[1530] Cf. p. 504.
[1531] On Cheyne’s houses cf. p. 499.
[1532] M. S. C. ii. 42–51. This hall is doubtless the ground-floor frater referred to in a document of c. 1562 (M. S. C. ii. 105).
[1533] Cf. p. 499. The ‘blinde parler that my Lord warden did clayme’ and ‘the litle kitchyn and cole howse’ are mentioned in the survey of 1550 to define the position of other parcels. But the hall and parlour might be held to be covered by the grant of the ‘howse called the vpper frater’, and I do not know what the ‘little tenement’ near that held by Kirkham from Cheyne was, if it was not the little chamber and kitchen. It is noteworthy that the disputed rooms, after being included, with a note of Cheyne’s claim, in the survey of 1548, were left out of Cawarden’s lease of the same year.
[1534] M. S. C. ii. 109.
[1535] Brewer, ii. 2. 1494.
[1536] Tudor Revels, 7.
[1537] Feuillerat, Edw. and Mary, 255; Wallace, i. 140.
[1538] Athenaeum (1886), ii. 91.
[1539] Feuillerat, Eliz. 430; cf. M. S. C. ii. 120; Wallace, i. 192.