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1586 results from this resource . Displaying 321 to 340

be made that no merchant or other person shall take any corn out of the port of that town to parts beyond upon pain of the forfeiture of the corn and of the vessels in which it is laded and

will and intent of King Edward III, and to the end that they might more freely take all issues, rents, corn, hay etc. of the said manors, for their greater security that they should not be defrauded in time to

proclamation to be made upon sight etc., that all who have wine, wheat flour, oats or any other kind of corn or malt, flesh, fish or other victuals whatsoever, sea coals or lime for sale shall from time to time

and certifying under seal in chancery the security so taken; as in consideration of the dearness of wheat and other corn in the southern parts of the realm, and especially in London, the king lately gave William Sevenoke licence by

cause proclamation to be made forbidding any merchant or other privily or openly to take or cause to be taken corn, lead, tin, cloths called 'worstedes,' sea coals, cheese, butter, felt, woad or millstones out of the kingdom to foreign

same of the defendants by custom and prescription time out of mind, namely of every plough ploughing one trave of corn of such sort as shall thereby be won, which traves the defendants have unlawfully withheld, and for recovery thereof

licence of the king to take over to foreign parts out of those ports any wheat, beans, pease or other corn under pain of forfeiting the value thereof. By C. Like writs to the keepers of the passage in the

Letter of attorney, appointing them to enter the moiety of a messuage in Staunton Drewe called 'Milleplace,' of a water corn mill and fulling mill, and 10 acres of land in the tenure of Richard Forster of Bristol the elder,

house and its church, to which a certain chapel is subject, burned the said house and seventeen stacks (?) of corn, 5 as well as the town ( villam ) in which it is situate, drove the friars into exile,

also granting and selling to the said John all his goods and chattels alive and dead, as well cattle and corn growing upon his lands as his other goods in Essex and Huntingdonshire which he had at this date. Dated

or another authentic seal witnessing the unlading thereof; but he has made oath in chancery that he bought not such corn, neither took it over as aforesaid. Feb. 11. Westminster. To the same. Writ of supersedeas until the quinzaine of

. 11/2 d . Northampton. Aldrington and Stok', 9 l . 4 s . Stock', corn and oats, 19 l . 10 s . Aldrington, corn and oats, 9 l . 6 s . 8 d . The goods and

cause proclamation to be made in that port, that without special licence of the king no man shall take any corn out of the realm to foreign parts. 3 By C. Like writs to the sheriffs of the following counties:

executors should have free access to the manor and stay there for a year after his death, to take away corn, hay, beasts, goods and chattels in that manor as they see fit and have easements of all houses of

the bishopric the straw placed on the thatching ( coopertura ) of the barns of the bishopric wherein the king's corn is deposited, and also the costs about the enclosure of underwood felled and sold by the guardians. Nov. 14.

Close Rolls, Edward I September 1283 September 1283 Sept. 3. Bromborough. To Master Henry de Bray, escheator this side Trent. Order to deliver to Isabella, late the wife of Patrick de Cadurcis, tenant in chief, the manors of

de Harlegh, king's clerk, late keeper of the abbey of Westminster, then void and in the king's hands, of the corn, stock, goods and debts that belonged to Richard, late abb ot of that place, delivered by him to Walter

l .; to be levied, in default of payment, of his lands and chattels in co. Derby.- 1 For the corn of Bracinton. Robert son of William de Houby came before the king, on Saturday after St. Barnabas, and sought

in the lands at his death and at the end of the first of the aforesaid years, and that the corn then sown shall remain to them to be removed in the following autumn. He also grants that all the

oxen and all the stock that David son of Griffin and Elizabeth, his wife, had in Frodesham and all David's corn growing there, as the king has given them to the abbot and convent, and to commit the manor to

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 30 June 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ct=lm%2Cnm&ft=s&kw=corn&st=320