Proceedings and Ordinances of the Privy Council of England ...G. Eyre and A. Spottiswoode, 1835 - Great Britain |
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9 Hen agreed ambassadors anno aº xij appointed apud Westm concordat assent BATHON beyng Bishop bope Calais Camar de scacio Camar de solvendo Cantuar Cleopatra concesf fuit concordat fuit qd consail consilii Council đci dict ditz đni Duke of Bedford Duke of Brittany Duke of Burgundy Duke of Gloucester Earl Eboz England entende Eodem February feoffees Fœdera forma France fuit qd fiat fvice Glouč hath Henry Ibid iiij Johan Joħi John jour King King of Scots King's Kyng land lyke maad marc mesme moneye ñre ñri ñro patentes pe seid postea psone ptie qªm qd fiat warant reaume Rege Regis regni Rolls of Parliament Scotland seid Lord shal shuld sibi sigillo sōme subgitte temps Theft Camar Thomas tres Tresorer truce tyme unto viam viij yere þat þe þei þeire þis
Popular passages
Page 68 - Report of the Lords' Committees on the Dignity of a Peer of the Realm.
Page 134 - ... Gloucester, and the other Lords of the Privy Council, against the effects of the young monarch's displeasure, in case he should " chastise" his Majesty. The part of the " Articles" in which this fact occurs is not a little curious : " Item that consideryng howe, blessid be God, the Kyng is growen in yeeres, in stature of his persone, and also in conceyte and knoweleche of his hiegh and royal auctoritee and estate, the whiche naturally causen hym, and from day to day as he groweth shal causen...
Page xxxviii - were caused by the unlawful doubt that they had of a disciple and limb of the fiend, called the Pucelle, who had used false enchantments and sorcery."* With the king every thing now appeared to prosper : the Duke of Burgundy entered into an alliance with him ; his victorious troops reentered Paris in 1437 ; and if a few other places remained in the hands of the English, it was owing entirely to the discontent...
Page viii - But later documents show tlret he had an Inn in the parish of St. Katherine Colman in Aldgate Ward. On 26 February 1425, the Inn of the Earl of March, being in the King's hands by reason of the minority of the heir, Richard, Duke of York, was granted during such minority to Queen Catherine, mother of Henry VI, on condition that she kept up the houses, buildings, and gardens. But apparently this grant did not take effect, and on 14 October 1425 the property was seized into the King's hands on account...
Page 32 - Ed•• ward par la Grace de Dieu Roy •• Dengleterre et de Fraunce, et " Seignur Dirlande a noz chers et •' foialx Johan de Stonore et ses " compaignons noz Justices du " Bank saluE. Come nadgaires, ' par cause qe done nous feuut eu...
Page xliii - ... relieved Lord Tiptoft of the Stewardship of the Household 2. Kemp, as well as Hungerford, had recently opposed Humphrey in the matter of an increase of salary 3. Writs were also issued summoning Parliament to meet at Westminster on the 1 2th May4. A few days before the time Privy Seals were addressed to the Duke of Norfolk, the Earls of Suffolk, Huntingdon, Stafford, Northumberland and Salisbury, and Lord Cromwell, warning them not to bring more than their usual retinues to Parliament5. The intimation...
Page 134 - ... also in conceyte and knoweleche of his hiegh and royal auctoritee and estate, the whiche naturally causen hym, and from day to day as he groweth shal causen him more and more, to grucche with chastysing and to lothe it, so that it may resonably be doubted, leste he wol conceyve ayenst the seid Erie, or eny other that wol take upon hym to chastyce hym for his defaultes, displesire, or indignation therefore, the whiche withouten due assistence is not esy to be borne.
Page xxx - Michael next ensuing, bringing with them all books, rolls, tallies, money, and other things necessary for their charge and discharge in their accounts, and to make no payments in the meantime - - p.