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A History of the County of Oxford
… 1628, 10 to be lent among poor tradesmen of the borough. Hugh Barker ( d. 1632), doctor of laws and chancellor of the …
A History of the County of Oxford
… and sometimes to groups of prominent burgesses such as Hugh Godhine, Thomas Bere, and the wool merchant Roger …
A History of the County of Oxford
… Church The Roman Catholic church of Our Lady and St Hugh, at the foot of Tower Hill, was built in 1975 to designs …
A History of the County of Oxford
… was confirmed in 1189, but by 1211 it belonged to Hugh of Gayhurst, chancellor of the diocese of Salisbury, 12 …
A History of the County of Oxford
… aerodrome. 12 A Roman Catholic church, dedicated to St Hugh of Lincoln, was established about 1930 in the former … attached presbytery. The dedication was to Our Lady and St Hugh. 13 The Convent of the Sisters of Charity opened in … Gott, Bk. of Witney, 623 (wrongly giving opening of St Hugh's as 1933); Oxf. Mail, 28 Feb., 29 Oct. 1975; above, …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… the site of a Cistercian abbey founded in 1145, by Hugh de Bolebec, and the revenue of which, at the …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… died in 1471, and one dated 1528 to Henry, father of Sir Hugh Willoughby, who, with his crew, was frozen in the North …
Thoroton's History of Nottinghamshire
… and other Lands, 14 11 E. 3. brought the inheritance to Hugh Willoughby, Clark, his next son, who died the 14 Sept. 7 … son of this William did afterwards claim. 15 But this Hugh the Clergy-man had a wife (or Concubine) called Joane de … married to John Armstrong of Thorpe, and a son called Hugh Willoughby, who married Joan, daughter of Sir John …
A History of the County of Oxford
… rate of 4 d. 35 The most prosperous man in the parish was Hugh Weller, probably already, as he was in 1541, tenant of … was succeeded by his nephew Jasper (d. 1593). 36 In 1619 Hugh Weller held 1 ¼ yardlands in Wolvercote; his son …
Displaying 26741 - 26750 of 26851