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Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem: Volume 20, Henry V
… 1418. YORK. Inquisition. Wakefield. 29 March. He held in his demesne as of fee 1 tenement and 2 bovates of arable and meadow in Snaith by Carlton of the king in socage of the duchy of … the remainder of Thomas, duke of Clarence, of his manor of Burstwick, service unknown, annual value 100s. He died on 26 …
Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem: Series 2, Volume 3, Henry VII
… 21 Henry VII. He died 12 November, 21 Henry VII, seised in fee of the under-mentioned messuages &c. Thomas Wentworth, … heir. YORK. A messuage and 30 a. land, meadow and pasture in Clayton, worth 40 s., held of Nicholas Buredett in socage. … worth 10 marks. A moiety of Dalton, worth 100 s. Manor of Ryhill, worth 10 l. Manor of Gunwarton, worth 10 l. Manor of …
Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem: Volume 16, Richard II
… of Castile and Leon, duke of Lancaster, or his chancellor in the duchy. 10 February, 11 Richard II. LANCASTER. Inq. … his death he granted all his under-mentioned lands &c. in Chorlegh and elsewhere in the county of Lancaster to John … Fulpette, Padebourghill, Jurdaneshevedlonde, Ryhill, Lousyfurlonge, Altouneshede, Buryhill, Tedreshall. …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… Leighland - Lench-Wick Leighland LEIGHLAND, a chapelry, in the parish of Old Cleeve, union of Williton, hundred of … Great (St. Mary) LEIGHS, GREAT ( St. Mary), a parish, in the union of Chelmsford, partly in the hundred of … the seigniory of Holderness, as a member of the manor of Burstwick. It comprises about 800 acres, belonging to several …
Borough Market Privileges
… of the privilege. Bibliographic details are given in square brackets at the end of each entry. The abbreviations used may be found in the Editorial note. 24/02/1371 Sussex Order to John … [CPR 1370-74, 342] 15/05/1373 Holderness (Yorkshire) Burstwick (Yorkshire) Hedon (Yorkshire) Drypool (Yorkshire) …
A History of the County of York East Riding
… The Townspeople, p. 80. Origins Hull came into existence in the late 12th century as one of the many 'new towns' which … of the early Middle Ages. 1 The speculative enterprise in this case was that of Meaux Abbey, which lay seven miles … and in 1304 he had a prolonged stay at his nearby manor of Burstwick. 113 Frequently Hull received the king's orders to …
A History of the County of York East Riding
… 1,204 a. (487 ha.), 7 of which 485 a. (196 ha.) were lost in 1930 and 7 a. (3 ha.) in 1935 to Sculcoates civil parish. The remaining 713 a. (289 … In 1367 land at Bilton was held by knight's service under Burstwick, the chief manor of that fee. 31 Drew's undertenant …
A History of the County of York East Riding
… PIDSEA THE small commuter village of Burton Pidsea stands in the north-western corner of its parish, some 9 km. east of Hull and 5 km. south-west of the North Sea at Grimston, in Garton. 33 The area of the parish was 2,303 a. (932 ha.) … Regulation of some drains in the parish later belonged to Burstwick manor court. 50 Much of the water draining from the …
A History of the County of York East Riding
… priory. 73 The opening near Langthorpe of Ellerby station in the 1860s 74 led to the building along the Marton road … slightly enlarged at the expense of Burton Constable. 76 In 1984 part of New Ellerby lying in Burton Constable civil … 92 It was later part of the Aumale fee, which passed with Burstwick manor to the Crown and its grantees. 93 Herbert de …
A History of the County of York East Riding
… known for Grimston Garth, an 18th-century mansion standing in well wooded parkland east of the village. 59 A group of … north-west. The name Garton, perhaps meaning 'farmstead in or near a triangular piece of land', may be an Anglian and … 80-100 a. of the abbey by fealty, besides 20-30 a. under Burstwick manor by military service, and his family later …
Displaying 281 - 290 of 338