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534 results from this resource . Displaying 281 to 300

] of St. Thomas of Canterbury, Abirbrothot [ sic ] , O.S.B., in the diocese of St. Andrews, and the habit thereof to be given to him, and his profession as a monk thereof to be received and admitted. The

in Suffolk; as the king has learned by inquisition, taken by the escheator, that Katherine Brewes, who has taken the habit of religion, on the day of her profession held the premises in chief by knight service, and that the

for chastisement according to the rule of their order; as he is wandering about from country to country in secular habit to the peril of his soul and the scandal of the order, as the prior and convent have signified

to the above archdeacon the usual oath of fealty, according to the form enclosed. He is also to wear the habit worn in St. John's and conform to its rule. Ex suscepte servitutis . ( An . and Jo. le

priory, in which had made his profession, betook himself to divers secular places and wandered about, and, wearing however his habit, has lived laudably in the world for about thirteen years) to absolve him from sentences of excommunication etc. and

Paston, an Augustinian friar, containing that formerly, after making his profession as an Augustinian friar, he left the order and habit and became a secular priest, without intent to apostatize, and that he desires to be transferred from the said

full age, and the said Isabel lately, while within age and in ward of the king, took upon her the habit of religion wherein she has made profession, as Margaret now abbess of the house of minoresses without Algate London

William Essex, draper, John More and Richard Northbury, mercers, Robert Fraunceys, goldsmith, and John Willarby, "taillour," had been in the habit of betraying the secrets of the Council and been remiss in their duties, and they were thereupon removed from

the above writ to the effect that by immemorial custom of the City the Mayor and Aldermen were in the habit of causing any ordinance affecting artificers in the City which proved to be prejudicial to the common good to

gild , 102 Head-sheet Hearse Heirlooms , 21, 83 Helmet , 16 Hermit , 145, 175 n , 177 -, habit of, 177 -, see also Anchorite Hermitage , 175 n Herrings , barrel of, 177 Hogshead of iron ,

the house shall remain payable wholly to the hospital house. ' That if he particularly wishes to assume the canonical habit entirely out-of-doors, his wish shall be satisfied. ' That because Adam has done fealty and is bound by an

He had left the monastery without leave of his superior, and was then living in the world without abandoning his habit; but he was desirous to return to the monastery. The mandate was also to dispense him on account of

the third as Liber Ruber . For the sake of brevity, however, Mr. Bennett and others have been in the habit of referring to them by numbers, in the order of their date, namely as R. I (Liber Albus i),

order of Preachers, to be acquitted of half a mark in which he was amerced, whilst he was in secular habit, before the justices last in eyre in co. Cambridge, which the barons cause to be exacted from him by

as would content me. Your Highnesses may verily believe that he really wishes the marriage ; only it is the habit of this monarch to conduct all his affairs with much gravity and deliberation. And until his answer has been

W. to take back his wife, if under a certain age. He having put her away and taken the Cistercian habit in the house of Wardon, she went into a convent, but took no vow. He then returned to the

Walter, before his provision, without the then prior ' s licence, and with the intention of apostatizing, put off the habit of his order, and left the said church, and went to Scotland and lands occupied by schismatics, adherents of

licence, as the king has taken his homage for the said lands, whereof Margaret enfeoffed him before she took the habit of religion. June 15. Westminster. To the treasurer and barons of the exchequer. Order to cause the master of

receive into their house and to veil Matilda, daughter of John le Mareschal, of Aulton, who wishes to receive the habit of their order, they being bound to admit a maiden ( puella ) of the king's nomination upon his

the things pertaining to the estate of a nun, as she desires to serve in their house under the perpetual habit of religion. By p.s. July 4. York. Matilda, late the wife of John de Kirkebride, acknowledges that she owes

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 29 March 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ft=s&kw=blue%20habit&sr=bh&st=280