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A Topographical Dictionary of England
… IV.; also with portraits of Prince Rupert, Archbishop Laud, and some others. The common gaol and house of … Panton, for the endowment of a Sunday school. Archbishop Laud bequeathed 50 per annum to the parish, to be employed …
Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541-1857
… The cathedral statutes were revised by archbishop Laud, and the new statutes of 1638 took the place of those of … Monuments of Westminster, 10 and the Diary of Archbishop Laud. 11 There are three references to 'Reg. Winton.'. The … The History of the Troubles and Tryal of . . . William Laud . . . To which is prefixed, The Diary of His Own Life …
Survey of London Monograph
… 1691. S. of Benjamin Holford, Steward to Archbishop Laud, slain in service of Charles I; married sister of Ball, …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… who is the perpetual curate of the parish. Archbishop Laud bequeathed 50 per annum, to be expended every third year …
A History of the County of Oxford
… were local clergy or fellows of Oxford colleges. William Laud, president of St. John's College and later archbishop of … the king in the royal chapel in the park. Probably at Laud's behest lectures ceased in October 1633: lecturers had … D.N.B. Below. D.N.B. Ibid. Ibid. Boro. Mun. 79; cf. Laud's Works, v. 330, 356. Their names occur in vestry mins. …
A History of the County of York
… from 1628 to 1640; both were friends and supporters of Laud. In 1632 Neile inquired into the adequacy of the …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
Charters and Documents relating to the City of Glasgow 1175-1649
… to come for ever, All and whole those sixteen acres of laud of our Moor, lying on the east side of the said city …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… considerable owner, and the lord of the manor. The common laud, about fifty acres, was inclosed in 1840. The chapel, …
Feet of Fines of the Tudor period [Yorks]
Displaying 2141 - 2150 of 2150