This manor of Blisland was heretofore invested with the jurisdiction of life and limb within its precincts (the lords whereof doubtless built or endowed the present church); and within memory of the last age, the inhabitants will tell you, that a person was executed, in the gallows-field there, for robbing this parish church of its silver cup and pattens belonging to the altar (vide Mitchell). This manor of Blisland, tempore Hen. VII. was the lands of ——, who forfeited the same by attainder of treason in Flammock’s rebellion, whereby it fell to the crown; from whence it was conveyed to the Stanhopes, and from them to Parker, and from Parker to Reynolds, from Reynolds to Sprye, from Sprye to Molesworth.
In this parish somewhere liveth Trese, Gent. The name Tres, or Treas, is Cornish British, and signifies in that language “the third,” and was a name taken up in memory of the third son or person of the family from whence he was descended, and is derived from the same Japhetical origin as τριτος, tertius, “the third,” as the Latin word tres. Treas is also “the third” in the Scots and Irish tongues.
This parish hath in it loads and streams of tin.
TONKIN.
The etymology of this parish is plain, being wholly Saxon, bless and land, as contrasted with the moors
and craggy hills around it. Norden says that the sheriff’s writ runneth not within this parish.
THE EDITOR.
Number of statute acres 6025.
| £. | s. | d. | |
| The annual value of Real Property, as returned to Parliament in 1815 | 3,643 | 0 | 0 |
| Poor Rate in 1831 | 328 | 5 | 0 |
| Population,— | |||
| in 1801, 437 | in 1811, 487 | in 1821, 637 | in 1831, 644. |