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4091 results from this resource . Displaying 221 to 240

English at sea, 170; strong fleet in Channel, 176. Burgundy would prefer war with, 180; fear English invasion may provoke revolt, 190. discontent at taxation, 191; truce with Burgundy, 193; war with Burgundy, 195, 197. English invasion, 196; harass

duos filios et tres filias. fundavit collegium Emanuelis Cantabrigiae Moritur Cancellarius et subthesaurarius scaccarii et regiae majestati a consiliis. (In English: Death is gain to us. Here lies Walter Mildmay, knight, and Mary his wife. He died on the last

mistery, which he ought to support whenever necessary. This they believe to have been the intention of their ancestors of old; but these ancient usages had been allowed to lapse, whereby the good misteries which used to maintain the City

1345. Roll 73 (17). Enefeld (John de), chandler.-TO Margaret his wife his term in a shop at the corner of Old Jewry held under the Master and Brethren of S. Thomas de Acon, as well as all his other terms,

very first a curious mixture of Latin and English, especially in its later portions, but from the first, where the name is rendered in Latin, the trade is often given in English. Further on, when we come to where the

of friars hermits London 'carpenter,' Peter Kerver of the same and Richard Saundre of the parish of St. Giles without Old Temple bar 'carpenter' to Thomas bishop of Durham. Bond in 100 l . payable at Easter next. Dated 6

to permit Richard de Leek, supplying the place of Michael Mynyot, the king's butler, to take 6 tuns of the old wine placed by the butler in that castle, to Berwick-upon-Tweed, with the other wine for the munition of the

Monboucher late sheriff of Northumberland did not and might not levy rents, farms and profits to the county pertaining of old time, not to charge him to answer for the same in his account, as they are purposing to do.

326, 391. English , the, apostle of. See St. Augustine. -, hospital of. See Rome. English Church , the, computation of, 49. English gold , a chalice made of, 191. English language , books written in, 529. English money ,

or near Old Jewry. The bond was no doubt in respect of a guardian's surety, but the page is left blank where the guardian's appointment should have been recorded. On fo. 226 b there is a recital (in English) of

maintain a lamp to burn before the high cross in the said church during her lifetime. Bequests also to the old work of S. Paul's, to each of the five orders of mendicant friars in London, the convent of the

Guildhall 288 Receipt of the ransom of a Knight of Burgundy, by a Citizen of London, on behalf of an English Knight 290 Order for the collection of moneys at the City Gates, for the repair of the Roads 291

Mildred, Virgin [20 Feb. ] . Messynger (Richard), mercer.-To William Whyte, vicar of the church of S. Laurence in the Old Jewry, and successors he leaves an annual rent of twenty-six shillings and eightpence issuing from a tenement in Milkestret

John Deyce, clerk witnessing that, for the perpetuation of the testimony of George Newton, of Gaitforth, then over eighty years old, at the instance of Sir Thomas Darcy, lord de Darcy, knight, the said George deposed, 3 June, 1506, at

would recommence. By 11 March, at the treaty of Lavardin, the English finally agreed the handover of Maine, and the truce was extended to 1 April 1450. An English embassy was now appointed to treat for a full peace, and

Symmes, grocer, discharged by Robert Otteley, the Mayor, and the Aldermen from serving on juries, & c., owing to increasing old age. Custodia corporum pueror' Ric'i Banastre vinetar' cum �cc. Friday, 26 Aug., 13 Henry VI. [A.D. 1435 ] ,

wages being due at Easter last; he payinge to the said Rich. Hardinge the sume of iij l . lawful English money (if he have not already received soe much) and so continue from yeare to yeare." 1651. R. Witty

K. To the sheriff of Wilts. Order to expend 20 l . in repairing the houses of the castle of Old Sarum, in addition to the 20 l . that the king lately ordered him to ex pend for this

daggs may bee fastoned to the pommell thereof" (Hewitt's 'Ancient Armour,' iii. 655). 1 'Earliest English Wills,' ed. by Dr. Furnivall for the Early English Text Soc. (p. 35). The editor there cites in illustration the following passage from Harrison's

de Branteston, of that pa rt of the grantor's court and chief mansion, which contains his old grange viz. as far as the old oak before the door of the grange & c. with free ingress and egress for horses

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 29 March 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ct=lm&kw=old%20english%20hexateuch&sr=bh&st=220