Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Milford on Sea" ¶ 8
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

manor and Milford
The manor of Milford Montagu, which was held of the lords of Christchurch, seems to have originated in an estate held by William Spileman at his death in 1291.
Sir Thomas Gorges owned the estate in 1611, and from that time its descent was the same as that of the manor of Milford Montagu.
The manor of Milford Baddesley originated in an estate held in Milford by the Knights Templar.

manor and Barnes
The park of Barn Elms, formerly the manor house of Barnes, which was for long the parish's chief property, is now an open space and playing field.
Barnes wrote her best-known novel, Nightwood, while staying at the Devonshire country manor, ' Hayford Hall ', that Guggenheim had rented for two summers.
Much of Nightwood was written during the summers of 1932 and 1933, while Barnes was staying at Hayford Hall, a country manor in Devonshire rented by the art patron Peggy Guggenheim.
Its name is derived from the Georgian house and parkland, the original manor house of Barnes, which stood on the site, until it was burnt out and demolished in 1954.
In earlier times the manor house of Barnes was in the ownership of the Archbishop of Canterbury and then of the Dean and Chapter of St Paul's.

manor and originally
The name first appears as ryver of Hamose in 1588 and it originally most likely applied just to a creek of the estuary that led up to the manor of Ham, north of the present-day Devonport Dockyard.
But this legend appears for the first time in only a much later account, " Tales of a Grandfather " by Sir Walter Scott, and may have originally been told about his companion-in-arms Sir James Douglas ( the " Black Douglas "), who had spent time hiding out in caves within his manor of Lintalee, which was then occupied by the English.
After the Norman invasion the manor of Chatham, originally Saxon, was given by William the Conqueror to Earl Godwinson.
Château ( plural châteaux ; ) or chateau is a manor house or residence of the lord of the manor or a country house of nobility or gentry, with or without fortifications, originally — and still most frequently — in French-speaking regions.
A feudal baron was a true titular dignity, with the right originally to attend Parliament, yet even a feudal baron, lord of the manor of many manors, was a vassal to the king.
The château was originally a fortified manor dating back to 1368 and, although amputated of one of its sides at the time of Napoleon I, it still retains its pentagonal bastioned footprint.
The dovecote, which had nesting space for 250 birds, belonged to Pimp Hall ( originally Pympe's Hall ), one of three manor houses around Chingford.
It was laid out as a residential district from 1791 and was originally part of the manor of Kentish Town and the parish of St Pancras, Middlesex.
The manor was originally part of the Livingston Manor ; Clermont was a section in the southwest corner that was bequeathed to Robert Livingston, a younger son.
The chapel was originally built by the Southworth family, to upgrade the house to a manor house, which had to have:
The farm was originally called Vettersjö, but was named by Swedish Count Lars Kagg ( 1595-1661 ) who bought the manor during 1647.
The charity originally consisted of a Master, Warden, four fellows, six poor brothers, six poor sisters and twelve poor scholars ( orphans admitted from the age of six years old ), who became the joint legal owners of Alleyn's endowment of the manor and lands of Dulwich, collectively known as the Members of the College.
Bunhill Fields was part of the manor of Finsbury ( originally Fensbury ), which is of great antiquity, the manor having its origins as a prebend of St Paul's Cathedral established in 1104.
Newark Castle " was originally a Saxon fortified manor house, founded by King Edward the Elder.
The current manor was originally built in 1678 by Sir William Pritchard on land bought from the Napier family on the site of an older medieval manor.
It was originally the manor of Little Linford as well as of Great Linford.
The Grand Union Canal runs near the manor house: it originally had its own wharf here ( independent of the Great Linford wharf ).
In 1225 Richard, 1st Earl of Cornwall, swapped the land of Merthen ( originally part of the manor of Winnianton ) with Gervase de Tintagel for Tintagel Castle.
The castle was originally called Llantilio Castle ( recorded in the Pipe Rolls in 1186 ), after Llantilio Crossenny, the mediæval manor of which it was a part.
Windsor Castle was originally built by William the Conqueror in the decade after the Norman conquest of 1066, a timber motte and bailey structure in the manor of Clewer.
The manor of Adstock originally formed part of the Votesdune Hundred, then merged into the Ashendon Hundred and was finally absorbed into the Buckingham Hundred.
It was originally a Victorian manor house and estate stretching along the river, gifted by the architect Tom Scott Sutherland in 1956, with the addition of land to the east purchased from Aberdeen City Council in the 1990s.

manor and belonged
The manor belonged to the Archbishops of Canterbury until the time of Henry VIII, when it passed by exchange to the Crown.
The manor had belonged to Ælfgār, Earl of Mercia in the time of Edward the Confessor, but was granted to Walter de Saint-Valery ( Waleric ) by William I of England after the Norman Conquest of England in 1066.
Before 1066 the manor of Wakefield belonged to Edward the Confessor and it passed to William the Conqueror after the Battle of Hastings.
The villages of Askham Bryan and close-by Askham Richard were once just one manor around the time of Edward the Confessor and belonged to Edwin, Earl of Mercia.
The villages of Askham Richard and close-by Askham Bryan were once just one manor around the time of Edward the Confessor and belonged to Edwin, Earl of Mercia.
During the reign of Edward the Confessor the manor and land belonged to a couple of Saxon lords known as Sasford and Turchil
The manor became royal again under Harold II of England, and by the Norman Conquest, 28 townships in what is now South Yorkshire belonged to the Lord of Conisbrough.
In the time of Henry III ( 1216 – 1272 ), a manor house slightly north-west of what is now the corner of Tottenham Court Road and Oxford Street belonged to one William de Tottenhall.
This manor belonged to the Duchy of Cornwall.
At the time, its manor belonged to the King, but a few hundred years later, ownership transferred to the Bishop of Salisbury, under a charter granted by King Edward I of England.
The manor of Wellingborough belonged to Crowland Abbey Lincolnshire, from Saxon times and the monks probably built the original church.
* The Wrexham Road Property, acquired by the College in 2004, is a large manor house that once belonged to the government of Rwanda and used as a home for its consul.
The village is mentioned as " Eaton " in the Domesday Book, when the manor belonged to Eudo Dapfier.
' Stoc ' names along with places called Stoke or Stow, usually indicate farms which belonged to a manor or religious house.
It was consecrated in 1260, at which time the manor and patronage of the church belonged to Rouen Cathedral, as it had from before the Norman invasion.
The manor, which belonged to Missenden Abbey, was granted in 1536 to Robert Drury esq.
It was first recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Burneham, when the manor belonged to Walter Fitz-Other.
The manor of Chicheley ( which some suggest may have once been called Thickthorn ) anciently belonged to the Pagnell family of Newport Pagnell, but was given by them to the church.
There was an ancient mansion house in this parish that belonged to the Mayne family for many years ( they were lords of the manor in 1086 ).
The manor of Fingest anciently belonged to St Albans Abbey, though in 1163 it was given to the bishop of Lincoln.
Chawton House, the 400 year old grade ll * listed Elizabethan manor house that once belonged to Jane Austen's brother and of land, has been restored as part of a major international project to establish the new Centre for the Study of Early English Women's Writing, 1600 – 1830.
A major attraction of the center, not far from the square, is a manor house that belonged to the former Tlalpan Hacienda.
The manor of Grendon anciently belonged to the St Amand family.
" The manor of Marlow, which had belonged to the Earls of Mercia, was given by William the Conqueror, to his Queen Matilda.

0.687 seconds.