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The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government, Volume 1

Chapter 8 8

Word Count: 1498    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

essions went to the king. By an act passed in the next session (28 Henry VIII., c. 38) its lands were exchanged by the king with Sir William Weston, Prior of the Hosp

lyeing and beying in Kylborne aforesayde, Hamstede, Padyngton, and Westborn, in the sayde countie;" "the hedge rowes rou

changed with the king for the dissolved Priory of Hurley, Berkshire, an

of King Henry VIII. in 1535, the following e

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t' de divs terr et ten

de Kilborn

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e Eybery

monaster predict p divs

Ebery pro ma

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ever since remained, excepting during the alienation of church lands in the seventeenth century, when it became the property of Si

rmined to resist, and enclosed the fields with gates and hedges, on which the inhabitants appealed, in 1592, to Lord Burleigh, High Steward of Westminster, for his interference in their behalf. He ordered Mr. Tenche, his under-steward, to empanel an inquest; and the decision of the jury being favourable to the petitioners, they, thinking they should have Lord Burleigh's countenance, proceeded on Lammas-day to assert their rights. The gates were pulled down, and the fences cut away, on which the tenants appealed on their part to Burleigh, who, again referring the matter to Mr. Tenche, that functionary, after inquiry, replied, that "certain of the parishioners of St. Martin's and St. Margaret's assembled together," and made an entry int

ame, and had made pastures of arable land; thereby not only annoying her Majesty in her walks and passages, but to the hindrance of her game, and great injury to the common, which at Lammas was wont to be laid open, for the most part, as by ancient precedents thereof made, do more particularly appear." They then state this system of inclosure had prevailed for about twenty years; that in the Neate, there were 108 acres belonging to her Majesty similarly enclosed, although they should

of Richard Dukeson, D.D., and who survived till July 11th, 1717, [19] he had one daughter, Mary, who was married at St. Clement's Danes, October 10th, 1676, to Sir Thomas Grosvenor. This manor devolved upon he

the better preservation of the game; and it was ordered that "our" land, called Knightsbridge land, containing, by estimation, about forty acres, should, at the costs of her Majesty, be "rayled" in, to hinder all manner of horses and cattle (except her Majesty's "dere") entering the said enclosed land. The said Francis Nevyll then covenants that while he is keeper he will keep the gates thereof locked, and will not suffer any horses or cattle to be put therein. He also agrees to make and sell in stacks, or carry into h

ly king who first gave the monks possessions here, to render such more available, would throw a bridge across the stream. For by this road even then was the only way to the metropolis from the west, and the stream was both broad and rapid. It was situated between the last hou

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