A collection of fragments illustrative of the history and antiquities of DerbyG. Wilkins and son., 1826 |
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Page 3
... Derby . Besides , a passage over the Derwent must have been necessary in early ages , as at present , to facilitate the communication between the Eastern and Western parts of the County ; and no point to which the roads tend , could be ...
... Derby . Besides , a passage over the Derwent must have been necessary in early ages , as at present , to facilitate the communication between the Eastern and Western parts of the County ; and no point to which the roads tend , could be ...
Page 8
... Derby was constituted the metropolis of the County , and in the beginning of the same reign , it was occupied by the forces of Southey's Book of the Church , Vol . i . p . 40—49 . + Nicholl's Leicester . i . 14 . Abbas Rivallensis , p ...
... Derby was constituted the metropolis of the County , and in the beginning of the same reign , it was occupied by the forces of Southey's Book of the Church , Vol . i . p . 40—49 . + Nicholl's Leicester . i . 14 . Abbas Rivallensis , p ...
Page 18
... county , and afterwards sent up into the King's Exchequer . The lesser Doomsday - book , containing the originals so returned from the three counties of Essex , Norfolk , and Suffolk , includes the live stock . The greater book was ...
... county , and afterwards sent up into the King's Exchequer . The lesser Doomsday - book , containing the originals so returned from the three counties of Essex , Norfolk , and Suffolk , includes the live stock . The greater book was ...
Page 19
... counties were then , for the most part , in a waste and desolate condition ; which , we may imagine , was one reason of their not being surveyed ... county - court , the court- leet , and sheriff's tourn ; tribunals , which ... DERBY . 19.
... counties were then , for the most part , in a waste and desolate condition ; which , we may imagine , was one reason of their not being surveyed ... county - court , the court- leet , and sheriff's tourn ; tribunals , which ... DERBY . 19.
Page 22
... county and hundred court , where they were suitors , and in the courts where they were jurors and recognitors of assize ; and the chief of them were sheriffs , hundredaries , and other judges and ministerial officers in their several ...
... county and hundred court , where they were suitors , and in the courts where they were jurors and recognitors of assize ; and the chief of them were sheriffs , hundredaries , and other judges and ministerial officers in their several ...
Other editions - View all
A Collection of Fragments Illustrative of the History and Antiquities of Derby Robert Simpson No preview available - 2015 |
A Collection of Fragments Illustrative of the History and Antiquities of Derby No preview available - 2020 |
Common terms and phrases
Abbot acres aforesaid mayor aged aldermen Alkmund's Almshouses Alvaston anno annum appointed appurtenances bailiffs belonging Benjamin Parker body borough aforesaid borough of Derby brethren called capital burgesses Cavendish Chancel Chapel Charter Church of St common clerk Corporation Countess of Shrewsbury County of Derby d'ni daughter Derb Derby aforesaid Derbyshire Derley died Duke of Devonshire Earl Edward Large Elizabeth England erected Francis Gent George Gisborne Grace hath heirs and successors Henry Henry VIII hereditaments ib'm James John Thraves Joseph Justices King King's late letters patents liberties Little Chester Lord lyeth manor March Mary mayor and burgesses meadows messuages Michael Minister Nottingham paid parish of St Parliament persons poor presents prisoners Quarndon Queen quod Regis reign rent Richard Robert Holden Saints Samuel serjeanty shillings successors do grant tenure thereof Thomas town of Derby tythes unto Vicar Warden Werburgh's whatsoever wife William yearly
Popular passages
Page 67 - YE that we of our special grace and of our certain knowledge and mere motion have given and granted, and by these presents do give and grant...
Page 496 - O Lord, open ,thou our lips. And our mouth shall shew forth thy ,praise. O God, make ,speed > to ,save us. O Lord, make haste > to help us.
Page 510 - Elizabeth, by the grace of God, Queen of England, France, and Ireland, Defender of the faith, &c.
Page 138 - And further, we will, and by these presents, for us, our heirs, and successors do grant to the aforesaid Mayor and...
Page 343 - To sum up her character with the brevity here required — she was a woman of a masculine understanding and conduct; proud, furious, selfish, and unfeeling. She was a builder, a buyer and seller of estates, a moneylender, a farmer, and a merchant of lead, coals, and timber...
Page 217 - ... the oaths, appointed by an act of parliament, made in the first year of the reign of our late...
Page 117 - England concerning succession to an inheritance inasmuch as the inheritance is partible among the heirs male, and from time whereof the memory of man is not to the contrary hath been partible, our Lord the King will not have that custom abrogated...
Page 126 - Township as shall meet in manner hereby directed shall have hold exercise and enjoy the Office or Offices to which he or they shall be so elected and chosen from the time of such Election until the...
Page 207 - The performances of this wonderful man, in whom were united the strength of twelve, were, rolling up a pewter dish of seven pounds as a man rolls up a sheet of paper ; holding a pewter quart at arm's length, and squeezing the sides together like an egg-shell ; lifting two hundred weight with his little finger, and moving it gently over his head. The bodies he touched seemed to have lost their powers of gravitation.
Page 207 - He also broke a rope fastened to the floor, that would sustain twenty hundred weight; lifted an oak table six feet long with his teeth, though half a hundred weight was hung to the extremity : a piece of leather was fixed to one end for his teeth to hold, two of the feet stood upon his knees, and he raised the end with the weight higher than that in his mouth. He took Mr. Chambers, vicar of All Saints, who weighed twenty-seven stone, and raised him with one hand. His head being laid on one chair,...