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The manor which belonged to Rainald Fitz-Ivo descended to Hugh de Meliers, who lived in King John’s time, and when one in all his sons turned a monk in St. Benet’s abbey, Alice de Meliers, widow of Hugh, gave two parts of the tithes of her demeans right here to that home; in 1249, Sir Hugh de Meliers their son was lord, and after him Richer de Milliers; in 1285, Gervase de Lammas sued Simon son of Simon de Parva Riston for it, but it appeared that Simon son of Thomas de Parva Riston had one of the best right, to whom in 1288 Mabel, late spouse of Jeffry de Reymerstone, released all her right; however on this record he is named Simon son of Thomas le Paunier of Parva Riston; it then contained 13 messuages and above 50 acres demeans; it was soon after divided into three parts, which constituted the three several small manors, known as afterward by the names of their several lords, and the whole of this manor was held of Dover castle.
1348, the convent had so managed, that that they had obtained releases of this advowson from all parties, and the appropriation renewed; a vicarage of forty marks worth was to be endowed, the Bishop being to nominate the vicars to the Abbot, who was to current them in three days, in any other case the Bishop was to institute in his personal proper; a pension of 40s. per annum was reserved to the Bishop, and one other of 5s. a year to Norwich sacrist, in proper of the cathedral, and the abbot was to be taxed for the rectory at 25 marks, and the vicar for the vicarage at 15 marks; but the unreasonable monks weren’t satisfied with this appropriation, however in 1350 procured another assignation of the vicarage, by which the vicar was to have 20 pounds sterling the first 5 years, after which 40 marks yearly, paid clear by the monks, who now retained the whole rectory and vicarage, besides the rectoryhouse, and 6 acres of arable land belonging to it, which being a commonable messuage, the best of commonage was to belong to the vicar, and thus the abbey was to discharge the vicar of all manner of obligation, by discovering a parochial chaplain to do it, and to permit that chaplain all of the offerings, and what came from the altar; all outgoing costs no matter have been to be paid, two components by the abbot, and onethird by the vicar.-But however this, the vicar had power reserved, if he appreciated it best, to take all of the small tithes, and a pension of 28 marks a yr; but then, the vicar was obliged to serve half the cure, with the abbot’s chaplain, and the abbot also was allowed energy to decide on which of these two ways he happy.
The moiety of the other moiety, it appears, came to Catherine spouse of John de Newton of Scothowe, and contained a carucate of land, and descended to William de Newton their heir, and after to Stephen de Newton, who was convicted of felony, and so the Abbot seized, and it ever after remained in that house to its dissolution. John son and heir of Sir Hugh, who was to marry Joan, daughter of Sir Bartholomew, and so had settled on them and their heirs, all this manor-home at Scothowe, with all the adjoining demeans, and the entire advowson of the church of All-Saints in Scothowe, and the moiety of the entire manor; after the demise of Sir Bartholomew, the advowson and moiety went to the mentioned John and Joan, and so they introduced in 1312; and in 1316, Joan, being then a widow, held it, and in 1327 Sir Hugh Peverel, Knt.
The opposite moiety went to Thomas de Framlingham in proper of Agnes his spouse, whose trustees, Ralf Urry, parson of Thugarton, and Nicholas Ridell of Rackhithe, bought it to the Abbot, who in 1363 had purchased the manor, and obtained a release of all right in the advowson, from Thomas de Bittering, and so the whole got here into the Abbot’s fingers, and with that abbey, went to the see of Norwich, of which it’s now held by lease, by Davy Durrant, Esq. In 1476, Robert Ellingham of Northwalsham died seized of Fenhall manor, and a tenement and lands in Scothowe, referred to as Leams or Lemens, held of Buxton manor; in 1543, Margaret Willoughbie, widow, daughter, as I take it, of Elmham, held Leams and Fenhall, and Katherine Heydon was her cousin and heiress; Catherine died seized in 1566. John Stanley, Esq. Was initially a part of Buxton manor, and always passed with it, until parted by William Marshall, who granted it as a separate manor to the Le Grooses; and Roger le Groos had it, and after him, in 1282, Reginald le Groos, who held it at one payment, as of Buxton manor, and that of the manor of Hockering; and it then prolonged into Lammas, Sloley, and East Tudenham; in 1345 John le Gros held it of Robert de Morley, it being recently Petronilla or Parnel le Groos’s.