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449 results from this resource . Displaying 101 to 120

Office, Lincoln Dean and Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.6 £ 4. 13s. 4d. 7 1 The grid reference is for the old church of Great Steeping, which still stands 1km SW of the 1891 replacement. N. Pevsner, The Buildings of England:

Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.8 £ 8. 0s. 0d. 12 1 The parish of Aubourn is back once again at the old church of Aubourn, which lies close to the Hall, the Victorian church in the village having been declared redundant

and Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.2 £ 10. 13s. 4d. 16 1 Grid reference given is for the site of the old church, of which only the chancel arch has been preserved. It is situated 400m SE of the present church

only church mapped in Ludford. Its double dedication - ST MARY AND ST PETER - may indicate that the two old parishes of Ludford were now being served from the one church. 0S(CS) (vicarage) PRO, E179/68/8 (minute benefices for archdeaconries

0d. 12 1 The church now standing within the gate of Overstone Park was built in 1803 and replaced the old church which stood in front of the former manor house. The Victoria History of the Counties of England: Northampton,

from the moiety £ 6. 0s. 0d. 9 1 The grid reference given is for the approximate position of the old ruined church of St John which stands to the NE of Boughton Green. The chapel on the main street

from the moiety £ 4. 6s. 8d. 6.5 1 The parish of Asterleigh was united with Kiddington in 1446. The old building has not survived. The grid reference given is for Asterleigh Farm. The Victoria History of the Counties of

Lincolnshire Archives Office, Lincoln Dean and Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.15v £ 6. 13s. 4d. 10 1 The ruins of the old church of St James remain in a field about one km to the north of the nineteenth-century church of

where the source is not extant see TEX, TLIB1&2, TCI) £ 13. 6s. 8d. GAINSBOROUGH SK815902 ded: ALL HALLOWS (in old wills) or ALL SAINTS F.Arnold-Forster, Studies in Church Dedication, 3 vols (London, 1899) vol 3 p.129 (vicarage) (inst.) vic.

in error), PLL2 1, BLL 116, OH 238 British Library, Cotton Tiberius C x p.162 £ 1. 6s. 8d. 2 1 The church has not survived, and the grid reference is for the placename of the old settlement of Porthcasseg.

p.117v £ 2. 13s. 4d. 4 1 The site of this church ('in ruins' on the OS(CS) map) is at Old Cogan. 2 For this church as a possession of Tewkesbury abbey in the late twelfth century see LlanEpAct 31-2.

13s. 4d. 16 Lincolnshire Archives Office, Lincoln Dean and Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.86v £ 5. 6s. 8d. 8 1 The old church of St Mary stood by Birch Hall. It was a small Norman church which is now in ruins.

Library, MS 23 p.19 £ 0. 3s. 6d. 0.2625 1 The church of St Mary at Moze has now been demolished and the parish combined with nearby Beaumont to become Beaumont-cum-Moze. The approximate grid reference is for Old Moze Hall.

church of St John on a different site and has not survived. Grid reference is for Loughton Hall where the old church stood. The Victoria History of the Counties of England: Essex, W.Page et al., 10 vols (London, 1903-2002) vol

13s. 4d. 7 Lincolnshire Archives Office, Lincoln Dean and Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.84v £ 0. 4s. 0d. 0.3 1 The old church of St Mary (for which the grid reference is given) stood immediately south of Great Warley Hall. This

No Full entry Lincolnshire Archives Office, Lincoln Dean and Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.83 £ 6. 13s. 4d. 10 1 The old church of St Nicholas is now disused. It stands in the grounds of Kelvedon Hall for which an approximate

1.5 1 Since the church was demolished in 1872, the grid reference is approximate for its former position. G.Cobb, The Old Churches of London (London, 1941) p.110 2 It seems clear that St Paul's London collated to the rectory here:

1 From 1300-1632 the parish church, probably dedicated to St Mary, stood to the north of the moat and opposite Old Church Farm. Grid reference is for this position. After this time, a new manor house, rectory and church were

3 1 The remains of the church are mapped 600m to the NW of its replacement, which re-used material from the old church. N.Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Norfolk 1: Norwich and North East (2nd edn B.Wilson, Harmondsworth, 1997) p.453-4

x (BC used for all other references to this MS) £ 4. 0s. 0d. 6 1 The remains of the old church, which lie 400m NW of the present church, are mapped at the grid reference given. N.Pevsner, The Buildings

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 24 April 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ct=lm&kw=old%20english%20hexateuch&sr=tx&st=100