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Alumni Oxonienses
… 1614, of Lincoln's Inn 1621, rector of Lydlinch 1609, and vicar of Fordington, (both) Dorset, 1609, rector of East … of Lincoln 1624, rector of Nutfield, Surrey, 1627-34, and of Foots Cray, Kent, 1633. See Foster's Index Eccl. … with Northgate, Canterbury, 1709, and one of the six preachers of the cathedral, vicar of Beakesbourne, Kent, …
A History of the County of Wiltshire
… Wilton Churches and Protestant nonconformity CHURCHES Leland's assertion that … to 100 and a separate house was licensed. 80 In fact, the preaching of Furz caused such excitement that it alarmed the … Meeting Houses. Undated. Lives of the Methodist Preachers, ed. T. Jackson (1846), ii. 62. V.C.H. Wilts, iii. …
A History of the County of Wiltshire
… is the rapid decline of the borough between the 13th and 15th centuries; all the evidence goes to show that while Wilton of the 12th century was still a prosperous and flourishing borough, by the 15th century the importance … town. It was highly significant that in 1280 the Friars Preachers moved from Wilton where they had settled only 35 …
A History of the County of Wiltshire
… Wilton Schools and charities SCHOOLS The Free School was founded with a bequest of 600 to the rector and churchwardens as trustees from Walter Dyer, of Chancery … his will dated 1706. A schoolmaster, chosen by the rector and churchwardens and approved by the Bishop of Salisbury, …
The Environs of London
… name of this place, which was anciently written Wymbaldon and Wymbeldon, was derived from one of its early proprietors. … Saxon language signifies a hill. Situation, boundaries, and extent. Wimbledon lies in the western division of Brixton … 3d Moral Essay, edit. 1751. He published some occasional sermons. Grants by Henry VIII. Augmentationoffice. Ibid. See …
A History of the County of Somerset
… of Wincanton lies in the south-east part of the county and at its centre is the largest town of the district. 81 The parish is divided between one principal and three smaller areas, and many very small pieces of land … Presbyterians and Baptists and an ejected clergyman was preaching there in the late 1680s. 76 Further licences for …
A History of the County of Hampshire
… is the only remaining portion of the castle where Norman and Angevin kings resided, where Henry I was married to Maud of Scotland and their son William Atheling was born, where Henry III was … born, where Henry VIII entertained the Emperor Charles V, and where Mary and Philip celebrated part of their ill-fated …
A History of the County of Hampshire
… with Winchester in general. 1. St. John's Hospital and the Allied Charities. The history of St. John's Hospital in its religious capacity and after the Dissolution as a charitable institution until … hospital, amounting annually to 1,681 6 s. 7 d. from rents and about 19 from consols, was consolidated with the …
A History of the County of Hampshire
… owed its first beginnings to its important geographical and political status 3 rather than to any deliberate trade … before or only after the Conquest it was only a part, and at first not necessarily a vital part of the borough … granting to the citizens of Winchester all the liberties and customs which they had enjoyed during the time of Henry …
A History of the County of Hampshire
… may be said to begin with the coming of St. Birinus in 635 and his conversion to Christianity of King Kynegils. Birinus … the church seems to have been finished by Bishop Elphege and to have had a central tower, north and south aisles, … their buttresses end in little pulpits holding figures of preaching cardinals or bishops. The screen closing the west …
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