Henry VIII and the English Monasteries: An Attempt to Illustrate the History of Their Suppression, Tom 2John Hodges, 1889 |
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Strona 15
... York , the com- missioners first arrived on June 13th , and it was not till August 31st that the final steps were taken , and the nuns turned out of their house . During that period Isabel Ward , the prioress , had been obliged to ...
... York , the com- missioners first arrived on June 13th , and it was not till August 31st that the final steps were taken , and the nuns turned out of their house . During that period Isabel Ward , the prioress , had been obliged to ...
Strona 23
... York- Strype , " Ecc . Mems . , " ed . 1822 , p . 395. The patent for the continuance of Stixwold is dated 9th July , ao 29 Hen . VIII . ( 1537 ) . " Rot . Pat . , " 29 Hen . VIII . , Part i . , m . 29. The letter is evidence that much ...
... York- Strype , " Ecc . Mems . , " ed . 1822 , p . 395. The patent for the continuance of Stixwold is dated 9th July , ao 29 Hen . VIII . ( 1537 ) . " Rot . Pat . , " 29 Hen . VIII . , Part i . , m . 29. The letter is evidence that much ...
Strona 24
... York- shire monasteries , being no less than £ 3,460 11s . id . , and the almost equal amount of £ 3,062 8s . old . from those in Lincolnshire . It will be seen subse- ( Exch . Augt . Office Mins . Accts . , ann . 27-28 Hen . VIII ...
... York- shire monasteries , being no less than £ 3,460 11s . id . , and the almost equal amount of £ 3,062 8s . old . from those in Lincolnshire . It will be seen subse- ( Exch . Augt . Office Mins . Accts . , ann . 27-28 Hen . VIII ...
Strona 26
... York to induce a lewd canon and his flock , if possible , to surrender his house of £ 140 good lands and only 40 marks of it in spiritual tithes . I had contrived , " he adds , " this matter long before now , if a little false knave in York ...
... York to induce a lewd canon and his flock , if possible , to surrender his house of £ 140 good lands and only 40 marks of it in spiritual tithes . I had contrived , " he adds , " this matter long before now , if a little false knave in York ...
Strona 27
... York . Two days later his wish was gratified , and he received the surrender ; a few days later still , he and Dr. Legh took the resignation of the priory of Hornby , in Lancashire . This was a poor place , and had even to borrow a seal ...
... York . Two days later his wish was gratified , and he received the surrender ; a few days later still , he and Dr. Legh took the resignation of the priory of Hornby , in Lancashire . This was a poor place , and had even to borrow a seal ...
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Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
abbess abbey abbot Accts appear Aske attainder Augt bells Benedictine bishop brethren Bridlington Calendar canons chancellor Chapter House Chapter House Bk church Cistercian commons convent Corr Court of Augmentation Crumwell Crumwell's declared destruction dissolution divers Doncaster duke of Norfolk England examinat examination friars given Glastonbury grace granted hath Henry Henry's Hexham Ibid Ingworth insurgents Jervaulx jewels John king king's highness lands Layton Legh letter Lincoln Lincolnshire Lincolnshire rising living London lord Darcy lordship Louth matter Misc monastery monastic monks nuns obtained ounces pardon parliament pension persons Pilgrimage of Grace plate poor pope possession priest prior prioress R. O. Crum R. O. Exch R. O. State Papers received religion religious houses royal commissioners says sent servants shillings silver spoil suppression supreme head surrender Thomas tion traitors treason treasurer unto VIII Whalley William writes wrote York Yorkshire
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 512 - ... grievously whipped and burned through the gristle of the right ear with a hot iron of the compass of an inch about, as a manifestation of his wicked life, and due punishment received for the same.
Strona 316 - The persons that cast the lead into fodders, plucked up all the seats in the choir, wherein the monks sat when they said service ; which were like to the seats in minsters, and burned them, and melted the lead therewithall: although there was wood plenty within a flight shot of them...
Strona 418 - ... parlours were hung with altar-cloths ; their tables and beds covered with copes, instead of carpets and coverlids ; and many made carousing cups of the sacred chalices, as once Belshazzar celebrated his drunken feast in the sanctified vessels of the Temple. It was a sorry house, and not worth the naming, which had not somewhat of this furniture in it, though it were only a fair large cushion made of a cope or altar-cloth, to adorn their windows, or make their chairs appear to have somewhat in...
Strona 64 - How presumptuous then are ye, the rude commons of one shire, and that one of the most brute and beastly of the whole realm...
Strona 442 - Yet it is certain, that, in this age, small merits of courtiers met with a prodigious recompence for their service. Not only all the cooks, but the meanest turn-broach in the king's kitchen, did lick his fingers.
Strona 488 - We will not receive the new service, because it is but like a Christmas game; but we will have our old service of matins, mass, even-song, and procession in Latin, as it was before. And so we the Cornish men, whereof certain of us understand no English, utterly refuse this new English.
Strona 50 - Masters, there is a statute made whereby all persons be restrained to make their will upon their lands; for now the eldest son must have all his father's lands; and no person, to the payment of his debts, neither to the advancement of his daughters' marriages, can do nothing with their lands, nor cannot give to his youngest son any lands.
Strona 540 - ... being a divine work, not the mere creation of human genius. Instead of progressing on plan and system and from the will of a superior, it has shot forth and run out as if spontaneously, and has shaped itself according to events, from an irrepressible fulness...
Strona 513 - Competition, in fact, has only become in any considerable degree the governing principle of contracts, at a comparatively modern period. The farther we look back into history, the more we see all transactions and engagements under the influence of fixed customs. The reason is evident. Custom is the most powerful protector of the weak against the strong ; their sole protector where there are no laws or government adequate to the purpose.
Strona 168 - March ne^t, because the days are now so very short ; and from such time as I begin I trust shortly to dispatch it after such fashion, that when all is finished, I trust your lordship hath appointed me to do : and thus the Holy Ghost ever preserve your lordship in honour. At York, this 14th day of November, 1558, by Your lordship's most bounden headman, Richard Bellyeys.
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