Annals of the Coinage of Britain and Its Dependencies: From the Earliest Period of Authentick History to the End of the Fiftieth Year of the Reign of His Present Majesty King George III, Volume 2Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor, and Jones, 1819 - Coinage |
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Page 105
... Statutes , yet it appears that the first alone can have any pretensións to that title , the second being no more than a Proclamation , and the last only Articles voff Regulation . By the Statute it was ordained that no one should ...
... Statutes , yet it appears that the first alone can have any pretensións to that title , the second being no more than a Proclamation , and the last only Articles voff Regulation . By the Statute it was ordained that no one should ...
Page 107
... Statute 20 E. I. Stat . 4. From Tottel's Edition of the Sta- tutes [ 1556 ] , compared with Runnington's . 17 k Statute 20 E. I. Stat . 6 . 1 Statute 20 E. I. Stat . 5. and Claus . 19 E. I. m . 4. dors . AWES bailamos ver de bobro Jun 8 ...
... Statute 20 E. I. Stat . 4. From Tottel's Edition of the Sta- tutes [ 1556 ] , compared with Runnington's . 17 k Statute 20 E. I. Stat . 6 . 1 Statute 20 E. I. Stat . 5. and Claus . 19 E. I. m . 4. dors . AWES bailamos ver de bobro Jun 8 ...
Page 109
... Statutes which had hitherto been made , were now found to be insufficient for the restraint of those practices by which ... Statute . It is called a Proclamation by Holinshed , vol . II p . 309.11 und wierd , ar I m I 99 beg JH ] nor q ...
... Statutes which had hitherto been made , were now found to be insufficient for the restraint of those practices by which ... Statute . It is called a Proclamation by Holinshed , vol . II p . 309.11 und wierd , ar I m I 99 beg JH ] nor q ...
Page 117
... Statute , to be punished by im- prisonment and ransom , at the King's pleasure d . These regulations show that Gold and Silver were not scarce , and that luxury began to display itself at this period . The Statute of Stebenheth seems to ...
... Statute , to be punished by im- prisonment and ransom , at the King's pleasure d . These regulations show that Gold and Silver were not scarce , and that luxury began to display itself at this period . The Statute of Stebenheth seems to ...
Page 118
... Statutes , dated 1577 , the Statute of Bread and Ale , 51 H. III . has not that clause respecting the weight of the Penny ; neither does that Collection contain the Ordinance of 31 Edward III . , but it has the Statute of 12 Henry VII ...
... Statutes , dated 1577 , the Statute of Bread and Ale , 51 H. III . has not that clause respecting the weight of the Penny ; neither does that Collection contain the Ordinance of 31 Edward III . , but it has the Statute of 12 Henry VII ...
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Annals of the Coinage of Britain and Its Dependencies: From the ..., Volume 5 Rogers Ruding No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
according aforesaid allay ANGLIE appears appointed bring brought Bullion Calais carried chap Chronicle CIVITAS Claus Coinage commanded Commons Council counterfeit Crown denarius Deniers dors Earl Edward Edward III eight Pence enacted exchange Exchequer Farthings Flanders forfeit four Pence France Gold and Silver Gold Money Gold or Silver Goldsmith grains granted Half Groats Halfpennies Henry III Hist holden Holinshed Indenture Ireland Irish Coins King's Coin Kingdom land lings Lord manner Master Mayor Merchant stranger Merchants Mint Mints Monarch Money of Gold Moneyers Nobles Obverse ordained ounces pain of forfeiture payment Pence Penny persons Petition pieces Plate pound weight Proclamation realm of England receive reign Richard Rolls of Parliament Rymer says Seal Seignorage Shillings Shillings and six Silver Coins Simon six Pence Statute Sterling struck sub anno Testons thereof tion Tower of London Warden wool Writ
Popular passages
Page 375 - And although he were a Prince in military virtue approved, jealous of the honour of the English nation, and likewise a good law-maker, for the ease and solace of the common people...
Page 428 - SIXTH, by the grace of God, king of England, France, and Ireland ; Defender of the Faith, and of the Church of England, and also of Ireland, in earth the supreme head ; to all Schoolmasters and Teachers of youth.
Page 274 - The Court Leet or view of frankpledge is a Court, of record held once in the year and not oftener, within a particular hundred, lordship or Manor before the Steward of the leet, being the king's Court granted by Charter to the Lords of those hundreds or Manors. Its original intent was to view the...
Page 440 - Well, well, is this their duty? Is this their office? Is this their calling? Should we have ministers of the church to be comptrollers of the mints? Is this a meet office for a priest that hath cure of souls? Is this his charge? I would here ask one question; I would fain know who controlleth the devil at home in his parish, while he controlleth the mint?
Page 182 - And if a Man counterfeit the King's Great or Privy Seal, or his Money: And if a Man bring false Money into this Realm, counterfeit to the Money of England...
Page 62 - London to proclaim in that city that "the gold money which the King had caused to be made should be immediately current there and elsewhere within the realm of England, in all transactions of buying and selling, at the rate of twenty pennies of sterlings for every gold penny.
Page 385 - Daubeney — were ordered to make a new money of gold according to the print and form of a piece of lead annexed to the Letters Patent. The new money was to be of the...
Page 235 - Whereupon our said lord the king, by the assent aforesaid, and at the request of his said commons, hath ordained and established, that if any purchase, or pursue, or cause to be purchased or pursued in the court of Rome or elsewhere, any such translations, processes, sentences of excommunications, bulls, instruments, or any other things whatsoever, which touch the king, against him, his crown and his regality, or his realm...
Page 235 - By which translations, (if they should be suffered,) the statutes of the realm should be defeated and made void, and his said liege sages of his Council without his assent, and against his will, carried away and gotten out of his realm, and the substance and treasure of the realm shall be carried away, and so the realm destitute as well of counsel as of substance, to the final destruction of the same realm. And so the crown of England...
Page 306 - Lord the King . . by the advice and assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and at the request of the...