Survey of London (1633): Aldersgate Ward
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THe next is Alders
gate Ward, taking
name of that North
Gate of the City;
this Ward also
consisteth of divers
Streetes and Lanes,
lying as well with
in the Gate and Wall, as without; and
first, to speake of that part within the
Gate, thus it is. The East part thereof
joyneth unto the West part of Creple
gate Ward in Engain lane or Maiden lane.
It beginneth on the North side of that
Lane, at Staining lane end, and runneth
up from the Haberdashers Hall, to St.
Mary Staining Church: and by the
Church East winding almost to VVood
streete. And west through Oate lane, and
then by the South side of Bacon house in
Noble streete, backe againe by Lilipot
lane, which is also of that VVard to
Maiden lane, and so on that North side
west to Saint Iohn Zacharies Church,
and to Foster lane.
gate Ward, taking
name of that North
Gate of the City;
this Ward also
consisteth of divers
Streetes and Lanes,
lying as well with
in the Gate and Wall, as without; and
first, to speake of that part within the
Gate, thus it is. The East part thereof
joyneth unto the West part of Creple
gate Ward in Engain lane or Maiden lane.
It beginneth on the North side of that
Lane, at Staining lane end, and runneth
up from the Haberdashers Hall, to St.
Mary Staining Church: and by the
Church East winding almost to VVood
streete. And west through Oate lane, and
then by the South side of Bacon house in
Noble streete, backe againe by Lilipot
lane, which is also of that VVard to
Maiden lane, and so on that North side
west to Saint Iohn Zacharies Church,
and to Foster lane.
Now on the South side of Engaine or
Maiden lane, is the west side of Guthe
rons lane, to Kery lane, and Kery lane it
selfe (which is of this Ward) and backe
againe into Engaine lane, by the North
side of the Goldsmiths Hall, to Foster
lane, almost wholly of this Ward, which
beginneth in the South toward Cheape,
on the East side, by the North side of
Saint Fosters Church, & runneth downe
North-west by the west end of Engaine
lane by Lilipot lane, and Oate lane, to No
ble streete, and through that by Shelly
house, (of old time so called,
ing to the Shellies) Sir Thomas Shelley,
Knight, was owner thereof in the first
of Henry the fourth. It is now called Ba
con house, because the same was new
builded by Sir Nicholas Bacon, Lord
Keeper of the great Seale. Downe on
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Recorder of London, who also new buil
ded it to Saint Olaves Church in Silver
streete, which is by the North-west end
of this Noble streete.
Maiden lane, is the west side of Guthe
rons lane, to Kery lane, and Kery lane it
selfe (which is of this Ward) and backe
againe into Engaine lane, by the North
side of the Goldsmiths Hall, to Foster
lane, almost wholly of this Ward, which
beginneth in the South toward Cheape,
on the East side, by the North side of
Saint Fosters Church, & runneth downe
North-west by the west end of Engaine
lane by Lilipot lane, and Oate lane, to No
ble streete, and through that by Shelly
house, (of old time so called,
Shelleyes house, now Bacon house.
as belonging to the Shellies) Sir Thomas Shelley,
Knight, was owner thereof in the first
of Henry the fourth. It is now called Ba
con house, because the same was new
builded by Sir Nicholas Bacon, Lord
Keeper of the great Seale. Downe on
that side by Serjeant Fleetwoods house,MoEML is still seeking information regarding this entry. If you have information to contribute, please email the MoEML team.
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Recorder of London, who also new buil
ded it to Saint Olaves Church in Silver
streete, which is by the North-west end
of this Noble streete.
Then againe in Foster lane, this Ward
beginneth on the west side therof, over
against the South-west corner of Saint
Fosters Church, and runneth downe by
Saint Leonards Church, by Pope lane
end, and by Saint Annes lane end, which
Lane is also of this Ward, North to the
stone wall, by the wall of the City,
over-against Bacon house, which stone
wall, and so downe North to Creplegate
on that side, is of Faringdon Ward.
beginneth on the west side therof, over
against the South-west corner of Saint
Fosters Church, and runneth downe by
Saint Leonards Church, by Pope lane
end, and by Saint Annes lane end, which
Lane is also of this Ward, North to the
stone wall, by the wall of the City,
over-against Bacon house, which stone
wall, and so downe North to Creplegate
on that side, is of Faringdon Ward.
Then have yee the maine streete of
this VVard, which is called Saint Mar
tins lane, including Saint Martin on the
East side thereof, and so downe on both
the sides to Aldersgate. And these be the
bounds of this VVard within the wall
and gate.
this VVard, which is called Saint Mar
tins lane, including Saint Martin on the
East side thereof, and so downe on both
the sides to Aldersgate. And these be the
bounds of this VVard within the wall
and gate.
Now, before wee speake of that part
of the wall without, let us say some
what of the Gate it selfe. Aldersgate be
ing very old, ruinous, and in danger of
some further decay; the Lord Maior &
his Brethren, with the advice of the
worthy Commoners, determined to
have it taken downe, and builded again
in beautifull manner. For the more
hastening of which intention, a worthy
Citizen,
whose Christian and liberall charities,
wee have in briefe manner spoken be
fore) out of his owne bountifull dispo
sition, gave the sum of three thousand
pounds, towards the furtherance of so
good a worke, in new re-edifying and
building the Gate, requiring & appoin
ting (by his VVill) that it should bee
new builded, within the space of three
yeeres after his decease. And the mony
to bee payd (by his Executor) to the
Lord Maior of London, and the Alder
men his Brethren (for the time being)
for the said use of new building the said
Gate, in manner and forme following.
of the wall without, let us say some
what of the Gate it selfe. Aldersgate be
ing very old, ruinous, and in danger of
some further decay; the Lord Maior &
his Brethren, with the advice of the
worthy Commoners, determined to
have it taken downe, and builded again
in beautifull manner. For the more
hastening of which intention, a worthy
Citizen,
M. William Parker, Ci
tizen and Merchāt-Taylor of london, gave three thousand pounds towards the new building of Alders
gate.
Master VVilliam Parker, (of
tizen and Merchāt-Taylor of london, gave three thousand pounds towards the new building of Alders
gate.
whose Christian and liberall charities,
wee have in briefe manner spoken be
fore) out of his owne bountifull dispo
sition, gave the sum of three thousand
pounds, towards the furtherance of so
good a worke, in new re-edifying and
building the Gate, requiring & appoin
ting (by his VVill) that it should bee
new builded, within the space of three
yeeres after his decease. And the mony
to bee payd (by his Executor) to the
Lord Maior of London, and the Alder
men his Brethren (for the time being)
for
for the said use of new building the said
Gate, in manner and forme following.
That is to say,
at the taking downe of the first Tile:
Other 200. l. thereof, at the laying of
the first stone, which was laid by the
right Worshipfull,
Knight, and Alderman of the City of
London, on Munday, the 26. day of May,
1617. Other 200. l. thereof, when the
new building should bee a yard in
height above the ground. Other 200. l.
thereof, when the new building should
be arched over the Gate. And the other
200. l. in full payment, when the said
building shall be full finished. Master
Richard Foxe, Citizen and Clothworker
of London (a most painfull and industri
ous Gentleman) having the oversight,
direction, and ordering of the said buil
ding.
The man
ner and forme of paying the said mony.
200. pounds thereof
ner and forme of paying the said mony.
at the taking downe of the first Tile:
Other 200. l. thereof, at the laying of
the first stone, which was laid by the
right Worshipfull,
The first Tile was taken downe the last day of March, 1617.
Sir William Cravon,
Knight, and Alderman of the City of
London, on Munday, the 26. day of May,
1617. Other 200. l. thereof, when the
new building should bee a yard in
height above the ground. Other 200. l.
thereof, when the new building should
be arched over the Gate. And the other
200. l. in full payment, when the said
building shall be full finished. Master
Richard Foxe, Citizen and Clothworker
of London (a most painfull and industri
ous Gentleman) having the oversight,
direction, and ordering of the said buil
ding.
VVithout the Gate,
the maine street
called Aldersgate streete, runneth up
North on the East side, to the west end
of Hounds-ditch, or Barbican streete: A
part of which streete is also of this
Ward. And on the west side to Long
lane, a part whereof is likewise of this
VVard. Beyond the which Aldersgate,
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called Aldersgate streete, runneth up
North on the East side, to the west end
of Hounds-ditch, or Barbican streete: A
part of which streete is also of this
Ward. And on the west side to Long
lane, a part whereof is likewise of this
VVard. Beyond the which Aldersgate,
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And on the west side of Aldersgate
streete, by Saint Buttolphs Church, is
Briton streete, which runneth west to a
Pumpe, and then North to the Gate,
which entreth the Church-yard, some
time pertaining to the Priory of Saint
Bartholomew on the East side: and on
the west side towards Saint Bartholo
mewes Spittle, to a paire of posts there
fixed. And these bee the bounds of this
Aldersgate VVard without.
streete, by Saint Buttolphs Church, is
Briton streete, which runneth west to a
Pumpe, and then North to the Gate,
which entreth the Church-yard, some
time pertaining to the Priory of Saint
Bartholomew on the East side: and on
the west side towards Saint Bartholo
mewes Spittle, to a paire of posts there
fixed. And these bee the bounds of this
Aldersgate VVard without.
The Antiquities bee these:
First, in
Staining lane, of old time so called, as
may bee supposed, of Painterstainers
dwelling there.
Staining lane, of old time so called, as
may bee supposed, of Painterstainers
dwelling there.
On the East side thereof, adjoyning to
the Haberdashers Hall,
pertaining to the Haberdashers,
wherein bee placed ten Almes people
of that Company, every of them ha
ving eight pence the peece every Friday
for ever, by the gift of Thomas Huntlow,
Haberdasher, one of the Sheriffes, in
the yeere, 1539.
the Haberdashers Hall,
Almes-houses there.
be ten Almes-houses,
pertaining to the Haberdashers,
wherein bee placed ten Almes people
of that Company, every of them ha
ving eight pence the peece every Friday
for ever, by the gift of Thomas Huntlow,
Haberdasher, one of the Sheriffes, in
the yeere, 1539.
More, Sir George Barne gave them ten
pounds by the yeere for ever.
pounds by the yeere for ever.
Then is the small Parish Church of
Saint Mary, called Staining, because it
standeth at the North end of Staining
lane. In the which Church, being but
newly builded, there remaine no Monu
ments worth the noting, but one lately
erected.
Saint Mary, called Staining, because it
standeth at the North end of Staining
lane. In the which Church, being but
newly builded, there remaine no Monu
ments worth the noting, but one lately
erected.
Here lieth the body of George Smithes,
Goldsmith and Alderman of London,
who tooke to wife, Sarah, the daughter
of Anthony Wolhouse, Citizen, and
Haberdasher of London: by whom hee
had issue foure sonnes and five daugh
ters. He departed this life the eleventh
day of Iuly, Anno Domini, 1615. be
ing 52. yeeres of age.
A goodly Monu
ment in South wall of the Chancell.
ment in South wall of the Chancell.
Goldsmith and Alderman of London,
who tooke to wife, Sarah, the daughter
of Anthony Wolhouse, Citizen, and
Haberdasher of London: by whom hee
had issue foure sonnes and five daugh
ters. He departed this life the eleventh
day of Iuly, Anno Domini, 1615. be
ing 52. yeeres of age.
To whose memory, Sarah his wife,
being sole Executrix of his last
Will and Testament, at her own
proper cost and charges, caused
this Monument to be erected.
being sole Executrix of his last
Will and Testament, at her own
proper cost and charges, caused
this Monument to be erected.
Then is Engaine lane, or Maiden lane,
and at the North-west corner thereof,
the Parish Church of Saint Iohn Zacha
rie, a faire Church, with the Monu
ments well preserved, of Thomas Lich
field, who founded a Chauntry there,
in the foureteenth of Edward the second,
of Sir Nicholas Twiford, Goldsmith,
Maior, 1388. and Dame Margery his
wife: of whose goods the Church was
made and new builded, with a Tombe
for them, and others of their race, 1390.
Drugo Barentine, Maior, 1398. He gave
faire lands to the Goldsmiths: he dwel
led right against the Goldsmiths Hall.
Betweene the which Hall and his dwel
ling house, he builded a Gallory thwar
ting the streete, whereby he might goe
from the one to the other, hee was bu
ried in this Church, and Christian his
wife, 1427. Iohn Adis, Goldsmith,
1400. and Margaret his wife. Iohn Fran
cis, Goldsmith, Maior, 1400. and Eli
zabeth his wife, 1450. I. Sutton, Gold
smith, one of the Sheriffes, 1413. Bar
tholomew Seman, Gold-beater, Master
of the Kings Mints, within the Tower
of London, and the Towne of Calice,
1430. Iohn Hewet, Esquire, 1500. Wil
liam Breakespeare, Goldsmith, 1461.
Christopher Eliot, Goldsmith, 1505.
Bartholomew Reade, Goldsmith, Maior,
1502. was buried in the Charter-house,
and gave to this Parish 100. l. His wife
was buried here with a faire Monu
ment, her picture in habit of a widow.
Thomas Keyton, Lorimar, 1522. Willi
am Potken, Esquire, 1537. Iohn Cornish
with an Epitaph, 1470. Robert Fenrbu
ther, Goldsmith, one of the Sheriffes in
the yeere, 1512.
and at the North-west corner thereof,
the Parish Church of Saint Iohn Zacha
rie, a faire Church, with the Monu
ments well preserved, of Thomas Lich
field, who founded a Chauntry there,
in the foureteenth of Edward the second,
of Sir Nicholas Twiford, Goldsmith,
Maior, 1388. and Dame Margery his
wife: of whose goods the Church was
made and new builded, with a Tombe
for them, and others of their race, 1390.
Drugo Barentine, Maior, 1398. He gave
faire lands to the Goldsmiths: he dwel
led right against the Goldsmiths Hall.
Betweene the which Hall and his dwel
ling house, he builded a Gallory thwar
ting the streete, whereby he might goe
from the one to the other, hee was bu
ried in this Church, and Christian his
wife, 1427. Iohn Adis, Goldsmith,
1400. and Margaret his wife. Iohn Fran
cis, Goldsmith, Maior, 1400. and Eli
zabeth his wife, 1450. I. Sutton, Gold
smith, one of the Sheriffes, 1413. Bar
tholomew Seman, Gold-beater, Master
of the Kings Mints, within the Tower
of London, and the Towne of Calice,
1430. Iohn Hewet, Esquire, 1500. Wil
liam Breakespeare, Goldsmith, 1461.
Christopher Eliot, Goldsmith, 1505.
Bartholomew Reade, Goldsmith, Maior,
1502.
1502. was buried in the Charter-house,
and gave to this Parish 100. l. His wife
was buried here with a faire Monu
ment, her picture in habit of a widow.
Thomas Keyton, Lorimar, 1522. Willi
am Potken, Esquire, 1537. Iohn Cornish
with an Epitaph, 1470. Robert Fenrbu
ther, Goldsmith, one of the Sheriffes in
the yeere, 1512.
Hereunder lieth buried sir Nicholas Twi
ford,
this City, and Dame Margery his wife;
of whose goods this Church was made a
Tombe for themselves, and for many
other more. He died in Anno Domini,
1390.
ford,
These words are engraven on an an
ciēt place in the Chancell.
Knight, sometime Lord Maior of
ciēt place in the Chancell.
this City, and Dame Margery his wife;
of whose goods this Church was made a
Tombe for themselves, and for many
other more. He died in Anno Domini,
1390.
Hic jacet Iohannes Adys,
rifaber London, & Margareta uxor
ejus, Obiit ultimo die Februarii,
1461. Et Margareta, &c.
A faire plated in the South Ile of the Quire.
Civis, & Aurifaber London, & Margareta uxor
ejus, Obiit ultimo die Februarii,
1461. Et Margareta, &c.
Here lieth Iohn Hewet,
squire, the which Iohn deceased the first
day of May, in the yeere of our Lord God
1510. and in the fifth yeere of the reigne
of King Henry the seventh, &c.
The like stone close by it.
of London, Esquire, the which Iohn deceased the first
day of May, in the yeere of our Lord God
1510. and in the fifth yeere of the reigne
of King Henry the seventh, &c.
Here lieth the body of Iohn Sutton,
zen, Goldsmith, and Alderman of Lon
don, who died the 6. day of Iuly, 1450.
The like stone and in the same Ile.
Citizen, Goldsmith, and Alderman of Lon
don, who died the 6. day of Iuly, 1450.
Here lieth buried before this place,
of Iohn Strelley, Esquire, who decea
sed the ninth day of December, 1595.
being about 86. yeeres of age.
A small Plate with his Armes in the South wall.
the body
of Iohn Strelley, Esquire, who decea
sed the ninth day of December, 1595.
being about 86. yeeres of age.
Here lieth buried within this Ile,
of Iohn Greenwood, Citizen, and
Painter-Stainer of Lond. who descen
ded of a younger house of Greenwood,
of Greenwoodley in Yorekshire:
And Elizabeth his wife, by whom hee
had many children; but at the time of
their death, left onely one sonne and a
daughter, Robert, and Ioane, which
Robert, after many yeeres spent in this
Parish, was laid by his father and mo
ther the 23. of Iune, 1585. In memory
of whom this Monument was erected by
his sisters sonne, Samuel Thompson, the
sixth of September, Anno 1602.
A comely Monumēt in the East end of the South Ile.
the bodies
of Iohn Greenwood, Citizen, and
Painter-Stainer of Lond. who descen
ded of a younger house of Greenwood,
of Greenwoodley in Yorekshire:
And Elizabeth his wife, by whom hee
had many children; but at the time of
their death, left onely one sonne and a
daughter, Robert, and Ioane, which
Robert, after many yeeres spent in this
Parish, was laid by his father and mo
ther the 23. of Iune, 1585. In memory
of whom this Monument was erected by
his sisters sonne, Samuel Thompson, the
sixth of September, Anno 1602.
Hic jacet Dominus Thomas Randolf,
Capellanus. Qui obiit 29. die No
vembris, Anno Domini, 1459. Cu
jus animae propitietur Deus.
A faire stone within the Chancell doore.
Capellanus. Qui obiit 29. die No
vembris, Anno Domini, 1459. Cu
jus animae propitietur Deus.
Hic jacet Ioannes Frances,
Aurifaber, & quondam Maior Lon
don. Qui obiit 13. die Decemb. An.
Dom. 1405. Cujus, &c.
A very faire pla
ted stone by the Commu
nion Ta
ble.
Civis, &
ted stone by the Commu
nion Ta
ble.
Aurifaber, & quondam Maior Lon
don. Qui obiit 13. die Decemb. An.
Dom. 1405. Cujus, &c.
Hic jacet Drugo Barantine,
Aurifaber, & quondam Maior Lon
don. Qui obiit 15. die Mensis De
cemb. An. Dom. 1415. Cujus, &c.
The like faire pla
ted stone close by the other.
Civis &
ted stone close by the other.
Aurifaber, & quondam Maior Lon
don. Qui obiit 15. die Mensis De
cemb. An. Dom. 1415. Cujus, &c.
Hic jacet Christiana, ux. dict. Drugo
nis. Quae obiit 11. die Mensis Martii,
An. Dom. 1427. Cujus, &c.
nis. Quae obiit 11. die Mensis Martii,
An. Dom. 1427. Cujus, &c.
This Monument is erected to the memory
of Sir Iames Pemberton,
being Sheriffe of this City at the com
ming in of King IAMES, entertained
neere 40. Earles and Barons in his house
on the day of the Kings being proclai
med. Afterwards, Anno 1612. was
elected Maior of this most honourable
Citie of London. Hee erected a Free-schoole
in the Parish of Ecleston in Lan
cashire, sixteene yeeres before his death,
and gave fifty pounds by the yeere to the
maintaining thereof for ever. Hee gave
also five hundred pounds to Christs Hos
pitall, and two hundred pounds to the
Company of Goldsmiths, besides many
liberall gifts to the poore of his Kinred,
and many other most charitable uses: He
died the eighth day of September, 1613.
aged, 68. yeeres.
of Sir Iames Pemberton,
A very goodly Monu
ment in the East end in the Chancell.
Knight, who
ment in the East end in the Chancell.
being Sheriffe of this City at the com
ming in of King IAMES, entertained
neere 40. Earles and Barons in his house
on the day of the Kings being proclai
med. Afterwards, Anno 1612. was
elected Maior of this most honourable
Citie of London. Hee erected a Free-schoole
in the Parish of Ecleston in Lan
cashire, sixteene yeeres before his death,
and gave fifty pounds by the yeere to the
maintaining thereof for ever. Hee gave
also five hundred pounds to Christs Hos
pitall, and two hundred pounds to the
Company of Goldsmiths, besides many
liberall gifts to the poore of his Kinred,
and many other most charitable uses: He
died the eighth day of September, 1613.
aged, 68. yeeres.
Marble nor Touch,
nor Alabaster can
Reveale the worth of
the long buried man:
For oft (we see) mens goods,
when they are gone,
Doe pious deeds, when
they themselves did none.
Mine (while I liv’d) no
goodnesse did expresse,
’Tis not Inscriptions make
them more or lesse:
In Christ I hope to rise
amongst the Iust,
Man is but grasse, all must
to Wormes and Dust.
both enamoured
On worthy PEMBERTON,
in heate of Love,
To be possest of
that each coveted,
Thus did they dialogue,
and thus they strove.
Ver.
No, Death, thou art deceiv’d,
thy envious stroke
Hath given him life
immortall, ’gainst thy will:
Ver.
Them I most covet.
Ver.
Mine his Eternity.
And as faire Trophees,
fit to beautifie
His Hearse, Vertue hangs
up these Ornaments:
His Justice, VVisedome,
and Integritie,
His courage, dreadlesse
of what are events,
His upright soule
in that high dignitie,
VVhich London gives
her chiefest Presidents.
Free from compare
with such as went before,
Or should succeed.
It was his sole desire
Truth might report those
actions lesse or more,
Which honest thoughts
did in his heart inspire.
His care of learning
and his liberall minde
Vnto the poore,
love to his Company,
Kinred and Friends, to
whom he was most kinde,
And with whom he dealt
truly bounteously:
These graces better doe
become his Grave,
Than wastfull words
of fruitlesse flattery,
And their due merit
(doubtlesse) he shall have,
Among the blessed
in Eternity.
VVhereto faire Vertue now
hath brought her son,
Worthily honour’d,
A. M.
On the East side of this Foster lane,
Engaine lane end, is the Goldsmiths
Hall, a proper house, but not large. And
therefore to say that Bartholomew Read,
Goldsmith, Maior in the yeere, 1502.
kept such a feast in this Hall, as some
have fabuled, is farre incredible, and
altogether unpossible, considering the
smalnesse of the Hall, and number of the
guests, which as they say, were more
than 100. persons of great estate. For
the messes and dishes of meats to them
served, the paled Parke in the same
Hall, furnished with fruitfull trees,
beasts of Venery, and other circumstan
ces of that pretended feast well weigh
ed, Westminster Hall would hardly have
sufficed; and therefore I will over-passe
it, and note somewhat of principall
Goldsmiths.
The Gold
smiths Hall.
at
smiths Hall.
Engaine lane end, is the Goldsmiths
Hall, a proper house, but not large. And
therefore to say that Bartholomew Read,
Goldsmith, Maior in the yeere, 1502.
kept such a feast in this Hall, as some
have fabuled, is farre incredible, and
altogether unpossible, considering the
smalnesse of the Hall, and number of the
guests,
guests, which as they say, were more
than 100. persons of great estate. For
the messes and dishes of meats to them
served, the paled Parke in the same
Hall, furnished with fruitfull trees,
beasts of Venery, and other circumstan
ces of that pretended feast well weigh
ed, Westminster Hall would hardly have
sufficed; and therefore I will over-passe
it, and note somewhat of principall
Goldsmiths.
First, J reade, that Leofstane, Gold
smith, was Provost of this City, in the
reigne of Henry the first. Also, that
Henry Fitz Alewin, Fitz Leafstane,
smith, was Maior of London, in the first
of Richard the first. Also, that Gregory
Rocksly, chiefe Say-master of all the
Kings Mints within England (and there
fore by my conjecture,
was Maior in the third of Edward the
first, and continued Maior seven yeeres
together. Then William Faringdon,
Goldsmith, Alderman of Faringdon
Ward, one of the Sheriffes, 1281. the
ninth of Edward the first, who was a
Goldsmith, as appeareth in record, and
shall bee shewed in Faringdon Ward.
Then Nicholas Faringdon his son, Gold
smith, Alderman of Faringdon Ward,
foure times Maior in the reigne of Ed
ward the second, &c. For the rest of la
ter time are more manifestly knowne;
and therefore I leave them: the men of
this mystery were incorporated or con
firmed in the sixteenth of Richard the
second.
smith, was Provost of this City, in the
reigne of Henry the first. Also, that
Henry Fitz Alewin, Fitz Leafstane,
The first Maior of London was a Gold
smith.
Goldsmith.
smith, was Maior of London, in the first
of Richard the first. Also, that Gregory
Rocksly, chiefe Say-master of all the
Kings Mints within England (and there
fore by my conjecture,
Principall men of the City, Gold
smiths.
a Goldsmith)
smiths.
was Maior in the third of Edward the
first, and continued Maior seven yeeres
together. Then William Faringdon,
Goldsmith, Alderman of Faringdon
Ward, one of the Sheriffes, 1281. the
ninth of Edward the first, who was a
Goldsmith, as appeareth in record, and
shall bee shewed in Faringdon Ward.
Then Nicholas Faringdon his son, Gold
smith, Alderman of Faringdon Ward,
foure times Maior in the reigne of Ed
ward the second, &c. For the rest of la
ter time are more manifestly knowne;
and therefore I leave them: the men of
this mystery were incorporated or con
firmed in the sixteenth of Richard the
second.
Then at the North end of Noble street
is the Parish Church of Saint Olave in
Silver streete, a small thing, and with
out any note-worthy Monuments, but
these following.
is the Parish Church of Saint Olave in
Silver streete, a small thing, and with
out any note-worthy Monuments, but
these following.
Here under this stone lieth buried the body
of Iohn Darcy,
Darcy of Ehie, who died in An. 1593.
aged, 33-yeeres.
of Iohn Darcy,
A faire plated stone in the Chan
cell.
second son to Iohn, Lord
cell.
Darcy of Ehie, who died in An. 1593.
aged, 33-yeeres.
Here lieth Grisseild Windsore,
of Henry, Lord Windsore, and Lady
Anne his wife, daughter and heyre of
Sir Thomas Rivet, Knight, who de
parted this life the seven and twentieth
day of Iune, and in the yeere of our Lord
God, 1600.
Another stone neer to it.
daughter
of Henry, Lord Windsore, and Lady
Anne his wife, daughter and heyre of
Sir Thomas Rivet, Knight, who de
parted this life the seven and twentieth
day of Iune, and in the yeere of our Lord
God, 1600.
A Remembrance of Master IOHN
BANESTER, Chirurgeon, and Li
centiate in Physicke.
BANESTER, Chirurgeon, and Li
centiate in Physicke.
GReat men that ne’re did
good in all their dayes,
But at the very instant
of their death,
Finde yet no meane
commenders of their praise,
Although it lasts no
longer than a-breath:
Shall then good men,
though lesser in degree,
Finde none to give
them right and equity?
If one shall say, The great
mans life was such,
So good, so full
of hospitality:
When God doth know,
he ne’re did halfe so much,
Though thus he must
be grac’d with flattery.
Shall meane men, who
such workes truly did,
Be nothing spoken of?
Oh God forbid.
Not then, as equalling
with any Great,
My fatherly good
friend, Iohn Banester:
No more but truth of
thee let me repeate,
A Sonnes Love-teares,
thy body to interre.
That such as knew thee
better same than I:
May say, Thy vertues
did not with thee dye,
Thy Skill and Practice,
that it selfe commends,
Some of the best have
truely found the same,
Not partially employed
to wealthy friends,
But even the poorest wretch,
the sicke and lame
Felt of the best. Some
difference there might be:
The rich payd somewhat,
Thy care and cost layd out
for common good,
In greater measure
than came in againe:
But that heavens blessing
with thy bounty stood,
Hardly had stretcht
so many to sustaine.
But it is true: The
liberall heart God loves,
And from him still all
cause of lacke removes,
Thy weekly charity
given to the poore
In Bread, beside, in
money from thy Purse:
Even in the hardest yeeres
dealt at thy doore,
When some repin’d that
every day did worse;
Makes poore men say:
Our good reliefe is gone,
Let them goe to thy
find-faults and have none.
Poore maymed Souldiers,
sore-sicke hearted men,
That under miseries
hard Crouch did bow,
Were freely cur’d, me thinkes
they cry: Lord, when,
Where shall we finde
our good Physician now?
I doubt not, but some
others will as much:
Yet (in these dayes) we
finde not many such.
Sleepe then, thou happy
Soule, in endlesse rest,
All good mens groanes
be powred on thy grave:
Live thou in Abrahams
bosome with blest;
Where Faith and VVorkes
due recompence shall have,
My sight growes dimme,
sighing my heart makes sore:
Teares blot my paper,
I can write no more.
On the west side of Foster lane is the
small Parish Church of S. Leonards, for
them of St. Martins le graund. A num
ber of Tenements being lately builded
in place of the great Collegiate Church
of Saint Martin, that Parish is mighti
ly increased.
small Parish Church of S. Leonards, for
them of St. Martins le graund. A num
ber of Tenements being lately builded
in place of the great Collegiate Church
of Saint Martin, that Parish is mighti
ly increased.
In this Church remaine these Monu
ments: First, without the Church is
graven in stone on the East end, Iohn
Broke it well, an especiall re-edifier or
new builder thereof.
ments: First, without the Church is
graven in stone on the East end, Iohn
Broke it well, an especiall re-edifier or
new builder thereof.
In the Quire graven in brasse, Ro.
Purfet, Grocer, 1507.
Purfet, Grocer, 1507.
When the Bels be merrily rung,
And the Masse devoutly sung:
And the meate merrily eaten,
Then shall Robert Traps his wife
and children be forgotten.
Sub hoc Marmore requiescit corpus
Humfred. Barret,
ret, Generosus. Qui obiit, An. Do
mini 1501.
Humfred. Barret,
A stone at the en
tring into the Quire
filli Iohannis Bartring into the Quire
ret, Generosus. Qui obiit, An. Do
mini 1501.
Live to Dye.
All flesh is grasse,
A faire stone in the Chan
cel, name
lesse.
and needs must fade,cel, name
lesse.
To earth againe, whereof it was made.
Felici, piae, & munificentissimae fe
minae,
siliae Roberti & Ioannae Trappes
Londinensium: Gratitudinis hoc of
ficii & pietatis Monumentum adop
tione filii Principalis & Scholares
Collegii de Brasennose apud Oxoni
ensee exhibùûre.
minae,
A faire Monu
ment in the North wall of the Chancell.
Iodocae Franckland viduatae,
ment in the North wall of the Chancell.
siliae Roberti & Ioannae Trappes
Londinensium: Gratitudinis hoc of
ficii & pietatis Monumentum adop
tione filii Principalis & Scholares
Collegii de Brasennose apud Oxoni
ensee exhibùûre.
Dilecti cineres, non sic
requiescitis urna
In tenui, ut vobis sola haec
monumenta parantur,
Quae tandem vel sera
dies pessundare possit:
Aenea vos monumenta tegunt,
vivumque Trophaeum
(Aeternum meruistis enim
vivumque Trophaeum)
Vobis vestra dedit Iodoca,
perenniùs aere,
Nes etenim aeternumqne omnes,
quos postera nobis
Secla dabunt vobis sumus
immortale Sepulchrum.
Then in Pope lane, so called of one Pope
that was owner thereof, on the North
side is the Parish Church of Saint Anne
in the willowes, so called, I know not
upon what occasion: but some say, of
willowes growing thereabouts: but
now there is no such voide place for
willowes to grow, more than the
Church-yard, wherein doe grow some
high Ash trees.
that was owner thereof, on the North
Ff
side
side is the Parish Church of Saint Anne
in the willowes, so called, I know not
upon what occasion: but some say, of
willowes growing thereabouts: but
now there is no such voide place for
willowes to grow, more than the
Church-yard, wherein doe grow some
high Ash trees.
This Church by causualty of fire, in
the yeere 1548. was burnt, so farre as it
was combustible; but since being new
ly repaired, there remaine a few Monu
ments of antiquity, of Thomas Lekhimp
ton, Clarke of the Pipe, who was buried
there, 1499. Ralph Caldwell, Gentleman
of Greyes Inne, 1527. Iohn, Lord Shef
feld, Iohn Herenden, Mercer, Esquire,
1572. And these Verses are on an anci
ent Table, hanging in the Quire.
the yeere 1548. was burnt, so farre as it
was combustible; but since being new
ly repaired, there remaine a few Monu
ments of antiquity, of Thomas Lekhimp
ton, Clarke of the Pipe, who was buried
there, 1499. Ralph Caldwell, Gentleman
of Greyes Inne, 1527. Iohn, Lord Shef
feld, Iohn Herenden, Mercer, Esquire,
1572. And these Verses are on an anci
ent Table, hanging in the Quire.
Vt tibi praeceptis mens
conformetur honestis,
Sex animo semper,
sunt repetenda tuo.
Principio Deus est, noster
Deus.
servator & Author,
Hostis in opposita
stat regione Sathan.
Diabolus.
Tertia res praesens est,
Vita.
vita simillima ventis,
Mors sequitur nobis,
Mors.
quae prope semper adest.
Ordine sunt quinto,
Coelum.
Coeli palatia summis,
Tartara sunt sexto,
Inferuum.
constituenda loco.
Haec animo tacitè secum,
qui saepe revolvit,
Miror in hoc vitij,
siquid inesse potest.
Gualterus Haddonus.
A table in the North Ile of the Chancell.
Quos anguis Tristi de iro cum vulnere strauit
hos sanguis Christi miro Tum munere lauit
Corda, manus, oculos,
aures, animosque levemus,
Et Domino, voces, sua sunt,
& ei sua demus.
Quos amor aeterno vivos
in foedere junxit,
Concordes tumulo mors
sic conjunxit in uno.
Non sors unanimes, nec
mors disjungit amantes,
Sed post fata vides
inviolata amant.
Here lieth buried the body of Edward He
renden,
of London, and Millescent his wife,
daughter of Richard Samond, of An
sley Woodhouse, in the County of
Nottingham, Esquire: who had issue
then living, Edmund, Henry, and Sey
more their sonnes; Frances, Martha,
Magdalene, and Judith, their daugh
ters: which Edward Herenden was
sonne and heyre of Richard Herenden
of West Farleige, in the County of Kent,
Esquire, An. 1572.
renden,
A hand
some smal Monumēt in the North wal of the Quire.
Esquire, Citizen and Mercer
some smal Monumēt in the North wal of the Quire.
of London, and Millescent his wife,
daughter of Richard Samond, of An
sley Woodhouse, in the County of
Nottingham, Esquire: who had issue
then living, Edmund, Henry, and Sey
more their sonnes; Frances, Martha,
Magdalene, and Judith, their daugh
ters: which Edward Herenden was
sonne and heyre of Richard Herenden
of West Farleige, in the County of Kent,
Esquire, An. 1572.
Memorare novissima, & in
aeternum non peccabis.
Eccles. 7.
aeternum non peccabis.
Eccles. 7.
Here lieth the bodies of Edmund Heren
den,
ward Herenden, Esquire, whose Mo
nument next adjoyneth. Which Ed
mund had to his first wife, Helen,
daughter of William Dunkeyn, Citi
zen, and Merchant-Taylor of London:
And he had issue by her nine sonnes, and
foure daughters. Hee had to his second
wife, Helen, daughter of Iohn Bird,
Citizen and Draper of London. Obiit
10. die Aprilis, 1590.
den,
A smaller Monumēt by the other.
Gentleman, sonne and heyre of Edward Herenden, Esquire, whose Mo
nument next adjoyneth. Which Ed
mund had to his first wife, Helen,
daughter of William Dunkeyn, Citi
zen, and Merchant-Taylor of London:
And he had issue by her nine sonnes, and
foure daughters. Hee had to his second
wife, Helen, daughter of Iohn Bird,
Citizen and Draper of London. Obiit
10. die Aprilis, 1590.
Here-under this stone lieth the body of Ste
phen Brakynbury,
Henry the 8. Edward the 6. Queene
Mary, and Queen Elizabeth, and Ioan
his wife: which Stephen died the 2. day
of Febru. An. 1563. & Ioane died, &c.
phen Brakynbury,
A faire plated stone un
der the Commu
nion table.
Gent. Vsher to King
der the Commu
nion table.
Henry the 8. Edward the 6. Queene
Mary, and Queen Elizabeth, and Ioan
his wife: which Stephen died the 2. day
of Febru. An. 1563. & Ioane died, &c.
Orate devotè pro anima
Magistri Ioannis Pem
berton,
Baccalaurii, quond. Resi
dentiar. Eccles. Cath. de
Rippon, Ebor. Diocesis, hujus{que} alius
Eccles. Rectoris. Qui obiit 12. die
Septemb. An. Dom. 1499. Cujus, &c.
Magistri Ioannis Pem
berton,
Another stone by the Com
munion Table.
utriusque Juris
munion Table.
Baccalaurii, quond. Resi
dentiar. Eccles. Cath. de
Rippon, Ebor. Diocesis, hujus{que} alius
Eccles. Rectoris. Qui obiit 12. die
Septemb. An. Dom. 1499. Cujus, &c.
William Gregory, Skinner, Maior of Lon
don in the yeere 1451. was there buried,
and founded a Chauntry, but no Mo
nument of him remaineth.
don in the yeere 1451. was there buried,
and founded a Chauntry, but no Mo
nument of him remaineth.
Then in St. Martins lane was (of old
time) a faire and large Colledge, of a
Deane and secular Canons or Priests,
and was called Saint Martins le graund,
founded by Ingelricus, and Edwardus his
brother, in the yeere of Christ, 1056.
and confirmed by William the Conque
rour, as appeareth by his Charter dated
1068. This Colledge claimed great
priviledges of Sanctuary,
wise, as appeareth in a booke written
by a Notary of that house, about the
yeere 1442. the nineteenth of Henry the
sixth, wherein amongst other things, is
set downe and declared, that on the first
of September, in the yeere aforesaid, a
Souldier, prisoner in Newgate, as hee
was led by an Officer towards the Guild
hall of London, there came out of Panyer
Alley five of his fellowship, and tooke
him from the Officer, brought him into
Sanctuary, at the West doore of Saint
Martins Church, and tooke grithe of
that place. But the same day Philip
Malpas, and Robert Marshall, then She
riffes of London, with many other entred
the said Church, and forcibly tooke out
with them the said five men thither
fled; led them fettred to the Compter,
and from thence chained by the neckes
to Newgate: of which violent taking,
the Deane and Chapter in large man
ner complained to the King, and requi
red him as their Patron, to defend their
priviledges, like as his Predecessors had
done, &c. All which complaint and
sute, the Citizens by their councell,
Markam, Serjeant at the Law, Iohn
Carpenter,
City, and other, learnedly answered,
offering to prove, that the said place of
Saint Martin had no such immunity or
liberty as was pretended; namely, Car
penter offered to lose his live-lode, if that
Church had more immunity than the
least Church in London: notwithstanding,
after long debating of this con
troversie, by the Kings commande
ment, and assent of his Councell in the
Starre-Chamber, the Chancellour and
Treasurer sent a Writ unto the Sheriffs
of London, charging them to bring the
said five persons, with the cause of their
taking, and withholding afore the King
in his Chancery, on the Vigill of All
hallowes. On which day, the said She
riffes, with the Recorder and Councell
of the City, brought and delivered
them accordingly, afore the said Lords,
whereas the Chancelor, after hee had
declared the Kings commandement,
sent them to Saint Martins, there to a
bide freely, as in a place having franchi
ses, whiles them liked, &c.
time) a faire and large Colledge, of a
Deane
Deane and secular Canons or Priests,
and was called Saint Martins le graund,
founded by Ingelricus, and Edwardus his
brother, in the yeere of Christ, 1056.
and confirmed by William the Conque
rour, as appeareth by his Charter dated
1068. This Colledge claimed great
priviledges of Sanctuary,
Lib. S. Mar
tin.
and othertin.
wise, as appeareth in a booke written
by a Notary of that house, about the
yeere 1442. the nineteenth of Henry the
sixth, wherein amongst other things, is
set downe and declared, that on the first
of September, in the yeere aforesaid, a
Souldier, prisoner in Newgate, as hee
was led by an Officer towards the Guild
hall of London, there came out of Panyer
Alley five of his fellowship, and tooke
him from the Officer, brought him into
Sanctuary, at the West doore of Saint
Martins Church, and tooke grithe of
that place. But the same day Philip
Malpas, and Robert Marshall, then She
riffes of London, with many other entred
the said Church, and forcibly tooke out
with them the said five men thither
fled; led them fettred to the Compter,
and from thence chained by the neckes
to Newgate: of which violent taking,
the Deane and Chapter in large man
ner complained to the King, and requi
red him as their Patron, to defend their
priviledges, like as his Predecessors had
done, &c. All which complaint and
sute, the Citizens by their councell,
Markam, Serjeant at the Law, Iohn
Carpenter,
Argument against priviledge challen
ged by the Deane of S. Martins.
late Common Clarke of the
ged by the Deane of S. Martins.
City, and other, learnedly answered,
offering to prove, that the said place of
Saint Martin had no such immunity or
liberty as was pretended; namely, Car
penter offered to lose his live-lode, if that
Church had more immunity than the
least Church in London: notwithstanding,
after long debating of this con
troversie, by the Kings commande
ment, and assent of his Councell in the
Starre-Chamber, the Chancellour and
Treasurer sent a Writ unto the Sheriffs
of London, charging them to bring the
said five persons, with the cause of their
taking, and withholding afore the King
in his Chancery, on the Vigill of All
hallowes. On which day, the said She
riffes, with the Recorder and Councell
of the City, brought and delivered
them accordingly, afore the said Lords,
whereas the Chancelor, after hee had
declared the Kings commandement,
sent them to Saint Martins, there to a
bide freely, as in a place having franchi
ses, whiles them liked, &c.
Thus much out of that Booke have I
noted concerning the Priviledge of that
place, challenged in those dayes; since
the which time, to wit, in the yeere
1457. the 36. of the said Henry the sixth,
an Ordinance was made by the King
and his Councell, concerning the said
Sanctuary men in S. Martins le graund,
whereof the Articles are set downe in
the Booke of K. within the Chamber of
the Guild hall, in the leafe 299.
noted concerning the Priviledge of that
place, challenged in those dayes; since
the which time, to wit, in the yeere
1457. the 36. of the said Henry the sixth,
an Ordinance was made by the King
and his Councell, concerning the said
Sanctuary men in S. Martins le graund,
whereof the Articles are set downe in
the Booke of K. within the Chamber of
the Guild hall, in the leafe 299.
Henricus Dei gratia, Rex Angliae &
Franciae, & Dominus Hyberniae:
Omnibus ad quos presentes literae
perventium, salutem. Inspeximus te
norem quondam ordinationis, con
cessionis, & stabilimenti certorum
Articulorum infra Sanctuarin li
berae Capellae nostrae, S. Martini
infra Civitatem nostram London
observandam & custodiendam, co
ram Nobis & Concilio nostro, 5. die
Februarii ultimo praeterito, apud
Westmon. in Camera Stellata, or
dinatorum & stabilitorum, Nobis
in Cancellar. nostram de mandato
nostro missum factū in haec verba:
Franciae, & Dominus Hyberniae:
Omnibus ad quos presentes literae
perventium, salutem. Inspeximus te
norem quondam ordinationis, con
cessionis, & stabilimenti certorum
Articulorum infra Sanctuarin li
berae Capellae nostrae, S. Martini
infra Civitatem nostram London
observandam & custodiendam, co
ram Nobis & Concilio nostro, 5. die
Februarii ultimo praeterito, apud
Westmon. in Camera Stellata, or
dinatorum & stabilitorum, Nobis
in Cancellar. nostram de mandato
nostro missum factū in haec verba:
THe fifth of Feverer,
the Reigne of our Soveraigne
Lord, King Henry the 6. thirty
fifth: at Westminster, in the Sterred Cham
ber, our said Soveraigne Lord, calling
to his high remembrance, the good and
blessed entent that his full Noble Pre
genitours have at all times had, to the
honour, worship, conservation and wele
of the Free Chappell of Saint Martins,
within the Citie of London, of the
which the King our said Soveraigne
Lord is founder and Patron: desiring
to doe all that may serve to th’ ease and
restful roule of the same; and conservati
on of the Sanctuary, Immunity, Privi
leges and Liberties, as appertaine to
the said Chappell and place, willing
that hereafter none occasion be yeven,
to the breach or hurting of them.
membring also the great complaints,
grudging, and displeasure that his sub
jects have taken, and specially the Citi
zens and Commonalty of the said City
of London, of the demeaning of misru
led persons comming and abiding in
the said place, under umbre and colour
of the Sanctuary there, the which have
at divers times issued out of the said
Sanctuary, and committed many ry
ots, robberies, man-slaughters, and o
ther mischiefes; where-through the
said Sanctuary hath be greatly dislaun
dered, and (over that) great inconve
nience like to ensue.
Set downe according to the English then used, and as it standeth in the Re
cord.
the yeere of
cord.
the Reigne of our Soveraigne
Lord, King Henry the 6. thirty
fifth: at Westminster, in the Sterred Cham
ber, our said Soveraigne Lord, calling
to his high remembrance, the good and
blessed entent that his full Noble Pre
genitours have at all times had, to the
honour, worship, conservation and wele
of the Free Chappell of Saint Martins,
within the Citie of London, of the
which the King our said Soveraigne
Lord is founder and Patron: desiring
to doe all that may serve to th’ ease and
restful roule of the same; and conservati
on of the Sanctuary, Immunity, Privi
leges and Liberties, as appertaine to
the said Chappell and place, willing
Ff2
that
that hereafter none occasion be yeven,
to the breach or hurting of them.
Offence taken by the City, against the indi
rect cour
ses used in the San
ctuary.
Rerect cour
ses used in the San
ctuary.
membring also the great complaints,
grudging, and displeasure that his sub
jects have taken, and specially the Citi
zens and Commonalty of the said City
of London, of the demeaning of misru
led persons comming and abiding in
the said place, under umbre and colour
of the Sanctuary there, the which have
at divers times issued out of the said
Sanctuary, and committed many ry
ots, robberies, man-slaughters, and o
ther mischiefes; where-through the
said Sanctuary hath be greatly dislaun
dered, and (over that) great inconve
nience like to ensue.
After great deliberation and com
munication had as well with Doctors
of Divinity, as of Law Civill and Ca
nonicall, called also thereto the Iudges
of this our Land, and their advices had
in that behalfe, other men also of great
wisedome and experience for the
weale and conservation of the said San
ctuary, and to eschew the said misgo
vernance and mischiefe, called also be
fore our said Soveraigne Lord and his
Councell the Maior and the Aldermen
of the said City, and Master Richard
Cawdre, Deane of the said place of
Saint Martins.
Lord (by the advice of his Councell a
bove said) Ordained, granted, and esta
blished certaine Articles under writ
ten, to bee kept and observed within
the said Sanctuary, from this time
forth, without any interruption of
them. VVilling and ordaining, that
the said Deane that now is promit by
his oath the observance of the same
for the time that hee shall bee Deane
there. And that every Deane after him
in his admission to the said Deanary,
be sworne to keepe the said Articles in
semblable wise, and make them to bee
kept within the said Sanctuary: the
which Articles beene such as follow:
munication had as well with Doctors
of Divinity, as of Law Civill and Ca
nonicall, called also thereto the Iudges
of this our Land, and their advices had
in that behalfe, other men also of great
wisedome and experience for the
weale and conservation of the said San
ctuary, and to eschew the said misgo
vernance and mischiefe, called also be
fore our said Soveraigne Lord and his
Councell the Maior and the Aldermen
of the said City, and Master Richard
Cawdre, Deane of the said place of
Saint Martins.
Order from the King and his Coun
cell to the Deane of the San
ctuary.
Our said Soveraigne
cell to the Deane of the San
ctuary.
Lord (by the advice of his Councell a
bove said) Ordained, granted, and esta
blished certaine Articles under writ
ten, to bee kept and observed within
the said Sanctuary, from this time
forth, without any interruption of
them. VVilling and ordaining, that
the said Deane that now is promit by
his oath the observance of the same
for the time that hee shall bee Deane
there. And that every Deane after him
in his admission to the said Deanary,
be sworne to keepe the said Articles in
semblable wise, and make them to bee
kept within the said Sanctuary: the
which Articles beene such as follow:
1. First,
comming unto the said Sanctuary for
tuition, and challenge to enjoy the im
munities and priviledges thereof, at his
entree, as soone as hee commodiously
and reasonably shall now present him
selfe unto the said Deane, his Commis
sarie, or Depute in that behalfe, and
before him declare the cause of the
feare moving him to come to the said
Sanctuary, be it for treason, felony,
surmised upon him, or for other causes,
and that the said declaration and cause
bee registred in the common Register,
ordained therefore in the said Sanctu
ary, and the name of the said fugitive.
For fugi
tives clai
ming be
nefit of the San
ctuary, & the causes moving thkm thereto.
That every person fugitive
tives clai
ming be
nefit of the San
ctuary, & the causes moving thkm thereto.
comming unto the said Sanctuary for
tuition, and challenge to enjoy the im
munities and priviledges thereof, at his
entree, as soone as hee commodiously
and reasonably shall now present him
selfe unto the said Deane, his Commis
sarie, or Depute in that behalfe, and
before him declare the cause of the
feare moving him to come to the said
Sanctuary, be it for treason, felony,
surmised upon him, or for other causes,
and that the said declaration and cause
bee registred in the common Register,
ordained therefore in the said Sanctu
ary, and the name of the said fugitive.
2. Item, That hee at his first entree
present and deliver unto the said
Deane, Commissary, or Depute, all
manner of weapon and armour that
hee bringeth with him as well invasive
as defensive,
to weare or use any such weapon or ar
mour, or it to have in his keeping with
in the said Sanctuary in any wise, Ex
cept a reasonable knife, to kerve with
all his meate, and that the said knife be
pointlesse.
present and deliver unto the said
Deane, Commissary, or Depute, all
manner of weapon and armour that
hee bringeth with him as well invasive
as defensive,
Against armour & weapons in the Sanctuary
and that he be not suffered
to weare or use any such weapon or ar
mour, or it to have in his keeping with
in the said Sanctuary in any wise, Ex
cept a reasonable knife, to kerve with
all his meate, and that the said knife be
pointlesse.
3. Item, That every ervaunt and o
pen Theefe,
Felon, notoriously noised by the com
mon fame of the people, or if the said
Deane, Commissary, or Depute bee
credibly informed, or due proofe bee
yoven or made, that hee is such one
repairing to the said Sanctuary, to
the intent that hee shall not (under co
lour of the said Sanctuary) intend to
doe further mischiefe, finde sufficient
seurte to bee made unto the King, as
well by his owne obligation, as by the
obligations of other, of his good bea
ring for the time of his abode (within
the said Sanctuary, and for a quar
ter of a yeere after his departing out
of the same. And that hee bee kept in
ward into the time hee have found and
made the said seurte: And if it so bee,
that it bee complained or shewed un
to the Kings Highnesse,
seurte bee not sufficient, that then at
the commandement of the said Coun
cell (if it bee thought necessary) the
said Deane, Commissary, or Depute
shall take other and better securte, or
else commit them to ward unto the
time better securte bee sound. Fore
seene alway that if the said fugitive
will depart out of the said Sanctua
ry, that hee may so doe when hee
will.
pen Theefe,
For theeves, felons, murde
rers, and infamous persons.
Robber, Murderer, and
rers, and infamous persons.
Felon, notoriously noised by the com
mon fame of the people, or if the said
Deane, Commissary, or Depute bee
credibly informed, or due proofe bee
yoven or made, that hee is such one
repairing to the said Sanctuary, to
the intent that hee shall not (under co
lour of the said Sanctuary) intend to
doe further mischiefe, finde sufficient
seurte to bee made unto the King, as
well by his owne obligation, as by the
obligations of other, of his good bea
ring for the time of his abode (within
the said Sanctuary, and for a quar
ter of a yeere after his departing out
of the same. And that hee bee kept in
ward into the time hee have found and
made the said seurte: And if it so bee,
that it bee complained or shewed un
to the Kings Highnesse,
Concer
ning secu
rity for good be
haviour to be gi
ven.
that the said
ning secu
rity for good be
haviour to be gi
ven.
seurte bee not sufficient, that then at
the commandement of the said Coun
cell (if it bee thought necessary) the
said Deane, Commissary, or Depute
shall take other and better securte, or
else commit them to ward unto the
time better securte bee sound. Fore
seene alway that if the said fugitive
will depart out of the said Sanctua
ry, that hee may so doe when hee
will.
4. Item, That all the out gates, as
well posternes, doores, as all other issues
outward whatsoever they be of the said
Sanctuary,
nightly at nine of the clocke. And so
remaine shut from the same houre, un
to sixe of the clocke in the morning,
from the Feast of Alhallowes,1 unto the
Feast of Candlemasse.2 And the rema
nent of the yeere nightly from the said
houre of nine unto foure of the clocke
in the morning, or unto the time that
the first Masse beginneth within the
said place: And that all those that been
fled to the said Sanctuary for treason
or felony, bee within the closure on
nights time.
well posternes, doores, as all other issues
outward
outward whatsoever they be of the said
Sanctuary,
For close keeping the gates and po
sternes of the San
ctuary nightly.
bee surely closed and shut
sternes of the San
ctuary nightly.
nightly at nine of the clocke. And so
remaine shut from the same houre, un
to sixe of the clocke in the morning,
from the Feast of Alhallowes,1 unto the
Feast of Candlemasse.2 And the rema
nent of the yeere nightly from the said
houre of nine unto foure of the clocke
in the morning, or unto the time that
the first Masse beginneth within the
said place: And that all those that been
fled to the said Sanctuary for treason
or felony, bee within the closure on
nights time.
5. Item,
rer, or felon resort to the said Sanctu
ary for tuition of the same, with any
manner robbery, or stollen goods, if
the party robbed make fresh sute there
fore, and prove by open evidence, that
the same felon hath brought into the
said Sanctuary the said goods so
stolne thence, the said Deane, Com
missary, or Depute, shall put in true
devoire, withouten any dissimulation,
fraud, or malengyne, to make full re
stitution unto the party so grieved of
the same stolne goods, if they can bee
had. And semblably, if any Fugitive
come to the said Sanctuary with other
mens goods, merchandize, or things,
intending there to live with the same:
And the owner of the said goods, mer
chandize, or things, make proofe that
they bee his, and verifie that they bee
brought into the said Sanctuary, the
said Deane, Commissary, or Depute
shall put him in full devoire, to make
restitution, to the party so proving, that
the same goods, merchandizes, or
things were his. And no Fugitive, nor
none dwelling within the said Sanctu
ary shall receive, conceale, nor buy
any such goods; but that they bee
brought to the said Deane, Commis
sary,
ners may have the sooner knowledge
of them. And if the said goods so
stolne and brought to the said Sanctu
ary, be concealed from the said Deane,
Commissary, or Depute, and bought
by any dwelling in the said Sanctuary:
that then the ouyer (abiding there)
make restitution or satisfaction to the
party grieved, proving the said goods
so stolne to bee his, and so sold in the
same Sanctuary.
For bring
ing stolne goods in
to the Sanctuary▪
If any such theefe, murdeing stolne goods in
to the Sanctuary▪
rer, or felon resort to the said Sanctu
ary for tuition of the same, with any
manner robbery, or stollen goods, if
the party robbed make fresh sute there
fore, and prove by open evidence, that
the same felon hath brought into the
said Sanctuary the said goods so
stolne thence, the said Deane, Com
missary, or Depute, shall put in true
devoire, withouten any dissimulation,
fraud, or malengyne, to make full re
stitution unto the party so grieved of
the same stolne goods, if they can bee
had. And semblably, if any Fugitive
come to the said Sanctuary with other
mens goods, merchandize, or things,
intending there to live with the same:
And the owner of the said goods, mer
chandize, or things, make proofe that
they bee his, and verifie that they bee
brought into the said Sanctuary, the
said Deane, Commissary, or Depute
shall put him in full devoire, to make
restitution, to the party so proving, that
the same goods, merchandizes, or
things were his. And no Fugitive, nor
none dwelling within the said Sanctu
ary shall receive, conceale, nor buy
any such goods; but that they bee
brought to the said Deane, Commis
sary,
For resti
tution or amends making to the ow
ners.
or Depute, to the intent the owtution or amends making to the ow
ners.
ners may have the sooner knowledge
of them. And if the said goods so
stolne and brought to the said Sanctu
ary, be concealed from the said Deane,
Commissary, or Depute, and bought
by any dwelling in the said Sanctuary:
that then the ouyer (abiding there)
make restitution or satisfaction to the
party grieved, proving the said goods
so stolne to bee his, and so sold in the
same Sanctuary.
6. Item,
on of the said Sanctuary, from thence
issue out by day or by night, and com
mit or doe any robbery, murder, trea
son, felony, or battery, without the
said Sanctuary. And thereupon resort
againe to the said Sanctuary for tuition;
the said Deane, Commissary, or De
pure, shall upon credible information
given unto him of the said robbery,
murder, treason, felony, or battery so
done (withoutensorth) commit the
same misdoer to ward, there to remaine
as long as he will abide in the said San
ctuary. And if so bee hee will depart
from thence, he shall depart at an houre
to be assigned unto him by day betwixt
sunne and sunne.
For offen
ces com
mitted by Sanctuary persons.
If any person having tuitices com
mitted by Sanctuary persons.
on of the said Sanctuary, from thence
issue out by day or by night, and com
mit or doe any robbery, murder, trea
son, felony, or battery, without the
said Sanctuary. And thereupon resort
againe to the said Sanctuary for tuition;
the said Deane, Commissary, or De
pure, shall upon credible information
given unto him of the said robbery,
murder, treason, felony, or battery so
done (withoutensorth) commit the
same misdoer to ward, there to remaine
as long as he will abide in the said San
ctuary. And if so bee hee will depart
from thence, he shall depart at an houre
to be assigned unto him by day betwixt
sunne and sunne.
7. Item,
Lockes, counterfeitours of Keyes, con
trivers of Sealx, forgers of false eviden
ces, workers of counterfeit Chaines,
Beades, Brouches, Ouches, Rings,
Cups, Spoones silvered, and plates of
Copper gilt, uttered for Gold, unto the
common hurt of the people, be not suf
fered in the said Sanctuary. And if any
being within the said Sanctuary be hol
den suspect of the things abovesaid, let
him be committed to ward, till he find
sufficient surety, as in the third Article
abovesaid.
For Pick
lockes, counter
feiters of divers no
torious crimes.
That subtle pickers of
lockes, counter
feiters of divers no
torious crimes.
Lockes, counterfeitours of Keyes, con
trivers of Sealx, forgers of false eviden
ces, workers of counterfeit Chaines,
Beades, Brouches, Ouches, Rings,
Cups, Spoones silvered, and plates of
Copper gilt, uttered for Gold, unto the
common hurt of the people, be not suf
fered in the said Sanctuary. And if any
being within the said Sanctuary be hol
den suspect of the things abovesaid, let
him be committed to ward, till he find
sufficient surety, as in the third Article
abovesaid.
8. Item,
Strumpers, and Bawdes be not suppor
ted in the said Sanctuary: And if they
claime the tuition of the said Sanctu
ary, that they bee set in open ward on
day times, till shame cause them to de
part, or to amend their vicious living.
For strum
pets, bawdes, & other foule li
vers.
That common Putuers,
pets, bawdes, & other foule li
vers.
Strumpers, and Bawdes be not suppor
ted in the said Sanctuary: And if they
claime the tuition of the said Sanctu
ary, that they bee set in open ward on
day times, till shame cause them to de
part, or to amend their vicious living.
9. Item,
playes at hazzard, the Dice, the Guek,
the Kayelles, the Cloysh, and other
such unleefull and reprovable games
bee not used, supported, nor cherished
within the said Sanctuary.
Against unlawfull games.
That deceitfull games, as
playes at hazzard, the Dice, the Guek,
the Kayelles, the Cloysh, and other
such unleefull and reprovable games
bee not used, supported, nor cherished
within the said Sanctuary.
10. Item,
ling within the said Sanctuary (as well
Barbours as other) keepe holy the
Sundayes and other great Festivall
dayes without breach, or exercising of
their craft, in such wise as done the
Inhabitants of the said City of Lon
don. And if they doe the contrary,
to bee committed to ward, till they
finde sufficient surety, as in the third
Article abovesaid, to use their crafts
in manner and forme as doe the Inhabi
tants of the said City, and according to
the ordinances of the same City.
For Artifi
cers dwel
ling in the San
ctuary.
That all Artificers dwelcers dwel
ling in the San
ctuary.
ling within the said Sanctuary (as well
Barbours as other) keepe holy the
Sundayes and other great Festivall
dayes without breach, or exercising of
their craft, in such wise as done the
Inhabitants of the said City of Lon
don. And if they doe the contrary,
to bee committed to ward, till they
Ff3
finde
finde sufficient surety, as in the third
Article abovesaid, to use their crafts
in manner and forme as doe the Inhabi
tants of the said City, and according to
the ordinances of the same City.
11. Item,
ming to the said Sanctuary for immu
nity and tuition of the same, that hee at
his admission to the said Sanctuary, bee
sworne on a booke, to obey, keepe, and
observe the Articles abovesaid, and e
very each of them with their pains and
rules appertaining to the same. And the
King by the advice abovesaid would,
granted and ordained, that this Act be
exemplified under his great Seale, and
be enrolled in his Chancellary, to the
intent that the ordinance abovesaid re
maine of Record, and that his subjects
may have knowledge thereof.
For such as come to live in the San
ctuary, to take an oath.
That every person comctuary, to take an oath.
ming to the said Sanctuary for immu
nity and tuition of the same, that hee at
his admission to the said Sanctuary, bee
sworne on a booke, to obey, keepe, and
observe the Articles abovesaid, and e
very each of them with their pains and
rules appertaining to the same. And the
King by the advice abovesaid would,
granted and ordained, that this Act be
exemplified under his great Seale, and
be enrolled in his Chancellary, to the
intent that the ordinance abovesaid re
maine of Record, and that his subjects
may have knowledge thereof.
Nos autem tenore praecedentium ad requi
sitinem dilecti & fidelis nostri Galfridi
Baleyne, Maioris Civitatis nostrae Lon
don, & Aldemannorum ejusdem Civita
tis, duximus exemplificandum per prae
sentes: In cujus rei testimonium has li
teras nostras fieri fecimus Patentes, Te
ste meipso apud Westmon. 24. die No
vembris, Anno Regni nostri, 36.
Examinatur per
Iositinem dilecti & fidelis nostri Galfridi
Baleyne, Maioris Civitatis nostrae Lon
don, & Aldemannorum ejusdem Civita
tis, duximus exemplificandum per prae
sentes: In cujus rei testimonium has li
teras nostras fieri fecimus Patentes, Te
ste meipso apud Westmon. 24. die No
vembris, Anno Regni nostri, 36.
hannem
Fankes, &
Thomam Ive.
By the meanes and friendly helpe of
Master William Williams, clarke of the
Chamber of London, I prevailed to have
the true copy of the said Articles: and
therefore in this manner have here in
serted
them.
This Colledge was surrendred to
King Edward the sixth, the second of
his reigne, the yeere of Christ, 1548.
And the same yeere, the Colledge
Church being pulled down, in the East
part thereof a large VVine-Taverne
was builded; and withall, downe to the
west, and throughout the whole pre
cinct of that Colledge, many other hou
ses were builded, and highly priced,
letten to strangers, borne, and other such
as there claimed benefit of priviledges,
granted to the Canons, serving God
day and night (for so bee the words in
the Charter of William the Conqueror)
which may hardly be wrested to artifi
cers, buyers, and sellers, otherwise than
is mentioned in the 21. of S. Matthewes
Gospel.
King Edward the sixth, the second of
his reigne, the yeere of Christ, 1548.
And the same yeere, the Colledge
Church being pulled down, in the East
part thereof a large VVine-Taverne
was builded; and withall, downe to the
west, and throughout the whole pre
cinct of that Colledge, many other hou
ses were builded, and highly priced,
letten to strangers, borne, and other such
as there claimed benefit of priviledges,
granted to the Canons, serving God
day and night (for so bee the words in
the Charter of William the Conqueror)
which may hardly be wrested to artifi
cers, buyers, and sellers, otherwise than
is mentioned in the 21. of S. Matthewes
Gospel.
Matth. 21.
Lower downe, on the west side of
Saint Martins lane, in the Parish of St.
Anne, almost by Aldersgate, is one great
house, commonly called Northumber
land house: it belonged to Henry Percy.
King Henry the fourth, in the seventh
of his reigne gave this house, with the
tenements thereunto appertaining, to
Queene Iane3 his wife, and then it was
called her VVardrope: it was afterward
a Printing-house; but now a Taverne.
Saint Martins lane, in the Parish of St.
Anne, almost by Aldersgate, is one great
house, commonly called Northumber
land house: it belonged to Henry Percy.
King Henry the fourth, in the seventh
of his reigne gave this house, with the
tenements thereunto appertaining, to
Queene Iane3 his wife, and then it was
called her VVardrope: it was afterward
a Printing-house; but now a Taverne.
VVithout Aldersgate, on the East side
of Aldersgate streete, is the Cooks Hall:
Which Cookes (or Pastelars) were ad
mitted to be a Company, and to have a
Master and VVardens, in the two and
twentienth of Edward the fourth. From
thence, along unto Hounsditch, or Barbi
can streete, bee many faire houses. On
the west side also be the like faire buil
dings, till yee come to Long lane, and so
to Goswell streete.
of Aldersgate streete, is the Cooks Hall:
Which Cookes (or Pastelars) were ad
mitted to be a Company, and to have a
Master and VVardens, in the two and
twentienth of Edward the fourth. From
thence, along unto Hounsditch, or Barbi
can streete, bee many faire houses. On
the west side also be the like faire buil
dings, till yee come to Long lane, and so
to Goswell streete.
In Britaine streete,
which tooke that
name of the Dukes of Britaine lodging
there, is one proper Parish Church of
Saint Buttolph: In which Church was
sometime a Brotherhood of Saint Fa
bian and Sebastian, founded in the yeere
1377. the 51. of Edward the third, and
confirmed by Henry the fourth, in the
sixth of his reigne. Then Henry the
sixth, in the 24. of his reigne, to the ho
nour of the Trinity, gave licence to
Dame Ioane Astley, sometime his Nurse,
to R. Cawood and T. Smith, to found the
same a Fraternity, perpetually to have
a Master and two Custos, with Brethren
and Sisters, &c. This Brotherhood was
indowed with Lands, more than thirty
pounds by the yeere, & was suppressed
by Edward the sixth.
name of the Dukes of Britaine lodging
there, is one proper Parish Church of
Saint Buttolph: In which Church was
sometime a Brotherhood of Saint Fa
bian and Sebastian, founded in the yeere
1377. the 51. of Edward the third, and
confirmed by Henry the fourth, in the
sixth of his reigne. Then Henry the
sixth, in the 24. of his reigne, to the ho
nour of the Trinity, gave licence to
Dame Ioane Astley, sometime his Nurse,
to R. Cawood and T. Smith, to found the
same a Fraternity, perpetually to have
a Master and two Custos, with Brethren
and Sisters, &c. This Brotherhood was
indowed with Lands, more than thirty
pounds by the yeere, & was suppressed
by Edward the sixth.
Philip at Vine, Capper, 1396.
Benet Gerard, Brewer, 1403.
Thomas Bilsington founded a Chaun
try there, and gave to that Church an
house, called the Helmet upon Cornhill.
try there, and gave to that Church an
house, called the Helmet upon Cornhill.
Allen Bret, Carpenter, 1425.
Iohn Trigilion, Brewer, 1417.
Iohn Mason, Brewer, 1431.
I. Hartshorne, Esquire, servant to the
King, 1400. And other of that Fami
ly, great Benefactors to that Church.
King, 1400. And other of that Fami
ly, great Benefactors to that Church.
The Lady Anne Packington, widdow,
late wife to Iohn Packington, Knight,
Chirographer of the Court of Com
mon Pleas: she founded Almes houses
neere unto the white Friers Church in
Fleetstreet, the Clothworkers in London
have oversight thereof.
late wife to Iohn Packington, Knight,
Chirographer of the Court of Com
mon Pleas: she founded Almes houses
neere unto the white Friers Church in
Fleetstreet, the Clothworkers in London
have oversight thereof.
Here lye buried the bodies of Richard
Downis,
Richard deceased the day of
1500. And the said Joane dyed the 13.
day of Ianuary, 1519.
Downis,
An anciēt Tombe in the South Ile of the Quire.
and Joane his wife. which
Richard deceased the day of
1500. And the said Joane dyed the 13.
day of Ianuary, 1519.
Hic jacet Johannes Rukeby,
vis & Atturnatus London, & Elizabe
tha uxor ejus. Qui quidem Ioh. obiit
1 die Mensis Septembris, 1427.
In the South Ile a plated Grave
stone.
nuper Cistone.
vis & Atturnatus London, & Elizabe
tha uxor ejus. Qui quidem Ioh. obiit
1 die Mensis Septembris, 1427.
The Corps of Iohn Milsam lyeth here,
A grave
stone in the South Ile of the Quire.
stone in the South Ile of the Quire.
Who lived fourescore and one yeere.
Free of the Notaries he was,
a friendly Citizen;
And eke a long time in Guild-Hall,
an Atturney hath been:
Who willingly this mortall life
did yeeld with constant mind,
Inperfect hope through Christ his blood,
th’ immortall life to find:
And now is gone the way before,
that we also must wend;
For Death is due to every man,
by it all things must end.
Ianuary the 18. day, 1567.
Out of this life he tooke the way.
Domina Margareta & Lichtervelde fi
lia Iohannis supremi Flandriae Prae
toris,
Johanni Wits, Topatchae Bouchar
diriae, & Franconatus apud Flandros,
Burghi Magistro: Peperit ei Ferdi
nandum, Jacobum, & Margare
tam,D. Domino Adolpho à Meet
kerck Equiti Aurato, & summo Flan
driae, ex quo Mater facta est Edovar
di, Elizabethae & Salomes. Matrona
excellentissimo ingenio, ornatissimis
moribus, insigni pietate, aliis{que} sum
mis praedita virtutibus. Marito in u
tra{que} fortuna assidua comes, Exiliiq,
postremi fida socia. Vixit Ann. 45.
Mens. 7. dies 14. Piè in Deo obdor
mivit, Idus Novembris, M.D.XC.IIII.
Londini Anglorum. His
additus est tumulus Nobilis viri Pau
li Knibbii, i. Ser. Daniae Regis, Con
siliarii generei supradicti Adolphi à
Meetkerck, qui dum apud Ser. Aug.
Reginam dicti Regis Legatum agit
Lond. Piè defunct. est, 8. Id. Octob.
M.D.XII.
lia Iohannis supremi Flandriae Prae
toris,
In the same Ile upon a painted Table.
nuptum primum Nobili viro
Johanni Wits, Topatchae Bouchar
diriae, & Franconatus apud Flandros,
Burghi Magistro: Peperit ei Ferdi
nandum, Jacobum, & Margare
tam,D. Domino Adolpho à Meet
kerck Equiti Aurato, & summo Flan
driae, ex quo Mater facta est Edovar
di, Elizabethae & Salomes. Matrona
excellentissimo ingenio, ornatissimis
moribus, insigni pietate, aliis{que} sum
mis praedita virtutibus. Marito in u
tra{que} fortuna assidua comes, Exiliiq,
postremi fida socia. Vixit Ann. 45.
Mens. 7. dies 14. Piè in Deo obdor
mivit, Idus Novembris, M.D.XC.IIII.
Londini Anglorum. His
additus est tumulus Nobilis viri Pau
li Knibbii, i. Ser. Daniae Regis, Con
siliarii generei supradicti Adolphi à
Meetkerck, qui dum apud Ser. Aug.
Reginam dicti Regis Legatum agit
Lond. Piè defunct. est, 8. Id. Octob.
M.D.XII.
Cinibus hosce suis
posuit Van Heilus honores
Digna horum meritis
alii Monumenta reponent.
Patience Vaincra.
DEO.
Here resteth the body of William Purde,
Esquire, late Clerke of the Pipe and Pri
vie Seale, which payed the generall tri
bute of Nature, divided from the mun
dane vexations by natural death, the 15
day of August, the 31. yeere, in the reigne
of King Henry the eighth.
A grave
stone in the same South Ile.
stone in the same South Ile.
Esquire, late Clerke of the Pipe and Pri
vie Seale, which payed the generall tri
bute of Nature, divided from the mun
dane vexations by natural death, the 15
day of August, the 31. yeere, in the reigne
of King Henry the eighth.
Hic jacet Petrus Swift, de London,
neros. dum vixit Auditor Eccles. Ca
thedrali D. Pauli London. Qui obiit
2. die Septemb. An. Dom. 1562.
Cujus, &c.
A grave
stone in the same Ile:
Gestone in the same Ile:
neros. dum vixit Auditor Eccles. Ca
thedrali D. Pauli London. Qui obiit
2. die Septemb. An. Dom. 1562.
Cujus, &c.
Pars Terrestris.
Joannis Coston,
chiepiscopalis Cantuar. Principalis,
Almae{que} Curiae Cant. de Arcubus
Lond. Procuratorum generalium u
nius. Sexaginta annos cum multa pi
etate & probitate sub Polo praeter
gressus, 3. Iulii, 1614. animam effla
vit. Relictis Simone & Anna, flio
& filia unicis in sacros cineres redact.
sub pedibus diem novum expectat.
A small Monu
ment on a pillar in the same Ile.
Registrarii sedis Arment on a pillar in the same Ile.
chiepiscopalis Cantuar. Principalis,
Almae{que} Curiae Cant. de Arcubus
Lond. Procuratorum generalium u
nius. Sexaginta annos cum multa pi
etate & probitate sub Polo praeter
gressus, 3. Iulii, 1614. animam effla
vit. Relictis Simone & Anna, flio
& filia unicis in sacros cineres redact.
sub pedibus diem novum expectat.
Heere lyeth Robert Greene, Gentleman,
who departed this world on Thursday,
the twelfth of November, and was bu
ried in this Church, upon Saturday,
the foureteenth day of the same Moneth,
1590.
who departed this world on Thursday,
the twelfth of November, and was bu
ried
ried in this Church, upon Saturday,
the foureteenth day of the same Moneth,
1590.
Here under this Tombe lyeth the body of
Dame Anne Packington,
wife of Sir Iohn Packington, Knight,
late Chirographer in the Court of Com
mon Pleas: which Dame Anne deceased
the 22. day of August, in the yeere of our
Lord God, 1563.
Dame Anne Packington,
An anci
ent Tomb in the East end of the Chancell.
widdow, late
ent Tomb in the East end of the Chancell.
wife of Sir Iohn Packington, Knight,
late Chirographer in the Court of Com
mon Pleas: which Dame Anne deceased
the 22. day of August, in the yeere of our
Lord God, 1563.
Iohannes Sotherton,
cera fretus in Deum pietate, studiosa
in Principem fidelitate, spectata in
omnes humanitate & benevolentia,
annum aetatis ingress. octogesimum,
placidè in Christo obdormivit, 26.
Octob. Anno Domini, 1605. & una
cum duabus conjugibus, Francisca &
Maria castiss. feminis hic sepultus.
A small Monumēt in the East end of the Chancell.
Baro Scaccarii, sincera fretus in Deum pietate, studiosa
in Principem fidelitate, spectata in
omnes humanitate & benevolentia,
annum aetatis ingress. octogesimum,
placidè in Christo obdormivit, 26.
Octob. Anno Domini, 1605. & una
cum duabus conjugibus, Francisca &
Maria castiss. feminis hic sepultus.
Francisca, filia & haeres de Iohannes
Smith de Cromer, Norff. Per quam
habuit unum filium Christopherum,
obiit Octob. 1563.
Smith de Cromer, Norff. Per quam
habuit unum filium Christopherum,
obiit Octob. 1563.
Maria, filia Edovardi Woton, Medici
nae Doctoris, per quam habuit alte
rum filium Iohannem, & unicam fili
am Mariam. Obiit 10. Iunii.
nae Doctoris, per quam habuit alte
rum filium Iohannem, & unicam fili
am Mariam. Obiit 10. Iunii.
Iohan. primogenitus Franciscae, unige
nitus Mariae privignus, non ingratus
Christopherus Sotherton posuit.
nitus Mariae privignus, non ingratus
Christopherus Sotherton posuit.
An. Dom. 1604. Martii 31. Obiit.
Michael Crud,
nator, atque hujus Ecclesiae Past or fi
delis, post vitam piè gestam, tam in
partibus transmarinis, quam in natali
solo, in Anno aetatis suae quinquage
simo, pacificè dormivit in Christo,
atque juxta tumulatur impensis Mar
garetae ejus relictae, quae hoc fieri in
foelicem Marici memoriam curavit.
A small Monumēt in the East end of the Chancell.
Divini Verbi Concionator, atque hujus Ecclesiae Past or fi
delis, post vitam piè gestam, tam in
partibus transmarinis, quam in natali
solo, in Anno aetatis suae quinquage
simo, pacificè dormivit in Christo,
atque juxta tumulatur impensis Mar
garetae ejus relictae, quae hoc fieri in
foelicem Marici memoriam curavit.
D. O. M.
Gulielmo Mill,
tate, & in arduis constantia celeber
rimo, Marito charissimo conjunx a
mantissima, in honoris perpetui tes
seram Monumentum hoc lugubre
moerens posuit.
A comly Monu
ment in the End of the Chan
cell.
Armigero, fide, chariment in the End of the Chan
cell.
tate, & in arduis constantia celeber
rimo, Marito charissimo conjunx a
mantissima, in honoris perpetui tes
seram Monumentum hoc lugubre
moerens posuit.
Gulielmus iste Croydoniae (Surriae
Comitatus emporio) natus, Guliel
mi Mill, & Hawisiae Harwell secun
do genitus, ex antiqua Millorum de
Horscombe (Agri Governiensis) fa
milia oriundus, liberaliter educatus,
Graiensis Hospitii Alumnus, in literis
foeliciter versatus, Consilii Sanctioris
in Camera quam Stellatam dictitant
amanuensis prius per annos quinqua
ginta, deinde Clericus, & Actuarius
summus, viginti plus minus ibidem
suis meritis evasit. Fratres duos Ni
cholaum & Iohannem innuptos, Eli
zabetham, Franciscam, Milicentam,
Margaretam atque Annam, uterinas,
& Margaretam sororem habuit. Mar
garetam, Thomae Greeke, Fisci Re
gii Baronis, filiam, (Gulielmi Butleri
viduam) in uxorē grandaevus duxit.
Tandem Londini in Carthusianis 16.
die Iulii, Anno Verbi incarnati, 1608.
Aetatis suae 71. (nulla suscepta prole)
vitam erumnosam ut Christo viveret,
piè sed placidè commutavit.
Comitatus emporio) natus, Guliel
mi Mill, & Hawisiae Harwell secun
do genitus, ex antiqua Millorum de
Horscombe (Agri Governiensis) fa
milia oriundus, liberaliter educatus,
Graiensis Hospitii Alumnus, in literis
foeliciter versatus, Consilii Sanctioris
in Camera quam Stellatam dictitant
amanuensis prius per annos quinqua
ginta, deinde Clericus, & Actuarius
summus, viginti plus minus ibidem
suis meritis evasit. Fratres duos Ni
cholaum & Iohannem innuptos, Eli
zabetham, Franciscam, Milicentam,
Margaretam atque Annam, uterinas,
& Margaretam sororem habuit. Mar
garetam, Thomae Greeke, Fisci Re
gii Baronis, filiam, (Gulielmi Butleri
viduam) in uxorē grandaevus duxit.
Tandem Londini in Carthusianis 16.
die Iulii, Anno Verbi incarnati, 1608.
Aetatis suae 71. (nulla suscepta prole)
vitam erumnosam ut Christo viveret,
piè sed placidè commutavit.
Non temerè sepimur,
nec nos Fortuna gubernat,
Sed Deus es vitae,
Dux es & ipse via.
Fraternae Pietatis Symbolum.
Iohannis Mill,
geri, de Croydon, filius secundò ge
nitus, vita integerrima defunctus hic
coelebs requiescit, corpore autem sub
Marmore istic pulverescente; Ani
mus in Coelis secundam per Chri
stum Iesum, repurgatae carnis assum
ptionem expectat. Obiit 27. die
Mensis Augusti, An. Domini, 1595.
Aetatis suae 57. Gulielmo Fratre
primaevo at{que} unico (sanctioris in Ca
mera Stellata Consilii Clerico) su
perstite.
A small Monu
ment on a pillar in the Chan
cell.
Gulielmi Patris Armiment on a pillar in the Chan
cell.
geri, de Croydon, filius secundò ge
nitus, vita integerrima defunctus hic
coelebs requiescit, corpore autem sub
Marmore istic pulverescente; Ani
mus in Coelis secundam per Chri
stum Iesum, repurgatae carnis assum
ptionem expectat. Obiit 27. die
Mensis Augusti, An. Domini, 1595.
Aetatis suae 57. Gulielmo Fratre
primaevo at{que} unico (sanctioris in Ca
mera Stellata Consilii Clerico) su
perstite.
What Epitaph
shall we afford this Shrine?
Words cannot-grace
this Pyramid of thine:
A faire Pyrami
des ere
cted a
gainst a pillar.
des ere
cted a
gainst a pillar.
Thy sweet perfections,
all summ’d up, were such,
As Heavens (I thinke)
for faith did thinke too much.
Religious zeale
did thy pure heart command,
Pitty thine eye,
and Charity thy hand:
These Graces, joyn’d
with more of like degree,
an Epitaph for thee.
Calme was thy death,
well-ordered was thy life,
A carefull Mother,
and a loving wife.
Aske any, how
these Vertues in thee grew?
Thou wast a Spencer,
and a Mountague.
Katharina Mountague obiit 7. die De
cembris, Anno Domini, 1612.
cembris, Anno Domini, 1612.
Mortua Tamworthi
spectas Monumenta viator?
A faire Tombe of white stone in the Chan
cell.
cell.
Quin potius vivus,
disce quis ille fuit.
Si proavos quaeras,
Generoso sanguine ductus,
Vsque per innumeros
invenietur Avos.
Si mores, dicam mores?
nec amantior aequi,
Nec Patriae quisquam,
nec probitatis erat.
Si quae conditio,
(si quid sit laudis in illa)
Vita sub illustri
Principe clara fuit.
Et si Principibus
laus est placuisse probatis,
Laudibus haec pars est
annumeranda suis.
Iam volucris sua Iustra
novem transegerat aetas,
Quum Mors hunc saeva
falce cruenta metat.
Haec satis hospes, abi,
nec vivere differ in horas,
Quae sua pars hodie,
cras tua forsan erit.
Obiit 19. die Aprilis, 1569.
Iohanni Morlcio Armigero,
bethae Wotton Conjugi, parentibus
charissimis, Iohannes Morleius de
Halnaker, in Comitatu Sussexiae, Mi
les, & Edwardus filii, pietatis & me
moriae ergô hoc posuerunt.
Another beautifull Pitamides directly opposite to the o
ther.
& Elizather.
bethae Wotton Conjugi, parentibus
charissimis, Iohannes Morleius de
Halnaker, in Comitatu Sussexiae, Mi
les, & Edwardus filii, pietatis & me
moriae ergô hoc posuerunt.
Vixerunt Conjuges annos 16. Ille obiit
die 20. Novembris, 1587. Illa die 7.
Novembris, 1603. Tres filios toti
dem{que} filias superstites reliquerunt:
Iohannem, Edwardum, Willielmum
Mariam, Elizabetham, & Magdale
nam.
die 20. Novembris, 1587. Illa die 7.
Novembris, 1603. Tres filios toti
dem{que} filias superstites reliquerunt:
Iohannem, Edwardum, Willielmum
Mariam, Elizabetham, & Magdale
nam.
Hereunder lyeth buried in the mercy of
God,
Esquire, who married Anne the daugh
ter of Thomas Peacocke, by whom hee
had issue, one daughter, named Anne.
which Thomas deceased the 27. day of
ianuary, An. Dom. 1565.
God,
A faire plated stone under the Com
munion Table.
the body of Thomas Goodwin,
munion Table.
Esquire, who married Anne the daugh
ter of Thomas Peacocke, by whom hee
had issue, one daughter, named Anne.
which Thomas deceased the 27. day of
ianuary, An. Dom. 1565.
Hoc latet in Tumulo
praestanti corpore Nympha
Margareta quidem
repsque parente sata.
A faire Grave
stone by the said Table.
stone by the said Table.
Censor erat genitor,
Sponsus venerabilis extat,
Woodhouse; bis decies
quinaque arista tulit.
Siste pedes igitur
sternis qui busta prophanus,
Nam Christi cupiens,
sic bonitatis erat.
Vixit & illa piè,
moriens & sancta vocatur,
Exemplo simili
vivere disce piè.
Here lyeth buried the body of Frances,
wife of Iohn Sotherton, forraine Appo
ser of the Queenes Majesties Exchequer;
who departed this present life, in the true
faith of Christ, the 20. of Octob. 1563.
Another stone, by the said Table.
late
wife of Iohn Sotherton, forraine Appo
ser of the Queenes Majesties Exchequer;
who departed this present life, in the true
faith of Christ, the 20. of Octob. 1563.
Barbara Bradburii
simul & Marianna Someri,
Another.
Progenies pariter
Tumulo conduntur in isto,
Vtraque Conjugio
Thomae conjuncta Pagetto,
Vna virum moriens
septena in prole reliquit,
Altera fuit sterilis
parili quoque tempore conjux;
Ambarum pia vita fuit,
pia mors{que} secuta est.
Primae 24. Februarii, An. Dom. 1583.
Alterae Decembris ultimo, Anno, 1598.
Heere lyeth buried the body of Thomas
Greeke,
Majesties Court of Exchequer; who dy
ed the 18. day of November, in the 20.
yeere of the reigne of our Soveraigne La
dy, Queene Elizabeth. Hee lived 63.
yeeres.
Greeke,
A grave
stone in the North Ile of the Quire.
one of the Barons of the Queens
stone in the North Ile of the Quire.
Majesties Court of Exchequer; who dy
ed the 18. day of November, in the 20.
yeere of the reigne of our Soveraigne La
dy, Queene Elizabeth. Hee lived 63.
yeeres.
Here under lyeth buried the body of Tho
mas Neale,
Esquire, one of her Majesties Auditors
of the Exchequer; who deceased the 8.
day of December, 1597. Aetatis suae,
99.
mas Neale,
Another in the same Ile.
the sonne of Francis Neale
Esquire, one of her Majesties Auditors
of
of the Exchequer; who deceased the 8.
day of December, 1597. Aetatis suae,
99.
Here lyeth the body of Anne,
John Branche, Citizen and Draper of
London, by Ioane his wife, daughter
and heire of Iohn Wilkinson, sometime
Alderman of this Citie. She was marri
ed first to Robert Dunne, and (after his
death) to Richard Stoneley, Esquire.
By Dunne she had three sonnes; Sir Da
niel Dunne, Knight, and Doctor of Law,
her eldest; Samuel Dunne, and Wil
liam Dunne, the yongest, Doctor of Phy
sicke. And by Stoneley she had divers
children, whereof two lived to be marri
ed, Dorothie, to William Dantrey,
of Sussex; Anne, to William Hig
ham of Essex, Esquire. Her life was
vertuous and godly, and so dyed the ele
venth day of Ianuary, An. Dom. 1611.
being of the age of fourescore and six yeers,
having seene her childrens children, to the
fourth generation: and lyes here buried
betweene her husbands, and among some
other of her children, according to her de
sire.
A faire Garve
stone in the same North Ile.
daughter of
stone in the same North Ile.
John Branche, Citizen and Draper of
London, by Ioane his wife, daughter
and heire of Iohn Wilkinson, sometime
Alderman of this Citie. She was marri
ed first to Robert Dunne, and (after his
death) to Richard Stoneley, Esquire.
By Dunne she had three sonnes; Sir Da
niel Dunne, Knight, and Doctor of Law,
her eldest; Samuel Dunne, and Wil
liam Dunne, the yongest, Doctor of Phy
sicke. And by Stoneley she had divers
children, whereof two lived to be marri
ed, Dorothie, to William Dantrey,
of Sussex; Anne, to William Hig
ham of Essex, Esquire. Her life was
vertuous and godly, and so dyed the ele
venth day of Ianuary, An. Dom. 1611.
being of the age of fourescore and six yeers,
having seene her childrens children, to the
fourth generation: and lyes here buried
betweene her husbands, and among some
other of her children, according to her de
sire.
Hic jacet Susanna,
tria Garnseyensis unica filia, uxor
Roberti Creswell, alias Blew-mantle,
Prosecutoris ad Arma Serenissimae
Elizabethae, Angliae Reginae.
A small Monu
ment in the South wall in the body of the Church.
Andreae Lionis Pament in the South wall in the body of the Church.
tria Garnseyensis unica filia, uxor
Roberti Creswell, alias Blew-mantle,
Prosecutoris ad Arma Serenissimae
Elizabethae, Angliae Reginae.
Quae modo fida Deo,
quae vixit chara marito,
Non invita animam
Christo moribunda reliquit.
—23. Decemb. Anno
Domini, 1590.
And thus and end of this Ward, which
hath an Alderman, his Deputy; Com
mon Counsellors, five; Constables,
eight; Scavengers, nine; for the Ward
mote inquest, fourereene, and a Bea
dle. It is taxed to the Fifteene in Lon
don, seven pounds, and in the Exche
quer, six pounds, nineteene shillings.
hath an Alderman, his Deputy; Com
mon Counsellors, five; Constables,
eight; Scavengers, nine; for the Ward
mote inquest, fourereene, and a Bea
dle. It is taxed to the Fifteene in Lon
don, seven pounds, and in the Exche
quer, six pounds, nineteene shillings.
Faringdon
Notes
Cite this page
MLA citation
Survey of London (1633): Aldersgate Ward.The Map of Early Modern London, Edition 7.0, edited by , U of Victoria, 05 May 2022, mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/stow_1633_ALDE2.htm. Draft.
Chicago citation
Survey of London (1633): Aldersgate Ward.The Map of Early Modern London, Edition 7.0. Ed. . Victoria: University of Victoria. Accessed May 05, 2022. mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/stow_1633_ALDE2.htm. Draft.
APA citation
The Map of Early Modern London (Edition 7.0). Victoria: University of Victoria. Retrieved from https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/editions/7.0/stow_1633_ALDE2.htm. Draft.
, , , & 2022. Survey of London (1633): Aldersgate Ward. In (Ed), RIS file (for RefMan, RefWorks, EndNote etc.)
Provider: University of Victoria Database: The Map of Early Modern London Content: text/plain; charset="utf-8" TY - ELEC A1 - Stow, John A1 - Munday, Anthony A1 - Munday, Anthony A1 - Dyson, Humphrey ED - Jenstad, Janelle T1 - Survey of London (1633): Aldersgate Ward T2 - The Map of Early Modern London ET - 7.0 PY - 2022 DA - 2022/05/05 CY - Victoria PB - University of Victoria LA - English UR - https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/stow_1633_ALDE2.htm UR - https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/xml/standalone/stow_1633_ALDE2.xml TY - UNP ER -
TEI citation
<bibl type="mla"><author><name ref="#STOW6"><surname>Stow</surname>, <forename>John</forename></name></author>,
<author><name ref="#MUND1"><forename>Anthony</forename> <surname>Munday</surname></name></author>,
<author><name ref="#MUND1"><forename>Anthony</forename> <surname>Munday</surname></name></author>,
and <author><name ref="#DYSO1"><forename>Humphrey</forename> <surname>Dyson</surname></name></author>.
<title level="a">Survey of London (1633): Aldersgate Ward</title>. <title level="m">The
Map of Early Modern London</title>, Edition <edition>7.0</edition>, edited by <editor><name
ref="#JENS1"><forename>Janelle</forename> <surname>Jenstad</surname></name></editor>,
<publisher>U of Victoria</publisher>, <date when="2022-05-05">05 May 2022</date>,
<ref target="https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/stow_1633_ALDE2.htm">mapoflondon.uvic.ca/edition/7.0/stow_1633_ALDE2.htm</ref>.
Draft.</bibl>
Personography
-
Molly Rothwell
MR
Project Manager, 2022-present. Research Assistant, 2020-2022. Molly Rothwell was an undergraduate student at the University of Victoria, with a double major in English and History. During her time at MoEML, Molly primarily worked on encoding and transcribing the 1598 and 1633 editions of Stow’s Survey, adding toponyms to MoEML’s Gazetteer, researching England’s early-modern court system, and standardizing MoEML’s Mapography.Roles played in the project
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Chris Horne
CH
Research Assistant, 2018-2020. Chris Horne was an honours student in the Department of English at the University of Victoria. His primary research interests included American modernism, affect studies, cultural studies, and digital humanities.Roles played in the project
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Kate LeBere
KL
Project Manager, 2020-2021. Assistant Project Manager, 2019-2020. Research Assistant, 2018-2020. Kate LeBere completed her BA (Hons.) in History and English at the University of Victoria in 2020. She published papers in The Corvette (2018), The Albatross (2019), and PLVS VLTRA (2020) and presented at the English Undergraduate Conference (2019), Qualicum History Conference (2020), and the Digital Humanities Summer Institute’s Project Management in the Humanities Conference (2021). While her primary research focus was sixteenth and seventeenth century England, she completed her honours thesis on Soviet ballet during the Russian Cultural Revolution. During her time at MoEML, Kate made significant contributions to the 1598 and 1633 editions of Stow’s Survey of London, old-spelling anthology of mayoral shows, and old-spelling library texts. She authored the MoEML’s first Project Management Manual andquickstart
guidelines for new employees and helped standardize the Personography and Bibliography. She is currently a student at the University of British Columbia’s iSchool, working on her masters in library and information science.Roles played in the project
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Tracey El Hajj
TEH
Junior Programmer 2018-2020. Research Associate 2020-2021. Tracey received her PhD from the Department of English at the University of Victoria in the field of Science and Technology Studies. Her research focuses on the algorhythmics of networked communications. She was a 2019-20 President’s Fellow in Research-Enriched Teaching at UVic, where she taught an advanced course onArtificial Intelligence and Everyday Life.
Tracey was also a member of the Linked Early Modern Drama Online team, between 2019 and 2021. Between 2020 and 2021, she was a fellow in residence at the Praxis Studio for Comparative Media Studies, where she investigated the relationships between artificial intelligence, creativity, health, and justice. As of July 2021, Tracey has moved into the alt-ac world for a term position, while also teaching in the English Department at the University of Victoria.Roles played in the project
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Joey Takeda
JT
Programmer, 2018-present. Junior Programmer, 2015-2017. Research Assistant, 2014-2017. Joey Takeda was a graduate student at the University of British Columbia in the Department of English (Science and Technology research stream). He completed his BA honours in English (with a minor in Women’s Studies) at the University of Victoria in 2016. His primary research interests included diasporic and indigenous Canadian and American literature, critical theory, cultural studies, and the digital humanities.Roles played in the project
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Contributions by this author
Joey Takeda is a member of the following organizations and/or groups:
Joey Takeda is mentioned in the following documents:
Joey Takeda authored or edited the following items in MoEML’s bibliography:
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Jenstad, Janelle and Joseph Takeda.
Making the RA Matter: Pedagogy, Interface, and Practices.
Making Things and Drawing Boundaries: Experiments in the Digital Humanities. Ed. Jentery Sayers. Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press, 2018. Print.
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Janelle Jenstad
JJ
Janelle Jenstad is Associate Professor of English at the University of Victoria, Director of The Map of Early Modern London, and PI of Linked Early Modern Drama Online. She has taught at Queen’s University, the Summer Academy at the Stratford Festival, the University of Windsor, and the University of Victoria. With Jennifer Roberts-Smith and Mark Kaethler, she co-edited Shakespeare’s Language in Digital Media (Routledge). She has prepared a documentary edition of John Stow’s A Survey of London (1598 text) for MoEML and is currently editing The Merchant of Venice (with Stephen Wittek) and Heywood’s 2 If You Know Not Me You Know Nobody for DRE. Her articles have appeared in Digital Humanities Quarterly, Renaissance and Reformation,Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Early Modern Literary Studies, Elizabethan Theatre, Shakespeare Bulletin: A Journal of Performance Criticism, and The Silver Society Journal. Her book chapters have appeared (or will appear) in Institutional Culture in Early Modern Society (Brill, 2004), Shakespeare, Language and the Stage, The Fifth Wall: Approaches to Shakespeare from Criticism, Performance and Theatre Studies (Arden/Thomson Learning, 2005), Approaches to Teaching Othello (Modern Language Association, 2005), Performing Maternity in Early Modern England (Ashgate, 2007), New Directions in the Geohumanities: Art, Text, and History at the Edge of Place (Routledge, 2011), Early Modern Studies and the Digital Turn (Iter, 2016), Teaching Early Modern English Literature from the Archives (MLA, 2015), Placing Names: Enriching and Integrating Gazetteers (Indiana, 2016), Making Things and Drawing Boundaries (Minnesota, 2017), and Rethinking Shakespeare’s Source Study: Audiences, Authors, and Digital Technologies (Routledge, 2018).Roles played in the project
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Abstract Author
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Author (Preface)
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Author of Preface
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Compiler
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Conceptor
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Course Instructor
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Vetter
Contributions by this author
Janelle Jenstad is a member of the following organizations and/or groups:
Janelle Jenstad is mentioned in the following documents:
Janelle Jenstad authored or edited the following items in MoEML’s bibliography:
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Jenstad, Janelle and Joseph Takeda.
Making the RA Matter: Pedagogy, Interface, and Practices.
Making Things and Drawing Boundaries: Experiments in the Digital Humanities. Ed. Jentery Sayers. Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press, 2018. Print. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
Building a Gazetteer for Early Modern London, 1550-1650.
Placing Names. Ed. Merrick Lex Berman, Ruth Mostern, and Humphrey Southall. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana UP, 2016. 129-145. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
The Burse and the Merchant’s Purse: Coin, Credit, and the Nation in Heywood’s 2 If You Know Not Me You Know Nobody.
The Elizabethan Theatre XV. Ed. C.E. McGee and A.L. Magnusson. Toronto: P.D. Meany, 2002. 181–202. Print. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
Early Modern Literary Studies 8.2 (2002): 5.1–26..The City Cannot Hold You
: Social Conversion in the Goldsmith’s Shop. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
The Silver Society Journal 10 (1998): 40–43.The Gouldesmythes Storehowse
: Early Evidence for Specialisation. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
Lying-in Like a Countess: The Lisle Letters, the Cecil Family, and A Chaste Maid in Cheapside.
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 34 (2004): 373–403. doi:10.1215/10829636–34–2–373. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
Public Glory, Private Gilt: The Goldsmiths’ Company and the Spectacle of Punishment.
Institutional Culture in Early Modern Society. Ed. Anne Goldgar and Robert Frost. Leiden: Brill, 2004. 191–217. Print. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
Smock Secrets: Birth and Women’s Mysteries on the Early Modern Stage.
Performing Maternity in Early Modern England. Ed. Katherine Moncrief and Kathryn McPherson. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007. 87–99. Print. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
Using Early Modern Maps in Literary Studies: Views and Caveats from London.
GeoHumanities: Art, History, Text at the Edge of Place. Ed. Michael Dear, James Ketchum, Sarah Luria, and Doug Richardson. London: Routledge, 2011. Print. -
Jenstad, Janelle.
Versioning John Stow’s A Survey of London, or, What’s New in 1618 and 1633?.
Janelle Jenstad Blog. https://janellejenstad.com/2013/03/20/versioning-john-stows-a-survey-of-london-or-whats-new-in-1618-and-1633/. -
Shakespeare, William. The Merchant of Venice. Ed. Janelle Jenstad. Internet Shakespeare Editions. U of Victoria. http://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/Library/Texts/MV/.
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Stow, John. A SVRVAY OF LONDON. Contayning the Originall, Antiquity, Increase, Moderne estate, and description of that Citie, written in the yeare 1598. by Iohn Stow Citizen of London. Also an Apologie (or defence) against the opinion of some men, concerning that Citie, the greatnesse thereof. With an Appendix, containing in Latine, Libellum de situ & nobilitate Londini: written by William Fitzstephen, in the raigne of Henry the second. Ed. Janelle Jenstad and the MoEML Team. MoEML. Transcribed.
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Paul Schaffner
PS
E-text and TCP production manager at the University of Michigan Digital Library Production Service (DLPS), Paul manages the production of full-text transcriptions for EEBO-TCP.Roles played in the project
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Editor of Original EEBO-TCP Encoding
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Sebastian Rahtz
SR
Chief data architect at University of Oxford IT Services, Sebastian was well known for his contributions to the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI), OxGarage, and the Text Creation Partnership (TCP).Roles played in the project
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Creator of TEI Stylesheets for Conversion of EEBO-TCP Encoding to TEI-P5
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Martin D. Holmes
MDH
Programmer at the University of Victoria Humanities Computing and Media Centre (HCMC). Martin ported the MOL project from its original PHP incarnation to a pure eXist database implementation in the fall of 2011. Since then, he has been lead programmer on the project and has also been responsible for maintaining the project schemas. He was a co-applicant on MoEML’s 2012 SSHRC Insight Grant.Roles played in the project
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Abstract Author
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Contributions by this author
Martin D. Holmes is a member of the following organizations and/or groups:
Martin D. Holmes is mentioned in the following documents:
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Alan Brett is mentioned in the following documents:
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John Broke It Well
Buried at St. Leonard, Foster Lane.John Broke It Well is mentioned in the following documents:
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Christopher Eliot is mentioned in the following documents:
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Elizabeth Francis is mentioned in the following documents:
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Ingelricus is mentioned in the following documents:
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Edwardus is mentioned in the following documents:
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John Sheffield is mentioned in the following documents:
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John Addis is mentioned in the following documents:
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Margaret Addis
Wife of John Addis. Monument at St. John Zachary.Margaret Addis is mentioned in the following documents:
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Dame Joan Astley is mentioned in the following documents:
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Sir Nicholas Bacon is mentioned in the following documents:
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Drugo Barantyn
Drugo Barantyn Sheriff Mayor
(b. 1350, d. 1415)Sheriff of London 1393-1394. Mayor 1398-1399 and 1408-1409. Member of the Goldsmiths’ Company. Husband of Dame Margery Twyford and Christine Barantyn. Buried at St. John Zachary.Drugo Barantyn is mentioned in the following documents:
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Christine Barantyn
(b. in or before 1415, d. 1427)Wife of Drugo Barantyn. Buried at St. John Zachary.Christine Barantyn is mentioned in the following documents:
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John Bradmore is mentioned in the following documents:
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Margaret Bradmore is mentioned in the following documents:
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Katherine Bradmore
Wife of John Bradmore. Buried at St. Botolph, Aldersgate.Katherine Bradmore is mentioned in the following documents:
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Nicholas Bourne is mentioned in the following documents:
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John Carpenter
John Carpenter Bishop of Worcester
(b. 1395, d. 1476)Bishop of Worcester 1443–1476. Master of St. Anthony’s Hospital.John Carpenter is mentioned in the following documents:
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Ralph Caldwell is mentioned in the following documents:
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Robert Cawood
(d. 1466)Clerk of the Treasurer. Co-founder of a fraternity for the Holy Trinity. Buried at St. Botolph, Aldersgate.Robert Cawood is mentioned in the following documents:
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John Cornish
Buried at St. John Zachary.John Cornish is mentioned in the following documents:
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Humphrey Dyson is mentioned in the following documents:
Humphrey Dyson authored or edited the following items in MoEML’s bibliography:
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Stow, John, Anthony Munday, and Humphrey Dyson. THE SURVEY OF LONDON: CONTAINING The Original, Increase, Modern Estate and Government of that City, Methodically set down. With a Memorial of those famouser Acts of Charity, which for publick and Pious Vses have been bestowed by many Worshipfull Citizens and Benefactors. As also all the Ancient and Modern Monuments erected in the Churches, not only of those two famous Cities, LONDON and WESTMINSTER, but (now newly added) Four miles compass. Begun first by the pains and industry of John Stow, in the year 1598. Afterwards inlarged by the care and diligence of A.M. in the year 1618. And now compleatly finished by the study &labour of A.M., H.D. and others, this present year 1633. Whereunto, besides many Additions (as appears by the Contents) are annexed divers Alphabetical Tables, especially two, The first, an index of Things. The second, a Concordance of Names. London: Printed for Nicholas Bourne, 1633. STC 23345.5.
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Strype, John, John Stow, Anthony Munday, and Humphrey Dyson. A Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster. Vol. 2. London, 1720. Remediated by The Making of the Modern World.
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Edward I
Edward This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 1I King of England Longshanks Hammer of the Scots
(b. between 17 June 1239 and 18 June 1239, d. in or before 27 October 1307)Edward I is mentioned in the following documents:
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Edward III
Edward This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 3III King of England
(b. 12 November 1312, d. 21 June 1377)Edward III is mentioned in the following documents:
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Edward VI
Edward This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 6VI King of England King of Ireland
(b. 12 October 1537, d. 6 July 1553)Edward VI is mentioned in the following documents:
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Edward IV
Edward This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 4IV King of England
(b. 28 April 1442, d. 9 April 1483)Edward IV is mentioned in the following documents:
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Elizabeth I
Elizabeth This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 1I Queen of England Queen of Ireland Gloriana Good Queen Bess
(b. 7 September 1533, d. 24 March 1603)Queen of England and Ireland 1558-1603.Elizabeth I is mentioned in the following documents:
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William Fleetwood is mentioned in the following documents:
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Virtue
Personification of virtue. Appears as an allegorical character in mayoral shows, Richard Johnson’s Nine Worthies of London and John Stow’s Survey of London. See also Arete.Virtue is mentioned in the following documents:
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William Faringdon
William Faringdon Sheriff
Sheriff of London 1280-1281. Member of the Goldsmiths’ Company. Principle owner of Farringdon Ward. Father of Nicholas Faringdon.William Faringdon is mentioned in the following documents:
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Nicholas Faringdon
Nicholas Faringdon Mayor
(fl. 1308-61)Mayor of London 1308-1309, 1313-1314, and 1320-1324. Member of the Goldsmiths’ Company. Principle owner of Farringdon Ward. Son of William Faringdon. Helped prisoners escape the Conduit, Cornhill in 1299. Buried at St. Peter, Westcheap.Nicholas Faringdon is mentioned in the following documents:
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Robert Fenrother is mentioned in the following documents:
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Bennett Gerard is mentioned in the following documents:
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Richard Grafton is mentioned in the following documents:
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Robert Greene is mentioned in the following documents:
Robert Greene authored or edited the following items in MoEML’s bibliography:
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Greene, Robert. The Second Part of Cony-Catching. The Elizabethan Underworld. Ed. A.V. Judges. 1930. Reprinted by New York: Octagon, 1965. 149–178. Print.
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John Hartshorne
Esquire. Servant of Henry IV. Buried at St. Botolph, Aldersgate.John Hartshorne is mentioned in the following documents:
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Henry VIII
Henry This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 8VIII King of England King of Ireland
(b. 28 June 1491, d. 28 January 1547)King of England and Ireland 1509-1547.Henry VIII is mentioned in the following documents:
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Henry VI
Henry This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 6VI King of England
(b. 6 December 1421, d. 21 May 1471)Henry VI is mentioned in the following documents:
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Henry VII
Henry This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 7VII King of England
(b. 1457, d. 1509)Henry VII is mentioned in the following documents:
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John Herenden
(d. 1572)Esquire. Member of the Mercersʼ Company. Monument at St. Anne and St. Agnes.John Herenden is mentioned in the following documents:
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Thomas Huntlowe is mentioned in the following documents:
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James VI and I
James This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 6VI This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 1I King of Scotland King of England King of Ireland
(b. 1566, d. 1625)James VI and I is mentioned in the following documents:
James VI and I authored or edited the following items in MoEML’s bibliography:
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James VI and I. Letters of King James VI and I. Ed. G.P.V. Akrigg. Berkeley: U of California P, 1984. Print.
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Rhodes, Neill, Jennifer Richards, and Joseph Marshall, eds. King James VI and I: Selected Writings. By James VI and I. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2004.
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London is mentioned in the following documents:
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Thomas Keyton Lorimar is mentioned in the following documents:
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Philip Malpas
Philip Malpas Sheriff
(d. 1469)Sheriff of London 1439-1440. Member of the Drapers’ Company. Buried at St. Andrew Undershaft. See related ODNB entry for Sir Thomas Cook.Philip Malpas is mentioned in the following documents:
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Robert Malton is a member of the following organizations and/or groups:
Robert Malton is mentioned in the following documents:
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William Marrow
William Marrow Sheriff Mayor
(b. 1410, d. 1564)Sheriff of London 1448-1449. Mayor 1455-1456. Member of the Grocers’ Company. Husband of Katharine Marrow. Buried at St. Botolph, Aldersgate.William Marrow is mentioned in the following documents:
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Katharine Marrow is mentioned in the following documents:
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Mary I
Mary This numeral is a Roman numeral. The Arabic equivalent is 1I Queen of England Queen of Ireland
(b. 18 February 1516, d. 17 November 1558)Mary I is mentioned in the following documents:
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John Michael is mentioned in the following documents:
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Anthony Munday
(bap. 1560, d. 1633)Playwright, actor, pageant poet, translator, and writer. Possible member of the Drapers’ Company or Merchant Taylors’ Company.Anthony Munday is mentioned in the following documents:
Anthony Munday authored or edited the following items in MoEML’s bibliography:
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Anthony Munday. The Triumphs of Re-United Britannia. Arthur F. Kinney. Renaissance Drama: An Anthology of Plays and Entertainments. 2nd ed. Toronto: Wiley, 2005.
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Munday, Anthony. Camp-Bell: or the Ironmongers Faire Feild. London: Edward Allde, 1609. DEEP406. STC 18279.
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Munday, Anthony, Henry Chettle, Thomas Dekker, Thomas Heywood, and William Shakespeare. Sir Thomas More. 1998. Remediated by Project Gutenberg.
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Munday, Anthony, Henry Chettle, Thomas Dekker, Thomas Heywood, and William Shakespeare. Sir Thomas More. Ed. Vittorio Gabrieli and Giorgio Melchiori. Revels Plays. Manchester; New York: Manchester UP, 1990. Print.
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Munday, Anthony. Metropolis Coronata, The Trivmphes of Ancient Drapery. London: George Purslowe, 1615. DEEP 630. STC 18275.
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Stow, John, Anthony Munday, and Henry Holland. THE SVRVAY of LONDON: Containing, The Originall, Antiquitie, Encrease, and more Moderne Estate of the sayd Famous Citie. As also, the Rule and Gouernment thereof (both Ecclesiasticall and Temporall) from time to time. With a briefe Relation of all the memorable Monuments, and other especiall Obseruations, both in and about the same CITIE. Written in the yeere 1598. by Iohn Stow, Citizen of London. Since then, continued, corrected and much enlarged, with many rare and worthy Notes, both of Venerable Antiquity, and later memorie; such, as were neuer published before this present yeere 1618. London: George Purslowe, 1618. STC 23344. Yale University Library copy.
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Stow, John, Anthony Munday, and Humphrey Dyson. THE SURVEY OF LONDON: CONTAINING The Original, Increase, Modern Estate and Government of that City, Methodically set down. With a Memorial of those famouser Acts of Charity, which for publick and Pious Vses have been bestowed by many Worshipfull Citizens and Benefactors. As also all the Ancient and Modern Monuments erected in the Churches, not only of those two famous Cities, LONDON and WESTMINSTER, but (now newly added) Four miles compass. Begun first by the pains and industry of John Stow, in the year 1598. Afterwards inlarged by the care and diligence of A.M. in the year 1618. And now compleatly finished by the study &labour of A.M., H.D. and others, this present year 1633. Whereunto, besides many Additions (as appears by the Contents) are annexed divers Alphabetical Tables, especially two, The first, an index of Things. The second, a Concordance of Names. London: Printed for Nicholas Bourne, 1633. STC 23345.5.
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Strype, John, John Stow, Anthony Munday, and Humphrey Dyson. A Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster. Vol. 2. London, 1720. Remediated by The Making of the Modern World.
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Joan of Navarre
Joan Queen consort of England
(b. 1368, d. 1437)Duchess of Brittany 1386-1399. Queen consort of England 1403-1413. Wife of John V of Brittany and Henry IV. Daughter of Charles II of Navarre.Joan of Navarre is mentioned in the following documents:
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Dame Anne Pakington
(fl. 1530-63)Wife of Sir John Pakington. Buried at St. Botolph, Aldersgate. See related ODNB entry for Sir John Pakington.Dame Anne Pakington is mentioned in the following documents:
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Sir John Pakington
(b. in or before 1477, d. 1551)Judge. Husband of Dame Anne Pakington. Buried at St. Botolph, Aldersgate.Sir John Pakington is mentioned in the following documents:
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Sir James Pemberton
Sir James Pemberton Sheriff Mayor
Sheriff of London 1602-1603. Mayor 1611-1612. Member of the Goldsmiths’ Company. Knighted on 26 July 1603. Monument at St. John Zachary.Sir James Pemberton is mentioned in the following documents:
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