rent from the priory. ref name Sele5 Salzman ed. Chartulary of the Priory of St. Peter at Sele ... at the urging of his mother Margaret. ref name Selexiii Salzman Introduction Chartulary ... Sele8 Salzman ed. Chartulary of the Priory of St. Peter at Sele pp. 8 9 ref and two small gifts of land. ref name Sele85 Salzman ed. Chartulary of the Priory of St. Peter at Sele pp. 85 87 ref Around ... previously paid to him and his ancestors. ref name Sele49 Salzman ed. Chartulary of the Priory of St ... 0 8063 1759 0 cite book author Salzman, L. F. chapter Introduction title The Chartulary of the Priory ... Salzman, L. F. editor title The Chartulary of the Priory of St. Peter at Sele publisher W. Heffer ... more details
, Royal Grants, and Donations, Monastic Chartulary, Muniments of Battle Abbey, Thomas Thorpe, London ... of early Yorkshire history. Levett came into possession of the Chartulary of St. John of Pontefract ..., 1835 ref The Chartulary was later published by the Yorkshire Archaeological Society , a publication ..., who gave him a Chartulary of the Cluniacs of Pontefract. ref http books.google.com books?id ...&hl en Index of Cartularies, Thomas Phillips, 1839 ref Within the Chartulary, Dodsworth ... dono Tomae Levett de High Melton, in anno 1626 27. How Levett came into possession of the Chartulary ... more details
No footnotes date June 2010 For the hoax figure, see Roger Dodsworth story Roger Dodsworth 1585&ndash 1654 was an English Antiquarian antiquary . Life He was born at Newton Grange, Oswaldkirk , near Helmsley , Yorkshire , in the house of his maternal grandfather, Ralph Sandwith. He devoted himself early to antiquarian research, in which he was greatly assisted by the fact that his father, Matthew Dodsworth , was registrar of York Minster , and could give him access to the records preserved there. He married Holcroft Hesketh, the widow of Laurence Rawsthorne of Hutton Grange, Penwortham , Lancashire where he subsequently resided until his death in August 1654. Works At various times in his life he was able to study the records in the library of Sir Robert Cotton, in Skipton Castle and in the Tower of London . He collected a vast store of materials for a history of Yorkshire , a Monasticon Anglicanum , and an English baronage. The second of these was published with considerable additions by Sir William Dugdale 2 vols., 1655 and 1661 . The manuscripts were left to Thomas Fairfax, 3rd Lord Fairfax of Cameron , who by his will bequeathed them 160 volumes in all to the Bodleian Library at Oxford . Portions have been printed by the Yorkshire Archaeological Society Dodsworth s Yorkshire Notes , 1884 and the Chetham Society copies of Lancashire postmortem inquisitions, 1875 1876 . Dodsworth was aided in his study of early Yorkshire by Thomas Levett , a native of High Melton, Yorkshire and High Sheriff of Rutland , who came into possession of the Chartulary of St. John of Pontefract, a collection of early Yorkshire documents kept by monks at the Cluniac abbey. In 1626 27 Levett gave the documents to Dodsworth. How Levett came to possess them is unknown, but the Levetts had been prominent in Yorkshire for centuries, and had once controlled Roche Abbey . References 1911 Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Dodsworth, Roger ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE ... more details
A chartophylax lang el , from , document , guard, keeper , sometimes also referred to as a chartoularios , was an ecclesiastical officer in charge of official documents and records in the Greek Orthodox Church in Byzantine times. The post existed in Constantinople as well as the provincial dioceses, and holders of the post were responsible for the archives and chancery. Some monasteries also included a chartophylax or, for the women s convents, a chartophylakissa , in charge of their records. Gradually, by virtue of his office s importance, the chartophylax of the Patriarch of Constantinople rose to become one of the most important officials in the clergy, despite his nominally low rank. George Codinus Codinus calls the Grand Chartophylax the judge of all causes, and the patriarch s right arm. He adds that this officer was the depository or keeper of all the charter s relating to the ecclesiastical rights stored in the chartophylakeion Archives . In addition, the chartophylax presided over matrimonial causes, and was the main intermediary between the clergy and the patriarch, controlling his correspondence and access to him. He drew up all sentences and decisions of the patriarch, who signed and sealed them he presided in the synods in the patriarch s absence and took cognizance of all ecclesiastical and civil matters and causes, whether among the clergy, the monks, or the people. The chartophylax took precedence over all the bishop s, though he was only a deacon . On occasion, he discharged the functions of the priest s he had twelve notaries under him. The chartophylax of Constantinople was analogous to the chartulary of the See of Rome , but far more powerful. References Chartophylax . Oxford English Dictionary . Oxford University Press. Second Edition 1989. citation editor first Alexander editor last Kazhdan editor link Alexander Kazhdan title Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium publisher Oxford University Press year 1991 isbn 978 0 19 504652 6 p ... more details
Oddone di Monferrato ref Othon de Montferrat, Ottone Candido, Otto of Toneno, Ottone da Tonengo. ref died before 23 January 1251 was an Italian papal diplomat and Cardinal Catholicism Cardinal . He was of the noble house of Monferrat , son of Marquis Guglielmo VI de Monferrato . He was created Cardinal in 1227. He undertook numerous missions as papal legate for Pope Gregory IX in northern Europe, including mediation between the Archbishop of Canterbury and Archbishop of York in London in 1237. In English history he is usually known as Cardinal Otto . When in July 1237 he came to Osney Abbey , a brawl broke out between a group of scholars from the Oxford University university and the cardinal s men in which the legate s cook was killed. Otto himself was locked for safety in the abbey tower, emerging unscathed to lay the city under interdict in reprisal. In 1240 he visited Shaftesbury Abbey and confirmed a charter of 1191, the first entered in the Glastonbury chartulary . He became Bishop of Porto e Santa Rufina in 1244. References Reflist External links http www.fiu.edu mirandas bios1227.htm Monferrato Biography Use dmy dates date September 2010 Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Oddone Of Montferrat ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1251 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Oddone Of Montferrat Category 1251 deaths Category Italian cardinals Category Cardinal bishops of Porto Category Diplomats of the Holy See Category House of Aleramici de Oddone di Tonengo fr Oddone de Monferrato pl Ottone de Tonengo ... more details
Sulcard floruit c . 1080 was a Benedictine monk at St. Peter s, Westminster Abbey , and the author of the first history of the abbey. Little is known of Sulcard, whose unusual name may reflect either Anglo Saxon or Norman parentage. ref name Harvey Harvey, Sulcard fl. c. 1080 . ref His entrance into the monastery may be dated to the 1050s and it is possible that he was previously attached to the Rochester Cathedral cathedral priory at Rochester , which receives a noticeable degree of attention in his work. ref name Harvey Prologus de Construccione Westmonasterii File Westminster Abbey cloister.jpg thumb 325px right The present day cloister of Westminster Abbey The sole work which Sulcard is known to have produced is the so called Prologus de Construccione Westmonasterii Prologue concerning the Building of Westminster , dedicated to Abbot Vitalis of Bernay c . 1076 ?1085 and hence datable to about 1080. ref Barlow, The Life of King Edward who Rests at Westminster , p. xxxvi and xxxvi note 100. ref It relates the history of the abbey, beginning in the time of Mellitus , bishop of London 604 17 , with the foundation of its first church on what was then Thorney Island London Thorney Island by a wealthy Londoner and his wife. It concludes with the dedication of a new church erected by King Edward the Confessor r. 1042 1066 for the monastery. In the dedication to Vitalis, Sulcard writes that he intended his work to serve as a commemorative book codex memorialis for his house. He was primarily interested in promoting the cult of St. Peter , the abbey s patron saint, who is said to have miraculously appeared in the early 7th century to dedicate the church in person. Two copies of the history are extant, the earliest being a chartulary from Winchester c . 1300 , BL, Cotton MS Faustina A.iii, fols. 11r 16v. The other copy is in BL, Cotton MS Titus A.viii, fols. 2r 5v. The title is not contemporary, but derives from the heading in the former chartulary, to which it serves as a ... more details
Other uses coord 53.507 2.985 display title infobox UK place country England latitude 53.5082 longitude 2.9851 official name Lunt population metropolitan borough Metropolitan Borough of Sefton Sefton region North West England metropolitan county Merseyside constituency westminster Sefton Central UK Parliament constituency Sefton Central post town LIVERPOOL postcode district L29 postcode area L dial code 0151 os grid reference SD3491802708 static image static image caption london distance Lunt is a small village in the borough of Metropolitan Borough of Sefton Sefton in Merseyside , England , close to Sefton, Sefton Sefton Village and to the west of Maghull and is in the L29 postcode. History The name derives from either the Old Norse word Lundr or the Old Swedish word lunder , both meaning grove or copse . This was likely a reference to the remnants of a large ancient forest that existed in the area at the time the settlement was founded. ref cite web url http www.lunt village.co.uk home index.htm title Lunt A place with a name, a name with a history work A. Farthing year 1995 accessdate 16 November 2007 ref The town was first documented in 1251 in the Chartulary of Cockersand Abbey, where it was referred to as de Lund . ref name BBC cite web url http news.bbc.co.uk 1 hi england merseyside 7338151.stm title Graffiti village name change plan work BBC date 2008 04 09 accessdate 2008 04 09 ref Vandals Residents are considering changing its name to tackle vandals who alter signs in the village. Roadsigns in Lunt have been repeatedly targeted by vandals who change the L to a Cunt C . A similar situation has arisen in the Austrian town of Fucking, Austria Fucking , where the town sign has been repeatedly stolen. However, as in Fucking, certain residents have been reluctant towards a name change, perceiving it as an erosion of the town s heritage. A proposed revision of the name is Launt, which would be pronounced in the same way. ref name BBC Governance From 1997 until 20 ... more details
Infobox UK place country Scotland official name Redgorton population population ref os grid reference NO089287 latitude 56.441649 longitude 3.479204 scots name Rochgorton unitary scotland Perth and Kinross lieutenancy scotland Perth and Kinross constituency westminster Ochil & South Perthshire constituency scottish parliament North Tayside Scottish Parliament constituency North Tayside constituency scottish parliament1 North East Scotland post town PERTH postcode district PH1 postcode area PH dial code 01738 static image static image caption london distance edinburgh distance File Redgorton.jpg thumb left Redgorton Church Redgorton is a settlement in Gowrie , Perth and Kinross , Scotland . It lies a few miles from the River Tay and the A9 road Great Britain A9 road , across the latter from Luncarty . It lies close to the Inveralmond Industrial Estate. Etymology The first recorded spelling of Redgorton was Rochgorton, this can be found in a charter of King David I preserved in the chartulary of Scone . The prefix of the current name, can be seen as translation of the Scottish Gaelic Gaelic word Roch, or Ruach, which means red. Gorton, or Garton, suggests a little field . The name as a whole, Redgorton, can be interpreted as the red field or field of blood, and it has been muted that it arose on account of the proximity of the Battle of Luncarty , which took place near Redgorton in c. 980AD between the Danes and the Scottish people Scots . ref http perthshire.blogspot.com 2007 12 redgorton perthshire scotland.html ref Further weight is added to this interpretation by the name, Battleby given to the Scottish Natural Heritage centre just outside Redgorton. It is important to note that there is much myth surrounding the battle. Most of which was propagated by the historian Hector Boece in his Scottish History of 1526. It likely the myth was generated a the bequest of the Clan Hay Hays of Errol, Perth and Kinross Errol to increase the legitimacy of them holding substantia ... more details
Infobox UK place country England official name Walmer Bridge latitude 53.712360 longitude 2.7896449 civil parish Little Hoole population 1,815 population ref ref http neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk dissemination LeadTableView.do?a 7&b 795824&c PR4 5RD&d 16&e 13&g 464112&i 1001x1003x1004&m 0&r 0&s 1317558949453&enc 1&dsFamilyId 779 Neighbourhood Statistics for Little Hoole CP Parish ref small Little Hoole parish, 2001 small shire district South Ribble shire county Lancashire region North West England constituency westminster South Ribble UK Parliament constituency South Ribble post town PRESTON postcode district PR4 postcode area PR dial code 01772 os grid reference SD4797924283 static image File Walmer Bridge Methodist church geograph.org.uk 158090.jpg 240px static image caption small Methodist Church demolished in 2011 small Walmer Bridge is a small village in Lancashire , England. Surrounding villages are Much Hoole and Longton, Lancashire Longton . History Walmer Bridge is first recorded in 1251 in the chartulary of Cockersand Abbey as Waldemurebruge . Walmer Bridge was once home to a large working mill factory mill which was working during the early 1900s . The factory bankrupt closed in 1931 due to lack of funds. Three decades later, it was demolished controlled demolition , in 1979. It is now a sheltered housing estate called Old Mill Court . The West Lancashire Railway used to run through some parts of the village. Little Hoole Primary School is situated on Dob Lane, however it used to be located on the corner of School Street where it was opened in the 1930s. The Wilkins brothers, W & R Wilkins , owners of the brewery malting down Marsh Lane in Longton, Lancashire Longton , originally owned the Walmer Bridge Inn and the Longton Arms . Being a wealthy family, the Wilkins opened the new Methodist chapel in 1894, situated next to the modern day Spar retailer Spar shop. ref http www.visitoruk.com historydetail.php?id 16873&f Preston Walmer Bridge and Hoole Hist ... more details
For the abbey near Paris see Abbey of St. Victor, Paris Image Abbaye Saint Victor Marseille .jpg thumb right Fortified tower of the Abbey of St. Victor Image St Victor entr e.jpg thumb right Entrance to abbey church The Abbey of St. Victor is a late Ancient Rome Roman former monastic foundation in Marseille in the south of France , named after the local soldier saint and martyr, Victor of Marseilles . History In about 415, John Cassian founded two monasteries of St. Victor at Marseille, one for men the later Abbey of St. Victor , the other for women. In the fifth century the monastery of St. Victor and the church of Marseille were greatly troubled by the Semipelagianism Semipelagian heresy, that began with certain writings of Cassian, and the layman Hilary and Saint Prosper of Aquitaine begged Augustine of Hippo Saint Augustine and Pope Celestine I for its suppression. In the eighth or ninth centuries both monasteries were destroyed by the Saracens , either in 731 or in 838, when the then abbess Saint Eusebia was martyred with 39 nuns. The nunnery was never re established. No rebuilding took place until the first half of the eleventh century when through the efforts of the then abbot, Saint Wiffred , the men s monastery was at last rebuilt. It soon recovered, and from the middle of the eleventh century its renown was such that from all points of the south appeals were sent to the abbots of this church to restore the religious life in decadent monasteries. The abbey long retained contact with the princes of Spain and Sardinia and even owned property in Syria. The polyptych of Saint Victor, compiled in 814, the large chartulary end of the eleventh and beginning of the twelfth century , and the small chartulary middle of the thirteen century ref edited by M. Gu rard ref , and containing documents from 683 to 1336, make it possible to understand to grasp the important economic r le of this great abbey in the Middle Ages. Saint Izarn d. 1048 , successor as abbot to Saint ... more details
Refimprove date April 2009 A cartulary or chartulary IPAc en pron k r tj l r i , Latin cartularium or chartularium , also called Pancarta and Codex Diplomaticus, is a medieval manuscript volume or roll rotulus containing transcriptions of original documents relating to the foundation, privileges, and legal rights of ecclesiastical establishments, municipal corporations , industrial associations, institutions of learning, or private families. The term is sometimes also applied to collections of original documents bound in one volume or attached to one another so as to form a roll. The word is formed from two Latin words, for a collection of charters an officer in charge of it. Citation needed date April 2009 The allusion of Gregory of Tours to chartarum tomi in the 6th century is commonly taken to refer to cartularies. The oldest surviving cartularies, however, originated in the 10th century. ref http individual.utoronto.ca emrecordkeeping WhatisN M.html Record keeping in eleventh century Worcester The early Worcester archive include texts of over 200 acta ... in addition, there are transcripts of at least another 57 pre conquest single sheet acta now lost. ref Those from the tenth to the thirteenth centuries are very numerous. Generally speaking, a cartulary, attested by the signatures or marks of a number of prominent individuals, ranks as a public document possessing greater value than a private letter or the narrative of an annalist . Sometimes the copyist of the cartulary reproduced the original document with literary exactness. On the other hand, some copyists took liberties with the text, including modifying the phraseology, modernizing proper names of persons and places, and even changing the substance, such as to extend the scope of the privileges or immunities granted in the document. The value of a cartulary as a historical document depends not only on the extent ... to public affairs. The chartulary presided in ecclesiastical judgments, in lieu of the Pope. Notes ... more details
chartulary in the British Museum , which contains an abstract of the charters in the possession ..., are found in many of the charters relating to tenements and leases in the chartulary. Nothing ... more details
Infobox UK place official name Hinxton country England region East of England os grid reference TL496450 latitude 52.083 longitude 0.183 post town SAFFRON WALDEN postcode area CB postcode district CB10 dial code 01799 shire county Cambridgeshire constituency westminster South Cambridgeshire UK Parliament constituency South Cambridgeshire population 320 hide services Yes static image File Hinxton, SS John & Mary geograph.org.uk 2963.jpg 250px static image caption SS John & Mary Hinxton is a village in South Cambridgeshire , England . It is the home to the Wellcome Trust Genome Campus , which includes the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and the European Bioinformatics Institute . The 2001 population was 315. ref cite web url http www.cambridgeshire.gov.uk NR rdonlyres 4C7C20FE CC27 49B5 91D2 B12085093760 0 Hinxton.pdf title Hinxton publisher Census date 2001 ref The River Cam runs through the village, as does the Cambridge to Liverpool Street station Liverpool Street railway, though the village has no station. Hinxton parish s southern boundaries form the border between Cambridgeshire and Essex . The village is five miles 8 km north west of Saffron Walden and nine miles 14 km south of Cambridge . History The name Hinxton is a contraction of Hengestestun , the town of Hengest . ref cite book title The place names of Cambridgeshire author Rev. Walter W. Skeat publisher Cambridge Antiquarian Society date 1901 ref The village of Hinxton is listed in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Hestitona , as Hyngeston in the Ely Registers of 1341 and Hengestone in the Ramsey Chartulary. Church The parish church of St Mary and St John the Evangelist St John is a medieval flint and rubble church in the early English style. It consists of a chancel, nave, south aisle, south chapel, south porch and a western tower with lead covered spire that contains a clock and two bells that were first hung in 1903. ref cite book title Cambridgeshire Directory author Kelly date 1929 ref The first record o ... more details
infobox UK place country England static image Image Coates st agatha.jpg 240px static image caption small Church of St. Agatha small latitude 50.95226 longitude 0.57937 official name Coates population civil parish Barlavington shire district Chichester district Chichester shire county West Sussex region South East England constituency westminster Horsham UK Parliament constituency Horsham post town postcode district postcode area dial code os grid reference SU998179 Infobox SSSI image Image CoatesCastle.jpg right thumb 250px image caption name Coates Castle latitude 50.9483 longitude 0.588398 displaycoord inline aos West Sussex interest Biological gridref gbmappingsmall SU991175 area convert 7.59 ha abbr on notifydate Start date 1993 enref 1006512 Coates is a downland village in the Chichester district Chichester Districts of England district of West Sussex , England . Coates lies one mile 1.7  km southwest from Fittleworth and four miles 6.8  km south east by south from Petworth . It is within the ancient divisions of the Bury Hundred and the Rape county subdivision of Arundel.The village is bounded north by the Rother Navigation . St Agatha s Church, The Anglican church of St Agatha ref http www.achurchnearyou.com coates st agatha A Church Near You ref is first recorded in about 1100 in the Chartulary of Lewes Priory , stating that the Church of Cotes made an annual donation to the Prior. The church is of early English style and consists of a single nave now covered by a wood floor with a bellcote rebuilt 1961 and a small square chancel. The chancel arch is plain and half circular. One Norman window has survived on the south wall. The larger windows are late 14th century and of early English lancet type. A small Sussex marble lead lined font stands extant at the west end of the nave ref J.L. Andre, Fonts in Sussex Churches, Sussex Archaeological Collections 44, 1901, 35 drawing of font ref and constructed within the south wall of the chancel is a sedile pl ... more details
Richard de Ferings died 1306 , was the archbishop of Dublin . Ferings was official of Canterbury, in which capacity he won the friendship of Archbishop Peckham ref Reg. Peckham, i. 88 ref . In 1279 he was present at the Council of Reading ref ib. i. 46 ref . In 1280 he was also for a short time official of Winchester, having been appointed by Peckham during a vacancy of the bishopric but before long Peckham found him so indispensable that he brought him back to Canterbury, and put Adam of Hales into the post at Winchester ref ib. i. 98 ref . Next year Peckham made him List of Archdeacons of Canterbury Archdeacon of Canterbury , and in 1284 gave him the rectory of Tunstall, near Sittingbourne, to be held in commendam with the archdeaconry ref ib. i. 267, iii. 1007 ref . Ferings remained archdeacon until 1299, when he was appointed by Pope Boniface VIII to the archbishopric of Dublin. The feuds of the two rival chapters had long made the elections to that see constant subjects of disputes. In 1297 William of Hothum , himself a nominee of the pope after a contested election, died soon after his consecration. Early in 1298 Christ Church elected Adam of Belsham , and St. Patrick s chose their dean, Thomas of Chadsworth , for whom the canons had previously tried to secure the archbishopric. In their hurry neither body had secured the royal license to elect. Both were accordingly summoned to answer for the contempt, and the temporalities of Christ Church were for a time seized by King Edward Disambiguation needed date June 2011 ref Rot. Parl. i. 152 b ref . Ferings s appointment by the pope was consequently not opposed by the king. His consecration was probably abroad, as it is not noticed in the English authorities, though the date is given as 1299 in the Annals of Ireland published with the Chartulary of St. Mary s Abbey, Dublin ref ii. 291, Rolls Ser. ref . It was not, however, until June 1300 that Ferings received from the crown the temporalities of his see, after a re ... more details
chronicle kept at Burton Abbey see Wrottesley, Burton Chartulary , p. 7. ref Career The Burton ... first Major General Hon. G. title The Burton Chartulary ... An abstract. By Major General Hon. G ... more details
Sele47 Salzman ed. Chartulary of the Priory of St. Peter at Sele p. 47 ref group Notes In 1286 Braose ... Series isbn 0 8063 1759 0 cite book author Salzman, L. F. editor title The Chartulary of the Priory ... more details