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1586 results from this resource . Displaying 1 to 20

the corn or other goods of W. archbishop of Dublin against his will, by reason of any order sent to them to send corn and victuals to Wales or Scotland, but to permit him to enjoy freely his corn and

no one shall take corn out of the realm except to Gascony, Ireland, Flanders, Brittany, Brabant, Spain, Holand, Seland and Almain, where there is a scarcity of corn, upon the forfeiture of the corn, and that corn shall be taken

John Fraunceys, the younger, and Nicholas de Odecoumbe to take 300 quarters of corn to Ireland, the king having granted them licence to take 400 quarters of corn thither. The king has ordered the sheriff of Somerset to permit them

the king granted it for life, and to whom he afterwards granted the corn in the demesne lands of the manor sown in Hugh's time and the corn sown by Robert whilst the manor was in his custody, provided that

Kent for the corn in the manor of Westerham. Co. Middlesex for the corn in the manors of Hodeford and Padynton. Co. Bucks for the corn in the manors of Turveston and Denham. Co. Essex for the corn in the

the king granted it for life, and to whom he afterwards granted the corn in the demesne lands of the manor sown in Hugh's time, and the corn sown by Robert whilst the manor was in his custody, provided that

Stradebrok, and Wilbegh, having lands in that town, according to what they hold there, if they found that they receive corn and other issues therefrom, and to compel them to pay if they refuse to do so, as the men

for custom or subsidy upon corn and other merchandise by them bought in Ireland for victualling of such castles and towns; as they have shewn that at all past times they used to buy corn etc. for the purpose in

Lincoln. Order to cause proclamation to be made forbidding any merchant, mariner, or other person, native or alien, to export corn, meat, ale, or other sorts of victuals by land or by sea in any manner without special licence from

for a certain purveyance of corn for the king's stock. Order, upon the instant petition of the mayor and commonalty of London, to suffer the persons hereinafter mentioned to bring to London all the corn by them bought and purveyed,

take any corn out of the realm except to Gascony, Ireland, Flanders, Britanny, Brabant, Spain, Holand, Seland and Almain, where a scarcity of corn, it is said, causes it to be taken, upon pain of forfeiture of the corn, and

purveyors of the king or of others or those newly appointed to purvey corn and divers other victuals for his use shall presume to take any corn or other victuals brought to that city to be sold from those bringing

sight of these presents, to cause proclamation to be made that no one, upon pain of forfeiture, shall take corn out of the port of that city to parts beyond, without licence, or presume to sell ships, barges or fly-boats

as the king greatly needs corn and other victuals for the maintenance of him and his subjects staying with him in the war in that land. The king will cause the cost of the corn, the freight of the ships,

of whatsoever estate or condition, under pain of forfeiture thereof and of the vessels wherein it is laded, to take corn or malt out of the realm to any foreign parts without the king's licence and special command, save to

at his peril upon sight etc. to cause proclamation to be made, that all who have wine, any kind of corn or malt, flesh, fish or other victuals whatsoever for sale shall take the same or cause them to be

of the corn sown in the said lands before the certain news of Richard's death arrived and before the date of the writ aforesaid, in accordance with the king's grant aforesaid, provided that the escheator answer for the corn sown

to Hugh de Burgh, parson of the church of Burgh-under-Staynemore, 36 l . 13 s . 4 d . for corn bought from him for the king's use for munition of the castle and town of Carlisle in the 12th

Stapelford, co. Leicester. Order to deliver to John de Neville of Horneby the aforesaid manor and appurtenances and the corn sown in it by Simon de Bereford, the king's late enemy and rebel, by whose forfeiture the manor came to

said Ralph shall have the corn and hay in granges, garner or houses and of land sown, and all stock therein live and dead, corn in the manor of Aston excepted; and that for such corn and the said Clement's

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 20 April 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ac=s&kw=corn