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492 results from this resource . Displaying 281 to 300

the Mayor and Sheriffs to make proclamation against any one furnishing Henry Horn, a disturber of the peace, with shelter, food, & c., under pain of imprisonment. Witness the King, 19 July, 28 Edward III. [A.D. 1354 ] . Br'e

de Waltham, cook, condemned to the pillory for selling a peck of eels ( picam de anguill ') unfit for food. Folio clvii. Br'e pro venis dulcibus. Writ to the Mayor and Sheriffs to the effect that taverners were to

ccxcv b. That no one capable of maintaining himself by art or labour pretend to be poor and beg his food ( begger son sustenance ) on pain of imprisonment, and that no leper walk the City under the same

which fell to the said Mayor, and asking the said Prior to admit the said chaplain and provide him with food, stipend, & c., according to the terms of the covenant made with the City by Philip de Thame, a

houses open after 9 o'clock on the eves of St. John Baptist and SS. Peter and Paul, or to sell food or drink before 6 o'clock of the following morning, under penalty of imprisonment and fine, and further enjoining all

. and two gowns of the livery of the Mayor for the time being; and further, he is to have food and drink in the house of the Mayor for the time being, and for the honour of the City,

Agnes, wife of John Cotiller, that she would instruct her apprentice, Juseana, in a proper manner, would find her in food and drink, and would not beat her with stick or knife. (L) Adam Stable was mainprised by John Feraunt

whom he was apprenticed for seven years, had failed to instruct him in his trade or to provide him with food, clothing and necessaries, and had taken refuge at S t Martin le Grand twelve weeks ago, leaving the complainant

pots or pot, if he have one (but who of these bond-tenants will have a brass pot for cooking his food in ?), because at their death the lord ought to have all things of metal. Abbot John granted to

of the City of London, that so the rich and middling persons therein might there have water for preparing their food, and the poor for their drink; the water aforesaid was now so wasted by brewers, and persons keeping brewhouses,

words, sold divers lands, tenements, and other goods and chattels of his, to support and find the said William in food and clothing. And after this, the same William said that John and his daughter must go with him to

and latrine; and if the prior failed in paying the pension, then John Mirfield (or his attorney) should have sufficient food from the prior and convent to satisfy the amount due; with power, in default, of entry and distress upon

people, 1 d . to each; the remainder for pittance of the convent, that is, for addition to the usual food. St. Dunstan's in the West ( versus novum templum ): from a tenement of the Prior of Royston (

which failure, a famine ensued, to such a degree that the people from the villages resorted to the City for food; and there, upon the famine waxing still greater, many thousand persons perished; many thousands more too would have died

the City's records, and whose loss is deeply felt by all connected with the Corporation. i.e. , an allowance of food, clothes, or money for her maintenance. See note supra , p. 84. In other places the phrase used is

of a rent and reversion of lands, tenements, and woods in Fontelgyffard, rendering yearly to the grantor sufficient support in food and drink and one robe, & c. Wednesday the vigil of St. Martin, 18 Edward III. Seal of arms

requests them to admit him to their house and to find him, and a yeoman and two grooms serving him, food and clothing according to their estates, and to find his horses reasonable sustenance for his lifetime; and to make

of that prison and the condition of its inmates given by Howard, who says he found some there whose sole food was bread boiled in water; they beg Mr. Carr to assist them "at this extreme time of need, being

working for two days in autumn by [ per ] two men at Wrentich (for which they shall have their food [ gestum suum ] at Christmas), for all service. After the death of each of them his best beast

to be set up in, for repair of crossbows, & c., 265, 425. -, -, prisoners in, to have more food and lighter chains, 291, 324. -, -, Jews allowed to shelter in, 334. -, -, close confinement in, 363,

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 28 May 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ac=s&kw=food&st=280