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The Mediæval Hospitals of England

Chapter 146: UNIDENTIFIED
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About This Book

The book surveys the origins, organization, and functions of medieval English hospitals, describing foundations, endowments, governance, and the range of house types from pilgrims’ hospices and almshouses to leper-houses and infirmaries. It uses documentary evidence, seals, plans, and illustrations to portray daily routines, charitable practices, funding and legal arrangements, and the religious observances that shaped administration. Architectural features and surviving fabric are examined alongside accounts of care for travelers, the poor, the sick, and the aged, presenting these institutions as integral elements of local welfare and community structure in the Middle Ages.

UNIDENTIFIED

Locality.

Dedication.

Date.

County.

Beghton471

St. Luke Ev. (L)

Pat. 1335

Chestnuts, Wood of472

(L)

Pat. 1256

? Kent

Cheston

St. Erasmus & St. Mary M.473

Clayhanger

Pat. 1253

? Middlesex

Clelecombe474

St. John Baptist

Pat. 1332

Hareford475

St. Mary

Close 1309

Lanford476

(L)

Will 1307

Exeter Diocese

Langeford

(L)

Pat. 1275

Merston, nr. Chelworth

St. John Baptist477

temp. Henry III.

Wilts

Newenham

St. Mary Magdalene(L)

Pat. 1256

Newnham Regis, Warwick, or Newnham-on-Severn, Glos. Cf. Newnham Murren, Oxon.

Newenham

St. Mary Magdalene

Pat. 1226

Newenham

St. Margaret

Pat. 1332–3–4

“Novus Locus”

Close 1235

Cf. New Place by Guildford

Scevenloke, de la478

St. Leonard

Pat. 1232

Teneleshend479

St. Leonard

c. 1270

Yorks