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1586 results from this resource . Displaying 161 to 180

to certify him concerning the corn taken from the said Richard and other men of those parts, as they complained to the king that they had not been paid at the wardrobe for the corn so taken. The like in

. He answers for 105 carryings of corn, of the issue of the Hundred. Sum 105 carryings. Whereof in acquittance of the Prevost and 2 Beadles, 4 carryings. In carriage of the lord's corn, 60 carryings. In the sale of

buy and purvey all kinds of corn in Gloucestershire and bring it without let to the county of Bristol for sustenance of the king's lieges there; as lately learning that the dearness of corn in Gloucestershire was greatly increasing, in

and armour to the parts of Normandy and Brittany, and have taken with them corn and victuals for their maintenance, or merchants wishing to take corn and victuals to Normandy and Brittany for the maintenance of those lieges, shall be

under pain of forfeiture to take such corn or victuals out of the island by land or water, ordering them to arrest all those found so doing after the proclamation, and such corn and victuals, and the vessels wherein they

' of Bayonne of forty tuns burden, Arnald de Castra master, to pass to the city of Bayonne laded with corn and other victuals for victualling that city, after payment of the customs etc. thereupon due, any arrest thereof on

king's hand. Order to deliver by indenture 200 quarters of wheat of the corn in those lands to Ralph Pledour or to Richard Pate, purveyors of corn for the king's household, to do therewith as has been enjoined upon them.

necessary for reaping the corn growing in the king's manors in his own hand in that bailiwick to be taken in places where it is most convenient, and set upon the king's work of reaping that corn, and of the

porter of corn shall not sell nor measure corn, nor presume to enter a churchyard, house, or ship to remove corn, nor lay his hand upon corn, until he be called by those who have bought the corn. 34 Also

then selling in the same market, in deceit of all the people, and to the increase of the dearness of corn: to the damage of the commonalty, to the amount of 1000 l . etc. And this he offers to

his lands in the town of Trefowell, for the term of her life, at the rent of a grain of corn, with remainder to Marina, his sister, mother of the said Anne, with remainder, after the decease of Christopher Lannargh,

was customary for the Mayor to raise a sum of money for the purchase of corn by assessment upon the several livery companies, the corn so provided being stored in the granaries of the Bridgehouse, which were let to the

the bishop and his men and tenants sown with divers sorts of corn without licence from the bishop or his men or tenants, and tread down the corn, to the damage of the bishop and his men and tenants: the

. yearly of land with the corn sown in 731/2 acres of land in the manor of Mershwod, being part of the said land, and the treasurer and barons charge him with the corn at the exchequer, as the king

the king. To the sheriff of Lincoln, and to the king's takers of corn in that county. Order not to take anything from the aforesaid Adam's corn in that county so that he may not make his profit thereof as

all the lord's corn be cut, and the work of each virgater is worth beyond reprises 2 d . Total by estimation: 21 s . 10 d . Also the customary-tenants ought to bind all the aforesaid corn, carry it

hands for certain causes, or to him who supplies his place, a sufficient quantity of corn for the munition of that castle out of the corn and victuals in the said manor. By K. March 9. Caldwell. To Robert de

all persons bringing corn and victuals to the king may sell them freely to whomsoever they will at a price to be agreed upon between buyer and seller, and that nothing shall be taken from their corn or victuals without

corn of the said goods for the king's use, and answered to the king for the same, as appears by their account rendered at the exchequer, and Simon has besought the king to cause the value of the said

them for garnerage, carriage, jettison, portage, plantage, levage and stowage, and for the multure of the corn and for tuns to hold the corn and victuals, and for the wages of the men working at putting flour in the tuns,

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 2 May 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ac=s&kw=corn&st=160