Search

Displaying 21 - 30 of 221
A Dictionary of London
… of Ivy was so named in 1546 and 1617 in a " Plat of the Greyfriars " reproduced in Trans. L. and M. Arch. Soc. V. …
Old and New London
… Lewes, in Sussex; the Charterhouse, the Blackfriars, the Greyfriars, and the Whitefriars, in London, felt the fury of …
A New History of London
… of St. Thomas a Becket, the Blackfriars, Whitefriars, Greyfriars, and the Carthusian monks of the Charter house, in …
A New History of London
… and idle persons: and as the city had appointed the Greyfriars, now called Christ's Hospital, for the education …
A History of the County of Essex
… on much of the north, but the castle and presumably the Greyfriars site were extraparochial in the Middle Ages. In …
A Dictionary of London
… on the north side of Newgate Market in a "plat of the Greyfriars" in Trans. L. and M. Arch Soc. V. 421. Bridge … Warwick Lane, in 1546 and 1617, shown in a "plat of the Greyfriars" in Trans. L. and M. Arch. Soc. V. 421. Probably …
London Bridge
… paviour, for paving 83 toises of new pavement at the Greyfriars and the north side of St Nicholas Shambles, at 7d. …
London Bridge
… 33s. 4d. To the friars of the infirmary [ farmary] at the Greyfriars within Newgate, London, for a quit-rent of 3s. 4d. …
A History of the County of Essex
… a belated recognition of medieval alienations to the Greyfriars and others. The meadow was consistently reckoned …
A Dictionary of London
… canon of St. Paul's north, 1246. Tenement opposite the Greyfriars church between tenement formerly of Reg. le Baker …
Displaying 21 - 30 of 221