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1586 results from this resource . Displaying 301 to 320

order of the Court of Assistants, or the precept or command of the Lord Mayor as for a supply of corn. The constitution of these guilds provided a convenient machinery for taxation, 9 and the Common Council assumed the right

Dean of Guild, Treasurer, Deacons of the Crafts, Councillors, and Community of the Burgh and City of Glasgow, the two corn mills and man mill called the Subdean's mills, with the little kiln belonging thereto, and the multures and others

of the lord's mills at Cardiff, in which, by a common feudal custom, the tenants were compelled to grind their corn at their own expense. One of these mills still stood, in the first half of the 19th century, under

and to John Breganam a heifer. To Henry the vicar of Istilworth a quarter of malt, half a quarter of corn, a gammon, a quarter of bef, a bordcloth with double towel, and a sanenapp. 19 To William her son

Serjeant of Stokgummer 66 l. 13 s. 4 d. Serjeant of Lydyard 40 l. 0 s. 0 d. Purchasers of corn at Congresbury 43 l. 1 s. 0 d. Whytechurch farm 20 l. 0 s. 0 d. Lovington and Mudford

To Bartholomew le Juvene. Order to answer for the issues of the manors of Luton and Weston and for the corn of the same in the barns to Eleanor, countess of Leicester, hereafter until further orders; saving to the king

the prior of Tykeford without Neuportpaynel for the sale of the king's corn in the manor of Neuportpaynel for the third year of the king's reign, which corn the king granted to William. To Richard de Holebrok, the king's steward.

, Norff, county, sheriff of. See Collevill, Norton. -, earl of. See Bigod. -, herrings from, 26-7. -, wine and corn from, 27. -, riot threatened in, 125. -, justices in, 421, 449, 473. -, tallages in, 537. Norhamt. See

] , constable of Windsor castle. Order to permit the executors of the will of Ralph Pipard to have his corn and other goods in the manor of Bray, with the arrears of the rents of that manor for Ralph's

king on this occasion. Feb. 2. Walsingham. To the sheriff of Surrey and Sussex. As the king wishes to provide corn for the expenses of his household in his next parliament at Westminster on Sunday after St. Matthias, he orders

who now hold them, what corn they were sown with after the beginning of the said second year or after the last regard made after that time, and the sowing in winter and spring corn are to be written down

victuals according to the late request; and if by chance he be unable to lend all the corn and malt required of old corn, that he will make it up with new grain, and that he will deliver the same

W. bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, in the king's hands and then in the custody of the said Robert, for corn of the said manor that he delivered to John de Beche, to whom the king afterwards granted the custody

Eudo and John to purvey divers kinds of corn and other victuals in fitting places in the said counties, to be paid for by the king's money, and to cause that corn to be ground and the flour thereof and

of corn out of the realm, as the king has, in compassion of the estate of the people of Ireland, where there is great scarcity of corn, granted licence to William, Jocius, and Roger to take 600 quarters of corn

time that he had the manor, which the king afterwards granted to him for life, from the corn growing therein and the corn in the barns, which were the bishop's chattels. By p.s. [2907. ] Aug. 20. Gloucester. To the

lands at ferm during the said term and may enjoy their profit, and carry the vesture of all manner of corn growing in the said lands, and the chattels, after the expiry of the said term. Dated at Westminster on

incapacitated by age and infirmity. April 7. Ely. To the king's merchant Anthony Pessaigne of Genoa. Order to cause the corn, meat, oats and victuals that the king ordered him to provide and cause to be carried to Berwick-on-Tweed to

indicted before them for taking corn, victuals, and armour to the Scots, the said Simon and John having been appointed by the king to enquire in the county of Somerset concerning the taking of corn, victuals, and armour to the

made that no one shall take corn or animals, to wit, oxen, cows, pigs or sheep, out of the realm to parts beyond without the king's special order, and if they find any corn or animals laded in ships to

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 9 June 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?kw=corn&sr=bh&st=300