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Derbyshire Parish Registers. Marriages
942.51019 M. L; Aalp v.4 1379092 GENEALOGY COLLECTION ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY 3 1833 00727 4241 DERBYSHIRE PARISH REGISTERS. flDarriagea, IV. phiiximore's parish register series. vol. xc. (derbyshire, vol. iv.) One hundred and fifty only printed. I0.ip.cj : Derbyshire Parish Registers, flftat triages. Edited by W. P. W. PHILLIMORE, M.A., B.C.L., AND LL. LL. SIMPSON. £,c VOL. IV. ILon&on Issued to the Subscribers by Phillimore & Co., 124, Chancery Lane. 1908. — PREFACE. As promised in the last volume of the Marriage Registers of Derbyshire, the marriage records of St. Alkmund's form the first instalment of the Registers of the County Town. The Editors do not doubt that these will prove especially interesting to Derbyshire people. In Volume V they hope to print further instalments of town registers in the shape of those of St. Michael's and also some village registers. It will be noticed that St. Alkmund's register begins at the earliest possible date, 1538, but of the remainder, two do not start till the seventeenth century and one, that of Quarndon, synchronizes with the passing of Lord Hardwicke's Marriage Act. 1379092 It will be convenient to give here a list of the Derby- shire parishes of which the Registers have been printed in this series: Volume I. Volume II. Dale Abbey Boulton Brailsford Duffield Stanton-by-Dale Hezthalias Lownd Volume III. Stanley or Lund Duffield Spondon Breaston Church Broughton Mellor Kirk Ireton Sandiacre Hault Hucknall Volume IV. Risley Mackworth Derby— St. Alkmund's Ockbrook Allestree Quarndon Tickenhall Foremark It has not been thought needful to print the entries — verbatim. -
T.111%. Iltdrulli 11C,UIVIC
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE OE FORM 6000,2/69 OFFICE OF EDUCATION , t.111%. IltdrUllI 11C,UIVIC. ERIC ACC. NO. ED 041 181 I S DOCUMENTCOPYRIGHTED? YES ta NO II CH ACC. NO. P.A.PUBL. DATE ISSUE ERICREPRODUCTION RELEASE? YES 0 NO AA 000 589 70 RIEDEC70 LEVELOF AVAILABI I-ITY I II HI AUTHOR Rothenberg, Albert TITLE Comprehensive Guide to Creative Writing Programs in American Colleges and Universities. SOURCE CODEINSTITUTION(SOURCE) ECC99225 SP. AG. CODESPONSORING AGENCY LYR56987 EDR S PRICE CONTRACT NO, GRANT NO. 0.75;8.45 REPORT NO. BUR EAU NO. AVAI LABI LI TY JOURNAL CITATION DESCRIPTIVE NOTE 167p. DESCRIPTORS *Creative Writing; *English Programs; *Higher Education; UndergraduateStudy; Graduate Study; Short Stories; Playwriting; Poetry; Scripts; Independent Study; Experimental Programs; Instructional Staff; Recognition; Student Teacher Relationship; Cocurricular Activities; School Surveys I DENT1 Fl ER S ABSTRACT Information on creative writing programs was collected from 1042 out of 1200 American colleges and universities contacted. The following data is presented in tabular form: (1) undergraduate academic status of creative writing; (2) graduate status; (3) offering of a course or courses covering the"core" or basic literary genres of short story, verse, and playwriting;(4) additional or unique course offerings in creative writing, such as TV, radio, film writing; (5) opportunities for independent study and work/study or experimental programs related to creative writing; (6) professional writers on the faculty; (7) opportunities for contact with professional writers through visits, lecture series or a"Writer in Residence" program; (8) prizes and awards in creative writing;(9) opportunities for individual contact with creative writing faculty iv seminars or individual conferences; (10) extra-curricular outlets for practicing and appreciating creative writing. -
Issue 84 – October 2018 Chairman’S Column
THE TIGER Royal British Legion wreaths displayed at the Menn Gate, Ypres August 2018 THE NEWSLETTER OF THE LEICESTERSHIRE & RUTLAND BRANCH OF THE WESTERN FRONT ASSOCIATION ISSUE 84 – OCTOBER 2018 CHAIRMAN’S COLUMN Welcome again, Ladies and Gentlemen, to the latest edition of The Tiger. Our cover photograph this month, courtesy of Lynn and Brian Roffee, shows wreaths of the Royal British Legion displayed at the Menin Gate, Ypres, following the 90th anniversary commemorations of their first pilgrimage to Ypres in 1928. The original “Great” Pilgrimage saw over 11,000 Great War veterans and War Widows return to, or visit, the battlefields of France and Flanders, the Pilgrimage culminating in a parade and ceremony at the Menin Gate in Ypres, unveiled in July of the previous year. 90 years later, 1,150 Branches of the Royal British Legion were represented at the Menin Gate to mark the centenary of the launch of the 100 Days Offensive. ABOVE: Standards at the Menin Gate (photograph courtesy of the Royal British Legion) RIGHT: The Hinckley Branch Wreath (photograph courtesy of Lynn & Brian Roffee) The splendour of this occasion is surely an apt reminder that not every anniversary has to be a “centenary” to be worthy of remembrance. One hopes, therefore, that other such events will thus continue to be held once the date of 11th November 2018 has passed. The Great War will not cease to have happened after this landmark date, although the focus the nation deigns to bestow upon it will lessen and the funding available for projects connected to it will cease. -
University of Southampton Research Repository Eprints Soton
University of Southampton Research Repository ePrints Soton Copyright © and Moral Rights for this thesis are retained by the author and/or other copyright owners. A copy can be downloaded for personal non-commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge. This thesis cannot be reproduced or quoted extensively from without first obtaining permission in writing from the copyright holder/s. The content must not be changed in any way or sold commercially in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. When referring to this work, full bibliographic details including the author, title, awarding institution and date of the thesis must be given e.g. AUTHOR (year of submission) "Full thesis title", University of Southampton, name of the University School or Department, PhD Thesis, pagination http://eprints.soton.ac.uk i UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON FACULTY OF HUMANITIES School of History The Wydeviles 1066-1503 A Re-assessment by Lynda J. Pidgeon Thesis for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy 15 December 2011 ii iii ABSTRACT Who were the Wydeviles? The family arrived with the Conqueror in 1066. As followers in the Conqueror’s army the Wydeviles rose through service with the Mowbray family. If we accept the definition given by Crouch and Turner for a brief period of time the Wydeviles qualified as barons in the twelfth century. This position was not maintained. By the thirteenth century the family had split into two distinct branches. The senior line settled in Yorkshire while the junior branch settled in Northamptonshire. The junior branch of the family gradually rose to prominence in the county through service as escheator, sheriff and knight of the shire. -
List of Official Mayoral Engagements
List of Official Mayoral Engagements Date Received Sent to Mayor Mayor Dep Mayor Accompanied Invitation No. Date of Event From Event Time Attending Att by INV-136 10-Jan-16 Avril Lennox Oceans of Fun Day 12:00 PM 06-Jan-16 - Yes INV-126 15-Jan-15 Nottingham Building Society Branch opening 11:00 AM 07-Dec-15 - Yes - INV-113 16-Jan-16 South Wigston Chamber of Commerce Beauty & The Beast Pantomine 7:00 PM 02-Nov-15 - Yes Lynda INV-139 20-Jan-16 Arzu Yilmaz Lessons from the Holocaust 6:30 PM 13-Jan-16 - INV-125 21-Jan-15 High Sherrif Leicester Civic visit to the Defence 6th form college 10:00 AM 02-Dec-15 - Yes INV-133 21-Jan-16 Mayor at Charnwood John Taylor Bell Factory Tour 1:30 PM 17-Dec-15 - INV-074 26-Jan-16 OWBC Community Engagement Holocaust memorial Day 2016 5:30 PM 18-Aug-15 - yes INV-092 27-Jan-16 Leicester Council of Faiths Holocaust Memorial Day Event 7:00 PM 30-Sep-15 - yes INV-124 28-Jan-15 Chairman of County Council Castel House Dinner 7:00 PM 02-Dec-15 - yes Shirin INV-134 30-Jan-15 North Wels Leicester Dist Council Mick McCreath's Charity Magic Dinner 7:00 PM 28-Jan-15 - INV-141 03-Feb-16 Dialogue Society In Sulticulturilsism Dead - Talk 6:30 PM 26-Jan-16 - yes INV-093 04-Feb-16 All Saints CofE Prmary School Wings of Peace Memorial Service 1:00 PM 29-Sep-15 - yes - INV-127 05-Feb-15 University of Leicester University of Leicester Court Meeting 11:00 AM 02-Dec-15 - INV-038 06-Feb-16 Wigston Civic Society O&W Civic Orchestra 50th Anniversary Concert 7:30 PM 16-Jun-15 - Yes Lynda INV-146 06-Feb-16 Pride of the Borough Priz\e -
Launde Priory 1
21 MAY 2018 LAUNDE PRIORY 1 actswilliam2henry1.wordpress.com Release date Version notes Who Current version: H1-Launde-2018-1 21/5/2018 Original version DXC Previous versions: — — — — This text is made available through the Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial-NoDerivs License; additional terms may apply Authors for attribution statement: Charters of William II and Henry I Project David X Carpenter, Faculty of History, University of Oxford LAUNDE PRIORY Augustinian priory of St John the Baptist County of Leicestershire : Diocese of Lincoln Founded 1121 × c. 1125 Launde priory was one of the early Augustinian houses in England, established 1120 × c. 1125. According to a narrative concerning the early years of Holy Trinity priory in Aldgate, London, known only from fifteenth-century manuscripts, Bernard prior of Dunstaple, John prior of Launde (Landa), Geoffrey de Clinton, the (king’s) chamberlain (Gaufridus camerarius de Clinton), and others named, witnessed the gift of the Cnihtengild in London to Holy Trinity in that year. It is unsurprising that the priors of two recently founded Augustinian houses should witness a gift to Holy Trinity, thought to be the first Augustinian house in England. Their names were presumably taken from a contemporary deed or other record which has not been preserved (Hodgett, Cartulary of Holy Trinity, 168, no. 871; R. R. Sharpe, Calendar of Letter Books, C, 220). The king’s confirmation of the gift, 000, Regesta 1467, also witnessed by Geoffrey de Clinton, is apparently authentic and datable 1123 × 1127, so the narrative’s date of 1125 may well be accurate. Launde priory was founded at Loddington, ‘in cuius territorio abbatia fundata est’, according to Henry II’s general confirmation of 1155 × 1158 (H2/1456). -
The Bretons and Normans of England 1066-1154: the Family, the Fief and the Feudal Monarchy*
© K.S.B. Keats-Rohan 1991. Published Nottingham Mediaeval Studies 36 (1992), 42-78 The Bretons and Normans of England 1066-1154: the family, the fief and the feudal monarchy* In memoriam R.H.C.Davis 1. The Problem (i) the non-Norman Conquest Of all the available studies of the Norman Conquest none has been more than tangentially concerned with the fact, acknowledged by all, that the regional origin of those who participated in or benefited from that conquest was not exclusively Norman. The non-Norman element has generally been regarded as too small to warrant more than isolated comment. No more than a handful of Angevins and Poitevins remained to hold land in England from the new English king; only slightly greater was the number of Flemish mercenaries, while the presence of Germans and Danes can be counted in ones and twos. More striking is the existence of the fief of the count of Boulogne in eastern England. But it is the size of the Breton contingent that is generally agreed to be the most significant. Stenton devoted several illuminating pages of his English Feudalism to the Bretons, suggesting for them an importance which he was uncertain how to define.1 To be sure, isolated studies of these minority groups have appeared, such as that of George Beech on the Poitevins, or those of J.H.Round and more recently Michael Jones on the Bretons.2 But, invaluable as such studies undoubtedly are, they tend to achieve no more for their subjects than the status of feudal curiosities, because they detach their subjects from the wider question of just what was the nature of the post-1066 ruling class of which they formed an integral part. -
Belgrave Stuart Galloway
U3A WTT Belgrave Stuart Galloway Route Summary A circular walk around historic Belgrave. Route Overview Category: Walking Length: 6.430 km / 4.02 mi Parking: The Sidings LE4 3BR Last Modified: 1st March 2017 Difficulty: Medium Rating: Unrated Surface: Average Refreshments: Platform Cafe The Sidings Date Published: 1st March 2017 Description This is an urban walk which crosses several busy roads so care should be taken. Some muddy patches after rain along the river. Waypoints Great Central Railway (52.66658; -1.13374) The Great Central Railway is now a heritage railway which links Leicester and Nottingham. Leicester North Station is the southernmost station. It is on the route of the original railway that linked Manchester, Sheffield, Nottingham and Leicester with London Marylebone. It was originally called Belgrave and Birstall Station. Following Beecham's sentence of death it became derelict but was restored by the Main Line Steam Trust and is now the site of a proposed new heritage railway museum. Backed by £10 million from the Heritage Lottery Fund, it is set to open in 2021 Walk down The Sidings, turn left and proceed a few yards along Redhill Way, turning left into Belgrave Cemetery Belgrave Cemetry (52.66637; -1.13221) 1 / 7 During the 1800's owing to the rapidly expanding towns and cities, sanitation was becoming appalling with diseases; such as cholera becoming mass killers. Up until about the middle of the 1800's those who died in urban areas such as Belgrave were buried in urban churchyards and had been for about 850 years since the Norman Conquest. -
An Archaeological Desk-Based Assessment for Land Off Seagrave Road, Sileby, Leicestershire (SK 610 158)
An archaeological desk-based assessment for land off Seagrave Road, Sileby, Leicestershire (SK 610 158) Leon Hunt ULAS Report No 2011-202 ©2012 An archaeological desk-based assessment for land off Seagrave Road, Sileby, Leicestershire (SK 610 158) Leon Hunt for: Hazelton Homes Checked by: Signed: Date: ……18.01.2012……. Name: ...Patrick Clay........................... University of Leicester Archaeological Services University Rd., Leicester, LE1 7RH Tel: (0116) 2522848 Fax: (0116) 2522614 ULAS Report Number 2011-202 ©2012 CONTENTS Summary ........................................................................................................................ 1 Introduction .................................................................................................................... 1 Aims and Methods ......................................................................................................... 1 Methodology .................................................................................................................. 2 Site Location, Geology and Topography ....................................................................... 3 Historical and Archaeological Background ................................................................... 4 Historical Background ................................................................................................... 4 Archaeological Background ........................................................................................... 5 Prehistoric ............................................................................................................. -
Domesday in Rutland — the Dramatis Personae
Domesday Book in Rutland The Dramatis Personae Prince Yuri Galitzine DOMESDAY BOOK IN RUTLAND The Dramatis Personae by Prince Yuri Galitzine Rutland Record Society 1986 1986 Published by Rutland Record Society Rutland County Museum, Oakham LE15 6HW © Prince Yuri Galitzine 1986 ISBN 0907464 05 X The extract Roteland by courtesy of Leicestershire Museums and the Domesday Map of Rutland by courtesy of the General Editor, Victoria County History of Rutland The Dramatis Personae of Domesday Book The story of Domesday Book only comes alive when we try to find more about those persons who are mentioned in it by name. The Domesday Book records the names of each of three categories of landowners – the tenants‑in‑chief and the tenants in 1086 – TRW = Tempore Regis Guilielmi and the antecessors, the name given to those who held in 1066 – TRE = Tempore Regis Edwardii. Throughout the whole of England about 200 tenants‑in‑chief arc recorded in Domesday Book holding from the King as overlord of whom 15 held in Rutland. About another 5,000 throughout England held as tenants directly of the King or of his tenants‑in‑chief by knight’s fees. Of the latter, there were 16 in Rutland. Sadly the majority of persons referred to in the record are not identified by name. These are people the landowners controlled and who were established in the villages of Rutland. They comprised 10 priests, 142 freemen, 1147 villagers, 244 small holders and 21 slaves (two of whom were women) ‑ a total of 1564. The tenants-in-chief Not unnaturally as Rutland had been the dowry of the Queens of England since 964, King William had in his direct control the largest share of the lands in Rutland – 24 carucates and 39 hides comprising the town of Oakham and 14 manors valued at £193 12s. -
Packington: Early History - BC to 11Th Century
Author: Adrian Mongredien Homecroft Drive Packington LE65 1WG 29/02/20 Packington: Early History - BC to 11th Century Packington Village History Group PVHG Packington: Early History - BC to 11th Century by Adrian Mongredien Page 2 of 24 Packington: Early History - BC to 11th Century Author's Foreword My joining the local Village History Group a couple of years ago encouraged me to look at “English” history from a different perspective; that of our local Packington community. How, and when, did it come into existence? How did it fit into the wider world of that era? How did its inhabitants live and survive its turbulent beginnings, and what have we inherited from the various tribes who have lived here before us? The setting up of the Packington Village History Group (PVHG) website at https://pvhg.uk gave impetus to the concept of a written history, as it became clear that a website provided the possibility for the continuous updating of any new local history information as it became available. The final prompt was my recent discovery that, under new government guidelines, history is no longer taught as a compulsory subject, or in a chronological format in the secondary school years. How would the next generation find out about our local ancestors and how they had coped with the huge challenges which faced them? I decided to unfold my laptop and attempt to put some answers to some of these questions on our new website. As I compiled my information. I realised that there are a dwindling number of us left who still think primarily in “imperial measurements”, are comfortable with furlongs, chains, yards, feet and inches, or perhaps struggle with a metrical world, hence the section on Anglo-Saxon measurements. -
Volume 3. 1705–1712
Buckinghamshire Sessions Records County of Buckingham CALENDER to the SESSIONS RECORDS VOLUME III. 1705 to 1712 AND APPENDIX, 1647 Edited by WILLIAM LE HARDY, M.C., F.S.A. GEOFFREY LI. RECKITT, M.C., F.S.A. AYLESBURY: Published by Guy R. Crouch, LL.B., Clerk of the Peace, County Hall. 1939 COMPILED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE STANDING JOINT COMMITTEE OF THE BUCKINGHAMSHIRE QUARTER SESSIONS AND COUNTY COUNCIL. [All Rights Reserved] Printed by HUNT, BARNARD & CO. LTD., AYLESBURY. CONTENTS PAGE Preface . vii-xxxxii Calendar to the Sessions Records, 1705 TO 1712 . 1-305 Appendix i, (a) Justices of the Peace, (B) Sheriffs, 1705 to 1712 306-308 Appendix ii, Document at Doddershall, 1647 . 309-316 Appendix III, Addenda to Volume II . 317-325 Appendix IV, Writs of venire facias and capias ad respondendum, 1705 to 1712 . 326-334 Appendix V, Register of Gamekeepers, 1707 to 1712. 335-345 Appendix VI, Steeple Claydon Highway Rate, 1710 . 346 Appendix VII, Dinton Poor Rate, 1711 . 347-349 Index . 350-427 PREFACE Those who believe that the value of a work of this nature lies in its completeness must suffer a disappointment in the fact that it is now nearly three years since the publication of the last volume of the calendar, and with those who hold such an opinion we have much sympathy and offer our apologies to them. This delay has been caused mainly by the discovery, during the preparation of the work, that many of the documents which go to make up a Sessions Roll had become misplaced. It was thus necessary to examine and arrange all the rolls for a period long after the date when this calendar was likely to end, in order to ensure that all records covering the period would be brought together and noted in the calendar.