A glance at the hundred of Wrotham, including the parishes of Wrotham, Ightham, Shipbourne, and Stansted, in the days of the early Edwards, ed. by T.S. Frampton1881 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 12
Page 4
... connection with the fine old church of Wrotham - a church which once admitted within its precincts felons flying from the pursuit of justice , but now stands daily open to welcome within its courts all those who are " prisoners of hope ...
... connection with the fine old church of Wrotham - a church which once admitted within its precincts felons flying from the pursuit of justice , but now stands daily open to welcome within its courts all those who are " prisoners of hope ...
Page 7
... connection with the very large number of jury- men named in these Rolls , one cannot help feeling that if they all journeyed to Canterbury , or wherever the Crown Pleas might be held , on the occasions when the Justices Itinerant made ...
... connection with the very large number of jury- men named in these Rolls , one cannot help feeling that if they all journeyed to Canterbury , or wherever the Crown Pleas might be held , on the occasions when the Justices Itinerant made ...
Page 8
... connection with the Anglo- Saxon race , as did the long flaxen hair of the three lads who , centuries earlier , had attracted the notice of Gregory the Great in the market - place at Rome , where they were exposed for sale ; if so , we ...
... connection with the Anglo- Saxon race , as did the long flaxen hair of the three lads who , centuries earlier , had attracted the notice of Gregory the Great in the market - place at Rome , where they were exposed for sale ; if so , we ...
Page 9
... connection with the Hundred of Wrotham , except Nicholas Kyryel , one of the coroners , who held the manor of Ightham . The Justices Itinerant , who had become an institu- tion in the reign of Henry I. , and are occasionally to be met ...
... connection with the Hundred of Wrotham , except Nicholas Kyryel , one of the coroners , who held the manor of Ightham . The Justices Itinerant , who had become an institu- tion in the reign of Henry I. , and are occasionally to be met ...
Page 18
... connection with Shipbourne ; and there is still a district in the parish called Budd's Green . John le Bud was the head man of the borough , or tithing , in which Andrew le Hunte was enrolled , and he would be responsible for the ...
... connection with Shipbourne ; and there is still a district in the parish called Budd's Green . John le Bud was the head man of the borough , or tithing , in which Andrew le Hunte was enrolled , and he would be responsible for the ...
Other editions - View all
A Glance at the Hundred of Wrotham, Including the Parishes of Wrotham ... Wrotham No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
abjured the realm acquitted thereof acre is worth afore aforesaid Richard aforesaid William Aldham annum Arch Archbishop of Canterbury Assize Rolls Bavent bishop borough chattels chattels are worth church of Wrotham coroner county of Kent demanded and outlawed deodand diocese Edward II Eldeham Englecherie presented evil puts Eynesford Festival finder and four four neighbours gaol delivery guilty Hale heir held Hundred of Wrotham Ightham ij.s Isolda Joan John de Hynton John Malemeyns John Peckham judgment jurors make presentment justices appointed Justices Itinerant King Edward knight's fee knights Knights Hospitallers lands and tenements lord king Maidstone manor mentioned mercy murdrum Nicholas oath ob.q offence parish of Wrotham Peckham pence perpetual vicar Plaxtol pledge possessed Ralph rector Rochester Roger Roughway sheriff shall answer shillings Shipbourne Simon Soranks Stansted Subsidy Roll suspected sworn took to flight vicar viij.d Walter Reynolds whereof the sum William atte William Inge xij.d
Popular passages
Page 83 - Edward by the grace of God, King of England, Lord of Ireland, and Duke of Aquitaine...
Page 13 - For if, during this forty days' privilege of sanctuary, or in his road to the sea-side, he was apprehended and arraigned in any court, for this felony, he might plead the privilege of sanctuary, and had a right to be remanded, if taken out against his will (a). But by this abjuration his blood was attainted, and he forfeited all his goods and chattels (b).
Page 68 - In testimony whereof we have caused our seal to be affixed to these presents. Dated at our hostel in London, the 18th February, 1391, and in the third year of our consecration.
Page 88 - ... of good and lawful men of your bailiwick, by whom the truth of the matter may be better known, you diligently...
Page 13 - First then, it is to be observed, that if a person accused of any crime, (except treason, wherein, the crown, and sacrilege, wherein the church, was too nearly concerned) had fled to any church or church-yard, and within forty days after went in sackcloth and confessed himself guilty before the coroner, and declared all the particular circumstances of the offence ; and thereupon took the oath in that case provided, viz. that he abjured the realm, and would depart from thence...
Page 6 - Trial by jury, according to the old English law, was a proceeding essentially different from the modern tribunal, still bearing the same name, by which it has been replaced; and, whatever merits belonged to the original mode of judicial investigation — and they were great and unquestionable, though...
Page 45 - Henry, by the grace of God, King of England, Lord of Ireland, Duke of Normandy and...
Page 83 - Service, in your bailiwick, on the day he died, and how much of others ; and by what service ; and how much those lands and tenements are worth...
Page 51 - In the year 1288, Pope Nicholas IV. granted the tenths to King Edward I. for six years, towards defraying the expenses of an expedition to the Holy Land, and that they might be collected to their full value, a taxation by the King's precept was begun in that year, and finished as to the province of Canterbury, in 1291...
Page 6 - Jurymen, in the present day, are triers of the issue : they are individuals who found their opinion upon the evidence, whether oral or written, adduced before them ; and the verdict delivered by them is their declaration of the judgment which they have formed. But the ancient jurymen were not...