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Franciscan Friary, Southampton : ウィキペディア英語版
Franciscan Friary, Southampton
The Franciscan Friary of Southampton was founded c. 1233. It occupied a south-eastern area of the city, within the walls and adjacent to God's House Tower. The friary was notable for its water supply system, which supplied water for use by the friars themselves and by the other inhabitants of Southampton. The friary was dissolved in 1538 and the last remains were swept away in the 1940s.〔Alwyn A. Ruddock, "The Greyfriars in Southampton", ''Papers & Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club & Archaeological Society'', 16:2 (1946), pp. 137–47〕 The site is now occupied by Friary House. Elsewhere, remnants of the extensive water supply system still survive today.
==The water supply system==

The water supply system was originally devised by the friars for their own use. In 1290, Nicholas de Barbeflet granted them access to the springs on his manor of Shirley, Southampton, out to the north west of the medieval town. The friars constructed a system of water pipes to bring the first of the water to their friary in 1304.〔William Page and H. Arthur Doubleday, 'Friaries: The Franciscans of Southampton', ''A History of the County of Hampshire'': Volume 2 (1973), pp. 193. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=38116〕 In all, the water had to travel some 1.7 kilometres from the spring to the friary within the town walls. There were several other springs supplying water to the friary; these were located in the The Polygon, Southampton area, but no traces remain above ground.
In 1310, the friars granted use of their water supply to the people of Southampton. In 1420, the friars were struggling to maintain the water supply system in good order, and therefore passed on ownership of the supply system to the mayor and community of Southampton. The water supply system remained in their hands for the rest of its lifetime. It was eventually superseded by the boring of new wells for use by the townspeople.〔Rev. J. Silvester Davies, ''A History of Southampton Partly From the Ms. of Dr Speed in the Southampton Archives'', 1883, pp. 117-119〕

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