Oxf. Hist. Soc, Volume 32 |
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Results 1-5 of 91
Page 7
... king's Escheator in 1288 16 ; ( 3 ) a demise of two plots of land from the Prior and Convent of St. Frideswide c . 1290 17 ; and ( 4 ) an inquisition taken by the crown in 1291 respecting the lands and tenements which the Prior and ...
... king's Escheator in 1288 16 ; ( 3 ) a demise of two plots of land from the Prior and Convent of St. Frideswide c . 1290 17 ; and ( 4 ) an inquisition taken by the crown in 1291 respecting the lands and tenements which the Prior and ...
Page 79
... king , or to the king and his council in parliament , or to the chancellor , during the thirteenth , fourteenth , and fifteenth centuries , preserved and handed down to our time . And thus from their origin they deal with all sorts of ...
... king , or to the king and his council in parliament , or to the chancellor , during the thirteenth , fourteenth , and fifteenth centuries , preserved and handed down to our time . And thus from their origin they deal with all sorts of ...
Page 80
... king's law again so as to defend his right without a special pardon . Or it might be that the Thames highway was so choked by the enclosing of spaces for fish - preserves or the building of weirs , & c . , that the free passage of ...
... king's law again so as to defend his right without a special pardon . Or it might be that the Thames highway was so choked by the enclosing of spaces for fish - preserves or the building of weirs , & c . , that the free passage of ...
Page 85
... King John , had its mayor and bailiffs who were responsible for the king's peace ' within its limits , for the arrest of evil - doers , for the holding of pleas in the mayor's court , and for the payment to the Exchequer of the fee ...
... King John , had its mayor and bailiffs who were responsible for the king's peace ' within its limits , for the arrest of evil - doers , for the holding of pleas in the mayor's court , and for the payment to the Exchequer of the fee ...
Page 88
... king's officers but not to these unlawful clerks ! The great town and gown fight of the feast of St. Scholastica in 1354 may have led to the petition by the town for a special pardon ( No. 92 ) , but this requires more examination ...
... king's officers but not to these unlawful clerks ! The great town and gown fight of the feast of St. Scholastica in 1354 may have led to the petition by the town for a special pardon ( No. 92 ) , but this requires more examination ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abstract aliis Alius liber anno anno domini Bishop cerico Chancellor Charter Christ Church Clarendon clerks Collegii Conybeare Council Dean Decretalium domini dono Magistri Duke Duke of Monmouth Durham College Earl Stanhope Earle of Abingdon ecclesie Endorsement endowment Exeter College Fellows File foll friars granted Hart Hall hath Hearne Henry Hertford College Hist House iiij iiijd Item ij Item unum Johannis John King King's letters Libri libros London Lord Stanhope Lordship Master monachi monks Monmouth Oxon Oxonia Parl Parliament persons petition poem pounds pray present primis Principal Principall printed Prior quae quam quod Rebells receptis Rector Rent Richard Newton Roberts Rolls Sancti scholars Society Statutes Stereotype Successors Summa sunt super textu Thomas town Tutors undergraduate University of Oxford Vice-Chancellor viijd Visitor Warden
Popular passages
Page 278 - He was a lovely person, had a virtuous and excellent lady that brought him great riches, and a second dukedom in Scotland. He was Master of the Horse, General of the King his father's army, Gentleman of the Bedchamber, Knight of the Garter, Chancellor of Cambridge ; in a word...
Page 374 - Biographical Memoirs of William Ged, including a particular Account of his Progress in the Art of Block Printing.
Page 357 - ... of our especial grace, certain knowledge,- and mere motion, have given and granted, and by these presents, for us, our heirs and successors, do...
Page 358 - ... or provided, or any other matter, cause or thing whatsoever to the contrary thereof in any wise notwithstanding.
Page 355 - Know ye therefore that we of our especial grace, certain knowledge, and mere motion...
Page 356 - ... plead and be impleaded, answer and be answered unto, defend and be defended in all courts...
Page 368 - ... the other, by Lord Cathcart; throughout every word of which, court adulation borrowed the language of gratitude to the Supreme Being for restoring to England her sovereign ;) — one, and only one, difficulty was suggested respecting the propriety of their parliamentary proceeding. Earl Stanhope, a man who at every period of his life, whether as a commoner or as a peer, displayed the same ardent, eccentric, fearless, indefatigable, and independent character, stood forward to state his doubts...
Page 339 - He usually made excursions, in the long vacations, into various parts of the kingdom, most commonly taking with him, for company and improvement, one or more young gentlemen of fortune in his college, at the request, and with the approbation, of their parents. He was himself, in every respect, a gentleman, and a man of refined good breeding. You might see this in every part of his conversation. At evening, upon such journeys, he would, a little before bed-time, desire his young pupils to indulge...
Page 30 - Rex omnibus ad quos, etc., salutem. Sciatis, quod de gracia nostra speciali concessimus et licenciam dedimus, pro nobis et heredibus nostris, quantum in nobis est...
Page 30 - In cuius rei testimonium has litteras nostras fieri fecimus patentes. Teste me ipso apud Westmonasterium decimo octavo die Julii, anno regni nostri tricesimo sexto ie.