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The Taxatio Database

449 results from this resource . Displaying 121 to 140

from the moiety £ 4. 6s. 8d. 6.5 1 The grid reference given is for the approximate position of the old church of St Mary which lies more than one km. to the east of its nineteenth-century replacement. N.Pevsner, The

Charlton near Greenwich. An approximate grid reference is given for the site of St Nicholas church as marked on the old 6-inch map. A.Hussey, Notes on the Churches in the Counties of Kent, Sussex and Surrey mentioned in Domesday Book

it was totally pulled down.The grid reference given is for its site just east of the present church(mapped on the old 6-inch map) Woodland is now included in the parish of Kingsdown. E.Hasted, The History and Topographical Survey of Kent

new church of All Saints was built to serve both parishes. The grid reference is for the site of the old church of St Mary. Churches of South-East Wiltshire (RCHM, 1987) p.123 2 The dean and chapter presented to the

Lincoln Dean and Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.137 £ 4. 0s. 0d. 6 1 The grid reference given is for the old church at East Fleet, of which only the chancel now remains. It is mapped as an ancient monument. The

references to this MS) £ 16. 0s. 0d. 24 1 The grid reference given is for the ruins of the old church of St Andrew which are in the grounds of the Castle Hotel. N.Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Dorset

has been given. The present church, dedicated to St John the Evangelist, was built c.1866-68 to the NW of the old church and nearer the centre of the village. The Victoria History of the Counties of England: Wiltshire, ed. R.B.Pugh

was apparently quite close to the parish church. See VCHWilts8 69. The grid reference gives an approximate position, near the 'Old Manor House'. The Victoria History of the Counties of England: Wiltshire, ed. R.B.Pugh & E.Crittall et al., 17 vols,

Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.132 £ 4. 6s. 8d. 6.5 Lincolnshire Archives Office, Lincoln Dean and Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.132 £ 2. 13s. 4d. 4 1 The old church of St Andrew stands east of the Market Place by the river.

seems most likely that it replaces an earlier church of the same dedication, rather than the building sometimes called 'the old church', said to have been built of stone c.1540, which is now the chapel of St George in the

standing, south of its replacement church of St John the Baptist, erected in 1875. The grid reference is for the old church. N.Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Hampshire & the Isle of Wight (Harmondsworth, reprint 1979) p.260 2 For the

Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.144 £ 4. 6s. 8d. 6.5 1 The grid reference is approximate for the site of the old church which was pulled down in 1829. It stood in meadows close to the river, where a stone cross

No Full entry Lincolnshire Archives Office, Lincoln Dean and Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.146 £ 14. 13s. 4d. 22 1 The old parish church of St Mary stands in the grounds of Laverstock House. It became a mortuary chapel in 1874,

(missing in WCWN 48). Winchester College Archives, MS. 23220, pp. 36-62 (Winchester) p.48 £ 40. 0s. 0d. 60 1 The old church of St Lawrence is disused except for burials. It is said to stand on Seven Sisters Road, a

Office, Lincoln Dean and Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.76 £ 0. 2s. 0d. 0.15 1 The grid reference is for the old church of St Lawrence, abandoned in the nineteenth century in favour of a new church of St Michael built

priory the church was dedicated to St Leonard, while the parishioners who worshipped in the nave had originally used an old chapel close by which was dedicated to St Swithun/St Swithin. It is likely that the nave altar for the

and Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.70v £ 12. 0s. 0d. 18 1 The grid reference gives the approximate position of the old church, close to the river Severn. Only the thirteenth-century tower remained when Pevsner visited, the medieval church having been

p.71 Excluded from the moiety £ 4. 6s. 8d. 6.5 1 The grid reference gives the approximate position of the old church which stood close to the house. N.Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Worcester (Harmondsworth, 1968) p.218 2 For the

to the archdeaconry soon after the taxatio: see BW.BA.RC.11. It is not clear what comprised the income of the archdeaconry at the time of the taxatio. English Episcopal Acta, vol. x (Bath and Wells 1061-1205), ed. F.M.R.Ramsey (Oxford, 1995) p.139

Dean and Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.159 £ 13. 6s. 8d. 20 1 For the late twelfth-century appropriation of this church to Bath priory see EEA10 203. English Episcopal Acta, vol. x (Bath and Wells 1061-1205), ed. F.M.R.Ramsey (Oxford, 1995) p.203

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 29 April 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ct=lm&kw=old%20english%20hexateuch&sdf=1250&sdt=1374&sr=tx&st=120