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1586 results from this resource . Displaying 241 to 260

returning carried great quantites of corn, wool, cloth, and fish At times even bullion was carried In the reign of Edward III the exportation of corn to Gascony was incessant and increasing The amount of corn grown in the Duchy

commanding that corn sent to millers and flour produced therefrom should correspond in weight. 6 Thereupon it was decreed by the Mayor and the Sheriffs with the assent of the Commonalty that weights and balances for weighing corn and flour

on which the corn was grown, for term of his life by the demise of the said Adam, and after the death of Reginald he had entered into the land and had reaped and carried the corn. Richard admitted that

wife of the deceased, equally. Also if they have corn, in grange or in field, then the wife of the deceased ought to choose her part, to wit, half the corn in the grange or the field, as she chooses.

receive sufficient corn from the said corn to sow the said lands, and to satisfy the executors for the price of the corn so taken, and to cause the executors to have free administration of the remaining corn and of

loaded in those parts with corn of the king's provision to go into Gascony, and at which places and where they are to discharge, and of the numbers of quarters of each kind of corn, and whether the ships have

the provision of corn in their bailiwick and the delivery thereof to the proctors of certain of the king's towns in Gascony, and to charge the men of the said towns with the receipt of the corn, or with its

forestalling the community of the city and the people of the adjoining parts in the buying of such corn, have retained the corn, which they bought for a reasonable price, until they could sell it at an excessive profit. By

Merk to take 400 quarters of corn from that county to Wales, upon their finding security not to take corn elsewhere out of the realm, as the king has granted them permission to take corn thither by sea. March 4.

no one, upon pain of forfeiture, shall take corn or other victuals out of that island, and if he finds any one doing this after the proclamation, to arrest them with the corn and victuals and keep them safely until

and the iron mines at Grabergh and Thernby are in common, and so are the corn mill of Egremound, the fulling mill there, the corn mills of Bekermet and Dreg, and shall be repaired at the common expense of the

proclamation, made by command and authority of the mayor, that no baker of London should buy any corn of any man until the corn bought for the common weal of the city should be sold and delivered, praying licence to

Ralph de Farleye for her lifetime, rendering therefor to her 5 quarters of corn and 10 s . yearly, and that she was seised of the said corn and rent from the time of the grant until the tenements were

to have the corn, hay, and grass growing or being in the manors of Colham, Eggeswere, Everle, and Colyngbourn, from 10 July, in the 16th year of the king's reign, when the king granted to her the corn, etc., in

6782. - worth 1 d ., 5899. an ear of corn, 4876. a grain of corn, 4097, 4395, 5030, 6365, 6658, 6715, 7327. a corn-rent, 6041. a quarter of corn, 3873. three quarters of palm-barley ( ordei palmal '), etc.

made that no merchant, native or alien, or any other of whatsoever condition shall without the king's special command take corn or malt out of the kingdom, on pain of forfeiture thereof, to any foreign parts save to the town

for furnishing the said town, namely of corn taken in Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire, Huntingdonshire and Norffolk in the 33rd and 34th years of the reign, it is found that they charged themselves with corn taken of divers persons for which no

market town or without by colour of purchase or otherwise cause corn of any prelate, man of religion or other clerk or layman to be threshed, or such corn, victuals or other goods to be taken contrary to the will

merchant or other shall take corn to any parts beyond except the town of Caleys, upon the forfeiture thereof, without the king's licence by advice of the council, and that all who wish to take corn to Caleys shall find

treatises on the practice of the, xxvii n. Metage , of coal at Retheresgate, - of corn at Queenhithe, - and Porterage of corn at Queenhithe, Military Service , action relating to losses during, Miskenning , n. Monstravit , writ

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 1 June 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ac=s&kw=corn&st=240