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1586 results from this resource . Displaying 401 to 420

the merchants and others of whatsoever estate or condition who will take corn to foreign parts may by themselves or their servants lawfully carry over all manner of corn without let to whatsoever parts they please over sea, being of

to lade the same in that port and bring it to Bourdeaux; an d in consideration of the dearness of corn in England in these days the king will not suffer the same to be taken out of the realm,

etc., and quitclaim to the abbot and convent of all their estate and right in the premises, the issues, rents, corn, hay and profits whereof from the date of the forfeiture until other order should by the king or his

Westminster. To the sheriff of Lincoln. Order to cause proclamation to be made, that all who will s ell wine, corn and other victuals shall cause them with all speed to be brought to Staunforde for sustenance of the king

others flocking thither, to cause proclamation to be made that all victuallers and others who used to come thither with corn and other victuals shall under pain of forfeiture repair therewith to that town by land and water while the

great travail and expense in the king's service at sea, to take of them security exceeding the value of the corn and goods hereinafter mentioned that they shall make restitution and deliver the same or the value thereof to those

ordered the sheriff of Hereford to deliver the land to Richard the son: the king orders Walter to deliver the corn and goods in the said lands that belonged to Richard the father, which he took into the king's hands

cornmongers, 3 corders, 4 clerks. Queenhithe was one of the centres for fishmongers and for cornmongers. According to early regulations corn was to be landed at Queenhithe only and likewise fish from foreign parts. In 1292 a little under 20

le Maderman, his son-in-law. - Stamford, Stanford (common). Henry atte Waye 1308 LBC 163 (farmer of murage arising out of corn), 1309 ib. 172 (witness St. Michael). Probably a cornmonger. The surname seems to mean 'at the river Wey (Wye)'

Subsidy Roll 1292 Billingsgate ward Warda Wlmari de Essexe, Billingsgate ward. Parishes: St. Andrew Hubbard, St. Botolph Billingsgate, St. George Botolph Lane, St. Margaret Pattens, St. Mary at Hill. Partly in Billingsgate: St. Dionis Backchurch, St. Gabriel Fenchurch,

of wheat also attracted merchants John de Causton, a mercer, bought corn in Dublin 4 Richard de Hakeneye, a woolmonger, procured "protection for himself and servants who were buying corn, wares and other things in divers parts of the realm

all merchants and others who have any corn and especially oats, and wish to sell it, shall bring the same with all speed to Calais, where there is now a great scarcity of corn, and where they will find numerous

that whereas the King had appointed William de Ormesby, John de Thorp, and John de Fresyngfelde to survey and examine corn measures in the counties of Norfolk and Suffolk, as well within the liberties as without, and to deliver measures

atte Forthe, William Wodehous, John Strattone. Langebourne : Thomas Same, Giles Kelseye, Peter Whappelode, Thomas atte Noket. Candelwykestret : Robert Corn, Thomas Clenche, Richard atte Dyche, William Lambourne. Bridge : Edmund Oliver, William Bys, Robert Rammeseye, John Croydone, Thomas Potesgrave,

, of corn and victuals regulated, 207; of gold and silver plate forbidden, 61; of wool to hostile countries forbidden, 146, 146 n. 1 Exports , of wool, 21, 47, 174; teasels, bure, woad and fuller's earth, 44; corn, 160;

4 May 1370 John Huwet, leche 4 , who had been arrested for contempt in saying that a bushel of corn ought to be sold for 20d, and would be were it not for the Mayor, put himself on the

mill and with which flow of water he used to grind day and night thirty quarters of each kind of corn; the defendants had lately diverted the course of the water of Sarebrok by a trench, so that the water

151, 177 in the Catertens, 177 to bedridden, 12-13 to blind and aged, 110 to child, 25 for damages to corn, etc., 25 Almshouse , 123 Altar-cloths , 31, 52, 71, 77, 92, 109, 135, 178. See Ornaments Altars ,

de Hundesacre, Geoffey Coket, Alan son of Alan de Cumbreford, and fourteen others named, for reaping and carrying away her corn in the fields of Coten and Wygeton, by which she had been damaged to the amount of £10. The

his protection, forbiddin g any one to molest them, they had come vi et armis and trodden down his growing corn at Clifton Caunvill with their cattle and horses and pigs, doing damage to him to the amount of £100.

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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&st=400