The Publications of the Surtees Society, Volume 30, Part 2

Front Cover
1855
Report of Society appended to many volumes.
 

Selected pages

Other editions - View all

Popular passages

Page 214 - Citie, be pnted, at his comyng to the Citie, w* vj swannes and vj pikes." Hence it appears, and the following pages will furnish additional evidence, that Richard had conhe was appointed one of the Justices of the Court of King's Bench. (Dugd. Chron. Ser. 69, 70.) stant intercourse with the citizens of York, and was regarded by them with much personal esteem and attachment. Their proceedings when he visited the city, and the tone of their correspondence with him, invariably manifest this feeling,...
Page 218 - She desires to be buried in the chancel of the parish church of Bingham, under the tomb in which her late husband Thomas Rempston was buried.
Page 221 - Clifton squyer a newe boke of Inglisse, ye which begynnyth with ye lyffe of Seynt Albon and Amphiabell and other mony dyvers lyfe} and thynges in ye same boke, and unto my cosyn Richard Willughby squyer an Englisse boke called Grace de Dieu.
Page 163 - He was very prosperous and beloved of all. He generously, hospitably, and charitably entertained all, from the King to the poorest Beggar. . . He was an extraordinary kind Landlord, and good Master, Husband to seven Wives.
Page 87 - ... dissolution of the monasteries, when it was granted to Sir Giles Pole, who married Elizabeth, the youngest of the co-heiresses of Thomas Whittington, the last male of the direct branch of the family. By the will of Robert Whittington (1424), it appears that Pauntley was the burial-place of the family. He desires to be buried in the Church of St. John the Evangelist, in Pauntley. His son Guy, by will (1440), desires to be buried in the New Chapel of St. George in the above church, which marks...
Page 13 - November 3Oth, 1505, 21 Henry VII. ordering his body to be buried in the church of the Holy Trinity, of Swyre in...
Page 275 - senior" in his will, f Robert Calverley (the elder) of Calverley, Esq. one of the younger sons of the testator, survived till 1498-9. He then made his will, in which he desired to be buried in the choir of the church of Calverley, under his stone.
Page 163 - ... part was miracle enough to convert an atheist, to see his Christianity so far prevail over his nature that without the least shadow of fear, unwearied with pain, grief, or sickness, he left the choicest things of this world with as great pleasure as others enjoy them.
Page 164 - Catherine, daughter of Sir John, and sister and co-heir of Sir Hugh Cressy of Hodsock.
Page 164 - ... as others enjoy them. He received from me the certain notice of his near approaching death, as he was wont to do an invitation of good friends to his own bowling-green (one of the most pleasant imaginable), and thereupon immediately called for his old Chaplain Mr. Robert Thirleby, to do the office of his Confessor, as if it had been to attend him to that recreation he often used and loved ; and when he had done with him, for his children, whom, Patriarch-like, he particularly blessed and admonished...

Bibliographic information