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1586 results from this resource . Displaying 221 to 240

their private gain have forestalled and regrated great quantity of corn and malt to the prejudice of the lieges there dwelling as the king has learned, and to cause such corn and malt to be distributed among the inhabitants for

of Nicholas de Bokelond, the king's clerk, warning all bakers and brewers of that town that they shall cause their corn to be ground at the said mill and baked in the said oven, at their peril. Membrane 8. Oct.

bailiwick, with 1,000 quarters of wheat, 600 quarters of oats, and 200 quarters of barley, and to cause all the corn to be carried by sea to Chester, so that they shall have it there in the quinzaine of Midsummer

lands and their goods and chattels in the same, and saving to the king and his tenants their commodities, approwments, corn and other goods and chattels and those of others of the lands aforesaid. Vacated, because otherwise below . To

his tenements in London in tail; remainder to the aforesaid Henry. To Margery his wife one third part of all corn sown or to he sown in his manors of Aldrenton 12 and Stokebrewere, 13 and one third of his

which her said husband demised to the said abbot in Wy and elsewhere in the same county; a load of corn and a load of barley to be delivered to her yearly in the abbot's court at Wy, so long

, D 939. -, 'Kendaleclothe,' D 939. Common Bench. See Bench. Coram rege rolls , document enrolled on, A 5889. Corn , C 3510; D 6, 8, 39, 1104, 1150, 1151, 1234. -, prices of, C 3339. Corrodies , grants

friars preachers of Cambridge to have all the corn of John de Moyne in his manors, as it is testified before the king that John before his death granted all his corn to them. To Philip de Wylegby, escheator beyond

of Dublin, all the corn sown in the lands of the archbishopric of Dublin for this year, whether sown at the king's own cost or by champarty or otherwise, as the king has granted such corn t o him. It

Westminster. To the justiciary of Ireland and to the treasurer of the exchequer of Dublin. As the king much needs corn and other necessaries for the munition of the castle of Carlisle against the Scots, his enemies and rebels, he

Ireland have sent a certain quantity of corn from Ireland to that county for the munition of the castle of Carlisle by the king's order; the king orders the sheriff to cause the corn to be carried to the castle

and took her and the said corn and wares to Southampton, pretending that the ship, corn, and wares belonged to merchants of the power of the king of France, under which pretext the ship, corn, and wares were arrested by

demesne meadows lying in the field of the manor in divers places towards the south; also a third of the corn mills of Egremound, Beckermet, Thoraldwait, Wastedale, and Eskedale, and a third of the fulling mill ( molendinorum fullareticorum )

and all other costs incurred in taking the corn from Lenn to Andewerp; the king therefore orders the treasurer, barons and chamberlains to view the indentures, and if they find that the corn was bought from Thomas as aforesaid and

to deliver to the sheriff of York the corn of the late W. archbishop of York and that bought from Master William de Birston, which Ralph was appointed to collect, and the corn that he can provide in the county

burgess of theirs was master, to be freighted to take certain corn out of the realm to Cales, and the said burgess, scheming to defraud the king, took the corn and abandoning the voyage which he had undertaken, carried the

ships in that port by John Godeslond and others laded with 480 quarters of corn of divers sorts for foreign parts after the proclamation forbidding corn to be taken out of the realm under pain of forfeiture thereof, that because

causes, under pain of forfeiture, to cause all men, and all corn, horses and other victuals in Ireland wholly to be kept in Ireland, not suffering any men, corn, horses or victuals to be drawn out of Ireland without the

that by force of arms he reaped the plaintiff's corn growing at Graveney and Faversham, mowed his grass there growing, and took and carried away the hay thereof arising and corn to the value of 40 l .; and the

in lump, plate or coin without the king's special licence and command, 184. corn may be taken to Calais, Bordeaux, Bayonne, Brest and Cherbourg, 99. merchants bringing corn or victuals to London may sell the same quit of custom or

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 18 May 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?kw=corn&sr=bh&st=220