Search
A History of the County of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely
… the longest and fiercest being that under Elizabeth I. In the 18th century the warfare transformed itself into … 7 and in April 1270 an agreement negotiated by the Lord Edward, 8 and authenticated by the common seals of both … and in 1902 succeeded Redfern as its chairman, a post which he retained until his death in 1910. The first …
A History of the County of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely
… 49 There are no precise indications of location. Ward I of 1086, which had been two wards in 1066, was presumably … the market and including the parishes of St. Mary, St. Edward, and (probably) St. Bene't; (6) Preachers' Ward, … n. 3; C. Stephenson, Borough and Town, 201. V.C.H. Cambs. i. 359, n. 1. Ibid. See below, p. 127. Atkinson, Cambridge …
The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent
… country of the Kentish men; and this city, Cant-wara byrg, i. e. the Kentish men's city, 3 a name agreeing with that of … crown afterwards continued possessed of it; 10 and in king Edward the Confessor's time, though in divers other parts of … ways within the city or without, shall dig or put down a post, the king's reeve shall follow him wherever he shall go, …
Magna Britannia
… some years in finishing, for it appears, that King Henry I. being at Carlisle in the year 1122, disbursed money for … of Falkirk, in the year 1298, the brave and victorious Edward I. marched with his army to Carlisle, where a … of a Queen, to assure any thing; but he would send by post to the court to know the Queen's pleasure; meantime, if …
A History of the County of Chester
… as a base. The city's military and political importance to Edward I, which endured into the early 14th century, brought it … early 18th century arose because it was the main staging post on the route between the two capital cities: about 185 …
A History of the County of Chester
… as a base. The city's military and political importance to Edward I, which endured into the early 14th century, brought it … early 18th century arose because it was the main staging post on the route between the two capital cities: about 185 …
A History of the County of Sussex
… and the reference we have to the writ or charter of Henry I carries us no farther. Stephen's charter, probably of 1135, … to have continued to hold the city at farm, 17 and in 1304 Edward I, while the city was in his hands, acknowledged the … within the city, not repairing the stage of the whipping-post, and forestalling the market. Records of the city …
A History of the County of Sussex
… to Chichester until they were granted away by Henry I, who severed them from the city. 8 Other lands must have … date. This boundary approximately went to St. James's Post 11 and thence to the west to the boundary post 12 south … and stood in a wide open space. The cross was erected by Edward Story, Bishop of Chichester (14781503), about the year …
A History of the County of Sussex
… Hidage,' 9 a document dating probably from the reign of Edward the Elder (90024), or earlier, Chichester is assigned … Brihtnoth, Leofric, and Leofwine. In the time of Harold I (103540) the moneyers were Aelfric, Goda, Godric, and … merged under other titles and Roger de Montgomery, the post-Conquest earl, made his Sussex seat at Arundel. The …
A History of the County of Sussex
… 4 d., 6 and he and Eartham were jurors on the Inquisition post mortem of the Earl of Cornwall in 1300; 7 he acted as burgess … Earl of Arundel as high steward under the charter of James I in 1618. This influence no doubt was lost during the …