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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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surrender his Soul to God Sheriffs of Kent under the Scepter of K. Charles Sir Thomas Hamon of Brasted Knight was Sheriff of Kent in the first year of K. Charles Sir Isaac Sidley of great Chart Knight and Baronet was Sheriff of Kent in the second year of K. Charles Basel Dixwel of Folkstone Esquire afterwards Knighted was Sheriff of Kent in third year of K. Charles Sir Edward Engham of Goodneston Knight was Sheriff of Kent in the fourth year of K. Charles and had a Dispensation under the Kings Hand and Signet to inhabit within the County and City of Canterbury during his year of Shrievalty and to find a meet Person to attend at the Assises in his Place in regard of his indisposition of Body Sir William Champion of Combwel in Goudherst Knight was Sheriff of Kent the fifth year of K. Charles Jo. Brown of Singleton in Great Chart Esquire was Sheriff of Kent in the sixth year of K. Charles and kept his Shrievalty at Hinxhill Court Sir Robert Lewknor of Acris Knight was Sheriff of Kent in the seventh year of K. Charles Nicholas Miller of Horsnels Crouch in Wrotham Esquire was Sheriff of Kent in the eighth year of K. Charles Sir Thomas Stiles of Watringbury Knight and Baronet was Sheriff of Kent in the ninth year of K. Charles Sir John Baker of Sisinghurst in Cranbroke Baronet was Sheriff of Kent the tenth year of K. Charles Edward Chowt of Surrenden in Bethersden Esquire was Sheriff of Kent in the eleventh year of K. Charles and kept his Shrievalty at Hinxhill Sir William Colepeper of Preston in Alresford Baronet was Sheriff of Kent in the twelfth of K. Charles Sir George Sonds of Lecze Court in Shelvich Knight of the Bath was Sheriff of Kent in the thirteenth of K. Charles Sir Thomas Henley of Coursehorne in Cranbroke Knight was Sheriff of Kent in the fourteenth year of K. Charles Sir Edward Masters of East Langdon Knight was Sheriff of Kent in the fifteenth year of K. Charles David Polhill of Otford Esquire was Sheriff of Kent in the sixteenth year of K. Charles James Hugison of Lingsted Esquire was Sheriff of Kent in the seventeenth year of K. Charles Sir William Brockman of Bithborough in Newington Belhouse Knight was Sheriff of Kent in the eighteenth year of K. Charles but being called to manage this Office by that King when he was in Arms at Oxford he was thought by the Parliament then sitting to be a Person in that Juncture of Affairs not fitting to have the Manegerie of a Place of so great Concernment and was accordingly supplanted Sir Iohn Honywood of Evington Court in Elmested Knight was chosen by the Parliament then sitting to serve the Sheriff of Kent part of the eighteenth year of King Charles and continued in that Office the nineteenth year and twentieth year of the abovesaid Princes Reign Sir Iohn Rayney of Wrotham Baronet was Sheriff of Kent in the twenty first year of K. Charles Sir Iohn Henden of Biddenden Knight was Sheriff of Kent in the twenty second year of K. Charles Sir Stephen Scot of Hays by Bromley Knight was Sheriff of Kent in the twenty third year of K. Charles George Selby of the Moat in Ightham Esquire was Sheriff of Kent in the twenty fourth year of K. Charles In which year that Noble but infortunate Monarch was put to Death Sheriffs of Kent since the Death of K. Charles Henry Crispe of Quekes in Birchington Esq was Sheriff of Kent part of the year 1649 and part of the year 1650 but in Respect of age and indisposition of Body his place was supplied by Sir Nicholas Crispe Son and Heir George Curtis of Chart by Sutton Esquire was Sheriff of Kent part of the year 1650 and part of the year 1651. He was chosen to serve upon the Decease of William Draper of Crayford Esquire who was named to serve but died not long after his Nomination but by reason of Age and the Craziness of his Constitution his Son Norton Curtis Esquire discharged the Office for him Thomas Floyd of Gore Court in Otham Esquire was Sheriff of Kent part of the year 1651 and part of the year 1652. Bernard Hide of Bore Place in Chiddingstone Esquire was Sheriff of Kent part of the year 1652 and part of the year 1653. The right Honourable Sir Iohn Tufton Earl of Thanet was Sheriff of Kent part of the year 1653 and part of the year 1654. Sir Humphry Tufton of the Moat by Maidston Knight was Sheriff of Kent part of the year 1654 and part of the year 1655. Sir Michael Livesey Baronet of East Church in Shepey was Sheriff of Kent the Remainder of the year 1655 and part of the year 1656. Sir Michael Livesey Baronet was again Sheriff of Kent the residue of the year 1656 and a part of the year 1657. Charles Bolles of Rochester Esquire is now Sheriff of Kent 1658. Having a in succinct Register represented to the Reader an Historal View of those who were successively Sheriffs of this County as high as the Light of Publick Record will guide us to discover I shall now in a narrow Landskip give him a Prospect of those who in elder Times were styled Conservatores Pacis from whence our modern Justices of the Peace may have seemed to have extracted their Original Institution They were first established by Edward the third and then invested and fortified with an Authority and Power of a very wide Latitude but suitable indeed to an Office of so much concernment and importance as they were intrusted with the main End of their Place in the first Foundation of it was as appears Pat. de Anno primo Edwar. tertii Pars prima Memb. septima in Dorse to array and train the Inhabitants of each respective County where the Scene of their Power was laid that so they might be put into a Capacity to repress all homebred Insurrections within and secure the Nation from the Eruptions of forraigne Invaders from without and it is further evident Pat. de Anno duodecimo Edwar. tertii Memb. 16. in Dorso and again Pat. de Anno decimo Edw. tertii Pars secunda Memb. 35. in Dorso They were authorised by two Commissions to reduce all Vagabonds and Wanderers to dissipate all mutinous and riotous Conventions and to suppress all Thieves and Outlaws and all other Persons disaffected to the Peace established and to vindicate and assert the two Statutes of North-Hampton and Winchester in all the Ends and Consequences of them both which Laws direct an Inspection into the Premises The Catalogue or Register of those who were Conservatores Pacis for the County of Kent does here ensue Pat. 1. Edwar. 3. prima Pars Memb. septima in Dorso Bartholomeus de Burgherst   Johannes de Ifield Pat. 3. Edwar. 3. Par. prima Memb. 16. in Dorso Bartholomeus Burhurst   Johannes de Cobham Joannes de Ifield Pat. 5. Edwar. 3. Par. prima Memb. 24. in Dorso Johannes de Cobham   Johannes
of a thousand Crowns on Sir Stephen de Cosington and Sir William his Son for their remarkable Service performed against the Enemies of his Crown and Scepter The last of this Family which held this Mannor was Sir J. Cosington who concluded in three Danghters and Coheirs about the the latter end of Henry the eighth matched to Duke Wood and Alexander Hamon and upon the Disunion of the Estate into Parcels the last by Female Interest was invested in Acris and his Successors remained Lords of the Fee untill the Beginning of K. James and then a Fatalitie like the former brought the Patrimony of this Family to be possest by two Daughters and Coheirs so that Sir Robert Lewknor having matched with Katharine who was one of them became in her Right entituled to this Mannor and left it to his Son Hamon Lewknor Esq who deceasing not long since hath transmitted it during the Minority of his Son to his Widow Dowager The Mannor of Brandred lies in this Parish and belonged to the Abby of St. Radigunds untill the suppression and then it was by Henry the eighth exchanged with the Arch Bishop of Canterbury in the twenty ninth of his Reign and remained parcel of that Patrimony which acknowledged the Signorie of that See untill these tempestuous Times shook it off Addington in the Hundred of Larkfield was as high as any Track of Evidence can transport me to discover the Inheritance of a noble Family called Mandeville and divers Deeds of a very venerable Antiquity being without date and now in the hands of Mr. Watton do attest Roger de Mandeville in those elder Times to have been Lord of the Fee but before the end of Edward the second this Family was vanished and had surrendred the possession of this place to Robert At Checquer in whom the possession was but of a narrow Date for hee not long after alienated his Interest in it to Nicholas Dagworth as is evident by this Record registred in the Book of Aid kept in the Exchequer De Nicholao de Dagworth pro uno Feodo Militis quod Roberius de Scaccario tenuit in Addington de Warreno de Montecanisio 40. s. That is Nicholas Dagworth in the twentieth year of Edward the third paid a respective Supply of 40. s. for his Mannor of Addington which both he and Robert At Checquer which enjoyed it before him held of the Honour of Swanscamp Castle as being the capital Seat of the Barony of Mountchensey under the Notion of a whole Knights Fee But in this Family the Title was a Volatile as in the former for before the going out of Edward the third I find it passed away from Dagworth to Sir Hugh Segrave and he in the seventh year of Richard the second alienated it to Richard Charles descended from Edward Charles Captain and Admirall of the Seas from the Thames mouth Northward in the reign of Edward the first as appears Pat. 34. Edwardi primi But he was scarce warm in his new Acquists but he expired in two Daughters and Coheirs Alice matched to William Snaith and Joan married to Richard Ormeskirk but this Mannor upon the Distinction of the Estate into Parcells was entwin'd with the Demeasne of Snaith and he dyed possest of it as the date of his Tombe in Addington Church informs me in the year 1409. but dyed without Issue-male so that his sole Daughter and Heir being wedded to Watton made it the Inheritance of that Family and here have they planted themselves ever since that Alliance and have performed many signal Services to this County by being invested with places of Trust as Justices of the Peace Commissioners of the Sewers and other Officers of the like Condition which hath much inforced and multiplied the eminent Reputation of this ancient Family Allington in the Hundred of Lark field is eminent for an ancient Castle within the Limits of it which as Mr. Darrell and Mr. Mersh do assert was erected by William de Columbariis or Columbers and this Mr. Darrell who was very curious in Disquisitions of this Nature more possitively affirms because in the eighth year of Henry the third when as appears by the Records of the Tower there was an exact Survey taken of all the Castles of England and of those who were either Proprietaries of them or else the respective Castellans or Guardians one of the above mentioned Family was found to be possessor of this Fortresse and was also Lord of the Mannor which was still annexed to the Castle but this Name was of no long continuance in the Tenure of either for about the latter end of Henry the third they came to own the Signorie of Sir Stephen de Penchester Lord Warden afterwards of the Cinque Ports to whom and to Margaret his Wife Daughter of the famous Hubert de Burgh Earl of Kent King Edward the first granted a Licence in the ninth year of his Reign as appears by the Patent-Rolls of that Time to erect a Castle and to fortifie and embattle at Allington so that it seems it was only before Fortalitium some small Fortresse and could not be marshall'd under the just Notion of a Castle untill it had received new Symetrie and Dimensions by those Appendages and Supplements which were added to it by this great Man and having thus established this Pile it came to own his Name and is in some old Records called Allington Penchester and not undeservedly for in the eighth year of Edward the first he obtained a Charter of Free-warren to his Mannor of Allington and also a Market Weekly on the Tuesday and a Fair yearly three days on the Vigil the day and day after St. Laurence but deceased without Issue Male so that after his Exit it came to acknowledge Stephen de Cobham who had married his Daughter and Coheir and he inocculated his own Name upon it and called it Allington Cobham which flourished severall Descents in this Family untill the beginning of Edward the fourth and then I find it in the possession of Brent but remained not long in this Name for in the eighth year of Henry the seventh John Brent passed away the Castle and Mannor of Allington to Sir Henry Wiat one of the Privie Councel to that Prince but his infortunate Grandchild Sir Thomas Wiat having by his Defection in the second year of Queen Mary forfeited it to the Crown it remained there untill Queen Elizabeth granted it to Jo. Astley Esq Master of her Jewels whose Son Sir Jo. Astley dying without Issue it came by Descent to Sir Jacob Astley created Lord Astley by the late King at Oxford whose Descendant does now enjoy the Possession of it Alkham in the Hundred of Folkston hath divers places in it of Account Malmains by vulgar Corruption of the word called Smalmains with Hollmeade which was ever accounted an Appendage to it are first to be considered In the twentieth year of Edward the third I find Thomas de Malmains Son of Nicholas de Malmains who
But left no Issue so that Joan his Kinswoman matched to Richard Haut became his Heir and he had Issue Richard Haut in whom the Male-line concluding William Isaac in Right of his Wife Margerie who was Daughter and Heir to the above-mentioned Richard entered upon his Estate here at Permested and about the Beginning of Henry the eighth passed it away by Sale to Edward Knevet of Newington Belhouse Esquire and his Daughters and Coheirs by joint Sale demised it to Tho. Lord Cromwell and he in the twenty ninth year of Henry the eighth alienated it to Christopher Hales Esquire afterwards knighted first Attorney Generall and then Master of the Rolls under the abovesaid Prince and his Son Sir James Hales conveyed it away to Thomas Alphew aliàs Alphy Yeoman From this Man it came over by Sale in the fifth year of Queen Elizabeth to William Downe of Maidstone Draper and he in the sixth year of that Princesse transmitted it by the like conveyance to Doctour Vincent Denne Doctour of the Civil Law Grand-father to Mr. Vincent Denne of Grays Inne Esquire the present Lord of the Fee A Person to whose Conduct and supply this particular Survey ows a grateful Remembrance because by his Concurrent Aid it was guided along through all those Difficulties which might have probably intercepted it in its farther progresse Denhill in this Parish was not only the Seat but likewise the Seminary of a Family of eminent Note in this County Ralph de Den held much Land in Romney Mersh and likewise at Buckhurst in Sussex as appears by an old Roll now in the Hands of the Earl of Dorset about the twentieth of William the Conqueror and is styled in the Record Son of Robert Pincerna a Name imposed upon his Father from being as is probable either Butler or Sewer to Edward the Confessor an Office of no vulgar Account in those Times Sir Alured de Den flourished in the Raign of Henry the third and was a Person of signal Estimate in that Age for when the Laws of Romney Mersh were compiled by that venerable Judge Henry de Bath from which all England receives Directions for Sewers this Sir Alured and Nicolas de Haudloe were his Associates and Assistants in the Composure of them in the forty second year of Henry the third on Saturday next after the Nativity of St. Mary and which makes this Sir Alured de Den more remarkable he sealed even in that Age divided by so remote a Distance from us with three Leopards Heads couped and full faced which is the ancient paternal Coat of this Family Indeed if I should enter into a particular Discourse of all those Persons who have been originally extracted from this Family and were formerly eminent not only within the private Sphere of this County as being invested with the Commission of Justices of the Peace and other Offices of publique Trust and Concernment but likewise shone like Stars of the first Magnitude within the two Orbes of Divinity and the Law both Civil and Municipal the Survey of this Place which I intend to retrench within as narrow Bounds as may be must swell into a particular Treatise it is enough therefore to inform the Reader that it hath been so many Centuries of years folded up in the Propriety of Den. that there is no Gappe at all in the Succession between Ralph de Den the first of that Name and Tho. Den Esq the last who in a direct Line enjoyed it Nor hath it yet departed from the Name for the above mentioned Thomas lately deceasing without Issue-Male Vincent Donne of Grays-Inn Esquire collarerally issued out of this Family by matching with Mary his yongest Daughter and Coheir in Right of this Alliance is now in the instant Possession of it Kingsnoth in the Hundreds of Chart and Longbridge did in elder Times give Sear and Sirname to a Family which assumed its Denomination from hence who bore as appears by Seals appendant to their ancient Deeds Ermin upon a Bend five Cheverons and John de Kingsnoth who flourished here about the latter end of Edward the first sealed with that Coat and this Inscription encircles the Seal Sigillum Joannis de Kingsnoth Yet I find Bartholomew Lord Badelesmer who was attainted in the seventeenth year of Edw. the second had some Interest in this Mannor which upon his Conviction escheated to the Crown and rested there until Richard the second granted it out again to Sir Robert Belknap the Judge who had not long before purchased that proportion which Kingsnoth was concerned in So that by this Concession it came entirely to own the Signory of this Family But he being infortunately attainted and cast into Exile in the tenth year of the above said Prince this Mannor was annexed to the Revenue of the Crown and was lodged there until Henry the sixth in the twenty seventh year of his Raign granted some part of it to Sir Thomas Brown of Bechworth Castle in Surrey and with it a Charter to inclose a Parke which had Liberty of Free-warren annexed to it and likewise the more to endear him licensed this Town to hold a Fair yearly on Michaelmas Day but the principal part of it was conveyed by Sale to Cardinal Kemp who about the twenty eighth of Henry the sixth settled it on the Colledge of Wye where it remained until the Resignation of its Revenue into the Hands of Henry the eighth in the twenty ninth year of his Raign and he by Royal Concession made it the Demeasne of Thomas Lord Cromwell afterwards Earl of Essex Who being attainted of High Treason in the thirty second year of that Prince it escheated back to the Crown and then a Moiety of it in the thirty fifth year of his Government was granted to Sir John Baker from whom by hereditary Conveyance it was delegated and transmitted to his Successor Sir John Baker of Sisingherst Baronet who some few years since hath alienated his Concerment here to Mr. Nathaniel Powell of Ewherst in Sussex The other Moiety of it lay folded up in the Patrimony of the Crown untill the first year of Queen Elizabeth and then it was by that Princesse granted to her Kinsman Henry Cary afterwards created Baron Hunsdon from whom by the Channel of Descent it was transported to his Grand-child the Right Honorable Henry Cary Earl of Dover who in our Memory conveyed it to Sir Thomas Finch afterwards Earl of Winchelsey Father to the instant Proprietary the Right Honorable Heneage Finch now Earl of Winchelsey Munfidde in this Parish was originally the Seat of the Clere's written in their ancient Deeds le Clere. But as all Families have their Vicissitudes and Tombs and like the Sea which is circumscribed and shut in with a Girdle of Sand are fettered to a determinate Period so was this for about the latter end of Edward the third Henry le Clerc concluded in Susan le Clerc who was his Daughter and Heir and she by matching with Sir Simon Woodchurch annexed
de Ifield Pat. 6. Edwar. 3. Par. prima Memb. 22. in Dorso William de Clinton Tres vel duo eorum John de Cobham John de Segrave Thomas Feversham Par. 6. Edwar. 3. Par. prima Memb. 11. in Dorso Willielmus de Clinton Quinque quatuor tres duo eorum John de Cobham Galfridus de Say John de Segrave Otho de Grandison Thomas de Feversham Pat. 9. Edwar. 3. Par. 2. Memb. 24. in Dorso Johannes de Cobham De Confirmatione Pacis ac Statuti Northampton cujusdam Ordinationis ne qui alicubi incedant armati ad terrorum Populi Thomas de Aldon John de Segrave Par. 10. Edwar. 3. Par. 2. Memb. 18. in Dorso Willielmus de Clinton De Feloniis Malefactoribus notorie suspectis insequendis de audiendo terminando Felonia Transgressiones Excessus Radulphus Savage Thomas de Aldon Quatuor vel Tres eorum Johannes de Hampton Willielmus de Reiculuar Pat. 12. Edwar. 3. Momb 16. in Dorso Johannes de Cobham Tres vel duo eorum Thomas de Aldon Jo. de Warrenâ Com. de Surrey Thomas de Brockhull Willielmo de Clinton Com. de Huntingdon Quos c. Willielmus de Orlanston Pat. 18. Edwar. 3. Par. 2. Memb. 35. in Dorso Johannes de Cobham Tres vel duo eorum in Com. Kantii Thomas de Brockhull Otho de Grandison Willielmus de Morant Stat. 18. Edwar. 3. Cap. 2. In this year the Statute was made that ordained that their should be two or three Wardens of the Peace in every County Pat. 29. Edwar. 3. Par. prima Memb. 29. in Dorso Galfridus de Say   Willielmus de Thorpe Otho de Grandison Arnaldus de Savage Stephen de Valoigns Willielmus de Norton Pat. 31. Edwar. 3. Par. prima Memb. 17. in Dorso Galfridus de Say Willielmus de Norton Willielmus de Thorpe Thomas de Lodelow Pat. 31. Edwar. 3. Par. 2. Memb. 11. in Dorso Rogerus de Mortuomari Comes de March Constabularius Castri Dovoriae Custos quinque Portuum Will. de Thorpe a Judge Radulphus de Spigurnel Will. de Norton a Judge Stephanus de Valoigns Thomas de Lodelow Willielmus Warner In this year it being found by Experience that the former Number of the Wardens of the Peace setled by the Statute of the eighteenth of Edw. the third before mentioned was not sufficient for the good Governance of this County It was further provided by an Act made in the thirty fourth year of Edward the third Cap. 2. Ordaining that their should be in every Shire one Lord and with him three or four of the best in the County and three or four learned in the Laws assigned for keeping of the Peace and to restrain Offenders In the next Commission awarded after this Act these eighth Persons are recited for the abovesaid Purpose Viz. Sir Robert Herle then Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports and Constable of Dover Castle Iohn de Cobham of Cobham Roger de Northwood of Northwood Ralph de Fremingham of Fremingham or Farningham Thomas de Lodelow Robert Vinter of Vinters in Boxley Iohn Barrie of Sevington Thomas Hartredge of Hartredge in Cranebroke But this Restriction was not so permanent but that in short space the Number was very much augmented as by the subsequent Series in the first year of Richard the second may very well be observed Pat. primo Rich. secundi Pars prima Memb. 20. in Dorso De Justiciariis ad Pacem conservandam assignatis Justiciarii ad pacem conservandam assignati Edmundus Comes Cantabrigiensis Constabularius Castri Dovoriae Johannes de Cohham Robertus Belknap A Judge Stephanus de Valoigns Henry de Astry or Astie A Judge Willielmus Horne Thomas de Shardelow A Judge Willielmus Topcliff Thomas Garwenton de Well Nicholaus Hering Willielmus Tiltombe In Lastis de Sheringhope Shepwey St. Augustines Septem Hundredis in Com. Kantii Willielmus Makenade Teste Rege apud Westmon primo Die Aprilis Johannes Francis Thomas Hatredge John Bird de Smeth Justiciarii ad pacem conservandam assignati Idem Edmundus Comes supradictus Johannes Cobham Robertus Belknap Thomas Colepeper Henricus Astie Johannes Fremingham In Lastis de Alresford Sutton Leucata de Tunbridge in Com. Kantii Jacobus de Peckham Thomas de Shardelow Teste Rege ut supra Willielmus Topclive Nocholaus Hering Willielmus Makenade After by the Statute of the twelfth year of Richard the second Cap. 10. and the fourteenth year of the same Prince Cap. 11. it was prohibited that there should be any more than six Justices of the Peace in any Commission besides the two Justices of Assise and certain Lords who were assigned in the Parliament it self But in Times subsequent to these when the Womb of Vice like the Mudde of Nile was more fertile in the production of Crimes and the Seeds of Contention began to be sown more plentifully in every furrow of this Nation which sprang up again in a numberless Variety of Discord and Animosity these Restrictions were broke and the Catalogue of Justices was improved to that Volume to which it is swoln at present Before I descend to a particular Description of the Parishes of this County I should take cognisance of all those Towns and Villages which by the indulgence of former Princes were invested with the Charter of Market and Faire But this hath been so exactly performed lately by Mr. Kilbourn that I shall at present decline this Task Indeed all of them had this Passage inserted in the Original Grant Quantum in Nobis est so that many of them when they came to be discussed before the Judges Itinerent at the general Assises Quo Warranto they were held that is to say what Authority they had to support them were if they were found convenient and necessary ratified confirmed and continued but if again they were deemed needless and superfluous they were at these publick Conventions by the power of the Law then planted in the Judges vacated and discarded This may likewise be added that many of them were granted with this Intention of their first Institution only to inforce and Aggrandize the Signorie of those Mannors which were parcel of the Demeasn of those eminent Persons to whom those above mentioned Royal Charters and Concessions were indulged as Sutton Valence Court at Sreet Shinglewell and others and when the Title and Possession of those Places was either by Purchase or Marriage cast into the Tenure of other Proprietaries the Virtue of these Grants began to be dis-spirited and the Custome of Keeping up Markets and Fairs at these Mannors and Parishes began insensibly to shrink into disuse and intermission It is farther observable that at diverse Places which were endowed with these above mentioned Priviledges as at Brenchly Charlton by Greenwich and other Parishes the Market and Fair was observed and held in the Church-yard and on the Sunday it being the great Design of the Romish Clergie of those cloudy Times to
was Possessor of both these Places in Times of an elder Computation paid respective Aid at making the black Prince Knight for his Lands at Alkham But after this I find no more intelligence given me by Record of this Family for about the beginning of Henry the fourth I discover Iohn Alkham who extracted his Sirname from this Parish and it is very probable had here his Mansion though now it have found a double Sepulcher that of Oblivion and its own Rubbish to have been possest of them both which he held in Castle-Guard Tenure of Dover Castle and paid a subsidiarie Supply for them in the fourth year of that Prince at the Marriage of Blanch his Daughter from which temporary Assessement or Contribution severall Parcels of Land in this County have ever since contracted the Name of Blanch-Lands In Alkham the Signorie of both Places did reside untill the beginning of Henry the seventh and then they were demised by Peter Alkham to Iohn Warren Gentleman in which Name after they had continued untill the latter End of Henry the eighth Malmains was passed away to Brown who in our Memory conveyed it by Sale to Lushinton and Hollmeade was by the same Vicissitude annexed to the Demeasn of Wollet a Name that is grown reverend by an Efflux of many Ages both here and at Elham The Mannor of Hoptons another place considerable in Alkham If you will search who was in elder Times possest of it the private date lesse Deeds will inform you that anciently it was the Inheritance of Peter de Hall but was not long permanent in the possession of this Name for in the twentieth year of Edward the third as appears by the Book of Aid it was the Inheritance of William de Bourn and here it seems the Title was more constant for in this Family it was resident untill the beginning of Henry the sixth and then it was alienated to Baker of Caldham in whom it had not long continued but by his Daughter and Coheir it became the Inheritance of Robert Brandred from which Name about the latter end of Edward the fourth it passed away by Sale to Brown of Bechworth Castle in Surrey and here it fixed untill that Age which came within the Verge of our Grandfathers Remembrance and then it was demised to Godman in whose Descendants the Propriety now continues Evering is the last place of Account in Alkham it was the possession of a Family so called which branched from the ancient Lords of Folkston sirnamed Averenches whose Armes were as is manifest by ancient Armorials Or five Cheverons Gules and these Everings bare Or five Cheverons Azure Wolwardus de Evering held it under the Notion and by the Service of a whole Knights Fee in the Time of Henry the second of the Lords of Folkston And by a successive Chanell of many Descents hath the Title flowed so constantly in this Family that this Seat is at this instant annexed to their Inheritance In this Parish is an Eyle-Bourn which rises in the bottome at Dillingore which the Inhabitants presage to be a fatall presage either of Death or Dearth and in a short Distance of Time and Place from no appearance of Head or Spring sends forth such store of Water that a Vessell of considerable Burden may float therein then the Water being inforced into a Stream runs down to Chilton and disgorges it self into that River which meets the Sea at Dover Apuldore in the Hundred of Blackborn in the year of Grace 1032. was by an especiall Licence first obtained from Canutus and Elfgiva his Queen and given by Eadsin Bishop of Sr. Martins without Canterbury to the Prior and Monks of Christchurch est de cibo corum says the Book of that Convent that is it was granted to them for a Supportation of Diet. In the eleventh year of Edward the third there was a License granted to the then Archbishop and others by his Royall Patent obsternere quendam antiquam Trencheam quae ducit a Brachio Maris vocato Apledore versus Villam de Romney those are the Words of the Record that is to intercept and dam up a certain Trench or Chanell which proceeds from an Arm of the Sea called Apledore for then it seems the Sea flow'd up to this place though now it have wholly deserted it and leads to the Town of Romney But to proceed Apledore having by the abovesaid Donation been link'd to the Ecclesiasticall Patrimony continued wrapp'd up in that Interest untill the Resignation of the Revenue of the Priorie of Christchurch into the hands of K. Henry the eighth and then he setled it by a new grant on his new erected Dean and Chapter of Christ Church Hornes place in this Parish was the Seat for many hundreds of years of Gentlemen of that Sirname William Horne was one of the Conservators of the Peace in the first year of Richard the Second for this County and Michael Horne was Sheriff of Kent in the seventh year of Henry the fourth and held his Shrievalty at Apledore and from him did the proprietie of this place descend to Anne Horne the last of this Name who matched with Benedict Guldford Esquire who in her Right as being the sole Inheritrix of this place became Lord of this Seat but he denying the Oath of Supremacy which began about the twelfth and thirteenth of Queen Elizabeth to be tendered to Romish Recusants and sheltring himselfe by a Recesse and Flight into forrein Parts fell under the displeasure of the Queen and his Estate under the Fury of a praemunire so that this Mannor was torne away from his Interest by a Confiscation of it to the Crown and shortly after the above mentioned Princesse granted it to her faithfull Servant George Chowte Esquire from whom it is now descended to his great Grandchild Mr. Edward Chowt * Lately Deceased Esquire a Person who for his Support of Learning in these Times wherein if some whose Palates do decline it with regret and disgust might be confirmed in that licencious Liberty which they pretend to they would scarce leave us the Title page to inform Posterity that their was once Religion or Learning inhabiting amongst us cannot be mentioned by the Fautors and Abettors of Literature or at least the Pretenders to it without some grateful acknowledgment Dean Court in this Parish was the Mansion of a Family who borrowed their Sirname from this Town and were called Apledore and sealed with a Pile surmounted with a Fesse which was their paternal Coat but before the latter end of Edward the third this Family found its Sepulcher in a Female Heir for Thomas de Apledore dying witout Issue Elnith his only Sister entituled her husband William Roper to his Estate here and in the confining Marsh and by an uninterrupted Right derived from this Alliance hath the title of this place been supported in the Family of Roper for so many Descents that it is now at last devolved to the right honorable Christopher
John Proude who was unhappily slain at the Groll in the year 1628 whilst he did vigorously pursue the Quarrel of the States General at that Siege against the Capital Enemy of their Religion and Liberty the Spaniard and Mary espoused to Sir Edward Partrich for his first Wife but dyed without any Issue surviving by him Sir John Proud left only one Daughter called Ann who was first wedded to Sir William Springate and secondly to Mr. Isaac Pennington eldest Son to Isaac Pennington Lord Maior of London in the year 1643 in Right of which Alliance he at present holds this Mannor of Goodwenston Goodneston by Wingham vulgarly called Gonston lies in the Hundred of Wingham and was formerly parcell of the Patrimony of Hastings Earl of Pembroke bequeathed to him by his Kinsman John de Hastings who was first Husband to Juliana the Heir generall of Roger de Leybourn John de Hostings held it at his Death which was in the forty ninth year of Edward the third and so did his Son John de Hastings after him and brings a pleading for it in the fourteenth year of R. the second After them the Malmains were possest of it who had some Estate here before which they had by Purchase from Pine and Beauchamp about the Beginning of Edward the third and in this Family did it remain untill Henry Malmains about the year ........ deceased without Issue-male and then by Agnes his Daughter and Heir marryed to Thomas Goldwell it came to own the Jurisdiction of that Name and Family but was not long fastned to it for he ended likewise in a Female Heir called Joan who was wedded to Thomas Took of Bere Esquire and so by her it was united to the Revenue of this Family and here rested untill that Age which came within the Circle of our Grandsathers Knowledge and then it was passed away to Henekar from which Name in Times almost of our Cognisance it went away by a Revolution like the former to Kelley who conveyed it to Engham descended from the noble Family of the Enghams of Woodchurch who flourished so many Ages at Edingam and Pleurinden in that Parish Bonnington in this Parish is the ancient Seat from whence the numerous and Knightly Family of Bois did as from their originall Fountain issue out into Fredville Betteshhanger Haukherst and other parts of this Countie and do derive themselves from John de Bosco who is mentioned in the Battle-Abby Roll of those who entered this Nation with Will the Conquerour and certainly they have not been much lesse at this place then 17 Descents as the datelesse Deeds of several of this Family who writ themselves of Bonnington do easily manifest Nor hath it yet deserted the Name or departed from the Possession of Bois being at this present part of the patrimony of Sir John Bois to whose paternal Arms the late King for his eminent and loyall Service perform'd by him at Donnington Castle added as an Augmentation upon a Canton Azure a Crown imperial Or. Rolling is a third place in this Parish to be taken notice of It contributed a Seat as well as a Sirname formerly to a Family called Rolling Thomas Rolling held some Lands in Lease at his Death which was in the fisteenth year of Ric. the second Rot. Esc Num. 143. which Lands belonged to a Chauntry in St. Peters Church in Sandwich and lay in Eastry near his Mannor of Rolling After this Family was worn out the Idley's who had large Possessions about Mepham Cobham and Higham as appears by the Inquisition taken after the Death of John Idelegh in the forty third year of Edward the third Rot. Esc Num. 58. Parte secunda were by Purchase seated in the Possession and preserved it untill the Reign of Henry the eighth and then it was alienated to Butler of Heronden in Eastry from whom in the Beginning of the raign of Q. Eliz. it went away to Roger Manwood Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer whose Son Sir Peter Manwood in our Fathers Remembrance alienated it to Dickenson from whom not many years since it was brought over to be the Possession of Master .......... Richards Godmersham in the Hundred of Felborough was given to the Monks of Christ-Church in Canterbury by Beornulfus King of the Mercians in the year of Grace eight hundred twenty and one free as Adisham and it was at the Request of Arch-bishop Vlfred to supply the Covent both with Food and Raiment which Grant Arch-bishop Egelnoth who it seems had some Interest in the Place in the year one Thousand thirty and six did fully confirm And in the year one thousand three hundred fourscore and seven Thomas Arundell Arch-bishop of Canterbury with the especiall Licence of Richard the second appropriated the Tiths of the Rectory of Godmersham to the Church of Christ-church to the Support and Maintenance of the Fabrick of the Church abovesaid If you will see what Value was set upon this Mannor in the Time of the Conquerour I shall afford you a Sight of it out of Dooms-day Book Godmersham says that Register est Manerium Monachorum de Vestitu eorum in Tempore Edwardi Regis se defendebat pro VIII Sullings est appretiatum XX. lb. sed tamen reddit XXX That is it paid a Rent of thirty pound to the Church Yolands and Ford are two other little Mannors in this Parish which acknowledged themselves anciently to be parcell of the Inheritance of Valoigns And Robert de Valoigns dyed possest of these and much other Land in this Track in the nineteenth year of Edward the second Rot. Esc Num. 41. Henry de Valoigns this mans Son was Sheriff of Kent in the fourteenth of King Edward the third and he had Issue Waretius de Valoigns and Stephen de Valoigns who planted himself at Gore-Court in Otham and is represented in Record to be one of the Conservators of the Peace for this County in the twenty ninth and thirty first years of Edward the third but Waretius de Valoigns determined in two Daughters and Coheirs one was matched to Fogge and the other to Thomas Aldon Son of Thomas de Aldon who was one of the Conservators of the Peace in Kent in the tenth and twelfth years of Edward the third and he in her Right was entituled to the Possession of these places And in this Family did it for diverse years continue untill the ordinary Mutation of Purchase rowled them into the Inheritance of Austin to which Name the Title remained constantly linked untill that Age we style our Grand-fathers and then they were by Richard Austin passed away by Sale to Broadnix so that they are now by paternal Right devolved to Thomas Broadnix Esquire in whose Estate the instant Propriety of them does lye involved Egerton in Godmersham was a Mannor which formerly swelled the demeasn of the noble Family of Valence who were Earls of Pembroke Aymer de Valence Earl of Pembroke held it at his Death which was in the
this Mannor to his Patrimony and he the better to inforce and perpetuate the Memory of this Alliance and the Estate which devolved to him by so fortunate a Conjunction inverted his Sirname and writ it for the future Clerc alias Woodchurch in which Name the Propriety of this Place continued until the latter end of Q. Elizabeth and then it was alienated to Taylor of Shadoxherst in which Name the Interest of it had not long continued but that it was in our Remembrance by Sale conveyed to Whitwick West-Halks is a third Mannor in Kingsnoth which in elder Times was ennobled for affording a Residence to a Family of this Sirname who bore in ancient Seals a Fesse between three Hawks or Falcons and sometimes one a Family of no contemptible Estimate or shallow Antiquity in this Track as appears by old Escripts Pedigrees and other venerable Muniments which represent this Family under the Character of Gentlemen for above three hundred years Sampson de Halk died about the year 1360 and held not onely this place Ex Autographis penes Dom. Tho. Taylor but much other Land about Petham and other Parishes in that Track but about the latter end of Henry the sixth this Family had demised the Propriety of this place to Taylor of great Chart in which Name it was constantly fixed untill the latter end of Henry the seaventh and then it was sold to Clerc who about the latter end of Q. Elizabeth passed it away to Robert Honywood of Charing Esquire who upon his Decease settled it by his last Will on his second Son by his second Wife Col. ....... Honywood now the instant Lord of the Fee Knowlton in the Hundred of Eastrye was parcel of the Patrimony of the noble Family of St. Leger Hugh St. Leger who was one of the Recognitores magnae Assisae in the Raign of King John held this Mannor in the fourth year of the Raign of that Prince and left it to his Son John St. Leger who in the twelfth year of Henry the third exchanged it for other Lands with Reginald de Cornhill and he in the twenty fifth year of the abovesaid Prince passed it away by Sale as the Book of Christ-Church informs me to the Prior and Monks of that Covent but it seems not long after they exchanged it with Thomas Perot for he in the fourth year of Edward the third died possest of it as appears by his Office Rot. Esc Num. 31. and left onely a Female Heir who carried it along with her to Langley descended out of the County of Warwick and being thus chained by this Match to the Interest of this Family it remained for many Descents fastned to it and was productive in several Ages of Men of no vulgar Account William de Langley Son of William Langley was Sheriff of Kent the twenty first twenty third twenty fourth and twenty fifth years of Edward the third William Langley of Knolton was Sheriff of Kent in the fourth year of Henry the fifth and likewise Justice of the Peace for this County under that Prince John Langley Esquire was Sheriff of Kent in the twentieth year of Henry the seventh and had Issue Edward Langley Esquire who matched with Elizabeth Daughter of Thomas Peyton of Peyton Hall in the County of Cambridge descended from Peytonus de Vfford but he dying without Issue about the latter end of Henry the eighth his Wive's Brother Sir Robert Peyton by Reason of a former Match in the Raign of Henry the fifth between Peyton and a Daughter of Langley entered upon it as Heir General at Law and he not desirous to desert Cambridgeshire to transplant himself into Kent assigned Knowlton for Livelyhood to his second Son Sir John Peyton Grand-father to Sir Thomas Peyton the Primier Baronet of this County who as lineally extracted from him does enjoy the Propriety of it See more of this Family of Peyton in my Discourse of Werd L. L. L. L. LAmberherst lies in the Hundred of Little Bernefield and was sometimes written Lamberts-hurst from Lambert a Saxon Owner in old English this Name imports as much as bright or holy and glorious Lamp as Herebert is bright Lord. Part of this Parish is in Kent and the other part in Sussex distinguished by a small Stream which rises nere Cowden and glides through this Town towards Medway The Lordship of Lamberhurst it self with the Mannor of Woodroff belonged to the Monastery of Roberts Bridge and after the Dissolution were by Henry the eighth granted in the thirteenth of his Reign to Sir William Sidney Tutor to King Edward the sixth when he was Prince whose Successor Robert Sidney Earl of Leicester sold Lamberherst in our Fathers Memory to Mr. Porter and Woodroff to Sir Edw. Henden one of the Barons of the Exchequer who bequeathed it to his Nephew Sir John Henden lately deceased Hodleigh in this Parish was part of that Demeasne which related to the Colledge of Lingfield in Surrey which upon the Suppression was by Henry the eighth granted to Thomas Cardan from which Family it passed away to Edward Filmer Esquire Ancestor to Sir Edward Filmer eldest Son to Sir Robert Filmer lately deceased to whose Demeasne the Propriety of it is at present united The Abby of Begham in this Parish was founded by Ela de Sackvill and Sir Robert de Thurneham a man of principal Account in the time of Henry the third This Priory was suppressed by Cardinal Wolsey and filled with Cannons Praemonstratenses or white Cannons called so from their Habit. The Mannor which belonged to it was by royal Concession From Q. Elizabeth it passed away to Anthony Brown Viscount Montague who not long after alienated the Fee-simple to Alderman Barneham of London who gave it to Benedict a second Son and he dying without Issne-male one of his Daughters and Coheirs married with Dobell of Sussex and so carried it into the Inheritance of that Family where the Possession has ever since been setled Scotney in this Parish which hath borrowed that Appellation from its locall Situation and the over-shooting of the Water was the Residence of a Family distinguished by that Sirname and Denomination for one Walter de Scotney in Times of high Ascent was Proprietary of this Place but added not much Reputation to this Mansion for as Edmund de Hadenham a Chronicler of great Antiquity attests he in the year 1259 administred poyson by tacit Stratagem to the Earl of Gloucester and his Brother to destroy them of which the last dyed and the first escaped not without Danger of Life But to goe on After this Family was mouldered away at this place which was about the midst of Edward the third the eminent Family of Ashburnham of Ashburnham in Sussex were entituled to the Signiory of it Roger Ashburnham who was one of the Conservators of the Peace for this County of Sussex in the first year of Richard the second had here a castellated Mansion did sometimes inhabit at this place and was
Inglethorp and to the Demeasne of this Name it was linked untill the Beginning of Henry the seventh and then it was wafted over by Sale to Morton and here the Title lodged untill our Grand-fathers memory and then it was alienated to Willonghbie and Sir Francis Willoughbie sold his Concernment in it to Ralph Heyman Esquire from whom it came over to his Son and Heir Sir Peter Heyman who some years since upon the Marriage of his second Son Peter Heyman setled it on him whom yet it owns for Proprietary Hodiford is the last place of any Estimate In elder Times a Family was setled here which borrowed its Sirname as it did its Residence from this Mansion for John Hodiford or Hodinorth was Lord of the Demeasne but when this Name departed from this place the Cardens were the next in order who were Possessors of the Fee from whom by the Vicissitude of Sale it was transmitted to Cobbe where the Title had not long been lodged but it was by the like Devolution conveyed by James Cobbe the last of the Name who enjoyed it to Thomas Godfrey Esquire a Person to whom by several Engagements both of Learning and Friendship I stand now obliged Shelvich in the Hundred of Feversham was formerly the Patrimony of Atleeze a Family of no contemptible Value in this Circuit who layd the Foundation of a House near the Leas and from its Situation extracted their Sirname but the greatest Honor which accrued to this House in elder Times was that it was the Cradle of Sir Richard Atleeze who was Sheriff of Kent in the reign of Edward the third and several times a Member or Burgesse of those Parliaments which assembled in that Age but dying without Issue Marcellus Atleeze his only Brother became his Heir but he not long after made his Exit in two Daughters and Coheirs whereof Lucy the eldest was matched to John Norton Esquire and Cicely the youngest was wedded to Valentine Barret of Perry-court but Norton upon the Division of the Estate was in his Wifes Right entituled to this Mannor and in this Family after the Title had for many discents resided it was by an ever Thread of Succession guided down to Sir Thomas Norton of Milton who not many years since passed it away to Sir Richard Sonds originally extracted from an ancient Family which about the reign of Henry the third had their Habitation at Sonds-place at Darkin in Surrey whose Son and Heir Sir George Sonds Knight of the Bath by Discent from him claims the Interest and Signory of it and hath upon the old Foundation of Leeze-Court erected a Pile so set out with all the cunning and Pomp of Magnificence that it is scarcely to be out-rivalled by a Fabrick of that Bulk in any part of the English Nation Sir Richard Atleeze lyes entombed in Shelvich Church under a fair Gravestone with his Portraicture in Brasse annexed as likewise that of his Lady as fairly insculped with this Epitaph affixed to both their Figures Hic jacet Dominus Ricardus Atleese Miles ac Domina Dionisia uxor ejus qui quidem Ricardus obiit Anno Dom. 1394. Coperhams-Sole in this Parish for several Centuries of years hath confessed the Belks to have been its Proprietaries who it is probable extracted their Name out of Denmark where the Name is yet spreading and the Family noble and numerous Stephen de Belk is mentioned in Testa de Nevill a Book kept in the Exchequer to have paid respective Aid for Land which he held in this Track at the Marriage of Isabell Sister to Henry the third in the twentieth year of that Prince's reign which is enough to justifie the Antiquity of this Family in this Track Shepeards Forstall was for many Descents the possessionof a Family called Ruck one of whom lies entombed at Rye and was an eminent Person in the reign of Henry the eighth being Bow-bearer to that Prince and bore for his Coat Armour as it appears affixed to his Grave-stone Sables a plain Crosse Argent between four Flower de Lis Or. The last of this Name which held this place was Nicholas Rucks who about the latter end of Queen Elizabeth dying without Issue gave it to his Nephew Mr. Nicholas Oliver who hath lately passed it away by Sale to the Colledge of Alsoules in Oxford Lords is the last place of Account in Shelvich in the reign of Edward the second and Edward the third it had Owners of that Sirname but ever since the latter part of Richard the second it hath constantly acknowledged the Family of Giles until this present to have been its successive proprietaries One of this Family called Alexander Giles was Steward to the Abbot of Lesnes in the reign of Edward the third and I have seen a Release under his Hand and Seal given to one John VValden of Erith in the twenty fifth of the abovesaid Prince for some Services due from that Person of the Covent abovesaid Sevington in the Hundreds of Chart and Longbridge was in Ages of as high as any Record can step to the Barrie's a Family of great Antiquity in this Track Sir Robert de Barrie is in the Register of those who were engaged in Ireland under Henry the second where he was the first as Mr. Camden reports which man'd and brought the Hawk to hand and grew up to that Repute as he was called by the Irish Barriemore or the great Barrie William de Barrie this mans Successor was one of the Recognitores Magnae Assisae for this County in the Time of King John and lived at the Moat in this Parish where many of his Successors who were Lievtenants of Dover-castle and Conservators of the Peace in Kent had their Residence the last of whom was Robert Barrie whose Female Heir brought this Mannor to Radcliff and he not many years since conveyed the Moat to Alcock by whose Daughter and Heir it is now united to the Demeasne of Bois Sevenoke is like a Fountain which streams into several places of Note which we cannot passe by without some Consideration The first is Blackhall which was the possession of a Family called Totihurst the first whom I find possest of it was William de Totihurst and he flourished here as appears by the ancient Court-rols a great part of the reign of Edward the third and Richard the second The next whom I find by the same Evidences setled in the Inheritance is Thomas Totihurst and he held it in the reign of Henry the fifth and Henry the sixth and had Issue Robert Totihurst who was as appears by an Inscription upon his Tomb Servant to Cardinal Bourchier and died possest of this Mannor in the year 1512. and transmitted it to his Son Thomas Totihurst Esquire Justice of Peace of this County who about the beginning of Queen Elizabeth alienated it to Sir ...... Boswell Grand-father to Sir Leonard Boswell who dying without Issue his Sister the Lady ...... Boswell Widow of Sir William Boswell as Heir General to
by a Chain of Descent to his Grand-child Sir Charles Sydley Baronet the present Lord of the Fee Pole vulgarly called Poole is another Mannor in Southfleet And was in elder Times the Inheritance of a Family called Berese for I find by a fine levyed in the thirty seventh year of Henry the third that Richard de Berese fells this Mannor under the Notion of a Carucate of Land to Reginald de Cobham of Roundall in Shorne and from him did it by a continued Thread of Succession devolve to John Cobham Esquire in whom the Male-line of that Name ended and he dyed seised of it in the ninth year of Henry the fourth Rot. Esc Num. 10. And lett it to Joan his Sole Inheritrix who by Reginald Braybrook her third and last Husband had Issue Joan her only Daughter and Heir who brought this Mannor and a liberal Revenue besides to her Husband Thomas Brook of the County of Somerset Esquire Grand-father to Thomas Lord Brook who about the Beginning of Henry the seventh passed it away to Sir Henry Wiat one of the Privy Councel to that Monarch from whom it descended to his noble but infortunate Grandchild Sir Tho. Wiat who in the second year of Q. Mary forfeited this and his Life together so that from thenceforth it was clasped up in the Income of the Crown untill Queen Elizabeth in the twenty fifth year of her reign restored it to his Widow the Lady Joan Wiatt and George Wiat Esquire his Son and Heir father to Sir Francis Wiat who upon his Decease left it to his Widow Dowager the Lady ..... Wiatt who is now in possession of it Scadbery in Southfleet hath been for some Centuries of years the possession of the Family of Sidleys who were in Times of very high Ascent seated in Romney Mersh for there are some Lands there which at this Day they call by the Name of Sidleys and Sidleys Mersh In this Mansion there is a Room whose sides are covered with Wainscot and on one of the Plates or Pains which appears to be exceeding ancient the Arms of Sidley are carved in embost-work viz A Fesse wavee between three Goats heads erased and these Letters underneath W. and S. with the year of our Lord affixed in Figures whose Date commences from 1337. And although the Structure of this House hath like a Snail shifted its ancient Shell yet in all its Mutations and Vicissitudes which must certainly have very much disordered the Fabrick when it was cast into a new mould and frame and ravelled and discomposed the Materials yet this Panel of Wainscot hath been like a Relique religiously preserved to justifie not only the Antiquity of this Seat but of the Family of Sydley also which is presumed to have been resident at this place before the above-mentioned Calculation from whom Sir Charles Sidley Baronet claims the Original of his Title to this Mansion and his Extraction or pedigree likewise untwisted into many Descents and now at last wound up in him Shouldon in the Hundred of Deal hath two remarkable places which are situated within the Limits of it First Hull presents it self to our View it was formerly under the Signory of the illustrious-Family of Ratling or Retling in Nonington Thomas de Retling paid respective Aid for this and divers other Lands of ancient Inheritance in the twentieth year of Edward the third at the making the Black Prince Knight and left it to his Son Sir Richard de Retling whose Widow the Lady Sarah Retling and afterwards Wife of John de St. Laurence died possest of it in the tenth year of Richard the second and left it to John Spicer who had married Joan Daughter and Heir to her first Husband but he concluding in a Daughter and Heir by this his first Wife called Cicely who was Heir to her mother Joan Spicer shee by matching with Iohn Isaack knit it to the Propriety of that Family But before the twenty first of Henry the sixth he had fixed the Inheritance in Iohn Bresland in whom it was not long resident for he suddenly after altered his right and about the Beginning of Edward the fourth put it over by Sale to Phineux of Swink-field whose Successor Robert Phineux by as quick and early a Vicissitude placed the possession about the Beginning of Henry the eighth in George Monins Esquire whose Successor in that Age which was circumscribed within the Pale of our Fathers Remembrance passed it away to Crayford of Great Mongeham Secondly Cotmanton puts in its Claim for some memorial likewise even in this respect that it was the Demeasne of the noble Family of Crioll or Keriell who were of some considerable Repute in this Track as appearsby by the Book styled Testa de Nevill kept in the Exchequer where they are represented in the twentieth year of Henry the third to have held Land in this Skirt of the County and in Ages of a modern Aspect that is in the twentieth year of Edward the third I find Iohn de Criol gave a pecuniary supply at the making the Black Prince Knight but before the end of Edward the third he was departed from the possession of this place which by Sale was resigned up to Roger Digge and he dyed in the possession of it in the third year of Ric. the second Rot. Esc Num 19. And in this Family it continued untill the reign of Henry the seventh and then it was alienated to Barton descended from the ancient Family of Barton of Barton-hall in the County of Lancaster from whom the like Mutation about the latter end of H. the eighth carried it off to the Family of Brown and from them it passed away by Sale into the Possession of Richardson upon whose going out the Family of Smith by a Devolution like the former not many years since stept into the Inheritance of it Sundrich in the Hundred of Codsheath was the Possession as high as any Light collected from Antiquity can waft us to a Discovery of an Ancient Family called in Latine-Records de Insula and in English Isley Iohn de Insula obtained a Charter of Free-warren to his Lands at Sundrich in the eleventh year of Edward the second and he had Issue Iohn Isley who married Joan Daughter to Sir Ralph de Fremingham and by her had Issue Roger Isley Esquire who in Right of his mother became Heir to his Uncle Iohn Fremingham Esquire who deceased without Issue in the twelfth year of Henry the fourth and this Roger Isley had Issue William Isley Esquire who was Sheriff of Kent in the twenty fifth year of Henry the sixth and he had Issue John Isley Esquire who was Justice of the Peace and Sheriff of Kent in the fourteenth year of Edward the fourth and deceased in the year 1484 as appears by an Inscription affixed to his Monument yet extant notwithstanding the late general Shipwrack of the Remains of Antiquity in Sundrich-church and he had Issue Thomas Isley Esquire Father of Sir Henry Isley who was