The Publications of the Thoresby Society, Volume 17The Society, 1908 |
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Page 26
... messuage and its appurtenances , let to 16 bondmen of the manor . In 1358 , Henry , Duke of Lancaster , granted the capital messuage and the new demesne lands to Thomas Elys and Joan his wife . It is not likely that the manor house ...
... messuage and its appurtenances , let to 16 bondmen of the manor . In 1358 , Henry , Duke of Lancaster , granted the capital messuage and the new demesne lands to Thomas Elys and Joan his wife . It is not likely that the manor house ...
Page 27
... messuage and lands at Barwick and lodged a bill of complaint in the Duchy Court . He claimed that John Sotehill , as heir of Thomas Elys and Joan his wife , to whom the said premises had been originally granted by Henry , Duke of ...
... messuage and lands at Barwick and lodged a bill of complaint in the Duchy Court . He claimed that John Sotehill , as heir of Thomas Elys and Joan his wife , to whom the said premises had been originally granted by Henry , Duke of ...
Page 29
... messuage and lands in Barwick , Potterton , and Hillam . This fine seems to have been the ground on which , in 1487 , John Copley , nephew of William , based his claim to the new demesne lands of this manor . He claimed to have been ...
... messuage and lands in Barwick , Potterton , and Hillam . This fine seems to have been the ground on which , in 1487 , John Copley , nephew of William , based his claim to the new demesne lands of this manor . He claimed to have been ...
Page 30
... messuage , etc. , with a garden and croft adjoining , and a third part of a meadow called Lentyng ' , two closes , new close and souther close , " in the town fields of Barwick , and held of the king as lord of the manor , sued Thomas ...
... messuage , etc. , with a garden and croft adjoining , and a third part of a meadow called Lentyng ' , two closes , new close and souther close , " in the town fields of Barwick , and held of the king as lord of the manor , sued Thomas ...
Page 90
... messuage of Berwyke by the view and delivery of the forester of the wood , and that they have had their swine and the swine of their tenants of their Church in the wood quit of pannage , and their plough oxen feeding with the lord's ...
... messuage of Berwyke by the view and delivery of the forester of the wood , and that they have had their swine and the swine of their tenants of their Church in the wood quit of pannage , and their plough oxen feeding with the lord's ...
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Common terms and phrases
Aberford acres of land Alice Anne appurtenances April Archbishop argent August Austhorpe Barnbow Barwick-in-Elmet born bovate brother buried at Barwick carucates Castle century chantry chaplain charter Church Cock Beck Copley Court dated daughter death deed demesne lands died Duchy Earl Edward Elizabeth Elmet esquire father formerly Free Tenant Garforth Geoffrey George George Gascoigne granted Hall heir held Henry Hillam Isabella Joan John Ellis John Gascoigne John Grenefeld June Kiddal king Lancaster Lascy Lasingcroft Leeds lord manor of Barwick Manston Margaret marriage married Mary messuage mill Nicholas Gascoigne October Oldhurst Oliver Gascoigne parish Parlington pasture pedigree Pontefract Potterton Rector rent Richard Gascoigne Richard Vevers Robert Roger Roll Roundhay Scholes Seacroft shillings Shippen Sir John Sir Thomas Gascoigne Sir William Tadcaster tenements Thomas Elys Thomas Gascoigne Thoresby toft Vavasour Walcote widow wife William Ellis William Gascoigne Winnmoor Witnesses York Yorkshire
Popular passages
Page 124 - Bloomfield, accordingly, to hold to him, his heirs and assigns for ever, according to the custom of the said manor, and...
Page 124 - As you shall answer the contrary at your peril. Given under my hand and seal, the First of July 1652. OLIVER CROMWELL.* Note. In the Archives of Trinity College Cambridge is a patent duly signeted, and superscribed "Oliver P.," of date "Whitehall, 21st October 1654;" appointing Richard Pratt, " who, as we are informed, is very poor and necessitous...
Page 210 - Geoffrey, whose heir he is, was seised in his demesne as of fee on the day on which he died in the time of King Henry III.
Page 268 - Poor of the same parish; and they or the greater part of them shall take order from time to time...
Page 201 - Leissencroft sine aliquo retenemento cum omnibus pertinenciis, libertatibus et aisiamentis ad eandam terram pertinentibus, habendam et tenendam sibi et heredibus suis de me et heredibus meis libere et quiete...
Page 275 - And further, it is commanded that highways leading from one market town to another shall be enlarged, whereas bushes, woods, or dykes be, so that there be neither dyke, tree, nor bush whereby a man may lurk to do hurt within two hundred foot of the one side and two hundred foot on the other side of the way...
Page 152 - Names of the Roman Catholics, Non-Jurors, and others, who Refused to Take the Oaths to King George I., together with their Titles, Additions, and Places of Abode, the Parishes and Townships where their Lands lay, the Names of the then Tenants, and the Annual Value of them as returned by themselves.
Page 167 - Cambridge to grant five messuages and twelve cottages to the Master and Scholars of the House of Corpus Christi and B.
Page 247 - ... 87 (m. 1 6). At Lancaster, on Monday in the fifth week of Lent, 35 Henry VI. [4th April, 1457]. Between Ralph Assheton, esquire, and Margery, his wife, plaintiffs, and Richard Barton, of Midelton, the elder, esquire, deforciant of 2 messuages, 76 acres of land, 19 acres of meadow, 90 acres of pasture, 30 acres of wood, and 100 acres of moor in Midelton [in Salford Hundred]. Roger acknowledged the said tenements to be the right of Margery, for which Ralph and Margery granted them to Richard, to...
Page 164 - ... composing it. This is the headland. Sometimes, when the strips of the one furlong run at right angles to the strips of its neighbour, the first strip in the one furlong does duty as the headland, giving access to the strips in the other. In either case all the owners of the strips in a furlong have the right to turn their plough upon the headland, and thus, the owner of the headland must wait until all the other strips are ploughed before he can plough his own.