Early Yorkshire Schools, Volume 1Society, 1899 - Education |
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Page vi
... clerks of ancient boroughs , the incumbents of ancient churches , particularly those which have been collegiate or in which there have been several chantries , are very likely to have , even without suspecting it , documents bearing on ...
... clerks of ancient boroughs , the incumbents of ancient churches , particularly those which have been collegiate or in which there have been several chantries , are very likely to have , even without suspecting it , documents bearing on ...
Page xiii
... clerks after the fashion of the Gauls ; those who read books , who serve the chanting , and who are assigned to the writing - school , having for each class their own masters . " This division of the grammar , the song , and the writing ...
... clerks after the fashion of the Gauls ; those who read books , who serve the chanting , and who are assigned to the writing - school , having for each class their own masters . " This division of the grammar , the song , and the writing ...
Page xviii
... clerks of the church and poor scholars gratis . " At the same time it was ordered that no charge should be made for a licence to teach school : and that no licence should be refused to any fit person . A year or two later a mandate of ...
... clerks of the church and poor scholars gratis . " At the same time it was ordered that no charge should be made for a licence to teach school : and that no licence should be refused to any fit person . A year or two later a mandate of ...
Page xx
... clerks and laymen . If this document is authentic and trustworthy , as to which there is no certainty , it would put back the use of the term chancellor to 1137 . withheld may be restored , and that your lordship may XX S. PETER'S ...
... clerks and laymen . If this document is authentic and trustworthy , as to which there is no certainty , it would put back the use of the term chancellor to 1137 . withheld may be restored , and that your lordship may XX S. PETER'S ...
Page xxii
... clerk , his servant in his theological school ( scolis ) . About 1408 , when the Chancellor , John of Sherburn , was imbecile , the chapter made an order for a substitute , " Mr. Edmund , " another canon probably , to deliver his ...
... clerk , his servant in his theological school ( scolis ) . About 1408 , when the Chancellor , John of Sherburn , was imbecile , the chapter made an order for a substitute , " Mr. Edmund , " another canon probably , to deliver his ...
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Page 80 - ... or provided, or any other matter, cause or thing whatsoever to the contrary thereof in any wise notwithstanding. In witness whereof we have caused these our letters to be made patent. Witness ourself at Westminster, the twelfth day of March, in the sixteenth year of our reign.
Page 6 - Victorious scripsere Boetius atque, Historici veteres, Pompeius, Plinius, ipse Acer Aristoteles, rhetor quoque Tullius ingens. Quid quoque Sedulius, vel quid canit ipse Juvencus, Alcimus et Clemens, Prosper, Paulinus, Arator, Quid Fortunatus, vel quid Lactantius edunt. Quae Maro Virgilius, Statius, Lucanus et auctor ; Artis grammaticae vel quid scripsere magistri, Quid Probus atque Focas, Donatus, Priscianusve, Servius, Euticius, Pompeius, Comminianus. Invenies alios perplures...
Page 78 - ... know ye, therefore, that we, of our especial grace, certain knowledge,- and mere motion, have given and granted, and by these presents, for us, our heirs and successors, do give and grant...
Page 76 - England in the Twelfth year of the Reign of his late Majesty King William the Third, intituled, An Act for the further Limitation of the Crown, and better securing the Rights and Liberties of the Subject...
Page xv - Ethelwerd the youngest, by the divine counsels and the admirable prudence of the king, was consigned to the schools of learning, where, with the children of almost all the nobility of the country, and many also who were not noble, he prospered under the diligent care of his teachers. Books in both languages, namely, Latin and Saxon, were both read in the school. They also learned to write...
Page 6 - Illic invenies veterum vestigia Patrum ; Quidquid habet pro se Latio Romanus in orbe ; Graecia vel quidquid transmisit clara Latinis ; Hebraicus vel quod populus bibit imbre superno ; Africa lucifluo vel quidquid lumine sparsit.
Page ix - Aeonian chant, making others play on the flute of Castaly, and run with the feet of lyric poets over the hills of Parnassus. Others the said master made to know the harmony of heaven, the labours of sun and moon, the five belts of the sky, the seven planets, the laws of the fixed stars, their rising and setting, the movements of the air, the quaking of sea and earth, the nature of men, cattle, birds and beasts, the divers kinds of numbers and various shapes.
Page 183 - Successors as of our Manor of East Greenwich in the County of Kent in free and Common Soccage and not in Capite or by Knights Service.
Page 44 - Anglie debite factas et sigillatas, absque fine seu feodo magno vel parvo nobis in Hanaperio nostro, seu alibi, ad usum nostrum, proinde quoquomodo reddendo, solvendo vel faciendo.
Page 177 - Ireland, Defenders of the Faith, Archdukes of Austria, Dukes of Burgundy, Milan and Brabant, Counts of Hapsburg, Flanders, and Tyrol ; To all, to whom the present letters shall come, greeting.