The English register of Oseney abbey / by Oxford, written about 1460. Ed., with an introduction and indexes, by Andrew Clark.

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Title
The English register of Oseney abbey / by Oxford, written about 1460. Ed., with an introduction and indexes, by Andrew Clark.
Publication
London :: Pub. for the Early English text society, by K. Paul, Trench, Trübner & co., ltd.,
1907-1913.
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"The English register of Oseney abbey / by Oxford, written about 1460. Ed., with an introduction and indexes, by Andrew Clark." In the digital collection Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/AHA2740.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 4, 2024.

Pages

[67.]

About 1200. Grant to Oseney, by Thomas of St. Valerie, of two strips at North Oseney to make a road along|side of the land in no. 64, and of a right of ford there, provided that his meadow is not damaged. and that if the grant exceed 6d. in yearly value Oseney pay the excess as a quit|rent.

KNOW þey that be present and to be þat I, Thomas of Seynte Walerye, haue i-yeve, grauntid, and confermed with my present charter, to god and to þe church of Blessid marye of Osney and to þe chanons þere seruyng god, for me and my wife and for þe sowles of my fadur and my modur and of my aun|ceturs, in-to pure and perpetuell almes, ij. sellions or buttes of lond to a wey [Marginal note: 'a waye.'] to be made at northoseney [North Oseney (afterwards the site of Rewley abbey) was an island, amid streams of Thames, next Oseney to the North: map ii. in Wood's City of Oxford, ii.] by þe Diche of þe londe of þe forsaide chanons þe which [i.e. londe.] Bernarde my fadur ȝafe to þem with þe roses pathe ['cum Roseo': possibly, the 'rushy' path.] that is bitwen þe forde that is i-callid Uuerforde [Marginal note: 'Vuerford.' Cotton MS. reads 'Were-ford.'] and þe londe of þe chanons, þe wey In lenght strecchyng hit-selfe fro þe forsaide forde vnto þe howse þe which [was sometime] of Water lingedraper: þe forde also (that is of my ryȝght), and ['et, in utraque parte, ascensionem et descensionem.'] In eyþer [part] goyng vppe and goyng downe with-oute [MS. has 'downe with with oute.'] harmyng of my mede. And hit

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is to be know that I haue forgefe to þe same afore [Read 'to the same afore-named chanons the ferme': 'condonavi canonicis prenominatis firmam.'] many chanons of ferme of vj. d. if so moche be to be paid; And if oony thyng ouer þoo vj. d. to be paied, þey shall paye hit to my cheker at þe fest of Seynte Myȝghell. This wey, with þe Above-saide thynges, to þe forsaide chanons I graunte, to be holde of me and myne heyres, frely and quietly, well and pesible for Euer, with-oute vexyng. And [þat] this my ȝifte and graunte sure & vnbroke abide, hit with þe witnesses of this present writyng and puttyng to of my seele, [I] þowght worþy to strenghte: þese witnisses, et cetera

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