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A39466 An exact abridgment of all statutes in force and use from the beginning of Magna Carta until 1641 / by Edm. Wingate of Grayes-Inne, Esq. ; with a continuation, under their proper titles, of all acts in force and use, untill the year 1666, and alphabetically digested under apt titles ; whereto is annexed four tables directing to the several matters and clauses throughout the said statutes.; Laws, etc. England and Wales.; Wingate, Edmund, 1596-1656.; Manby, Thomas, of Lincolns-Inn. 1666 (1666) Wing E906; ESTC R33346 579,794 810

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Vessel than belonging to the places of France c. and manned as aforesaid shall be adjudged aliens goods and pay Custonis and Duty to the Town or Port where they shall be imported And all Masts Timber-boards c. of the growth of Spain Canary Islands Portugal Madera Western Islands Muscovy or Russia imported in any other Ships than of the said places And all Turky Commodities otherwise imported than as aforesaid shall pay Customes as Aliens goods LXXII Officers of the Custome may not allow any the Priviledges aforesaid to foreign built ships nor English built ships for forein goods without certificate and proof by oath taken before them and examination whether the Master and 3 fourths of the Mariners be English or of the Countrey from whence the goods come upon pain to forfeit their places LXXIII Proviso to exempt coming from the Straights or Levant though not of the very growth of the said places LXXIII Proviso Not to restrain the importing any East-India Commodities in English-built shipping manned with Mariners as aforesaid from usual places in those Seas to the Southward though not of the said growth LXXIV Proviso That the People of England Ireland Wales Guernsey and Jersey Islands and Berwick may bring in English Ships manned as aforesaid from any Ports of Spain or Portugol or Western Islands called Azores or Madera or Canary Islands all sorts of Commodities of their growth manufacture or Plantations LXXV Proviso Not to extend to Bullion or Goods taken by reprisal by any Ship of England Ireland Wales Guernsey Jersey Islands or Berwick Navigated as aforesaid and having Commission from the King LXXVI Proviso Not to extend to lay Aliens duties upon Corn and certain other goods of Scotland imported in Scotch Ships Navigated by 3 fourths of the Kings Subjects nor to Seal Oyls of Kussia LXXVII Proviso Imposing duties upon certain French Ships to continue so long as a certain duty of 50 Soulz per Tun upon English by the French shall be payable and 3 months after and no longer LXXVIII Sugars Tobacco Cotton Wooll Indico Ginger Fustick or other dying Wood of the production of America Asia or Africa shall not be shipt or conveyed from any the said Plantations but such other as belong to the King or to England Ireland or Wales and there laid on shore upon pain of forfeiture one moity to the King the other moity to the Informer LXXIX Ships of England Ireland or VVales sailing to any English Plantation in America Asia or Africa shall give sufficient sureties to bring goods there laded into England Ireland VVales or Berwick upon Twe●d And likewise Ships coming from other Plantations shall give the like Sureties and shall bring Certificates to the respective Governors of the said Plantations from the Officers of the Custome-House of England c. of their having given su●h Bonds upon pain of forfeiture of the Ships offending their Goods Tacklings c. And the said respective Governors to return the Bonds so taken twice every year to the chief Officers of the Custome-House of London LXXX Stat. 13 Car. 2. cap. 9. Articles to be observed for the Publique Worship of God punishing certain offences and for the regulating and better governing of the Kings Navies Ships of War and Forces by Sea And impowring the Lord Admiral to grant Commissions to call Court-Marshals LXXXI All faults misdemeanors and disorders committed a● Sea not mentioned in the Act to be punished according to the Laws and Customs in such cases used at Sea LXXXII Proviso Not to extend to give the Lord Admiral of England or other his Officers any other Power Jurisdiction or Authority then they ought to have before this Act other then touching the said offences mentioned in the said Articles done upon the main Sea or in Ships or Vessels in the main stream of great Rivers only beneath the Bridges nigh the Sea within the Jurisdiction of the Admiralty and committed only by such persons as be in actual service and pay in the Kings Fleet or Ships at Sea LXXXIII Stat. 16 Car. 2. cap. 7. An Act to prevent the disturbance of Seamen and others and to preserve the Stores belonging to his Majesties Navy Royal. Vid. the Act being but upon continuance for two years from the First of June 1664. And from thence to the end of the next Session of Parliament LXXXIV Stat. 16 Car. 2. cap. 8. An Act to prevent the delivering up of Merchants ships to Pyrats and Sea-Rovers having sufficient to defend themselves Vid the Act being but upon Continuance for 3 years and from thence to the end of the next Session of Parliament and no longer Silk * I. Stat. 19 H. 7.21 None shall bring or cause to be brought into England any Silk wrought by it self or with other stuff out of England in Riband Laces Girdles Corses Calles Corses or Tissues or Points in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof to be divided betwixt the King and the seisor or prosecutor But all other Silk both wrought and raw may be imported and sold at pleasure II. Stat. 14 Car. 2. cap. 15. An Act incotporating and for regulating ordering and managing the Trade and Mystery of Silk-throwing See the Act. Southampton I. Stat. 11 H. 7.5 Every man may pull down the Wears and Engines in the Haven of Southampton between Calshord and Rebridge And whosoever levieth any other there shall pay 100 l. to the King II. Stat. 14 H. 8.13 A confirmation of 11 H. 7.5 and the same made perpetual III. Stat. 4 Jac. 10. An Act was made for the confirmation of some part of a Charter granted by H. 6. to the Mayor Bailiffs and Burgesses of Southampton and for the relief of the Town See the Statute at large Spice I. Stat. 1. 19 Jac. 19. All Spice Drugs and other Merchandize Garbleable shall for the fees usually allowed be sufficiently cleansed and Garbled and afterwards sealed by the Garbler thereto appointed or his Deputy before they be sold in pain to forfeit them or the value thereof Also such as after Garbling shall be again mixed with Garble shall likewise be forfeit II. It shall be lawful for the said Garbler to search in Shops Cellars Ware-houses and other places for wares ungarbled and if he find any such to cause them to be Garbled III. The forfeitures of this Act are to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor IV. Spices or other Garbleable Merchandize imported and afterwards within eight months exported without being sold or Garbled shall not be within the danger of this Act. Spiritual Laws I. Stat. 13 El. 12. Every Spiritual person under the degree of a Bishop pretending to be a Priest or Minister of the Word by any other form of Institution or Consecration then that established by E. 6. or now used shall before Christmas next in the presence of the Bishop or Guardian of the Spiritualties of the Diocess where he hath his Benefice declare his assent and subscribe to the Articles of Religion
between Tine and Tees fees of Earls and Barons in the Marches where the Kings writ runs not and where such Archbishops Bishops Earls and Barons ought to have such Wards albeit they hold of the King in some other place XXXII Prerog Reg. 2. 17 E. 2. The King shall have the marriage of an heir being within age and in his Ward whether his lands have appertained to the Crown of ancient continuance or came by Escheat being in the Kings hands or by reason of another wardship without respect of priority or posteriority of feoffment albeit such heir held also of others XXXIII Prerog Reg. 6. 17 E. 2. If a Woman before her ancestors death that held of the King in chief be married before her age of consent the King shall have the ward of her body untill her age of consent and then it is at her election whether she will have him whom she first married or him whom the King will offer her XXXIV None that holds of the King in chief by Knight-service shall without the Kings licence alien so much of his lands that the residue is not sufficient to do his service Howbeit this is not to be understood of members and parcels of such lands XXXV Stat. 14 E. 3. Stat. 1.13 After the death of the Kings tenant in chief the Escheator shall cause to be seised into the Kings hands the lands as to their office appertains without doing waste in houses Woods Parks Ponds or other extortions which may tend to the damage of the heir and forthwith after the Diem clausit extremum delivered to him shall make return thereof by a good and true extent in the Chancery XXXVI After such return if the next friends of the heir to whom the inheritance cannot descend shall come and offer to take the said lands untill the heir be at age and to give for the same as much as another without fraud by accord of the Chancellor and Treasurer they shall have Commission to keep them upon good security untill his full age answering to the King the value thereof XXXVII Howbeit this Act shall not conclude the King from having an Action of waste against such Guardians and Farmers the Heir also may have like Action against them when he comes to age XXXVIII Stat. 39 H. 6.2 Women being of the age of 16 years at the time of the death of their Ancestors shall have livery of their lands descended to them XXXIX Stat. 4 H. 7.17 The Statute of Marlb 6. 52 H. 3. before 4. is confirmed XL. The Lord of Cestuy que use no Will of his Ancestor being declared in his life time shall have a Writ of right of Ward for the body and the land and the heir of Cestuy que use being at full age at the death of his ancestor shall pay relief the heir also of Cestuy-que use shall have like action of waste as if his ancestor had dyed seised and if the Lord be barred in his Writ of right of Ward the Defendant shall recover damages The Court of Wards Vide Courts Numb XXXIV VVares I. Stat. 5 El. 7. None shall bring or cause to be brought into this Realm from beyond Sea any girdles harness for girdles Rapiers Daggers Knives Hilts Pummels Lockets Chapes Dagger-blades Handles Scabbards or Sheaths for Knives Saddles Horsharness Stirrops Bits Gloves Points Leather laces or Pinnes being ready wrought beyond Sea to be sold bartered or exchanged in this Realm or Wales in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof to be divided betwixt the Queen and the Prosecutor VVarranty I. The Statute of Bigamy 6. 4 E. 1. Indeeds conteining Dedi concessi tale tenementum without non-age or any clause of Warranty and to be holden of the donors and their heirs by a certain service in this case the donors and their heirs are bound to Warranty But where the deed is dedi concessi c. to be holden of the chief Lord of the fee or of other and not of the feoffors and their heirs reserving no service and without homage and the aforesaid clause here the feoffors Heirs shall not be bound to Warranty Howbeit the feoffor himself during his life by force of his own gift is bound to warrant II. The Statute of Glocester 3. 6 E. 1. Where tenant by the curtesy aliens his Wives land his son having no ossets by descent shall not be barred to recover the land by a Writ of Mortdancester of the seisin of his mother albeit his fathers deed mentioneth that he and his heirs shall be bound to warranty but in case any land descend to the heir of his fathers side he shall be barred for the value of the inheritance so descended III. Also if afterwards any inheritance descend to him by the same father the tenant shall recover against him of the seisin of his mother by a Judicial writ to be issued out of the Rolls of the Justices before whom the plea was pleaded to resummon his warranty as hath been heretofore used in cases where the warrantor pleads ●iens per descent from him by whose deed he is vouched IV. Likewise the issue of the son may recover by Writ of Cousinage Ayel and Besayel neither shall the heir of the Wife be barred of his action after the death of his father and mother by writ of Entry for land which his Father did alien in the time of his mother whereof no fine is levyed in the Kings Court. Warr. I. Stat. 1 E. 3.7 Whereas Commissioners have heretofore prepared men of Arms and conveyed them to the King of Scotland Gascoigne and elswhere at the charge of the Shires whereby the Commons have been much impoverished The King wills That it shall be done so no more II. Stat. 18 E. 3.7 Men of Arms Hoblers and Archers chosen to go in the Kings service out of England shall be at the Kings wages from the day that they depart out of the Countreys where they are levied till their return III. Stat. 25 E. 3. Stat. 5.8 None shall be constrained to find men of Arms Hoblers or Archers but by tenure of land or grant in Parliament IV. Stat. 4 H. 4.13 The Statutes of 1 E. 3.7 18 E. 3.7 and 25 E. 3. Stat. 5.8 shall be holden in all points yet so as Lords and all others that have lands in Wales or the Marches thereof or hold of the King by Escuage or other service shall in no wise be excused of their service and devoirs due to the King for their lands fees annuities pensions or other profits V. Stat. 11 H. 7.18 Every person in England and Wales having any office fee or annuity of the Kings grant shall personally attend upon him when he goes himself in person in the Wars unless he have the Kings licence or be letted upon some just cause well proved in pain to forfeit such office fee and annuity Howbeit this Act shall not extend to any spiritual person the Master of the Rolls or other
shall be void X. Stat. 1 H. 4.4 The Parliament holden in Ann. 11 R. 2. shall be holden and kept according to the purport thereof as a thing done to the great honour and common profit of the Realm XI Stat. 1 E. 4.1 An Act was made whereby was confirmed all Judicial Acts Exemplifications Concords Recoveries Process in Court c. made in the times of H. 4. H. 5. and H. 6. and all grants and letters Patents of divers things mentioned in the said Act made by any of the said three kings See the Statute at large XII The confirmation of divers particular Statutes See under their proper titles ☞ Conjuration Enchantment and Witchcraft * I. Stat. 1. Jac. 12. If any shall be convicted to have used any invocation or conjuration of any evil Spirit or to have consulted covenanted with entertained imployed fed or rewarded any such Spirit or taken up any dead person or the skin bone or other part thereof to have used in Witchcraft Sorcery charm or inchantment or to have used any of the said Arts to kill consume and lame any person they together with their accessaries before the facts shall suffer as felons without benefit of Clergie II. If any shall be convicted to have by Witchcraft Sorcery Charm or Inchantment undertaken to tell where any treasure or goods lost or stollen may be found or are become or to provoke any to unlawfull love or to destroy or hurt any cattel goods or person albeit the same be not effected they shall for the first offence suffer one year's imprisonment without bail once every quarter of that year-stand six hours upon the pillory in some open Fair or Market and there make open confession of the offence committed and for the second offence shall suffer as felons without benefit of Clergie III. But in these cases shall be no loss of dower or disherison of heir And a Peer being an offender shall be tried by his Peers ☞ Conspiracie I. Artic. sup Charta 10. 28 E. 1. Against Conspirators false Informers and imbraceors of inquests the King hath provided a Writ in the Chancery and the Justices of either Bench and Justices of Assize shall upon every plaint thereof award inquests thereupon without Writ II. Stat. 33 E. 1. Conspirators are such as bind themselves by oath or other alliance falsly and maliciously to indict and falsly to move and maintain pleas and such as cause children within age to appeal men of felony and retain men to maintain their malicious enterprizes And this extendeth as well to the takers as givers and also Stewards and Bailiffs who by their power maintain debates that concern not their Lords but other parties III. Stat. 7 H. 5. Whereas divers have been indicted for treasons and felonies supposed to be committed in places there being none such to be found every Justice having power to hear and determine such offences by the oath of twelve men whereof each shall have Free-hold within the County of the yearly value of 5 l. besides all reprises shall before Exigent inquire of Office whether there be indeed any such places or no And if there be no such place or places in the County where such appeals or indictments are made they and the process thereupon shall be void and the Indictors shall be punished by imprisonment fine and ransome at the discretion of the said Justices and if any Exigent be awarded before inquisition it shall be also void This Act to continue in force untill the next Parliament IV. Stat. 9 H. 5.1 The Stat. of 7 H. 5. shall continue in force untill the next Parliament after the King's return from beyond Sea V. Stat. 18 H. 6.12 The Statute of 9 H. 5.1 made perpetual because H. 5. dying beyond Sea some were of opinion it was expired Constable and Marshal I. Stat. 8 R. 2.5 The Constable and Marshall shall not have conusance of Pleas or suits which ought to be discussed at the Common Law II. Stat. 13 R. 2. Stat. 1.2 The Constable of England hath cognisance of things concerning Arms and Wars which cannot be discussed by the Common Law III. In this Court the Plaintiff shall plainly declare his matter in his Petition before the Defendant be sent for IV. When a Plea is commenced before the Constable and Marshall which may be tried at the Common Law the party grieved shall have a privy Seal to cause the Constable and Marshall to cease untill it may be decided by the King's Councel whether it may be tried there or at the Common Law Contra formam Collationis I. West 2.41 13 E. 1. If lands given to Abbies Priories Hospitals or other Religious Houses or to maintain a Chantery a light or Alms be alienated the King shall seize it and the purchaser shall lose both the land and his money II. If the house were founded by a Subject he shall recover the land by a Writ which see in the Statute at large III. If it were given to maintain a Chanterie a light or Alms and not aliened but the duty withdrawn two years together the donor or his heir shall recover it by Cessavit Conventicles 1. Stat. 16 Car. 2. cap. 4. The Stat. of 35 El. cap. 1. declared to be in force and further remedies against the dangerous practices of seditious Sectaries and other meetings in Conventicles under colour of exercise of Religion and the Act at large being upon continuance for 3 years after the end of this Parliament and to the end of the next session of Parliament after the said 3 years and no longer Conusance I. Stat. 9 H. 4.5 Where in Assizes and Pleas of land or rent within Franchises and ancient Demesne against certain persons the names of the Mayors Bailiffs or Communalties in Franchises and of the Lords or Bailiffs in ancient Demesne are therein also by collusion inserted supposing them also to be disseisors or tenants of the land and with purpose to exclude them from the conusance of the matter in Plea which by reason of their Franchises and Liberties ought to be discussed before them in such Assizes and Writs the Justices shall upon request first inquire by the same Assize whether they be indeed disseisors or tenants or whether their names be inserted by fraud as aforesaid II. If it shall be found by fraud the Assizes or Writs shall abate and the Plaintiff shall be grievously amercied notwithstanding there be others named therein who are in truth disseisors or tenants III. Stat. 8. H. 6.26 In Assizes or personal actions if the Defendant make default by collusion with purpose that Mayors Bailiffs or other Communalties or Lords and Bailiffs should lose their jurisdictions the Justices shall upon request inquire thereof by Assizes or inquests where both the Plaintiffs and the owners of such Franchises and Liberties may have their challenges And if collusion be found the Writs shall abate and the Plaintiff shall be amercied Copiholds I. Stat. 7 Jac. 21. Compositions made by Decrees in the Exchequer
whereunto title is made is lawful X. Proclamations shall be made at the Assizes of the Statutes made against Maintenance Champerty Embracery and unlawful retainers XI The offenders against this Act shall be prosecuted within one year ☞ Malt. I. Stat. 17 R. 2.4 Malt made in the Counties of Huntingdon Cambridge Northampton and Bedford and brought to London for the provision of the Court and City shall be well cleansed from dust and other filth and Mayors Bailiffs and Wardens of Towns and places where it is sold have power to make search and to see such defaults redressed * II. Stat. 2 E. 6.10 None shall imploy less time in the making and drying of Malt except in the moneths of June July and August then three weeks and in those moneths less then 17 days nor put to sale any Malt mingled of good and bad in pain to forfeit for every quarter so put to sale 2 s. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor III. None shall put any Malt to sale before by treading rubbing and fanning it he shall have conveniently taken out of every quarter half a peck of dust or more in pain to forfeit 20 d. for every quarter otherwise sold to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor IV. Justices of Peace in Sessions and Stewards in Leets have power to hear and determine these offences as well by presentment of twelve men as by information of two witnesses V. Bailiffs and Constables of Towns and places where faulty Malt is made or mingled as aforesaid have power to make search for it and being found with the advice of a Justice of Peace to make sale thereof at their discretions VI. None shall be punished by this Act who onely maketh Malt for his own provision nor unless the Action be prosecuted within one year ☞ VII Stat. 39 El. 16. Justices of Peace in Sessions have power at their discretions to restrain the superfluous number of Malsters and also of the buyers of Barley to be converted into Malt. VIII If any person shall be convicted by the testimony of two Witnesses or his own confession to have disobeyed the restraint aforesaid they shall suffer three days imprisonment without bail and shall there remain untill they shall before some Justice of Peace become bound by recognizance in 40 l. to obey the said restraint IX Justices of Peace in the County shall not execute this Law within Corporations but onely the Justices and chief Officers of the same Corporations X. Such as have Barly of their own growing tith-corn or rent-corn may convert it into Malt notwithstanding this Statute XI Malsters shall not meddle with the execution of this Act. XII Stat. 3 Jac. 11. When Malt is at 16 s. the quarter Beer may be transported to the King's Allies in Cask And the impost shall be 8 s. and the Custom 18 d. for a subject but for a Stranger 10 s. and 22 d. half peny XIII This Act shall not infringe the Statute of 35 El. 11.1 Jac. 25. or any other Statute made for the bringing in of Clapboard Cask or Scaffold board Manufactures * I. Stat. 14 Car. 2. cap. 13. An Act prohibiting importation of forein Bone-lace Cutting Imbroidery Fringe Bandstrings Buttons and Needle-work II. Justices of the Peace may cause search to be made for any of the said Wares imported contrary to this Act. See the Act at large III. Stat. 15 Car. 2. cap. 15 Stat. 3. Any person Native or Alien may freely set up or use the trade of breaking or dressing of Hemp Flax making of Threed Twine or Nets for Fishery or of Storing of Cordage and the trade of making any fort of Tapistery IV. All foreiners bonâ fide using the said trades in England Wales or Barwick by 3 years and taking the oathes of Allegiance and Spuremacy before 2 Justices of the Peace next dwelling who are impowred hereby to administer the same shall enjoy all previledges as natural born subjects V. All foreigners which shall exercise any the said trades by vertue of this Act shall not pay any other taxes or impositions then as natural born subjects unless they use Merchandise into foreign parts in which case they shall pay such customs as Aliens for 5 years next ensuing and no longer Merchants Merchandise I. Magna Charta 30. 9 H. 3. Merchant-strangers shall have safe conduct of coming into going out of and remaining in England to buy and sell without being exacted upon by excessive tolls except in time of war if they be of our enemies Countrey And albeit they be so yet so long as our Merchants be used well there they shall have the like usage here II. Stat. 9 E. 3.1 Merchant-strangers may freely buy and sell within the Realm without disturbance except they be alien enemies III. If any disturbance or abuse be offered them or any other Merchant in a Corporation and the Head-Officer there do not upon request provide remedy the Franchise shall be seised into the King's hand and the disturber being thereof attainted shall answer double damages to the party grieved suffer one years imprisonment and be ransomed at the King's will IV. If the disturbance be out of a Franchise and the Lord there or his Bailiff Constable or other Chief Ruler do not upon request provide remedy he shall being attainted thereof render double damages to the party grieved and the disturber being also thereof attainted shall also suffer one whole years imprisonment and be ransomed at the King's will V. Howbeit Merchants-aliens shall carry no wines out of this Realm VI. This Law shall be strictly observed throughout the Realm notwithstanding any Charter Franchise or Custom to the contrary saving to the King his due Customs VII The Chancellor Treasurer Justices assigned by commission to hold pleas and others by special commission from the King shall have power to hear and determine these misdemeanors VIII Stat. 14 E. 3. Stat. 2.2 All Merchants except enemies may safely come into England with their goods and Merchandize tarry and return paying the customs and subsidies IX Franchises and free customs reasonably granted to Cities Towns and Burroughs are saved X. Stat. 25 E. 3. Stat. 4.2 The Statute of 9 E. 3.1 is confirmed and all Statutes Charters Letters Pattents Proclamations Commandements Usages Allowances and Judgments to the contrary are repealed and made void XI All Merchants may freely sell their commodities without challenge or impeachment of any Officer or other notwithstanding any franchise grant or custom to the contrary XII The King may assign Justices to inquire of such as offend this Law and to inflict punishment upon them according to the said Statute of 9 E. 3. XIII Any that will sue against any such offender may have a writ out of the Chancery for that purpose XIV Stat. Stapul 27 E. 3. Stat. 2.2 A safe conduct is granted to Merchant-Strangers except alien enemies to come and dwell in this Realm and to return when they please as also to sell their
the Exchequer 15 E. 2. Estreats Prerogativa Regis 17 E. 2. 1 Wards 2 Wards 3 Primer Seisin 4 Women c. 5 Partition 6 Wards 7 Alienation without licence 8 Advowson 9 Fools Lunaticks c. 10 Fools Lunaticks c. 11 Wrcek 13 Intrusion 14 Forfeiture 15 Patents 16 Forfeiture The Statute of Homgae 17 E. 2. Homage A Statute for Templers 17 E. 2 Templers View of Frankpledge 18 E. 2. Leet A Statute for the Oaths of the King Bishops c. Oath Ne rectores prosternant c. Church-yards Articles upon Money Money A Statute for Iustices of Assise Justices of Assise A Statute for Eels and Perches Weights A Statute for Chattels of Felons Forfeiture Statutes of 1 E. 3. Stat. 1. 4 False Judgment 5 Return of Sheriffs 6 Attaint 7 Prison c. 8 Forests 1 E. 3. Stat. 2. 1 Forests 2 Bishops Forests 5 Armour 6 Taxes 7 War 8 Beau-pleader 9 Franchises 10 Monasteries 11 Prohibition 12 Tenure 13 Tenure 14 Maintenance 16 Justices of Peace 17 Indictments 2 E. 3. 1 Confirmation 2 Justices of Gaol-Delivery Oyer Terminer Pardon 3 Armour 4 Sheriff 5 Return of Sheriffs 6 Peace 7 War 8 Justice and right c. 9 Staple 11 Adjornment 12 Sheriff 15 Fairs and Markets 16 Nisi prius 17 Deceit 4 E. 2. 1 Confirmation 2 Justices of G.D. 3 Purveyors 7 Executors 9 Sheriff 10 Sheriffs 11 Nisi prius 12 Wines 13 Pardon 15 Parliament 15 Sheriffs 5 E. 3. 1 Confirmation 2 Error Marshalsey Purveyors 4 Sheriffs 5 Fairs and Markets 6 Attaint 7 Attaint 8 Prison c. 9 Accusation 10 Jurors 11 Process 12 Exigent and Utlawry 13 Exigent and Utlawry 14 Robberies 9 E. 3. Stat. 1. 1 Marc●ant 2 Non-plevin 3 Executors 4 Triall 5 Records 9 E. 3. Stat. 2. 1 Money 2 Money 3 Money 4 Money 5 Money 6 Money 7 Exchange 8 Prison 9 Money 10 Money 11 Money 12 Excommunication 10 E. 3. Stat. 1. 1 Confirmation 2 Pardon 3 Pardon 10 E. 3. Stat. 2. Of Purveyors 2 Marshalsey 3 Error 11 E. 3 3 Drapery 5 Drapery 14 E. 3. Stat. 1. 1 Confirmation Franchises 4 Englishire 5 Judgment 6 Amendments 7 Sheriff 8 Escheators Coroners 9 Sheriff 10 Prison c. 11 Recognizance c. 12 Weights 13 Wards 14 Aide of the King 15 Pardon 16 Nisi prius 17 Pa●s●n c. 18 Voucher 19 Purveyors 21 Customs c. 14 E 3. Stat 2. 2 Merchants 14 E. 3. Stat. 3. 1 Purveyors 3 Bishops 4 Vacations of Bishopricks 5 Vacations of Bishopricks 14 E. 3. Stat. 4. 1 That England shall not be subject to France Crown 18 E. 3. Stat. 1. 1 Exigent and utlawry 18 E. 3. Stat. 2. 2 Justices of Peace 3 Sea 5 Exigent and utlawry 6 Money 7 War 18 E. 3. Stat. 3. 3 Clergy Mortmain 4 Purveyors 5 Prohibition 6 Ordinaries 7 Titles 8 Justice and right c. 18 E. 3. Stat. 4. 1 Justice c. 2 Clerks of the Chancery 20 E. 3. 1 Justice and right c. 2 Justice and right c. 3 Justice and right c. 4 Maintenance 5 Maintenance 6 Justices of Assise 23 E. 3. 6 Victuall c. 25 E. 3. Stat. 2. 1 Ability 25 E. 3. Stat. 3. 1 Franchises 2 Franchises 3 Advowson 4 Clergy 5 Clergy 6 Bishops 7 Advowson 8 Jurisdiction 9 Ordinaries 25 E. 3. Stat. 4. 1 Drapery 2 Merchants 4 Wears 25 E. 3. Stat. 5. 2 Treason 3 Jurors 4 Accusation 5 Executors 6 Purveyors 7 Forests 8 VVar 9 VVeights 10 VVeights 11 Reasonable aide 12 Exchange 13 Money 14 Indictments 15 Purveyors 16 Non-Tenure 17 Process 18 Villenage 19 Protection 20 Money 21 Butler of the King 22 Proviso 25 E. 3. Stat. 6. 1 Proviso 27 E. 3. Stat. 1. 1 Proviso 2 Pardon 4 Drapery 5 Wines 8 Gauging 27 E. 3. Stat. 2. 1 Staple 2 Merchants 3 Merchants Wooll 4 Staple 5 Staple 6 Staple 7 Staple 8 Staple 9 Staple 10 Weights 11 Merchants 13 Merchants 14 Gold Silver c. 15 Staple 16 Staple 17 Merchants 18 Staple 19 Staple 20 Staple 21 Staple 22 Staple 23 Staple 24 Staple 25 Staple 26 Merchants 27 Staple 28 Monasteries 28 E. 3. 1 Confirmation 2 Wales 3 Accusation 4 Livery c. 5 Iron 6 Coroner 7 Sheriff 8 Attaint 9 Sheriff 10 London 11 Robberies 12 Purveyors 13 Staple 31 E. 3. Stat. 1. 1 Confirmation 2 Wooll 3 Forfeiture 4 Probate of Test 5 Gauging 8 Wooll 9 Wooll 10 Victuall c. 11 Administrators 12 Error 14 Escape 15 County and Turn 31 E. 1. Stat. 2. 1 Fish Fishers c. 2 Fish Fishers c. 3 Fish Fishers c. 31 E. 3. Stat. 3. 1 Fish Fishers c. 2 Fish Fishers c. 34 E. 3. 1 Justices of Peace 2 Purveyors 3 Purveyors 4 Jurors 7 Attaint 8 Jurors 12 Forfeiture 13 Escheators 14 Escheators 15 Tenure 16 Fines 17 Ireland 18 Ireland 19 Wooll 22 Hawks 35 E. 3. 1 Fish Fishers c. 36 E. 3. 1 Confirmation 2 Purveyors 3 Purveyors 4 Purveyors 5 Purveyors 6 Purveyors 9 Chancery 10 Parliament 11 Wooll 12 Justices of Peace 13 Escheators 15 Declaration Pleading 37 E. 3. 1 Confirmation 2 Identitate nominis 4 Exchequer 7 Gold Silver c. 16 Wines 17 Villenage 18 Accusation 19 Hawks 38 E. 3. Stat. 1. 1 Confirmation 2 Merchants Money 3 Fines 4 Obligations 5 Wager of Law 6 Wooll 7 Staple 8 Ships 9 Accusation 10 Wines 11 Wines 12 Decies tantum 42 E. 3. 1 Confirmation 3 Accusation 4 Commission c. 5 Escheators 9 Estreats Sheriffs 10 Ability 11 Panell 43 E. 3. 1 Wooll 2 Wines 3 Butler of the King 45 E. 3. 1 Confirmation 2 Wears 3 Prohibition 4 Wooll 50 E. 3. 1 Confirmation 2 Confirmation 3 Arrests 4 Prohibition 5 Arrests 6 Fraudulent Conveyances 7 Drapery 8 Drapery Stat. of 1 R. 2. 1 Confirmation 2 Peace 3 Purveyors 4 Maintenance 5 Exchequer 7 Liveries of Companies 8 Protection 9 Feoffments 11 Sheriff 12 Debt 13 Dures se 14 Tithes 15 Arrests 2 R. 2. Stat. 2. 1 Merchants 5 News 2 R. 2. Stat. 1. 1 Confirmation 3 Debt 3 R. 2. 1 Confirmation 2 Drapery 3 Proviso 4 R. 2. 1 Gauging 5 R. 2. 1 Confirmation 2 Money 3 Ships 7 Forcible Entry 9 Exchequer 10 Captains c. 11 Exchequer 12 Exchequer 13 Exchequer 14 Exchequer 15 Exchequer 16 Exchequer 5 R. 2. Stat. 2. 1 Merchants 4 Parliament 6 R. 2. Stat. 1. 1 Confirmation Franchises 2 Writs 3 Nusance 4 Inrolments 5 Justices of Assise 6 Rape 7 Wines 8 Ships 9 Victuall c. 10 Victuall c. 7 R. 2. 1 Franchises 2 Confirmation 3 Forests 4 Forests 6 Robberies 7 Nisi prius 8 Purveyors 9 Drapery 10 Assises 12 Proviso 13 Armour 14 Attorney 15 Maintenance 8 R. 2. 2 Confirmation 3 Justices of Assise 4 Recognizance 9 R. 2. 1 Confirmation 2 Villenage 3 Attaint 5 Marshalsey 11 R. 2. 7 Merchants 8 Patents 9 Taxes 10 Seals 11 Justices of Assise 12 R. 2. 1 Confirmation 2 Officers 10 Justices of Peace 11 News 12 Parliament 13