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at Holebech, and passed and broke his walls, and took Avelina his daughter, and broke her girdle near the hall door, and beat a servant of the said William, by reason whereof the said Avelina raised hue and cry with

de Wysham, late keeper of the said castle and honour, Adam de Hoperton, and Richard de Aldeburgh that John de Lilleburn levied and retained rents, ferms, and other profits of the castle and honour to the above amount when he

plough-oxen, sheep, plough-horses, foals in store, the money by tale, and the debts to be levied of the arrears of accounts and otherwise, and of all other goods and chattels that belonged to the earl in the castle and manor

horses, oxen, sheep, geese, fowls and other animals and the goods and cartage of those men against their will, without giving them due satisfaction, forcing their wives and daughters and beating and illtreating the men when they resist and committing

cease from demanding and taking of them new and unwonted customs and imposts, at their peril demanding and taking none other for weighing and cocketing their wool than are demanded and taken at the staple of Westminster, and so behaving

d ., and owing suit at the king's hundred (court); and 38 a . land, a messuage, 6 a . wood and pasture, 4 a . meadow, a watermill, 20 s . rent and 1/2 mark works and customs, held

'Baylesclyve' near Lekhampstede, and pasture for 12 oxen and cows, with the issues of the cows of four years and for six horses, 24 pigs and for 300 sheep in le Thiket and in all the fields and pastures of

shall be extracted and entered in rolls, and the rolls shall be delivered to faithful and circumspect men, who shall make inquisition concerning the same in a form to be provided by the treasurer and barons. And because the common

the abbot and convent in the town of Rading' or outside without the special licence of the abbot and convent, and that in this they will wholly abstain from prejudicing the abbot and convent and their men; and that they

shulde be diged and caste at Mighelmasse and soo lye open to Cristmas thanne next folowing, and thanne to be turned and caste ayen wherby the marle and the chalke shulde breke out like as chalkestones and cloddis liyng in

goods, movable and immovable, and her chamber in entirety. To John, William, and Thomas his sons, and to Katherine, Johanna, and Margaret his daughters, respectively one hundred pounds, besides divers household chattels. Also to his said sons and daughters various

Lambe, Bartholomew Horwode, John Berell, and John Hunteley, citizens and grocers of London, of the manor of Saint Maryehalle, and land, meadow, and pasture for 157 sheep, in the marshes of Dalemerssh, Hoggekynnesmerssh, Hoggekynsham, and Lytelham; also two sheep-folds in

Warnell (nos. 220 to 224, 248). And in 1235 they acquired land and houses in Newcastle-upon-Tyne (no. 98) and further land and houses there in 1237 (no. 100). About 1234 to 1240 additional land and rights were granted at Burgh-by-Sands

also ordered to provide 100 oxen andsheep, 60 swine, 200 sheep, 40 or 50 quarters of old corn and 10 or more [quarters ] of new corn, and 100 quarters of oats, and to have all these things ready

and five thousands of hard fish, which the king ordered him to buy and purvey and carry to Skynbarn[esse ] by the Ascension next, provided that he shall cause the said carcases and fish to be bought and purveyed

hands of others, and how and in what manner, and whether the lands are still in their hands or in the hands of others, and if of others, their names and in what manner and how, and the value of

late and the present kings, whom the king has caused to be sent to them, and to find him for life sustenance for himself and a groom in food and drink and for one horse, and suitable robes, and a

Coventry and Lichfield, twelve oaks fit for timber from the forest of Wauberge for repairing his houses at Offord and Everton; and twelve oaks fit for timber from the park of Hanle for his houses at Thorpmundevill and Neubotle; and

her letters to the provost and community, and the earls, barons, and all the societies of merchants of this realm by their letters to the count and to the provost and community, and the mayor and community of the city

as to 'donge and compasse'; Purrat to have 'the gate and feedinge' for ten 'beaste or neate' and forty sheep 'upon the commons in the fieldes and bounds of Clapham' with Rowe's sheep,and to 'cut downe and take' 'all

Cite this page:

"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 16 May 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?kw=pig%20and%20sheep&sr=bh&st=200