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492 results from this resource . Displaying 321 to 340

80 years, at the same rent. HF and TF were to allow the prioress's steward to hold court there, providing food and drink for the steward and his clerks, and also taking all profits pertaining to that court. HF and

when the work was completed John was to ride down to Huntingdonshire with his two journeymen The Abbey would find food for horses and men whilst they stayed Master and men were each to have two loaves of bread and

at, 345, 348 - cormans of, 319, 320, 331n, - echevinage of, 330 - echevins of, 319 20, 322 - food supply of, 338 - fortifications of, 313, 318, 320, 338 9 - Frank Verity, court of, at, 319 -

until they should come to lawful age. On this condition, that the said Sarah shall find the said children in food, linen and woollen clothing, shoes, and all other necessaries, until they come to full age, and when the said

the rest of the citizens and good men of the City of London, for supplying the King and army with food and other necessaries, to be delivered at Berewyk by Midsummer Day. 26 Dated at "Fekenham," 12 April, 29 Edward

de Suffolk, Richard de Gloucestre, Edmund Lambyn, Robert Sely, and Henry de Seccheford, Aldermen, with putrid meat unfit for human food. The said William was ordered to stand in the pillory and the meat to be burnt under him, &

with the assent of Parliament in the thirty-fifth year of his reign, to the effect that great beasts intended for food for the inhabitants of the City should be slaughtered at Stratford or Knightsbridge, and not nearer the City, which

Sheriffs or the Chamberlain for the time being, and that their contents be used for paying the collectors and buying food and other necessaries for the prisoners every month or quarter of a year under the supervision of one of

or serving men to help them, and that at a time when they needed more comfort in the matter of food and clothing, conditions were so evil that the gallon of beer cost 2d instead of 1d, and other necessaries

. A mistress of this kind entered into security in 1364 to instruct her apprentice Juseana, to find her in food and drink and not to beat her with stick or knife 61 . A few years later a cruel

scrutinies and exercise supervision over the men of their trade and the Pybakers , to prevent the sale of unhealthy food and the charging of unreasonable prices, and to report offences from time to time to the Mayor and Aldermen.

for making rings. Probably used generally in the sense of wooden posts or pieces of timber. A dressing-board for preparing food. The following three entries are printed in the Life Records of Chaucer (Chau. Soc.), vol. iv, pp. 226-7. Houpland,

Adam son of William de Kneghton of his free tenement in Kneyghton (Knighton) in Hales, viz., of his sustenance in food and clothing, and a chamber, viz., of a robe and a tunic for summer ( estivali ), and two

son of John Griffyn by a deed to hold to the said William son of John and his heirs, finding food and raiment for the said Margaret for her life; and Margaret had lived after the said deed of gift

master and brethren of the hospital were called upon 6 to admit Nicholas de la Marche and provide him with food and clothing, but in a fortnight's time the writ was changed for one to the prior and convent of

infirmity would permit, that henceforth there should be comfort to the prisoners, shelter to the poor, visitation to the sick, food to the hungry, drink to the thirsty, clothes to the naked, and sepulture to the dead administered there '.

accustomed to plough with one "caruca" once a year at Lent for the lord of the Wapentake, who found them food, or else they gave 11/4 d., and they had to find a man to sow once a year in

the consent of Alice his daughter and heir, to the above Walter for his homage and service and for such food and clothing as he had in the days of Walter's father, of all his lands in Stretleg' at a

where the said sheep brought forth, a man healthy and sound, and sufficiently sober and moderate in drink and in food, in the same year suddenly and unexpectedly fell into a state of paralysis, losing the power of speech and

penetrated full sixty miles into that land, and there great numbers of his people died of hunger for want of food; and the King had no encounter there, but shamefully returned into England, and his people were greatly wasted through

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 9 June 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ac=s&kw=food&st=320