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A History of the County of Sussex
… acres. The ground rises from about 100 ft. near the church and village, which lie on the road running west from … north, on Bow Hill. The district is rich in earthworks, and Kingley Vale, which is partly in the parish, is famous … Robinson, loc. cit. Phillipps seems to have been son-in-law to Peter Legay; Katherine was widow of Peter's son Isaac, …
A History of the County of Sussex
… now part of Worthing borough, lay between the South Downs and the sea; the prefix distinguishes it from Tarring Neville … others worked on linen manufacture. 55 In 1597 a parish by-law was passed preventing the letting of houses without the … iv. 229. W.S.R.O., Add. MS. 109, ff. 1078. Suss. Poor Law Rec. 32, 46. V.C.H. Suss. i. 389. S.N.Q. v. 1067. B.L. …
The Environs of London
… given to distinguish it from the parish last treated of, and from another of the same name in the country, lies within … the hundred of Ruxley, about four miles from Bromley, and four from Croydon in Surrey. The principal part of the … is nearly twelve miles from London-bridge: the church and the manor-house are a mile farther. Boundaries. Quantity …
Alumni Oxonienses
… gent. Magdalen Hall, matric. 19 Nov., 1650; bar.-at-law, Gray's Inn, 1660, as son of Thomas, of Woodmancote, Sussex, gent. See Foster's Judges and Barristers. [ 5] West, Christopher of Devon, gent. … Queen's Coll., matric. 30 March, 1702, aged 15; bar.-at-law, Lincoln's Inn, 1710 (his father bar.-at-law, Gray's Inn, …
A History of the County of Sussex
… 4,500 acres, with an additional 422 acres of foreshore and 58 acres of tidal water, forms a roughly rectangular … the earl and was among the estates settled on his son-in-law Lord Lumley in 1566. 27 Five years later the Earl of … the lands, as his son John in 1613 left to his brother-in-law Richard Langrish his manor house and lands of St. Clere …
A History of the County of Gloucester
… an early foundation as it formerly also served Newnham and Minsterworth; both those places had chapels of ease by … was apparently made c. 1220 by his three daughters and their husbands, 70 but it was later agreed that Isabel, … rectory in 1288, 7 and in 1309 he was a doctor of canon law and also held the deanery of Exeter and prebends at …
A History of the County of Gloucester
… of court were received for Burghill manor in 1303, 24 and for Robert de Sapy's portion of Westbury manor in 1337, … R 328.3. Glos. R.O., P 354/OV 9/1-2. Ibid. CW 2/2. Poor Law Abstract, 1804, 184-5. Ibid. 1818, 156-7. GIoc. R.O., P 354/VE 2/2. Ibid. OV 2/1, 4-5; P 354A/OV 2/1-3; Poor Law Abstract, 1804, 184-5; Glos. R.O., P 354A/OV 2/1-3. Poor …
A History of the County of Wiltshire
… date. Throughout the Middle Ages the churches of Bratton and Dilton were dependent chapels of Westbury church and remained so, in the case of Bratton, until 1845 when a … side of the church, by William of Westbury, serjant-at-law and a justice of the King's Bench. 12 The chapel was …
A History of the County of Wiltshire
… of the Crown. 41 The royal manor was assessed at 40 hides, and was co-extensive with the hundred. 42 The process of … 44 The Empress Maud granted land to Humphrey FitzOdo, 45 and also made a large grant to William Defuble. A gift by … Peerage, Devon. For the contingent interest of his heir-at-law, Sir Robert Willoughly, and his issue, see e.g. C.P. …
A History of the County of Wiltshire
… Walter Pavely acquired from Monkton Farleigh in 1320, 64 and formed part of his estate at Brook on his death in 1323. … a number of small estates in 1599, three fulling mills and a grain mill were included in the Brook Farm estate … mill to his two daughters, his son, Thomas, his brother-in-law, Thomas Finnemore Evans, and to Thomas White, and William …
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