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Poll-tax records indicate the surprisingly large number of clergy in late-medieval England and suggest the need for a reassessment of the church at that time.
Probate inventories (drawn up to protect the heirs to an estate and to facilitate the distribution of bequests) selected from mainly urban parishes yield detail on a wide range of occupations.
Supplementary to material contained in Corns'Bibliotheca Lincolniensis (1904).
The first thirty years of the first minute book of the Boston Assembly.
Facsimile of record of matters and items discussed by this society, modelled on the meetings of the Royal Society.
This is the final volume in the trilogy covering the last ten years of the text. The index of persons has been expanded to give some biographical details of Lincolnshire Quakers mentioned in the 3 volumes. Appendices I and II contain matter from other contemporary sources to illustrate or amplify features not covered by the Minutes themselves. Various printed books are referred to incidentally in volumes II and III and these have been fully identified in Appendix IV.
Returns from rural deaneries; records of visitations to monasteries and colleges; visitations to 34 religious houses.
This large and important register of the diocese of Lincoln includes institutions and promotions of heads of religious houses for the archdeaconries of Stow, Bedford, Leicester, Huntingdon, Buckingham and Oxford. Calendared in English with full transcripts and English summaries of unusual entries.
Stow Church in Lincolnshire is one of the most interesting Anglo-Saxon Churches in England. These documents record its restoration in the mid-nineteenth century.
A transcript of the original cartulary of Lincoln cathedral, compiled during the 13th and 14th centuries, with additional charters, a comprehensive introdution and two volumes of facsimiles.
A transcript of the original cartulary of Lincoln cathedral compiled in the 13th and 14th centuries, with additional charters, a comprehensive introduction and two volumes of facsimiles.
Editions (in Latin and translation) of papal letters expressing some principal of law, culled from collections of legally important documents which served the universities and the medieval church as law and text books.
Alterations to Revesby - buildings, furnishings, estate management - and family business in Lincoln, London and elsewhere.
The introduction deals with rural local government in Lincolnshire during the war of 1294-8.
The steward reports to Madam Whichcott from Harpswell; Transaction of the church's legal business at Lincoln.
A vivid picture of wartime Lincolnshire, and an engagingly readable account of the life of a busy parish priest.
Stories of injustice, feuding, chicanery and natural disasters told through the words of Lincolnshire people in the Middle Ages.
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