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imperator Romanorum ex Graecis ' ), the bodies were translated to Milan , for it had assisted him in recovering Greece and Armeny, then laid waste by the Saracens and Persians; " " and it is read ( legitur )
dining-hall of a monastery. In later times the word was further corrupted to Frater |house. Thus Davies , in his Ancient Rites and Monuments of the Church of Durham ( 1672 ), says, ' In the south alley of the
anderen Liedern durch eine verhältnissmässig einheitliche Ortho|graphie aus. Th . Wright , Pol . Songs , pag. 187; Ritson , Ancient Songs , I, 51. Lustneþ, lordinges, boþe ȝonge ant olde, of pe freynsshe men þat were so proude ant
symple & a poouere knyght. ¶ Also þe meyre of london, notable of dignyte, and of queneborow Queenborough , an ancient, but poor town of Kent , in the Isle of Sheppey , situated at the mouth of the river
man mai se bi The Concordaunce Several concordances were made from the Vulgate before Pecock ' s time, the most ancient being that of Antonio of Padua, composed in the early part of the thirteenth century . Cardinal Hugo '
and is interlineated in a later hand. into iij. parties, as a man mai fynde in oold writingis. For the ancient authorities on this subject, see Bingham ' s Antiq. Chr . Ch., book v. c. 6. Ferthermore, in othere
auch bei R. of G. finden sich beide. Wright , Pol . Songs of England , p. 212; Ritson , Ancient Songs , pag. 28. Lystneþ, Lordynges, a newe song ichulle bigynne of þe traytours of scotlond, þat take beþ
the French prose romance " Les Quatre Filz Aymon, " which is a rendering more or less free of an ancient chanson de geste bearing the same name, though more often entitled " Renaud de Montauban. " The earliest extant
In the chanson the Sons are said to go to Tremogne, not Arden or Dordon . This Tremogne is the ancient name for Dortmund in Westphalia, which position would account for the fact that Charlemagne passes Liege to go to
n. and preketes Pryket, of a candylstykke, or other lyke. Stiga , P. Parv. Candlesticks (says Mr Way ) in ancient times were not fashioned with nozzles, but with long spikes or prykets ... (See wood cut at the end
ferme. ferme of Oxonforde 65/13 a yearly quit-rent paid by the borough to the crown for the perpetual lease of ancient dues payable to the crown. ferme 114/1, 132/4 secure, indisput|able. ferre 19/10 far. ferthyng 10/4. fest 100/22 festival. ffeuerer
akynge & swellynge in a lyme þat is woundid, leie þerto a potage in maner maad of eerbis & swynes greece & water & wheete flour, corruptyn þe lyme, & þilke corrupcioun is cause of þe crampe / For Galion
correct. In Rymer , vol. viii. p. 398, is an injunction for seizing into the king ' s hands the ancient liberties, privileges, and franchises of the city of York , on account of this insurrection, dated Pontefract Castle ,
rector of Kidlington , claimed from the executors of Ralph Frensh, of Thrupp , in Kidling|ton parish, according to the ancient custom, his second best beast, as due to the church as a ' mor|tuary. ' The ex|ecutors re|fused, and
rebus anglicis, 1619 , p. 511. John Weever , who is reported to have visited Liége, prints it in his Ancient Funeral Monuments, 1631 , p. 567. It was again transcribed and published by Pierre Lambinet: Recherches … sur l
Formen, die der ost-mittelländischen Mundart angehören. E, deren Text abgedruckt ist in " Owaine Miles and other inedited Fragments of ancient English Poetry, Edinb. 1837 " , ist in ost-mittelländischer Sprache abgefasst. Diese Hand|schrift ist zweifellos jünger als O und
wondre. 5 5_5 In the Harl . MS. these two lines have been inked over and scraped out by some ancient fig|leafite. Betydde a shame, þey gun to crye, Þat wundyr fyl on here folye. Men asked sone what was
daies aftir. & whanne þat he myȝte take sufficiently mete, I comaundide him to take pilulas chochias Cochia . An ancient name for several officinal purgative pills. Dunglison , Medic. Lex ., a pill. Alex . Trall. Compare Fr. cochée.
Watir þat is gaderid in children hedis, Hydrocephalus and its cure is treated at some length by most of the ancient physicians. See Paul . Aegineta, ed. Adams , vol. II., p. 250. Our author ' s description is abridged
] Basset and R. de Velpont i. e. Robert de Vipont . , Bec shall take all tithes of the ancient demesne, saving to the mother church wholly the thirtieth acre, as they were accustomed to take of old; but