Close Rolls, Edward III: January 1335

Calendar of Close Rolls, Edward III: Volume 3, 1333-1337. Originally published by Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1898.

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'Close Rolls, Edward III: January 1335', in Calendar of Close Rolls, Edward III: Volume 3, 1333-1337, (London, 1898) pp. 368. British History Online https://www.british-history.ac.uk/cal-close-rolls/edw3/vol3/p368 [accessed 24 April 2024]

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9 EDWARD III.

January 1335

Membrane 35.
Jan. 26.
Roxburgh.
To the treasurer and barons of the exchequer and to the chamberlains. Order to cause competent expenses to be paid from the treasury to those whom the king appointed to treat and agree with the communities of cities and boroughs, and with the men of the towns and ancient demesnes of counties and parts of the same concerning the payment of competent fines or sums for the tenth and fifteenth granted to the king in the last parliament, to wit, to the king's clerks, Thomas de Sibethorp in the parts of Kesteven and Lyndesey, co. Lincoln; John de Marton in co. Essex; Edmund de Grymesby, in co. Huntingdon; Robert de Foxton in co. Northampton; James de Kyngeston, in co. Sussex; William de Lound, in co. Nottingham; John de Tiddeswell, in co. Leicester; and Thomas de Capenhirst, in co. Lancaster, for the time when they were intending that affair. By C.
Jan. 26.
Roxburgh.
To the same. Order to pay to Thomas Powis, now master and keeper of the twenty-nine boys whom the king maintains in the university of Cambridge, 40l. from the treasury for the wages of the keeper and the boys, or cause him to have a competent assignment where he may quickly be satisfied, as the king lately ordered the sheriff of Cambridge to pay the keeper of thirty-two boys, whom the king maintains in the said university, the arrears of such wages from Michaelmas in the 7th year of the king's reign, and to pay such wages henceforth until further orders, and Thomas has informed the king that the sheriff has not at present anything wherewith to pay such wages on account of divers payments which it has been necessary for him to make in providing victuals for the king's use from the issues of his bailiwick. By C.
[Fœdera.]
Jan. 28.
Roxburgh.
To Ralph de Middelneye, escheator in cos. Somerset, Dorset, Devon and Cornwall. Order not to intermeddle further with a messuage and a carucate of land in Penhalmi, co. Cornwall, restoring the issues thereof, because the king has learned by inquisition taken by the escheator that Ralph de Bello Prato held no lands at his death of the king in chief by reason whereof the custody of his lands in that bailiwick ought to pertain to the king, but that he held the manor of Trewethegi of Queen Isabella as of the castle of Launceveton, co. Cornwall, then in that queen's hand by the king's grant, together with the knight's fees and advowsons pertaining to that castle, by knight's service, and that he held the said messuage and land of Joan, late the wife of Henry de Campo Arnulphi by knight's service, and that John, Ralph's son, is his next heir and aged 7½ years.