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1586 results from this resource . Displaying 461 to 480

next court. lex ad quindenam misericordia John of Wroteham claims against Roger le Rede, baker, 18s. for a quarter of corn sold to him in London on Wednesday before Christmas, 10 Edward II [22 nd December, 1316 ] at Queenhithe.

of the City that they see that the price of corn be not enhanced at the King's coming into the City, in consequence of merchants having hoarded large quantities of corn imported into the City from Flanders. Dated at Beaulieu

and others were discharged. Articulus de ponderacione Bladi. Confirmation by the King of a former ordinance to the effect that corn coming from mills be weighed, and a charge made of one halfpenny per quarter, to go to the Mayor

forbidding any one to export corn from the City without special licence, except Ralph, Earl of Stafford, Bernard Ezii, Lord of Lebret, 29 and John Charnels, 30 who had already obtained permission to export corn to Gascony for the King's

at your discretion, that they may excite in others in like case a fear of so offending. And that all corn to be ground at mills within the city aforesaid, and without, shall be weighed by the millers, and that

on the Thursday after the Fe ast of the Assumption, 2 E. II, and had cut and carried away his corn from Alstonfeld to the value of £20. The defendants appeared and denied the trespass and appealed to a jury

plea of Robert de Dutton that he had broken forcibly into his close at Rounhale, and had destroyed his growing corn to the value of £20 by depasturing within it cows, oxen, and horses. And the Bishop returned that he

that his house was burdened with divers debts, and in consequence of a great mortality amongst their animals, defect of corn, and other misfortunes, his house was so pauperized that it could not find necessaries for the canons serving God

throughout this year continued the dearth of corn, and great mortality among poor folk. Be it remembered, that in the ninth year of Edward, son of King Edward, began the dearth of corn: wheat was at first one mark, then

matrices ), two hundred lambs ( multones ), sixteen oxen, ten cows, and a bull, and the whole of his corn at Wyshangre and Musarder, 6 whether stored or sown in the fields. To Master John his brother his hostel

customs of the port of Cardiff, dated 1573, 1584, 1585, and 1636. They show that such goods as butter, leather, corn, tallow or coal were not permitted to be shipped from Cardiff to an English port, except " by cocket

attendance at the ploughings ( precarias carucarum ) called 'Beinhurthe,' the mowing of the meadows, and the reaping of the corn, of the abbot in Kyngeston; Henry is to pay the abbot 39 s . yearly at Michaelmas, in lieu

the said hospital, and to pay 6 s . 8 d . by way of heriot, and a measure of corn and two capons to each new master of the said hospital. Vigil of the Annunciation, 24 Henry VII. Signed.

) the lord's corn ( bladum ), one man for one day yearly when warned, and shall lift and turn the lord's hay when needed and shall find a man in the autumn to reap the lord's corn for a

of Helleston to William Bon, of all his messuages, & c. in the town of Hellestonburgh; rent, a grain of corn. Dated at Terramboll, Thursday before St. Luke, 1 Henry V. A. 9727. General release by Richard Deye of London,

ploughing and harrowing as before; to thresh and winnow one bushel of seed corn and two bushels of oats (value 1/4 d. each) and one bushel of corn for the gestum : to come to Kyngesmede with his neighbours to

aliorum quorumcumque emptum ad usus suos proprios, set solummodo allec mercatorum venale. Teste ut supra. Pro R. comite Pictavie et Corn ubie .-Mandatum est G. de Segrave, justiciario foreste, quod habere faciat R. comiti Pictavie et Cornubie decem damos et

to inhibit all his subjects of that land and power from communicating with them in any way, or from permitting corn, wine, honey, salt, iron, arms, or anything else whereby the rebels may have maintenance to be carried through Edmund's

near Tibrapadric, at Obranan, Ohandgaega, Ocharmachan, Ocheruchean, Meiccaircham by Lismacinolcluchi, that near the gate of St. Brigid, Tirinchaim, tithes of corn, hay, leeks, beans of the archbishop ' s lands, and other tithes and offerings. Ibid . To the same.

barons of the exchequer. Whereas the king has appointed Peter de Parys, burgess of Yoghel, to take corn, wine and other victuals by sea from Ireland to him for his expedition into Wales, and to take and bring with him

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 6 July 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ac=s&ct=lm%2Cnm&ft=s&kw=corn&st=460