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Deeds relating to Old Change (ff. 104r–106r) (and to Hiltoft chantry, between f. 104v and f. 105r)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 March 2023

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Summary

Folios 104r–106r contain deeds relating to Old Change.

The red-ink heading at the top of f. 104r translates as “John Fraunceys gave us these tenements for the support of poor people / Old Change”. Thereafter the red-ink headings at the top of the verso pages read “Olde” and those on the recto pages read “chaunge”. Bound in between f. 104v and f. 105r, held on a stiff cardboard holding strip, is a quire of four folios of paper, of much smaller format than the parchment of the book, containing a document relating to John Hiltoft’s chantry in St Paul’s, and, to avoid interruption here to the deeds relating to Old Change, this document is placed here below those.

Grant by John de Cornhulle to Thomas & Alice de Yppegrave [26 June 1353 and enrolled 1 December 1354]

May those present and future know that I, John, son and heir of Richard de Cornhulle, have given, granted, and by this my present deed have confirmed to Thomas de Yppegrave, citizen and goldsmith of London, and Alice his wife, those shops with upper rooms built above and their appurtenances which are situated in the parish of St Augustine in Old Change in the city of London, breadthwise between the tenement of William de Causton on the south side and my, John de Cornhulle’s, tenement on the north side, and they extend lengthwise from the king’s road to the west as far as the tenement of the said William de Causton to the east. I have also given and granted to the aforesaid Thomas and Alice his wife, and have confirmed this by this my present deed, all that messuage with its appurtenances which I have in a certain lane called Spaldings Porch in the aforesaid parish of St Augustine, which is situated breadthwise between the tenement of William de Causton on the south side and my, John de Cornhulle’s, tenement to the north, extending lengthwise from the said lane of Spalding Porch and the tenement of the said William de Causton to the west as far as the garden of Adam Brabason to the east.

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