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A History of the County of Lancaster
… township at this date indicates the aptness of the name 'weald tn.' Banastre obtained in 1257 a charter of free warren …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… containing 6S5 inhabitants. This parish lies partly in the Weald. It is intersected by several small streams that empty …
A History of the County of Essex
… at Rainham c. 1697. 91 John Pain, whose house at South Weald was licensed for Baptists in 1705, was one of the …
A History of the County of Sussex
… a large detached portion c. 11 miles to the north in the Weald near Horsham. The two areas were separate for poor-law … an entrepôt for the transport of Horsham stone from the Weald to be used at West Tarring church. 2 A bargeman of …
The English Fur Trade in the Later Middle Ages
Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Interregnum
… [ I. 76, p. 487.] Jan. 22. The Jersey, Spithead. 59. John Weald to Rev. Hugh Peters, Whitehall. Thanks for your …
Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Interregnum
… Col. Guibon has raised 3 troops of horse in the Weald of Kent, but I hope there will now be no need of them. …
Alumni Oxonienses
… M.A. 16 June, 1528; one of these names vicar of North Weald, Essex, 1538, until his death in 1553. See Foster's …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… The name Walden is said to be deriyed from the Saxon words Weald and Den, signifying a woody valley. At a latter period …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… London. The name Waltham is compounded of the Saxon words Weald and Ham, signifying a residence in or near a wood. The … to the crown. The name appears to be of Saxon origin, from weald, "a wood," and ham, "a dwelling;" the adjunct stowe, "a …
Displaying 881 - 890 of 921