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Post by Daniel Silk on Jul 30, 2009 20:49:02 GMT
www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=1042102 Non. July. Lucca. (f. 2.) To William Sylke, perpetual vicar of Delvyn in the diocese of Meath. Dispensation to him—whose petition contained that in Ireland wars have been going on for a hundred years, that the inhabitants for their maintenance and defence impose exactions on clerks and ecclesiastical persons, and that men of dissolute life and evil condition crowd to their houses and especially to the said parish church, situate by the public way, causing him no small expense, so that he cannot decently live on its fruits, pay his dues and reside without danger—to hold for one year with his said vicarage, value not exceeding 28 marks, one other benefice with cure or otherwise incompatible. Within the year, he is to exchange one of them for another benefice compatible with the remaining one; if not, he is thereupon to resign his vicarage. Vite ac morum.
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Post by Daniel Silk on Mar 8, 2011 11:12:22 GMT
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