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         <titleStmt>
            <title>Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem, Volume 23, 1427-32</title>
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         <publicationStmt><publisher><ref target="http://www.inquisitionspostmortem.ac.uk/">Mapping The Medieval Countryside</ref>, a collaboration between the Department of History, University of Winchester, and the Department of Digital Humanities, King's College London. Licenced under a <ref target="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/deed.en_GB">Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 UK: England &amp; Wales License</ref>.</publisher><address><addrLine>University of Winchester, Winchester, SO22 4NR, England, United Kingdom</addrLine><addrLine>http://www.winchester.ac.uk/academicdepartments/history/</addrLine></address><address><addrLine>King's College London, Strand, London WC2R 2LS, England, United Kingdom</addrLine><addrLine>http://www.kcl.ac.uk/ddh/</addrLine></address></publicationStmt>
         <sourceDesc>
            <listBibl>
               <bibl><author>Claire Noble (ed.), with introduction by Christine Carpenter</author>, <title>Calendar of Inquisitions Post-Mortem and other Analogous Documents preserved in the Public Record Office XXIII: 6-10 Henry VI (1427-1432)</title>. <publisher>Boydell &amp; Brewer</publisher><date>2004</date></bibl>
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            <date>2013-02-28T19:08:25.486Z</date>
                        XML generated from GATE information extraction pipeline
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   <text>
      <front><!--Front matter will be added here--></front>
      <body>
         <div type="sdoc">
<!--INFO ABOUT SUBJECT OF INQUISITION-->
        <head>
           <name type="person" role="sdoc" key="1892110"><name type="forename">JOHN</name> BROTHER OF 
                  PHILIP 
                  <name type="surname">DARCY</name>, KNIGHT
, SON OF JOHN, 
                  
                     LORD
                   
                  DARCY</name>
               
            </head>
            <div type="wholeDoc" xml:id="CIPM-DOC-23-150"><!--WRIT-->
               <div type="writ" xml:id="CIPM-WRT-23-150">
                  <head>
                     <num type="docNum">150</num>  [<hi rend="italic">
                        <rs type="writType" subtype="wne">Writ not extant</rs>.</hi>]</head>
               </div>
               <!--INQ HEAD-->
               <div type="doc" xml:id="CIPM-INQ-23-150">
                  
                  <head><name type="county" key="1377557">YORKSHIRE</name>.  <rs type="doc" subtype="prf">Proof  of  age</rs>.  <name type="place" role="inqLoc" key="649145">Selby</name>  
                     <date type="inqDate" when="1428-01-15">15  January  1428</date>  <note type="edit">(Thursday  after  the  feast  of  St Hillarius...)</note>. [<name type="person" role="escheator" key="2799415">Clarell</name>].</head>
                  
        <div type="testimony">
                     
<note type="edit">[<hi rend="italic">Proof: ms torn and worn.</hi>]</note>
   <name type="person" key="2065750">
                           <name type="forename">Thomas</name> 
                           <nameLink>de</nameLink> 
                           <name type="surname">Selby</name>
   </name>, 60 and more, swears that <rs type="person">John</rs> was <measure type="age">aged 21</measure> and more on.... last. He was born at <name type="place" role="birthPlace" key="731471">Temple Hirst</name> and baptised in the <name type="place" key="2704222">chapel of St Mary
, Temple Hirst</name>, on the <date>feast of






St Bricius the Bishop</date> during the reign of ‪<name type="person" role="king" key="2447657"> 
                           <name type="forename">Henry</name> 
                           <name type="surname">IV</name>
</name>. His godfathers were <name type="person" key="2016832">
                           <name type="forename">John</name>, <name type="role">prior
                         of St
Oswald
’s</name></name>, and <name type="person" key="2107648">
                           <name type="forename">Robert</name> 
                           <name type="surname">Wa...fen</name>, <name type="role">esquire</name>
                        </name>, and his godmother was <name type="person"><name type="role">Lady</name> <name type="forename">Isabel</name> <name type="surname">?Ne...ar</name></name>.
           On the day of <rs type="person">John</rs>’s birth, he was sent by <name type="person" key="1891855">
                           <name type="forename">John</name>, late <name type="role">Lord Darcy</name>
                        </name>, to check the furnishings in the chapel.... he found its altar hung with ten cloths of gold and its font adorned with silken hangings... Wymersley... and saw several other servants of the late <name type="person">Lord Darcy</name>. <name type="person" key="2129690">
                           <name type="forename">John</name> 
                           <name type="surname">Wymersley</name>
                        </name> told him that everything was prepared for the baptism of <name type="person" key="1891855"><!--CHECK ME: THIS LINK BASED ONLY ON VOLUME NUMBER-->
                           <name type="forename">John</name> 
                           <name type="surname">Darcy</name>
                        </name>.... Twenty-one years have since passed, and he thus remembers the age of 
                           John 
                           Darcy
                       .
           <name type="person" key="2133796"><name type="forename">Richard</name> <name type="surname">...</name> </name>, 51 and more, was with the prior of St Oswald
           ’s, and... who told him that <name type="person" key="1891656">Lady Darcy</name> had given birth to a son whom he was to raise from the font with 
                           Robert 
                           Wa
                        …fen, esquire. He asked <rs type="person">Richard</rs> to go with him to witness the baptism, and <rs type="person">Richard</rs> thus saw <rs type="person">John</rs> raised from the font.
           <name type="person">... of <name type="place" key="649145">Selby</name></name>, 5...., says that 
                           John 
                           Darcy
                         was born in the presence of <name type="person" key="2034832">master 
                           <name type="forename">Thomas</name>
                           <name type="surname">Polton</name>, <name type="role">officer of the 
                           archbishop of York</name>
                        </name>
                           
                        ... his wife and he..... as wife.
           <name type="person" key="1936744"><name type="forename">...</name> <name type="surname">Hagh</name> of Selby</name>,...., says that on the day of 
                           John 
                           Darcy
                           ’s birth, <name type="person" key="1936799">Richard</name>, his first-born son, was born and baptised.... <name type="person" key="1892261">
                           <name type="forename">Richard</name> 
                           <name type="surname">Darcy</name>, <name type="role">esquire</name>
                        </name>....
           <name type="person" key="1859678"><name type="forename">...</name> <name type="surname">Byrne</name> of <name type="place">Selby</name></name>, ?60 and more, performed homage to <name type="person" key="2133332">
                           <name type="forename">John</name> 
                           <nameLink>le</nameLink> 
                           <name type="surname">Zouche</name>, <name type="role">knight</name>
                        </name>, for a tenement that he held of the same... <note type="edit">[<hi rend="italic">the rest of the proof is torn away</hi>]</note>.
                 <note type="edit">[<hi rend="italic">The order and type of reasons given by the jurors here are almost identical to those in</hi> 
                     <ref target="CIPM-DOC-23-139">139</ref>.]</note> </div>

                  
                  

               </div><div type="classMarks">
                     <classMark type="chancery">C 139/36/87 m.1</classMark>
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