Whereupon the King, after alluding to his having dismissed his son, Edward Prince of Wales, from his house for nearly half a year for some outrage towards the King's officers, ordered that William de Brewes, with his body ungirt, his head uncovered, and... Old London: Papers Read at the London Congress, July, 1866 - Page 224by Royal Archaeological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland - 1867 - 376 pagesFull view - About this book
| Edward Foss - 1851 - 574 pages
...William de Brewes, with his body ungirt, his head uncovered, and his coif laid aside, should go from the King's Bench at Westminster through the middle of...the court was full, to the Exchequer, and there ask Roger de Hegham's pardon, and apologise for 1 Rapin, iii. 245. * Rot. Parl. i. 95. * Abbrev. Placit.... | |
| Edward Foss - 1851 - 568 pages
...William de Brewes, with his body ungirt, his head uncovered, and his coif laid aside, should go from the King's Bench at Westminster through the middle of...the court was full, to the Exchequer, and there ask Roger de Hegham's pardon, and apologise for 1 Rapin, iii. 245. ' Rot. Par!. i. 95. » Abbrev. Placit.... | |
| 1866 - 586 pages
...William de Brewes, with his body ungirt, his head uncovered, and his coif laid aside, should go from 'the King's Bench at Westminster through the middle of...the Court was full, to the Exchequer, and there ask Roger de Hegham's pardon and apologise for his offence to him; and that for the contempt done to the... | |
| 1866 - 604 pages
...William do Brewes, with his body ungirt, his head uncovered, and his coif laid aside, should go from the King's Bench at Westminster through the middle of...the Court was full, to the Exchequer, and there ask Roger de Hegham's pardon and apologise for his offence to him ; and that for the contempt done to the... | |
| 1866 - 582 pages
...head uncovered, and his coif laid aside, should go from the King's Bench at Westminster through tho middle of the Hall, when the Court was full, to the Exchequer, and there ask Roger de Hegham's pardon and apologise for his offence to him; and that for the contempt done to the... | |
| Edward Foss - 1874 - 376 pages
...in the reign of Edward I., we have an order of that king that William de Brewes, a sergeant-at-law, who had publicly insulted a baron of the Exchequer,...Temple, through which there was evidently a right of way. King Edward, on his return from France, in 1289, was inundated with complaints against the judges... | |
| William Forsyth - 1874 - 620 pages
...William de Brewes, with his body ungirt, his head uncovered, and his coif laid aside, should go from the King's Bench at Westminster through the middle of...the Court was full, to the Exchequer, and there ask Roger de Hegham's pardon and apologise for his offence to him ; and that for the contempt done to the... | |
| George Purcell Costigan - 1917 - 656 pages
...publicly insulted a baron of the Exchequer named Roger de Hegham, should go, with his body un.zirt, his head uncovered, and his coif laid aside, from...the Hall, when the Court was full, to the Exchequer, aud there ask the Baron's pardon." — Edward Foss, Memories of Westminster llall (1874) Vol. 1. p.... | |
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