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1586 results from this resource . Displaying 341 to 360

quindenam Richard Dask claims v. John Cobbe and Margery his wife £15. 16. 6.; viz. £ 11. 11. 6 for corn, barley and oats sold to the said Margery when she was 'femme sole', and £ 4.5.0 for wood sold

quindenam John of Wroteham waged his law v. Roger le Rede concerning the charge that the said Roger did not pay him 18s. for a quarter of corn bought from him at Billinggesgate in 9 Edward II [1315-1316 ] .

Batesford, valet of Sir William de Carletone, adm. 1310 LBD 53, H. Herre of London, yeoman 1316 Pat (purveyor of corn for the King's forces). Apparently a cornmonger. Sir William was a Justice of the Jews in 1287 (LBD 236)

having concealed corn and malt in the mansion house of Richard Mildenhale, cordwainer, in the parish of All Hallows de Graschirche, instead of bringing the same to the public market. The said Roger confessed his guilt, and the corn, &

(9) that no cornmonger sell corn at Billingsgate, Queenhithe, Gracechurch, or on the pavement at Newgate before the hour of Prime; (10) that no merchant stranger sell corn by sample; (11) that no one forestall corn or other victual; (12)

7 Henry VI. [A.D. 1429 ] , ordinance by the Common Council that persons should be sent abroad to buy corn, at the City's risk of any loss by sea or otherwise. Lalliances entre Engleterre et Flaundres etc. Letters patent

"Overee" in Southwark to distrain for rent in the house of Robert Corn in the parish of S t Mary "Appechirche," was assaulted by the said Robert Corn and his servant Robert Holm. The said Robert and Robert, being arrested

taking the corn, and rents and issues, as from his own land, so that when the King sent the Justices into those parts to assess the fifteenth (in A.D. 1225), the said John gave a fifteenth of the corn and

Apostle [25 July ] , the said William was in the fields of the village of Stratford, getting in his corn; and that one John, parish-clerk of the same village, as to whose surname they are ignorant, came into the

of Essex for corn, 11885. nayle, 12805. perches of 18 ft ., 11125. virgatas lan ', 11470. Welsh measure, de Wallicana mensura , of land, 12019. - See also Grain; Land. Mill :- 'argays.' dams (Welsh), 12566. corn in bynno

be them gevyn to the Cherche ij s Rec eyuyd of Ioh'n Banest er for the Arerag es of the Corn er hows at stokk es , p er sell' of the lyvelod of M aister Cambryge Rentt es ,

762, 868, 913, 1145, 1170, 1242. -, -, documents enrolled in, C 455, 765, 1676. Copula , a, A 1803. Corn , carriage of, price of, A 1086. Cornish quadrant of land , C 1444. Corrody , grant of a,

le Turc, and William le Jongehosebonde. Measures of land called "curselliones" and "cursiones" occur several times; and a measure of corn occurs in the words "quindecim truggis bladi" (truck-loads ?). 9. Twenty-five deeds relating to lands at Burghill, and chiefly

years. He appointed the fasts of the four seasons [by way of intercession or thanksgiving ] for the abundance of corn, wine and oil, and the twelve lessons [to be read ] on the Saturdays [of the Ember weeks ]

Boniface, the late archbishop, and to deliver to the elect what pertains to the king of the forage of the corn of the archbishopric in the barns, in recompence for the maintenance that the plough-oxen and harrowers had of the

acknowledges in chancery that he owes to Walter de Merton 22 l ., for his corn of Chetindon; to be levied, in default of payment, of his lands and chattels in co. Buckingham. [ Cancelled . ] Enrolment of agreement

to cause the executors of the will of Nicholas de Haversham, tenant in chief, to have full administration of the corn sown by Nicholas in his demesne lands in the manor of Haversham, such as the executors can show to

or his accomplices, and to inhibit all the earl's subjects of that land from communicating with them and from permitting corn, wine, honey, salt, iron, arms, or other things whatsoever, whence the rebels might have any maintenance, to be taken

and the wood of Docwellehey, of the land that Richard lately caused to be assarted in Swyneshey, together with the corn of the said 11/2 acres for this autumn, as the king learns by inquisition taken by Richard that the

lands of Eustace in Watford, which were taken into the king's hands by reason of William's death, together with the corn sown in the lands, which the king has granted to Joan, and to deliver to her the other goods

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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=340