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Displaying 51 - 60 of 1062
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… name appears to be derived from the Saxon Asc, an ash, and bye, a habitation: it received the adjunct by which it is …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… four assistant constables, from 12 to 24 jurymen, 12 bye-law men, two bailiffs, two pounders, three afferors, an …
Cardiff Records
… saythe that abowts Michaellmas last past the sayd def' did bye an old house that was redy to falle that some tyme did …
Dictionary of English Furniture Makers 1660-1840
… Hereford, chairmaker (1734). [Poll bk] Beavan, William, Bye St, Hereford, cm and u (183540). [D] Beaver, George, … 715894; vol. 497, ref. 1008057; vol. 496, ref. 1017175] Bye, George, 25 Queen's Row, Pimlico, London, u (183539). [D] Bye, Jacob, 25 Queen's Row, Pimlico, London, cm and u …
A History of the County of Oxford
… to put up the pens for the sheep and charge for their use; bye-laws of 1564 limited the charge to 1 d. for a hurdle's …
A Topographical Dictionary of Wales
… possessed the amplest powers for the enactment of bye-laws and the enforcement of their authority, and also had …
Old and New London
… deep an interest) some little annuity! He wished her good-bye kindly, called her a good woman, and slipped a piece of …
An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset
… windows. c (54) Cottage, on the S. side of a bye-lane 750 yards W. of the church, has recently been …
Dictionary of Traded Goods and Commodities
… Black rosin [blacke rozin; blacke rossen] Black rosin is a bye-product of the distilled TURPENTINE OIL, being the …
Old and New London
… is much infested with donkeys; but owing to the stringent bye-laws that have been passed of late years, the …
Displaying 51 - 60 of 1062