No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
COMPOTUM SYMONIS DE HAUERINGES de Honore de Eye, videlicet de custodia terrarum quondam Almarici Peche cum dote Margarete Peche, a festo sancti Michaelis anno régni regis Edwardi filii regis Henrici vicesimo quarto usque ad idem festum anno regis predicti vicesimo quinto, vna cum aliis terris vt patet inferius
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 December 2009
Extract
Arreragia. Idem reddit compotum de £11 2s. de arreragiis compoti precedents.
Summa £11 2s. Et totum debet.
Baketone de duabus partibus Peche [Bacton, Norf.]
Redditus et exitus. Idem r. c. de 33s. 10¼d. de redditu assiso per annum ad terminos sancti Andree, Pasche et sancti Michaelis. De 21½d. de 3 caponibus, 1 gallo, 16 gallinis de redditu vend'. De 3d. de 120 ouis de redditu vend'. De 25s. 10d. de operibus hoc anno remanentibus. De 7½d. de arruris remanentibus. De 13d. pro turbaria de consuetudine. De 8d. de herbagio apud Snape. De 2s. 8d. pro domibus et curia hoc anno locatis, De 8d. de herbagio in bosco. De 8d. de bruera vend'. De 4d. de fugera vend'. De 69s. de dominicis terris hoc anno ad firmam.
- Type
- Ministers' Accounts of the Earldom of Cornwall, 1296–1297
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Royal Historical Society 1945
References
page 151 note 1 For m. 15, filed out of order in the roll, see below, p. 157.
page 151 note 2 Emery Pecche died in December 1287, his heir being his grandson, Thomas, son of Edmund and Margaret Pecche, then described, alternatively, as 9½ and 13 years old (Cal. inq. p. m., ii. 407Google Scholar). Edmund was dead by 6 June 1285, and then, or in 1287, Thomas, still a minor, succeeded to tenements in Bacton held in chief of the earl as of the honour of Eye (ibid., 348, 407). In all he held 2¾ fees of the earl in Bacton and elsewhere in Norfolk and Suffolk (ibid., iii. 478). The manor of Bacton, with the rest of the ‘honour of Eye, namely the earl's possessions in Norfolk, Suffolk, and Lincoln (saving knights’ fees, advowsons, and escheats) formed part of his settlement on the countess at the time of their separation, in 1294 (C.P.R. 1292–1301, p. 63Google Scholar; Ministers' accounts, vol. i. p. xxiGoogle Scholar; and cf. also C.C.R. 1296–1302, p. 426Google Scholar; ibid., 1302–7, p. 252).
page 152 note 1 MS. ‘turbar'’.
page 152 note 2 Presumably the countess's manor. See p. 151, n. 2, above.
page 152 note 3 I.e. the dower of Margaret Pecche of her late husband's lands. Cal. inq. p.m., ii. 348Google Scholar; and see below, p. 157.
page 153 note 1 Emery Pecche had held the manor of Honing (Cal. inq. p. m., ii. 407Google Scholar) apparently of the abbot of St. Benets Holme (ibid., 348).
page 153 note 2 MS. ‘turb'’.
page 153 note 3 *…* added in a different hand.
page 153 note 4 See Cal. inq. p. m., iii. 478.Google Scholar
page 154 note 1 * … * added in a different hand.
page 154 note 2 On the tongue of the membrane is written: Custodia terrarum Thome Peche.
page 154 note 3 See Cal. inq. p.m., iii. 478.Google Scholar
page 155 note 1 Presumably, the messuage, with 60 acres of land, 2 acres of wood, and 10s. rent in Braiseworth, Suff., held in 1300 by Hugh de Troye and Lucy his wife, and Master Adam de Sancto Albano. Cal. inq. p. m., iii. 483, 486.Google Scholar
page 155 note 2 The trees were lopped to give proof of seisin.
page 155 note 3 MS. ‘custod'’.
page 155 note 4 William le Flemming was holding 1½ fees in Beddingfield, Darsham, and Laxfield, Suff., in 1300. Cal. inq. p. m., iii. 478.Google Scholar
page 156 note 1 * … * added in another hand. Newport, Essex, was at this date included in the bailiwick of Berkhamsted (see Accounts i. 48–53Google Scholar; Cal. inq. p.m., iii. 462Google Scholar), but in extents taken in 47 Hen. III and 4 Edw. I this manor was included in the honour, or possibly in the bailiwick of Eye. Stafford (Sulyard) Roll. No. 1609, in the possession of Lord Stafford (from a transcript by the Rev. J. B. Frith, rector of Swynnerton).
page 156 note 2 Edmund, as patron, took custody of the priory on 8 April 1294 on the death of the prior, but his servants were ejected on 29 November 1295 when the king took houses of alien religious into his own hands. The king's writ to restore custody to the earl was dated 24 April 1296. C.C.R. 1288–96, p. 479Google Scholar. This account runs from 1 August 1296 to 1 August 1297.
page 156 note 3 Substituted for ‘xx’ in a different hand.
page 156 note 4 Substituted for ‘lx.s.’.
page 156 note 5 Substituted for ‘xxx.s.’.
page 157 note 1 Substituted for ‘vj.li. xiiij.s. vj.d.’ in a different hand.
page 157 note 2 Cf. C.C.R. 1288–96, p. 479.Google Scholar
page 157 note 3 No amount is given, but money from the custody of the priory was paid. See below, p. 158.
page 157 note 4 This membrane is out of place on the file. See above, p. 151, n. 1.
page 157 note 5 Cf. above, p. 156.
page 157 note 6 Substituted for ‘Grenhull’, Simon de Grenehull was steward of the honour of St. Valery this year. Accounts, i. 136.Google Scholar
page 158 note 1 It was a condition, when lands were assigned to the countess on her separation from the earl in 1294, that she should permit no waste, sale, or destruction. C.P.R. 1292–1301, p. 63.Google Scholar
page 158 note 2 See above, p. 155.
page 158 note 3 ‘Summa xiij. li. vij.s. ij.d.ob.’ is written in small figures in the left margin and deleted.
page 158 note 4 On the tongue of the membrane is written: Allocaciones de Eye: