Date: 18/6/1325 — 20/7/1325 People & Places Participant: RobertAppleby [de Appelby] Role: plaintiff Details: male; clerk Employment: rector of the church of Beverley, St Nicholas Participant: John Bigrigg [de Bigrig] Role: defendant Details: male Participant: Randulf Yarwell [de Yarwell] Role:
de Hexteldesham, conventus de Hexham) : religious house Notes: The prior and convent are named as the appropriators of the church of Hexham. Participant: master and brethren of the hospital of St Giles. Role: defendant Details: male Location: Richmond (YorkshireNorthRiding)
Place(s): Marnham (Marnham) : ecclesiastical parish Participant: Nicholas Sixtenby [de Sixtenby] Role: defendant Details: male; clerk Employment: vicar of disputed church of Marnham Notes: Cannot identify the surname 'de Sixtenby'. Participant: WilliamTwyford [Twyforde; Twyford] Role: prosecution proctor Details: male Participant:
Church, Canterbury (see f. 2; Gameson 1999 p. 94).Dover Priory, by 14th century: inscribed with its press mark 'D VII' and title (f. 2); included in the 1389 catalogue.John Joscelin [Joscelyn] (b. 1529, d. 1603), Old English scholar and
or blue at the beginning of lines and verses (ff. 60-89). Rubrics in red. Sermons, letters and tracts The Cathedral Church of St Mary, Salisbury: probably to be identified with no. 155 in Patrick Young's 1622 catalogue of the cathedral
supervising the building of a church; miniature of Joseph or Arimathea on his deathbed making a red cross on a white shield with his own blood as a momento for Mordrain. Includes: Estoire del Saint Graal, imperfect (ff. 1-88); La
king supervising the building of a church. Includes: Estoire del Saint Graal, imperfect (ff. 1-88); La Queste del Saint Graal (ff. 89-139); abridged version of the Morte Artu, imperfect, attributed to Walter Map (ff. 140-161). This manuscript is connected in
Decorated foliate initial 'A'(dventus) at the beginning of Florus's Epitome bellorum, and foliate border with heraldic arms. 1 large foliate initial in colours on a burnished punched gold ground (f. 1, perhaps 19th-century ?), with a three-sided border incorporating
day'. English Horstmann 1875, pp. 82-100. ff. 36v-40r Section on the Purification ( IMEV 2717 ) 'Oure ledi dude hyre church ȝong as hit fel in þe lay'. 'and pilatus'. Bottom third of f. 40r ruled but blank. F. 40v