Registrum Palatinum dunelmense: The register of Richard de Kellawe, lord palatine and bishop of Durham, 1311-1316, Del 2Longman, 1874 |
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Registrum Palatinum Dunelmense ; The Register of Richard de Kellawe ..., Volum 2 Richard Kellawe Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1874 |
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bishop of Durham bonis Breve domini carta Cestr Charter Christo patri church coram cujus rei testimonium Datum dictæ dicti dicto dioecesis Domini millesimo domini regis dominus Hiberniæ Dunol Dunolmensi episcopo Dunolmensis episcopus dux Aquitaniæ eadem gratia Edited Edwardi Edwardus eidem ejusdem Episc episcopatu episcopatus episcopo Dunolmensi Evenwod faciatis Februarii foregoing writ going writ Grant hæredes hæredibus Henry hujusmodi iiij ipsius Item Johannis John justiciariis juxta Kellawe king's writ land literas magistro Mandate Matilda Memorandum memoriæ mensis episcopus omnibus omnibus aliis permissione divina perpetuum persona ecclesiæ personæ pertinentiis portione præ prædicti Antonii prædictum præfato præmissis præsentes præsenti pretii quæ quondam rationabilem compotum suum regni Retornum Return rex Angliæ Ricardo Ricardus Richard Roberto salutem Sancti Scaccario Scaccarium nostrum sigillum nostrum præsentibus sine Staunton suæ successoribus nostris super suum de tempore terræ Thomæ Thomas touching tunc valentiam venerabili in Christo vestra viij vobis mandamus Waltero Westmonasterium Willelmo Willelmus William xiij
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Side 621 - MAJESTY'S TREASURY. UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE MASTER OF THE ROLLS. ON the 26th of January 1857, the Master of the Rolls submitted to the Treasury a proposal for the publication of materials for the History of this Country from the Invasion of the Romans to the Reign of Henry VIII.
Side 1393 - WILLIAM STUBBS, MA, Vicar of Navestock, Essex, and Lambeth Librarian. 1864-1865. The authorship of the Chronicle in Vol. I., hitherto ascribed to Geoffrey Vinesauf, is now more correctly ascribed to Richard, Canon of the Holy Trinity of London. The narrative...
Side 622 - was well calculated for the accomplishment of this important national object, in an effectual and satisfactory manner, within a reasonable time, and provided proper attention be paid to economy, in making the detailed arrangements, without unnecessary expense." They expressed their approbation of the proposal that each chronicle and historical document should be edited in such a manner as to represent with all possible correctness the text of each writer, derived from a collation of the best MSS.,...
Side 1395 - Dublin. 1867. The work in its present form, in the editor's opinion, is a comparatively modern version of an undoubtedly ancient original. That it was compiled from contemporary materials has been proved by curious incidental evidence.
Side 1390 - Collection in the College of Arms, London, a manuscript of the fifteenth century, collated with MS. 13 E. IX. in the King's Library in the British Museum, and MS. VII. in the Parker Collection of Manuscripts at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. In the third volume is a Chronicle of English History...
Side 622 - ... their age and their peculiarities ; that he should add to the work a brief account of the life and times of the author, and any remarks necessary to explain the chronology; but no other note or comment was to be allowed, except what might be necessary to establish the correctness of the text.
Side 1396 - GILBERT, Esq., FSA, Secretary of the Public Record Office of Ireland. 1870. A collection of original documents, elucidating mainly the history and condition of the municipal, middle, and trading classes under or in relation with the rule of England in Ireland, — a subject hitherto in almost total obscurity. Extending over the first hundred and fifty years of the Anglo-Norman settlement, the series includes charters, municipal laws and regulations, rolls of names of citizens and members of merchant-guilds,...
Side 1394 - JOHN GLOVER, MA, Vicar of Brading, Isle of Wight, formerly Librarian of Trinity College, Cambridge. 1865. These two treatises, though they cannot rank as independent narratives, are nevertheless valuable as careful abstracts of previous historians, especially " Le Livere de Reis de Engletere.
Side 1378 - II., the Scottish Series, of the Reign of Elizabeth, 1589-1603 ; an Appendix to the Scottish Series, 1543-1592; and the State Papers relating to Mary Queen of Scots during her Detention in England, 1568-1587.
Side 1390 - It is printed from MS. VII. in the Arundel Collection in the College of Arms, London, a manuscript of the fifteenth century, collated with MS. 13 E.