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1586 results from this resource . Displaying 21 to 40

February 1297 Membrane 22 d . Feb. 4. Walsingham. To the king's takers of corn in co. Dorset. Order not to intermeddle with taking the corn of John Huse, as he is staying with John de Sancto Johanne in the

to permit certain merchants of Newcastle-on-Tyne, who are coming to his realm to buy corn and other victuals for the defence of that town, to buy corn and victuals within his realm and to carry the same away f rom

of corn, gold and silver and arms, the true value thereof and of the ships wherein the same were laded; as the king is informed that merchants and others have oft times heretofore taken out of the realm corn, gold

corn in co. Middlesex. Order not to intermeddle in any way with the corn of the master and brethren of the military order of the Temple in England, as the king has granted to them that nothing of their

estate or condition, under pain of forfeiting the same, henceforward until the end of the parliament to buy any wine, corn or other victuals by forestalment, or to sell any, or suffer any to be sold to any man at

lands and goods into his hand with the corn and herbage growing upon those lands, and to deliver them to the sheriff by indenture, so that the sheriff should cause the corn and herbage to be reaped, mown, carried and

presents to cause proclamation to be made on the king's behalf forbidding any man secretly or openly to take any corn to Wales or any foreign parts, or by craft or covin to presume so to do, under pain of

take no custom or subsidy until further order upon any corn now or hereafter imported by that port or the bounds thereof; as by reason of the threatened dearness of corn in the realm order is made by the king

corn by any of his ministers. If they wish that this payment shall be made now for the said corn of last year, they are desired to advise and ordain how the king may be best served with the

of tithe corn in Spersolt of the yearly value of 2 s ., in Denchesworth of the yearly value of 5 s ., in Appelton of the yearly value of 6 s . 8 d ., of corn, wool and

and boats laden with wool, wool-fells, corn or other victuals to be taken to parts beyond the sea in all ports from the mouth of the Thames towards the west, and to arrest all corn, victuals, wool and wool-fells which

take any corn out the realm except to Gascony, Ireland, Flanders, Britanny, Brabant, Spain, Holland, Seland and Almain, where there was then a dearth of corn, upon the forf eiture of the corn, and that all taking such corn should

to cause the corn in the manor of Qweye, which manor belonged to Walter de Treilly, tenant in chief, and which he demised before his death for a certain term to John, formerly bishop of Ely, which corn he [the

corn of any sort, notwithstanding the king's late order to prohibit the taking of corn out of the realm without special licence, as the king, compassionating the estate of the people of Ireland, where there is great dearness of

Tolbooth of Lenne. Order not to permit corn or other victuals to be exported from that port by alien merchants in any wise, and to take security from native merchants wishing to export corn or victuals by their oaths and

orders them not to intermeddle with the earl's own corn in those counties by reason of the order aforesaid, but to permit the earl's men and attorneys to take the corn that they now have ready for his use for

the king has learned that by reason of withdrawing and embracing of too much corn now and heretofore done by such merchants the dearness of corn is increasing in the said county, wherefore the people in those parts are like

and that satisfaction shall be made by the Hospitallers for the value of the corn growing in the said lands, or that the owners of the corn may carry the same away and make their profit thereof when the time

patent appointing him to arrest and take all those who, as he might be assured, took wool and other merchandise, corn and other victuals out of the realm not cocketed nor customed, to bring them to places in the said

his complaint shews that at Calais he lately caused that ship to be laded with wheat and other sorts of corn, and sent over to Bordeaux, there to buy wine for the purpose aforesaid, and that the collectors are troubling

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