Acum) : township Location: York (Ebor') : city Location: York : city Place(s): YorkPalace of the Archbishop ofYork (palacio domini Archiepiscopi Ebor') : habitation Location: York : city Place(s): YorkStonegate (Stayngate) : street name Location: York : city Place(s):
York, St Peter The Little (Yorkshire) Place(s): York, St Peter The Little (beatus petrus le litell) : ecclesiastical parish Participant: Richard Pape [dictus Pape] Role: plaintiff Details: male; clerk Employment: chantry chaplain in York, St Peter the Little Location:
Case:Appeals (matrimonial, validity of marriage) Details:7 Pieces; Has deposition; Has libel; Has sentence Outcome:Agnes Waller, defendant, subsequently makes an appeal against the decision of the judge; Richard Kirkby, plaintiff, makes another appeal; judge confirms sentence in favour of defendant Date:
vicar choral ofYork Minster Location: York, St Peter Le Willows (Yorkshire) Place(s): York, St Peter Le Willows (beatus petrus Ebor') : undefined Participant: WalterKilling [de Kylling] Role: witness Details: male; clerk Employment: clerk ofYork Minster Location: York :
Repository:Borthwick Institute GB 193 Court:Curia Ebor Case:Appeals (matrimonial, validity of marriage) Details:10 Pieces; Has deposition; No libel; Has sentence Outcome:defendant wins Date: 20/07/1357 — 30/04/1361 People & Places Participant: Lucy wife of William Brown [Broun] Role: plaintiff Details: female Location:
1). Smaller initials in blue with red pen-flourishing. De pluralitate beneficiorum (ends imperfectly) Unidentified owner, middle of the 15th century: arms of the see of Winchester, ~gules~, a sword and key crossed, ~or~ and ~argent~ (f. 1).Bought by the British
Robert of Molesme (29 April), Peter of Tarentaise (8 May), William, archbishop ofYork (8 June), Bernard of Clairvaux, with an octave (20 and 27 August), Wilfrid, archbishop ofYork (12 October), Malachi (5 November); the Litany and Canon of
Robert of Molesme (29 April), Peter of Tarentaise (8 May), William, archbishop ofYork (8 June), Bernard of Clairvaux, with an octave (20 and 27 August), Wilfrid, archbishop ofYork (12 October), Malachi (5 November); the Litany and Canon of
Robert of Molesme (29 April), Peter of Tarentaise (8 May), William, archbishop ofYork (8 June), Bernard of Clairvaux, with an octave (20 and 27 August), Wilfrid, archbishop ofYork (12 October), Malachi (5 November); the Litany and Canon of
Robert of Molesme (29 April), Peter of Tarentaise (8 May), William, archbishop ofYork (8 June), Bernard of Clairvaux, with an octave (20 and 27 August), Wilfrid, archbishop ofYork (12 October), Malachi (5 November); the Litany and Canon of
p. 156) of the Prick of Conscience . ff. 1r-100r Prick of Conscience (Southern Recension, IMEV 3429 ) 'þe myȝt of þe fader of heuene'. 'þat for oure love made alle þ[mutilated ] '. 'Here endeþ þe pricke of concie
to Richard Rolle, Hermit of Hampole and Materials for his Biography , Modern Language Association of America Monograph series, 3, New York and London: Modern Language Association of America, p. 261. Allen, H. E. 1931. English Writings ofRichard Rolle,
the diocese of Lichfield and Coventry' (Doyle 1987, p. 13). Allen, H. E. 1927. Writings Ascribed to Richard Rolle, Hermit of Hampole and Materials for his Biography , Modern Language Association of America Monograph series, 3, New York and London:
late-fourteenth century copy of the Prick of Conscience copied by a single scribe c. 1370 (Lewis and McIntosh 1982, p. 48). ff. 3r-136v Prick of Conscience (Main Version, IMEV 3428 ) 'Explicit stimulus consciencie'. 'þe myght of the fader almyghty'.
of Devonshire's MS s. xv English Scribal Dialect: Warwickshire. Linguistic Atlas Grid Reference: 423 276, LP 65 (McIntosh, Samuels and Benskin 1986, p. 244). A fifteenth-century copy of Walter Hilton's Scale of Perfection . ff. 1r-61v Walter Hilton Scale
Description Appearances Etymology Brit Eboracon, possibly a pers. name + -acon, suffix, 'estate of' Translation Earlier editors Eburienc (Gough); Eboriensis (OS 1035); Eboriens' (Parsons) Early Maps York (Angliae Figura); Eborac(us) (Totius Britanniae; spired church, three buildings, four (?) castles, walls
Appearances red ink, within a cartouche Etymology OE weald (Angl wald), 'forest land' Translation Earlier editors appears as district name on Saxton's map of 1577 (Parsons) Early Maps york wold (Angliae Figura) Overwritten no Attested spelling Yorkes Wold 1551 NCWills