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            <title>Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem, Volume 24, 1432-37</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>M.L. Holford</author>, <author>S.A. Mileson</author>, <author>C.V. Noble</author> and <author>K. Parkin</author> (eds), <title>Calendar of Inquisitions Post-Mortem and other Analogous Documents preserved in the Public Record Office XXIV: 11-15 Henry VI (1432-1437)</title>.<publisher>Boydell &amp; Brewer</publisher><date>2010</date></bibl>
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            <date>2013-06-19T10:06:27.891+01:00</date>
                        XML generated from GATE information extraction pipeline
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      <front><!--Front matter will be added here--></front>
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<!--INFO ABOUT SUBJECT OF INQUISITION-->
        <head>
               <name type="person" role="sdoc"><name type="forename">JOHN</name>, SON OF <rs type="person">THOMAS</rs>, SON OF <name type="person">
                  <name type="forename">THOMAS</name> 
                  <name type="surname">FOULESHURST</name></name>
               </name>
            </head>
            <div type="wholeDoc" xml:id="CIPM-DOC-24-565"><!--WRIT-->
        <div type="writ" subtype="dep">
                  <head>
                     <num type="docNum">565</num> 
                     <rs type="writType" subtype="dep">Writ de etate probanda</rs>. <rs type="dorse" n="en">‡</rs> 
                     <date type="writDate" when="1436-02-01">1 February 1436</date>. [<name type="person" role="writClerk">Bate</name>].</head>
                  <!--WRIT DETAILS-->
        <ab>Regarding his inheritance as son and heir of <rs type="person">Thomas</rs>, son and heir of <name type="person">
                        <name type="forename">Thomas</name> 
                        <name type="surname">Fouleshurst</name>
                     </name>, deceased, who <rs type="heldOf">held of ‪<name type="person" role="king"> 
                           <name type="forename">Henry</name> IV
                        </name>
                     </rs> in chief. <rs type="person">Thomas</rs> the son was lately a minor who died in the wardship of <name type="person" role="king"> 
                        <name type="forename">Henry</name> V
                     </name>. The lands are in the custody of <name type="person">
                        <name type="forename">Roger</name> 
                        <name type="surname">Venables</name>, <name type="role">parson of <name type="place" key="628831">Rostherne</name>
                        </name>
                     </name>, and <name type="person">
                        <name type="forename">Henry</name> 
                        <nameLink>de</nameLink> 
                        <name type="surname">Ravenscroft</name>
                     </name>, farmers of the same, so it is said, by commission of ‪<name type="person" role="king"> 
                        <name type="forename">Henry</name> V</name> [CPR 1416–22, p. 168]. Inform them of the forthcoming proof of age.
[Dorse:] <rs type="person">Roger</rs> and <rs type="person">Henry</rs> were informed. Place of proof given.</ab>
               </div>
               <!--INQ HEAD-->
        <div type="doc">
                  <head>
                     <name type="county" key="https://ipm-stg.cch.kcl.ac.uk/django/eats/entity/2081">SHROPSHIRE</name>. <rs type="doc" subtype="prf">Proof of age</rs>. <name type="place" role="inqLoc" key="530663">Much Wenlock</name>. <date type="inqDate" when="1436-02-06">6 February 1436</date>. [<name type="person" role="escheator">Boerley</name>].</head>
                  <!--HOLDINGS-->
        <div type="holdings">
                     <ab>The jurors swear that <rs type="person">John</rs> was born at <name type="place" key="210437">Cressage</name>, baptised in the church there, and was 21 on Monday <date>20 June last</date>.
<name type="person">
                           <name type="forename">William</name> 
                           <name type="surname">Poynour</name>
                        </name>, 46 and more, knows because he was godfather.
<name type="person">
                           <name type="forename">Philip</name> 
                           <name type="surname">Yong</name>
                        </name>, 46 and more, knows because he carried a waxen torch to the church, and stayed there while <rs type="person">John</rs> was baptised.
<name type="person">
                           <name type="forename">William</name> 
                           <name type="surname">Coton</name>
                        </name>, 50 and more, knows because he carried a towel to the church to dry the godfathers’ and godmother’s hands.
<name type="person">
                           <name type="forename">Richard</name> 
                           <name type="surname">Husee</name>
                        </name>, 43 and more, knows because he carried a basin to the church in which the godfather and godmother might wash their hands.
<name type="person">
                           <name type="forename">John</name> 
                           <name type="surname">Paternoster</name>
                        </name>, 70 and more, knows because he raised a grange in <name type="place" key="210437">Cressage</name> on the same day.
<name type="person">
                           <name type="forename">Thomas</name> 
                           <name type="surname">Clerk</name>
</name>, of <name type="place" key="530663">Much Wenlock</name>, 51 and more, knows because he was in the church for mass on the same day and heard <rs type="person">John</rs>’s most frequent crying caused by the cold water.
<name type="person">
                           <name type="forename">Edmund</name> 
                           <name type="surname">Lowe</name>
                        </name>, 44 and more, knows because <rs type="person">Joan</rs>, his sister, carried water to the church for <rs type="person">John</rs>’s baptism.

                        <name type="person">
                           <name type="forename">John</name> 
                           <name type="surname">Suell</name>
                        </name>, 62 and more, knows because he came to Cressage on the same day to talk to <rs type="person">John</rs>’s father and saw very many men and wives going to the church see <rs type="person">John</rs>’s baptism.
<name type="person">
                           <name type="forename">William</name> 
                           <name type="surname">Kynnesley</name>
                        </name>, 64 and more, knows because <rs type="person">John</rs>, his first-born son, was baptised in the church of <name type="place" key="205061">Cound</name> by Cressage on the same day.
<name type="person">
                           <name type="forename">Richard</name> 
                           <name type="surname">Parlour</name>
                        </name>, 63 and more, knows because <rs type="person">Margery</rs> his wife cried like an owl (tutubavit) and broke her right shin while going to Cressage church to see <rs type="person">John</rs> baptised.
<name type="person">
                           <name type="forename">John</name> 
                           <name type="surname">Purye</name>
                        </name>, 49 and more, knows because <rs type="person">Katherine</rs> his mother was buried in the church of <name type="place" key="205061">Cound</name> by Cressage on the same day.
<name type="person">
                           <name type="forename">William</name> 
                           <name type="surname">Wynnesbury</name>
                        </name>, 64 and more, knows because on the same day he rode through Cressage towards Shrewsbury and saw very many men and wives going from the church, with <rs type="person">John</rs>, to his father’s house.</ab>
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                     <classMark type="chancery">C 139/78/52 mm.1–2</classMark>
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