[18] The site is marked by seven large stone slabs. Outside the north door of the old Hall stood the Chapel of St. Thomas. It was connected with the Cloisters, and thereby with the Chapel of St. Anne or with the present main entrance of the Temple Church. Indications of the old cloister are traceable in the present Buttery and the ancient chamber beneath it. The walls of this chamber are of rubble and Kentish rag, and the ceiling is supported by groined arches. Its floor is on the same level as that of the ancient Church. There is an open fireplace of later date. Mr. Inderwick takes this room to have been the old “Refectory of the Priests.”
[19] ‘The Temple Church.’
[20] Cf. ‘The Inns of Court and Chancery’ (W. J. Loftie).
[21] ‘Origines Juridiciales.’
[22] ‘Sepulchral Monuments,’ vol. i., pp. 24, 50.
[23] Gough, ‘Sepulchral Monuments.’
[24] Raised 2 feet in 1908, but otherwise unaltered.
[25] Can only be visited by obtaining an order. It would be gracious of the Benchers to relax this restriction.
[26] Bellot, ‘Inner and Middle Temple.’
[27] Thackeray, ‘Pendennis.’