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A Topographical Dictionary of Scotland
… cod, ling, haddock, whiting, turbot, skate, flounders, mackerel, and herrings, which last are taken only during the …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… at the Dissolution was 307. 16. 6.: the last prior was Dr. Mackerel, who, having put himself at the head of an …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… is the fishery, in which about 100 boats are employed: the mackerel season commences in April, and the herring season in …
A Topographical Dictionary of Wales
… a variety of fish, chiefly whiting, cod, brill, soles, mackerel, and herring. Herrings generally make their …
Dictionary of Traded Goods and Commodities
… 'caveach', which the OED said was a West Indian term for MACKEREL spiced and salted, fried in SWEET OIL, then placed … layer of oil on top. One cookery writer wrote that mackerel thus prepared were 'very delicious, and if well …
Calendar of the Cecil Papers in Hatfield House
Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Charles I
… lately put on shore by the French sloops, and since that a mackerel-man taken. Suggests that the Minniken should be …
Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Charles I
… to Philip Burlamachi. The two barks, the Edmund and the Mackerel, of Newhaven, went to sea that morning. They go to …
Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Charles I
… Thomas Goble, fisherman, to Sec. Dorchester. Driving for mackerel between the Goodwin and Calais, certain Frenchmen …
Displaying 21 - 30 of 297