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534 results from this resource . Displaying 341 to 360

taken. The headings of the chapters are in red, and the principal initial letters and section marks in red or blue. It commences on fo. 1 a with the usual heading In Dei nomine, Amen . and ends abruptly on

. . . . . . Bottall, the king's alnager in the said county, witnessing that certain woollen cloth of blue colour, certain cloth called 'Kendaleclothe,' and other cloth, had been seized at Southwell on Friday after St. Stephen, in

licence of lord, 290. ancient demesne, privileges of, 59, 72, 188, 412, 446, 453. arrest of canon wandering in secular habit, 441. - of deserters, 403, 485. assembly of men in Cheshire to determine their subsidy, 322. assessors of subsidies

181, 185, 202, 213, 221, 224, 284 ( bis ), 341, 342, 486, 492, 499, 502, 524, 570, 625. -, habit of, 111. -, houses of:- in England. See Arbury; Bath; Bolton; Bridlington; Brinkburn; Bruton; Carlisle; Christchurch; Colchester; Combwell; Darley;

"dux Alsatie"; see p. 197. James II. ( d . 1327), and Alfonso IV. ( d . 1336), took the habit on their death-bed. ( Analecta Franciscana , iii., 484; iv., 348.) Ferdinando IV. ( d . 1312). ( Id

with hands together as in prayer. The head, tonsured, rests on a tasselled cushion; the body is clothed in the habit of the Augustinian order. The outer garment is the Cappa Nigra , or canon's cope. The hood is rolled

domui nostre reddiderint ), had taken their habit with its mark and so persevered among them; they had farther sworn that in accordance with their rule they would admit none to the habit of their fraternity unless fully absolved from

for a fortnight in his vicar's habit at the usual hours on probation of fitness as to chanting and reading, after which time he was presented to be unfit; wherefore he put off his habit and withdrew by their leave.

de Hertilpole, a friar of the order and professed in it, lately escaped from his cloister at Richemund, spurning the habit of the order, and took away with him certain goods and chattels of neighbours and friends of the friars

on 2 March 1431 Henry Inglose retained JK tailor, to work on three gowns for his wife, namely one of blue velvet upon satin, another of black of lyre, and the third coloured green lined with buckram, all for 14s

goods consisted of 369 dried fish called 'lyngefyssh', 80 fish called keelings, a blue gown lined with beaver fur, one striped gown, one green gown, another blue gown, a black cap, a feather bed with bolster, two pillows, two bedspreads,

off goods and chattels worth 5m, namely one blue woman's gown lined with miniver, one murrey coloured woman's gown lined with mink, one green woman's gown with a black buckram lining, a blue man's gown lined with marten fur, and

lieu of the 20s, a mantle of white cameline 1 , furred with "Eremyn," value 30s, a mantle of piers blue 2 cameline lined with red "sendall" 3 , value 2 marks, a supertunic of azure-blue furred with squirrel, value

the age of eighteen and upwards, and that William Moubray has taken Margaret to wife and Joan has taken the habit of religion in the order of St. Gilbert of Sempyngham at Chiksonde priory, but whether she be professed or

obit of Richard and of John de Ravenser, with full service of the dead preceding, and they shall wear the habit of the choir, and shall be in the processions on Sundays and other solemn days on which processions shall

-, -, before a master, 254. -, sworn upon a book, 99, 347. -, sworn upon the cross of the habit of the order of St. John of Jerusalem, 234. -, sworn upon the gospels, 228. -, taken by escheators

he obtains possession of the rule and administration he shall not be bound to make his profession and wear the habit, and also that he may be blessed by any catholic bishop in communion with the apostolic see, who shall

the chapel of St. Stephen at Westminster or in other collegiate churches of England, and to the said poor another habit, etc.; with like licence to the bishop of Lincoln to approve and confirm such assignment etc. Ad. perp. rei

the monks of the Cistercian monastery of Bordesley in the said diocese to enter it, that he took the religious habit therein, and at the persuasion of the said monks made his regular profession; and adding that before he reached

and all other insignia of a college, and that the king may assign to the provost, vice-provost and scholars a habit to be worn at divine offices and in the university, and that the provost may, at the said times

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 20 April 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ac=s&ct=od&ft=s&kw=blue%20habit&st=340