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A Downland Parish - Ash by Wrotham in Former Times by W. Frank Proudfoot

                   Chapter 2 -  The Early and Middle Ages  continued  page 12a

occasion that previously the same John de Southesse had held from the manor of Kemsing and that manor from the Earl of Leicester. At the time, the Kemsing manor was held by Sir Otho de Grandison, whose uncle of the same name had acquired it many years before.
   The subsequent history of the manor of South Ash is simple enough. From the family of Southesse it passed, somewhere about the turn of the fourteenth century, to the family of Hodsoll. It remained with the Hodsolls for more than four hundred years.
   There was another manor in Ash, variously called Halywell, Holywell, Holiwell or Holliwell, which belonged to and. took its name from the Benedictine nunnery of Halywell at Shoreditch; according to Hasted, it was also sometimes known as the manor of Hodsoll, being at one time leased to the Hodsoll family. The first positive reference found in relation to this manor comes from the reign of Edward II, during which the prioress 

of the nunnery was granted certain liberties for it. However, a much earlier provenance is suggested by the fact that in the year 1259 Mabel de Torpel had made to Christiana, then Prioress, and her church of St John the Baptist the handsome gift of 66s.2d. of rent and the rent of one hundred and thirteen eggs, a somewhat curious number, and of ten hens and three ploughshares in Ash. Whatever happened to the rents, the manor was still with the good nuns when their order was dissolved at the time of the Reformation.18
   About the year 1302, a certain William Latimer was granted a Thursday market at his manor of Ash, a Fair on the Feast of the Apostles Peter and Paul and free warren within his demesne lands. Latimer died possessed of this manor ca. 1327. Twenty years later, it was held by his grandson of the same name from Roger de Mowbray at the fourth. part of a knight’s fee, Hasted’s conclusion that

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