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A Transcript of “The Red Book,” A Detailed Account of the Hereford Bishopric Estates in the Thirteenth Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 December 2009

Abstract

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Copyright
Copyright © Royal Historical Society 1929

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References

page v note 1 Printed in Capes, Charters and Records of Hereford Cathedral, p. 8.Google Scholar

page v note 2 Printed Reg. Trefnant (ed. Capes, p. 39).

page vii note 1 Capes, Ch. and Rec., p. 1.Google Scholar

page vii note 2 Haddan and Stubbs, III, 544.

page vii note 3 Capes, Ch. and Rec., p. 6.Google Scholar

page vii note 4 Map, Walter, De Nug., p. 20.Google Scholar

page vii note 5 Ibid., 79–82.

page vii note 6 Capes, Ch. and Rec., p. 32.Google Scholar

page vii note 7 In the Swinfield Register (ed. Capes, p. 389) is an entry recording at length the homage done by Humphry de Bohun, earl of Hereford and Essex, to the Bishop, for the lands he held from him.

page viii note 1 In the Swinfield Register (pp. 403–406) is a list of the military fees held under the Bishop in 1304, agreeing in almost every detail with these returns from the manors, which are perhaps twenty years earlier.

page viii note 2 Swithun Butterfield spent, he says, the greater part of three years studying the Court Rolls of the Hereford episcopal manorial courts; and he gives an interesting account of what he finds there as to the customs of the manors (see Eng. Hist. Rev., April, 1928).

page viii note 3 In 1289 this vineyard yielded seven casks of white wine (Household Roll of Bishop Swinfield, p. 59).

page viii note 4 In the summa valoris of Whitbourne and of Frome is the qualification exceptis perquisitis, escaetis, nemoribus et Reda.

page viii note 5 This maybe analogous to the custom of benearth described by Vinogradoff, , Vil. in Engl., p. 281.Google Scholar

page viii note 6 Quedam consuetudines, videlicet, tak et tol, et ffaldfey, et sanguinem emere.

page ix note 1 Reg. Swinfield, p. 2.Google Scholar

page ix note 2 Reg. Orleton, ed. Bannister, p. 58.Google Scholar

page 1 note 1 Peter de Aquablanca (1240–1268).

page 3 note 1 Giles de Avenbury was dean before 1253, when he was ejected by the “Burgundian” faction in the Chapter. But he recovered the deanery in 1270. Since he is here mentioned separately from the Dean, it is possible that this portion of the Rental dates from before 1270.

page 4 note 1 Magister Thomas de Ingaldesthorpe is witness to a grant (undated) by Bishop John le Breton (1269–1274).

page 4 note 2 Walter de Paris is witness to a grant of Bishop Hugh Foliot (1230–1234).

page 14 note 1 ? = Benearth (Vinog., Vil. in England, p. 281).Google Scholar

page 29 note 1 John le Breton (1268–1274).

page 33 note 1 Peter de Aquablanca (1240–1268).