Sources |
- [source4071148053] Hugh Bardolf, 1st Lord Bardolf (1259-1304), The Peerage.com, (Publication Date: 1259
Media: Website / URL).
Hugh Bardolf, 1st Lord Bardolf was born circa 29 September 1259.1 He was the son of William Bardolf and Julian de Gournay.1 He married Isabel Aguillon, daughter of Sir Robert d'Aguillon and Joan de Ferrers, before 1282.1 He died in September 1304.1
He was appointed Knight.1 He fought in the French and Scottish wars.1 On 29 November 1295 he had seizin of his mother's lands.1 He was created 1st Lord Bardolf [England by writ] on 6 February 1298/99.1
Child of Hugh Bardolf, 1st Lord Bardolf and Isabel Aguillon: Thomas Bardolf, 2nd Lord Bardolf+2 b. 4 Oct 1282, d. 15 Dec 1329
Citations:
1. [S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume I, page 417. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
2. [S6] Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume I, page 418.
http://thepeerage.com/p10273.htm#i102728
- [source4071148054] Hugh Bardolf, 1st Lord Bardolph (1259-1304), Our Royal, Titled, Noble, and Commoner Ancestors, (Publication Date: 10 APR 2022
Media: Website / URL).
Father Sir William Bardolf, Constable of Nottingham Castle3 d. 1 Dec 1289
Mother Juliane de Gournay3 d. c 6 Nov 1295
Sir Hugh Bardolf, 1st Lord Bardolph was born circa 29 September 1259 at of Wormgay, Norfolk, Shelford, Nottinghamshire, England.4 He married Isabel d' Aguillon, daughter of Sir Robert d' Aguillon, Sheriff of Surrey & Sussex and Joan de Ferrers, before 1282; They had 2 sons (Sir Thomas, 2nd Lord Bardolf; & William) & 2 daughters (Nichole, wife of Sir Robert de Arderne, & of Sir Thomas Wale; & Margery (Margaret), wife of Sir Michael de Poynings).4,2 Sir Hugh Bardolf, 1st Lord Bardolph died circa 20 September 1304.4
Family: Isabel d' Aguillon b. 25 Mar 1258, d. c 28 May 1323
Children:
Margery Bardolf+5,4,6 d. a 24 Feb 1334
Sir Thomas Bardolf, 2nd Lord Bardolf+4 b. 4 Oct 1282, d. 15 Dec 1328
Citations:
1. [S4941] Unknown author, The Complete Peerage, by Cokayne, Vol. I, p. 417; Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists by F. L. Weis, p. 225.
2. [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 102.
3. [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. I, p. 251.
4. [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. I, p. 251-252.
5. [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. III, p. 263.
6. [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 419.
https://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p568.htm#i17073
- [source4071148055] Hugh Bardolf (1259-1304), "Find A Grave Index", (Media: Website / URL).
Name Hugh Bardolf
Death Date Sep 1304
Birth Date 29 Sep 1259
Event Type Burial
Event Date 1304
Event Place Shelford, Rushcliffe Borough, Nottinghamshire, England
Event Place (Original) Shelford, Rushcliffe Borough, Nottinghamshire, England
Cemetery Shelford Priory
Photograph Included N
Note Contains Biography
---
Baron Bardolf, Sir Hugh of Wormgay
Hugh was the son of William Bardolf and Julian de Gournay. Grandson of William and Nichola Bardolf, Hugh de Gournay and Mathilda.
He married Isabel Aguillon, the daughter of Robert Aguillon and Joan de Ferrers and heiress of Addington. They had one son, Sir Thomas, who married Agnes de Grandison.
He was summoned to Parliament from 06 February 1299, to 02 June 1302. He was involved in wars against Scotland and France.
"Find A Grave Index," database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QV2Y-BM65 : 11 June 2020), Hugh Bardolf, 1304; Burial, , ; citing record ID , Find a Grave, http://www.findagrave.com.
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/81510979/hugh-bardolf
- [source4071148056] Wikipedia biography for Hugh de Bardolf, (Publication Date: 03 JAN 2023
Media: Website / URL).
Hugh Bardulf or Hugh Bardolf (died c. 1203) was a medieval English administrator and royal justice. Known for his legal expertise, he also served as a financial administrator. He served three kings of England before his death.
Bardulf began his royal service under King Henry II of England, where he was a steward to the royal household. He also served as a royal justice and a sheriff during Henry's reign, and continued as sheriff under Henry's son and successor, Richard I. Because Bardulf was a vassal of Richard's younger brother John, who rebelled against his older brother, Bardulf was denounced briefly as a traitor to Richard. He was quickly restored to royal service, however, and continued in service throughout the rest of Richard's reign and into the reign of John. Bardulf died sometime before 1203, and his heir was his brother, Robert Bardulf.
Early life
Historians are divided on Hugh Bardulf's ancestry. Katharine Keats-Rohan says that he was the son of Hamelin Bardulf, a tenant of Hugh Bigod, who held land in Suffolk.[1] Ralph V. Turner, revising John Horace Round's entry in the Dictionary of National Biography for the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography says that Hugh was the son of a Hugh Bardulf who died around 1176. According to Turner and Round, the younger Hugh's mother was Isabel, who may have been a member of the Twist family from Lincolnshire.[2] The younger Hugh acquired land at Waddington, Lincolnshire as a tenant of Ranulf de Gernon, 4th Earl of Chester, sometime in the middle 1140s.[1]
Royal service
In 1181, Bardulf was at the court of King Henry II of England, where he was steward,[2] or dapifer, an office he held throughout Henry's reign and which he may have held throughout the next reign also.[3] He held that office until Henry's death in 1189. From about 1185 until 1203, Bardulf was a royal justice almost annually, usually as a justice of eyre rather than sitting at Westminster. He performed the duties of sheriff for the following counties: Cornwall from 1184–1187, Wiltshire from 1187 to 1189, Somerset during 1188 and 1189 along with Dorset during the same period, the counties of Staffordshire, Warwickshire and Leicestershire during 1190 and 1191, Yorkshire from 1191 to 1194, Westmorland from 1191 to 1199, Northumberland from 1194 to 1198, Cumberland during 1198 and 1199, Cornwall again from 1199 to 1200 along with Devonshire, and Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire from 1200 to 1203.[2]
In 1194, Bardulf was mentioned on the escheat roll as responsible for the farm of lands held by Osbert de Bayeux, an archdeacon of York.[4]
Under Richard and John
In 1189, Hugh was one of only five sitting sheriffs who retained their office when Richard took the throne; the others included Geoffrey fitzPeter, William Briwerre, and Ranulf de Glanvill.[5] However, in 1189, Bardulf did lose custody of Salisbury Castle, which he had held under Henry.[6] Henry had given Bardulf the manor and barony of Brampton in Devonshire, but when Richard took the throne, the king took back Brampton, and gave Bardulf the manor of Hoo in Kent instead.[7]
Although Bardulf set out with the new King, Richard I on the Third Crusade, he turned back after a period in Messina, and returned to England. There, he was part of the administration during the Justiciarship of Hugh de Puiset, the Bishop of Durham, and William Longchamp, the Bishop of Ely.[2] Longchamp gave him custody of Kenilworth Castle.[8] Bardulf then was involved in the attempts of Walter de Coutances to remove Longchamp from office, which led to Longchamp excommunicating Bardulf. In 1193, Bardulf helped with the defences of Doncaster against the forces of Prince John, Richard's brother, who was rebelling against Richard while the king was on crusade. However, Bardulf refused to besiege Tickhill near Doncaster, because he was a vassal of John's, which led to him being denounced as a traitor.[2] Although he was required to surrender his shrievalty of Yorkshire, he was immediately appointed to other sheriff offices.[2] On 31 March 1194, Hugh was named an escheator for estates confiscated by Richard in the northern part of England in relation to John's rebellion.[9] While Richard was in captivity in Germany in 1193, Bardulf, along with William Marshall, Geoffrey fitzPeter and William Briwerre, was a recipient of letters from the captive king, urging the election of Hubert Walter as Archbishop of Canterbury.[10]
Bardulf was also a financial administrator. He served as a Baron of the Exchequer during the reigns of Henry, Richard and John.[2] In 1196, he was the collector of taxation in seven shires, along with Philip of Poitou, the bishop-elect of Durham.[11] Around 1197, Hugh was named as responsible for the "bail and custody" of the Jewish population in England, along with William of Sainte-Mère-Eglise, the Bishop of London, who was his fellow escheator in the north.[3] The office in charge of the bail and custody of the Jews was probably a forerunner of the office of Keeper of the Jews.[12]
Bardulf continued to serve Richard until the king's death, and then served John, who became king, until sometime before Michaelmas 1203, when records show that Bardulf was known to be deceased.[2]
Legacy and personal life
Bardulf was known for his legal expertise, which led to him being one of the few justices mentioned by name in Glanvill, an early medieval English legal text, although whether by the original author or by a glossator, is unclear.[13] His long career as a justice helped create a sense of continuity in judicial matters through the reigns of the Angevin kings.[14] He remained on such good terms with Hubert Walter, that when Walter was appointed chancellor at the beginning of John's reign, Bardulf made a comment to the new chancellor that included a pointed barb about the last Archbishop of Canterbury to also be chancellor, Thomas Becket. Bardulf was on good enough terms that he was able to tease Walter that "We have never heard nor seen an archbishop become a chancellor, but we have seen a chancellor become an archbishop."[15]
The justice married Mabel de Limesy, daughter of Gerard de Limesy, and coheir with her sisters of their brother John de Limesy, with the marriage taking place in 1200. When he died, his heir was Robert Bardulf,[1] his brother.[2] Hugh Bardulf gave land capable of pasturing 500 sheep to Barlings Abbey.[16] Robert, his heir, offered a £1,000 fine to receive the inheritance, and William de Briouze made an identical offer for the right to marry his son to Mabel, Hugh's widow.[2]
After Bardulf's death, a legal case was brought against Bardulf's chaplain and constable, alleging that Bardulf had allowed his two servants to hear a case that should have been heard by the justice. The litigants charged that the two servants had wrongly decided the case, and after hearing the allegations, the royal justices at Westminster agreed and restored the disputed property to the litigants.[17]
Citations
Keats-Rohan Domesday Descendants p. 162
Round "Bardolf, Hugh (d. 1203)" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
Turner English Judiciary pp. 82–84
Burton "Bayeux, Osbert de (fl. 1120–1184)" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
Turner and Heiser Reign of Richard Lionheart p. 99
Turner and Heiser Reign of Richard Lionheart p. 104
Turner English Judiciary pp. 111–112
Turner and Heiser Reign of Richard Lionheart p. 116
Gillingham Richard I pp. 270–271
West Justiciarship in England p. 79
Mitchell Taxation p. 291
Turner English Judiciary p. 86
Richardson and Sayres Governance of Mediaeval England p. 274 and footnote 2
Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings p. 192
Quoted in Turner English Judiciary p. 121
Turner "Religious Patronage" Albion p. 9
Turner "Reputation of Royal Judges" Albion p. 307
References
Bartlett, Robert C. (2000). England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings: 1075–1225. Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-822741-8.
Burton, Janet (2004). "Bayeux, Osbert de (fl. 1120–1184)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 15 August 2010. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
Gillingham, John (1999). Richard I. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-07912-5.
Keats-Rohan, K. S. B. (1999). Domesday Descendants: A Prosopography of Persons Occurring in English Documents, 1066–1166: Pipe Rolls to Cartae Baronum. Ipswich, UK: Boydell Press. ISBN 0-85115-863-3.
Mitchell, Sydney Knox (1971). Taxation in Medieval England. Hamden, CT: Archon Books. ISBN 0-208-00956-6.
Richardson, H. G.; Sayles, G. O. (1963). The Governance of Mediaeval England: From the Conquest to Magna Carta. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. OCLC 504298.
Round, J. H. (2004). "Bardolf, Hugh (d. 1203)". In Turner, Ralph V. (ed.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/1359. Retrieved 16 May 2010. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
Turner, Ralph V. (2008). The English Judiciary in the age of Glanvill and Bracton, c. 1176–1239 (Reprint ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-07242-7.
Turner, Ralph V. (Spring 1986). "Religious Patronage of Angevin Royal Administrators, c. 1170–1239". Albion. 18 (1): 1–21. doi:10.2307/4048700. JSTOR 4048700.
Turner, Ralph V. (Winter 1979). "The Reputation of Royal Judges Under the Angevin Kings". Albion. 11 (4): 301–316. doi:10.2307/4048542. JSTOR 4048542.
Turner, Ralph V.; Heiser, Richard R. (2000). The Reign of Richard Lionheart: Ruler of the Angevin Empire 1189–1199. The Medieval World. Harlow, UK: Longman. ISBN 0-582-25660-7.
West, Francis (1966). The Justiciarship in England 1066–1232. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. OCLC 953249.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Bardulf
- [source4071148057] Inquisitions Post Mortem (IPMs) for Hugh Bardolf alias Bardulf, (Publication Date: 1304).
236. HUGH BARDOLF alias BARDULF.
Writ [ (fn. 1) 20 Aug. 32 Edw. I. [1304]] (missing).
YORK; WESTRIDING. Inq. Monday the feast of St. Matthew, 32 Edw. I.
Herthill. A capital messuage &c. 46a. arable in demesne, 5a. meadow, and 57s. 1 1/2d. rents of tenants at will (named), held of John de Novo Mercato by homage and service of 1/4 knight’s fee.
Thomas his son, aged 21 on the day of St. Francis last, is his next heir.
DERBY. Inq. Friday before St. Matthew, 32 Edw. I.
Okebrok. A capital messuage &c. 12 bovates of land whereof 12a. make a bovate, 50a. land of assart, and 10a. meadow, in demesne, 55s. 3 3/4d. rents of free tenants including lands in Ambaldiston, 7l. 9s. 1 1/2d. rents of bondmen, and 28s. 10 3/4d. rents of cottars (all named), and a park, held of the king in chief by service of 1/2 knight’s fee, pertaining to the barony of Schelford.
He held no other lands &c. in the county.
Heir as above, aged 21 and more.
NOTTINGHAM. Inq. … Sept. 32 Edw. I (defective).
Stoke Bardolf. The manor (full extent given with names of free tenants, customers and cottars), including a ferry over the Trent, but there is no crossing except in the winter, and a fishery with a weir in the Trent, held of the king in chief by service of 1/2 knight’s fee.
Heir as first above.
Writ [ (fn. 2) 20 Aug. 32 Edw. I] (missing).
NOTTINGHAM. Inq. Friday before St. Luke, 32 Edw. I.
Schelforde. 10a. meadow, 34 free tenants rendering 40s. 5 1/4d., and one rendering 1lb. cummin and another rendering 6 iron arrow heads or shafts (?) (sex ferros sagitarum sive flecchas), 13 bondmen rendering 4l. yearly, with their works, and a court worth 13s. 4d. yearly, held of the king in chief, with other tenements in divers counties, by service of a moiety of a barony.
Thomas Bardolf, aged 22 and more, is his next heir.
BEDFORD. Inq. 23 Sept. 32 Edw. I.
Houtone by Donesstapele. 60s. 1d. yearly rent from 4 free tenants held of the king in chief as a member of the barony of Gorney, which was of the said Hugh.
Thomas his son, aged 21 and more, is his next heir.
BUCKINGHAM. Inq. made at Wenge, 22 Sept. 32 Edw. I.
Crofton. A messuage, 80a. arable, 5a. meadow, 11 free tenants rendering 24s. yearly, and 1/2 virgate of land held by a tenant in villenage, held of the inheritance of Isabel his wife, of the heirs of William de Say in chief by service of 1/2 knight’s fee.
Bledelowe. 16s. yearly rent from Christiana daughter of Reginald de Hamdene for a water-mill.
Huccote. 6s. yearly rent from Walter le Graunt for certain tenements. All held of the king in chief, as members of the barony of Gorneie.
Wendovere. 18s. 11d. yearly rent from 6 free tenants of tenements which are held of the heirs of William Fenes, service unspecified.
Heir as first above.
HERTFORD. Inq. made at Cestrehunte, 28 Oct. 32 Edw. I.
Watton Stone. A messuage and a carucate of land held of the inheritance of Isabel his wife, who still survives, of the king in chief by serjeanty of finding in the war of Wales a footman with bow and arrows for forty days at his own costs.
Heir as above, aged 22 on the day of St. Francis last; and this the jurors know because he was born at Watton on that day, 10 Edw. I, and each of them was then resident in the neighbourhood of the manor. The inquisition was made at Cestrehunte because the said Thomas was born at Watton Stone, and there were present the prior of Royston (Cruce Rois), the prior of Hertford, the prior of Wilmondele, John de la Legh, sheriff of Hertford, and others, who being examined agreed that the said Thomas is 22 years of age and more.
SOUTHAMPTON. Inq. made at Wordy, 2 Oct. 32 Edw. I.
Grutham. A grange and oxhouse thatched with straw, a garden, 50a. arable, 8a. great wood, 2a. meadow, and 16 free tenants rendering 4l. 0s. 3 1/2d. yearly.
Emnesworth. 16 customers rendering 4 marks yearly.
All held of the king in chief, service unknown; they are the inheritance of Isabel late his wife, and descended to her after the death of Robert Aguilloun her father, as his daughter and heir; which Robert died now 18 years ago, after the said Hugh married her and begat issue of her; and after the said Robert’s death the same were taken into the king’s hand and afterwards restored to the said Isabel as heir.
Heir as last above; which the jurors recollect because he was born at Watton, co. Hertford, in 10 Edw. II, and there was much talk about the matter.
SUSSEX. Inq. made at Lewes, 9 Oct. 32 Edw. I.
Berlyng. The manor (full extent given) held of the king in chief as a member of the said Hugh’s barony of Gorneye.
Bercampe. The manor (full extent given) held of the earl of Warenn by service of 1/4 knight’s fee.
Heir as above, aged 22.
SUSSEX. Inq. 10 Oct. 32 Edw. I.
Percynge alias Percing. The manor (full extent given) held of the earl of Warenn, of the inheritance of Isabel his wife, daughter and heir of Robert Aguillon, who survives, by service of a knight’s fee; which inheritance, with other lands, descended to them after the death of the said Robert, after marriage solemnized between them.
Plompton. The manor (full extent given) held jointly by the said Hugh and Isabel, by the gift of William Bardolf, father of the said Hugh, to hold to them for life and to the heirs of the said Hugh lawfully begotten, of the earl of Warenn, service unknown.
Heir as last above.
SURREY. Inq. 14 Oct. 32 Edw. I.
Adyngton. The manor (full extent given), including the easement of the grange of Waldyngeham, held of the king in chief of the inheritance of Is[abel] his wife, daughter and heir of Robert Aguillon, who survives, by service of finding a cook at the king’s coronation to make for the king a dish called ‘mees de Geroun’ at the king’s charges in a pot of clay (olla lutea); which inheritance with other lands descended to the said Hugh and Is[abel], after the death of the said Robert, after marriage contracted between them; and (there are due) thence 50d. (yearly) for sheriff’s aid, 5s. to John de Bures, 5s. to the warden of Mertonehall, Oxford, 2s. to Robert Russel, 4d. to the lord of Wykham, 6d. to the prior of St. Mary’s, Suthwerk, and 1lb. cummin, price 1 1/2d., to the prior of Leuesham.
Heir as last above.
KENT. Inq. 2 Oct. 32 Edw. I.
Hoo. Lands &c. worth 100s. yearly, of the inheritance of Isabel his wife, daughter of Robert Agylon, held of the abbot of Redyng, service unspecified.
He held no other tenements in the county.
LINCOLN. Inq. 23 Oct. 32 Edw. I.
Westburg. The manor with the hamlets of Dodington, Stubton, Stokking and Thorp (extents given), including a several pasture called Hogate Wro, carrying (averagium) worth 13s. 4d. by all the customers to (apud) Raueswell towards the east and Hokesworth and Newerk towards the west, to Heygham towards the north and to Graham towards the south, from the feast of Easter (Sancti Pasch) to the feast of St. Michael, held of the king in chief as a member of the said Hugh’s barony of Sheldeford, rendering also 10s. yearly for the aid of the sheriff of Lincoln.
Heir as above, aged 22 and more.
LINCOLN. Inq. 22 Oct. 32 Edw. I (defaced).
Riskinton. The manor with the hamlets of Diggeby, Leuesingham alias Lesingham, Rokesham and Brauncewelle (full extents given), including a several pasture called Redefen and several marshes called Brendefen, Woldale (?) and Amwykfen, held of the king in chief as a member of the said Hugh’s barony of Sheldeford, rendering also 32s. yearly for the aid of the sheriff of Lincoln.
Filingham. A capital messuage, a water-mill, 216a. arable by the greater hundred, 32a. meadow, 15 free tenants holding 15 bovates of land, 21 customers each holding 2 bovates of land, who do 321 works by the greater hundred, 6 cottars rendering 6s. 6d. yearly, 6 cocks and 6 hens, pleas &c. of court worth 6s. 8d., and bondmen’s aid (ausil’) worth 20s. yearly, held of Henry de Lacy, earl of Lincoln, by service of a knight’s fee, with two attendances at the court of the fee of ‘la Haye’ at Lincoln at the feasts of St. Michael and Easter.
Heir as last above.
SUFFOLK. Inq. Tuesday the morrow of St. Matthew, 32 Edw. I.
Bures. The manor (extent given) held of the inheritance of Isabel his wife of the king in chief, by service of 1/4 knight’s fee.
Heir as above, age unknown because he was not born in Suffolk as the jurors believe.
NORFOLK. Inq. 17 Oct. 32 Edw. I (defaced).
Wirmegeye. The manor (extent given), with lands, rents &c. in Rungeton, Fincham, Stowe and Qwinebergh, viz.—
Rungeton. 32s. 1 1/2d. assised rents of free tenants, 19s. 11d. from customers and cottars holding 218a. land in villenage, works, hens, and pleas &c. of court with view of frank pledge.
Fincham. A capital messuage, 71a. arable, 1a. meadow, 3a. several pasture, assised rents of 13 free tenants, customers holding 80a. land in villenage, autumn works, and pleas &c. of court.
Stowe and Well. A capital messuage, 240a. arable, 20a. meadow, 5a. wood, a marsh, a fishery at Westwere(?) and Estwere, a windmill, a rent on the eve of Holy Trinity, worth 2s., rents of free tenants, customers and cottars, and rents of hens and 57 sticks of salted eels, works &c. and pleas &c. of court.
Quinebergh. A capital messuage, 140a. arable, 14a. meadow, 8a. several pasture, a wood, 10a. alder, 3 windmills, 60s. rents of 9 free tenants, 12l. 3s. 8d. assised rents of 180 customers and cottars who hold 444(?)a. land in Whinebergh, Jakesham, Gerveston, Reymereston, Thurston, Bergh, Mateshale and Shipedham, 19 geese, 342 hens, 1300 1/2 eggs, works &c. and pleas &c. of court.
All held of the king in chief by barony and paying 7s. every month for the guard (custodiam) of the king’s castle of Norwich, and 6s. 8d. for ‘waytefe’ yearly.
Cauntele. A capital messuage &c., 80a. arable, 10a. meadow, a several pasture, a salt marsh, 6a. of rushes (junccarie), 4a. wood, a wind-mill, assised rents of 21 free tenants and 90 customers and cottars, hens, works &c. and pleas &c. of court with view of frank pledge.
J E E S Sharp and A E Stamp, 'Inquisitions Post Mortem, Edward I, File 115', in Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem: Volume 4, Edward I (London, 1913), pp. 166-179. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/inquis-post-mortem/vol4/pp166-179 [accessed 22 January 2020].
- [source4071148052] L5XT-ZHK
FamilySearch.org, (Publication Date: 13 MAY 2023
Media: Website / URL).
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