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Calendar of Treasury Books
… Pembroke. (Done.) Consul of Algiers: order, whether signed or not. (Done.) Earl of Craven's warrant to be sent to Capt. … second quarter of the subsidy as is inserted [in the text or body of said warrant]. Sir Edm. Windham: order for 260 l. … Thomas Howard's name as desired by Lord Ogle and Robert Dymock, Esq. (Done.) Mr. Griffith: 1,000 l. on the loan money …
Calendar of Treasury Books
… when the said loans shall begin to be repaid, or after what sum, out of the Aids of next year; and though … that their Lordships cannot undertake to tell them when, or after what sum, the said loans will take place [on the … to the Act. Mr. Chancellor of the Exchequer comes in. Mary Dymock to have 20 l. [Write] to Mr. Twitty to send my Lords …
An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset
… the Confessor. Azure, a cross flory between five martlets or. III, 193b. England. 14th century, pre-1340. Gules, three lions passant gardant or. I, 76a; III, 97a. Castile, Eleanor of. Quarterly, Castile … and gules, three talbots' heads counterchanged. II, 110a. Dymock. Sable, two lions passant argent crowned or, an …
A History of the County of Gloucester: Volume 12
… were taken. Most of the acquisitions were by purchase or lease rather than by gift in free alms. 8 The meadowland … and elsewhere, usually for terms of six years, from 19 or more of its tenants and freeholders. 9 Ploughing and … a major factor in the demise of an older market at Dymock. In 1291 the tolls taken by the lords of Newent manor …
A History of the County of Gloucester: Volume 12
… by distinctive features. In places they followed a lane or a water course, including on part of the east a small … and roads from Newent to Ross-on-Wye (Herefs.) and to Dymock were all touched. Even the county boundary, where it … 6 Newent tithing, which was also termed the borough or liberty of Newent, 7 occupied the north central part of …
A History of the County of Gloucester: Volume 12
… take possession on Cheyne's death, which occurred in 1413 or 1414. In 1419 the college, for which buildings at … confiscated in 1649, and was bought back by Winter in 1651 or 1652. 20 To meet his debts Winter and his son William … Hayes farm then descended with his estate at Lintridge, in Dymock, until the early 19th century. 7 In 1816 John and Mary …
A History of the County of Gloucester: Volume 12
… large parish is indicated by a cross shaft of the late 8th or early 9th century discovered, probably in situ, in Newent … with its tithes, together with the churches of Taynton and Dymock and the chapel of Pauntley, was confirmed to … Robert of Stalling's land, and took tithe of fruit or, if turned into cider and perry (as much was), a twelfth …
A History of the County of Gloucester: Volume 12
… by the discovery there of a cross shaft of the late 8th or early 9th century. 17 Following the Norman Conquest the … enters at the north, where it joins the route from Dymock and Ledbury. A third street, of less importance but … road in the east of the town was recorded as Church (or Churchend) Street from 1368 3 and its outer part, beyond …
A History of the County of Gloucester: Volume 12
… contained ten ancient parishes, namely Bromesberrow, Dymock, Huntley, Kempley, Longhope, Newent, Oxenhall, … Newent's church was probably older, established by the 8th or 9th century, and the churches at Pauntley and Taynton … are an ubiquitous feature. Many are situated on a hillside or an outcrop, having complex sections with wings at …
A History of the County of Gloucester: Volume 12
… the Environment List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest Dugdale, Mon. W. Dugdale, Monasticon … A.T. Bannister (Canterbury and York Society 1920) Reg. of Dymock The Registers of the Church of St. Mary, Dymock, 15381790, ed. I. Gray and J.E. Gethyn-Jones (Records …
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