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- The Province of York covered most of northern England
'Close Rolls, Edward III: March 1337 (part 2 of 2)', Calendar of Close Rolls, Edward III: volume 4: 1337-1339 (1900), pp. 31-47. March 4. Westminster. To John Moryn, escheator beyond Trent. Order not to intermeddle further with a messuage and 4 bovates of land in Gedelyng, amoving the king's hands therefrom, and restoring the issues thereof to Richard Ingram, as the escheator returned that he had taken these tenements into the king's hands because Matilda de Cauce, who held them of the king's progenitors, alienated them to Richard Ingram, deceased, without the licence of the king's predecessors, and Richard, Richard's son and heir, having entered them after his father's death, alienated them to Richard Ingram, his son in fee, without obtaining the king's licence; and afterwards at Richard's suit, showing that the said tenements are held of Adam de Everyngham and not of the king, and beseeching the king to order his hand to be amoved therefrom, the king ordered the escheator to take an inquisition upon the premises, by which it is found that the said tenements are held of Adam by scutage, homage and fealty and suit at the court of Shelford every three weeks, and that they are worth 30s. yearly.
Close Rolls, Edward II: October 1322', Calendar of Close Rolls, Edward II: volume 3: 1318-1323 (1895), pp. 680-683. Oct. 30th, 1322 York. Richard son of Richard de Riboef of Stretton acknowledges that he owes to Robert Ingram of Notingham 10l.; to be levied, in default of payment, of his lands and chattels in co. Derby.
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