Survey of London (1633): Borough of Southwark and Bridge Ward Without
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442
BRIDGE WARD
WITHOVT,
The 26. in number, consisting of the Borough of
Southwarke, in the County of Surrey.
WITHOVT,
The 26. in number, consisting of the Borough of
Southwarke, in the County of Surrey.
HAving treated of Wards
in London, on the North
side the Thames (in num
ber five and twenty) I
am now to crosse over
the said River, into the
Borough of Southwarke, which is also
a Ward of London without the walls,
on the South side thereof, as is Portsoken
on the East, and Faringdon extra on the
West.
in London, on the North
side the Thames (in num
ber five and twenty) I
am now to crosse over
the said River, into the
Borough of Southwarke, which is also
a Ward of London without the walls,
on the South side thereof, as is Portsoken
on the East, and Faringdon extra on the
West.
But before I come to the particular
description of this Ward, it will not be
impertinent to declare,
what meanes the Borough of Southwark
now called Bridge Ward without, was
made one of the six and twenty Wards,
belonging to the City of London; which
was in this manner:
description of this Ward, it will not be
impertinent to declare,
Ex
Humfr. Dyson.
when, and by what meanes the Borough of Southwark
now called Bridge Ward without, was
made one of the six and twenty Wards,
belonging to the City of London; which
was in this manner:
After the dissolution of the Monaste
ries, Abbeys, Priories, and other religi
ous Houses, in this Realme of England:
The Maior, Communalty, and Citi
zens of this City of London taking into
their considerations, how commodious
and convenient it would be unto the Ci
ty, to have the Borough of Southwarke
annexed thereunto, and that the same
Borough was in the Kings hands whol
ly; they became humble suiters unto
King Henry eighth, and to the Lords of
his Highnesse Privie Councell, for the
obtaining of the same. Which suit not
being granted unto them; after the de
cease of King Henry the eighth, they re
newed their suit unto his Sonne and
next successor, King Edward the sixth,
and to the Lords of his Privie Councell
for the obtaining of the same Borough.
ries, Abbeys, Priories, and other religi
ous Houses, in this Realme of England:
The Maior, Communalty, and Citi
zens of this City of London taking into
their considerations, how commodious
and convenient it would be unto the Ci
ty, to have the Borough of Southwarke
annexed thereunto, and that the same
Borough was in the Kings hands whol
ly; they became humble suiters unto
King Henry eighth, and to the Lords of
his Highnesse Privie Councell, for the
obtaining of the same. Which suit not
being granted unto them; after the de
cease of King Henry the eighth, they re
newed their suit unto his Sonne and
next successor, King Edward the sixth,
and to the Lords of his Privie Councell
for the obtaining of the same Borough.
At the length, after long suit, and
much labour, it pleased King Edward
the sixth, by his Letters Patents, sealed
with the great Seale of England, bearing
date at Westminster the three and twen
tieth day April, in the fourth yeere of
his reigne, as well in consideration of
the summe of sixe hundred forty seven
pounds, two shillings, and a penny, of
lawfull money of England, paid to his
Highnesse use, by the Maior, Commu
nalty, and Citizens of London, as for di
vers other considerations him thereun
to moving; To give and grant unto the
said Maior and Communalty, and Ci
tizens of London, divers Messuages, lands
& Tenements, lying in or neere the said
Borough of Southwark, in the said Letters
Patents particularly expressed, which
were sometimes the Lands of Charles,
then late Duke of Suffolke, and of whom
King Henry the eighth did buy and pur
chase the same.
much labour, it pleased King Edward
the sixth, by his Letters Patents, sealed
with the great Seale of England, bearing
date at Westminster the three and twen
tieth day April, in the fourth yeere of
his reigne, as well in consideration of
the summe of sixe hundred forty seven
pounds, two shillings, and a penny, of
lawfull money of England, paid to his
Highnesse use, by the Maior, Commu
nalty, and Citizens of London, as for di
vers other considerations him thereun
to moving; To give and grant unto the
said Maior and Communalty, and Ci
tizens of London, divers Messuages, lands
& Tenements, lying in or neere the said
Borough of Southwark, in the said Letters
Patents particularly expressed, which
were sometimes the Lands of Charles,
then late Duke of Suffolke, and of whom
King Henry the eighth did buy and pur
chase the same.
But there was excepted out of the
said Grant, and reserved unto the said
King Edward the sixth, his Heires and
successors, all that his Capitall Messu
age, or Mansion House, called South
warke Place, late of the said Duke of Suf
folke,1 and all Gardens and Land to the
same adjoyning: And all that his Parke
in Southwarke: And all that his Messu
age, and all Edifices and ground, cal
led the Antilope there.
said Grant, and reserved unto the said
King Edward the sixth, his Heires and
successors, all that his Capitall Messu
age, or Mansion House, called South
warke Place, late of the said Duke of Suf
folke,1 and all Gardens and Land to the
same adjoyning: And all that his Parke
in Southwarke: And all that his Messu
age, and all Edifices and ground, cal
led the Antilope there.
And the said King Edward the sixth
did by his said Letters Patents give and
grant to the said Maior, Communalty,
and Citizens, and their successors, all
that his Lordship and Mannor of South
warke, with all and singular the Rights,
Members, and appurtenances thereof,
in the said County of Surrey, then late
belonging to the late Monastery of Ber
mondsey in the same County: And al
so all that his Mannor and Borough of
Southwarke, with all and singular the
Rights, Members, and appurtenances
thereof, in the said County of Surrey,
then late parcell of the Possessions of the
Archbishop and Archbishoprickes of
Canturbury, Together with divers yeer
ly rents, issuing out of divers Messuages
or Tenements, in the said Letters Pa
tents particularly expressed.
did by his said Letters Patents give and
grant to the said Maior, Communalty,
and Citizens, and their successors, all
that his Lordship and Mannor of South
warke, with all and singular the Rights,
Members, and appurtenances thereof,
in the said County of Surrey, then late
belonging to the late Monastery of Ber
mondsey,
443
and
Bridge Ward without.
mondsey in the same County: And al
so all that his Mannor and Borough of
Southwarke, with all and singular the
Rights, Members, and appurtenances
thereof, in the said County of Surrey,
then late parcell of the Possessions of the
Archbishop and Archbishoprickes of
Canturbury, Together with divers yeer
ly rents, issuing out of divers Messuages
or Tenements, in the said Letters Pa
tents particularly expressed.
And also the said King Edward the
sixth, by his said Letters Patents, as
well for the above-mentioned conside
rations, as also for the summe of five
hundred Markes, paid to his use, by the
said Maior, Communalty, and Citizens
of the said City of London, did give and
grant to the said Maior, Communalty,
and Citizens of the said City, and to
their successors, in and through the
whole Borough and Towne of South
warke, and in and through the whole
Parish of Saint Saviors, Saint Olaves,
and Saint George in Southwarke, and in
and through the whole Parish, then late
called Saint Thomas Hospitall, and then
called the Kings Hospitall in Southwark,
and elsewhere whersoever, in the Town
and Borough of Southwarke, and in Ken
tish street and Blackman street, in the Pa
rish of Newington, All Wayffes, Estrays,
Treasure-trove, Goods and Chattels of
Traytors, Felons, Fugitives, Out-lawes,
Condemned persons, Convict persons,
and Felons defamed, and of such as bee
put in Exigent of Outlawry, Felons of
themselves, and Deodands, and of such
as refuse the Lawes of the Land: And
all Goods disclaimed, found, or being
within the said Borough, Towne, Pari
shes and Precincts: And all mannor of
Escheats and Forfeitures.
sixth, by his said Letters Patents, as
well for the above-mentioned conside
rations, as also for the summe of five
hundred Markes, paid to his use, by the
said Maior, Communalty, and Citizens
of the said City of London, did give and
grant to the said Maior, Communalty,
and Citizens of the said City, and to
their successors, in and through the
whole Borough and Towne of South
warke, and in and through the whole
Parish of Saint Saviors, Saint Olaves,
and Saint George in Southwarke, and in
and through the whole Parish, then late
called Saint Thomas Hospitall, and then
called the Kings Hospitall in Southwark,
and elsewhere whersoever, in the Town
and Borough of Southwarke, and in Ken
tish street and Blackman street, in the Pa
rish of Newington, All Wayffes, Estrays,
Treasure-trove, Goods and Chattels of
Traytors, Felons, Fugitives, Out-lawes,
Condemned persons, Convict persons,
and Felons defamed, and of such as bee
put in Exigent of Outlawry, Felons of
themselves, and Deodands, and of such
as refuse the Lawes of the Land: And
all Goods disclaimed, found, or being
within the said Borough, Towne, Pari
shes and Precincts: And all mannor of
Escheats and Forfeitures.
And that the said Maior, Commu
nalty, and Citizens, by themselves, or
their Deputy, or Officer or Officers,
should have in the Towne, Borough,
Parishes, and Precincts aforesaid, the
Taste and Assize of Bread, Wine, Ale,
and Beere, and of all other Victuals, and
things whatsoever, sold in the same
Towne. And whatsoever should or
might appertaine to the Office of the
Clarke of the Market of his Majesties
House-hold. And the correction and
punishment of all persons there selling
Bread, Wine, Beere, and Ale, and o
ther Victuals; and of others there inha
biting, or using any Arts whatsoever.
And all Forfeitures, Fines, and Amerci
aments, to be forfeited to the King, or
his Heires or Successors. And that they
should have the execution of the Kings
Writs, and of all other Writs, Com
mandements, Precepts, Extracts, and
Warrants, with the returnes thereof, by
such their Minister or Deputy as they
should chuse.
nalty, and Citizens, by themselves, or
their Deputy, or Officer or Officers,
should have in the Towne, Borough,
Parishes, and Precincts aforesaid, the
Taste and Assize of Bread, Wine, Ale,
and Beere, and of all other Victuals, and
things whatsoever, sold in the same
Towne. And whatsoever should or
might appertaine to the Office of the
Clarke of the Market of his Majesties
House-hold. And the correction and
punishment of all persons there selling
Bread, Wine, Beere, and Ale, and o
ther Victuals; and of others there inha
biting, or using any Arts whatsoever.
And all Forfeitures, Fines, and Amerci
aments, to be forfeited to the King, or
his Heires or Successors. And that they
should have the execution of the Kings
Writs, and of all other Writs, Com
mandements, Precepts, Extracts, and
Warrants, with the returnes thereof, by
such their Minister or Deputy as they
should chuse.
And that they should have,
keepe,
and hold there, every yeere, yeerely,
one Faire, to endure for three dayes,
viz. the seventh, eighth, and ninth daies
of September. And that during the
said three dayes, they should hold there
by their Minister or Deputy, from day
to day, from houre to houre, and from
time to time, all Actions, Plaints, and
Pleas of the Court of Pipowder, with al
Summons, Attachments, Arrests, Issues,
Fines, Redemptions, Commodities,
and other Rights whatsoever, to the
Court of Pipowder by any meanes be
longing. And also, that they should
have throughout the whole Precinct a
foresaid, View of Franke-pledge, with
all Sommons, Attachments, Arrests,
Issues, Amerciaments, Fines, Redemp
tions, Profits, Commodities, and other
things, which thereof to the King, his
Heires, or Successors, should apper
taine.
and hold there, every yeere, yeerely,
one Faire, to endure for three dayes,
viz. the seventh, eighth, and ninth daies
of September. And that during the
said three dayes, they should hold there
by their Minister or Deputy, from day
to day, from houre to houre, and from
time to time, all Actions, Plaints, and
Pleas of the Court of Pipowder, with al
Summons, Attachments, Arrests, Issues,
Fines, Redemptions, Commodities,
and other Rights whatsoever, to the
Court of Pipowder by any meanes be
longing. And also, that they should
have throughout the whole Precinct a
foresaid, View of Franke-pledge, with
all Sommons, Attachments, Arrests,
Issues, Amerciaments, Fines, Redemp
tions, Profits, Commodities, and other
things, which thereof to the King, his
Heires, or Successors, should apper
taine.
And also, that the said Maior, Com
munalty, and Citizens, and their suc
cessors, by themselves, or by their Offi
cers or Deputies, may take and arrest in
the Borough, Towne, Parish, and Pre
cincts aforesaid, all Theeves, Felons,
and other Malefactors, and may carry
them to the Gaole of Newgate. And
that the said Maior, Communalty, and
Citizens, and their successors, should
for ever have in the said Borough, Town
parishes, and Precincts, all such Liber
ties, priviledges, Franchises, Dischar
ges, and Customes, which the King or
his Heires should have had, if the said
Borough had remained in the Kings
hands.
munalty, and Citizens, and their suc
cessors, by themselves, or by their Offi
cers or Deputies, may take and arrest in
the Borough, Towne, Parish, and Pre
cincts aforesaid, all Theeves, Felons,
and other Malefactors, and may carry
them to the Gaole of Newgate. And
that the said Maior, Communalty, and
Citizens, and their successors, should
for ever have in the said Borough, Town
parishes, and Precincts, all such Liber
ties, priviledges, Franchises, Dischar
ges, and Customes, which the King or
his Heires should have had, if the said
Borough had remained in the Kings
hands.
And also he granted to the said Ma
ior, Communalty, and Citizens of
London, and to their successors, that they
should for ever hold and keepe, all
manner of Pleas,
personall Suites, and all manner of cau
ses, Matters, Contracts, and Demands
whatsoever, happening in the Precincts
aforesaid, before the Maior and Alder
men of London, and before the Sheriffes
of London, for the time being, or any of
them, in the Guild hall and Hustings of
the said City: and the like Actions,
Bills, Plaints, Proces, Arrests, Iudge
ments, Executions, and other things
whatsoever, and the same dayes and
times, and in such like maner, as the like
Pleas happening in the said City, before
the Maior, Aldermen and Sheriffes, or
any of them, in the said Courts, or any
of them, time out of minde, have been
taken, holden, prosecuted, or executed.
And that the Serjeants at Mace, and o
ther Officers of London, using to serve
Proces, might from thenceforth, for e
ver, serve and execute all manner of Pro
ces in the said Borough, Towne, Pari
shes and Precincts, concerning such
Pleas and executions of the same, as
time out of mind hath been used in the
City of London.
ior, Communalty, and Citizens of
London, and to their successors, that they
should for ever hold and keepe, all
manner
444
manner of Pleas,
Pleas,
Actions,
Plaints,
and perso
nall Suits.
Actions, Plaints, and Actions,
Plaints,
and perso
nall Suits.
personall Suites, and all manner of cau
ses, Matters, Contracts, and Demands
whatsoever, happening in the Precincts
aforesaid, before the Maior and Alder
men of London, and before the Sheriffes
of London, for the time being, or any of
them, in the Guild hall and Hustings of
the said City: and the like Actions,
Bills, Plaints, Proces, Arrests, Iudge
ments, Executions, and other things
whatsoever, and the same dayes and
times, and in such like maner, as the like
Pleas happening in the said City, before
the Maior, Aldermen and Sheriffes, or
any of them, in the said Courts, or any
of them, time out of minde, have been
taken, holden, prosecuted, or executed.
And that the Serjeants at Mace, and o
ther Officers of London, using to serve
Proces, might from thenceforth, for e
ver, serve and execute all manner of Pro
ces in the said Borough, Towne, Pari
shes and Precincts, concerning such
Pleas and executions of the same, as
time out of mind hath been used in the
City of London.
And that the Inhabitants of the same
Borough, Parishes, and Precincts, for
Causes and Matters there growing, may
implead or bee impleaded in the said
City, in forme aforesaid, and in the said
Courts. And that if the Iuries impa
nelled, and so moved to try such Issues,
shall not appeare before the said Maior
and Aldermen, or Sheriffes, in the said
Courts in London, they shall bee amer
ced in like manner, and forfeit such Is
sues, as Iuries in London, making default
of appearance, have used to forfeit. And
that the Issues so forfeited, shall bee to
the use of the Maior, Communalty, and
Citizens of London, and their successors
for ever. And also, that the said Maior
and Communalty, and Citizens, and
their successors for ever, should have
the Cognizance of all manner of Pleas,
Plaints, and personall Actions, out of
all the Kings Courts, before the King,
or before any of his Iustices, for any
thing happening in the said Borough,
or Precincts,
Aldermen, and Sheriffs, or any of them,
in the Courts of the said City. And
that the Issues taken upon the said suits,
shall be tryed in the said Courts, before
the Maior and Aldermen and Sheriffes,
by men of the said Borough, as Issues in
London are tryed.
Borough, Parishes, and Precincts, for
Causes and Matters there growing, may
implead or bee impleaded in the said
City, in forme aforesaid, and in the said
Courts. And that if the Iuries impa
nelled, and so moved to try such Issues,
shall not appeare before the said Maior
and Aldermen, or Sheriffes, in the said
Courts in London, they shall bee amer
ced in like manner, and forfeit such Is
sues, as Iuries in London, making default
of appearance, have used to forfeit. And
that the Issues so forfeited, shall bee to
the use of the Maior, Communalty, and
Citizens of London, and their successors
for ever. And also, that the said Maior
and Communalty, and Citizens, and
their successors for ever, should have
the Cognizance of all manner of Pleas,
Plaints, and personall Actions, out of
all the Kings Courts, before the King,
or before any of his Iustices, for any
thing happening in the said Borough,
or Precincts,
Issues ta
ken upon
Suits try
ed before
the Maior
and Alder
men.
before the said Maior and ken upon
Suits try
ed before
the Maior
and Alder
men.
Aldermen, and Sheriffs, or any of them,
in the Courts of the said City. And
that the Issues taken upon the said suits,
shall be tryed in the said Courts, before
the Maior and Aldermen and Sheriffes,
by men of the said Borough, as Issues in
London are tryed.
And that the said Maior,
nalty, and Citizens, and their successors,
should for ever chuse, according to the
Law, every yeere, or as often as they
should thinke meet, two Coroners in
the said Borough: And that the said
Coroners, and either of them so chosen,
should in the Precincts aforesaid, have
and use like authority, as any Coroners
in England ought to have and execute:
and that no other of the Kings Coroners
should in any wise presume to execute
any thing belonging to the Office of a
Coroner, in the Precincts aforesaid.
Two Co
roners for
the Bo
rough.
Commuroners for
the Bo
rough.
nalty, and Citizens, and their successors,
should for ever chuse, according to the
Law, every yeere, or as often as they
should thinke meet, two Coroners in
the said Borough: And that the said
Coroners, and either of them so chosen,
should in the Precincts aforesaid, have
and use like authority, as any Coroners
in England ought to have and execute:
and that no other of the Kings Coroners
should in any wise presume to execute
any thing belonging to the Office of a
Coroner, in the Precincts aforesaid.
And that the Maior of London, for the
time being, should be Escheator in the
Precincts aforesaid, and have power to
direct Precepts to the Sheriffe of the
County of Surrey for the time being,
and to do all other things, which to the
Office of Escheator in any of the Coun
ties of England appertaineth: and that
no other Escheator shall enter there, or
intermeddle with any thing belonging
to the Office of Escheator: and that the
Maior of London, for the time being,
shall be the Kings Clarke of the Market
within the Precincts aforesaid, and may
doe all things there appertaining to the
Office of Clarke of the Market, and that
the Clarke of the Market of the Kings
Household shall not there intermeddle
with any thing.
time being, should be Escheator in the
Precincts aforesaid, and have power to
direct Precepts to the Sheriffe of the
County of Surrey for the time being,
and to do all other things, which to the
Office of Escheator in any of the Coun
ties of England appertaineth: and that
no other Escheator shall enter there, or
intermeddle with any thing belonging
to the Office of Escheator: and that the
Maior of London, for the time being,
shall be the Kings Clarke of the Market
within the Precincts aforesaid, and may
doe all things there appertaining to the
Office of Clarke of the Market, and that
the Clarke of the Market of the Kings
Household shall not there intermeddle
with any thing.
And that the said Maior, Commu
nalty, and Citizens, and their succes
sors for ever, should have, hold, use, and
enjoy, in the Precincts aforesaid, as well
all the Liberties and Franchises afore
said, as the Toll, Tallage, Picage, and
all other the said Kings Iurisdictions,
Franchises, and Priviledges, which any
Archbishop of Canturbury, Charles D.
of Suffolke, or any the M. Brother and
Sisters of the then late Hospitall of St.
Thomas in Southwarke, or any Abbot of
the then late Monastery of S. Saviors
of Bermondsey, neere Southwarke; or any
Prior or Covent of the then late Priory
of Saint Mary Overy, or any of them e
ver had, then had, or ought to have had
in the premises, in any of the places a
foresaid; or which the said King Ed
ward the sixth then lately held and en
joyed or ought to have had & enjoy, &
in as ample manner as King Henry the 8.
had and enjoyed, or ought to have had,
and enjoy the same: So that none of the
Kings Sheriffes, or any other of his Of
ficers should intermeddle in any thing
in the said Borough and Precincts a
foresaid.
nalty, and Citizens, and their succes
sors for ever, should have, hold, use, and
enjoy, in the Precincts aforesaid, as well
all the Liberties and Franchises afore
said, as the Toll, Tallage, Picage, and
all other the said Kings Iurisdictions,
Toll, Tal
lage, Pi
cage, &c.
lage, Pi
cage, &c.
Franchises, and Priviledges, which any
Archbishop of Canturbury, Charles D.
of Suffolke, or any the M. Brother and
Sisters of the then late Hospitall of St.
Thomas in Southwarke, or any Abbot of
the then late Monastery of S. Saviors
of Bermondsey, neere Southwarke; or any
Prior or Covent of the then late Priory
of Saint Mary Overy, or any of them e
ver had, then had, or ought to have had
in the premises, in any of the places a
foresaid; or which the said King Ed
ward the sixth then lately held and en
joyed
445
and
Bridge Ward without.
joyed or ought to have had & enjoy, &
in as ample manner as King Henry the 8.
had and enjoyed, or ought to have had,
and enjoy the same: So that none of the
Kings Sheriffes, or any other of his Of
ficers should intermeddle in any thing
in the said Borough and Precincts a
foresaid.
And the said King Edward the sixt
did by his said Letters Patents further
grant,
said Precincts should be within the or
dinance, governance and correction of
the Maior and Officers of London and
their Deputies, as the Citizens and In
habitants of London ought to be, by rea
son of any Charter formerly granted by
any of the said Kings Progenitors, to the
Maior, Communalty and Citizens of
London. And that the said Maior, Com
munalty and Citizens, and their Succes
sors for ever should haue, enjoy, and use
such Lawes, Iurisdictions, Liberties,
Franchises and Priviledges whatsoever
in the Borough, and Precincts aforesaid,
as fully and freely as they then used, or
ought to have used and enjoyed the
same in London, by vertue of any grant
to them made by any of the said Kings
Progenitors.
did by his said Letters Patents further
grant,
The inha
bitants to
be within
the gover
nance and
correcti
on of the
Maior, &c.
that all the Inhabitants of the bitants to
be within
the gover
nance and
correcti
on of the
Maior, &c.
said Precincts should be within the or
dinance, governance and correction of
the Maior and Officers of London and
their Deputies, as the Citizens and In
habitants of London ought to be, by rea
son of any Charter formerly granted by
any of the said Kings Progenitors, to the
Maior, Communalty and Citizens of
London. And that the said Maior, Com
munalty and Citizens, and their Succes
sors for ever should haue, enjoy, and use
such Lawes, Iurisdictions, Liberties,
Franchises and Priviledges whatsoever
in the Borough, and Precincts aforesaid,
as fully and freely as they then used, or
ought to have used and enjoyed the
same in London, by vertue of any grant
to them made by any of the said Kings
Progenitors.
And that the Maior of London for the
time being, and the Recorder of London
for the time being, after they have borne
the Office of Maioraltie of London,
should be Iustices of the Kings Peace in
Southwarke, and the Precincts aforesaid,
so long as they should stand Aldermen
of the said Citty, and should in the said
Borough and Precincts aforesaid doe
and execute all things which other Iu
stices of the Peace might doe in the
County of Surrey, according to the
Lawes and Statutes of England.
time being, and the Recorder of London
for the time being, after they have borne
the Office of Maioraltie of London,
should be Iustices of the Kings Peace in
Southwarke, and the Precincts aforesaid,
so long as they should stand Aldermen
of the said Citty, and should in the said
Borough and Precincts aforesaid doe
and execute all things which other Iu
stices of the Peace might doe in the
County of Surrey, according to the
Lawes and Statutes of England.
And also, that the said Maior, Com
munaltie & Citizens, & their Successors
should have every weeke, on Munday,
Wednesday, Friday and Satterday in
the said Borough and Towne of South
warke, one Market or Markets there to
bee kept, and all things to Markets ap
pertaining: All which Mannor, Lands,
Tenements, Rents, Liberties, Priviled
ges, Franchises, and other the premises
granted by the said Letters Patents, did
extend to the cleere yeerely value of 35.
li. 14. s. 4. d. And were granted to bee
holden to the said Maior, Commu
nalty and Citizens of London, and
their Successors for ever, of the said
King, his Heires and Successors, as
of his Mannor of East Greenwitch, in
the County of Kent, by Fealty onely
in Free Socage (and not in Capite) for
all manner of services and demands
whatsoever.
munaltie & Citizens, & their Successors
should have every weeke, on Munday,
Wednesday, Friday and Satterday in
the said Borough and Towne of South
warke, one Market or Markets there to
bee kept, and all things to Markets ap
pertaining: All which Mannor, Lands,
Tenements, Rents, Liberties, Priviled
ges, Franchises, and other the premises
granted by the said Letters Patents, did
extend to the cleere yeerely value of 35.
li. 14. s. 4. d. And were granted to bee
holden to the said Maior, Commu
nalty and Citizens of London, and
their Successors for ever, of the said
King, his Heires and Successors, as
of his Mannor of East Greenwitch, in
the County of Kent, by Fealty onely
in Free Socage (and not in Capite) for
all manner of services and demands
whatsoever.
But there was excepted and reserved
out of the said Grant,
King Edward the sixt, his Heires and Succes
sors, all his Rights, Iurisdictions, Li
berties & Franchises whatsoever, with
in the Walke, Circuit, and Precinct
of his Capitall Messuage, Gardens, and
Parke in Southwarke, and in all Gar
dens, Curtilages, and Lands, to the
said Mansion House,2 Gardens, and
Parke belonging.
out of the said Grant,
Excepti
ons and
reservati
ons to the
King.
to the said ons and
reservati
ons to the
King.
King Edward the sixt, his Heires and Succes
sors, all his Rights, Iurisdictions, Li
berties & Franchises whatsoever, with
in the Walke, Circuit, and Precinct
of his Capitall Messuage, Gardens, and
Parke in Southwarke, and in all Gar
dens, Curtilages, and Lands, to the
said Mansion House,2 Gardens, and
Parke belonging.
Also, there was excepted and reser
ved out of the said Graunt, the House,
Messuage, or Lodging there, called the
Kings Bench, and the GardThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on evidence internal to this text (context, etc.). (MR)e3ns to the
same belonging, so long as it should be
used as a Prison for Prisoners, as it was
then used.
ved out of the said Graunt, the House,
Messuage, or Lodging there, called the
Kings Bench, and the GardThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on evidence internal to this text (context, etc.). (MR)e3ns to the
same belonging, so long as it should be
used as a Prison for Prisoners, as it was
then used.
Also, there was excepted and reser
ved out of the said Graunt, the House,
Messuage, or Lodging there, called
the Marshalsey, and the Gardens to
the same belonging, so long as it should
be used as a Prison for Prisoners, as it
was then used.
ved out of the said Graunt, the House,
Messuage, or Lodging there, called
the Marshalsey, and the Gardens to
the same belonging, so long as it should
be used as a Prison for Prisoners, as it
was then used.
Also it was provided, that the said
Letters Patents should not be prejudi
ciall to the Offices of the Great Master
or Steward of the Kings Household,
within the Borough and Precincts a
foresaid, to be executed while the same
Borough and Precincts should be with
in the Verge: Nor to Ioh. Gates, Knight,
one of the Gentlemen of the Kings Pri
vie Chamber, concerning any Lands,
Tenements, Offices, Profits, Franchises,
or Liberties to him granted during his
life, by the said King Edward the
sixth, or by his Father King Henry the
eight.
Letters Patents should not be prejudi
ciall to the Offices of the Great Master
or Steward of the Kings Household,
within the Borough and Precincts a
foresaid, to be executed while the same
Borough and Precincts should be with
in the Verge: Nor to Ioh. Gates, Knight,
one of the Gentlemen of the Kings Pri
vie Chamber, concerning any Lands,
Tenements, Offices, Profits, Franchises,
or Liberties to him granted during his
life, by the said King Edward the
sixth, or by his Father King Henry the
eight.
About the space of a moneth after
the said Borough of Southwarke was so
granted by King Edward the sixt to
the Maior, Communaltie, and Citizens
of London, and that they by force of the
said Letters Patents stood charged with
the Ordering, Survev, and Government
of the same Borough, and of al the Kings
subjects inhabiting therein,
ring thither: At a Court holden before
Sir Rowland Hill, Knight, then Lord
Maior of London, and the Aldermen of
the same Citie, in the Guild-Hall of
London, on Tuesday the eight and twen
tieth of May, in the said fourth yeere of
the raigne of King Edward the sixth, the
said Towne or Borough was named and
called the Ward of Bridge Ward with
out: And Sir Iohn Ayliffe, Knight, Ci
tizen and Barber-Surgeon of London,
was then also named, elected, and cho
sen by the same Court, to be Alder
man of the same Ward, albeit that be
fore that time there neyther was any
such Ward nor Alderman.
the said Borough of Southwarke was so
granted by King Edward the sixt to
the Maior, Communaltie, and Citizens
of London, and that they by force of the
said Letters Patents stood charged with
the Ordering, Survev, and Government
Qq
of
446
of the same Borough, and of al the Kings
subjects inhabiting therein,
The orde
ring, sur
uey, and
gouern
ment of
the Bo
rough, &c.
and repayring, sur
uey, and
gouern
ment of
the Bo
rough, &c.
ring thither: At a Court holden before
Sir Rowland Hill, Knight, then Lord
Maior of London, and the Aldermen of
the same Citie, in the Guild-Hall of
London, on Tuesday the eight and twen
tieth of May, in the said fourth yeere of
the raigne of King Edward the sixth, the
said Towne or Borough was named and
called the Ward of Bridge Ward with
out: And Sir Iohn Ayliffe, Knight, Ci
tizen and Barber-Surgeon of London,
was then also named, elected, and cho
sen by the same Court, to be Alder
man of the same Ward, albeit that be
fore that time there neyther was any
such Ward nor Alderman.
And it was then also ordered, That
the Said Sir Iohn Ayliffe, by that name
of Alderman of Bridge Ward without,
and all other that from thenceforth
should be Alderman of the same Ward,
should have the Rule, Survey, and Go
vernment, not onely of the Inhabitants
of the said Towne & Borough of South
warke, and other the Kings people re
payring to the same, but also of all the
Liberties, Franchises, and Priviledges
within the said Towne and Borough,
then formerly granted by the King and
his Progenitors to the said Maior,
Communaltie, and Citizens of Lon
don. And for the due execution of
which Office, the said Sir Iohn Ayliffe
was then presently sworne and admit
ted.
the Said Sir Iohn Ayliffe, by that name
of Alderman of Bridge Ward without,
and all other that from thenceforth
should be Alderman of the same Ward,
should have the Rule, Survey, and Go
vernment, not onely of the Inhabitants
of the said Towne & Borough of South
warke, and other the Kings people re
payring to the same, but also of all the
Liberties, Franchises, and Priviledges
within the said Towne and Borough,
then formerly granted by the King and
his Progenitors to the said Maior,
Communaltie, and Citizens of Lon
don. And for the due execution of
which Office, the said Sir Iohn Ayliffe
was then presently sworne and admit
ted.
Not long after, videlicet, at a Court
of Common Councell, holden in the
Guild-Hall of London, on the laſt day of
Iuly, in the said fourth yeere of the
raigne of King Edward the sixth, and in
the time of the Maioraltie of the said
Sir Rowland Hill, it was enacted, That
besides the then ancient accustomed
number of five and twentie Aldermen,
there should be one Alderman more
elected, to have the Rule, Charge, and
Governance of the said Borough and
Towne. And that foure discreet persons,
or more, being Freemen of London, and
dwelling within the said Cittie, or the
Borough of Southwarke, or in other the
Liberties of the said Citie, should from
thenceforth, as often as the case should
require, be from time to time nomi
nated, appointed, and chosen by the In
habitants of the said Borough for the
time being, before the Lord Maior of
London for the time being, sitting in the
said Borough for that purpose, in such
sort and order, as the Aldermen of Lon
don were in those dayes commonly ele
cted.
of Common Councell, holden in the
Guild-Hall of London, on the laſt day of
Iuly, in the said fourth yeere of the
raigne of King Edward the sixth, and in
the time of the Maioraltie of the said
Sir Rowland Hill, it was enacted, That
besides the then ancient accustomed
number of five and twentie Aldermen,
there should be one Alderman more
elected, to have the Rule, Charge, and
Governance of the said Borough and
Towne. And that foure discreet persons,
or more, being Freemen of London, and
dwelling within the said Cittie, or the
Borough of Southwarke, or in other the
Liberties of the said Citie, should from
thenceforth, as often as the case should
require, be from time to time nomi
nated, appointed, and chosen by the In
habitants of the said Borough for the
time being, before the Lord Maior of
London for the time being, sitting in the
said Borough for that purpose, in such
sort and order, as the Aldermen of Lon
don were in those dayes commonly ele
cted.
And that the said Lord Maior for the
time being should (at the next Court of
Aldermen to be holden at the Guild-Hall
of the said Citie, next after such
election) present the names and sur
names of all such persons as so should
be named before him, and put in the
said election.
Maior & Aldermen for the time being,
should of those foure persons, or mo, so
presented, elect and chuse one, by way
of Scrutinie, to be an Alderman of the
said Citie, and to have the peculiar Or
dering, Rule and Governance of the said
Borough and Towne of Southwarke, and
of the Inhabitants thereof, and of all o
ther the Kings liege people, repayring
to the same.
time being should (at the next Court of
Aldermen to be holden at the Guild-Hall
of the said Citie, next after such
election) present the names and sur
names of all such persons as so should
be named before him, and put in the
said election.
Election
of an Al
derman by
Scrutiaie.
And that the said Lord of an Al
derman by
Scrutiaie.
Maior & Aldermen for the time being,
should of those foure persons, or mo, so
presented, elect and chuse one, by way
of Scrutinie, to be an Alderman of the
said Citie, and to have the peculiar Or
dering, Rule and Governance of the said
Borough and Towne of Southwarke, and
of the Inhabitants thereof, and of all o
ther the Kings liege people, repayring
to the same.
And that the said Alderman so espe
cially elect and chosen, and from time
to time, as the cause should require
thenceforth, to be elect and chosen for
the Survey and Government of the said
Borough, and the Inhabitants and other
remayning in and to the same, should
alwayes be named and called the Alder
man of Bridge Ward without, and by none
other Name, for or concerning that
Office, or Roome, and should have the
Cure and Charge of the good Ordering
and Government of the said Borough
and Towne of Southwarke, and of the
Inhabitants and People of and in the
same, and of none other Place within
the said Citie, by reason or colour of the
said Roome, as long as he should re
maine and stand Alderman of the said
Ward, but as the residue of the said Al
dermen of the said Citie be commonly
charged: And therein to doe and use
himselfe, as other Aldermen within the
Liberties of the said Citie were accu
stomed and used to doe, in as much as
the Lawes and Statutes of this Realme
would permit and suffer.
cially elect and chosen, and from time
to time, as the cause should require
thenceforth, to be elect and chosen for
the Survey and Government of the said
Borough, and the Inhabitants and other
remayning in and to the same, should
alwayes be named and called the Alder
man of Bridge Ward without, and by none
other Name, for or concerning that
Office, or Roome, and should have the
Cure and Charge of the good Ordering
and Government of the said Borough
and Towne of Southwarke, and of the
Inhabitants and People of and in the
same, and of none other Place within
the said Citie, by reason or colour of the
said Roome, as long as he should re
maine and stand Alderman of the said
Ward, but as the residue of the said Al
dermen of the said Citie be commonly
charged: And therein to doe and use
himselfe, as other Aldermen within the
Liberties of the said Citie were accu
stomed and used to doe, in as much as
the Lawes and Statutes of this Realme
would permit and suffer.
Yet neverthelesse it was prouided, &
by the said Cōmon Councell further or
dained and enacted, That the said Sir
derman of the said Ward: And that as
well the same Sir Iohn Ayliffe, as also all
and every person and persons, that
thenceforth should fortune to be Alder
man of the same Ward, should have
and enjoy like prerogative, liberty, and
benefit, to change and remove from the
same Ward,
his and their free will and pleasure any
such other Ward or Wards within the
said City, as it should fortune him, or
them, or any of them, to be thenceforth
duely elect and chosen unto by the In
habitants of the same other VVard, or
VVards, or any of them in like manner
and forme, as the other Aldermen of
the said City lawfully might, and com
monly use to doe: Any thing in the said
recited Act to the contrary in any wise
notwithstanding.
by the said Cōmon Councell further or
dained and enacted, That the said Sir
Iohn
447
and
Bridge Ward without.
Iohn
Ayliffe, Knight, should then be Alderman of the said Ward: And that as
well the same Sir Iohn Ayliffe, as also all
and every person and persons, that
thenceforth should fortune to be Alder
man of the same Ward, should have
and enjoy like prerogative, liberty, and
benefit, to change and remove from the
same Ward,
The Al
derman to
change
from that
Ward, as
occasion
served.
and to accept and take at derman to
change
from that
Ward, as
occasion
served.
his and their free will and pleasure any
such other Ward or Wards within the
said City, as it should fortune him, or
them, or any of them, to be thenceforth
duely elect and chosen unto by the In
habitants of the same other VVard, or
VVards, or any of them in like manner
and forme, as the other Aldermen of
the said City lawfully might, and com
monly use to doe: Any thing in the said
recited Act to the contrary in any wise
notwithstanding.
Neverthelesse, at a Court of Alder
men holden on Tuesday, the ſecond of
September, in the said fourth yeere of
the reigne of king Edward the sixth, and
in the time of the Maioralty of the said
Sir Rowland Hill, it was ordered, That
the Aldermen of Bridge Ward without,
for the time being, should stand and re
maine Alderman of the same VVard
three whole yeeres next after his electi
on, before hee should bee permitted to
bee removed to the governance of any
other VVard: Notwithstanding any
former Law, Vsage, or Custome.
men holden on Tuesday, the ſecond of
September, in the said fourth yeere of
the reigne of king Edward the sixth, and
in the time of the Maioralty of the said
Sir Rowland Hill, it was ordered, That
the Aldermen of Bridge Ward without,
for the time being, should stand and re
maine Alderman of the same VVard
three whole yeeres next after his electi
on, before hee should bee permitted to
bee removed to the governance of any
other VVard: Notwithstanding any
former Law, Vsage, or Custome.
But afterwards it seemeth, upon bet
ter advice, that another order should be
taken in the election of the Alderman
of the same Ward: For at a Common
Councell holden in the Guild-Hall in
London, on the 16. day of Iune, in the
fourth and fifth yeeres of King Philip
and Queene Mary,and in the time of
the Maioralty of Sir Thomas Curtis,
Knight, the said former Act, made on
the laſt day of Iuly, in the fourth yeere
of King Edward the sixth, for so much
thereof as did concerne the forme and
order of the election of the Alderman
of the said VVard of Bridge Ward with
out,
was enacted, That from thenceforth
the Alderman of the same Ward should
alwaies, at the time of vacation, or lack
of an Alderman thereof, be elected and
chosen by the Lord Maior and Alder
men of London, for the time being, at a
full Court of Aldermen, by them to be
holden in the Inner Chamber of the
Guild-Hall of the same City in this
manner, viz. That the Lord Maior and
Aldermen should at their said full
Court, amongst themselves, nominate
foure discreet and meet Citizens, being
Freemen of London, either resiant with
in the said Borough, or in London, or the
Liberties thereof, to be put in election
of Alderman of that Ward. And of the
said foure persons so nominated, the
said Lord Maior and Aldermen should
by Scrutiny, according to their accusto
med manner, elect one to bee Alder
man of the same VVard: VVhich Al
derman, so by them elected and sworne,
should use and behave himselfe in all
things, as by the residue of the former
Act of Common Councell, made the
laſt day of Iuly, in the fourth yeere of
King Edward the sixth was ordained
and appointed.
ter advice, that another order should be
taken in the election of the Alderman
of the same Ward: For at a Common
Councell holden in the Guild-Hall in
London, on the 16. day of Iune, in the
fourth and fifth yeeres of King Philip
and Queene Mary,and in the time of
the Maioralty of Sir Thomas Curtis,
Knight, the said former Act, made on
the laſt day of Iuly, in the fourth yeere
of King Edward the sixth, for so much
thereof as did concerne the forme and
order of the election of the Alderman
of the said VVard of Bridge Ward with
out,
4.
Another
order for
electing
the Alder
man of
Bridge
Ward with
out, in the
time of
K. Philip
& Queen
Mary.
was utterly
repealed. And then it Another
order for
electing
the Alder
man of
Bridge
Ward with
out, in the
time of
K. Philip
& Queen
Mary.
was enacted, That from thenceforth
the Alderman of the same Ward should
alwaies, at the time of vacation, or lack
of an Alderman thereof, be elected and
chosen by the Lord Maior and Alder
men of London, for the time being, at a
full Court of Aldermen, by them to be
holden in the Inner Chamber of the
Guild-Hall of the same City in this
manner, viz. That the Lord Maior and
Aldermen should at their said full
Court, amongst themselves, nominate
foure discreet and meet Citizens, being
Freemen of London, either resiant with
in the said Borough, or in London, or the
Liberties thereof, to be put in election
of Alderman of that Ward. And of the
said foure persons so nominated, the
said Lord Maior and Aldermen should
by Scrutiny, according to their accusto
med manner, elect one to bee Alder
man of the same VVard: VVhich Al
derman, so by them elected and sworne,
should use and behave himselfe in all
things, as by the residue of the former
Act of Common Councell, made the
laſt day of Iuly, in the fourth yeere of
King Edward the sixth was ordained
and appointed.
Thus having declared, by what means
and at what time the said Borough of
Southwarke was made and named one
of the sixe and twenty VVards, now
belonging to the City of London; I in
tend to proceed to the description of
the severall particular places of the
same VVard, and likewise of such Mo
numents of Antiquity, as are to bee
found therein.
and at what time the said Borough of
Southwarke was made and named one
of the sixe and twenty VVards, now
belonging to the City of London; I in
tend to proceed to the description of
the severall particular places of the
same VVard, and likewise of such Mo
numents of Antiquity, as are to bee
found therein.
This Borough being in the County
of Surrey, consisteth of divers streetes,
waies, and winding lanes, all full of
buildings inhabited: and first, to begin
at the West part thereof, over-against
the West Suburbe of the City.
of Surrey, consisteth of divers streetes,
waies, and winding lanes, all full of
buildings inhabited: and first, to begin
at the West part thereof, over-against
the West Suburbe of the City.
On the banke of the River Thames,
there is now a continuall building of
Tenements, about halfe a mile in length
to the Bridge.4
there is now a continuall building of
Tenements, about halfe a mile in length
to the Bridge.4
Then South a continuall street called
Long Southwarke, builded on both sides
with divers Lanes and Allies up to St.
Georges Church, and beyond it thorow
Blackman street, towards Newtowne (or
Newington) the liberties of which Bo
rough extend almost to the Parish
Church of Newtowne aforesaid, distant
one mile from London bridge, and also
Southwest a continuall building, almost
to Lambith, more than one mile from
the said Bridge.
Long Southwarke, builded on both sides
with divers Lanes and Allies up to St.
Georges Church, and beyond it thorow
Blackman street, towards Newtowne (or
Newington) the liberties of which Bo
rough extend almost to the Parish
Church of Newtowne aforesaid, distant
one mile from London bridge, and also
Southwest a continuall building, almost
to Lambith, more than one mile from
the said Bridge.
Qq2
Then
448
Then from the Bridge along by the
Thames Eastward, is S. Olaves street, ha
ving continuall building on both the
sides, with lanes and Alleyes up to Bat
tle bridge, to Horse-downe, and towards
Rother-hith: also some good halfe mile
in length from London bridge.
So that I account the whole continu
all buildings on the Banke of the said
River, from the West towards the East,
to be more than a large mile in length.
all buildings on the Banke of the said
River, from the West towards the East,
to be more than a large mile in length.
Then have yee from the entring to
wards the said Horsedowne, one other
continuall street, called Barmondes eye
street, which stretcheth South, likewise
furnished with buildings on both sides,
almost halfe a mile in length, up to the
late dissolved Monastery of S. Saviour,
called Bermondsey.5
wards the said Horsedowne, one other
continuall street, called Barmondes eye
street, which stretcheth South, likewise
furnished with buildings on both sides,
almost halfe a mile in length, up to the
late dissolved Monastery of S. Saviour,
called Bermondsey.5
And from thence is one long lane (so
called of the length) turning West to
Saint Georges Church afore-named.
Out of the which lane mentioned Long
lane, breaketh one other street towards
the South and by East, and this is called
Kentish street, for that it is the way lea
ding into that Country: and so have
you the bounds of this Borough.
called of the length) turning West to
Saint Georges Church afore-named.
Out of the which lane mentioned Long
lane, breaketh one other street towards
the South and by East, and this is called
Kentish street, for that it is the way lea
ding into that Country: and so have
you the bounds of this Borough.
The Antiquities most notable in this
Borough are these: first, for Ecclesiasti
call, there was Bermondsey, an Abbey of
blacke Monkes, Saint Mary Overies, a
Priory of Canons Regular, Saint Thomas
a Colledge or Hospitall for the poore,
and the Loke, a Lazar-house in Kent
street. Parish Churches there have been
sixe, whereof five doe remaine, (viz.)
Saint Mary Magdalen, in the Priory of
Saint Mary Overy: now the same Saint
Mary Overy is the Parish Church for
the said Mary Magdalen, and for Saint
Margaret on the Hill, and is called St.
Saviour.
Borough are these: first, for Ecclesiasti
call, there was Bermondsey, an Abbey of
blacke Monkes, Saint Mary Overies, a
Priory of Canons Regular, Saint Thomas
a Colledge or Hospitall for the poore,
and the Loke, a Lazar-house in Kent
street. Parish Churches there have been
sixe, whereof five doe remaine, (viz.)
Saint Mary Magdalen, in the Priory of
Saint Mary Overy: now the same Saint
Mary Overy is the Parish Church for
the said Mary Magdalen, and for Saint
Margaret on the Hill, and is called St.
Saviour.
Saint Margaret on
the Hill being put
downe, is now a Court for Iustice. S.
Thomas in the Hospitall serveth for a
Parish Church, as afore. Saint George
a Parish Church, as before it did:
So doth Saint Olave, and Saint Ma
ry Magdalen, by the Abby of Bermond
sey.
downe, is now a Court for Iustice. S.
Thomas in the Hospitall serveth for a
Parish Church, as afore. Saint George
a Parish Church, as before it did:
So doth Saint Olave, and Saint Ma
ry Magdalen, by the Abby of Bermond
sey.
There be also these five Prisons, or Gaoles.
The Clinke, on the
Banke.
The Compter, in the
late Parish Church
of S. Margaret.
of S. Margaret.
The Marshalsey.
The Kings Bench.
And the White Lion;
all in Long South
warke.
warke.
Houses most notable, be these.
The Tabard, an
Hostery, or Inne.
The Abbot of Hyde his House.
The Bridge-house.
The Abbot of Battaile his House.
The Stewes on the Banke of Thames.
And the Beare-Gardens there.
Now to returne to the West Banke:
there were two Beare-Gardens, the Old
and New, Places wherein were kept
Beares, Buls, and other Beasts, to be bay
ted: As also Mastives, in severall kenels,
nourished to baite them. These Beares,
and other Beasts are there baited in
plots of ground, scaffolded about, for
the beholders to stand safe.
The Beare
Gardens
Gardens
there were two Beare-Gardens, the Old
and New, Places wherein were kept
Beares, Buls, and other Beasts, to be bay
ted: As also Mastives, in severall kenels,
nourished to baite them. These Beares,
and other Beasts are there baited in
plots of ground, scaffolded about, for
the beholders to stand safe.
Next, on this Banke,
the Bordello or Stewes, a place so called,
of certaine Stew-houses priviledged
there,
men to the like women; of the which
Priviledge I have read thus:
Liber Ma
nuscript.
was sometime nuscript.
the Bordello or Stewes, a place so called,
of certaine Stew-houses priviledged
there,
The Stewes
on the
Bank-side.
for the repaire of incontinent on the
Bank-side.
men to the like women; of the which
Priviledge I have read thus:
In a Parliament holden at Westmin
ster, the eighth of Henry the second, it
was ordained by the Commons, and confir
med by the King and Lords, That di
vers Constitutions for ever should be kept
within that Lordship, or Franchise, accor
ding to the old Customes, that had beene
there used This text is the corrected text. The original is time time (MR) time of minde: Amongst
the which, these following were some: vi
delicet.
ster, the eighth of Henry the second, it
was ordained by the Commons, and confir
med by the King and Lords, That di
vers Constitutions for ever should be kept
within that Lordship, or Franchise, accor
ding to the old Customes, that had beene
there used This text is the corrected text. The original is time time (MR) time of minde: Amongst
the which, these following were some: vi
delicet.
That no Stew-holder, or his wife, should
let or stay any single woman to goe and
come freely at all times, when they li
sted.
let or stay any single woman to goe and
come freely at all times, when they li
sted.
No Stew-holder to keepe any woman to
boord, but she to boord abroad at her plea
sure.
boord, but she to boord abroad at her plea
sure.
To take no more for the womans chamber
in the Weeke, than foureteene pence.
in the Weeke, than foureteene pence.
Not
Not to keepe any single woman in his
house on the Holy-dayes, but the Bay
liffe to see them voyded out of the Lord
ship.
house on the Holy-dayes, but the Bay
liffe to see them voyded out of the Lord
ship.
No single woman to bee kept against her
will, that would leave her sinne.
will, that would leave her sinne.
No Stew-holder receive any woman of
Religion, or any mans wife.
Religion, or any mans wife.
No single woman to take mony to lye with
any man, except she lye with him all night,
till the morrow.
any man, except she lye with him all night,
till the morrow.
No man to be drawne or enticed into any
Stew-house.
Stew-house.
The Constables, Bayliffe, and others, e
very weeke to search every Stew-house.
very weeke to search every Stew-house.
No Stew-holder to keepe any woman, that
hath the perillous infirmity of Burning; nor
to sell Bread, Ale, Flesh, Fish, Wood, Coale,
or any Victuals, &c.
hath the perillous infirmity of Burning; nor
to sell Bread, Ale, Flesh, Fish, Wood, Coale,
or any Victuals, &c.
These and many more Orders were
to bee observed, upon great paine and
punishment.
to bee observed, upon great paine and
punishment.
I have also seene divers Patents of
confirmation,
the ninetenth of Edward the third.
I finde, that in the fourth of Richard the
second, these Stew-houses belonging to
William Walworth, then Maior of London,
were farmed by Froes of Flaunders,
spoyled by Walter Tylar, and other Re
bels of Kent: notwithstanding, I finde
that ordinances for the same place, and
houses, were againe confirmed in the
reigne of Henry the sixth, and to be con
tinued as before. Also Robert Fabian
writeth, that in the yeere 1506. the one
and twentieth of Henry the seventh, the
said Stew-houses in Southwarke were
(for a season) inhabited, and the doores
closed up: but it was not long (saith he)
ere the houses there were set open a
gaine, so many as were permitted, for
(as it was said) whereas before were
eighteen houses, from thenceforth were
appointed to be used but twelve onely.
These allowed Stew-houses had signes
on their fronts, towards the Thames,
not hanged out, but painted on the wals
as a Boares head,
Gunne, the Castle, the Crane, the Car
dinals Hat, the Bell, the Swanne, &c.
I have heard ancient men of good cre
dit report, that these single women
were forbidden the rights of the
Church,
sinnefull life, and were excluded from
Christian buriall, if they were not re
conciled before their death. And ther
fore there was a plot of ground, called
the Single womens Churchyard, appointed
for them, far from the Parish Church.
confirmation,
Li. S. Mary
Eborum.
namely, one
dated 1345. Eborum.
the ninetenth of Edward the third.
English
people
disdayned
to bee
Bawds.
Also people
disdayned
to bee
Bawds.
I finde, that in the fourth of Richard the
second, these Stew-houses belonging to
William Walworth, then Maior of London,
were farmed by Froes of Flaunders,
Froes of
Flaunders
were wo
men for
that pur
pose.
and Flaunders
were wo
men for
that pur
pose.
spoyled by Walter Tylar, and other Re
bels of Kent: notwithstanding, I finde
that ordinances for the same place, and
houses, were againe confirmed in the
reigne of Henry the sixth, and to be con
tinued as before. Also Robert Fabian
writeth, that in the yeere 1506. the one
and twentieth of Henry the seventh, the
said Stew-houses in Southwarke were
(for a season) inhabited, and the doores
closed up: but it was not long (saith he)
ere the houses there were set open a
gaine, so many as were permitted, for
(as it was said) whereas before were
eighteen houses, from thenceforth were
appointed to be used but twelve onely.
These allowed Stew-houses had signes
on their fronts, towards the Thames,
not hanged out, but painted on the wals
as a Boares head,
Signes on
the Stew
houses.
the Crosse keyes, the the Stew
houses.
Gunne, the Castle, the Crane, the Car
dinals Hat, the Bell, the Swanne, &c.
I have heard ancient men of good cre
dit report, that these single women
were forbidden the rights of the
Church,
Single
women
forbidden
rights of
the
Church.
so long as
they continued that women
forbidden
rights of
the
Church.
sinnefull life, and were excluded from
Christian buriall, if they were not re
conciled before their death. And ther
fore there was a plot of ground, called
the Single womens Churchyard, appointed
for them, far from the Parish Church.
In the yeere of Christ, a thouſand five
hundred forty ſixe,
tieth of Henry the eighth, this row
of Stewes in Southwarke was put downe
by the Kings commandement, which
was proclaimed by sound of Trumpet
no more to be priviledged, and used as
a common Brothel; but the inhabitants
of the same to keepe good and honest
rule, as in other places of this Realm, &c.
hundred forty ſixe,
Stew-hou
ses put
downe.
the seven
and thirses put
downe.
tieth of Henry the eighth, this row
of Stewes in Southwarke was put downe
by the Kings commandement, which
was proclaimed by sound of Trumpet
no more to be priviledged, and used as
a common Brothel; but the inhabitants
of the same to keepe good and honest
rule, as in other places of this Realm, &c.
Then next is the Clinke, a Gaole or
Prison for the Trespassers in those parts;
namely, in old time for such as should
brabble, fray, or breake the peace on
the said Banke, or in the Brothell hou
ses, they were by the inhabitants there
about apprehended and committed to
this Gaole, where they were straightly
imprisoned.
Prison for the Trespassers in those parts;
namely, in old time for such as should
brabble, fray, or breake the peace on
the said Banke, or in the Brothell hou
ses, they were by the inhabitants there
about apprehended and committed to
this Gaole, where they were straightly
imprisoned.
Next is the Bishop of Winchesters
house, or lodging when he commeth to
this City: which house was first buil
ded by William Gifford, Bishop of Win
chester, about the yeere one thouſand
one hundred and seven, the seventh of
Henry the first, upon a plot of ground
pertaining to the Prior of Bermondsey,
as appeareth by a Writ directed unto
the Barons of the Exchequer, in the
yeere 1366. the one and fortieth of Ed
ward the third (the Bishops Sea being
void) for 8. pounds due to the Monkes
of Bermondsey, for the Bishop of Winche
sters lodging in Southwarke. This is a
very faire house wel repayred, and hath
a large Wharfe, and a landing place cal
led the Bishop of Winchesters staires.
house, or lodging when he commeth to
this City: which house was first buil
ded by William Gifford, Bishop of Win
chester, about the yeere one thouſand
one hundred and seven, the seventh of
Henry the first, upon a plot of ground
pertaining to the Prior of Bermondsey,
as appeareth by a Writ directed unto
the Barons of the Exchequer, in the
yeere 1366. the one and fortieth of Ed
ward the third (the Bishops Sea being
void) for 8. pounds due to the Monkes
of Bermondsey, for the Bishop of Winche
sters lodging in Southwarke. This is a
very faire house wel repayred, and hath
a large Wharfe, and a landing place cal
led the Bishop of Winchesters staires.
Adjoyning to this on the South side
thereof, is the Bishop of Rochesters Inne
or lodging, by whom first erected I doe
not now remember me to have read, but
well I wot, the same of long time
hath not beene frequented by any Bi
shop, and lyeth ruinous for lacke of re
parations. The Abbot of Naverley had
a house there.
thereof, is the Bishop of Rochesters Inne
or lodging, by whom first erected I doe
not now remember me to have read, but
well I wot, the same of long time
hath not beene frequented by any Bi
shop, and lyeth ruinous for lacke of re
parations. The Abbot of Naverley had
a house there.
East from the Bishop of Winchesters
house, directly over-against it standeth
a faire Church, called S. Mary over the
Rie, or Overy, that is, over the water.
This Church, or some other in place
thereof, was (of old time long before the
Conquest) an house of Sisters, founded
by a Maiden, named Mary, unto the
which house and Sisters she left (as was
left to her by her Parents) the over-sight
and profits of a Crosse Ferrie, or traverse
Ferry over the Thames, there kept be
fore that any Bridge was builded. This
house of Sisters was after by Swithen a
noble Lady, converted unto a Colledge
of Priests, who in place of the Ferrie,
builded a Bridge of Timber, and from
time to time kept the same in good re
parations; but lastly the same Bridge
was builded of Stone, and then in the
yeere 1106. was this Church againe
founded for Canons Regular, by William
Pont de le Arch, and William Dauncy,
Knights Normans.
house, directly over-against it standeth
Qq3
a faire
450
a faire Church, called S. Mary over the
Rie, or Overy, that is, over the water.
This Church, or some other in place
thereof, was (of old time long before the
Conquest) an house of Sisters, founded
by a Maiden, named Mary, unto the
which house and Sisters she left (as was
left to her by her Parents) the over-sight
and profits of a Crosse Ferrie, or traverse
Ferry over the Thames, there kept be
fore that any Bridge was builded. This
house of Sisters was after by Swithen a
noble Lady, converted unto a Colledge
of Priests, who in place of the Ferrie,
builded a Bridge of Timber, and from
time to time kept the same in good re
parations; but lastly the same Bridge
was builded of Stone, and then in the
yeere 1106. was this Church againe
founded for Canons Regular, by William
Pont de le Arch, and William Dauncy,
Knights Normans.
William Gifford,
Bishop of Winchester,
was a good Benefactor also,
some have noted) builded the body of
that Church,
ſand, one hundred and ſixe, the seventh
of Henry the first.
was a good Benefactor also,
Lib.
Rufen.
for hee
(as some have noted) builded the body of
that Church,
Liber Ber
mondsey.
in
the yeere one thoumondsey.
ſand, one hundred and ſixe, the seventh
of Henry the first.
King Stephen
confirmeth the gift of
King Henry, and also gave the Stone
House, which was William de Ponte le
Arche, by Downgate.
King Henry, and also gave the Stone
House, which was William de Ponte le
Arche, by Downgate.
This Priory was burned about the
yeere 1207. wherefore the Canons did
found an Hospitall neere unto their Pri
ory, where they celebrated untill the
Priory was repayred: which Hospi
tall was after (by consent of Peter de la
Roch, Bishop of Winchester) removed into
the land of Anicius, Archdeacon of Sur
rey, in the yeere 1228. a place where
the water was more plentifull, and the
ayre more wholsome, and was dedica
ted to S. Thomas.
yeere 1207. wherefore the Canons did
found an Hospitall neere unto their Pri
ory, where they celebrated untill the
Priory was repayred: which Hospi
tall was after (by consent of Peter de la
Roch, Bishop of Winchester) removed into
the land of Anicius, Archdeacon of Sur
rey, in the yeere 1228. a place where
the water was more plentifull, and the
ayre more wholsome, and was dedica
ted to S. Thomas.
This Peter de
Rupibus, or de la Roch,
founded a large Chappell of Saint Ma
ry Magdalen, in the said Church of St.
Mary Overy, which chappell was after
ward appointed to be the Parish Church
for the inhabitants neere adjoyning.
founded a large Chappell of Saint Ma
ry Magdalen, in the said Church of St.
Mary Overy, which chappell was after
ward appointed to be the Parish Church
for the inhabitants neere adjoyning.
Iohn Gower, Esquire,
a famous Poet,
was then an especialll Benefactor to that
worke,
North side of the said Church, in the
Chappell of Saint Iohn, where he foun
ded a Chantry, hee lyeth under a
Tombe of Stone, with his Image also
of Stone over him. The haire of his
head aburne, long to his shoulders, but
curling up, and a small forked beard;
on his head a Chaplet, like a coronet
of foure Roses, an habite of Purple, da
masked downe to his feet, a Collar of
Esses of gold about his necke, under his
feet the likenesse of three Bookes,
which hee compiled. The first, named
Speculum Meditantis, written in French:
The second, Vox Clamantis, penned in
Latine: The third, Confessio Amantis,
written in English, and this last is prin
ted. Vox Clamantis, with his Cronica
Tripartita, and other both in Latine and
French, never printed, I have and doe
possesse, but Speculum Meditantis, I ne
ver saw, though heard thereof to bee
in Kent; Beside on the wall where he ly
eth, there was painted 3. Virgins crow
ned, one of the which was named Cha
rity, holding this divice:
was then an especialll Benefactor to that
worke,
Iohn Gower
was no
Knight,
neither
had he a
ny Gar
land of
Ivie and
Roses, but
a Chaplet
of foure
Roses on
ly.
and was
there buried on the was no
Knight,
neither
had he a
ny Gar
land of
Ivie and
Roses, but
a Chaplet
of foure
Roses on
ly.
North side of the said Church, in the
Chappell of Saint Iohn, where he foun
ded a Chantry, hee lyeth under a
Tombe of Stone, with his Image also
of Stone over him. The haire of his
head aburne, long to his shoulders, but
curling up, and a small forked beard;
on his head a Chaplet, like a coronet
of foure Roses, an habite of Purple, da
masked downe to his feet, a Collar of
Esses of gold about his necke, under his
feet the likenesse of three Bookes,
which hee compiled. The first, named
Speculum Meditantis, written in French:
The second, Vox Clamantis, penned in
Latine: The third, Confessio Amantis,
written in English, and this last is prin
ted. Vox Clamantis, with his Cronica
Tripartita, and other both in Latine and
French, never printed, I have and doe
possesse, but Speculum Meditantis, I ne
ver saw, though heard thereof to bee
in Kent; Beside on the wall where he ly
eth, there was painted 3. Virgins crow
ned, one of the which was named Cha
rity, holding this divice:
En toy qui es Fitz de Dieu le Pere,
Savue soit, qui gist sours cest Pierre.
The second writing Mercy, with this
device.
device.
O bone Iesu fait
ta mercy,
Al’ame, dont le corps gist icy.
The third writing Pitty, with this de
vice.
vice.
Pour ta pite Iesu
regar’de,
Et met cest a me en savue garde.
His Armes, in a Field Argent, on a
Cheveron Azure, three Leopards heads
Gold, their tongues Gules, two Angels
Supporters; on the Crest a Talbot.
His Epitaph,
Cheveron Azure, three Leopards heads
Gold, their tongues Gules, two Angels
Supporters; on the Crest a Talbot.
His Epitaph,
Armigeri Scutum nihil
a modo fert sibi tutum,
Reddidit immolutum morti
generale tributum,
Spiritus exutum
se gaudeat esse solutum,
Est
Regnum sine labe statutum.
The roofe of the middle waste Ile fell
downe in the yeere 1469. This Priory
was surrendered to Henry the eighth,
the one and thirtieth of his reigne, the
ſeven and twentieth of October, the
yeere of Chriſt 1539. valued at sixe
hundred, twenty foure pounds, six shil
lings, sixe pence, by the yeere.
downe in the yeere 1469. This Priory
was surrendered to Henry the eighth,
the one and thirtieth of his reigne, the
ſeven and twentieth of October, the
yeere of Chriſt 1539. valued at sixe
hundred, twenty foure pounds, six shil
lings, sixe pence, by the yeere.
About Christmas next following,
the Church of the said Priory was pur
chased of the King by the inhabitants
of the Borough. Doctor Stephen Gar
dener, Bishop of Winchester, putting to
his helping hand, they made thereof a
Parish Church for the Parish Church
of S. Mary Magdalen, on the South side
of the said Quire, out of Saint Marga
ret on the hill, which were made one
Parish of S. Saviour.
the Church of the said Priory was pur
chased of the King by the inhabitants
of the Borough. Doctor Stephen Gar
dener, Bishop of Winchester, putting to
his helping hand, they made thereof a
Parish Church for the Parish Church
of S. Mary Magdalen, on the South side
of the said Quire, out of Saint Marga
ret on the hill, which were made one
Parish of S. Saviour.
Robert Merfin,
Esquire.
William Vndall,
Esquire.
Sir George
Brewes, Knight.
Lady Brandon, Wife to Sir Thomas
Brandon.
Brandon.
Iohn Bowden Esquire.
Iohn Duncell,
Merchant-Taylor, 1516.
Iohn Sturton,
Esquire.
William Wickham,
translated from the
Sea of Lincolne, to the Bishopricke of
Winchester, in the moneth of March,
1595. deceased the 11. day of Iune
next following and was buried here.
Sea of Lincolne, to the Bishopricke of
Winchester, in the moneth of March,
1595. deceased the 11. day of Iune
next following and was buried here.
Thomas Cure, Esquire,
Sadler to King
Edward the sixth, Queene Mary and
Queene Elizabeth, deceased the 24. day
of May, 1598.
Edward the sixth, Queene Mary and
Queene Elizabeth, deceased the 24. day
of May, 1598.
Hic jacet Ioannes Gower,
glorum Poeta celeberrimus, ac huic sa
cro Ædificio benefactor insignis, vixit
temporibus Ed. 3. & Rich. 3.
A very
faire
Tombe in
the North
Ile of the
Church.
Armiger, Anfaire
Tombe in
the North
Ile of the
Church.
glorum Poeta celeberrimus, ac huic sa
cro Ædificio benefactor insignis, vixit
temporibus Ed. 3. & Rich. 3.
Noviter constructum impensis
Parochiæ, An. Dom. 1615.
Parochiæ, An. Dom. 1615.
Elizabetha tibi Princeps
servivit Equorum
A sellis Curus,
A faire
Tombe in
the North
wall of the
Quire.
Tombe in
the North
wall of the
Quire.
quem lapis iste tegit.
Servivit Edvardo Regi,
Mariæque Sorori,
Principibus magna
est laus placuisse tribus.
Convixit cunctis charus
Respublica Curæ
Semper erat Curo,
commoda plebis erant:
Dum vixit tribui
senibus curavit alendis,
Nummorum in sumptus
annua dona domos.
Obiit 24. die Maii, An. Dom.
1588.
Had Kings a power
to lend their Subjects breath,
A very
Monumẽt
close by
the other.
Monumẽt
close by
the other.
not be cast downe by death:
Thy Royall Master still
would keepe thee then;
But length of dayes
are beyond reach of men.
Nor wealth, nor strength,
nor great mens love can ease
The wound Deaths Arrowes make,
for thou hast these.
In thy Kings Court
good place to thee is given:
Whence thou shalt goe
to the Kings Court of Heaven.
Peter
452
Peter Humble,
A very
faire
Tombe in
the chan
cell.
Gentleman, dedicates this
faire
Tombe in
the chan
cell.
Monument to the pious memory of Ri
chard Humble, Alderman of London,
and Margaret his first wife, daughter
to Iohn Pierson of Nathing, in the
County of Essex, Gentleman. By whom
he had issue two sonnes, Iohn, who died
young, and the above-named Peter, now
living. Also foure daughters, Katha
rine, Weltham, Margaret, and Eliza
beth, who survived the other three, and
was interred the same day with her Fa
ther, being the 30. of April 1616. Ri
chard left Isabel his second wife, wi
dow, who was the daughter of Robert
Kitchinman, of Hemsley, in the Coun
ty of Yorke, Gentleman, bequeathing to
the poore of this Parish five pounds, foure
shillings yeerly for ever, out of a Tene
ment adjoyning to the Southside of the
three Crownes gate in Southwarke.
A very
faire stone
by the
Commu
nion ta
ble.
faire stone
by the
Commu
nion ta
ble.
Gulielmus Wickham, translat. à sede
Lincoln. & Menſe Martii, 1595. ex
isten Episcopus Winton. Obiit 11.
Iunii, prox. sequent. Reliquit uxorem
laudatiff. quæ sepelit in Awkenbery,
Com. Hunt.
Lincoln. & Menſe Martii, 1595. ex
isten Episcopus Winton. Obiit 11.
Iunii, prox. sequent. Reliquit uxorem
laudatiff. quæ sepelit in Awkenbery,
Com. Hunt.
Doctrina Antistes præstans
& moribus æquis,
Eloquio & pietate gravis,
mensaque manuque.
Non parcus, justi neglectus
honore sepulchri,
Hic jacet. O seculum
insipiens, verum aequior illi,
Dum moritur, Deus Aligeros
dat cernere, missos,
Qui migrantem animam
Coeli ad sublimina ferrent.
F. M. posuit 10. Iunii, Anno
Domini 1600.
Domini 1600.
The Monument of Bishop Andrewes
is in a Chappell at the East end of the
Church, and his body lyeth within the
Monument.
is in a Chappell at the East end of the
Church, and his body lyeth within the
Monument.
Lector,
Si Christianus es, siste:
Morae pretium erit,
Non nescire te, qui vir hîc situs sit:
Ejusdem tecum Catholicæ Ecclesiæ membru,
Sub eadem felicis Resurrectionis spe,
Eandem D. Iesu præstolans Epiphaniam,
Sub eadem felicis Resurrectionis spe,
Eandem D. Iesu præstolans Epiphaniam,
Sacratiss. Antistes Lancelotus Andrews,
Londini oriundus, educatus Cantabrigiæ,
Anlæ Pembroch. Alumnor. Socior. Præfector.
Vnus, & nemini secundus:
Londini oriundus, educatus Cantabrigiæ,
Anlæ Pembroch. Alumnor. Socior. Præfector.
Vnus, & nemini secundus:
Linguarum, Artium, Scientiarum,
Humanorum, Divinorum, Omnium
Humanorum, Divinorum, Omnium
Infinitus Thesaurus, Stupendum Oraculū:
Orthodoxæ Christi Ecclesiæ,
Dictis, scriptis, precibus, Exemplo
Incomparabile propugnaculum:
Reginæ Elizabethæ à sacris,
D. Pauli London.
Residentiarius,
D. Petri Westmonast. Decanus:
Episcopus Cicestrensis, Eliensis, Wintoniensis,
Regique Iacobo tum ab Eleemosynis,
Tum ab utriusque Regni Consiliis,
Decanus denique Secelli Regii:
Regique Iacobo tum ab Eleemosynis,
Tum ab utriusque Regni Consiliis,
Decanus denique Secelli Regii:
Idem ex
Indefessa opera in studiis,
Summa sapientia in rebus,
Assidua pietate in Deum,
Profusa largitate in Egenos,
Rara amœnitate in suos,
Spectata probitate in omnes,
Æternum admirandus.
Annorum pariter & publicæ famæ satur,
Sed bonorū passim omnium cum luctu denatus,
Cœlebs hinc migravit ad aureolam cœlestem,
Sed bonorū passim omnium cum luctu denatus,
Cœlebs hinc migravit ad aureolam cœlestem,
Anno
Regis Caroli 11o. Ætatis S. LXXIo.
Christi MDCXXVIo.
Regis Caroli 11o. Ætatis S. LXXIo.
Christi MDCXXVIo.
Tantum est (Lector) quod te mœrentes
posteri
Nunc volebant, atque vt voto tuo valeas, dicto
Sit Deo gloria.
Nunc volebant, atque vt voto tuo valeas, dicto
Sit Deo gloria.
There is a Monument of Iohn
Bin
gham, Esquire, Sadler to Queene Eliza
beth and King Iames. Who was a wor
thy benefactor to the Parish, and to the
Free-Schoole there: who departed this
life in the yeere of our Lord, 1625.
gham, Esquire, Sadler to Queene Eliza
beth and King Iames. Who was a wor
thy benefactor to the Parish, and to the
Free-Schoole there: who departed this
life in the yeere of our Lord, 1625.
There is a Monument for VVilliam
Emerson,
of Iune, An. Dom. 1575. in the yeere of
his age 92.
Emerson,
This Mo
nument
standeth
in the
South Ile.
who departed this life the 27. nument
standeth
in the
South Ile.
of Iune, An. Dom. 1575. in the yeere of
his age 92.
Arvum hoc Sepulchrale.
Exuviarum opt. matris Iocosæ dominæ
Clerke. Sui ipsius lectissimæque uxoris
consitioni destinatum, Gulielmus Augu
stinus Armiger vivus sacravit.
Clerke. Sui ipsius lectissimæque uxoris
consitioni destinatum, Gulielmus Augu
stinus Armiger vivus sacravit.
Anna
453
and
Bridge Ward without.
Anna
Conjux charissima primo.
inseritur.
Quæ post decimū partum (An MDCXXIII.
Ian. XXI. Marito, ac liberis quinque su
perstitibus) Tricenaria valedicens:
Ian. XXI. Marito, ac liberis quinque su
perstitibus) Tricenaria valedicens:
In restorescendi dic & spem; Hac
terra tegitur.
Sequimur cæteri: Sati
corruptibiles,
Suscitandi incorruptibiles.
The Monument with this inscripti
on standeth on the South side of the
Quire.
on standeth on the South side of the
Quire.
Monumentum viri justi.
In memory of Iohn Symons, Citizen and
White-Baker of London; who departed
this life the 10. of Auguſt, in the yeere
of our Lord 1625. and was a good Bene
factor unto this Parish: who gave unto
the poore the summe of eight pounds Per
Annum for ever, to be distributed on the
Feast day of St. Thomas before Christ
mas. And unto Saint Georges Parish
in Southwarke the summe of ten pounds
per Annum, for ever. And unto the
Parish of Saint Mary Newington in
Surrey, the summe of five pounds per
Annum, for ever. These summes to
come unto the said Parish, after the de
cease of his father Samuel Symons,
who yet liveth, in the yeere 1631.
White-Baker of London; who departed
this life the 10. of Auguſt, in the yeere
of our Lord 1625. and was a good Bene
factor unto this Parish: who gave unto
the poore the summe of eight pounds Per
Annum for ever, to be distributed on the
Feast day of St. Thomas before Christ
mas. And unto Saint Georges Parish
in Southwarke the summe of ten pounds
per Annum, for ever. And unto the
Parish of Saint Mary Newington in
Surrey, the summe of five pounds per
Annum, for ever. These summes to
come unto the said Parish, after the de
cease of his father Samuel Symons,
who yet liveth, in the yeere 1631.
The Monument standeth in the South
side of the Church, with this Epitaph:
side of the Church, with this Epitaph:
His flesh interr’d here
once contain’d a spirit,
Who (by Gods mercy
and his Saviours merit)
Departed in that constant
hope of trust,
To reigne eternally
amongst the just:
To live and dye well
was his whole endeavor,
And in (assurance) dyed
to live for ever.
In the South side of the Church by
the Quire there standeth the Monu
ment of William Austin, Esquire, very
faire and beautifull; the invention thus:
the Quire there standeth the Monu
ment of William Austin, Esquire, very
faire and beautifull; the invention thus:
Over the head of the Angell is a
Sunne, and in it written Sol Iustitiæ.
Sunne, and in it written Sol Iustitiæ.
There standeth an Angell upon a
Rocke, with a Sickle in the left hand,
and the right hand erected towards
heaven, with these words written on
the Rocke: Petra erat Christus; and un
der the Rocke is a field of ripe wheate,
and in it written: Si non moriatur, non
reviviscit. And under that these words:
Nos sevit, fovit, lavit, cogit, renovabit.
Rocke, with a Sickle in the left hand,
and the right hand erected towards
heaven, with these words written on
the Rocke: Petra erat Christus; and un
der the Rocke is a field of ripe wheate,
and in it written: Si non moriatur, non
reviviscit. And under that these words:
Nos sevit, fovit, lavit, cogit, renovabit.
Vpon the right hand of this Angell
are written these words: Vos esstis Dei.
And on the left this: Agricultura.
are written these words: Vos esstis Dei.
And on the left this: Agricultura.
On each side of this Angell sitteth
two other Angels, leaning on their
armes; the one with a Forke, and un
der written Messores. The other with a
Rack, and under written: Congregabunt.
two other Angels, leaning on their
armes; the one with a Forke, and un
der written Messores. The other with a
Rack, and under written: Congregabunt.
Vnder all this is the forme of a win
nowing Fanne, and words written in it.
nowing Fanne, and words written in it.
The Lady Clarke, mother to Master
William Austin, gave a very faire Com
munion Table railed about, where 60.
may kneele to receive the Sacrament,
with a faire Carpet for it, and the railes
hung about with the same embroide
red.
William Austin, gave a very faire Com
munion Table railed about, where 60.
may kneele to receive the Sacrament,
with a faire Carpet for it, and the railes
hung about with the same embroide
red.
Master William
Austin gave a faire
Silver Chalice, and a Dish for the
Bread, to the value of almost forty
pounds. And his wife that now is, who
was the Relict of Iohn Bingham, Esquire,
gave two very faire Silver Flagons of
the like value.
Silver Chalice, and a Dish for the
Bread, to the value of almost forty
pounds. And his wife that now is, who
was the Relict of Iohn Bingham, Esquire,
gave two very faire Silver Flagons of
the like value.
Item, I give and bequeath these An
nuities ensuing to be issuing out of cer
taine Tenements of mine, viz. twenty
shillings yeerly for ever to the Master
and Society of Peter house in Cam
bridge, towards the maintenance of the
Library there: and twenty shillings
yeerly for ever to the Church-wardens
of Saint Olaves in Southwarke, for the
use of the poore of the Parish. And ten
shilligs yeerly for ever to the Church-wardens
of the Parish of St. Saviours,
for the poore in the precinct of old Pa
rish Garden,
nuities ensuing to be issuing out of cer
taine Tenements of mine, viz. twenty
shillings yeerly for ever to the Master
and Society of Peter house in Cam
bridge, towards the maintenance of the
Library there: and twenty shillings
yeerly for ever to the Church-wardens
of Saint Olaves in Southwarke, for the
use of the poore of the Parish. And ten
shilligs yeerly for ever to the Church-wardens
of the Parish of St. Saviours,
for the poore in the precinct of old Pa
rish Garden,
Master Smith hath given unto
the said PThis text has been supplied. Reason: The ink has faded, obscuring the text. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on evidence internal to this text (context, etc.). (MR)a6rish of S. Saviours the summe
of twenty eight pounds per Annum, for
ever unto the poore of this Parish.
the said PThis text has been supplied. Reason: The ink has faded, obscuring the text. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on evidence internal to this text (context, etc.). (MR)a6rish of S. Saviours the summe
of
454
of twenty eight pounds per Annum, for
ever unto the poore of this Parish.
Master Randall
Carter, Citizen and
Tallow Chandler of London, hath given
seven pounds per Annum, for ever unto
a poore Scholar that shall bee elected
out of the Free Schoole to either of the
Vniversities; and this seven pounds he
is to enjoy for sixe yeeres, and his time
expired to another: and so forward.
Tallow Chandler of London, hath given
seven pounds per Annum, for ever unto
a poore Scholar that shall bee elected
out of the Free Schoole to either of the
Vniversities; and this seven pounds he
is to enjoy for sixe yeeres, and his time
expired to another: and so forward.
Master Edward
Hulit, Gentleman,
hath given forty pounds per Annum, to
the poore of the same Parish for ever,
to bee received out of certaine Tene
ments, situate in the Borough of South
warke.
hath given forty pounds per Annum, to
the poore of the same Parish for ever,
to bee received out of certaine Tene
ments, situate in the Borough of South
warke.
Hugh Brooker,
Esquire, hath given
unto the Free Schoole the summe of
five pounds per Annum, for ever. And
likewise unto the poore of the same Pa
rish five pounds per Annum, for ever:
and lyeth buried in Saint Saviours
Church in the North Ile by the Quire.
unto the Free Schoole the summe of
five pounds per Annum, for ever. And
likewise unto the poore of the same Pa
rish five pounds per Annum, for ever:
and lyeth buried in Saint Saviours
Church in the North Ile by the Quire.
Thomas Marshall gave
an hundred
pounds for ever to the Parish, for to
clothe sixe poore boyes every Christ
masse, who dyed in the yeere 1625.
pounds for ever to the Parish, for to
clothe sixe poore boyes every Christ
masse, who dyed in the yeere 1625.
Now passing through Saint Mary
Overies Close (in possession of the Lord
Mountacute7) and Pepper Alley, into
Long Southwarke, on the right hand
thereof, the Market hill, where the
Leather is sold, there stood the late na
med Parish Church of Saint Margaret,
given to Saint Mary Overies by Henry
the first, put downe and joyned with
the Parish Church of Saint Mary Mag
dalen, and united to the late dissolved
Priory Church of S. Mary Overy.
Overies Close (in possession of the Lord
Mountacute7) and Pepper Alley, into
Long Southwarke, on the right hand
thereof, the Market hill, where the
Leather is sold, there stood the late na
med Parish Church of Saint Margaret,
given to Saint Mary Overies by Henry
the first, put downe and joyned with
the Parish Church of Saint Mary Mag
dalen, and united to the late dissolved
Priory Church of S. Mary Overy.
A part of this Parish Church of St.
Margaret is now a Court, wherein the
Assises and Sessions bee kept, and the
Court of Admiralty is also there kept.
One other part of the same Church is
now a Prison, called the Compter in
Southwarke, &c.
Margaret is now a Court, wherein the
Assises and Sessions bee kept, and the
Court of Admiralty is also there kept.
One other part of the same Church is
now a Prison, called the Compter in
Southwarke, &c.
Farther up on that side, almost di
rectly over-against St. Georges Church,
was sometime a large and most sump
tuous house, builded by Charles Bran
don, late Duke of Suffolke, in the reigne
of Henry the eighth, which was called
Suffolke house; but comming afterwards
into the Kings hands, the same was
called Southwarke Place, and a Mint of
Coynage was there kept for the King.
rectly over-against St. Georges Church,
was sometime a large and most sump
tuous house, builded by Charles Bran
don, late Duke of Suffolke, in the reigne
of Henry the eighth, which was called
Suffolke house; but comming afterwards
into the Kings hands, the same was
called Southwarke Place, and a Mint of
Coynage was there kept for the King.
To this place came King Edward the
sixth, in the second of his reigne, from
Hampton Court, and dined in it. He at
that time made Iohn Yorke, one of the
Sheriffes of London, Knight, and then
rode through the City to Westminster.
sixth, in the second of his reigne, from
Hampton Court, and dined in it. He at
that time made Iohn Yorke, one of the
Sheriffes of London, Knight, and then
rode through the City to Westminster.
Queene Mary
gave this house to Ni
cholas Heth, Archbishop of Yorke, and
to his successors for ever, to bee their
Inne or lodging for their repaire to Lon
don, in recompence of York house, neere
to Westminster, which King Henry her
father had taken from Cardinall Wool
sey, and from the Sea of Yorke.
cholas Heth, Archbishop of Yorke, and
to his successors for ever, to bee their
Inne or lodging for their repaire to Lon
don, in recompence of York house, neere
to Westminster, which King Henry her
father had taken from Cardinall Wool
sey, and from the Sea of Yorke.
Archbishop Heth sold the same house
to a Merchant, or to Merchants, that
pulled it downe, sold the Lead, Stone,
Iron, &c. and in place thereof builded
many small Cottages of great rents, to
the increasing of beggars in that Bo
rough. The Archbishop bought Nor
wich House, or Suffolke Place, neere unto
Charing-Crosse, because it was neere un
to the Court, and left it to his succes
sors. Now on the South side, to returne
backe again towards the Bridge.8 Over-against
this Suffolke Place, is the Parish
Church of Saint George, sometime per
taining to the Priory of Bermondsey, by
the gift of Thomas Arderne, and Thomas
his son, in the yeere 1122.
to a Merchant, or to Merchants, that
pulled it downe, sold the Lead, Stone,
Iron, &c. and in place thereof builded
many small Cottages of great rents, to
the increasing of beggars in that Bo
rough. The Archbishop bought Nor
wich House, or Suffolke Place, neere unto
Charing-Crosse, because it was neere un
to the Court, and left it to his succes
sors. Now on the South side, to returne
backe again towards the Bridge.8 Over-against
this Suffolke Place, is the Parish
Church of Saint George, sometime per
taining to the Priory of Bermondsey, by
the gift of Thomas Arderne, and Thomas
his son, in the yeere 1122.
Loe,
A faire
Monumēt
in the
South wal
of the
Chancell.
Master William
Evans heMonumēt
in the
South wal
of the
Chancell.
whose body lieth here,
Bequeathed hath by his last will,
for ever by the yeere
Ten pounds, eight shillings to the poore,
which is a blessed stay,
And must be given them in bread,
on every Sabbath day.
One halfe to Crekederus poore,
his native soile so deare:
The other moity to the poore
of this our Parish here.
See now all ye that love the poore,
how God did guide his wayes,
Ten score and eight are serv’d with bread
in two and fifty daies,
More
to yeelded any share.
Praise God, ye poore, who gave to him
so provident a care.
He was free of the right Worship
full Company of the Merchant
Taylors,
and deceased the nine
and twentieth of Iuly 1590. in
the two and thirtieth yeer of the
most prosperous reigne of our
Soveraigne Lady Queene Eliza
beth. Ætatis 67.
full Company of the Merchant
Taylors,
and deceased the nine
and twentieth of Iuly 1590. in
the two and thirtieth yeer of the
most prosperous reigne of our
Soveraigne Lady Queene Eliza
beth. Ætatis 67.
hath done a godly deed
To the poore of this Parish,
for to relieve their need,
Five pounds a yeere for everThis text is the corrected text. The original is n (MR)
m
ore,
by will he hath bequeath’d,
Which must out of the Angell rents,
quarterly be receiv’d,
By the Church-wardens of this Church,
whom he hath put in trust,
As Fathers in the poores behalfe,
to be upright and just.
Which men I doubt not but our God,
who seeth all things, shall finde
True in dispersing of the same,
according to his minde.
Ye poore, thanke Christ fThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The
text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)o9r Savage still,
extoil Gods name with This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The
text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)praise,
That he to follow his goThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The
text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)od
art,
in time may many raiThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The
text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)se.
Anno This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The
text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)Domini 1588.
Then is the White
LioThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The
text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)n,
a
Gaole so
called, for that the same This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)was a common
Hostery for the receit of Travellers by
that signe. This house wThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)as first used as
a Gaole within this thrThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)eescore yeeres
last, since the which timThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)e the Prisoners
were once removed theThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)see to an house
in Newtowne, where they This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)rmained for a
short time, and were retThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)urned backe a
gaine to the aforesaid WhiThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)te >Lion, there
to remaine, as the appointed Gaole for
the County of Surrey.
called, for that the same This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)was a common
Hostery for the receit of Travellers by
that signe. This house wThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)as first used as
a Gaole within this thrThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)eescore yeeres
last, since the which timThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)e the Prisoners
were once removed theThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)see to an house
in Newtowne, where they This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)rmained for a
short time, and were retThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)urned backe a
gaine to the aforesaid WhiThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)te >Lion, there
to remaine, as the appointed Gaole for
the County of Surrey.
Next, is the Gaole or PThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The
text has been supplied based on an external source.rison of the
Kings Bench, but of what anThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)tiquity the
same is, I know not. For This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)I have read,
that the Courts of the KThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)ings This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)Bench and
Chancery, have oft times This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)been removed
from London to other plThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)aces, and so hath
likewise the other GaThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)oles that serve
those Courts, as in the This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)yeere 1304. Ed
ward the first commanded the Courts
of the Kings Bench and the Exchequer,
which had remained seven yeeres at
Yorke, to be removed to their old places
at London. And in the yeere 1387. the
eleventh of Richard the second, Robert
Trisilian chiefe Iustice, came to the Ci
tie of Coventry, and there sate by the
space of a moneth, as Iustice of the Kings
Benche, and caused to be indited in that
Court, about the number of 2000. per
sons of that Country, &c.
Kings Bench, but of what anThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)tiquity the
same is, I know not. For This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)I have read,
that the Courts of the KThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)ings This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)Bench and
Chancery, have oft times This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)been removed
from London to other plThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)aces, and so hath
likewise the other GaThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)oles that serve
those Courts, as in the This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)yeere 1304. Ed
ward the first commanded the Courts
of the Kings Bench and the Exchequer,
which had remained seven yeeres at
Yorke, to be removed to their old places
at London. And in the yeere 1387. the
eleventh of Richard the second, Robert
Trisilian chiefe Iustice, came to the Ci
tie of Coventry, and there sate by the
space of a moneth, as Iustice of the Kings
Benche, and caused to be indited in that
Court, about the number of 2000. per
sons of that Country, &c.
It seemeth therefore, that for that
time, the Prison or Gaole of that Court
was not far off. Also, in the yeere 1392.
the sixteenth of the same Richard, the
Archbishop of Yorke being Lord Chan
cellor, for good will that he bare to his
City, caused the Kings Bench and Chan
cery to bee removed from London to
Yorke, but ere long they were returned
to London.
time, the Prison or Gaole of that Court
was not far off. Also, in the yeere 1392.
the sixteenth of the same Richard, the
Archbishop of Yorke being Lord Chan
cellor, for good will that he bare to his
City, caused the Kings Bench and Chan
cery to bee removed from London to
Yorke, but ere long they were returned
to London.
Then is the Marshalsey another Gaole
or Prison, so called, as pertaining to the
Marshals of England. Of what continu
ance kept in Southwarke, I have not lear
ned: but like it is, that the same hath
been removeable, at the pleasure of the
Marshals. For I finde, that in the yeere
1376. the 50. of Edward the third, Hen
ry Percy (being Marshall) kept his pri
soners in the City of London, where ha
ving committed one Iohn Prendargest,
of Norwich, contrary to the liberties of
the City of London, the Citizens, by per
swasion of the Lord Fitzwalter,10 their
Standard-bearer, tooke armour, and
ranne with great rage to the Marshals
Inne, brake up the gates, brought out
the prisoner, and conveighed him a
way, minding to have burnt the stockes
in the middest of their City; but they
first sought for Sir Henry Percy, to have
punished him, as I have noted in my
Annals.
or Prison, so called, as pertaining to the
Marshals of England. Of what continu
ance kept in Southwarke, I have not lear
ned: but like it is, that the same hath
been removeable, at the pleasure of the
Marshals. For I finde, that in the yeere
1376. the 50. of Edward the third, Hen
ry Percy (being Marshall) kept his pri
soners in the City of London, where ha
ving committed one Iohn Prendargest,
of Norwich, contrary to the liberties of
the City of London, the Citizens, by per
swasion of the Lord Fitzwalter,10 their
Standard-bearer, tooke armour, and
ranne with great rage to the Marshals
Inne, brake up the gates, brought out
the prisoner, and conveighed him a
way, minding to have burnt the stockes
in the middest of their City; but they
first sought for Sir Henry Percy, to have
punished him, as I have noted in my
Annals.
More, about the Feast of Easter next
following, Iohn Duke of Lancaster, ha
ving caused all the whole Navie of Eng
land to be gathered together at London,
it chanced a certaine Esquire to kill one
of the Mariners, which act the other
Mariners taking in ill part, they brought
their suit into the Kings Court of the
Marshalsey, which then as chanced (saith
mine Author) was kept in Southwarke:
but when they perceived that Court to
be so favourable to the murderer; and
further, that the Kings Warrant was
also gotten for his pardon; they in great
fury ranne to the house, wherein the
murderer was imprisoned, brake into
it, and brought forth the prisoner with
his Gives on his legges, they thrust a
knife to his heart, and sticked him, as if
hee had beene a Hogge: after this they
tyed a rope to his Gives, and drew him
to the Gallowes, where when they had
hanged him, as though they had done
a great act, they caused the Trumpets
to bee sounded before them to their
ships, and there in great triumph they
spent the rest of the day.
following, Iohn Duke of Lancaster, ha
ving caused all the whole Navie of Eng
land to be gathered together at London,
it chanced a certaine Esquire to kill one
of the Mariners, which act the other
Mariners taking in ill part, they brought
their suit into the Kings Court of the
Marshalsey, which then as chanced (saith
mine Author) was kept in Southwarke:
but when they perceived that Court to
be
456
be so favourable to the murderer; and
further, that the Kings Warrant was
also gotten for his pardon; they in great
fury ranne to the house, wherein the
murderer was imprisoned, brake into
it, and brought forth the prisoner with
his Gives on his legges, they thrust a
knife to his heart, and sticked him, as if
hee had beene a Hogge: after this they
tyed a rope to his Gives, and drew him
to the Gallowes, where when they had
hanged him, as though they had done
a great act, they caused the Trumpets
to bee sounded before them to their
ships, and there in great triumph they
spent the rest of the day.
Also the Rebels of Kent,
in the yeere
1381. brake downe the houses of the
Marshalsey and Kings Bench in South
warke, tooke from thence the prisoners,
brake downe the house of Sir Iohn Im
morth,11 then Marshall of the Marshalsey,
and Kings Bench, &c. After this, in the
yeere 1387. the eleventh of Richard the
second, the morrow after Bartholomew
day,12 the King kept a great Councell in
the Castle of Nottingham, and the Mar
shalsey of the King was then kept at
Lughborow, by the space of sixe daies or
more. In the yeere 1443. Sir Walter
Many, was Marshall of the Marshalsey,
the two and twentieth of Henry the
sixth. William Brandon, Esquire, was
Marshall in the eighth of Edward the
fourth. In the yeere 1504. the priso
ners of the Marshalsey then in Southwark
brake out, and many of them being ta
ken were executed, especially such as
had beene committed for Felony or
Treason.
1381. brake downe the houses of the
Marshalsey and Kings Bench in South
warke, tooke from thence the prisoners,
brake downe the house of Sir Iohn Im
morth,11 then Marshall of the Marshalsey,
and Kings Bench, &c. After this, in the
yeere 1387. the eleventh of Richard the
second, the morrow after Bartholomew
day,12 the King kept a great Councell in
the Castle of Nottingham, and the Mar
shalsey of the King was then kept at
Lughborow, by the space of sixe daies or
more. In the yeere 1443. Sir Walter
Many, was Marshall of the Marshalsey,
the two and twentieth of Henry the
sixth. William Brandon, Esquire, was
Marshall in the eighth of Edward the
fourth. In the yeere 1504. the priso
ners of the Marshalsey then in Southwark
brake out, and many of them being ta
ken were executed, especially such as
had beene committed for Felony or
Treason.
From thence towards London
bridge,
on the same side, bee many faire Innes,
for receit of travellers, by these signes,
the Spurre, Christopher, Bull, Queens
head, Tabard, George, Hart, Kings
head, &c. Amongst the which, the
most ancient is the Tabard, so called of
the signe, which as wee now terme it,
is of a lacket or sleevelesse coate, whole
before, open on both sides, with a square
collar, winged at the shoulders: a state
ly garment, of old time commonly
worne of Noblemen and others, both at
home and abroad in the wars; but then
(to wit, in the warres) their Armes em
broidered, or otherwise depict upon
them, that every man by his Coate of
Armes might bee knowne from others:
But now these Tabards are onely worne
by the Heralds, and bee called their
Coates of Armes in Service. For the
Inne of the Tabard, Geffrey Chaucer,
Esquire, the most famous Poet of Eng
land, in commendation thereof, writeth
thus:
on the same side, bee many faire Innes,
for receit of travellers, by these signes,
the Spurre, Christopher, Bull, Queens
head, Tabard, George, Hart, Kings
head, &c. Amongst the which, the
most ancient is the Tabard, so called of
the signe, which as wee now terme it,
is of a lacket or sleevelesse coate, whole
before, open on both sides, with a square
collar, winged at the shoulders: a state
ly garment, of old time commonly
worne of Noblemen and others, both at
home and abroad in the wars; but then
(to wit, in the warres) their Armes em
broidered, or otherwise depict upon
them, that every man by his Coate of
Armes might bee knowne from others:
But now these Tabards are onely worne
by the Heralds, and bee called their
Coates of Armes in Service. For the
Inne of the Tabard, Geffrey Chaucer,
Esquire, the most famous Poet of Eng
land, in commendation thereof, writeth
thus:
It befell in that season, on a day,
In Southwarke, at the Tabert, as I lay,
Ready to wend on my Pilgrimage
To Canturbury, with full devout courage;
That night was comen into the Hostery
Well nine and twenty in a company,
Of sundry folke, by adventure yfall,
In fellowship and Pilgrims were they all,
That toward Canturbury woulden ride:
The Stables and Chambers werenwide,
And well we were This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The
text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)ea13sed at the best, &c.
Within this Inne was also the Lodg
ing of the Abbot of Hide (by the City
of Winchester) a faire house for him and
his Traine,
to Parliament, &c.
ing of the Abbot of Hide (by the City
of Winchester) a faire house for him and
his Traine,
The Ab
bot of
Hide his
Lodging.
when
hee came to the City bot of
Hide his
Lodging.
to Parliament, &c.
And theThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The
text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)n
Theeves lane,
by St. Thomas
Hospitall. The Hospitall of St. Thomas
first founded by Richard, Prior of Ber
mendsey, in the Sellerers ground, against
the wall of the This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)Monastery, in the yeere
1213. Hee named it the Almery, or
House of AlmThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)es, for Converts and
poore Children; for the which ground
the Prior ordThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)ained, that the AThis text has been supplied. Reason: The text is not clear for some reason not covered by other available values. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on evidence internal to this text (context, etc.). (CH)l14moner
should pay This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)ten shillings foure pence
yeerly to the This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)Sellerer at Michaelmas.15
Hospitall. The Hospitall of St. Thomas
first founded by Richard, Prior of Ber
mendsey, in the Sellerers ground, against
the wall of the This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)Monastery, in the yeere
1213. Hee named it the Almery, or
House of AlmThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)es, for Converts and
poore Children; for the which ground
the Prior ordThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)ained, that the AThis text has been supplied. Reason: The text is not clear for some reason not covered by other available values. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on evidence internal to this text (context, etc.). (CH)l14moner
should pay This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)ten shillings foure pence
yeerly to the This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)Sellerer at Michaelmas.15
But Peter
dThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The
text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)e
Rupibus,
Bishop of
Win
chester, in the This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)yeere 1215. founded the
same againe This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)more fully for Canons Re
gular, in placThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)e of the first Hospitall: He
increased the This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)rent thereof to three hun
dred forty fThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)oure pounds by the yeere.
Thus was thThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)is Hospitall holden of the
Prior and AThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)bbot of Bermondsey, till the
yeere 1428. This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)at which time a compositi
on was maThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)de between Thomas Thetford,
Abbot of This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)Bermondsey, & Nicholas Buck
land, MThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)aster of the said Hospitall of
Saint ThThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)omas, for all the Lands and Te
nemenThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)ts, whThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)ich were holden of the said
AbboThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)t and This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)Covent in Southwarke, or
elsewhere, for This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)the old rent to bee paid
unto the said This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)Abbot.
chester, in the This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)yeere 1215. founded the
same againe This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)more fully for Canons Re
gular, in placThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)e of the first Hospitall: He
increased the This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)rent thereof to three hun
dred forty fThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)oure pounds by the yeere.
Thus was thThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)is Hospitall holden of the
Prior and AThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)bbot of Bermondsey, till the
yeere 1428. This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)at which time a compositi
on was maThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)de between Thomas Thetford,
Abbot of This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)Bermondsey, & Nicholas Buck
land, MThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)aster of the said Hospitall of
Saint ThThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)omas, for all the Lands and Te
nemenThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)ts, whThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)ich were holden of the said
AbboThis text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)t and This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)Covent in Southwarke, or
elsewhere, for This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)the old rent to bee paid
unto the said This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)Abbot.
There bee This text has been supplied. Reason: Dirt on the page, tearing, etc. Evidence: The
text has been supplied based on an external source. (MR)the Monuments in this
Hospitall Church, of Sir Robert Cham
ber, Knight,
Hospitall
457
and Bridge Ward without.
Hospitall Church, of Sir Robert Cham
ber, Knight,
Lord Say16
Richard Chaucer,
Iohn Gloucester, A
dam Atwood, Iohn Ward, Michael Cam
bridge, William West, Iohn Golding, Es
quires.
dam Atwood, Iohn Ward, Michael Cam
bridge, William West, Iohn Golding, Es
quires.
Robert, Sonne to
Sir Thomas
Fleming.
Agnes, wife to Sir Walter
Dennis,
Knight, Daughter and one of the heires
of Sir Robert Danver, Iohn Evarey, Gen
tlemen, &c.
Knight, Daughter and one of the heires
of Sir Robert Danver, Iohn Evarey, Gen
tlemen, &c.
This Hospitall was by the Visitors,
in the yeere 1538. valued at 266. l. 17.
s. 6. d. and was surrendred to Henry the
8. in the 30. of his raigne.
in the yeere 1538. valued at 266. l. 17.
s. 6. d. and was surrendred to Henry the
8. in the 30. of his raigne.
In the yeere 1552. the Citizens of
London, having purchased the voyd
suppressed Hospitall of Saint Thomas
in Southwarke, in the Month of Iuly, be
began the reparations therof, for poore,
impotent, lame, and diseased people,
so that in the Moneth of November
next following, the sicke and poore
people were taken in. And in the yeere
1553. on the 10. of April, King Ed
ward the sixt in the seventh of his
raigne, gave to the Maior, Com
munaltie, and Citizens of Lon
don, to bee a workehouse for the
poore and idle persons of the Citie, his
house of Bridewell, and seven hundred
Marks Lands of the Savoy Rents, which
Hospitall he had suppressed, with all
the beds, bedding, and other furniture
belonging to the same, towards the
maintenance of the said workehouse of
Bridewell, and of this Hospitall of Saint
Thomas in Southwarke. This gift, the
King confirmed by his Charter, dated
the 26. of June next following, and wil
led it to be called the Kings Hospitall in
Southwarke.
London, having purchased the voyd
suppressed Hospitall of Saint Thomas
in Southwarke, in the Month of Iuly, be
began the reparations therof, for poore,
impotent, lame, and diseased people,
so that in the Moneth of November
next following, the sicke and poore
people were taken in. And in the yeere
1553. on the 10. of April, King Ed
ward the sixt in the seventh of his
raigne, gave to the Maior, Com
munaltie, and Citizens of Lon
don, to bee a workehouse for the
poore and idle persons of the Citie, his
house of Bridewell, and seven hundred
Marks Lands of the Savoy Rents, which
Hospitall he had suppressed, with all
the beds, bedding, and other furniture
belonging to the same, towards the
maintenance of the said workehouse of
Bridewell, and of this Hospitall of Saint
Thomas in Southwarke. This gift, the
King confirmed by his Charter, dated
the 26. of June next following, and wil
led it to be called the Kings Hospitall in
Southwarke.
The Church of this Hospitall, which
of old time served for the Tenements
neere adjoyning and pertaining to the
said Hospitall, remaineth as a Parish
Church.
of old time served for the Tenements
neere adjoyning and pertaining to the
said Hospitall, remaineth as a Parish
Church.
But now to come to S. Olaves street:
on the banke of the river of Thames is
the Parish Church of Saint Olave, a
faire and meetely large Church, but a
far larger Parish, especially of Aliens or
strangers, and poore people; in which
Church, there lyeth intombed Sir Iohn
Burcettur, Knight, 1466.
on the banke of the river of Thames is
the Parish Church of Saint Olave, a
faire and meetely large Church, but a
far larger Parish, especially of Aliens or
strangers, and poore people; in which
Church, there lyeth intombed Sir Iohn
Burcettur, Knight, 1466.
Here th’earthly part
of William Benson lyes,
A small
Monumēt
in the
North
wall of the
Chancell.
Monumēt
in the
North
wall of the
Chancell.
Whom Robert Benson
had by Mary Lyle,
The Heavenly mounted is
above the Skies
With wings of Faith,
dissolv’d but for a while:
The Linnen which he sold
was nere so white,
As is the Robe
wherein the Soule is dight:
Yes Thomas mourns in blacke,
his onely Sonne,
And Richard (of whole blood)
his eldest Brother:
this hath done,
Which was by Ravis
borne of the same Mother:
And William Lyle,
first cousin to them all,
Long live his Verse,
penn’d this Memoriall.
He departed in the 56.
yeere of his age.
An. Dom.
1603.
Februar.
1579.
To you that live possest,
A graven
Plate in
the end of
the Quire.
Plate in
the end of
the Quire.
great troubles do befall,
Where we that sleep by death,
do feele no harme at all:
An honest life doth bring,
a joyfull death at last,
And life againe begins,
when death is over-past.
Death is the path to life,
and way to endlesse wealth,
The doore whereby we passe
to everlasting health.
These threescore yeere and six
have passed here my life,
And thirty seven yeeres thereof,
thou Helen wert my
wife,
A Citizen also,
and of the Cutlers free,
And Warden of the same,
so worthy thought to be.
My loving wife farewell,
God guide thee with his grace.
Prepare thy selfe to come,
and I will give thee place:
Rr
Acquain
and be assur’d of this,
You shall be brought to dust,
as Thomas Malledge
is.
Hic jacet corpus Ioannis Thomas,
vis & Groceri Civitatis London. Qui
obiit die Mercurii, vid. 23. Auguſti,
Anno Domini 1564. Hic tres uxores
habuit, vid. Christianam, Matildam,
& Ioannam. Ex Christiana suscepit hos
liberos, Rogerum, Ioannem, seu Williel
mum, Ioannem inter Richardum, Lam
bertum, Henricum, Beatricem, & Pe
trum. Ex Matilda, Aliciam, Agne
tem, & Susannam. Ex Ioanna, Thomam,
Martham, Margaretam, Annam, Ri
chardum & Saram.
A plated
Stone by
the Com
munion
Table.
nuper CiStone by
the Com
munion
Table.
vis & Groceri Civitatis London. Qui
obiit die Mercurii, vid. 23. Auguſti,
Anno Domini 1564. Hic tres uxores
habuit, vid. Christianam, Matildam,
& Ioannam. Ex Christiana suscepit hos
liberos, Rogerum, Ioannem, seu Williel
mum, Ioannem inter Richardum, Lam
bertum, Henricum, Beatricem, & Pe
trum. Ex Matilda, Aliciam, Agne
tem, & Susannam. Ex Ioanna, Thomam,
Martham, Margaretam, Annam, Ri
chardum & Saram.
Hic jacet corpus Richardi Philip,
Groceri London. Qui obiit 10. die
Menſis Aprilis, Anno Domini 1412.
& Isabella uxor ejus: Quæ obiit, &c.
Quorum, &c.
Another
like Stone
by it.
Civis & like Stone
by it.
Groceri London. Qui obiit 10. die
Menſis Aprilis, Anno Domini 1412.
& Isabella uxor ejus: Quæ obiit, &c.
Quorum, &c.
Here resteth,
body of Iohn Eston, Esquire, late Iu
stice of the Peace, and of Southwarke
Steward, leaving behind him Mar
garet his wife. Which Iohn died the
eight day of May, Anno Domini 1565.
The like
Stone on
the other
side of the
Table.
in the mercie of God, the Stone on
the other
side of the
Table.
body of Iohn Eston, Esquire, late Iu
stice of the Peace, and of Southwarke
Steward, leaving behind him Mar
garet his wife. Which Iohn died the
eight day of May, Anno Domini 1565.
How rich be they certaine,
That Heavenly Kingdome gaine?
No tongue can well expresse
Their joyes, that be endlesse.
Hic jacent Robertus Faireford,
dam Serviens excellentiss. Principis
Henrici Reg. Angliæ Quarti, ac nu
per Coronator Curiæ Marescalciæ
Hospitii Metuendissimorum Prin
cip. Henrici Regis Angliæ Quinti,
& Henrici Sexti. Qui obiit 21. die
Auguſti, Anno Domini, 1456. &c.
Et Agnet. ux.—Quæ obiit—
An anci
ent Mar
ble
Tombe
in the
Chancell.
quonent Mar
ble
Tombe
in the
Chancell.
dam Serviens excellentiss. Principis
Henrici Reg. Angliæ Quarti, ac nu
per Coronator Curiæ Marescalciæ
Hospitii Metuendissimorum Prin
cip. Henrici Regis Angliæ Quinti,
& Henrici Sexti. Qui obiit 21. die
Auguſti, Anno Domini, 1456. &c.
Et Agnet. ux.—Quæ obiit—
Over-against this Parish Church,
on
the South side the street, was sometime
one great House, builded of Stone, with
arched Gates, which pertained to the
Prior of Lewis in Sussex, and was his
Lodging when hee came to London: It
is now a common Hostery for Travel
lers, and hath to Signe, the Walnut
tree.
the South side the street, was sometime
one great House, builded of Stone, with
arched Gates, which pertained to the
Prior of Lewis in Sussex, and was his
Lodging when hee came to London: It
is now a common Hostery for Travel
lers, and hath to Signe, the Walnut
tree.
Then East from the said Parish
Church of Saint Olave, is a Key. In the
yeere 1330. by the licence of Simon
Swanlond, Maior of London, it was buil
ded by Isabell, widow to Hamond Good
cheape. And next thereunto was then a
great house of stone and timber, belon
ging to the Abbot of S. Augustin,
out the wals of Canturbury, which was an
ancient piece of work, & seemeth to be
one of the first builded houses on that
side the River, over-against the City:
It was called the Abbots Inne of Saint
Augustine in Southwarke, and was some
time holden of the Earles of Warren and
Surrey, as appeareth by a deede, made
1281. which I have read, and may bee
Englished thus:
Church of Saint Olave, is a Key. In the
yeere 1330. by the licence of Simon
Swanlond, Maior of London, it was buil
ded by Isabell, widow to Hamond Good
cheape. And next thereunto was then a
great house of stone and timber, belon
ging to the Abbot of S. Augustin,
AbboThis text has been supplied. Reason: Smudging dating from the original print process.
Evidence: The text has been supplied based on evidence internal to this text (context,
etc.). (MR)t18 of
Augustines
Inne.
withAugustines
Inne.
out the wals of Canturbury, which was an
ancient piece of work, & seemeth to be
one of the first builded houses on that
side the River, over-against the City:
It was called the Abbots Inne of Saint
Augustine in Southwarke, and was some
time holden of the Earles of Warren and
Surrey, as appeareth by a deede, made
1281. which I have read, and may bee
Englished thus:
To all to whom this present writing shall
come, Iohn, Earle Warren, sendeth gree
ting. Know ye, that we have altogether re
mised and quite claimed for us and our
heires for ever, to Nicholas, Abbot of
Saint Augustines of Canturbury, and the
Covent of the same, and their successors,
suit to our Court of Southwarke, which
they owe unto us, for all that Messuage and
houses thereon builded, and all their appur
tenances, which they have of our fee in
Southwarke, situate upon the Thames,
betweene the Bridgehouse, and Church of
Saint Olave. And the said Messuage with
the buildings thereon builded, and all their
appurtenances to them and their successors,
we have granted in perpetuall Almes to
hold of us, and our heires for the same: sa
ving the service due to any other persons, if
any such be, then to us. And for this remit
and grant, the said Abbot and Covent have
given unto us five shillings of rent yeerely
in Southwarke, and have received us
and our heires in all Benefices, which shall
be in their Church for ever.
come, Iohn, Earle Warren, sendeth gree
ting. Know ye, that we have altogether re
mised and quite claimed for us and our
heires for ever, to Nicholas, Abbot of
Saint Augustines of Canturbury, and the
Covent of the same, and their successors,
suit to our Court of Southwarke, which
they owe unto us, for all that Messuage and
houses thereon builded, and all their appur
tenances, which they have of our fee in
Southwarke, situate upon the Thames,
betweene the Bridgehouse, and Church of
Saint Olave. And the said Messuage with
the buildings thereon builded, and all their
appurtenances to them and their successors,
we have granted in perpetuall Almes to
hold of us, and our heires for the same: sa
ving the service due to any other persons, if
any such be, then to us. And for this remit
and grant, the said Abbot and Covent have
given unto us five shillings of rent yeerely
in Southwarke, and have received us
and our heires in all Benefices, which shall
be in their Church for ever.
This sute of Court one William Cras
peis was bound to doe to the said Earle,
for the said Messuage: and heretofore
to acquit in all things, the Church of
Saint Augustine, against the said
Earle.
peis was bound to doe to the said Earle,
for the said Messuage: and heretofore
to acquit in all things, the Church of
Saint Augustine, against the said
Earle.
This house of late time belonged to
Sir Anthony Sentleger, then to Warham
Sentleger, &c. And now is called Sent
leger house, but divided into sundry
Tenements.
Sir Anthony Sentleger, then to Warham
Sentleger, &c. And now is called Sent
leger house, but divided into sundry
Tenements.
Next is the Bridgehouse, so called, as
being a store-house, for Stone, Timber,
or whatsouer pertaining to the buil
ding or repairing of London bridge.
being a store-house, for Stone, Timber,
or
459
or whatsouer pertaining to the buil
ding or repairing of London bridge.
This house seemeth to have taken
beginning, with the first founding of
the Bridge; either of stone or timber:
it is a large plot of ground on the banke
of the river Thames, containing divers
large buildings, for stowage of things
necessary, towards reparation of the
said Bridge.
beginning, with the first founding of
the Bridge; either of stone or timber:
it is a large plot of ground on the banke
of the river Thames, containing divers
large buildings, for stowage of things
necessary, towards reparation of the
said Bridge.
There are also divers Garners,
for
laying up of Wheate, and other Gray
ners for service of the City, as need re
quireth. Moreover, there bee certaine
Ovens builded,
sixe bee very large, the other foure be
ing but halfe so bigge. These were
purposely made to bake out the bread
corne of the said Grayners, to the best
advantage, for reliefe of the poore Citi
zens, when neede should require. Sir I.
Throstone, Knight, sometime an Im
broderer, then Goldsmith, one of the
Sheriffes, 1516. gave (by his Testa
ment) towards the making of these
Ovens two hundred pounds, which
thing was performed by his Executors:
Sir Iohn Munday, Goldsmith, then be
ing Maior. There was of late, for the
enlarging of the said Bridge-house, taken
in an old Brew-house, called Goldings,
which was given to the Citie by George
Monox, sometime Maior, and in place
thereof, is now a faire brew-house
builded, for service of the Citie with
Beere.
laying up of Wheate, and other Gray
ners for service of the City, as need re
quireth. Moreover, there bee certaine
Ovens builded,
Ovens
in
the Bridge
house.
in number ten: of which
the Bridge
house.
sixe bee very large, the other foure be
ing but halfe so bigge. These were
purposely made to bake out the bread
corne of the said Grayners, to the best
advantage, for reliefe of the poore Citi
zens, when neede should require. Sir I.
Throstone, Knight, sometime an Im
broderer, then Goldsmith, one of the
Sheriffes, 1516. gave (by his Testa
ment) towards the making of these
Ovens two hundred pounds, which
thing was performed by his Executors:
Sir Iohn Munday, Goldsmith, then be
ing Maior. There was of late, for the
enlarging of the said Bridge-house, taken
in an old Brew-house, called Goldings,
which was given to the Citie by George
Monox, sometime Maior, and in place
thereof, is now a faire brew-house
builded, for service of the Citie with
Beere.
Next,
Inne, betwixt the Bridge-house and Bat
taile bridge, likewise on the banke of the
river of Thames; the walkes and gar
dens thereunto appertaining, on the o
ther side of the way, before the gate of
the said house, was called the Maze:
there is now an Inne, called the Flower
de luce, for that the signe is three Flower
de luces. Much other buildings of smal
tenements are thereon builded reple
nished with strangers and other, for the
most part poore people.
Abbot of
Battaile his
Inne.
was
the Abbot of Battailes
Battaile his
Inne.
Inne, betwixt the Bridge-house and Bat
taile bridge, likewise on the banke of the
river of Thames; the walkes and gar
dens thereunto appertaining, on the o
ther side of the way, before the gate of
the said house, was called the Maze:
there is now an Inne, called the Flower
de luce, for that the signe is three Flower
de luces. Much other buildings of smal
tenements are thereon builded reple
nished with strangers and other, for the
most part poore people.
Then is Battaile
bridge,
so called of
Battaile Abbey, for that it standeth on
the ground, and over a water-course
(flowing out of Thames) pertaining to
that Abbey, & was therfore both buil
ded and repaired by the Abbots of that
house as being hard adjoyning to the
Abbots lodging.
Battaile Abbey, for that it standeth on
the ground, and over a water-course
(flowing out of Thames) pertaining to
that Abbey, & was therfore both buil
ded and repaired by the Abbots of that
house as being hard adjoyning to the
Abbots lodging.
Beyond this Bridge is Bermondsey
streete, turning South, in the South end
whereof was sometime a Priory or Ab
bey, of S. Sauiovr, called Bermonds eye
in Southwarke, founded by Ailewin
Childe, a Citizen of London, in the yeere
1081.
streete, turning South, in the South end
whereof was sometime a Priory or Ab
bey, of S. Sauiovr, called Bermonds eye
in Southwarke, founded by Ailewin
Childe, a Citizen of London, in the yeere
1081.
Peter, Richard, Obstert, and Vmbalde,
Monkes de Charitate, came to Bermond
sey, the yeere 1089. and Peter was
made first Prior there, by appointment
of the Prior of the house, called Charitie
in France: by which meanes this Priory
of Bermondsey (being a Cell to that
in France) was accounted a Priory of A
liens.
Monkes de Charitate, came to Bermond
sey, the yeere 1089. and Peter was
made first Prior there, by appointment
of the Prior of the house, called Charitie
in France: by which meanes this Priory
of Bermondsey (being a Cell to that
in France) was accounted a Priory of A
liens.
In the yeere 1094. deceased Ailewin
Childe, founder of this house. Then Wil
liam Rufus gave to the Monks, his Man
nor of Bermondsey, with the appurtenan
ces, and builded for them there a new
great Church.
Childe, founder of this house. Then Wil
liam Rufus gave to the Monks, his Man
nor of Bermondsey, with the appurtenan
ces, and builded for them there a new
great Church.
Robert Blewit, Bishop
of Lincolne
(King Williams Chancelor) gave them
the Mannor of Charleton, with the ap
purtenances. Also Geffrey Martell, by
the grant of Geffrey Magnaville, gave
them the Land of Halingbury, and the
tithe of Alferton, &c.
(King Williams Chancelor) gave them
the Mannor of Charleton, with the ap
purtenances. Also Geffrey Martell, by
the grant of Geffrey Magnaville, gave
them the Land of Halingbury, and the
tithe of Alferton, &c.
More in the yeere Thomas of Arderne
1122. and Thomas his Son, gave to the
Monkes of Bermonds Eye, the Church
of Saint George in Southwarke.
1122. and Thomas his Son, gave to the
Monkes of Bermonds Eye, the Church
of Saint George in Southwarke.
In the yeere 1165. King Henry the
second confirmed to them the Hide or
territorie of Southwarke, and Laygham,
Waddam, with the land of Coleman, &c.
second confirmed to them the Hide or
territorie of Southwarke, and Laygham,
Waddam, with the land of Coleman, &c.
In the yeere one thouſand, three hun
dred, ſeventy one, the Priories of A
liens (throughout England) being seized
into the Kings hands, Richard Denten
an Englishman, was made Prior of
Bermondsey: to whom was committed
the custody of the said Priory, by the
letters patents of King Edward the
third, saving to the King the advow
sons of Churches.
dred, ſeventy one, the Priories of A
liens (throughout England) being seized
into the Kings hands, Richard Denten
an Englishman, was made Prior of
Bermondsey: to whom was committed
the custody of the said Priory, by the
letters patents of King Edward the
third, saving to the King the advow
sons of Churches.
In the yeare 1380. the fourth of Ri
chard the second, this Priory was made
a Denizen (or free English) for the fine
of 200. Markes, payd to the Kings Ha
naper in the Chancery. In the yeare
1399. Attelborough, Prior of Bermond
sey, was made the first Abbot of that
house, by Pope Boniface the ninth, at the
suit of King Richard the second.
chard the second, this Priory was made
a Denizen (or free English) for the fine
of 200. Markes, payd to the Kings Ha
naper in the Chancery. In the yeare
1399. Attelborough, Prior of Bermond
sey, was made the first Abbot of that
house, by Pope Boniface the ninth, at the
suit of King Richard the second.
Rr2
In
460
In the yeere 1417. Thomas Thetford,
Abbot of Bermondsey, held a Plea in
Chauncery against the King, for the
Mannors of Preston, Bermondsey, and
Stone, in the County of Summerset, in
the which sute the Abbot prevailed,
and recovered against the King.
In the yeere 1539. this Abbey was
valued to dispend by the yeere 474. l.
14. . 4. d. ob. and was surrendred to
Henry the eighth, the 31. of his reigne:
the Abbey Church was then pulled
downe by Sir Thomas Pope, Knight, and
in place thereof, a goodly house builded
of stone and timber, since pertaining to
the Earles of Sussex.
valued to dispend by the yeere 474. l.
14. . 4. d. ob. and was surrendred to
Henry the eighth, the 31. of his reigne:
the Abbey Church was then pulled
downe by Sir Thomas Pope, Knight, and
in place thereof, a goodly house builded
of stone and timber, since pertaining to
the Earles of Sussex.
Sir William
Bowes, Knight, and Dame
Elizabeth his wife.
Elizabeth his wife.
Sir Thomas
Pikeworth, Knight.
Iohn Winkefield,
Esquire.
Sir Nicholas
Blonket, Knight.
Dame Bridget, wife to Wil. Trussell.
Holgrave, Baron of
the Exchequer,
&c.
&c.
Next unto this Abbey Church stan
deth a proper Church of Saint Mary
Magdalen, builded by the Priors of Ber
mondsey, serving for resort of the inha
bitants (tenants to the Prior or Abbots
neere adjoyning) there to have their di
vine Service: this Church remaineth
and serveth as afore, and is called a Pa
rish Church.
deth a proper Church of Saint Mary
Magdalen, builded by the Priors of Ber
mondsey, serving for resort of the inha
bitants (tenants to the Prior or Abbots
neere adjoyning) there to have their di
vine Service: this Church remaineth
and serveth as afore, and is called a Pa
rish Church.
Then in Kentstreet
is a Lazar house
for Leprous people, called the Loke in
Southwarke: the foundation whereof I
finde not. Now having touched divers
principall parts of this Borough, I am
to speak somewhat of government, and
so to end.
for Leprous people, called the Loke in
Southwarke: the foundation whereof I
finde not. Now having touched divers
principall parts of this Borough, I am
to speak somewhat of government, and
so to end.
This Borough at a Subsidy to the
King, yeeldeth about 1000. Markes, or
800. l. which is more than any one Ci
ty in England payeth, except the City of
London. And also the Muster of men in
this Borough doth likewise in number
surpasse all other Cities, except London.
And thus much for the Borough of
Southwarke, one of the 26. Wards of
London, which hath an Alderman, De
puties three, and a Bayliffe. Common
Councell none. Constables 16. Scaven
gers 6. Wardmote Inquest 20. And is
taxed to the Fifteene, at 17. pounds, 17.
shillings, 8. pence.
King, yeeldeth about 1000. Markes, or
800. l. which is more than any one Ci
ty in England payeth, except the City of
London. And also the Muster of men in
this Borough doth likewise in number
surpasse all other Cities, except London.
And thus much for the Borough of
Southwarke, one of the 26. Wards of
London, which hath an Alderman, De
puties three, and a Bayliffe. Common
Councell none. Constables 16. Scaven
gers 6. Wardmote Inquest 20. And is
taxed to the Fifteene, at 17. pounds, 17.
shillings, 8. pence.
The
Notes
- I.e., Charles Brandon. (MR)↑
- I.e., Suffolk House. (MR)↑
- Ink faded: missing letter obvious from context. (MR)↑
- I.e., London Bridge. (MR)↑
- This appears to be a mistake. Bermondsey Abbey and St. Saviour (Southwark) are separate places in Southwark. (LS)↑
- Faded ink: missing letter obvious from context. (MR)↑
- I.e., Anthony Browne, first Viscount Montague and owner of Montague Close. (MR)↑
- I.e., London Bridge. (MR)↑
- Torn page: all missing characters on this page are supplied from EEBO copy. (MR)↑
- Likely Walter Fitzwalter, third Baron Fitzwalter based on the years he lived. (JB)↑
- Kingston corrects the name to Sir Richard Imworth in Kingston 1908. (JB)↑
- St. Batholomew’s began August 24th. (MR)↑
- Torn page: all missing characters on this page are supplied from EEBO copy. (MR)↑
- Faded ink: missing letter obvious from context. (MR)↑
- Celebrated 29 September. (MR)↑
- Possibly referring to Geoffery de Say, second Lord de Say. (MR)↑
- I.e., Thomas Ravis. (MR)↑
- Ink smudged: missing letter obvious from context. (MR)↑
Cite this page
MLA citation
Survey of London (1633): Borough of Southwark and Bridge Ward Without.The Map of Early Modern London, Edition 7.0, edited by , U of Victoria, 05 May 2022, mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/stow_1633_BRID4.htm. Draft.
Chicago citation
Survey of London (1633): Borough of Southwark and Bridge Ward Without.The Map of Early Modern London, Edition 7.0. Ed. . Victoria: University of Victoria. Accessed May 05, 2022. mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/stow_1633_BRID4.htm. Draft.
APA citation
The Map of Early Modern London (Edition 7.0). Victoria: University of Victoria. Retrieved from https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/editions/7.0/stow_1633_BRID4.htm. Draft.
, , , & 2022. Survey of London (1633): Borough of Southwark and Bridge Ward Without. In (Ed), RIS file (for RefMan, RefWorks, EndNote etc.)
Provider: University of Victoria Database: The Map of Early Modern London Content: text/plain; charset="utf-8" TY - ELEC A1 - Stow, John A1 - Munday, Anthony A1 - Munday, Anthony A1 - Dyson, Humphrey ED - Jenstad, Janelle T1 - Survey of London (1633): Borough of Southwark and Bridge Ward Without T2 - The Map of Early Modern London ET - 7.0 PY - 2022 DA - 2022/05/05 CY - Victoria PB - University of Victoria LA - English UR - https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/stow_1633_BRID4.htm UR - https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/xml/standalone/stow_1633_BRID4.xml TY - UNP ER -
TEI citation
<bibl type="mla"><author><name ref="#STOW6"><surname>Stow</surname>, <forename>John</forename></name></author>,
<author><name ref="#MUND1"><forename>Anthony</forename> <surname>Munday</surname></name></author>,
<author><name ref="#MUND1"><forename>Anthony</forename> <surname>Munday</surname></name></author>,
and <author><name ref="#DYSO1"><forename>Humphrey</forename> <surname>Dyson</surname></name></author>.
<title level="a">Survey of London (1633): Borough of Southwark and Bridge Ward Without</title>.
<title level="m">The Map of Early Modern London</title>, Edition <edition>7.0</edition>,
edited by <editor><name ref="#JENS1"><forename>Janelle</forename> <surname>Jenstad</surname></name></editor>,
<publisher>U of Victoria</publisher>, <date when="2022-05-05">05 May 2022</date>,
<ref target="https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/stow_1633_BRID4.htm">mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/stow_1633_BRID4.htm</ref>.
Draft.</bibl>
Personography
-
Molly Rothwell
MR
Project Manager, 2022-present. Research Assistant, 2020-2022. Molly Rothwell was an undergraduate student at the University of Victoria, with a double major in English and History. During her time at MoEML, Molly primarily worked on encoding and transcribing the 1598 and 1633 editions of Stow’s Survey, adding toponyms to MoEML’s Gazetteer, researching England’s early-modern court system, and standardizing MoEML’s Mapography.Roles played in the project
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Molly Rothwell is mentioned in the following documents:
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Lucas Simpson
LS
Research Assistant, 2018-2021. Lucas Simpson was a student at the University of Victoria.Roles played in the project
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Chris Horne
CH
Research Assistant, 2018-2020. Chris Horne was an honours student in the Department of English at the University of Victoria. His primary research interests included American modernism, affect studies, cultural studies, and digital humanities.Roles played in the project
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Tracey El Hajj
TEH
Junior Programmer 2018-2020. Research Associate 2020-2021. Tracey received her PhD from the Department of English at the University of Victoria in the field of Science and Technology Studies. Her research focuses on the algorhythmics of networked communications. She was a 2019-20 President’s Fellow in Research-Enriched Teaching at UVic, where she taught an advanced course onArtificial Intelligence and Everyday Life.
Tracey was also a member of the Linked Early Modern Drama Online team, between 2019 and 2021. Between 2020 and 2021, she was a fellow in residence at the Praxis Studio for Comparative Media Studies, where she investigated the relationships between artificial intelligence, creativity, health, and justice. As of July 2021, Tracey has moved into the alt-ac world for a term position, while also teaching in the English Department at the University of Victoria.Roles played in the project
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Joey Takeda
JT
Programmer, 2018-present. Junior Programmer, 2015-2017. Research Assistant, 2014-2017. Joey Takeda was a graduate student at the University of British Columbia in the Department of English (Science and Technology research stream). He completed his BA honours in English (with a minor in Women’s Studies) at the University of Victoria in 2016. His primary research interests included diasporic and indigenous Canadian and American literature, critical theory, cultural studies, and the digital humanities.Roles played in the project
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Jenstad, Janelle and Joseph Takeda.
Making the RA Matter: Pedagogy, Interface, and Practices.
Making Things and Drawing Boundaries: Experiments in the Digital Humanities. Ed. Jentery Sayers. Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press, 2018. Print.
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Jasmeen Boparai
JB
Research Assistant, 2016-2017. Jasmeen Boparai was an undergraduate English major and Medieval Studies minor at the University of Victoria. Her primary research interests included Middle English literature with a specific interest in later works, early modern studies, and Elizabethan poetry.Roles played in the project
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Janelle Jenstad
JJ
Janelle Jenstad is Associate Professor of English at the University of Victoria, Director of The Map of Early Modern London, and PI of Linked Early Modern Drama Online. She has taught at Queen’s University, the Summer Academy at the Stratford Festival, the University of Windsor, and the University of Victoria. With Jennifer Roberts-Smith and Mark Kaethler, she co-edited Shakespeare’s Language in Digital Media (Routledge). She has prepared a documentary edition of John Stow’s A Survey of London (1598 text) for MoEML and is currently editing The Merchant of Venice (with Stephen Wittek) and Heywood’s 2 If You Know Not Me You Know Nobody for DRE. Her articles have appeared in Digital Humanities Quarterly, Renaissance and Reformation,Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Early Modern Literary Studies, Elizabethan Theatre, Shakespeare Bulletin: A Journal of Performance Criticism, and The Silver Society Journal. Her book chapters have appeared (or will appear) in Institutional Culture in Early Modern Society (Brill, 2004), Shakespeare, Language and the Stage, The Fifth Wall: Approaches to Shakespeare from Criticism, Performance and Theatre Studies (Arden/Thomson Learning, 2005), Approaches to Teaching Othello (Modern Language Association, 2005), Performing Maternity in Early Modern England (Ashgate, 2007), New Directions in the Geohumanities: Art, Text, and History at the Edge of Place (Routledge, 2011), Early Modern Studies and the Digital Turn (Iter, 2016), Teaching Early Modern English Literature from the Archives (MLA, 2015), Placing Names: Enriching and Integrating Gazetteers (Indiana, 2016), Making Things and Drawing Boundaries (Minnesota, 2017), and Rethinking Shakespeare’s Source Study: Audiences, Authors, and Digital Technologies (Routledge, 2018).Roles played in the project
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Jenstad, Janelle and Joseph Takeda.
Making the RA Matter: Pedagogy, Interface, and Practices.
Making Things and Drawing Boundaries: Experiments in the Digital Humanities. Ed. Jentery Sayers. Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press, 2018. Print. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
Building a Gazetteer for Early Modern London, 1550-1650.
Placing Names. Ed. Merrick Lex Berman, Ruth Mostern, and Humphrey Southall. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana UP, 2016. 129-145. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
The Burse and the Merchant’s Purse: Coin, Credit, and the Nation in Heywood’s 2 If You Know Not Me You Know Nobody.
The Elizabethan Theatre XV. Ed. C.E. McGee and A.L. Magnusson. Toronto: P.D. Meany, 2002. 181–202. Print. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
Early Modern Literary Studies 8.2 (2002): 5.1–26..The City Cannot Hold You
: Social Conversion in the Goldsmith’s Shop. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
The Silver Society Journal 10 (1998): 40–43.The Gouldesmythes Storehowse
: Early Evidence for Specialisation. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
Lying-in Like a Countess: The Lisle Letters, the Cecil Family, and A Chaste Maid in Cheapside.
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 34 (2004): 373–403. doi:10.1215/10829636–34–2–373. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
Public Glory, Private Gilt: The Goldsmiths’ Company and the Spectacle of Punishment.
Institutional Culture in Early Modern Society. Ed. Anne Goldgar and Robert Frost. Leiden: Brill, 2004. 191–217. Print. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
Smock Secrets: Birth and Women’s Mysteries on the Early Modern Stage.
Performing Maternity in Early Modern England. Ed. Katherine Moncrief and Kathryn McPherson. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007. 87–99. Print. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
Using Early Modern Maps in Literary Studies: Views and Caveats from London.
GeoHumanities: Art, History, Text at the Edge of Place. Ed. Michael Dear, James Ketchum, Sarah Luria, and Doug Richardson. London: Routledge, 2011. Print. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
Versioning John Stow’s A Survey of London, or, What’s New in 1618 and 1633?.
Janelle Jenstad Blog. https://janellejenstad.com/2013/03/20/versioning-john-stows-a-survey-of-london-or-whats-new-in-1618-and-1633/. -
Shakespeare, William. The Merchant of Venice. Ed. Janelle Jenstad. Internet Shakespeare Editions. U of Victoria. http://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/Library/Texts/MV/.
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Stow, John. A SVRVAY OF LONDON. Contayning the Originall, Antiquity, Increase, Moderne estate, and description of that Citie, written in the yeare 1598. by Iohn Stow Citizen of London. Also an Apologie (or defence) against the opinion of some men, concerning that Citie, the greatnesse thereof. With an Appendix, containing in Latine, Libellum de situ & nobilitate Londini: written by William Fitzstephen, in the raigne of Henry the second. Ed. Janelle Jenstad and the MoEML Team. MoEML. Transcribed.
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Paul Schaffner
PS
E-text and TCP production manager at the University of Michigan Digital Library Production Service (DLPS), Paul manages the production of full-text transcriptions for EEBO-TCP.Roles played in the project
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Editor of Original EEBO-TCP Encoding
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Sebastian Rahtz
SR
Chief data architect at University of Oxford IT Services, Sebastian was well known for his contributions to the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI), OxGarage, and the Text Creation Partnership (TCP).Roles played in the project
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Creator of TEI Stylesheets for Conversion of EEBO-TCP Encoding to TEI-P5
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Martin D. Holmes
MDH
Programmer at the University of Victoria Humanities Computing and Media Centre (HCMC). Martin ported the MOL project from its original PHP incarnation to a pure eXist database implementation in the fall of 2011. Since then, he has been lead programmer on the project and has also been responsible for maintaining the project schemas. He was a co-applicant on MoEML’s 2012 SSHRC Insight Grant.Roles played in the project
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Abstract Author
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Author
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Conceptor
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Editor
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Encoder
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Geo-Coordinate Researcher
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Markup Editor
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Post-Conversion Editor
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Programmer
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Proofreader
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Researcher
Contributions by this author
Martin D. Holmes is a member of the following organizations and/or groups:
Martin D. Holmes is mentioned in the following documents:
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Sir Thomas Audley
(b. between 1487 and 1488, d. 1544)First Baron Audley of Walden. Lord Chancellor of England 1533-1544. Husband of Elizabeth Audley. Father of Margaret Howard.Sir Thomas Audley is mentioned in the following documents:
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Nicholas Bourne is mentioned in the following documents:
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Geoffrey Chaucer
(b. 1340, d. 1400)Poet and administrator. Author of The Canterbury Tales. Buried at Westminster Abbey.Geoffrey Chaucer is mentioned in the following documents:
Geoffrey Chaucer authored or edited the following items in MoEML’s bibliography:
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Chaucer, Geoffrey. The Works of Geoffrey Chaucer. Ed. F.N. Robinson. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1957. Remediated by Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse.
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Humphrey Dyson is mentioned in the following documents:
Humphrey Dyson authored or edited the following items in MoEML’s bibliography:
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Stow, John, Anthony Munday, and Humphrey Dyson. THE SURVEY OF LONDON: CONTAINING The Original, Increase, Modern Estate and Government of that City, Methodically set down. With a Memorial of those famouser Acts of Charity, which for publick and Pious Vses have been bestowed by many Worshipfull Citizens and Benefactors. As also all the Ancient and Modern Monuments erected in the Churches, not only of those two famous Cities, LONDON and WESTMINSTER, but (now newly added) Four miles compass. Begun first by the pains and industry of John Stow, in the year 1598. Afterwards inlarged by the care and diligence of A.M. in the year 1618. And now compleatly finished by the study &labour of A.M., H.D. and others, this present year 1633. Whereunto, besides many Additions (as appears by the Contents) are annexed divers Alphabetical Tables, especially two, The first, an index of Things. The second, a Concordance of Names. London: Printed for Nicholas Bourne, 1633. STC 23345.5.
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Strype, John, John Stow, Anthony Munday, and Humphrey Dyson. A Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster. Vol. 2. London, 1720. Remediated by The Making of the Modern World.
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Edward I
Edward This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 1I King of England Longshanks Hammer of the Scots
(b. between 17 June 1239 and 18 June 1239, d. in or before 27 October 1307)Edward I is mentioned in the following documents:
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Edward III
Edward This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 3III King of England
(b. 12 November 1312, d. 21 June 1377)Edward III is mentioned in the following documents:
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Edward VI
Edward This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 6VI King of England King of Ireland
(b. 12 October 1537, d. 6 July 1553)Edward VI is mentioned in the following documents:
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Edward IV
Edward This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 4IV King of England
(b. 28 April 1442, d. 9 April 1483)Edward IV is mentioned in the following documents:
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Elizabeth I
Elizabeth This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 1I Queen of England Queen of Ireland Gloriana Good Queen Bess
(b. 7 September 1533, d. 24 March 1603)Queen of England and Ireland 1558-1603.Elizabeth I is mentioned in the following documents:
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Sir Thomas Fleming
Husband of Margaret Fleming. Buried at St. Katherine’s Hospital.Sir Thomas Fleming is mentioned in the following documents:
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Robert Fleming
Son of Sir Thomas Fleming. Monument at St. Thomas Hospital.Robert Fleming is mentioned in the following documents:
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John of Gaunt
John
(b. 1340, d. 1399)Duke of Aquitaine and First Duke of Lancaster. Husband of Blanche of Lancaster.John of Gaunt is mentioned in the following documents:
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Henry VIII
Henry This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 8VIII King of England King of Ireland
(b. 28 June 1491, d. 28 January 1547)King of England and Ireland 1509-1547.Henry VIII is mentioned in the following documents:
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Henry VI
Henry This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 6VI King of England
(b. 6 December 1421, d. 21 May 1471)Henry VI is mentioned in the following documents:
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Henry VII
Henry This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 7VII King of England
(b. 1457, d. 1509)Henry VII is mentioned in the following documents:
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Henry V
Henry This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 5V King of England
(b. 1386, d. 1422)Henry V is mentioned in the following documents:
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James VI and I
James This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 6VI This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 1I King of Scotland King of England King of Ireland
(b. 1566, d. 1625)James VI and I is mentioned in the following documents:
James VI and I authored or edited the following items in MoEML’s bibliography:
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James VI and I. Letters of King James VI and I. Ed. G.P.V. Akrigg. Berkeley: U of California P, 1984. Print.
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Rhodes, Neill, Jennifer Richards, and Joseph Marshall, eds. King James VI and I: Selected Writings. By James VI and I. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2004.
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Mary I
Mary This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 1I Queen of England Queen of Ireland
(b. 18 February 1516, d. 17 November 1558)Mary I is mentioned in the following documents:
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Sir John Mundy
Sir John Mundy Sheriff Mayor
(d. 1537)Sheriff of London 1514-1515. Mayor 1522-1523. Member of the Goldsmiths’ Company. Buried at St. Peter, Westcheap.Sir John Mundy is mentioned in the following documents:
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Anthony Munday
(bap. 1560, d. 1633)Playwright, actor, pageant poet, translator, and writer. Possible member of the Drapers’ Company or Merchant Taylors’ Company.Anthony Munday is mentioned in the following documents:
Anthony Munday authored or edited the following items in MoEML’s bibliography:
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Anthony Munday. The Triumphs of Re-United Britannia. Arthur F. Kinney. Renaissance Drama: An Anthology of Plays and Entertainments. 2nd ed. Toronto: Wiley, 2005.
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Munday, Anthony. Camp-Bell: or the Ironmongers Faire Feild. London: Edward Allde, 1609. DEEP406. STC 18279.
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Munday, Anthony, Henry Chettle, Thomas Dekker, Thomas Heywood, and William Shakespeare. Sir Thomas More. 1998. Remediated by Project Gutenberg.
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Munday, Anthony, Henry Chettle, Thomas Dekker, Thomas Heywood, and William Shakespeare. Sir Thomas More. Ed. Vittorio Gabrieli and Giorgio Melchiori. Revels Plays. Manchester; New York: Manchester UP, 1990. Print.
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