freechapel

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

free +‎ chapel

Noun[edit]

freechapel (plural freechapels)

  1. (historical) A chapel founded by the king of England or built under a grant from the king, which is not subject to the jurisdiction of the local bishop or other ruling member of the clergy.
    • 1751, Stephen Whatley, England's Gazetteer:
      Radfield-Chapel, (Kent,) in the p. of Bapchild, had once a freechapel, the ruins of which are yet remaining; the lands of which were by K. Edw VI. given to John Bateman, whose successor gave it by will to John Bateman of Wormsell. The steeple of its Ch. is a sea-mark.
    • 1806, Francis Blomefield, Charles Parkin, An Essay Towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk:
      There is piece of land called chapel-yard, late parcel of the possessions of the priory of Hickling, where a freechapel stood formerly, of which I have no further account in any evidences that I have seen.
    • 1814, Daniel Lysons, Magna Britannia;: Cornwall, page 49:
      The incumbent is called in old records Dean of the King's freechapel of St.Burian.