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Displaying 1581 - 1590 of 1721
A Dictionary of London
Old and New London
A History of the County of Lancaster
… the manor of Chipping and the capital messuage called 'Wolf house in Shireburne,' with various other messuages, … 5966. For the Shireburnes of Knott, a branch of the Wolf house family, see ibid. 11416. In 1607 the two-thirds …
A History of the County of Lancaster
… Colne Water, on the north, and rising to 1,430 ft. at the Wolf Stones in the south-eastern corner. North of the town … were a grey stone in 'the Bawsedge' (Boss Head) and the Wolf Stones. Another witness said the bounds began at Tom …
A History of the County of Lancaster
… by robbers; another had lost an on through the attack of a wolf. 4 In 1305 the number of boothmen was one less. 5 There …
A History of the County of Lancaster
… of cattle suffered, among other things, from murrain, a wolf and robbers. 14 There were eleven vaccaries in the whole …
A History of the County of Lancaster
… a mound in base vert, thereon two cows grazing sable, a wolf courant of the first between two wool-packs of the …
A History of the County of Lancaster
… some had died of murrain and others had been killed by a wolf. The officers named are Gilbert son of Michael the …
A History of the County of Lancaster
… held in demesne. Daresbury of Daresbury. Argent, a wolf passant sable. Beatrice was her father's heir, and her …
Displaying 1581 - 1590 of 1721