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534 results from this resource . Displaying 361 to 380

114, 115. -, indulgence to persons visiting and making offerings to, 515, 516. -, master of, to wear the regular habit, 114. -, master and brethren of, petition of, 114. -, collectors etc. of, 115. house of Carmelite Friars in

as the archbishop ' s recent petition contained, was in infancy placed in the monastery and clad in the monastic habit, has never expressly made her profession, and all of whose brothers and sisters are dead. At the archbishop '

Yarmouth ( Jernemute ), Hoxne and Aldeby; the admission of postulants ( monachandorum ) before their being invested with the habit, and their profession; the correction and reformation of crimes and excesses, detected at visitation, of the monks; the exhibition,

after St. Botolph 49 Edward III, that Margaret daughter and one of the heirs of Robert Ram, who took the habit of religion of St. Benedict at Hedyngham co. Essex, wherein she was professed in 47 Edward III, at her

and heir, that he had issue a daughter named Joyous and died, that she is yet living, having taken the habit of religion in the abbey of St. Helen London, but whether she be therein professed or no the jurors

stalls among the vicars, and shall be like the other vicars with amices of calaber etc. in raiment, ornament and habit: they shall be present at the daily mass of the Virgin in the said chapel, and at the high

Court prior to 1537, when stringent regulations were promulgated for future practice. 13 Hitherto each clerk had been in the habit of keeping in his own custody the books or calendars upon which he happened to be engaged for the

Adam de Wynchester, taverner, and Robert Pynnote are bullies ( bellatores ) by day and night, and are in the habit of taking reward from men for making assaults contrary to the King's peace. Let them therefore be kept in

writ and proceedings thereon are printed in 'Memorials,' pp. 111-13. Alluding to the scriveners and others who were in the habit of transacting business in "Paul's Walk." 'Memorials,' p. 113. Printed in 'Liber Albus,' i. 298. 300. 'Memorials,' p. 115.

the City should receive his patrimony, and it was given to him. Thereupon the said William, who had assumed the habit of a Friar of the Augustinian Order, acknowledged satisfaction for mesne profits, and the above Nicholas and his sureties

find that the said Henry had two sons and one daughter; that the eldest son, named William, had taken the habit of religion in the Order of Carmelites in their house at Maldon, 20 and that the other, named John,

came the above John, one of the orphans, and claimed his property, and notified his intention of assuming the religious habit in the house at Merton. 16 His request granted. Afterwards, viz., on Monday the 24th Jan., 8 Henry IV.

Recorder, Aldermen, and Sheriffs for the removal of a bridge called "Bochersbrigge," near the Thames, where butchers were in the habit of casting offal into the river, before the Feast of St. Peter ad Vincula [1 Aug. ] next ensuing.

allow any one to leave the Port of London on a pilgrimage to Rome, as they had been in the habit of allowing, without the King's special licence. Dated at Westminster, 3 Oct., 24 Edward III. [A.D. 1350 ] .

no lawyers (as well as no Sheriff) should be returned to Parliament, for the reason that lawyers were in the habit of making Parliament a convenience for transacting the affairs of their clients to the neglect of public bustness, and

) of Ironmongers, but was now following the craft ( arte ) of Fishmongers, and who had been in the habit of receiving yearly and alternately 6 ( et alternis vicibus ) the livery and clothing of both crafts, contrary

friar of their order, and so they took the boy away on 4 July 1392 and dressed him in the habit of their order and withdrew him from the custody of the said Richard Exton. And when the latter complained

in this, namely, that such carts as are wont to load firewood at Castle Baynard's wharf, have been in the habit of passing through that place, as along a common way; whereas, if it were built upon, those same carts,

other period. It was perhaps as a step in the direction of stricter poverty that in 1502 they changed their habit from brown russet at four, six, or eight shillings a yard to kennet russet at two shillings. 31 Bavard,

Rites of Durham, Surtees Society. Concerning the charnel house. Rock, Daniel, Church of Our Fathers, ed. 1905. Concerning the monastic habit, & c. Sargeaunt, John, A History of Felsted School, 1889. A history of Sir Richard Rich and his descendants,

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 29 April 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ac=s&ct=od&ft=s&kw=blue%20habit&st=360