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449 results from this resource . Displaying 161 to 180

£ 20. 0s. 0d. 30 1 The grid reference is approximate for the mounds which mark the site of the old church on the Wye flats 400m north of the present parish church. The site of St Peter's is shown

c.1300; both were rebuilt a little inland, and the splendid late Norman doorway is assumed to have come from the old buried church. The grid reference given is for the current church. N.Pevsner, The Buildings of Wales: Glamorgan (revised J.Newman,

in decimis in Esthattele (BC 296) British Library, Cotton Tiberius C x p.296 £ 0. 2s. 0d. 0.15 1 The old church here is derelict, and the grid reference given is for its site which is marked on the current

the moiety Lincolnshire Archives Office, Lincoln Dean and Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.178v £ 1. 0s. 0d. 1.5 1 Of the old church of St Mary, only the west wall and part of the north wall stand. The grid reference is

not taxable. PRO, E179/68/56 (Shropshire archdeaconry, spiritualities, for moiety) p.1 (exempted because too low in value) 1 The grid reference given is approximate for the ruins of the old church of St Lawrence which lie NE of the new church.

Record Office (exempted because too low in value) Excluded from the moiety 1 The grid reference given is for the old church of Deuxhill, whose ruins remain to the NW of Hall Farm. PevsnerShropshire p.120 2 The grid reference is

RegPeterborough 300-40) p.134v (exempted because too low in value) 1 The parish was formerly known as Segenhoe or Ridgmont-cum-Segenhoe. The old church of Segenhoe stands apart on the south side of the village. It is now used as a mortuary

farm to the rector of 'Haseley', apparently Great Haseley, Oxon (LI.OX.CU.21). St Gregory's priory was, as Winchelsey explained, assigned of old to the archbishop's treasury and was peculiarly under the archbishop's control, and the consequence was that the church of

Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.7 £ 1. 13s. 4d. 2.5 1 The grid reference given is for the remains of the old church of Stenigot, which is situated 1km NE of the present church. N. Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Lincolnshire

Office, Lincoln Dean and Chapter Muniments, A1/11 p.18v £ 0. 13s. 4d. 1 1 Grid reference given is for the old church of All Saints which has been preserved as a mortuary chapel. N.Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Oxfordshire (by

new threshold) 1 The church was lost in the fire of 1666 and not rebuilt. The tower remaining from the old church of St Olave Jewry overlooks the site of St Martin's church, now a secluded railed garden made from

Report 51, Dereham, 1991) p.51 2 The remains of the chapel are mapped at the grid reference given. Like the old church, the chapel was abandoned when a new church was built in the centre of the village. N.Pevsner, The

Cotton Tiberius C x (BC used for all other references to this MS) £ 4. 0s. 0d. 6 1 The old church was demolished c. 1890 and some of the material was used to build a new church elsewhere. The

p.116v £ 6. 13s. 4d. 10 1 The grid reference given is for the remains of the tower of the old church of All Saints, mapped on the OS map but unnamed. N.Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Cambridgeshire & the

(Suffolk & Sudbury archdeaconries) p.3 £ 10. 13s. 4d. 16 1 The grid reference is to the remains of the old church of St Margaret which caught fire in 1865. A new church was built on a different site in

x p.27v £ 2. 13s. 4d. 4 1 The present chapel of Pusey is not on the site of the old building, which stood near Pusey House. The Victoria History of the Counties of England: Berkshire, ed. P.H.Ditchfield & W.Page

of All Saints was built on a new site to serve both parishes. The grid reference given is for the old church of All Saints. Churches of South-East Wiltshire (RCHM, 1987) p.119 2 The taxatio text indicates appropriation to Vaux

Lawn. It was replaced in 1852 by Christ Church, 500m to the NW, although some of the fabric of the old church still remains. The Victoria History of the Counties of England: Wiltshire, ed. R.B.Pugh & E.Crittall et al., 17

13s. 4d. 22 1 The exact site of the original church cannot be determined. However, it was situated with the old manor house at the foot of the Downs, and then swept away in the reign of Henry VIII to

in 1240, and it was clearly closely linked with - if not a dependent chapel of - the church of Old Woking (WN.SU.GU.37): see VCHSurrey3 365. The Victoria History of the Counties of England: Surrey, ed. H.E.Malden, 4 vols &

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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=160