The Yorkshire Archaeological Journal, Volume 14Yorkshire Archaeological Society., 1898 A review of history, antiquities and topography in the county. |
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Results 6-10 of 17
Page 57
William de Perci . one carucate of land for geld , and one plough may be ... Malet , because she had her land separate and free from the con- trol of ... William Malet seized as well of that [ land ] as of the whole of her land until the ...
William de Perci . one carucate of land for geld , and one plough may be ... Malet , because she had her land separate and free from the con- trol of ... William Malet seized as well of that [ land ] as of the whole of her land until the ...
Page 251
... William Malet until the Danes took him . " The half carucate is omitted in the Recapitulation . These six carucates had belonged to William Malet . See The Claims . " The ancestor of the baronial family of Fauconberg . As Franco de ...
... William Malet until the Danes took him . " The half carucate is omitted in the Recapitulation . These six carucates had belonged to William Malet . See The Claims . " The ancestor of the baronial family of Fauconberg . As Franco de ...
Page 261
... William Malet and Robert fitz Richard . On Sept. 21st , 1069 , when it was retaken by the Danes , he was one of the few who were spared as prisoners of war for ex- change or ransom ( Ibid . , p . 231 ) . Gilbert de Gand obtained ...
... William Malet and Robert fitz Richard . On Sept. 21st , 1069 , when it was retaken by the Danes , he was one of the few who were spared as prisoners of war for ex- change or ransom ( Ibid . , p . 231 ) . Gilbert de Gand obtained ...
Page 271
... William Malet bought seven carucates of the land of Sprot in " Hotone " for ten inarks of silver . 38 I have supplied the words within the brackets from the Recapitulation . 29 Twelve carucates in the Recapitu- lation ; but see below ...
... William Malet bought seven carucates of the land of Sprot in " Hotone " for ten inarks of silver . 38 I have supplied the words within the brackets from the Recapitulation . 29 Twelve carucates in the Recapitu- lation ; but see below ...
Page 280
... William Malet ought to have it . 89 Ernuin Catenase . See note 85 . Osbern de Arches . 90 there , of Osbern , 280 DOMESDAY BOOK FOR YORKSHIRE .
... William Malet ought to have it . 89 Ernuin Catenase . See note 85 . Osbern de Arches . 90 there , of Osbern , 280 DOMESDAY BOOK FOR YORKSHIRE .
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Common terms and phrases
1.-Facsimile Edit acres of meadow aged aisle Alderman Allerthorpe arch Archbishop berewick bordars bovates bovates of land buried carucates for geld carucates of land chancel church clerestory Count of Mortain daughter died Elizabeth five car five carucates four car four carucates four ploughs Gent Gospatric half a leuga half a plough Henry Holy Trinity Hugh Ilbert Ilbert de Laci Jane John July June Kirkby land for geld Leeds length and half leuga in length leugæ Margaret Mary nave parish pasturable Perci Pocklington Pontefract quarenteens in breadth quarenteens in length Ralph Recapitulation Revd Richard Robert Sept six car six carucates soke Thomas three car three carucates three ploughs Wapentake waste whole manor Wid.-at wife William William de Perci window Wood worth forty shillings worth ten shillings worth twenty shillings York York-at
Popular passages
Page 135 - Society ; the degree of Doctor of Laws was conferred upon him by the University of Glasgow in 1806; and in 1808 he was elected a member of the French Institute.
Page 27 - Index to archaeologists is now" recognised. Every effort is made to keep its contents up to date and continuous, but it is obvious that the difficulties are great unless the assistance of the societies is obtained. If for any reason the papers of a society are not indexed in the year to which they properly belong the plan is to include them in the following year ; and whenever the papers of societies are brought into the Index for the first time they are then indexed from the year 1891. By this...
Page 11 - Registries and a reference to these will often fill up a void, clear up a difficulty or supply an omission. It occasionally happens that the original Registers are preserved as well as later Transcripts ; in such cases, the two should be collated and all variations noted. PUBLICATION. With regard to the publication of Registers, the Committee have carefully considered the question of printing in abbreviated or index form and have come to the conclusion to strongly recommend that the publication should...
Page 552 - Types of fibulae and other ornaments. Coins. Implements and weapons, stone, bronze, or iron. Other antiquities. A list of place-names within the area. No modern names required. Special note should be made of British, Roman, and Saxon interments occurring in the same field, and other signs of successive occupation. Reference should be made to the article ' Archaeology ' in ' Notes and Queries on Anthropology,
Page 546 - In regulating the height of the head it is tedious and clumsy to arrange the proper blocks on the seat by trial. The simpler plan is to make the sitter first take his place on a separate seat with its back to the wall, having previously marked on the wall, at heights corresponding to those of the various heights of head, the numbers of the blocks that should be used in each case. The appropriate number for the sitter is noted, and the proper blocks are placed on the chair with the assurance that...
Page 110 - Church-wardens six months after her decease, and the interest arising therefrom to be laid out in Bread and distributed by the Minister and Churchwardens to the most indigent poor belonging to the parish of Pocklington every New Year's Day for ever.
Page 549 - ... any ceremonies performed at the hearth ; are the ashes used for divination ; is the fire ever kept burning for any continuous period ? (456) Is it unlucky to give fire from the hearth to strangers always, or when ? (467) Is there any ceremony on leaving a house, or on first occupying a house ? (509) What are the chief festivals, and what the lesser festivals observed ? (515) Explain the popular belief in the object of each festival. (516) Describe the customs and observances appertaining to each...
Page 542 - Traveller's Anthropometer,' manufactured by Aston & Mander, 25 Old Compton Street, London, WC ; price 31. 3s. complete ; without 2-metre steel measuring tape and box footpiece, 21. 10s. With this instrument all the measurements can be taken. In a permanent laboratory it will be found convenient to have a fixed graduated standard for measuring the height, or a scale affixed to a wall. For field work a tape measure may be temporarily suspended to a rigid vertical support, with the zero just touching...
Page 3 - Transcripts in the British Museum Library. ,, No. 4. — Registers of other Churches in all classes. ,, No. 5. — Parish Registers transcribed in MS. No. 1 —A List of Parish Registers that have been printed as separate works. Extracted by permission...