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Physicians and Irregular Medical Practitioners in London 1550-1640
… medical surgeon (Unlicensed Surgeon 1595) Period of medical practice 1590-1617 Address St Botolph's Aldgate … 1605. Fined 1606. Accused 1607. Excommunicated 1595! ?=TW of Byton, Archbishop's Licence 1636 (Raach p.251)? Known London address St Botolph's Aldgate Parish St Botolph without …
An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset
… SU 01 SW) Woodlands covers 2,594 acres in a broad strip of land extending from the R. Allen in the W. to the Dorset … falls and the Chalk is soon overlain by Reading Beds and London Clays which give rise to a well-wooded area, at … by streams flowing S. and S.E. Bagshot Beds in the S.E. of the parish result in open heathland. The parish came into …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… West Woodmancote WOODMANCOTE, a tything, in the parish of North Cerney, union of Winchcomb, hundred of Rapsgate, Eastern division of the … from Steyning; containing 378 inhabitants. The road from London to Brighton, by way of Horsham, runs through the …
A History of the County of Sussex
… and other estates MANORS AND OTHER ESTATES. The manor of WOODMANCOTE was held in 1066 by Countess Guda, and in 1086 of William de Braose by William son of Rannulf, 35 who also … was his son Jacob 60 (fl. 1680). 61 In 1693 Walter West, a London merchant, sold the manor to Thomas Dennett 62 (d. …
A History of the County of Oxford
… survived until the 1930s. They were listed in a survey of 1279 and as 'the king's rents' in 1468-9. 48 Later the … their arrangement was partly topographical, as was that of the late 18th-century land tax assessments and the census … Gardner, were noted for the best homebrewed beer between London and Birmingham. 7 By then no. 32 seems to have been …
A History of the County of Oxford
… to those founded in the chantry house on the north side of the church by Thomas Croft (d. 1488). 77 In 1551 the … in 1724. 79 In 1614 it housed old men and women; a list of doles to the almshouse poor c. 1630 evidently included … 1617 gave £12 a year, payable by the Skinners' Company of London, to be divided equally between the grammar school, a …
A History of the County of Oxford
… Woodstock Church Church. The church, of which the south doorway is of the 12th century, was presumably established when the … sermons to the corporation. 67 In 1617 Thomas Fletcher of London left £4 a year for five sermons and £4 a year to be …
A History of the County of Oxford
… Woodstock Development of the town Development of the town New Woodstock developed at a gate into the royal … roofs of shallower pitch. There is little sign that London pattern books influenced local builders: most fronts …
A History of the County of Oxford
… its original market, 66 but it remained a small community of tradesmen, craftsmen, and royal servants. Service in the … other names were derived from the building crafts of mason, carpenter, thatcher, and slater, the metal crafts … Bailly (d. 1461), chapman of Woodstock and haberdasher of London, and Robert Austen, variously called chapman and …
A History of the County of Oxford
… dame schools; it was a popular place for boarding schools, of which some took day pupils. The rector, although a keen … and in 1831 that 'scarcely any residents lacked the means of education'. 85 Continued failure to respond to national … chamber. 87 By will of 1585 Richard Cornwell, a London skinner born in Woodstock, left £ 300 to provide and …
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