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1586 results from this resource . Displaying 81 to 100

acres of land in Penpont, Trewynt, Hervene, Tresmayne, Polglas and Fowymore, a corn mill in Penpont, three messuages and 60 acres of land in Boconan by Bodmyn, a corn mill there, fifteen burgages in Bodmyn, a messuage and 20 acres

of Cresteyn ought to receive, after the tithing of all their corn of Berlinges to the church of Esden, the tenth sheaf of all the remainder of the corn , and the abbot and his predecessors have been always wont

William le Vavassur. Whereas the king has appointed the sheriff of York to make divers provisions of corn in that county for the maintenance of the king and his magnates who are going with him to Scotland at Whitsuntide next,

15 s . yearly and of holding her plough ( carucam suam ), reaping her corn, mowing her meadows, and hoeing ( sarclandi ) her corn, and carrying in autumn, and other villein services, and that they were so held

Chichester, and the said executors, testifying that whereas the bishop has made the preceding recognisance, which was made for the corn of the bishopric for autumn last, sold by the executors in the best market, in part to the bishop,

who alleges that he is a friend of the said Gilbert, a yearly pension of all the fruits of the corn tithes of the church of Edirdoull in the diocese of Ross, which is united to the said archdeaconry, the

have their poultry within the said messuage all the year and in the fields after cutting and carrying of the corn, and their game and sport going, fishing and hunting over all the lands aforesaid; that the said William shall

cause Elizabeth la Marschall to be acquitted of 10 marks by which she made fine with the king for his corn then in the manor of Northon, which manor the king caused to be taken into his hands for certain

accordance with the fine aforesaid, saving to the king and to John de Bray and Cecily, William and Agnes the corn sown in the land of Marnham, Strathawe and Skegehawe: the king therefore orders the escheator to cause Richard de

of the king's proclamation that there should be one measure of wine, one measure of ale, and one measure of corn, to wit the quarter of London, throughout the whole realm, and although those who have used false measures have

to cause proclamation to be made that no one shall take corn or victuals from the realm without the king's special licence, upon pain of forfeiture of the corn and victuals, and that whoever, coming from parts beyond the sea,

to deliver all the corn in his custody in the granges of the manors of the archbishopric of Canterbury, of the corn which belonged to John de Stratford, archbishop of Canterbury, at his death, beyond the corn taken for the

in seaports etc., on the king's behalf forbidding any man under pain of forfeiture of life and limb to take corn or victuals or cause them to be taken to Scotland for sustenance of the king's enemies there, or to

and his heirs for a piece of ground there, and of Isabel daughter of the grantor for lands and a corn mill in Tregassiell, all of him held, and the reversion when it shall fall in, to hold of the

Thomas to supersede the arrest of all corn and malt now in the port of Lenn, by them made, and to the mayor and bailiffs to permit ships laded with malt and corn to cross from that port without hindrance,

Sandewic, that all and singular who will take any corn or victuals to the town of Calais to make their advantage thereof shall repa ir to the ports where such corn or victuals shall be laded, and shall there find

of corn of the prebendary's demesne lands with the lands belonging to the chapels which the vicar used to take, pasture for four beasts of his on the rectory pasture, and one horse feeding in the prebendary's meadow, the corn

from Adam for the corn sown in the said lands on the aforesaid day and for all other things touching him concerning the said wardship, and to certify the king of the value of the corn then sown in the

ordered him to receive all the corn that William de Hamelton, dean of York, granted to the king in those counties and that William de Walmesford, appointed by the king to receive the corn, should deliver to the sheriff from

of corn on condition that good security be found them for payment therefor at Midsummer next as shall be agreed between the sheriff and them: the king orders the sheriff, if the merchants will find the said quantities of corn

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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=80