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charter and Ecgwine
" Ecgwine returned from Rome bearing this charter, which was apparently read out by Archbishop Berhtwald at a council of the whole of England ” held at Alcester, although that meeting was probably fictitious.

charter and written
The actual charter was written in the Parliamentary Assembly based on the Congress ' Recommendations.
Oswald's foundation of a monastery at Pershore is not stated explicitly in the charter, but the Worcester chronicle Cronica de Anglia, written c. 1150, reports it under the annal for 683, and John Leland, consulting the now lost Annals of Pershore, places the event around 689.
Its charter was written in the council-manager form, leaving the mayor with few powers other than vetoing legislation passed by the council and tending to some duties involving the police department.
On October 16, 1920, Hornsby's charter was written and a new government was formed.
" The right of habeas corpus was written into the charter, as was freedom of religious worship and bans on excessive fines and cruel and unusual punishment.
He has written that on December 21, 1973, he traveled by charter bus from Toronto to Pittsburgh to attend a " miracle service " conducted by evangelist Kathryn Kuhlman.
Walter first appears in Glanvill's household in a charter that has been dated to 1178, although as it is undated it may have been written as late as 1180.
Open Site operates under a charter written by the founders of Open Site when it started in 2002.
In addition, the oldest South Slavic document is the Bosnian statehood charter from 1189, written by Ban Kulin of Bosnia in Bosnian Cyrillic.
Villèle, who before the promulgation of the charter had written some Observations sur le projet de constitution, opposing it as too democratic in character, naturally took his place on the extreme right with the ultra-royalists.
This was the mortgage by conveyance ( aka mortgage in fee ) or, when written, the mortgage by charter and reconveyance and took the form of a feoffment, bargain and sale, or lease and release.
The first official mention of the settlement is from 1415, as it was written in the charter issued by Dubrovnik to Holy Roman Emperor Sigismund, although there are numerous artefacts and objects that have been found ( The National Museum of Bosnia / Herzegovina in Sarajevo & The Regional Museum in Doboj ) and which confirm the fact that the area had been inhabited ever since the early stone age, and that the Roman Empire had an army camp ( Castrum ) and a settlement ( Canabea ) in the vicinity of the town dating from the 1st century AD.
The charter was written in connection with a dispute between the nuns of North Berwick and the monks at Dunfermline Abbey over the tithes of Airthrey and Corntown.
There is no surviving record of a charter first establishing the corporation as a legal body, but the city is regarded as incorporated by prescription, meaning that the law presumes it to have been incorporated because it has for so long been regarded as such even in the absence of written documentation.
This charter, written in Latin, confirmed that the estate had been given by one Athulf to his daughter Aethelgyth.
Although, written information of a charter for the modern town was lost, evidence has suggested that this did exist as one of the many properties owned by the Earls of Fife by 1294.
A charter of 1067 given by William I ( 1028 – 87 ) to Westminster Abbey mentions a church of St. Clement, which is possibly St. Clement Eastcheap, but the earliest definite reference to the church is found in a deed written in the reign of Henry III ( 1207 – 72 ), which mentions ' St Clement Candlewickstrate '.
The first written mention of Duns is when a ' Hugo de Duns ' signed as a witness to a charter before 1214.
In one sense, the Fundamental Orders were replaced by a Royal Charter in 1662, but the major outline of the charter was written in Connecticut and embodied the Orders ' rights and mechanics.
King Cnut's charter of 1032 was " written and promulgated in the wooden church at Glastonbury, in the kings presence ".
A Serbian diplomatic mission, possibly sent from Duklja, arrives in the Byzantine capital of Constantinople and was recorded in a charter of the Great Lavra Monastery, written in 993.
The earliest written record of Beath ( Beth ), was found in a charter of Inchcolm Abbey, dated 6 March 1178.
Nevertheless, the KUBG approved the charter, which Ulbrich had previously written together with Lipp and YMCA youth secretary Jakob Staehelin, and he took responsibility for the still-to-be-founded choir.
But one of the earliest written references to Machynlleth is the Royal charter granted in 1291 by Edward I to Owen de la Pole, Lord of Powys.

charter and 714
Nunna's last surviving charter, which is dated 714 in error for 717, is witnessed by a King Æðelstan.
He witnessed Noðhelm s last surviving charter, which is dated 714 in error for 717, as Athelstan rex.

charter and records
Written mostly in Latin but using an Old English boundary clause, the charter records a grant of land near the city of Rochester to Justus ' church.
Although Bede records that Æthelberht gave lands to support the new episcopate, a charter that claims to be a grant of lands from Æthelberht to Mellitus is a later forgery.
There is another charter, that is thought to be genuine, that records a series of transactions of a piece of land near modern day Burpham in the Arun Valley.
In addition, a charter of King Ine of Wessex, dating from 706 and witnessed by nine Bishops including the Archbishop of Canterbury, records the granting of the area in which Shepton Mallet is now situated to Abbot Berwald of Glastonbury Abbey.
A charter of 799 records a wife of Coenwulf's named Cynegyth ; the charter is forged but this detail is possibly accurate.
Bryan acted as either a feoffee or an owner representing the governing body of the Inn ( there are some records suggesting he may have been a Bencher at this point ) but in 1493 he transferred the ownership by charter to a group including Sir Robert Brudenell and Thomas Wodeward, reverting the ownership of the Inn partially back to the Gray family.
According to IRS tax records, Mainline Airways posted a substantial loss in 2003 including $ 12, 000 of call center expenses and forfeiture a $ 20, 000 deposit on an aircraft charter contract.
According to IRS tax records, Mainline Airways posted a substantial loss in 2003 including forfeiting a $ 20, 000 deposit on an aircraft charter contract.
A charter records a meeting of the king's council at Eðandun, although a later scribe has annotated the same document with Eðandune.
The charter stated that the house would: " enable them College to assemble together, and consult, and agree amongst themselves, for the good of their faculty, and that the records and rolls might be more safely and conveniently deposited.
A charter records his patronage of the monastery at Chertsey.
Historical records show that whales were plentiful in the area going well back into colonial history: in 1697, the charter for Trinity Church received its official royal charter, which gave it not only a large chunk of land in Lower Manhattan, but also the profit from any whales or shipwrecks along the banks of the Hudson.
The 2009 British investigative documentary Starsuckers exposed the request to obtain medical records of celebrities by many of the red-top UK tabloids, and the lack of PCC action against the papers that had broken the PCC charter.
The Council's charter preserves the watchdog's right to appoint special investigators for countries whose human rights records are of particular concern, something many developing states have long opposed.
In 1417 it was held by Thomas de Berkeley, 5th Baron Berkeley ( d. 1417 ), as his charter dated 24 June 1417 appointing feoffees to his estate records.
The charter was apparently issued in the 670s by Æthelred, king of Mercia, and records his grant of lands at Gloucester and Pershore to two of his thegns, noblemen of the Hwicce, Osric and his brother Oswald.
It is first mentioned in historical records from the 13th century, and was granted its town charter in 1394.
A charter dated October 1252 records a dispute with Isabella and her husband's will.
The town remained as an island until the 18th century, when small rivers were diverted to form dry land north and west of the town. The earliest known records of a settlement are dated to 1247, when a charter of 3 fairs per year was awarded to Matthew Fitzgriffin, Lord of the manor of Carrick who was a member of the Cambro-Norman nobility.
A charter of William Longespee, son of the Earl of Salisbury, records that the advowson, with the Manor of Shalford, is given to John, son of Geoffrey Earl of Essex, who died in 1256.
Historical records of Moston date back as far as 1301 where the earliest historical archives are of a charter from the Lord of the manor of Manchester, Thomas Grelle.
Together they witness a charter which records an exchange of land between Bishop Brihthelm and Æthelwold, then abbot of Abingdon.

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