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A History of the County of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely
… Parishes Croydon cum Clopton CROYDON CUM CLOPTON The parish of Croydon cum Clopton, 1 16 km. south-west of … 47 By the early 12th century that manor, held usually as 1 knight's fee, 48 belonged to one Hugh, who was succeeded by … 69 From 1389 to 1395 William Tailboys's grandson and heir Walter (d. 1411) sued Sir Roger and his wife Margaret to …
A History of the County of Wiltshire
… north-east of Malmesbury. 2 It took its name either from the stream flowing through it or from the mineral spring … Patrick of Chaworth. 105 The overlordship of the estate, knight's fee in 12423, was later held by another Patrick of … 1203 it was held by Godfrey's relict Alice and her husband Walter de la Hay, 109 and in 12423 by Hugh of Standen. 110 …
The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent
… Parishes Crundal CRUNDAL. LIES the next parish north-eastward from Wye. It appears by the register of Leeds abbey, that this parish was likewise … exchanged them, for Garwinton, in Littleborne, with Thomas Knight, esq. of Godmersham, whose son of the same name dying …
A History of the County of Worcester
… Crutch probably became extra-parochial in 1178, when the tithes were assigned to the nuns of Westwood in exchange for their claim on the … John Acton, Elizabeth wife of Henry Townsend, Anne wife of Walter Colles, Helen wife of Thomas Thornburgh, and Penelope …
A History of the County of Hampshire
… parish, distant 3 miles west from Burghclere station on the Great Western Railway. The general rise of the ground is from south to north, the … Croch to hold of him and his heirs by the service of one knight's fee. 8 The overlordship continued with the heirs of …
A History of the County of Warwick
… 1,264. Cubbington is a parish and large village almost in the centre of the county, 2 miles north-east of Leamington … Pope Honorius III in 1221, 16 and was reckoned as half a knight's fee, its tenants being the Prior of Kenilworth in … of Roger de Ivri's Domesday holding, was held in 1273 by Walter de Ottesford, who in that year granted a life tenancy …
A History of the County of Buckingham
… (xi cent.); Cobelintone, Colblyngton (xiv cent.); The parish of Cublington contains 1,223 acres, comprising 117 … have been a castle mount, 2 and may have been thrown up by Walter de Chesney in the 12th century, or Geoffrey Lucy in … Hugh, 11 on whose death Cublington descended to his son Walter, who bore the surname of de Chesney. 12 Walter de …
A History of the County of Sussex
… Cucufeld, Kukufeld (xi. cent.); Cokefeld (xiv. cent.). The River Ouse in places forms the northern boundary of … with a lion rampant, and a roundel enclosing a mounted knight wearing a checky cloak and bearing a checky shield. 7 … Anne. 21 Sir Thomas was succeeded in 1656 by his son Walter, 22 who was made a baronet in 1661 and died in 1675, …
A History of the County of Oxford
… parish was originally larger than at present. It included the modern civil parishes of Wheatley and Denton as well as … and a sanctus. The second, third, and fourth are by Henry Knight of Reading. A former fifth was dated 1677, and a … Browne (d. 1831), and his son Thomas Browne, the Revd. Walter Sneyd, who obtained the property in 1841, Captain …
A History of the County of Surrey
… mile in breadth. It contains 1,859 acres, and extends over the usual variety of soils, the southern part being upon the … duchess, 48 whose son in 1731 sold Worcester Park to John Walter his former steward. John Walter died in 1745, and was succeeded by his son George, …