Prohibition/Premunire

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T1302 A: Prohibition. Northamptonshire. Rex v. John de Ferrers. For prosecuting Thomas, earl of Lancaster before the Archbishop of Canterbury et al. at St. Paul's. Presumed knowledge of the law. [1]. Related: [2]

H1303 A: King's council handling of a papal provision to Wolverhampton. [3]

M1303 A: Novel disseisin handling a corrody. Lawrence de Offyn v. Prior of Holy Trinity, York, Brother Gervase le Fraunceys, Brother Ingelram le Fraunceys, & Brother William le Flemyng. [4]

E1304 A: Prohibition with pardon. Nottinghamshire. Rex v. John de Auneslee. [5]

E1304 B: Prohibition. Cornwall. Rex v. William de Bodrygan archdeacon of Cornwall. concerning chapel of St. Berian. [6], [7]

T1304 A: Prohibition. Delivery of a prohibition concerning the presentation of the sacristan of the church of Blessed Mary and All Saints of York. [8], [9]

T1304 B: Prohibition. Undersheriff arrested priest during liturgy. Archbishop excommunicated undersheriff. Judgment in favor of the undersheriff or oder to arrest the archbishop. [10] See also WAALT under Canterbury.

T1304 C: Quare non admisit. Rex v. Archbishop of York. Prebend of Stillington in church of St Peter of York. [11]

M1304 A: Prohibition. Rex v. Archbishop of Canterbury. Presentation to St Oswald, Gloucester. Archbishop had excommunicated the prior and canons of the church. [12]; Related: [13]; [14]; [15]. Prior of St. Oswald v. Robert, archbishop of Canterbury. [16]. Reversal of sentence. [17]

M1304 B: Procedure without prohibition for threatening immunity of chapel of St Martin the Great in London. Rex v. Master John de Sancta Fide. [18]

M1304 C: Prohibition. Abbot of St Augustine, Canterbury v. Geoffrey, abbot of Faversham. taking of tithes in kind from Selling. [19]; [20]

H1305 A: Quare non admisit. Rex v. Master Walter de Thorp, dean of the consistory of the Arches, London & Master Gilbert de Middelton, concerning the advowson of Dodderhill, Worcestershire; the king had recovered that advowson against Robert, archbishop of Canterbury, the bishop of Worcester, the Prior of Worcester, and John de Middelton cleric. [21]

H1305 B: Illegal appeals to Rome. Rex v. Gilbert de Segrave, archdeacon of Oxford. Mainperned for parliament. [22]

M1309 A: Complicated presentment to St Leonard's Hospital in Chesterfield. [23]; [24]

H1315 A: Prohibition against creation of a vicarage that would reduce the value of a prior royal appointment to Llanbadarn-Vawr. Rex v. Bishop of St. David. [25]; see [26]

H1315 B: Rex v. Walter bishop of Exeter. Prohibition against violation of the liberty of St Berian chapel, Cornwall. [27]

E1316 A: Protection of prior of Malton in his return from parliament. [28]

T1316 A: Violation of prohibition that protected the immunity of the king's chapel of Bosham, Sussex, seemingly particularly in regard to the choir. [29]

E1320 A: Rex v. John de St Albans parson of Moryngthorpe, Alexander de Berneye parson of Swanton Abbots, Master John de Slyndon, and John de la Lee. Citation outside the realm. Defendants by usurpation held inquisitions done to John de Slyndon and John de la Lee and then cited Hugh abbot of St Albans, brother Richard de Paxton archdeacon of that house, brother Richard de Hedersete, brother Alexander Dypere, and brother William de Benner co-monks of the abbot, as well as Master Hugh de Ware cleric, Thomas Grauncourt, William Sergaunt intheHalle, John Palefreyman, and John the Celereresman to answer outside the realm. [30]

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H1347A:Rex v. Thomas de Carleton. The king had recovered the presentation to Sigston, Yorkshire, and prohibited all and singular from doing anything to the contrary, but Thomas with Henry de Foxton, Hugh de Fletham, John de Masfeld chaplain, William Fereby, William Rose, Adam de Kirkeby, and Gilbert de Kyrkeby intruded into the church with armed force and procured legal processes against John de Halneraby, the king's nominee, who had been canonically installed. [31]

H1347B: Rex v. Simon Benet de Keten chaplain. Whereas the king in common pleas recovered the presentment to St Peters Stamford against the prior of St. Fromond, Simon, scheming to enervate that judgment drew into a plea in foreign court Richard Martyn cleric whom the king had presented and who had been canonically installed. Exigent order. [32]. Simon was apparently aided by Stephen and John his brothers and by Walter in the Pyt, chaplain. [33]

H1347C:Inquest on those notaries public who undermined the king's court by drawing personnel into court Christian outside the realm. The inquest returned that Peter de Normandeby notary public did thus by serving process on Edmund de Grymesby king's clerk in chancery on October 25, 19 Edward III for a case of quare impedit between Hugh le Despenser and Elizabeth his wife against John de Kellesey concerning the churchof Barwe by Edmund's counsel. The citations were made in the presence of the king in Westminster Palace and in the presence of the justices of both benches hearing pleas during term. Exigent. [34]; [35]

H1347D:Jury between the king and Master John de O and Simon de Sudbury, commissaries of the bishop of Norwich [and companion case against the bishop of Norwich]: whether the commissaries, to collect the bishop's tax of 12d to the mark on spiritual goods, had threatened the Abbot of Bury St Edmunds to make him denounce the abbot and convent of Ramsey already excommunicated and had threatened the abbot of St Edmunds with greater excommunication if he did not pay the same tax both before and after the king's prohibition delivered to them. [36]

H1347E:Outlawry of Master Robert de Thresk. The king had recovered the presentation to the prebend of Thorpe in the church of Howden, Yorkshire, and the archbishop had installed Master Ralph de Blaykeston cleric. Master Robert de Thresk then drew Blaykeston into foreign court. [37]

H1347F:Alleged extortions in Canterbury ecclesiastical court by Thomas de Canterbury rector of Brookland and Master Peter Duraunt; necessity of prohibition. [38]

H1347G: Rex v. Simon Benet de Keten chaplain and John his brother: undermining king's court judgment concerning church of St Peter Stamford by suing in foreign court. [39]

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