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Archaeologia Cantiana -  Vol. 1  1858  page 152

Faversham Church, Kent. 
By T. Willement, Esq., F.S.A.

leaves, generally in a perfect state, and forming a graceful termination to the painting on the wall. 
   To return to the inscription on the scroll held by the kneeling figure of the Judge. Although even at its first discovery it was not perfectly clear, and that at the latter end of both lines some letters were obliterated, it appears to have been thus:


FERRE : POLI: SERTVM : FAC : REX: EDMVNDE : ROBERTVM :l
DOD : FAVERSHAMIE : QVEM : REGE : THOMA : PIE :2

and may be interpreted thus: "O King Edmund, cause Robert Dod, of Faversham, to bear the crown of Heaven, whom, O pious Thomas, do thou guide."
   The exact meaning of this inscription, and the cause of such an invocation in favour of Robert Dod, appears at present extremely doubtful. Robert Dod himself is not to be found in the list of those who were judges, nor was he even a mayor of Faversham, as the records of .that borough evidence. Whom then does the kneeling figure represent? The daughter and heiress of Robert Dod,3 of Faversham, was married to Richard de Faversham, whose father, Thomas de Faversham, was a judge, and Lord of Graveney. It is a mere supposition, but this Robert Dod might, by some act or grant, have benefited those pilgrims who, on their way to the great shrine of St. Thomas at Canterbury, halted at Faversham, to pay their devotions at the altar dedicated to him in the church of Faversham, close to which this memorial of their benefactor was placed; or that he had himself performed some more than ordinary pilgrimage
   1  The last letter, supposed to have been M, was not visible.
   2  The five last letters, MA : PIE, have been, supplied to complete the pentameter.
   3  The family of Dod, spelt variously, is frequently mentioned in the histories of Kent. A monument and its inscription is still remaining in Graveney church, to the memory of this Robert Dod, there called Dodde, and to his son-in-law Richard de Faversham.

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