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The Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse icon

The Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse

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, Archbishop of York " in No. 82. From A.C. , xlvi, 123. Willm. Stonore, I sende yow Goddes blessyng and myne. And I wulle that ye bespeke for a gentylman of my lord Archebyhsshopis of York a doseyn Brode

ARCHBISHOP OF YORK , TO SIR WILLIAM STONOR 13 DEC. [ 1480 ] This letter apparently has reference to the Stewardship of Thame , so was probably written soon after Rotherham ' s translation from Lincoln to York , and

? before 1461 ] The reference to the Duke of York makes it likely that the date is not later than 1460 . It is possible, however, that the letter may have reference to the intended sale of Bierton to

the seyde duk of York and of the for|seyde erles, and euer excited and stered the kyng ageyns thaym; notwithstandyng that the comones of this lande hated this duk Edmond and loued the duk of York , because he loued

York : and sone aftirward Almyȝty God shewde for the said archebisshoppe meny grete miracleȝ. And the cause of the said risyng was this:—The erlis sone of Notyngham and his heir the lord Moubray compleyned to the archebisshoppe of

meeting of the Parliament of the Lancastrian Restoration . The Chancellor in both years was George Neville , Archbishop of York , with whom the Stonors had friendly relations. Suffolk , who was married to a sister of Edward IV

, 1482 . Edward went to Fotheringhay about the end of May in that year ( Ramsay , Lancaster and York , ii, 443). The intended date given in this letter is Whit - Tuesday , i.e. 28 May .

Warw., 55/31. Wyche, Worc., 47/8. Wynkyn de Worde, 4 note . Yarnton ( Erdington ), Oxon ., 78/3, 91/6. Ynglonde, 31/25, see Inglonde. York , archbishops of: York , Thurstan , 24/11. York , Walter de Gray , 98/2, 204/9.

a markeys, and v. erlis. Ffirst, he made ser Edmund of Langley , erl of Cambrige, his vncle, duke of York ; and his othir vncle, ser Thomas of Wodestoke, that was erl of Bukynghame, he made duke of Gloucestre;

755, 938-9. In the province of York the rates appear to have been lower. From the Testamenta Eboracensia , publis hed by the Surtees Society (vol. ii, p. 118) it appears that at York , in the middle of the

fixed for 1476 , and the day was a Tuesday . " My lady of Southfolke " is Elizabeth of York , wife of John de la Pole , the second Duke of Suffolk . " Cossyne Rokyse " is

and openli knowe that iij lordis, that is to say, ser Richard erlle of Cambrigge brothir to the duke of York , the lord Scroope tresorer of Englond , and ser Thomas Grey , knyghte, hadde receyued an huge summe

it, as y haue red in dy|uerse oolde ordinalis of ca thedrale chirchis and of mo|nasteries in Ynglond: In the York Missal (in Dominic . Palm .) printed at Paris in 1533 , occurs this rubric: " Deinde, cum ante

Richard Fortescue was finally dismissed. The reason for the description of Thomas Stonor as a servant of the Archbishop of York is obscure—but see No. 97; he may have been steward of one of the archbishop ' s manors. Placita

on leaf 106, back ] LOrdyngis ther/ is in york schire as I gesse. A merschy contre called holdernesse. In whiche ther/ wente a lymytour/ a-boute. To preche & eek/ to begge it is no doute. And so bifell that

tale LOrdynges þer is in york schire / as I gesse A mersshy countre called Holdernesse In which þer wente a lymytour aboute / To preche and eek to begge it is no doute And so bifelle þat on a

of his royal lands to the Church . p. 97, l. 28. seint William: perhaps William Fitzherbert , Archbishop of York . He was elected Archbishop in 1142 at the instance of the King, in opposition to the candidature of

present letters shall come, Walter , By þe grace of god Archiebisshop of ȝorke Walter de Grey , archbishop of York 1216 -55 , was nephew to John de Grey , bishop of Norwich 1200 -14 . , a primat

deutlich auf Yorkshire , nicht auf Lincolnshire ; auch die ursprünglich in einem andern Dialect abgefassten Gedichte sind in den York |shire Dialect umschrieben. Das Alter des Ms. ist nach 1422 zu setzen, da die fol. 250 ff. erzählte "

and his blissyng, willyng to be know to all the children of our modir the chirch, that Robert Robert of York , admitted vicar 1236 : Wood ' s City of Oxford , iii. 96. , perpetuel vicary of seynt

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 25 April 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?kw=york&sr=pv