation imposed upon him to support the Clergy in all their Excesses and vitious Sallies that so they might be obliged to engage the Pulpit and the Pen in the asserting of that Authority which the Western Emperors vainly endevoured by frequent Contests and Struglings to wring out of his Hands and reinvest in themselves and they looking up and discovering that he beheld their Disorders with a calm and an indulgent Brow let loose the Golden Reigns of Discipline and it is no wonder if at any Time the Bridle of Government be slackned when the Snaffle that should keep it steady and even hath lost its two Bosses Fear and Punishment But I have digressed I now return After the Suppression had entituled the Crown to this Maunor which formerly supported the Convent of Bilsington King Henry the eighth in the thirty seventh year of his Reign by Royall Concession made it the Inheritance of Sir Anthony St. Leger of Ulcombe in which Family the Title was permanent untill the beginning of Queen Elizabeth and then his Son Sir Warham St. Leger passed it away to Sir Francis Barnham of London Knight Sir Walter de Bernham was one of those who was at the seige of Carlaveock in Scotland with Edward the first in the twenty eighth of his Reign Knights and bore the Paternall Coat of this Family viz. Sables A plain Cross engrailed between sour Crescents Argent whose great Grand-childe Master Robert Barnham Esquire by Paternal devolution and descent does now claim the instant Signory of it Neither Bilsington in this Parish is that Mannor which anciently was held by a Family called Staplegate of Staplegate in Natindon who claimed to be the Kings chie Butler at his Coronation The first that I find possest of it was Edmund de Staplegate to whom it was derived by Purchase about the middle of Edward the third from Richard Fitz Allan Earl of Arundell whose Ancestors held it many years before and he having thus entered upon it by his Acquist dyed possest of it in the twenty ninth year of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 58 and left it to his Son and Heir Edmund de Staplegate and he in the first year of Richard the second put in his claim to be chief Butler at his Coronation as holding this Mannor by the Tenure of grand Serjeantry to discharge that Office to evacuate his claim Richard Earl of Arundell exhibits a Petition and Plea wherein he asserts that the Office of chief Butler was never annexed to this Mannor of Bilsington that his Family had enjoyed it both before the Possession and after the Alienation of it and therefore desired he might perform it that Solemn Day upon the discussion of the whole Controversie it was ordered that that Day the Earl of Arundell should discharge it with a salvo jure that it should not infringe the Right of Staplegate or any other that should pretend a Right or Title to it for the future But to proceed this Family held this Manor untill the Beginning of Henry the sixth and then the Fate of Sale carryed it away to Cheney and Sir John Cheney Knight was seized of it at his Death which was in the seventh year of Edward the fourth and from him was it wafted down by the Thread of Descent to his Successor Henry Lord Cheney who about the Beginning of Queen Elizabeth alienated his Propriety in it to Sir Francis Barnham of London Knight from whom by Successive Right the Title is now devolved to his great Grand-childe Master Robert Barnham Esquire Birling in the Hundred of Larkfield was belonging when the great Survey of England was taken called Doomsday Book to one Ralph de Curva Spina and tha ancient Seat of those who were the possessors of it was at Comport or Comford Parke in this Parish but before the End of Henry the second the above mentioned Family was worn out and then I find a Family called Crescie to succeed in the Inheritance William de Crescie had a grant of Liberties in Birling in the fifth year of King John but his Name and Family after this did not long continue to possess them for before the Expiration of the long and tempestuous Reign of Henry the third it was departed from them and planted in th Revenue which did call that Family of Say Proprietaries the first of whom was William de Say who was one of those
which yet courts the Eye of the Beholder to an Admiration of its former Strength with all the Services annexed to it to Sir Anthony Weldon of Swanscamp whose Son and Heir Ralph Weldon of Swanscamp Esquire is the instant Lord of the Fee There is much Land in this County held of this Castle whose Tenure is perfect Castleguard for upon the Day prefixed for the discharge of the quitt-Rent relating to it there is a Banner displaid and hung out anciently it was over the Castle-Wall and all those who are Tenants to this Mannor and are in Default by their non-Appearance and do not discharge their Customary Duties and Services the Penaltie imposed upon their Neglect is that the Return of every Tide of the adjacent River which finds them Absent doubles their Service or quitt-Rent The Bridge which is almost contiguous to the Root or Basis was anciently when the Frame was of Timber removed to a farther Distance and crossed the Stream over against the Hospital of St Maries at Stroude But this was by Simon de Montfort when he besieged Rochester ruined by Fire and although it was re-edified and repaired not long after yet some twenty years subsequent to this Misfortune it was swept away by Ice so that it appears the Elements entered into a Corrivalship or Competition which should make the most ruinous Impression on this infortunate Structure But after this that is in the raign of Richard the second all those above-mentioned Dysasters and Inconveniences which might again have assaulted the Bridge were for the future prevented for Sir Robert Knolles a Person who had improved and enhaunsed his Fame to the highest Degree of Eminence by his glorious and succesfull Managery of the English Affairs and Interest in France seeking to make himself as usefull to his Friends that is his Contrymen as he was before considerable to his Enemies mastered the Course of the River and somewhat nearer to the Castle as in a place more fit both for the Soliditie and fastnesse of the Soile as likewise for the breaking of the impetuousnesse of the Current erected the Bridge of Stone which is now visible fixed and established on one and twenty Arches and by this Victory over the Elements made his Triumphs more illustrious than he had done before by all the Conquests of his Adversaries for in these he only seemed to have out-gone all others but in this to have outdone himself Being thus fixed and Strengthned there was a Statute enacted in the one and twentieth year of Richard the second wherein there is Provision made for its future Security there being several parcells of Land which are mentioned in that Act tied and obliged for its continual Maintenance and Repair whensoever the Injuries of Time or those of the Elements should deface or impair it The Chappel or Chantry in old Records styled the Chantry of Rochester Bridge was founded in the year 1399 by Iohn de Cobham and was dedicated to the holy Trinity and was called at the first Institution All Souls Chappel because Prayers and other Orizons were there to be offered up for the Redemption and Health of all Christian Souls and likewise a Stipend or Exhibition was there setled for the Support and Maintenance of three Priests or Chaplains particularly to pray for the Souls of John de Cobham the Patron and Founder Sir Robert Knolles to whom the Bridge owed its primitive Establishment William Wangford and Eleanor his Wife Iohn Fremingham and Alice his Wife William Makenade and Sir William Rickhil and likewise for the Souls of some who were deceased before the Foundation of this Chappel as namely for the Soul of Iohn Buckingham formerly Bishop of Lincoln and Sir William Wall worth the eminent Lord Maior of London to whose Virtue and Valour London owes the Addition of the Dagger which was annexed as an Augmentation to the Arms of the City The Priory was founded by Ethelbert King of Kent and dedicated to the Honor of St. Andrew and stored with Monks who were to live under the Rule of St. Benedict though afterwards as Mr. Lambert out of the Book of Rochester observes they altered their Rule and conformed themselves to the Canon of St. Augustine Bishop of Hippo but were reduced again to the primitive Institution of St. Benedict in the year 1080 by Gundulphus then Bishop of Rochester in which Design he was aided and supported by Lanfranc the active Arch-bishop of Canterbury In Ages of an elder Inscription there were several Contests brake forth between the Monks of Christ-church in Canterbury and those of this Covent the first Strugling to bring the Election of the Bishop of Rochester into their Chapiter which the last Sticking close to their own inherent Rights and Priviledges endevoured to disannul and wholly to circumscribe his Election within the Precincts of their own Chapiter Two Presidents which represent to Posterity the whole State of this Controversie do occur in Record The first appears in the year 1227 when after the Death of Benedict the Bishop of Rochester elected to succeed him Henry Sandford a Man of exemplary Piety so that he was inculpable for his Life and of unfathomed Learning so that he was in that Age almost unparallelled for his Knowledge which could not stave off the Monks of Christ-church to justle the Election pretending that the pastoral Staffe or Crosier of Rochester de Jure ought to have been brought to their House after the Decease of the Bishop and that the Election was to have been made in their Chapiter This occasioned much Heat for the Monks of Rochester vigorously asserted their own Choice so that it was referred to the Decision of the Archbishop and he again put it over to the Umpirage of Delegates who hearing the parties concerned and poising the Allegations produced by either side to sustain the Justice of their own Cause they by a finall Determination declared the Right to reside in the Monks of Rochester But it seems this Fire was only allayed not extinguished for in the year 1238 it brake forth again and the occasion which gave Fuell to it was this The Monks of Rochester had elected Richard Wendover for their Bishop which so exasperated and disgusted the Monks of Christ-church that suspecting their own Power they more to inforce and multiply their Strength and evacuate that Election entituled Arch-bishop Edmund to their Cause But the Monks of Rochester disclaiming by a tame Remissenesse either to foment or palliate their own undoing appealed to Rome where after the chargeable Commencement of a three years Sute the Innocency and Justice of their Cause was recompensed with the Triumph of the Day upon which they returned home exalted with the Joy of their Successe and enacted in their Chapiter that the annuall Feast of St. Cuthbert on which Day they archieved this signal Conquest should be doubly solemnized both in their Church and in their Kitchin But as they were successefull in their rancounters with the Arch-bishop so they were