incidents to the tenure are—1. payment of fines; 2. situation in an ancient vill; 3. attendance on the lord's court; 4. enjoyment of certain rights of common. It may be that neither the fine nor the vill forms a component part of the name; but K. need have no scruple in believing that an abbreviated Latin or "legal term" (invented, of course, by the stewards or bailiffs of the lord) may have become naturalised among those of the inhabitants of the Moor whom it concerns. The tenants or retainers of a manor have no alternative but to submit to any generic name by which the steward may please to distinguish them. Thus the "priors" and "censors" of Dartmoor forest are content to be called by those names, because they were designated as "prehurdarii" and "censarii" in the court rolls some hundred years ago. The tenants of a certain lordship in Cornwall know and convey their tenements by the name of landams to this day, merely because the stewards two hundred years ago, when the court rolls were in Latin, well knowing that landa was the Latin for land, and that transitive verbs in that language require an accusative case, recorded each tenant as having taken of the lord "unam landam, vocatam Tregollup," &c. Indeed so easily does a clipt exotic take root and become acclimated among the peasantry of the Moor, whose powers of appropriation are so much disparaged by the sceptical doubts of K., that since the establishment of local courts the terms fifa and casa have become familiar to them as household words and the name and uses of that article of abbreviated Latinity called a 'bus are, as I am credibly informed, not unknown to them.

E. Smirke.


Replies to Minor Queries.

Newburgh Hamilton (Vol. iii, p. 117).—In Thomas Whincop's List of Dramatic Authors, &c., the following notice of Hamilton occurs:—

"Mr. Newburgh Hamilton.

A Gentleman, who I think was related to, at least lived in the family of Duke Hamilton; he wrote two Plays, called

I. The Doating Lovers, or The Libertine Tam'd; a Comedy acted at the Theatre in Lincoln's Inn-Fields, in the year 1715, with no success: but supported to the third night, for the Author's Benefit; when the Boxes and Pit were laid together at the unusual Price of six Shillings each Ticket.

II. The Petticoat Plotter; a Comedy of two Acts, performed at the Theatre Royal in Drury-Lane."

T. C. T.

Pedigree of Owen Glendower (Vol. iii., p. 222.).—A contributor who is not a Cambrian, sends the following pedigree of Owen Glyndowr, with the authority from whence he has obtained it, viz. Harl. MS. 807., Robert Glover's Book of Pedigrees and Arms, drawn up in part about 1574.

H. E.

MADOCUS
| LEWELLINUS ultimus
GRIFFITH, Dominus de Bromfeld, == Filia JACOBI Princeps Walliæ.
obiit 1270, sepultus apud Valcraeys. | AUDLEY |
| |____________
| |
______________________________________|____________ PHILIP AP YEVOR, == UNICA, filia
| | | | Lord of Iscoyd. | et hæres.
MADOC VICHAN, Dñs LEONLINUS, GRIFFITH VAWER 4 filius, Dñs de |_____________
de Bromfeld, cujus Dñs de GWYNN, Dñs de Kynllieth. |
custôdiam in minori Chirke Yale avus Owyn |
ætate, Rex H. 3. Glyndore THOMAS AP LLYN ap === ALIONORA,
dedit Johanni Com. | Owen ap Meredeth | filia et
Warennæ, 1270, qui | ap Owen ap Rhese | hæres.
adificavit Castrum | ap Griffin ap Rese ap |
de Holt. | Thewdor. |
| _____________________________________|
| | |
GRIFFITH VICHAN, === ELENA. Filia nupta Tudor
pater Owyn | ap Grono.
Glyndoure |
____________|
|
OWEN GLYNDOWRE
proditor Rex H. 4.
|
| JOHANNIS SCUDAMORE, miles,
ALICIA, filia et hæres, duxit filiam et hæredam
nupta —— Scudamore. Oweni Glendoure proditoris
Regis H. 4.