Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 November 2011
page 301 1 Trans. Potter, K. R. (edition of 1955, Nelson and Sons), 138–9.Google Scholar
page 301 2 Fuit namque idem castellum ex episcopi Wintoniensis iure, quod quidem in illis partibus et ad uarios raptorum arcendos incursus et ad suae specialiter ecclesiae terras tuendas, quas circumquaque episcopus habuerat, possidebat. It was the lands of the bishop's church, i.e. of the monks of his cathedral, whichwere in this neighbourhood.
page 301 3 Adam de Domerham, Historia de Rebus gestis Glastoniensibus (ed. Hearne, Oxford, 1727), 316.
page 301 4 Annahs Wintonienses (Rolls Series, 36. 2), 51.
page 301 5 Davis, R. H. C., E.H.R. lxxvii (1962), 229, n. 11.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
page 301 6 Domesday Book, i, 41 a, 2; cf. Pipe Roll 24 Henry II, 109.
page 301 7 F.C.H., Hants, iv, 8.
page 301 8 Williams-Freeman, J. P., An Introduction to Field Archaeology as Illustrated by Hampshire(London, 1915), 306–7, 352.Google Scholar
page 302 1 Ibid. 305–6, 369. See also Tie Times, 26 October 1951.
page 303 1 O.S. card No. SU74 NE9.
page 303 2 Pipe Roll 2 Henry II, 54, recording the slighting of the bishop's castles, probably applies.
page 303 3 Cf. the occasion in 1141 when the bishop's castles were not ready for defence; Gesta Stephani, 78.