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Surrey Feet of Fines 1558-1760 Courtesy of Findmypast
Feet of Fines – Worcester references plus William Worcester publications: http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk Abstracts of Feet of Fines: Introduction The aim of this project is to provide abstracts of the medieval feet of fines that have not yet been published, for the period before 1509. A list of published editions, together with links to the abstracts on this site, can be found here. Alternatively, the abstracts can be searched for entries of interest. Background In the late 12th century a procedure evolved for ending a legal action by agreement between the parties. The agreement was known as a final concord (or fine). Originally this was a means of resolving genuine disputes, but by the middle of the 13th century the fine had become a popular way of conveying freehold property, and the legal action was usually a fictitious one, initiated with the cooperation of both parties. This procedure survived until the 1830s. Originally, each party would be given a copy of the agreement, but in 1195 the procedure was modified, so that three copies were made on a single sheet of parchment, one on each side and one at the foot. The copies would then be separated by cutting the parchment along indented (wavy) lines as a precaution against forgery. The right and left hand copies were given to the parties and the third copy at the foot was retained by the court. For this reason the documents are known as feet of fines. The following information is available online: Court of Common Pleas, General Eyres and Court of King's Bench: Feet of Fines Files, Richard I - Henry VII (to 1509) and Henry VIII - Victoria (from 1509) (descriptions of class CP 25 in The National Archives online catalogue) Land Conveyances: Feet of Fines, 1182-1833 (National Archives information leaflet) [Internet Archive copy from August 2004] CP 25/1/45/76, number 9. -
Accounts of the Constables of Bristol Castle
BRISTOL RECORD SOCIETY'S PUBLICATIONS General Editor: PROFESSOR PATRICK MCGRATH, M.A., Assistant General Editor: MISS ELIZABETH RALPH, M .A., F.S.A. VOL. XXXIV ACCOUNTS OF THE CONSTABLES OF BRISTOL CASTLE IN 1HE THIRTEENTH AND EARLY FOURTEENTH CENTURIES ACCOUNTS OF THE CONSTABLES OF BRISTOL CASTLE IN THE THIR1EENTH AND EARLY FOUR1EENTH CENTURIES EDITED BY MARGARET SHARP Printed for the BRISTOL RECORD SOCIETY 1982 ISSN 0305-8730 © Margaret Sharp Produced for the Society by A1an Sutton Publishing Limited, Gloucester Printed in Great Britain by Redwood Burn Limited Trowbridge CONTENTS Page Abbreviations VI Preface XI Introduction Xlll Pandulf- 1221-24 1 Ralph de Wiliton - 1224-25 5 Burgesses of Bristol - 1224-25 8 Peter de la Mare - 1282-84 10 Peter de la Mare - 1289-91 22 Nicholas Fermbaud - 1294-96 28 Nicholas Fermbaud- 1300-1303 47 Appendix 1 - Lists of Lords of Castle 69 Appendix 2 - Lists of Constables 77 Appendix 3 - Dating 94 Bibliography 97 Index 111 ABBREVIATIONS Abbrev. Plac. Placitorum in domo Capitulari Westmon asteriensi asservatorum abbrevatio ... Ed. W. Dlingworth. Rec. Comm. London, 1811. Ann. Mon. Annales monastici Ed. H.R. Luard. 5v. (R S xxxvi) London, 1864-69. BBC British Borough Charters, 1216-1307. Ed. A. Ballard and J. Tait. 3v. Cambridge 1913-43. BOAS Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society Transactions (Author's name and the volume number quoted. Full details in bibliography). BIHR Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research. BM British Museum - Now British Library. Book of Fees Liber Feodorum: the Book of Fees com monly called Testa de Nevill 3v. HMSO 1920-31. Book of Seals Sir Christopher Hatton's Book of Seals Ed. -
Prisons and Punishments in Late Medieval London
Prisons and Punishments in Late Medieval London Christine Winter Thesis submitted for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the University of London Royal Holloway, University of London, 2012 2 Declaration I, Christine Winter, hereby declare that this thesis and the work presented in it is entirely my own. Where I have consulted the work of others, this is always clearly stated. Signed: Date: 3 Abstract In the history of crime and punishment the prisons of medieval London have generally been overlooked. This may have been because none of the prison records have survived for this period, yet there is enough information in civic and royal documents, and through archaeological evidence, to allow a reassessment of London’s prisons in the later middle ages. This thesis begins with an analysis of the purpose of imprisonment, which was not merely custodial and was undoubtedly punitive in the medieval period. Having established that incarceration was employed for a variety of purposes the physicality of prison buildings and the conditions in which prisoners were kept are considered. This research suggests that the periodic complaints that London’s medieval prisons, particularly Newgate, were ‘foul’ with ‘noxious air’ were the result of external, rather than internal, factors. Using both civic and royal sources the management of prisons and the abuses inflicted by some keepers have been analysed. This has revealed that there were very few differences in the way civic and royal prisons were administered; however, there were distinct advantages to being either the keeper or a prisoner of the Fleet prison. Because incarceration was not the only penalty available in the enforcement of law and order, this thesis also considers the offences that constituted a misdemeanour and the various punishments employed by the authorities. -
Sussex Archaeological Society
GB 1850 Dunkin Collection Sussex Archaeological Society This catalogue was digitised by The National Archives as part of the National Register of Archives digitisation project NRA 41412 The National Archives NOTE ON ACCESS Searchers should note that to secure access to these papers they should make an appointment with the honorary librarian of the Sussex Archaeological Society. Sussex Archaeological Society, Barbican House, 169 High Street, Lewes BN 7 1 Y E Tel. 01273-486290. GUIDE TO THE DUNKIN COLLECTION Page Introduction 2 Contents of boxes and other containers 3 Manuscript Volumes k Published works in S.A.S. Library 5 Monumental Inscription notebooks numbering 6 Index to collection 7-1 1 Sussex Archaeological Society library Barbican House Lewes. November 1984' INTRODUCTION The papers in this collection are the work of Edwin Hadlow Wl6e Dunkin, F.S.A. (l&t9 - 1915). After his death the bulk of his papers was presented by his widow to the British Museum and the Sussex Archaeological Society. The British Museum retained 221 volumes (Add. MSS 39326-39358); certain items which they did not require were sent by them to our Society, who added them to their own collection. The collection in this library consists mainly of transcripts of documents from a great variety of sources including public, diocesan and parish records, the emphasis being on Sussex clergy, genealogy and manorial history. The material is in the form of manuscript volumes, notebooks, series of paper slips and loose papers. Many of the papers appear to be working notes from which Dunkin compiled his finished volumes. Arrangement The collection has been arranged as far as possible according to subject matter, but a batch of papers concerning many aspects of the parish and manor of Buxted has been kept intact, as this appears to have been Dunkin's intention. -
Sussex Record Society Publications
SUSSEX RECORD SOCIETY Publications Dunkin, E.H.W., Calendar of Sussex Marriage Licenses recorded in the Consistory Court of the Bishop of Chichester for the Archdeaconry of Lewes, Sussex Record Society, 1 (1902) Salzmann, L.F., An Abstract Feet of Fines relating to the County of Sussex, from 2 Richard I to 33 Henry III, Sussex Record Society, 2 (1903) Salzmann, L.F., A Calendar of Post Mortem Inquisitions relating to the County of Sussex, 1 to 25 Elizabeth, Sussex Record Society, 3 (1904) Miscellaneous Records, Sussex Record Society, 4 (1905) Renshaw, W.C., ‘Ecclesiastical returns for 81 parishes in East Sussex, made in 1603.’ A poll for the election of members of parliament for the county of Sussex in 1705 [from a ms. poll book]. Salzmann, L.F., ‘A calendar of the entries relating to Sussex in the Harleian manuscripts.’ Deedes, C. ed., ‘Extracts from the Episcopal register of Richard Praty, S.T.P., lord bishop of Chichester, 1438-1445.’ Garraway Rice, T. ed., West Sussex Protestation Returns, 1641-2, Sussex Record Society, 5 (1906) Dunkin, E.H.W., Calendar of Sussex Marriage Licenses recorded in the Consistory Court of the Bishop of Chichester for the Archdeaconry of Lewes, August 1670 to March 1728/9, and in the Peculiar Court of the Archbishop of Canterbury for the Deanery of South Malling, May 1620 to December 1732, Sussex Record Society, 6 (1907) Salzmann, L.F., An Abstract Feet of Fines relating to the County of Sussex, from 34 Henry III to 35 Edward I, Sussex Record Society, 7 (1908) Deedes, C. -
Proquest Dissertations
Towards Professionalism? Archives and Archivists in England in the 20th Century Elizabeth Jane Shepherd University College London PhD in Archive Studies 2004 ProQuest Number: U643007 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. uest. ProQuest U643007 Published by ProQuest LLC(2015). Copyright of the Dissertation is held by the Author. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 Abstract Archives have the potential to change people’s lives. They are ‘a fundamental bulwark of our democracy, our culture, our community and personal identity’.' They are created in the first instance for the ‘conduct of business and to support accountability’, but they also ‘meet the requirements of society for transparency and the protection of rights’, they underpin citizen’s rights in a democratic state and are the raw material of our history and memory.^ Archivists and records managers are the professionals responsible for ensuring that these qualities are protected and exploited for the public good. Do they belong to a mature profession, equipped for this challenge in the 2T‘ century? This thesis seeks to understand how the archive profession in the United Kingdom (particularly in England) developed during the 19'"’ and 20^'’ centuries by examining the political and legislative context for archives, analysing how archival institutions developed in central and local government, business and in universities to preserve and provide access to records and archives, by considering the growth and influence of professional associations and support bodies and reviewing the education and training of archivists and records managers. -
The Imagined Cartography of Matthew Paris's Britain
East Tennessee State University Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University Electronic Theses and Dissertations Student Works 5-2013 "Queen of All Islands": The mI agined Cartography of Matthew aP ris's Britain John Wyatt Greenlee East Tennessee State University Follow this and additional works at: https://dc.etsu.edu/etd Part of the European History Commons, Other History Commons, and the Political History Commons Recommended Citation Greenlee, John Wyatt, ""Queen of All Islands": The mI agined Cartography of Matthew Paris's Britain" (2013). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. Paper 1118. https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/1118 This Thesis - Open Access is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Works at Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. "Queen of All Islands": The Imagined Cartography of Matthew Paris's Britain _____________________ A thesis presented to the faculty of the Department of History East Tennessee State University In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Arts in History _____________________ by John Wyatt Greenlee May 2013 _____________________ Dr. Brian J. Maxson, Chair Dr. William Douglas Burgess Dr. Thomas Crofts Dr. Daniel Newcomer Keywords: Matthew Paris, Britain, Cartography, Chronica Majora , Claudius Map ABSTRACT "Queen of All Islands": The Imagined Cartography of Matthew Paris's Britain by John Wyatt Greenlee In the middle decade of the thirteenth century, the Benedictine monk and historian Matthew Paris drew four regional maps of Britain. -
ORM the SERPENT: a Tale of Viking Leicestershire Michael Wood
ORM THE SERPENT: A taLE OF VIKING LEICESTERSHIRE Michael Wood It is a real pleasure, and a great honour, to be elected President of the Society – an undeserved honour given such distinguished predecessors. Local history is the root of history, and Leicester is the home of local history. Almost at the start of British writing on local history, following Lambarde in Kent, came Burton’s Description of Leicestershire (which went through Ned Blunt’s printing shop at the same time as the First Folio).1 Burton planned no less than three village histories – Lindley, Theddingworth and Dadlington – and his notebooks are a still untapped source of material, including his transcripts of lost Leicestershire Hundred Rolls in the Bodleian Library which would be a very valuable and exciting task for a local historian with Latin, following the model of the Kent Hundred Rolls Project. Later, as local studies burgeoned the London printer John Nichols compiled perhaps the greatest local history ever written, The History and Antiquities of the County of Leicester, which is still a gold mine for the local historian. That impetus continued throughout the nineteenth century when this society was founded in 1855. Then from the 1930s came a new golden age (a long one – for we are still in it!) when Frank Attenborough brought the Devonian Bill Hoskins here (there are photos of young David counting hedgerows around Oadby!). From then on the Transactions contain a roll call of the great historians who have shaped every generation of students since and opened local studies to a far wider public, nationally and internationally. -
Northamptonshire Past & Present
~nqirnt and MODERN .... large or small. Fine building is synonymous with Robert Marriott Ltd., a member of the Robert Marriott Group, famous for quality building since 1890. In the past 80 years Marriotts have established a reputation for meticulous craftsmanship on the largest and small est scales. Whether it is a £7,000,000 housing contract near Bletchley, a new head quarters for Buckinghamshire County Council at Aylesbury (right) or restor ation and alterations to Easton Maudit Church (left) Marriotts have the experi ence, the expertise and the men to carry out work of the most exacting standards and to a strict schedule. In the last century Marriotts made a name for itself by the skill of its crafts men employed on restoring buildings of great historical importance. A re markable tribute to the firm's founder, the late Mr. Robert Marriott was paid in 1948 by Sir Albert Richardson, later President of the Royal Academy, when he said: "He was a master builder of the calibre of the Grimbolds and other famous country men. He spared no pains and placed ultimate good before financial gain. No mean craftsman him self, he demanded similar excellence from his helpers." Three-quarters of a century later Marriotts' highly specialised Special Projects Division displays the same inherent skills in the same delicate work on buildings throughout the Midlands. To date Hatfield House, Long Melford Hall in Suffolk, the Branch Library at Earls Barton, the restoration of Castle Cottage at Higham Ferrers, Fisons Ltd., Cambridge, Greens Norton School, Woburn Abbey restorations and the Falcon Inn, Castle Ashby, all bear witness to the craftsmanship of Marriotts. -
Buscapronta Base De Dados Junho/2010
BUSCAPRONTA WWW.BUSCAPRONTA.COM BASE DE DADOS JUNHO/2010 9.264.260 SOBRENOMES / ENDEREÇOS PESQUISADOS SITES E LINKS A 145147 B 1347538 C 495817 D 276690 E 17216 F 177217 G 105102 H 61772 I 4082 J 29600 K 655085 L 42311 M 550085 N 540620 O 4793 P 117441 Q 226 R 1716485 S 1089982 T 71176 U 35625 V 47393 W 1681776 X / Y 1490 Z 49591 ATUALIZAÇÕES E PÁGINAS OFF LINE PODEM ALTERAR (PARA MAIS OU PARA MENOS) OS PRESENTES NÚMEROS EM ATÉ 5% A 8% ATENÇÃO Os números apresentados à direita de alguns sobrenomes indicam o número de sites e links correspondentes. Links podem se referir a um ou mais indivíduos. Sobrenomes sem numeração à direita se referem a famílias, indivíduo ou grupo de indivíduos. Relação de sobrenomes apresentada em 3 segmentos distintos (um não substitui o outro quando apresentar o mesmo sobrenome). Eventualmente, poderá ocorrer superposição de informação sobre um mesmo indivíduo, em endereços Internet diferentes. Este arquivo geral não substitui os demais arquivos apresentados no site BUSCAPRONTA. Para facilitar sua pesquisa utilize a ferramenta EDITAR/LOCALIZAR so WORD. BUSCAPRONTA não reproduz dados genealógicos. È necessário acessar os sites e links correspondentes. As informações contidas nos sites e links são de única e exclusiva responsabilidade de seus respectivos editores. O Banco de Dados do BUSCAPRONTA é complementado diariamente com novos dados eventualmente não apresentados neste resumo geral. Se você não encontrou aqui todos os dados de que necessita para sua pesquisa entre em contato e informe sobre os sobrenomes -
Naming Shirehampton and the Name Shirehampton
Naming Shirehampton and the name Shirehampton Richard Coates University of the West of England, Bristol Shirehampton is a village in southern Gloucestershire, England, which has been absorbed into the city of Bristol. It has expanded into a suburb with a population of 6867 in 1991 (census figure; the precise figure is not readily deducible from later census data).1 Its territory included, until 1917, what was marshland and is now Avonmouth port and suburb. The historical development of its name is easy to follow in broad but unrevealing terms, though there is a considerable amount of problematic detail. In this article I explore what it is possible to deduce about aspects of the processes involved in its evolution, which are not at all straightforward. The paper can also be taken as an object lesson in the lexical-semantic and phonological difficulties of historical onomastics, and in the pleasures of travelling unexpected byways in the history of onomastics and in cultural history. But historical onomastics, in the sense of establishing the etymology of a name, is not the same as exploring the history of a name, and not the same as the historiography of a name. In analysing Shirehampton and its name, we shall look at all of these techniques and processes in detail. In this article I attempt to explore the historical onomasiological questions of what this particular tract of ground has been called over the centuries, and why; the semasiological question of the use of the place’s name or names in derived names (commemoration); and the historiographical question of what scholars have deduced from the place’s name or names: first and foremost the history of the interpretation of the place’s name or names (changing views on its/their etymology, and the consequences of changes in such provisional knowledge), but also changing views about the identification (denotation) of the name or names featuring in the record, and some real-world consequences of that. -
The Activities of Thomas Becket During His Exile in France
" T ir" -X T' ^ V" 1 4' sir 4 4^ 4- 4- / 1^ 4 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY i -f Class Book Volume MrlO-20M 1*- ^ t 4 4 -f -> -^ f V The person charging this material is re- sponsible for its return to the library from which it was withdrawn on or before the Latest Date stamped below. Theft, mutilation, and underlining of books are reasons for disciplinary action and may result in dismissal from the University. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN AUG 30 1974 f ^ ftUJiPIMGl SE ONLY /VJG 3 im ^ -!-- ^1 ^ . -i I" L161 — O-1096 ''''''M^ ' 4- -i- f 4 ^ 4" + -f- Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2013 http://archive.org/details/activitiesofthomOOadam THE ACTIVITIES OF THOMAS BECKET DURING HIS EXILE IN FRANCE BY WILLIAM SYLVESTER ADAMS A. B. Greenville College, 1907 THESIS Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS IN HISTORY IN THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OP THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 1910 c Ad I UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS THE GRADUATE SCHOOL ^^^^ ^ 19/ 1 HEREBY RECOMMEND THAT THE THESIS PREPARED UNDER MY SUPERVISION BY ENTITLED ^-C-t-^l^^-.^-c^^^ Or/ — BE ACCEPTED AS FULFILLING THIS PART OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF '^^c^ cJ^ (L^-t^ . In Charge of Major Work ^^-tr-^.. ^S'XJUUyJi^ Head of Department Recommendation concurred in: Committee on Final Examination 168705 UlUC ^ CONTENTS I Introduction II The flight and reception abroad III Becket*a activities while at Pontigny IV The attempt to obtain peace and the final reconciliation AC V The reurn and murder of Beckot VI Conclusion VII List of authorities i I 1 I INTRODUCTION Without question the controversy between Henry II and Thomas Becket, the Archbishop of Canterbury, is one of the most rancorous and famous in history.