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1586 results from this resource . Displaying 481 to 500

be provided at their discretion that they shall strike others in like cases with fear of offending, and that all corn to be ground at the mills within the city and without shall be delivered by weight to the millers,

rent in divers places, whereof she is dowered less than she ought to be. Memorandum , that the crop of corn, both winter and lent, that was sown there in the king's seisin before assignment of this dower was made

be afforded to others in speedily doing the premisses, he wills that the sheriff shall cause any of the king's corn and other necessaries of maintenance that may be in the sheriff's custody to be brought to his son at

the lands by the king's commission or in any other way their costs and expenses on the lands and their corn and other goods and chattels therein, as the king, with the assent of the earls, barons and other his

custom of cloth, wax, avoir-du-pois , and other small ( sublilium ) things, horses and other beasts, corn and other things and merchandise of foreign merchants in the port of Newcastle-on-Tyne. Order to pay by indenture all the money arising

whole community of Great Yarmouth. Grant that merchants of parts beyond sea, who have been wont to bring thither wines, corn, and other victuals, and to take thence in exchange herrings, ale, and the like small victuals, and to carry

for 20 l . made to him in chancery by William le Chaundelour of the parish of St. Michael atte Corn', citizen of London. Jan. 17. Buckby. John de Thorndon acknowledges that he owes to John de Cokermouth 10 marks;

from other money delivered or to be delivered to them, for the corn and victuals bought and provided as aforesaid by Maneutus Francisci, to those from whom the corn and victuals were bought, by the advice and information of the

that no merchant or other person, upon pain of forfeiture, shall take any corn out of the kingdom without the king's special licence; and to cause the corn of any one who disobeys t he said proclamation to be taken

render judgment herein without consulting the king. March 1. Croydon. To the sheriff of Rutland. Order to cause all the corn, beasts, and other goods and chattels in the manor of Ryhale, in that county, to be appraised in the

hill ( monticulo ) to build a windmill upon and the easement of the usual ways for the carriage of corn and other things to that place, to have to them and to the heirs of their bodies, rendering therefor

ought to distribute to poor mendicants at the said manor daily the bread arising from half a quarter of mixed corn ( mixtilionis ) and on Friday in addition a dish of cooked beans for the souls of the king's

Englishman or Irishman shall, under pain of forfeiture, presume to burn or otherwise dest roy corn or other victuals, and that no one shall take corn or other victuals out of Ireland by land or water before the arrival of

and goods being taken into the king's protection, with covenant that nought should be taken against their will of their corn, hay, horses, wains, carriages, victuals and goods, and that if aught should be so taken within their lands and

the people of those parts are like to be ruined, especially as the bulk of such corn is in their hands insomuch that corn may hardly be found in any markets there. To the same. Order to cause proclamation to

forbidding any man under pain of forfeiture thereof or of the value thereof to take or cause any kind of corn to be taken out of the realm without the king's special licence. By C. Oct. 30. Westminster. Gerard Martyn

late belonging to Gilbert de Clare, earl of Gloucester and Hertford, tenant in chief, for a yearly ferm, all the corn sown in the king's name in the lands of the manor at a lawful price to be paid into

of forfeiture, shall take corn, boards, iron or any victuals out of England to any parts beyond without the king's special order, and if they find any doing this after the proclamation, they shall arrest the corn etc. as forfeit

merchandise not coketted or customed to foreign parts, or corn or other things contrary to the proclamation, and to arrest the same. Order to permit John Clote to take his corn in a ship of John Spaynard to the par

are purveyors and other ministers of lords and other men, have heretofore caused the corn of divers citizens of Waterford to be threshed, and such corn and other victuals there to be taken against their will, not contenting the owners

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 12 July 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ac=s&ct=lm%2Cnm%2Cod&kw=corn&sr=bh&st=480