History and Topography of the City of York: The Ainsty Wapentake; and the East Riding of Yorkshire; Embracing a General Review of the Early History of Great Britain, and a General History and Description of the County of York, Volume 2J. Green, 1857 |
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Page v
... Owthorne , 333 . : Owstwick , 375 . Painsthorpe , 646 . Paull , 341 . Octon - cum - Octon Grange , Shipton , 592 . 490 . PATRINGTON , 336 . POCKLINGTON , 563 . Pockthorpe , 486 . Portingden and Cavil , 613 . Preston , 371 . Raisthorpe ...
... Owthorne , 333 . : Owstwick , 375 . Painsthorpe , 646 . Paull , 341 . Octon - cum - Octon Grange , Shipton , 592 . 490 . PATRINGTON , 336 . POCKLINGTON , 563 . Pockthorpe , 486 . Portingden and Cavil , 613 . Preston , 371 . Raisthorpe ...
Page 310
... Owthorne and Kilnsea , the former of which was ingulphed in the ocean in 1816 , and the latter in 1826. " The town of Ravenspurne and several villages , which have been washed away , and have left not a " wreck behind , " will be ...
... Owthorne and Kilnsea , the former of which was ingulphed in the ocean in 1816 , and the latter in 1826. " The town of Ravenspurne and several villages , which have been washed away , and have left not a " wreck behind , " will be ...
Page 322
... Owthorne , were long known to sailors navigating this coast by the name of " the Sister Churches , " from their contiguity and resemblance to each other , which gave rise to the popular tradition that they were built by two sisters ...
... Owthorne , were long known to sailors navigating this coast by the name of " the Sister Churches , " from their contiguity and resemblance to each other , which gave rise to the popular tradition that they were built by two sisters ...
Page 323
... Ow- thorne Church , perfectly entire . Two or three tides preceding the above discovery were extremely high , and ... Owthorne Township , at a subsequent page . ) The Railway Company have erected a splendid and most extensive Hotel ...
... Ow- thorne Church , perfectly entire . Two or three tides preceding the above discovery were extremely high , and ... Owthorne Township , at a subsequent page . ) The Railway Company have erected a splendid and most extensive Hotel ...
Page 327
... Owthorne , which was undermined by the sea , in 1816 ; as well as a few tons of the stone of which York Minster was * Mr. Owst , whose name is of Saxon origin , is the last of the name , though various branches of the family have lived ...
... Owthorne , which was undermined by the sea , in 1816 ; as well as a few tons of the stone of which York Minster was * Mr. Owst , whose name is of Saxon origin , is the last of the name , though various branches of the family have lived ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abbey amount of assessed ancient annum Archbishop of York assessed property bells belonging Bishop borough brick building Bridlington built burgesses Burstwick Burton called chancel chantry charter Church St consists Constable contains Discharged Vicarage Driffield Earl East Riding edifice Edward endowed erected farm house feet font formerly granted Hall Hamlet handsome Henry Holderness Hornsea Hotham Howden inhabitants John of Beverley King King's Kingston-upon-Hull Lord Malton Manor House mansion Market Market Weighton Mayor miles N.E. nave neat north side occupied octagonal Owthorne parish Parliament Patrington Pocklington pointed arches poor population porch present Primitive Methodists Queen Anne's Bounty rateable value rebuilt Rectory reign residence river Hull Saxon School seat Sir John situated souls south side stone Street Sykes Thomas tithes tithes were commuted tower town of Beverley township transept Trinity Vicar village Wassand Wesleyan Chapel west end William Wolds
Popular passages
Page 294 - Yea, is he yet so lusty ? Well, let the pope send him a hat when he will, Mother of God, he shall wear it on his shoulders then ; for I will leave him never a head to set it on.
Page 54 - Hereupon, at a public meeting of the country, his majesty declared, " that he was resolved, in regard of the public distempers, and the neighbourhood of Hull, to have a guard for his person ; but of such persons, and with such circumstances, as should administer no occasion of jealousy to the most suspicious ; and wished the gentlemen of quality who attended, to consider and advise of the way...
Page 176 - Druid stones with crosses, in order to change the worship without breaking the prejudice. Timber, with lath and plaster, and thatch for the roofs, constituted the chief materials in the dwellings of the English from an early period till near the close of the fourteenth century, and beginning of the fifteenth, when bricks began to be used in the better sort of houses. The Britons had no bed-rooms, but, according to the custom of the ancient Welsh and Highlanders, slept on the floor on mats, in one...
Page 248 - ... windows. Each tower has four large and eight small pinnacles, and a very beautiful battlement. The whole front is panelled, and the buttresses, which have a very bold projection, are ornamented with various tiers of niche-work, of excellent composition, and most delicate execution. The doors are uncommonly rich, and have the hanging feathered ornament ; the canopy of the great centre door runs up above the sill...
Page 314 - The living is a discharged vicarage, rated in the king's books at £10.
Page 624 - Liv. ing, a discharged vicarage, a peculiar of the dean and chapter of York ; rated at £5 Os.
Page 228 - ... monastic legislators devised the plan of establishing double monasteries. In the vicinity of the edifice, destined to receive the virgins who had dedicated their chastity to God, was erected a building for the residence of a society of monks or canons, whose duty it was to officiate at the altar, and superintend the external economy of the community. The mortified and religious life, to which they had bound themselves by the most solemn engagements, was supposed to render them superior to temptation...
Page 10 - ... the king. To the relative situation, therefore, of the two places in this respect may be attributed the regulation of the amount of the fines in the proportion mentioned. As a further proof that the disparity in the amount of these fines depended more upon some such circumstance as we have alluded to, than on the ability of the parties to discharge them, it may be observed that the people of Hull paid a moiety of their fine immediately, and the remaining part in the following year, while the...
Page 596 - Hoveden, five prebends for ever, and each of them to maintain at his own proper costs, a priest and clerk in holy orders, to administer in the same, in a canonical habit...
Page 218 - Here two young Danish soldiers lye : The one in quarrell chanc'd to die : The other's Head, by their own Law, With Sword was sever'd at one Blow." Above are two swords crossed, and below is the date