Record: Lichfield County Staffordshire Transcript lichefeld Icon description spired church with cross, convent buildings Icons church with cross Description Appearances faded Etymology Letocetum, a Celtic name of a Roman town, meaning 'grey wood' + OE feld, 'field' Translation Earlier editors
Stafford could be the Sow although Stafford is shown on the wrong bank. The tributary from Lichfield to Birmingham could be the Tame although Lichfield would then be misplaced (Parsons). Early Maps Trent (Angliae Figura) Overwritten no Attested spelling Trent
London (London) : city Describes London as a parish. Participant: Richard Welford [de Welford] Role: witness Details: male Participant: William Lichfield [de Lichefeld] Role: witness Details: male Participant: John Pulteney [Pulteneye] Role: witness Details: male; knight Location: London (London) :
Holkham Hall, Library of the Earl of Leicester 668 s. xiv/xv English Latin Scribal Dialect: Scribe 1 - Lichfield; Scribe 2 - Lichfield; Scribe 3 - Staffordshire; Scribe 4 - too short to assess. Linguistic Atlas Grid Reference: not mapped
manuscript is related to London, British Library, MS Harley 1205 and Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Eng. poet. a.1 and the Lichfield subgroup throughout (1982, pp. 115-116). Dennison, L., Orr, M. T., and Scott, K. L. ed, 2001. An Index of
Atlas Grid Reference: not mapped but McIntosh, Samuels and Benskin state that the 'language is from Lichfield or nearby' (1986, p. 239). A late fourteenth-century copy of the Prick of Conscience (Lewis and McIntosh 1982, p. 63). ff. 1r-125r Prick
and a few other notes. Mynors and Thomson note that this is probably John Foxholes OFM, who was at the Lichfield convent in 1436-41, and then at Oxford c. 1451, and archbishop of Armagh from 1471, and who had died