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High Friarside: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 54°54′14″N 1°44′44″W / 54.90389°N 1.74556°W / 54.90389; -1.74556
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A list of masters of the chantry/chapel include, John Eryum, 1312; Richard de Egglescliffe, 1376 (?) William Thorp, 1376; [[Oswald of Glenluce|Oswald]], bishop of Whithorn, d. 1417; Robert Frend, 1418; William Cross, 1422; and, John Gare, 1423.<ref name=":0" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Boutflower |first=Douglas Samuel |title=Fasti dunelmenses : a record of the beneficed clergy of the diocese of Durham down to the dissolution of the monastic and collegiate churches. |date=1926 |pages=162}}</ref>
A list of masters of the chantry/chapel include, John Eryum, 1312; Richard de Egglescliffe, 1376 (?) William Thorp, 1376; [[Oswald of Glenluce|Oswald]], bishop of Whithorn, d. 1417; Robert Frend, 1418; William Cross, 1422; and, John Gare, 1423.<ref name=":0" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Boutflower |first=Douglas Samuel |title=Fasti dunelmenses : a record of the beneficed clergy of the diocese of Durham down to the dissolution of the monastic and collegiate churches. |date=1926 |pages=162}}</ref>


The hospital seems to have been demolished in 1450 [citation needed]. However, the chapel survived and with the closure of the chantries in England 1548 it was recorded that Friarside still had one bell perhaps indicating continued usage.<ref>Longstaffe, W. Hylton Dyer. (1970). Early history of Ebchester, Friarside, and Medomsley. ''Transactions of the Architectural and Archaeological Society of Durham and Northumberland 2''. Vol 2, p.130.</ref>
The hospital seems to have been demolished in 1450 {{Citation needed|date=May 2024}}. However, the chapel survived and with the closure of the chantries in England 1548 it was recorded that Friarside still had one bell perhaps indicating continued usage.<ref>Longstaffe, W. Hylton Dyer. (1970). Early history of Ebchester, Friarside, and Medomsley. ''Transactions of the Architectural and Archaeological Society of Durham and Northumberland 2''. Vol 2, p.130.</ref>


At Middle Friarside there is moat with multiple embankments and ditches.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Page |first=William |title=The Victoria history of the county of Durham |date=1905 |pages=359}}</ref>
At Middle Friarside there is moat with multiple embankments and ditches.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Page |first=William |title=The Victoria history of the county of Durham |date=1905 |pages=359}}</ref>

Revision as of 15:59, 22 May 2024

High Friarside is a village in County Durham, England. It is situated a short distance to the west of Burnopfield.[1]

The placename is variously recorded as Frevejohanside, Frerejonside, and Freresyde meaning "Friar (John’s) hill".[2] There are also localities called Low Friarside and Middle Friarside.

At Low Friarside there are the ruins of a chapel. The date of the foundation of the chapel (sometimes referred to as a chantry or house, and possibly connected to a hospital) is unknow. However, it was in existence in 1312 when Bishop Kellawe collated John Eryum to 'the house, chapel, or chantry of Friarside (Frerejohanside) near Derwent.'[3] In Bishop Hatfield's Survey (1383), the warden of the chantry of Friarside held a messuage and 22 acres of land in Wolsingham. In 1439 Bishop Neville appropriated it with all its revenues to the chantry of Farnacres after that site had suffered floods and a decrease in finances.[4]

A list of masters of the chantry/chapel include, John Eryum, 1312; Richard de Egglescliffe, 1376 (?) William Thorp, 1376; Oswald, bishop of Whithorn, d. 1417; Robert Frend, 1418; William Cross, 1422; and, John Gare, 1423.[4][5]

The hospital seems to have been demolished in 1450 [citation needed]. However, the chapel survived and with the closure of the chantries in England 1548 it was recorded that Friarside still had one bell perhaps indicating continued usage.[6]

At Middle Friarside there is moat with multiple embankments and ditches.[7]

There was a coal mine, South Garesfield Colliery, also known as Friarside Colliery and North Lintz Colliery that operated 1865-1960 (located to the west of Low Friarside.[8]

References

  1. ^ Ordnance Survey: Landranger map sheet 88 Newcastle upon Tyne (Durham & Sunderland) (Map). Ordnance Survey. 2012. ISBN 9780319229989.
  2. ^ Mawer, A. (1920). The place-names of Northumberland and Durham. p. 90.
  3. ^ Hardy, Thomas Duffus (1873). Registrum Palatinum Dunelmense : The Register of Richard de Kellawe, Lord Palatine and Bishop of Durham, 1311-1316. Volume 1. p. 248.
  4. ^ a b Page, William (1905). The Victoria history of the county of Durham. p. 123.
  5. ^ Boutflower, Douglas Samuel (1926). Fasti dunelmenses : a record of the beneficed clergy of the diocese of Durham down to the dissolution of the monastic and collegiate churches. p. 162.
  6. ^ Longstaffe, W. Hylton Dyer. (1970). Early history of Ebchester, Friarside, and Medomsley. Transactions of the Architectural and Archaeological Society of Durham and Northumberland 2. Vol 2, p.130.
  7. ^ Page, William (1905). The Victoria history of the county of Durham. p. 359.
  8. ^ "South Garesfield Colliery". Durham Mining Museum.

54°54′14″N 1°44′44″W / 54.90389°N 1.74556°W / 54.90389; -1.74556

Further reading

Longstaffe, W. Hylton Dyer. (1970). Early history of Ebchester, Friarside, and Medomsley.. Transactions of the Architectural and Archaeological Society of Durham and Northumberland 2. Vol 2, pp. 125-133.