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  • av A.k. Mchardy
    859,-

    The purpose of this work is to make available sources for the study of the church in London during the last quarter of the fourteenth century. It contains three distinct groups of material. The first consists of six documents concerned with the clerical taxes of the years 1379-81. The second is an assessment of ecclesiastical property in the city of London in 1392. The third consists of the acta of William Courtenay, bishop of London 1375-81, collected from the registers of contemporary bishops, the cartularies of religious houses in the diocese and certain classes of Public Records.

  • - Minutes 1786-90 and 1827-8
    av Thomas W. Davis
    979,-

  • - Letters from a Merchant in London to His Partners in Maryland
    av Jacob M. Price
    859,-

  • - Minutes of a Whig Club 1714-1717 and London Pollbooks 1713
    av H. Horwitz
    979,-

    "Guildhall Library manuscript 197 consists of the minutes of a Whig political club operating within the City of London" -- Introd.

  • - Fraternity of the Holy Trinity and SS. Fabian and Sebastian in the Parish of St. Botolph without Aldersgate
    av Patricia Basing
    859,-

  • - The Minute Books, 1711-27, A Calendar
    av M. H. Port
    989,-

    Prepared by the Commission for Building Fifty New Churches in London and Westminster.

  • av Sarah A. Milne
    979,-

    Accounts of ceremonial dinners given by the Drapers' Company shed extraordinary light on the menus served, the numbers of guests, and the employees.

  • - Certificates of the Sworn Viewers of the City of London
    av Janet Senderowi Loengard
    979,-

  • av Laura Wright & Vanessa Harding
    859,-

    The rulers of London in the late middle ages sought to safeguard the future of their important river crossing by placing its administration in the hands of a specially created institution. By the mid-fourteenth century the "BridgeHouse", as it became known, had been endowed with a large portfolio of properties which provided the bulk of the revenue needed for the frequent, and often urgent, repairs to London Bridge's structure: as many as 130 shops stoodon the bridge itself. As well as providing information on the technicalities of bridge-building or wider issues concerning urban crafts and productive processes, the accounts and rentals from the institution's archive provide useful snapshots of the bridge at various points in its often turbulent history.

  • av Loreen L. Giese
    989,-

    A uniquely valuable insight into Elizabethan and Jacobean culture in early modern London.

  • av Tim Hitchcock
    979,-

    Records of settlement and bastardy examinations held in the parish of Chelsea in the mid-eighteenth century.

  • av Clive Burgess
    989,-

    St Andrew was a small and comparatively obscure parish situated in the south-east of the medieval city of London, but its churchwardens' accounts survive in a virtually unbroken series starting in 1454 and continuing into the 1620s. Such complete sets of churchwardens' accounts are rare and particularly so for the period before the Reformation. These accounts reveal much about the practices and priorities of ordinary Londoners and demonstrate how they responded to the often conflicting demands of royal government in the sixteenth century. In addition to the accounts, the editor has also provided the texts of nearly a hundred wills of men and women who lived and died in this smallparish during these years. There is a full index provided to both the accounts and the wills.

  • av Henry Horwitz
    979,-

    The cases presented at the Court of Exchequer contain a wealth of information about many aspects of London history such as commerce, colonial trade, property and social customs.

  • - A Checklist of unpublished diaries by Londoners and visitors with a Select Bibliography of published diaries
    av Heather Creaton
    975,-

    A unique snapshot of London life as recorded by diarists whose interests range from high politics to housework, childbirth to deathbeds, burglaries to bowel movements.

  • av Dr Hannes (Reviewer) Kleineke
    819,-

    The unique manorial and household accounts of William Worsley, Dean of St Paul's Cathedral.

  • av Deirdre Palk
    989,-

    In British gaols and on hulks, awaiting transportation to New South Wales, prisoners convicted of forged paper currency offences wrote to their influential prosecutor, the Bank of England. This volume comprises several hundred ofsuch letters held in the Bank's archives. Many, mainly those wirtten by or for women, came from the depths of abject misery and poverty, begging help to cope with prison conditions and with the journey to Australia. Others offeredinformation to the Bank about forged note traffickers in the hope of gaining some benefit for themselves. The collection reveals an extraordinary story of a surprising relationship between convicted prisoners and a mighty financial institution.

  • av Patrick Wallis
    859,-

    The imposition in 1695 of a new tax on births, marriages and deaths, in support of England's contribution to the Nine Years' War, led to the creation of a full register of the population of London [as of other counties]. The surviving records offer an unequalled level of information on social, family and household structures. In particular, they enumerate entire households by name and status, including children, servants and lodgers. This volume provides an index ro the surviving manuscript assessments for London's thirteen extramural parishes, and complements David Glass's index of inhabitants within the walls, published by the London Record Society in 1966.

  • av Helena M. Chew
    979,-

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