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Displaying 11 - 20 of 2001
The Court of Chivalry 1634-1640
… of Shrewsbury, co. Salop, gent v Thomas Owen, Richard Owen and Thomas Betton of the same December 1639 Early Stuart … Humphrey Mackworth maintained that Thomas Betton had hired shoemakers to perform a 'rough music' against Mackworth and his bride as they passed through the town's streets …
The Court of Chivalry 1634-1640
… May 1637 - May 1638 Peterborough, where Thomas Billiard and Matthew Robinson quarreled at the Three Tuns Tavern in … Robinson gave him the lie, calling him a son of a whore and challenging him to fight. Robinson claimed that he had … telling him that he was 'no gentleman nor honest man' and Billiard, in turn, insisted that he responded to Robinson …
The Court of Chivalry 1634-1640
… in Fareham, Hampshire, Badd had called him 'a base rogue and a rascall, and noe gentleman'. Badd's defence was that Rigges had been … saying that he was 'a base fellow, the son of a cobler, and no gentleman', and threatening 'to assault and runne at …
The Court of Chivalry 1634-1640
… that all Sydenham's brethren 'were base scurvy fellows', and that John Sydenham, the eldest, 'was the basest of them … for an £8 debt. Process was granted on 16 February 1638 and in November witnesses were being examined in support of … On 22 June 1639 Sydenham was granted £40 damages and £30 expenses and on 9 July 1639, in response to a …
The Court of Chivalry 1634-1640
… in 1635, in the parishes of St Martin-in-the-Fields and St Margaret's, Westminster, Sherrowe, a shoemaker, gave him the lie and had said that 'I was a base fellowe, an unworthy fellowe, and a trencher flye; and that he had relieved mee, and
The Court of Chivalry 1634-1640
… presence of many persons. Process was granted on 27 May and Vincent entered bond on 29 May; but no further … Yeoman of the cittie of York, shoemaker, in publique and disgracefull manner before many persons without any … co. York, gent, on behalf of Vincent. Sealed, subscribed and delivered in the presence of John Watson. Notes Neither …
Proceedings in Parliament 1624
… [CJ 699; f. 29v] Veneris, 7 0 Maii , 22 0 Jacobi Knights and burgesses of Cornwall and Devon to be added to [John] Edwards's committee. Bill … they had not spiritual food. Cardinals put into churches shoemakers and tailors. Quinquagesimo Edw. 3 called bonum …
A Topographical Dictionary of Scotland
… bank of the Nethan, a fine stream tributary to the Clyde, and is in the centre of the parish, and contains the parochial church. The inhabitants are … viz., the hammermen, bakers, wrights and coopers, tailors, shoemakers, weavers, and fleshers. The burgesses are entitled …
An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in the County of Northamptonshire
… Abbreviations ABBREVIATIONS AND SHORTENED TITLES OF WORKS OF REFERENCE Ackerman, J.Y., … Iceni', Britannia 1, 133 Allison, K.J., Beresford, M.W. and Hurst, J.G., 1966 The Deserted Villages of … Occasional Paper 11a Hatley, V.A., and Rajczonek, J., 1971 Shoemakers in Northamptonshire 17621911, A Statistical …
A History of the County of Gloucester
… on the south-west by the extraparochial Forest of Dean and included part of the market town of Mitcheldean. 2 Almost … in shape, the parish covered only 770 a. 3 (311.6 ha.) and was divided from Mitcheldean parish to the north-west … of land called the Wilderness west of the Monmouth road and three small detached pieces to the south-east within a …
Displaying 11 - 20 of 2001