Search

Displaying 21 - 30 of 7360
The Court of Chivalry 1634-1640
… called him 'base fellow jackanapes, hoggard or hoggrubber' and coward and 'bid him alight from his horse'. This happened on St … and she never heard him taxed for being commonly drunk and she believeth that he will swear nothing but the …
The Court of Chivalry 1634-1640
… a ten shilling piece from Kettle, he gave him the lie and called him 'a base shufflinge fellowe', between October and December 1635 at the White Hart Inn in St Botolph's, … them from those debts. Kettle also claimed that he had drunk with Haslewood since the occasion mentioned in the …
The Court of Chivalry 1634-1640
… Hawley v Futter 287 HAWLEY V FUTTER Henry Hawley, Captain and Governor of Barbados, gent v James Futter of St Margaret, … Mary Woolnoth, London, that 'I was a base cheating knave, and that I had none to wayte on me, but a hangman'. Futter … widely heard; and was he in your judgement divers times drunk'? 6. Was the witness present at the Pope's Head tavern, …
28th April 1624
Proceedings in Parliament 1624
… James Poyntz, kt., deceased. L. 1a. An act for avoiding and annulling of a sentence in the prerogative court in the … grievances. L. 1a. An act for expedition of suits in law and for preventing unnecessary charges and delays in sealing … [f. 57v] [SIR ROBERT] PHELIPS. They came into the country disorderly for their own ends, and gathered in the time of …
The Court of Chivalry 1634-1640
… had been provoked by Hide saying that he was no gentleman and that Hide was a better gentleman. Floyer also resented Hide calling him a boy and a drunkard, telling him 'goe sleepe childe'. Proceedings were under way by December 1638 and the commission for Hide's depositions was ordered to sit …
Proceedings in Parliament 1624
… behind. Upon question, the Clerk to have 30, his son, 10, and the Serjeant, 20. Upon question, all those which pay not … The order for the/ [f. 64v] Sir Robert Mansell's and Sir Henry Vane's patents to be delivered in to them. The … of. So the bill of Brewers. So Earl of Oxford's bill and the Apothecaries' bill to rest. MR. SOLICITOR reports …
The Court of Chivalry 1634-1640
… London, had killed her late husband, William Wise, steward and cooper of the same vessel, in a duel at Renews Harbour, … that he been seeking to prevent Wise from raising a mutiny and murdering Vincent Harris, the captain. Discipline had broken down on board ship, with much drunkenness, and a duel arranged between William Derson, the master, and
The Court of Chivalry 1634-1640
… the early Stuart period. In June 1640 Sir Robert Hudleston and Robert Hope quarrelled at the Horseshoe Tavern in Drury … base fellow'. When Hudleston answered that he was a knight and the king's servant, and threatened to complain to the … also evident that Hope had spoken the words while being so drunk that he tried to leave the room via the chimney rather …
The Court of Chivalry 1634-1640
… said that he was a 'base fellow, base shitten captaine, and when he spake he did barke as a dogg against the moone', … to the peace because he was fearful of his behaviour when drunk. Hudson submitted to this and entered a recognisance … humiliations on him in the past, particularly when he was drunk, perhaps because as a woollen draper he was …
The Court of Chivalry 1634-1640
… 'Thou bearest thyself soe high on thy Mr John Pierpoint, and thy M[aste]r soe highe on the earle of Kingston that men … been spoken, in the earl's absence, before local farmers and their wives out in the barley fields of Wadworth at … fraudulent and deceitful persons in their dealings, or disorderly persons knowen or noated for comon alehouse …
Displaying 21 - 30 of 7360