Luppitt Parish A Terrior of the Vicarage and August 1808. Glebelands and the customs of the said Parish of Luppitt as such customs have been for times immemorial and the goods of the said Parish. The vicarage house is built with stones and timber and covered with reed - it contains five under rooms namely A kitchen, a cellar and a pantry with stone floors, and a parlour and a room inside the parlour floored with wood - and four chambers and a study. The outbuildings are one small stable a barn and a small brewhouse built with stone and covered with reed. There is a orchard about half an acre and there are two gardens hedged in all, adjoining the church yard... There are also four acres of enclosed land, two acres and a half of which are dry pasture and one acre and a half of a meadow called the Grove, and there is a right to Common without stint. There are four bells.- the church is repaired by the parishioners and the chancel by the impropriator of the Rectory. The goods of the church are a surplice - one large pewter flagon - one silver bowl - one silver paten and one pewter basin for the Oratory. The Rector or Impropriator is entitled to the Rectorial or Great Tythes consisting of all sorts of corn and seeds? The Vicar is entitled to the Vicarial Tythes or to the customary payments in lieu there of which - customary payments have always prevailed in the said parish as follows to wit - For every acre of meadow ground two pence, for every acre of land grass mown two pence, for the tythes of the milk of a cow three pence, for the tythes of a winter milk cow two pence, for the tythes of the milk of a heifer two pence, for the tythes of the foal of a mare one penny, for the tythes of a garden one penny, for the tythes of every hogshead of cider two pence, for the land let to agistiment the twelfth penny and the same tythe ought to be paid to the Vicar at Easter yearly, for purifying a woman two pence, and no more for the tythe of lambs than tenth, and if the parishioner hath but seven, the Vicar to have the third best paying unto the parishioner three pence, and if the said parishioner hath but six lambs or under full ton then for every of them one penny. And that the tythe of lambs ought to be paid at the feast of Saint Mark the Evangelist - For the tythes of hoard fruit the parishioners ought to pay according to conscience in money and not any tythe of apples. For the tythe of a pig the tenth, titheable at fourteen days old at the utmost and that nothing ought to be paid for the tythe of plough or for horses, horse geldings or colts except only one penny for the foal of a mare as aforesaid. For young cattle nothing, for the tythe of barren or feeding cattle nothing, for the tythe of eggs nothing, but by courtesy and for the tythe of wood nothing and that the said tythes and tenths have been always paid in the said parish according to the ancient modus or custom and not otherwise.