Tetney, Lincolnshire: A Historyauthor, 1901 - 112 sider |
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Side 10
... yearly ; also thirteen salt works worth 12s . yearly , and one hundred and forty acres of meadow . The annual value in King Edward's time was £ 10 ; now it is £ 20 , and it is tallaged at £ 20 . " This requires some explanation . A ...
... yearly ; also thirteen salt works worth 12s . yearly , and one hundred and forty acres of meadow . The annual value in King Edward's time was £ 10 ; now it is £ 20 , and it is tallaged at £ 20 . " This requires some explanation . A ...
Side 15
... yearly . The average rent of a salt pan was about 8d . a year ; these were nearly 1 / - , and therefore above the ordinary value . Salt was undoubtedly made here as late as about A.D. 1627 , when Sir William * Hist . Anglo - Saxons ...
... yearly . The average rent of a salt pan was about 8d . a year ; these were nearly 1 / - , and therefore above the ordinary value . Salt was undoubtedly made here as late as about A.D. 1627 , when Sir William * Hist . Anglo - Saxons ...
Side 37
... yearly beyond deductions , because there is there neither garden nor herbage ( i.e. , liberty of grazing ) . There is there one dove - cot which is worth yearly 2/6 , and not more , for it is dilapidated and in ruins . There is there in ...
... yearly beyond deductions , because there is there neither garden nor herbage ( i.e. , liberty of grazing ) . There is there one dove - cot which is worth yearly 2/6 , and not more , for it is dilapidated and in ruins . There is there in ...
Side 38
... yearly value per acre is 6d . and not more because of the overflowing of the sea . Total 20 / - There is also there a certain several pasture which is called the North Marsh , which is of the yearly value of 5 / - and a certain windmill ...
... yearly value per acre is 6d . and not more because of the overflowing of the sea . Total 20 / - There is also there a certain several pasture which is called the North Marsh , which is of the yearly value of 5 / - and a certain windmill ...
Side 39
... yearly . * Total £ 12 9 : 11. " : I have copied the above literally and fully , as it contains a number of interesting particulars as to the value of land and labour at that time . It also shews us another thing which throws light on a ...
... yearly . * Total £ 12 9 : 11. " : I have copied the above literally and fully , as it contains a number of interesting particulars as to the value of land and labour at that time . It also shews us another thing which throws light on a ...
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Abbey Abbot and Convent acre adjoining acres of land acres of meadow annually April became belonging Bishop of Lincoln blow-wells bovate of land called carucates Church Churchwardens cottage County of Lincoln Court Rolls Cowmarsh demesne Drain Duchy of Lancaster Earl of Chester Earldom East Field Farm Grainsby Grange GRIMOLDBY Grimsby half an acre Hall Hemmans Henry Henry Wynter Hewson Highways Holme Holton-le-Clay Humberston inclosures inhabitants Johanna John Greteham Jolyff lanes Lincolnshire lord king Louth Park Manor of Tetney Marshchapel Maughan messuage Michael mill Monastery Newton Marsh North North Thoresby Northcotes open field open field system owner paid Parish of Tetney plough possessions present Ranulph Rectory rent repaired Richard salt-works Sea Bank Simon Webster South Fitty South Marsh Spalding tenants Tetney aforesaid Tetney Lock Thomas Thoresby Thos tithes Vestry Vicar Vicarage village Waithe Waithe Beck Waltham Wathall Wellow West Field William Willm yearly
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Side 82 - Galatia : grace be to you and peace from God the Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ, 4 who gave himself for our sins, that he might deliver us from this present evil world, according 5 to the will of God and our Father : to whom be glory for ever and ever.
Side 86 - God; that the nation, seeing that their temples are not destroyed, may remove error from their hearts, and knowing and adoring the true God, may the more familiarly resort to the places to which they have been accustomed.
Side 86 - English, determined upon, viz., that the temples of the idols in that nation ought not to be destroyed ; but let the idols that are in them be destroyed ; let holy water be made and sprinkled in the said temples, let altars be erected, and relics placed.
Side 12 - ... hay-fields, or the proportion of cattle to be turned into the common pasture, exists still in the manorial courts and in the meetings of the townships : the very customs of relief and surrender which are often regarded as distinctly feudal, are remnants of the polity of the time when every transfer of property required the witness of the community, to whose membership the new tenant was thereby admitted."1 V.— THE PARISH.
Side 12 - This court-baron is of two natures : the one is a customary court, of which we formerly spoke, appertaining entirely to the copyholders, in which their estates are transferred by surrender and admittance and other matters transacted relative to their tenures only. The other...
Side 78 - ... and such churchwardens and overseers of the poor and their successors, shall and may, and they are hereby empowered to accept, take and hold, in the nature of a body corporate, for and on behalf of the parish, all .such buildings, lands and hereditaments, and also all other buildings, lands and hereditaments belonging to such parish...
Side 76 - ... facie pass to the allottees of the land abutting on the lane, the allotments on each side extending to the middle of the lane, although described as bounded by the lane.
Side 86 - And because they are wont to sacrifice many oxen in honor of the devils, let them celebrate a religious and solemn festival, not slaughtering the beasts for devils, but to be consumed by themselves, to the praise of God. Some solemnity must be exchanged for them, as that on the day of the dedication, or the natal days of holy martyrs,* whose relics are there deposited, they may build themselves booths of the boughs of trees, about those churches which have been turned to that use from temples, and...
Side 65 - ... fees, views of frankpledge, escheats, reliefs, mines, quarries, goods and chattels of felons and fugitives, felons of themselves, and put in exigent, deodands, free warrens, and all other royalties and seigniories, rights and jurisdictions, privileges and hereditaments whatsoever.