「Manors」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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er held Firle, Catsfield, Hollington and other | manors across Sussex. |
astes, woods, and pastures, belonging to their | Manors, against the tenants. |
d from baron to baron, its owner often holding | manors all over England. |
ion to the busy electric service to the coast, | Manors also served as a terminal station for passenge |
d on the Surrey map, which shows only Domesday | manors), an administrative area, where local leaders |
arish had a population of around 50, with four | manors and a church, by 1066. |
He owned 10 | manors and over 2000 acres including coal mines. |
her died when Draper was four, leaving him the | manors and estates at Crayford. |
Both of these | manors and their tenants are clearly documented thenc |
ricting that would take effect in 1992, Wilton | Manors and some of the neighborhoods of Ft. |
In about 1100 de Lacy's son forefeited both | manors, and his holding at Forest Hill passed to Robe |
e 16th century, where they acquired twenty-two | manors and the title of marquis by 1651. |
e Flowers, hobs are the unseen managers of the | manors and towers of the upperclass Fairies. |
who gave the church and the tithes of several | manors and two fisheries, to the Benedictine Abbey at |
public service, allowing them to terminate at | Manors and then return to the Gosforth depot (and vic |
f the Galician peasants, destroyed a number of | manors, and killed, among others, the family of his l |
orge de Dunbar, Earl of March, the ward of the | manors and lordships of Kyme and Croftes in Lincolnsh |
onsort, Eleanor of Castile (who gave a gift of | manors) and Philippa of Hainault. |
eive high-rent from the lords of the principal | manors and to claim the regalia of the navigable rive |
oke of Kirketon in Lindsey, as well as various | manors and lands belonging to Prince Charles, afterwa |
Two | manors are listed in the Domesday Book of 1086, of th |
al boxes that controlled the approaches to the | Manors area - Argyle Street (187? - 1964), Manors Nor |
The Sandyford, Heaton, Byker and | Manors areas of the city border Shieldfield to the No |
On his resignation, he had three | manors assigned to him for his support, and it was at |
The manor of Great Kimble (along with | manors at Kimble Wick and Marsh) had been possessions |
7812 Erlestroke Manor is one of 3 | Manors at the Severn Valley Railway the other 2 being |
lo-Saxon who also had interests which included | manors at Weston-on-Trent, Newton Solney and Repton. |
After a brief exile at her Westphalian | manors at Enger, where she established a college of c |
s mentioned in the Domesday Book as one of the | manors belonging to Walter D'Aincourt. |
was much the same size as today, as one of the | manors belonging to Walter D'Aincourt. |
n mentioned in the Domesday Book as one of the | manors belonging to Walter D'Aincourt. |
ikely Cornelis Buys (*1559), who inherited the | manors Capelle ter Vliet and Zevenhoven in 1592 - the |
after the Norman conquest acquired a block of | manors centred on Broad Hinton, built the castle to o |
k in 1086 divided the Chalke Valley into eight | manors, Chelke (Chalke - Bowerchalke and Broadchalke) |
d the division of the Chalke Valley into eight | manors, Chelke (Chalke), Eblesborne (Ebbesbourne Wake |
k in 1086 divided the Chalke Valley into eight | manors, Chelke (Chalke - Broad Chalke and Bowerchalke |
hile local inhabitants of Edmonton and Enfield | manors claimed common rights. |
indication of subdivision into three dependent | manors comes in 1150. |
re found, identified by the names of the chief | manors: Connerton, Winnianton, Pawton, Tybesta, Strat |
t 17.46 (17.40 on Saturdays), having called at | Manors, Cramlington, and Morpeth. |
Of the other medieval | manors:- Dundridge; Chivery; St Leonards and Vaches, |
This would be from Riverside Junction, between | Manors East & Heaton, to Percy Main. |
He held over 60 | manors, either alone or in conjunction with others, a |
hat by 1086 D'Oyly and d'Ivry held a number of | manors either partitioned between the two of them or |
hat on 1086 D'Oyly and d'Ivry held a number of | manors either partitioned between the two of them or |
In 1650 the | manors' estate consisted of 74 acres (300,000 m2) val |
nyers, one of the few lords of the many Cowton | manors, ever to actually live there. |
Suckling had become wealthy and accumualted | manors, fee-farms, and advowsons in various parts of |
He also gave De Grandmesnil 100 | manors for his services, sixty-five of them in Leices |
he Gilded Age, known for designing residential | manors for the wealthy. |
e hands of the abbey while Ermenhald held five | manors from it. |
In 1550, the City of London acquired two | manors from Edward VI's government. |
'Domesday records over 65 | manors given to Walter D'Aincourt' . |
n the Domesday Book, in 1086, amongst the many | manors given by Henry de Ferrers by William the Conqu |
n 1086, together with Roston, amongst the many | manors given to Henry de Ferrers by William the Conqu |
Brotton was one of a number of | manors granted by William the Conqueror to Robert de |
Groby was one of 67 | manors Grantmesnil held in Leicestershire according t |
ntury this district was part of Devon as these | manors had been possessions of Tavistock Abbey from N |
to an extraordinary degree in Sussex, and 140 | manors have been catalogued in which it was found. |
In 2011, he will release Ill | Manors, his first film as a director. |
It then had 22 sub-manors in Norfolk, plus | manors in Hereford and Gloucestershire. |
Henry was given a large number of | manors in Derbyshire including Doveridge, Breaston, D |
e of the Domesday Book in 1086 there were five | manors in Mudford. |
ccording to the Domesday Book, Mowsley had two | manors in 1086. |
In 1100, Henry 1 set up 3 royal | manors in Herefordshire, including the manor of Wilto |
The Honour of Grafton is a collection of | manors in the south east of Northamptonshire, England |
There were two | manors in Lyford: Lyford Manor and Lyford Grange. |
ts killed over 1000 noblemen and destroyed 474 | manors in 1846. |
ant of Tutbury Castle in Staffordshire and 114 | manors in Derbyshire. |
s very considerable estates, including several | manors in Staffordshire, Shropshire and Herefordshire |
d informally to avoid confusion with the other | manors in Southwark. |
There are three other | manors in Shermanbury parish, Woolfly, also held by R |
rpe was in Derbyshire and was amonngst several | manors in Derbyshire given to Nigel of Stafford by Wi |
According to the Domesday book he held 221 | manors in Suffolk, 32 in Yorkshire, 8 in Lincolnshire |
Baldwin the Sheriff.. Baldwin was granted 164 | manors in Devon, south-west England. |
a, known today as "von der Ropp") that founded | manors in Livonia and Courland. |
luded Leez (Leighs) Priory and about a hundred | manors in Essex. |
ohn O Gaunt )and Sir John Crozier who had many | manors in the home counties near to London and lived |
d vast wealth and influence, owning twenty-six | manors in this county alone at the time of the Domesd |
well as copyhold land tenure, thus abolishing | manors in practically all but name. |
oured vodkas if not so popular in Polish noble | manors in the 17th CE as other well-known nalewkas, s |
n 1066 and was rewarded with a large number of | manors in a number of counties but particularly Notti |
the Domesday Book which records eleven of his | manors in Derbyshire, a manor in Northamptonshire, fo |
e of the Domesday Survey the internal order of | manors in the Exeter Domesday Book for Cornwall is in |
and certain other peers as feoffee of certain | manors in Staffordshire, Berkshire, Wiltshire, Kent, |
The surrounding | manors included Gensing, a large and attractive expan |
e 15th century is huge - several lord of local | manors, including the Boleyn family, vied with each o |
Ill | Manors is an upcoming British film. |
On | manors, it was the day when a reeve was elected from |
These four | manors lay on the edge of the Royal Forest of Woolmer |
District 92 would include most of Wilton | Manors, Lazy Lake, the eastern half of Oakland Park, |
most of the farmhouses in Rawreth were moated | manors, many of which survive today. |
Manors Metro station is located to the east of Newcas | |
), Wilton Drive (in Fort Lauderdale and Wilton | Manors), North Dixie Highway (in Wilton Manors, Oakla |
Economic Conditions on the | Manors of Ramsey Abbey (1899) |
(Russian) Palaces and | Manors of the Ladoga Region |
In so doing he became Lord of the | Manors of Hinton Admiral, Christchurch and Westover. |
1421) was granted custody of the | manors of Prestwich and Alkrington. |
With his wife he had, besides other lands, the | manors of Ardmaile and Killmorarkill. |
Cockayne held the lands and Lordships of the | Manors of Pooley in Warwickshire, and of Ashbourne. |
et was originally a trackway lying between the | manors of East Ham and West Ham. |
A court book of the | Manors of Long Burton and Holnest survives for 1523 t |
In England, Walchelin held the | manors of Oakham in Rutland and Lechlade in Glouceste |
In 1230 he was granted the royal demesne | manors of Kingskerswell and Diptford in Devon. |
One of the | manors of Hadlow was Caustons, owned by the Caxton fa |
tion, Aldred continued to hold a number of the | manors of the diocese. |
In Domesday Book the abbey held the | manors of Sheviock, Antony, Rame, Tregrenna, Penharge |
Manorbier in Pembrokeshire, which included the | manors of Jameston and Manorbier Newton, as well as t |
He married in 1637 and that year bought the | manors of Sagebury and Obden in Dodderhill, Worcester |
f of Buckinghamshire in 1857, and left him the | manors of Brightwalton, Chaddleworth, and Woolley. |
e Middle Ages the village was divided into the | manors of Williton Fulford and Williton Hadley. |
nd in Dorset, adjacent to Athelhampton, in the | manors of Burleston and Southover. |
de Burgh gave the | manors of River and Kingsdown to the hospital in orde |
e formal gardens inspired by the grand English | manors of the 18th century. |
or was sold to King Henry VIII, along with the | manors of Ebisham (Epsom), Coulsdon, and Horley. |
ber 1494), Knight of the Bath, and Lord of the | Manors of Burnham Thorpe, and Ludham, in Norfolk. |
She gave them her | manors of Hinton and Norton St Philip in Somerset and |
Sir Roger also possessed in his own right the | manors of Bletchington and Holton, Oxfordshire, Stand |
services", following which he was granted the | manors of Sandal, Yorkshire and Vauxhall, Surrey, in |
Elize Hele included the | manors of Fardel, Dinnaton, Brixton Reigny, Cofleet, |
l were "as luxurious and courtly as any of the | manors of the English gentry." |
ad Latimers, distinguished by the lords of the | manors of those two places. |
50 and the rest was built in 1370 when the two | manors of Kegworth were united under a single Lord of |
Book; "In Siwardbi, Carle and Torchil had two | manors, of six carucates and a half. |
his wife's properties, including the Wiltshire | manors of Sherston, Malmesbury and Norton, helped con |
tern part, and in 1177 King Henry gave him the | manors of Ellesmere and Hales in England. |
of "Jewish Landed Gentry" that resided in the | manors of the gentile aristocracy, and managed their |
She gave them her | manors of Hinton Charterhouse and Norton St Philip an |
th century, a law in England required that all | manors of villages and parishes had to be merged with |
(Levett) de Opton (Upton), in whose family the | manors of Upton and Haselor descended for several gen |
The two | manors of Lockington, viz Nether Hall and Over Hall w |
y house which was once specified as one of the | manors of Bentworth Hall. |
ily's extensive landed interests including the | manors of Wynyard, The Isle, Kelloe, Old Durham and R |
Imelaghbegan and Le Newenhagard near Trim; the | manors of Derver and Corbally; and an estate around A |
In 1430 Margaret settled the | manors of her inheritance which included Stagenhoe in |
ynold Stourton, Seymour inherited the Somerset | manors of West Bower in Bridgwater, Moorland in North |
II (knighted 22 February 1546) and Lord of the | Manors of Clifton Maubank and South Perrott. |
the churches of Chaddleworth and Kingston, the | manors of West Batterton , Peasemore, Curridge, and B |
The estates and titles to the | Manors of Grafton and Upton Warren stayed with the Ea |
But for the | manors of Bentworth, Greywell, Hartley Wintney, Liss |
nt, and settled upon him Vescy's lordships and | manors of Kildare, Rathangan, &c., which were forfeit |
Other exclaves of Flintshire included the | manors of Marford and Hoseley, Abenbury Fechan and Br |
Henry VIII, in 1539, granted the | manors of Hackpen, Sheldon, Bolham and Saint Hill to |
sive 'wastes' or common lands belonging to the | manors of Claygate and Imber Court, which has since b |
72), daughter of Sir Robert Drury, Lord of the | Manors of Thurston, and Hawstead, Suffolk, (1455-1536 |
ly, descendants of the Calthorpes who held the | manors of Cockthorpe, Norfolk, and Ampton, Suffolk, a |
On August 5, 1389, he was enfeoffed in the | manors of Leuchan, Kildroghte, and Kylmacrydocke, in |
t: they are grouped in Domesday under the head | manors of Rillaton (East) and Fawton (West). |
The village was one of two | manors of the parish of Marylebone, which was itself |
as it had in King Edward's time, the Wiltshire | manors of Bulford, Boscombe, 'Allentone', Choulston, |
nd inherited the family estates, including the | manors of Draycot and Athelhampton. |
The | Manors of Ogle (owned by the Ogle family), and Causey |
he 17th century the City of Bristol bought the | manors of North Weston and Portishead for access to t |
y introduced to the area were the newly-built ' | Manors of Shelsley' which, although claimed to be in |
ily's extensive landed interests including the | manors of Wynyard (purchased in 1742 for £8,000), The |
The original endowment consisted of the | manors of Great Horwood, Newton Longville, Whaddon an |
of Odiham, containing part of Odiham with its | manors of Hillside, Stapely, and Murrell. |
0 acres (52 km2) (English acres) featuring the | manors of Lough Gur and Glenogra, in the Barony of th |
itzTurgis (later 'de Wickersley'), lord of the | manors of Hooton and Wickersley and co-founder of nea |
er brother Richard, by which she inherited the | manors of Plashes in Standon, Hertfordshire and lands |
rother William (d.1377) to the Gloucestershire | manors of Siston, Alveston (incorporating Olveston) a |
street, in London; the castles, lordships, and | manors of Manerbere or Maverbere, and Pennalle, both |
reat and Little came later, long after the two | manors on either side of the river were allotted to d |
vilakam-residences are usually large beautiful | manors or palaces with extensive wood work and mural |
ad grown large enough to be divided into three | manors: Overleigh, Netherleigh and Royal Handbridge. |
The prospect of Percy | manors passing to the Neville family was too much for |
Manors Power Station did not supply domestic or indus | |
The former North Eastern Railway route between | Manors railway station and Jesmond can be accessed vi |
onal Rail station of the same name, please see | Manors railway station. |
at Ashburton, and early records from Dartmoor | manors refer to ponies being branded and ear-marked. |
ulars, prelates, beneficiaries, ecclesiastical | manors, servants and subjects. |
South Lytchett | Manors South Face |
comprised a Royal Forest and a Liberty of ten | manors spanning eight townships and four parishes and |
comprised a Royal Forest and a Liberty of ten | manors spanning eight townships and four parishes and |
comprised a Royal Forest and a Liberty of ten | manors spanning eight townships and four parishes and |
ramount of a Royal Forest and a Liberty of ten | manors spanning eight townships and four parishes and |
Heading east from | Manors station, the route surfaces alongside the East |
much of the woodland in fact belonged to other | manors, such as Upper Arley and Kinlet. |
e civil wars in Ireland, William had taken two | manors that the Bishop of Ferns claimed but could not |
were an old Staffordshire family who had held | manors there since the reign of King Edward VI of Eng |
In Domesday Book of 1086 there were two | manors there, Kettleby, whos Lord of the Manor was Ra |
Queen Mary later restored the whole of these | manors to Francis, only son of Sir Nicholas Carew. |
parliament, and was enfeoffed of certain other | manors to the uses of the king's will. |
It seems some people escaped from the | manors to Liphook to evade taxes of the Lord.Since th |
e Coast, and return westwards via Wallsend and | Manors towards St James. |
ver 250 acres (1.0 km2) in small parcels in 23 | manors, two churches and three advowsons. |
Another of his | manors was Ligovo near St. Petersburg. |
At this time one of the Gomshall | manors was held by the Abbey of Netley near Southampt |
At various times, land in all three | manors was held by the Earl of Arundel, and old sourc |
The | manors were largely enclosed by the end of the 17th c |
These | manors were held by Evesham but Worcester claimed the |
By the early part of the 16th century the two | manors were referred to together and were generally h |
(owner of Mounteney Manor) and in 1592 the two | Manors were united. |
However by 1426 the two | manors were owned by the same person and the distinct |
The village was originally split into four | manors, which became two: Ickenham and Swakeleys. |
Domesday Book the district contained thirteen | manors which totalled an area of ten hides and the wh |
Castle Sowerby was one of the | manors which formed part of the Honour of Penrith whi |
s and Chalfont St Peter are listed as separate | Manors with different owners. |
and Bradnop (probably additional land in these | manors) with the services of all the inhabitants with |
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