Itm an owlde buttery and enterye or passage wth a greate Stayre therin wth Sellers therunder wth a halle place at the upper ende of the Stayre and an entree there to the frater over the same butterye all wch conteyne in lengethe xxxvts ffoote / and in breddethe iiij ∕ xx x v (95) fooet abuttinge to the cloyster on the Easte ende and the Cutchin aforseide at the weste ende and on the Northe syde to the lorde Cobhm̃s howse and on the Sowthe syde to A blynde pler that my lorde[43] Warden did claim.
Itm A howse[44] called the upper frater [?] in lengethe Cvij foote and in breddethe lij foote /
Itm vnder the same A hall A pler A lytle Chaumber A litle Cutchen therunder wth iiijor small sellers and darke holes therunder of the same lengethe and breddethe aforeseide /
Itm A voyde rome cont in lengethe xxxt foote and in breddethe xvij foote //
Itm a Chaumber called the Duchie Chaumber wth a darke loginge therunder cont in lengethe l[45] foote and in breddethe xvj foote.
APPENDIX X
THE PAPEY
“The Hospital of Le Papey was founded in the year 1442, by Thomas Symminesson, William Cleve, William Barnaby, and John Stafford, priests in the diocese of London. Symminesson, otherwise written Symmesson, and Symson, was Rector of All Saints, or All Hallows, on the Wall; Cleve was priest of the charity of St. John Baptist in the church of St. Mary Aldermary; Barnaby was a chantry priest in the Cathedral Church of St. Paul; and of Stafford I know no more than that he was a priest in the city of London. The Hospital was founded for those of their own Order whom age or sickness disabled from the active performance of the duties of their function.” (Late Rev. Thomas Hugo in London and Midd. Archæological Soc., vol. v.)
“The name of the Hospital was derived from that of the church which, as we shall see, was appropriated to it, ordinarily known as St. Augustine’s de Papey.” (Ibid. 187.)
“The charter of foundation is as follows. It will supply various particulars of interest which I have hitherto omitted for the sake of brevity.