Cannock (St. Luke)
CANNOCK (St. Luke), a parish, in the union of
Penkridge, E. division of the hundred of Cuttlestone, S. division of the county of Stafford, 8 miles
(N. by W.) from Walsall; containing, with the townships of Cannock-Wood, Hednesford cum Leacroft,
Huntington, and Great Wyrley, 2852 inhabitants, of
whom 1125 are in the township of Cannock. This place
was a forest or chace belonging to the Mercian kings,
and is supposed to have derived its name from Canute,
the first Danish king of England. The parish is situated
on the road between Walsall and Stafford, and comprises by computation 20,000 acres, about half of which
is still uninclosed on Cannock Chace, a heath about
12 miles long, and from 3 to 5 wide. Of the tithable
lands, 4497 acres are arable, 1830 meadow and pasture,
668 wood, and 2993 common: in Cannock township are
1510a. 3r. 26p. There are collieries at Wyrley, ChurchBridge, and other places, in some of which is found a
peculiar description of ironstone, called Cannock stone,
which oxygenates so rapidly as to be capable of much
useful application; and a fine white gravel is found, excellently adapted to ornamental walks. The Liverpool
and Birmingham railway passes through Penkridge,
about four miles from the village of Cannock; and a
canal has been cut at a great expense, by the Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal Company, from ChurchBridge, to meet the canal at Galey, three miles off. The
village is supplied with water by means of a conduit,
and leaden pipes from Leacroft, about a mile distant,
constructed by Bishop Hough. There is a manufactory
for edge-tools at Wedges-Mill, which affords employment to about 100 persons; the coal used is from the
immediate neighbourhood. A market was formerly
held on Tuesday, but is discontinued; fairs, however,
are held on May 8th, August 24th, and October 18th,
principally for cattle and sheep.
The living is a perpetual curacy, in the patronage
of the Dean and Chapter of Lichfield, and has a net income of £144: the tithes have been commuted for
£1217. 6.; a good glebe-house was built in 1842, and
attached to it is half an acre of glebe land. The church
is a very ancient edifice of stone, in the early English
style, with a square tower. The parish is remarkable as
having been the first curacy held by the famous Dr.
Sacheverell. At Wyrley is a living in the gift of the
Incumbent of Cannock. There are places of worship
for Independents and Wesleyans. A school founded by
John Wood was, in 1727, enfeoffed by Thos. Wood
with land, the income of which is £8 per annum; and
John Biddulph, Esq., gave a meadow for the use of the
master. In 1725, Mrs. M. Chapman bequeathed a small
sum for education; the endowment altogether produces
about £20 per annum, with a house and two acres of
land. A national school was endowed by Mrs. Walhouse (mother of Lord Hatherton), who died in 1843.
Castle Ring, situated on the summit of Castle Hill, near
Beaudesert Park, the seat of the Marquess of Anglesey,
part of which is in the township of Cannock, is supposed
to have been a British encampment: it is nearly a circular area of eight or ten acres, surrounded by a double
trench occupying three or four acres more; and near it
are the remains of a moat inclosing an oblong of about
three acres, named the Old Nunnery, where a Cistercian abbey was founded in the reign of Stephen, which
was shortly after removed to Stoneleigh, in Warwickshire. A similar inclosure at a small distance is called
the Moat Bank. At Leacroft was formerly a mineral
spring of great repute.
Cannock-Wood
CANNOCK-WOOD, a township, in the parish of
Cannock, union of Penkridge, E. division of the hundred of Cuttlestone, S. division of the county of Stafford; containing 275 inhabitants, and comprising
1214a. 20p. of land.
Cannonby, Cross (St. John)
CANNONBY, CROSS (St. John), a parish, in the
union of Cockermouth, Allerdale ward below Derwent, W. division of Cumberland; comprising the
town of Maryport, and the townships of Birkby, CrossCannonby, and Crossby; the whole containing 5731 inhabitants, of whom 59 are in the township of CrossCannonby, 2½ miles (N. E. by E.) from Maryport. This
parish, which is situated on the shore of the Solway Firth,
and bounded on the south by the river Ellen, comprises
by computation 2415 acres. It contains coal and freestone; and in a quarry of the latter, some implements
supposed to be Roman were found a few years ago, from
which it is thought that the stone used in erecting the
Roman station at Ellenborough was obtained here. The
living is a perpetual curacy, in the patronage of the
Dean and Chapter of Carlisle, the appropriators; with
a net income of £150. The church is of early Norman
architecture. There is a chapel at Maryport.
Cannonhold
CANNONHOLD, a tything, in the parish, union,
and hundred of Melksham, Melksham and N. divisions
of Wilts; containing 321 inhabitants.
Canon-Fee
CANON-FEE, a tything, in the parish, union, and
hundred of Crediton, Crediton and N. divisions of
Devon; containing 1411 inhabitants.
Canon-Froome.—See Froome, Canon.
CANON-FROOME.—See Froome, Canon.
Canongate
CANONGATE, a township, in the parish and union
of Alnwick, E. division of Coquetdale ward, N. division of Northumberland; with 572 inhabitants.
Canon-Pion (St. Lawrence)
CANON-PION (St. Lawrence), a parish, in the
union of Weobley, hundred of Grimsworth, county
of Hereford, 4½ miles (S. E. by E.) from Weobley;
containing 681 inhabitants. The parish comprises 3690
acres, of which 86 are common or waste. The living is
a discharged vicarage, valued in the king's books at
£5. 13. 6½., and in the patronage of the Dean and Chapter of Hereford: the great tithes, payable to the Dean
and Chapter, have been commuted for £300, and those
of the incumbent for £277. 15.; there is a glebe of 10
acres. The church is principally in the early English
style, with some fine screen-work; the font is ancient,
and has an octagonal top enriched with quatrefoils.
Canterbury
CANTERBURY, an ancient city, and a county of
itself, having separate jurisdiction, locally in the hundred of Bridge and Petham, lathe of St. Augustine, E. division of Kent,
26 miles (S. E. by E.) from
Rochester, 16 (N. W. by W.)
from Dover, and 55 (E. by
S.) from London; containing 15,435 inhabitants. This
place, the origin of which is
not distinctly known, is, from the discovery of numerous
Druidical relics, supposed to have been distinguished at
a very early period for the celebration of the religious
rites of the Britons, prior to the Christian era. That it
was a British town of considerable importance before
the Roman invasion, is not only confirmed by the numerous celts, and other instruments of British warfare,
that have been at various times found in the vicinity,
but by the name of the station which the Romans fixed
here, on their establishment in the island, and which
they called Durovernum, a name obviously derived from
the British Dwr, a "stream," and whern, "swift," being
characteristic of the Stour, upon which Canterbury is
situated. From this station three roads branched off to
Rhutupis, Dubræ, and Lemanum; now Richborough,
Dovor, and Limne. By the Saxons, who, on their arrival
in Britain, were established in this part of Kent, it was
called Cantwara-byrig, from which its present name is
evidently deduced.

Arms.
Canterbury was the metropolis of the Saxon kingdom
of Kent, and the residence of its kings, of whom Ethelbert, having married Bertha of France, who had been
educated in the principles of Christianity, allowed her
by treaty the free exercise of her religion, and suffered
her to bring over a limited number of ecclesiastics. The
Christian religion had been partially promulgated during
the occupation of the city by the Romans, and two
churches had been built in the second century, one of
which, on Bertha's arrival, was consecrated for her use
by the Bishop of Soissons, and dedicated to St. Martin.
During the reign of this monarch, Augustine, who had
been sent by Pope Gregory to convert the Britons to
Christianity, took up his station at Canterbury, where,
through the influence of Bertha, he was courteously received. His mission was attended with success: the
king, who soon became a convert, resigned his palace,
which Augustine converted into a priory for brethren of
his own order; and, in conjunction with Ethelbert, he
founded an abbey without the city walls, dedicated to
St. Peter and St. Paul. Being invested by the pope
with the dignity of an archbishop, he made this city the
seat of the metropolitan see, which distinction it has
retained for more than twelve centuries, under an uninterrupted succession of ninety archbishops, many of
whom have been eminent for their talents and their virtues, and distinguished by the important offices they
have held in the administration of the temporal affairs
of the kingdom. Among these may be noticed Dunstan,
who governed the kingdom with absolute authority
during the reigns of Edred and Edwy; Stigand, who,
for his opposition to William the Conqueror, was displaced from his see; Lanfranc, his successor, who
rebuilt the cathedral, and founded several religious
establishments; the celebrated Thomas à Becket;
Stephen Langton, who was raised to the see in defiance
of King John; Cranmer, who, for his zeal in promoting
the Reformation, was burnt at the stake in the reign of
Mary; and Laud, who, for his strenuous support of
the measures of his sovereign, Charles I., was beheaded
during the usurpation of Cromwell. The abbey was
intended as a place of sepulture for the successors of
the archbishop in the see of Canterbury, and for those
of the monarch in the kingdom of Kent: the cathedral,
which was not completed at the time of Augustine's
decease, was dedicated to Our Saviour, and is still
usually called Christ-Church.
The city suffered frequently from the ravages of the
Danes, of whom, on their advancing against it in 1009,
the inhabitants, by the advice of Archbishop Siricius,
purchased a peace for the sum of £3000, obtaining from
them an oath not to renew their aggressions; but in
1011, they again landed at Sandwich, and laid siege to
the city, which, after a resolute defence for three weeks
on the part of the inhabitants, they took by storm and
reduced to ashes. In this siege, 43,200 persons were
slain, more than 8000 of the inhabitants were massacred,
and among the prisoners whom the Danes carried off to
their camp at Greenwich was Alphege, the archbishop,
whom they afterwards put to death at Blackheath, for
refusing to sanction their extortions. Canute, after his
usurpation of the throne upon the death of Edmund
Ironside, contributed greatly to the rebuilding of the
city, and the restoration of the cathedral; and, placing
his crown upon the altar, gave the revenue of the port
of Sandwich for the support of the monks. From this
time the city began to revive, and continued to flourish
till the Norman Conquest, when, according to Stowe, it
surpassed London in extent and magnificence. In
Domesday book it is described, under the title Civitas
Cantuariæ, as a populous city, having a castle, which, as
there is no previous mention of it, was probably built by
the Conqueror, to keep his Saxon subjects in awe: the
remains now visible are evidently of Norman character.
In 1080, the cathedral was destroyed by fire, but was
restored with greater splendour, and dedicated to the
Holy Trinity, by Archbishop Lanfranc, who rebuilt the
monastic edifices, erected the archbishop's palace, founded
and endowed a priory, which he dedicated to St. Gregory, and built the hospitals of St. John and St. Nicholas.
In 1161, the city was nearly consumed by fire, and it
suffered materially from a similar calamity at several
subsequent periods. In 1171, the memorable murder of
Thomas à Becket was perpetrated in the cathedral, as he
was ascending the steps leading from the nave into the
choir: his subsequent canonization tended greatly to
enrich the city and the church, by the costly offerings
of numerous pilgrims of all ranks, who came not only
from every part of England, but from every place in
Christendom, to visit his shrine. From this source a
rich fund was obtained for the enlargement and embellishment of the cathedral, which rapidly recovered from
the repeated devastations to which it had been exposed,
and from which it invariably arose with increased magnificence. Four years after the murder of Becket,
Henry II. performed a pilgrimage to Canterbury, where,
prostrating himself before the shrine of the martyr, he
submitted to be scourged by the monks, whom he had
assembled for that purpose. In 1299, the nuptials of
Edward I. and Margaret of Anjou were celebrated with
great pomp in this city; which, in the reign of Edward
IV., was constituted a county of itself, under the designation of the "City and County of the City of Canterbury." Little variety henceforward occurs in the civil
history of the city, whose interests were so closely interwoven with the ecclesiastical establishments, that, upon
their dissolution in the reign of Henry VIII., its prosperity materially declined.
The Jubilees, which, by indulgence of the pope, were
celebrated every fiftieth year, in honour of St. Thomas
à Becket, caused a great influx of wealth into the city,
which owed much of its trade to the immense number of
pilgrims who came to visit his shrine: according to the
civic records, more than 100,000 persons attended the
fifth jubilee, in 1420, when the number and richness of
their offerings were incredible: the last of these jubilees
was celebrated in 1520. The dissolution of the priory
of Christ Church was effected gradually: the festivals in
honour of the martyr were successively abolished; his
gorgeous shrine was stripped of its costly ornaments,
and the bones of the saint were, according to Stowe,
ultimately burnt to ashes, and scattered to the winds.
The revenue, at the Dissolution, was estimated at
£2489. 4. 9., a sum much inferior to the actual value of
its numerous and extensive possessions. At this period,
part of the monastery of St. Augustine was converted
by Henry VIII. into a royal palace, in which Queen
Elizabeth held her court for several days. During her
reign, the Walloons, driven from the Netherlands by
persecution on account of their religious tenets, found
an asylum at Canterbury, where they introduced the
weaving of silk and stuffs; their descendants are still
numerous in the city and its neighbourhood, and continue to use, as their place of worship, the crypt under
the cathedral, which was granted to them by Elizabeth,
and where the service is performed in the French language. Charles I., in 1625, solemnized his marriage
with Henrietta Maria of France at this palace. During
the war in the reign of that monarch, the city was occupied by a regiment of Cromwell's horse, that committed
great havoc in the ecclesiastical buildings, and wantonly
mutilated and defaced the cathedral, which they used as
stabling for their horses. A political tumult occurred
in 1647, in which originated the celebrated Kentish
Association in favour of Charles I., that terminated in
the siege of Colchester, and in the execution, after its
capture, of Lord Capel, Sir Charles Lucas, and Sir
George Lisle. Charles II., on his return from France at
the Restoration, held his court at the royal palace at
Canterbury, for three days; and in 1676, that monarch
granted a charter of incorporation to the emigrant silkweavers settled in the city, who, on the revocation of the
edict of Nantes, in 1685, were joined by a considerable
number of other artisans from France.
The city is pleasantly seated in a fertile vale environed with gently rising hills, from which numerous
streams of excellent water descend; and is intersected
by the river Stour, which, dividing and re-uniting its
channel, forms several islands, on one of which, anciently
called Birmewith, the western part of the town is built.
It still occupies the original site, and is of an elliptic
form. The walls with which the Romans surrounded it,
appear to have been built of flint and chalk, and to have
included an area a mile and three-quarters in circumference, defended by a moat one hundred and fifty feet
in width; of these walls nearly the whole is remaining,
and on that part which forms the terrace of the promenade called Dane John Field, are four of the ancient
towers in good preservation. The arches over the river
have been taken down at various times; and of the six
gates that formed the principal entrances, only the
western, forming the entrance from the London road, is
now standing. It is a handsome embattled structure,
erected about the year 1380, by Archbishop Sudbury,
who also rebuilt a considerable portion of the city wall;
and consists of a centre flanked by two round towers,
having their foundations in the bed of the western branch
of the Stour, over which is a stone bridge of two arches,
that has been widened for the accommodation of carriages
and foot passengers, an approach having been cut
through the city walls for each. The principal streets,
which intersect at right angles, and also the smaller
streets, were originally paved, under an act of parliament obtained in the reign of Edward IV.; they were
subsequently made more convenient by an act passed in
1787, for the improvement of the city, and are now
lighted with gas by a company established under an act
obtained in 1822. The inhabitants are amply supplied
with water conveyed into their houses from the river, by
a company established in 1824 by act of parliament, and
with excellent spring water brought from St. Martin's
Hill into a spacious conduit in one of the ancient towers
on the city wall, whence it is distributed to the most
populous parts of the city, at the expense of the corporation. The houses in some parts retain their ancient
appearance, with the upper stories projecting. The
greater part of the old Chequers Inn, mentioned by
Chaucer as frequented by pilgrims visiting Becket's
shrine, has been converted into a range of dwellinghouses, extending from St. Mary Bredman's church
nearly half-way down Mercery-lane; and the remains of
the palace of Sir Thomas More, in the dancing-school
yard in Orange-street, are now used as a warehouse for
wool. In other parts, the houses are in general handsome, and many of them modern and well built. An act
was passed in 1844 for the general improvement of the
city.
The environs are pleasant, and the scenery is agreeably diversified with simple and picturesque beauty. On
the road leading into the Isle of Thanet are extensive
Barracks for cavalry, artillery, and infantry of the line.
The cavalry barracks, erected in 1794, at an expense of
£40,000, are a handsome range of brick building, occupying three sides of a quadrangle, and, with the several
parades and grounds for exercise, comprise sixteen
acres, inclosed with lofty iron palisades; the barracks
for 2000 infantry, erected near the former, in 1798, have
been since made a permanent station for detachments of
the royal horse and foot artillery. The barracks erected
on the site of St. Gregory's Priory, and in other parts of
the city, have been taken down, and new streets of
small houses occupy their places. To the south is Dane
John Field, so called from a lofty conical mount said to
have been thrown up by the Danes when they besieged
the city; or, more probably, from its having been the
site of a keep, or donjon. It is tastefully laid out in
spiral walks and shrubberies, and planted with limetrees: on the city wall, by which it is bounded to the
south-east, is a fine broad terrace, with declivities
covered with turf; and on the promenade is a sun-dial,
supported on a marble pedestal sculptured with emblematical representations of the seasons, by Mr. Henry
Weeks, a native artist. On the summit of the mount,
from which a panoramic view of the city and its environs is obtained, a stone pillar has been erected, with
tablets recording, among other benefactions, a vote of
£60 per annum by the corporation for keeping the promenade in order.
The Philosophical and Literary Institution is a chaste
and elegant edifice of the Ionic order, with a handsome
portico of four columns, erected by subscription in 1825,
after the model of a temple on the river llissus, in
Greece. The members possess a spacious museum, in
which is an extensive and valuable collection of minerals,
fossils, and natural curiosities, scientifically arranged,
and in an order peculiarly adapted to assist the student
in natural history; it has recently been enriched by a
collection of Greek and Egyptian antiquities, the gift of
Viscount Strangford. The institution has also an extensive library, and a theatre in which lectures are delivered
once a week throughout the year. The Theatre, a neat
and commodious edifice, erected by Mrs. Sarah Baker,
was opened in 1790: opposite to it is a concert-room
belonging to the Catch Club, but now used by the members of the Apollonian Club for their concerts every
Friday evening. The original Catch Club is at present
held in the new concert-room in Guildhall-street.
Assemblies are held in a suite of rooms built by subscription; and races take place in the month of August,
upon Barham Downs, within three miles of the city.
The course, on which there is a commodious stand, has
been greatly enlarged.
The manufacture of silk, established by the Walloons,
under the auspices of Queen Elizabeth, and which
flourished in such a degree as to obtain from Charles II.
a charter of incorporation, gave place, in 1789, to the introduction of the cotton manufacture by Mr. John Callaway, master of the company of weavers, who discovered
a method of interweaving silk with cotton in a fabric
still known by the name of Canterbury, or Chamberry,
muslin. A considerable trade in long wool is carried
on, and there is an extensive manufactory for parchment; but the principal source of employment for the
labouring class is the cultivation of hops, for the growth
of which the soil is peculiarly favourable, and with
extensive plantations of which the neighbourhood
abounds. A great quantity of corn is also raised in the
vicinity. The city is geologically situated on the plastic
clay of the London basin, with which red bricks and
tiles are made; and at a short distance to the southeast, flint imbedded in chalk is found in abundance,
from which lime of an excellent quality is produced.
There are numerous mills on the banks of the river,
several of them extensive, particularly that called the
Abbot's Mill from its having anciently belonged to the
abbey of St. Augustine; it is now the property of the
corporation, by whom it was purchased in 1543. Canterbury has been long celebrated for its brawn. Frequent
attempts, attended with considerable expense, have been
made to improve the navigation of the river Stour; and
an act was obtained in 1825, to make it navigable to
Sandwich, and to construct a canal from that port to a
harbour to be formed near Deal; but the undertaking
has not been commenced. The Canterbury and Whitstable railway, which is chiefly for the conveyance of
coal from Whitstable, was opened in 1830; it is six
miles and a quarter in length, and runs nearly in a
straight line from North Lane to Whitstable, where it
terminates at the harbour. The railway from Ashford to
Ramsgate, opened in 1846, passes through the city; it
has a station near the cathedral, and communicates
with the Whitstable line. The market for cattle, corn,
hops, and seeds, is on Saturday, and the market for provisions daily. The cattle-market is held on the site of
the ancient city moat, in the parish of St. George without the walls; the corn, hop, and seed market is held
in a spacious room in the Corn and Hop Exchange, a
handsome building of the composite order, erected a few
years since, and ornamented with the city arms and
appropriate devices, behind which is a spacious area for
the daily market for meat and vegetables. The market
for eggs, poultry, and butter, is held in the ancient
butter-market, near Christ-Church gate; and there is a
convenient market-place for fish in St. Margaret street.
These markets are under the regulation of the corporation, by an act passed in 1824. The Michaelmas fair
commences on the 10th of October, and continues
during three market days.
The city, which at the time of the Conquest was
governed by a præpositus, or prefect, appointed by the
king, received from Henry II. a charter, conferring
peculiar privileges, in addition to those it previously
enjoyed. Henry III. granted the city to the inhabitants,
at a fee-farm rent of £60, and empowered the citizens
to elect two bailiffs; who were superseded by a mayor
in the reign of Henry VI., who added the privilege of
choosing a coroner. Edward IV. confirmed the preceding charters, remitted £16. 13. 4. of the fee-farm
rent, and constituted Canterbury a county of itself:
Henry VII. limited the number of aldermen to twelve,
and the common-councilmen to twenty-four; and Henry
VIII., by an act of the 35th of his reign, empowered the
mayor and aldermen to levy a fine of six shillings and
eightpence per day upon all strangers who should keep
shops, or exercise any trade, in the city. James I., in
the sixth year of his reign, confirmed all the former
charters and privileges, and re-incorporated the citizens,
under the title of the "Mayor and Commonalty of the
city of Canterbury."

Old Corporation Seal.
Obverse.
Reverse.
By the act of the 5th and
6th of William IV., cap. 76,
the corporation now consists of a mayor, six aldermen, and eighteen councillors; and the council appoints a sheriff and a clerk
of the peace. By that act
also the city is divided into
three wards, called Westgate, Dane-John, and Northgate, instead of six as before;
and there are nine justices
of the peace, including the mayor, who is a justice
during his mayoralty and the year following. The freedom of the city is inherited by birth, or acquired by
servitude, or marriage with a freeman's daughter. The
city has returned two members to parliament since the
23rd of Edward I.: the right of election was formerly
vested in the freemen and citizens at large, in number
about 2000; but by the act of the 2nd of William IV.,
cap. 45, the non-resident voters, except within seven
miles, were disfranchised, and the privilege extended to
the £10 householders; and by the act of the 2nd and
3rd of William IV., cap. 64, the limits of the parliamentary borough, which had comprised 2780 acres,
were enlarged to an extent of 4250 acres. Courts of
quarter-sessions are held for the trial of offenders, but
the capital jurisdiction is taken away; there is likewise
a court of petty-session on the first Thursday in every
month, for determining minor offences. The mayor's
court, which is also a court of record, is but rarely
held: the last instance of its exercising jurisdiction in
civil pleas was in February, 1793. The guildhall is an
ancient and lofty building, the interior of which is
decorated with portraits of the most distinguished benefactors to the city, and with various pieces of armour.
In 1453, Henry VI. granted to the corporation the custody of his gaol at Westgate, which gate, from that time
at least, if not previously, has been used as a city gaol;
considerable additions have been made to it, and a house
for the gaoler was erected in 1829, in a style corresponding with the character of the original building.
The quarter-sessions for the eastern division of the
county are regularly held here, and petty-sessions on the
first Saturday in every month; and a king's commission
of sewers, having jurisdiction over the several limits of
East Kent, sits four times in the year at the sessionshouse. The powers of the county debt-court of Canterbury, established in 1847, extend over the registrationdistricts of Canterbury, Blean, and Bridge. The sessions-house, and common gaol and house of correction,
form an extensive pile of building within the precinct
of the abbey of St. Augustine. Canterbury is the
principal place of election for the eastern division of the
county.

New Corporation Seal.
The primacy, though immediately delegated by the
pope to the see of Canterbury, was not maintained
without considerable difficulty; its establishment was
violently opposed by the
native British prelates, who
refused to acknowledge the
supremacy either of the
archbishop or the pope.
Offa, King of Mercia, attempted to divide the jurisdiction, and the archbishops of York persevered in asserting their claims; but the Archbishop of Canterbury was
ultimately acknowledged Primate and Metropolitan of all
England. In this dignity he ranks as first peer of the
realm, and, with the exception of the royal family, takes
precedence of all the nobility and chief officers of state;
at coronations he places the crown upon the head of the
sovereign. The Bishops of London, Winchester, Lincoln,
and Rochester, are respectively his provincial dean, subdean, chancellor, and chaplain; he is a privy councillor
in right of his primacy, and has the power of conferring
degrees in the several faculties of divinity, law, and
physic, except within the immediate jurisdiction of the
Universities of Oxford and Cambridge. The province
of Canterbury comprehends the sees of 21 bishops,
including the four Welsh sees. The diocese, pursuant
to the provisions of the act of the 6th and 7th of William IV., cap. 77, founded on the reports of the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, consists of the county of Kent,
except the city and deanery of Rochester, and certain
parishes in the diocese of London; and of the parishes
of Croydon and Addington, and the district of Lambeth
Palace, in the county of Surrey. The ecclesiastical
establishment consists of an archbishop, dean, two archdeacons, nine (to be reduced to six) canons, six preachers,
six minor canons, six substitutes, twelve lay clerks, ten
choristers, two masters, fifty scholars, and twelve almsmen. The archbishop's patronage comprises the archdeaconries, two of the canonries, and the preacherships;
the patronage of the Dean and Chapter consists of the
minor canonries.

Arms of the Archbishopric.
The Cathedral, dedicated to Our Saviour, originally
the church of the monastery founded by St. Augustine on the site of the palace of Ethelbert, King of
Kent, rebuilt by Archbishop Lanfranc soon after the
Conquest, and enlarged and enriched by several of his
successors, is a magnificent structure, exhibiting in
their highest perfection the finest specimens in every
style of architecture, from the earliest Norman to the
latest English, and is equally conspicuous for the justness of its proportions, the correctness of its details,
and the richness of its decoration. Its form is that of a
double cross, with a lofty and elegant tower rising from
the intersection of the nave and the western transepts,
in the later style of English architecture, with a
pierced parapet and pinnacles, and having octagonal
turrets at the angles, terminating in minarets. At the
west end are two massive towers, of which the northwest is in the Norman style, and the south-west,
though crowned with battlements, is of similar character,
and little inferior to the central tower: between the
western towers is a narrow entrance, through a sharply
pointed arch with deeply receding mouldings, surmounted by canopied niches, over which is a lofty and
magnificent window of six lights, decorated with stained
glass representing saints. The south-west porch, which
is the principal entrance, is a highly enriched specimen
of the later style, and is profusely ornamented with
niches of elegant design; the roof is elaborately groined,
and at the intersections of the ribs are numerous shields.
The Nave, which, with the western transepts, is in the
later style, is peculiarly fine; the roof is richly groined,
and supported by eight lofty piers, which on each side
separate it from the aisles, and of which the clustered
shafts are banded, like those of early English character.
The eastern part of the nave derives a grandeur of effect
from the many avenues leading from it to the Chapels in
different parts. The chapel of Henry IV. is conspicuous
for the simplicity of its design, and the elegant fan tracery
depending from its roof: the Lady chapel, separated from
the eastern side of the transept by a finely carved stone
screen, is small, but exquisitely beautiful; the chapel of
the Holy Trinity, in which was the gorgeous shrine of
St. Thomas à Becket, opens into that part of the cathedral
called Becket's Crown, where is preserved the ancient
stone chair in which the archbishops are enthroned.
There are various other chapels equally deserving attention. A triple flight of steps leads from the nave
into the Choir, which is divided off by a stone screen
of exquisite workmanship; the roof, which is plainly
groined, is supported on slender shafted columns, alternately circular and octagonal, with highly enriched
capitals of various designs: this part of the structure
is chiefly early English, intermixed with the Norman
style, which prevails also in the triforium, and other
parts of the choir, and in the eastern transept. The archbishop's throne, on the south side of the choir near the
centre, and the stalls of the dean and prebendaries,
are strikingly elegant; a new altar-piece, in accordance
with the prevailing style of architecture, has been
erected with the Caen stone of St. Augustine's monastery. The entire length of the cathedral from east
to west is 514 feet; the length of the choir 180; the
length of the eastern transepts 154, and of the western
124.
Under the whole building is a spacious and elegant
Crypt, the several parts of which correspond with those
of the cathedral; the western part is in the Norman
style, and the eastern in the early English. The vaulted
roof is about 14 feet in height, and supported on massive pillars, whose prevailing character is simplicity and
strength, though occasionally sculptured with foliage
and grotesque ornaments. Near the south end of the
western transept, Edward the Black Prince in 1363
founded a chantry, and endowed it for two chaplains
with his manor of Vauxhall, near London: there are
some remains of the chapel, consisting of the vaulting
of the roof, sustained by one central column. Near
the centre of the crypt are the remains of the chapel
of the Virgin, in a niche at the east end of which
was her statue, supported on a pedestal sculptured in
basso-relievo with various subjects, among which the
Annunciation may be distinctly traced. The western
part of the crypt is called the French church, from its
having been given by Queen Elizabeth to the Walloons
and the French refugees, and from the service being still
performed there in the French language.
The cathedral contains many interesting Monuments,
and other memorials, of the archbishops, deans, and other
dignitaries of the church, and of illustrious persons who
have been interred within its walls. In the arches surrounding the chapel of the Holy Trinity are, the tomb
of Henry IV. and his queen, Joan of Navarre, whose
recumbent figures, arrayed in royal robes, and crowned,
are finely sculptured in alabaster; the monument of
the Black Prince, whose effigy in complete armour and
in a recumbent posture, with the arms raised in the
attitude of prayer, is executed in gilt brass, and surmounted by a rich canopy, in which are his gauntlets
and the scabbard of his sword; and the cenotaph of
Archbishop Courteney, with a recumbent figure of
that prelate in his pontificals. In the north aisle of
the choir are the splendid monuments of the Archbishops Chicheley and Bourchier. The chapel of the
Virgin contains monuments to the memory of six of the
deans; and in that of St. Michael are those of the Earl
of Somerset, and the Duke of Clarence, second son
of Henry IV., whose effigy, with that of the duchess
in her robes and coronet, is beautifully sculptured in
marble; also the monuments of Archbishop Langton
and Admiral Sir George Rooke. In the south aisle
of the choir are those of the Archbishops Reynolds,
Walter Kemp, Stratford, Sudbury, and Meopham; and
within an iron palisade, on the north side of Becket's
Crown, is the tomb of Cardinal Pole, the last of the
archbishops who were buried in the cathedral. There
are several monuments in the crypt, among which are
some to distinguished persons that have been connected
with the county.
The precincts of the cathedral comprehend an area
three-quarters of a mile in circumference. The principal entrance is on the south side, through ChristChurch gate, erected by Prior Goldstone in 1517, and
exhibiting, though greatly mutilated, an elegant specimen of the later style of English architecture; the
front is richly sculptured, and ornamented with canopied niches, and consists of two octangular embattled
towers, with a larger and a smaller arched entrance
between them, the wooden doors of which are carved
with the arms of the see, and those of Archbishop
Juxon. On the north side is the Library, containing a
valuable collection of books, and a series of Grecian and
Roman coins; in the centre is an octagonal table of
black marble, on which is sculptured the history of
Orpheus, surrounded with various hunting-pieces. A
passage from the north transept of the cathedral to the
library leads into a circular room, called Bell Jesus,
the lower part of which is of Norman character; it is
lighted by a dome in the centre, under which is placed
the font, removed from the nave of the cathedral. On
the east side of the cloisters is the Chapter-house, a
spacious and elegant building, containing a hall 92 feet
in length, 37 in width, and 54 in height: on the sides
are the ancient stone seats of the monks, surmounted by
a range of trefoil-headed arches supporting a cornice
and battlement; the east and west windows are large,
and enriched with tracery, and the roof of oak is
panelled, and decorated with shields of arms and
other ornaments. The Cloisters form a quadrangle,
on each side of which are handsome windows of four
lights; the vaulted stone roof is elaborately groined,
and ornamented at the points of intersection with more
than 700 shields. Against the north wall is a range of
stone seats, separated from each other by pillars supporting canopied arches: on the east side are, a doorway leading into the cathedral, highly enriched, and
an archway leading to the chapter-house; on the west
side is an arched entrance to the archbishop's palace,
the only remains of which are the porter's gallery and
the surveyor's house. The Treasury is a fine building,
in the Norman style of architecture, the staircase to
which, in the same style, is of very curious design.
The city comprises the parishes of All Saints, containing 377 inhabitants; St. Alphage, 1073; St. Andrew, 509; St. George the Martyr, 1113; Holy Cross
Westgate (part), 191; St. Margaret, 761; St. Martin
198; St. Mary Bredman, 402; St. Mary Bredin, 754;
St. Mary Magdalene, 419; St. Mary Northgate, 4273;
St. Mildred, 1900; St. Peter, 1094; and St. Paul, 1480;
also the extra-parochial precincts of the archbishop's
palace, containing 184; Christ-Church, 248; Eastbridge Hospital, 46; St. John's Hospital, 46; Old
Castle, 39; and the Almonry, 328. The living of All
Saints' is a rectory, with which that of St. Mary's in the
Castle is consolidated, valued together in the king's
books at £80, and united with that of St. Mildred's,
valued at £17. 17. 11.; it is in the gift of the Crown,
and the net income is £150. The living of the parish
of St. Alphage is a rectory, united to the vicarage of
St. Mary's Northgate, the former valued at £8. 13. 4.,
and the latter at £11. 19. 4½.; net income, £150;
patron, the Archbishop; impropriator of St. Mary's
Northgate, G. Gipps, Esq. St. Andrew's is a rectory,
with that of St. Mary's Bredman united, valued together in the king's books at £22. 6. 8., and in the
patronage of the Archbishop for two turns, and the
Dean and Chapter for one; net income, £224. The
living of St. George the Martyr's is a rectory, with that
of St. Mary Magdalene's united, the former valued at
£7. 17. 11., and the latter at £4. 10.; net income, £150:
patrons, the Dean and Chapter. St. Margaret's is a
royal donative, in the gift of the Archdeacon; net
income, £87. The living of St. Martin's is a rectory,
united to the vicarage of St. Paul's, the former valued
at £6. 5. 2½., and the latter at £9. 18. 9.; net income,
£300: it is in the alternate patronage of the Archbishop and the Dean and Chapter, the appropriators;
and the tithes have been commuted for £210. St. Mary's
Bredin is a vicarage, valued at £4. 1. 5½.; net income,
£149; patrons and impropriators, the family of Warner.
The living of St. Peter's is a rectory, with the vicarage
of Holy Cross parish united, the former valued at
£3. 10. 10., and the latter at £13. 0. 2½.; net income,
£161; patrons, alternately, the Archbishop and the
Dean and Chapter; impropriators, the Archbishop, and
the Corporation of Eastbridge Hospital, jointly: the
glebe consists of nearly 2 acres, with a glebe-house.
Of the several churches, few possess any distinguishing architectural features. St. Martin's is said to have
been founded during the occupation of Canterbury by the
Romans, and consecrated for the celebration of the
Christian service prior to the conversion of Ethelbert,
who is thought to have been baptized in it. The
materials of the building, particularly the chancel, are
chiefly Roman tiles: the chancel is supposed to be the
original church, and the other part of less antiquity. The
whole has been beautifully restored by the taste and
munificence of the Hon. Daniel Finch, and it is now a
perfect specimen of early architecture. It contains a
very handsome monument to the Lord-Keeper Finch,
who was compelled to leave the kingdom to escape the
malice of the republicans, before the death of Charles I.,
but returned at the Restoration, and lived to pass
sentence on the regicides; the inscription is a remarkably elegant specimen of monumental Latinity,
written with great power and spirit. There are places
of worship for Baptists, the Society of Friends, Independents, Wesleyans, and Roman Catholics; also a
synagogue.
The King's Free Grammar School, coeval with the present establishment of the cathedral, was founded by Henry
VIII. on the recommendation of Cranmer, for fifty scholars from all parts of the kingdom; the management is
vested in the Dean and Chapter. Belonging to it are
two scholarships of £3. 6. 8. per annum each, founded
in Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, and endowed
with a portion of the revenue of Eastbridge Hospital, by
Archbishop Whitgift, in 1569; one of three exhibitions
of about £15 per annum each, founded in that college
by Archbishop Parker, in 1575; a medical scholarship, founded by the same archbishop in Caius College,
Cambridge; and one of three scholarships founded in
the college by John Parker, in 1580. It has also four
scholarships at either university, founded in 1618, by
Robert Rose, who endowed them with twenty-six acres
of land in Romney Marsh; two exhibitions to any
college in Cambridge, founded in 1635, by William Heyman; four scholarships of £10 per annum each, established in St. John's College, Cambridge, by a decree of
the court of chancery, in 1652, in lieu of two fellowships
and two scholarships founded in that college by Henry
Robinson, in 1643; five exhibitions of £24 per annum
each, to Emmanuel College, Cambridge, founded in 1719,
by Dr. George Thorpe, prebendary of Canterbury; two
Greek scholarships of £8 per annum each, founded in
the same college by the Rev. John Brown, B.D.; and
one exhibition of £9 per annum, to any college in Cambridge, founded in 1728, by Dr. George Stanhope, Dean
of Canterbury. By the liberality of the members of a
society of gentlemen educated at the school, a fund has
been raised, that has enabled them to found an exhibition of £60 per annum, to be held for four years with
any of the preceding. Among the eminent men who
have received the rudiments of their education in the
school, may be noticed, the celebrated Harvey, who discovered the circulation of the blood; Dr. Marsh, Bishop
of Peterborough; and Lord Tenterden, lord chief justice
of the court of king's bench. The Blue-coat school was
established by the mayor and commonalty; sixteen boys
are clothed, maintained, and instructed, and, on leaving
school, apprenticed with premiums, which, though originally fixed at £5, are, according to circumstances, increased to £21. The Grey-coat school is supported by
the Dean and Chapter, and other subscribers. The
Missionary College for the Church of England occupies
the site of the ancient abbey of St. Augustine: the subscriptions for its establishment amounted in Sept. 1846,
to £54,000, besides subscriptions to be made annually;
the principal quadrangle includes the chapel, hall, library,
and apartments for 50 students.
Eastbridge Hospital is supposed to have been founded
by Archbishop Lanfranc, for the entertainment of pilgrims, and was endowed by succeeding archbishops, for
a master, five brothers, and five sisters resident, and an
equal number of non-resident brothers and sisters, above
the age of 50, who must have lived in the city or suburbs for seven years. A school was annexed to it by an
ordinance of Archbishop Whitgift, confirmed by act of
parliament in the 27th of Elizabeth; it is endowed with
an estate at Blean, and with an investment of £2624 in
the three per cent. consols. Maynard's Hospital was
founded about the year 1312, by Mayner le Rich, an
opulent citizen, who endowed it with land for the support
of three unmarried brothers, one of whom is prior and
reader, and four unmarried sisters; they are a corporate
body by prescription, having a common seal. Cotton's
Hospital, adjoining, was founded in 1605, by Leonard
Cotton, who endowed it for one aged widower and two
widows. These two hospitals are united. Jesus Hospital was founded in 1596, by Sir John Boys, first recorder of the city, for a warden, nine brothers, and nine
sisters, above fifty-five years of age; there are at present
eight brothers and four sisters. St. John's Hospital,
without the North gate, was founded in 1084, by Archbishop Lanfranc, who endowed it with £70 per annum
for poor infirm, lame, or blind men and women; but it
may be considered as almost refounded by Archbishop
Parker, who gave it a body of statutes in 1560. At the
time of the Dissolution, its revenue was only £93. 15.;
but for the last few years, the clear income has averaged
about £300 per annum, which is divided among a chaplain, 53 brothers and sisters, and seven non-residents,
making in all 60, who receive their appointment from
the Archbishop of Canterbury. John Smith in 1644,
bequeathed £200 to build almshouses, and £32 per
annum for their endowment. Smith's Hospital, in the
suburb of Langport, without the liberties of the city, for
four brothers and four sisters born within the manor of
Barton, was founded in 1662, by Ann Smith, who endowed it with land, producing £171 per annum, of which
sum she appropriated £32 to the inmates of the hospital;
£20 to poor children of Hornsey, in the county of Middlesex; £20 to the minister of St. Paul's, in this city;
and the residue to the apprenticing of children of that
parish. Cogan's Hospital was founded in 1657, and endowed with an estate, by John Cogan, for six clergymen's widows; but the only property derived from his
bequest was the site of the hospital, and the institution
is indebted to subsequent benefactions for the whole of
its income. John Aucher, D.D., by deed in 1696, gave
a rent-charge of £60 for six clergymen's widows, with
preference to those in Cogan's Hospital; and a society
raises annually by subscription £36, which is divided
among three widows of clergymen. Harris' Almshouses,
in Wincheap, were founded in 1726, by Thomas Harris,
who endowed them with houses and land, producing
£21 per annum, for five poor families. The Kent and
Canterbury Infirmary was opened for the reception of
patients on the 26th of April, 1793, under the auspices
of Dr. William Carter; the building, which is spacious
and well adapted to the purpose, stands on part of the
cemetery of St. Augustine's Abbey, and contains apartments for a house-surgeon and 60 patients.
Of the numerous monastic establishments that
flourished here, the principal was the abbey which Augustine, in conjunction with King Ethelbert, founded
for monks of the Benedictine order, and dedicated to
St. Peter and St. Paul; the revenue, at the Dissolution,
was £1412. 4. 7. The remains consist principally of
the gateway entrance, a beautiful specimen of the decorated style of English architecture, with two embattled
octagonal turrets, relieved with canopied niches, and enriched with bands, mouldings, and cornices; between
these turrets is the entrance, through a finely pointed
arch, in which are the original wooden doors richly
carved. One of the towers, called St. Ethelbert's Tower,
was a fine structure in the Norman style, ornamented
in its successive stages with a series of intersecting arches;
part of it fell in 1822, and part was subsequently taken
down from apprehension of danger. The cemetery gate
is still standing; it was repaired, some years ago, in a
creditable manner, by Mr. J. Mears, a native of the city.
At the north-west of the cemetery are the remains of
the chapel of St. Pancras, built in 1387, on the site of a
chapel said to have been a pagan temple resorted to by
Ethelbert before his conversion. The remains of this
once splendid abbey have been restored, and now form
part of the Church Missionary College. In Northgatestreet was a religious house founded in 1084, by Lanfranc, for Secular priests, and dedicated to St. Gregory;
the revenue, at the Dissolution, was £166. 4. 5.: the
remains, consisting of parts of the walls, arches, and
some windows in the Norman and early English styles
of architecture, have been converted into a pottery, and
a tobacco-pipe manufactory. To the south-east of the
city was a Benedictine nunnery, founded by Archbishop
Anselm, and dedicated to St. Sepulchre; the revenue, at
the Dissolution, was £38. 19. 7. This convent obtained
celebrity from the pretended inspiration of Elizabeth
Barton, one of the nuns, called "the Holy Maid of Kent,"
who, for denouncing the wrath of the Almighty upon
Henry VIII., for his intended divorce of Catherine of
Arragon, was hanged at Tyburn, with her confederate,
Richard Deering, cellarer of Christ-Church. To the
right of the city, on the road to Dovor, was an hospital
dedicated to St. Lawrence, for leprous monks, founded
by Hugh, abbot of St. Augustine's, in 1137, and endowed
for a warden, chaplain, clerk, and sixteen brothers and
sisters, of whom the senior sister was prioress; the revenue, at the Dissolution, was £39. 8. 6. In the parish of
St. Peter was an Hospital founded by William Cockyn,
citizen, and dedicated to St. Nicholas and St. Catherine;
which, in 1203, was united to that of St. Thomas Eastbridge. In the parish of St. Alphage was a priory of
Dominicans, or Black friars, founded about the year 1221
by Henry III., the only remains of which are the hall,
now a meeting-house for Baptists; and near the hospital
for poor priests was a priory of Franciscans, or Grey friars,
founded by the same monarch in 1224, which was the
first house of that order established in the kingdom: the
remains consist chiefly of some low walls and arches.
There are also slight vestiges of a convent of White friars
that once existed here.
Numerous relics of British and Roman antiquity have
been discovered. Among the latter are aqueducts, tessellated pavements, vases, and coins; and a Roman
arch, called Worthgate, considered to be one of the finest
and most ancient structures of the kind in England,
has been carefully removed from that part of the castle
yard which was crossed by the new road from Ashford,
and re-constructed in a private garden. There are some
chalybeate springs, and one slightly sulphureous, in the
extensive nursery-grounds of Mr. W. Masters, near the
West gate; and without the North gate is a fine spring
of water, where a bath, called St. Rhadigund's bath, has
been constructed, with the requisite accommodation.
The natives of Canterbury include, Dr. Thomas Linacre,
founder of the Royal College of Physicians, in London;
Dr. Thomas Nevile, master of Magdalen College, and
afterwards master of Trinity College, Cambridge, who
was sent by Archbishop Whitgift to tender the English
crown to King James; William Somner, author of the
Antiquities of Canterbury, and of a Saxon Glossary; and
W. Frend, M.A., author of the Ephemeris. Of other
literary characters that have flourished here, may be
noticed, the Primate Langton, who first divided the Old
and New Testaments into chapters; Osbern, a monk in
the eleventh century, who wrote in Latin the life of St.
Dunstan, and who, from his skill in music, was called
the English Jubal; and John Bale, Prebendary of Canterbury and Bishop of Ossory, the Protestant historian
and biographer. Isaac Casaubon, whom, on account of
his learning, James I. invited over from France; and
Meric, his son; were both installed prebendaries of the
cathedral.
Canterton
CANTERTON, a tything, in the parish of Minstead,
union, and N. division of the hundred, of New Forest,
Romsey and S. divisions of the county of Southampton;
containing 38 inhabitants.
Cantley (St. Margaret)
CANTLEY (St. Margaret), a parish, in the union
and hundred of Blofield, E. division of Norfolk, 4½
miles (S. by W.) from Acle; containing 210 inhabitants.
It is bounded on the south and south-west by the navigable river Yare, and comprises 1850a. 26p., of which
877 acres are arable, and 900 pasture, heath, marsh, and
wood. The railway from Norwich to Yarmouth passes
through the parish. The living is a rectory, valued in
the king's books at £14, and in the gift of W. A.
Gilbert, Esq.: the tithes have been commuted for a
rent-charge of £300, and there is a good glebe-house,
with 43 acres of land. The church is chiefly in the later
English style, and has a tower; the entrance to the
chancel is through a decorated Norman doorway. The
poor have the benefit of 19 acres of land, allotted at the
inclosure.
Cantley (St. Wilfrid)
CANTLEY (St. Wilfrid), a parish, in the union of
Doncaster, S. division of the wapentake of Strafforth and Tickhill, W. riding of York, 3 miles (E.
by S.) from Doncaster; containing 651 inhabitants. This
parish, of which large portions were anciently possessed
by different religious foundations, including those of
Worksop, Kirkstall, and Hampole, comprises about
5160 acres, and contains the hamlets of Branton, Bessecar, High and Low Ellers, Gatewood, and Kilholme.
The surface is level, and in some parts is well wooded.
The parish is intersected by the road between Doncaster
and Bawtry, which leaves it at Rossington bridge; and
the Torn forms its southern boundary, dividing it from
those portions of Finningsby parish which are in Yorkshire. The living is a discharged vicarage, valued in the
king's books at £6. 6. 5½., and in the patronage of
John Walbanke Childers, Esq., who is the impropriator:
the vicarial tithes have been commuted for land producing £175 per annum, and there is a good glebehouse. The church was formerly in the hands of a religious community; it is a small cemented structure, with
a low tower.
Cantsfield
CANTSFIELD, a township, in the parish of Tunstall, union of Lancaster, hundred of Lonsdale
south of the Sands, N. division of the county of Lancaster, 5 miles (S. by E.) from Kirkby-Lonsdale; containing 114 inhabitants. Cantsfield gave name to an
ancient family, whose heiress married one of the Harringtons, of Aldingham; but in the time of Edward III. it
was in the possession of the Tunstalls. In the 17th
century a younger branch of the Cantsfields inhabited
the Hall, and a daughter of Sir J. Cantsfield, marrying
Sir William Gerard, Bart., brought the estate to that
family. The township, which lies on the road from
Lancaster to Richmond in Yorkshire, comprises 1221a.
2r. 18p. of land. Within its limits is Thurland Castle,
built by Sir Thomas Tunstall, who obtained permission
from Henry IV. to fortify and kernell it: the building
stands on a slightly elevated site which rises from a
level bounded on the south by the Greta and on the
north by the Cant; and its wings, towers, and battlements, with a deep circular moat, give it quite a fortresslike aspect. This castle sustained a long and obstinate
siege, which left it a ruin, during the civil wars. The
great tithes of the township have been commuted for
£42, and the small tithes for £46.
Canvey Island
CANVEY ISLAND, a chapelry, partly in the parishes of North and South Benfleet, BowersGifford, Laindon, Pitsea, and Vange, union of Billericay, hundred of Barstable, and partly in the
parishes of Leigh, Prettlewell, and Southchurch,
union and hundred of Rochford, S. division of Essex;
containing 277 inhabitants: the chapel is 6¼ miles
(W. S. W.) from Leigh. This island is situated near the
mouth of the Thames, and contains 3600 acres: it is
encompassed by branches of that river, which, on the
south side, is two miles broad; while on the other side
there is a passage over the strand at low water, and at
high water a ferry-boat is used. A fair is held on the
25th of June. The living is a perpetual curacy; net
income, £58. 10.; patron, the Bishop of London. The
tithes have been commuted for £190. The chapel is
dedicated to St. Catherine. Service was formerly performed by the vicar, or curate, of South Benfleet; but, in
1837, a perpetual curate was inducted by the bishop.
Canwell
CANWELL, an extra-parochial liberty, in the union
of Tamworth, S. division of the hundred of Offlow
and of the county of Stafford, 5¼ miles (S. W. by W.)
from Tamworth; containing 27 inhabitants, and comprising 260 acres of land. In 1142, a priory of Benedictine monks was founded by Geva Riddell; it subsequently went to decay, became a poor cell for one
monk, and was granted to Cardinal Wolsey by Henry
VIII. towards the endowment of his two intended
colleges. In Queen Mary's time, the manor was held
by the Bishop of Exon; more recently it became the
property of the Lawley family, by whom was built the
spacious and beautiful mansion, Canwell Hall, at a cost
of £60,000.
Canwick (All Saints)
CANWICK (All Saints), a parish, in the wapentake of Langoe, parts of Kesteven, union and county
of Lincoln, 1¾ mile (S. E. by S.) from Lincoln; containing 190 inhabitants. It comprises 2039a. 27p., the
chief part of which is arable; having on its western
side a large common. The corporation of Lincoln are
lords of the manor, but the greater part of the parish
belongs to Col. Sibthorp, whose seat, Canwick Hall, is a
large stone mansion with pleasant grounds, built by the
late Col. Coningsby Waldo Sibthorp, who died in 1822.
The house stands partly on the site of the old Hall,
which had long been the seat of the Sibthorps, many of
whom have represented Lincoln in parliament since the
reign of George II. The village is neat, and situated on
a bold eminence. The living is a discharged vicarage,
valued in the king's books at £5. 6. 8.; net income,
£231; patrons and impropriators, the Mercers' Company, London. The church was nearly all rebuilt many
years ago, and appears from some remaining pillars and
arches to have been a Norman structure; it has several
neat monuments to the Sibthorp family: there are nearly
20 acres of church land. Some springs here are strongly
impregnated with iron.
Capel (St. Thomas à Becket)
CAPEL (St. Thomas à Becket), a parish, in the
union, and partly in the lowey, of Tonbridge, but
chiefly in the hundred of Washlingstone, lathe of
Aylesford, W. division of Kent, 3½ miles (E. S. E.)
from Tonbridge; containing 516 inhabitants. It is
crossed by the South-Eastern railway, and comprises
1584a. 2r. 14p., about 70 acres of which are hop-grounds,
and 90 acres in wood. The living is a vicarage, united
with that of Tudeley: the rectorial tithes of Capel have
been commuted for a rent-charge of £158, and the vicarial for £132. The church was formerly a chapel of
ease to Hadlow.
Capel (St. Andrew)
CAPEL (St. Andrew), a hamlet, in the parish of
Butley, union of Woodbridge, hundred of Wilford,
E. division of Suffolk, 2¾ miles (W. by S.) from Orford;
containing 222 inhabitants. This was formerly a distinct parish, but the church is now in ruins, and the
living, a perpetual curacy, has been consolidated with
Butley.
Capel (St. Mary)
CAPEL (St. Mary), a parish, in the incorporation
and hundred of Samford, E. division of Suffolk, 7
miles (S. W.) from Ipswich; containing 608 inhabitants.
It comprises by measurement 1876 acres. The living is
a rectory, with that of Little Wenham consolidated,
valued in the king's books at £13. 18. 4.; patron and
incumbent, the Rev. J. Tweed. The tithes have been
commuted for £522, and the glebe comprises 22 acres,
with a good glebe-house.
Capel (St. John the Baptist)
CAPEL (St. John the Baptist), a parish, in the
union of Dorking, Second division of the hundred of
Wotton, W. division of Surrey, 6 miles (S. by E.) from
Dorking; containing 989 inhabitants. It comprises
5522 acres, of which 105 are common or waste; 813
acres are exempt from tithes. The lands are principally
arable, producing good crops of wheat and oats, and the
soil is also well adapted to the growth of timber. Broom
Hall here, is an elegant edifice, on the south-eastern
confines of Leith Hill. The living is a donative, in the
patronage of Charles Webb, Esq., with a net income of
£84: the tithes have been commuted for £610. The
church was enlarged in 1836, at the expense of J. S.
Broadwood, Esq.
Capel-Le-Ferne (St. Mary)
CAPEL-LE-FERNE (St. Mary), a parish, in the
union of Dovor, hundred of Folkestone, lathe of
Shepway, E. division of Kent, 3¼ miles (N. N. E.) from
Folkestone; containing 247 inhabitants. The parish is
on the road from Folkestone to Dovor, and comprises
1636a. 3r. 3p., of which 227 acres are common or waste:
the South-Eastern railroad runs at the foot of the cliff
on the south side. The surface was originally little else
than a waste. The living is annexed to the vicarage of
Alkham: the tithes of Capel have been commuted for
£175 payable to the Archbishop of Canterbury, £41. 10. 6.
to the impropriators, and £100 to the incumbent, who
has also nearly an acre of glebe. The church is surrounded by handsome firs, which give it a very solemn
and retired character; it consists of only an aisle and
chancel, and is a good specimen of massy ancient architecture. On a flat stone in the chancel is a brass to the
memory of a family named Gubbiss.
Capernwray
CAPERNWRAY, a manor, in the chapelry of Over
Kellet, parish of Bolton-le-Sands, hundred of Lonsdale south of the Sands, N. division of the county of
Lancaster, 9½ miles (N. N. E.) from Lancaster. This
place (anciently Coupmanwrara, as appears from deeds
in the time of King John,) gave name to a family, of
whom Thomas de Coupmanwrara is mentioned in 1273.
It is situated on the river Keer, is four miles north-east
from the Carnforth station of the Lancaster and Carlisle
railway, and the Lancaster and Kendal canal passes
through the property: the land is hilly and woody, with
limestone and freestone rocks. The manor is within the
manor of Over Kellet, of which George Marton, Esq.,
whose family has been long connected with Capernwray,
is the lord; he is the principal proprietor of the soil, and
owner of the Hall. In the park is a chapel, dedicated
to St. George, and supported by Mr. Marton; it is a
neat structure in the early English style, from a design
by Sharpe, of Lancaster.
Capesthorne
CAPESTHORNE, a chapelry, in the parish of
Prestbury, union and hundred of Macclesfield, N.
division of the county of Chester, 6 miles (N. by W.)
from Congleton; containing 95 inhabitants. This place
is the principal residence of the oldest, and now the
only, branch of the Davenport family; it comprises by
computation 800 acres, 600 of which are meadow and
pasture, and 100 arable. The living is a perpetual
curacy; net income, £76; patron and impropriator,
E. D. Davenport, Esq. The chapel, dedicated to the
Holy Trinity, was erected by Mr. Ward, of Capesthorne,
about the year 1726, in the Grecian style.
Capheaton
CAPHEATON, a township, in the parish of KirkWhelpington, union of Castle ward, N. E. division
of Tindale ward, S. division of Northumberland, 13
miles (W. S. W.) from Morpeth; containing 213 inhabitants. The township comprises 2213 acres, and forms
a very picturesque and highly cultivated district, a possession of the Swinburne family from the 13th century.
The castle is first mentioned in the 15th century, and is
styled by Leland "a faire castle," and "the oldist house
of the Swinburnes;" it was taken down in 1668, and
the present beautiful mansion, Capheaton Hall, now the
seat of Sir John Swinburne, Bart., F.R.S., and F.S.A.,
erected on its site. The village is exceedingly neat; and
directly in its front is an artificial lake, comprehending,
with its islands, between 40 and 50 acres. The impropriate tithes have been commuted for £87. 16., and the
vicarial for £23. 2. 9. Several Roman coins, silver
vessels, and ornaments, were discovered near the Hall,
by some labourers, in 1745.
Cappenhurst
CAPPENHURST, a township, in the parish of
Shotwick, union of Great Boughton, Higher division
of the hundred of Wirrall, S. division of the county
of Chester, 5¾ miles (N. N. W.) from Chester; containing 154 inhabitants. The manor belonged in the
reign of Edward I. to a family of the same name. In
the year 1701, Lord Cholmondeley held two-thirds of
it, which his ancestors had enjoyed from the time of
Henry VII.; and Sir James Poole the other third, with
the Hall, by inheritance from his ancestors: the manor
was purchased by the Richardson family in 1790. Cappenhurst comprises 1150 acres of land, of a clayey soil.
The Chester and Birkenhead railway passes close to it.
The tithes have been commuted for £100.
Carbrooke (St. Peter and St. Paul)
CARBROOKE (St. Peter and St. Paul), a parish,
in the union and hundred of Weyland, W. division of
Norfolk, 3 miles (E. N. E.) from Watton; containing
807 inhabitants. The parish comprises 3012a. 2r. 32p.,
of which 2162 acres are arable, 765 meadow and pasture, and 30 woodland. The living is a discharged
vicarage, valued in the king's books at £7. 12. 6.;
patron, R. Dewing, Esq.: the great tithes have been
commuted for £517. 4., and the vicarial for £22. 4.
Tithes upon 218 acres of land in Great Ellingham belong
to this parish. The church, rebuilt in the early part of
the reign of Henry VI., has a lofty square tower, a nave,
two aisles, and a chancel, which is separated from the
nave by an early English screen; the roof of the church
is splendidly carved and painted, and ornamented with
roses. There were formerly 16 stalls in the chancel.
The Knights Templars had a preceptory here, founded
by Roger, Earl of Clare, who died in 1173, and subsequently given by Maud, his widowed countess, who
amply endowed it, to the Knights Hospitallers of St.
John of Jerusalem, as a commandery: at the Dissolution
it was valued at £65. 2. 9., and the revenues, with the
house and church, were granted to Sir Richard Gresham
and Sir Richard Southwell. There are places of worship
for Independents, and Primitive and Wesleyan Methodists. An allotment to the poor, of 55 acres of land, was
made under an inclosure act, in 1801.