Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - Volume 4.djvu/282

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232 NOTES AND QUERIES. [io» s. iv. SEPT. ie, IQOS. Horneby Abbey, Lancashire. (Subordinate to Croxton, founded before 1200 by an ancestor of the Lords of Monteagle.) Irford Nunnery, Lincolnshire. ( Ralph de Albany, Ul.) Kalenda or Kaylend Abbey, Northants. (1 A cell in parish of Cottesbrook.) Langdon Abbey, Kent. (1212, William D'Auberville. 56Z. 6s. 9d.) Langley Abbey, Norfolk. (1198, Robert Fitz Roger Helke, 128Z. 19s. 9d) Lavendon Abbey, Bucks. (Temp. Henry II., John de Bidun, 79^. 13s. 8d. ; Speed gives 91/. 8s. 3id) Le Dale or De Parco Stanley Abbey, Derbyshire. (1204, William Fitz Ralph, 144J. 12s.) Leystone Abbey, Suffolk. (1183, Ranulph de Glanville, 1811. 17s. Id.) Newbowe Abbey, Lincolnshire. ( Richard Malbyse, 1152. Us. 8d.) Newhouse or Newsham Abbey, Lincolnshire. (1143, Peter de Gousel or Gousla, 99J. 2s. lOd.: Speed, 114Z. Is. 4d.) St. Agatha Easby Abbey, Yorkshire. (1152, Roald "le Ennasse," Constable of Rich- mond Castle, 111Z. 17s. lid.) St. Radegund or Bradsole Abbey, Kent. (1191, King Richard I., 142?. 8s. 9d.) Shapp or Hipp Abbey, Westmoreland. (1150, Thomas Fitz Gospatrick, 166J. 10s. 6d.) Sulby Abbey, Northants. (1155, Robert de Querceto or de Chesney, Bishop of Lin- coln, 3051. 8s. 5d.) Titchfield Abbey, Hants. (1231, Peter de Rupibus, Bishop of Winchester, 280/. 19s. lOd.) Torr Abbey, Devonshire. (1196, William de Briwere, 396Z. Os. lid.) Tupholme Abbey, Lincolnshire. (Temp. Henry II., Gilbert de Nevill, 1191. 2s. 8d.) Welbeck Abbey, Notts. (1153, Thomas de Cokeney or Thomas le Flemangh, 2981. 4s. 8d.) Wendling Abbey, Norfolk. (Before 1267, William de Wendling, 55Z. 18s. 4d) ALFRED T. EVERITT. High Street, Portsmouth. Abbot Gasquet gives a chronological list of ancient English Premonstratensian founda- tions on pp. vii and viii of his ' Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia,' vol. i., published by the Royal Historical Society in 1904. JOHN B. WAINEWRIGHT. There are thirty-two named in 5th S. vii. 390, and six in a supplemental list (p. 616). To these may be added Coverham, Yorkshire; Halesowen, Worcestershire ; Great Parndou, Essex; Dryburgh, Berwick ; Blanchland, Northumberland ; Leiston, Suffolk ; Crowle, Lincolnshire, making in all forty-five. EVERARD HOME COLI.M N. The following list is given in Mackenzie Walcott's ' Minsters and Abbey Ruins of the United Kingdom' (1860): William II., 2; Stephen, 5: Henry II., 16; Richard I., 8; John, 3 : Henry III., 3 ; total, 37. W. B. H. By the kindness of my friend and fellow- contributor MR. R. C. BOSTOCK, of Ramsgate, I have been enabled to see the following booklet, which is most helpful: "A Sketch of the Premonstratensian Order and their •Houses in Great Britain and Ireland. London, Burns & Oates, Portman Street, 1878." T. CANN HUGHES, M.A., F.S.A. Lancaster. [Our readers will, we think, be grateful for the double alphabetical arrangement. MR. ROLAND AUSTIN, MR. W. E. A. AXON, MR. J. HOLDEN MAU.MICHAKL, MR. J. A. RANDOLPH, ST. SWITHIN, and the REV. C. 8. WARD are also thanked for replies.] " JlGGERY - POKERY " (10th S. iv. 166).— "Jigger"was formerly used in Scotland to denote a secret still, and " poke " a bag or sack (" To buy a pig in a poke"). I can remember an old Scotch lady who constantly used a somewhat similar word to express a sly or underhand proceeding ; but she called it" jewkery-pawkery." CONSTANCE RUSSELL. Swallowfield. " HlCKERY - PUCKERY " (10th S. iv. 87).— " Puckery-hickery " and " hickery_-puckery " are merely local or personal variations of the slang term " hokery-pokery," which is a descriptive form of the conjurer's "hocus pocus," whose derivation is doubtless known to your correspondents. FRANK PENNY. GYTHA, MOTHER OF HAROLD II. (10th S. iv. 168).—She was sister to Earl Ulf (son-in-law to Cnut), and was married to God wine about 1019. He died in 1053. When Harold fell at Sen lac she was denied his body, though she offered its weight in gold. She then retired to Exeter, which the Conqueror took the next year. For a time she found refuge on the Steep Holm in the Bristol Channel, and afterwards went thence over sea to St. Oiuer's (' A.-S. Chron.,' 1067). The date of her death is unknown. C. S. WJLHD. I do not think the date of her death i« known. Freeman's ' Norman Conquest ' would, I suppose, give all that is known and would refer to the sources of inspiration for any statement made concerning her. She