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1586 results from this resource . Displaying 201 to 220

corn for sale to Chester without impediment, taking from them first security that they will not cause the corn to be taken to Wales or elsewhere than to the king's parts, as the king has need to obtain more

to have i n fee, if the justiciary took it into the king's hands because William caused certain of his corn taken into the king's hands to be thrashed without the king's license. Nov. 25. Shrewsbury. To the justices appointed

Champagne ( Campan ') the allowance ( graciam ) that Matthew's sister has been hitherto wont to receive in money, corn, and other rents in the bailiwick ( consergeria ) of Columbers, which are asserted to amount to 50 l

ought to answer to the king. March 7. Salisbury. To the takers of the king's corn in co. Wilts. Orders not to take any corn, horses or carts, preserved meats, ( lardario ), carriage, or other goods from the prior

William's rebellion, and which is held of the earl, to hold during the king's pleasure, saving to the king the corn and other goods therein. By K. Nov. 24. Newcastle-on-Tyne. To Walter Haclut, the king's bailiff of Haverford, or to

cause 1,000 quarters of wheat and 1,000 quarters of oats, from the corn granted to the king by William de Hamelton, dean of York, and from other corn provided by the sheriff, or to be provided with all speed, to

Robert de Barton, and Michael de Haveryngton that the said mills were so occupied during the said term in grinding corn for the maintenance of the late king's household, and of his subjects then with him about Carlisle, and for

of the 120 l . that the late king pardoned him, which he owed to the late king's exchequer for corn sent from Ireland by Stephen, then bishop of Waterford, justiciary of Ireland, to Wales for the defence of the

of Henry's death, if surrender be demanded, that the recognisance shall be of no effect, saving to Henry's executors the corn sown in the said two parts in case Robert do not render them to Thomas in manner aforesaid. The

directed to the said bailiffs not to take corn out of the kingdom, so that the said Peter and John shall find them sufficient security that they will not take the said corn elsewhere than to Bordeaux, as Peter and

pertained to the king as forfeited, ordered his sub-escheators, without special order from the king, to arrest all the sown corn of the bishop in their bailiwicks and his other goods and chattels, and to cause them to be kept

the will of Sir John de Lorty, to Sir John de Molyns, knight, of all the goods and chattels, growing corn, hay, beasts, and other things taken by Sir John de Molyns and his people in the manors of Coklyngton,

his council in the present parliament that men of religion and others are much oppressed by the taking of their corn, cattle and goods by the king's purveyors and others and by the frequent coming of the king's magnates and

the sheriff to receive the said corn, and has also ordered the mayor and bailiffs of Newcastle-on-Tyne to pay the sheriff 20 marks out of their ferm for the carriage of the same corn. By C. Vacated, because otherwise below

of Lincoln. Order to cause proclamation to be made that no merchant, mariner, or other, native or foreign, shall carry corn, meat, fish or other victual out of the realm, without the king's special order, under pain of grievous forfeiture,

the chamberlain of Scotland, to provide there wheat and other corn to the number of 3,000 quarters by themselves and by their servants, and to allow them to take such corn to Berwick without hindrance. By K. and C. The

the exportation without license not only of corn, malt, beer and herring, but with certain exceptions, of cloth also 2 Soon after this, licences began to be issued for the export of cloth, corn and beer, and much of the

successors and the brethren, when the corn has been reaped, to put the 100 pigs in their own parcels of arable land lying in the fields of Askeby without doing damage to the corn and meadows of Jordan and his

de Elm and other evildoers, by breaking his close at Brisyngham, reaping his corn there, fishing in his several fishery, taking and carrying away fish and corn to the value of 10 marks etc. Writ of supersedeas . By letter

of the said count, arresting all those of the said town who took out of the said ship or have corn, bacon pigs, oil, cheese, honey or other goods and will not restore the same, and imprisoning them until they

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 20 May 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ac=s&kw=corn&st=200